You don't need a so called equity relationship you dooofus. Make up all the gobbledygoop legal sounding terms you want, you cashed the check, that was the taxable event.Harvester wrote:
Gregg wrote:Yes, you can challenge it, and they will get the documents that show a check was issued, to you, deposited in a bank account in your name or cashed with your signature, and that's all the proof they need.
Ahh, but if the check was redeemed in "lawful money" pursuant to Title 12 § 411 then it was public money, not private credit of the Federal Reserve. I am not in contract with the Feds; there is no equity relationship, no income(special legal term).
As I said, you're too stupid to get that. Taking tax advice from someone going to prison for tax crimes, and taking what the hell you want to call it advice about how to endorse a check to make it tax free from a homeless mental patient who assaults his mother and is the laughing stock not only of this site but a good portion of the legal system in the whole state of Colorado, real good strategies there, idiot.