[00:00.000 --> 00:10.240] Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel Sunday of committing greater [00:10.240 --> 00:15.540] crimes against Palestinians during its war against Gaza than those for which Sudanese [00:15.540 --> 00:18.960] leader Omar al-Bashir has been indicted. [00:18.960 --> 00:25.300] The UK government is pumping an extra $42 billion, Britain's biggest ever bailout, [00:25.300 --> 00:30.120] to Royal Bank of Scotland, saying it was the only way to keep the business alive. [00:30.120 --> 00:36.080] Britain now owns 84% of what was, at the peak of the finance bubble, the world's largest [00:36.080 --> 00:37.120] bank. [00:37.120 --> 00:42.520] In Afghanistan, NATO plans to abandon part of Helmand province, including the key town [00:42.520 --> 00:49.760] of Musa Qala, which British forces seized in 2007 and installed a former Taliban commander [00:49.760 --> 00:51.680] as governor of the region. [00:51.680 --> 00:56.440] British commander says it's a betrayal to the Taliban defector to hand his district [00:56.440 --> 01:00.440] back to the Taliban. [01:00.440 --> 01:07.240] According to a new study compiled by CPR, the Center for Responsive Politics, 237 members [01:07.240 --> 01:11.520] of Congress, or 44%, are millionaires. [01:11.520 --> 01:16.000] Nationwide, only 1% of US citizens are millionaires. [01:16.000 --> 01:22.200] By compiling financial disclosure statements and public tax records, CPR was able to examine [01:22.200 --> 01:25.800] the investment holdings of elected officials. [01:25.800 --> 01:31.400] In 2008, the same year the federal government bailed out several US banks, the second most [01:31.400 --> 01:36.320] commonly held stock among Congress members was Bank of America. [01:36.320 --> 01:42.160] Other popular bank stocks included Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Goldman Sachs, all of which [01:42.160 --> 01:45.120] received congressionally approved funds. [01:45.120 --> 01:50.240] Dave Leventhal, who helped compile the study's findings, noted that as Congress worked on [01:50.240 --> 01:55.820] health care reform, health industry related stocks were also commonly held by many on [01:55.820 --> 01:57.320] Capitol Hill. [01:57.320 --> 02:02.400] Leventhal said, oftentimes members of Congress are heavily invested in companies that will [02:02.400 --> 02:07.680] be affected by decisions the federal government makes. [02:07.680 --> 02:13.200] The Labor Department's jobs report released Friday shows unemployment and underemployment [02:13.200 --> 02:18.600] has reached its highest level in decades. [02:18.600 --> 02:24.080] Analysts say unemployment would almost certainly be at its highest level since the Great Depression. [02:24.080 --> 02:30.240] In all, more than one out of every six workers, or 17.5%, were unemployed or underemployed [02:30.240 --> 02:31.240] in October. [02:31.240 --> 02:36.600] This includes the officially unemployed who have looked for work in the last four weeks, [02:36.600 --> 02:41.680] discouraged workers who have looked in the past year, and millions of part-time workers [02:41.680 --> 02:43.880] who want to work full-time. [02:43.880 --> 03:13.000] The official jobless rate, 10.2% in October, is up from 9.8% in September. [03:13.000 --> 03:24.200] OK. [03:24.200 --> 03:37.480] Nice job. [03:37.480 --> 03:48.480] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:48.480 --> 03:53.480] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:53.480 --> 03:59.480] When you were eight and you had bad dreams You'd go to school and learn the golden rules [03:59.480 --> 04:04.480] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? If you get hot then you must get cool [04:04.480 --> 04:09.480] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [04:09.480 --> 04:35.480] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [04:40.480 --> 04:45.480] against RFID chipping in humans and animals. [04:45.480 --> 04:51.480] And Lisa, you are in a runoff now. This is very exciting. [04:51.480 --> 04:58.480] And apparently today was the last day for out of town overseas ballots to come in. [04:58.480 --> 05:04.480] So can you give us an update on what the status is concerning the runoff election? [05:04.480 --> 05:09.480] Yes, Deborah, it's all official as of today. All the ballots have come in [05:09.480 --> 05:13.480] and basically it looks like we're headed to a runoff. [05:13.480 --> 05:20.480] We had approximately about 8% of our voters in state markets were involved in the election [05:20.480 --> 05:27.480] and so now it's coming down to a runoff with election dates slated tentatively for Tuesday, [05:27.480 --> 05:36.480] December 5th after it goes for the city council for actual officiating of the runoff. [05:36.480 --> 05:42.480] Wonderful. So can you give us an idea, tell us what your platform is? [05:42.480 --> 05:49.480] What are you running on? How are your views on the issues different from the incumbent [05:49.480 --> 05:51.480] and who is your incumbent? [05:51.480 --> 05:58.480] Yes, ma'am. Well, actually last year I ran for city council in March and received almost 5,000 votes [05:58.480 --> 06:05.480] in a race when I spent under $500 in campaign for less than three months [06:05.480 --> 06:09.480] to an incumbent that I actually had helped in office when he was a student. [06:09.480 --> 06:14.480] And then last year, of course this March, we had the largest protest in the history of our community [06:14.480 --> 06:20.480] and we overturned an ordinance with the first city in the nation to overturn RFID ordinance [06:20.480 --> 06:29.480] so this year I announced back in January that I was going to run and myself and a very devoted group [06:29.480 --> 06:34.480] of us here in state markets have been campaign ably through the doors since July, [06:34.480 --> 06:41.480] literally passing out thousands of flyers a weekend and then of course we started phone banking [06:41.480 --> 06:46.480] and now it looks like we're going to run off. The voter turnout was so low there was kind of split vote [06:46.480 --> 06:55.480] and now it's basically me against another gentleman who kind of, since campaign treasurer is the current incumbent, [06:55.480 --> 07:01.480] I have significantly more votes going into this race. She stepped down and this is basically an election [07:01.480 --> 07:07.480] about development issues in markets, giving abatements to large outside corporations [07:07.480 --> 07:12.480] and development issues which we've had a lot of mobilization here in our community about. [07:12.480 --> 07:18.480] And then obviously I'm the only candidate who's doing specific initiatives for our nation's veterans [07:18.480 --> 07:23.480] regarding a variety of issues here in state markets. [07:23.480 --> 07:30.480] Yes and if you could please, I would like you to elaborate a little bit more on the development issues [07:30.480 --> 07:39.480] because I've gotten some response concerning your PSAs and ads and stuff where you're talking about smart growth [07:39.480 --> 07:46.480] and I've talked to you a little off line about this off the air where you've explained to me [07:46.480 --> 07:58.480] that your idea of smart growth is very different from what the purported definition of smart growth is [07:58.480 --> 08:05.480] according to our public officials, public servants. So if you could please explain on this [08:05.480 --> 08:10.480] because there's a lot of people out here who are very opposed to Agenda 21 [08:10.480 --> 08:14.480] and the whole ideology that comes down from that. [08:14.480 --> 08:24.480] And so I would like you to explain to your constituents and to the listeners out here your take on that [08:24.480 --> 08:37.480] because I feel that your representation of smart growth quote unquote is not the Agenda 21 definition of smart growth. [08:37.480 --> 08:43.480] Totally, totally Deborah and I appreciate you saying that and I'm glad, I mean I'm honored that your listeners [08:43.480 --> 08:49.480] are so critical when they hear those club words or those buzz words, listen to the club word. [08:49.480 --> 08:56.480] They would pick up their phone and call which shows you how savvy your listeners are to political issues. [08:56.480 --> 09:03.480] For me, this is back to the roots of new urbanism philosophy. It's a holistic, paradigmatic perspective towards growth. [09:03.480 --> 09:09.480] You know here in San Marcos, Deborah, we have a downtown that has been neglected by city council [09:09.480 --> 09:13.480] and pitted against large outside corporations getting abatement. [09:13.480 --> 09:21.480] It's almost like we have a district for corporations versus a downtown entrepreneurial zone or enterprise zone [09:21.480 --> 09:28.480] where we have a student population base, we have a south side base of citizens who should not be reliable [09:28.480 --> 09:32.480] on transportation for not only basic necessities but for entertainment. [09:32.480 --> 09:38.480] And what we're seeing is the city council giving abatement for these corporations to move out to Owlette Mall [09:38.480 --> 09:43.480] and then give abatement from bigger businesses to come in when it threatens integrity, [09:43.480 --> 09:48.480] obviously you know of our neighborhoods of retired residents as well as students and then those of course [09:48.480 --> 09:52.480] who live in our assisted living facilities here in our community. [09:52.480 --> 09:58.480] Lisa, what does that mean in practical terms to give abatements? [09:58.480 --> 10:03.480] Well what's happening is you're finding that they're giving public funding for abatement, [10:03.480 --> 10:09.480] advertising abatement more specifically recently with the city council passage of measure [10:09.480 --> 10:12.480] and then a lot of us opposed and defeated. [10:12.480 --> 10:18.480] I'm the only cane in this race that spoke out against this consistently in this race. [10:18.480 --> 10:23.480] Since I was a student, one of your guests, he's also a student, I've been an activist for some time [10:23.480 --> 10:31.480] and that was the Springtown Deal where they moved target and then they wanted to bring in businesses [10:31.480 --> 10:36.480] that would have enhanced, you know, increased home driving rate and so forth there at the Springtown, [10:36.480 --> 10:42.480] you know, giving these outside corporations abatement when our small businesses are having difficulty [10:42.480 --> 10:45.480] just making very simple improvements in our community. [10:45.480 --> 10:51.480] So this is definitely an issue of outside development versus fostering a local downtown economy. [10:51.480 --> 10:55.480] For me that's what smart growth means, that the core of the city is with promises [10:55.480 --> 11:00.480] and then that we don't have to be reliable to move downtown to get our basic necessities [11:00.480 --> 11:07.480] which affects not only our student population but those of us who live downtown and on the south side. [11:07.480 --> 11:15.480] Right, so you're advocating basically stopping government subsidizing of these major corporations [11:15.480 --> 11:19.480] to engage in their development. [11:19.480 --> 11:25.480] That and also move towards desks being federally city and bike friendly cities [11:25.480 --> 11:29.480] and we have, you know, the economic structure in place with university where that's viable [11:29.480 --> 11:31.480] and there are a lot of other models. [11:31.480 --> 11:35.480] You know, I've talked strongly about green industries. [11:35.480 --> 11:38.480] This is something Daniel and I have been discussing for some time [11:38.480 --> 11:45.480] and, you know, there's an opportunity for us to bring in veterans with a new GI bill for the university. [11:45.480 --> 11:50.480] So there's a whole myriad of platforms that I have specific initiatives [11:50.480 --> 11:56.480] and they're innovative and they incorporate pre-existing populations as well as enhancing the tourism [11:56.480 --> 12:04.480] versus, like I said, giving handouts to big businesses which is something I'm definitely opposed to. [12:04.480 --> 12:13.480] So Lisa, let me ask you, how are you, how can you, okay, let's say you got on City Council in San Marcos. [12:13.480 --> 12:19.480] How can you stop City Council, the rest of the City Council members, [12:19.480 --> 12:26.480] how could you stop the City Council from taking federal handout money? [12:26.480 --> 12:30.480] Well, I mean, I've got a good track record, Deborah, of working with the City Council [12:30.480 --> 12:34.480] on issues that concern residents like the RFID ordinance. [12:34.480 --> 12:40.480] You know, we were very fortunate that two of our City Council members put that on the agenda [12:40.480 --> 12:44.480] and since then when they tried to bring it back up in July I met with the mayor. [12:44.480 --> 12:49.480] I have a good track record of working on the outside for citizen interests with my colleagues [12:49.480 --> 12:58.480] and I can't say what I would reject, what I would, you know, vote pro or affirm, you know, [12:58.480 --> 13:01.480] as a City Council member but people know my paradigmatic perspective [13:01.480 --> 13:08.480] and I think I would not only shed light but also be a good working colleague with the City Council members. [13:08.480 --> 13:14.480] Okay, so Lisa, how can people support you right now in your runoff election, in this runoff election? [13:14.480 --> 13:16.480] Well, I'm going to let Daniel in a moment. [13:16.480 --> 13:19.480] I think Daniel would be wonderful to talk about some of the volunteer things that we're doing [13:19.480 --> 13:22.480] and I'm very honored to have Daniel on our team. [13:22.480 --> 13:25.480] He's a testimony to activists in San Marcos. [13:25.480 --> 13:32.480] This man phone banged over 275 people on election day while campaigning out in front of the voting box. [13:32.480 --> 13:35.480] So talk about a multi-tasker. [13:35.480 --> 13:38.480] But also we have a blog. [13:38.480 --> 13:39.480] I have a website. [13:39.480 --> 13:50.480] It's www.lmc4sanmarcos.com, www.lmc4sanmarcos.com and there's a blog link [13:50.480 --> 13:56.480] and at my blog link I have a donate widget and, you know, I'm running against a lot of big money [13:56.480 --> 14:01.480] and, you know, I was definitely the lowest spending candidate in this race [14:01.480 --> 14:06.480] and I could definitely use some support from people monetary-wise, but also volunteers. [14:06.480 --> 14:14.480] I've got email links on my website and we could sure use people who want to support us in this fight to help us out. [14:14.480 --> 14:18.480] I think Daniel can tell you a lot about what we've been doing over these months. [14:18.480 --> 14:21.480] So I'd love to, you know, yes sir. [14:21.480 --> 14:28.480] If I could jump in, yeah, this has been a, it's really been a hard-fought race [14:28.480 --> 14:35.480] and now that we're moving into the runoff, now it's more important than ever to get boots on the