Your Own Ghost Load™ Audit
An interactive worksheet that calculates your personal extraction rate, generates a downloadable PDF receipt you own and control, and shows you the real government filing pathways where that receipt can serve as evidence.
Before You Start — What This Is and Isn't
This tool gives you:
- A structured worksheet to calculate your personal Ghost Load™ across 12 major spending categories
- A downloadable, timestamped PDF receipt documenting your extraction total — anchored under the MARLOWE framework with USPTO, GAO, and DOE references
- A forensic record you own and can use as supporting evidence when filing with real government consumer protection agencies
This tool does NOT:
- Automatically file anything with any government agency on your behalf
- Guarantee any reimbursement, refund, or settlement
- Serve as legal or financial advice
- Replace a consultation with a consumer protection attorney for significant claims
Step 1 — Enter Your Monthly Spending
Fill in your approximate monthly spending for each category. Use your best estimates from bank statements, bills, or memory. Every entry is processed locally in your browser — no data is sent to any server.
Leave any category at 0 if it doesn't apply to you. You can always refine the numbers later and re-run the audit.
| Category | Your Monthly Spend | Industry Extraction Rate | Your Monthly Extraction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing (rent/mortgage + fees) | $ | ~25% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Banking & Financial Services (fees, investment management) | $ | ~60% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Health Insurance (premium + out-of-pocket) | $ | ~35% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Pharmacy & Prescriptions | $ | ~50% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Auto Insurance | $ | ~25% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Life Insurance (if whole life, flag high extraction) | $ | ~60% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Utilities (electric, gas, water) | $ | ~15% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Telecom (internet, mobile, streaming) | $ | ~55% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Groceries & Food | $ | ~20% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Subscriptions & SaaS (all monthly subscriptions) | $ | ~40% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Transportation (fuel, repair, rideshare) | $ | ~20% Ghost Load | $0 |
| Other Recurring (childcare, eldercare, memberships) | $ | ~25% Ghost Load | $0 |
Extraction rates above are industry averages derived from BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey, CFPB reports, and MARLOWE framework audit data. Your actual extraction may be higher or lower depending on your specific providers.
Step 2 — Enter Your Information for the Receipt
This information appears on your downloadable PDF receipt. None of it is transmitted anywhere. The receipt is generated entirely in your browser.
Step 3 — Generate and Download Your Receipt
Click the button below to generate your Personal Sovereign Audit™ Receipt as a PDF. The receipt is timestamped, uniquely numbered, anchored under the MARLOWE framework, and downloadable to your device. You own it. You control what happens to it.
Where to File — Real Government Pathways
A Personal Sovereign Audit™ receipt is documentation. What you do with that documentation is your choice. Below are the real U.S. government consumer protection agencies where your receipt can serve as supporting evidence for specific claims. These are not promises of payment; they are legitimate filing pathways that have produced real restitution for real consumers when complaints are documented and specific.
For Financial Services Issues (Banks, Credit Cards, Mortgages, Debt Collection)
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)
What they do: The CFPB handles complaints about banks, credit unions, credit cards, mortgages, student loans, debt collectors, credit reporting agencies, and most other financial companies. When you file a complaint, the CFPB forwards it directly to the company within 15 days and requires them to respond.
Real impact: The CFPB complaint database has resulted in billions of dollars of consumer relief since 2011. The filing is free, takes about 10 minutes online, and creates a public record of the complaint and company response.
How to file: consumerfinance.gov/complaint · By phone: 1-855-411-CFPB (2372) · By mail: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, P.O. Box 2900, Clinton, IA 52733-2900
Best for: Specific fees you believe were charged improperly, predatory loan terms, billing errors, collection practices, credit report disputes.
Use your MARLOWE audit receipt: Attach as supporting documentation showing your pattern of extraction from the specific institution, with the calculated Ghost Load percentage.
For Consumer Fraud, Scams, and Deceptive Practices
Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
What they do: The FTC investigates and takes enforcement action against companies engaged in unfair or deceptive practices. FTC complaints feed into law enforcement databases and inform investigations, but the FTC generally does not act on individual complaints directly.
Real impact: FTC enforcement actions have recovered hundreds of millions in refunds for consumers in cases like Equifax data breach settlements, DirecTV deceptive billing, and Herbalife business opportunity claims.
How to file: reportfraud.ftc.gov · By phone: 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357)
Best for: Suspected fraud, deceptive marketing, false advertising, identity theft, unwanted telemarketing, imposter scams.
Use your MARLOWE audit receipt: Include as evidence of the financial impact when reporting fraud or deceptive practices.
For State-Level Consumer Protection
Your State Attorney General
What they do: State AGs enforce consumer protection laws at the state level and often have more aggressive enforcement authority for state-specific violations than federal agencies. Many have consumer protection divisions that actively investigate patterns of consumer complaints.
Real impact: State AG settlements regularly produce consumer restitution, including the multi-state settlements with companies like Volkswagen (emissions), Wells Fargo (account fraud), and prescription opioid manufacturers.
How to file: Find your state AG at naag.org/find-my-ag. Every state AG's office has an online consumer complaint form.
Best for: In-state businesses engaged in deceptive practices, utility rate disputes, insurance practice complaints, debt collection violations that fall under state law.
Use your MARLOWE audit receipt: As supporting documentation showing extraction impact within the state's jurisdiction.
For Insurance Disputes
Your State Insurance Commissioner
What they do: Each state has an insurance commissioner or department responsible for regulating insurance carriers operating in that state. They handle complaints about claim denials, rate increases, policy cancellations, and insurance agent conduct.
