
11 August 2017 | 9 replies
Hello, my name is Dylan I'm an Army combat veteran and a police veteran.

17 April 2017 | 25 replies
all these are great postsIll tell you a little story that happened to one of my buddieshe did the mail thinglow and behold someone got a letter that was an attorney that worked for a civil rites groupthe attorney turned around and found every fraudulent claim in the letter and went after buddyafter tying him up in court over a frivolous claim, he lost his shirt and also ended up with a record for fraudfair warning if you are going to send out bulk letters claiming something, you better have an attorney look over what you are claiming"the risks fools take to make profits"- twainenjoy

18 April 2017 | 65 replies
You have fraudulently appraised properties worth a lot less.

26 April 2017 | 9 replies
Net is rife with horror stories about these people and their practices of preying on customers with out and out fraudulent tactics.

16 June 2017 | 30 replies
To be clear, I'm not trying to be fraudulent!
16 June 2017 | 14 replies
The complainant will likely have one, often times free of charge courtesy of a state or federal grant established to combat discrimination.
26 May 2017 | 1 reply
A friend just wired $52,000 to a fraudulent account.

7 June 2017 | 9 replies
We have set aside combat, hostile fire, family separation pay, and the tax free from being in a combat zone, reenlistment bonuses, and got super intense about saving up for down-payments on our rental properties.

1 June 2017 | 7 replies
I think, and this is just a guess, that if the property is sold for significantly less than what it appraised for (because of the occupancy and the outstanding taxes) the IRS will assume that the appraisal was fraudulent, therefore withdrawing the tax deduction.

3 July 2017 | 10 replies
I saw the story on Channel 9 and I think the OK county sheriffs dept. said all the notices were fraudulent that they've seen.