Estate Planning

How to Avoid ID Theft: Protect Privacy from Creditors

Avoid ID Theft and Learn How the Ultra Trust ® can Protect You From Creditors Buy a paper shredder and shred ALL your documents, mail and anything else you don't wish prying eyes to see. Never…

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  1. Avoid ID Theft and Learn How the Ultra Trust ® can Protect You From Creditors
  2. Get the Ultra Trust ® to Protect Your Privacy from Creditors and others
  1. Common questions about this article

Avoid ID Theft and Learn How the Ultra Trust ® can Protect You From Creditors

Protect your assets from lawsuits, divorce, Medicaid.
  • Buy a paper shredder and shred ALL your documents, mail and anything else you don’t wish prying eyes to see.
  • Never simply throw away your mail. Unscrupulous people do look through the garbage to find credit card numbers, mailing addresses, etc.
  • When securing a loan or filling out an application ask how your personal information will be used and if it is shared with others.
  • Be aware of your billing cycles and call your creditor if a bill does not show up when you expect it.
  • Remove your mail from your mailbox daily and promptly.
  • Avoid using readily available information when choosing a password such as birthdays and social security numbers.
  • Avoid releasing personal information to anyone with which you did not initiate the contact with or already have a business relationship with.
  • Never write down your passwords to your computer, bank information or any other personal or financial passwords.
  • Destroy statements that do not need to be kept. Those you keep should be kept safely filed away.
  • Also keep your social security card in a safe place at home. An original social security card can open up a lot of opportunities for a thief.
  • Avoid using your social security number as an identification number when ever possible. Companies and government can often issue a random number in place of a social security number, ask for it.
  • Check your own credit reports annually for anything unusual. On your reports check the status of accounts you have closed, never opened or cannot identify at all. Also check for lists of credit checks done on you without your permission. Question anything you do not recognize or understand.

 

Get the Ultra Trust ® to Protect Your Privacy from Creditors and others

With my proven ULTRA TRUST ® you can effectively reposition our assets from you to a legal entity that effectively shuts out privacy invaders.
 
ONE signature and ONE Document, will lock your wealth out of reach from unscrupulous lawyers, over ambitions creditors, and over zealous bureaucrats. ONE signature will insulate you from frivolous lawsuits, eliminate the probate process, eliminate all inheritance taxes, and keep your private information from being sold to the highest bidder.
 

With The ULTRA TRUST ® you don’t own any assets.

Marketing companies can’t sell information about people they don’t know anything about. Lawyers are not going to take cases where they are contingent on getting 1/3 of NOTHING. Identity Thieves will have a hard time tracing your wealth.
 

Eligible Assets That Can Be REPOSITIONED to The ULTRA TRUST ®

There are no dollar limitations or the type of assets that can be repositioned from you to The ULTRA TRUST ®.
 
The ULTRA TRUST ® may own:
  • Your Personal Residence
  • Other Real Estate, your vacation spot
  • Investment Account (stocks, bonds, collectibles, antiques, boats, planes, …)
  • Your Life Insurance Policy
  • Your Automobiles (especially if you have under age drivers and may reduce your insurance premium, or eliminate the need of an umbrella policy)
  • Your Business(es), your corporation stock, LLC shares. The ULTRA TRUST™ is the only device that can own your sub “S” stock.
The ULTRA TRUST ® is an absolute asset protection fortress when the ULTRA TRUST ® owns a Limited Liability Co. (LLC) or is the General Partner in a Limited Partnership. Contact us today and get your privacy protect!
Answers that help

Common questions about this article

These answers summarize the topic in plain English so readers can move from the article into the next practical planning page.

What is the main takeaway from "How to Avoid ID Theft: Protect Privacy from Creditors"?

Avoid ID Theft and Learn How the Ultra Trust ® can Protect You From Creditors Buy a paper shredder and shred ALL your documents, mail and anything else… The article is meant to give readers a practical understanding of the issue so they can connect the topic to planning decisions instead of treating it as an isolated legal phrase.

Who should read this article?

This article is usually most useful for readers who are trying to understand how to avoid id theft: protect privacy from creditors before making a trust, ownership, or asset protection decision and want a clearer explanation in everyday language.

Why does this topic matter in broader planning?

Topics like this matter because one misunderstood issue can change how readers think about timing, control, funding, or exposure. Articles like this help turn a broad concern into a more focused next step.

What should readers compare after finishing this article?

Most readers go next to a related trust page, a comparison page, or another article in the same category so they can test the idea against a larger planning framework before deciding what to do next.

Related resources

Readers focused on lawsuit pressure usually want to compare what protection needs to be in place before a claim, what counts as risky timing, and which structures still leave gaps.

What people want to know first

The first concern is usually whether protection still works once risk feels real, or whether timing has already become the deciding factor.

What most readers compare next

Trust structure, entity structure, and transfer timing usually become the next practical questions.

When a conversation helps more

Once structure, timing, and next steps start intersecting, it usually helps to talk through the options in the right order.

Explore Asset Protection From Lawsuit

Review how timing, creditor pressure, and pre-claim planning change the strategy.

Explore Asset Protection

Review the main introduction to asset protection planning and the core decisions that shape a stronger structure.

Explore Irrevocable Trust

Understand how irrevocable trust planning works, when people use it, and what tradeoffs usually matter most.

Explore How It Works

Follow the planning process from consultation through drafting, funding, and the next practical steps.

Explore Ebook

Download the guide for a longer walkthrough you can read at your own pace and revisit later.

Explore Main Blog

Browse more practical articles, comparisons, and next-step guidance across the full UltraTrust blog.

What people usually compare next

Most readers compare structure, timing, control, and the practical next step after narrowing the issue in the article above.

What usually makes the answer more specific

Actual ownership, funding, current exposure, and how much control someone wants to keep usually matter more than labels in isolation.

When another step helps more than another article

Once timing, structure, and next steps start overlapping, it often helps to talk through the sequence instead of trying to compare everything mentally.

Questions readers usually ask next

Lawsuit-focused readers usually want clearer answers around timing, transfer risk, creditor access, and which structure still leaves avoidable gaps.

Can a protection plan still help once a lawsuit feels close?

That usually depends on timing, transfer history, and whether the structure was created before the pressure became obvious. The closer the threat, the more important the facts become.

Why do readers keep comparing trust planning with entity planning in lawsuit situations?

Because they solve different parts of the problem. Entity planning often addresses operating liability, while trust planning is usually part of the conversation about where personal wealth is held.

What often changes the answer in creditor-protection planning?

Transfer timing, funding, retained control, and the facts surrounding the claim usually change the answer more than broad marketing language ever does.

When is the next step to review structure instead of just asking broader questions?

It usually becomes a structure question once the discussion turns to real assets, current ownership, and whether the plan needs to work before a known problem gets closer.

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