[00:00.000 --> 00:04.320] This news brief brought to you by the International Newsnet. [00:04.320 --> 00:10.000] Manhattan salaries surged 12% this year as Wall Street recovered from the financial crisis, [00:10.000 --> 00:15.040] but a new report by the Community Service Society found young black males continued [00:15.040 --> 00:17.680] to bear the burden of the economic crisis. [00:17.680 --> 00:23.320] 75% of black men between 16 and 24 in New York City are unemployed. [00:23.320 --> 00:29.800] CSS says the discriminatory trend in employment feeds a prison pipeline. [00:29.800 --> 00:33.600] Los Angeles County public school officials Wednesday endorsed a plan [00:33.600 --> 00:38.720] to solicit corporate sponsorship to help increase their budgets and retain staff. [00:38.720 --> 00:43.160] The school board decided to allow corporate brand identity in the facilities [00:43.160 --> 00:45.720] of the Los Angeles Unified School District. [00:45.720 --> 00:49.600] Critics say the decision is indicative of America's social decline. [00:49.600 --> 00:55.720] Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi survived two no confidence votes [00:55.720 --> 00:57.440] in Parliament Wednesday. [00:57.440 --> 01:02.160] The billionaire has been dogged by repeated sex scandals and fraud allegations. [01:02.160 --> 01:05.240] The survival of Berlusconi's right wing government was greeted [01:05.240 --> 01:07.920] by widespread street protests in Rome. [01:07.920 --> 01:12.200] Trade unionists, revolutionary socialists, students and people left homeless [01:12.200 --> 01:15.400] by last year's earthquake were among the demonstrators. [01:15.400 --> 01:19.080] Inside Parliament, brawling politicians had to be separated [01:19.080 --> 01:22.760] after one deputy switched her vote. [01:22.760 --> 01:27.000] Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army private accused of leaking classified documents [01:27.000 --> 01:31.320] to WikiLeaks, has been detained at a U.S. Marine brig for five months [01:31.320 --> 01:35.920] under conditions that constitute torture by the standards of many nations. [01:35.920 --> 01:40.040] Constitutional lawyer and journalist Glenn Greenwald said Wednesday, [01:40.040 --> 01:43.640] Manning is being held in intensive solitary confinement. [01:43.640 --> 01:47.000] He's barred from exercising, is under constant surveillance, [01:47.000 --> 01:50.680] cannot access news from the outside world and is denied a pillow [01:50.680 --> 01:52.280] and sheets for his bed. [01:52.280 --> 01:56.440] Greenwald writes, quote, Manning has been subjected for many months [01:56.440 --> 02:00.120] to inhumane, insanity-inducing conditions of isolation [02:00.120 --> 02:02.600] without having been convicted of anything. [02:02.600 --> 02:05.880] An article in the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry [02:05.880 --> 02:09.360] and Law explains prolonged solitary confinement, quote, [02:09.360 --> 02:14.120] can be as clinically distressing as physical torture. [02:14.120 --> 02:17.600] The latest WikiLeaks cables show striking resemblances [02:17.600 --> 02:22.120] between the BP oil disaster and a little reported giant gas leak [02:22.120 --> 02:24.960] in Azerbaijan 18 months earlier. [02:24.960 --> 02:30.120] In January 2009, BP thought, quote, a bad cement job was to blame [02:30.120 --> 02:32.840] for the gas leak in Azerbaijan. [02:32.840 --> 02:36.400] More recently, BP's former chief executive, Tony Haywood, [02:36.400 --> 02:40.520] also blamed a bad cement job by contractor Halliburton [02:40.520 --> 02:44.240] for the deep water horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. [02:44.240 --> 02:48.000] BP's partners in the Azerbaijan gas field were upset [02:48.000 --> 02:50.880] because BP was secretive about the incident [02:50.880 --> 02:52.960] and withheld information from them. [02:52.960 --> 02:55.680] The cables say BP was lucky it was able [02:55.680 --> 02:58.720] to evacuate its 212 workers safely. [02:58.720 --> 03:23.080] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network [03:23.080 --> 03:50.760] and the American Academy of Psychiatry. [03:50.760 --> 03:57.560] We hope you enjoyed this video. [03:57.560 --> 04:00.560] What you gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.560 --> 04:03.560] When you were eight and you had bad traits [04:03.560 --> 04:05.560] You'd go to school and learn the golden rule [04:05.560 --> 04:08.560] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [04:08.560 --> 04:11.560] If you get hot in your mouth, that's cool [04:11.560 --> 04:14.560] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [04:14.560 --> 04:16.560] What you gonna do when they come for you? [04:16.560 --> 04:19.560] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [04:19.560 --> 04:22.560] What you gonna do when they come for you? [04:22.560 --> 04:25.560] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one [04:25.560 --> 04:28.560] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [04:28.560 --> 04:31.560] You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister [04:31.560 --> 04:33.560] You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me [04:33.560 --> 04:36.560] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [04:36.560 --> 04:42.360] All right, tonight is December 16th, 2010. [04:42.360 --> 04:47.920] This is the rule of law, Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, and Deborah Stevens. [04:47.920 --> 04:55.000] We'll be taking your calls tonight, 512-646-1984. [04:56.340 --> 05:02.680] And Eddie, you wanted to discuss some interesting things that happened at the court today. [05:02.680 --> 05:08.000] Why don't you tell us about it so we can get Randy's and my feedback on this? [05:08.000 --> 05:11.480] Yes, we went down to municipal court today. [05:11.480 --> 05:18.640] The young lady that I've been helping get her paperwork together that was falsely accused [05:18.640 --> 05:25.000] of a traffic accident by a police officer who conducted an incompetent investigation [05:25.000 --> 05:32.320] and wound up citing her a ticket that was falsified in its facts and its assessment [05:32.320 --> 05:34.920] of the situation along with the police report. [05:34.920 --> 05:36.640] We went down today. [05:36.640 --> 05:40.600] This young lady was summoned to appear in court by telephone. [05:40.600 --> 05:45.320] She was not sent anything in writing telling her what the hearing [05:45.320 --> 05:49.960] that she was attending today was about, when it had been scheduled, [05:49.960 --> 05:54.360] who scheduled it, absolutely nothing. [05:54.360 --> 05:59.880] So the only, and she had called the court several times asking and she had gone [05:59.880 --> 06:05.200] down there asking and they had told her, and she actually found this out on Friday, [06:05.200 --> 06:09.840] by the way, and she went down there yesterday and spoke with them and they told her [06:09.840 --> 06:13.920] that the only thing they could see was that someone had filed a motion [06:13.920 --> 06:17.640] in her case for discovery, so maybe that's what it was about. [06:17.640 --> 06:21.480] Well, this young lady has not filed a motion for discovery. [06:21.480 --> 06:26.760] The only thing she has filed, and she had to file it twice before somebody would rule [06:26.760 --> 06:32.720] on it, was a motion for a continuance so that she could file a motion [06:32.720 --> 06:36.040] and conduct her discovery. [06:36.040 --> 06:40.680] Well, it turns out that the judge ambushed her in this hearing. [06:40.680 --> 06:46.160] This was a motions hearing on the motion that she originally filed. [06:46.160 --> 06:53.960] No one informed her of this and this motion is our initial traffic motion number one. [06:53.960 --> 06:58.160] The judge is sitting here telling her that this motion is not a motion. [06:58.160 --> 06:59.800] I'm not even going to address this. [06:59.800 --> 07:04.520] There's no law in this whatsoever that has any bearing or effect on this court. [07:04.520 --> 07:08.160] There's nothing in here that's controlling on this court, so on and so forth. [07:08.160 --> 07:13.080] She did everything she could to intimidate this young lady and browbeat her [07:13.080 --> 07:18.640] into just going, oh, okay, then I'll withdraw it, which she didn't do. [07:18.640 --> 07:23.040] Much to her credit, she stood her ground and she even brought up the issue that, [07:23.040 --> 07:27.840] well, if this motion is not a motion, how has a trial been scheduled even [07:27.840 --> 07:29.680] after it's been filed? [07:29.680 --> 07:34.760] Because obviously the presiding judge thinks it's a valid motion. [07:34.760 --> 07:38.280] They decided to go ahead and schedule a trial even though it was already filed [07:38.280 --> 07:42.880] and completely avoided having a hearing on it. [07:42.880 --> 07:46.680] So basically, the judge today attempted to conduct a railroad job, [07:46.680 --> 07:50.840] which to her credit, Marnie did not allow her to do. [07:50.840 --> 07:54.680] So the next thing we're going to be working on here is we're going to be [07:54.680 --> 07:59.440] filing a judicial conduct complaint, multiple ones in fact against the judge, [07:59.440 --> 08:05.480] once for her treatment of a defendant, one for her inability to apply the law, [08:05.480 --> 08:11.280] one for her ability to understand the law, and one for general principle of [08:11.280 --> 08:15.880] the fact that she obviously didn't bother to read the motion and its contents. [08:15.880 --> 08:19.160] You also need one for abusive process. [08:19.160 --> 08:22.840] Yes, we're going to do that too. [08:22.840 --> 08:27.560] And then the problem we've got though, Randy, is there was no process. [08:27.560 --> 08:29.880] That's the whole thing. [08:29.880 --> 08:36.720] She was summoned by telephone, which as we all know is not allowed. [08:36.720 --> 08:41.440] But in any case, we're also going to be finding out whether or not this judge is [08:41.440 --> 08:43.440] also a bar card carrying attorney. [08:43.440 --> 08:47.360] And then we're going to file a bar grievance for every judicial conduct [08:47.360 --> 08:49.840] complaint we had to file. [08:49.840 --> 08:52.520] Well, what exactly was this motion about? [08:52.520 --> 08:54.160] It wasn't a motion for discovery. [08:54.160 --> 08:57.600] This is the initial traffic motion, motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. [08:57.600 --> 09:02.680] And it goes into complete description of why the court lacks it, what the court's [09:02.680 --> 09:07.440] done wrong to this point, what the officer's done wrong to this point. [09:07.440 --> 09:12.400] And the judge just decided that, well, none of this law applies. [09:12.400 --> 09:20.240] She completely ignores Chapter 45, Section 45.002, which the last sentence [09:20.240 --> 09:25.760] in that section specifically states that if there is any process or procedure [09:25.760 --> 09:32.200] that this chapter does not deal with in relation to the prosecution of a case, [09:32.200 --> 09:37.920] then the judge shall apply the other provisions of this code to do so. [09:37.920 --> 09:43.600] Well, there is nothing in Chapter 45 dealing with a warrant or a capious [09:43.600 --> 09:45.920] or a summons. [09:45.920 --> 09:51.840] There is for a warrant of arrest, but there has been no arraignment and there [09:51.840 --> 09:54.640] has been no probable cause determination. [09:54.640 --> 09:59.000] So they can't issue one of those. [09:59.000 --> 10:03.680] Up until today, there wasn't even a valid complaint in the file. [10:03.680 --> 10:10.080] And then I haven't got to see the complaint to verify whether it's valid or not. [10:10.080 --> 10:16.200] But regardless of that issue, they still don't have an information in the file, [10:16.200 --> 10:18.720] which means they have no jurisdiction. [10:18.720 --> 10:23.040] And the prosecuting attorney is still a city attorney who cannot prosecute in the [10:23.040 --> 10:27.600] name of the state and who can't even sign an information. [10:27.600 --> 10:32.440] All of this deprives them of jurisdiction. [10:32.440 --> 10:36.200] But this particular motion deals with the fact that they were never properly [10:36.200 --> 10:41.560] served as summons to appear in court to begin with and that the arrest conducted [10:41.560 --> 10:46.880] at the scene was unlawful from the beginning. [10:46.880 --> 10:52.160] And this judge just blows it all off at saying that this is not even a motion. [10:52.160 --> 10:55.720] Nothing in here applies to this court and so on and so forth. [10:55.720 --> 11:00.800] Well, we're going to be filing the findings of facts and conclusions of law, [11:00.800 --> 11:03.320] and it is not going to be kind. [11:03.320 --> 11:07.360] It is going to take the individual initial motion, it is going to dissect it [11:07.360 --> 11:12.280] section by section, and it's going to demand a bylaw response from the [11:12.280 --> 11:21.960] magistrate on how this law does not apply to the court in which she sits. [11:21.960 --> 11:25.160] But at the moment, that's going to be the plan of attack. [11:25.160 --> 11:30.120] And I think we're just going to go ahead and file the second constructive notice [11:30.120 --> 11:39.680] and file suit against the city while this is going on. [11:39.680 --> 11:40.800] So what do you think, Randy? [11:40.800 --> 11:46.920] Well, that sort of brings me to the subject that I wanted to address today. [11:46.920 --> 11:53.320] I did a conference call yesterday and we talked about the power of the grand juries. [11:53.320 --> 11:58.040] I would suggest that while you're doing these other things, you prepare a set of [11:58.040 --> 12:02.920] criminal charges against the judge for official oppression and take your story [12:02.920 --> 12:09.000] to a grand jury and see what they think of these shenanigans. [12:09.000 --> 