By William M. Hart
How to Commit Bankruptcy Fraud and Get Away With It Scot-Free
By any objective standards, the federal judiciary is so wholly corrupt that, even when a person who personally planned a crime that was committed comes forward to say, “This is the crime, and this is how it was done— I know, because I personally planned it,” they remain obstinately resistant to acknowledging any manner of wrong-doing, even when presented with concrete evidence of it.
I say this not as a matter of subjective opinion, but as a verifiable fact.
You see, I’m the guy who planned it. It was my baby.
I met a woman on the internet, a blogger, a Ms. Salois, who seemed to be all I could ever dream for. She was an English teacher with aspirations of publication, having several chapters already written for a novel, and I, already a published author and journalist, agreed to edit some of her work, a sample of which you may find here. She was in an abusive relationship with her husband (hint: plot complication here), an ex-Marine ex-cop (and also a former student from her English class, I was to find out later), and the two were in the process of a separation at the time we met.
She had knowledge of my background, as she assisted me in writing an updated resume. She knew that I had a background in taxes, and that I was looking at opening a tax preparation office as a franchisee.
She began asking me about how a person might go about committing bankruptcy fraud, were one so inclined, a series of question and answer sessions spanning some four weeks through late April to mid-May of 2007. I was uncomfortable with how she would return to the subject repeatedly, and asked if this was some sort of plot device for a story, which she assured me it was. I believed because I wanted to believe— I did not want to consider the alternative at length.
Continue reading “
The Present State and Need of Civil Rights in the United States, Part One”