[00:00.000 --> 00:11.040] One quarter of all maize and other grain grown in the U.S. now ends up as biofuel in cars. [00:11.040 --> 00:17.600] 2009 figures from the U.S. Department of Agriculture show ethanol production rising to record levels [00:17.600 --> 00:24.040] driven by farm subsidies and laws that require vehicles to use increasing amounts of biofuels. [00:24.040 --> 00:29.840] The grain in question is enough to feed 330 million people for one year. [00:29.840 --> 00:35.400] Governors are proposing a new biometric ID card that would be required of all U.S. workers. [00:35.400 --> 00:39.800] Under the controversial plan taking shape in the Senate, all U.S. citizens and legal [00:39.800 --> 00:45.820] immigrants would be issued a card with embedded information, including fingerprints. [00:45.820 --> 00:51.480] In late January, Citibank mailed 600,000 year-end tax statements that included the [00:51.480 --> 00:55.480] customers' Social Security numbers on the outside of the envelope. [00:55.480 --> 01:00.480] Citibank later apologized, saying it believed the error produced little or no risk to its [01:00.480 --> 01:01.480] customers. [01:01.480 --> 01:08.720] Top of the hour news brought to you by INN World Report. [01:08.720 --> 01:12.960] European countries are blocking Wall Street banks from lucrative deals to sell government [01:12.960 --> 01:17.600] debt worth hundreds of billions of euros in retaliation for their role in the credit [01:17.600 --> 01:18.600] crunch. [01:18.600 --> 01:24.040] For the first time in five years, no big U.S. investment bank appears among the top nine [01:24.040 --> 01:26.960] sovereign bond book runners in Europe. [01:26.960 --> 01:31.920] European sovereign bond league tables are now dominated by Barclays Capital, Deutsche [01:31.920 --> 01:34.680] Bank, and Societe Generale. [01:34.680 --> 01:39.320] Their business model is usually seen as more relationship-based, while U.S. investment [01:39.320 --> 01:43.000] banks have traditionally been focused on immediate dealmaking. [01:43.000 --> 01:47.280] Being left out of government bond sales means missing out on one of the top fee-earning [01:47.280 --> 01:52.920] opportunities this year, given the relative drought in mergers and acquisitions and stock [01:52.920 --> 01:54.640] market flotations. [01:54.640 --> 01:58.240] Western European governments need to raise an estimated half a trillion dollars this [01:58.240 --> 02:04.640] year to refinance debts and pay for bank bailouts and rising unemployment. [02:04.640 --> 02:09.920] The New York Times Tuesday cited an unpublished U.N. Security Council report which says as [02:09.920 --> 02:16.160] much as half the food aid sent to Somalia is diverted to a network of corrupt contractors, [02:16.160 --> 02:20.440] radical Islamic militants, and local U.N. staff members. [02:20.440 --> 02:26.040] The report recommends Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon open an independent investigation [02:26.040 --> 02:29.600] into the World Food Program's operations in Somalia. [02:29.600 --> 02:34.280] The report suggests the food distribution system in Somalia needs complete rebuilding [02:34.280 --> 02:38.600] to break the corrupt cartel of Somali distributors. [02:38.600 --> 02:44.520] The report also says regional Somali authorities are collaborating with pirates and that Somali [02:44.520 --> 02:49.760] government ministers have auctioned off to the highest bidders diplomatic visas, possibly [02:49.760 --> 02:52.960] to pirates and insurgents for trips to Europe. [03:19.760 --> 03:31.880] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:31.880 --> 03:44.200] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:44.200 --> 03:59.200] When you were eight and you had bad traits, you'd go to school and learn the golden rules. [03:59.200 --> 04:01.800] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [04:01.800 --> 04:04.800] If you get up then you must get cool. [04:04.800 --> 04:07.800] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [04:07.800 --> 04:17.680] If you get up and get cool then you must get cool. [04:17.680 --> 04:18.680] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [04:18.680 --> 04:19.680] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [04:19.680 --> 04:20.680] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:20.680 --> 04:21.680] You choke it on that one, you choke it on this one, you choke it on your mother and [04:21.680 --> 04:22.680] you choke it on your father. [04:22.680 --> 04:23.680] You choke it on your brother and you choke it on your... [04:23.680 --> 04:24.680] Hey to everybody. [04:24.680 --> 04:27.640] Wait a minute, I was looking to the song. [04:27.640 --> 04:29.000] This is Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton. [04:29.000 --> 04:30.640] Deborah Stevens has the night off. [04:30.640 --> 04:36.960] She is getting ready for the AE911 Truth press conference and seminar that's going to be [04:36.960 --> 04:42.800] going on this Saturday from 1 to 9 p.m. Everybody that's wishing to attend, remember that it's [04:42.800 --> 04:49.520] going to be at the DoubleTree Hotel in Austin at 6505 North I-35. It will be on Saturday [04:49.520 --> 04:54.080] from 1 to 9. They're going to kick it off at 1 o'clock and Alex Jones will be the first [04:54.080 --> 05:01.200] speaker up at 1-15 followed by Ron Avery at 1-45. So if you can, please get out there [05:01.200 --> 05:07.240] and listen to what's going on. Learn some of the things that have been basically kept [05:07.240 --> 05:11.240] out of the mainstream media and out of the knowledge of the general public. Find out [05:11.240 --> 05:19.720] what really, really happened to all of the buildings on 9-11. You'll be able to say that [05:19.720 --> 05:26.480] you were standing on the edge of the tipping point. We're on the edge of the tipping point [05:26.480 --> 05:34.520] and architects and engineers for 9-11, I suspect, is going to be the catalyst that turns a lot [05:34.520 --> 05:40.120] of things around. A place you're going to want to say you knew where you were on that [05:40.120 --> 05:48.320] day. Well, I'm going to be there. [05:48.320 --> 05:53.760] Now the other thing is, is Randy wanted to talk a little bit tonight about real estate. [05:53.760 --> 05:59.720] So we're going to talk about that for a little bit and see where we go from there. Also, [05:59.720 --> 06:03.640] there is a possibility that if we cover that tonight and we're unable to get someone on [06:03.640 --> 06:10.000] tomorrow night that we may be running an archive tomorrow night. So if we're not here on the [06:10.000 --> 06:13.280] show tomorrow night, tonight's going to be the only night you have to call in before [06:13.280 --> 06:17.880] Monday. So if you've got anything you need to talk about, tonight's going to be the night. [06:17.880 --> 06:25.040] Yes, there was something I want to go over. I've talked about it a time or two before, [06:25.040 --> 06:33.560] but it was so different that I've got lots of questions about it. I've got a lot of comment [06:33.560 --> 06:39.880] that it made sense to people, but they had a lot of questions. So I'm going to go over [06:39.880 --> 06:44.160] how things really work. I've been over this time or two, and for those of you who've heard [06:44.160 --> 06:55.200] it before, I would appreciate any good constructive comment preparing this as a presentation for [06:55.200 --> 07:01.960] people who don't know anything about the real estate industry or people who think they know [07:01.960 --> 07:09.400] a whole lot about the real estate industry and turns out they don't. This is how it really [07:09.400 --> 07:18.600] works. The lender, the lender is the key figure. It is in the best interest of the lender to [07:18.600 --> 07:26.640] create a note that the borrower will have trouble paying and will eventually default [07:26.640 --> 07:35.080] on. Now when I say that to most people, they sit there and look at me with a blank stare [07:35.080 --> 07:43.520] because it appears to violate all of their unstated presuppositions about the nature [07:43.520 --> 07:50.240] of the lending industry. All we've ever heard about the lending industry is that if you [07:50.240 --> 07:57.680] don't pay for what you received credit for, the lender loses it and he's going to be [07:57.680 --> 08:05.240] rolling happy about that. Well, that used to be the way it was. Before the late 80s, [08:05.240 --> 08:15.960] early 90s, a bank would create the loan and then provide the credit to you and then collect [08:15.960 --> 08:25.560] the payments and everybody's happy. If you didn't pay, it was the bank that wound up [08:25.560 --> 08:31.360] suffering the default and then they had to try to recover the property and recover some [08:31.360 --> 08:41.320] of their losses. Well, in the world we live in now, the mortgage company as we think about [08:41.320 --> 08:48.000] mortgage companies is not really a mortgage company anymore. We think of a mortgage company [08:48.000 --> 08:57.960] as the guy in a wonderful life. They've got a bank or a lending institution and they generate [08:57.960 --> 09:02.120] this credit for you and they need to collect this back to keep their books balanced and [09:02.120 --> 09:06.480] keep themselves out of trouble. That's not what they are anymore. Now you've got a bunch [09:06.480 --> 09:12.800] of guys that go out and they go to Wells Fargo or Chase and they get this huge loan, $50, [09:12.800 --> 09:21.040] $75 million loan and they convert it to 20 and 30 year mortgages. Problem, they have [09:21.040 --> 09:27.840] to pay that loan back in six to nine months. So when they create the mortgage, they have [09:27.840 --> 09:34.360] no intention of keeping it because they've got a big bill to pay. In fact, when they [09:34.360 --> 09:41.240] create the mortgage, they have someone standing in line waiting to purchase it. A whole cottage [09:41.240 --> 09:52.640] industry has grown up around this, this securitization of the note. This occurred early in the 90s. [09:52.640 --> 09:57.200] Somebody come up with the bright idea of bundling a lot of these notes together and selling [09:57.200 --> 10:07.400] them as a security. Well, that was about the time that Clinton released, got revoked two [10:07.400 --> 10:14.840] primary restrictions on the lenders, that allowed lenders to make loans that they could [10:14.840 --> 10:20.020] never have made before. And they did this under the guise of making housing available [10:20.020 --> 10:29.040] to the poor. But as is the common way things happen, nothing ever works the way it was [10:29.040 --> 10:35.400] supposed to. They made it easier for the lenders to make loans so that they could get poor [10:35.400 --> 10:40.560] people into houses. Well, the lenders weren't interested in dealing with poor people who [10:40.560 --> 10:46.480] didn't have any money. They were interested in dealing with people who did have money. [10:46.480 --> 10:53.480] So they went to people who were in loans that they had secured with the restrictions in [10:53.480 --> 11:01.460] place. So for the most part, they were in stable loans. And it was the lender's job [11:01.460 --> 11:13.320] to convince everyone that with the growing housing demand and increase in mortgage prices, [11:13.320 --> 11:23.440] that you should do what had traditionally been absolutely taboo. Never speculate with [11:23.440 --> 11:31.600] your home. And they convinced these people, if you sell this house, use that equity you [11:31.600 --> 11:39.520] have in this house to purchase this much nicer house, the value of this house will just skyrocket. [11:39.520 --> 11:48.440] You'll make a whole lot of money. And at first, I suppose a lot of people did. And it created [11:48.440 --> 11:57.560] a housing boom. It wasn't that there were a lot more people entering the housing market [11:57.560 --> 12:03.120] as first-time purchasers. It was a lot of people moving from a home they could afford [12:03.120 --> 12:09.760] to a home they couldn't afford. So what it wound up doing is subjecting them to abject [12:09.760 --> 12:20.360] slavery. They wound up spending their entire life trying to find a way to pay this mortgage. [12:20.360 --> 12:28.760] And as it turns out, most of them were bound to lose. So they take their equity out of [12:28.760 --> 12:37.700] a home they could afford, put it into a home they can't afford, and wind up losing everything. [12:37.700 --> 12:45.520] This way, the bankers are stripping this country of its equity. And once they have stripped [12:45.520 --> 12:51.440] the country of all its value, they're going to come back and sell it all back to us at [12:51.440 --> 13:03.360] an inflated price to keep us in slavery. But the lender in all of this, it became his primary [13:03.360 --> 13:14.200] goal to create as profitable a loan for himself that he could. Because as soon as he created [13:14.200 --> 13:21.640] the note, he was going to sell it. So the lender comes in. He has a house here that [13:21.640 --> 13:25.960] the seller wants to hunt a grand for. So he makes a deal with the seller. He makes a deal [13:25.960 --> 13:32.160] with the lender and the borrower. He gets them together. And he makes a deal to transfer [13:32.160 --> 13:43.400] the property from the seller to the lender. He gives the borrower title. And from the [13:43.400 --> 13:51.520] borrower, in return, he gets a promissory note, a promise to pay, and a lien to enforce [13:51.520 --> 14:02.000] the promise to pay. Then he immediately sells the security instrument and takes the portion [14:02.000 --> 14:09.200] that goes to the seller and gives it to the seller. The seller's happy. He goes away. [14:09.200 --> 14:16.720] He pays back part of the note to Wells Fargo that he borrowed to get this done with. And [14:16.720 --> 14:22.880] take a $100,000 note at 6%. It'll produce about $220,000 across the life of a 30-year [14:22.880 --> 14:29.840] note. So he creates a note. He goes to the purchaser of the security and says, let's [14:29.840 --> 14:37.920] make a deal. Got this note that has a future value of $220,000. I'll sell it to you for [14:37.920 --> 14:44.360] $140,000. So they make a deal. He gets $140,000. He covers his cost to the seller, covers [14:44.360 --> 14:57.600] his cost to the bank, and he's got $25.30 left. So he's done his deal. So if the loan [14:57.600 --> 15:09.280] then pays on time and he acts as the servicer, he will make about 3% of every payment. However, [15:09.280 --> 15:19.680] if the borrower is struggling and pays late, in that case, he makes 8%. So it's in his [15:19.680 --> 15:28.400] interest that the borrower pay late. If it forecloses, he gets to charge fees for doing [15:28.400 --> 15:35.080] the foreclosure. But he doesn't lose anything because the foreclosure is not against him. [15:35.080 --> 15:45.160] It's against the owner of the security. But the court in the state of Kansas addressed [15:45.160 --> 15:52.620] this issue of securitization of the note, where the lender creates the note, then sells [15:52.620 --> 16:01.600] the security instrument and receives consideration. But the court said, Bubba, you've been paid. [16:01.600 --> 16:10.880] You cannot be harmed. So you cannot get standing to express the lien, so that it creates a [16:10.880 --> 16:15.280] fatal flaw. So if it creates a fatal flaw, why would the lender keep it? Why wouldn't [16:15.280 --> 16:21.440] he give the lien to the purchaser of the security? We're going to go to break in a second. When [16:21.440 --> 16:26.320] we come back from break, I'll explain that. But there's a real good reason why he does [16:26.320 --> 16:32.480] that and creates that potential major problem for the owner of the security. And it goes [16:32.480 --> 16:38.600] to where the money is. Always follow the money. And as soon as we come back, I'll tell you [16:38.600 --> 16:48.040] why he keeps the lien document. Okay, Eddie, we need a sweet voice to bring us in and out. [16:48.040 --> 16:51.080] We're used to Deb, but I guess we'll have to study for a few more minutes. [16:51.080 --> 17:04.960] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? Are you confused [17:04.960 --> 17:09.600] by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? If so, you may be diagnosed with [17:09.600 --> 17:15.240] the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. Hi, my name is Steve Holt. And like millions [17:15.240 --> 17:20.640] of other Americans, I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. I had no idea that the number [17:20.640 --> 17:26.120] one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. Unfortunately, [17:26.120 --> 17:30.800] that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity. But there is hope. The staff at [17:30.800 --> 17:34.680] Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports [17:34.680 --> 17:39.920] zombieism recover. And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational [17:39.920 --> 17:45.280] documentaries without feeling tired or uninterested. So if you or anybody you know suffers from [17:45.280 --> 17:53.360] stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or brave new [17:53.360 --> 17:57.080] bookstore dot com. Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment [17:57.080 --> 18:16.680] and enlarged vocabulary and an overall increase in mental functioning. [18:16.680 --> 18:44.680] So if you have any questions, please feel free to contact me. Thank you very much. [18:44.680 --> 19:10.860] It is beyond my understanding that the [19:10.860 --> 19:23.060] Hi, folks. This is Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton. David Stevens has the night off. We're going [19:23.060 --> 19:30.220] to come back in now and let Randy continue on with his information regarding these mortgages [19:30.220 --> 19:31.660] and the property. [19:31.660 --> 19:42.220] Okay. Why does the lender keep the lien document when he's already been paid? One of the things [19:42.220 --> 19:48.100] in the qualified written request I'm preparing for people, one of the requests hidden way [19:48.100 --> 19:56.740] down in the document is a demand for the records of the transaction between the lender and [19:56.740 --> 20:04.260] the original purchaser of the security instrument. I want to know how much consideration the [20:04.260 --> 20:13.620] lender received when he sold the security instrument. Was that amount in excess of the [20:13.620 --> 20:24.960] amount of the lien? And it always is. This is a problem he puts the lender in. If you [20:24.960 --> 20:31.620] hired me to work on your house and I did some work and you decided I did shabby work and [20:31.620 --> 20:38.100] refused to pay me, so we get an altercation and I put a lien on your house, a mechanic's [20:38.100 --> 20:43.060] lien or a material man's lien. And then a year or so later you want to sell your property [20:43.060 --> 20:46.180] but that lien's in the way but you're ticked off at me so you're not going to come back [20:46.180 --> 20:50.660] to me and pay me. So your brother comes to me and says, look, look, look, he's ticked [20:50.660 --> 20:57.940] off at you and he really needs to sell it. Here, let me pay you for it. Could I then [20:57.940 --> 21:08.220] go back and collect from you or would that be fraud? That would absolutely be fraud. [21:08.220 --> 21:15.260] I have a claim. Once my claim is satisfied, I have no more claim. The lender has a claim [21:15.260 --> 21:19.380] against your property. He sells the security instrument three days after you sign it. He [21:19.380 --> 21:24.700] has to wait three days because you have three days in which to send your signature on a [21:24.700 --> 21:32.540] contract for those who are not aware of it. Any consumer loan, any consumer contract you [21:32.540 --> 21:39.660] signed, you have three days to revoke the contract. No questions asked. So he has to [21:39.660 --> 21:47.020] wait three days. He sells it. He gets his consideration. He's been paid but he keeps [21:47.020 --> 21:55.900] that lien anyway. If he transferred the lien to the holder of the security instrument, [21:55.900 --> 22:00.340] then for the consideration, the purchaser would have purchased both but that's not what [22:00.340 --> 22:08.820] happens. Follow the money. The lender will hold the lien document for three years, file [22:08.820 --> 22:16.580] a 1099A on it and claim all of that amount of the lien as abandoned funds and write it [22:16.580 --> 22:24.900] off as income tax. So where he has other loans that are profitable that he can't do this [22:24.900 --> 22:32.620] sort of thing with, this allows him to get consideration a second time and not have to [22:32.620 --> 22:38.700] pay that amount in tax on another deal. So he gets consideration a second time. That's [22:38.700 --> 22:50.180] why he keeps the lien. We have a lender who it is in his best interest to talk the borrower [22:50.180 --> 23:00.620] into a loan that he cannot afford. So he stands in the middle, steals from the borrower on [23:00.620 --> 23:09.620] the front end, steals from the purchaser of the security on the back end and steals from [23:09.620 --> 23:21.620] all of us through taxes on the 1099A in the middle. So the lender is not a good guy. Now [23:21.620 --> 23:29.300] most people who are the minions actually doing the legwork have no idea what's going on. [23:29.300 --> 23:34.660] I talked to a woman who is a real estate broker for 30 years and when I told her that Real [23:34.660 --> 23:38.780] Estate Settlement Procedures Act forbid the lender to pay the broker more than 1% of the [23:38.780 --> 23:44.420] note she was flabbergasted. She said, that can't be. I never come away from the table [23:44.420 --> 23:48.900] with less than 2% or 3%. I couldn't afford to do a deal without that much because there's [23:48.900 --> 23:57.060] too much work involved. Well, that's the fact. Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act intended [23:57.060 --> 24:08.820] that the broker act as a fiduciary to the borrower and shop the lenders to find the [24:08.820 --> 24:15.900] best deal for his client. So they told all the lenders, 1%, everywhere the broker looks [24:15.900 --> 24:22.020] everybody pays him the same. So it's not in his best interest to violate his fiduciary [24:22.020 --> 24:29.860] duty to the borrower. However, that's not how it really works. The law is still in place [24:29.860 --> 24:38.380] just nobody's enforcing it and what they really do is collect 2% to 3% and the way the lender [24:38.380 --> 24:49.900] does this is charges the borrower bogus fees. The only fees the lender is allowed to assess [24:49.900 --> 24:57.700] to the borrower are those fees the borrower would have to pay if the borrower purchased [24:57.700 --> 25:07.700] the house in cash or those fees that the lender has to pay to a third party vendor. The guy [25:07.700 --> 25:16.780] doing the appraisals and insurance and various other things. So what I do in order to find [25:16.780 --> 25:22.060] the fraud, I'm sorry I'm a little bit ahead of myself. The point here is that the broker [25:22.060 --> 25:28.380] and you go out to buy a house and the broker says oh yeah I can help you out I'll get you [25:28.380 --> 25:33.620] a good deal I'm sure I can get you a loan. It may be tough but I can get it done and [25:33.620 --> 25:41.940] you think the broker is working in your behalf. He is not. He's working in his own behalf. [25:41.940 --> 25:48.460] The broker is trying to create as expensive a loan as he possibly can and that's called [25:48.460 --> 25:57.220] up-selling. You convince your client that he only qualifies for a loan that's much [25:57.220 --> 26:02.740] more costly than the one he would actually qualify for. So you bring a more profitable [26:02.740 --> 26:09.460] product to the lender and the lender will pay you more money under the table to get [26:09.460 --> 26:20.540] that product. Then he pays that product by charging you bogus fees at settlement. All [26:20.540 --> 26:27.900] those fees not allowed by the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act are intended to [26:27.900 --> 26:35.220] be absorbed by the lender as the normal cost of doing business and they are absorbed by [26:35.220 --> 26:43.060] the finance charge which is the APR, the percentage you pay over the amount of the note. It's [26:43.060 --> 26:48.340] intended that he absorbs those. What they actually do is they charge you a processing [26:48.340 --> 26:53.620] fee, an administration fee, a underwriting fee, almost always the lender underwrites [26:53.620 --> 26:57.340] their own note. And this guy sits down and looks at all the paperwork and makes sure [26:57.340 --> 27:01.540] everything is right. I just looked at one where they charged him $750 to look at all [27:01.540 --> 27:07.860] the paperwork to make sure it was right and it was a horrendous mess. Processing fee, [27:07.860 --> 27:16.020] what is that? So everybody who has a note, you want to send a qualified written request [27:16.020 --> 27:23.140] to the lender and list every fee they charged on the settlement statement and demand that [27:23.140 --> 27:29.300] they prove that those fees were in line with the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. [27:29.300 --> 27:37.460] Show me the invoice from the vendor listing the services charged showing that they were [27:37.460 --> 27:46.740] necessary. The amounts charged for each service showing that the price was reasonable. And [27:46.740 --> 27:55.700] the disbursement from the lender to the broker, to the vendor showing that the amount of money [27:55.700 --> 28:02.820] charged you is actually the amount of money charged by the vendor and wasn't marked up [28:02.820 --> 28:13.260] by the lender. This lender and vendor could get confusing. But the lender often does a [28:13.260 --> 28:22.700] markup on whatever he hires somebody to do. That's illegal. If you find $1 of fraud, fraud [28:22.700 --> 28:31.820] mitigates all contracts. And when I look at these, I just got one today where they charged [28:31.820 --> 28:39.660] the borrower in loan origination fee. That's the amount that goes to the broker. It was [28:39.660 --> 28:46.660] 2%. And then they sometimes call it a loan origination fee, sometimes call it a yield [28:46.660 --> 28:53.460] spread premium. Well, these guys were real creative. They billed for both. 2% loan origination [28:53.460 --> 28:57.540] fee, which is double what it could be, and then a yield spread premium of 1%. So they [28:57.540 --> 29:06.620] paid the broker 3%. And these guys were dumb enough to even put it on the settlement statement. [29:06.620 --> 29:14.220] When you make this, when you demand that the lender prove it up, they're not going to. [29:14.220 --> 29:19.780] They'll send you back a letter saying, oh, well, all of the fees we charged were correct [29:19.780 --> 29:25.380] and in accordance with the real estate settlement procedures act. You see, they don't dare prove [29:25.380 --> 29:32.140] any of them up. If they prove the ones up that are valid and don't prove up the ones [29:32.140 --> 29:38.460] that are invalid, it points right at them as fraud. So they don't prove up any. And [29:38.460 --> 29:43.900] when we get back, I'll show you why that's a cool deal. It's one of those, we use one [29:43.900 --> 29:51.620] of the lawyer tricks on them. Okay, this is Eddie Craig, Randy Colton. Eddie, you bring [29:51.620 --> 29:56.180] us out. Your voice is so much sweeter than mine. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. All right, folks. [29:56.180 --> 30:01.500] We'll be right back on the other side of these messages with a little vlog. Are you the plaintiff [30:01.500 --> 30:07.780] or defendant in a lawsuit? 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[31:20.860 --> 31:34.600] When you're going to stop abuse your power When you're going to stop abuse your power [31:34.600 --> 31:45.400] When you're going to stop abuse your power When you're going to stop abuse your power [31:45.400 --> 31:50.400] So please Mr. Macklin, teach officers not to abuse their power [31:50.400 --> 31:56.400] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers [31:56.400 --> 32:01.400] Tell them to uphold the law, and please don't abuse their power [32:01.400 --> 32:07.400] They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they lie every hour [32:07.400 --> 32:12.400] So Mr. Officer, please stop abusing your power [32:12.400 --> 32:18.400] You pull me over and tell me to be silent, sir [32:18.400 --> 32:23.400] I need to speak to my lawyer, Mr. Officer [32:23.400 --> 32:26.400] You're acting like you're the judge [32:26.400 --> 32:29.400] Alright folks, this is Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton [32:29.400 --> 32:31.400] Debra Stevens has the night off [32:31.400 --> 32:37.400] We're going to continue now with Randy's travel down Property Lane [32:37.400 --> 32:43.400] Also remember that tomorrow from, on Saturday rather, from 1 to 9 [32:43.400 --> 32:48.400] We will be broadcasting the entire Architects and Engineers for 9-11 [32:48.400 --> 32:52.400] From 1 o'clock to 9 o'clock on Rule of Law Radio [32:52.400 --> 32:56.400] For those of you who wish to attend, remember that it is at the DoubleTree Hotel in Austin [32:56.400 --> 33:01.400] At 6505 North I-35 from 1 to 9 [33:01.400 --> 33:07.400] Alex Jones will start to speak at 1-15, followed up by Ron Avery at 1-45 [33:07.400 --> 33:10.400] So if you can attend, please do so [33:10.400 --> 33:16.400] It promises to bring about a lot of new information and understanding about 9-11 [33:16.400 --> 33:18.400] So please go out and show your support [33:18.400 --> 33:21.400] Alright, Randy [33:21.400 --> 33:24.400] Well, after all of that, I forgot where it was [33:24.400 --> 33:34.400] We were talking about the fees that the lender charges [33:34.400 --> 33:37.400] And then what I do is [33:37.400 --> 33:41.400] I'm sorry to interrupt, but I think the last thing you left off was [33:41.400 --> 33:43.400] We pulled one of those lawyer tricks on them [33:43.400 --> 33:47.400] Yes, yes, and why they don't prove up everything [33:47.400 --> 33:54.400] See, what we do is, with a normal forensic analysis [33:54.400 --> 33:58.400] You go in and try to figure out everything they did wrong [33:58.400 --> 34:05.400] Well, I'll do that, but initially I'm not so concerned with figuring out what they did wrong [34:05.400 --> 34:09.400] I want them to prove they did it right [34:09.400 --> 34:14.400] Since they're required by statute to do things a certain way [34:14.400 --> 34:18.400] I'm going to demand they prove they did it that way [34:18.400 --> 34:22.400] And when I do, they're going to refuse to [34:22.400 --> 34:25.400] Because they screwed up some of them [34:25.400 --> 34:31.400] They do this all the time, so 95% of all of the foreclosures never get challenged [34:31.400 --> 34:35.400] So they're not used to having an answer for it, and even when they do [34:35.400 --> 34:41.400] It's so rare they can afford to lose it because they steal so much otherwise [34:41.400 --> 34:45.400] So a lot of these fees are bogus [34:45.400 --> 