12:15.480] More people we get hammering the grand jury, the more effect we're going to get. [12:15.480 --> 12:16.920] I would agree with that. [12:16.920 --> 12:24.760] I've been talking to people on foreclosure issues that one thing we go in [12:24.760 --> 12:32.280] pro se and that gives us abilities that attorneys don't have. [12:32.280 --> 12:36.600] We can file the judicial conduct complaints and the bar grievances and not [12:36.600 --> 12:43.320] only can the court do nothing about it, the court can't even mention it. [12:43.320 --> 12:50.200] One word about one of those grievances or complaints and that would be considered [12:50.200 --> 12:53.640] obstruction of justice and tampering with witness. [12:53.640 --> 13:00.040] So when you file against them, they just kind of got to sit there and take it. [13:00.040 --> 13:06.120] If we use that, that we can do as the pro se from hell and hammer them with that [13:06.120 --> 13:09.480] and then we go down and file with the grand jury. [13:09.480 --> 13:13.640] The best part of that is you never say a word about it to the person you're [13:13.640 --> 13:15.560] filing against. [13:15.560 --> 13:19.560] That would be absolutely inappropriate. [13:19.560 --> 13:26.120] It would be just as inappropriate for them to say a word about it to you. [13:26.120 --> 13:32.200] So you get to go down and try to end their career and they can't negotiate [13:32.200 --> 13:38.760] with you, they can't give you their side, they can't do anything. [13:38.760 --> 13:40.200] One word. [13:40.200 --> 13:44.280] They get another set of complaints that's more serious than the first. [13:44.280 --> 13:49.880] So I'm seriously trying to get people to start looking at the grand jury as a [13:49.880 --> 13:57.080] viable option to the behaviors of these judges and prosecutors. [13:57.080 --> 14:03.640] We can take them on and it's easier than you think. [14:03.640 --> 14:11.080] Besides, it's fun when you start going down and calling these public officials, [14:11.080 --> 14:14.680] especially the higher level officials, we're talking about chumped [14:14.680 --> 14:17.000] municipal judges here. [14:17.000 --> 14:19.800] When you go down and file with the district attorney and the district [14:19.800 --> 14:23.640] attorney refuses to give the complaint to the grand jury, now you go after the [14:23.640 --> 14:25.800] district attorney. [14:25.800 --> 14:31.080] And I suggest you send a set of complaints to a district judge. [14:31.080 --> 14:34.360] You might try Judge Dietz because I'm going to be down filing criminal charges [14:34.360 --> 14:40.440] against him and then start filing with the grand jury on him. [14:40.440 --> 14:45.800] These judges start getting people, trying to get them arrested for protecting [14:45.800 --> 14:51.000] these chumped municipal judges, they are not going to be happy campers. [14:51.000 --> 14:55.400] And when they start getting judicial conduct complaints against them for not [14:55.400 --> 14:59.960] performing their duty as a magistrate, they're not going to be happy. [14:59.960 --> 15:06.120] We'll get them to start putting pressure back on the municipalities. [15:06.120 --> 15:08.600] And then again, there's the lawsuits. [15:08.600 --> 15:12.840] I'm looking at early in the year to start putting my suits together. [15:12.840 --> 15:18.120] And when I get them put together, I'll make them available on line so people [15:18.120 --> 15:21.480] could look at them and craft their own. [15:21.480 --> 15:25.160] We start suing them every way from Sunday. [15:25.160 --> 15:27.160] We'll start getting their attention. [15:27.160 --> 15:28.680] You get a ticket. [15:28.680 --> 15:33.640] If you go fight, it's going to wind up costing you about $300, $350 time you pay [15:33.640 --> 15:35.720] the fine and court cost. [15:35.720 --> 15:40.520] Not even to mention all the time you have to spend down there messing with them. [15:40.520 --> 15:44.600] They only cost about 120 bucks to file a suit in the district. [15:44.600 --> 15:47.240] And I think it's 200 and something in the district court and only 100 something [15:47.240 --> 15:49.800] in the county court. [15:49.800 --> 15:52.200] And in this case, since it's public officials, you would sue them in the [15:52.200 --> 15:55.080] district court, a couple hundred bucks. [15:55.080 --> 16:01.320] You can put them in a district court, really get their attention. [16:01.320 --> 16:03.960] Maybe we'll get this stuff stopped. [16:03.960 --> 16:07.720] We're certainly not going to get it stopped the way we've been doing it [16:07.720 --> 16:11.160] because they're just ignoring us and doing whatever they want to. [16:11.160 --> 16:15.480] And they are absolutely outrageous. [16:15.480 --> 16:20.280] I suspect we start telling these stories to local grand jurors. [16:20.280 --> 16:23.880] We'll get a change in attitude. [16:23.880 --> 16:25.400] What do you think, Eddie? [16:25.400 --> 16:27.720] Well, I think that's possibly true. [16:27.720 --> 16:33.400] Now, here's the situation, though, as we know, with the case law, which we'll [16:33.400 --> 16:36.840] cover on the other side of the break, it seems. [16:36.840 --> 16:37.480] All right, folks. [16:37.480 --> 16:42.040] This is Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig. [16:42.040 --> 16:43.960] We're about to go to break. [16:43.960 --> 16:48.680] We're very shortly going to be taking phone calls, 512-646-1984. [16:48.680 --> 16:51.160] Please give us a call and get stacked on the board. [16:51.160 --> 17:01.800] And we'll be back after the break. [17:01.800 --> 17:06.200] Capital Coin and Bullion is your local source for rare coins, precious metals, [17:06.200 --> 17:09.080] and coin supplies in the Austin metro area. [17:09.080 --> 17:11.080] We also ship worldwide. [17:11.080 --> 17:14.760] We are a family-owned and operated business that offers competitive prices [17:14.760 --> 17:16.680] on your coin and metals purchases. 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[18:41.080 --> 18:44.440] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [18:44.440 --> 18:49.480] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.480 --> 18:51.880] That's ruleoflawradio.com. [18:51.880 --> 18:57.320] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [18:57.320 --> 18:59.880] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:59.880 --> 19:23.240] All right, folks, we are back. [19:23.240 --> 19:28.440] Rule of Law Radio, this is Eddie Craig, Andy Kelton, Deborah Stevens. [19:28.440 --> 19:31.880] Okay, when we went to break, we were talking about how the case law [19:31.880 --> 19:36.120] has set this problem up for us to have to contend with regarding these judges. [19:36.920 --> 19:43.000] The case law has set it up where a judge cannot be held liable in any way, [19:43.000 --> 19:47.080] shape, or form for this judicially created form of immunity [19:47.880 --> 19:54.600] if the actions they perform are discretionary or judicial in nature, [19:54.600 --> 20:01.400] even if they are malicious. And I've even seen a couple of case laws [20:02.120 --> 20:05.240] where it says that even if it's in violation of law. [20:06.280 --> 20:09.240] Now, get that. These judges say that as long as they're [20:09.240 --> 20:12.040] can claim they're acting in a judicial capacity, [20:12.040 --> 20:14.760] they're completely immune even if they violate law. [20:16.120 --> 20:23.320] Well, the problem here is what constitutes a judicial action versus a ministerial action. [20:23.320 --> 20:31.880] And Randy, I found one of my cases where the federal courts made it very clear [20:32.600 --> 20:38.760] that a municipality, when it hires a judge to sit in a municipal court, [20:39.560 --> 20:47.800] that municipal court is an administrative judge in an administrative capacity. [20:47.800 --> 20:53.080] And if that magistrate is enforcing statutory law, [20:54.360 --> 20:57.880] then they cannot be acting in a judicial capacity. [20:59.880 --> 21:00.920] What's that case? [21:01.800 --> 21:03.800] I'm looking for it right now. [21:06.280 --> 21:10.280] Let's see. Well, while I'm looking it up here in the document, [21:10.280 --> 21:13.400] you go ahead and give me whatever commentary you've got on some of this. [21:13.400 --> 21:23.800] Okay. Well, the courts have done everything they can to make themselves absolutely immune from law. [21:25.320 --> 21:27.720] And that's, you know, I keep harping on grand juries, [21:27.720 --> 21:30.200] but that's the one place they have no immunity. [21:31.720 --> 21:37.080] That's the one place where they're dealing, not with their buddies, [21:38.040 --> 21:40.520] with other judges and prosecutors, [21:40.520 --> 21:43.560] but they're dealing with individuals like you and me. [21:44.600 --> 21:50.840] And even though they try to convince these grand jurors that they don't know squat, [21:51.400 --> 21:54.920] and the grand jurors should do anything the prosecutor tells them to do, [21:55.640 --> 22:00.840] the problem is, is you simply never know what a grand jury is going to do. [22:01.800 --> 22:04.280] That's what my prosecutor and attorney told me once. [22:04.280 --> 22:07.880] Those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're going to do. [22:07.880 --> 22:11.240] And that was the best commentary I could have heard about them. [22:12.440 --> 22:16.840] They're ordinary people like you and me, and you simply never know what they're going to do. [22:17.720 --> 22:23.160] So when we start going to grand juries filing criminal complaints against these judges, [22:24.760 --> 22:28.360] it's a crap shoot. It's always a crap shoot. [22:29.480 --> 22:31.240] This is a very familiar case, Randy. [22:31.240 --> 22:35.160] This is Thompson versus Smith, 154 Southeast 583. [22:35.160 --> 22:38.840] 154 Southeast 583. And the site is this. [22:39.640 --> 22:44.440] When acting to enforce a statute and its subsequent amendments to the present date, [22:44.440 --> 22:48.520] the judge of the municipal court is acting as an administrative officer [22:48.520 --> 22:51.000] and not in a judicial capacity. [22:51.000 --> 22:57.880] Courts in administering or enforcing statutes do not act judicially, but merely ministerially. [23:00.120 --> 23:03.640] Okay. 154 Southeast? [23:03.640 --> 23:07.240] Southeast 583. Now here's another one. [23:07.240 --> 23:11.320] ACES versus US, 568 Federal 2nd, 284. [23:12.200 --> 23:18.600] A judge ceases to sit as a judicial officer because the governing principle of administrative law [23:18.600 --> 23:23.640] provides that courts are prohibited from substituting their evidence, [23:23.640 --> 23:28.520] testimony, record, arguments, and rationale for that of the agency. [23:28.520 --> 23:34.520] Additionally, courts are prohibited from substituting their judgment for that of the agency. [23:34.920 --> 23:40.680] Courts and administrative issues are prohibited from even listening to or hearing arguments, [23:40.680 --> 23:42.600] presentation, or rationale. [23:43.960 --> 23:49.800] Then you have Burns versus Supreme Court, SF 140 in California. [23:49.800 --> 23:55.960] Ministerial officers are incompetent to receive grants of judicial power from the legislature. [23:55.960 --> 24:01.240] Their acts in attempting to exercise such powers are necessarily nullities. [24:02.120 --> 24:09.960] Then we have Board of Trade versus Olson, 262 US 1, 29 ALR 2D 105. [24:10.760 --> 24:16.280] The elementary doctrine that the constitutionality of a legislative act is open to attack [24:16.280 --> 24:24.760] only by persons whose rights are affected thereby applies to a statute relating to administrative agencies. [24:24.760 --> 24:30.760] The validity of which may not be called into question in the absence of showing a substantial harm, [24:31.480 --> 24:37.720] actual or impending, to a legally protected interest directly resulting from the enforcement [24:37.720 --> 24:38.680] of the statute. [24:39.240 --> 24:44.280] In other words, we have standing and the right to defend our rights [24:44.280 --> 24:48.120] when a statute is impinging upon those rights. [24:48.120 --> 24:58.120] Okay, how do you establish that this judge in this instance in this state is sitting in an [25:01.240 --> 25:14.360] administrative capacity rather than as a judge enforcing criminal law? [25:14.360 --> 25:15.560] That's what he's going to claim. [25:15.560 --> 25:18.760] He's going to say these are criminal laws and I'm enforcing criminal laws. [25:19.720 --> 25:20.440] That's correct. [25:20.440 --> 25:21.960] That's what they're going to say. [25:21.960 --> 25:28.760] However, the statutes themselves show very clearly that the process they're using, [25:28.760 --> 25:31.800] even though it's created in the code of criminal procedure, [25:32.440 --> 25:36.120] they're charging you under an administrative statute [25:36.120 --> 25:39.960] that is regulated by an administrative state agency. [25:40.840 --> 25:42.840] There's no argument about that. [25:42.840 --> 25:49.640] The Department of Public Safety in this particular instance is the agency that has control over that [25:49.640 --> 25:55.320] specific section of the transportation code where this offense allegedly is being charged from, [25:56.440 --> 26:02.200] which is chapter 545, or subtitle C, of the transportation code. [26:02.840 --> 26:05.640] This is considered a moving violation under that code. [26:05.640 --> 26:11.560] And so, it falls squarely within the realm and authority of the Department of Public Safety. [26:12.200 --> 26:18.920] The fact that they're using municipal police departments to do things they're incompetent to do [26:18.920 --> 26:25.000] does not in any way, shape, or form remove the original jurisdiction of that subject matter [26:25.000 --> 26:29.080] from the Department of Public Safety to the municipal police department. [26:29.080 --> 26:35.080] Okay. So, there is a requirement