[00:00.000 --> 00:05.680] This news brief brought to you by the International News Net. [00:05.680 --> 00:11.480] Honduran President Manuel Zelaya has vowed to end his month-long exile by staging a dramatic [00:11.480 --> 00:13.680] border crossing from Nicaragua. [00:13.680 --> 00:19.000] Zelaya was ushered out of the country by the Honduran military on June 28th. [00:19.000 --> 00:24.280] The Washington Post says the health care industry is spreading rumors that 77 percent of Americans [00:24.280 --> 00:27.480] are satisfied with their existing health insurance coverage. [00:27.480 --> 00:34.280] However, a New York Times, CBS News survey found 72 percent of Americans favor a public [00:34.280 --> 00:35.960] plan. [00:35.960 --> 00:41.720] Russian and Chinese military forces are taking part in a five-day exercise in China aimed [00:41.720 --> 00:46.600] at quelling terrorists who have captured a city and provoked massive riots. [00:46.600 --> 00:51.040] This news brief brought to you by the International News Net. [00:51.040 --> 00:56.920] Senate Democrats Wednesday narrowly defeated a Republican proposal to allow concealed weapons [00:56.920 --> 00:59.360] to be carried across state lines. [00:59.360 --> 01:04.920] The vote capped a furious effort by Majority Whip Dick Durbin and Senator Charles Schumer. [01:04.920 --> 01:10.480] Schumer, who led the effort to kill the amendment, said its defeat means, quote, lives have been [01:10.480 --> 01:15.400] saved, adding, the passage of this amendment would have done more to threaten the safety [01:15.400 --> 01:20.640] of New Yorkers than anything since the repeal of the assault weapons ban. [01:20.640 --> 01:25.920] The vote was a rare defeat for the National Rifle Association, which described the amendment [01:25.920 --> 01:30.800] as a way to push back against an increasingly hostile atmosphere for gun owners. [01:30.800 --> 01:35.680] A coalition of U.S. mayors, mayors against illegal guns, co-chaired by New York City [01:35.680 --> 01:41.520] Mayor Michael Bloomberg, lobbied senators far more intensely than in other recent gun [01:41.520 --> 01:43.160] votes in the Senate. [01:43.160 --> 01:52.080] Bloomberg called the amendment an intrusive and destructive bill. [01:52.080 --> 01:57.360] The American Academy of Environmental Medicine says genetically modified foods have not been [01:57.360 --> 02:01.400] properly tested and pose a serious health risk. [02:01.400 --> 02:07.440] Recently the AAEM called on physicians to educate their patients, the medical community [02:07.440 --> 02:11.240] and the public to avoid genetically modified foods. [02:11.240 --> 02:17.240] They called for a moratorium on GM foods, long-term independent studies and labeling. [02:17.240 --> 02:24.180] The AAEM said animal studies indicate serious health risks associated with GM food include [02:24.180 --> 02:31.440] infertility, immune problems, accelerated aging, insulin regulation and changes in major [02:31.440 --> 02:34.920] organs and the gastrointestinal system. [02:34.920 --> 02:37.800] More and more doctors are prescribing GM free diets. [02:37.800 --> 02:44.200] Dr. Amy Dean, a Michigan internal medicine specialist and board member of AAEM says, [02:44.200 --> 03:01.160] I strongly recommend patients eat strictly non-genetically modified foods. [03:01.160 --> 03:04.800] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [03:04.800 --> 03:09.080] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [03:09.080 --> 03:13.520] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [03:13.520 --> 03:18.840] Hi, my name is Steve Holt and like millions of other Americans, I was diagnosed with stupidity [03:18.840 --> 03:20.040] at an early age. [03:20.040 --> 03:24.020] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home [03:24.020 --> 03:26.120] in America, the television. [03:26.120 --> 03:31.160] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [03:31.160 --> 03:34.920] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other Foxaholics suffering [03:34.920 --> 03:37.240] from sports zombieism recover. [03:37.240 --> 03:41.460] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [03:41.460 --> 03:44.120] without feeling tired or uninterested. [03:44.120 --> 03:51.480] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [03:51.480 --> 03:55.560] or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [03:55.560 --> 03:58.960] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [03:58.960 --> 04:00.800] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [04:00.800 --> 04:09.520] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network at ruleoflawradio.com, live free speech [04:09.520 --> 04:11.520] talk radio at its best. [04:39.520 --> 04:47.380] What are you going to do? [04:47.380 --> 04:57.720] What are you going to do when they come for you? [04:57.720 --> 05:02.720] Bad boys, bad boys, what are you going to do? [05:02.720 --> 05:04.720] What are you going to do when they come for you? [05:04.720 --> 05:05.720] When you were eight and you had bad traits, you go to school and learn the golden rules. [05:05.720 --> 05:06.720] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [05:06.720 --> 05:07.720] If you get caught then you must get crewed. [05:07.720 --> 05:08.720] Bad boys, bad boys, what are you going to do? [05:08.720 --> 05:09.720] Bad boys, bad boys, what are you going to do? [05:09.720 --> 05:10.720] Bad boys, bad boys, what are you going to do? [05:10.720 --> 05:11.720] When they come for you. [05:11.720 --> 05:12.720] What are you going to do when they come for you? [05:12.720 --> 05:14.440] Chug it on that one, you chug it on this one. [05:14.440 --> 05:21.720] You chug it on your mother and you chug it on your father. [05:21.720 --> 05:26.700] You chug it on your brother and you chug it on your singer. [05:26.700 --> 05:29.700] You chug it on that one and you chug it on me. [05:29.700 --> 05:33.700] You bad boys, bad boys, what are you going to do when they come for you? [05:33.700 --> 05:41.500] Bad boys, bad boys, what are you going to do when we come for you and we are coming for [05:41.500 --> 05:42.500] you? [05:42.500 --> 05:47.580] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, and Eddie Craig. [05:47.580 --> 05:52.180] And tonight we have two very special guests, but before we go to our guests, we have a [05:52.180 --> 05:55.660] very special announcement to make. [05:55.660 --> 06:00.540] We are ironing out the details for the seminar. [06:00.540 --> 06:04.180] It's going to be a humdinger. [06:04.180 --> 06:07.740] We've pretty much decided the strategy, how we're going to lay it all out. [06:07.740 --> 06:08.740] It's a two-day seminar. [06:08.740 --> 06:12.300] We're going to do it at Brave New Books. [06:12.300 --> 06:19.380] And with the seminar, day one is going to be Eddie presenting the traffic code and causes [06:19.380 --> 06:24.780] of action concerning the laws that they break, the types of criminal complaints. [06:24.780 --> 06:26.600] You can file what laws are broken. [06:26.600 --> 06:33.300] Day two, Randy and I are going to go over due process and grand jury functioning. [06:33.300 --> 06:38.740] And in addition to that, you get a copy of jurisdictionary. [06:38.740 --> 06:43.740] Now jurisdictionary is going to be a prerequisite for the seminar. [06:43.740 --> 06:49.420] So people who sign up ahead of time, you'll have time to go over it. [06:49.420 --> 06:53.300] And for people who may decide at the last minute they want to go to the seminar, then [06:53.300 --> 06:56.820] y'all can just go over jurisdictionary after the seminar. [06:56.820 --> 07:03.300] And the reason that we're doing that is because we want to come with a very hard-hitting package [07:03.300 --> 07:11.120] for you guys with some high-level strategies both in the civil arena and the criminal arena. [07:11.120 --> 07:13.220] And it would waste too much time. [07:13.220 --> 07:19.540] It would cost too much time to teach fundamental techniques that are in jurisdictionary that [07:19.540 --> 07:24.780] you guys and ladies out there are going to need to know in order to implement the strategies [07:24.780 --> 07:29.980] and the remedies and the solutions that we're going to be presenting in the seminar. [07:29.980 --> 07:36.660] So for those of you who already have jurisdictionary, you're going to get another copy and you can [07:36.660 --> 07:42.060] give it to someone very special that you think should have it. [07:42.060 --> 07:45.420] So here is the deal. [07:45.420 --> 07:46.780] It's going to be 400 bucks. [07:46.780 --> 07:51.860] I think that's a very reasonable and fair price considering what you guys are going [07:51.860 --> 07:52.860] to be getting. [07:52.860 --> 07:55.740] There's really no way we can cram all the information into one day. [07:55.740 --> 08:00.700] I mean, any stuff alone is going to take one day, it's going to take a whole day. [08:00.700 --> 08:06.460] And going over the strategies, the solutions and remedies is going to take a whole other [08:06.460 --> 08:07.460] day. [08:07.460 --> 08:10.700] So that's about the best that we can do. [08:10.700 --> 08:12.340] And I think it's very reasonable. [08:12.340 --> 08:13.340] So here's the deal. [08:13.340 --> 08:20.620] We're not going to schedule a date until we get 20 people committed, all right, 20 people [08:20.620 --> 08:22.220] who have prepaid. [08:22.220 --> 08:27.980] And once we get the 20 people, then we'll set the date and then, you know, it will be [08:27.980 --> 08:29.620] on after that for sure. [08:29.620 --> 08:31.900] And the enrollment is limited to 50 people. [08:31.900 --> 08:34.780] That's as many people as we can fit into the bookstore. [08:34.780 --> 08:43.780] So sign up early because, you know, it's going to fill up, and just by some crazy means, [08:43.780 --> 08:50.260] we don't get 20 people, the people who prepay in advance will get their money back minus [08:50.260 --> 08:55.700] a $25 service fee because of the time that Randy and I will have to spend processing [08:55.700 --> 08:56.700] everything. [08:56.700 --> 08:57.780] And I think that's reasonable too. [08:57.780 --> 08:59.740] So that's the deal with the seminar. [08:59.740 --> 09:01.580] We're very excited about it. [09:01.580 --> 09:05.500] So people, email us. [09:05.500 --> 09:11.860] At this point in time, I prefer a check if y'all are going to sign up and prepay. [09:11.860 --> 09:15.300] Please send a check and look at the instructions for how to send checks on the Rule of Law [09:15.300 --> 09:19.700] Radio website just because the PayPal fees will be exorbitant. [09:19.700 --> 09:26.140] So that being said, now we are going to go to our guests. [09:26.140 --> 09:28.180] And Randy, would you like to introduce our guests? [09:28.180 --> 09:29.180] Yes. [09:29.180 --> 09:30.180] We have two guests today. [09:30.180 --> 09:36.060] And the reason we have two is they have two different specialties concerning this mortgage [09:36.060 --> 09:37.060] crisis. [09:37.060 --> 09:39.820] Charla West, very special guest. [09:39.820 --> 09:47.500] She is a, was for 25 years executive vice president for a federal savings and loan. [09:47.500 --> 09:49.700] She wrote the loans. [09:49.700 --> 09:51.580] She knows how they're written. [09:51.580 --> 09:55.220] She knows what the laws are frontwards and backwards. [09:55.220 --> 09:56.860] And we also have Randy Raylor. [09:56.860 --> 10:01.660] A lot of you may have heard him on our show before. [10:01.660 --> 10:07.500] When he's not out chasing his dog up and down the street, he sells real estate. [10:07.500 --> 10:12.100] So he's very familiar with the other side of the table. [10:12.100 --> 10:19.820] And we're going to talk today about this real estate crisis, how we got here, but mostly [10:19.820 --> 10:28.980] what is wrong, and we'll be discussing some ideas for what people can do as a remedy to [10:28.980 --> 10:29.980] what is wrong. [10:29.980 --> 10:38.620] Charla, I'd like to bring you in first and just kind of introduce yourself and just kind [10:38.620 --> 10:46.140] of give us an overview of the situation concerning people with mortgages. [10:46.140 --> 10:52.380] And by the way, Charla does forensic analysis. [10:52.380 --> 10:57.140] She can take the mortgage that you have, you send her all the paperwork, and she can tell [10:57.140 --> 11:01.780] you everything the other side has done wrong. [11:01.780 --> 11:09.580] So without any further ado, Charla, will you kind of tell us who you are and give us an [11:09.580 --> 11:20.460] idea of what you can expect if you go over your mortgage closely? [11:20.460 --> 11:21.460] Hold on one second. [11:21.460 --> 11:22.460] Charla, are you there? [11:22.460 --> 11:23.460] Yes, I'm here. [11:23.460 --> 11:24.460] Okay. [11:24.460 --> 11:25.460] Go ahead. [11:25.460 --> 11:26.460] Okay. [11:26.460 --> 11:27.460] Thanks, Randy. [11:27.460 --> 11:28.460] That was a very nice introduction. [11:28.460 --> 11:33.460] I hope I can live up to those kind words. [11:33.460 --> 11:42.500] As Randy said, I was an executive vice president at a federal credit union for 25 years. [11:42.500 --> 11:50.500] I started doing real estate loans relatively young and went to several trainings, real [11:50.500 --> 11:57.460] estate law, business law, and just grew up in the industry doing real estate loans. [11:57.460 --> 12:01.580] I enjoyed it, and we made good loans. [12:01.580 --> 12:08.940] The industry has changed significantly since the 80s. [12:08.940 --> 12:14.940] At one time, and there probably are still several institutions where their staff has [12:14.940 --> 12:20.620] a lot of integrity, but what I have seen in looking at documents and watching the news [12:20.620 --> 12:27.620] and knowing people still in the financial world, what has happened and what I've seen, [12:27.620 --> 12:32.020] it's all about fees and funds. [12:32.020 --> 12:37.340] I mean, institutions are not on every corner from the fees they charge you from your checking [12:37.340 --> 12:38.340] account. [12:38.340 --> 12:46.180] They're making fees left and right in the real estate loans. [12:46.180 --> 12:53.740] They are doing it unbeknownst and incorrectly based on how the documents are gone up and [12:53.740 --> 13:01.060] the way they are really charted to be able to charge those fees. [13:01.060 --> 13:07.940] The loan documents that I have reviewed the last couple of weeks, there are documents [13:07.940 --> 13:14.860] that aren't signed, calculations are not correct, fees are being collected that are never disclosed [13:14.860 --> 13:18.620] to the borrowers that they're going to be collected. [13:18.620 --> 13:25.660] I mean, there's just at different levels, and it is extremely sloppy work. [13:25.660 --> 13:34.260] But what is bothersome is these people that are sitting across the desk from the underwriter [13:34.260 --> 13:42.020] or the loan officer at the institution, they value what that person says, because after [13:42.020 --> 13:46.420] all, they're supposed to be the educated one in the entire transaction. [13:46.420 --> 13:54.100] And what has happened is they have allowed borrowers to have funds for mortgages that [13:54.100 --> 13:57.580] they do not qualify for. [13:57.580 --> 14:04.380] And they put them in loans that were either 100% financing or interest-only payments for [14:04.380 --> 14:12.620] a certain period of time, and people have found themselves, when those have to be rewritten [14:12.620 --> 14:18.620] and then they really have to start repaying the loan, they can't afford the payment. [14:18.620 --> 14:25.100] And then, not to mention on top of that fact, that foreclosures are happening even to people [14:25.100 --> 14:31.860] that aren't delinquent, so the mortgage industry is in a mess. [14:31.860 --> 14:39.180] And so with the forensic analysis, I hope to be able to help people actually take the [14:39.180 --> 14:46.220] institutions to task, and to bring enough attention to the industry so that everyone [14:46.220 --> 14:55.020] knows what is wrong so that we can fix it, hopefully. [14:55.020 --> 14:58.020] That's wonderful, Sharla. [14:58.020 --> 15:00.380] Now let me ask you something, Sharla. [15:00.380 --> 15:08.700] You say about the fees, let me guess, when it comes to fees, they never err on the side [15:08.700 --> 15:11.860] of the customer, right? [15:11.860 --> 15:15.420] Oh, for sure, for sure. [15:15.420 --> 15:20.260] So wouldn't you, I mean, to me, that indicates that it's probably a little bit more going [15:20.260 --> 15:25.980] on here than just sloppy work, because if it was just sloppy work, the errors would [15:25.980 --> 15:29.740] statistically fall on either side, at least somewhere. [15:29.740 --> 15:34.660] Well, and that's true, and my definition of sloppy is just that. [15:34.660 --> 15:40.340] You know, you have incorrect disclosures, you have documents that are not signed, which, [15:40.340 --> 15:45.340] I mean, you know, I'm a stickler from the beginning to the end, there is a reason and [15:45.340 --> 15:53.460] a method to the madness, and the institutions have lost sight of the importance of everything [15:53.460 --> 15:54.460] being done correctly. [15:54.460 --> 15:59.140] But let's say, for example, you go in and you apply for a loan, and they're required [15:59.140 --> 16:04.140] within three days of the loan application to disclose to you an estimate of the fees, [16:04.140 --> 16:09.340] the costs that are going to be associated with that real estate transaction. [16:09.340 --> 16:12.900] And then you go, you know, through the application process, and you go to closing, and you get [16:12.900 --> 16:20.780] to the closing table, and people are charged, I have seen anywhere from, you know, double [16:20.780 --> 16:27.420] digits to six digits of a fee that they were never disclosed that it was going to be charged [16:27.420 --> 16:28.420] to them. [16:28.420 --> 16:29.420] Six digits? [16:29.420 --> 16:35.060] Oh my gosh. [16:35.060 --> 16:41.100] So you have them at the table after they've gone through months of preparation to get [16:41.100 --> 16:47.860] to the table, and all of a sudden you throw this fee at them that had you thrown it at [16:47.860 --> 16:53.260] them six months earlier or three months earlier, they would have had time to digest it and [16:53.260 --> 16:56.180] rail against it and do something to change it. [16:56.180 --> 17:02.500] But now that you've got them at the table, they're pretty well stuck unless they want [17:02.500 --> 17:04.700] to blow off the deal. [17:04.700 --> 17:06.580] Well exactly. [17:06.580 --> 17:11.540] And you know, after you've gone 30, 45, 60 days, however long it takes to get that application [17:11.540 --> 17:16.820] process to purchase the property, and we all know what happens when, you know, the new [17:16.820 --> 17:22.460] house or the new car bug bites us, we want that. [17:22.460 --> 17:27.740] And then we're sitting there and we're thinking, well, you know, we can squeeze this and it's [17:27.740 --> 17:28.740] okay. [17:28.740 --> 17:29.740] No, it isn't okay. [17:29.740 --> 17:36.300] The law is written like the law is written, and of course the people at the title company [17:36.300 --> 17:42.020] do not know that the disclosures were not done properly. [17:42.020 --> 17:44.260] That's not their job. [17:44.260 --> 17:50.700] That's the job of the loan officer at the bank, and it's not necessarily even the job [17:50.700 --> 17:52.940] of the real estate agent. [17:52.940 --> 17:58.300] Now they are required to do some disclosures along with the lender, but the lender is the [17:58.300 --> 18:04.980] responsible party to disclose that information and to make sure that that borrower understands [18:04.980 --> 18:12.180] everything and that they actually qualify for the house that they're purchasing. [18:12.180 --> 18:13.180] Yes. [18:13.180 --> 18:21.220] Yeah, I looked at a document you sent me today where there was a forensic analysis and they [18:21.220 --> 18:27.700] showed that he qualified for the loan, but when the forensic analysis was done, it showed [18:27.700 --> 18:40.260] that with the loan applied to all his other encumbrances, they equal to 107 percent of [18:40.260 --> 18:41.260] his income. [18:41.260 --> 18:42.260] Exactly. [18:42.260 --> 18:46.900] Well, Charlotte, in cases like that, what is the remedy? [18:46.900 --> 18:52.140] I mean, if you go back and correct the mortgage at that point to correct the payment scheduled [18:52.140 --> 18:56.380] and the person can't afford it, so what do we do? [18:56.380 --> 18:59.780] I don't know if I want to know. [18:59.780 --> 19:09.020] Well, most people, and I've always tried to explain it to someone like this, I may not [19:09.020 --> 19:14.780] tell you what you want to hear, but I'm going to tell you the truth. [19:14.780 --> 19:21.420] Let's try to put you in a home that in three, four, or five years that you've established [19:21.420 --> 19:27.300] enough equity, you've been able to pay for, you can continue to make your utility payments [19:27.300 --> 19:31.300] and your insurance and your property taxes, because we know all those costs are going [19:31.300 --> 19:32.300] to go up. [19:32.300 --> 19:33.300] It's just a given. [19:33.300 --> 19:38.420] Well, Charlotte, isn't there some way that we could go after the bank for fraud for having [19:38.420 --> 19:40.260] all these errors in the mortgage? [19:40.260 --> 19:43.460] Well, and that's... Yes, you can. [19:43.460 --> 19:51.500] The law allows... I mean, the laws are written and the disclosures are required for a reason. [19:51.500 --> 19:58.300] The lenders are not adhering to the law as it's written, and the borrowers are not taking [19:58.300 --> 20:01.140] them to task because they are not educated. [20:01.140 --> 20:07.020] They don't know how to go in and talk... Well, first of all, if you can even find someone [20:07.020 --> 20:14.060] at an institution to even really understand what you're talking to them about. [20:14.060 --> 20:20.820] I've even tried in my personal business talking to some of the larger banks, and I have to [20:20.820 --> 20:27.700] just get downright stern with several of them and say, you know, I appreciate the fact that [20:27.700 --> 20:30.380] you're trying to help me, but you're not what I'm saying. [20:30.380 --> 20:35.780] I need to talk to your supervisor, because the person on the front line, the customer [20:35.780 --> 20:39.100] service person, or whoever, they have no idea how to help you. [20:39.100 --> 20:42.180] They haven't been trained. [20:42.180 --> 20:47.180] So they're just doing what they've been instructed to do and have no clue? [20:47.180 --> 20:50.220] For the most part, but you know what? [20:50.220 --> 20:54.460] That's not my fault, and I'm not there to be taken advantage of because that person [20:54.460 --> 20:57.660] is not educated enough to do their job. [20:57.660 --> 20:58.660] Okay. [20:58.660 --> 21:02.780] When you say my fault, what context are you in? [21:02.780 --> 21:04.780] My fault is the customer. [21:04.780 --> 21:05.780] Okay. [21:05.780 --> 21:06.780] Right. [21:06.780 --> 21:12.300] It's no fault of the borrower, the customer, or whoever that the person that they go in [21:12.300 --> 21:15.820] seeking some guidance from can't help them. [21:15.820 --> 21:22.740] It's the blame of the institutions, but until people are educated and get some help in educating [21:22.740 --> 21:30.620] themselves on how to talk to the people at the bank, to get really past the fluff down [21:30.620 --> 21:37.460] to the decision makers that can help them either with the loan modification or rewriting [21:37.460 --> 21:42.420] the loan in some other manner or something, that nothing's going to change. [21:42.420 --> 21:46.540] I don't see how it's going to change. [21:46.540 --> 21:56.740] How do we give them reason or how do we influence them to change or motivation to change? [21:56.740 --> 22:01.700] Well, you have to know what... I mean, it's no different than anything else that I think [22:01.700 --> 22:03.940] you guys talk about on your radio program. [22:03.940 --> 22:09.540] Good... Shannon Poudent, a good swift kick in the butt. [22:09.540 --> 22:14.940] Yes, and then after that, you can talk to them. [22:14.940 --> 22:18.980] You can tell them that you're... You know, you can show them that you are educated. [22:18.980 --> 22:24.940] Take your documents in there and say, no, that's not what this says. [22:24.940 --> 22:32.020] It says this, and you did that, and you need to fix this. [22:32.020 --> 22:36.300] I'm in here asking you to help me fix this. [22:36.300 --> 22:42.380] Banks are not in business to take houses back. [22:42.380 --> 22:45.460] Banks are not in business to repo cars. [22:45.460 --> 22:57.780] What obligation do they have if you go into them with evidence of an error to make you hold and repair the error? [22:57.780 --> 23:00.820] Well, it depends on what type of error it is. [23:00.820 --> 23:08.140] You know, there's different remedies, but let's say, for example, we'll just talk about [23:08.140 --> 23:15.020] one that I know is a common error, the disclosure of your annual percentage rate, your APR. [23:15.020 --> 23:19.580] That rate has to be disclosed to you within an eighth of one percent of accuracy, so there [23:19.580 --> 23:28.500] is not any wiggle room, so to speak, for what they are disclosing to you. [23:28.500 --> 23:31.020] And those penalties are very stiff. [23:31.020 --> 23:39.020] Now, is that a penalty from some... other than from a civil suit against them? [23:39.020 --> 23:48.020] I mean, are these industry penalties like fines and fees from government organizations? [23:48.020 --> 24:02.380] Yes, but there's also some remedies depending on the infraction on monetary funds back to [24:02.380 --> 24:06.500] the borrower as a form of penalty. [24:06.500 --> 24:14.740] I would like to bring Randy in now and let him explain who he is and his perspective [24:14.740 --> 24:22.620] on this issue, because he also has a concern about the way things are going, and I'd like [24:22.620 --> 24:29.700] him to kind of address his position, and then we kind of kick around how to structure remedies, [24:29.700 --> 24:36.180] what can be done to pay these back, to straighten these things out. [24:36.180 --> 24:42.300] Randy, you got your dog under control? [24:42.300 --> 24:45.300] Is Randy unmuted? [24:45.300 --> 24:46.300] He is now. [24:46.300 --> 24:50.340] He just called back in, he dropped off a line, and he disappeared for a while, and he just [24:50.340 --> 24:51.340] came back. [24:51.340 --> 24:52.340] Randy, thanks. [24:52.340 --> 24:53.340] Yeah. [24:53.340 --> 24:54.340] Hi, guys. [24:54.340 --> 24:57.780] Just a little background, my name is Randy Reller. [24:57.780 --> 25:04.900] I've been in real estate for 25 years, and the mortgage issue to me, there are a lot [25:04.900 --> 25:10.460] of elements to it, but I kind of pulled up some numbers just to give everybody an idea [25:10.460 --> 25:12.900] of what's going on. [25:12.900 --> 25:21.500] Currently in the Austin market, there's 11,500 homes per sale, and out of that, 3.87% of [25:21.500 --> 25:26.500] them are in a short sale situation, which means they're upside down. [25:26.500 --> 25:30.900] That's about almost 500 homes. [25:30.900 --> 25:39.100] The situation is such that all these people need some type of relief, who knows how they [25:39.100 --> 25:40.940] got into the situation. [25:40.940 --> 25:45.860] There's a lot of stuff that goes on, I think, in the mortgage side of things. [25:45.860 --> 25:51.460] When it comes to disclosures, I mean, there's a lot of disclosure laws, and I'd like to [25:51.460 --> 25:55.600] hear what Charlotte has to say about this new HERA stuff, which they're supposedly [25:55.600 --> 26:04.220] tightening down on the disclosures, and what has to be disclosed when, how long people [26:04.220 --> 26:10.020] get to find out about it before they sign off on it, and all that. [26:10.020 --> 26:18.260] I've always felt like the way that they do it is not quite kosher. [26:18.260 --> 26:23.940] I know as a buyer of property, when I sit down and I put all the numbers together and [26:23.940 --> 26:28.300] I look and see what I'm actually going to be into this thing for, because what most [26:28.300 --> 26:32.720] people don't realize is that the sales price is not how much you actually pay for a property. [26:32.720 --> 26:38.380] You always pay over that, and that's not really disclosed to anybody in a clear-cut manner [26:38.380 --> 26:43.540] so you understand what you're really into this thing for in the beginning, and actually [26:43.540 --> 26:47.220] what you're going to come out of pocket for. [26:47.220 --> 26:53.660] In a short summation, that's kind of my position on it, is I think there's some clear issues [26:53.660 --> 27:00.460] that the general public just doesn't have a very good handle on. [27:00.460 --> 27:04.340] Okay. [27:04.340 --> 27:11.780] From your perspective, what are the things primarily you see that are done wrong to defraud [27:11.780 --> 27:19.700] your clients? [27:19.700 --> 27:23.460] Is the agent the problem? [27:23.460 --> 27:25.140] The real estate agent? [27:25.140 --> 27:26.140] Yes. [27:26.140 --> 27:27.140] No. [27:27.140 --> 27:32.980] The real estate agent has zero to do with the loan, typically, and anybody that's got [27:32.980 --> 27:38.100] a lick of sense that's an agent has nothing to do with the loan other than you might suggest [27:38.100 --> 27:40.140] a lender to somebody. [27:40.140 --> 27:42.820] After that, I totally stay out of it. [27:42.820 --> 27:47.340] I don't want to know about it, because there's nothing I can do about it. [27:47.340 --> 27:58.340] It only increases my liability, and I have no control over it whatsoever. [27:58.340 --> 28:04.260] On the mortgage side of it, I'm not sure that those folks are totally at blame either. [28:04.260 --> 28:13.580] I think it goes back to the institutions that are actually creating the funds at an error [28:13.580 --> 28:15.060] when they create these loans. [28:15.060 --> 28:22.100] The whole process, when you get right down to the core of it, is not legit, and has nothing [28:22.100 --> 28:26.140] to do with the mortgage broker or the mortgage people, in my opinion. [28:26.140 --> 28:35.460] They're just following a recipe, and unfortunately, that recipe depends upon an element of fraud [28:35.460 --> 28:40.580] that is inherent in every transaction, in my opinion. [28:40.580 --> 28:49.660] How do you, as a broker, protect your client? [28:49.660 --> 28:56.780] There's no way I can, in the sense that, in the current situation, if you want a loan, [28:56.780 --> 29:03.300] you have to go and deal with the process as it is. [29:03.300 --> 29:08.900] You understand this, Randy, that the funds are created at the signature point. [29:08.900 --> 29:13.140] That's the fraud of it. [29:13.140 --> 29:19.260] The people that are doing it, the paper pushers, none of those people understand how it really [29:19.260 --> 29:25.100] works, and neither does the borrower. [29:25.100 --> 29:33.140] The paper pushers are creating the funds, but how does that defraud the buyer? [29:33.140 --> 29:43.980] We're going to talk about how this defrauds the buyer when we get back on the other side. [29:43.980 --> 29:49.660] This is the rule of law, Randy Kelton and Debra Stevens, Eddie Craig, here on the rule [29:49.660 --> 29:50.900] of law radio network. [29:50.900 --> 29:58.740] We will be right back. [29:58.740 --> 30:03.060] Gold prices are at historic highs, and with the recent pullback, this is a great time [30:03.060 --> 30:04.060] to buy. [30:04.060 --> 30:08.300] With the value of the dollar, risks of inflation, geopolitical uncertainties, and instability [30:08.300 --> 30:11.820] in world financial systems, I see gold going up much higher. [30:11.820 --> 30:15.340] Hi, I'm Tim Fry at Roberts and Roberts Brokerage. [30:15.340 --> 30:18.860] Everybody should have some of their assets in investment grade precious metals. [30:18.860 --> 30:22.800] At Roberts and Roberts Brokerage, you can buy gold, silver, and platinum with confidence [30:22.800 --> 30:27.820] from a brokerage that specialized in the precious metals market since 1977. [30:27.820 --> 30:31.560] If you are new to precious metals, we will happily provide you with the information you [30:31.560 --> 30:35.940] need to make an informed decision whether or not you choose to purchase from us. [30:35.940 --> 30:40.300] Also, Roberts and Roberts Brokerage values your privacy and will always advise you in [30:40.300 --> 30:43.700] the event that we would be required to report any transaction. [30:43.700 --> 30:47.820] If you have gold, silver, or platinum you'd like to sell, we can convert it for immediate [30:47.820 --> 30:48.820] payment. [30:48.820 --> 30:52.580] Call us at 800-874-9760. [30:52.580 --> 30:57.940] We're at Roberts and Roberts Brokerage, 800-874-9760. [31:22.580 --> 31:52.420] Helicopter Bernanke, printing the U.S. currency. [31:52.420 --> 31:57.020] The bailout money, okay? [31:57.020 --> 32:00.940] Know why they call him Helicopter Bernanke? [32:00.940 --> 32:09.580] Because he's known for his policies of dropping, his policies are akin to that of dropping [32:09.580 --> 32:11.900] cash from a helicopter all over the country. [32:11.900 --> 32:14.420] That's why they call him Helicopter Bernanke. [32:14.420 --> 32:16.680] Anyways, Dan, go ahead. [32:16.680 --> 32:22.780] You were just about to explain about how people are just being defrauded. [32:22.780 --> 32:23.780] Randy? [32:23.780 --> 32:24.780] Yes. [32:24.780 --> 32:25.780] Okay. [32:25.780 --> 32:26.780] Go ahead. [32:26.780 --> 32:27.780] Randy Raylor. [32:27.780 --> 32:34.060] Well, I guess what I was saying is that, you know, the funds for Bank A that go to fund [32:34.060 --> 32:36.940] the mortgage are created on the signature. [32:36.940 --> 32:43.100] They're not existing until the signature is done on the loan and therefore the bank in [32:43.100 --> 32:45.020] truth has nothing at risk. [32:45.020 --> 32:49.460] They're just asking you to pay them back plus interest for something that was created at [32:49.460 --> 32:50.460] the time of your signature. [32:50.460 --> 32:54.060] Well, it's total fraud because they never lent you anything anyway. [32:54.060 --> 32:56.380] Exactly, because there's no money to be lent. [32:56.380 --> 32:59.500] It's all credit. [32:59.500 --> 33:05.700] And so when we talk about these, this mortgage crisis, I mean, the system