Transcript for:
Overview of Trust Law and Administrative Courts

once again welcome back to the channel uh tonight i'd like to talk a little bit about uh the trust law and maybe try and finish this up with part three uh a lot of times i'll use i'll misuse words uh for instance license your license and uh in court uh in previous in the previous I told you that it wasn't your license, it's the trust license, and then I referred to it again as your license. Well, a lot of times I'll do that because I don't want to confuse you. Some people, it takes a little time to get used to hearing words that are used in ways that you're not used to hearing them in, like reference to the court. There are no courts, except maybe the United States Supreme Court, maybe. The Constitution of the United States states that the legislation has the power to create lesser tribunals inferior to the United States Supreme Court.

Really, they're not courts, they're tribunals. And if they're created by the legislative branch of the government and they're ran by the executive branch of government, then they're not judicial. You've heard me say that in a previous video. The courts aren't judicial.

If you go in there and start hollering, I know my constitutional rights, I'm going to tell you to sit down and shut up. I've been told that the Constitution doesn't apply here by administrators. And it really doesn't because it would if it was judicial, but it isn't.

So you'll hear me use the word court when it's really administrative tribunal. Think about it like this. If the legislative branch creates these tribunals, And they're ran by the executive branch of the government. How do we know it's the executive branch of government? Well, the President of the United States chooses who he wants to be the Attorney General of the United States.

He chooses them, and then who does he send them in front of? It isn't the Supreme Court. It's the legislative branch. So they go in front of the legislative branch, and it's the legislative branch that decides whether or not to put them into that position.

And it's the same thing with the state. The attorney general of the state of whatever state that you're in is chosen by the governor, and he goes in front of the executive branch. or the legislative branch of the government, and then they put him in. So in most judges, a lot of the so-called judges are put in there by the executive branch of government. Some of them are voted in, but most of them are installed.

So there's nothing judicial about their courts. They're... commercial, trust action, administrative courts, or tribunals.

See, like I say, a lot of times I'll misuse words because they're not familiar, and I take it used to saying them a lot. But that was one thing I wanted to touch on from part one. And at the end of it, I talked about the beneficiary account and to go to the bank and do the bank account. And I'll explain to you like this.

First time I did a beneficiary bank account, I went to the bank and I said, I'd like to open up an account. And the lady said, OK, you know, here's she started getting the paperwork out. And.

When she handed me the signature card, I kind of blocked her view. It was kind of sneaky, but I blocked her view a little bit so she couldn't see how I was signing the signature card. And I signed it with a beneficiary signature. Well, I took the $200 that I was going to open the account with and I laid it on top of the signature card and I handed it to the accounts lady and made some small talk.

And she called back. She called my house a couple of days later and she said, Mr. Hauser, I was looking at your signature card here and I noticed the word after your name. She said, is that beneficiary?

I said, well, it most certainly is. Well, I was just wondering why you signed it that way. Well, that's my signature. I am the beneficiary of the trust.

And the Secretary of the State recognizes the signature as such. And if you ever see a signature down there on any transaction involving me, if it doesn't say beneficiary at the end of my name, then it's a forgery. Oh, okay. Well, you know, I was just wondering, uh, she hung up.

Well, for six or seven months, I wrote checks, uh, on the account and, uh, those checks were, were written out for various payments and the bank accepted those back from those, uh, places, Walmart and, you know, places that I wrote the checks, uh, the bank accepted those and. This went on for about seven or eight months. Well, they sent me a letter saying that I would have to come down and close the account because the signature wasn't acceptable because it was an alteration of the contract. But they were never specific why it was an alteration. They said that I'd have to come down and close the account, or they would.

I didn't close the account. And they attempted to get to talk me into coming and closing the account. Why? Because they couldn't close it theirself.

I'm the beneficiary. Another thing, too, about this account is there was a $6.50 maintenance fee on the account every month. Well, the first month they... I got the statement. It showed that they'd taken six and a half dollars out of the account, and then they put six and a half dollars right back in it.

After that, they never took the maintenance fee out again because I was the beneficiary of the account. They were acting as trustees in a fiduciary obligation and weren't allowed to take the money for the maintenance fee. That's why they put it back. I never closed the account.

They, you know, basically threatened, if you don't come down and close the account, we're going to send you a check for the balance of the account. We're going to close it ourself. When you close a bank account and the account's still there, it just has a zero balance.

And the reason banks do that is for the federally funded. a $250,000 FDIC. They're still showing that they have account. They tried to get me to close this account. I wouldn't do it.

They can't. They can't close it themselves. And I'm going through some dealings with this particular bank right now.

And when it's over, I'm going to start using the account wide open like I used to. Uh, if you look at the bottom, um, If you look at the signature line on a check, most people aren't even using them anymore, but when you look at the signature line on the check, it's not a line. The little lock, the little padlock-looking thing says MP on it.

That stands for microprint. If you take a magnifying glass and you look at that line, it's one line of authorized representative. a continuous authorized representative authorized representative authorized representative so consider that uh what does that mean what is an authorized representative uh a representative or to represent or represent means to present again so if you're signing it as an authorized representative then you're not signing it as the beneficiary So that was the issue that the bank had with me. I'll let you know let you all know how that turns out in a future video.