in there for the administrative hearing? [26:35.880 --> 26:40.520] That's the Administrative Procedures Act, Chapter 2001, Government Code. [26:43.080 --> 26:44.520] So, that would bring... [26:44.520 --> 26:49.560] Texas Administrative Code says very clearly that everything the Department of Public Safety does [26:49.560 --> 26:52.200] is subject to the Administrative Procedures Act. [26:52.200 --> 26:57.720] So, how do we transfer that directly to municipal police officers? [26:57.720 --> 26:59.720] They're going to say that it doesn't apply. [26:59.720 --> 27:05.080] Rule 4.13, how does a police officer become certified to enforce traffic? [27:07.480 --> 27:09.720] It has to be authorized by the... [27:09.720 --> 27:11.720] Department of Public Safety. [27:11.720 --> 27:18.760] So, he enforces the traffic code under the authority of the Department of Public Safety. [27:18.760 --> 27:23.880] So, he enforces the traffic code under the authority of the Department of Public Safety. [27:23.880 --> 27:25.000] That is correct. [27:25.000 --> 27:30.200] They are the administrative agency for that code, in that section of code anyway. [27:31.160 --> 27:34.120] There's dual jurisdiction in the Transportation Code. [27:34.120 --> 27:37.320] The Department of Public Safety, the Department of Transportation. [27:38.600 --> 27:41.640] One has everything to do with construction and maintenance. [27:41.640 --> 27:49.000] The other one has everything to do with enforcement and service. [27:49.000 --> 27:51.720] I really need this in a brief. [27:52.760 --> 27:55.960] I'm looking forward to arguing this in front of this municipal court. [27:58.920 --> 28:04.040] Well, to Marnie's credit, she did a really excellent job today of not letting this judge [28:04.040 --> 28:04.760] run over her. [28:05.480 --> 28:06.840] She stood her ground. [28:06.840 --> 28:08.360] She asked the right questions. [28:08.360 --> 28:14.520] But the judge was going to browbeat her into submission if she could, and Marnie did not [28:14.520 --> 28:15.560] let her do that. [28:16.680 --> 28:22.760] So, we're going back after this judge now, because they bushwhacked her and ambushed [28:22.760 --> 28:30.120] her in this hearing to begin with by not giving her proper summons in process, nor informing [28:30.120 --> 28:32.520] her of any scheduled hearing dealing with this motion. [28:32.520 --> 28:38.200] The motion was filed, but no one scheduled a hearing, and now the judge sitting on the [28:38.200 --> 28:43.160] bench says, well, what you've done when you filed this, this starts an immediate chain [28:43.160 --> 28:43.720] reaction. [28:43.720 --> 28:44.440] Really? [28:44.440 --> 28:49.560] You would be the first judge in the history of this city that calls this a chain reaction. [28:50.440 --> 28:53.160] Most of them just ignore it and set a trial. [28:53.160 --> 28:57.800] So, you're saying that all the other judges are doing it wrong, and you're the only one [28:57.800 --> 28:58.680] doing it right. [28:58.680 --> 29:03.480] You're going to hold a hearing, but you're not going to notify the other side in the [29:03.480 --> 29:05.480] proper manner in accordance with law. [29:07.000 --> 29:09.400] Is that the argument we're getting here? [29:11.560 --> 29:17.320] But she really did try to ambush Marnie in regards to this. [29:17.320 --> 29:25.080] So, the due process procedure in the Municipal Court of Austin, as you've heard, is a very [29:25.080 --> 29:30.680] rare procedure in the Municipal Court of Austin, as you folks out there are well, well aware, [29:30.680 --> 29:31.800] is right out the window. [29:32.680 --> 29:34.600] So, we have to make them pay for that. [29:37.480 --> 29:39.720] Okay, we have a bunch of callers. [29:39.720 --> 29:43.160] When we come back from a break, how about we start taking some calls? [29:43.160 --> 29:43.720] Works for me. [29:44.600 --> 29:49.640] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig, Wheel of Law Radio. [29:51.880 --> 29:54.680] Call in, get your name out, get your spot in the queue. [29:54.680 --> 29:55.880] We'll be taking questions. [29:55.880 --> 30:25.800] We'll be right back. [30:26.600 --> 30:29.080] To be one love kitchen, Austin, Texas. [30:30.280 --> 30:35.160] Alzheimer's disease and dementia are on the rise in our aging population, and researchers [30:35.160 --> 30:37.080] are scrambling to find cures. [30:37.080 --> 30:39.800] Could the humble purple beach be the solution? [30:39.800 --> 30:42.920] I'm Dr. Kathryn Albrecht, and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [30:42.920 --> 30:48.520] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [30:48.520 --> 30:50.280] of your personal information. [30:50.280 --> 30:51.240] That's creepy. 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[31:25.640 --> 31:30.360] Doctors believe mental decline is caused by decreased blood flow to the brain as people [31:30.360 --> 31:31.160] age. [31:31.160 --> 31:35.320] Beet juice is high in nitrates that the body turns into nitrites. [31:35.320 --> 31:39.720] Those open up blood vessels and increase the flow of oxygen-rich blood into the part of [31:39.720 --> 31:41.480] the brain that handles cognition. [31:41.480 --> 31:42.920] But don't drink it straight. [31:42.920 --> 31:47.880] Beet juice is intense and can cause side effects like temporary paralysis of vocal cords and [31:47.880 --> 31:48.760] hives. [31:48.760 --> 31:52.120] Mix beet juice with other fruit and veggie juices and drink up. [31:52.120 --> 31:53.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:53.400 --> 32:20.760] For more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:23.640 --> 32:24.840] Okay, folks, we are back. [32:24.840 --> 32:26.120] We are taking your calls. [32:27.560 --> 32:30.440] We have Jim from Washington. [32:31.960 --> 32:33.720] Work situation, bar grievances. [32:33.720 --> 32:35.480] Jim, thanks for calling in. [32:35.480 --> 32:37.560] Tell us what is on your mind tonight. [32:37.560 --> 32:39.000] What's the problem, what's going on? [32:41.240 --> 32:47.320] I'm, I've got a situation at work and I have possible bar grievances against a couple [32:47.320 --> 32:47.800] attorneys. [32:47.800 --> 32:51.400] I wanted to run it by you and see what you thought and what I might possibly be able [32:51.400 --> 32:54.120] to do. [32:54.120 --> 33:04.120] I worked for a company for 13 years and I worked out in Indiana and in 2005 I transferred [33:04.120 --> 33:11.320] to the Seattle area and I continued to work for the company for another four years and [33:11.320 --> 33:15.480] the company lost the contract and a new company came in and took over and we were in a union. [33:16.520 --> 33:20.280] And everyone was allowed to keep their vacation except for me and one other gentleman who [33:20.280 --> 33:26.280] transferred in, they took our vacation away from our previous work area which was with [33:26.280 --> 33:27.000] the same company. [33:29.000 --> 33:37.880] The union has told us that there is no validity to our grievance and that's due to our union [33:37.880 --> 33:38.840] shop steward. [33:38.840 --> 33:40.440] He has a problem with it. [33:40.440 --> 33:47.000] I fought him five years ago on this and I won and they continued paying me my vacation [33:47.000 --> 33:48.280] up until the new company came in. [33:48.280 --> 33:53.560] And my question is, can I bar grieve against the union attorney? [33:57.560 --> 34:00.520] Well, you can bar grieve them any time you want to for anything. [34:01.400 --> 34:07.080] Yeah, you can technically bar grieve them for breathing the air but you haven't given, [34:08.680 --> 34:13.640] while we suggest that you can bar grieve them for anything, it's not always appropriate just [34:13.640 --> 34:15.560] to bar grieve them just for bar grieving. [34:15.560 --> 34:20.440] What did the attorneys do that you feel was improper or inappropriate? [34:20.440 --> 34:25.480] Well, they defrauded me out of my vacation and they conspired with the union steward [34:25.480 --> 34:29.320] and the secretary treasurer and the business agent to, you know, take it away from me. [34:29.880 --> 34:32.760] My understanding of the situation is that the company told them they'd do whatever they [34:32.760 --> 34:34.200] wanted, the union wanted them to do. [34:35.000 --> 34:40.520] And the union decided that I was not entitled to my vacation because the shop steward didn't [34:40.520 --> 34:42.440] like the fact that I didn't earn it right there in that yard. [34:42.440 --> 34:49.400] Is, what does the union, the bylaws or the union rules call for? [34:50.520 --> 34:51.160] As far as... [34:52.920 --> 34:53.480] This issue? [34:54.680 --> 35:00.920] Well, they really don't address it but it's been, it had been, oh man, what did I call [35:00.920 --> 35:04.600] that, it had already been settled six years ago and they continued letting the company [35:04.600 --> 35:08.360] pay me my vacation because the union steward fought this when I first got there. [35:09.160 --> 35:09.400] Okay. [35:10.120 --> 35:11.880] Past precedence, that's what they called it. [35:11.880 --> 35:13.960] Past precedence is insufficient. [35:15.960 --> 35:22.440] If they were paying you vacation pay and they didn't have to pay you vacation pay, [35:23.320 --> 35:26.920] it does not necessarily create a duty for them to do so. [35:27.960 --> 35:28.280] Okay. [35:31.240 --> 35:36.920] Well, they either discriminated against this other gentleman and I or they did not, [35:36.920 --> 35:40.360] they have a duty to fair representation, they didn't represent us fairly. [35:40.360 --> 35:44.280] Well, what are the grounds on which you're making your claim? [35:45.000 --> 35:48.280] Well, everyone else received and maintained their vacation. [35:48.280 --> 35:51.160] I had four weeks of vacation when this company arrived. [35:52.120 --> 35:55.400] Everyone else was able to keep their vacation and they took the vacation, [35:55.400 --> 35:59.320] two weeks of my vacation away from me and this other gentleman where he also lost two weeks. [36:00.760 --> 36:05.080] Okay, what was, did they have a reason for doing that? [36:05.080 --> 36:09.960] Did they state what their authority was for taking away the vacation time? [36:10.680 --> 36:15.160] No, they really, they just told us our grievance didn't have any merit and [36:15.160 --> 36:17.000] they were not going to pursue it any further. [36:17.880 --> 36:23.240] Well, see, the problem is this is a, you can file a bar grievance if you feel the [36:23.240 --> 36:27.480] attorney's acted inappropriately, but this is a civil matter. [36:28.920 --> 36:29.320] Okay. [36:29.320 --> 36:30.920] This clearly goes to contract. [36:30.920 --> 36:40.280] If the contract says you have a right to it, then you can take them on in a contractual, [36:40.280 --> 36:42.120] you know, breach of contract issue. [36:42.120 --> 36:42.840] Okay. [36:44.040 --> 36:48.360] If it's not in the contract, you may not have grounds. [36:49.960 --> 36:50.600] Okay. [36:52.840 --> 36:56.920] So, you know, you can file bar grievances and that'll annoy the attorneys on the other side, [36:56.920 --> 37:03.240] but I doubt that it'll get you much purchase in reaching the outcome you intend. [37:04.040 --> 37:04.600] Okay. [37:04.600 --> 37:10.920] So you're thinking I should probably go with the breach of contract and I know that they [37:10.920 --> 37:13.160] didn't fairly represent me. [37:13.160 --> 37:14.520] I know there was a bias. [37:14.520 --> 37:15.880] Okay, hold on. [37:15.880 --> 37:17.560] Are you talking about your own attorneys? [37:18.280 --> 37:19.080] No, no, no. [37:19.080 --> 37:23.320] That's what I'm wondering is because it is the union attorney and I pay union dues and [37:23.320 --> 37:27.160] he's there, you know, in essence to fight for me and he didn't do so. [37:27.160 --> 37:30.440] Oh, then that's, yeah, that's a good reason to file a bar grievance. [37:30.440 --> 37:31.160] Oh, good. [37:31.160 --> 37:36.360] And the other question is, is the secretary treasurer who is also involved happens to [37:36.360 --> 37:37.560] be an attorney also? [37:37.560 --> 37:39.320] Can I bargrieve her for that? [37:39.320 --> 37:41.800] Secondary treasurer of the union? [37:41.800 --> 37:43.400] Of the union local, yes. [37:43.400 --> 37:43.960] Okay. [37:43.960 --> 37:47.800] Did the secretary treasurer have any fiduciary duty to you? [37:47.800 --> 37:53.560] Did she have the right to do the fair representation, which I don't believe she followed either. [37:53.560 --> 37:55.720] Did she represent you or represent the union? [37:55.720 --> 37:57.880] Um, well, that's just it. [37:57.880 --> 38:01.320] They represented the union and nobody represented me. [38:01.320 --> 38:05.320] I'm not supposed to be fighting my own union for the, they're supposed to go to the company [38:05.320 --> 38:06.760] and fight the company for me. [38:06.760 --> 38:08.760] Okay. [38:08.760 --> 38:15.320] I don't know how to answer your question because you haven't given any, I don't know [38:15.320 --> 38:20.600] where the lines are, where these attorneys, what the heck were they doing? [38:20.600 --> 38:25.480] Were they, you're saying they're supposed to be fighting for you and the union is telling [38:25.480 --> 38:28.440] you that you don't have a right to what you're asking for. [38:28.440 --> 38:30.040] Is that what I understand? [38:30.040 --> 38:32.040] Yes. [38:32.040 --> 38:36.440] The union and the attorneys and all that and the business agent and the union steward are [38:36.440 --> 38:39.800] all supposed to be, you know, going to bat for the employee. [38:39.800 --> 38:42.680] Yeah, but the union only has to go to bat for you. [38:42.680 --> 38:46.760] Yeah, but the union only has to go to bat for you if you're right. [38:46.760 --> 38:47.480] Okay. [38:47.480 --> 38:53.240] Do you have law, do you have contract stating that you