How did the State of California's surplus real estate Mission Armory
end-up in the portfolio of a Budapest Hungary male prostitution genre
video and DVD maker?
One of the best-kept secrets in California is the proper and legal
procedure for the disposal of the state's surplus land and military
armories. These huge facilities are situated on valuable inner city
land, which whet the appetites of real estate racketeers, who operate
in areas where these properties are often unused or underused.
When these armories are not used in wartime for the military, in times
of natural disasters such as earthquakes, fires, floods, tornados and
hurricanes, armories around the US are utilized to house those people
who are dislocated because of the disasters.
In California, a state where the military once owned millions of acres
of land, buildings and bases, it's no state secret that some of these
properties, such as San Francisco's Presidio sixth US Army base has
been the target of real estate manipulations by both corrupt politicians
and real estate racketeers.
It is also no state secret that in the two decades reign of Willie,
the Kingfish, Brown, the state's legislature was his domain. The members
of the legislature worked for Willie or its members were worked over!
This is one of the creditable reasons that Willie Brown is compared
to Huey Long, the first kingfish. As one longtime Louisiana political
cognoscente observed: "the only difference between Huey and Willie besides
ethnicity, is that Huey liked bourbon and broads. Because of his involvement
in gay-lesbian marriage and the agendas, as well as attending a May
1997 raucous sex, sadism and depravity party thrown by Jack Davis, his
notorious homosexual political consultant and manager, Willie is now
seen as exploring his sexuality, and catering to that sexual preference
constituency.
For decades, politicians and real estate developers and the racketeers,
some of them were entangled with, have viewed the state's surplus lands
as a lucrative resource. One of these major resources was the block
long; three story high San Francisco Mission Armory, located at 1800
Mission Street.
In 2000, A Veritas USA! Investigation uncovered the following irrefutable
fact that California's state real estate surplus is supposed to be listed
in the published documents of Deerings, This is the legal book publisher,
which publishes not only the yearly updates on all of the changes and
additions by California State legislature to California's laws and regulations,
but also publishes a full list of the state's surplus real estate properties
as designated by the state legislature. These easily accessible indexes
and books are found in the reference section of every major public and
law library in the state of California and elsewhere.
Interestingly, another California state military surplus property as
well as the federal government's surplus acreage at Camp Pendleton,
the US Marine base, has been has been listed in the DEERINGS. But not
San Francisco's Mission Armory.
Among the mandatory procedures for the disposal of surplus state and
military lands, is that once declared "surplus", if the property can
be used for affordable Housing, the city in which the property is located
has to be offered the surplus property and has the first rights to its
acquisition at very minimal cost, sometimes a dollar. If rehab or other
maintenance work is required to bring the property up to building codes,
the state will also provide the money.
However, in the case of San Francisco's Mission Armory, this didn't
happen. Instead, real estate operatives Istavan Masa and Steve Poztos
secretly and mysteriously acquired the huge facility.

An investigation of Istavan Masa disclosed that for several years,
Masa has owed Solano County California over $5,000 in delinquent child
support payments. How did Istavan Masa obtain the valuable multi million
dollar property from the state of California, despite the fact that
he, Masa couldn't or wouldn't pay the delinquent child support payments?
Solano County Officials were informed of Masa's delinquency but so far,
there has been any known action taken against Masa.
However, in another circumvention of California's law on the disposal
of California's surplus real estate, somehow this huge property mysteriously
ended up in the real estate portfolio of STUDIO
2000 USA, INC. a homosexual prostitution genre video and DVD producer
located in Budapest Hungary, but operating in California and elsewhere
in the US. STUDIO 2000 USA INC. also specializes in homosexual vides
and DVDs that Feature and depict young military recruits in such filth
" HUNGARY and LOADED FOR ACTION." STUDIO 2000 USA. INC. produced a huge
catalogue of this filth.

These corruptions and other questionable real estate transactions involving
public real estate occurred during the California Kingfish's reign.
Willie Brown has never deigned to explain these and other questionable
real estate deals, which reek of black graft, and which benefited his
political supporters and his protectors in the media.
These scandals are relevant to both the California and American taxpayer
because the homeless, who could and should have a central safe location
to shelter them, instead have ended up on the state's and San Francisco's
streets, and doorways in both business and residential districts of
the city.
Living on the street and in the doorways of businesses and residences
deteriorate the already fragile health of the homeless. It is no state
secret that these forlorn individuals are afflicted with the gamut of
communicable diseases from pneumonia, tuberculosis, flesh eating diseases
to hepatitis, venereal disease, STD, HIV and AIDS.
Few taxpayers are aware that when a public ambulance, fire engine or
police car has to handle a homeless person, who is disabled and diseased
on the streets of San Francisco, each medical emergency incident costs
the taxpayer an estimated $500. Or more if the homeless person has to
be hospitalized.
Much of this exorbitant medical emergency cost could be saved if the
government of San Francisco City and County had received, as it was
entitled to, the Mission Armory to shelter and house these homeless
poor individuals, as well as provide them services. These services would
help protect these hapless and forlorn individuals from the ravages
Of living on the street, while seeking shelter in a warm doorway of
a business or a resident, under a viaduct away from the wintry elements.
It may be sickening commentary on California's values, but stray dogs
and feral cats are treated better in animal control shelters than homeless
human beings on the streets. Instead because of the corruption and illegal
circumvention by corrupt politicians and real estate speculators in
the state's surplus real estate disposal procedures, both the homeless,
the sick, the diseased as well as the American taxpayer bear the burdens
and suffer while real estate speculators and pervert video producers
profit.