So I wanted to touch on that from part one. Part two I made the statement when I was talking about the the situation with the social security judge administrator. about the insurance running out in two months. That was a mistake. I misspoke.

It was two years, is what that is, which means two years after you stop working, the benefits run out. You have to apply for Social Security Disability within the two years after you get injured and stop working the public job. Okay, but what I want to do is speak in some more detail about the Social Security hearing.

When I asked the, if you watched the last video, when I asked this administrator, what is Social Security? Well, it's a trust. And who's the beneficiary?

Well, you are. Well, then you're all trustees in a fiduciary obligation. Now, the last question that I asked him was, would it be in the Social Security Administration's best interest to give me an on-ledger and off-ledger account of the trust since its inception and a check for the balance or the annuity payment?

He said the annuity payment. The reason I said. Give me an on-ledger and off-ledger account of the trust since it began and a check for the balance being, is that in the Social Security Administration's best interest? No, it's not.

Because What really happens when you turn 65, as the beneficiary, you can now know what's happened in the trust. The trust has matured at 65. So when I asked him, can I get an on-ledger and off-ledger account of the trust, would it be in their best interest to do that and give me a check for the balance or make the annuity payments, he said the annuity payments. This guy knew. Here's the thing.

When I got out of the military after Desert Storm in 92, I was rock climbing on a cliff here in East Tennessee. I fell almost 50 feet and shattered both of my ankles. I was in a wheelchair for eight and a half, nine months.

All kinds of hardware and everything. I was lucky it didn't kill me. But at that time, I was on unemployment from the state of Illinois and from my military pay when I got hurt.

So they discontinued the Social Security, not the Social Security, but the unemployment because I wasn't unemployable anymore. I was disabled. So I applied for Social Security Disability and won and got it. That's why I was kind of familiar with when I went back in 2016, how the hearings operated, because I did it in the 90s. Well, during the 90s, I drew it for three years and got $8,500 back pay.

And they paid me a total in three years. uh forty five thousand dollars okay now if you think about the forty five thousand dollars that they gave me in the 90s and the hundred thousand that they gave me in 2016 it's almost like almost a hundred fifty thousand dollars well uh the with that being said uh i never paid twenty thousand dollars into social security nineteen thousand something or another So I never paid that much into it. Why would that administrator have said that it's in the best interest of Social Security to make you the annuity payment than to give you $20,000, right?

Okay, you gave me $150,000. And now you're going to pay me $1,500 a month for the next 10 years, at least till my 8-year-old ages out. And then continue to pay me all this, plus pay for Medicare and all those other benefits.

How is that beneficial to the Social Security account? How is it that they can pay me $100,000 out of an account? that I didn't pay $20,000 into.

They can't take that money from your account and give it to me. That's theft. That's trust fraud.

They can't do that. So where does that money come from? That's proof that they're putting money into your trust.

And as I said in a previous video, You're a secured party creditor up to the amount of money that you know you have in there. And I know for a fact, for a fact, that I have $132.6 million in my trust. That was from 2016. I know there's that much money in there.

I've got two signed contracts from the Secretary of the United States Treasury, two signed contracts. His name was Jacob Liu. I got two contracts signed by him or his agent, agreeing that the Treasury owes me $132.6 million.

So, and they were supposed to have paid me that in, uh, golden silver coins or federal reserve notes or bank draft or, uh, the contract said, whatever's, whatever's good money for you at the time. Uh, they never paid that. Uh, so in order for them to get the money due to them, uh, they were entitled to, uh, What I did is I created $204 million in liens against public officials here in East Tennessee.

Google Christopher Allen Hauser and you'll see what they said about it anyway. But I've got contracts signed by the Secretary of the United States Treasury, them agreeing that I gave them $204 million. in lien securities and they sent those to the to the IRS to collect the IRS is the largest nonprofit or for-profit collection agency in the world they are a profitable company their headquarters is in Puerto Rico which is one of the territories of the District of Columbia And they collect for the Treasury. So the Treasury sent the lien securities to the IRS, and the IRS collected.

And the IRS was entitled to 35% by the contract. You don't think they're going to want $71 million? Well, of course. But the only way that they could do that...

to get paid their self, uh, was to do something with the money that they owed me. And, uh, so if you're not going to send it to me in what the contract says, you're supposed to send it to me in, well, then, uh, there's only one place that could go and that's my social security account. Okay.

Uh, so what that does is if you're a secured party creditor, knowing what is on ledger, Say you paid $50,000 in. You're a secured party creditor for up to $50,000. If I only put $20,000 in on Ledger and there's at least $132.6 million off Ledger, not counting what they put in, there's no telling how many millions of dollars is in my trust. But there is telling that there's at least $132.6.

million in there uh i know that And see, that's the thing. If you want to access your trust, you can access the trust and take money from it. As long as the trustee is in agreement with you, you need the benefit. But if I can't access it for myself, what I can do, knowing that there's that much in there, is create letters of credit. Okay, and it's like this.