34:51.400] When I call them on it, if they proved up the fees that are not [34:51.400 --> 34:55.400] Like the $7.50 flood examination fee [34:55.400 --> 34:58.400] They check to see if you're in a flood zone [34:58.400 --> 35:00.400] They could prove that one up [35:00.400 --> 35:03.400] Maybe, they probably just wrote it in there [35:03.400 --> 35:08.400] And the amount they paid to the appraiser and the amount paid for [35:08.400 --> 35:12.400] Hazard insurance, entitled insurance, they could prove all that up [35:12.400 --> 35:14.400] But they're not going to [35:14.400 --> 35:20.400] The reason they're not going to is because if they prove up one, have to prove up all of them [35:20.400 --> 35:27.400] Otherwise, it would give a reasonable person of ordinary prudence [35:27.400 --> 35:33.400] Evidence that on the face of it, these weren't proved up because they were bogus [35:33.400 --> 35:36.400] Just like I accused them of being [35:36.400 --> 35:42.400] And what that gives me is prima facie evidence that these fees were false fees [35:42.400 --> 35:46.400] Charged to the lender and paid to the broker under the table [35:46.400 --> 35:53.400] To get the broker to violate his fiduciary duty to the borrower [35:53.400 --> 35:56.400] It's a great lawyer trick [35:56.400 --> 36:00.400] And once we get that [36:00.400 --> 36:08.400] Then we maintained that each of these fees that were charged improperly [36:08.400 --> 36:13.400] Is a separate violation of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act [36:13.400 --> 36:18.400] And what the legislature clearly stated they intended [36:18.400 --> 36:25.400] Was that the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Truth in Lending Act, and the other consumer protection laws [36:25.400 --> 36:30.400] Engender strict adherence [36:30.400 --> 36:33.400] And in order to generate that [36:33.400 --> 36:40.400] They stated that a violation of one of these acts is harm per se [36:40.400 --> 36:45.400] So that the aggrieved party does not have to show harm [36:45.400 --> 36:50.400] And that a violation of one of these provisions [36:50.400 --> 36:55.400] Creates a penalty as opposed to a fine or a fee [36:55.400 --> 36:58.400] A fine or a fee would go to the agency [36:58.400 --> 37:01.400] A penalty goes to the aggrieved party [37:01.400 --> 37:15.400] And the legislature stipulated that the court can assess a penalty no less than $200, no more than $2,000 [37:15.400 --> 37:22.400] So since the lender failed to prove up all these fees, we assume that he's a dirty rotten scoundrel [37:22.400 --> 37:25.400] And the court's going to throw the book at him [37:25.400 --> 37:33.400] So for each fee that the lender charges and doesn't prove up [37:33.400 --> 37:38.400] We take $2,000 rest of the penalty violation [37:38.400 --> 37:41.400] And the case law says [37:41.400 --> 37:47.400] That a penalty accrues at consummation of the note [37:47.400 --> 37:52.400] When you sit down and sign the note, if there were any RESPA violations [37:52.400 --> 37:56.400] Whatever penalty the court will subsequently assess [37:56.400 --> 38:00.400] Assesses at consummation of the note [38:00.400 --> 38:02.400] One minor hiccup [38:02.400 --> 38:12.400] The legislature stated that a violation of RESPA or the other consumer protection laws does not create a cause of action [38:12.400 --> 38:15.400] So you can't sue them for it [38:15.400 --> 38:23.400] However, since the penalty accrues at consummation of the note [38:23.400 --> 38:29.400] That amount should have been deducted from the principal the first day [38:29.400 --> 38:33.400] And I should not have been paying interest on it [38:33.400 --> 38:43.400] And since the RESPA violation amounts to a fraudulent amount on the principal [38:43.400 --> 38:47.400] All the interest I pay on it is fraud [38:47.400 --> 38:51.400] And that is a cause of action [38:51.400 --> 38:56.400] So what we do is we take the amount of the penalty [38:56.400 --> 39:01.400] We take the amount of all of the fees that were charged [39:01.400 --> 39:04.400] We subtract them all from the principal [39:04.400 --> 39:07.400] And then do an amortization [39:07.400 --> 39:13.400] When you sit down at closing, you'll get a settlement statement, truth and lending statement [39:13.400 --> 39:16.400] They almost never match [39:16.400 --> 39:25.400] Settlement statement will always have about $3,000 to $5,000 less in principal than the note [39:25.400 --> 39:28.400] And about half percent more in interest [39:28.400 --> 39:35.400] So you look at these, one I use for comparison, $115,000 note at 6% on the note [39:35.400 --> 39:44.400] Truth and lending statement call for $113,000, $5,000 less, 6.5%, half a percent more interest [39:44.400 --> 39:50.400] Well, after you've signed about 50 disclosures and your brain's turned to mud [39:50.400 --> 39:55.400] Then they put these in front of you and you look at them, well, it kind of looks like it'll balance out [39:55.400 --> 39:59.400] Not in this particular note [39:59.400 --> 40:08.400] The payment on the note, $115,000 at 6% was $693 [40:08.400 --> 40:15.400] Payment on the truth and lending statement was $747 and change [40:15.400 --> 40:21.400] So it came out $47 and change different [40:21.400 --> 40:23.400] However that worked out [40:23.400 --> 40:27.400] Anyway, difference was $47 [40:27.400 --> 40:31.400] Take $47 off the principal each month [40:31.400 --> 40:37.400] We ran the note as if you paid the amount the truth and lending payment said you were supposed to [40:37.400 --> 40:42.400] But you should have only been paying this amount, so the extra came off the principal as an overpayment [40:42.400 --> 40:47.400] Next month you don't pay interest on that, you run that across the face of a 30-year note [40:47.400 --> 40:58.400] And on this one with a half a percent interest more and $5,000 less in principal [40:58.400 --> 41:04.400] Over the life of the note you'd have paid $44,000 extra [41:04.400 --> 41:09.400] And on a 6% note if you take $1,000 off the principal across the face of the note [41:09.400 --> 41:19.400] It will amount to $5,900 almost $6,000 for every $1,000 [41:19.400 --> 41:21.400] That you would overpay [41:21.400 --> 41:26.400] And what you would overpay we claim as fraud [41:26.400 --> 41:32.400] You do that this way and then you take the pure respa violations [41:32.400 --> 41:34.400] And take $2,000 for each one of those [41:34.400 --> 41:45.400] I generally come up with about somewhere around five times the amount of the original purchase price in fraud against the lender [41:45.400 --> 41:50.400] If anybody out here has ever tried to get a loan modification [41:50.400 --> 41:56.400] They will find that the lender is not interested in giving you a loan modification [41:56.400 --> 42:02.400] For the very reasons I talked about earlier, he wants you paying late [42:02.400 --> 42:08.400] You get a loan modification and pay on time, he loses 5% per payment [42:08.400 --> 42:10.400] So instead of $8,000 he's down to $3,000 [42:10.400 --> 42:17.400] So he loses two and a half times the amount he would if you paid late [42:17.400 --> 42:21.400] So why would he give you a loan modification? [42:21.400 --> 42:25.400] And I talked to people who got in the loan modification business and they got out [42:25.400 --> 42:29.400] Because they said the banks are corrupt, they won't do the modifications [42:29.400 --> 42:31.400] Well they have no reason to [42:31.400 --> 42:39.400] Well if you take all of the fees they charge and all of the respa violations they committed [42:39.400 --> 42:42.400] And take $2,000 off the principal and run the note [42:42.400 --> 42:47.400] That way you come up with a hefty amount of fraud you can throw at them [42:47.400 --> 42:52.400] And then you don't go in with your hat in your hand asking for a loan modification [42:52.400 --> 42:56.400] You go in and say, here guys, tell you what we'll do [42:56.400 --> 43:02.400] You give me quiet title and give me twice the amount of the principal [43:02.400 --> 43:06.400] Then I won't sue you ever away from Sunday [43:06.400 --> 43:10.400] Now they have reason to do the loan modification [43:10.400 --> 43:19.400] Plus we'll throw in a few charges of fraud and conspiracy and usury [43:19.400 --> 43:23.400] Use your loan to get them 10 years [43:23.400 --> 43:26.400] So let's dance [43:26.400 --> 43:32.400] We have to find a way to keep people in their homes [43:32.400 --> 43:35.400] They're trying to steal all our equity [43:35.400 --> 43:37.400] So it's time for us to fight back [43:37.400 --> 43:41.400] When we come back I'll start taking the calls [43:41.400 --> 43:45.400] Hi folks, this is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens with The Night Off [43:45.400 --> 43:48.400] We'll be right back on the other side [43:48.400 --> 43:53.400] We'll be taking the calls here very shortly [44:18.400 --> 44:20.400] We'll be right back [44:49.400 --> 44:57.400] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [44:57.400 --> 45:00.400] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [45:00.400 --> 45:18.400] If you did not have any problem, where you gonna look for one? [45:18.400 --> 45:24.400] If you could not reach any by too long, would you purposefully die? [45:24.400 --> 45:30.400] Such a sentiment, a soldier, a warrior of love, scouple and they keep the peace [45:30.400 --> 45:33.400] All they're taking is misunderstanding [45:33.400 --> 45:40.400] If somebody calls the police, they're watching the spotlight [45:40.400 --> 45:45.400] Alright everybody, this is Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Deborah Stevens with The Night Off [45:45.400 --> 45:51.400] And I'd still like for everybody to remember the Architect and Engineers 9-11 Truth press conference and seminar [45:51.400 --> 45:58.400] On Saturday at the Double 3 Hotel in Austin at 6505 North High 35 [45:58.400 --> 46:00.400] The event begins at 1 o'clock [46:00.400 --> 46:03.400] Alex Jones will be starting at 1.15 to speak [46:03.400 --> 46:06.400] Followed by Ron Avery at 1.45 [46:06.400 --> 46:09.400] Please come out and support the event [46:09.400 --> 46:10.400] Alright, Randy [46:10.400 --> 46:12.400] Okay, we're gonna start taking callers [46:12.400 --> 46:14.400] We have Michael from Maryland [46:14.400 --> 46:17.400] Michael, you got a hard question for Eddie [46:17.400 --> 46:19.400] Yes, hi, how you doing? [46:19.400 --> 46:20.400] Doing great [46:20.400 --> 46:23.400] Good, land patents, do you all use them? [46:23.400 --> 46:27.400] I mean, you know, do you have your own and do you like the concept? [46:27.400 --> 46:28.400] That's one question real quick [46:28.400 --> 46:34.400] Yes, in Texas, Texas is special, separate from all the other states [46:34.400 --> 46:36.400] All the other states [46:36.400 --> 46:41.400] I'm hoping that Barry Watson is listening [46:41.400 --> 46:43.400] If he is, I hope he'll call again [46:43.400 --> 46:46.400] He just got land patent on his [46:46.400 --> 46:50.400] And it turns out he goes to church with the guy that works for land patents [46:50.400 --> 46:51.400] I'll talk about that and I've been interested in it [46:51.400 --> 46:55.400] The other question I had real quick is about the questionnaire [46:55.400 --> 46:58.400] The public servant questionnaire that I've seen on the Internet [46:58.400 --> 47:01.400] And I think I've heard a couple different people mention [47:01.400 --> 47:06.400] I was wondering, I read somewhere where that actually is only applicable to federal employees [47:06.400 --> 47:10.400] Do you know about that aspect of it or is that not germane in light of the fact [47:10.400 --> 47:12.400] And I think Eddie can speak to this [47:12.400 --> 47:17.400] In light of the fact that they share all their drivers license databases now [47:17.400 --> 47:21.400] Actually, as far as I know, you can use it on any public servant [47:21.400 --> 47:24.400] Well, I did read, I have to go back and look [47:24.400 --> 47:30.400] It looked pretty essential like it was actually language from, you know, I don't know [47:30.400 --> 47:37.400] They always try to mix up the actual law with the administrative publications that they put out [47:37.400 --> 47:40.400] And make you think it's one thing when it's really another [47:40.400 --> 47:48.400] But what I read did suggest that it only applies to federal agencies [47:48.400 --> 47:52.400] That you can't really hold state or local officials to it [47:52.400 --> 47:55.400] But I'd like to think that I could [47:55.400 --> 47:58.400] Eddie, you've been, I'm sorry, did you have something else to say about that real quick? [47:58.400 --> 48:00.400] I researched that [48:00.400 --> 48:04.400] If it's the same one that's been going around for quite a while [48:04.400 --> 48:08.400] It primarily references 552 [48:08.400 --> 48:13.400] I looked at it, I pulled up the statutes they referred to [48:13.400 --> 48:22.400] And I can find nothing that requires a public servant to answer those questions [48:22.400 --> 48:25.400] Well, that's true [48:25.400 --> 48:30.400] But they are required to answer the questions that they're asking information of you [48:30.400 --> 48:35.400] You have the right to demand to know on what authority they're requesting the information [48:35.400 --> 48:41.400] That's all I could ask and that goes to Federal Crop Insurance v. Merrill [48:41.400 --> 48:46.400] Only in as much as if I'm depending on the authority expressed by an official [48:46.400 --> 48:52.400] Then it is my responsibility to determine the limits of the authority of that official [48:52.400 --> 48:55.400] But I found nothing to bind the official [48:55.400 --> 48:58.400] Well, there was an act in 1974 [48:58.400 --> 49:01.400] I think it has something like the Federal Privacy Act or something like that [49:01.400 --> 49:03.400] Does that ring a bell, Eddie, or Randy? [49:03.400 --> 49:07.400] Yeah, it's the Privacy Act of 1974 [49:07.400 --> 49:15.400] So does that commit public servants, Federal or otherwise, to answer our questions or is that not relevant? [49:15.400 --> 49:19.400] Well, no, the Privacy Act actually protects certain information about you [49:19.400 --> 49:24.400] Such as your Social Security number from disclosure without your consent or knowledge [49:24.400 --> 49:25.400] Okay [49:25.400 --> 49:27.400] That was its primary purpose [49:27.400 --> 49:34.400] But it does protect other areas of that but nothing specifically dealing with what you're asking about that I'm aware of [49:34.400 --> 49:36.400] Okay, third quick question [49:36.400 --> 49:37.400] I'll try to keep them all real brief [49:37.400 --> 49:41.400] Because every time I listen to your archives and listen to your shows, I just keep thinking about other stuff [49:41.400 --> 49:46.400] Third quick question is, Eddie, I remember hearing a couple weeks back where you were developing something [49:46.400 --> 49:50.400] And you kept speaking in what I would call veiled language as to a project you were working on [49:50.400 --> 49:57.400] That would nail these thinkers to the wall when they try to stick us under administrative proceedings [49:57.400 --> 50:02.400] When in fact we're supposed to be getting due process [50:02.400 --> 50:05.400] Hopefully that rings a bell as to what you've been talking about on past shows [50:05.400 --> 50:09.400] And I was wondering if you could give us any kind of an update whatsoever on how that's coming [50:09.400 --> 50:14.400] Well, one of the things that I've got is the motion for a fair and impartial trial [50:14.400 --> 50:19.400] Which