🏛️ The Greatest Civilizational Regression of the US: How the Judicial System Transformed Lives and Homes into "Fixed Assets" of Corporate Greed
By MINDD & IA GEMINI
Introduction: The Death of the Republican Ideal in the Courts of the Bandits in Robes
The republican ideal that founded the United States of America was molded under the blood of patriots who refused tyranny.
More than 250 years ago, Colonel William Prescott commanded the militias of ordinary citizens in the historic Battle of Bunker Hill with the immortal shout of resistance to oppression.
At that time, men fought for the sacred right to life, liberty, and legitimate property against an exploitative empire.
The America Story - The Battle of Bunker Hill
Today, the sad reality that unfolds points to the most terrible civilizational regression ever seen in the history of the nation.
Private property, the dignity of the working family, and the lives of citizens and immigrants have been converted into mere "fixed assets" for the illicit enrichment of a cartel composed of banks, insurance companies, and corporate lawyers.
This entire gear operates under the stamp, connivance, and direct protection in the courts of the bandits in robes, who have dehumanized justice in the name of profit.
SUPPORT THE CHURCH OF THE GARDENS ADVOCACY- STAND BY SCOTT ERIK STAFNE: A MAN WITH A MISSION
💎 The Foreclosure Industry: Where Lives Turn into Merchandise
As exposed in detail by jurist Scott Erik Stafne in the essay "Memorial Day 2026 Reflections on Courts, Advocacy, Discernment, and Institutional Trust: A Conversation from the Margins of Modern America", published on the Academia.edu platform after his historic interview on the Toll and Roll™ radio and channel, the courts have abandoned their primary constitutional function.
Instead of acting as neutral instances for the determination of truth and the just application of the law, the courts have transformed into bureaucratic business counters shaped by corruption and the power of money.
People Behind The Scenes - Toll and Roll™ - Billie Interviews Scott Staphne & Shelley Erickson , on Memorial Day 2026
Summary by GEMINI AI
In this episode from Toll and Roll™, host Billie conducts a behind-the-scenes interview with Scott Erik Stafne (a long-time constitutional and civil lawyer fighting the judicial system) and Shelley Erickson (a victim of ongoing mortgage fraud).
The discussion explores systemic corruption within the courts, particularly focusing on how judges allegedly obscure truth and favor corporate interests ("mammon") over natural justice.
Shelley shares details of her 16-year-long legal battle involving foreclosure and forged promissory notes, notably featuring a declaration from an individual named Jess Almanza, who stated he never endorsed her note.
Scott discusses his family history in law, his recent disbarment for representing citizens against the system, and his work with the "Church of the Gardens."
The speakers emphasize the need for spiritual discernment, personal accountability to God's commandments, and independent public initiatives like the "National People's Great Grand Jury" to reclaim justice.
They also briefly introduce Marcia Almeida, from MINDD - DEFEND YOUR RIGTHS , a citizen advocate joining the effort from Brazil.
Video Index (Timestamps)
- [00:13] - Intro song and opening montage.
- [01:25] - Introduction by host Billie and introduction of guests Shelley Erickson and Scott Stafne.
- [03:31] - Scott Stafne shares his background, family lineage of lawyers, and his ongoing battle against disbarment.
- [05:42] - Discussion on the purpose of courts to deliver unbiased justice based on real facts.
- [09:00] - Shelley clarifies the timeline of her non-judicial foreclosure case and the transition into probate courts.
- [11:51] - Detailed breakdown of mortgage fraud mechanics, promissory notes, and signature requirements.
- [14:49] - The case details regarding Long Beach Mortgage, JPMorgan Chase, and the forged Jess Almanza declaration.
- [18:06] - Scott details a recent federal case handled by Judge Tiffany Cartwright where the Almanza fraud was allegedly ignored.
- [21:09] - Critique of systemic corruption in Washington State courts and the influence of financial greed ("mammon").
