About Us

Mid-Atlantic Surety & Public Trust (MASPT) is an unincorporated private trust with situs in South Dakota. The Trust operates in a private capacity and publishes documentation for educational purposes concerning its legal structure, governance posture, and internal administrative principles. Public pages are informational only; operational materials are private and available only to authorized parties.

Governance Posture

Internal governance may include delegated councils or private membership mechanisms. These mechanisms are private to the Trust and are not public invitations for participation.

Roles
  • Grantors: Collective intent establishing the Trust’s purposes.

  • Trustees / Fiduciaries: Licensed professionals operating under private agreement within the Trust’s framework.

  • Beneficiaries: Qualified recipients under the Trust’s internal framework.

Administrative Functions

MASPT maintains documentation, recordkeeping, and internal oversight related to the Trust’s purposes. No public program enrollment or consumer offerings are presented on this site.

Our Journey

Rooted in North Carolina, the Trust’s founders began by documenting equitable governance concepts and community-oriented frameworks. Over time, MASPT formalized a private administrative posture emphasizing documentation, fiduciary discipline, and partner-gated coordination.

Our Evolution

What began as documentation of bail and surety concepts matured into a broader governance record focused on trust administration. Collaboration with aligned entities (including faith-based and community organizations) occurs through executed private agreements and confidential protocols rather than public recruitment or enrollment.

Mid-Atlantic Surety & Public Trust (MASPT) plays a pivotal role in fostering community empowerment by offering equitable financial services, robust legal advocacy, and culturally relevant educational programs. By focusing on generational wealth preservation and restitution advocacy, MASPT addresses the historical injustices faced by underserved populations.