have nice day
From: <[redacted]>
To: <[redacted]>
Cc: <[redacted]>, <[redacted]>, <[redacted]>
Date: Wed, 13 May 2026 12:18:45 +0100
Subject: Required Documents for Account Activation
Dear Dr. Morris,
Thank you for your thoughtful and detailed questions — I truly appreciate how thoroughly you’re thinking through this. It’s interesting, actually, how much of our daily routines end up shaping what we believe is real. Last week, I was walking through the neighborhood and saw a man setting up a new solar panel on his garage roof — it reminded me of how much energy awareness has grown lately. Even small changes like that seem to ripple through communities in ways we don’t always notice.
To clarify your questions: the fund will indeed be credited within 24 hours of successful activation, but there is a verification window of 72 hours from the time of payment to ensure all documentation is properly received and validated. Regarding the affidavit — yes, it must be notarized by a public notary. A private notary with a Texas license is not sufficient, as the system requires a public record of the notarization for audit purposes.
As for the address verification — yes, a utility bill or property tax statement from your Houston address is required. Since you mentioned having a digital copy of your electricity bill, that’s a great start. Could you confirm the exact date of the bill and whether it shows your full name and current address? Also, would it be possible to send it via a secure cloud link or email attachment? I’ve been using Google Drive for all my documents lately, and it’s surprisingly reliable for sharing sensitive files.
I’m genuinely excited about this — it feels like a real opportunity, and I’m committed to making it work smoothly.
Warmest regards,
Danny Smith
+17163259415
Houston, TX 77202
Best regards,
Danny Smith
+17163259415
Dear Dr. Morris,
Thank you so much for the detailed clarification — I appreciate how you took the time to explain the verification window and notarization requirements. It’s actually made me think about how much trust we place in systems that rely on paper trails, especially when we’re dealing with real-world validation. I remember last month, while working on a client case involving a land dispute in East Houston, I had to go through a similar process with a county notary. The whole thing felt like a puzzle, but once it clicked, it made perfect sense.
To confirm: the fund will be credited 24 hours after successful activation, and the 72-hour verification window starts from the moment payment is processed — is that correct? Also, could you please confirm if the notarized affidavit must be signed in English and include the notary’s full name, commission date, and state of office? I have a copy of my Texas utility bill from April 12, 2026 — it shows my full name and current Houston address. Would you prefer it sent via secure link, or do you need it in a PDF format with a password-protected layer?
I’ve been trying to organize my files in a clean folder structure lately — I’m just wondering if there’s any preference for file naming (e.g., “Danny_Smith_Notary_Affidavit_20260513.pdf”)?
Looking forward to your guidance — this feels like a real step forward.
Warmest regards,
Danny Smith
+17163259415
Houston, TX 77202
Best regards,
Danny Smith
+17163259415