have a right to it or are you just [38:53.240 --> 38:57.000] saying because they gave it to me before, they have to give it to me now? [38:57.000 --> 39:03.720] No, is what I'm saying is, um, all right, I have, uh, I had benefits that were in place [39:03.720 --> 39:05.320] when this new company came in. [39:05.320 --> 39:11.320] Did you have benefits in, when the new company came in, did those benefits transfer to the [39:11.320 --> 39:12.280] new company? [39:12.280 --> 39:15.000] Everybody else's did, but except for mine and the one other guy's. [39:15.000 --> 39:16.040] That's not what I'm asking. [39:16.040 --> 39:18.680] You and the other guy are different because you transferred in. [39:20.200 --> 39:20.920] Okay. [39:20.920 --> 39:25.160] You're different circumstances and you're saying your circumstances should be exactly [39:25.160 --> 39:29.160] like everybody else's and apparently the union's saying, no, your circumstances are [39:29.160 --> 39:31.160] different because you transferred in. [39:31.160 --> 39:31.960] Right. [39:31.960 --> 39:32.600] Well, okay. [39:33.160 --> 39:33.480] All right. [39:35.000 --> 39:40.120] The best way to explain it is, is that there's some kind of a personal bias with this. [39:40.120 --> 39:42.680] Oh, wait a minute. [39:42.680 --> 39:44.680] Yeah, but see, that's not going to affect the contract. [39:44.680 --> 39:51.400] You haven't told anything that gives the company a duty. [39:52.040 --> 39:55.080] You're just saying because they did, they still have to. [39:56.120 --> 39:57.080] That won't hold up. [40:01.320 --> 40:04.680] You have to have something in the contract that says you have a right to this and they [40:04.680 --> 40:05.800] have a duty to give it to you. [40:05.800 --> 40:10.760] Well, isn't there, don't they have to show some reason as to why they're taking away [40:10.760 --> 40:11.880] his vacation? [40:11.880 --> 40:16.360] I mean, can companies just give vacation and then say, oh, nevermind, we're just going [40:16.360 --> 40:18.840] to take it away and we don't have to give you a reason why? [40:18.840 --> 40:25.160] If they don't have a contractual duty to give it to you, yeah, they can just say no. [40:27.320 --> 40:30.600] Even though the union is there to protect everybody and we're all supposed to be treated [40:30.600 --> 40:32.760] equally, they can single out two of us and just. [40:32.760 --> 40:39.400] If it's not in the contract, they can't, the union can't enforce non-contractual issues. [40:40.680 --> 40:41.560] Okay. [40:41.560 --> 40:46.840] You can't just say, well, I want to be treated this way and I want my union to go force this [40:46.840 --> 40:48.120] other guy to treat me this way. [40:48.120 --> 40:51.800] You got to give them a contract that says they have to do something. [40:52.760 --> 40:53.160] Okay. [40:57.720 --> 40:59.560] This should be a good lesson to everyone. [40:59.560 --> 41:04.360] When you get some vacation time from your company, take it immediately or else they [41:04.360 --> 41:05.240] may take it away. [41:05.880 --> 41:08.520] Oh, no, I did take my vacation immediately. [41:08.520 --> 41:10.360] This is over the next seven years. [41:10.360 --> 41:11.320] This is going to affect me. [41:11.320 --> 41:18.760] They took it away permanently until I rereached the years of service to get back to four weeks. [41:21.080 --> 41:22.280] Oh, so they just changed. [41:22.280 --> 41:27.240] They didn't transfer your, what do you call it? [41:27.240 --> 41:28.120] Your seniority. [41:28.120 --> 41:32.920] My seniority as far as vacation time transferred with me with the original company, [41:34.760 --> 41:38.760] the union Stewart fought it and lost the first time. [41:38.760 --> 41:40.680] So I was allowed to keep my vacation. [41:41.560 --> 41:45.480] When the new company came in, the union Stewart saw it as his chance to re [41:46.280 --> 41:49.800] bring up the argument and that he got it taken away this time. [41:51.320 --> 41:53.400] Under, under what grounds? [41:53.400 --> 41:53.960] I don't know. [41:53.960 --> 41:54.760] That's, that's. [41:54.760 --> 41:55.560] You have to know. [41:55.560 --> 42:00.520] You can't, you can't come in and argue this issue if you don't know, you have to read [42:00.520 --> 42:01.400] the contract. [42:01.400 --> 42:03.480] Well, that's what the, the only thing they sent me in writing. [42:03.480 --> 42:08.280] I just got it the other day was, it was a generic form letter that said that my grievance [42:08.280 --> 42:09.880] had no merit, but they did not specifically. [42:10.520 --> 42:11.080] Wait a minute. [42:11.080 --> 42:12.600] Do you have an employment contract? [42:13.160 --> 42:13.880] Yes, we do. [42:13.880 --> 42:15.080] Have you read it? [42:15.080 --> 42:15.640] Yes, I have. [42:16.200 --> 42:16.920] Is it in there? [42:17.880 --> 42:24.120] Well, for the length of service, I'm entitled to four weeks by the contract, but they're [42:24.120 --> 42:27.000] trying to say that part of my time does not count. [42:27.560 --> 42:30.440] Is it in the contract that says part of your time doesn't count? [42:30.440 --> 42:31.400] No, it is not. [42:31.400 --> 42:32.280] Then so. [42:32.280 --> 42:34.120] Well, that's what I'm calling you. [42:35.400 --> 42:39.720] If it's in the contract, then send them a tort letter. [42:39.720 --> 42:43.960] Yeah, there's really nothing in the contract that has anything to do with transfers. [42:43.960 --> 42:45.720] So it's kind of a blank area. [42:46.920 --> 42:52.120] It has never been a problem or a situation has come up until I came and transferred in. [42:52.120 --> 42:59.000] Okay. So if the contract says you have X amount of years of service, you get X amount, [42:59.000 --> 43:05.960] Y amount of vacation time, and there's nothing in there mitigating that, it's cool. [43:05.960 --> 43:07.960] Okay. That's what I was wondering. [43:07.960 --> 43:11.160] And would it do me any good to do the bar grievances at that point? [43:11.160 --> 43:13.240] Yeah, that's always, that's always just yuck. [43:13.240 --> 43:17.240] Okay. So he can bar grieve this attorney now at this point. [43:17.240 --> 43:23.400] If it's in the contract that he has a right to this and they're taking a situation that's [43:23.400 --> 43:31.160] not covered in the contract and mitigating the benefits he has in the contract. [43:31.160 --> 43:31.880] Absolutely. [43:31.880 --> 43:33.480] Okay. So there's your answer, Jim. [43:33.480 --> 43:36.680] Sue him and you file the bar grievance because it's in your contract. [43:36.680 --> 43:37.720] Thank you very much. [43:37.720 --> 43:38.600] All right. Thank you. [43:39.240 --> 43:41.720] Okay. When we get back, we're going to move on to more callers. [43:41.720 --> 43:44.120] We've got Charles, James, Frank, Francis, Neil. [43:44.120 --> 43:46.280] We will be right back. This is the rule of law. [43:46.280 --> 44:14.440] Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Deborah Stevens. [44:47.240 --> 44:57.320] Visit, centrician.com to order yours or call 1-866-497-7436 after you use centrician, [44:57.320 --> 44:59.160] you'll believe in supplements again. 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[46:28.520 --> 46:34.360] Scaffolding the key to the peace? All they're taking is a misunderstanding. [46:34.360 --> 46:36.520] Somebody calls the police. [46:36.520 --> 46:53.800] What's in the spotlight? What's in the spotlight? What's in the spotlight? [46:53.800 --> 47:10.520] Okay, folks, we are back. Rule of law. We are taking your calls. [47:12.920 --> 47:19.080] We have got Charles from Texas. Charles, thanks for calling in. What is on your mind tonight? [47:19.080 --> 47:27.160] Okay, so I will try to be brief and concise and to the point in trying to [47:28.360 --> 47:34.120] give enough background information to get the information I need from you all to proceed in the [47:34.760 --> 47:43.880] most correct manner. In 2008, in 2009, on the 8th of January, before I went to go work at a [47:43.880 --> 47:50.520] public school as a substitute teacher, I took a walk in the morning at a park at the city of Plano [47:50.520 --> 48:00.360] in the North Dallas suburb. It was along some park trail. I took a walk before the morning. [48:00.360 --> 48:06.040] I got back in my car. I was on my way to Clark High School of the Plano Independent School District. [48:06.040 --> 48:15.400] I was pulled over by a cop because someone had called the Plano Police reporting that there was [48:15.400 --> 48:25.720] a suspicious character out and about. Therefore, when I was pulled over, ultimately the cop pulled [48:25.720 --> 48:32.920] me over. He told me I had failed to signal a lane change. I obtained the police footage video, [48:32.920 --> 48:38.760] and there is no lane change violation. I clearly changed lanes and signaled and whatnot. [48:39.320 --> 48:45.320] To make a long story short, he was very hostile. He was very aggressive with me. He was very [48:45.320 --> 48:53.560] intimidating with me. There came a point where he asked me to step out of the car, and he asked [48:53.560 --> 48:59.240] if I could search my car. If he could search my car, I told him no, and I had locked the car [48:59.240 --> 49:10.120] as I got out. Things came to pass. The next thing I know, I'm being patted down and having my [49:10.120 --> 49:18.200] genital area groped by this man who was purportedly afraid that I had a firearm or some weapon that [49:18.200 --> 49:25.080] could be used to hurt him, which is my understanding why he tried to construe that it was justified [49:25.080 --> 49:34.040] that he forcibly take my keys from me to open my car to search for something that I could use to [49:34.040 --> 49:40.680] harm him, which he clearly says in the video. That was on the 8th of January, 2009. [49:42.680 --> 49:48.440] I got the 911 call. I got the police video from the City of Plano, from the Plano Police Department. [49:48.440 --> 49:58.120] I have sat on this for, well, it's going to be two years on the 8th of January, 2011, and I feel [49:59.000 --> 50:07.480] still obliged to do something about it. I have put it off thus far because in January of last year [50:07.480 --> 50:15.720] at Brave New Books in Austin, I saw Mr. Randy Kelton speak, and I asked him what the amount of [50:15.720 --> 50:21.480] amount of time I can wait to file criminal charges against this Plano cop is, and he said [50:21.480 --> 50:32.680] two years from the date of the original incident. I recently moved to Austin from the City of [50:32.680 --> 50:40.520] Richardson. I am back at the City of Richardson because school is out down at UT, and I still [50:40.520 --> 50:46.040] like to do something about this. I still feel morally obliged to do something about this. [50:47.800 --> 50:54.040] I have a criminal complaint already well written based on what you all have online. [50:55.880 --> 51:02.920] I'm up in Richardson, and Richardson is just south of Plano. It is my understanding that [51:02.920 --> 51:09.560] to initiate the criminal process against this City of Plano cop, it is best to initiate it [51:09.560 --> 51:16.840] at the city court, but I now live in Austin. Hold on. No, not at the city court. [51:18.440 --> 51:22.600] All complaints against public officials go to the district attorney. [51:25.320 --> 51:28.680] Now, the district attorney. This happened in Collin County, Texas. [51:30.920 --> 51:37.080] I spend my days in Travis County, Texas now. I'm in Dallas County right now seeing my family [51:37.080 --> 51:44.440] before Christmas, and it would be far, far easier for me to proceed with this at a district [51:44.440 --> 51:49.320] where I now am, which would be Travis County. I'm going to suggest that you do it all by mail [51:49.320 --> 51:55.480] anyway. Okay. I go down to the court, but I have a lot of experience at it. [51:55.480 --> 52:01.560] Yes. I suggest that you do it by mail. You send a verified criminal affidavit to the [52:01.560 --> 52:09.720] prosecuting attorney. Okay. Can I send it to Travis County? No. Okay. The venue is in [52:09.720 --> 52:15.320] the jurisdiction where it occurred. Collin County. Yeah, Collin County. Send it to Collin County [52:15.320 --> 52:21.720] district attorney. He's going to refuse to act on it. Okay. Then you send the complaint to a [52:22.600 --> 52:30.440] district judge in Collin County. Okay. Now, Randy, then I send a complaint after it is apparent that [52:30.440 --> 52:35.480] he has refused to act on it. Then I send a complaint, or do I send the complaint at the [52:35.480 --> 52:41.960] same time as I send the original affidavit? Give him two weeks to act on it. Okay. Then [52:43.000 --> 52:47.240] if you have someone in Collin County who can go by the courthouse and check the [52:47.240 --> 52:53.320] minutes of the grand jury, you check to see if there's evidence in the minutes of the grand [52:53.320 --> 53:01.240] jury of a true bill or a no bill. Okay. You're saying that when I send it to the district [53:01.240 --> 53:07.720] attorney for Collin County, it is his obligation to take my complaint before a grand jury, [53:07.720 --> 53:13.960] who then determines whether or not Collin County should proceed in prosecuting criminally this [53:13.960 --> 53:21.080] City of Plano Cop? Precisely. Okay. Under 2.03 Code of Criminal Procedure, the prosecuting attorney [53:21.080 --> 53:30.760] has no discretion in the matter. Okay. 2.03, the Code of Criminal Procedure, prosecuting attorney [53:30.760 --> 53:40.040] has no discretion. When a prosecuting attorney is made known that a public official has violated a [53:40.040 --> 53:44.600] law relating to his office, he shall reduce complaint from information and submit it to the [53:44.600 --> 53:54.440] grand jury. Okay. So because this guy was a cop, he is therefore a public official and the criminal [53:54.440 --> 54:01.640] complaint is official oppression. Because he's