ground. [14:35.480 --> 14:42.480] That really, that's what got us into the runoff, even though Lisa spent less than half of what Ryan Thomason spent, [14:42.480 --> 14:50.480] who was quoted by Sean Maycock, the other challenger, as being the special interest candidate. [14:50.480 --> 14:55.480] He spent a lot of money and still didn't get the votes, didn't even get 50 percent, [14:55.480 --> 14:58.480] even though he spent more than twice as much as Lisa did. [14:58.480 --> 15:06.480] And so now it's really going to be up to the people on the ground because he can't spend that money and we do have momentum. [15:06.480 --> 15:13.480] So, you know, if anybody wants to come down and knock on doors with us, we'd be happy to have them. [15:13.480 --> 15:21.480] Other than that, phone banking can be done from anywhere in the United States or the world. [15:21.480 --> 15:25.480] That's really what's going to help with that. [15:25.480 --> 15:26.480] I think that's well put. [15:26.480 --> 15:31.480] I mean, Daniel and I have been, we've been walking for months and I'm blessed to have a, [15:31.480 --> 15:40.480] we call it the LMC Street Team crew and we've got volunteers ranging from college-age students up on past 67 years old [15:40.480 --> 15:44.480] and all forms of political party alliances. [15:44.480 --> 15:50.480] We all agree that we need to protect the integrity of our neighborhoods and this is important, Deborah. [15:50.480 --> 15:55.480] In our community, there's a big discussion about students cooperating with the neighborhoods. [15:55.480 --> 15:57.480] They formed all these commissions. [15:57.480 --> 16:03.480] I think that the team building between Daniel and I and my treasurer who's a student [16:03.480 --> 16:11.480] and the large student base that I have to support is testimony of us working together for the love of our community, [16:11.480 --> 16:18.480] whether it's our river or our citizens, transportation issues, the environment, as well as neighborhoods. [16:18.480 --> 16:20.480] Yeah. [16:20.480 --> 16:21.480] All right. [16:21.480 --> 16:30.480] So listeners, go to lmc4, the number four, sanmarcos.blogspot.com. [16:30.480 --> 16:36.480] That's lmc4, the number four, sanmarcos.blogspot.com. [16:36.480 --> 16:43.480] And please support Lisa Marie Copoletta running for city council in San Marcos. [16:43.480 --> 16:52.480] She's in a runoff race and she is going to be a host here on Rule of Law Radio Network. [16:52.480 --> 16:54.480] Thank you, Lisa. [16:54.480 --> 17:00.480] Thank you. [17:00.480 --> 17:04.480] Do you feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [17:04.480 --> 17:08.480] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [17:08.480 --> 17:12.480] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [17:12.480 --> 17:19.480] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [17:19.480 --> 17:25.480] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. [17:25.480 --> 17:30.480] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [17:30.480 --> 17:36.480] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [17:36.480 --> 17:40.480] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [17:40.480 --> 17:43.480] without feeling tired or uninterested. [17:43.480 --> 17:50.480] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [17:50.480 --> 17:54.480] or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [17:54.480 --> 17:57.480] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [17:57.480 --> 18:11.480] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [18:27.480 --> 18:29.480] Look, mom, again. [18:29.480 --> 18:31.480] I don't have an answer. [18:31.480 --> 18:33.480] I'm so confused inside. [18:33.480 --> 18:35.480] Guadalupe is such a seed. [18:35.480 --> 18:38.480] Lord, how they want we can take it easy? [18:38.480 --> 18:43.480] They might want me to politically end them getting up and angry. [18:43.480 --> 18:48.480] But they must come in up and fight, in fight for the freedom and the free. [18:48.480 --> 18:52.480] On the right, they will love slavery and get handouts from the government. [18:52.480 --> 19:13.480] But we ask the Christians, they don't have the answers, but we ask the Christians, and they don't have the answers. [19:13.480 --> 19:23.480] Here I need them to tear you, them to tear me Lord, them to tear the country. Here I need them to tear me, them to tear you, and them to tear the country. [19:23.480 --> 19:28.480] Them don't tear up the confidus, and them rip it in three, them give a damn about three. [19:28.480 --> 19:33.480] When we free out this country, how them lead we, them lead we free. [19:33.480 --> 19:38.480] Like we blind and we crazy, them lead in with the destructionists. [19:38.480 --> 19:43.480] If we weapon and big gun, them appoint from the country of me. [19:43.480 --> 19:48.480] Here I need them to tear you, them to tear me Lord, them to tear the country. [19:48.480 --> 19:53.480] Here I need them to tear you, them to tear me Lord, them to tear the country. [19:53.480 --> 20:12.480] But we ask the Christians, they don't have the answers, but we ask the Christians, they don't have the answers. [20:12.480 --> 20:28.480] We ask the Christians, they don't have the answers, but we ask the Christians, they don't have the answers. [20:28.480 --> 20:36.480] Okay, we didn't find no bomb, we didn't find no gun, we didn't find no weapons of mass destruction. [20:36.480 --> 20:40.480] So what the heck are we doing over there? [20:40.480 --> 20:44.480] Very good questions. We ask the questions, they don't have the answers. [20:44.480 --> 20:48.480] Okay, well, it's just something for you all to think about. [20:48.480 --> 21:03.480] In the meantime, Eddie has to come back here, actually to Rockdale on the 19th for a hearing because he's been charged with, [21:03.480 --> 21:06.480] what is it now that he charged you with? [21:06.480 --> 21:12.480] Well, the only charge they actually told me that they had, they put three on the ticket, [21:12.480 --> 21:17.480] but they only bonded me for one, which is no driver's license, [21:17.480 --> 21:23.480] which they're going to have a real fun time with me over that little piece of subject matter. [21:23.480 --> 21:27.480] But at this point, that part's neither here nor there. [21:27.480 --> 21:32.480] What we want to do is we're going to formulate on how we're going after. [21:32.480 --> 21:38.480] Now I've got some paperwork that I've mailed out to the court, which I have yet to hear back from. [21:38.480 --> 21:45.480] One is a petition rescinding the plea they made me enter, the police officer made me enter a plea, [21:45.480 --> 21:52.480] not the clerk, not the judge, the police officer of all people, had me enter a plea and sign off on it. [21:52.480 --> 21:58.480] But since I have not been informed of the nature of the charge against me, a plea is a tad bit irrelevant at this point. [21:58.480 --> 22:05.480] So I sent that in with the information demanding that I wish to be informed of the nature of the charges against me. [22:05.480 --> 22:08.480] I also, since there was no prosecuting attorney, [22:08.480 --> 22:15.480] demanded to know how the judge was able to schedule a pretrial when there could not possibly have been an information filed [22:15.480 --> 22:19.480] for the court to gain jurisdiction to hold a pretrial. [22:19.480 --> 22:24.480] So I am waiting at the moment to hear back on this material. [22:24.480 --> 22:32.480] When did the officer force you into entering this plea? [22:32.480 --> 22:38.480] After he took me back to the jail and entered my name and address into their computer. [22:38.480 --> 22:45.480] He went in and got the paperwork from the judge who was sitting there but never said a word to me or anything else. [22:45.480 --> 22:50.480] Got the paperwork from the judge, brought it out to me, had me sign it. [22:50.480 --> 22:57.480] And of course, he had already signed the ticket in the booking area, and there was no clerk, no judge, no notary, [22:57.480 --> 22:59.480] nobody to notarize the signature. [22:59.480 --> 23:03.480] And it says right on the ticket, must be signed in front of one of these people. [23:03.480 --> 23:06.480] And it was not. [23:06.480 --> 23:10.480] So all the way around, they're already FUBARed. [23:10.480 --> 23:12.480] They just don't know it yet. [23:12.480 --> 23:16.480] But I intend to remind them when I get there. [23:16.480 --> 23:20.480] So I don't really know what is going to occur on the 19th. [23:20.480 --> 23:24.480] It all depends on what the response is to the paperwork when it comes back to me. [23:24.480 --> 23:33.480] But it's going to be real interesting to see just how far off the charted map these people are willing to go for a $200 ticket [23:33.480 --> 23:37.480] because I tend to run them ashore if at all possible. [23:37.480 --> 23:43.480] Did you file the cross-complaint against the officer? [23:43.480 --> 23:45.480] Can't file anything yet, Randy. [23:45.480 --> 23:54.480] I don't have a case number or anything else to file in, nor do I have, like I said, there's nothing to file on. [23:54.480 --> 23:57.480] As of right now, they have no cause of action. [23:57.480 --> 24:01.480] I am going through the complaint on the officer that we've got prepared. [24:01.480 --> 24:08.480] I am just trying to make sure that it's all complete down the line and fitting this particular situation. [24:08.480 --> 24:15.480] Okay, okay, if they have no cause of action, their problem, not your problem. [24:15.480 --> 24:16.480] That's right. [24:16.480 --> 24:23.480] You send them in the motions registered, restricted. [24:23.480 --> 24:28.480] Then the clerk has to sign for the document. [24:28.480 --> 24:33.480] And it's the clerk's problem what to do with the documents. [24:33.480 --> 24:40.480] And if she doesn't get them filed in a cause number in your name, then you charge her with tampering the government document. [24:40.480 --> 24:44.480] Randy, isn't this a scenario for a writ of habeas corpus? [24:44.480 --> 24:46.480] I mean, we've been through this before. [24:46.480 --> 24:49.480] No, not until after I'm in jail. [24:49.480 --> 24:50.480] Wait a minute. [24:50.480 --> 24:52.480] They already arrested you. [24:52.480 --> 24:53.480] They already arrested you. [24:53.480 --> 24:54.480] There's only charges against you. [24:54.480 --> 24:56.480] For 20 whole minutes. [24:56.480 --> 25:00.480] You're restricted at your liberty, but there are other remedies. [25:00.480 --> 25:03.480] Okay, but wait, let me ask a question here. [25:03.480 --> 25:04.480] All right. [25:04.480 --> 25:17.480] Charges against Eddie, but he can't file motions in his case because there's no case as far as the records go with the clerk of the courts. [25:17.480 --> 25:21.480] Sounds to me like it's time for writ of habeas corpus. [25:21.480 --> 25:22.480] Bring me before the court. [25:22.480 --> 25:25.480] I can't file motions in my own case. [25:25.480 --> 25:30.480] The prosecutor is trying to prosecute you. [25:30.480 --> 25:31.480] She's right about the writ. [25:31.480 --> 25:34.480] That's the scenario fits. [25:34.480 --> 25:39.480] Yeah, well, technically I could go ahead and file them and do all of that. [25:39.480 --> 25:46.480] I am more interested in seeing how the court is going to respond to what I've sent in before I do that. [25:46.480 --> 25:52.480] I want to see if I'm dealing with guys that are going to refuse to obey the law up front. [25:52.480 --> 25:55.480] So this is basically a feeler filing that I did. [25:55.480 --> 26:00.480] I want to feel out what their purpose and intent is going to be in response to this. [26:00.480 --> 26:11.480] For all I know, they may have sent me a check back already with my money in it because Officer Lightfoot read the paperwork, found out that he was goofed up, and withdrew the complaint. [26:11.480 --> 26:13.480] I don't know. [26:13.480 --> 26:15.480] That's what I'm trying to wait and find out. [26:15.480 --> 26:22.480] They've got a couple more days, and then I'm going to go ahead and just file everything a second time, including the stuff from the seminar. [26:22.480 --> 26:31.480] But what I want to do is I want to try to feel them out to see whether or not these folks are going to press the envelope and violate the law in the process. [26:31.480 --> 26:34.480] Well, Eddie, did the clerk tell you? [26:34.480 --> 26:35.480] The clerk never spoke to me. [26:35.480 --> 26:43.480] The only person I addressed verbally in any form or fashion were the two officers, no one else. [26:43.480 --> 26:46.480] The judge and the court clerk were both sitting right there. [26:46.480 --> 26:52.480] Neither looked at me, neither spoke to me, though they were two feet from me. [26:52.480 --> 26:56.480] Have you pulled your file from the clerk of the court, the clerk's record? [26:56.480 --> 26:57.480] There was no file. [26:57.480 --> 27:01.480] The only piece of paper in existence was the one I signed and the copy of the ticket. [27:01.480 --> 27:03.480] And it's not in the file? [27:03.480 --> 27:05.480] And there's no file? [27:05.480 --> 27:07.480] Well, they wouldn't have made a file until after I left ever. [27:07.480 --> 27:08.480] That's what I'm saying. [27:08.480 --> 27:10.480] Everything was signed right there with me. [27:10.480 --> 27:16.480] What I did sign I've got copies of, but there's still no verified complaint. [27:16.480 --> 27:18.480] There is no information. [27:18.480 --> 27:20.480] I'm willing to bet dollars to doughnuts on it. [27:20.480 --> 27:30.480] And even if they are in the folder, at this point it's all moot because they still messed up in the original filing of the complaint to begin with. [27:30.480 --> 27:33.480] It was not signed in front of a notary. [27:33.480 --> 27:39.480] And if the officer is going to go back and sign it after the fact in front of a notary, I don't have a copy of that. [27:39.480 --> 27:41.480] I was not given my ten days to appear. [27:41.480 --> 27:44.480] I was not given any of that stuff. [27:44.480 --> 27:58.480] My main concern is even despite all that, if there's no file, if there's no folder in the record of the clerk of the court, then there's no case. [27:58.480 --> 27:59.480] Right. [27:59.480 --> 28:04.480] But what I'm saying is there may be at this moment, there was not at that moment. [28:04.480 --> 28:06.480] Okay. [28:06.480 --> 28:08.480] That's what I'm waiting to get back. [28:08.480 --> 28:11.480] Did I understand that you were standing in front of the judge? [28:11.480 --> 28:13.480] You are correct. [28:13.480 --> 28:18.480] He was sitting in the dispatcher's office, and the dispatcher and the court clerk appear to be the same person. [28:18.480 --> 28:24.480] Did you demand an examining trial? [28:24.480 --> 28:28.480] Like I said, the judge wouldn't talk to me. [28:28.480 --> 28:31.480] You demanded it from the police officer, didn't you? [28:31.480 --> 28:34.480] I demanded the officer take me to a magistrate. [28:34.480 --> 28:43.480] He insisted he was not required to do that for some time within 48 hours, which I insisted that's incorrect, as you well heard on the phone. [28:43.480 --> 28:51.480] I said, no, you're to act with all due diligence to take me before one immediately, but you have a maximum of 48 hours. [28:51.480 --> 28:52.480] No, no, no. [28:52.480 --> 28:54.480] I got up to 48 hours. [28:54.480 --> 28:56.480] Well, all right. [28:56.480 --> 29:02.480] And you were actually before a magistrate, and he did not perform an examining trial. [29:02.480 --> 29:03.480] He didn't perform squat. [29:03.480 --> 29:06.480] He was too busy weighing down that chair so it wouldn't float away. [29:06.480 --> 29:08.480] You need to find out what his name is. [29:08.480 --> 29:09.480] Oh, I will. [29:09.480 --> 29:11.480] That's part of the information I requested. [29:11.480 --> 29:18.480] I requested everything about the presiding judge, who's going to prosecute, what their official title is. [29:18.480 --> 29:19.480] I want to know if it's a city attorney. [29:19.480 --> 29:23.480] I want to know everything about who's going to be in that courtroom. [29:23.480 --> 29:29.480] I want to know if there's actually a file, a folder in record of the clerk of the court. [29:29.480 --> 29:34.480] That's one of the things I'm going to find out when I get down there. [29:34.480 --> 29:41.480] Because if there isn't, it's time for a writ of habeas corpus. [29:41.480 --> 29:42.480] She's got a point. [29:42.480 --> 29:43.480] Yeah. [29:43.480 --> 29:45.480] I mean, you can't even argue the merits. [29:45.480 --> 29:46.480] You can't argue jurisdiction. [29:46.480 --> 29:51.480] You can't argue anything if there's not even a case. [29:51.480 --> 29:53.480] That's why we have writ of habeas corpus. [29:53.480 --> 30:00.480] Okay, we'll be right back. [30:00.480 --> 30:03.