tries to place them within the realm of using the Constitution in the court [50:19.400 --> 50:25.400] What they're trying to do is put us under an area where they can say the Constitution doesn't apply [50:25.400 --> 50:29.400] We know that's not true, yet it's what the judges do [50:29.400 --> 50:39.400] So the point of this motion is to require them to either say the motion is okay and they sign off on the order or they deny it [50:39.400 --> 50:48.400] Now granted, any judge that signs off on a motion that says you're petitioning the court for a fair and impartial trial and he says denied [50:48.400 --> 50:51.400] They're going to have a problem [50:51.400 --> 50:53.400] Yeah, that's right [50:53.400 --> 50:55.400] And so that's what I'm working on [50:55.400 --> 50:57.400] Sorry to cut you off there [50:57.400 --> 51:01.400] Quick question, I'm going to get it before it gets to the break or before I overstay my welcome [51:01.400 --> 51:05.400] You may or may not recall, but I had a red light camera issue going some time back [51:05.400 --> 51:08.400] And I haven't resolved that yet, I still need to take some firm action on that [51:08.400 --> 51:17.400] I want to take an offensive posture actually, but I realize every week it goes by I'm getting myself in a more deep hole [51:17.400 --> 51:23.400] But I had occasion recently to get one of these tickets where they put it on your window because you didn't put a quarter in a meter [51:23.400 --> 51:26.400] And I'm really meant to put the quarters in the meter [51:26.400 --> 51:30.400] I just plumb for God as I got out and I went to a restaurant and came back and there was the ticket [51:30.400 --> 51:33.400] Now it's a pretty inexpensive ticket, it's probably 20 bucks I think [51:33.400 --> 51:36.400] So I'm not especially opposed to paying it [51:36.400 --> 51:45.400] But at the same time it seems to me it might be an opportunity to pick a fight and to force the local authorities to prove up their jurisdiction [51:45.400 --> 51:47.400] That wouldn't be a bad one to fight [51:47.400 --> 51:52.400] Whether I'm barking up the wrong tree and shouldn't even bother [51:52.400 --> 51:55.400] That wouldn't be a bad one to fight [51:55.400 --> 51:59.400] And the reason for it is that with all the law talking about the right to travel [51:59.400 --> 52:03.400] That very same set of law from that same period of time makes it very clear [52:03.400 --> 52:09.400] The street's use is for the travel of the public, not the parking of an automobile [52:09.400 --> 52:17.400] Parking and or using it for commerce is an extraordinary use and the city and or the county or whoever can regulate that [52:17.400 --> 52:19.400] Right, right [52:19.400 --> 52:20.400] Okay, good advice [52:20.400 --> 52:26.400] Thank you so much and I'll turn the call over or the show over to somebody else's question [52:26.400 --> 52:27.400] Thank you so much, I always appreciate it [52:27.400 --> 52:30.400] Yes, sir [52:30.400 --> 52:34.400] Okay, we're going to go now to Greg in Colorado [52:34.400 --> 52:37.400] Greg, you got a question for us or a comment? [52:37.400 --> 52:48.400] Yeah, Randy, I sent you an email a couple of weeks ago about a zoning violation out in Colorado [52:48.400 --> 52:51.400] Is this about where you took your cars? [52:51.400 --> 53:01.400] No, what we got is we have a piece of what the county has zoned us agricultural back in the early 70s [53:01.400 --> 53:07.400] And they took it upon themselves in the 80s to change our zoning without notification [53:07.400 --> 53:11.400] So now what they're doing is saying that with the equipment and stuff that we have on the property [53:11.400 --> 53:15.400] Is a violation of their zoning regulations [53:15.400 --> 53:19.400] And so what they're trying to force us into a board of adjustment hearing [53:19.400 --> 53:27.400] Where they want to find us, of course, in violation and we filed for an appeal [53:27.400 --> 53:33.400] And if they do find us in violation, they give you 30 days to clear out your property [53:33.400 --> 53:38.400] That took us some 60 years to put the stuff on the property [53:38.400 --> 53:41.400] How did they redo the zoning? [53:41.400 --> 53:50.400] Don't they have to post it and hold hearings and give opportunity to object before they change zoning? [53:50.400 --> 53:52.400] What are the requirements in Colorado? [53:52.400 --> 54:00.400] Yeah, the requirements in this county anyway are that if I want to change my zoning, those are the things that I have to do [54:00.400 --> 54:05.400] And according to them, they did a windshield survey in 1985 [54:05.400 --> 54:16.400] Where a gentleman or woman from the county zoning and planning drove through a particular part of our county [54:16.400 --> 54:25.400] And they decided when they went back that they wrote on the map that this property looks best served as rural residential instead of agricultural [54:25.400 --> 54:28.400] And so they accepted it that way and made the change [54:28.400 --> 54:33.400] And then I guess they wrote it down on a piece of tax paper [54:33.400 --> 54:37.400] And I haven't seen the tax papers where it says rural residential [54:37.400 --> 54:42.400] But they said, well, you paid your taxes on it, so you accepted our zoning change [54:42.400 --> 54:45.400] But we never accepted a zoning change [54:45.400 --> 54:48.400] Okay, what are the requirements for changing zoning? [54:48.400 --> 54:52.400] Can the county just change zoning at their whim? [54:52.400 --> 54:55.400] They shouldn't be able to [54:55.400 --> 54:59.400] Okay, you need to know what's required before they change zoning [54:59.400 --> 55:08.400] I live in a small town and the city took it upon itself to change the zoning without notifying me [55:08.400 --> 55:13.400] And I was not happy about it because now I have a house that I can't repair [55:13.400 --> 55:22.400] If a tree falls on, part of it knocks it down, I can't put it back because they've zoned it commercial [55:22.400 --> 55:31.400] So I bought two big buses and got a permit to start a bus terminal right next to the city hall [55:31.400 --> 55:39.400] And lo and behold, they wrote me a variance [55:39.400 --> 55:43.400] 24-hour bus terminal [55:43.400 --> 55:46.400] You need to look at what the... [55:46.400 --> 55:56.400] If they didn't follow the rules in establishing the new zoning, then sue the individuals personally [55:56.400 --> 55:57.400] Okay [55:57.400 --> 56:01.400] They want to fight, you give them one, and what about your grandfather's rights? [56:01.400 --> 56:09.400] Exactly, they came out in 1994, the county had, well there's a couple tricks here [56:09.400 --> 56:16.400] We had a complainant that complained about our property and the county said that they only respond to complaints from citizens [56:16.400 --> 56:23.400] So the complainant happened to be on this board of adjustment and he's one of my neighbors for sure [56:23.400 --> 56:27.400] But he started the complaints and went to the county commissioners with it [56:27.400 --> 56:32.400] So they sent Planning and Zoning out to survey the property and talk to the owners, which is us [56:32.400 --> 56:38.400] And they said, hey, you guys aren't in violation, you've been here long enough, you're grandfathered in [56:38.400 --> 56:44.400] So they issued a letter to that fact to the complainant, to the county commissioners, to us as the property owners [56:44.400 --> 56:48.400] And said, you're not in violation, everything's good to go [56:48.400 --> 56:51.400] So we did receive that in 1994 [56:51.400 --> 56:59.400] So the complainant had sent letters that looked like on a monthly basis to the county for years [56:59.400 --> 57:04.400] And finally he found somebody that wanted to run for county commissioner and they put some money together [57:04.400 --> 57:07.400] And got this gentleman in as the county commissioner [57:07.400 --> 57:11.400] They elected this person onto the board of adjustment again [57:11.400 --> 57:17.400] And so now they think they're going to jam us through the system because they've already convinced the board of adjustment [57:17.400 --> 57:21.400] As far as I can tell to find us in violation [57:21.400 --> 57:26.400] And that's supposed to be an open and fair group of people [57:26.400 --> 57:30.400] Well, what I suggest is, is if there is law that gives you grandfather rights [57:30.400 --> 57:35.400] Anybody who tries to interfere with you, you need to sue them personally [57:35.400 --> 57:39.400] Okay, and how would I go about doing something like that? [57:39.400 --> 57:42.400] Oh, that's a piece of cake [57:42.400 --> 57:46.400] But first you have to do your homework, you have to know what the law is [57:46.400 --> 57:47.400] Yes, sir [57:47.400 --> 57:53.400] And get on the internet, you do a few searches, Colorado, zoning, county [57:53.400 --> 57:56.400] You'll be surprised how fast you'll find it [57:56.400 --> 57:59.400] Grandfather rights, California, I mean Colorado [57:59.400 --> 58:00.400] Okay [58:00.400 --> 58:04.400] You'll be surprised how quickly you'll come up with good information [58:04.400 --> 58:08.400] Know the law before you start and then the lawsuit's great [58:08.400 --> 58:11.400] It really gets everybody's attention [58:11.400 --> 58:13.400] Can we carry this past break? [58:13.400 --> 58:14.400] Yes [58:14.400 --> 58:15.400] Thank you [58:15.400 --> 58:20.400] Just hang on, we've got another caller, Russ, from Texas [58:20.400 --> 58:23.400] And, Eddie, you take us out [58:23.400 --> 58:26.400] My voice is too crappy, you need a good sweet sound [58:26.400 --> 58:28.400] Alright, folks, y'all just hang in there [58:28.400 --> 58:31.400] We'll catch you on the other side of the break [58:31.400 --> 58:33.400] That wasn't very sweet sounding [58:33.400 --> 58:46.400] Well, I know, but that's just the... [59:03.400 --> 59:23.400] We'll catch you on the other side of the break [59:33.400 --> 59:40.400] This news brief brought to you by the International News Agency. [01:00:03.400 --> 01:00:14.400] Afghan and NATO forces Thursday handed over control of Marja to civilian authorities in the wake of a huge military operation to capture the area from Taliban control. [01:00:14.400 --> 01:00:21.400] Hours earlier, roadside bombs were uncovered in the main market, suggesting Taliban fighters were still active in the area. [01:00:21.400 --> 01:00:27.400] The Afghan Human Rights Commission said Wednesday 28 civilians have been killed so far in Marja [01:00:27.400 --> 01:00:34.400] and urged pro-government forces to take more care, distinguishing between non-competence and militants. [01:00:34.400 --> 01:00:39.400] The Department of Homeland Security has more contractors working for it than full-time employees. [01:00:39.400 --> 01:00:50.400] Senator Joseph Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said he was astounded to learn there are more than 200,000 contractor employees. [01:00:50.400 --> 01:00:54.400] The civilian workforce numbers 188,000. [01:00:54.400 --> 01:01:01.400] Top of the hour news brought to you by INN World Report. [01:01:01.400 --> 01:01:13.400] Abu Maji al-Mohandas, one of 6,000 candidates running in the Iraqi elections next month, won't set foot on the campaign trail for fear of a U.S. assassination attempt. [01:01:13.400 --> 01:01:16.400] Al-Mohandas told Makachi News, quote, [01:01:16.400 --> 01:01:25.400] I was told officially by the Speaker of Parliament that it's preferable I don't show up before the election because they couldn't assure I would be protected, [01:01:25.400 --> 01:01:32.400] adding, quote, since 2005 the Americans have conveyed a message they'll kidnap or assassinate me. [01:01:32.400 --> 01:01:41.400] Campaign posters depict al-Mohandas as an elder statesman who belongs to the main Shiite Muslim ticket, challenging Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. [01:01:41.400 --> 01:01:53.400] Last July, the U.S. Treasury Department accused al-Mohandas of helping train Shiite militia to attack U.S. forces in Iraq and of moving weapons from Iran into Iraq for that purpose. [01:01:53.400 --> 01:02:04.400] Al-Mohandas lives in Iran, effectively exiled from his home country, because of Washington's accusations he's an Iranian proxy with a terrorism rap sheet. [01:02:04.400 --> 01:02:14.400] Over one million Iraqis have met violent deaths as a result of the U.S.-led invasion. A study conducted by the prestigious British polling group, Opinion Research Business, [01:02:14.400 --> 01:02:23.400] shows the invasion and occupation of Iraq exceeded the eight to 900,000 believed killed in the Rwandan genocide in 1994, [01:02:23.400 --> 01:02:30.400] and is approaching the 1.7 million who died in Cambodia's infamous killing fields in the 1970s. [01:02:30.400 --> 01:02:41.400] In interviews with 2,414 adults, the poll found that more than one in five respondents had had at least one death in their household as a result of the conflict. [01:02:41.400 --> 01:03:00.400] Authors Joshua Holland and Michael Schwartz discovered most violence against Iraqis was not perpetrated by Iraqis themselves. [01:03:00.400 --> 01:03:14.400] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network at ruleoflawradio.com, live free speech talk radio at its best. [01:03:30.400 --> 01:03:52.400] All right, folks, this is Eddie Craig. Yep, Debbie Stevens has the night off. [01:03:52.400 --> 01:04:01.400] Once again, everybody that can, please be sure and attend the Architect and Engineers for 9-11 Troop press conference and seminar [01:04:01.400 --> 01:04:11.400] that is going to be this Saturday at the Double Tree Hotel in Austin at 6505 North I-35. It starts at 1 o'clock. It ends at 9. [01:04:11.400 --> 01:04:21.400] The first speaker up will be Alex Jones at 1-15, followed by Ron Avery at 1-45. Please go support the effort. [01:04:21.400 --> 01:04:29.400] Listen to what's got, what evidence and information they're going to be talking about. Get the word out that we still don't have all the facts. [01:04:29.400 --> 01:04:40.400] We have been lied to. We have been betrayed. And these architects and engineers have worked diligently to help put that to the forefront of the public knowledge. [01:04:40.400 --> 01:04:49.400] So please, they put a lot of time and effort into getting this set up. Please go out and support them. All right, Randy, we had a caller still on the line. [01:04:49.400 --> 01:04:52.400] Greg, you had another question or comment? [01:04:52.400 --> 01:04:57.400] Yeah. Well, you know, I know there's zoning regulations that they make us follow. [01:04:57.400 --> 01:05:08.400] We have to post signs and go through all sorts of pre-meeting hearings with the planning department, notify all your neighbors what you want to do, [01:05:08.400 --> 01:05:17.400] and actually give them certified letters to adjoining landowners and people within a couple thousand feet of your property and what have you. [01:05:17.400 --> 01:05:26.400] So, you know, they didn't follow those guidelines. And as far as I can tell, they have to follow the same as they make me abide by. Is that correct? [01:05:26.400 --> 01:05:31.400] Not as far as I know, unless there's some special rule that we don't know about. [01:05:31.400 --> 01:05:32.400] Okay. [01:05:32.400 --> 01:05:40.400] And if there's not, you need to file against them criminally and send a tort letter to the county commissioners. [01:05:40.400 --> 01:05:41.400] Okay. [01:05:41.400 --> 01:05:54.400] And best if you listen to the show when we talk about causes of action and how to address them, write up a lawsuit with causes of