I was just thinking about these fake deeds. Do the properties described even exist? That seems like a fertile area for digging. Of course it is fairly easy to find the owners of a particular address, or the properties one person owns, through the county assessor records. BUT---many properties are owned by trusts and then you have to dig into the trustees. Also, two or three years ago the assessor changed the way the search works and added fees. The Assessor's office would have to be in on this too, I would think.
This DB can be searched by address, owner name, or parcel number. It has had its glitches in the past, where a record could be found by one means but not another. Or maybe the owner couldn't be found at all, or tax records would be incomplete.
I used to look up property records all the time, then suddenly it got hard, but I don't remember exactly when. That seems important. It seems like 2016 was when we were seriously invaded, pre-Q.
I can't remember enough to even look up on this board for past posts, but remember there were hundreds of locations, complete with USPS street numbers, but a Goo Earth search led to empty lots in the middle of nowhere? I think the idea back then was this might be connected to human trafficking in some way but nothing came of it. Wonder if these are the shell properties that were being used to launder cartel money.
I think the properties can't even be that real. If they exist, they have a parcel number, recorded by the Assessor's office, and they are part of the tax data base. Do they check to see if it is a legitimate parcel number? They could, every bit of Arizona was surveyed and registered long ago, and if big chunks are broken into subdivisions, each lot and road and curb is not only described but plotted on a drawing down to a tenth of an inch. I know that from working in 1969 wth a civil engineering company that was doing this chore during a big subdivision boom. So how do the bogus deeds deal with the parcel numbers?.
You know the government is going to pay attention to its revenue. Every year the Assessor mails out a little card of property valuation used to determine taxes on the property so people can argue about it--deadline is in March. Later, about August, they mail out the tax bill. If the property doesn't exist and is escaping this process, it could go unknown until the property was sold. Then the deceit might be uncovered. Seems like the deeds/property needs to be "sold" for the bribee to actually collect something. How is it happening?
I was just thinking about these fake deeds. Do the properties described even exist? That seems like a fertile area for digging. Of course it is fairly easy to find the owners of a particular address, or the properties one person owns, through the county assessor records. BUT---many properties are owned by trusts and then you have to dig into the trustees. Also, two or three years ago the assessor changed the way the search works and added fees. The Assessor's office would have to be in on this too, I would think.
I am sure a lot of the assessor's officers are all in on this.
If they added Fees, yes they are most definitely in on it....
It's a small fee but it means you can't ask anonymously anymore.
In most Counties of a smaller size, they let you do the searching IF you already know how to use the books....
And honestly, it's super easy, like using a Reference guide to find a specific item in an extensive set of Encyclopedias....
And it's FREE....
This DB can be searched by address, owner name, or parcel number. It has had its glitches in the past, where a record could be found by one means but not another. Or maybe the owner couldn't be found at all, or tax records would be incomplete.
I used to look up property records all the time, then suddenly it got hard, but I don't remember exactly when. That seems important. It seems like 2016 was when we were seriously invaded, pre-Q.
I can't remember enough to even look up on this board for past posts, but remember there were hundreds of locations, complete with USPS street numbers, but a Goo Earth search led to empty lots in the middle of nowhere? I think the idea back then was this might be connected to human trafficking in some way but nothing came of it. Wonder if these are the shell properties that were being used to launder cartel money.
I think the properties can't even be that real. If they exist, they have a parcel number, recorded by the Assessor's office, and they are part of the tax data base. Do they check to see if it is a legitimate parcel number? They could, every bit of Arizona was surveyed and registered long ago, and if big chunks are broken into subdivisions, each lot and road and curb is not only described but plotted on a drawing down to a tenth of an inch. I know that from working in 1969 wth a civil engineering company that was doing this chore during a big subdivision boom. So how do the bogus deeds deal with the parcel numbers?.
You know the government is going to pay attention to its revenue. Every year the Assessor mails out a little card of property valuation used to determine taxes on the property so people can argue about it--deadline is in March. Later, about August, they mail out the tax bill. If the property doesn't exist and is escaping this process, it could go unknown until the property was sold. Then the deceit might be uncovered. Seems like the deeds/property needs to be "sold" for the bribee to actually collect something. How is it happening?