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [30:03.480 --> 30:14.480] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [30:14.480 --> 30:18.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [30:18.480 --> 30:22.480] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [30:22.480 --> 30:27.480] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [30:27.480 --> 30:33.480] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [30:33.480 --> 30:42.480] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [30:42.480 --> 30:51.480] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [30:51.480 --> 31:00.480] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [31:00.480 --> 31:21.480] Yeah, I got a warrant, and I'm gonna solve them, to the government them, prosecute them. Okay. [31:21.480 --> 31:30.480] This is a race for Mr. Bush. This is a race for Dick Cheney. [31:30.480 --> 31:35.480] Well, I need a prosecutor to come and help me prosecute them wicked leaders. [31:35.480 --> 31:39.480] You see, they're all liars. They tell me they're liars. [31:39.480 --> 31:41.480] I tell six stories, people believe me. [31:41.480 --> 31:45.480] They say what they tell me, 3% of Americans vote for Bush. [31:45.480 --> 31:48.480] So how the hell do you get the presidency? [31:48.480 --> 31:50.480] That's why I have a warrant for him. [31:50.480 --> 31:52.480] Everybody listen carefully. [31:52.480 --> 31:54.480] Listen to the words of the three shoes passing. [31:54.480 --> 31:58.480] This is a race for Mr. Bush. [31:58.480 --> 32:03.480] One more warrant for Dick Cheney. [32:03.480 --> 32:08.480] This is a race for Mr. Bush. [32:08.480 --> 32:13.480] One more warrant and then for Dick Cheney. [32:13.480 --> 32:16.480] Well, we're not for Dick Rumsfield, warrant for him. [32:16.480 --> 32:21.480] All Dick Cheney warrants for him, fight about the citizens in the country. [32:21.480 --> 32:23.480] Them getting summoned and them getting angry. [32:23.480 --> 32:26.480] We have some warrants we need to solve. [32:26.480 --> 32:28.480] Need a prosecutor to come and help me. [32:28.480 --> 32:31.480] Prosecutor from any state will be. [32:31.480 --> 32:33.480] Come over and let me show them to him. [32:33.480 --> 32:35.480] Hear them tell you what me tell you. [32:35.480 --> 32:37.480] Three shoes passing speak the truth. [32:37.480 --> 32:38.480] Okay, we're back. [32:38.480 --> 32:41.480] Charlie from Missouri, we see you on the line. [32:41.480 --> 32:43.480] Okay, just hang tight. [32:43.480 --> 32:45.480] Sit there for one second. [32:45.480 --> 32:49.480] We want to go through this process from A to Z. [32:49.480 --> 32:55.480] Okay, because you can't even argue a case if there's no case, first off. [32:55.480 --> 33:04.480] That's why I was bringing up is there even a file or is there even a folder in the records of the court? [33:04.480 --> 33:06.480] Because this is the whole problem. [33:06.480 --> 33:13.480] What happens with most jurisdictions, almost every single one of them in Texas, [33:13.480 --> 33:17.480] especially when it comes to arrests, all right? [33:17.480 --> 33:31.480] They arrest people and the prosecutor secrets the documents away from the clerk of the court so that they can pressure the defendant for a deal. [33:31.480 --> 33:40.480] Meanwhile, person sitting in jail or out on bond or whatever and the court doesn't even know that you exist. [33:40.480 --> 33:43.480] Okay, this is what a writ of habeas corpus is for. [33:43.480 --> 33:44.480] Bring the body. [33:44.480 --> 33:47.480] Bring me in front of the judge. [33:47.480 --> 33:49.480] Okay, there's no case. [33:49.480 --> 33:50.480] There's no folder. [33:50.480 --> 33:51.480] There's no file. [33:51.480 --> 33:53.480] There's no nothing. [33:53.480 --> 34:02.480] So how can the executive branch be engaging in a prosecution when there's nothing in the court record, nothing? [34:02.480 --> 34:11.480] And now, Randy, you're saying even if there is a folder, if it's incomplete, the writ of habeas corpus is still appropriate. [34:11.480 --> 34:13.480] So can we go through this? [34:13.480 --> 34:15.480] Because you can't even challenge jurisdiction. [34:15.480 --> 34:19.480] You can't even challenge the merits of the case or file motions of your case. [34:19.480 --> 34:20.480] Nothing. [34:20.480 --> 34:22.480] If there's no case, okay, that's the whole problem. [34:22.480 --> 34:24.480] There's no case. [34:24.480 --> 34:26.480] So can you guys please explain that? [34:26.480 --> 34:32.480] Even if there was a case, there's no subject matter jurisdiction. [34:32.480 --> 34:37.480] So nobody has any authority to do anything. [34:37.480 --> 34:40.480] That goes to habeas corpus. [34:40.480 --> 34:44.480] The officer never had the authority to pull him over in the first place. [34:44.480 --> 34:55.480] And even if he did have the authority to pull him over, he had to immediately inquire into probable cause to believe that he was in commerce, [34:55.480 --> 34:57.480] which he did not. [34:57.480 --> 35:04.480] And that creates the presupposition that the stop, since the stop was made without a warrant, [35:04.480 --> 35:09.480] the presupposition stands that the arrest was unreasonable. [35:09.480 --> 35:15.480] And the duty is on the officer making the arrest to demonstrate the reasonableness of the arrest. [35:15.480 --> 35:19.480] The first thing he has to do is show he has subject matter jurisdiction. [35:19.480 --> 35:22.480] And he can't do that. [35:22.480 --> 35:27.480] Even if he did that, then he was required to take him directly to the nearest magistrate. [35:27.480 --> 35:32.480] And it appears as though he did that. [35:32.480 --> 35:37.480] Because he took you to wherever he took you, and there's a magistrate sitting right there. [35:37.480 --> 35:39.480] Yes, who did absolutely nothing. [35:39.480 --> 35:46.480] And the magistrate has a duty to examine in the sufficiency of the allegation, which he did not do. [35:46.480 --> 35:54.480] And if these records were sent to him, he was required to prepare a warrant, which he almost certainly did not do. [35:54.480 --> 36:00.480] And he's required to make that warrant open for public inspection immediately after arrest, which he did not do. [36:00.480 --> 36:07.480] He's required to prepare an order under 16.17, code of current procedure, stating whether he found probable cause, [36:07.480 --> 36:13.480] released the person at his liberty, or bound him to the court, or threw him in jail, whatever he did. [36:13.480 --> 36:19.480] He would seal all those documents up and send them and seal them in an envelope, [36:19.480 --> 36:24.480] causing his name to be written across the seal and forward it to the court of jurisdiction. [36:24.480 --> 36:31.480] But since he is the court of jurisdiction, he wouldn't have to seal it, he'd just give it to himself. [36:31.480 --> 36:42.480] There would have to be the complaint, statement of probable cause, a certified record of the proceedings, [36:42.480 --> 36:46.480] an order under 16.17 and a warrant under 16.20. [36:46.480 --> 36:52.480] I want to see the signature on the envelope on the seal. [36:52.480 --> 36:59.480] And Randy, by the way, okay, we've been talking about this for a couple years now, [36:59.480 --> 37:06.480] about the name of the magistrate and the magistrate signing across the seal. [37:06.480 --> 37:20.480] Okay, when is the appropriate time under law or according to law, however you want to word it, for that seal to be opened? [37:20.480 --> 37:22.480] The clerk opens it as soon as she receives it. [37:22.480 --> 37:24.480] Okay, the clerk. [37:24.480 --> 37:32.480] The records are sent to the clerk to be placed under the protection of the clerk. [37:32.480 --> 37:40.480] So as soon as the clerk gets them, she opens them and puts them in a file, which is what she does. [37:40.480 --> 37:46.480] But the seal is for the purpose to ensure that all of the records that the magistrate had in his hand [37:46.480 --> 37:52.480] when he made the probable cause determination go directly to the clerk and nowhere else. [37:52.480 --> 37:58.480] So it shouldn't matter if the magistrate and the judge is the same human being. [37:58.480 --> 38:01.480] It's the clerk that has to verify this. [38:01.480 --> 38:09.480] Well, in that case, it would be unreasonable to seal the documents up in an envelope and mail them to his own office. [38:09.480 --> 38:13.480] Oh, I don't think so. Uh-uh. No. No. [38:13.480 --> 38:15.480] Well, that's not an issue that I'd want to fight in court. [38:15.480 --> 38:17.480] Oh, I will. [38:17.480 --> 38:25.480] But the intent of the legislation is that all of the documents used in the examining trial [38:25.480 --> 38:29.480] are to be put in the hands of the clerk of the court. [38:29.480 --> 38:33.480] So the question becomes, where are those documents? [38:33.480 --> 38:40.480] You had to have made them in order to prepare them in order to give the court subject matter jurisdiction. [38:40.480 --> 38:48.480] The legislature didn't make up all these statutes just for yucks. They intended they be followed. [38:48.480 --> 38:51.480] Okay. And I'm going to challenge you on something here, Randy. [38:51.480 --> 38:52.480] Okay. [38:52.480 --> 38:59.480] Concerning mailing the documents or sending them to his or her own office, [38:59.480 --> 39:08.480] there's a big difference between the clerk of the court as far as the record keeping and the judge slash magistrate. [39:08.480 --> 39:17.480] The judge slash magistrate is not mailing those documents to him or herself or sending them to him or herself. [39:17.480 --> 39:24.480] The magistrate is sending those documents and signing the seal and sending those documents, [39:24.480 --> 39:31.480] that envelope, to the clerk of the court to be filed in the record of the court. [39:31.480 --> 39:38.480] Okay. The records of the court and the clerk of the court and how those records are handled by the clerk [39:38.480 --> 39:47.480] is a completely, totally different function from the judge, the magistrate, whatever capacity. [39:47.480 --> 39:51.480] Okay. Those records have to be signed and sealed. [39:51.480 --> 39:54.480] I don't care if the magistrate, judge, I don't care if it's all the same person. [39:54.480 --> 39:58.480] I don't care if the clerk is the same person. [39:58.480 --> 40:05.480] We can sure make the argument. It's just we have more substantive arguments to make. [40:05.480 --> 40:10.480] Otherwise, you're saying that the judge runs the records. [40:10.480 --> 40:16.480] Otherwise, why do you need a clerk? Just the judge runs everything inside the court. [40:16.480 --> 40:20.480] The judge is to put the records into the protection of the clerk. [40:20.480 --> 40:21.480] Exactly. [40:21.480 --> 40:26.480] It doesn't matter if he's a magistrate and the judge, he puts the records in the protection of the clerk. [40:26.480 --> 40:30.480] Right. [40:30.480 --> 40:36.480] So the real question is, are all the records in the hands of the clerk? [40:36.480 --> 40:44.480] And if they're not, you want to ask the judge what he did with them. [40:44.480 --> 40:51.480] We asked that question in Hayes County and they changed their procedures immediately [40:51.480 --> 41:00.480] because they read the code, saw what the code said, and changed procedures to do what the code said. [41:00.480 --> 41:05.480] But apparently, the other counties didn't get the message. [41:05.480 --> 41:09.480] Well, I don't know. I think Travis County may have gotten the message too [41:09.480 --> 41:26.480] because word has come down certain individual that was arrested on truck ticket warrants early in the evening [41:26.480 --> 41:33.480] apparently saw a magistrate around 1, 2 in the morning. [41:33.480 --> 41:37.480] Well, that's not normal procedure. [41:37.480 --> 41:48.480] Usually you got to sit in jail for like till 10 a.m., 11 a.m., all night long, till the next morning. [41:48.480 --> 41:53.480] So I would venture to say that we're making a difference. [41:53.480 --> 42:01.480] Well, we're about to. When I see the crapola out of them, I expect that to make a difference. [42:01.480 --> 42:08.480] Well, that's the hope and prayer we all get to that we're going to make all that work. [42:08.480 --> 42:16.480] But the interesting thing about all this is going to be allegedly this is supposed to be what they're calling a pre-trial. [42:16.480 --> 42:21.480] Now, the interesting thing about these pre-trials is there are several ways they can work. [42:21.480 --> 42:29.480] Their favorite, however, is to call you in, find out if you've got anything to file in the case, [42:29.480 --> 42:32.480] and then they schedule a trial two or three hours later. [42:32.480 --> 42:37.480] That's their favorite tactic, which is to give you absolutely no prep time. [42:37.480 --> 42:42.480] They haven't told you the nature of the charge, nor have they usually given you a copy of the complaint [42:42.480 --> 42:47.480] as they're required to do no later than one day prior to trial by law. [42:47.480 --> 42:54.480] The officer will almost always attempt to use during the trial the