action. [01:05:54.400 --> 01:05:55.400] Okay. [01:05:55.400 --> 01:05:59.400] Every allegation you make against them, make it in terms of a cause of action. [01:05:59.400 --> 01:06:00.400] Okay. [01:06:00.400 --> 01:06:14.400] Here you have official pretenders. They're pretending to be enforcing a zoning that cannot exist because it wasn't created in accordance with law. [01:06:14.400 --> 01:06:15.400] Okay. [01:06:15.400 --> 01:06:24.400] So every actor is purporting to exert an authority they do not expressly have. And that's a crime in every state. [01:06:24.400 --> 01:06:25.400] Okay. [01:06:25.400 --> 01:06:34.400] Texas is called official oppression. In the Fed, it's called official misconduct, 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:06:34.400 --> 01:06:42.400] So you're going to have a corresponding statute in Colorado. I've read it. I don't remember what it was. It's been a couple of years since I've been up there. [01:06:42.400 --> 01:06:43.400] Okay. [01:06:43.400 --> 01:06:51.400] But charge them with it. And then their act harmed you. That creates a tort against you. [01:06:51.400 --> 01:06:59.400] You start going after their house, they're not going to be quite so interested in your house. [01:06:59.400 --> 01:07:00.400] Correct. [01:07:00.400 --> 01:07:06.400] So the best defense is a good effective offense. But first, read the law. Know the law. [01:07:06.400 --> 01:07:07.400] Right. [01:07:07.400 --> 01:07:08.400] Okay. Do you have any more questions? [01:07:08.400 --> 01:07:16.400] Well, you had mentioned that you might have some folks here in Colorado that I might be able to get some information from. [01:07:16.400 --> 01:07:27.400] Yes. Send me an email at Randy at ruleoflawradio.com and put Colorado zoning in all caps. [01:07:27.400 --> 01:07:28.400] Okay. [01:07:28.400 --> 01:07:31.400] And I'll link you to some folks who might be able to help you out. [01:07:31.400 --> 01:07:41.400] Yes, sir. And I sure appreciate your showing. And I'll try and help you out as much as I can. And, you know, I just think you guys got a golden thing going. [01:07:41.400 --> 01:07:42.400] Well, thank you. [01:07:42.400 --> 01:07:44.400] You betcha. Have a good evening. [01:07:44.400 --> 01:07:48.400] Okay. Now we're going to go to Russell from Texas. [01:07:48.400 --> 01:07:51.400] So, Russ, you got a question or a comment? [01:07:51.400 --> 01:08:01.400] Well, I just wanted to let you know that your listener line is, for some reason, kicking people off tonight during the commercials and sometimes during your speeches. [01:08:01.400 --> 01:08:05.400] It happened to me about four times tonight. [01:08:05.400 --> 01:08:11.400] Okay. We'll have to get to our technical people. [01:08:11.400 --> 01:08:16.400] The producer can handle that and I'm sure he's listening. [01:08:16.400 --> 01:08:17.400] So, thanks. [01:08:17.400 --> 01:08:26.400] Within like say 10, 15 seconds when you go to commercial, all of a sudden it's like you get hung up on and you get a dial tone and then you got a call back in. [01:08:26.400 --> 01:08:35.400] And then during – when you were talking about the mortgages and then when Eddie was talking about something else, it cut off those two different times, too. [01:08:35.400 --> 01:08:39.400] Okay. We'll get our technical people to have a look at that. [01:08:39.400 --> 01:08:40.400] Okay. Thanks. [01:08:40.400 --> 01:08:43.400] Thank you, Russ. [01:08:43.400 --> 01:08:47.400] Okay. Now we're going to Craig in Ohio. [01:08:47.400 --> 01:08:50.400] Craig, you got a question or comment? [01:08:50.400 --> 01:09:04.400] Yeah. It seems to me that this side of the Mississippi, it is not nearly as lively as it is on your side with people that are motivated or trying to raise awareness. [01:09:04.400 --> 01:09:14.400] I don't know whether that's true or not, but it just appears that because you got a lot more groups, a lot more people on that side. [01:09:14.400 --> 01:09:17.400] Would you contend that may be true? [01:09:17.400 --> 01:09:24.400] Would you have a higher percentage of people that's more aware or groups on that side versus this side? [01:09:24.400 --> 01:09:29.400] I haven't really looked at it that way, but it kind of makes sense. [01:09:29.400 --> 01:09:35.400] The further west you go, the newer the areas are. [01:09:35.400 --> 01:09:43.400] We haven't been settled near as long as you folks in Ohio and Kentucky and Tennessee and West Virginia. [01:09:43.400 --> 01:09:46.400] We're still a little closer to the old west. [01:09:46.400 --> 01:09:49.400] Well, of course, now in California, that's not entirely true. [01:09:49.400 --> 01:09:55.400] They just were insane from the start, so we don't hold us accountable for that. [01:09:55.400 --> 01:10:07.400] Yeah, but I haven't looked at it that way, but you're right when I think, well, actually, we have quite a few people in New York and Pennsylvania. [01:10:07.400 --> 01:10:14.400] We get a lot of action from back that side of the Mississippi. [01:10:14.400 --> 01:10:16.400] Yeah, New Hampshire is doing pretty good right now, too. [01:10:16.400 --> 01:10:19.400] They've got their open carry law put back into force. [01:10:19.400 --> 01:10:25.400] So they've been active for a while up in New Hampshire as well. [01:10:25.400 --> 01:10:26.400] Good. [01:10:26.400 --> 01:10:34.400] I think it's probably pretty balanced around the country, and it's going to get stronger. [01:10:34.400 --> 01:10:38.400] I just feel like we're reaching a tipping point. [01:10:38.400 --> 01:10:49.400] And what I said about architects and engineers for 9-11, that's absolutely an indication of how things are going. [01:10:49.400 --> 01:10:54.400] They're talking about going over 1,000, but they didn't just go over 1,000. [01:10:54.400 --> 01:10:57.400] They flooded over 1,000. [01:10:57.400 --> 01:11:08.400] So it's reaching the point to where the ones who are raising the issues are no longer considered so far out on the lunatic fringe. [01:11:08.400 --> 01:11:18.400] They're coming back in, and people are beginning to trust it more, and it's like the cognitive dissonance is beginning to dissipate. [01:11:18.400 --> 01:11:31.400] The public in general are less afraid to accept that the government is a mess and that we've been lied to. [01:11:31.400 --> 01:11:36.400] And I think part of it may be that we're getting a lot more veterans. [01:11:36.400 --> 01:11:44.400] When I come back from Vietnam, it was clear to me that if the government said it, it wasn't true, [01:11:44.400 --> 01:11:52.400] because they would lie when the truth would do better, because telling lies and telling the truth gets them confused. [01:11:52.400 --> 01:11:56.400] If they're lying all the time, the more they seem to be more comfortable with it. [01:11:56.400 --> 01:12:06.400] And it's the other people around me that wouldn't accept that, but they're beginning to. [01:12:06.400 --> 01:12:10.400] So I'm getting more encouraged. [01:12:10.400 --> 01:12:12.400] So do you have any groups there in Ohio? [01:12:12.400 --> 01:12:17.400] Well, we've got some 9-12 groups. [01:12:17.400 --> 01:12:24.400] There are more, and I'm not picking on anybody in particular, but they're more of a politically motivated, [01:12:24.400 --> 01:12:28.400] and I'm not selling my school or anything of that nature. [01:12:28.400 --> 01:12:35.400] I'm trying to get people more of a judicial suing mindset, and I'm having a very difficult time with that over here. [01:12:35.400 --> 01:12:39.400] People just think that it's like blasphemy or something. [01:12:39.400 --> 01:12:46.400] I'm in a suit now in federal court against the county and the sheriff's department and so forth on a bad-faced stop, [01:12:46.400 --> 01:12:52.400] but it's really frustrating in my county. [01:12:52.400 --> 01:12:57.400] I've talked to probably 50 or 60 people, and I've asked them, [01:12:57.400 --> 01:13:00.400] well, how do you feel about citizens suing this or suing that? [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:10.400] And they all turn into – I just can't explain it. It's like I'm speaking blasphemy. [01:13:10.400 --> 01:13:11.400] That's the best way I can put it. [01:13:11.400 --> 01:13:13.400] Get your water tested. [01:13:13.400 --> 01:13:15.400] You're frightening them. [01:13:15.400 --> 01:13:17.400] Yeah. [01:13:17.400 --> 01:13:20.400] But that's okay. [01:13:20.400 --> 01:13:27.400] They will see you doing this this month, and then they'll see you again next month and then the month after that. [01:13:27.400 --> 01:13:32.400] And you did this thing that terrifies them. [01:13:32.400 --> 01:13:34.400] And you're still here? [01:13:34.400 --> 01:13:35.400] Yeah. [01:13:35.400 --> 01:13:43.400] In the town I'm from, everybody that knew me knew my days were numbered. [01:13:43.400 --> 01:13:44.400] I would meet people. [01:13:44.400 --> 01:13:47.400] I have one really great friend. [01:13:47.400 --> 01:13:51.400] She used to have the convenience store, and I hadn't seen her in a couple years. [01:13:51.400 --> 01:13:57.400] And I went into a restaurant she had bought in Decatur, Texas, about 10 miles from where I was. [01:13:57.400 --> 01:14:04.400] I walked in, and she looked at me and said, oh, my God, you're not dead yet. [01:14:04.400 --> 01:14:10.400] Oh, well, no, not yet. [01:14:10.400 --> 01:14:14.400] We try to keep closed tabs on them anyway. [01:14:14.400 --> 01:14:22.400] People in this condition, you can't expect to just go turn them around all at once. [01:14:22.400 --> 01:14:23.400] Yeah. [01:14:23.400 --> 01:14:25.400] It's like a herd of cattle. [01:14:25.400 --> 01:14:27.400] You're not going to just turn them. [01:14:27.400 --> 01:14:31.400] You've got to kind of nudge them and then nudge them again. [01:14:31.400 --> 01:14:43.400] And when I try to wake people up, I try to give them a little germ of a piece of information and then go away and let that germ settle. [01:14:43.400 --> 01:14:52.400] I just mentioned one that I did in Fort Lauderdale when I was talking to Melvin Perkins, the head U.S. attorney, I'm sorry, head U.S. [01:14:52.400 --> 01:14:55.400] marshal in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. [01:14:55.400 --> 01:15:03.400] I asked him, you know, he really wasn't into all this conspiracy theories, nonsense. [01:15:03.400 --> 01:15:04.400] I said, me neither. [01:15:04.400 --> 01:15:05.400] That's all a bunch of crap. [01:15:05.400 --> 01:15:07.400] I just got one question. [01:15:07.400 --> 01:15:12.400] What was Zachariah Massowee doing, registered in the same motel as Terri Perkins? [01:15:12.400 --> 01:15:16.400] The motel is Terry McVeigh on the day of the J.P. [01:15:16.400 --> 01:15:18.400] Murrow building bombing. [01:15:18.400 --> 01:15:23.400] And he just stood there and stared at me for about 45 seconds. [01:15:23.400 --> 01:15:27.400] Then he said, are you sure about that? [01:15:27.400 --> 01:15:30.400] I'm sure about that. [01:15:30.400 --> 01:15:34.400] And he turned and walked away. [01:15:34.400 --> 01:15:40.400] But I knew, you know, that's going to sit there and fester. [01:15:40.400 --> 01:15:43.400] I couldn't get him to admit at that time. [01:15:43.400 --> 01:15:50.400] You know, if I had oppressed him at that time, what I would have forced him to do was resist. [01:15:50.400 --> 01:15:56.400] So I simply tried to lay down a seed and then leave it alone. [01:15:56.400 --> 01:16:00.400] If I say it, it can be a lie. [01:16:00.400 --> 01:16:06.400] But if I can get you to come to that conclusion on your own, that's true. [01:16:06.400 --> 01:16:09.400] So I tend not to press people too hard. [01:16:09.400 --> 01:16:13.400] We just lay it out there and give them opportunity. [01:16:13.400 --> 01:16:15.400] And you come back and lay a little more and give them opportunity, [01:16:15.400 --> 01:16:19.400] I think you'll be surprised, especially with the coming hard times. [01:16:19.400 --> 01:16:24.400] Yeah, Randy is the only guy I know that treats patriotism like it's a virus. [01:16:24.400 --> 01:16:26.400] Getting just a little. [01:16:26.400 --> 01:16:28.400] When they get sick enough of it, they'll catch more. [01:16:28.400 --> 01:16:30.400] Yes. [01:16:30.400 --> 01:16:33.400] Well, I'm looking for it to go viral. [01:16:33.400 --> 01:16:35.400] I've been spreading it. [01:16:35.400 --> 01:16:37.400] It's beginning to catch on. [01:16:37.400 --> 01:16:40.400] It's pretty thick, but okay. [01:16:40.400 --> 01:16:42.400] All right, folks, we're about to go to break. [01:16:42.400 --> 01:16:44.400] This is Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton. [01:16:44.400 --> 01:16:46.400] Deborah Stevens has a night off. [01:16:46.400 --> 01:16:50.400] We will get right back and continue our calls after these messages. [01:16:50.400 --> 01:16:52.400] I appreciate it, guys. [01:16:52.400 --> 01:16:53.400] Yes, sir. [01:16:53.400 --> 01:16:54.400] Do you want to hang on to the other break? [01:16:54.400 --> 01:16:55.400] Yeah, I could. [01:16:55.400 --> 01:16:59.400] Okay. [01:16:59.400 --> 01:17:03.400] Do you feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:17:03.400 --> 01:17:07.400] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:17:07.400 --> 01:17:12.400] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:17:12.400 --> 01:17:15.400] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:17:15.400 --> 01:17:18.400] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:17:18.400 --> 01:17:24.400] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. [01:17:24.400 --> 01:17:29.400] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [01:17:29.400 --> 01:17:35.400] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other poxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [01:17:35.400 --> 01:17:42.400] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:17:42.400 --> 01:17:49.400] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [01:17:49.400 --> 01:17:54.400] or visit them at 1904Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:17:54.400 --> 01:17:57.400] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:17:57.400 --> 01:17:59.400] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:18:28.400 --> 01:18:32.400] All right, folks, we're back. [01:18:32.400 --> 01:18:34.400] It's Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton. [01:18:34.400 --> 01:18:36.400] Everybody has a night off. [01:18:36.400 --> 01:18:40.400] One more time, I want to remind you all about the DoubleTree Hotel in Austin [01:18:40.400 --> 01:18:46.400] for the Architects and Engineers for 9-11 Truth press conference and seminar. [01:18:46.400 --> 01:18:48.400] Please go out and support them. [01:18:48.400 --> 01:18:51.400] The event starts at 1 o'clock and lasts until 9 p.m. [01:18:51.400 --> 01:18:57.400] Alex Jones will be the first speaker up at 1 15, followed by Ron Avery at 1 45. [01:18:57.400 --> 01:19:02.400] 6505 North I-35, please come out and support these folks. [01:19:02.400 --> 01:19:08.400] They have put a lot of time and effort into researching what really happened to the buildings on 9-11. [01:19:08.400 --> 01:19:14.400] They can prove that these things could not have happened the way the official story wants us to believe. [01:19:14.400 --> 01:19:18.400] Please give these people your best support and effort. [01:19:18.400 --> 01:19:24.400] They've worked very hard to get us this information, so please go out and support them. [01:19:24.400 --> 01:19:26.400] All right, Randy, let's get back to our caller. [01:19:26.400 --> 01:19:30.400] Okay, Craig, do you have another question or comment? [01:19:30.400 --> 01:19:38.400] Yeah, mentioning