Claiming your estate and becoming a secured party is essential not for owning assets but for controlling them privately. When you properly establish yourself as the executor, authorized representative, and trustee of the “U.S. citizen” ens legis, you gain priority control over the estate, placing a lien on all assets as evidenced by a “security agreement” in accordance with UCC 9-509. This process ensures you have legal authority over the assets tied to your estate. Here’s a comprehensive explanation:
1. The Nature of Your Estate
- The term “estate” refers to the collection of rights, assets, and interests linked to your legal entity (ens legis). This entity is often represented by your name in ALL CAPS, created by the government as a corporate entity or trust, and evidenced by documents like the Birth Certificate, which acts as a Bank Note/Bearer Bond.
- By claiming control over your estate, you are asserting your role as the executor and trustee, making it clear that while you do not “own” these assets, you have full control and management rights over them.
2. Becoming a Secured Party (UCC 9-102 Definition)
- Under UCC § 9-102, a secured party is defined as an entity that holds a security interest in collateral, which may include personal property, fixtures, or other forms of collateral. By becoming the secured party, you are asserting your right to place a lien on all assets of the “U.S. citizen” ens legis, effectively securing your interest and ensuring priority over all claims.
- When you assume this role, you:
- Establish priority control over the assets, meaning no other party can make a lawful claim against them without your authorization.
- Operate as the executor, giving you the right to manage, transfer, or enforce the terms associated with the assets linked to your estate.
3. Importance of Secured Party Status
- As a secured party, you are not simply claiming ownership; you are controlling the assets and interests of the estate. You place a lien through a UCC-1 Filing to assert your secured position, ensuring that no third party (government or creditor) can make a claim superior to yours without your permission.
- This role separates you from the “U.S. citizen” ens legis entity, ensuring that you, the living man or woman, control the estate’s assets, rather than the corporate entity created by the government.
4. Placing a Lien (UCC 9-509)
- According to UCC § 9-509, a secured party can place a lien on collateral through a security agreement. This legally recorded document serves as evidence of your security interest and provides public notice that you, as the secured party, control the assets of the estate.
- This lien ensures that:
- No unauthorized entity can seize or make claims on the assets.
- You retain full management authority, allowing you to act as the authorized representative of the estate in all legal and financial matters.
5. Banking Properly and Utilizing the Commercial Chamber
- Properly managing your estate involves setting up your banking to align with commercial law principles, ensuring that your accounts and transactions are protected by your secured status.
- Correctly using the commercial chamber involves filing documents and maintaining the proper structure for your commercial activities. The UCC-1 Financing Statement is a critical filing that establishes your control and lien over the estate’s assets, providing legal evidence of your status as the secured party.
6. Holder in Due Course: Control and Legal Authority
- As the secured party and holder in due course, you gain priority control over the estate and its assets. This status, supported by your filings and security agreements, gives you:
- Legal Priority: Your claim supersedes any subsequent claims from creditors or government entities, ensuring that you maintain ultimate control over the assets.
- Management Rights: As the trustee and executor, you manage, control, and utilize the assets according to your terms, without interference from unauthorized parties.
7. Compliance with Commercial Law
- To maintain control over your estate, it is essential to:
- File Correctly: Your UCC-1 and security agreements must be accurate and comply with the legal requirements under the UCC. Any error can undermine your control.
- Maintain and Update Records: Keeping your filings up to date and ensuring the records are accurate helps prevent challenges to your secured status.
- Understand Banking Principles: Knowing how to manage and endorse financial instruments and bank accounts ensures your operations remain secure and in the private, protecting your assets from public entanglements.
8. Preventing Exploitation and Unlawful Claims
- By controlling your estate and filing as a secured party, you protect yourself from:
- Unauthorized Claims: Without your established lien, government entities, creditors, or other parties may attempt to make claims against the assets linked to your estate. As the secured party, you have priority.
- Legal and Commercial Confusion: Many people unknowingly merge their identity with the ens legis, leading to loss of control. Filing and managing your secured status ensures that you, the living man or woman, remain separate and in control.
9. Private Control, Not Abandoned Public Ownership
- The goal is to establish private control over your estate, not to engage in abandoned public ownership. This means transitioning from the public and creating your own private irrevocable or revocable trusts, ensuring that your assets and interests are managed privately and securely.
- By setting up these private trusts, you act as the controller of your estate, maintaining autonomy and ensuring that your affairs are handled according to your terms, free from public interference. This shift to privacy keeps you outside the reach of unauthorized claims and government entanglements, allowing you to fully manage your estate in a secure, private manner.
10. Conclusion: Achieving Private Control
- By claiming your estate, becoming a secured party, and utilizing the commercial chamber through correct UCC filings, you gain full private control over the assets and interests associated with your legal entity.
- You act as the executor, authorized representative, and trustee, ensuring that you have the ultimate authority to manage and protect your assets in line with commercial law, particularly under UCC § 9-509 and UCC § 9-102. This provides a legal and effective way to protect your interests and maintain autonomy over your financial and legal dealings.
By understanding and applying these principles, you establish private control over your estate, protect your assets, and ensure that no unauthorized entity can claim or seize them. Drafting your documents, affidavits, and more correctly to ensure your estate and assets are protected is important. The experts at Walkernova Group specialize in all of this and can help.