is what it is, [33:05.700 --> 33:12.300] but it would be very simple to, you know, stop the problem and stop the bleeding because [33:12.300 --> 33:17.020] no one really has anything at risk other than the time and effort they put in, which is [33:17.020 --> 33:19.700] minimal compared to the total loans about. [33:19.700 --> 33:20.700] Absolutely. [33:20.700 --> 33:21.700] They're not out. [33:21.700 --> 33:28.500] Anything when they cut the check to the person who's buying the house to pay the seller, [33:28.500 --> 33:36.260] they've already monetized your signature when you sign that note before the funds get deposited [33:36.260 --> 33:41.260] in the account of your account so that you can cut the check, okay? [33:41.260 --> 33:46.260] Before the check goes to the seller, you have already signed the note and they've already [33:46.260 --> 33:50.660] monetized it and securitized it and sold it 10 times over. [33:50.660 --> 33:51.660] And that is a reality. [33:51.660 --> 33:52.660] That is a fact. [33:52.660 --> 33:56.700] That is on mainstream banking websites. [33:56.700 --> 33:59.140] They teach courses about it, okay? [33:59.140 --> 34:01.820] So it's complete and total fraud. [34:01.820 --> 34:07.500] Well, the biggest fraud in all of that though is if you read any type of loan agreement, [34:07.500 --> 34:13.380] the loan agreement states the bank is lending you something of value in exchange for your [34:13.380 --> 34:16.740] signature and the purpose of the loan. [34:16.740 --> 34:22.020] The bank is never lending you anything of value because they don't have anything to [34:22.020 --> 34:23.020] lend. [34:23.020 --> 34:24.020] Exactly. [34:24.020 --> 34:29.740] And that is complete and total utter fraud on its face. [34:29.740 --> 34:35.340] And I think we should go after them for the whole value, face value of the mortgage and [34:35.340 --> 34:39.740] all the payments that we ever paid to on top of it and damages, okay? [34:39.740 --> 34:44.260] Yeah, we're kind of looking in that direction, aren't we, Charla? [34:44.260 --> 34:45.620] Well, most definitely. [34:45.620 --> 34:47.860] And I agree with everything that you guys are saying. [34:47.860 --> 34:56.300] But, I mean, you know, I pose this into the argument as the signatory person and they're [34:56.300 --> 35:03.260] taking my home away, how does what we're talking about now, fraud on the face, how does that [35:03.260 --> 35:04.260] help me? [35:04.260 --> 35:10.340] Because we go, we file criminal charges against them and with the grand jury and we file court [35:10.340 --> 35:16.300] injunction, file petitions for court injunctions to stop the foreclosure and sue the living, [35:16.300 --> 35:18.300] you know what, out of them. [35:18.300 --> 35:27.380] Well, that sort of goes to where we're going, but not quite totally focused on that issue. [35:27.380 --> 35:29.500] I'm sure we could adjudicate that. [35:29.500 --> 35:32.700] That one's going to be extremely difficult to adjudicate. [35:32.700 --> 35:34.620] What is? [35:34.620 --> 35:39.420] The assertion that the bank lends nothing of value. [35:39.420 --> 35:42.180] That is not going to be difficult. [35:42.180 --> 35:47.580] I can pull up hundreds of websites on it right now that are valid sources of information [35:47.580 --> 35:50.820] and get this, here's some other research that I did. [35:50.820 --> 35:54.820] You want to look up monetizing signatures and mortgages? [35:54.820 --> 36:00.820] The main bank that handles the securitization of these notes, guess what the name of the [36:00.820 --> 36:02.820] bank is? [36:02.820 --> 36:03.820] Signature bank. [36:03.820 --> 36:04.820] Ha ha. [36:04.820 --> 36:05.820] Very funny. [36:05.820 --> 36:07.820] They just throw it in your face. [36:07.820 --> 36:17.160] Yeah, we can, but there's something a lot easier to adjudicate, a lot more direct and [36:17.160 --> 36:23.240] absolutely easy for each one to understand. [36:23.240 --> 36:31.500] Even by their own rules, even by the rules they claim to follow, they violate all of [36:31.500 --> 36:32.500] them. [36:32.500 --> 36:39.300] So we don't have to say overall, generally, the whole thing you're doing is fraud and [36:39.300 --> 36:43.740] have to prove that the entire system is fraudulent. [36:43.740 --> 36:49.700] How are we going to get a federal judge to say, oh yeah, every loan every bank has ever [36:49.700 --> 36:55.660] made in this country is fraudulent in the real world we live in? [36:55.660 --> 36:59.780] And actually, Randy, that shouldn't really be that difficult because all you have to [36:59.780 --> 37:01.740] do is get the bank records. [37:01.740 --> 37:07.300] The bank record will show that there was nothing physically actually removed from the bank. [37:07.300 --> 37:10.140] I'm not saying it's hard to prove. [37:10.140 --> 37:16.660] Well, I mean, I didn't think we were talking about a class action lawsuit here on behalf [37:16.660 --> 37:18.460] of every homeowner in America. [37:18.460 --> 37:25.500] We're talking about individuals, so we're not asking a judge to say that every mortgage [37:25.500 --> 37:26.500] is fraudulent. [37:26.500 --> 37:29.580] We're just asking the judge to rule that this one is. [37:29.580 --> 37:30.580] That's what he does. [37:30.580 --> 37:31.580] Okay. [37:31.580 --> 37:32.580] Well, then... [37:32.580 --> 37:33.580] That becomes precedent. [37:33.580 --> 37:38.980] But you know, Randy, I was thinking that it's kind of like what you do with the rules of [37:38.980 --> 37:43.780] criminal procedure and stuff when you're dealing with the traffic tickets and whatnot. [37:43.780 --> 37:45.340] They don't follow their own rules. [37:45.340 --> 37:50.660] It's not necessary to go into the depth of the detail that we've kind of went into now. [37:50.660 --> 37:56.620] It's more necessary to hit them on the key points that the average person can understand [37:56.620 --> 38:00.980] to, you know, achieve the victory that we all want. [38:00.980 --> 38:01.980] Yeah. [38:01.980 --> 38:06.420] Like they told me I would be paying 6% interest. [38:06.420 --> 38:12.460] But when I calculate out what I'm actually paying, it comes up 6.9% interest. [38:12.460 --> 38:15.500] That's real easy to understand. [38:15.500 --> 38:20.780] The law says they were supposed to do X, they did Y. [38:20.780 --> 38:21.780] That's really easy. [38:21.780 --> 38:24.780] They charge me this fee, they're forbidden to charge me. [38:24.780 --> 38:30.180] Those things are real simple to understand, and it's a lot easier to get a judge to give [38:30.180 --> 38:35.700] a ruling in your favor because he's not giving a ruling that will reverberate through the [38:35.700 --> 38:40.820] entire system. [38:40.820 --> 38:42.700] That's what Charla's all about. [38:42.700 --> 38:49.260] Well, but I do think that there are going to be people out there that will go for the [38:49.260 --> 38:57.700] initial fraud, and I hope that there are, you know, because that is the root of everything. [38:57.700 --> 39:07.500] But there's going to be more, in my opinion, more people that are going to understand the [39:07.500 --> 39:11.300] next level, you know, not at the beginning level. [39:11.300 --> 39:14.100] They will be able to represent themselves better. [39:14.100 --> 39:17.860] They understand it better, and there will be more of a success rate. [39:17.860 --> 39:24.140] Well, you know, I said there was 455 that I could find right now, people in a position [39:24.140 --> 39:26.180] that needed some help. [39:26.180 --> 39:31.980] And I think it would be much easier to approach them with a logical thing that they could [39:31.980 --> 39:39.540] understand as far as, you know, here's how you've been taken advantage of versus explaining [39:39.540 --> 39:45.300] to them the true nature of how they've been taken advantage of because I don't think the [39:45.300 --> 39:51.220] average person is prepared to admit to what's really going on. [39:51.220 --> 39:56.620] I think everybody's starting to finally in the gut know something is dead wrong, but [39:56.620 --> 40:03.860] it's a hard one to look it straight in the eye and say, my God, I've just been a fool. [40:03.860 --> 40:08.100] Exactly, and I think that's really kind of where we all are. [40:08.100 --> 40:12.540] Yeah, that type of thought process usually only works with ex-wives. [40:12.540 --> 40:19.300] Well, and Charlotte, to answer your question or to address your comment a minute ago, there [40:19.300 --> 40:21.060] are a lot of people who are already doing it. [40:21.060 --> 40:27.660] A lot of people are beating their foreclosures and getting their houses outright simply because [40:27.660 --> 40:33.940] the banks can't produce the original wet ink signature note in court, which they are required [40:33.940 --> 40:36.060] to do under the federal rules of evidence. [40:36.060 --> 40:37.060] Well, exactly. [40:37.060 --> 40:38.060] How was that? [40:38.060 --> 40:39.060] I'm sorry, say that again. [40:39.060 --> 40:40.060] Your voice kind of dropped out. [40:40.060 --> 40:41.060] I'm sorry. [40:41.060 --> 40:42.060] How simple is that for everyone to understand? [40:42.060 --> 40:43.060] It's very simple and it's very effective. [40:43.060 --> 40:54.140] Absolutely. [40:54.140 --> 40:57.140] You're trying to collect on a contract. [40:57.140 --> 40:58.140] Show me the contract. [40:58.140 --> 41:00.100] Well, we got this photocopy here. [41:00.100 --> 41:05.780] Well, that's evidence that there's a good chance a contract actually exists, but it's [41:05.780 --> 41:09.300] only evidence, prima facie. [41:09.300 --> 41:16.180] You don't get standing on prima facie, you get standing on wet ink signature document. [41:16.180 --> 41:22.660] And these are things, this is the kind of thing we're looking to go to here. [41:22.660 --> 41:29.620] I know this whole issue of the monetary system is a valid issue, but man, it's going to be [41:29.620 --> 41:34.780] hard to adjudicate, to use that with me trying to save my house tomorrow. [41:34.780 --> 41:41.300] Well, we'll see, the thing is, Randy, I don't really think it's fair to bash one remedy [41:41.300 --> 41:42.820] over another. [41:42.820 --> 41:48.620] There are a lot of remedies at stake here and a lot of them are working, most all of [41:48.620 --> 41:49.620] them are working. [41:49.620 --> 41:55.980] So who's to say that we shouldn't try to do that one or this one? [41:55.980 --> 41:59.980] I'm in favor of it all, okay? [41:59.980 --> 42:06.380] Go after them every which way we can, okay, if we can prove fraud through the basic structure [42:06.380 --> 42:10.500] of the monetary system, then I say, let's use that as a cause of action. [42:10.500 --> 42:15.460] If we can use Sharla's causes of action, let's use that too. [42:15.460 --> 42:19.780] Let's file lawsuits that have 50 causes of action and show every way that they're doing [42:19.780 --> 42:20.780] it, okay? [42:20.780 --> 42:23.980] Because the more evidence we have against them, the better. [42:23.980 --> 42:24.980] Yes. [42:24.980 --> 42:25.980] Go ahead. [42:25.980 --> 42:34.020] There was something that triggered a memory in me that the interesting thing that I've [42:34.020 --> 42:39.020] always found with the mortgages is that there's only one signatory on all of this paperwork [42:39.020 --> 42:42.020] and that is the borrower. [42:42.020 --> 42:52.060] And how in the world, when I was in law class in college, any type of a note required two [42:52.060 --> 42:54.940] signatures out of the borrower and the lender. [42:54.940 --> 43:00.180] What is to stop the borrower from just changing the terms of the note since he's the only [43:00.180 --> 43:04.820] one that controls it? [43:04.820 --> 43:09.580] And that's very interesting that you say that because there is no extension of the institution's [43:09.580 --> 43:14.980] liability because there is no one that has agreed to any term because there's no signature [43:14.980 --> 43:17.020] for representing the institution. [43:17.020 --> 43:18.220] It's just the borrower's signature. [43:18.220 --> 43:24.500] Yes, so why can't I just send in some paperwork and modify the terms of the loan at will? [43:24.500 --> 43:25.500] Absolutely. [43:25.500 --> 43:32.340] I mean, it's worth trying for definite. [43:32.340 --> 43:37.540] I mean, you know, it just strikes me as there's a lot of fun ways we can play with this, but [43:37.540 --> 43:44.740] I would like to get something that we could bring to the average person that is somewhat [43:44.740 --> 43:49.940] we know works pretty well in the general case, but at the same time, there's a lot of areas, [43:49.940 --> 43:56.940] Deborah said, that we can really get into this and, you know, attack the beast as it [43:56.940 --> 43:57.940] were. [43:57.940 --> 43:58.940] Well, and I agree with Deborah. [43:58.940 --> 44:22.220] We're really good after it. [44:22.220 --> 44:25.060] You can bring them to a new level. [44:25.060 --> 44:26.060] Right. [44:26.060 --> 44:27.060] I agree. [44:27.060 --> 44:29.060] Absolutely. [44:29.060 --> 44:39.340] Randy, are you still there? [44:39.340 --> 44:40.340] This Randy is. [44:40.340 --> 44:41.340] Yeah, I'm here. [44:41.340 --> 44:50.460] There was one thing I wanted to ask you about, Charla. [44:50.460 --> 44:54.620] We talked earlier and you mentioned a no interest loan. [44:54.620 --> 44:55.620] Yes. [44:55.620 --> 45:00.700] Can you explain how that works and what the fallback is? [45:00.700 --> 45:01.700] Yes. [45:01.700 --> 45:05.980] What happened in the mortgage industry, and so lenders are always very resilient in trying [45:05.980 --> 45:11.020] to figure out ways to get borrowers into properties or whatever, you know, depending on what the [45:11.020 --> 45:17.020] market is doing, and we had an increase in property values, as everyone knows, and they [45:17.020 --> 45:19.820] were pricing themselves out of the market. [45:19.820 --> 45:28.340] And so what they did is they came up with three, five, and seven, well, not many sevens, [45:28.340 --> 45:35.780] mostly three and five year interest only payment loans to get into mortgages. [45:35.780 --> 45:38.660] And I haven't really looked at a lot of them. [45:38.660 --> 45:46.940] My institution personally, we did not do those, but I posed the question to Randy that, you [45:46.940 --> 45:53.380] know, at the time, my three year period is up when I'm finished paying interest only, [45:53.380 --> 45:59.460] and it goes into an amortization where I'm repaying the principal and the interest in [45:59.460 --> 46:01.460] at that point. [46:01.460 --> 46:06.660] Number one, I don't know that a lot of people can afford the payment, which is one reason [46:06.660 --> 46:13.820] for the delinquencies that we've seen with the foreclosures, but the other thing is I [46:13.820 --> 46:21.420] want to see how they are actually taking that original note and what verbiage is written [46:21.420 --> 46:27.580] within that original note that carries over into the repayment, because when I went into [46:27.580 --> 46:33.860] that original note, what kind of rate did they disclose to me that I was going to be [46:33.860 --> 46:36.180] paying in three years? [46:36.180 --> 46:38.340] What kind of payment did they disclose at that time? [46:38.340 --> 46:44.660] I mean, there's all kinds of different reporting structures that I'm going to educate myself [46:44.660 --> 46:50.100] on, because there are so many of those loans out there. [46:50.100 --> 46:51.100] It's amazing. [46:51.100 --> 46:56.620] And I'm sure, Randy, you can probably speak to this maybe with your real estate background [46:56.620 --> 46:59.300] and knowing that people got into those kinds of loans. [46:59.300 --> 47:05.740] I mean, you might even conchets and educate me a little bit about any of those. [47:05.740 --> 47:15.100] Yeah, it looks like when I look at it, the guy can't pay the mortgage and the interest. [47:15.100 --> 47:24.220] So the lender gets him into this contract where he only has to pay interest and not [47:24.220 --> 47:25.220] principal. [47:25.220 --> 47:32.900] Well, he can do that, but at some point, he's going to have to pay them both. [47:32.900 --> 47:40.940] Is he expecting all of a sudden to get some windfall that's going to last for the next [47:40.940 --> 47:47.740] 20 years when this principal comes due? [47:47.740 --> 47:49.860] Has that been what's happening, Charla? [47:49.860 --> 47:55.220] Have these people been, all of a sudden, when they're payment balloons, have they been able [47:55.220 --> 47:57.820] to keep up with it? [47:57.820 --> 48:02.460] I think a lot of them have not, okay, and probably a lot of them at this point are going [48:02.460 --> 48:08.860] into loan modifications, rewriting the loan, maybe extending the amortization back out [48:08.860 --> 48:13.980] to 30 years so that they can afford the principal and interest payment so that the loan goes [48:13.980 --> 48:18.620] amortized over a given period of time. [48:18.620 --> 48:23.020] But that's not happening in some cases, too. [48:23.020 --> 48:29.860] But Mr. Raylow, have you experienced any conversations or what have you seen out there in the Austin [48:29.860 --> 48:32.660] area, just out of curiosity? [48:32.660 --> 48:38.700] Well, I mean, in a general