The man: Does every transaction in an escrow have to go through me? No, I don't know anything like that.
The wife's counsel: Isn't that true?
The man: Sounds delusional to me.
The wife's counsel: Okay.
The man: Does she have to go through me?
The wife's counsel: Now,
The man: No, I don't agree with this version.
The wife's counsel: Is it true that you told Michael to Morris Mormont that if he did not act in accordance with Mr. Amos's letter of insight, you would appoint another management company in his place.
The man: I can't appoint anyone in his place.
The wife's counsel: So is it true or wrong that you wrote this to him?
The man: Should I appoint someone else in his place? I can't name anyone. I can't appoint" (See the minutes of the hearing of November 24, 2020, p. 912, paras. 1-23, emphases not original).
- Another layer in the manner in which the man whose complex trust system is established is the use of wish letters, which, as may be recalled, are supposed to be sent to the trustee by the creator of the trust (and not by the beneficiary, i.e., the person) in order to express a desire for the manner in which the trust property is managed. Take another example that the woman was able to prove, about the manner in which the man used this tool. From a 2012 correspondence between the man and the late Mr. Amos, a minister who served as the creator of the trust on the man's behalf (the Texas Trust which managed the Nevada Trust, also on behalf of the man) - it emerged that the man himself would draw up the wishlists, ask the late Mr. Amos to sign them - for payment - and then transfer them to the trust management company (see Appendix 64 to the wife's summaries). This is important because even in the event that the person is given as the beneficiary of a certain trust, and the trust cannot be linked to the person, he still has the ability to control and direct the trust by means of such a wish letter.
- It is precisely in this matter that within the veil of fog called "the man's testimony" there is one beacon for medicine, and that is the comprehensive and precise explanation that the man gave in answer to the question of what a wish letter is. Unfortunately, the connection with the lighthouse was lost again when the man was asked whether and to what loyalty he himself wrote wishes:
"The woman's counsel: What is a letter of intent, letter of wishes?