Fannie Mae has been looking for John Kuzmanich, but John is no where to be found. The mortgage lender even sent processors to his know locations 19 different times, but still, no luck.
It’s as if Kuzmanich fell off the face of the Earth!
John should practice what he preaches.
The founder and chairman of the Oregon Tea Party is often seen on television and radio shows, bemoaning the government for not living within its means.
Six days into the Government Shutdown, John made an appearance on KATU Channel 2’s Your Voice, Your Vote on Oct. 6 and expressed support for the Tea Party/Republican shutdown.
“We are just good and decent principled Americans who believe in the Constitution and a fiscally responsible government,” Kuzmanich said.
That statement was made 3 years into his apparent decision that fiscal responsibility doesn’t apply to him.
Back in 2009, Kuzmanich made the decision to run for Congress representing Oregon’s 1st Congressional District. He finished third out of four in the Republican primary, getting 28% of the vote. On his website, Kuzmanich said, “We need to decrease the size of government and make it live within its means just like we do.”
Maybe his lack of mortgage payment to the federal agency that loaned him $361,000 for a duplex on Southwest 150th Avenue in Beaverton, is Kuzmanich’s way to “decrease the size of government,” or maybe he is just another teabagging hypocrite. Whatever he is, John is on the run, and Fannie Mae has been unsuccessful in locating him.
After visiting his last known address back in June to serve the papers, the server wrote in an affidavit that there was “no answer at the door, no noise inside and no movement inside. No vehicles.”
On August 12, Fannie Mae’s lawyer Michael Thornicroft said, “After exercising due diligence, Plaintiff has been unable to serve defendants John Kuzmanich and Occupants of the premises, but believes they reside in Washington County.”
John Kuzmanich – a teabagging hypocrite who believes in fiscal responsibility Republican style. It’s kinda like shutting down the government for 16 days resulting in a $25 billion dollar loss to the American economy, to prove absolutely nothing.