an official, he has no discretion. He must present [54:01.640 --> 54:06.520] it before the grand jury and then it is the obligation, it is the responsibility of the [54:06.520 --> 54:13.480] grand jury to determine whether or not the County of Collin should proceed. Well, yes, exactly. [54:13.480 --> 54:23.320] They'll decide to indict or not indict. Okay. So, but essentially then my criminal complaint, [54:23.320 --> 54:30.920] which should be worded enough to invoke enough sympathy within the jury to initiate them, [54:30.920 --> 54:36.120] to compel them to initiate the prosecution. Yes, but they'll never see it. So you want the [54:36.120 --> 54:42.840] complaint and put in a statement of probable cause. Okay. Within the complaint? No, you can [54:42.840 --> 54:50.280] do it within the complaint or you can attach it to the complaint as an affidavit. And since [54:50.280 --> 54:57.480] you're a teacher, I think you'll appreciate this. Now the statement of probable cause is a document [54:57.480 --> 55:04.760] in addition to the criminal complaint, correct? Yes. Okay. But the statement of probable cause [55:04.760 --> 55:12.440] is, you know, ultimately if it is apparent that it has never been shown to the grand jury, [55:12.440 --> 55:19.560] my original criminal complaint, or what is the reason that compels me to write this statement [55:19.560 --> 55:25.400] of probable cause to whom am I writing it? Generally, the criminal complaint is simply [55:25.400 --> 55:36.840] states basic information sufficient to file the complaint. If you want to give them all [55:36.840 --> 55:43.320] the information they need to make a good determination, if putting the statement of cause [55:43.320 --> 55:50.120] in the complaint itself will make the complaint overly long and cumbersome, then you might want [55:50.120 --> 55:57.240] to write up a statement, have it notarized as an affidavit, and attach it to the criminal [55:57.240 --> 56:04.200] complaint. Oh, okay. Basically, the criminal complaint is like a one-page document that [56:04.200 --> 56:11.880] just says who you are, who the accused is, and what statute you're accusing the accused [56:11.880 --> 56:18.280] of breaking, and it's notarized and that's it. It just shows what, you know, it basically [56:18.280 --> 56:24.840] just has the names and the statute and the date. The statement of probable cause is your [56:24.840 --> 56:32.440] story of what happened, backing up why you're accusing this person of violating this statute. [56:32.440 --> 56:39.400] You see what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah, yeah. So the criminal complaint is the legal document [56:39.400 --> 56:45.160] and the statement of probable cause is the affidavit, which if the jury, you know, actually [56:45.160 --> 56:53.800] hears it, should be of such language to make them want to proceed. You know, it's the narrative. [56:53.800 --> 56:59.640] It's the narrative. It's the narrative. It's your argument in support. You attach the statement [56:59.640 --> 57:05.400] of probable cause to the criminal complaint. Okay, okay. Yes. Don't put an argument in [57:05.400 --> 57:11.960] the complaint itself. You say, I, Randall Kelton, have reason to believe and do believe [57:11.960 --> 57:18.600] based on the following. You give basic, just basic facts. Yeah. No argument. In the complaint. [57:18.600 --> 57:23.480] In the complaint. Basic facts. Just basic facts. And then in the statement of probable cause, [57:24.200 --> 57:33.080] there you can treat that as an argument in support. Okay, so, okay, you know, the thing, [57:33.080 --> 57:41.080] you know, I've sat on this and because, you know, like in the video that I've seen from the [57:41.080 --> 57:46.600] Plano Police Department, I said, I want to leave this North Dallas area because the police are [57:46.600 --> 57:51.560] particularly hostile because North Dallas is still a very safe place and they have nothing to really [57:51.560 --> 57:56.040] do but mess with people. But of course that's indicative of police across the United States [57:56.040 --> 58:04.520] of America. But, gee, I forgot what I was going to say. Okay, when we get back, I'll go over this [58:04.520 --> 58:14.040] briefly, briefly of how to engage them to really give them major grief. Yes, yes, yes. I was about [58:14.040 --> 58:23.640] to express the nature of my grief. Okay, okay. You can do that. You get higher level people upset. [58:24.200 --> 58:30.120] This cop, his name is going to be. He fondled me. He fondled me. You know, that's what they do. [58:30.120 --> 58:35.160] You should charge him with. Well, you should file him with sexual assault. That would be great. [58:35.880 --> 58:41.800] Okay. And we do, and we do have six other callers on the line. So, so let's try to, [58:41.800 --> 58:46.920] let's try to keep everything as succinct as possible. Yeah, we'll move quickly coming back [58:46.920 --> 58:51.480] and then we'll go to other callers. This is Randy Kelton, Betty Craig, Deborah Stevens, [58:51.480 --> 59:02.360] Rule of Law Radio. We'll be right back on the other side. The Bible remains the most popular [59:02.360 --> 59:07.320] book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand [59:07.320 --> 59:14.040] it. 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In the wake of the WikiLeaks furor, [01:00:06.040 --> 01:00:11.480] Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Wednesday she's appointing an internet security coordinator [01:00:11.480 --> 01:00:17.000] to help protect secret State Department materials. Officially, Clinton claimed the position was [01:00:17.000 --> 01:00:22.760] created as part of a bigger plan to, quote, adjust U.S. diplomacy, making it more, quote, [01:00:22.760 --> 01:00:30.600] flexible and effective in response to world crises and developments. A record 60 percent of Americans [01:00:30.600 --> 01:00:36.120] say the war in Afghanistan has not been worth fighting. Public dissatisfaction with the war [01:00:36.120 --> 01:00:42.040] has spiked by seven points just since July. The public's increasingly negative assessment [01:00:42.040 --> 01:00:48.040] comes after a new strategy, including a surge of U.S. and allied forces, led to the Afghanistan [01:00:48.040 --> 01:00:55.240] war's bloodiest year. Nearly 500 U.S. soldiers have been killed and over 4,400 wounded in 2010. [01:00:56.840 --> 01:01:02.200] New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson is visiting North Korea as an unofficial envoy, quote, [01:01:02.200 --> 01:01:07.640] to try to convince North Korea to calm down a little bit and see if we can reduce tensions [01:01:07.640 --> 01:01:13.000] in the Korean Peninsula. U.S. and South Korean intelligence services are monitoring North [01:01:13.000 --> 01:01:20.120] Korean nuclear sites. Wall Street is once again getting ready to pay astronomical bonuses [01:01:20.120 --> 01:01:25.960] this holiday season. A new report by the Services Employees International Union found the nation's [01:01:25.960 --> 01:01:32.760] six largest banks are on track to pay their bankers $143 billion in bonuses, benefits and [01:01:32.760 --> 01:01:40.520] compensation. That figure more than covers the $130 billion total budget deficit for all 50 states [01:01:40.520 --> 01:01:46.040] in 2011. If Wall Street pumped this money directly into the economy instead of paying it to its [01:01:46.040 --> 01:01:53.720] bankers, it could create 3.6 million new jobs and lower the unemployment rate by 2.3 percent. Just [01:01:53.720 --> 01:01:59.160] half the money banks are preparing to give themselves would provide the $73 billion needed [01:01:59.160 --> 01:02:05.160] to give all homeowners in the U.S. facing foreclosure, loan modifications with principal [01:02:05.160 --> 01:02:11.080] and interest rate reductions to market value. Bank of America is slated to give the largest [01:02:11.080 --> 01:02:19.960] bonuses with $35 billion set aside for its bankers. A pro-Wikileaks hacker has told Sky News [01:02:19.960 --> 01:02:25.000] the internet insurgent group Anonymous will keep attacking those companies that target the [01:02:25.000 --> 01:02:30.920] whistleblowing website. Speaking on camera for the first time, an anonymous cyber insurgent code [01:02:30.920 --> 01:02:36.360] named Bass said, we're going after the agencies that were directly involved in the censorship of [01:02:36.360 --> 01:02:42.600] Wikileaks, including PayPal, Visa, MasterCard and Amazon. In the last attack, the group said it [01:02:42.600 --> 01:02:49.080] mobilized 9,000 volunteers to smother the websites of companies that withdrew support from Wikileaks. [01:02:49.080 --> 01:02:54.200] Bass said Anonymous has thousands of supporters who have pledged to carry on their attacks and [01:02:54.200 --> 01:03:22.200] said they are developing new and more sophisticated types of malicious software. [01:04:54.200 --> 01:05:08.360] Okay, folks, we are back. We're taking your calls. And we are speaking with Charles in Texas. [01:05:10.040 --> 01:05:14.520] Okay, Randy, you are about to give him a brief strategy and then we've got [01:05:14.520 --> 01:05:17.720] six other people on the line. Right, we need to move along because we've got [01:05:17.720 --> 01:05:24.680] four segments and six people. Yes, file the complaint with the district attorney [01:05:26.120 --> 01:05:34.600] and after a week or two after he's gotten it, check with the county and find out when the grand jury [01:05:34.600 --> 01:05:39.960] meets. This is Collin County. They probably meet on a regular basis because it's a populated county. [01:05:41.720 --> 01:05:44.600] They got a lot of people in the county, so they probably meet more than once a month. [01:05:44.600 --> 01:05:52.760] Find out when the grand jury meets. Check a couple of days after they've met and have someone go in [01:05:52.760 --> 01:05:57.880] and check the minutes of the grand jury. And it should reflect a true bill or no bill. [01:05:57.880 --> 01:06:02.360] If there's not a true bill or no bill in there, then you have reason to believe the prosecutor [01:06:02.360 --> 01:06:07.480] did not give it to the grand jury the way he's required to by Article 2.03. Then you make up [01:06:07.480 --> 01:06:12.920] a criminal complaint against the district attorney and mail it to the highest district judge you can [01:06:12.920 --> 01:06:22.200] find. Does the county matter? The highest district judge I can find, I don't understand. [01:06:22.200 --> 01:06:28.920] Okay, in Travis County, we have a head criminal district judge. We have a bunch of criminal [01:06:28.920 --> 01:06:35.560] district judges, but we have one head of all of the criminal district judges. If they have that [01:06:35.560 --> 01:06:43.640] in Collin County, you want to find the most prestigious judge in Collin County who thinks [01:06:43.640 --> 01:06:48.360] he's the biggest and the baddest and the most important. Okay, whereas the first one was given [01:06:48.360 --> 01:06:54.600] to the district attorney, now this is to the judge. Now you send one to the judge asking the judge [01:06:55.880 --> 01:07:01.000] to hear your criminal complaint against the district attorney. Well, the judge is not going [01:07:01.000 --> 01:07:07.320] to think of himself as a magistrate, so he's going to refuse to act on it. And then you [01:07:07.880 --> 01:07:15.560] send a complaint to the grand jury, addressed to the foreman of the grand jury and one to grand [01:07:15.560 --> 01:07:23.240] juror 1 through 11, addressed to the district attorney, to his address, but with not his name [01:07:23.240 --> 01:07:30.520] on it, with a letter in there asking the foreman to sign this letter or initial this letter and [01:07:30.520 --> 01:07:34.680] send it back to you because you've had problems with the district attorney's secret and criminal [01:07:34.680 --> 01:07:38.440] complaints from the grand jury. And since these are against the district attorney, you want to [01:07:38.440 --> 01:07:46.920] make sure he gets it. When you don't receive that letter back, then I suggest that at that point, [01:07:46.920 --> 01:07:55.960] you go down yourself with criminal complaints against the district attorney and you go to the [01:07:55.960 --> 01:08:00.200] bailiff and give them to the bailiff and ask him to give it to the grand jury. Now the district [01:08:00.200 --> 01:08:06.040] attorney is compromised. He came in a fear of his complaints against him. So this is how we set him [01:08:06.040 --> 01:08:13.400] up. I'd like to spend more time on it because frankly, this is my pet subject. My only thing [01:08:13.400 --> 01:08:25.560] is can I send somebody a copy of what I intend to send as like a perusal of some sort? Who can I [01:08:25.560 --> 01:08:30.280] send the documents that I'm going to send to like proofreader? Do you guys not do that? [01:08:30.280 --> 01:08:36.040] Oh yeah. You could send those to me. Yeah. Just email them to Randy at Root of Law Radio. I would [01:08:36.040 --> 01:08:44.840] love to go over those. Okay. If you don't respond like within a week or so, is that so? Is it two [01:08:44.840 --> 01:08:50.440] years and that's it? And so it must be, I must send that... Not really. Did he file a complaint [01:08:50.440 --> 01:08:57.960] against you? No, he let me go because... Okay. Then your two years is running. So once you file [01:08:57.960 --> 01:09:05.160] the complaint, you stop the clock. Okay. But I've got to get that FedExed out. I've got to get [01:09:05.160 --> 01:09:13.560] a notarized criminal complaint with FedExed out probably before the new year, definitely before [01:09:13.560 --> 01:09:19.640] the 8th of January. Absolutely. Get it in there quickly. Okay. Well then... Get it to me. If you [01:09:19.640 --> 01:09:27.080] haven't heard a response from me in two days, send me an email with the subject line in all caps. [01:09:27.080 --> 01:09:33.480] 10-4. 10-4. 