Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
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Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend


 

Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member
It is important you check to make sure the snow is soft and has depth before taking such leaps. The way his face smacked the snow is quite the reminder.

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Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend






 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend



 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend




 

bbuzzard

Skeptic
BGOL Investor

Casca

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
iu



Kansas cult leaders convicted of making children work 16-hour days without pay​

Prosecutors say the group beat children as young as eight years old and imposed strict rules on what they did and ate



The defendants were either high-ranking members of the organization formerly known as the United Nation of Islam and the Value Creators, or were wives of the late founder, Royall Jenkins, the US Department of Justice said on Monday in announcing the verdict.

After a 26-day trial, jurors convicted all six defendants of conspiracy to commit forced labor. One of the six, Kaaba Majeed, 50, was also convicted of five counts of forced labor.

 

RoomService

Dinner is now being served.
BGOL Investor

Deed to $4M North Carolina home transferred to total stranger without owner’s knowledge — here's what happened​

Wed, September 18, 2024 at 5:01 AM PDT

Deed to $4M North Carolina home transferred to total stranger without owner’s knowledge — here's what happened



Deed to $4M North Carolina home transferred to total stranger without owner’s knowledge — here's what happened


One homeowner has recently discovered he no longer owns his 8,300-square-foot home — at least on paper.
Craig Adams, a local dentist in Raleigh, North Carolina, said the deed to his $4 million property no longer included his name.

" I found out that [a Dawn Mangum] had filed a false warranty claim deed against this house and basically tried to steal (it)," Adams told ABC11 Eyewitness News, adding, "we're so vulnerable."
Paperwork filed with the Wake County Register of Deeds Office lists Adams as a debtor and includes Mangum, a woman he's never met, on the deed. It was allegedly approved and officially recorded without any verifications.
Adams and his wife discovered the issue after Mangum contacted their homeowners association (HOA) to gain access to the private gated community.

Adams proved to the Register of Deeds that he owned the home, using mortgage and tax records, and stated that Mangum had no stake in it; however, the deed remains in her name.
According to emails Adams received from the Wake County Register of Deeds and the County Attorney, they can’t remove a document once it’s been recorded, as per North Carolina law.

"They say there's absolutely nothing they can do to reverse this,” Adams told the news outlet. “Once it's filed their only solution is that I have to go hire a private attorney, and the first quote I got was about $8,000 to file a civil suit against this woman."


How did this happen?

According to North Carolina law, county Registers of Deeds aren’t required to verify the legitimacy of paperwork they receive.
In this instance, Mangum, who claims it was all a misunderstanding, has since been charged with obtaining property under false pretense. But how did this happen in the first place?
According to Mangum, in an interview with ABC11, she believed Adams’ property was in foreclosure when she started to make moves to get the deed to the home into her trust. She said that, once she learned the property was not in foreclosure, she stopped all paperwork. She also claimed that she wants to amend the paperwork to return the property to Adams.
However, she'd filed paperwork with the Wake County Register of Deeds, listing herself as the owner through a fraudulent trust. No legal checks are required to verify the legitimacy of the deed transfer, allowing it to be recorded without Adams' knowledge.

The Wake County Register of Deeds released a statement about the case, which stated in part:
"The Register of Deeds is not required to verify the legal validity of a deed when it is presented for registration, nor are they required to verify the credentials or legal standing of the notary or drafter of the document (G.S. 47-14). With more than 500 documents processed through the Wake County Register of Deeds office daily, it would be impossible to verify the legitimacy of each document."

Even if Mangum is convicted, Adams will still need to go through civil courts in order to correct the record.
In the meantime, he hopes his frustrating ordeal prompts changes in the laws that allowed Mangum to change the deed in the first place.

How to protect yourself from deed fraud
There are steps homeowners can take to protect themselves from deed fraud. Check if your county offers a deed or title fraud alert service to monitor changes to deeds in your name.

While that wouldn't have protected Adams in this instance, since his name wasn't on the new deed, it can help prevent other types of deed fraud.
Title insurance, which many homeowners get once they purchase a home, also offers protection from title defects, including fraud. It can come in handy with such common title issues as: back taxes, filing errors, liens, title forgeries, easements, and conflicting wills.

Finally, if you suspect deed fraud on your property, contact authorities immediately and seek legal counsel.
Acting quickly is important, because once the deed is filed, in many cases it requires a court order to reverse.


 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Deed to $4M North Carolina home transferred to total stranger without owner’s knowledge — here's what happened​

Wed, September 18, 2024 at 5:01 AM PDT

Deed to $4M North Carolina home transferred to total stranger without owner’s knowledge — here's what happened's what happened



Deed to $4M North Carolina home transferred to total stranger without owner’s knowledge — here's what happened


One homeowner has recently discovered he no longer owns his 8,300-square-foot home — at least on paper.
Craig Adams, a local dentist in Raleigh, North Carolina, said the deed to his $4 million property no longer included his name.