sense, for years and years and years, what I've always seen [48:38.700 --> 48:51.100] is that the lending institutions or whatever side of a transaction, it is better able to [48:51.100 --> 48:52.540] absorb the risk. [48:52.540 --> 48:58.260] In this case, it would be the mortgage lender versus the borrower. [48:58.260 --> 49:05.660] Always tries to shift the risk to the lesser party that cannot bear the risk with the mistaken [49:05.660 --> 49:11.860] assumption that the risk, by shifting the risk, that they're shifting that risk burden [49:11.860 --> 49:13.780] away from themselves. [49:13.780 --> 49:19.300] And what I've always seen, be it in the financial markets or the mortgage markets or whatever, [49:19.300 --> 49:21.300] is this is the case. [49:21.300 --> 49:27.620] The government facilitates this, and it always increases the instability of the total system [49:27.620 --> 49:34.020] because the risk is compounded because the one that is least able to bear risk, in this [49:34.020 --> 49:41.820] case the lender or the borrower, is always given the position to take on the risk, in [49:41.820 --> 49:43.660] other words, the default risk. [49:43.660 --> 49:50.580] The default risk really falls back to the mortgage or, not the mortgagee. [49:50.580 --> 49:54.340] And any time that you play the game that you're going to shift the risk over to the other [49:54.340 --> 49:59.820] side, you always have these inherent and unstable positions. [49:59.820 --> 50:04.220] But what we always see is that the government comes in and then takes those burdens and [50:04.220 --> 50:09.260] places them on the back of the taxpayers and bails out the bad decisions and the poor risk [50:09.260 --> 50:13.060] management that is associated with the whole transaction. [50:13.060 --> 50:16.980] And this is systemic, and it always happens this way. [50:16.980 --> 50:21.140] That probably didn't answer your question, but that explains kind of how we got to the [50:21.140 --> 50:27.420] point where we are now and what, if in the future, even if we have a system similar to [50:27.420 --> 50:32.740] what we have, maybe we have to change it some, you can't shift these burdens over to the [50:32.740 --> 50:34.860] weak side. [50:34.860 --> 50:44.180] You haven't done anything but play kind of an accounting trick, but it didn't shift the [50:44.180 --> 50:45.180] burden. [50:45.180 --> 50:46.180] The burden is still there. [50:46.180 --> 50:50.660] It actually increases the burden because now you're depending upon the side that can never [50:50.660 --> 50:54.300] make good on it to be the one that does. [50:54.300 --> 50:58.020] And that's kind of what I would have to say about that. [50:58.020 --> 51:07.140] Personal circumstances, I've seen all types of things going on with borrowers. [51:07.140 --> 51:09.340] I've always tried to steer them clear. [51:09.340 --> 51:12.820] Don't take on negative amortizations. [51:12.820 --> 51:15.940] Don't take on adjustable rates. [51:15.940 --> 51:20.780] If I felt the client couldn't handle it, I would tell them, look, this is a bad deal for [51:20.780 --> 51:21.780] you. [51:21.780 --> 51:23.140] I don't think you should do it. [51:23.140 --> 51:26.700] But I can't do anything about it if they do. [51:26.700 --> 51:29.700] I have to go with what they say. [51:29.700 --> 51:36.260] But in general, I think that one point I was trying to make about the risk shifting that [51:36.260 --> 51:42.700] really doesn't shift risk, all it does is create more risk and create a totally unstable [51:42.700 --> 51:49.220] situation down the road is absolutely fundamentally at the bottom of all the things that are going [51:49.220 --> 51:56.420] on that everybody sees in the financial markets now, the mortgage markets, it's just inherent [51:56.420 --> 51:57.420] in it. [51:57.420 --> 52:02.780] And because the ultimate players know that they're going to take the government or Jess [52:02.780 --> 52:08.020] and shift it onto the backs of the taxpayers and get away with it, which is what they've [52:08.020 --> 52:09.020] done. [52:09.020 --> 52:10.020] Right. [52:10.020 --> 52:20.260] I don't know if that answered your question in short. [52:20.260 --> 52:28.260] Charla, the one thing that you do is examine the mortgages the way they're done. [52:28.260 --> 52:37.340] Can you kind of give us a short course in the common errors you tend to find in most [52:37.340 --> 52:40.700] of the mortgages that you look at? [52:40.700 --> 52:44.980] Not the ones you did, of course, but the ones other people did. [52:44.980 --> 52:45.980] Of course. [52:45.980 --> 52:55.380] Well, and recently what I've seen when I looked at some of them, there are a few places where [52:55.380 --> 53:03.340] the lender or the loan officer is required to sign and documents are not signed, documents [53:03.340 --> 53:09.860] are not notarized, of course, disclosures are not given. [53:09.860 --> 53:15.100] I mean, I looked at one recently, I was looking at the survey, and there was one document [53:15.100 --> 53:19.940] in the file that said flood insurance was required, one document that said flood insurance [53:19.940 --> 53:26.980] was not required, and the survey itself said that the property is not in a flood zone. [53:26.980 --> 53:29.900] You know, maybe the lender was just trying to make sure they got the right document and [53:29.900 --> 53:39.420] file, so they just put both of them in there, I don't know, but there's no, of course, the [53:39.420 --> 53:45.260] treatment lending violations, I mean, and statistically, the numbers that are out there, [53:45.260 --> 53:59.460] 88% of all mortgage loans have a serious infraction, and there's different levels of, I guess, [53:59.460 --> 54:04.940] what they do wrong, so people can understand that, you know, based on what they do wrong [54:04.940 --> 54:10.140] or what is not properly disclosed, it goes into a different level, a different penalty [54:10.140 --> 54:23.780] phase, but 88% of all loans have a major infraction, okay, a real monetary penalty that can go [54:23.780 --> 54:29.020] back against the lender and the institution. [54:29.020 --> 54:35.140] I mean, I was looking at some documents the other day that were certified true copies [54:35.140 --> 54:38.940] of the originals, but none of them were notarized. [54:38.940 --> 54:42.260] Now, is the original notarized? [54:42.260 --> 54:43.260] I don't know. [54:43.260 --> 54:48.260] I mean, you know, if I'm looking at a certified true original copy, I would think that it [54:48.260 --> 54:54.100] would have a notarized stamp on it, so it's just things like that. [54:54.100 --> 55:02.500] I mean, it's just all kinds of things, and of course, there's not any two of them that [55:02.500 --> 55:06.140] are going to be the same, obviously, but... [55:06.140 --> 55:18.460] What of these amount to, you know, errors that are no harm, no foul, and what percentage [55:18.460 --> 55:25.860] of these tend to amount to errors that defraud the borrower? [55:25.860 --> 55:35.100] Well, I go back to the figure that I've investigated, and that is being spread throughout the industry, [55:35.100 --> 55:36.100] 88%. [55:36.100 --> 55:41.260] So, and these, you're saying they're serious because they defraud the borrower. [55:41.260 --> 55:50.780] I mean, they're not serious because of some technical requirement, but in fact, the person [55:50.780 --> 56:01.220] who made the loan has the loan based on fraud, and from what I know of that part, if the [56:01.220 --> 56:09.060] loan's based on fraud, then the loan is garbage, and now, I guess, this kind of leads back [56:09.060 --> 56:15.380] to what Randy and Deborah were talking about earlier about the banks creating this money [56:15.380 --> 56:26.820] out of air in that you purchase the house, the house is transferred to you, and then [56:26.820 --> 56:37.020] you create a promissory note to the bank, but the bank already got an entry on the positive [56:37.020 --> 56:45.060] side of their ledger for the amount of the home, and they've got that, as I understand [56:45.060 --> 56:54.380] it, monetized by the U.S. Treasury, so their side of the ledger got its entry, and they [56:54.380 --> 57:02.500] show to have this value, and now they're asking you to give them back value again, and from [57:02.500 --> 57:12.180] what I've seen in researching these cases against credit card companies and mortgage [57:12.180 --> 57:20.300] companies for fraud, that if you find fraud in the promissory note, it doesn't necessarily [57:20.300 --> 57:27.540] affect the bill, the house, it's already yours, but you don't have to pay back the note because [57:27.540 --> 57:36.580] it's fraud. So the note goes away. Yes, it's fraud on its face from the very beginning. [57:36.580 --> 57:44.540] So the note simply goes away, and the house is rightly yours. Yeah, but what about all [57:44.540 --> 57:50.380] the money that you paid on the payments? You deserve that back. Right, yeah, that's what [57:50.380 --> 57:56.060] we sue for. What I was getting at is you don't have to pay the rest of it, now you can go [57:56.060 --> 58:02.260] after them, and this is one thing that Charla and I talked about, is you've got someone [58:02.260 --> 58:07.940] on fixed income who's already paid for the house, they've had a lot of money stole from [58:07.940 --> 58:12.660] them, they should be able to get back. Yeah, and I think probably when you're not in a [58:12.660 --> 58:16.780] foreclosure situation or in some kind of trouble with the loan, that's the time to go after [58:16.780 --> 58:22.780] and be proactive. Absolutely. Okay, we're going to break, we've got Steve Skidmore on [58:22.780 --> 58:27.860] the line. I'd like to bring him into the conversation on the other side. His show Endless Fraud Detection [58:27.860 --> 58:32.220] is coming to Rule of Law Radio Network. He's going to be filling in for Tom Kiley tomorrow [58:32.220 --> 58:39.380] night, Thursday night, 6 to 8, him and his co-host Neil Switkowski, and he'll be doing [58:39.380 --> 58:43.260] his show on Thursday nights, 10 to midnight, coming up in a couple of weeks. The Rule of [58:43.260 --> 59:01.980] Law Radio Network, we will be right back. Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [59:01.980 --> 59:07.180] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [59:07.180 --> 59:14.700] for CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, [59:14.700 --> 59:19.060] know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should [59:19.060 --> 59:25.580] do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [59:25.580 --> 59:31.420] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [59:31.420 --> 59:36.780] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [59:36.780 --> 59:41.780] the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our [59:41.780 --> 59:48.900] audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and [59:48.900 --> 59:55.100] much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, or call toll-free [59:55.100 --> 59:58.100] 866-LAW-EZ. [59:58.100 --> 01:00:07.100] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network at ruleoflawradio.com, live free speech [01:00:07.100 --> 01:00:29.100] talk radio at its best. [01:00:37.100 --> 01:01:06.660] All right, there it is. That's song by Three Shoes Posse, dedicated to Randy [01:01:06.660 --> 01:01:13.020] Raylor. Neighbor, neighbor, keep your dog out of my yard. I love it. I got to love it. [01:01:13.020 --> 01:01:18.460] We didn't write that song for him, but certainly that song is dedicated to Randy Raylor, the [01:01:18.460 --> 01:01:22.580] listeners who have been following this story for a while know what I'm talking about. Anyway, [01:01:22.580 --> 01:01:28.100] back to the banking fraud, and Steve, just sit tight for one second, because Randy Raylor [01:01:28.100 --> 01:01:34.820] and I were discussing something on the break concerning the issue again of the fraud of [01:01:34.820 --> 01:01:40.860] the entire monetary system and monetizing people's signatures. Randy, tell our listeners [01:01:40.860 --> 01:01:42.420] what you told me on the break. [01:01:42.420 --> 01:01:51.420] Well, it was probably around, I want to say, May of 2007. I was in a meeting with one of [01:01:51.420 --> 01:01:57.140] the main reps for Countrywide Mortgage, which was at that point the largest mortgage lender [01:01:57.140 --> 01:02:03.260] in the country. They were telling us about all the wonderful things. This was like about [01:02:03.260 --> 01:02:11.740] a week before the subprime blow up. He was saying to us that if we could bring in clients [01:02:11.740 --> 01:02:16.140] that were not American citizens, they didn't have to have a Social Security number, they [01:02:16.140 --> 01:02:19.980] didn't have to prove income, they didn't have to do anything. They just had to be able to [01:02:19.980 --> 01:02:25.300] fog a mirror, and they would give them a mortgage. Now, if you were an American, forget it. You [01:02:25.300 --> 01:02:30.460] had to prove all this and that, jump through all the hoops and all that, but if you were [01:02:30.460 --> 01:02:37.260] a non-American and wanted to buy a house, come on in. Loans were good. We're going to [01:02:37.260 --> 01:02:38.940] lend you whatever the heck you want. [01:02:38.940 --> 01:02:40.580] All they needed was the signature, right? [01:02:40.580 --> 01:02:46.620] All they wanted was the signature and a living, breathing body. Who knows, we might even be [01:02:46.620 --> 01:02:50.380] able to make it up as we went. I just couldn't believe it. [01:02:50.380 --> 01:02:55.660] Yeah, and the reason for that is because when you give them your signature on that piece [01:02:55.660 --> 01:03:04.940] of paper, they now have a debt instrument that they monetize and trade as a security [01:03:04.940 --> 01:03:11.260] on the market and make thousands of percent of profit off of it. It's already an even [01:03:11.260 --> 01:03:18.260] exchange anyway. They have already been paid when you give them your signature. You don't [01:03:18.260 --> 01:03:25.860] owe them anything after that point. It's an even trade. You've sold them your signature [01:03:25.860 --> 01:03:31.660] on a debt instrument to monetize on the open market. What do you owe them anything after [01:03:31.660 --> 01:03:35.340] that for? You should have charged them more. [01:03:35.340 --> 01:03:42.180] I don't understand this. The mortgage company, when they sold the house to you, they had [01:03:42.180 --> 01:03:43.540] to buy it from the seller. [01:03:43.540 --> 01:03:44.540] No, they didn't. [01:03:44.540 --> 01:03:45.540] No, they didn't, Randy. [01:03:45.540 --> 01:03:55.780] Think of it this way. The mortgage company may have $100,000 in the bank. They're going [01:03:55.780 --> 01:04:02.860] to lend you $100,000. Now, they don't take the $100,000 that they have in their account. [01:04:02.860 --> 01:04:05.700] They create a brand new $100,000. [01:04:05.700 --> 01:04:11.260] Yeah, that's actually prohibited by federal law for them to actually lend you the $100,000 [01:04:11.260 --> 01:04:12.260] that they have in the bank. [01:04:12.260 --> 01:04:15.980] I understand that part. They get a- [01:04:15.980 --> 01:04:19.900] They keep the $100,000, but now they have a note worth $100,000. [01:04:19.900 --> 01:04:20.900] At least. [01:04:20.900 --> 01:04:27.700] Plus the $100,000 that they always had, plus the $100,000 that's out there to the seller. [01:04:27.700 --> 01:04:33.660] Then they turn around and they sell that note. Now they've got another $100,000. [01:04:33.660 --> 01:04:40.340] Exactly. That's exactly right. The banks admit this on their own website. That's why I'm [01:04:40.340 --> 01:04:45.180] saying this is not speculation or theory. Go look it up yourself, Signature Bank. I'm [01:04:45.180 --> 01:04:47.500] telling you. This is taught- [01:04:47.500 --> 01:04:51.820] But you are the book for the $100,000 that was created out of thin air, and you have [01:04:51.820 --> 01:04:53.820] to pay it back in interest. [01:04:53.820 --> 01:04:56.020] Where does the seller come in to this? [01:04:56.020 --> 01:05:00.060] These principles are taught in high level economics. [01:05:00.060 --> 01:05:08.900] There's a ledger entry that goes to the seller, so he gets a ledger entry on his positive [01:05:08.900 --> 01:05:14.700] side. Well, that has to balance with a negative ledger entry on somebody. [01:05:14.700 --> 01:05:22.380] Randy, listen. This is what I was saying earlier in the show. The bank does not cut the check [01:05:22.380 --> 01:05:29.940] to the seller until after you have already signed the note. Sometimes it's a couple days [01:05:29.940 --> 01:05:38.140] later even. Once they get that signed note, then they turn into a securities instrument [01:05:38.140 --> 01:05:42.820] and they get their money back right away on the open market. You think the banks are going [01:05:42.820 --> 01:05:43.820] to be out- [01:05:43.820 --> 01:05:44.820] Trying to get this to make sense. [01:05:44.820 --> 01:05:50.180] I'm telling you, that's what they do. That's what it says on their own bank's website. [01:05:50.180 --> 01:05:53.180] They tell you what they do. [01:05:53.180 --> 01:05:54.180] Stop just a second. [01:05:54.180 --> 01:05:59.700] They sell your note and they get the $100,000 by selling your promissory note, and then [01:05:59.700 --> 01:06:06.860] they use that money to cut the check to the seller of the house. Then the buyer pays them [01:06:06.860 --> 01:06:09.260] back again. It's ridiculous. [01:06:09.260 --> 01:06:13.700] That's not even true, Deborah. They don't get the money when they sell the note. The [01:06:13.700 --> 01:06:23.500] money's created as a checkbooking entry and it goes directly from the bank to the seller. [01:06:23.500 --> 01:06:29.100] Now that checkbooking entry, that money is technically yours created by your signature. [01:06:29.100 --> 01:06:32.140] So then they also sell the note on top of it. [01:06:32.140 --> 01:06:35.100] Then they go and they sell the note and they get another $100,000. [01:06:35.100 --> 01:06:39.300] Okay, yes. That's right. That's right. So it's even worse. That's right. I forgot about [01:06:39.300 --> 01:06:40.300] that part. [01:06:40.300 --> 01:06:45.340] Yeah, but the idea, when they sell the note, they sell the note on the condition that they [01:06:45.340 --> 01:06:50.420] pay it off back to the person who buys it as you pay them. [01:06:50.420 --> 01:06:57.460] No, Randy. That's not true. That's not the way it works. They sell it as a securities [01:06:57.460 --> 01:07:01.180] instrument. It turns into a debt instrument at that point. [01:07:01.180 --> 01:07:02.620] What's the value? [01:07:02.620 --> 01:07:05.820] It's a commodity that's worth something at that point. [01:07:05.820 --> 01:07:12.820] Yes, but it's a promissory note. They sell a promissory note. [01:07:12.820 --> 01:07:18.540] In the market, people apply speculative values to that because it all goes back to the signature. [01:07:18.540 --> 01:07:25.220] Think about it. If you have a famous author that has a book and they have a book signing, [01:07:25.220 --> 01:07:31.780] that book is worth a lot more money just simply because the author signed it. It's all about [01:07:31.780 --> 01:07:38.300] the signature, and they turn it into some kind of a securities instrument on its face. [01:07:38.300 --> 01:07:41.580] Yes, and I understand. After something I read today... [01:07:41.580 --> 01:07:44.820] Right, Randy? Raylor? Am I understanding this correctly? [01:07:44.820 --> 01:07:51.620] Well, okay. Look, you have 100,000. Bank A has 100,000. They turn around. They create [01:07:51.620 --> 01:07:57.940] a mortgage to you. You sign the note. They create 100,000 additional dollars. So now [01:07:57.940 --> 01:08:04.620] they have 200,000. The created money goes to the seller. They claim those created monies. [01:08:04.620 --> 01:08:08.980] Then they turn around. They take the note, and they sell it. Now, if they'd actually [01:08:08.980 --> 01:08:13.740] lent you the money that they had in the account, it would be more of a legitimate transaction. [01:08:13.740 --> 01:08:18.700] The problem is they don't lend you that money. They're lending you credit, your own credit [01:08:18.700 --> 01:08:20.220] back to you at interest. [01:08:20.220 --> 01:08:21.220] Yes. [01:08:21.220 --> 01:08:24.420] You're making this more complex than it is. [01:08:24.420 --> 01:08:45.300] No, that's how it works. I will send you dozens of links on mainstream banking websites that [01:08:45.300 --> 01:08:51.220] say exactly what Randy Raylor is saying. They admit it on their own websites. [01:08:51.220 --> 01:08:58.060] I understand they admit that. The guy just gives them a piece of paper with no value [01:08:58.060 --> 01:09:03.180] whatsoever. Here's this piece of paper. I'm going to give it to you, and you're never [01:09:03.180 --> 01:09:09.380] going to get anything of value for that piece of paper, and you're going to give me $100,000 [01:09:09.380 --> 01:09:10.380] for that piece of paper. [01:09:10.380 --> 01:09:17.300] That's because of HJR 192, Randy. You can't pay off a debt. You can only discharge a debt. [01:09:17.300 --> 01:09:21.460] The guy that buys the note from Bank A is the one that's... [01:09:21.460 --> 01:09:28.020] ... has the need to be paid back by the bank as they collect the funds from you, the borrower. [01:09:28.020 --> 01:09:33.300] Randy, you really have to see debt as money, too. You really have to see that. [01:09:33.300 --> 01:09:38.700] I just read Debt as Money today. No, I'm sorry. It wasn't Debt as Money. It was another deal [01:09:38.700 --> 01:09:44.020] on how all of this works, and that was the idea, and that's why there's a problem, because [01:09:44.020 --> 01:09:49.740] they sold these notes, and they were supposed to pay back the note as the money came in, [01:09:49.740 --> 01:09:52.540] but the money stopped coming in, so they couldn't pay the note. [01:09:52.540 --> 01:09:58.340] See, Randy, the thing is, you can't pay off a debt anymore anyway. It's against public [01:09:58.340 --> 01:09:59.340] policy that they... [01:09:59.340 --> 01:10:00.340] Playing with words with me. [01:10:00.340 --> 01:10:01.340] No, I'm not. [01:10:01.340 --> 01:10:04.340] You discharge the debt as the money comes in. [01:10:04.340 --> 01:10:05.340] Right. [01:10:05.340 --> 01:10:06.340] That's the problem. [01:10:06.340 --> 01:10:13.540] You're totally correct. I mean, but here's the thing. What is to say that B, the buyer [01:10:13.540 --> 01:10:20.460] of the note from A, actually paid any real funds for the note? Maybe they created a debt [01:10:20.460 --> 01:10:27.300] on itself to buy it, because remember, it's just a big old pushing around paper scheme. [01:10:27.300 --> 01:10:28.300] Exactly. [01:10:28.300 --> 01:10:34.180] I mean, now maybe somebody actually did have some funds on deposit that they earned, and [01:10:34.180 --> 01:10:40.340] they paid for this note. Now, they should be paid back, but the problem is that there's [01:10:40.340 --> 01:10:44.180] $200,000 created on a $100,000 note. [01:10:44.180 --> 01:10:47.900] I've been struggling to understand this for quite a while. It's finally beginning to make [01:10:47.900 --> 01:10:50.900] sense of how this can work. [01:10:50.900 --> 01:10:53.060] This is a fractional reserve system, Randy. [01:10:53.060 --> 01:10:59.380] It doesn't... Fractional reserve system doesn't make it make any sense whatsoever. Why would [01:10:59.380 --> 01:11:07.060] someone in a foreign country give us their value for nothing? Absolutely nothing. [01:11:07.060 --> 01:11:11.620] Well, let's bring Steve Skidmore into the conversation. Maybe he can explain it. [01:11:11.620 --> 01:11:14.180] I can explain it. This is real easy. [01:11:14.180 --> 01:11:15.180] Okay. [01:11:15.180 --> 01:11:16.180] Well, but the thing is... [01:11:16.180 --> 01:11:20.940] There is a promise to pay. You're buying a promise to pay. [01:11:20.940 --> 01:11:21.940] But the foreign countries... [01:11:21.940 --> 01:11:24.780] Exactly. You really are. You have it right. [01:11:24.780 --> 01:11:30.940] They do pay as they get paid. They have this value coming to them, and they factor it. [01:11:30.940 --> 01:11:31.940] This is just factoring. [01:11:31.940 --> 01:11:32.940] Steve, are you there? [01:11:32.940 --> 01:11:33.940] Yes. [01:11:33.940 --> 01:11:40.660] Okay, Steve, why don't you jump in here and talk about what you've seen with the fraud? [01:11:40.660 --> 01:11:43.660] Yeah. Beat some sense into me. [01:11:43.660 --> 01:11:53.700] Randy, nobody can beat sense into you. You're too big an old boy to beat on. No, actually, [01:11:53.700 --> 01:11:59.420] I'm having trouble wrapping my mind around the fractional reserve system. I understand [01:11:59.420 --> 01:12:07.420] the nuts and bolts of it, but how the machine works on the backside, I'm still... I don't [01:12:07.420 --> 01:12:08.420] know. [01:12:08.420 --> 01:12:15.860] That's what's beginning to make sense. This foreign country is buying a promise to pay. [01:12:15.860 --> 01:12:19.740] I'm saying, well, I got this debt owed to me, and these guys are going to be sending [01:12:19.740 --> 01:12:25.300] me this money. But I need dollars right now, so I'll tell you what I'll do. Let's make [01:12:25.300 --> 01:12:31.660] a deal. I got a $100,000 note. I'll sell it to you for 80, and then as this money comes [01:12:31.660 --> 01:12:36.420] to me, I'll give it to you. When you collect the whole thing, it'll take you more time, [01:12:36.420 --> 01:12:38.420] but you'll collect 20 grand. [01:12:38.420 --> 01:12:45.420] Right. What they do before they sell it, they try to season it a little bit. If the note [01:12:45.420 --> 01:12:50.300] is six months old, it's not worth very much because you haven't shown your potential to [01:12:50.300 --> 01:12:55.540] keep paying. But if it's two or three years old, then you've established a history of [01:12:55.540 --> 01:13:02.340] constant payments. Therefore, it makes that note more valuable on the SEC market. [01:13:02.340 --> 01:13:07.980] Exactly. When the guy buying the promissory note looks at it, he's saying, yeah, I'm going [01:13:07.980 --> 01:13:15.980] to get paid from this. It goes to, he has an expectation of having the debt that he [01:13:15.980 --> 01:13:26.300] creates discharged as the borrower pays in the funds. It goes to the guy at the end of [01:13:26.300 --> 01:13:27.300] the line. [01:13:27.300 --> 01:13:28.300] Right. [01:13:28.300 --> 01:13:34.060] Randy, let me see if I can jump in here and use you as the example to explain it to you. [01:13:34.060 --> 01:13:40.900] You have $100,000 in the bank. Deborah wants to buy a house for $100,000 and is going to [01:13:40.900 --> 01:13:49.620] take out a mortgage with you as a private lender. You guys do the note. You do the mortgage. [01:13:49.620 --> 01:13:57.020] She signs it. You give her your $100,000. She turns around or it goes through the transaction [01:13:57.020 --> 01:14:03.320] and it goes to the seller. She now has the piece of property. The seller has the $100,000. [01:14:03.320 --> 01:14:10.980] You have a promissory note. That's the way the transaction is supposed to be, but that's [01:14:10.980 --> 01:14:18.260] not what happens. If you're the bank, you never put up the $100,000. You kept your $100,000, [01:14:18.260 --> 01:14:24.740] the original $100,000, created the new $100,000 at a thin air. You gave it to the seller and [01:14:24.740 --> 01:14:32.900] you turn around and you sell the note to buyer B. Now, you've never risked one thin dime [01:14:32.900 --> 01:14:40.700] and you've been paid fees upfront and you may be paid fees to handle the mortgage payments, [01:14:40.700 --> 01:14:48.260] but that's the difference. They never put any money up. They have nothing at risk. Now, [01:14:48.260 --> 01:14:57.820] the guy that's buying the buyer B has an expectation that the mortgagee, Deborah, is going to pay [01:14:57.820 --> 01:15:02.580] him. That's the difference right there. [01:15:02.580 --> 01:15:04.900] What happens if he don't? [01:15:04.900 --> 01:15:14.020] Well, then it's the same situation as if it was just you. The problem comes into play [01:15:14.020 --> 01:15:18.380] is that the whole thing, because of what the bank's done, is a fraud on its face. [01:15:18.380 --> 01:15:25.020] Wait a minute. There is something in there. The bank has got that $100,000 that they kept. [01:15:25.020 --> 01:15:27.020] Well, it was always theirs. [01:15:27.020 --> 01:15:37.100] It becomes collateral. There's nothing that ties to that money. It's just their money. [01:15:37.100 --> 01:15:38.100] They never put it up. [01:15:38.100 --> 01:15:44.420] Yeah, that does not become collateral for the promissory note. How do the banks wind [01:15:44.420 --> 01:15:50.260] up going out of business when people don't pay the notes if the notes are sold to somebody [01:15:50.260 --> 01:15:51.260] else? [01:15:51.260 --> 01:15:56.820] Randy, you really got to see that video. Debt is money too. It will tell you this so straight [01:15:56.820 --> 01:16:02.900] up. It's not even funny. In 45 minutes, you'll know so much about how this works. You'll [01:16:02.900 --> 01:16:05.660] slap your forehead with a hammer out of frustration. [01:16:05.660 --> 01:16:10.660] Well, I think I'm understanding how it works. How did Countrywide go bankrupt? [01:16:10.660 --> 01:16:12.660] It's like a brilliant scam. [01:16:12.660 --> 01:16:18.660] Well, if this is so brilliant, how did Countrywide go bankrupt if they have no risk? [01:16:18.660 --> 01:16:23.980] They go bankrupt because they're holding more promises than they have money to pay. [01:16:23.980 --> 01:16:30.780] Wait a minute. You just said nothing they were holding was collateral. [01:16:30.780 --> 01:16:38.460] The only way that a bank can go bankrupt is if the Federal Reserve wants to turn the screws [01:16:38.460 --> 01:16:47.300] on them and call in the Reserve. The Federal Reserve Bank sets a limit. It used to be like [01:16:47.300 --> 01:16:52.100] they could fractionalize nine times. Now it's like 90 to 900. Who knows? It could be infinite [01:16:52.100 --> 01:16:57.060] at this point. It's whatever the Federal Reserve says at any particular given point in time [01:16:57.060 --> 01:17:04.860] that they have to have X percentage of reserves in comparison to how many signatures they [01:17:04.860 --> 01:17:12.060] have monetized. If they don't have enough, then the Federal Reserve Bank declares them [01:17:12.060 --> 01:17:18.700] bankrupt. That's what happens. It's all up to the Federal Reserve. What they do is they [01:17:18.700 --> 01:17:24.420] want to consolidate the smaller, they want to wipe out the smaller banks, consolidate [01:17:24.420 --> 01:17:28.420] the bigger banks. The bigger banks are eating up the smaller banks so that the people in [01:17:28.420 --> 01:17:35.020] the top control, upper echelon levels can stomp out the middle class, so to speak, of [01:17:35.020 --> 01:17:36.020] the banking system. [01:17:36.020 --> 01:17:40.820] Okay. Well, I'm trying to make this make sense. You're saying that the Reserve is not collateral. [01:17:40.820 --> 01:17:41.820] No. [01:17:41.820 --> 01:17:42.820] No. [01:17:42.820 --> 01:17:43.820] It never was. [01:17:43.820 --> 01:17:48.060] There's no claim against it at all. The bank can just do whatever it wants to with it. [01:17:48.060 --> 01:17:50.900] Yes. It was theirs to begin with. [01:17:50.900 --> 01:17:55.540] You just said they couldn't. If they don't have enough, if they don't have it there, [01:17:55.540 --> 01:17:57.980] then they get taken out by the Federal Reserve. [01:17:57.980 --> 01:18:03.940] Well, remember, Randy, that the Federal Reserve system is a public relations game, and sometimes [01:18:03.940 --> 01:18:08.740] they have to sacrifice one of the players to keep everybody in the musical chairs. [01:18:08.740 --> 01:18:13.340] How do they do it if the bank doesn't own anything? [01:18:13.340 --> 01:18:20.100] Because Randy, the problem is that they can only monetize so much. They can only create [01:18:20.100 --> 01:18:26.500] so much debt in comparison to what they have on reserve. The way that the Federal Reserve [01:18:26.500 --> 01:18:31.100] puts a bank out of business is that they can all of a sudden just change their policy at [01:18:31.100 --> 01:18:37.300] any point in time and say, oh, we just decided that you have to have 20% reserves now instead [01:18:37.300 --> 01:18:42.900] of 10, or you have to have 10% reserves now instead of five, and the Federal Reserve just [01:18:42.900 --> 01:18:46.460] decides that they're going to raise the bar, and they put the bank out of business. It's [01:18:46.460 --> 01:18:47.460] that simple. [01:18:47.460 --> 01:18:51.180] What is the point of the reserve? [01:18:51.180 --> 01:18:52.180] There is none. [01:18:52.180 --> 01:18:53.180] There is none anyway. [01:18:53.180 --> 01:18:54.180] Public relations. [01:18:54.180 --> 01:18:55.180] Yes. [01:18:55.180 --> 01:18:56.180] Public relations. [01:18:56.180 --> 01:18:57.180] Right. [01:18:57.180 --> 01:18:58.180] It's in the God in County show. [01:18:58.180 --> 01:18:59.180] What is the purported purpose? [01:18:59.180 --> 01:19:03.860] As a smoking mirror for the public to consume. [01:19:03.860 --> 01:19:06.300] What is the purported purpose of the reserve? [01:19:06.300 --> 01:19:08.340] Go read HJR 192. [01:19:08.340 --> 01:19:15.300] It is there to initiate the backing for the loans, but it does not show the purpose at [01:19:15.300 --> 01:19:16.300] all. [01:19:16.300 --> 01:19:17.300] Collateral. [01:19:17.300 --> 01:19:18.300] It's not collateral. [01:19:18.300 --> 01:19:19.300] It's collateral. [01:19:19.300 --> 01:19:20.300] No. [01:19:20.300 --> 01:19:21.300] Well, you call it what you want. [01:19:21.300 --> 01:19:25.940] No, it makes sense this way. You're using these strange terms that don't make sense. [01:19:25.940 --> 01:19:26.940] Okay, call it collateral. [01:19:26.940 --> 01:19:33.820] They're required to hold collateral, but they're only required to hold $1 on 10. [01:19:33.820 --> 01:19:35.820] Okay, there you go. [01:19:35.820 --> 01:19:39.780] You have enough, but it's collateral. [01:19:39.780 --> 01:19:43.180] If the loan doesn't pay, the reserve pays the loan. [01:19:43.180 --> 01:19:44.180] No. [01:19:44.180 --> 01:19:46.420] It's not what happens. [01:19:46.420 --> 01:19:49.020] That is the public relations of it, Randy. [01:19:49.020 --> 01:19:50.020] You have it right there. [01:19:50.020 --> 01:19:51.020] It's