Quote Quoting MsDBD
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As I wrote earlier in this thread, I have a judge who has ordered me to file an FTCA Claim against the USA.
I think that unlikely. The judge may have told you that a lawsuit under the FTCA cannot be pursued against the FBI but must instead be pursued against the United States. That's simply a statement of the law. But the judge would not have ordered you to file such a lawsuit. A judge has no such power. It's up to you whether to file a lawsuit or not.

Quote Quoting MsDBD
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All I want to know is basically what address do I use when filing against the USA?
I gave you the link to the FRCP rule that tells you what you need to do. You need to send copies of the complaint to both the Attorney General in Washington DC and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the federal court district where you are filing the lawsuit. So if the lawsuit is to be filed in the Eastern District of Michigan, you'd send a copy to the U.S. Attorney for the district of Eastern Michigan.

The address for the Attorney General in DC is:
Attorney General of the United States
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001

You may want to contact the FTCA division of the DOJ to see if there are any special instructions to follow given the current covid-19 restrictions.

The address for service of the U.S. attorney will depend on the district in which you will file. Again, check with that office for any special covid-19 instructions. For the Eastern District of Michigan, for example, see the U.S. Attorney's covid-19 notice where it states that you should send a copy both by mail and by e-mail to a specific e-mail address set up just for new civil filings.

Because a FTCA claim is against the United States and not against a specific agency you need not send a copy to the agency, but it wouldn't hurt you if you do copy the agency.


Quote Quoting MsDBD
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I have the right to hold the USA responsible for the Gross Negligence of the FBI
Not all claims that you might bring against a private person or entity may be brought against the federal government. When it comes to money claims against the federal government, you must state in your complaint the particular law that waives the government's sovereign immunity and allows for the lawsuit. The FTCA is a waiver of immunity for tort claims, but that waiver has exceptions to it, including the discretionary act limitation that I discussed earlier. When bringing a FTCA claim, you must therefore be mindful of those exceptions.

Quote Quoting MsDBD
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when UBS Paine Webber refuses to give me my account statements even after two judges subpoenaed them. In fact this kind of crime, embezzlement , by a national financial institution concerns us all.
Refusing to give you the statements is not itself a crime. The failure to obey a subpoena can lead to the court imposing contempt of court sanctions on the offending party, including potentially confining the offending party, until the order is complied with. It would have been up to you to seek contempt sanctions. Did you ask the courts that issued the subpoenas to hold the bank and the responsible employees in contempt? A contempt order typically prompts very fast compliance by banks.