10-4. And once that initial stage is done, I can always call back and get more from [01:09:33.480 --> 01:09:39.640] you all. So God bless you all. You all do a wonderful thing. This is probably the most [01:09:39.640 --> 01:09:44.760] original show in the United States of America. So have a good evening. You will find this... [01:09:44.760 --> 01:09:48.920] Thank you, Sean. This will turn out to be your personal Christmas present. It will be so much fun. [01:09:48.920 --> 01:09:53.320] Thank you, Charles. All right. Y'all be good. And Deborah and Eddie. Y'all do a great job. [01:09:53.320 --> 01:10:00.680] Thanks, Charles. Thank you. Okay. We are going now to James in Alaska. We've got listeners all [01:10:00.680 --> 01:10:04.040] over the continent. Thanks, James. What's on your mind tonight? How can we help you? [01:10:05.080 --> 01:10:09.720] Well, I'll have to agree with that, gentlemen. This is probably one of the most original shows [01:10:09.720 --> 01:10:19.160] on the radio. Oh, thank you. I've got three things. A friend of mine went to tax court, had [01:10:21.880 --> 01:10:30.200] sent in his, you know, the formal request for admission. The responding attorney [01:10:30.200 --> 01:10:33.960] didn't do anything. She didn't answer them. She didn't do anything with them. [01:10:33.960 --> 01:10:39.960] He went to tax court, fully expecting those things to be admitted on the record. [01:10:41.640 --> 01:10:50.600] The judge basically... And she didn't make a motion for anything as far as, you know, [01:10:50.600 --> 01:10:55.960] putting aside the admissions or anything. You know, it turns out on a cross transcript that [01:10:55.960 --> 01:11:07.480] the judge of his own accord made up a supposed motion by the respondent's attorney to, [01:11:07.480 --> 01:11:10.920] you know, get relief from these things and entered a judgment for it. So... [01:11:12.280 --> 01:11:16.520] Whoa, whoa. You're saying that the judge wrote a motion? [01:11:17.880 --> 01:11:24.920] Well, no. The judge acted like there had been a motion in court when in fact there had been none. [01:11:24.920 --> 01:11:31.160] A fellow and his wife were both there and they didn't hear anybody say anything about moving [01:11:31.160 --> 01:11:35.960] the court, that kind of a thing like that. Yeah. File criminal charges against the judge. [01:11:37.240 --> 01:11:43.160] Criminal? In tax court? Any court. This is a judge exercising an authority. The judge knows... [01:11:43.160 --> 01:11:47.880] Well, no. You wouldn't file... You would not file the criminal complaint in tax courts. [01:11:47.880 --> 01:11:50.680] No, not in a tax... No, no. That's not what I mean. No, no. I mean... [01:11:50.680 --> 01:12:00.600] The action occurred in the tax court. The judge is supposed to be a neutral arbitrator, [01:12:01.160 --> 01:12:08.280] but the judge is adjudicating for the other side. Now, the judge has a duty. It has two duties. [01:12:08.920 --> 01:12:14.920] First, the judge must determine the facts based on the rules of evidence and then apply the law [01:12:14.920 --> 01:12:21.560] as it comes to him to the facts in the case. Right. He doesn't have a authority to act [01:12:23.400 --> 01:12:31.080] in an adjudicatory capacity toward either side or either party. Then if he does that, [01:12:31.080 --> 01:12:36.280] he breaches his ministerial duty and he denies you in your full and free access [01:12:36.280 --> 01:12:41.080] to enjoyment of your right to equal protection of the law. [01:12:41.080 --> 01:12:44.920] Fair trial. That's a crime in every state except New Mexico. [01:12:44.920 --> 01:12:53.480] All right. But he was... The thought was that he was exercising his judicial prerogative. [01:12:54.120 --> 01:13:00.120] Not... He has judicial prerogatives. That's not one of them. [01:13:01.080 --> 01:13:04.920] All right. So what would be your... This is the thing. [01:13:04.920 --> 01:13:11.240] The criminal sues against him for exceeding his... No, you can't sue him. It would waste [01:13:11.240 --> 01:13:17.000] the time to sue him. What I suggest, if you want to file suit, you go into court and ask the bailiff [01:13:17.000 --> 01:13:24.760] to arrest the judge, and the bailiff will refuse, and then you sue the bailiff. You can't sue the [01:13:24.760 --> 01:13:29.240] judge, but you can sue the bailiff. But file criminal charges against the bailiff. You run [01:13:29.240 --> 01:13:35.400] the routine on the judge by filing a complaint with the prosecutor, and then the head district [01:13:35.400 --> 01:13:40.760] judge, and then the grand jury, going after this judge. File a judicial conduct complaint [01:13:40.760 --> 01:13:46.360] against the judge. As proceeds, as individuals, you can make their life a living hell. [01:13:47.560 --> 01:13:51.560] Okay. So a judicial complaint would be probably the best step then, right? [01:13:51.560 --> 01:13:55.640] That would be... Yeah. That's great because you'll never hear anything about it, and the [01:13:55.640 --> 01:14:01.400] judicial conduct commission will toss your complaint. But it's just like if you buy a new [01:14:01.400 --> 01:14:08.920] car and pay a lot of money for insurance. I paid $650 a year for insurance. I'm sorry. $650 every [01:14:08.920 --> 01:14:14.280] six months on my avalanche. If I parked that thing in Walmart's parking lot and somebody [01:14:14.280 --> 01:14:19.640] bashed in my fender, well, they'd fix it. If I come out there next month and somebody bashes in my [01:14:19.640 --> 01:14:27.240] fender, they'd fix it, cancel my insurance. Not my fault. They don't care. You file a judicial [01:14:27.240 --> 01:14:32.440] conduct complaint against the judge, his bond rating goes up. Okay. So what would be the [01:14:34.200 --> 01:14:37.080] specific complaint that you're making? Official oppression. [01:14:38.520 --> 01:14:41.880] Official oppression? Yes. He's exercising authority he does not [01:14:41.880 --> 01:14:48.760] expressly have. He's adjudicating for the other side. He's supposed to provide you [01:14:48.760 --> 01:14:51.080] the equal protection of the laws. He failed to do that. [01:14:59.720 --> 01:15:07.960] Okay. No, no. Okay. What you do is in all of the admissions that weren't answered, [01:15:09.320 --> 01:15:11.400] you file those as judicial notice. [01:15:11.400 --> 01:15:21.560] You take judicial notice that this admission was not answered. Therefore, they gave you tacit [01:15:21.560 --> 01:15:29.320] admission that these are facts before the court that are incontrovertible. They waive your [01:15:29.320 --> 01:15:36.200] opportunity to controvert them. Okay. We are losing you. You're getting really garbled. [01:15:36.200 --> 01:15:39.400] Yeah. You're getting really garbled. You've got a bad connection. You're getting [01:15:39.400 --> 01:15:43.160] really garbled. You've got a bad connection, James. I'm sorry. We're going to have to let you go. [01:15:44.840 --> 01:15:51.800] Must be a lot of snow in there freezing the lines. But yeah, just do judicial notice of [01:15:51.800 --> 01:15:55.640] all of the admissions they didn't answer to and move for summary judgment. [01:15:58.920 --> 01:16:02.040] Okay. I think we've lost him. Yeah. Okay. Let's go to the next one. [01:16:02.040 --> 01:16:04.440] Okay. We've got Frank from Texas. [01:16:04.440 --> 01:16:09.560] Hi. Hello, Frank. Thank you for calling in. What's on your mind tonight? [01:16:09.560 --> 01:16:14.920] Well, I just have something. It's a little off topic, but I work at one of the high schools here [01:16:14.920 --> 01:16:24.120] in Austin. Today, during our morning announcements, we actually had somebody come on, either a teacher [01:16:24.120 --> 01:16:30.200] or administrator. I couldn't make the name out. They were urging our students to call their senators [01:16:30.200 --> 01:16:37.240] and congressmen to support the DREAM Act and kind of shocked me because... [01:16:37.880 --> 01:16:46.760] Yes. That's using government facilities to promote a private agenda. We need to go quickly on the [01:16:46.760 --> 01:16:50.600] other side because we're running out of time, but I would very much like to address that when [01:16:50.600 --> 01:16:54.440] we come back. This is Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, Eddie Craig, Rule of Law Radio. [01:16:54.440 --> 01:16:59.480] We'll be right back on the other side. [01:17:25.000 --> 01:17:30.040] We are located at 5448 Burnett Road, Suite 3 at the corner of Burnett and Shulmont, [01:17:30.040 --> 01:17:35.320] and we're open Mondays and Fridays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 5. You are welcome to stop in [01:17:35.320 --> 01:17:42.760] our shop during regular business hours or call 512-646-644-0 with any questions. Ask for Chad [01:17:42.760 --> 01:17:47.080] and say you've heard about us on Rule of Law Radio or Texas Liberty Radio. That's Capitol Point [01:17:47.080 --> 01:17:51.960] and Boyon at the corner of Burnett and Shulmont, and we're open Mondays and Fridays, 10 to 6, [01:17:51.960 --> 01:17:57.480] Saturdays, 10 to 5. That's Capitol Point and Boyon, 512-646-644-0. [01:18:00.280 --> 01:18:05.960] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the internet isn't so easy, [01:18:05.960 --> 01:18:10.200] and neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. Oh, well, I guess you haven't [01:18:10.200 --> 01:18:15.880] heard of Brave New Books then. Brave New Books? Yes. Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs [01:18:15.880 --> 01:18:21.000] you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Angie, Edward Griffin. They even stock [01:18:21.000 --> 01:18:26.760] inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. There's no way a place like that exists. Go [01:18:26.760 --> 01:18:31.880] check it out for yourself. It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [01:18:32.440 --> 01:18:38.280] By UT, there's never anywhere to park down there. Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking [01:18:38.280 --> 01:18:44.600] for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility, just behind the bookstore. It does [01:18:44.600 --> 01:18:51.720] exist, but when are they open? Monday through Saturday, 11 AM to 9 PM, and 1 to 6 PM on Sundays. [01:18:51.720 --> 01:19:15.160] So give them a call at 512-480-2503, or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:19:21.720 --> 01:19:43.240] Okay, folks, we are back. We're taking your calls. We're speaking with Frank in Texas. [01:19:43.240 --> 01:19:53.160] Okay, and it sounds like somebody is using government property to promote a private agenda. [01:19:53.160 --> 01:20:04.760] Okay, look up 39.02, Texas Penal Code. Calculate the value of the equipment they were using to [01:20:04.760 --> 01:20:15.880] promote a private agenda. And if it's in excess of the amount listed in 39....$1,500, it's a state [01:20:15.880 --> 01:20:21.640] jail felony. Then it's a state jail felony. Wow. And it sounds like they're using a PA system. [01:20:21.640 --> 01:20:28.040] That's certainly worth more than $1,500. If it's in excess of $100,000, it is a second degree. If [01:20:28.040 --> 01:20:34.200] it's in excess of $200,000, it is a first degree. Yeah. Well, surely the PA system is worth at least [01:20:34.200 --> 01:20:40.840] $1,500. It may or may not be worth $100,000. Yeah, but that would be the school. That would be [01:20:40.840 --> 01:20:47.560] everything. Yeah, that's true. The building. If you are a teacher, [01:20:51.320 --> 01:20:57.960] I would suggest, unless you want to be fired. Yeah, I just really wanted to kind of get the [01:20:57.960 --> 01:21:04.200] word out, and if parents out there hear this and they're wanting to do it, that's fine. If we could [01:21:04.200 --> 01:21:09.000] get a parent to do it, and not because you agree or disagree with the political agenda, [01:21:10.200 --> 01:21:18.680] because this is not acceptable. Now, I was shocked because every year they send out, [01:21:18.680 --> 01:21:24.200] especially during election season, they send out all these emails telling us that you cannot use [01:21:24.200 --> 01:21:31.000] any of the school facilities, or any of the school email, or anything to electioneer, or... [01:21:31.000 --> 01:21:34.280] Well, who did this? Who did this over the loudspeaker? [01:21:34.280 --> 01:21:41.640] Well, I wasn't... Our speaker system is not that great, and I did not get the name of the person. [01:21:41.640 --> 01:21:49.400] It was... We usually have announcements, and one of the assistant principals will do it, [01:21:49.400 --> 01:21:54.520] but then somebody else came on, and I'm just not sure who it was. [01:21:54.520 --> 01:22:04.280] Send me an email with the principal's phone number, and I will call him tomorrow and get [01:22:04.280 --> 01:22:09.960] his attention. Okay, and do I send that to Rule of Law? [01:22:09.960 --> 01:22:15.320] Yes, ruleoflawrandy at ruleoflawradio.com. I really like doing this part. [01:22:15.320 --> 01:22:18.360] And they'll say... I'll accuse them of doing something, and they'll say, [01:22:18.360 --> 01:22:23.240] oh, we didn't do that, and I tell them, oh, I don't care. Heck, you guys are going to make me famous. [01:22:26.200 --> 01:22:32.360] I accused a sheriff of trying to murder someone in his jail by withholding his heart medicine, [01:22:32.360 --> 01:22:35.800] and they said, whoa, whoa, I don't think they're doing that. Oh, I don't care. [01:22:35.800 --> 01:22:38.280] Heck, this is a great story. You're going to make me famous. [01:22:38.280 --> 01:22:43.000] Well, I still have about 14 or 15 years to retirement, so... [01:22:43.000 --> 01:22:48.040] Yeah, that's why I was warning you not to... It may be wrong for them to do that to you, [01:22:48.040 --> 01:22:50.600] but they would do that to you. So send me an email. [01:22:50.600 --> 01:22:53.880] ... or make my life such a living hell that I quit. [01:22:53.880 --> 01:22:57.960] Exactly. Okay, give me