Jun 14, 2022
For obvious reasons, I need to keep this short.
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On June 2, 2022, I suffered a massive heart attack. It is known in the medical community as the “widow maker,” because the immediate consequence is the cessation of blood flow anywhere in the body. It is death. I was fortunate because when it occurred, I was already on the operating table for a related procedure.
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It took 20 minutes of very aggressive CPR to (a) keep blood flowing and (b) re-start a normal heart rhythm. It was and remains a nightmare scenario for both members of my family and the excellent team of doctors who saved my life at UF Health in Jacksonville.
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The events that followed fall into many categories. The bottom line is that I am left in a very weakened condition that affects every physical aspect and movement of my body and my life. As my body recovers from the heart attack and the CPR used to save my life, I must also endure the lingering mental, emotional and cognitive effects.
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My recovery and rehabilitation are likely to span 4-6 months — although the bulk of the improvement may be apparent within 2 months.
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All of this has vastly reduced the amount of productive time I have to spend on writing, analysis, and performing services. Based on the consensus of doctors, it appears that I’ll be running on most of my cylinders within a few weeks, but I will be slowed by my temporary disabilities. And I will be constantly fatigued by mental or physical effort.
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None of this changes my overall plans. 16 years ago I did everything I could to alert the public to the largest economic crime in human history — luring homeowners into executing documents that failed to comply with law, failed to disclose the real terms of the deal, and failed to adequately compensate and protect homeowners for their involuntary participation in an illegal unregulated securities scheme.
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My job would be done if everyone had reached an understanding of the scheme. But that is not the case. So I will continue as long as I can.
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Everything I have to say, and all the proposed strategies and tactics I recommend to beat back the banks flow from one simple premise: when put to the test, the law firm representing the “lender” cannot and will not corroborate the asserted or implied right to enforce anything. It is all a sham. Even under court order, the lawyers cannot do it, the “lender” cannot do it, and the “servicer” cannot do it.
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So the obvious answer is to put these actors to the test, knowing they will fail. That is how I win, it is how dozens of other lawyers have won and it is how every homeowner can win against these actors.