not the truth. [01:19:51.020 --> 01:19:52.020] That's the point. [01:19:52.020 --> 01:19:54.100] All the banks did was exchange book entries. [01:19:54.100 --> 01:19:55.380] I understand that. [01:19:55.380 --> 01:19:56.380] I'm trying to... [01:19:56.380 --> 01:19:57.380] The only time... [01:19:57.380 --> 01:20:01.100] You're making this a whole lot more complicated than it needs to be. [01:20:01.100 --> 01:20:02.100] No, Randy. [01:20:02.100 --> 01:20:03.100] It's actually a lot... [01:20:03.100 --> 01:20:10.260] You're saying collateral is not collateral, and money is not money, and nothing is nothing. [01:20:10.260 --> 01:20:12.020] This all makes no sense this way. [01:20:12.020 --> 01:20:19.140] If that reserve is not there for collateral, then what is it? [01:20:19.140 --> 01:20:20.140] Public relations. [01:20:20.140 --> 01:20:24.740] It's there to create it. [01:20:24.740 --> 01:20:26.540] You're mixing up issues here. [01:20:26.540 --> 01:20:27.540] No. [01:20:27.540 --> 01:20:33.020] I'm telling you that it's there because that's the requirement the federal reserve is... [01:20:33.020 --> 01:20:35.140] You don't know the opinion of what it is. [01:20:35.140 --> 01:20:36.580] They don't abide by any of it. [01:20:36.580 --> 01:20:38.740] It's just the same as what you deal with in the court. [01:20:38.740 --> 01:20:39.740] Wait a minute. [01:20:39.740 --> 01:20:40.740] This is not Randy Raylor's opinion. [01:20:40.740 --> 01:20:44.540] You can read that on the Federal Reserve website, Randy. [01:20:44.540 --> 01:20:45.540] Okay. [01:20:45.540 --> 01:20:48.500] Then there's no way for me to make any sense out of this. [01:20:48.500 --> 01:20:49.500] This is just fairyland. [01:20:49.500 --> 01:20:50.500] It is fairyland. [01:20:50.500 --> 01:20:53.500] That's the whole point of the fiat currency. [01:20:53.500 --> 01:20:57.260] Absolutely no sense to anything that's going on here. [01:20:57.260 --> 01:20:58.260] Nothing makes sense. [01:20:58.260 --> 01:21:00.260] Well, it makes sense to me. [01:21:00.260 --> 01:21:04.700] Randy, if you were one of the insiders, it'd make a lot of sense to you and you'd be very [01:21:04.700 --> 01:21:05.700] real. [01:21:05.700 --> 01:21:06.700] Yeah. [01:21:06.700 --> 01:21:09.700] While I just get to grab money and steal it and stuff it in my pocket, then there's absolutely [01:21:09.700 --> 01:21:14.820] no... Why are we even bothering to try to make sense out of this? [01:21:14.820 --> 01:21:19.460] Are you not watching them do that to this minute right now? [01:21:19.460 --> 01:21:25.540] If I don't know, right now I have absolutely no idea what's going on. [01:21:25.540 --> 01:21:30.020] I've listened to people talk about this and talk about this and always running around [01:21:30.020 --> 01:21:34.140] in circles just simply accusing everybody of fraud. [01:21:34.140 --> 01:21:38.260] Every time I ask a direct question, the answer is, oh, it's all fraud. [01:21:38.260 --> 01:21:41.260] Well, how specifically do they get to the fraud? [01:21:41.260 --> 01:21:46.340] The only reason I know this stuff is because I've read it off of their publications. [01:21:46.340 --> 01:21:47.860] I can't make this stuff up. [01:21:47.860 --> 01:21:48.860] It's crazy. [01:21:48.860 --> 01:21:49.860] I'm not... Okay. [01:21:49.860 --> 01:21:54.620] I'm asking you, how do they get to the fraud? [01:21:54.620 --> 01:22:00.340] Well, and the disturbing part of it is, and I think this is maybe kind of what Randy's [01:22:00.340 --> 01:22:06.420] getting at, is people's lives are being normal people, everyday people. [01:22:06.420 --> 01:22:11.820] Their lives are being affected in very negative ways. [01:22:11.820 --> 01:22:14.500] I mean, their whole lives are changing. [01:22:14.500 --> 01:22:21.060] Their homes are being taken from them, okay, based on nothing. [01:22:21.060 --> 01:22:31.860] I mean, it begins with nothing, just them signing the document, and that's the disturbing [01:22:31.860 --> 01:22:32.860] part of it. [01:22:32.860 --> 01:22:39.540] You know, Randy, if I had to say one thing, I would say, in a way you're correct about [01:22:39.540 --> 01:22:47.220] the collateral, the problem is that the system doesn't play within its own set of rules, [01:22:47.220 --> 01:22:55.860] and so the idea that there was some kind of a check with the collateral, the equity that [01:22:55.860 --> 01:23:00.980] the bank raised to start the lending process to begin with, had a validity, but it doesn't [01:23:00.980 --> 01:23:06.020] anymore because they just don't care. [01:23:06.020 --> 01:23:09.700] That doesn't help me understand the structure. [01:23:09.700 --> 01:23:13.540] Well, what about the structure don't you get? [01:23:13.540 --> 01:23:19.540] I don't care how corrupt they are. [01:23:19.540 --> 01:23:24.780] I'm trying to understand the structure, and you're telling me what is, isn't what it is [01:23:24.780 --> 01:23:30.700] because somebody else doesn't do what he's supposed to do. [01:23:30.700 --> 01:23:40.820] What was originally the reason that a bank had to have reserve? [01:23:40.820 --> 01:23:44.460] The bank had to, it's kind of hard to explain in this time. [01:23:44.460 --> 01:23:46.820] This is what happened in the bankruptcy. [01:23:46.820 --> 01:23:51.060] This is what happened in the bankruptcy with Roosevelt, okay? [01:23:51.060 --> 01:24:00.900] This whole setup happened back in the 30s, okay, when they confiscated everyone's gold [01:24:00.900 --> 01:24:09.140] and they wrote a law that said that they interfere with private contracts, okay, which is against [01:24:09.140 --> 01:24:17.220] the constitution, they said that all contracts existing right now where the lender is demanding [01:24:17.220 --> 01:24:23.380] to be paid in gold or silver or other commodities, those contracts are null and void, and you [01:24:23.380 --> 01:24:26.180] can't make any more contracts like that anymore. [01:24:26.180 --> 01:24:28.300] You cannot pay a debt anymore. [01:24:28.300 --> 01:24:33.980] You can only discharge a debt with what we're saying here is legal tender, which is a promise [01:24:33.980 --> 01:24:34.980] to pay. [01:24:34.980 --> 01:24:40.140] Everyone is just passing around bogus promises to pay, okay, because it all goes back to [01:24:40.140 --> 01:24:45.700] the bankruptcy of the 30s, and that's going, it's in the law, Randy. [01:24:45.700 --> 01:24:49.980] I understand that's in the law, but you didn't answer the question I asked you. [01:24:49.980 --> 01:24:50.980] Come up with a different answer. [01:24:50.980 --> 01:24:54.540] It's in that law that they set up the system. [01:24:54.540 --> 01:25:03.180] What was the original purpose of a bank having reserve? [01:25:03.180 --> 01:25:10.620] I should be able to start a bank and lend out millions and millions and have not a penny. [01:25:10.620 --> 01:25:15.740] So that, like Randy Raylor said, to try to have a check upon the lending, but the thing [01:25:15.740 --> 01:25:18.940] is it's a flawed design to begin with, because they- [01:25:18.940 --> 01:25:20.660] I'm not asking if it's flawed. [01:25:20.660 --> 01:25:21.660] Wait, wait, wait. [01:25:21.660 --> 01:25:26.180] The purpose of the reserve was if there was a run on the bank and people wanted to come [01:25:26.180 --> 01:25:27.460] in and withdraw their money. [01:25:27.460 --> 01:25:28.460] Exactly. [01:25:28.460 --> 01:25:31.340] The bank had to have enough funds on hand to pay back the depositors. [01:25:31.340 --> 01:25:32.340] Exactly. [01:25:32.340 --> 01:25:33.340] Finally. [01:25:33.340 --> 01:25:35.220] That's exactly the answer I was trying to- [01:25:35.220 --> 01:25:37.620] Well, that's only one of the reasons. [01:25:37.620 --> 01:25:41.380] But the problem is, is there is no money to pay back the depositors. [01:25:41.380 --> 01:25:48.060] I understand that part, but this doesn't make sense if you run around in circles and say [01:25:48.060 --> 01:25:51.740] nothing is what it appears to be, nothing's like you think it is- [01:25:51.740 --> 01:25:54.460] Randy, you're not, I don't think you're listening to us very well. [01:25:54.460 --> 01:25:55.460] I think- [01:25:55.460 --> 01:25:56.460] This is real simple. [01:25:56.460 --> 01:26:00.980] Yeah, it is, and I think that Randy Raylor and Steve Skidmore and myself and Eddie are [01:26:00.980 --> 01:26:02.580] explaining it pretty well. [01:26:02.580 --> 01:26:04.540] Yeah, everything's a fraud. [01:26:04.540 --> 01:26:05.540] I've got that. [01:26:05.540 --> 01:26:07.740] I've got it, it's all fraud. [01:26:07.740 --> 01:26:14.980] Well, speaking of fraud, Steve, why don't you talk about some of the actual technical [01:26:14.980 --> 01:26:20.540] aspects of fraud that you have discovered in your research and your dealings? [01:26:20.540 --> 01:26:23.020] Oh, God, where do you start? [01:26:23.020 --> 01:26:27.140] Okay, because when you called in earlier, you were saying you wanted to discuss things [01:26:27.140 --> 01:26:29.460] like that, so please go ahead. [01:26:29.460 --> 01:26:36.540] Well, in the mortgage industry, Charlotte, you had mentioned that there's usually only [01:26:36.540 --> 01:26:41.500] one set of signatures on the document. [01:26:41.500 --> 01:26:50.820] This is true, but I was doing a quick search for the statute, but there are statutes stating [01:26:50.820 --> 01:26:58.620] that all you need is one signature on the document, but there is a lady out there named [01:26:58.620 --> 01:27:01.540] Karen Tappert. [01:27:01.540 --> 01:27:08.840] She has realized this and kind of centered in on some aspects of that, and she's come [01:27:08.840 --> 01:27:10.820] up with six documents. [01:27:10.820 --> 01:27:15.180] Let me scroll down here. [01:27:15.180 --> 01:27:20.340] I have posted these documents, and you folks out there can go look at them, do what you [01:27:20.340 --> 01:27:21.340] want with them. [01:27:21.340 --> 01:27:28.480] You so fit your own risk, none of this is legal advice and all that, but you can go [01:27:28.480 --> 01:27:38.940] to sujurisclub.net, that's S-U-I-J-U-R-I-S, club.net, and click on the estate protection [01:27:38.940 --> 01:27:47.940] and asset planning form, and then click on the Karen... Let's see, what am I reading [01:27:47.940 --> 01:27:48.940] here? [01:27:48.940 --> 01:27:56.700] Foreclosure remedy-Karen Tappert method, and what she has compiled is a notice of revocation [01:27:56.700 --> 01:28:04.060] of power of attorney, notice of right to counsel, power of attorney revocation removal affidavit, [01:28:04.060 --> 01:28:11.020] qualified written request, revised full reconveyance, and revised grant deed. [01:28:11.020 --> 01:28:18.900] There is also a... You'd have to look for it, but there's also an interview with Ms. [01:28:18.900 --> 01:28:27.300] Tappert on some kind of conference call thing that she gives her dissertation, how she came [01:28:27.300 --> 01:28:34.540] about this knowledge, how she figured out her process, but what I actually called in [01:28:34.540 --> 01:28:43.820] for was I was listening towards the beginning of the conversation, and to just throw a wrench [01:28:43.820 --> 01:28:44.820] in the gears. [01:28:44.820 --> 01:28:51.220] There is some behind the scenes, closed doors legislation being pushed through by one of [01:28:51.220 --> 01:28:57.100] the country's leading debt collectors slash law firms. [01:28:57.100 --> 01:29:03.940] This, if you want to call it a law firm or debt collecting agency, whatever it is, Barrett [01:29:03.940 --> 01:29:12.940] Burke, they are today, they go under the business name Barrett Burke, Barrett, Daffin, Frappier, [01:29:12.940 --> 01:29:15.340] Turner, and Engel. [01:29:15.340 --> 01:29:22.180] These are people I have intimate knowledge of. [01:29:22.180 --> 01:29:29.500] They were Barrett, Burke, Wilson, Castle, and Daffin. [01:29:29.500 --> 01:29:40.100] A few interesting things, Michael C. Barrett, excuse me, let me read this right quick. [01:29:40.100 --> 01:29:46.260] Just in 1990, Barrett Burke is one of the leading providers of trustee administrative [01:29:46.260 --> 01:29:49.940] processing and legal services in the mortgage industry. [01:29:49.940 --> 01:29:55.620] The firm has a long-standing client relationship with the most dominant mortgage industry leaders, [01:29:55.620 --> 01:29:57.920] servicers, and investors. [01:29:57.920 --> 01:30:03.540] National Default Exchange will assume from Barrett Burke the responsibility of providing [01:30:03.540 --> 01:30:09.060] trustee and administrative processing services to the firm and its clients. [01:30:09.060 --> 01:30:14.340] The company will be led by Michael C. Barrett, chairman and CEO. [01:30:14.340 --> 01:30:21.460] Now a little bit more interest in some of their political moves, it would seem that [01:30:21.460 --> 01:30:35.300] Michael C. Barrett and James C. Frappier on 313-08 each donated $5,000 to the Mortgage [01:30:35.300 --> 01:30:39.900] Bankers Association Political Action Committee. [01:30:39.900 --> 01:30:47.580] Mr. Barrett has been very active in lobbying here lately to Congress to pass legislation [01:30:47.580 --> 01:30:54.740] to make it more difficult and more costly for the homeowners to bring litigation to [01:30:54.740 --> 01:31:06.580] the mortgage companies, claiming that it's being too costly on the banks and the attorney [01:31:06.580 --> 01:31:14.620] firms representing the banks or alleged lending institutions, trying to fight these little [01:31:14.620 --> 01:31:20.780] fires, these little weasel people coming in with all these false claims and frivolous [01:31:20.780 --> 01:31:25.580] lawsuits, trying to keep their homes. [01:31:25.580 --> 01:31:32.500] This information I got from an attorney in Houston and I've pressed him for more information [01:31:32.500 --> 01:31:37.620] and he's been very reluctant to let me know anything else if he knows anything else. [01:31:37.620 --> 01:31:45.740] He just knows that Mr. Barrett, Barrett, Daffin, Frappier, Turner, and Engel, to reiterate, [01:31:45.740 --> 01:31:50.020] one of the largest law firms representing alleged lenders, particularly in the mortgage [01:31:50.020 --> 01:31:55.220] industry, here's the guy. [01:31:55.220 --> 01:31:58.220] These people are evil. [01:31:58.220 --> 01:32:02.060] My whole point is these people are evil. [01:32:02.060 --> 01:32:07.060] They are pushing as hard as they can to make it as difficult and as costly for the homeowner [01:32:07.060 --> 01:32:10.980] because they know what's coming. [01:32:10.980 --> 01:32:12.660] They know. [01:32:12.660 --> 01:32:13.660] They did it. [01:32:13.660 --> 01:32:14.660] They helped. [01:32:14.660 --> 01:32:20.200] They're trying to make it more difficult to hold back the flood of people that is fixing [01:32:20.200 --> 01:32:28.380] to hit the courts because word grows, knowledge grows exponentially. [01:32:28.380 --> 01:32:31.940] People are waking up to this fractional reserve system. [01:32:31.940 --> 01:32:43.980] They're waking up to all the fraud being committed by the finger or branch entities [01:32:43.980 --> 01:32:51.300] of the Federal Reserve government and that would go even into so far as insurance companies [01:32:51.300 --> 01:33:01.620] and this all goes back in this snake chasing his tail, infinite loop of the banking industry. [01:33:01.620 --> 01:33:05.740] It's based on nothing, nothing. [01:33:05.740 --> 01:33:13.300] It's based on people going to a closing, putting their name on a piece of paper and then God [01:33:13.300 --> 01:33:18.780] only knows what happens to that piece of paper but somebody's butt's held in the sling and [01:33:18.780 --> 01:33:27.460] nobody seems to want to claim to be the holder in due course once you've racked up a bunch [01:33:27.460 --> 01:33:37.260] of violations, let's say TILA violations, RESPA, HOPA, Fair Debt Collection Practices Act violations. [01:33:37.260 --> 01:33:43.420] Once you find the holder in due course, if they are the ones foreclosing on you, now [01:33:43.420 --> 01:33:49.340] you've got somebody that you can hold liable for these violations but once you... I have [01:33:49.340 --> 01:33:50.340] the understanding. [01:33:50.340 --> 01:33:55.220] I haven't done it myself but I have the understanding that once you present this to a judge in such [01:33:55.220 --> 01:34:02.420] a light, nobody seems to want to be the holder in due course anymore. [01:34:02.420 --> 01:34:08.860] That alleged note then becomes a hot potato of biblical proportion. [01:34:08.860 --> 01:34:10.420] Yep. [01:34:10.420 --> 01:34:15.980] It's time to pour the gas on. [01:34:15.980 --> 01:34:16.980] It's time to... [01:34:16.980 --> 01:34:17.980] I agree. [01:34:17.980 --> 01:34:24.460] It's really time that people start digging into their notes, digging into their documents, [01:34:24.460 --> 01:34:29.740] reading them for themselves and finding out what's going on and hold these people's feet [01:34:29.740 --> 01:34:30.740] to the fire. [01:34:30.740 --> 01:34:31.740] Yes. [01:34:31.740 --> 01:34:41.540] That's why I brought Charlotte to come on because she can show them what to look for [01:34:41.540 --> 01:34:45.060] so you know how to hold her feet to the fire. [01:34:45.060 --> 01:34:54.820] Even if this attorney is lobbying to make it more difficult, he has a very large problem [01:34:54.820 --> 