Post
Topic
Board Exchanges
Re: bitfloor issues?
by
wtfvanity
on 31/05/2013, 17:33:14 UTC
There are a lot of attorney trust accounts that access million dollar checks all the time. If you have been on either side of getting money into or out of an attorney, you might know that.

Again, if you think it is trivial, make it happen, take a 1% fee for your work.

How are you involved in this process and capable of offering a 1% fee? If I've somehow missed you becoming a trustee of the entire Bitfloor process, PM me with your number and I'll call you. I've talked to a couple of attorneys since we posted now, and they see no reason that accepting a check from a closed account, and creating a settlement agreement with all of the customers, that the bank would have any problems letting the check be deposited into their trust account.

Stop spreading your FUD and making it sound like he has a worthless million dollar check. Again, while the kid behind the whole thing is taking a permanent vacation.

So you have found a specific bank officer who has committed to accepting this check and opening an account that BitFloor can use to disburse the funds?  Horray.  Please let us know where/who.  As soon as I talk to them and confirm that you are being honest, I'll personally fly to California grab Roman by the collar and drag him to the bank so I can get my money (and all of you can too).

It's not a bank just for Roman. It's an attorney's trust account. The attorney would then be able to make payments on behalf of Bitfloor. Has no one here every been involved with a settlement that has gone through an attorney? Even the big class action suits go like that. Some sleazy attorney sues facebook for showing your personal photos to the world. Every person that signs up for the lawsuit gets $12.50 after the attorney's cut. Facebook puts x amount of dollars into the attorney's trust account, and attorney sends out the settlement. I'm breaking it down for you a little bit if you've never heard of one before. You'll have to agree to accept xx% of what you are owed, and you'll get a check in a few months. Of course this isn't a class action, but maybe that will help you understand an attorney's trust account that is already opened with a bank.

For crying out loud, a casino in Las Vegas will pretty much let you deposit it into an offshore account no questions asked.