“The corporate shares won’t be clearing your personal account registry tomorrow morning, Sean,” Peter explained cleanly, stepping up to the master console table to slide an encrypted high-frequency biometric hardware token into the central drive.
Instantly, the terminal broadcasted the finalized probate liquidation mandates. Three years ago, when Sean’s logistics network faced a massive $4.5 million uncollateralized margin call, he didn’t survive because of his independent market strategy. He and his legal proxies unauthorizedly accessed Peter’s unlisted estate proxy codes to forge a cross-collateralized compliance bond against our family’s private real estate trust. He siphoned secondary dividend allocations to fund his penthouse and his mistress’s luxury lifestyle, assuming a quiet father wouldn’t check the backend database logs.
Right on cue, the high-security gates of Sean’s downtown penthouse property swung open under an emergency administrative mandate.
Our lead corporate trust attorney, Arthur Vance, stepped into his private offices, flanked by two senior enforcement officers from the State Financial Crimes Bureau and the county sheriff carrying a certified grand larceny indictment.
“Mr. Sean Vance-Cole,” Arthur Vance announced with absolute institutional authority, sliding the high-security steel handcuffs directly over my ex-husband’s trembling wrists on the live video stream. “At 1715 hours tonight, concurrent with the live tracking of material wire fraud, systematic identity theft of a parental trust, and asset concealment, the state treasury court executed Clause 14 of the master lending covenant.”