01:34:56.620] and it goes to fraud. [01:34:56.620 --> 01:35:04.180] If they change it so that it's harder to sue for fraud in the mortgage area, they're going [01:35:04.180 --> 01:35:11.980] to change it for everything and it will disrupt the entire legal system. [01:35:11.980 --> 01:35:13.580] He's not going to get this done. [01:35:13.580 --> 01:35:16.500] Even if he gets something passed, it won't stand. [01:35:16.500 --> 01:35:23.140] I think all it's going to do is make people more angry and make them more willing to fight. [01:35:23.140 --> 01:35:24.140] That would be my hope. [01:35:24.140 --> 01:35:30.980] Well, and don't forget the other side because there is another side to this. [01:35:30.980 --> 01:35:38.900] I was reading on it that everyone counts the phrase predatory lenders that is still hot [01:35:38.900 --> 01:35:41.140] and heavy out in the industry. [01:35:41.140 --> 01:35:51.660] There are people that are lobbying still for litigation and to make the regulations more [01:35:51.660 --> 01:35:58.340] strict on the lenders because of all the predatory lending that they had in the past and continue [01:35:58.340 --> 01:36:00.380] to do. [01:36:00.380 --> 01:36:09.060] I agree even if Barrett and his firm is trying to make some real changes to where it's harder [01:36:09.060 --> 01:36:15.340] for people to go after the institutions, the other side of the aisle is doing the same [01:36:15.340 --> 01:36:21.060] thing to try to make it harder on the lender to continue to make the predatory loans. [01:36:21.060 --> 01:36:22.060] Yes. [01:36:22.060 --> 01:36:23.060] It's a counter-attack. [01:36:23.060 --> 01:36:24.060] Yes. [01:36:24.060 --> 01:36:25.060] Exactly. [01:36:25.060 --> 01:36:32.140] To just comment on what you were saying a minute ago, Steve, I want to read a quote [01:36:32.140 --> 01:36:35.380] here which I'm sure many of our listeners are familiar with. [01:36:35.380 --> 01:36:40.860] It is well enough that the people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary [01:36:40.860 --> 01:36:47.140] system for if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning as [01:36:47.140 --> 01:36:49.140] Henry Ford. [01:36:49.140 --> 01:36:59.700] Also, give me control of the nation's monetary system, the issue of a nation's currency. [01:36:59.700 --> 01:37:01.700] Yes, exactly Rothschild. [01:37:01.700 --> 01:37:02.700] Rothschild. [01:37:02.700 --> 01:37:06.660] He also said, I want to own nothing and control everything. [01:37:06.660 --> 01:37:11.620] It would seem that his progeny has or real close to it. [01:37:11.620 --> 01:37:14.020] But I'm going to let you guys go. [01:37:14.020 --> 01:37:15.020] I'm sure you got more callers. [01:37:15.020 --> 01:37:16.020] Thanks, Steve. [01:37:16.020 --> 01:37:17.020] Thank you for the time. [01:37:17.020 --> 01:37:21.780] Steve, before I go, is this the infamous Charla that you've been telling me so much about? [01:37:21.780 --> 01:37:23.580] The one and only. [01:37:23.580 --> 01:37:25.180] Well, hello, Charla. [01:37:25.180 --> 01:37:30.580] It's been a very large pleasure of mine to have made your acquaintance even in such a [01:37:30.580 --> 01:37:31.580] light. [01:37:31.580 --> 01:37:34.580] Well, thank you, Steve, and I hope to talk to you again soon. [01:37:34.580 --> 01:37:35.580] We'll do. [01:37:35.580 --> 01:37:36.580] Bye, guys. [01:37:36.580 --> 01:37:37.580] Bye, Steve. [01:37:37.580 --> 01:37:38.580] Bye. [01:37:38.580 --> 01:37:42.140] There's another Rothschild quote you missed, give me control of a nation's money and I [01:37:42.140 --> 01:37:43.620] care not who makes its laws. [01:37:43.620 --> 01:37:45.620] That's what Steve was just saying, right? [01:37:45.620 --> 01:37:46.620] Yes. [01:37:46.620 --> 01:37:52.020] All right, and I want to go back to Charla also, but quickly I want to bring Russell [01:37:52.020 --> 01:37:53.020] up. [01:37:53.020 --> 01:37:54.020] I believe this is Russell Mortland. [01:37:54.020 --> 01:37:55.020] Russell, are you there? [01:37:55.020 --> 01:37:56.020] Hey, what's up? [01:37:56.020 --> 01:37:57.020] Hey. [01:37:57.020 --> 01:37:58.020] What do you have for us? [01:37:58.020 --> 01:38:01.020] I haven't heard anybody mention public policy. [01:38:01.020 --> 01:38:02.020] Yes, I did. [01:38:02.020 --> 01:38:07.020] I mentioned the public policy, the HDR192, that's what I was telling Randy earlier. [01:38:07.020 --> 01:38:11.020] Well, I'm just trying to say that this whole thing is set under public policy. [01:38:11.020 --> 01:38:12.020] Right. [01:38:12.020 --> 01:38:13.020] Public policy is based on fraud. [01:38:13.020 --> 01:38:14.020] Yep. [01:38:14.020 --> 01:38:21.020] Also, that Barrett law firm and stuff, I mean, I bet you a dollar that this man's been quite [01:38:21.020 --> 01:38:28.020] as well up there in his law firm and stuff, has never had a bar grievance filed against [01:38:28.020 --> 01:38:29.020] him. [01:38:29.020 --> 01:38:33.020] I mean, if somebody wants to take that law firm down, all they've got to do is put off [01:38:33.020 --> 01:38:37.020] the information on the Internet and get these people's names and stuff. [01:38:37.020 --> 01:38:42.020] Half a dozen people start feeling bar grievances and stuff, and that law firm won't exist [01:38:42.020 --> 01:38:43.020] later on. [01:38:43.020 --> 01:38:46.020] And there won't be no lobbying and stuff then. [01:38:46.020 --> 01:38:51.020] Yeah, but they'll just open up another one the next day. [01:38:51.020 --> 01:38:52.020] Well, yeah. [01:38:52.020 --> 01:38:55.020] But it'll be costly for them. [01:38:55.020 --> 01:38:56.020] That's right. [01:38:56.020 --> 01:39:02.020] I'm just saying that this is a way to start showing these people that we mean business [01:39:02.020 --> 01:39:06.020] and fight back at them and stuff, and once you start shutting down four or five of these [01:39:06.020 --> 01:39:12.020] things in a row, other people are not going to be so eager to come and replace them because [01:39:12.020 --> 01:39:15.020] they're going to see what's happening. [01:39:15.020 --> 01:39:20.020] I mean, the American Bar Association would almost have to change their grievance process [01:39:20.020 --> 01:39:22.020] to stop it. [01:39:22.020 --> 01:39:26.020] And I'd like to see how they do that. [01:39:26.020 --> 01:39:27.020] Yeah. [01:39:27.020 --> 01:39:29.020] Because they change the grievance process. [01:39:29.020 --> 01:39:33.020] The insurance company is going to change their evaluation procedures. [01:39:33.020 --> 01:39:36.020] I don't think it'll help them. [01:39:36.020 --> 01:39:41.020] That's why I say we can go after these foreclosure law firms, and we can go after these law [01:39:41.020 --> 01:39:44.020] firms that are doing the property taxes. [01:39:44.020 --> 01:39:49.020] If we shut down the law firms, they've got nobody to turn around and come back after us [01:39:49.020 --> 01:39:54.020] for taxes because as soon as they want that tax money, then you start hearing from the [01:39:54.020 --> 01:39:56.020] law firm. [01:39:56.020 --> 01:39:59.020] And as soon as they want to foreclose and stuff and things like that, that's when you [01:39:59.020 --> 01:40:01.020] start hearing from the law firms. [01:40:01.020 --> 01:40:06.020] If you shut them down there instead of worrying about the companies or the tax assessor [01:40:06.020 --> 01:40:11.020] or the collector, then that's where we're going to have the biggest bite taking out [01:40:11.020 --> 01:40:14.020] of these people. [01:40:14.020 --> 01:40:15.020] I kind of agree with that. [01:40:15.020 --> 01:40:21.020] You're going to make litigation so expensive because the law firms, when they start getting [01:40:21.020 --> 01:40:26.020] hit really hard and it starts costing them more, they're going to charge more, and it [01:40:26.020 --> 01:40:28.020] will become too expensive to cheat us. [01:40:28.020 --> 01:40:30.020] That would be a nice thing to see. [01:40:30.020 --> 01:40:31.020] Well, it's not just that. [01:40:31.020 --> 01:40:36.020] I mean, they've entered into contracts with these property tax people and these mortgage [01:40:36.020 --> 01:40:40.020] companies and stuff, and then when all of a sudden they get bar grievances and stuff [01:40:40.020 --> 01:40:45.020] filed against them and they can't practice law anymore and stuff, then there goes the [01:40:45.020 --> 01:40:48.020] contract and they've got to go find another law firm. [01:40:48.020 --> 01:40:50.020] Yeah, that's what I mean. [01:40:50.020 --> 01:40:55.020] It's going to cost these guys so much to adjudicate these cases. [01:40:55.020 --> 01:41:01.020] It would be cheaper to stop cheating people and stop getting sued because it's so expensive [01:41:01.020 --> 01:41:04.020] just to hire attorneys to try to protect yourself. [01:41:04.020 --> 01:41:08.020] And certainly they'll try to settle out of court with these kinds of issues because they [01:41:08.020 --> 01:41:13.020] certainly don't want any court rulings in place, making a ruling on the fundamental [01:41:13.020 --> 01:41:17.020] nature of our financial monetary banking system. [01:41:17.020 --> 01:41:22.020] I did want to add in here at one point, I just got a chat from my call screener. [01:41:22.020 --> 01:41:25.020] We have a caller on the line that's in the middle of a foreclosure right now who had [01:41:25.020 --> 01:41:29.020] some questions for our guests. [01:41:29.020 --> 01:41:31.020] I'll let you go. [01:41:31.020 --> 01:41:32.020] Okay. [01:41:32.020 --> 01:41:33.020] Thanks, Russell. [01:41:33.020 --> 01:41:34.020] Thanks, Russell. [01:41:34.020 --> 01:41:35.020] Okay. [01:41:35.020 --> 01:41:37.020] This is Al from Texas. [01:41:37.020 --> 01:41:40.020] I'm sorry, Al from Florida. [01:41:40.020 --> 01:41:41.020] Hi. [01:41:41.020 --> 01:41:42.020] Hi. [01:41:42.020 --> 01:41:43.020] Are you listening? [01:41:43.020 --> 01:41:44.020] Yes. [01:41:44.020 --> 01:41:45.020] Go ahead. [01:41:45.020 --> 01:41:46.020] Okay. [01:41:46.020 --> 01:41:47.020] Thank you. [01:41:47.020 --> 01:41:52.020] I'm a third friend of Christian Walters, so we've been working closely and we had an [01:41:52.020 --> 01:42:00.020] experience about a month ago where we wanted to become a plaintiff in the case with this [01:42:00.020 --> 01:42:07.020] foreclosure, and that was done in June, the beginning of June, and at the beginning of [01:42:07.020 --> 01:42:09.020] June they made a law. [01:42:09.020 --> 01:42:14.020] How did you get standing to become a plaintiff in the foreclosure? [01:42:14.020 --> 01:42:21.020] Was this a foreclosure against you or someone else and you tried to intervene in the case? [01:42:21.020 --> 01:42:22.020] Right. [01:42:22.020 --> 01:42:26.020] We were the defendants, and based on... [01:42:26.020 --> 01:42:33.020] I'm not sure how to explain this basically, but as a defendant, I think we have to just [01:42:33.020 --> 01:42:39.020] went through the motions, but as a plaintiff, in order to become a plaintiff on the grounds [01:42:39.020 --> 01:42:48.020] that we were pursuing, we had to go from $300, which was the cost prior to this new law that [01:42:48.020 --> 01:42:54.020] was passed by Governor Chris in Florida. [01:42:54.020 --> 01:43:02.020] There was a law stating basically that now instead of being $300, the cost to become [01:43:02.020 --> 01:43:12.020] to put in a claim in any real estate related case, it would cost $1,900 instead of $300, [01:43:12.020 --> 01:43:19.020] so when I went to try to put in the case to become a plaintiff against the bank, the lady [01:43:19.020 --> 01:43:26.020] says, you need $1,900 or almost $2,000 just to initiate the case, and that just happened [01:43:26.020 --> 01:43:33.020] like a day or two before because... and I was saying just what made this happen was [01:43:33.020 --> 01:43:39.020] Charlie Chris passed this law, which I guess he must be in cahoots with these bankers. [01:43:39.020 --> 01:43:40.020] Okay. [01:43:40.020 --> 01:43:41.020] Back up. [01:43:41.020 --> 01:43:42.020] Sorry. [01:43:42.020 --> 01:43:43.020] Sorry. [01:43:43.020 --> 01:43:46.020] Those guys got daught for one second. [01:43:46.020 --> 01:43:47.020] Okay. [01:43:47.020 --> 01:43:50.020] Just back up a little bit, please. [01:43:50.020 --> 01:43:51.020] Okay. [01:43:51.020 --> 01:43:59.020] Well, basically what I'm saying is that they changed the law that if you want to initiate [01:43:59.020 --> 01:44:07.020] to be in the position of a plaintiff in a court in a case related to mortgages in Florida, [01:44:07.020 --> 01:44:15.020] instead of paying $300-something to open the case, you have to pay $1,900, almost $2,000 [01:44:15.020 --> 01:44:20.020] to do the same thing, getting a lot of people more difficult to come up with $2,000 just [01:44:20.020 --> 01:44:27.020] to start a case where there will be a plaintiff against the bank, especially what I'm saying. [01:44:27.020 --> 01:44:33.020] That sounds like what this other attorney was trying to accomplish. [01:44:33.020 --> 01:44:34.020] Right. [01:44:34.020 --> 01:44:37.020] That certainly needs to be challenged because... [01:44:37.020 --> 01:44:43.020] Well, they're getting to the big leaders, the political leaders, the congress people, [01:44:43.020 --> 01:44:52.020] these big people that are making decisions without everybody, anyone's input of saying [01:44:52.020 --> 01:44:53.020] what they can do. [01:44:53.020 --> 01:44:56.020] There should be, definitely should be a way to fight this back. [01:44:56.020 --> 01:45:06.020] Well, this needs to be challenged on a constitutional basis as it denies the citizen the right to [01:45:06.020 --> 01:45:08.020] petition the court for redress of grievance. [01:45:08.020 --> 01:45:13.020] This kind of issue has been handled before by the courts. [01:45:13.020 --> 01:45:19.020] It's not uncommon for legislatures to pass laws they absolutely know are unconstitutional [01:45:19.020 --> 01:45:21.020] and will never stand. [01:45:21.020 --> 01:45:25.020] A lot of people get beat up in the meantime. [01:45:25.020 --> 01:45:29.020] And by the time this gets through to the courts and gets overturned, a lot of people will [01:45:29.020 --> 01:45:33.020] have lost their houses. [01:45:33.020 --> 01:45:40.020] If we can help people protect all their rights when it does get changed back, or even if [01:45:40.020 --> 01:45:45.020] they can get to 1900, we can make up for it by beating up Crapola out of these mortgage [01:45:45.020 --> 01:45:46.020] companies. [01:45:46.020 --> 01:45:52.020] And this is clearly an effort to protect these guys because they know this storm is coming [01:45:52.020 --> 01:45:55.020] at them. [01:45:55.020 --> 01:46:00.020] I think that a group should get together and see if they can put their brainstorm away to [01:46:00.020 --> 01:46:03.020] get this thing done as a group. [01:46:03.020 --> 01:46:08.020] Well, someone needs to challenge this through the court. [01:46:08.020 --> 01:46:15.020] Someone needs to go down and try to file, and when the filing fee for this is different [01:46:15.020 --> 01:46:25.020] than what it was, then you file suit against the court or the state for injunctive relief, [01:46:25.020 --> 01:46:30.020] claiming that this price increase is unconstitutional. [01:46:30.020 --> 01:46:32.020] That's the way you get it changed. [01:46:32.020 --> 01:46:34.020] Someone has to be injured by it first. [01:46:34.020 --> 01:46:37.020] So it has to be someone who's trying to file. [01:46:37.020 --> 01:46:41.020] They try to force to pay this. [01:46:41.020 --> 01:46:45.020] So someone's going to face the music and get tomatoes thrown at them. [01:46:45.020 --> 01:46:46.020] Forget about it. [01:46:46.020 --> 01:46:48.020] Yes. [01:46:48.020 --> 01:46:51.020] Kind of that way. [01:46:51.020 --> 01:46:58.020] But if you can get some people together to help, you know, with the cost of the litigation, [01:46:58.020 --> 01:47:01.020] everybody wins by it. [01:47:01.020 --> 01:47:03.020] Okay. [01:47:03.020 --> 01:47:04.020] Okay. [01:47:04.020 --> 01:47:09.020] Well, I guess you've got to put on a helmet and expect the worst because these people [01:47:09.020 --> 01:47:14.020] have a lot of money and have a lot of lawyers backing them up, and they can just, you know, [01:47:14.020 --> 01:47:17.020] you guys go there, you're in charge of this. [01:47:17.020 --> 01:47:24.020] And unless you have a strong backing or group of people that have, you know, decent pockets, [01:47:24.020 --> 01:47:30.020] you know, that are lined up financially, I mean, it's like you going against the, [01:47:30.020 --> 01:47:32.020] like me, me, me, going against the life. [01:47:32.020 --> 01:47:34.020] Well, I mean, check it out, though. [01:47:34.020 --> 01:47:41.020] Listen, one of the hosts on Agenda 21, Mike Callaway, he's in the middle of a foreclosure [01:47:41.020 --> 01:47:49.020] right now, and he's handling it pro se, and he turned around and he sued them, he sued [01:47:49.020 --> 01:47:58.020] the bank for fraud, and he's going up, Mike Callaway, against, pro se, against 43 attorneys [01:47:58.020 --> 01:48:04.020] for Chase Bank, 43 against Mike, and he's winning. [01:48:04.020 --> 01:48:06.020] He's just about got the case settled. [01:48:06.020 --> 01:48:07.020] Yes. [01:48:07.020 --> 01:48:12.020] And they're going to have to pay him before it's