videotape from his cruiser, [42:54.480 --> 43:04.480] which they also may not do according to law unless you were provided a copy of that video no later than 20 days prior to trial. [43:04.480 --> 43:08.480] So this is going to be interesting all the way around. [43:08.480 --> 43:16.480] I am going to do my best to have a whole stack of affidavits and criminal charges already lined up and put together [43:16.480 --> 43:22.480] so that whoever shows up for court watcher, we will have plenty of paperwork going around there, that's for sure. [43:22.480 --> 43:29.480] I am hoping that if the plan works the way that we want it to work and people start doing this [43:29.480 --> 43:38.480] and working together in groups in these courtrooms, we're going to turn these judges around and just out of fear alone. [43:38.480 --> 43:43.480] Good swift kick in the pants goes a long way. [43:43.480 --> 43:47.480] Give them three shoes, guys. [43:47.480 --> 43:50.480] Okay, we'll be right back. [43:50.480 --> 43:59.480] Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Deborah Stevens, we're taking your calls, 512-646-1984. [43:59.480 --> 44:03.480] Special Roast Hemp Coffee from HempUSA.org. [44:03.480 --> 44:09.480] Our coffee grows in the dense volcanic rich soil, herbicide and pesticide free and in the high altitudes of Guatemala [44:09.480 --> 44:13.480] in conditions that are ideal for natural growth of this high quality coffee. [44:13.480 --> 44:18.480] Try our mellow cup of coffee that is ground and roasted with 25% hemp seed from Canada [44:18.480 --> 44:22.480] with a wonderful nutty flavor that contains 18% protein. [44:22.480 --> 44:27.480] Our roasters bring a unique flavor that makes this the best cup of coffee you'll ever have. [44:27.480 --> 44:33.480] Try our new Special Roast Hemp Coffee from HempUSA.org and wake up your brain without the jitters. [44:33.480 --> 44:36.480] Our customers look forward to their next cup of hemp coffee. [44:36.480 --> 44:43.480] Visit us at HempUSA.org or call 908-691-2608. [44:43.480 --> 44:50.480] That's 908-691-2608 and see if you'll change your mind about drinking coffee again. [44:50.480 --> 44:55.480] Taste the difference, feel the difference at HempUSA.org today. [44:55.480 --> 45:14.480] Hemp Coffee from HempUSA.org. [45:25.480 --> 45:37.480] Okay, watching the Sparks Fly, here on the rule of law. [45:37.480 --> 45:40.480] We are taking your calls. [45:40.480 --> 45:43.480] Right now we've got Charlie from Missouri. [45:43.480 --> 45:46.480] Charlie, thanks for calling in. What's on your mind tonight? [45:46.480 --> 45:58.480] Hey, good evening, Paul. I had a call before I got back from a court with a red light on a camera. [45:58.480 --> 46:05.480] I had talked before about it. I had a couple of questions I was hoping you might be able to answer for me. [46:05.480 --> 46:07.480] See what we can do. [46:07.480 --> 46:18.480] Well, let me tell you, when I went to court, prior to that, when I went to court, I had a motion challenging their jurisdiction. [46:18.480 --> 46:22.480] Nobody had an oath of office there. [46:22.480 --> 46:31.480] So I took Randy's advice through the proceedings, and every time they tried to move, I kept objecting on that fact. [46:31.480 --> 46:38.480] They got to the point where they didn't know what to do. [46:38.480 --> 46:45.480] Because I was afraid of what they might do, and they didn't know what to do, I articulated everything, [46:45.480 --> 46:52.480] and so they seemed, the judge seemed excited about that so they could get rid of me. [46:52.480 --> 46:55.480] But I wanted to ask you a couple of things about what happened when I was in there. [46:55.480 --> 46:59.480] First of all, they sent me a notice of violation, notice to appear. [46:59.480 --> 47:07.480] And on this, it's like a ticket, I guess. [47:07.480 --> 47:17.480] It was signed by an officer, a police officer, and it was also signed, it says on the bottom of it, [47:17.480 --> 47:21.480] well, it was signed by the police officer, but in reality, he never signed anything. [47:21.480 --> 47:24.480] It was just all typed up. [47:24.480 --> 47:29.480] And then below that, it says on information, undersigned prosecutor charges the defendant [47:29.480 --> 47:33.480] and informs the court that the above facts were true and punishable. [47:33.480 --> 47:36.480] And then that's signed by a prosecutor, but he didn't really sign it either. [47:36.480 --> 47:38.480] That was printed up, too. [47:38.480 --> 47:45.480] So when I was fired to go in the court, I had a motion in because neither the officer, [47:45.480 --> 47:53.480] the officer didn't sign it and there was no information on file that the court was able to show me. [47:53.480 --> 48:03.480] So my first question is... [48:03.480 --> 48:05.480] Charlie? [48:05.480 --> 48:11.480] Is that the information itself? [48:11.480 --> 48:13.480] Yeah, we're here. [48:13.480 --> 48:15.480] We just can't hear you sometimes. [48:15.480 --> 48:17.480] Oh, I'm sorry. [48:17.480 --> 48:19.480] Is that any better? [48:19.480 --> 48:20.480] That's fine. [48:20.480 --> 48:26.480] Is that information what now? [48:26.480 --> 48:31.480] I was just wondering on the bottom of the ticket, when it said on the bottom of the so-called ticket, [48:31.480 --> 48:36.480] when it has the statement on information by the prosecutor, is that what they call, [48:36.480 --> 48:40.480] is that what they determine is information on file? [48:40.480 --> 48:42.480] No. [48:42.480 --> 48:44.480] The information is a separate document. [48:44.480 --> 48:49.480] It should look just like the criminal complaint, except it's signed by the prosecutor [48:49.480 --> 48:54.480] and it says information across the top instead of complaint. [48:54.480 --> 48:55.480] Okay. [48:55.480 --> 48:56.480] Well, okay. [48:56.480 --> 48:58.480] I thought it might. [48:58.480 --> 48:59.480] Well, they didn't have that anyway. [48:59.480 --> 49:02.480] But another thing is during... [49:02.480 --> 49:06.480] I was objecting because I didn't believe they had jurisdiction. [49:06.480 --> 49:14.480] And finally, when I told the judge I was just ready to stipulate, moving on to style de novo, [49:14.480 --> 49:19.480] he turned to the prosecutor and told the prosecutor to sign this document. [49:19.480 --> 49:23.480] And I objected to that, but the prosecutor did it anyway. [49:23.480 --> 49:27.480] You got any comments on that? [49:27.480 --> 49:28.480] Okay. [49:28.480 --> 49:29.480] Run that last part by me one more time. [49:29.480 --> 49:32.480] What did the prosecutor do anyway? [49:32.480 --> 49:36.480] This notice of violation, it looks like a ticket. [49:36.480 --> 49:37.480] Right. [49:37.480 --> 49:42.480] And on the bottom, the prosecutor, it says the prosecutor verifies all these statements are true. [49:42.480 --> 49:47.480] And he's got his type signature, but he's never really signed it. [49:47.480 --> 49:48.480] Okay. [49:48.480 --> 49:49.480] So when I... [49:49.480 --> 49:57.480] At the end of the court, right when I had requested style de novo and just got it out of the court, [49:57.480 --> 49:59.480] the judge turned to the prosecutor. [49:59.480 --> 50:00.480] And he... [50:00.480 --> 50:01.480] And he... [50:01.480 --> 50:02.480] Who the defendant is, he called him Carl. [50:02.480 --> 50:06.480] He said, Carl, by the way, signed the ticket. [50:06.480 --> 50:09.480] And I objected, but the prosecutor signed it anyway. [50:09.480 --> 50:11.480] Does that have anything to do with anything? [50:11.480 --> 50:12.480] No. [50:12.480 --> 50:15.480] Yes, it does, tampering with a government document. [50:15.480 --> 50:18.480] I thought so. [50:18.480 --> 50:22.480] Now, the question is, does that statute apply in your state? [50:22.480 --> 50:27.480] It should, but you need to find out what it is and file a criminal complaint based on that. [50:27.480 --> 50:32.480] The judge is now telling the prosecution how to proceed. [50:32.480 --> 50:38.480] He is basically covering the prosecution's butt for them. [50:38.480 --> 50:41.480] That's called adjudicating from the bench. [50:41.480 --> 50:45.480] So that would be against the judge or against the prosecutor or both? [50:45.480 --> 50:46.480] Both. [50:46.480 --> 50:50.480] They conspired to do the act. [50:50.480 --> 50:53.480] And so I put that on a criminal complaint. [50:53.480 --> 51:00.480] Yeah, file two, tampering with a government document and conspiracy to tamper with a government document. [51:00.480 --> 51:01.480] That's what I thought. [51:01.480 --> 51:03.480] Now, I've got to file this style de novo. [51:03.480 --> 51:10.480] And I'll tell you, I'm in Missouri here, I saw the laws and statutes where you have them outlined in Texas, [51:10.480 --> 51:15.480] and I really wish I was in Texas, because in Missouri, it seems like they try to hide everything. [51:15.480 --> 51:20.480] But on trial de novo, it looks like I can file some post motions. [51:20.480 --> 51:22.480] Do you know anything about that? [51:22.480 --> 51:24.480] Post motions? [51:24.480 --> 51:30.480] Yeah, after court, on the trial de novo, I can put in motion. [51:30.480 --> 51:36.480] You know, I can motion the court that things that weren't in the first trial before they look at these. [51:36.480 --> 51:42.480] Well, the purpose of de novo simply means do-over, okay? [51:42.480 --> 51:43.480] Right. [51:43.480 --> 51:46.480] So it's going to be as if the first trial never occurred. [51:46.480 --> 51:50.480] That's what de novo is, starting from the beginning. [51:50.480 --> 51:57.480] So it's not a matter of you putting in different motions that are added to what you were doing before. [51:57.480 --> 52:02.480] You're starting completely over from scratch as if the other one never occurred. [52:02.480 --> 52:05.480] Well, that's kind of the way it is. [52:05.480 --> 52:10.480] It's de novo for the purpose of perfecting your appeal. [52:10.480 --> 52:22.480] If you were denied rights in the first trial, and anything that went on in the first trial is proper to bring forward in this trial, [52:22.480 --> 52:29.480] they will try to say it's de novo as if it didn't happen, and you remind them, no, it is not. [52:29.480 --> 52:36.480] It's de novo for the purpose of perfecting my appeal, and that is all. [52:36.480 --> 52:43.480] So you can bring the due process violations on the part of the judge and the prosecutor forward to the second case, [52:43.480 --> 52:48.480] to the second hearing, and move for dismissal for violation of due process. [52:48.480 --> 52:53.480] You can file those criminal charges you're going to rot up with that magistrate at that time. [52:53.480 --> 52:56.480] As a matter of fact, if you file them as attachments to your documents, [52:56.480 --> 53:03.480] it's going to be real hard for him to unglue them from his fingers and get rid of them at that point. [53:03.480 --> 53:15.480] And when you file that in court, make sure that the clerk stamps your copies of the complaints as well as the motion on the front. [53:15.480 --> 53:21.480] That puts the clerk in the hot seat if the judge does not act on the complaint and tries to throw them out [53:21.480 --> 53:29.480] because you've got stamped copies that says the court was in receipt of those complaints with your motion. [53:29.480 --> 53:36.480] Good. That's what I wanted to know, because filing the complaint itself here is worthless. [53:36.480 --> 53:46.480] That's correct, but if you file a complaint that can show the judge evaded, avoided, or otherwise ignored their duty under the law [53:46.480 --> 53:54.480] to do something proper with that complaint, you've now caused that judge a whole world of heartburn he wasn't counting on. [53:54.480 --> 54:07.480] Okay. And then one more question. When I filed the challenge to jurisdiction in this court, I gave it to the judge, [54:07.480 --> 54:11.480] I gave it to the prosecutor, and I did that right away. [54:11.480 --> 54:14.480] And then they tried to move forward, and I objected anyway. [54:14.480 --> 54:20.480] And then the judge came up and he said, well, that's because I've denied your challenge to the jurisdiction. [54:20.480 --> 54:28.480] Now, he can't really do that either, can he? I think he'd have to have another judge decide whether to challenge his jurisdiction. [54:28.480 --> 54:30.480] Isn't that correct? [54:30.480 --> 54:38.480] No, he can rule on the jurisdiction. If you file a disqualification, he can't rule on that or a recusal. [54:38.480 --> 54:42.480] Well, as a rule, apparently in Wisconsin they can. [54:42.480 --> 54:50.480] Or was it Michigan? One of the states that can. But the can in Missouri. I just looked at that. [54:50.480 --> 54:58.480] If you file a recusal or disqualification, another judge has to hear it, but not the subject matter jurisdiction. [54:58.480 --> 55:04.480] But on subject matter jurisdiction, you should file a cross-complaint against the judge. [55:04.480 --> 55:09.480] He thinks he has jurisdiction. We'll see how much he thinks he has it. [55:09.480 --> 55:10.480] Really? [55:10.480 --> 55:17.480] If you file a cross-complaint, if it turns out he has no jurisdiction, he has zero immunity. [55:17.480 --> 55:29.480] And because the allegation is one of no jurisdiction, then he has to hire his own attorney to prove that he does have jurisdiction. [55:29.480 --> 55:37.480] It's not what you can prove up. It's the nature of the allegation that you make. [55:37.480 --> 55:47.480] So you allege no subject matter jurisdiction, no immunity. He has to hire his own attorney to prove that he does have subject matter jurisdiction or immunity. [55:47.480 --> 55:53.480] Okay, great. I want to tell you guys one more thing, and then I'll let some other callers call in. [55:53.480 --> 56:01.480] You know, when I went to this court, because they didn't have any OSIP offices, they made me sit until they knew what I was doing. [56:01.480 --> 56:07.480] The prosecutor didn't like me, so they made me wait to be the very last person. [56:07.480 --> 56:16.480] And I was so aggrieved by how they treated people and what they did to people, and knowing that they didn't have an OSIP office. [56:16.480 --> 56:24.480] The first thing the judge did is he asked me to raise my right hand, and he said, you swear to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth? [56:24.480 --> 56:33.480] I was so upset because of what I'd seen and been through, I told him no. And then he really got flustered and asked me what I meant. [56:33.480 --> 56:40.480] And I said, well, I don't know the truth, because what are you asking me? Are you asking me the difference between your truth and my truth? [56:40.480 --> 56:47.480] And I did that, and I was nervous as heck, but I'm wondering, could I have gotten in trouble for that? [56:47.480 --> 56:55.480] Well, no, not unless he ordered you to do a certain thing and you didn't do the thing he ordered you to do. [56:55.480 --> 57:04.480] There's no, as far as I know, there's no law