Real impact: State insurance commissioners have authority to order insurers to pay claims, reverse cancellations, and refund improperly-charged premiums. The complaint process often produces results that individual consumers cannot achieve directly.
How to file: Find your state insurance commissioner at content.naic.org/state-insurance-departments.
Best for: Claim denials you believe are improper, unexplained rate increases, policy cancellations, agent misconduct, coverage disputes.
Use your MARLOWE audit receipt: As documentation of the financial pattern, especially if the dispute involves multiple premium increases or denial patterns.
For Tax Fraud by Others
IRS Whistleblower Office (Form 211)
What they do: The IRS Whistleblower Office pays awards to people who provide specific, credible information leading to the collection of taxes, penalties, and interest from individuals or companies that underreported income or otherwise violated tax law.
Real impact: Awards range from 15% to 30% of the amounts collected when information leads to successful enforcement. The IRS has paid over $1 billion in whistleblower awards since 2007.
How to file: IRS Form 211 — "Application for Award for Original Information" at irs.gov/compliance/whistleblower-office.
Best for: Specific, documented information about tax fraud by businesses or individuals. Not applicable for generic consumer extraction complaints.
Note: This is a whistleblower process with specific legal implications. Consult a whistleblower attorney before filing a significant claim. Awards come only when the IRS successfully collects, which can take years.
For Utility and Energy Issues
Your State Public Utility Commission (PUC)
What they do: Every state has a public utility commission that regulates electricity, natural gas, and often water utilities. They handle billing disputes, service complaints, and rate case interventions.
Real impact: PUC complaints can result in billing corrections, service restorations, and formal investigations. Consumer participation in rate cases has prevented or reduced rate increases in many states.
How to file: Search "[your state] public utility commission" — every state has an online complaint portal.
Best for: Billing disputes, service quality, rate case participation, shutoff disputes.
Use your MARLOWE audit receipt: Especially relevant during rate case proceedings where consumer testimony and documentation affect outcomes.
For Healthcare Billing Issues
No Surprises Act Filing + State Health Insurance Regulator
What they do: The federal No Surprises Act (effective 2022) protects consumers from surprise out-of-network billing in specific circumstances. Complaints go to HHS or state regulators depending on your situation.
Real impact: The law has resulted in millions of disputed charges being reduced or eliminated through the Independent Dispute Resolution process.
How to file: cms.gov/nosurprises/consumers · Call 1-800-985-3059 for No Surprises Help Desk.
Best for: Surprise bills from out-of-network providers in emergency situations, from out-of-network providers at in-network facilities, or for air ambulance services.
Use your MARLOWE audit receipt: As supporting documentation of the broader pattern of extraction in your healthcare spending.
For Workplace and Wage Issues
Department of Labor + State Labor Department
What they do: The U.S. Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division enforces federal minimum wage and overtime laws. Every state has a labor department that enforces state wage laws, which are often more protective than federal law.
Real impact: DOL investigations have recovered billions in back wages for workers. State labor departments often resolve individual wage claims more quickly than federal complaints.
How to file: dol.gov/agencies/whd for federal · Search "[your state] department of labor wage claim" for state filings.
Best for: Unpaid wages, overtime violations, misclassification as independent contractor, final paycheck disputes, tip theft.
Important Notes About All Filings
- Filing is free at every agency listed above. If someone is asking you to pay them to file a complaint with a government agency on your behalf, that is likely a scam.
- Complaints take time. Agencies respond on their own schedules. Expect 15-90 days for initial response, longer for resolution.
- Documentation matters enormously. Your MARLOWE audit receipt, combined with bank statements, bills, contracts, and correspondence from the company, makes any complaint more credible and more likely to produce results.
- File with the most specific agency first. A complaint about a bank fee goes to the CFPB, not the FTC. A complaint about an insurance claim denial goes to your state insurance commissioner, not the IRS. Match the complaint to the right jurisdiction.
- Keep copies of everything. Every complaint filed. Every response received. Every document submitted. Paper trail matters.
- Consider a consumer protection attorney for large claims. Many work on contingency for substantial consumer claims; you don't pay unless they recover.
What Happens After You File
- Immediate confirmation. Every agency will confirm receipt of your complaint within a few days.
- Agency forwards to the company (CFPB) or reviews internally (FTC, state AGs). The company is typically required to respond within 15–60 days depending on the agency.
- You receive the company's response and can indicate whether it resolves your issue. Many legitimate billing errors and improper fees are resolved at this stage because the formal complaint carries more weight than a customer service call.
- If unresolved, some agencies escalate (CFPB may include your complaint in aggregate enforcement data; state AGs may open investigations if they see patterns). Consumer restitution from successful enforcement actions flows to affected consumers in a later stage of the process.
- Keep your MARLOWE audit receipt with all complaint correspondence as part of your personal forensic record.
The Framework Context
Your Personal Sovereign Audit™ receipt is a document. The document exists under the MARLOWE framework — anchored by six USPTO filings, GAO docket COMP-26-002174, DOE filing AR 2026-001, and federal whistleblower protection under 18 U.S.C. § 1833(b). It carries the weight of the framework's public record.
It does not, by itself, generate a payment. It documents your extraction.
What you do with that documentation — how you choose to file, when, with which agency — is your sovereignty. The parallel economy was never about waiting for permission. It was always about having the tools to operate as a sovereign agent of your own affairs.
The seal returns commerce to the hands of craftsmen. The audit returns documentation to the hands of the audited.
Explore the Parallel Economy Guide → Read the Craftsman Economy Thesis →