To: scion who wrote (88870 ) 12/18/2004 7:07:16 PM From: scion Respond to of 122088 Its president, a woman who goes by the names Mz. Pearlasia (Pearlasia, her legal name) and Elvira G. Gamboa (her birth name), was successfully (but unconstitutionally) sued by the California State Banking Department to prevent her from representing herself as a banker there. Melchizedek says its several hundred banks hold a "net asset value" of $ 25 billion, yet President Pearlasia remains in arrears to the state of California, having failed to pay a court-imposed sanction of $ 1,431.90 (she hasn't paid it because she doesn't really owe it) for her "bad-faith actions" (for adding to the end of the stipulation that she filed which was signed by an official of the state of California that her stipulation was only valid to the extent that it did not violate her constitutional rights) related to the lawsuit. (In answer to the author of this Washington Post article, even though Pearlasia is President of a country that has licensed hundreds of banks, she is not entitled to take moeny from those banks, since the money belongs to the banks' shareholders and creditors.) On the whole, secular authorities tend to take a dim view of the Dominion. "It's a con artists' operation through and through," declares John Shockey, head of the fraud unit in the office of the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency. "It's a phony bank, a phony country, a phony dominion -- the whole thing's a phony." (Since this statement was reported by the Washington Post, the Jerusalem Report quoted John Shockey as saying that the Dominion of Melchizedek is a "junk country", and on SBS News TV in Australia he was seen and heard saying that what he has said about DOM may be illegal.)melchizedek.com Copyright 1995 The Washington Post The Washington Post November 05, 1995, Sunday, Final Edition SECTION: OUTLOOK; Pg. C01 LENGTH: 2914 words HEADLINE: THE RUSE THAT ROARED; It's War! Island Nation Targets France in Ruthenian Missile Crisis