SEC Does NOT Regulate Trusts or the Issuance of Certificates

Yet another MASSIVE Banking Fraud

 

By Neil Garfield
 

No trust is regulated by the SEC. No reporting is required of any trust.

But by filing a prospectus, the investment bank gains access to the SEC.gov site. So they upload documents and then download the same documents so they can display the sec.gov in the header. They then falsely argue for judicial notice of a government document.

No document is a government document unless it is created by the government. Since the SEC did not issue the document and never reviewed or exercised any regulatory action, this is not a government document. It is a private document that the lawyers have dressed up to look like a government document. Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Clinton, 880 F. Supp. 1, 11 (D.D.C. 1995) (“documents are typically not agency records under the Act unless and until they are included within material controlled, created, approved and utilized by the agency itself. ”)

Ultimately all filings by the investment bank in relation to the fictitious trusts are followed by a filing that says, "we don't need to report anything." In 1998 the regulations were rolled back on the certificates sold to investors in which, by law, the certificates were categorized as private contracts and expressly asserted to be excluded from the category of securities and issuers that were regulated.

In short, there are no securities, trusts, or government documents in any securitization infrastructure. 

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