Nothing was stated on the purpose of Marriage and as I stated..... I DID NOT KNOW ABOUT WANTING TO MARRY IN THE UK or AMERICA. Once I decided, alternative legal steps were taken.... Once again did I lie?.....No. All information on the alternative legal steps were advised by the UKBA Home Office and my local courts in the region of my family. Please read my post carefully and so that it would give you a better understanding.
Okay, so you have given specific step-by-step instructions for how to bypass getting a fiance visa, but then say that you didn't take those steps at all and did everything a completely different way?

Just to point out though, that some of the steps you listed are not actually correct:
(1) Enter the UK on a visitors visa. Getting past UKBA at the border is a challenging one and they will turn you back if they know a marriage is planned.
First off, how do you know this? You just said that you had no intention of getting married when you entered the UK, so how do you know that getting past UKBA is challenging... because obviously you had no trouble getting past them due to the fact that you were not going to be getting married in the UK anyway and presumably you wouldn't have even considered that it might be difficult to get past them if they knew a marriage was planned.
(2) Once a person is in the UK for one month, both partners can go to apply for the "Intent to Marry" being that Americans need this being non EU. The intent to marry is what to fiancee visa is actually for. UKBA advised me while I was there, that they can not stop a marriage from being performed in the UK if one is on a visitors visa if the intent was in place.
This is incorrect - you do not have to be in the UK for one month and you don't apply for an 'intent to marry'.
You just need 7 days residency in the UK, and then you can 'give notice to marry'.
This is not what the fiance visa is for - the fiance visa gives you permission to marry in the UK if you do not already live here on another visa (same as the visit for marriage visa)... but even if you have a fiance visa, you still need 7 days residency in the UK and you still need to 'give notice to marry', so the fiance visa makes no difference in this respect - you still have to take these steps, with or without it.
(3) After the Intent of marriage is ordered, there is a mandatory 16 day waiting period before a marriage can take place.
Actually it's 15 days, not 16.
Financially if done right, like I went through triple AAA for cheap flights, it comes out to the same price but instead of paying for the fiancee visa, the same money goes to the couples airflights round trip for the honeymoon during the wait of the spouse visa process.
There are actually 4 different options for getting married, and they are all perfectly allowable and don't involve taking any sneaky steps... it just depends on your circumstances as to which option you should be taking:
1) If you know you want to marry in the UK and do not want to have to return to the US to apply for a spousal visa:Apply for a fiance visa (£826), fly to the UK, wait 7 days, give notice to marry, wait 15 days, marry in the UK, stay in the UK to apply for the FLR(M) visa (£561 by post, £867 in person).
2) If you will be visiting the UK and know in advance that you wish to get married there: Apply for a visit for marriage visa (£78) before you leave. Then fly to the UK, wait 7 days, give notice to marry, wait 15 days, marry in the UK, fly back to the US, apply for a spousal visa (£826), fly back to the UK
3) If you do not want the hassle of meeting the residency requirements to marry in the UK:The UK citizen flies to the US on a visitor visa, you wait 24-72 hours (depending on the laws of the state), marry in the US, then apply for spousal visa (£826), and move to the UK.
4) If you fly to the UK as a visitor, with no intention of getting married at the time you enter the UK, but while in the UK, you decide you would like to get married:After a minimum of 7 days of residency, give notice to marry, wait 15 days, marry in the UK, fly back to the US, apply for spousal visa (£826), fly back to the UK.