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The Bulletproof Guide to Filing a UCC-1 to Secure Your Estate and Reclaim Control

Elite Guide to UCC-1 Filing: How to Perfectly Structure Your Estate Claim

Author: Daniel-Wayne; of the Gard Family

Posted On: 05/19/2025

In today’s world of unrevealed contractual assumptions and hidden commercial bondage, one of the most powerful moves a living man or woman can make is filing a proper UCC-1 Financing Statement. This tool allows you to publicly claim control over the all-caps NAME (legal fiction) and all property tied to it, including your estate. Below is a complete walkthrough of how and why this works — with clarity, precision, and absolute lawful authority.

Why File a UCC-1?

Under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), a UCC-1 Financing Statement gives public notice of a secured party’s interest in the collateral of a debtor. In estate reclaiming processes, this secures your interest in the all-caps NAME, which represents your corporate legal fiction — the ESTATE. Filing properly affirms your superior lien and control over that entity, preempting banks, courts, and agencies from unlawful presumption.

Key Parties in a UCC-1 Filing

  • Debtor: This is the corporate ALL-CAPS NAME (e.g., DANIEL WAYNE GARD). This is the artificial person, legal fiction, or transmitting utility created via the birth certificate.
  • Secured Party Creditor (SPC): This is the living man or woman reclaiming the estate (e.g., Daniel-Wayne; of the Gard Family). This party is the one securing their interest over the Debtor.
  • Filer: Often the same as the SPC. The person responsible for recording the filing into public record.

How to Fill Out the UCC-1 Form

1. Debtor Information (Line 1)

Enter the full legal fiction name in ALL CAPS (e.g., DANIEL WAYNE GARD).
Use the address associated with government records (e.g., driver’s license or bank).

2. Secured Party (Line 3)

Enter your living name in proper case, separating given and family names with a semicolon (e.g., Daniel-Wayne; of the Gard Family).
Use your private address or mailing location; many use “c/o” and a non-domestic ZIP.

3. Collateral Description (Line 4)

This is where you define your lien claim. Example:

“All property, titles, assets, proceeds, rights, interests, and fixtures, including but not limited to the legal entity/Ens legis known as DANIEL WAYNE GARD, its derivatives, and associated trust property and estates, now existing or hereafter arising. This includes CUSIP numbers, bonded instruments, court-created securities, and any property derived therefrom. UCC lien in the amount of $100,000,000,000.00.” (because of cusips/bonds made in my name since birth, I did mine for $100 T).

4. Additional Pages

You may attach an Addendum (UCC-1 Addendum Form or extra page) to list:

  • Your SPC Declaration
  • Executor’s Title Claim
  • Trust association or lien schedule

Why NOT Use Your Trust as Debtor

Using a Trust as the Debtor confuses roles. The trust is already one layer removed from the estate fiction. The correct Debtor is the NAME created by the state (the all-caps estate/legal fiction). This maintains lawful alignment and keeps the trust in its rightful role as beneficiary or holding entity — not a debtor.

Where to File

  • State UCC Filing Office – File with your Secretary of State (online or mail-in).
  • County Recorder – For additional public notice.
  • Your Website – If this is your venue of record, publish it as proof of control.

After Filing

Once your UCC-1 is recorded, attach your filings to:

  • Your trust documents
  • Executor Letters
  • Notice of Private Trust Control
  • Your Venue or Trust Website

Final Notes

Your UCC-1 is your public armor. It stands as your first line of protection against unauthorized claims, unauthorized use of your estate, and deceptive court practices. Always keep certified copies and keep your trust properly structured behind the scenes.

Standing in your full capacity requires clarity, confidence, and lawful structure. This is the foundation.

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