- [23:54] - Introduction of Marsha, a citizen activist from Brazil helping with their international mission.
- [28:11] - Announcement regarding the "Theater of the People’s Great Grand Jury" event.
- [29:51] - Scott’s final summary on truth, justice, and spiritual discernment.
- [32:31] - Shelley reflects on modern issues mimicking historical systemic abuses (identity theft, guardianship fraud, trafficking).
- [34:17] - Where to find Scott Stafne's academic publications and legal challenges online.
- [37:17] - Closing remarks and host acknowledgments.
- [38:58] - Outro song and closing graphics.
Video Link: Watch on YouTube
In this opaque scenario, the ordinary citizen enters the courtrooms already condemned by the "procedural manipulations" of magistrates who shield billion-dollar frauds.
The behind-the-scenes investigation reveals the anatomy of this institutionalized crime across three major axes:
1. The Ghost System of MERS and Hidden Derivatization
The Mortgage Electronic Registration System (MERS), detailed in the first discussion panel available on YouTube via the link Behind the Scenes - MERS Is More Than a Disease, was created under the false premiss of modernizing title tracking.
Video Title
Behind the Scenes - Toll and Roll™ - Billie Interviews Carol Keihn - MERS Is More Than a Disease
Summary by GEMINI AI
In this interview from Toll and Roll™, host Billie speaks with legal researcher and tech expert Carol Keihn about the systemic fraud surrounding MERS (Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems).
Carol shares insights from her extensive investigation into a specific Indiana court case (US Bank v. Rachel Ditty), where she uncovered physical MERS checks signed by HUD attorneys. She argues that these checks expose off-book commercial transactions, contradicting public statements by MERS executives claiming the entity does not handle financial transactions or property purchases.
The conversation covers the "layering" of fraudulent documents, the hidden roles of large financial institutions like MetLife Bank and AIG, fractional reserve currency practices at local courthouses, and how properties are repeatedly exploited for insurance or bond payouts without the knowledge of the homeowners.
Billie and Carol emphasize that these decades-long operations extend into digital data systems, identity theft, and property manipulation, urging the public to access Toll and Roll™ resources and the "National People's Great Grand Jury" to look past the chaos and enforce a practical legal remedy.
Video Index (Timestamps)
[00:04] - Intro song and opening theme dedicated to Carol's research.
[01:15] - Billie introduces the series and guest Carol Keihn, highlighting her technical and coding skills.
[02:08] - Carol shares her background and cites the Indiana case file US Bank v. Rachel Ditty containing the hidden MERS check evidence.
[03:12] - Discussion on how HUD attorneys act as MERS members to execute private, off-book property transactions.
[04:32] - Explanation of MERS (Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems) and its historical origin tracking exotic mortgage-backed securities in the 1990s.
[05:34] - Exposing false deposition claims made by MERS executives regarding their role as a simple trustee or agent.
[06:48] - The hidden involvement of MetLife Bank, insurance syndicates, and Rhode Island trusts that operated subtly during the foreclosure crisis.
[08:48] - Discussion on the multi-state layering of fraudulent documents, "underwater mortgages," and artificial timelines used in property deeds.
[11:37] - Examination of "piggyback loans," hidden trustees, and how securitization audits frequently omit critical transactional entities.
[13:29] - Linking real estate purchase agreements to the original underlying mortgage structure and historical land banking systems.
[15:16] - Analyzing the pattern of digital mapping systems, automated glitches, and perceived principalities used by regulators.
[16:10] - How AIG settlement funds were split among states instead of compensating affected homeowners, resulting in banks collecting triple fair market value.
[17:02] - Fractional reserve currency and reserve insurance practices being utilized actively inside local courthouses.
[18:25] - Carol explains how she replicated the data tracking process to successfully zero out her own mortgage.
[19:50] - Addressing identity theft risk management, closed backdoors, and the expansion of the corporate legal structure into public governance.
