Fake data entered
Greg intentionally entered obviously fake values including 2101 Scammer Way, apartment 69, and DATH VADER.
Public evidence note
This page preserves the December 2024 Online Notary Center recording as both a dated publication trail and a Florida-notary workflow record involving intentionally fake test inputs, identity/KBA-style screens, a completed notarial view, and later payment/account steps.
What is verified
The legacy WordPress inventory preserved in this project shows that the MP4 recording was linked to a publicly published page titled The Online Notary Center fraud. Local review of the recording also shows a workflow inside app.onlinenotarycenter.com that advances from intentionally fake seed inputs into identity/KBA-style screens, then into a live Florida notary room, then into a completed Florida notarial view, and later to a payment/account step.
This matters because the recording is not just a title or a complaint page. It is a preserved workflow record involving a Florida notary act and a visible progression through identity, notarization, and payment screens.
What this supports
2101 Scammer Way, apartment 69, and DATH VADER.Timeline
This is the workflow preserved by Greg Lirette's recording, in order.
Greg intentionally entered obviously fake values including 2101 Scammer Way, apartment 69, and DATH VADER.
The visible workflow still advanced into purported identity and KBA-style screens instead of stopping at the bad-input stage.
The recording then shows a live Florida notary room with David Merkatz as notary and Gregory Lirette as signer.
The session reaches a completed Florida notarial certificate view referencing Broward County and audio-video communication.
The workflow later reaches a payment/account stage, showing the session was allowed to continue past identity and notarization steps.
Greg's account
Greg Lirette states that he intentionally entered the fake values as a test, that the platform later presented a purported identity/KBA flow anyway, that the ID upload step functioned more like a generic intake or drop box than a meaningful identity-proofing control, and that the Florida notary confirmed Greg's ID passed and completed the session.
This matters because the sequence does not stop at a quirky form field. Greg's account is that the workflow moved all the way through a supposedly validated identity result and an actually completed Florida notarial session.
Online Notary Center appears on MISMO's certified RON provider list. MISMO's own certification materials say the certification does not verify compliance with any particular federal, state, county, or other governing/regulatory body laws, regulations, rules, or requirements.
That means a MISMO badge does not answer the harder question raised by Greg's recording: whether the workflow delivered meaningful identity assurance and real state-law compliance value in an actual Florida-notary session. Read the MISMO evidence note.
Public-safe conclusion
Notary Geek preserved a December 2024 meeting-recording asset that was linked to a legacy page titled The Online Notary Center fraud. The recording also preserves a Florida notary session in which Greg Lirette intentionally entered obviously fake test values, after which the visible workflow continued into identity/KBA-style screens, a live notary room, a completed Florida notarial certificate view, and a payment/account step. Greg Lirette further states that the Florida notary confirmed his ID passed and completed the session.