" I found out that [a Dawn Mangum] had filed a false warranty claim deed against this house and basically tried to steal (it)," Adams told ABC11 Eyewitness News, adding, "we're so vulnerable."
Paperwork filed with the Wake County Register of Deeds Office lists Adams as a debtor and includes Mangum, a woman he's never met, on the deed. It was allegedly approved and officially recorded without any verifications.
Adams and his wife discovered the issue after Mangum contacted their homeowners association (HOA) to gain access to the private gated community.

Adams proved to the Register of Deeds that he owned the home, using mortgage and tax records, and stated that Mangum had no stake in it; however, the deed remains in her name.
According to emails Adams received from the Wake County Register of Deeds and the County Attorney, they can’t remove a document once it’s been recorded, as per North Carolina law.

"They say there's absolutely nothing they can do to reverse this,” Adams told the news outlet. “Once it's filed their only solution is that I have to go hire a private attorney, and the first quote I got was about $8,000 to file a civil suit against this woman."


How did this happen?

According to North Carolina law, county Registers of Deeds aren’t required to verify the legitimacy of paperwork they receive.
In this instance, Mangum, who claims it was all a misunderstanding, has since been charged with obtaining property under false pretense. But how did this happen in the first place?
According to Mangum, in an interview with ABC11, she believed Adams’ property was in foreclosure when she started to make moves to get the deed to the home into her trust. She said that, once she learned the property was not in foreclosure, she stopped all paperwork. She also claimed that she wants to amend the paperwork to return the property to Adams.
However, she'd filed paperwork with the Wake County Register of Deeds, listing herself as the owner through a fraudulent trust. No legal checks are required to verify the legitimacy of the deed transfer, allowing it to be recorded without Adams' knowledge.

The Wake County Register of Deeds released a statement about the case, which stated in part:
"The Register of Deeds is not required to verify the legal validity of a deed when it is presented for registration, nor are they required to verify the credentials or legal standing of the notary or drafter of the document (G.S. 47-14). With more than 500 documents processed through the Wake County Register of Deeds office daily, it would be impossible to verify the legitimacy of each document."

Even if Mangum is convicted, Adams will still need to go through civil courts in order to correct the record.
In the meantime, he hopes his frustrating ordeal prompts changes in the laws that allowed Mangum to change the deed in the first place.

How to protect yourself from deed fraud
There are steps homeowners can take to protect themselves from deed fraud. Check if your county offers a deed or title fraud alert service to monitor changes to deeds in your name.

While that wouldn't have protected Adams in this instance, since his name wasn't on the new deed, it can help prevent other types of deed fraud.
Title insurance, which many homeowners get once they purchase a home, also offers protection from title defects, including fraud. It can come in handy with such common title issues as: back taxes, filing errors, liens, title forgeries, easements, and conflicting wills.

Finally, if you suspect deed fraud on your property, contact authorities immediately and seek legal counsel.
Acting quickly is important, because once the deed is filed, in many cases it requires a court order to reverse.


 

sahusahir

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

I think this is click bait, the guy in the wheelchair is not Vincent Simmons. The twins he was accused of raping, never apologized. May they burn in hell when they get their just reward.

This Instagram post is mixing up two different cases in order to get likes & internet infamy. May they also burn in hell.


Those hoes going to the grave with the truth:


The truth. They are covering up incestuous pedo relationship with older cousin, whose father was sheriff & uncle was county assessors. To protect family name they blame a black man:


The Internet a motherfucka with people trying to capitalize off half truths & lies. At times a waste of time & sentiment.

This mf here in Ghana stirring shit up try to benefit off Vincent Simmons' tribulations:

Fixon Dennis
@fixondennis

MARKETING/RETAIL MANAGER
@ghana_tcl
|| MC || ACTIVATIONAL SPEAKER || TRAINER || OPTIMIST || ACTOR || CONTENT CREATOR.
Accra, Ghanafixondennis.comBorn March 14Joined October 2015
 
Last edited:

Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member
I think this is click bait, the guy in the wheel is not Vincent Simmons. The twins he was accused of raping, never apologized. May they burn in hell when they get their just reward.

This Instagram post is mixing up two different cases in order to get likes & internet infamy. May they also burn in hell.


Those hoes going to the grave with the truth:


The truth. They are covering up incestuous pedo relationship with older cousin, whose father was sheriff & uncle was county assessors. To protect family name they blame a black man:


The Internet a motherfucka with people trying to capitalize off half truths & lies. At times a waste of time & sentiment.

This mf here in Ghana stirring shit up try to benefit off Vincent Simmons' tribulations:

Fixon Dennis
@fixondennis

MARKETING/RETAIL MANAGER
@ghana_tcl
|| MC || ACTIVATIONAL SPEAKER || TRAINER || OPTIMIST || ACTOR || CONTENT CREATOR.
Accra, Ghanafixondennis.comBorn March 14Joined October 2015

Thank you.
 
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