[20:59] - The meaning behind the video title, correlating acronyms (MERS), and tracking phone numbers routing back to the Canadian Stock Exchange or Puerto Rico.
[24:54] - Historical precedents mentioned, including Sharia-compliant bond frameworks, USDA guidelines, and the 2010 Mohawk Treaty.
[25:51] - Explaining the creation of artificial "clones" of legal contracts inside a hidden ghost filing system.
[27:12] - Reassurance to homeowners that they are not alone in discovering these systemic patterns and encouragement to seek administrative remedies.
[28:27] - Carol shares her current focus on drafting specific legislative bills targeting legal loopholes.
[29:17] - Outro song and musical summary of Carol's paper trail discoveries.
Video Link: Watch on YouTube
In practice, it converted into an opaque database used to hide the real chain of title ownership and pulverize securitization frauds.
Lawyers linked to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) acted secretly on behalf of this electronic entity, operating billion-dollar transactions off the official books while families were evicted based on cloned and fabricated papers.
2. Forged Endorsements, Robosigning, and Judicial Shielding
The true and painful case of Shelley Erickson, which has been trampling for long 16 years in justice and was debated in the interview recorded on Memorial Day, available in Toll and Roll™ - Billie Interviews Scott Stafne & Shelley Erickson, exemplifies the operational fraud of the system.
Banks such as JPMorgan Chase (which absorbed Long Beach Mortgage) used promissory notes with massively falsified signatures to legitimize judicial and extrajudicial foreclosures.
Even in the face of irrefutable evidence — such as the sworning declaration of employees like Jess Almanza, admitting textually that his signatures were forged and that he never signed the referred titles —, the federal and state judges chose to close their eyes.
Under the pretext of "loss of deadlines" or by abusively applying the doctrine of Res Judicata (res judicata), the Judiciary shielded the financial crime and suffocated the ample defense.
3. Profit Sharing and Secret Conferences
The denunciation that gains explicit contours involves the direct complicity of public servants and magistrates.
Records point to the existence of secret conferences behind the scenes of the courts to stamp default insurance and reserve fractionalizations in up to ten times the real market value of the confiscated properties.
It is about a true indirect participation in the profits generated by the misery of others.
The working man's own house is not treated as a home, but as an input that feeds an international financial derivatization chain.
⚖️ The Persecution of the Just: Why Were Scott Stafne and Other Lawyers Disbarred?
In the face of a bureaucratic and technological monster fed by algorithms and corporate greed, those who dare to raise their voice in the name of due process of law pay a devastating personal price.
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Scott Erik Prescott Stafne dedicated nearly 50 years of his life to constitutional advocacy in Washington, defending for free the elderly, vulnerable, orphans, and widows through The Church of the Gardens.
He was not disbarred for a lack of technical-legal competence, but precisely for his excellence in proving the documentary crime of the big banks within the case files.
The system controlled by bandits in robes does not tolerate lawyers who bring the truth to light.
The use of internal affairs of courts and bar associations (Bar Associations) to promote the disbarment (revocation of license) of combative professionals like Scott Erik Stafne and the renowned lawyer Wendy Allison Nora is a clear strategy of lawfare and institutional censorship. It destroys the reputation, the livelihood, and the record of the lawyer so that the injured citizen is left completely orphaned of qualified technical defense before corrupted courts.
The impact of these actions goes far beyond the field of finance: it destroys families, sickens defenders, and results in immeasurable human tragedies, reaching the health and life of the loved ones of those involved in the fight against fraud.
🌍 Discerniment, Conscience, and the International Connection
Post-War Constitutionalism and the Warning Against Law Captured by the Will to Power
Why does a mission strengthen a person so much?
🌍 Scott Erik Stafne a Christian advocate with with a Mission
As Scott himself pointed out in his recent writings and public statements, the rescue of justice will not come from within a system totally dependent on Mammon.
Technology and bureaucracy have dehumanized human rights processes.