that says I have to swear to that. [57:04.480 --> 57:14.480] And the judge can give you a direct order to, and if you refuse to, then he can hold you in contempt, I suppose. [57:14.480 --> 57:24.480] But if it's forced out of you, it is of no force and effect, so it kind of defeats the purpose. [57:24.480 --> 57:34.480] Dr. Veath raised that very issue, what if you did that? So now we get to find out. [57:34.480 --> 57:40.480] Well, I did it because I didn't figure why could I take an oath if he doesn't have an oath. [57:40.480 --> 57:46.480] Well, you should have brought that up to him. I'll take the oath if you take the oath. [57:46.480 --> 57:50.480] I thought about that too, but I didn't, you know. Anyway, that's another story. [57:50.480 --> 57:55.480] They had me surrounded by nine cops, police officers. [57:55.480 --> 58:01.480] Well, whenever they surround me with security, I tell them, good, I'm glad you're here. [58:01.480 --> 58:06.480] I think these guys are going to commit some crimes, and when they do, I'm going to want you to arrest them. [58:06.480 --> 58:09.480] It always changes their perspective. [58:09.480 --> 58:11.480] Well, thanks for taking my call. [58:11.480 --> 58:12.480] You are welcome. [58:12.480 --> 58:19.480] And Charlie, you know, even if they had you surrounded, I mean, what are they going to do? Make you say yes? [58:19.480 --> 58:24.480] I have no idea, but I was pretty nervous at the time. [58:24.480 --> 58:26.480] That's just crazy. That's just crazy. [58:26.480 --> 58:31.480] Yeah. All right. Thanks. [58:31.480 --> 58:34.480] All right. Thank you, Charlie. [58:34.480 --> 58:40.480] All right. We'll be right back after these short messages and the news break. [58:40.480 --> 59:09.480] 512-646-1984. This is the rule of law. [59:10.480 --> 59:37.480] Yeah. [59:37.480 --> 01:00:04.480] This news brief brought to you by the International News Net. [01:00:04.480 --> 01:00:13.480] Four Colorado veterans are suing defense contractors Halliburton and Kellogg Brown and Root for operating dangerous burn pits in Iraq. [01:00:13.480 --> 01:00:18.480] The lawsuit filed Friday states the four veterans now suffer from breathing problems. [01:00:18.480 --> 01:00:23.480] Similar suits are pending in at least 11 other states. [01:00:23.480 --> 01:00:30.480] In Peshawar, Pakistan, 12 people, including the city's mayor, Abdul Malik, were killed Sunday in a suicide bombing. [01:00:30.480 --> 01:00:39.480] Malik once had close links to the Taliban, but switched sides in 2008 and formed a militia to fight the Taliban. [01:00:39.480 --> 01:00:44.480] In Ukraine, 144 people are reported to have died from flu. [01:00:44.480 --> 01:00:59.480] 43,000 are hospitalized and 936,000 are suffering from flu or ARI, acute respiratory infections. [01:00:59.480 --> 01:01:08.480] The UK Guardian says Hezbollah is rapidly rearming, fearing Israel will attack Lebanon prior to any assault on Iran's nuclear facilities. [01:01:08.480 --> 01:01:15.480] Last week, Israeli commanders seized a ship in the Mediterranean loaded with 400 tons of rockets and small arms, [01:01:15.480 --> 01:01:20.480] which Israel claimed was being sent from Iran to its Hezbollah allies. [01:01:20.480 --> 01:01:27.480] Although Hezbollah denied the weapons were intended for its use, senior commanders have done little to disguise the scale of rearmament. [01:01:27.480 --> 01:01:35.480] The 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel lasted 34 days and killed more than 1,000 people. [01:01:35.480 --> 01:01:45.480] Israel and the US have long assumed any military action against Iran's nuclear program would draw a muscular response from its close allies in Hezbollah. [01:01:45.480 --> 01:01:54.480] According to Israeli military and intelligence analysts, any move against Iran would require a move first against Hezbollah's rockets. [01:01:54.480 --> 01:01:59.480] Israeli military sources have said they are preparing for a potential new conflict. [01:01:59.480 --> 01:02:12.480] On the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, protesters in the West Bank village of Neelin Monday toppled part of a 25-foot concrete wall. [01:02:12.480 --> 01:02:17.480] The Israeli army retaliated by firing live rounds at demonstrators. [01:02:17.480 --> 01:02:25.480] Protesters say the wall has been built to allow more land to be annexed to the nearby settlements rather than for military purposes. [01:02:25.480 --> 01:02:32.480] The section of the wall in Neelin is the only place along the barrier's route where a concrete wall has been erected. [01:02:32.480 --> 01:02:43.480] Demonstrator Mohib Khawaja said 20 years ago no one thought the monster that divided Berlin could be brought down, but in only two days in November it did, [01:02:43.480 --> 01:02:47.480] adding, today we have proven this can also be done here and now. [01:02:47.480 --> 01:02:51.480] It is our land beyond this wall and we will not give up on it. [01:02:51.480 --> 01:03:16.480] We will win for a simple reason, justice is on our side. [01:03:16.480 --> 01:03:40.480] We will win for a simple reason, justice is on our side. [01:03:40.480 --> 01:03:48.480] Neba, Neba, sit your down and go to meet God. [01:03:48.480 --> 01:03:56.480] Neba, Neba, sit your down and go to meet God. [01:03:56.480 --> 01:04:11.480] Neba, Neba, sit your down and go to meet God. [01:04:11.480 --> 01:04:26.480] Neba, Neba, sit your down and go to meet God. [01:04:26.480 --> 01:04:41.480] Neba, Neba, sit your down and go to meet God. [01:04:41.480 --> 01:04:57.480] Okay, we are back. We are going now to Mark in Wisconsin. Mark, thanks for calling in and thank you for the seeds by the way, survivorseeds.com. Thank you very much for the seeds. We really appreciate it. What's on your mind tonight? [01:04:57.480 --> 01:05:19.480] Well, you're welcome. Hey, I just wanted to call and thank Randy. I stole one of his ideas. He was having some problem with some phone company or something. He said go straight to the President. So I was having a problem with an adjuster over $2,300 and so I sent out certified mail to the President, his VP of legal and his VP of plans. [01:05:19.480 --> 01:05:34.480] You know, and I mentioned four or five causes of actions. He was giving me legal advice that amounted to nothing. He breached our fiduciary trust. He was secreting documents. [01:05:34.480 --> 01:05:49.480] Anyway, just a whole myriad of things and they didn't have to give me any more money, but I hung these over their head and I sent them certified mail so that if they did go through what they said they were going to go through with it, I would have lost, you know, $2,300. [01:05:49.480 --> 01:06:05.480] And what happened is the VP of claims called me back and he says, oh, we're going to give you $1,000 and that's $1,000 I would have had to pay. And then he calls back a half hour later and he says, oh, I'm sorry I made a mistake. I'll give you $1,126 back. [01:06:05.480 --> 01:06:15.480] So it just goes to show if you go to the top instead of dealing with the hatchet man on these corporate companies, you can really get something done. [01:06:15.480 --> 01:06:21.480] Applaud, applaud, applaud. [01:06:21.480 --> 01:06:24.480] We should do more of that. [01:06:24.480 --> 01:06:28.480] Find out how much effect we can have when we go up to the top. [01:06:28.480 --> 01:06:33.480] You know, I have ran my own business since I was 21. [01:06:33.480 --> 01:06:43.480] And I hire people and I work and struggle to get good clients and then to take care of those clients. [01:06:43.480 --> 01:06:49.480] And then my help goes out there and they screw up big time. [01:06:49.480 --> 01:06:55.480] Are they going to come to me and say, hey, you know, I really screwed up big time? [01:06:55.480 --> 01:06:57.480] Not going to happen. [01:06:57.480 --> 01:07:04.480] And it's always the guy at the top that never really knows what's going on down below. [01:07:04.480 --> 01:07:14.480] So if you go to him or you can't get to him, there's somebody better. [01:07:14.480 --> 01:07:19.480] It was the adjuster's manager and I guess he was not very happy with him at all. [01:07:19.480 --> 01:07:24.480] I'm thinking that they call him into the corporate office with this letter sitting on the desk and said, explain this. [01:07:24.480 --> 01:07:26.480] You hung up on one of our valued customers. [01:07:26.480 --> 01:07:29.480] You were giving legal advice to one of our customers. [01:07:29.480 --> 01:07:31.480] Are you insane? [01:07:31.480 --> 01:07:34.480] This is unjust enrichment. You're double dipping. [01:07:34.480 --> 01:07:42.480] First you give them, you know, average quality for the car and then you take off for prior damage. [01:07:42.480 --> 01:07:43.480] That's double dipping. [01:07:43.480 --> 01:07:46.480] So I mentioned, you know, unjust enrichment and all that. [01:07:46.480 --> 01:07:50.480] I'm sure they ripped him up. [01:07:50.480 --> 01:07:51.480] I love it. [01:07:51.480 --> 01:07:53.480] That's how it works. [01:07:53.480 --> 01:07:56.480] It helps everybody. [01:07:56.480 --> 01:08:07.480] Yeah, because he's not going to be so avid to rip off, you know, valued customers after that or be rude or secret documents or hang up the phone. [01:08:07.480 --> 01:08:09.480] Good. [01:08:09.480 --> 01:08:13.480] When I run my own business, I need to know this kind of stuff. [01:08:13.480 --> 01:08:15.480] I did this with Southwestern Bell. [01:08:15.480 --> 01:08:18.480] I did it with Cintel. [01:08:18.480 --> 01:08:22.480] I've done it with a number of companies and it always works. [01:08:22.480 --> 01:08:25.480] I remember a book. [01:08:25.480 --> 01:08:29.480] It was called Letters by a Nut. [01:08:29.480 --> 01:08:35.480] And it was some comedian and he just had a book full of letters he had written to people all over the place. [01:08:35.480 --> 01:08:43.480] And a lot of them were just letters of complaint or letters complimenting someone. [01:08:43.480 --> 01:08:45.480] And we almost never do that. [01:08:45.480 --> 01:08:51.480] Dr. V bought a house and really liked it. [01:08:51.480 --> 01:08:57.480] The company that built it, he felt like they did an extremely good job. [01:08:57.480 --> 01:09:06.480] And I thought they did too because I was there and I was on the second floor in a bathroom and the building was like eight or ten years old. [01:09:06.480 --> 01:09:18.480] And where they caulked between the bathtub and the wall, eight years earlier, there wasn't one crack in it. [01:09:18.480 --> 01:09:27.480] And I looked at that and wondered how in the world did they get that bathtub so stable that you could fill it with water [01:09:27.480 --> 01:09:35.480] and empty it and fill it and empty it and it didn't even cause a separation in the caulking. [01:09:35.480 --> 01:09:46.480] I mentioned this to Bill and he said he had written a letter to the company complimenting the contractors for the good job they did. [01:09:46.480 --> 01:09:52.480] And several years later he was talking to a salesman in the neighborhood and he introduced himself. [01:09:52.480 --> 01:09:56.480] Oh, you're Dr. V, he said. [01:09:56.480 --> 01:10:02.480] The guy said he was in a training seminar in Atlanta, Georgia. [01:10:02.480 --> 01:10:07.480] And they used that letter in the training seminar. [01:10:07.480 --> 01:10:11.480] That was pretty cool. [01:10:11.480 --> 01:10:15.480] And I've had that kind of thing go a long way for me. [01:10:15.480 --> 01:10:20.480] I had a, I pulled over inside a road one day because I had a motor in the back of my avalanche [01:10:20.480 --> 01:10:25.480] and I had it tied down but it was moving a little bit so I stopped to tighten it. [01:10:25.480 --> 01:10:27.480] It's a light misty rain. [01:10:27.480 --> 01:10:33.480] A DPS officer pulled up next to me, rolled down his side window, leaned over and he said, [01:10:33.480 --> 01:10:35.480] do you need any help? [01:10:35.480 --> 01:10:39.480] And I told him, no, no, the motor's just a little loose and if it scratched this avalanche, [01:10:39.480 --> 01:10:43.480] mama would skin me alive and I was just tightening it up. [01:10:43.480 --> 01:10:47.480] And he said, oh, okay, I was just thought to see if you needed any help. [01:10:47.480 --> 01:10:49.480] And he left. [01:10:49.480 --> 01:10:55.480] When I got in the car, I took out the cell phone and I called the local sergeant who happened to hate my guts. [01:10:55.480 --> 01:11:01.480] And I asked him what officer he had dispatched out in this area at this time. [01:11:01.480 --> 01:11:03.480] And he told me the officer's name. [01:11:03.480 --> 01:11:07.480] And I told him that I was pulled on the side of the road, tightened out a motor and he pulled, [01:11:07.480 --> 01:11:11.480] stopped in the road to ask me if I needed help. [01:11:11.480 --> 01:11:13.480] And I said, well, is there a problem? [01:11:13.480 --> 01:11:15.480] Absolutely not. [01:11:15.480 --> 01:11:23.480] I think that is the first time a police officer stopped and didn't use the stop as an excuse to harass me. [01:11:23.480 --> 01:11:27.480] He really actually stopped to see if I needed help. [01:11:27.480 --> 01:11:32.480] And I wanted you to know how much I appreciated that. [01:11:32.480 --> 01:11:38.480] Two years later, I walked into the JP's officers, about half a dozen DPS officers in there. [01:11:38.480 --> 01:11:42.480] A big tall guy walked up to me and said, well, hello, Mr. Kelton. [01:11:42.480 --> 01:11:44.480] And I looked kind of confused. [01:11:44.480 --> 01:11:48.480] And he said, you don't remember me, do you? [01:11:48.480 --> 01:11:50.480] Did you arrest me? [01:11:50.480 --> 01:11:52.480] And about half of them, most of them knew me. [01:11:52.480 --> 01:11:54.480] Oh, I'll arrest you. I think I arrested you. [01:11:54.480 --> 01:11:57.480] No, not you guys. [01:11:57.480 --> 01:12:00.480] It was the same guy. [01:12:00.480 --> 01:12:06.480] Two years later, he saw me and he knew immediately who I was. [01:12:06.480 --> 01:12:09.480] That went a long way for him. [01:12:09.480 --> 01:12:19.480] And because so seldom they ever get a positive word that we should do that every chance we get. [01:12:19.480 --> 01:12:31.480] And then we'll get our police officers actually being proud to be police officers and a little more reluctant to treat everybody as if they are the enemy. [01:12:31.480 --> 01:12:33.480] My favorite one was I called Sergeant Rankin. [01:12:33.480 --> 01:12:37.480] I said, Sergeant Rankin, you know that Officer Helton stopped me out there on the highway today. [01:12:37.480 --> 01:12:40.480] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I know all about that. [01:12:40.480 --> 01:12:42.480] You know, he wrote me two tickets. [01:12:42.480 --> 01:12:44.480] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I do. [01:12:44.480 --> 01:12:48.480] You know, Sergeant Rankin, I was my usual smart mouth, arrogant self. [01:12:48.480 --> 01:12:50.480] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I