all done and said. [01:48:12.020 --> 01:48:13.020] Exactly. [01:48:13.020 --> 01:48:20.020] We really, we really can, that shows me it really, we really can do this. [01:48:20.020 --> 01:48:22.020] We don't need to be scared of these guys. [01:48:22.020 --> 01:48:27.020] They are committing fraud, and there are so many different ways that they are committing [01:48:27.020 --> 01:48:28.020] fraud. [01:48:28.020 --> 01:48:31.020] Okay, we talked about the fraud, the banking system. [01:48:31.020 --> 01:48:35.020] Sharla has ways that she can prove they've committed fraud. [01:48:35.020 --> 01:48:38.020] Steve Skidmore has all kinds of ways to prove that they commit fraud. [01:48:38.020 --> 01:48:41.020] There are hundreds, thousands of ways, different ways. [01:48:41.020 --> 01:48:45.020] Some are big, some are small, some are easy to understand, some are more difficult to [01:48:45.020 --> 01:48:50.020] understand, but there are so many ways that they are committing fraud, and it's the total [01:48:50.020 --> 01:48:56.020] smoke and mirrors, and they know how vulnerable they are because it's all about the show. [01:48:56.020 --> 01:49:02.020] It's all about fooling people, and so we really can, we really can do this. [01:49:02.020 --> 01:49:03.020] Okay? [01:49:03.020 --> 01:49:05.020] So. [01:49:05.020 --> 01:49:07.020] A lot of jurisdiction, I guess. [01:49:07.020 --> 01:49:08.020] Juristic sharing. [01:49:08.020 --> 01:49:11.020] All right, well listen, thank you, Al. [01:49:11.020 --> 01:49:12.020] Thank you very much. [01:49:12.020 --> 01:49:13.020] I appreciate your input. [01:49:13.020 --> 01:49:14.020] Okay, thank you. [01:49:14.020 --> 01:49:16.020] Okay, thank you. [01:49:16.020 --> 01:49:18.020] Okay, we have a couple more callers on the line. [01:49:18.020 --> 01:49:19.020] We still got about 10 minutes left. [01:49:19.020 --> 01:49:25.020] Randy, did you want to go over some material with Sharla first before the end of the show? [01:49:25.020 --> 01:49:27.020] Randy. [01:49:27.020 --> 01:49:29.020] No, we'll do this on the next one. [01:49:29.020 --> 01:49:30.020] Let's go ahead and take callers. [01:49:30.020 --> 01:49:34.020] Okay, yeah, maybe we can, yeah, we need to have you on again very soon. [01:49:34.020 --> 01:49:38.020] We could even continue it on Thursday if you guys want to. [01:49:38.020 --> 01:49:39.020] This is a great discussion. [01:49:39.020 --> 01:49:41.020] Let's go to Mark from Wisconsin. [01:49:41.020 --> 01:49:43.020] He's one of our affiliates. [01:49:43.020 --> 01:49:44.020] Mark, thanks for calling in. [01:49:44.020 --> 01:49:46.020] What's on your mind tonight? [01:49:46.020 --> 01:49:47.020] Hi, I just called in. [01:49:47.020 --> 01:49:48.020] I wanted to recommend a video. [01:49:48.020 --> 01:49:50.020] It's called The Money Masters. [01:49:50.020 --> 01:49:53.020] It's the most comprehensive video ever made on the Federal Reserve system. [01:49:53.020 --> 01:49:54.020] Excellent. [01:49:54.020 --> 01:49:56.020] And it's history. [01:49:56.020 --> 01:49:59.020] It's about three hours and 15 minutes. [01:49:59.020 --> 01:50:04.020] If you think you've got an understanding of the way the system works, [01:50:04.020 --> 01:50:06.020] really you've got to watch this movie. [01:50:06.020 --> 01:50:10.020] I mean, it's the best documentary in my mind that has ever been made [01:50:10.020 --> 01:50:14.020] because it shows their system of control. [01:50:14.020 --> 01:50:18.020] And their whole system depends on this fraud. [01:50:18.020 --> 01:50:22.020] This whole system depends on this fake money system. [01:50:22.020 --> 01:50:24.020] And it's three hours and 15 minutes. [01:50:24.020 --> 01:50:26.020] It talks about how they started it in Europe, [01:50:26.020 --> 01:50:29.020] how they started it with the guys who held gold, [01:50:29.020 --> 01:50:31.020] and they would issue certificates for the gold, [01:50:31.020 --> 01:50:35.020] and then they finally discovered that only 20% of the people would come in [01:50:35.020 --> 01:50:37.020] and actually ask for their gold. [01:50:37.020 --> 01:50:41.020] So they knew that they could issue a lot more certificates than they had gold, [01:50:41.020 --> 01:50:45.020] and that's how the Federal Reserve banking system actually started. [01:50:45.020 --> 01:50:48.020] But we really need to have Randy have a look at that video. [01:50:48.020 --> 01:50:53.020] Look, I am very familiar with that. [01:50:53.020 --> 01:50:57.020] I am very familiar with it. [01:50:57.020 --> 01:51:03.020] What I was trying to do was demonstrate how it's purported to be [01:51:03.020 --> 01:51:06.020] so it appears to make some sense [01:51:06.020 --> 01:51:12.020] and then from there show how it's been adulterated [01:51:12.020 --> 01:51:17.020] so that what the average guy on the street looks at and thinks he's seeing, [01:51:17.020 --> 01:51:22.020] I was trying to construct what is designed for him to think he's seeing. [01:51:22.020 --> 01:51:25.020] And everybody keeps telling me you're not really seeing what you think you're seeing. [01:51:25.020 --> 01:51:28.020] I know that. [01:51:28.020 --> 01:51:34.020] But I was trying to get to what they present for us to think that we're seeing [01:51:34.020 --> 01:51:39.020] so that we have a talisman, a place to work from. [01:51:39.020 --> 01:51:45.020] I think we were doing that pretty well, Randy. [01:51:45.020 --> 01:51:46.020] Okay. [01:51:46.020 --> 01:51:48.020] Yeah, and if you watch that video, [01:51:48.020 --> 01:51:52.020] you'll begin to realize there is a boom-bust cycle, but it's more like shearing [01:51:52.020 --> 01:51:54.020] and eating the sheep. [01:51:54.020 --> 01:51:55.020] I mean, it's all planned. [01:51:55.020 --> 01:51:58.020] They know when the system is going to come down next, [01:51:58.020 --> 01:52:01.020] and they're gearing up to maybe get us on the gold standard next. [01:52:01.020 --> 01:52:03.020] That's how they did it last time. [01:52:03.020 --> 01:52:06.020] I mean, they said, look, the system runs on faith alone, [01:52:06.020 --> 01:52:10.020] and so we need to get faith back in the currency, so we'll back it with gold. [01:52:10.020 --> 01:52:11.020] Everyone believes in gold. [01:52:11.020 --> 01:52:16.020] And then after a while, they just change it back into the fractional reserve system. [01:52:16.020 --> 01:52:18.020] I mean, it's a cycle. [01:52:18.020 --> 01:52:20.020] We go through it over and over and over again. [01:52:20.020 --> 01:52:22.020] And the money that they're capturing, [01:52:22.020 --> 01:52:24.020] they're using against the citizens of the world. [01:52:24.020 --> 01:52:27.020] I mean, Jacob Schiff out of New York financed the Bolshevik Revolution. [01:52:27.020 --> 01:52:29.020] Twenty million people dead. [01:52:29.020 --> 01:52:33.020] Max Warburg financed the Germans in World War II. [01:52:33.020 --> 01:52:35.020] Paul Warburg financed the Americans. [01:52:35.020 --> 01:52:37.020] They're brothers, for God's sakes. [01:52:37.020 --> 01:52:46.020] And Paul Warburg was one of the authors on the Federal Reserve Act, the Aldrich Bill. [01:52:46.020 --> 01:52:49.020] Amazing. [01:52:49.020 --> 01:52:50.020] It is amazing. [01:52:50.020 --> 01:52:55.020] And if we don't get on these guys, I mean, the whole system has got to be brought down. [01:52:55.020 --> 01:53:00.020] It's coming down anyway, but they're going to have a system ready for us to go into, [01:53:00.020 --> 01:53:02.020] and it will probably be the IMF. [01:53:02.020 --> 01:53:05.020] And you've seen what the IMF has done to small countries. [01:53:05.020 --> 01:53:07.020] They're going to do the same thing here. [01:53:07.020 --> 01:53:10.020] Every country they go into, they rape, rob and pillage [01:53:10.020 --> 01:53:15.020] and take all the resources that are necessary for people to live. [01:53:15.020 --> 01:53:16.020] They control the water. [01:53:16.020 --> 01:53:18.020] They control the food. [01:53:18.020 --> 01:53:19.020] They control the money. [01:53:19.020 --> 01:53:21.020] They control the politicians. [01:53:21.020 --> 01:53:23.020] Anyway, with that, I'd like to say good night. [01:53:23.020 --> 01:53:25.020] And the Money Masters, it's on Google. [01:53:25.020 --> 01:53:26.020] It's free. [01:53:26.020 --> 01:53:27.020] The Money Masters. [01:53:27.020 --> 01:53:28.020] Good night, all. [01:53:28.020 --> 01:53:29.020] All right. [01:53:29.020 --> 01:53:30.020] Thank you, Mark. [01:53:30.020 --> 01:53:31.020] That's Mark from Wisconsin. [01:53:31.020 --> 01:53:35.020] He's one of our affiliates, he broadcasts us on FM Station in Madison. [01:53:35.020 --> 01:53:36.020] We really appreciate that. [01:53:36.020 --> 01:53:38.020] Thank you so much. [01:53:38.020 --> 01:53:41.020] We really want to thank our affiliates here. [01:53:41.020 --> 01:53:42.020] Okay. [01:53:42.020 --> 01:53:44.020] We've got a few minutes left. [01:53:44.020 --> 01:53:47.020] We're going to try to blaze through the rest of your calls as quickly as possible. [01:53:47.020 --> 01:53:49.020] We've got Paul in Texas. [01:53:49.020 --> 01:53:51.020] Paul, thanks for calling in. [01:53:51.020 --> 01:53:52.020] What's on your mind tonight? [01:53:52.020 --> 01:53:53.020] Yeah, thank you. [01:53:53.020 --> 01:53:57.020] I don't know if there's enough time left for me to go into all this. [01:53:57.020 --> 01:53:58.020] There may not be. [01:53:58.020 --> 01:53:59.020] We've got three callers on the board. [01:53:59.020 --> 01:54:03.020] I'd like to take them all if we can because everyone's been holding for such a long time. [01:54:03.020 --> 01:54:08.020] So if you have a quick comment, I want to give everyone like one minute. [01:54:08.020 --> 01:54:11.020] Randy, you've invited me to be on your show several times, [01:54:11.020 --> 01:54:14.020] and the subject tonight is one I am very familiar with. [01:54:14.020 --> 01:54:21.020] And I can tell you why and how the brokerage community is in concert with the bankers [01:54:21.020 --> 01:54:26.020] and how the fiat currency and the fraction reserve banking are all tied to the [01:54:26.020 --> 01:54:31.020] Depository Trust Corporation, how the QCIP numbers are assigned, [01:54:31.020 --> 01:54:35.020] and why, and through the tranches that they create, [01:54:35.020 --> 01:54:41.020] why they're able to sell all this paper to not only domestic consumers [01:54:41.020 --> 01:54:43.020] but also international consumers. [01:54:43.020 --> 01:54:48.020] So if you want, Russell knows how to get ahold of me. [01:54:48.020 --> 01:54:50.020] You can get ahold of him. [01:54:50.020 --> 01:54:53.020] Yeah, I was going to send Russell down to grab you by the throat [01:54:53.020 --> 01:54:55.020] and drag you to the microphone. [01:54:55.020 --> 01:54:57.020] Paul, do you have a Web site? [01:54:57.020 --> 01:55:02.020] Well, I don't have a Web site that's involved with this. [01:55:02.020 --> 01:55:07.020] I have Web sites, but Randy, let's you and I visit. [01:55:07.020 --> 01:55:10.020] I know you're not local right at the moment, [01:55:10.020 --> 01:55:13.020] so the next time you're close by there's a couple of things we need to talk about. [01:55:13.020 --> 01:55:19.020] But I can give you a whole lot of why this system is going to collapse. [01:55:19.020 --> 01:55:24.020] There's not a fraction reserve system ever created that lasts more than 100 years. [01:55:24.020 --> 01:55:27.020] This one started in 1913. [01:55:27.020 --> 01:55:30.020] It was a direct result of the Panic of 1894. [01:55:30.020 --> 01:55:35.020] The brokerage community, there's not a mortgage in the nation [01:55:35.020 --> 01:55:42.020] that doesn't ultimately become part of HUD, Housing or Health and Human Services now. [01:55:42.020 --> 01:55:45.020] Well, Paul, maybe we can have you on as a guest later this week. [01:55:45.020 --> 01:55:47.020] Let's do that then. [01:55:47.020 --> 01:55:48.020] Okay. [01:55:47.020 --> 01:55:48.020] Wonderful. [01:55:48.020 --> 01:55:49.020] All right. [01:55:49.020 --> 01:55:53.020] I've got your number from the caller board, so let us contact you. [01:55:53.020 --> 01:55:54.020] Okay. [01:55:53.020 --> 01:55:54.020] All right, thank you. [01:55:54.020 --> 01:55:55.020] Good evening. [01:55:55.020 --> 01:55:56.020] Okay. [01:55:56.020 --> 01:56:00.020] All right, we are going to go now to Charles from California. [01:56:00.020 --> 01:56:02.020] He's been holding very long time. [01:56:02.020 --> 01:56:05.020] Charles, what's on your mind tonight? [01:56:05.020 --> 01:56:06.020] Hi there. [01:56:06.020 --> 01:56:10.020] I've got a couple of traffic problems that I've got to get resolved. [01:56:10.020 --> 01:56:15.020] One of them is resulting in a hold on my license renewal. [01:56:15.020 --> 01:56:18.020] We are not going to have time for this. [01:56:18.020 --> 01:56:20.020] I'm so sorry. [01:56:20.020 --> 01:56:22.020] Call in Friday on that. [01:56:22.020 --> 01:56:25.020] Yeah, yeah, call in Friday so we can – I know you've been holding forever, [01:56:25.020 --> 01:56:30.020] but we don't – we've only got two minutes left in the program. [01:56:30.020 --> 01:56:31.020] Okay. [01:56:31.020 --> 01:56:32.020] Yeah, call in Friday. [01:56:32.020 --> 01:56:34.020] Charles, I've got your number. [01:56:34.020 --> 01:56:36.020] I'm going to bookmark it. [01:56:36.020 --> 01:56:38.020] When you call in, we'll give you first priority on Friday. [01:56:38.020 --> 01:56:40.020] I'll bump you to the head of the list, okay? [01:56:40.020 --> 01:56:41.020] Okay, thank you. [01:56:41.020 --> 01:56:42.020] All right, thank you. [01:56:42.020 --> 01:56:44.020] Thank you. [01:56:44.020 --> 01:56:49.020] Okay, we are going now to Mike in Texas, our last caller. [01:56:49.020 --> 01:56:50.020] Mike, thanks for calling in. [01:56:50.020 --> 01:56:52.020] Any last comments? [01:56:52.020 --> 01:56:53.020] You have about a minute. [01:56:53.020 --> 01:56:56.020] Yeah, I need help with my mortgage fraud. [01:56:56.020 --> 01:57:02.020] I got into this in 2001, and I think I called Randy last week. [01:57:02.020 --> 01:57:05.020] He was going to get me in touch with – I guess it was Charlotte. [01:57:05.020 --> 01:57:07.020] I don't know, to the forensic – [01:57:07.020 --> 01:57:09.020] Yes, send me an email. [01:57:09.020 --> 01:57:11.020] I'm the one with no computer. [01:57:11.020 --> 01:57:12.020] I'm just a painter. [01:57:12.020 --> 01:57:14.020] Oh, oh, it's a painter. [01:57:14.020 --> 01:57:15.020] Okay. [01:57:15.020 --> 01:57:16.020] Yeah. [01:57:16.020 --> 01:57:18.020] Charlotte's here. [01:57:18.020 --> 01:57:23.020] I mean, every time I look at my escrow statement in February or so, [01:57:23.020 --> 01:57:26.020] I see these big blacked out boxes. [01:57:26.020 --> 01:57:29.020] Do you have my phone number? [01:57:29.020 --> 01:57:31.020] Yeah, I still got it. [01:57:31.020 --> 01:57:33.020] Okay, call me tomorrow. [01:57:33.020 --> 01:57:35.020] Are you in Austin, Mike? [01:57:35.020 --> 01:57:36.020] Yes, ma'am. [01:57:36.020 --> 01:57:39.020] I would recommend that you go down to Goodwill Computers. [01:57:39.020 --> 01:57:42.020] Computer Works is also called up on research, [01:57:42.020 --> 01:57:47.020] because you can get a really decent system there, [01:57:47.020 --> 01:57:50.020] really for like about $100, $150, [01:57:50.020 --> 01:57:53.020] and really everybody needs to have a computer this day and age to be able to do – [01:57:53.020 --> 01:57:54.020] I don't even know how to use them. [01:57:54.020 --> 01:57:57.020] I mean, you know, I just need to figure this. [01:57:57.020 --> 01:58:00.020] Every time I look at that escrow statement and the numbers, [01:58:00.020 --> 01:58:04.020] I'm thinking, you know, I'm getting royally bent here. [01:58:04.020 --> 01:58:05.020] Yes, you are. [01:58:05.020 --> 01:58:07.020] We can help you with that. [01:58:07.020 --> 01:58:08.020] Call me tomorrow. [01:58:08.020 --> 01:58:10.020] I'll get you together with Charlotte. [01:58:10.020 --> 01:58:11.020] All right. [01:58:11.020 --> 01:58:15.020] Okay, we'll – there's some information we'll need. [01:58:15.020 --> 01:58:17.020] What time should I call you? [01:58:17.020 --> 01:58:20.020] Am I on noon or what? [01:58:20.020 --> 01:58:21.020] Yeah, any time. [01:58:21.020 --> 01:58:25.020] I wake up early in the morning, so I'll be up all day. [01:58:25.020 --> 01:58:27.020] Okay, thank you. [01:58:27.020 --> 01:58:28.020] Okay. [01:58:28.020 --> 01:58:29.020] All right. [01:58:29.020 --> 01:58:34.020] Okay, well, listen, we are about to go off the air here, [01:58:34.020 --> 01:58:38.020] so we really appreciate all you listeners listening in, [01:58:38.020 --> 01:58:41.020] and Charlotte, thanks for joining us. [01:58:41.020 --> 01:58:43.020] We need to have you back again maybe on Thursday if you can, [01:58:43.020 --> 01:58:47.020] so we can continue the conversation if we didn't go over all your material. [01:58:47.020 --> 01:58:48.020] All right. [01:58:48.020 --> 01:58:50.020] And Charles, again, I know you've been holding forever. [01:58:50.020 --> 01:58:54.020] Thank you so much for holding, and we will take a call right away on Friday. [01:58:54.020 --> 01:59:14.020] This has been the rule of law on the rule of law radio network. [01:59:24.020 --> 01:59:51.020] Thank you so much. [01:59:51.020 --> 01:59:55.020] Thank you.