how the buildings come down on 9-11 and so forth, I have to apologize. [01:19:38.400 --> 01:19:41.400] I tend to be very cynical and hateful. [01:19:41.400 --> 01:19:46.400] You'd have to almost be a moron not to believe that the buildings coming down the way they did [01:19:46.400 --> 01:19:49.400] wasn't done through demolition. [01:19:49.400 --> 01:19:55.400] If you could just watch the Discovery Channel the last 20 years, [01:19:55.400 --> 01:19:59.400] they've showed it repeatedly how buildings are done and so forth. [01:19:59.400 --> 01:20:04.400] Up until that point, it was kind of weird for me because I didn't see as many shows [01:20:04.400 --> 01:20:07.400] dealing with them taking down buildings. [01:20:07.400 --> 01:20:14.400] But you'd almost have to be a nigger and just completely refuse to even consider the possibility [01:20:14.400 --> 01:20:18.400] that those wasn't demoed down or, you know... [01:20:18.400 --> 01:20:25.400] Okay, we've got to understand when you talk to somebody and they just cut you off, [01:20:25.400 --> 01:20:29.400] that's more than just the issue. [01:20:29.400 --> 01:20:35.400] You know, if you talk about a tractor having a particular problem, [01:20:35.400 --> 01:20:39.400] you don't have people getting absolutely incredulous. [01:20:39.400 --> 01:20:42.400] They deal with it logically and reasonably. [01:20:42.400 --> 01:20:47.400] When people won't deal with an issue logically and reasonably, [01:20:47.400 --> 01:20:50.400] I take that as a good sign. [01:20:50.400 --> 01:20:51.400] Let me give you an example. [01:20:51.400 --> 01:20:59.400] I had a friend whose son was into devil worship and he was just beside himself. [01:20:59.400 --> 01:21:04.400] I said, Johnny, relax. He's 16. [01:21:04.400 --> 01:21:08.400] Anything you don't like, he likes. [01:21:08.400 --> 01:21:14.400] It's better that him be into devil worship than being agnostic. [01:21:14.400 --> 01:21:18.400] He has to believe in God to profess to follow the devil. [01:21:18.400 --> 01:21:21.400] All you're going to do is flick him back over. [01:21:21.400 --> 01:21:24.400] You start pushing, stop pushing, he'll come back. [01:21:24.400 --> 01:21:27.400] And that's exactly what happened. [01:21:27.400 --> 01:21:33.400] You're talking to somebody that has a really strong reaction and slam shut, [01:21:33.400 --> 01:21:36.400] they already know. [01:21:36.400 --> 01:21:37.400] Yeah. [01:21:37.400 --> 01:21:42.400] They know already they're just stuck in cognitive dissonance. [01:21:42.400 --> 01:21:46.400] So what you do with them is just give them a piece. [01:21:46.400 --> 01:21:50.400] Ask them a reasonable question. [01:21:50.400 --> 01:21:55.400] Where in the heck did all of that military-grade thermite come from [01:21:55.400 --> 01:21:58.400] in all of the dust samples? [01:21:58.400 --> 01:22:00.400] Really? I didn't know that. [01:22:00.400 --> 01:22:08.400] And how was it that this BBC broadcaster reported that the Building 7 [01:22:08.400 --> 01:22:13.400] had collapsed 45 minutes before it did? [01:22:13.400 --> 01:22:15.400] Strange how she'd do that. [01:22:15.400 --> 01:22:20.400] Now, when it happened in Texas that they were doing the lottery, [01:22:20.400 --> 01:22:29.400] that they printed in a newspaper the lottery numbers four hours before they picked them. [01:22:29.400 --> 01:22:33.400] Now, everybody was saying that they cheated. [01:22:33.400 --> 01:22:39.400] People didn't say, oh, no, no, no, no, it didn't happen that way, it didn't happen. [01:22:39.400 --> 01:22:44.400] So for people to slam shut this way, they already know. [01:22:44.400 --> 01:22:47.400] They just haven't worked through their cognitive dissonance. [01:22:47.400 --> 01:22:52.400] They'll go hide from it because the implications are just too horrible. [01:22:52.400 --> 01:22:53.400] Right. [01:22:53.400 --> 01:22:56.400] They know it's true. [01:22:56.400 --> 01:23:03.400] And I guarantee you, as the economy tanks, [01:23:03.400 --> 01:23:10.400] all of this cognitive dissonance is going to turn into rage. [01:23:10.400 --> 01:23:14.400] And I think our government knows that. [01:23:14.400 --> 01:23:20.400] So for us that are trying to wake people up, be patient with them. [01:23:20.400 --> 01:23:23.400] Well, I have to learn new skills on that. [01:23:23.400 --> 01:23:24.400] Say that again? [01:23:24.400 --> 01:23:29.400] I, myself, I have to kind of calm down myself a little bit, [01:23:29.400 --> 01:23:34.400] not necessarily that I'm in a rant, just I have to, I guess, I don't know, [01:23:34.400 --> 01:23:37.400] just kind of have new and more skills on that area, I guess, [01:23:37.400 --> 01:23:43.400] because you're right, I've experienced that so much and had such bad reaction to that. [01:23:43.400 --> 01:23:45.400] See, you're past the cognitive dissonance. [01:23:45.400 --> 01:23:48.400] You're into rage. [01:23:48.400 --> 01:23:51.400] That's what they're going to do. [01:23:51.400 --> 01:23:56.400] And I wouldn't want to be a government official when this does go viral [01:23:56.400 --> 01:24:00.400] and it's going that direction. [01:24:00.400 --> 01:24:02.400] It's, you know, this hasn't went away. [01:24:02.400 --> 01:24:04.400] They haven't been able to make it go away. [01:24:04.400 --> 01:24:06.400] It's steady picking up steam. [01:24:06.400 --> 01:24:12.400] And I hear people objecting more strongly than ever to it. [01:24:12.400 --> 01:24:15.400] At first, people just, nah, that's a bunch of crap. [01:24:15.400 --> 01:24:17.400] Now, I don't want to hear it. [01:24:17.400 --> 01:24:18.400] I don't want to hear it. [01:24:18.400 --> 01:24:20.400] Don't even mention that to me. [01:24:20.400 --> 01:24:27.400] And that tells me they already know that it's just you're asking me to give up [01:24:27.400 --> 01:24:31.400] everything I've believed and accepted all my life. [01:24:31.400 --> 01:24:34.400] It's too costly. [01:24:34.400 --> 01:24:38.400] And if you're doing good, life is easy. [01:24:38.400 --> 01:24:42.400] It's easy enough to not see it. [01:24:42.400 --> 01:24:46.400] But all of that's changing. [01:24:46.400 --> 01:24:48.400] So I'm encouraged. [01:24:48.400 --> 01:24:50.400] In a way, I'm encouraged. [01:24:50.400 --> 01:24:55.400] I'm encouraged in as much as if we're going to fix this problem, [01:24:55.400 --> 01:25:00.400] the American people are going to have to get up off of their behinds. [01:25:00.400 --> 01:25:09.400] And the only way you're going to get them up off of their behinds is to sting them good. [01:25:09.400 --> 01:25:14.400] You know, it's not that I want the American people to have a difficult time, [01:25:14.400 --> 01:25:22.400] but sometimes it's necessary, and this is one of those times. [01:25:22.400 --> 01:25:24.400] A little pain would be good for all of us. [01:25:24.400 --> 01:25:26.400] Yeah. [01:25:26.400 --> 01:25:34.400] My mother, when she talks about the depression, you know, she, [01:25:34.400 --> 01:25:36.400] one time I mentioned the good old days. [01:25:36.400 --> 01:25:39.400] She said, don't tell me about good old days. [01:25:39.400 --> 01:25:43.400] There was nothing good about those old days. [01:25:43.400 --> 01:25:50.400] But then, you know, she's 85 now, and she has mentioned from time to time [01:25:50.400 --> 01:25:56.400] how these kids just have it too easy. [01:25:56.400 --> 01:26:02.400] They don't understand how to do things, how to take care of themselves [01:26:02.400 --> 01:26:04.400] because they've had it too easy. [01:26:04.400 --> 01:26:08.400] She realizes that even though it was difficult, [01:26:08.400 --> 01:26:16.400] it made her and her whole generation much, much stronger. [01:26:16.400 --> 01:26:17.400] So hang on, guys. [01:26:17.400 --> 01:26:21.400] It's going to be a bumpy ride, but it's not the end of the world, [01:26:21.400 --> 01:26:27.400] all this stuff about 2012 being the end of the world. [01:26:27.400 --> 01:26:30.400] That's not what the Incas maintain. [01:26:30.400 --> 01:26:33.400] It's not what the Indians have always said. [01:26:33.400 --> 01:26:36.400] It's an end of an epoch. [01:26:36.400 --> 01:26:41.400] The world as we know it will change, but the world won't end. [01:26:41.400 --> 01:26:44.400] We'll just be doing things differently. [01:26:44.400 --> 01:26:45.400] Well, that's interesting. [01:26:45.400 --> 01:26:47.400] You raised that 2012. [01:26:47.400 --> 01:26:52.400] There's a website called reformthecalendar.org. [01:26:52.400 --> 01:26:59.400] There's a big move for 2012 for this group of people. [01:26:59.400 --> 01:27:03.400] They're moving to change the Gregorian calendar. [01:27:03.400 --> 01:27:06.400] So there is a calendar move here in the United States. [01:27:06.400 --> 01:27:11.400] They're predicting that 2012 will be their day. [01:27:11.400 --> 01:27:15.400] I've been watching that very closely, seeing how that's coming out. [01:27:15.400 --> 01:27:18.400] What, do they want to start at 1 again? [01:27:18.400 --> 01:27:21.400] I don't know what they're talking at. [01:27:21.400 --> 01:27:23.400] One article says they want to add a 13th month, [01:27:23.400 --> 01:27:29.400] and then they want to make it 360 instead of a 365-point-something number. [01:27:29.400 --> 01:27:33.400] Ah, you know, there's an interesting thing about that. [01:27:33.400 --> 01:27:38.400] There's a book called Worlds in Collision by Emanuel Wolkowski. [01:27:38.400 --> 01:27:43.400] Einstein had it on his coffee table when he passed away. [01:27:43.400 --> 01:27:49.400] And in it, he talks about major cataclysms, [01:27:49.400 --> 01:27:58.400] and he suggests that the things that happened at the time of the exorcism of the Jews from Egypt [01:27:58.400 --> 01:28:01.400] was the result of a large comet entering the solar system [01:28:01.400 --> 01:28:06.400] or a large portion of matter erupting from the surface of Jupiter, [01:28:06.400 --> 01:28:08.400] passing through the solar system a number of times, [01:28:08.400 --> 01:28:11.400] having a number of near-misses with the Earth, [01:28:11.400 --> 01:28:16.400] and then a close encounter which rolled the Earth over in its axis [01:28:16.400 --> 01:28:18.400] and pushed it into a different orbit. [01:28:18.400 --> 01:28:23.400] What he maintains is that prior to the exit of the Jews from Egypt, [01:28:23.400 --> 01:28:29.400] the year was 360 days long. [01:28:29.400 --> 01:28:34.400] The lunar period was exactly 30 days. [01:28:34.400 --> 01:28:42.400] And all of the texts prior to this time reference the sun rising in the east and setting in the west, [01:28:42.400 --> 01:28:47.400] and that after this cataclysm, that this body came so close to the Earth [01:28:47.400 --> 01:28:51.400] that it grabbed a crust of the Earth and rolled us over. [01:28:51.400 --> 01:28:53.400] So the Earth is still spinning in the same direction, [01:28:53.400 --> 01:28:59.400] but it flipped us over so the sun appears to rise in the east and set in the west. [01:28:59.400 --> 01:29:04.400] Instead of the opposite, the year is 365 plus, [01:29:04.400 --> 01:29:07.400] and the lunar period is 30 days plus. [01:29:07.400 --> 01:29:11.400] It's not exactly 30 days anymore. [01:29:11.400 --> 01:29:14.400] Things may not be the way we think it is. [01:29:14.400 --> 01:29:25.400] And frankly, in the end, Wolokiewski was wrong because the geology did not support his hypothesis. [01:29:25.400 --> 01:29:30.400] But it was very interesting reading the hypothesis [01:29:30.400 --> 01:29:35.400] because the history appeared to support a whole different story. [01:29:35.400 --> 01:29:39.400] So things may not be the way we think it is. [01:29:39.400 --> 01:29:44.400] Maybe they are, but it's interesting to think about. [01:29:44.400 --> 01:29:47.400] Just let us up to break with a bunch of dribble. [01:29:47.400 --> 01:29:49.400] You want to hang on, Craig? [01:29:49.400 --> 01:29:50.400] Yeah. [01:29:50.400 --> 01:29:53.400] Okay, we've got one more call. [01:29:53.400 --> 01:29:54.400] We'll be back. [01:29:54.400 --> 01:29:58.400] Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Debra Steven has the night off. [01:29:58.400 --> 01:30:10.400] We'll be right back. [01:30:28.400 --> 01:30:51.400] We'll be right back. [01:30:51.400 --> 01:31:01.400] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:31:21.400 --> 01:31:48.400] Thank you. [01:31:48.400 --> 01:31:59.400] Hi, folks. [01:31:59.400 --> 01:32:00.400] We've got a half hour left. [01:32:00.400 --> 01:32:02.400] This is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton. [01:32:02.400 --> 01:32:06.400] Debra Steven has the night off. [01:32:06.400 --> 01:32:10.400] I'd like to take this time for more time to talk about architects and engineers from 9-11 Truth. [01:32:10.400 --> 01:32:17.400] Press conference and seminar Saturday at the Double Tree Hotel in Austin, 6505 North I-35. [01:32:17.400 --> 01:32:19.400] Please come out and support these folks. [01:32:19.400 --> 01:32:21.400] They put a lot of time and effort into this. [01:32:21.400 --> 01:32:23.400] All right, Randy. [01:32:23.400 --> 01:32:26.400] Okay, you had another question or comment. [01:32:26.400 --> 01:32:27.400] We need to kind of move on. [01:32:27.400 --> 01:32:29.400] Deloitte has been waiting quite a while. [01:32:29.400 --> 01:32:30.400] Okay, yeah, real quick. [01:32:30.400 --> 01:32:36.400] Over here in Creshock, Ohio, what's been happening over here is I wanted to get to this quick and then I got to go. [01:32:36.400 --> 01:32:43.400] But what's going on over here is we've got – I've identified one private organization [01:32:43.400 --> 01:32:53.400] and I've identified law enforcement, undercover law enforcement doing illegal sneak and peeks, if you will, [01:32:53.400 --> 01:33:00.400] or illegal surveillance and they've been breaking into homes and businesses and so forth like that. [01:33:00.400 --> 01:33:06.400] I've had somebody close to the executive branch in this county that's real credible [01:33:06.400 --> 01:33:09.400] and I won't say their names tell me these things. [01:33:09.400 --> 01:33:14.400] And they said that we have massive intelligence gathering organizations [01:33:14.400 --> 01:33:19.400] and that they were using private organizations to do this. [01:33:19.400 --> 01:33:25.400] Now, that's what we're experiencing here in Ohio or at least around these county areas. [01:33:25.400 --> 01:33:26.400] And I see that quite a bit. [01:33:26.400 --> 01:33:31.400] And I've actually – once you start understanding that, that that's possible, [01:33:31.400 --> 01:33:36.400] then you start to look for, well, what are the signs or elements of this thing? [01:33:36.400 --> 01:33:42.400] So I don't know if that's happening there, but it's happening real bad over here. [01:33:42.400 --> 01:33:47.400] And now we've got people that are taking pictures and filming these guys. [01:33:47.400 --> 01:33:54.400] So I think that they're also doing illegal wiretaps, which is common. [01:33:54.400 --> 01:33:56.400] I think that's pretty common over here too. [01:33:56.400 --> 01:33:58.400] But, you know, we can't – we haven't proven it yet. [01:33:58.400 --> 01:34:00.400] This is all rhetoric. [01:34:00.400 --> 01:34:06.400] So I have information that the Feds are supplying local police officers [01:34:06.400 --> 01:34:13.400] with high-tech surveillance equipment so that they will share their information with the Feds. [01:34:13.400 --> 01:34:15.400] Say that again now. [01:34:15.400 --> 01:34:21.400] Said I have information that the Feds are supplying local police law enforcement agencies [01:34:21.400 --> 