know. [01:12:50.480 --> 01:12:54.480] And I just wanted to tell you how much I appreciate Officer Helton. [01:12:54.480 --> 01:13:01.480] When I crawled down his throat, he gathered up his professionalism, did his job. [01:13:01.480 --> 01:13:04.480] He didn't cut me any slack, which I did not expect. [01:13:04.480 --> 01:13:08.480] He wrote me two tickets, was professional and polite. [01:13:08.480 --> 01:13:15.480] If I need a police officer with a pistol on his hip, I want you to send Officer Helton because I'll trust him. [01:13:15.480 --> 01:13:19.480] And this sergeant really hated me. [01:13:19.480 --> 01:13:28.480] And I could hear the steam coming out of his ears that he really hadn't expected me to compliment one of his officers. [01:13:28.480 --> 01:13:32.480] These things really do go a long way. [01:13:32.480 --> 01:13:34.480] And I encourage everybody to do that. [01:13:34.480 --> 01:13:39.480] If you get an officer that treats you right, call his boss, let him know. [01:13:39.480 --> 01:13:42.480] You want that guy promoted. [01:13:42.480 --> 01:13:52.480] Well, $6 in certified mail and some Randy Kelton's mojo saved me $1,300. [01:13:52.480 --> 01:13:54.480] I can't thank you enough for that. [01:13:54.480 --> 01:14:00.480] And I did have one other comment. Was that Paul that was on the other night about the land patents, Deborah? [01:14:00.480 --> 01:14:02.480] No, that was Pat. [01:14:02.480 --> 01:14:05.480] Pat in Southwest Texas. [01:14:05.480 --> 01:14:11.480] I wanted to thank him for his information and thank you for bringing that to the attention of your audience. [01:14:11.480 --> 01:14:13.480] And I had a question. [01:14:13.480 --> 01:14:19.480] If you have problems with that land patent, I was thinking that the assessor would be the weak link in the chain. [01:14:19.480 --> 01:14:25.480] If you sue the assessor for not accepting the land patent or taking you off the tax roll, what do you think about that? [01:14:25.480 --> 01:14:28.480] Yeah, that was my consideration. [01:14:28.480 --> 01:14:31.480] You know, he said that you may have trouble with him. [01:14:31.480 --> 01:14:33.480] So I'd give him trouble. [01:14:33.480 --> 01:14:37.480] They'll either take it off the rolls or him and I go to court. [01:14:37.480 --> 01:14:42.480] And I'll be the petitioner and he'll be the defendant. [01:14:42.480 --> 01:14:46.480] And I'll be charging him personally and accusing him criminally. [01:14:46.480 --> 01:14:48.480] So we'll give him a good fight. [01:14:48.480 --> 01:14:56.480] I was talking to someone in Missouri today and they mentioned an abstract. [01:14:56.480 --> 01:15:02.480] They said you may need to also get an abstract because she had a piece of property. [01:15:02.480 --> 01:15:13.480] She went back and got the abstract and found that during the depression, this property was foreclosed on. [01:15:13.480 --> 01:15:19.480] And it clouded the patent. [01:15:19.480 --> 01:15:28.480] And she had to go back and find whoever had needed to find someone who's around at that time. [01:15:28.480 --> 01:15:31.480] And she got lucky and did. [01:15:31.480 --> 01:15:36.480] And they gave her a quick claim deed, which cleared the title. [01:15:36.480 --> 01:15:44.480] I didn't understand how it interfered with the patent, but apparently it does. [01:15:44.480 --> 01:15:49.480] A sheriff's sale apparently screws up everything. [01:15:49.480 --> 01:15:57.480] So it's important that you get an abstract of title so that you know every place this title's been. [01:15:57.480 --> 01:16:02.480] Hey, and the implications of this land patent are incredible. [01:16:02.480 --> 01:16:09.480] It's the only document I've ever seen that says you own this land forever, forever. [01:16:09.480 --> 01:16:14.480] I mean, the way I look at property taxes, do you tax a badger for his badger hole? [01:16:14.480 --> 01:16:16.480] Do you tax a turtle for his turtle shell? [01:16:16.480 --> 01:16:17.480] No. [01:16:17.480 --> 01:16:22.480] This is the most important document I've probably ever seen next to, you know, the Constitution or the Bill of Rights. [01:16:22.480 --> 01:16:27.480] And what are the implications for this document with your new company, Randy? [01:16:27.480 --> 01:16:28.480] And I'll take my answer off the air. [01:16:28.480 --> 01:16:32.480] Thank you guys for your excellent work again. Good night. [01:16:32.480 --> 01:16:33.480] Thank you. [01:16:33.480 --> 01:16:43.480] You got to know I've been thinking about these patents in conjunction with what I'm doing. [01:16:43.480 --> 01:16:45.480] Okay, we're about to go to break. [01:16:45.480 --> 01:16:48.480] And enforcing it is the real issue. [01:16:48.480 --> 01:16:53.480] Yeah, well, you take the guy who's, the first thing he does is bring the patent forward. [01:16:53.480 --> 01:16:54.480] All right, we'll be right back. [01:16:54.480 --> 01:17:00.480] Give you extra leverage. [01:17:00.480 --> 01:17:01.480] Hello, Austin. [01:17:01.480 --> 01:17:06.480] My name is Harlan Dieter, owner of Brave New Books, a local independent bookstore here in town. [01:17:06.480 --> 01:17:09.480] Many of you are familiar with the bookstore and have attended some of our events. [01:17:09.480 --> 01:17:14.480] We've been proud to host speakers like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Jim Mars, Katherine Albert, Webster Carpley, [01:17:14.480 --> 01:17:18.480] G.Ebert Griffin, and many other heroic figures in the patriot movement. [01:17:18.480 --> 01:17:21.480] But now, Brave New Books needs your help. [01:17:21.480 --> 01:17:26.480] In order to continue to provide a space for these events and be an outlet for hard to find materials, [01:17:26.480 --> 01:17:30.480] we're going to need you, Austin, to help spread the word about the bookstore. [01:17:30.480 --> 01:17:34.480] Please tell your friends and family about the wide variety of materials we offer. [01:17:34.480 --> 01:17:38.480] We also have DVD duplication capabilities for all you activists. [01:17:38.480 --> 01:17:42.480] Also, if you haven't visited us yet, please come down and show your support. [01:17:42.480 --> 01:17:47.480] It is so easy to support the big corporate chain stores that do nothing to further our message. [01:17:47.480 --> 01:17:49.480] Remember, you vote with your dollars. [01:17:49.480 --> 01:17:51.480] We're counting on you, Austin. [01:17:51.480 --> 01:17:58.480] If you need any information, please call 512-480-2503 or visit us at 1904 Guadalupe Street. [01:17:58.480 --> 01:18:01.480] Thank you, everyone. [01:18:01.480 --> 01:18:26.480] Thank you. [01:18:31.480 --> 01:18:33.480] Put the fear in my pocket. [01:18:33.480 --> 01:18:35.480] Took the money from my ass. [01:18:35.480 --> 01:18:44.480] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:18:44.480 --> 01:19:01.480] Ain't gonna fool me. [01:19:01.480 --> 01:19:05.480] Ain't gonna drive me with that same old sucker money. [01:19:05.480 --> 01:19:10.480] I get it now, but then I must have been down for good. [01:19:10.480 --> 01:19:15.480] Back then you had room to move, but now you're feeling the ground. [01:19:15.480 --> 01:19:36.480] Ain't gonna get me with that same old sucker punch. [01:19:36.480 --> 01:19:45.480] Ain't gonna please me with that same old man's song. [01:19:45.480 --> 01:19:50.480] You thought you were on, but now you've got me wrong. [01:19:50.480 --> 01:19:56.480] It was a weak moment for me, but I had the power all along. [01:19:56.480 --> 01:19:57.480] Okay, we're back. [01:19:57.480 --> 01:20:02.480] Callers 512-646-1984. [01:20:02.480 --> 01:20:16.480] And Randy, okay, I wanted to go back to something you were talking about earlier concerning an ambush method of filing criminal complaints. [01:20:16.480 --> 01:20:23.480] Yes, I'm beginning to find more and more appreciation for the Bushwhack technique. [01:20:23.480 --> 01:20:39.480] Somehow you integrate the criminal complaint, the statement of probable cause and the notarized signature and the whole thing in an affidavit or some sort of motion. [01:20:39.480 --> 01:20:47.480] And when that is submitted in front of the judge, then that invokes the judge's capacity as a magistrate. [01:20:47.480 --> 01:20:56.480] And so if they don't at that point, you know, do an examining trial, then they're in some kind of violation of law. [01:20:56.480 --> 01:21:03.480] So, you know, honestly, okay, before you explain the method, I just have to say my opinion on this. [01:21:03.480 --> 01:21:19.480] I think it is totally preposterous and ridiculous and downright disgusting that we have to come up with these kinds of, you know, outrageous creative techniques, [01:21:19.480 --> 01:21:34.480] shenanigans or whatever you want to call it, to file a criminal complaint because the powers that be have over the centuries done everything they can to keep us from being able to do that, [01:21:34.480 --> 01:21:42.480] to restrict our access to the grand jury, restrict our access to magistrates, restrict our access to being able to file criminal complaints. [01:21:42.480 --> 01:21:57.480] And so now we have to like, you know, integrate it and weave it into other legal documents to invoke the magisterial duty of a judge in order to file a criminal complaint. [01:21:57.480 --> 01:22:04.480] All right. And then, of course, they're going to ignore it. So then we got to go and go after them after that. [01:22:04.480 --> 01:22:10.480] So, man, this has got to stop somewhere. Randy, how are we going to take this country back? [01:22:10.480 --> 01:22:18.480] It's about posture. We got to, we got to, we got to, we got to knock this crap all out, man. I'm tired of it. [01:22:18.480 --> 01:22:27.480] Okay. It's about posture. And as I work with these people, they exhibit a certain posture. [01:22:27.480 --> 01:22:41.480] And then we come into their domain and we exhibit, exhibit common civility and we expect them to exhibit common civility, but they don't. [01:22:41.480 --> 01:22:52.480] They act from a different posture. We are the enforcers of the law. You are the abiders by the law. [01:22:52.480 --> 01:22:58.480] We don't have to explain to you the law before you get charged with violating it. [01:22:58.480 --> 01:23:06.480] If you violate it, you simply get charged. Well, I'm doing the same thing. [01:23:06.480 --> 01:23:30.480] If I give a filing to the, to the prosecuting attorney, if I file a motion in my behalf and included as an attachment is a verified criminal affidavit complete in accordance with 15.05 code of criminal procedure, duly affirmed and verified, [01:23:30.480 --> 01:23:38.480] then he has had presented to him a verified criminal affidavit. [01:23:38.480 --> 01:23:50.480] And if the affidavit alleges a criminal act by a public official, the law is very clear on what his duty is. [01:23:50.480 --> 01:24:00.480] I don't have to explain it to him. According to screws versus us, he already knows what it is. [01:24:00.480 --> 01:24:10.480] So for me to explain it to him is would be patronizing him and I wouldn't want to do a thing like that. [01:24:10.480 --> 01:24:22.480] So I'll put the document in there. And in this case, he is the abider by the law and I am the enforcer of the law. [01:24:22.480 --> 01:24:28.480] He will either abide by the law or I'll file criminal charges against him. [01:24:28.480 --> 01:24:35.480] And there's something psychologically unsettling about that. [01:24:35.480 --> 01:24:41.480] You go along and do the normal things that you normally do. [01:24:41.480 --> 01:24:50.480] And somebody comes along and lays a silent mine in front of you so that you walk along and step on it. [01:24:50.480 --> 01:24:54.480] And you don't even know you stepped on it yet. [01:24:54.480 --> 01:25:06.480] A couple of days later, somebody else comes up kicking you in the behind and it takes you a while to realize what in the heck are they talking about. [01:25:06.480 --> 01:25:11.480] There's something extremely powerful about that. [01:25:11.480 --> 01:25:23.480] Once I've done that to him one time, everything I do before them, they're worried, what kind of trap is this jerk laying for me now? [01:25:23.480 --> 01:25:26.480] Just riddle me this, Bubba. [01:25:26.480 --> 01:25:31.480] OK, so Randy, what's the trap as far as filing the criminal complaint? [01:25:31.480 --> 01:25:39.480] If I attach a criminal complaint to a court filing, it's filed in the court record. [01:25:39.480 --> 01:25:44.480] It becomes a part of the permanent court record. [01:25:44.480 --> 01:25:58.480] So it can't be ignored. And if anybody does ignore it, for instance, the judge in the cause, I give him a copy of the motion and I expect him to read it. [01:25:58.480 --> 01:26:00.480] It is his duty. [01:26:00.480 --> 01:26:09.480] Well, when he reads it, he's going to read a criminal accusation, a verified criminal, affirmed and verified. [01:26:09.480 --> 01:26:16.480] Well, when he does that, that automatically invokes a duty on his part. [01:26:16.480 --> 01:26:22.480] OK, maybe he doesn't realize it invokes a duty on his part. [01:26:22.480 --> 01:26:26.480] Yo, Bubba, life is tough. [01:26:26.480 --> 01:26:28.480] Not my fault. [01:26:28.480 --> 01:26:40.480] I'm not the one that swore to the oath to be this good, kind and virtuous judge and abide by all the laws and uphold the Constitution. You were. You did that. [01:26:40.480 --> 01:26:46.480] So when you read that criminal complaint, it invokes your duty as a magistrate. [01:26:46.480 --> 01:26:51.480] And it goes to the Tar Baby syndrome. You stick to it. [01:26:51.480 --> 01:26:57.480] And then when he doesn't act on it, I come back and file on it, criminally. [01:26:57.480 --> 01:27:04.480] Case recently, I get sued for a credit card issue. [01:27:04.480 --> 01:27:09.480] The attorney did not sign the petition. [01:27:09.480 --> 01:27:13.480] Therefore, the petition is insufficient to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. [01:27:13.480 --> 01:27:20.480] Am I going to go to the court and say, oh, Mr. Judge, you don't have subject matter jurisdiction? [01:27:20.480 --> 01:27:30.480] No, I want to go to the district attorney and say the judge doesn't have any subject matter jurisdiction in this case, and I want you to arrest him. [01:27:30.480 --> 01:27:51.480] In this particular case, we wrote a counter suit, a cross complaint. We counter sued the attorneys who filed the suit and cross complained against the judge, accusing him of impersonating a judicial officer. [01:27:51.480 --> 01:27:56.480] That's how you challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [01:27:56.480 --> 01:28:04.480] And it goes to what I've been saying about subject matter jurisdiction. It's not my place to determine subject matter jurisdiction. [01:28:04.480 --> 01:28:14.480] It's your place. And this particular judge told Mark in court, well, it's not my place to determine whether or not the documents are sufficient. [01:28:14.480 --> 01:28:17.480] Is that a fact, Jack? [01:28:17.480 --> 01:28:29.480] Well, you need to go back to school. And this guy is an attorney, Mark Herb Evans, down here at the J.P. in the old courthouse down on Guadalupe. [01:28:29.480 --> 01:28:34.480] Yes, it is his place to determine whether or not he has subject matter jurisdiction. [01:28:34.480 --> 01:28:42.480] And this stuff of just filing a motion claiming he doesn't, well, that's nonsense. Let's file criminal charges against him. [01:28:42.480 --> 01:28:56.480] Bar grievance, judicial conduct complaint. Let's accuse him of being the criminal that he is because that's exactly what it is when he exerts or purports to exert an authority he does not expressly have. [01:28:56.480 --> 01:29:03.480] That's impersonating a public official. In this particular instance, he's not one. [01:29:03.480 --> 01:29:09.480] So as sovereigns, we need to think about this different. [01:29:09.480 --> 01:29:13.480] Let's take the fight to him. [01:29:13.480 --> 01:29:17.480] And it'll be interesting to see how this one shakes down. [01:29:17.480 --> 01:29:20.480] So. [01:29:20.480 --> 01:29:22.480] Don't tell him. [01:29:22.480 --> 01:29:27.480] You don't owe them common civility. [01:29:27.480 --> 01:29:37.480] I don't owe a criminal the civil behavior of explaining to him that what he's doing is criminal. [01:29:37.480 --> 01:29:41.480] Let's kick him in his behind. [01:29:41.480 --> 01:29:45.480] Anyway, OK. [01:29:45.480 --> 01:29:48.480] Just do it. [01:29:48.480 --> 01:29:49.480] Right, Randy. [01:29:49.480 --> 01:29:52.480] Just do it. Just do it and then talk about it later. [01:29:52.480 --> 01:29:53.480] Never threaten. [01:29:53.480 --> 01:29:55.480] OK, we have Keith from Texas. [01:29:55.480 --> 01:29:59.480] We'll be right back. [01:29:59.480 --> 01:30:14.