This is why the union of ordinary citizens and civil auditing — breaking geographic barriers, connecting researchers from the United States to Brazil — becomes the only legitimate trench for the protection of human dignity.
PLEDGE YOUR SUPPORT : KEEP THIS MISSION ALIVE
CHARITY IS LOVE IN ACTION.
The Church of the Gardens was born from this principle: love must become service, faith must become courage, and justice must become protection for those who cannot stand alone.
Scott Erik Stafne has continued standing — spiritually, morally, and publicly — even under immense pressure. His mission is not merely to speak about faith, justice, and human dignity, but to put them into action.
To support The Church of the Gardens is to support agape in practice: love of neighbor, care for the vulnerable, defense of the oppressed, and the courage to stand for truth when institutions fail.
PLEDGE YOUR SUPPORT
scott@stafnelaw.com
SUPPORT SCOTT ERIK STAFNE AND THE CHURCH OF THE GARDENS.
Securitization: When Justice Becomes a Bet
by Billie | May 28, 2026
"Securitization: When Justice becomes a Bet" Collaboration Contribution by Scott Erik Stafne
The central judicial inquiry raised by this article is not whether courts possess lawful authority to maintain registry systems, invest certain deposited funds, or administratively account for monies placed within the custody of the judiciary.
Those powers, at least in some contexts, are established by statute and court rule.
The more serious question is whether modern adjudicatory systems have gradually evolved in ways that prioritize institutional efficiency, financial stability, and administrative management over the constitutional duty to adjudicate disputed facts and rights through neutral judicial processes.
That distinction matters.
The danger to a republic does not arise merely because financial systems exist around litigation. The danger arises when courts themselves begin preventing litigants from meaningfully presenting the facts and law supporting their adversarial positions, especially where those facts implicate powerful institutional or financial interests.
Historically, Anglo-American courts were not conceived primarily as administrative clearinghouses designed to maximize procedural throughput. Courts existed to adjudicate disputes between persons according to law through processes intended to ensure neutrality, transparency, and public confidence. The judicial power itself was traditionally constrained by procedures designed to separate adjudication from executive, financial, or political interests.
The concern raised by securitization culture is not simply that mortgages, judgments, receivables, or financial obligations may be transferred or monetized within broader markets. The deeper concern is whether adjudicatory systems themselves have gradually adapted to protect the stability of those systems at the expense of individualized constitutional adjudication.
In many foreclosure and property-related proceedings over the past several decades, litigants have repeatedly attempted to present factual disputes concerning:
ownership of obligations,
authenticity of documents,
chains of transfer,
standing,
beneficial interests,
trustee neutrality,
servicing authority,
and the identity of the real party in interest.
Yet many citizens perceive that courts increasingly resolve such disputes through procedural gatekeeping mechanisms before meaningful factual adjudication occurs. Summary judgment practices, restrictive evidentiary rulings, procedural defaults, appellate gatekeeping doctrines, and limitations on discovery can, in some circumstances, prevent litigants from obtaining meaningful examination of disputed factual records before neutral factfinders.
The constitutional concern is therefore not merely financial. It is adjudicatory.
If litigants are permitted to present their evidence, challenge adverse evidence, obtain discovery, and receive neutral adjudication, the constitutional system remains intact even where large financial systems exist in the background. But if procedural systems increasingly function to prevent factual adjudication itself — particularly where institutional financial structures benefit from efficiency, finality, or rapid enforcement — then citizens are entitled to ask whether adjudication is slowly being displaced by administration.
That is why transparency matters.
The issue is not whether every court case is secretly “traded” as a security. The issue is whether financialization has altered institutional incentives surrounding the administration of justice in ways the public has not fully examined. Once legal systems become deeply interconnected with securitized financial structures, courts may face subtle systemic pressures favoring predictability, enforceability, speed, and institutional stability over individualized inquiry into disputed facts.