01:34:26.400] with illegal wiretapping and surveillance equipment on the condition [01:34:26.400 --> 01:34:31.400] that they share their information with the Feds. [01:34:31.400 --> 01:34:40.400] We really need to declare gold and silver as legal tender in the states [01:34:40.400 --> 01:34:46.400] and throw the Feds out along with their green dollars. [01:34:46.400 --> 01:34:47.400] Okay, we need to move along. [01:34:47.400 --> 01:34:48.400] We've got a couple more callers. [01:34:48.400 --> 01:34:56.400] I've got Deloitte and – I'm trying to do two things at once here. [01:34:56.400 --> 01:35:00.400] And at my age, I'm not good at that. [01:35:00.400 --> 01:35:03.400] Okay, Deloitte, I got you unmuted. [01:35:03.400 --> 01:35:04.400] Are you there? [01:35:04.400 --> 01:35:06.400] Yeah, can you hear me? [01:35:06.400 --> 01:35:07.400] Good. [01:35:07.400 --> 01:35:09.400] Okay, you got a question or comment? [01:35:09.400 --> 01:35:15.400] Yeah, I wanted to update everybody on my little drama that's going on here in Coeur d'Alene. [01:35:15.400 --> 01:35:25.400] For those who don't know me or know what's happened, on May 15th of 2008 I was paid seven times [01:35:25.400 --> 01:35:31.400] and taken to jail because the excuse they used was I didn't have a headlight on my bicycle. [01:35:31.400 --> 01:35:37.400] And I eventually pled guilty to disturbing the peace, loud and unusual noise, [01:35:37.400 --> 01:35:41.400] and all the felonies that they slapped on me went away. [01:35:41.400 --> 01:35:49.400] On February 20th of 2009, I filed a RICO case against the city of Coeur d'Alene, [01:35:49.400 --> 01:35:53.400] their police department, nine of their officers. [01:35:53.400 --> 01:36:02.400] And for the past two or three months, I've been harassed by the grass cops. [01:36:02.400 --> 01:36:06.400] They don't like my vehicles, and they don't like my yard, [01:36:06.400 --> 01:36:11.400] and they said that they've got somebody that's complaining about it. [01:36:11.400 --> 01:36:19.400] And so on March 1st, they came over and stole three of my vehicles. [01:36:19.400 --> 01:36:24.400] They claimed that they were abandoned, and I was out there, and I refused that. [01:36:24.400 --> 01:36:27.400] And they said, well, we're towing them. [01:36:27.400 --> 01:36:32.400] And they towed them, and it took a minimum of eight armed officers [01:36:32.400 --> 01:36:38.400] to make sure that I didn't stop the tow truck driver from taking my property. [01:36:38.400 --> 01:36:45.400] One of the officers had an automatic assault rifle on him, [01:36:45.400 --> 01:36:50.400] although I never saw that one pointed at me, but that's what happened that day. [01:36:50.400 --> 01:36:52.400] They came back two days later. [01:36:52.400 --> 01:37:00.400] Oh, they put a 48-hour parking ticket on one of my other private conveyances, [01:37:00.400 --> 01:37:06.400] and they came back two days later and took it, plus a trailer that was hooked to it [01:37:06.400 --> 01:37:10.400] with a truck that was on the bed of the trailer. [01:37:10.400 --> 01:37:15.400] So there's a little procedure you have to go through. [01:37:15.400 --> 01:37:20.400] They call it a post-storage hearing. [01:37:20.400 --> 01:37:27.400] And I went to – I sent off the letter and everything and got a phone call [01:37:27.400 --> 01:37:31.400] and set up an appointment for 10 o'clock the next day. [01:37:31.400 --> 01:37:33.400] And I went down to the police station. [01:37:33.400 --> 01:37:41.400] Now, the people who take the equipment appoint somebody within their same agency [01:37:41.400 --> 01:37:44.400] to conduct the hearing. [01:37:44.400 --> 01:37:46.400] Well, I went in there. [01:37:46.400 --> 01:37:49.400] I was sitting in the lobby, and I'd been there for a couple of minutes, [01:37:49.400 --> 01:37:56.400] and an officer walks in and addresses me and says, show me your driver's license. [01:37:56.400 --> 01:38:00.400] And, of course, I haven't had a driver's license for years. [01:38:00.400 --> 01:38:04.400] So he ended up writing me a ticket for not having a driver's license, [01:38:04.400 --> 01:38:08.400] told me I couldn't drive the truck out of the parking lot, [01:38:08.400 --> 01:38:13.400] and then they stationed an officer out there on the street just waiting for me to pull out. [01:38:13.400 --> 01:38:18.400] And while I was sitting in the truck waiting for somebody to come and pick me up, [01:38:18.400 --> 01:38:24.400] here comes this great, big, beautiful black shiny with two gold stripes down the side [01:38:24.400 --> 01:38:30.400] Vietnam-era helicopter circled around the top of the police station [01:38:30.400 --> 01:38:36.400] and then took off to the east, which is the direction I would have had to have went to go home. [01:38:36.400 --> 01:38:40.400] And the hearing didn't go very well. [01:38:40.400 --> 01:38:45.400] They don't like listening to definitions of words, [01:38:45.400 --> 01:38:51.400] and they don't like it when somebody points out that they don't follow their own rule book. [01:38:51.400 --> 01:38:54.400] I don't think that that went very well. [01:38:54.400 --> 01:39:01.400] And so I think they're going to – they undervalued all of my equipment under $200 [01:39:01.400 --> 01:39:09.400] so that they can sidestep several of the statutes or several of the codes [01:39:09.400 --> 01:39:15.400] that protect people from having their property stolen and disposed of quickly. [01:39:15.400 --> 01:39:21.400] And I called 911 on the 1st. [01:39:21.400 --> 01:39:26.400] On March 1st, when they was here, I called 911 to report an armed robbery. [01:39:26.400 --> 01:39:29.400] And they said, well, talk to the city police. They're there. [01:39:29.400 --> 01:39:31.400] And I said, they're the robbers. [01:39:31.400 --> 01:39:34.400] Well, I got nowhere with that. [01:39:34.400 --> 01:39:41.400] On the 3rd, I called 911 again, and I said, you know, I'm being robbed. [01:39:41.400 --> 01:39:42.400] They've got guns. [01:39:42.400 --> 01:39:48.400] And on the 3rd, there was actually – I believe that I saw a man with a high-powered rifle [01:39:48.400 --> 01:39:54.400] laying down across the hood of a car that was in an alley up the street from me. [01:39:54.400 --> 01:40:01.400] And I called 911 and reported the robbery, and they took the truck, [01:40:01.400 --> 01:40:06.400] and then the cops stayed around for about 5, 10 minutes. [01:40:06.400 --> 01:40:09.400] And I was talking to an attorney on the phone, and I went back outside, [01:40:09.400 --> 01:40:12.400] and they're still out there, and then they started walking towards me. [01:40:12.400 --> 01:40:15.400] I figured they were coming to arrest me for something. [01:40:15.400 --> 01:40:23.400] But he handed me a ticket for making a false 911 call. [01:40:23.400 --> 01:40:26.400] How does that sound to you? [01:40:26.400 --> 01:40:32.400] Have you – you need to file an amended RICO complaint [01:40:32.400 --> 01:40:40.400] and petition for a restraining order from the federal court. Did you file in the federal? [01:40:40.400 --> 01:40:46.400] The summary judgment – the motion for summary judgment is set for the 7th of April. [01:40:46.400 --> 01:40:49.400] For you or against you? [01:40:49.400 --> 01:40:53.400] Against them. My RICO action against them. [01:40:53.400 --> 01:40:58.400] They have motion for a summary judgment. The defense has. [01:40:58.400 --> 01:41:01.400] Okay. Have you answered the motion? [01:41:01.400 --> 01:41:04.400] Yeah. Yeah, the answer was in a couple months ago, I believe. [01:41:04.400 --> 01:41:09.400] Okay. You might consider filing an amended petition naming these guys [01:41:09.400 --> 01:41:13.400] and petition for a restraining order. [01:41:13.400 --> 01:41:19.400] Accused them of retaliation and tampering with a witness. [01:41:19.400 --> 01:41:26.400] They're attempting to obstruct justice by intimidating a witness in a RICO suit. [01:41:26.400 --> 01:41:38.400] Yeah, I've been looking at the statutes, and that covers – it covers witnesses, victims, and informants, is the way it's worded. [01:41:38.400 --> 01:41:42.400] And, you know, I went in and talked to my attorney about it, [01:41:42.400 --> 01:41:48.400] and it just didn't seem like he was too interested in doing something like that. [01:41:48.400 --> 01:41:54.400] I'm kind of of the impression right now that they either want to kill me [01:41:54.400 --> 01:42:02.400] or they want to put me in jail, or they know that I've got the wrong judge and the fix is in, [01:42:02.400 --> 01:42:10.400] and they're just setting me up so that when the date comes and goes, then they can open up the guns on me. [01:42:10.400 --> 01:42:13.400] I think I am being attacked by these people. [01:42:13.400 --> 01:42:18.400] I can't believe what's going on, but there's just so much evidence to indicate that that's what's going on. [01:42:18.400 --> 01:42:21.400] Have you filed criminal charges against them? [01:42:21.400 --> 01:42:24.400] Yes. [01:42:24.400 --> 01:42:28.400] Not separate from the RICO action, no, but I'm preparing to do such. [01:42:28.400 --> 01:42:34.400] You might want to get those filed, and if you can find an agency outside of your local area, [01:42:34.400 --> 01:42:44.400] like a state policing agency or attorney general somewhere else, that you can file outside their little circle. [01:42:44.400 --> 01:42:53.400] If you can bring heat in on them from somewhere else, they're less likely to be quite so aggressive. [01:42:53.400 --> 01:42:57.400] I guarantee you, they are aggressive. They are very aggressive. [01:42:57.400 --> 01:43:05.400] We've got a bunch of them California cops up here, and you get some of them idiots from Los Angeles, [01:43:05.400 --> 01:43:12.400] and all they've got to do is look around and see if there's anybody looking, and they'll pop you off. That's it. [01:43:12.400 --> 01:43:19.400] I mean, these are very aggressive, ignorant little. I won't finish that statement. [01:43:19.400 --> 01:43:24.400] Okay, we're about to go to break. Have you got some more for the other side? [01:43:24.400 --> 01:43:31.400] Well, if you want to go ahead and give me some ideas, then we can go from there. [01:43:31.400 --> 01:43:36.400] I actually just wanted to tell the story so that people know what's going on up here. [01:43:36.400 --> 01:43:42.400] Okay, then we'll address it a little on the other side, and then we'll go to Dan from Connecticut. [01:43:42.400 --> 01:43:43.400] Okay, thanks a lot. [01:43:43.400 --> 01:43:44.400] Thank you, Deloitte. [01:43:44.400 --> 01:43:46.400] Bye-bye. [01:43:46.400 --> 01:43:51.400] Okay, Randy Kelton, Eddie Stevens, Debra Craig. [01:43:51.400 --> 01:43:59.400] Let's see, Debra Craig and Eddie. Oh, forget it. We'll be right back. [01:43:59.400 --> 01:44:04.400] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:44:04.400 --> 01:44:08.400] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:44:08.400 --> 01:44:13.400] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:44:13.400 --> 01:44:19.400] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:44:19.400 --> 01:44:25.400] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:44:25.400 --> 01:44:28.400] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:44:28.400 --> 01:44:32.400] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:32.400 --> 01:44:37.400] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:37.400 --> 01:44:39.400] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:39.400 --> 01:44:45.400] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [01:44:45.400 --> 01:44:48.400] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:44:48.400 --> 01:45:02.400] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email michaelmears at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:45:19.400 --> 01:45:24.400] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:45:24.400 --> 01:45:28.400] Some things I realize fully. [01:45:28.400 --> 01:45:33.400] Somebody's gonna police a policeman. [01:45:33.400 --> 01:45:36.400] Somebody's gonna police a bully. [01:45:36.400 --> 01:45:41.400] There's always a room at the top of the hill. [01:45:41.400 --> 01:45:46.400] I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely there too. [01:45:46.400 --> 01:45:50.400] They're wishing they'd welcome all that opposition to fail. [01:45:50.400 --> 01:45:55.400] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. [01:45:55.400 --> 01:45:58.400] Alright everybody, this is Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton. [01:45:58.400 --> 01:46:00.400] Debra Stevens has the night off. [01:46:00.400 --> 01:46:02.400] We are in our final segment. [01:46:02.400 --> 01:46:05.400] So anybody that's got a call in, better make it quick. [01:46:05.400 --> 01:46:07.400] You've got 15 minutes left. [01:46:07.400 --> 01:46:12.400] Again, architects and engineers for 9-11 Truth Press Conference and Seminars, [01:46:12.400 --> 01:46:15.400] Saturday at the Double Tree Hotel in Austin. [01:46:15.400 --> 01:46:22.400] That's at 6505 North I-35, starting at 1 o'clock and running until 9 p.m. [01:46:22.400 --> 01:46:27.400] Alex Jones will start talking at 1-15, followed by Ron Avery at 1-45. [01:46:27.400 --> 01:46:30.400] Please go out and support these folks. [01:46:30.400 --> 01:46:32.400] Alright, let's get back with our caller. [01:46:32.400 --> 01:46:41.400] Okay, we were talking to Deloitte and when you go after these guys, they'll tend to come back after you. [01:46:41.400 --> 01:46:47.400] And I don't like to think it, but Deloitte has a good point. [01:46:47.400 --> 01:46:50.400] You know, these guys can really get dangerous. [01:46:50.400 --> 01:46:53.400] So sometimes what we do is iffy. [01:46:53.400 --> 01:47:01.400] But it's been my experience that if you can get higher up past these little guys on the street, [01:47:01.400 --> 01:47:07.400] I always want to get away from the police and get up to the mayors and the district judges. [01:47:07.400 --> 01:47:12.400] That's where I have the most effect and when I start going after those guys, [01:47:12.400 --> 01:47:16.400] these peons on the street want nothing to do with me. [01:47:16.400 --> 01:47:21.400] And I very much try to avoid these guys because they're crazy people out there. [01:47:21.400 --> 01:47:27.400] And it seems like a lot of times the very thing that should, [01:47:27.400 --> 01:47:31.400] the state of mind that should keep someone from being in law enforcement [01:47:31.400 --> 01:47:35.400] is the very state of mind that draws them to it. [01:47:35.400 --> 01:47:41.400] And law enforcement in the last few years seems to be leaning toward the psychopath [01:47:41.400 --> 01:47:45.400] because they'll do anything asked of them without question. [01:47:45.400 --> 01:47:48.400] Especially if it means they get to inflict it upon someone else. [01:47:48.400 --> 01:47:50.400] Yes. [01:47:50.400 --> 01:47:57.400] So we're going to go on to Dan Reel, the real deal. [01:47:57.400 --> 01:47:59.400] Are you there, Dan? [01:47:59.400 --> 01:48:05.400] I am here and, boy, did I have so, oh, so much fun in a courthouse recently [01:48:05.400 --> 01:48:11.400] and it was just infinitely amusing to watch what happened. [01:48:11.400 --> 01:48:13.400] Okay, we got to hear this. [01:48:13.400 --> 01:48:18.400] Okay, anyway, my wife was supposed to be induced on Tuesday [01:48:18.400 --> 01:48:21.400] and I guess the doctors decided this would be a bad time. [01:48:21.400 --> 01:48:27.400] So I figured, you know, what the heck, this guy that I told you about who was in a coma [01:48:27.400 --> 01:48:30.400] and was arrested for failure to appear