
Excerpt: Liberty Fighters Network (LFN) cautions the public against so-called “emancipation” schemes by entities like You Are Law and Anne Verster. These scams falsely promise that court filings can cancel debt and stop repossessions — they don’t work. Victims have lost homes and farms, while the banks continue with auctions undeterred. Courts do not accept emancipation or “Bills of Exchange” as legal defences. LFN is fighting back — currently in the High Court, Johannesburg in the Falecia Mvenya case to expose systemic bias. We assist many, free of charge, but rely only on voluntary support. Don’t fall for false hope. Fight lawfully.
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South Africans facing foreclosure are increasingly falling victim to a dangerous and deceptive scheme — so-called “emancipation” scams peddled by outfits like You Are Law, led by Anne Verster, only one of her aliases. These scams promise financially distressed individuals that their debts to the banks can be cancelled simply by lodging emancipation documents and so-called “Bills of Exchange” in court.
Despite charging thousands for this process, not a single court in South Africa has ever accepted emancipation as a legitimate defence. The consequences for those duped by these false promises are severe: eviction, sequestration, and utter devastation.
Take the case of the Strydom family, proud fourth-generation fruit farmers in the Eastern Cape. They believed Verster’s process would extinguish their Standard Bank debt. Today, they are under provisional sequestration and face the loss of their heritage and enterprise.
Or consider the 80-year-old man who entrusted Verster to stop ABSA from selling his only home. He nearly lost it, if LFN did not come to his rescue in time. His wife, also elderly, is now desperately fighting FirstRand Bank to avoid losing her investment home, caught in the same trap.
At LFN, we warn the public: this paperwork is not legal defence. It is snake oil dressed up in legal terminology.
Worse yet, these scams distract from the reality that many people actually have valid legal defences — but never use them because they’re never advised to. Instead, they pour their last funds into paper processes that the court rightly ignores.
At LFN, we have lawfully helped numerous individuals oppose banks effectively in court, often with no legal representation, only proper process and factual argument. We do this free of charge, relying only on voluntary donations to continue our work.
But LFN is currently overwhelmed. We are assisting a rising number of citizens under threat of losing their homes. We do not solicit donations, but call on those who share our mission — reform of a legal system inaccessible to most South Africans — to support this cause in any way they can.
A key example of our work is the ongoing High Court case of Falecia Mvenya in Johannesburg. This case has become a model to expose the entrenched connections between banks, their panel attorneys, and members of the judiciary — especially those who were once top bank litigators and now serve as acting judges. These are individuals, we respectfully argue, who may no longer possess the impartiality required to adjudicate against the very banks they once so effectively protected.
Three hearings in the Mvenya matter have already taken place in May, and we return to court again on 13 June 2025, where LFN will continue to argue why such judges must recuse themselves in bank-related cases — not as an attack on the judiciary, but in defence of constitutional fairness and the right to a truly impartial hearing.
So again, we say to the public:
- Do not waste your last money on emancipation schemes.
- Do not believe in paper miracles.
- And do not underestimate your power to stand — lawfully — with the right guidance. Where possible, enter your matters properly. If you do not know how, reach out to those who can guide you lawfully.
If you can support the cause of reform, now is the time to do so.
Kindly consider supporting our work by giving a donation of your choice.


