HOWTO Not Lose Your Foreclosure Case
1) Don't ask. No one will volunteer damaging information. 2) Don't state a claim. If you have no claim, why are you here? 3) Challenge your opponent. Challenge every piece of information. Your opponent is building a case on sand. Attack the foundation. 4) Build your case on bedrock principle. Thou shalt not steal. OTOH, You shall not surrender. 5) READ THE RULES. The rules and regulations are built to enforce EQUALITY before the law. If your opponent knows the rules, and you don't, you are already at a significant disadvantage. What is the average survival time of a pilot entering Instrument Flight Conditions and not operating under Instrument Flight Rules? About 38 seconds. 6) Your judge might make an error. Many judges do. The most common errors are written up in appeals by people who have been in your position. READ the Appeals. Don't go there. 7) Argue your own case. Your opponent is constructing bunny trails. They are built just for you. Argue your own case. 8) Your opponent might lie, especially for financial gain. Lying is not acceptable in court. Such evidence will be removed, or such comment will be stricken from the record, and the jury will be instructed to disregard such prevarication. YOU will have to object. No one else will. What, is there a mouse in your pocket? 9) Meet all your time commitments. Your opponent has 850 lawyers. Maybe you don't. If you fail to prosecute your case in a timely fashion, your case will be dismissed. 10) Present your case to a jury. Your judge may be corrupt. Many judges are. It is unlikely that more than two or three jurors are corrupt. That gives you nine or ten fair hearings. In a civil trial, you only need a preponderance of the jury to prevail.
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AuthorDave McCrae is a retired engineer now settled in Oatmeal, Texas. I trained as a nuclear physicist and for a brief time was able to hold positions operating a small cyclotron, a large computer (CDC-6400 BITD) and as a medical researcher. After a weekend in Cleveland, and learning to weld, I left academia and joined Clan MacRae, constructing large buildings, setting complex machinery, devising manufacturing processes, and operating deepwater submersibles. I had too much fun, and made too much money. The cyclotron was kind of quaint, punch card computers are pretty much extinct, and we still have issues with cancer. Archives
November 2018
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