Yes, A Thief Can Use Courts To Steal A Home In Florida..

Can a Thief Really Steal A Home In Florida?

Years ago, I asked the question, “Judge just who are you giving that house away to?” As I watched judges granting foreclosure judgments one after the other to alphabet soup or vaguely identified plaintiffs, I was deeply disturbed that none of us, including the judges, knew who was directing such trauma and who was profiting from the acts.

At that point in time, I thought it was kind of important for judges and for all of us to know exactly who it was that was directing our elected circuit court judges to throw our neighbors out into the streets. The question became, “The Capacity Argument” and it was made successfully in thousands of cases all across the state.

Last week however, I learned that it doesn’t matter one bit at all who is directing our judges to throw neighbors and families into the street. I lost a trial where the issues of capacity and ownership were front and center. It remains a desperately painful loss and it signifies a far more dangerous and systemically flawed system that expands far beyond this one individual case. This issues demonstrated in this singular case, extrapolated out across millions of cases across this nation, illustrate that the nuclear bomb has already detonated all across this country and confirm my proposition that we are all merely living in the radiated cities left behind in the wake. Every courtroom is ground zero.

Losing is such a painful experience on so many levels, but the most infuriating aspects of this trial was the argument advanced by the bank (successfully I regret to admit) not only that it didn’t matter who was directing the judge to throw a neighbor into the street because the law holds (according to this attorney) that that even a thief could walk into a courtroom and take a Floridian’s home, but that it was futile and improper for me to even raise such issues.

The alleged authority for this absurd proposition is found in the following section of Florida Statutes which reads:

673.3011 Person entitled to enforce instrument.—The term “person entitled to enforce” an instrument means: The holder of the instrument; (and especially this)

“A person may be a person entitled to enforce the instrument even though the person is not the owner of the instrument or is in wrongful possession of the instrument.”

Be sure to check out the rest here…

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4closureFraud.org