April 16, 2026 | Lot 1 Water Disconnection
From: Nigel Churcher (nnnigel@gmail.com)
To: Catalina Castro (ABI Admin)
Subject: Request for Confirmation – Water Line Disconnection at Lot 1
Date: April 16, 2026 5:48 PM
Hola Catalina,
¿Podría por favor confirmar si la administración, el desarrollador, o algún contratista actuando en su nombre ingresó recientemente a nuestra propiedad y retiró o desconectó algún componente de la línea de agua o del sistema de cierre que da servicio a nuestro lote?
Recientemente observamos que una sección de la tubería parece faltar en la línea ubicada en nuestra propiedad, lo que actualmente impide el restablecimiento del servicio de agua.
Le agradeceríamos confirmar si dicha remoción o desconexión fue autorizada por la administración, quién realizó el trabajo, y bajo qué autoridad se llevó a cabo esta acción.
Gracias,
Nigel
English version:
Hello Catalina,
Could you please confirm whether the administration, the developer, or any contractor acting on their behalf recently accessed our property and removed or disconnected any component of the water line or shutoff assembly serving our lot?
We recently observed that a section of pipe appears to be missing from the line on our property, which is currently preventing restoration of water service.
Please confirm whether this removal or disconnection was authorized by the administration, who performed the work, and under what authority this action was taken.
Thank you,
Nigel
Nigel Churcher
Sup Art Director
nnnigel@gmail.com
WhatsApp +1(416)885-1054
This email was sent one day after ABI disconnected water to Lot 1 (April 16, 2026) due to Nigel's prolonged non-payment of HOA fees. Instead of addressing his debt, Nigel is questioning whether pipe was "removed" from his property.
This is part of a pattern where SFERA clients deflect from their obligations by creating legal disputes about the enforcement actions taken against them.
Document created: May 11, 2026
Source: Email forwarded by Catalina Castro to Marion/Federico
For: Mar Azul Legal System