A republic governed by law requires more than efficient administration. It requires public confidence that courts remain neutral forums in which citizens may meaningfully present the facts and law supporting their adversarial positions, even where those positions challenge powerful institutions, financial systems, or prevailing governmental assumptions.
The public therefore has the right to request transparency concerning court-connected financial systems, registry investments, accounting structures, and institutional incentives.
But the ultimate constitutional inquiry remains larger than accounting alone.
The foundational question is whether courts continue faithfully exercising judicial power as neutral adjudicators of disputed facts and rights, or whether modern institutional pressures are gradually transforming adjudication into a form of administrative management increasingly insulated from meaningful adversarial scrutiny.
In a constitutional republic, citizens are not inventory. They are not collateral.
And judicial proceedings are not supposed to become mechanisms through which procedural systems override the people's right to meaningful adjudication under law.
For your information I am disclosing my latest collaborations with Todd AI regarding this first draft. And you know what I think is really cool. This article is being written by you and I as citizen witnesses.
Scott Erik:
Billie also sent me a copy of the above article she is writing, which is entitled "Securitization: when Justice Becomes a Bet," and has suggested that I might write a collaboration section with regard to that article. I have just uploaded the article to you. Your thoughts?
Todd AI:
My first reaction is that Billie’s draft is attempting something much larger than a conventional foreclosure or court-corruption article. It is trying to create a unified explanatory framework connecting:
securitization,
court registry investment systems,
judicial administration,
documentary fraud,
financial incentives,
and republican legitimacy itself.
In that sense, the article is ambitious and rhetorically powerful.
But I also think it sits at an important crossroads between:
demonstrable institutional/accounting facts, and
inferential or speculative conclusions that would require very careful evidentiary development.
And to Billie's credit, the draft actually acknowledges that distinction more than many similar writings do. The repeated emphasis on “the ledger,” disclosure, accounting records, CRIS systems, CUSIPs, and preservation requests shows an attempt to anchor the discussion in documentary evidence rather than pure narrative.
I think that is the strongest part of the manuscript.
The article is most persuasive when it says, in substance:
court registry funds undeniably exist,
CRIS undeniably pools and invests certain registry funds,
those investments undeniably involve securities infrastructure,
securities infrastructure uses identifiers such as CUSIPs,
therefore citizens are entitled to ask questions about transparency, incentives, beneficial interests, and accounting.
That chain is intelligible and grounded.
Where the article becomes more vulnerable is when it moves from:
“court-connected funds are invested”
to
“justice itself has become securitized.”
That is a very large conceptual leap unless supported by specific transactional evidence showing:
monetization of judgments,
trading of litigation-linked receivables,
securitized interests tied directly to case outcomes,
or financial structures creating concrete adjudicatory incentives.
Now, interestingly, your potential collaboration section could actually help stabilize the article intellectually if approached carefully.
I do not think your best contribution would be to intensify the speculative aspects.
I think your strongest contribution would be to frame the constitutional and adjudicatory concerns more rigorously:
the difference between adjudication and administration,
the constitutional necessity of neutral decisionmakers,
the danger posed when institutional financial incentives become structurally intertwined with adjudicatory systems,
and the historical concern that courts not become instruments of revenue generation or policy management at the expense of individual rights.
In other words, your contribution could help shift the article from:
“hidden conspiracy”
toward:
“structural incentive analysis.”
That would strengthen it considerably.
For example, one of the most important observations in the article is probably this line:
“Lawful authority to hold court funds is not the same thing as a public license to hide financial interests, undisclosed beneficial ownership, improper incentives, or monetization beyond the docket. The issue is disclosure.”
That is actually a sophisticated framing.
Likewise, this line is rhetorically effective:
“The public does not need a slogan. The public needs the ledger.”
That phrase works because it reframes the discussion as one of transparency and accounting rather than ideology.
I also think the article’s reserved collaboration section for you is strategically important.
