




Welcome to US Citizens for Justice
NEW INFORMATION!
The focus of this website is to show how banks and individuals were under the impression their investments into veterans’ and dinosaur museums owned and operated by Fred Hoppe, would produce large returns with substantial amounts of interest.
Many of documents posted throughout this website are publicly available through the Nebraska Judicial system. The public is welcome to visit courthouses throughout the state of Nebraska and print documents from public computers for fees, which may vary. Court personnel are usually willing to assist the public in acquiring public documents.
NEW INFORMATION!
See our new post below, “Additional Loans and Default” for document filings in the court system from 2008 to 2012.
More documents will be posted soon.
Filed under Uncategorized
Additional Loans in Default
These loans were acquired by Fred Hoppe between 2008 and 2012.
The documents posted in this section and other sections throughout this website are publicly available through the Nebraska Judicial system. The public is welcome to visit courthouses throughout the state of Nebraska and print documents from public computers for fees, which may vary. Court personnel are usually willing to assist the public in acquiring public documents.
Jones Bank






















Civil suit





Pinnacle Bank








Filed under Uncategorized
2015 in review
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2015 annual report for this blog.
Here's an excerpt:
A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 3,200 times in 2015. If it were a cable car, it would take about 53 trips to carry that many people.
Filed under Uncategorized
2014 in review
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 3,000 times in 2014. If it were a cable car, it would take about 50 trips to carry that many people.
Filed under Uncategorized
Sculptures in the Veteran’s Memorial Museum
The first photo is of the Veteran’s Memorial 50-man bronze sculpture of soldiers storming a beach in World War II. Below the sculpture is the financial statement from the court record showing the sculptures valued at $19,120,000. Under the financial statement, which was submitted June 3, 2009, is the Gary Hendershott Catalog 145 that shows the 50-man valued at $9,500,000.
The 50-man sculpture and additional sculptures in the Veteran’s Memorial Museum total $10,592,500 in the Hendershott Catalog dated May 12, 2009, three weeks prior to the financial statement in the court record.
In the June 3, 2009 Cornerstone Bank Financial Statement below, the values for a duplicate set of four sculptures for the National Freedom Museum in Pigeon Forge and Veteran’s Memorial Museum in Branson, Mo., (Pigeon Forge closed in 2007) total $8,539,000 and $19,120,000, respectively. The Branson museum’s total includes the 50-man sculpture. The four sculptures are: a WWI soldier, WWII Infantry men, WWII bust of President George Bush and the fourth sculpture is three soldiers in Vietnam.
Less than a month before, the June 3 financial statement was included as part of a loan modification for Fred Hoppe because he wasn’t making good on his promissory notes. The Pigeon Forge set of sculptures was valued at a total of $1,092,500 in the Gary Hendershott Catalog May 12, 2009. The Branson Museum sculptures were valued at $10,592,500 in the catalog. The Branson price tag – $10,592,000 plus the Pigeon Forge figure of $1,092,500 and the financial statement totals of $8,539,000 plus $19,120,000 produce a difference of $15,974,000 from the May 12 catalog to the June 3 financial statement in 2009.
We feel the following citations apply to Fred Hoppe’s valuation of sculptures that he reported to the bank on the financial statement in the court record. (See financial statement and sculpture valuations above)
Filed under Veteran's Memorial Bronze Sculptures
P-51 at Veterans Memorial Museum in Branson
Before and after photos of the P-51 North American Mustang warplane, which sat on a pylon outside the Veterans Memorial Museum in Branson, Mo., show the plane wasn’t real following the Leap Year Tornado that hit Branson. It was passed off as authentic in an appraisal conducted by Frank Grant of The Canadian Military Studies Museum. The plane was valued at $500,000 in the financial statement. Grant signed the appraisal. See the document below the photos of the plane.
Below the signed document by Grant is the financial statement in the Cornerstone Bank Case. The statement lists the plane’s value at $500,000.
WHY THE PLANE ISN’T REAL:
The post-tornado photo shows the insides of the plane, which are simply angle-iron and fiberglass. If the plane were authentic, it would look different – there would be parts and metal exposed.



