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:30:14.480 --> 01:30:21.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:30:21.480 --> 01:30:33.480] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can, too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:30:33.480 --> 01:30:42.480] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:30:42.480 --> 01:30:51.480] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:30:51.480 --> 01:31:01.480] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:31:01.480 --> 01:31:14.480] Yeah, who you want to chip? Who you take me for? Free Tully. Who you want to chip? Me no free Tully. You can't chip me. All the fact. All of them chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, put a chip in your body. [01:31:14.480 --> 01:31:29.480] And then when you go computer reading, you can't hide me from nobody. When you say chip in your mom, chip in your daddy, chip in your grandpa and the granny, chip in me, chip in your baby, chip in your family, whole family, [01:31:29.480 --> 01:31:39.480] chip in your dad and the cat around me, chip in the beef and you still go eat it, chip in the fish, them all in the sea, chip in the shark and the whale around me. [01:31:39.480 --> 01:31:48.480] You see mankind, we ain't chip crazy. They taking a thing, man, they want to eat it. Social security, they go tell me. Number when they give me, they rip it up, you see. [01:31:48.480 --> 01:32:00.480] I'm chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, chip you all the dinner time. Experiment on mankind, but man, you know, say them lie. Well, when I want to chip, man, you have your body. [01:32:00.480 --> 01:32:10.480] Freedom or something, man, you fight for me. You should tell them, they feel ready. Constitution set us free. Now let them put no chip in your body. [01:32:10.480 --> 01:32:20.480] Put no chip in your dog or cat, you see. No put no chip in your cow and go eat it. No put no chip in the fish and go eat it. All in the whale and the shark in the sea. [01:32:20.480 --> 01:32:29.480] Put the little chip in the little baby. Want to put the chip in a grandpa, you see. Want to put the little chip in a human body. If me go hide in the Atlantic sea. [01:32:29.480 --> 01:32:41.480] Man did not realize, me say, going to find me. Until I get mad, until I get angry. Two chip them use, me say, cross up, you see. Me say chip in the morning, chip in the evening, chip in your body, buddy. [01:32:41.480 --> 01:32:50.480] Man don't let them come come chip with. Put no chip in the little baby. Me say chip in the morning, chip in the evening. They want to come and not chip me. [01:32:50.480 --> 01:33:09.480] But they want to chip all in the sea and the shark and the whale around me. What me say? Chip for your mom, chip for your daddy. Chip for the dumb little little baby. Chip for the shark and the whale in the sea. Chip for the whale and the whale around me. Chip for the dog and the cat, you see. Even want to chip. [01:33:09.480 --> 01:33:19.480] Okay, we are back. We're taking your calls. We've got Keith from Texas. Keith thanks for calling. What's on your mind tonight? [01:33:19.480 --> 01:33:21.480] Hey guys, how are you doing tonight? [01:33:21.480 --> 01:33:23.480] Good. [01:33:23.480 --> 01:33:39.480] Well, in my particular case, I filed tort letters. Tort letters and tort claims. In my particular case, potentially everything that's happened. [01:33:39.480 --> 01:33:51.480] I sent a tort letter to the county commissioner's court to, I guess, let it, you know, let them sue, I suppose, or I don't know. [01:33:51.480 --> 01:34:00.480] I mean, I assume they'll contact me by letter or something of that nature. I haven't gotten anything, but it's only been about two weeks. [01:34:00.480 --> 01:34:12.480] And I got back on my, I had sent, I don't know how many bar grievances, probably 30. I don't know a lot. [01:34:12.480 --> 01:34:18.480] And I got them back today. I got back some responses from these people. And this is absolutely unbelievable, man. [01:34:18.480 --> 01:34:31.480] This is, what's his name, Chief Investigator, JM. Oh, I can't remember. Anyway, JM Richard. I'm going to go ahead and, JM Richard. Geez, they're in Austin. [01:34:31.480 --> 01:34:45.480] But anyway, this is unbelievable. Essentially, I mean tonight sent him over another explanation, I guess, in the event that he couldn't understand what he was reading. [01:34:45.480 --> 01:34:54.480] And the complaints that I made, pretty straightforward, you know, pretty straightforward stuff, you know. [01:34:54.480 --> 01:35:02.480] It kind of goes to what you guys were just talking about, a judge not understanding that they have to try to determine jurisdiction in some respect. [01:35:02.480 --> 01:35:10.480] I've found that absolutely incredible. I can't, you know, I have to sit back and really think about it. It's almost like you're in the twilight zone. [01:35:10.480 --> 01:35:17.480] When I've been to court, I've actually sat there and told the judge in my particular case, you have no jurisdiction. [01:35:17.480 --> 01:35:24.480] It's right here. Did you read the information? You've got 150 pages of information from me, thanks to Mr. Kelton. [01:35:24.480 --> 01:35:36.480] And you have no jurisdiction. There's absolutely no way. You can't have somebody, you can't just completely just discount an entire chapter of the Code of Criminal Procedure [01:35:36.480 --> 01:35:46.480] and expect the most important chapter, Chapter 16, which includes the fact that you go before a judge when you're arrested without warrant, which I was. [01:35:46.480 --> 01:36:00.480] And you can't just discount that and expect to have, I don't understand where your bearings are here, you know. [01:36:00.480 --> 01:36:14.480] What do you have? You're bankrupt, you know. I mean, but yet they plow on, they plow ahead, you know. They just plow forward. I don't get it. [01:36:14.480 --> 01:36:23.480] I mean, these foreign counsel, these people understand that, you know, this is federal lawsuit. This is 42-1983. [01:36:23.480 --> 01:36:31.480] Very easily, very simple. It's a federal lawsuit. They're used to people making threats and never following through. [01:36:31.480 --> 01:36:40.480] But I am, you know. I mean, I guess just take you to the, because there's no way, Randy, there's no way that in my particular instance, [01:36:40.480 --> 01:36:48.480] there's no way you could take something like this and let me get in front of a jury, especially with now my attorney understands the ballgame. [01:36:48.480 --> 01:36:54.480] This isn't just run of the mill. We're just going to go do our little plea bargain or whatever the case might be and then we're going to be on our way. [01:36:54.480 --> 01:37:02.480] That's not going to happen. That's the problem now. We've got too many people that do that. They take the deal and they just walk away. [01:37:02.480 --> 01:37:06.480] And things have just gotten, that's why you have people sitting in prison, you know, or in jail. [01:37:06.480 --> 01:37:14.480] Like Randy went down to Montgomery County. The kid had been sitting there for what, 12, 14 months? Yeah. With no charges? No charges, no nothing. [01:37:14.480 --> 01:37:24.480] That's insane. To waiting, waiting because he was not going to make a deal. He wasn't going to contemplate something to a crime he didn't commit. [01:37:24.480 --> 01:37:29.480] Otherwise, I'm sure he would have said, yeah, you got me. I did it. Ball, ball. Let's go and get this over with. [01:37:29.480 --> 01:37:37.480] What about time served? I mean, what did that guy do? You know? But that's the thing that, that's the thing that blows me away. [01:37:37.480 --> 01:37:47.480] I get this, and I get this back from this guy today. I'm not really disillusioned. I really expected it. But I guess when you get it, you're thinking, you know, this guy could have found something here. [01:37:47.480 --> 01:37:57.480] He could have found tampering with government documents. He could have found easily found official oppression, impersonating a public servant, you know, with a prosecutor and a judge because that happened. [01:37:57.480 --> 01:38:06.480] It's exactly, Randy, it's exactly the way you lay it out. It's got to be. You looked in the files and I've looked in, and since I've looked in other people's files, people that I talk to and just people that I knew. [01:38:06.480 --> 01:38:20.480] And you have an information and you have a bonding agreement. My bonding agreement was signed by a deputy. A deputy signs a personal or cognizance when he writes a traffic ticket. [01:38:20.480 --> 01:38:26.480] That's about it. A judge signs a bond, especially when it was without warrant bond. [01:38:26.480 --> 01:38:44.480] There are circumstances where a deputy can issue a bond that's under 17, 20, 21, and 22. And those are instances where bond is preset for certain offenses. [01:38:44.480 --> 01:38:59.480] But even so, he has to show due diligence. If a magistrate is not available, then he has to show that he exercised due diligence in locating one before he released you. [01:38:59.480 --> 01:39:06.480] Or if he released you immediately, then he wouldn't have to take you before a magistrate. [01:39:06.480 --> 01:39:17.480] See, I've actually gone through that process. Everybody else had gone except for myself and a couple of other people. And I thought, what's this? I need to have an audience with somebody here. We need to talk. [01:39:17.480 --> 01:39:22.480] Didn't happen. So I'm like, well, I guess that's their problem. [01:39:22.480 --> 01:39:42.480] Yeah. The other problem is when they set those bonds excessive. Like, for instance, when I got arrested over in Lufkin, the charge that they cited me on was $145. But the bond, irregardless of what the amount of the charge would come out to in court, was $500 per charge, irregardless. [01:39:42.480 --> 01:39:53.480] Now, tell me about this excessive bond problem that we have. [01:39:53.480 --> 01:40:07.480] I can't. I've got one where they want a $6,000 cash bond. [01:40:07.480 --> 01:40:25.480] On a warrant that's not signed. Yeah, Cherokee County. Nobody signed this warrant. Now, the first warrant, a county clerk signed it, and I filed a whole stack of criminal charges against her. So nobody signed this one. [01:40:25.480 --> 01:40:30.480] Well, that's a hoot. [01:40:30.480 --> 01:40:44.480] It does if you don't want to be the guy caught in the middle of that. You know, and that led me to something else. I was going back. I wasn't going to go into this for a minute because I find it very, very interesting, Andy. [01:40:44.480 --> 01:40:55.480] I believe it was April, April 4th. There's a show that's on the archives where you went through everything in so far as the traffic code is concerned. [01:40:55.480 --> 01:41:05.480] Well, not everything, but I went through just the parts of the code that show already. I didn't go through the administrative code then, I don't think, but I did go through the rest of it. [01:41:05.480 --> 01:41:19.480] Right. You went through the terms and you went through, I mean, just the driver's license, the occupational driver's license, commercial driver's license, and all those things. You know, very, very interesting. [01:41:19.480 --> 01:41:25.480] Oh, it got a whole lot better by the time the seminar rolled around. [01:41:25.480 --> 01:41:42.480] You know, we've got to get you guys down here. I'm still working with Tim O'Rourke. We're trying to get you guys, well, just as soon as we can get it all together, you know, like Brainy knows how that goes whenever you're trying to, you know, you're trying to fight these people and you're trying to do other things, too. It's kind of a pain. [01:41:42.480 --> 01:41:43.480] Oh, yeah. [01:41:43.480 --> 01:41:57.480] Well, I thought about it from, I'm thinking about it now more or less, but because of this, I guess once, I guess they'll just fight you and fight you. I guess I'm just going to finish and say, I don't understand how well I know that these... [01:41:57.480 --> 01:42:05.480] This is what they'll do. They will huff and they will puff and they will jump up and down and wave their arms and make loud noises. [01:42:05.480 --> 01:42:07.480] But never go to trial. [01:42:07.480 --> 01:42:20.480] And when you get to the courthouse door, they'll play light smack ideal. In mine, I told my attorney, no deals. There will be no deals. Don't you dare take a deal. [01:42:20.480 --> 01:42:21.480] Right. [01:42:21.480 --> 01:42:32.480] They waited till we went to lunch and the prosecutor snuck in behind both of us and went to the judge and gave him the motion to dismiss and he dismissed it while we were at lunch. [01:42:32.480 --> 01:42:38.480] The prosecutor actually handed a letter to the court and got the judge's permission to actually do it the right way. [01:42:38.480 --> 01:42:45.480] Yeah, I got it dismissed while we were not there because I had made it clear I would accept no deals. [01:42:45.480 --> 01:42:49.480] But you were there for the first day of what was supposed to be a trial. [01:42:49.480 --> 01:42:52.480] Yeah, it was supposed to be a trial and they didn't have any witnesses. [01:42:52.480 --> 01:42:53.480] Did they? [01:42:53.480 --> 01:43:05.480] It