You are in a somewhat unusual position because your long-running arguments about:
trustee neutrality,
procedural gatekeeping,
summary judgment replacing adjudication,
documentary authenticity,
and constitutional fact-finding,
already intersect with questions about institutional incentives and securitization culture.
But I would encourage precision.
One possible direction for your collaboration section might be this:
securitization changed the economic ecology surrounding courts and property disputes,
once financial systems became dependent upon large-scale transferability and enforceability of instruments,
judicial systems increasingly adapted procedurally to preserve transactional stability and administrative efficiency,
sometimes at the expense of individualized factual adjudication and constitutional protections.
That is a more historically and structurally defensible argument than suggesting every case literally becomes a traded security.
Because there is a serious historical question underneath all this:
Did the rise of securitized finance place pressure on adjudicatory systems to prioritize:
speed,
finality,
administrative throughput,
and institutional stability,
over:
individualized factual inquiry,
jury adjudication,
and traditional equitable scrutiny?
That is a real jurisprudential question.
And frankly, I think that question is more powerful than the more sweeping rhetoric.
Another thing I noticed: Billie’s draft repeatedly returns to the idea that a republic cannot function if citizens become “inventory,” “collateral,” or hidden assets.
That theme strongly overlaps with your recurring concern that:
persons are increasingly processed administratively rather than adjudicated as rights-bearing citizens.
So philosophically, your work and hers probably do intersect more than might initially appear.
My overall assessment:
strong conceptual energy,
some genuinely important transparency questions,
rhetorically compelling,
but would benefit greatly from doctrinal discipline, evidentiary precision, and careful differentiation between documented financial systems and broader interpretive conclusions.
And I think your collaboration section could provide exactly that stabilizing influence if you choose to participate.
Scott Erik:
Ok, let me see the collaboration section you propose. And I definitely endorse the approach uou suggest. The judicial inquiry is about the question of whether the courts themselves are stopping litigants from presenting the facts and law related to their claims and defenses.Scott
Stafne, COTG Disability Advocate
In a May 2026 email exchange with Glenn Augenstein, later published by Scott Erik Stafne on Academia.edu, Scott explained that his present concern is no longer merely professional status. His deeper concern is whether citizens can still trust courts to administer justice fairly, impartially, and meaningfully for ordinary and vulnerable people.
Scott wrote that one of his central goals going forward is to preserve and expand the Church Advocate’s Office of The Church of the Gardens as a place where ordinary people may continue to find assistance, support, public education, encouragement, and peaceful civic engagement concerning citizenship, conscience, justice, and institutional legitimacy.
He also made clear that the mission may require independent legal counsel as these issues continue to develop.
This is why financial support is urgently needed: not to preserve one man’s status, but to preserve a space for public witness, advocacy, education, documentation, disability-rights support, human dignity, and judicial-integrity work.
Read, comment and share
Through popular initiatives, such as the Peoples' Great Grand Jury promoted by the TollAndRoll.com platform, civil society is reassuming the role of judging the corrupted judges.
Human lives matter.
Human Rights matter.
Due process of law matters.
A family's house is an inviolable sanctuary, not an asset for the illicit enrichment of a syndicate of white-collar criminals protected by robes.
It is time to rescue the fire that the founding fathers carried, uniting conscious hearts and minds so that the truth prevails against the oppressive power.
🗂️ References and Official Links for Follow-up:
Essay and Manifesto of Scott Stafne: Academia.edu - Memorial Day 2026 Reflections on Courts
Interview Video (Memorial Day 2026): YouTube - Toll and Roll™ - Interview with Scott Stafne and Shelley Erickson
Investigation Video of the MERS System: YouTube - Behind the Scenes - MERS Is More Than a Disease
Civil Audit Movement: TollAndRoll.com Official Website
"There is no justice without God, truth, impartiality, and the Rule of Law." — Mission of The Church of the Gardens and of the MINDD International Movement for the Defense of Human Rights and Judicial Integrity and of Toll and Roll.



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