If I gave you a checking account and I said, look, there's money in this account. I'm not going to tell you how much is in there, but there's money in there. And here's the check.

Here's the checkbook. You can start writing checks, but if you overdraft, you're going to prison. You're not even, most people in the right mind aren't even going to write the first check because they don't know the balance of the ledger.

I know that there is. I know that there isn't that much. So, and I've done this twice already. A friend of mine is a double platinum rap artist. I'm not going to mention any names because that's unimportant, but he's a pretty famous guy.

And I wrote him a letter of credit for a million dollars. He took that letter. We got a contract.

I bought into his studios. We created a contract giving me 49%. and then I wrote him a letter of credit for a million dollars, which he took to the treasury, and the treasury sent him a check. You know, now I get my percentage, and that's how you can do it.

Right now, if you Google my name and you look into this, I might as well break this down. Me and some friends of mine, comrades, we created almost two billion dollars in lien securities against public officials, judges, county mayors, all kinds of public officials. I even leaned my ex-wife for four million dollars.

Oh, you ain't getting money. You ain't getting money from her. She's broke. No, the IRS took $4 million from her trust.

The reason I know this is because she filed bankruptcy. And in the bankruptcy, the $4 million was scheduled. And then it was discharged. The United States Code says you can only discharge provable debts. So I got proof that $4 million that I leaned her for, or actually the Treasury leaned her for, was real.

Which means all of it is. But the state of Tennessee came and got us all in one day. Ma'am, we got warrants for your arrest.

They failed to produce a warrant. They never would produce a warrant. Where's the warrant?

Well, we'll show it to you later. They claim they had indictments. They've never produced an indictment to this day.

Two weeks after capturing us or kidnapping us, they had an alleged arraignment where we challenged the jurisdiction and... and was never told the nature and the cause. The Sixth Amendment says you have the right to know the nature and cause of the accusations against you. So they never told us that.

They have to tell you you're being charged with X, Y, and Z. Tennessee Code annotated X, Y, and Z. They never said that. We refused to go to court, and 14 months later, they had a trial. An alleged trial where we weren't allowed to enter.

We never went in. We never seen a jury. A jury never seen us.

And we were all sentenced. At the most, it was a 50-year sentence, and at the least, it was a 20, which was mine. I was locked up four days short of three years.

And to this day, Tennessee has yet to put one single piece of paper in my hand saying they had the right to do anything. The case is now going in front of the Tennessee Supreme Court. uh they know uh i'm about to own this state uh to take and hold someone using unlawful forces kidnapping and if you fail to produce a warrant and you fail to produce an indictment you never say what the charges are you've been kidnapped uh so when i say i don't kneel I don't know. I called the so-called judge. I called her a harlot of Babylon.

I cussed her out quite a bit. Three times in 20 minutes, I cussed her out and never held me in contempt. Why? Because she didn't have jurisdiction.

It's a female judge. She looked just like Judge Judy. Um, so that's, that's what happened there.

Um, I could go into a little more detail, but I really don't have a lot of time. Uh, but I just wanted to touch base with that. And the final thing that I'd like to say is, um, I wanted to talk about what, how, how it's really supposed to work.

Um. When you turn 65, the trust matures. You go down to the Social Security office. Okay, I'm 65. And, oh, come right this way, Mr. Hauser. We're going to set you up.

You know, we're setting you up, man. We're going to, you know, give you health care. And we're going to give you so much money a month and blah, blah, blah. Here, we want you to apply for your benefits.

And what they do. is they convince you to renegotiate the contract, allowing them to be the trustees until you're dead. What's really supposed to happen is you're supposed to go down there and go, okay, the trust has matured.

I'm 65. I want an on-ledger and off-ledger account of the trust since inception. And I want a check for the amount, which would be the yours and the millions of dollars that they... they've put in your trust over the years so but everybody thinks well you got to go get your benefits and uh you measly twelve hundred dollars a month you know and uh you skimpy little what medical care you get um and then then what happens is you contract to can allow them to continue to the trustee until you're dead you And then when you die, there's no beneficiary left in the trust anymore, so they get to keep the money. If you've known anybody that's died on Social Security shortly after they turn 65, like my grandfather got two months of payments and then he died. My grandma got a measly little check for a while and then they got to keep the rest of it.

What you're supposed to do is go get your money. Get it all. That's what I intend to do. I'm working on the process right now.

I've got a few more years. I got, you know, nine years, I think, before I can do this. But here's the thing.

Go to a graveyard that's got graves in it older than the 1930s and look around at the graves. You're going to see the names on the graves prior to 1933, 34, 35. the names on the headstones are going to be in upper and lowercase letters. After the 30s, they're in all caps.

So the name on the headstone is actually the name of the trust. Check it out sometime just when you're in a graveyard, an old graveyard. Look around, check it out. I'm going to be bringing some more videos about about registration and about property and how to uh you know get this stuff out of their hands get it out from under their contracts but uh for now peace and blessings my friends