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DetlefK

(16,670 posts)
6. It's somewhere in the regulations for a 501 entity.
Wed Sep 11, 2019, 04:58 AM
Sep 2019

I didn't include sources because I didn't want to bloat the OP. Youtuber Sly Sparkane showed the relevant forms and paragraphs in his video.

The obligation to have a principal office is not that hard to fulfill:
* Your home-adress with mail-box is good enough.
* And someone must be present in person to officially receive legal letters on behalf of the corporation. (E.g. when you are being sued, the claimant must prove to the court that he informed you that you are being sued. That's why Wikileaks is so hard to sue: It's almost impossible to prove that you TOLD them that you are suing them.)
* The corporation even gets to decide (within reasonable limits) what they consider their business-hours when a representative is available for business.

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