was supposed to subpoena them. So I told my prosecutor came to my attorney came to me and said, well, they don't have the witnesses. Well, get up. Well, they weren't subpoenaed. Not a problem. [01:43:05.480 --> 01:43:13.480] They're all public officials. Just call the dispatcher and have them routed here. They can't claim inconvenience because they're on the state clock. [01:43:13.480 --> 01:43:15.480] Right. [01:43:15.480 --> 01:43:18.480] Okay. [01:43:18.480 --> 01:43:26.480] You know, and that's something else. I mean, I filed these. Well, I mean, it's the challenge to the jurisdiction. [01:43:26.480 --> 01:43:30.480] I mean, I'm just going to tell this attorney he went out of town. He'll be back tomorrow, supposedly. [01:43:30.480 --> 01:43:39.480] You've got to tell her that, you know, they don't have a leg to stand on with what he's looking at and what the actual law says. [01:43:39.480 --> 01:43:43.480] Yeah, hold him over to the other side, Deborah. [01:43:43.480 --> 01:43:44.480] Okay. [01:43:43.480 --> 01:43:44.480] Could you hold on? [01:43:44.480 --> 01:44:06.480] Yes, of course. We'll be right back and Mark from Wisconsin is on the line. He's on the line, too. We'll be right back. [01:44:06.480 --> 01:44:17.480] Aerial spraying, chemtrails, the modified atmosphere, heavy metals and pesticides, carcinogens and chemical fibers all falling from the sky. [01:44:17.480 --> 01:44:30.480] You have a choice to keep your body clean. Detoxify with micro plant powder from hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608. [01:44:30.480 --> 01:44:39.480] It's odorless and tasteless and used in any liquid or food. Protect your family now with micro plant powder. [01:44:39.480 --> 01:44:48.480] Cleaning out heavy metals, parasites and toxins. Order it now for daily intake and stock it now for long term storage. [01:44:48.480 --> 01:45:07.480] Visit hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608 today. [01:45:07.480 --> 01:45:21.480] Hello? Oh, man, in jail? You got busted, man? Oh, man, I'm broken. [01:45:21.480 --> 01:45:38.480] Something in this world I will never understand. Something I realize fully. Somebody's gonna police that policeman. Somebody's gonna police the police. [01:45:38.480 --> 01:45:51.480] There's always a room at the top of the hill. I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely there, too. They're wishing it was more than opposition to fail. [01:45:51.480 --> 01:46:12.480] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. Something in this world I will never understand. Something I realize fully. Somebody's gonna police that policeman. Somebody's gonna police the police. [01:46:12.480 --> 01:46:21.480] I know they will. Yeah, they're gonna put the bill. I don't see so much in God's name. [01:46:21.480 --> 01:46:25.480] Okay. We are speaking with Keith. Go ahead, Keith. [01:46:25.480 --> 01:46:37.480] Hey, guys. I wanted to get Randy. Could you explain something? I don't know why. It just kind of fogs my brain. I can't think of it. I know that there's something. [01:46:37.480 --> 01:46:54.480] Insofar as the tar baby, what is that? Is that codified or is that? No. That's kind of just a euphemism. That's a Randy-ism. That's a Randy-ism. [01:46:54.480 --> 01:47:05.480] Yeah, it's from Uncle Remus talking about rare rabbit and the tar baby. But isn't there something in law either in case law? I've got a bunch of case law here that I was going through. [01:47:05.480 --> 01:47:20.480] Okay. It goes to Chapter 7, Code of Criminal Procedure. I'm sorry, Penal Code. Culpability. All of this goes directly to culpability. [01:47:20.480 --> 01:47:31.480] If you are an actor, you participate in a criminal act, you have touched a tar baby, Bubba. [01:47:31.480 --> 01:47:45.480] It's kind of an accessory type. You're continuing this. If it's aggravated kidnapping, it just continues to the process. Now what are you going to do to me? What else are we going to add to the list? [01:47:45.480 --> 01:47:46.480] Yeah. [01:47:46.480 --> 01:48:00.480] It's insane. But it's true. Anyway, Randy, real quick, what should I expect from these tort claims? Anything at all? Are you going to wait until I file a 42-1983 or what? [01:48:00.480 --> 01:48:02.480] Expect nothing. [01:48:02.480 --> 01:48:03.480] Yeah, that's kind of what I thought. [01:48:03.480 --> 01:48:13.480] That's what you want. They have 60 days to respond. If they don't respond, then you file suit. [01:48:13.480 --> 01:48:16.480] Then I file the federal law or just file a... [01:48:16.480 --> 01:48:34.480] I would file a state first and beat them up in the state a while and then when they give them opportunity to screw things up, set them up to violate the constitutional rights and due process and then remove it to the federal court. [01:48:34.480 --> 01:48:44.480] Okay. All right, my friends. I'm going to let you guys go. I appreciate your time. I appreciate everything. You guys are great. I'll get back with you guys on Thursday. [01:48:44.480 --> 01:48:46.480] Okay. [01:48:46.480 --> 01:48:49.480] Randy, we're going to do details to see if this document would help you. [01:48:49.480 --> 01:48:57.480] Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's right. Are you in... You're not in the municipal court, are you? [01:48:57.480 --> 01:48:59.480] I'm in the county court of law. [01:48:59.480 --> 01:49:08.480] Yeah, that's what I thought. So we have a document that really beats up the local prosecutor, but it wouldn't help you in this case because it goes to... [01:49:08.480 --> 01:49:25.480] The red light cameras to civil and municipal, I thought that was interesting. And he was explaining that and the fact that you essentially, you have no remedy. You have the recourse, you know, with those red light tickets. I thought, well, that's kind of stupid. [01:49:25.480 --> 01:49:42.480] Well, you'll find that the entire thing is actually kind of set up that way. I read an interesting article today on News with Views where they're talking about how administrative agencies have usurped the judiciary to the point where they are the only rule of law that matters. [01:49:42.480 --> 01:49:57.480] And through an administrative agency, all rights are being circumvented. And that's really what we're dealing with here is the Department of Transportation, the Department of Public Safety. These are administrative agencies according to the code. [01:49:57.480 --> 01:50:09.480] And these administrative agencies are making rules that circumvent the constitutionally protected rights of the people by putting us under an administrative agency where we do not belong. [01:50:09.480 --> 01:50:28.480] Right. Yeah, that's incredible. So many things happening with this health care bill and all those. That's scary. The thing that I always go back to that I think about where that's concerned is our state legislature. Where are they at? [01:50:28.480 --> 01:50:49.480] You know, how are they going to know that they're proclaiming 10th Amendment rights? And I hope they're serious because there's still ways people are going to go for that. Well, actually read the health care bill. You'll find out really quick that it's not quite as bad as everybody thinks because if you actually read it, it's strictly limited to the federal territories. [01:50:49.480 --> 01:50:59.480] It doesn't apply within the states at all, which it couldn't anyway for lack of federal jurisdiction, but that's beside the point. The actual language of the bill limits it. [01:50:59.480 --> 01:51:04.480] You mean federal territories? You mean Puerto Rico? [01:51:04.480 --> 01:51:05.480] You got it. [01:51:05.480 --> 01:51:07.480] They're talking about those sort of outlying places. [01:51:07.480 --> 01:51:09.480] That's the place. [01:51:09.480 --> 01:51:14.480] Really? Why would they go to all this? I don't understand. [01:51:14.480 --> 01:51:29.480] For the same reason they always have done it. Same place like the income tax, to take it from those who it doesn't apply to, just like what they're doing with the traffic code. If we can convince them that they have to contribute the money, then that's more money for us and less for them. [01:51:29.480 --> 01:51:40.480] Yeah. That's crazy. All right, guys. I'm going to let somebody else hop on here. I'll talk to you guys Thursday. Thanks a lot. [01:51:40.480 --> 01:51:41.480] Thanks, Keith. [01:51:41.480 --> 01:51:42.480] Thank you. [01:51:42.480 --> 01:51:47.480] Okay, bye bye. [01:51:47.480 --> 01:52:09.480] The feds don't have any jurisdiction anyway, unless the state government has ceded specific property to the federal government, or unless there's some terms of agreement in the annexation like with California, but that ain't the way it is in Texas. [01:52:09.480 --> 01:52:34.480] Nope. And I can say right now because I've been to the state archives library and pulled all the files, there is not one square inch of land in Travis County that is under the jurisdiction of the federal government, period. [01:52:34.480 --> 01:52:44.480] There are works from Air Force Base, even the post office downtown, letters back and forth. I had my hands on the letters from the 50s. [01:52:44.480 --> 01:52:47.480] Okay, people. [01:52:47.480 --> 01:52:59.480] Writing back and forth. State Comptroller, Attorney General. Well, we don't have the records, they never ceded any property in this county to the federal government. [01:52:59.480 --> 01:53:02.480] We're sovereign. That's just the way it is. [01:53:02.480 --> 01:53:07.480] Mark from Wisconsin. Thank you, Mark. What's on your mind? [01:53:07.480 --> 01:53:19.480] Hi, yeah, this is Mark from Survivor Seeds. I forgot to mention November 9th through November 13th. I'm running a special on seeds, all proceeds, less shipping will go to rule of law radio. [01:53:19.480 --> 01:53:24.480] Again, that's November 9th through the 13th. [01:53:24.480 --> 01:53:26.480] That's all I had to add. [01:53:26.480 --> 01:53:34.480] Thank you, Mark. Yeah, all the proceeds will go to Randy's Beer Fund. [01:53:34.480 --> 01:53:35.480] Good night. [01:53:35.480 --> 01:53:37.480] Good night, Mark. Thanks. [01:53:37.480 --> 01:53:41.480] Thank you, Mark. [01:53:41.480 --> 01:53:48.480] Survivorseeds.com. [01:53:48.480 --> 01:54:02.480] All right. I would like to tell you all that this, for those of you all that attended the seminar, I have given a large compilation of files to Deborah for her to set up. [01:54:02.480 --> 01:54:06.480] We're still trying to figure out how we're going to set them up for everybody to get their hands on them. [01:54:06.480 --> 01:54:17.480] We are getting the remedies library built up document by document, so there will be more paperwork available as the next few weeks progress. [01:54:17.480 --> 01:54:27.480] I am building a lot of new documents to go along with the trial that I've got on the 19th and to formulate the information that we learned in the seminar. [01:54:27.480 --> 01:54:37.480] So very, very soon, folks that attended, you will be able to get your hands on all the same paperwork that we're using in the court ourselves at this point. [01:54:37.480 --> 01:54:45.480] So I hope you guys are looking forward to that and that it brings you much victory out there when we get going. [01:54:45.480 --> 01:54:57.480] Yes, and I have gotten a number of e-mails from people wanting to know when they can get their hands on Mike Maris' documents, M-I-R-R-A-S. [01:54:57.480 --> 01:55:04.480] He has had a number of successful cases in federal court. [01:55:04.480 --> 01:55:13.480] He's won six cases in federal court plus a number of settlements out of court regarding credit card issues and helped other people. [01:55:13.480 --> 01:55:18.480] And we will be getting his documents up soon as well. [01:55:18.480 --> 01:55:24.480] So just wanted to get that out to you guys. [01:55:24.480 --> 01:55:30.480] And Randy, the litigation engine. [01:55:30.480 --> 01:55:40.480] I am working very hard on getting a product together for the forensic analysis program. [01:55:40.480 --> 01:55:46.480] And it is based on, it will be the basic structure for the engine. [01:55:46.480 --> 01:55:50.480] So we're moving ahead in that direction. [01:55:50.480 --> 01:55:57.480] I have a site up where you can go on the site, download the major documents. [01:55:57.480 --> 01:56:05.480] In doing the forensic analysis, there are four major documents with a lot of information on them. [01:56:05.480 --> 01:56:13.480] You can download those documents and take the one that you have that matches it and just transfer the figures to it, e-mail it to me. [01:56:13.480 --> 01:56:22.480] But when I get, right now I'm working on getting the website to talk to the database. [01:56:22.480 --> 01:56:32.480] Once I get the website talking to the database, it will be easy enough to write the routines to do the logic to send you back the remedy. [01:56:32.480 --> 01:56:49.480] It will read the documents, run it through the engine, and send you back what's wrong, why they're doing it the way they're doing it, and what you can do about it. [01:56:49.480 --> 01:56:56.480] So I hope to have that up in a week, or at least a whole lot closer. [01:56:56.480 --> 01:57:02.480] I hate to say a week because it gets real busy around here, but we're struggling forward on it. [01:57:02.480 --> 01:57:07.480] The problem is we have so many people calling us for help. [01:57:07.480 --> 01:57:13.480] And when a guy's calling you and you tell he's in jail or his wife is in jail, what can you do? [01:57:13.480 --> 01:57:20.480] We have to keep setting things down so it's not moving near as fast as we want it to. [01:57:20.480 --> 01:57:28.480] We are working on it. I started about 4 o'clock this morning, and this is this way every day. [01:57:28.480 --> 01:57:32.480] But we're getting there. [01:57:32.480 --> 01:57:36.480] Yeah, we are trying to get it put together for you folks out there, so just please bear with us. [01:57:36.480 --> 01:57:49.480] And for all those that are willing to volunteer time and contribute effort on research, information collection, getting copies out of the archives, Mr. Larry, we thank you very much for all that. [01:57:49.480 --> 01:57:55.480] Just folks that are giving us a hand in getting all this done that we may not necessarily be able to reach out and do ourselves. [01:57:55.480 --> 01:58:03.480] Again, thank you all very much for your contributions. They are greatly appreciated. [01:58:03.480 --> 01:58:13.480] Absolutely, especially the contributions to Randy's Beer Fund. It's still only got a nickel in it. [01:58:13.480 --> 01:58:19.480] It really can't handle more than once anyway, but still. [01:58:19.480 --> 01:58:27.480] I have been putting all the funds into Randy's Beer Funds that are earmarked for Randy's Beer Fund. [01:58:27.480 --> 01:58:34.480] I got that nickel. [01:58:34.480 --> 01:58:44.480] Okay, thanks a lot, guys. We'll be back Thursday. [01:59:04.480 --> 01:59:14.480] Thank you. [01:59:34.480 --> 01:59:44.480] Thank you.