because he was in a coma, [01:48:30.400 --> 01:48:37.400] well, he had a few motions for a fair trial and he had a few other motions for discovery [01:48:37.400 --> 01:48:40.400] and he also had the Mother of All Brady motions. [01:48:40.400 --> 01:48:45.400] And attached to all the motions for a fair trial was a copy of the hospital discharge papers [01:48:45.400 --> 01:48:49.400] stating that, yes, he was in fact in a coma. [01:48:49.400 --> 01:48:54.400] What happened was, let me just put it to you this way, I was laughing. [01:48:54.400 --> 01:48:57.400] As soon as we left and I said, did you see that? [01:48:57.400 --> 01:49:03.400] But anyway, we went to the clerk and he basically requested a copy of his case [01:49:03.400 --> 01:49:09.400] which the clerk denied and tried to charge him money to get, all three of his cases. [01:49:09.400 --> 01:49:13.400] Two of them were driving wall port. [01:49:13.400 --> 01:49:18.400] And so on top of that, he tried to file his motions which the clerk pretty much said, [01:49:18.400 --> 01:49:20.400] we can't take those. [01:49:20.400 --> 01:49:24.400] Is this funny yet? [01:49:24.400 --> 01:49:27.400] No, but I think it's going to get funny. [01:49:27.400 --> 01:49:29.400] Oh, yes, it will. [01:49:29.400 --> 01:49:35.400] She basically said, well, you've got to go upstairs and give those to the prosecutor. [01:49:35.400 --> 01:49:37.400] And so basically we get there. [01:49:37.400 --> 01:49:41.400] The prosecutor accepted half of them. [01:49:41.400 --> 01:49:46.400] And two of the motions the prosecutor did not accept service of, [01:49:46.400 --> 01:49:49.400] I mean just willful evasion of service, [01:49:49.400 --> 01:49:53.400] two of them were motions for a fair trial on the driving wall port offenses. [01:49:53.400 --> 01:49:59.400] And one of the motions that she did not accept was the mother of all Brady motions. [01:49:59.400 --> 01:50:03.400] Just willfully evaded those. [01:50:03.400 --> 01:50:08.400] I mean I basically said, okay, well, you know, let's go back downstairs and try again. [01:50:08.400 --> 01:50:11.400] But he figured, well, you know, I don't want to push my luck. [01:50:11.400 --> 01:50:14.400] That's when you take security with you. [01:50:14.400 --> 01:50:17.400] Yeah, but I would have done that. [01:50:17.400 --> 01:50:20.400] He was kind of like, yeah, well, you know, we made the point. [01:50:20.400 --> 01:50:22.400] I'm going to court, you know, in April. [01:50:22.400 --> 01:50:25.400] So if it was me, I totally would have done it. [01:50:25.400 --> 01:50:31.400] But, you know, I figured, hey, you know, this is your show. [01:50:31.400 --> 01:50:37.400] But I just figured, you know, that right there was just, I was, you know, [01:50:37.400 --> 01:50:40.400] we went to the courthouse and I was like, did you see that? [01:50:40.400 --> 01:50:43.400] You need to file a bar grievance against that attorney. [01:50:43.400 --> 01:50:47.400] Yeah, that's what I was thinking too. [01:50:47.400 --> 01:50:51.400] And you could file criminal charges against the attorney for denying this guy [01:50:51.400 --> 01:50:56.400] in his right to petition the court for redress and grievance. [01:50:56.400 --> 01:50:57.400] And you're a better one to do it. [01:50:57.400 --> 01:51:00.400] They can't get at you. [01:51:00.400 --> 01:51:03.400] Yeah, this is true and I was right there to see it. [01:51:03.400 --> 01:51:08.400] And unlike what Deloitte's doing where he's dealing with the police on the street, [01:51:08.400 --> 01:51:13.400] dealing with a prosecutor, you don't have those kinds of problems [01:51:13.400 --> 01:51:18.400] because he recognizes his vulnerability. [01:51:18.400 --> 01:51:22.400] And you come after him and when you try to file with a district judge [01:51:22.400 --> 01:51:27.400] and the judge refuses to take it, then you file against the judge, [01:51:27.400 --> 01:51:30.400] oh, it gets them all jumping up and down. [01:51:30.400 --> 01:51:34.400] Yeah, I basically put it to this guy this way and I basically said, [01:51:34.400 --> 01:51:39.400] you're going to get their bass vote. [01:51:39.400 --> 01:51:42.400] Well, if he's willing to stand up for himself, he will. [01:51:42.400 --> 01:51:46.400] But if he keeps letting them get by him like this, he won't. [01:51:46.400 --> 01:51:48.400] He totally is. [01:51:48.400 --> 01:51:52.400] I mean, and the sad part about this is he had a good reason not to be in court. [01:51:52.400 --> 01:51:57.400] And I figured, you know what, let's wait on filing the charges against the clerk [01:51:57.400 --> 01:52:02.400] for not informing the court that this guy was in fact in a coma that day [01:52:02.400 --> 01:52:11.400] because his wife called him, you know, see what else, you know, they kind of do stupid. [01:52:11.400 --> 01:52:13.400] Well, you get too much credit. [01:52:13.400 --> 01:52:18.400] I would have assumed stupid was inherited and gone from there. [01:52:18.400 --> 01:52:25.400] Yeah, you and I both, but unfortunately, I guess the circumstances, this isn't me. [01:52:25.400 --> 01:52:31.400] If you've got a guy that has got bad habits anyway, [01:52:31.400 --> 01:52:39.400] he's probably not a good one to work this with because he has an extra fear of the police [01:52:39.400 --> 01:52:44.400] and he probably has a really good reason to have it. [01:52:44.400 --> 01:52:48.400] Yeah, and the sad part about this is he was totally trying to clean his life up [01:52:48.400 --> 01:52:51.400] and he was actually doing it, you know, and I've witnessed this. [01:52:51.400 --> 01:52:53.400] I mean, otherwise, I wouldn't have even bothered with it. [01:52:53.400 --> 01:52:57.400] But, you know, I mean, he's starting to be proactive, [01:52:57.400 --> 01:53:01.400] which is really good to see because as far as Connecticut goes, [01:53:01.400 --> 01:53:05.400] you're talking one out of a thousand people and, of course, in Connecticut, [01:53:05.400 --> 01:53:09.400] the public defender didn't seem too enthused to really do anything [01:53:09.400 --> 01:53:16.400] because they're going on unpaid furloughs, you know, because the state's running out of money. [01:53:16.400 --> 01:53:18.400] But just file a bar grievance against you. [01:53:18.400 --> 01:53:23.400] Let the public offender know that if he doesn't do his job, [01:53:23.400 --> 01:53:26.400] I'll just file a bar grievance too against you. [01:53:26.400 --> 01:53:31.400] I like that phrase, public offender. [01:53:31.400 --> 01:53:34.400] But, yeah, I figured Eddie would get a kick out of that because I'm thinking, [01:53:34.400 --> 01:53:39.400] you know what, this is a perfect case for a motion for a fair trial. [01:53:39.400 --> 01:53:40.400] Oh, yeah. [01:53:40.400 --> 01:53:45.400] You know, considering that the clerk allowed the warrant to be issued. [01:53:45.400 --> 01:53:49.400] Yeah, you need a tort letter in. [01:53:49.400 --> 01:53:55.400] Yeah, because I know, you know, he's still got concerns and he's, you know, kind of... [01:53:55.400 --> 01:53:59.400] Telling that a tort letter goes to the county. [01:53:59.400 --> 01:54:06.400] Letting the county know, you know, it essentially lets them know that you're preparing to sue them. [01:54:06.400 --> 01:54:12.400] So it gives them opportunity to say, well, let's not give him any more tort action than we can avoid [01:54:12.400 --> 01:54:16.400] because then they'll get the county coming down on them and say, what are you guys doing here? [01:54:16.400 --> 01:54:19.400] Will you really arrest this guy for being in a coma? [01:54:19.400 --> 01:54:21.400] Give me a break. [01:54:21.400 --> 01:54:25.400] They need somebody else looking down their throat. [01:54:25.400 --> 01:54:28.400] And, you know, when you have to answer to your higher up, [01:54:28.400 --> 01:54:36.400] you tend not to go retaliate against the one that got you hollered at the first time [01:54:36.400 --> 01:54:41.400] because the second time is liable to be worse. [01:54:41.400 --> 01:54:46.400] And that would probably be the least offensive way to kind of get them off his case [01:54:46.400 --> 01:54:51.400] and maybe at least get his liberty cleared up. [01:54:51.400 --> 01:54:55.400] Yeah, I mean, I'm kind of looking at it on the other end. [01:54:55.400 --> 01:54:58.400] I mean, he's, you know, obviously still afraid of retaliation. [01:54:58.400 --> 01:55:00.400] I mean, of course, me, I'm not. [01:55:00.400 --> 01:55:04.400] But, you know, I think if I wanted to file a charge against the clerk, [01:55:04.400 --> 01:55:08.400] I'd probably wait until my daughter's born and then say, okay, well, full bore [01:55:08.400 --> 01:55:12.400] because I obviously don't want to miss that. [01:55:12.400 --> 01:55:18.400] Well, see, the thing about filing a criminal complaint is it doesn't really engage you in anything. [01:55:18.400 --> 01:55:21.400] They're not going to do anything with it [01:55:21.400 --> 01:55:26.400] and certainly not going to call a hearing and have you come and testify. [01:55:26.400 --> 01:55:28.400] They're just going to try to make it go away. [01:55:28.400 --> 01:55:33.400] And all that does is give you opportunity to just kick them around all over the place. [01:55:33.400 --> 01:55:36.400] And this would be, you know, would help Deloitte. [01:55:36.400 --> 01:55:41.400] If he went after the prosecutor and the judges, [01:55:41.400 --> 01:55:46.400] if he could ask them to do things they don't want to do, [01:55:46.400 --> 01:55:49.400] then go after the highest judges around. [01:55:49.400 --> 01:55:52.400] These guys don't do that retaliation nonsense [01:55:52.400 --> 01:55:57.400] because they understand how bad that can come back and bite you. [01:55:57.400 --> 01:56:02.400] When I go hammer one of the judges, they don't want anyone even talking to me. [01:56:02.400 --> 01:56:05.400] They don't want anybody doing anything to me. [01:56:05.400 --> 01:56:08.400] You leave him alone. [01:56:08.400 --> 01:56:11.400] If you do something to him, it's going to cause me trouble. [01:56:11.400 --> 01:56:14.400] And these guys tend to be elected. [01:56:14.400 --> 01:56:16.400] They don't need this kind of heat. [01:56:16.400 --> 01:56:18.400] I agree with you. [01:56:18.400 --> 01:56:21.400] I mean, and as far as that incident I had with the state police goes, [01:56:21.400 --> 01:56:24.400] I mean, I pretty much just went through the back channels and said, [01:56:24.400 --> 01:56:28.400] like, look, you know, if this keeps going, I'm going to do this, this, this, and that. [01:56:28.400 --> 01:56:31.400] And they basically said, we're done. [01:56:31.400 --> 01:56:35.400] I mean, I didn't even have to go to a judge, which is really amazing. [01:56:35.400 --> 01:56:40.400] I mean, and this is the hard part about what I'm trying to do up here, [01:56:40.400 --> 01:56:45.400] is people really don't understand that, like, you know, once you start fighting, [01:56:45.400 --> 01:56:47.400] I mean, they basically say, I'm done. [01:56:47.400 --> 01:56:52.400] I mean, there was another guy that I talked to who basically started going toward, [01:56:52.400 --> 01:56:57.400] you know, like, is it legal to even apply for a driver's license, et cetera, [01:56:57.400 --> 01:56:59.400] you know, right to travel and all that. [01:56:59.400 --> 01:57:02.400] They basically just let him go. [01:57:02.400 --> 01:57:07.400] You know, so hopefully in time, actually not even hopefully. [01:57:07.400 --> 01:57:11.400] You may actually have some officials that aren't completely brain dead. [01:57:11.400 --> 01:57:13.400] Yeah, that's a good thing. [01:57:13.400 --> 01:57:16.400] I mean, in Connecticut, I didn't even expect that. [01:57:16.400 --> 01:57:19.400] You know, I expected to, you know, we're going to be fighting with the police, [01:57:19.400 --> 01:57:22.400] you know, I mean, and whatever, [01:57:22.400 --> 01:57:25.400] but it seems like they're really quick on the uptake here. [01:57:25.400 --> 01:57:29.400] And they may be getting, you know, there may be more people like you out there [01:57:29.400 --> 01:57:31.400] than you realize. [01:57:31.400 --> 01:57:34.400] Yeah, that's the other thing that I've kind of noticed. [01:57:34.400 --> 01:57:38.400] I mean, it's almost come toward the point where, I mean, [01:57:38.400 --> 01:57:40.400] I'm still running for Congress here. [01:57:40.400 --> 01:57:44.400] And, you know, they've seen fit to attack me politically, [01:57:44.400 --> 01:57:48.400] which I'm going like, well, I must be doing something right, you know, [01:57:48.400 --> 01:57:50.400] so we'll see. [01:57:50.400 --> 01:57:53.400] But, you know, I mean, again, it looks like there's progress, [01:57:53.400 --> 01:57:59.400] but, you know, I'm really seeing it in one of the states I would least expect to see it. [01:57:59.400 --> 01:58:01.400] I mean, Texas wouldn't surprise me. [01:58:01.400 --> 01:58:02.400] Down south wouldn't surprise me. [01:58:02.400 --> 01:58:04.400] New Hampshire wouldn't surprise me. [01:58:04.400 --> 01:58:08.400] But here, it's a big surprise. [01:58:08.400 --> 01:58:11.400] I think we're reaching the tipping point. [01:58:11.400 --> 01:58:13.400] I agree. [01:58:13.400 --> 01:58:16.400] And if we give him one more drink, he'll tip clean over. [01:58:16.400 --> 01:58:20.400] Yes, I will. [01:58:20.400 --> 01:58:22.400] Dan, we appreciate the information and the commentary. [01:58:22.400 --> 01:58:24.400] Keep us posted, will you? [01:58:24.400 --> 01:58:25.400] Oh, definitely, definitely. [01:58:25.400 --> 01:58:28.400] I figured I'd take that idea and run with it, Eddie. [01:58:28.400 --> 01:58:29.400] All right. [01:58:29.400 --> 01:58:31.400] Well, good luck. [01:58:31.400 --> 01:58:32.400] All right, folks. [01:58:32.400 --> 01:58:34.400] This is Eddie Craig and Randy Kelton. [01:58:34.400 --> 01:58:35.400] Debra Stevens had the night off. [01:58:35.400 --> 01:58:37.400] We do a pre-hitch listening in. [01:58:37.400 --> 01:58:39.400] One more time, please go out on Saturday. [01:58:39.400 --> 01:58:43.400] Architects and Engineers for 9-11 True from 1 till 9. [01:58:43.400 --> 01:58:45.400] Double 3 Hotel in Austin. [01:58:45.400 --> 01:58:48.400] Please support these folks. [01:58:48.400 --> 01:58:49.400] All right. [01:58:49.400 --> 01:58:50.400] We thank you for listening. [01:58:50.400 --> 01:58:53.400] We thank you for all your support. [01:58:53.400 --> 01:58:57.400] And we thank you for not falling asleep during Randy's presentation earlier. [01:58:57.400 --> 01:58:58.400] Thank you. [01:58:58.400 --> 01:58:59.400] Thank you for listening. [01:58:59.400 --> 01:59:00.400] Thanks, everybody. [01:59:00.400 --> 01:59:06.400] Once again thank you for listening and good night. [01:59:06.400 --> 01:59:10.400] Have a sweet day. [01:59:10.400 --> 01:59:13.400] Thanks everyone. [01:59:13.400 --> 01:59:16.400] Good night. [01:59:16.400 --> 01:59:22.400] Thank you so much for listening. [01:59:22.400 --> 01:59:23.400] hopper's [01:59:23.400 --> 01:59:27.960] But a chop from me is still dangerous [01:59:27.960 --> 01:59:30.200] I'd like to step in the grave [01:59:30.200 --> 01:59:31.640] To watch my side [01:59:31.640 --> 01:59:35.320] I'm dangerous, I'm dangerous [01:59:35.320 --> 01:59:37.320] I'd like to jump in the grave [01:59:37.320 --> 01:59:39.320] To watch my side [01:59:39.320 --> 01:59:42.360] I'm dangerous, dangerous [01:59:42.360 --> 01:59:45.320] If you eat, I'll give all [01:59:45.320 --> 01:59:49.720] If you drink, I'll give you all [01:59:49.720 --> 01:59:52.520] If you drink, let's lose [01:59:52.520 --> 01:59:54.520] If you drink, you better pay