OFFICIAL MEDIA PLATFORM
H.I.S. HomeFront TV™
Your front-row seat to homeowner education
This page hosts video episodes from our official YouTube channel, delivering the education, research, and tools homeowners need to make informed decisions and protect their property rights.
Featured Episodes
Educational segments for homeowners and professionals.
June 29, 2026
Episode 1 - "She Rejected $28K. They Cancelled the Entire Debt."
In the powerful premiere of H.I.S. HomeFront TV, Clarence “Clay” Owens tells the deeply personal story of his mother, Tyrea—a homeowner who refused to accept a $28,000 settlement offer that would have required her to surrender her rights, her questions, and ultimately the truth about her mortgage—and whose determination instead led to the cancellation of the entire alleged mortgage debt; through documents, legal records, and the family’s firsthand account, this episode reveals how an ordinary homeowner confronted a mortgage system she believed was relying upon questionable ownership claims, irregular documents, and intimidation tactics designed to make her give up, while demonstrating that homeowners should never assume the company demanding payment has proven it owns the loan, never sign away rights without understanding the consequences, and never underestimate the power of challenging a debt when the documents behind it do not withstand scrutiny.
July 6, 2026
Episode 2 — “One Million Forged Documents. One CEO.”
More than one million mortgage-related documents were fraudulently signed and notarized for use in land records, foreclosure cases, and bankruptcy proceedings across America. At the center was Lorraine Brown, former CEO of DocX, LLC, who pleaded guilty in a federal criminal case connected to the company’s mass-production of false mortgage documents. In this episode of H.I.S. HomeFront TV, we examine the DocX scandal, the federal prosecution, and the question homeowners still need answered today: Are documents created through this operation still being used to claim ownership of mortgages, enforce debts, and take homes? One million documents. One CEO. And unanswered questions that may still affect homeowners today.
July 13, 2026
"DocX Admitted Guilt. Fran Twardy Is Still Fighting to Save His Home."
DocX became nationally known after its former CEO, Lorraine Brown, pleaded guilty in a federal case involving the mass production of fraudulently signed and notarized mortgage documents. Yet years later, New Jersey homeowner Fran Twardy is still fighting to save his home while challenging documents he alleges were created by DocX and are being used in his foreclosure case. This episode examines the questions raised by Mr. Twardy’s court filing based in signficant part on research by Clarence "Clay" Owens and Home Information Support (H.I.S.), and the continuing fight over whether documents tied to the DocX scandal should still be relied upon to enforce a mortgage debt. *The claims discussed remain under review by the New Jersey Superior Court and New Jersey State Police.*
July 20, 2026
"He Was a Real Estate Broker. His Mortgage Documents Were Still Forged."
George White was a New Jersey real estate broker—someone trained to understand property, title, and mortgage transactions. Yet research by Clarence “Clay” Owens of Home Information Support (H.I.S.) identified document irregularities tied to his mortgage that raised serious questions about the debt being enforced against him. George acted on the findings, pursued a quiet-title resolution, and ultimately saw his mortgage debt cancelled. This episode reveals why no homeowner—even a real estate professional—should assume the mortgage documents in the public record are accurate, authentic, or beyond challenge.
July 27, 2026
"Bank of America Settled Her Case. Here's What They Didn't Want Public."
Denise Abbott, a New Jersey homeowner, took on Bank of America after questions emerged about documents and other irregularities connected to her mortgage. With research assistance from Clarence “Clay” Owens of Home Information Support (H.I.S.), those issues became part of a civil complaint challenging the handling and enforcement of her mortgage. The case ended in an undisclosed settlement. This episode examines what it means when a homeowner brings document-based questions into court—and a major financial institution resolves the case rather than taking the dispute through public litigation. Denise’s story reinforces a critical lesson: homeowners should not assume their mortgage records, ownership claims, or foreclosure paperwork are beyond scrutiny. The settlement was undisclosed and should not be construed as an admission of liability by any party. This episode discusses publicly asserted claims, research findings, and legal proceedings for educational and public-interest purposes.
August 3, 2026
They Dismissed His $1 Billion Case. The Appeals Court Just Brought It Back.
They dismissed his federal case seeking more than $1 billion in claimed relief. But Clarence “Clay” Owens appealed—and the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit brought part of the fight back. In this season finale of *H.I.S. HomeFront TV*, the founder becomes the subject. Owens and his co-plaintiff challenged mortgage-servicing, foreclosure, and debt-collection practices connected to an alleged mortgage debt, including claims involving allegedly false, forged, or misleading court filings and documents. The federal trial court dismissed the case. On appeal, however, the Third Circuit reversed in part, restoring the malicious abuse-of-process claim for further proceedings. That claim centers on allegations that legal process was misused after it had begun—through the alleged use of false or forged pleadings and evidence. It is the same category of document irregularities H.I.S. COTA Reports™ are designed to help homeowners identify, understand, and investigate. This is not just a story about a court victory. It is why H.I.S. exists: to challenge the assumption that a mortgage company’s documents, ownership claims, and foreclosure filings should never be questioned. *The appellate ruling did not determine the truth of the allegations or resolve the surviving claim on its merits. Further proceedings remain pending.*
Eligible to be Interviewed on H.I.S. HomeFront TV™
While persons who purchased a H.I.S. COTA Report™ are eligible to be interviewed on H.I.S. HomeFront TV™, HAU Members get exclusive access to share their journey and expertise. This is your platform to discuss property rights, housing advocacy, or your personal homeownership mission with our national audience.