Posted on 01/21/2022 1:28:57 PM PST by true believer forever
Surety Bonds are required for every elected and appointed official throughout the United States - including State School Boards, Districts, Mayors, Sheriffs, and County Officials.
A mother with a 16-year-old boy who has autism begged the schools to let her son have an exemption. They refused. When forced to wear the masks he became distraught and he harmed himself so badly that he had to be hospitalized in a mental institution. The mother obtained the bond for the superintendent of her school district. The superintendent was carrying a $4 million liability per bond claim so the mother served the superintendent with a letter of intent to file a claim against her bond if she didn’t pull back the mask mandates, admit she was wrong, and resign within five days. The superintendent did nothing. After day 6, the mother filed the claim against her at the bond company.
The very next day, lawyers who represent the district explained that they have to get rid of the masks, and all state and federal funding is blocked.
"The path to save the nation is very simple - it is going to go through the schoolboards." ~ Steve Bannon, May 19, 2021.
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Surety Bonds is a hero!
I hope she & little Bonds score lots of free money!
Surety Bond Definition Explained
A surety bond is defined as a three-party agreement that legally binds together a principal who needs the bond, an obligee who requires the bond and a surety company that sells the bond. The bond guarantees the principal will act in accordance with certain laws. If the principal fails to perform in this manner, the bond will cover resulting damages or losses.
https://www.suretybonds.com/surety-bond-definition.html
Some lawyers’ phones need to start ringing in Loudon County, VA and other places.
And the insurance companies shall lead them....
bookmark
The link isn’t to anything like what you posted, which is interesting.
Round Rock, Texas too
https://bondsforthewin.com/2022/01/19/elementor-2353/
See my 9 and 10 replies
"A mother named Violet with a 16-year-old boy who has autism begged the schools to let her son have an exemption.They refused. When forced to wear the masks he became distraught and he harmed himself so badly that he had to be hospitalized in a mental institution.
Violet obtained the bond for the superintendent of her school district. Turns out – The superintendent was carrying a $4 million liability per bond claim!!
So next Violet served the superintendent with a letter of intent to file a claim against her bond if she didn’t pull back the mask mandates, admit she was wrong, and resign within five days. The superintendent did nothing.
After day 6 Violet filed the claim against her at the bond company.
The very next day we have a recording from the lawyers who represent the district explaining that they have to get rid of the masks, all state and federal funding is BLOCKED, and the superintendent is on her own with regard to the $4 million claim!!!
They also put out a request for parent volunteers to substitute for teachers because their funding is CEASED due to an OPEN claim against them."
Did you watch the video?
Violet obtained the bond for the superintendent of her school district. Turns out – The superintendent was carrying a $4 million liability per bond claim!!
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No way an insurance company is writing a bond just like that and then having the person who obtained the bond make a claim. It would amount to insurance fraud.
The only way to obtain payment from an insurance company like that is with a judgement from a court.
Sorry, but this story is not believable.
She obtained the superintendent’s bond insurer info and then served her. The video is interesting
Checkmate
There are parts missing that are important.
I’ve done similar strategic moves in the past. However, I had the experience as a CPA doing compliance audits on Federal Grants so I knew their weak points.
That is why I posted my own personal disclaimer about being disappointed before, but this looked interesting and maybe some lawyer types could weigh in on it.
No way an insurance company is writing a bond just like that and then having the person who obtained the bond make a claim. It would amount to insurance fraud.
The bond was owned by the school district and the superintendent. She filed a claim against them, and the district's insurance carrier then got involved. Or at least that is how I am understanding it.
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