the email. We need to move along. I've got a bunch of calls. [01:22:57.960 --> 01:22:59.560] Okay, thank you. Thank you. [01:22:59.560 --> 01:23:04.360] Okay, thanks, Frank. All right, we are going to go to the next question. [01:23:04.360 --> 01:23:10.840] Thank you. Thank you. Okay, thanks, Frank. All right, we are going to go now to Francis in Texas. [01:23:12.440 --> 01:23:15.480] Hello, Francis. Thank you for calling in. What's on your mind tonight? [01:23:15.480 --> 01:23:25.160] Yes, ma'am. I had what might be considered a fully present. I turned 52 on December 3rd. [01:23:25.800 --> 01:23:34.280] I was traveling on December 2nd from Phoenix on Interstate 40 to Oklahoma City to see my [01:23:34.280 --> 01:23:41.560] daughter before returning to Austin. At about 3.30 in the afternoon, about 20 miles outside of [01:23:41.560 --> 01:23:49.240] Apollo, I was pulled over by... Well, first of all, I was tracked for about five minutes [01:23:49.240 --> 01:23:55.000] by a DPS trooper. Perfect weather conditions, about 3.30 in the afternoon on December 2nd. [01:23:55.000 --> 01:24:03.880] I hit his lights. I pull over, roll down all the windows. I have my hands on the wheel. [01:24:04.760 --> 01:24:08.040] He comes over to the passenger's side and he says, [01:24:08.040 --> 01:24:14.440] sir, do you realize that your license plate is obstructed? To that I respond, sir, I really [01:24:14.440 --> 01:24:21.000] don't have a clue what you're talking about. I just bought this car from Midland Nissan in 2009. [01:24:21.000 --> 01:24:28.200] I haven't made any amendments or any modifications to the license plate frame from the factory. [01:24:28.760 --> 01:24:34.440] Can you show me what you're talking about? He said, yeah, get out. I go to the back of the car [01:24:34.440 --> 01:24:43.160] and approximately a half a millimeter of the top of the word Texas is obstructed by the dealership [01:24:43.160 --> 01:24:51.720] frame. I said, this is really odd. I never knew that I was in violation of any kind of law. He [01:24:51.720 --> 01:25:01.720] said, yeah, it's an offense to obstruct your license in any way. He then asked me to produce [01:25:01.720 --> 01:25:09.560] my Texas driver's license, my insurance. Before I went back to the car to retrieve those documents, [01:25:09.560 --> 01:25:16.360] I advised him that I had a concealed carry license and had a pistol under my [01:25:18.360 --> 01:25:22.680] driver's side mat. That didn't seem to be any big deal to this officer. [01:25:23.560 --> 01:25:29.080] Went and retrieved three documents, the driver's license, the concealed carry permit, and the [01:25:29.080 --> 01:25:37.080] insurance. I gave that to him and I'm still standing outside of my car. He looks at the [01:25:37.080 --> 01:25:43.640] insurance. He looks at the concealed carry. He gives me both of those two documents. He then asked [01:25:43.640 --> 01:25:54.600] me to go to his cruiser and sit in the front seat. Just to kind of give you a little background on [01:25:54.600 --> 01:26:03.720] his overall demeanor, if I had to rank his level of courtesy, congeniality, 10 being the most [01:26:03.720 --> 01:26:10.280] congenial, this guy was a 10 out of a 10. He was like a Boy Scout and I was equally congenial to [01:26:10.280 --> 01:26:18.440] him. I'm sitting now in his cruiser and he asked me where I'm coming from. I explained I spent [01:26:18.440 --> 01:26:25.320] Thanksgiving in Phoenix with my parents. He asked me how long I was there. I answered that question. [01:26:25.320 --> 01:26:29.720] He asked me where I'm going. I told him I'm going to see my daughter in Oklahoma City. He asked me [01:26:29.720 --> 01:26:35.800] how long I'm going to be in Oklahoma City. I responded to that question. Then he segues into [01:26:35.800 --> 01:26:43.880] the question, have I ever been arrested before? I basically told him about a couple of arrests [01:26:45.080 --> 01:26:49.880] 15 to 20 years ago. I told him I had no convictions. They were all misdemeanor arrests. [01:26:49.880 --> 01:26:59.080] At this point, the dispatcher is calling back my arrest record. One was illegal carrying of a weapon, [01:26:59.880 --> 01:27:08.040] deferred adjudication in 1981, Dallas County. The second one was assault in 1990, a Class A [01:27:08.040 --> 01:27:13.640] misdemeanor that was brought by Tarrant County. I don't mean to be difficult, but we're running [01:27:13.640 --> 01:27:19.000] out of time. Can you move a little longer? Let me try to accelerate this. As soon as we go [01:27:19.000 --> 01:27:25.880] over the arrests, he then says, would you mind if I searched your car? I said, sir, I'm a strict [01:27:25.880 --> 01:27:31.240] constitutionalist. What is your probable cause? He doesn't answer the question. He immediately gets [01:27:31.240 --> 01:27:38.840] on the radio, calls the dispatcher for a canine unit. Then the dispatcher responds, the canine [01:27:38.840 --> 01:27:45.080] unit is 11 miles out. He turns to me and he says, you don't mind waiting 20 minutes, do you? I said, [01:27:45.080 --> 01:27:52.520] sir, am I under arrest? To which he responds, no. Then I ask him again, what is the probable cause? [01:27:53.400 --> 01:27:57.720] He still doesn't answer the question. At that point, he asked me to get out of the car [01:27:57.720 --> 01:28:05.560] and go stand in a field about 10 yards away from my vehicle. For the next 20 minutes, [01:28:05.560 --> 01:28:14.200] another four DPS cars pull up. Then at about the 30 minute mark, an Amarillo municipal cop pulls up [01:28:14.200 --> 01:28:20.680] that has the dog. The cop that initially pulls me over comes up to me. He briefs me on what's [01:28:20.680 --> 01:28:25.640] about ready to happen. He says, you don't have anything illegal in your car? I said, no, I don't, [01:28:25.640 --> 01:28:33.160] sir. He said, we're just going to do a walk around your car. At that point, the canine cop, [01:28:33.720 --> 01:28:40.200] who has not interfaced with me at all, he's not had two words with me, walks around the vehicle [01:28:40.200 --> 01:28:46.360] one time. The dog is unresponsive, walks around the vehicle a second time, at which point the [01:28:46.360 --> 01:28:54.200] canine cop jerks the leash and the dog barks like he's being strangled. The cop that pulls me over [01:28:54.920 --> 01:29:01.800] walks up to me and says, the dog is alerted on your car. We need to search your car. At that [01:29:01.800 --> 01:29:10.360] point, I get about eight DPS cops plus the canine cop tearing everything out of my vehicle, banging [01:29:10.360 --> 01:29:19.000] on hubcaps, banging on tires, banging on my gas tank. They didn't find anything. This is a whole [01:29:19.000 --> 01:29:26.520] segment. You got to get to it. We got a whole stack of callers. Basically, they put everything [01:29:26.520 --> 01:29:37.080] back in my car. It's now 60 minutes has elapsed. Hello? Okay, we're running out of time. We need [01:29:37.080 --> 01:29:40.840] to finish this up on the other side. We've got a whole stack of callers. We haven't got to your [01:29:40.840 --> 01:29:47.080] question yet. Okay. Okay. This is Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, Eddie Craig, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:29:49.320 --> 01:29:55.480] Okay, we'll finish this up on the other side. Then we've got three more callers. We need to [01:29:55.480 --> 01:30:00.840] move quickly. We're running out of time. Okay. We'll be right back. Top 10 reasons to question [01:30:00.840 --> 01:30:05.080] the official story of the Oklahoma City bombing, reason number five. As witnessed by millions of [01:30:05.080 --> 01:30:08.760] viewers, the rescue efforts were interrupted several times due to the presence of other [01:30:08.760 --> 01:30:13.880] explosives. Government log entries indicate and witnesses report that after the initial devastating [01:30:13.880 --> 01:30:18.600] blast, a bomb complete with timer was discovered and removed from wreckage by the bomb squad. [01:30:18.600 --> 01:30:22.920] Yet we are told it's all due to baseless bomb scares or other contrivances. While officials [01:30:22.920 --> 01:30:27.400] try to sort out their stories, all we ask is who planted these bombs and why is the government [01:30:27.400 --> 01:30:32.840] lying about them? For more information, go to okcbombingtruth.com. There's a new breed of [01:30:32.840 --> 01:30:37.320] pickpockets on the loose and you could be their next victim if you have a recently issued credit [01:30:37.320 --> 01:30:41.960] or debit card. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with tips for protecting [01:30:41.960 --> 01:30:48.440] yourself from high tech thieves. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, [01:30:48.440 --> 01:30:53.560] you'll never get it back again and once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will [01:30:53.560 --> 01:30:59.400] start to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to [01:30:59.400 --> 01:31:04.920] yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [01:31:04.920 --> 01:31:12.280] Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:31:12.280 --> 01:31:19.320] Credit and debit cards with PayPass RFID microchips let you wave and pay, but they also give thieves [01:31:19.320 --> 01:31:23.960] the ability to secretly capture your card information right through your wallet. Radio [01:31:23.960 --> 01:31:29.640] frequency identification is a technology that uses radio waves to scan unique numbers from items. [01:31:29.640 --> 01:31:34.280] Like the waves that let you listen to your favorite radio station, RFID radio waves travel [01:31:34.280 --> 01:31:40.200] through solid objects like walls and purses. A savvy crook with the right RFID card reading device [01:31:40.200 --> 01:31:45.560] can walk through a crowd, siphon numbers and use them to make purchases and you might never be the [01:31:45.560 --> 01:31:51.240] wiser until the bill arrives. Protect yourself, refuse cards with RFID inside and demand a [01:31:51.240 --> 01:32:11.080] replacement card. I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:32:21.240 --> 01:32:47.160] Okay, folks, we are back. Okay, Francis, so please continue. Try to finish the story as [01:32:47.160 --> 01:32:52.040] quickly as possible so we can get to the rest of these calls. Gotcha. So just to summarize, [01:32:52.040 --> 01:32:57.800] the dog makes two trips around my car. It alerts on the vehicle on the second cycle around. [01:32:59.320 --> 01:33:05.080] The cop that initially pulled me over alerts me to the fact that they're going to have to now [01:33:05.080 --> 01:33:12.120] search my car. They tear everything out, bang on the hubcaps. This takes about 35 minutes. [01:33:12.120 --> 01:33:17.320] They don't find anything illegal. They put everything back in the car. At that point, [01:33:18.120 --> 01:33:24.040] I have a stack of family photographs on a clipboard in the backseat. One of them is a picture [01:33:24.040 --> 01:33:31.000] of my son who's nine years a seal. I went to Annapolis. The cops call me over. Now the canine [01:33:31.000 --> 01:33:36.040] cop is talking to me for the first time. He calls me over, very aggressive, a bracelet sounding [01:33:36.040 --> 01:33:45.240] voice. He points to this 8x10 photograph of these two soldiers. He says, do I affiliate with these [01:33:45.240 --> 01:33:50.520] people as if it's some kind of illegal militia? I said, sir, this is my oldest son. He's an [01:33:50.520 --> 01:33:58.360] Annapolis graduate. He's nine years a Navy SEAL. He's currently serving. Just to kind of put [01:33:59.400 --> 01:34:03.560] a courteous closure on the whole thing, I said, gentlemen, could you please say a prayer for my [01:34:03.560 --> 01:34:10.040] boy? He is active duty in Yemen right now. That's kind of how we left the whole thing. [01:34:10.040 --> 01:34:18.840] My question is this. Since I asked the initial cop that pulled me over for probable cause when [01:34:18.840 --> 01:34:23.960] he asked me if he could search my vehicle and he failed to respond the first time, [01:34:24.760 --> 01:34:31.160] and then after he got confirmation that there was a canine unit 11 miles away, asked me [01:34:31.160 --> 01:34:35.720] would I be willing to stay another 20 minutes, which I kind of didn't really answer the question [01:34:35.720 --> 01:34:40.840] and I just sort of acquiesced. And then I asked him a second time, am I under arrest? [01:34:41.400 --> 01:34:47.000] What is the probable cause? He said, no, you're not under arrest. And he would never elucidate. [01:34:47.000 --> 01:34:49.560] Okay. Okay. Wait a minute. Get to your question. Come on. [01:34:49.560 --> 01:34:53.880] Okay. The question is, do I have any cause of action? [01:34:54.520 --> 01:35:00.600] Absolutely. Yes, you do. False imprisonment. The officer had no right to detain you. [01:35:00.600 --> 01:35:06.600] However, when he asked you if you mind waiting and you simply stood there and said nothing, [01:35:07.160 --> 01:35:12.360] you could very well have blown that opportunity. However, there is something- [01:35:12.360 --> 01:35:15.880] No, he did not. I said could have, didn't say did. [01:35:15.880 --> 01:35:20.040] However, there is other case law, and I've done a lot of research on this, [01:35:20.040 --> 01:35:26.120] gearing up for my lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service under the Federal Tort Claims Act having [01:35:26.120 --> 01:35:33.560] to do with stops run and where they run dogs, sniff dogs around your car. The courts have [01:35:33.560 --> 01:35:42.360] ruled consistently that they, that law enforcement is within their scope to run a dog around your car [01:35:42.920 --> 01:35:53.000] if and only if it is conducted during the traffic stop. They cannot extend the scope [01:35:53.000 --> 01:36:01.160] or the duration of the traffic stop beyond that which is reasonable to issue a warning citation [01:36:01.960 --> 01:36:08.200] in order to run a dog around your car. Now, at the point that the guy wanted to call out the canine [01:36:08.200 --> 01:36:13.880] unit and they said that it's 20 minutes away, and then it ended up being 30 minutes, that [01:36:13.880 --> 01:36:21.480] significantly extended the scope and the duration of the traffic stop which originally had to do [01:36:21.480 --> 01:36:28.680] with a blocked license plate. And so, yes, you would have cause of action because of that recent [01:36:28.680 --> 01:36:34.120] Supreme Court case law. And you may want to prepare a criminal complaint against the officer. [01:36:35.160 --> 01:36:40.440] File it with the district attorney in Randall County. It's actually in the Oldham County that [01:36:40.440 --> 01:36:45.400] I was pulled over on, sir. Oh, bummer. It would be better if it was Randall County because you [01:36:45.400 --> 01:36:51.320] could tell him that I suggested that you do that because the district attorney in Randall [01:36:51.320 --> 01:36:57.960] County really hates me. Okay, listen, Francis, if you want to send me an email, I'll send you [01:36:57.960 --> 01:37:03.240] that case law citation, okay? Well, yeah, there's one other saving grace to this and that was when [01:37:03.240 --> 01:37:08.920] the cop directed him to go stand in the field. When he was directed to move away from his vehicle [01:37:08.920 --> 01:37:14.920] so that he could not leave the scene, now he's got an arrest for being detained beyond the stop. [01:37:14.920 --> 01:37:22.840] Okay. Yes, yes, absolutely. You were detained. The bottom line is they extended the scope [01:37:22.840 --> 01:37:30.440] and the duration of the traffic stop far beyond that which was necessary to issue you a warning [01:37:30.440 --> 01:37:37.960] citation for the license plate being blocked. Now, say, for example, if the guy had the canine with [01:37:37.960 --> 01:37:45.800] him, okay, and one officer was running the dog around your car while the other officer was [01:37:45.800 --> 01:37:51.240] writing a ticket to you for your license being blocked, then you wouldn't be able to do anything [01:37:51.240 --> 01:37:56.440] about it. But they made you sit there and wait 30 minutes to bring out the canine unit and there was [01:37:56.440 --> 01:38:04.360] no probable cause. They extended the scope and duration. That's a violation of the authority [01:38:04.360 --> 01:38:09.960] of law enforcement that has been interpreted by the Supreme Court per the Kabbalist ruling. [01:38:09.960 --> 01:38:17.320] And you may want to just look that up yourself, C-A-B-A-L-L-E-S. That was the Kabbalist case and [01:38:17.320 --> 01:38:22.200] I believe that was in 07, very recent Supreme Court ruling. Okay. Can I see the email address? [01:38:22.840 --> 01:38:27.080] Yes, just go to the website, ruleoflawradio.com, and click on the contact button, okay? [01:38:27.080 --> 01:38:31.880] Okay, thank you. Okay, great. Okay, we are going now to Neil in Texas. [01:38:31.880 --> 01:38:35.080] Neil, thanks for calling in. What is your question for us tonight? [01:38:35.080 --> 01:38:43.800] Uh, well, I got a traffic ticket this afternoon, or early, late this morning. I was pulled over [01:38:44.360 --> 01:38:49.800] for not having an inspection sticker by a Travis County constable. [01:38:50.440 --> 01:38:53.320] Okay, how long had the sticker been expired? [01:38:53.320 --> 01:39:06.200] Uh, I didn't have one on there, period. I had the windshield replaced, and the only thing that got [01:39:06.200 --> 01:39:14.760] transferred over was the license sticker. So it didn't have an inspection sticker on it. [01:39:14.760 --> 01:39:18.360] So was the, did you have an inspection that was current? [01:39:18.360 --> 01:39:20.360] No, I didn't. [01:39:20.360 --> 01:39:37.160] Okay, the statute says that it is a violation not to display. It's not a violation not to have it. [01:39:37.960 --> 01:39:40.360] It's a violation if you don't display it. [01:39:41.720 --> 01:39:48.760] Oh, I thought it was a violation if it was expired but being displayed. [01:39:48.760 --> 01:39:55.160] No, no. If it's a registration, it's a violation not to have it. [01:39:55.720 --> 01:40:00.520] But if it's an inspection, it's a violation not to display it. [01:40:01.880 --> 01:40:03.080] Been there, done that. [01:40:04.120 --> 01:40:08.360] So am I just going to just buy it? [01:40:08.360 --> 01:40:13.400] No, just go get an inspection. Generally, if you get an inspection within 10 days, [01:40:13.400 --> 01:40:17.640] you go down to court and you say, uh, I got an inspection. They'll charge you 10 bucks and [01:40:17.640 --> 01:40:24.120] dismiss. Okay. Or they might even let me, it says here they might let me take a [01:40:25.240 --> 01:40:26.360] defensive driving. [01:40:26.360 --> 01:40:32.040] No, no, no, not on this. This is not, it's not a moving violation. If you get it within 10 days [01:40:32.040 --> 01:40:39.720] and take it to them, they're required to, they can dismiss it even if you were guilty. If you [01:40:39.720 --> 01:40:45.240] get it taken care of, then they'll dismiss it and just charge you 10 bucks to cover their cost of [01:40:45.240 --> 01:40:51.320] missing with the paperwork. And whether I like it or not, uh, that's not, you know, that's not an [01:40:51.320 --> 01:40:55.720] obnoxious answer. You know, I'd pay them 10 bucks not to have a violation. [01:40:55.720 --> 01:40:59.160] So that's just the best course of action is just take care of it. [01:40:59.160 --> 01:41:01.240] Yeah. Pick your battles real careful. [01:41:01.240 --> 01:41:06.600] Yeah. Okay. All right. Good enough. Appreciate it. [01:41:06.600 --> 01:41:13.480] Okay. Thanks, Neil. Okay. We are going now to Hondo in Texas. Hondo, thank you for calling in. [01:41:13.480 --> 01:41:15.240] What is your question for us tonight? [01:41:16.360 --> 01:41:24.920] Uh, yes, I have some questions about, uh, trials. Um, there's examining trial, arraignment, pretrial, [01:41:25.560 --> 01:41:33.960] and I, I'm not real sure what all the difference is, what, what, uh, order they go in, et cetera. [01:41:33.960 --> 01:41:40.200] Um, the examining trial, if I'm not mistaken, that's where the magistrate examined into the, [01:41:40.200 --> 01:41:46.360] uh, probable cause for the arrest, right? And that should be the absolute very first [01:41:47.320 --> 01:41:49.000] trial or anything. [01:41:49.000 --> 01:41:51.960] Exactly. That's exactly what should happen first. [01:41:51.960 --> 01:41:56.040] Okay. And so that's what should happen when you appear on a citation, right? [01:41:56.040 --> 01:42:01.000] Yeah. You have the examining trial. If the magistrate finds probable cause, [01:42:01.960 --> 01:42:07.640] then he will afford the complaint to the court having subject matter jurisdiction. [01:42:07.640 --> 01:42:12.120] And then the court having subject matter jurisdiction will then convene an arraignment [01:42:12.120 --> 01:42:19.000] hearing. And the purpose of an arraignment hearing is for the purpose of determining [01:42:19.000 --> 01:42:29.000] the identity of the accused and taking a plea. And then any other hearings under 28.01 code of [01:42:29.000 --> 01:42:34.200] criminal procedure, that's the one that authorizes the judge to order you to come to court. He can [01:42:34.200 --> 01:42:40.360] order you to come to court for an arraignment hearing and all of the other things listed in [01:42:40.360 --> 01:42:46.280] there all amount to, uh, motion hearings. Okay. [01:42:46.280 --> 01:42:49.480] It lists different kinds of motions. It has to be for a motion hearing. [01:42:49.480 --> 01:42:55.400] I went to court here in Travis County and went up to the judge and said, your honor, [01:42:55.400 --> 01:42:59.640] you summoned me to court, but I have the summons here, but it doesn't tell me why you [01:42:59.640 --> 01:43:04.840] summoned me here. What am I doing here? She said, well, Mr. Kelton, we needed to find out if you [01:43:04.840 --> 01:43:10.520] had an attorney. Well, with all due respect, your honor, I have 28.01 code of criminal procedure, [01:43:10.520 --> 01:43:14.840] and it lists all those things you can order me to come to court for. Find out if I have [01:43:14.840 --> 01:43:24.200] an attorney is not one of them. That was fun, but it has to be everything other than arraignment [01:43:24.200 --> 01:43:27.160] is for some type of motion hearing. Okay. [01:43:27.160 --> 01:43:37.400] Okay. And, um, oh, there's your music. Yeah, just stay there, Hondo. We'll finish [01:43:37.400 --> 01:43:41.560] on the other side. All right, folks, moving right along here. We got one more segment [01:43:41.560 --> 01:43:47.000] left on the rule of law. Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Deborah Stevens, we're taking your [01:43:47.000 --> 01:44:06.280] phone calls. We'll be right back. Stronger immune power, improved sense of wellbeing. [01:44:07.480 --> 01:44:13.000] How many supplements have you heard? Most of these benefits, the team behind centrician [01:44:13.000 --> 01:44:19.800] believes that supplements should over-deliver on their promises. And centrician does just that. [01:44:20.440 --> 01:44:25.720] Centrician utilizes the ancient healing wisdom of Chinese medicine. 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[01:46:34.120 --> 01:46:40.200] Okay, so examining trial, you go before the magistrate. At that point, they don't have to [01:46:40.200 --> 01:46:43.560] have indictment or information. They don't necessarily have to have subject matter [01:46:43.560 --> 01:46:47.080] jurisdiction. They're just examining into the probable cause, right? [01:46:47.080 --> 01:46:49.880] At that point, they must have a criminal accusation. [01:46:50.520 --> 01:46:55.080] Okay, which would be the arresting officer is accusing you of something. That's all they [01:46:55.080 --> 01:47:03.720] need. Yes, they need. Okay, the citation is not a complaint. What they need is a criminal complaint. [01:47:05.080 --> 01:47:15.080] Okay. It is the criminal complaint that gives the, excuse me a second. It is the criminal [01:47:15.080 --> 01:47:22.680] complaint that gives the magistrate subject matter jurisdiction for the purpose of holding [01:47:22.680 --> 01:47:30.760] an examining trial. If at the examining trial, the magistrate finds probable cause, then he [01:47:30.760 --> 01:47:36.920] must produce an order showing that he finds probable cause, binding you to the court, [01:47:36.920 --> 01:47:45.800] releasing you on bail, whatever. And that's 1617 code of criminal procedure. And under 1620, [01:47:45.800 --> 01:47:54.440] he must produce a warrant. So you're arrested without a warrant. If he finds probable cause, [01:47:54.440 --> 01:48:00.200] then he must produce, must create a warrant. And it is that warrant that gives the state [01:48:00.200 --> 01:48:08.440] subject matter jurisdiction. They never do that. They just bypass that point. [01:48:08.440 --> 01:48:13.400] Yeah, I'm just deciding myself that how much stuff they just bypass conveniently. And I [01:48:13.400 --> 01:48:21.880] went into, I'm in Crockett County down in Arizona, and I went into today to appear and asked the [01:48:21.880 --> 01:48:26.600] clerk if I could see the judge. And she said, absolutely, which was shocking. So I went in to [01:48:26.600 --> 01:48:33.880] see the judge, the magistrate, and started talking to him. And he said, well, really, the state has [01:48:33.880 --> 01:48:38.280] a right to be represented. So we walked into the county attorney's office and started talking to [01:48:38.280 --> 01:48:42.920] the county attorney. He said, I'm going to just let y'all talk about it. And he left. So I sat [01:48:42.920 --> 01:48:51.480] with the county attorney. And she went into what she would offer me as far as a reduced [01:48:53.720 --> 01:48:59.560] fine, et cetera. And I told her that, you know, I don't, that's kind of just wasting her time [01:48:59.560 --> 01:49:06.440] because, you know, we need, the proper things are not in the file to grant held jurisdiction. [01:49:06.440 --> 01:49:13.960] And I'm here for an examining trial, and there's not a valid complaint. And she said, well, [01:49:13.960 --> 01:49:20.360] all we ever do is just file the ticket that they write you. And then if you plead not guilty, [01:49:20.360 --> 01:49:25.880] then we'll do a complaint, which is what the court procedure says that they do, which I understand [01:49:25.880 --> 01:49:32.040] is not right. But anyway, she said, yes, it would just be too much paperwork if we had to do a [01:49:32.040 --> 01:49:36.760] complaint right from the beginning. And we just do it this way. And I said, yeah, to be more [01:49:36.760 --> 01:49:41.880] expedient and try to keep this money machine going without piling up with paperwork. And she [01:49:41.880 --> 01:49:47.960] agreed with me. And I said, well, it's not going to be the case with me. And I told her, you know, [01:49:47.960 --> 01:49:55.320] I just left and said, I'll be sending in some motions. And so, I mean, these guys even knew [01:49:55.320 --> 01:50:00.840] what they were doing really. They can only do if you let them. They know it's wrong. [01:50:00.840 --> 01:50:08.360] Oh, it just drives me nuts. I'm a busy guy. You know, I got things to do other than be [01:50:08.360 --> 01:50:11.480] putting together motions and trying to make these people behave themselves. [01:50:11.480 --> 01:50:12.440] They count on that. [01:50:13.560 --> 01:50:14.440] I know it. They do. [01:50:15.160 --> 01:50:24.200] They use that. And from my perspective, whatever else happens, when I reach the end of this [01:50:24.200 --> 01:50:32.520] place I'm at here, I'm going to be able to look back and say at least one time I did the right [01:50:32.520 --> 01:50:38.600] thing for the right reasons, even though it was difficult, it was inconvenient, and it was costly. [01:50:39.800 --> 01:50:44.600] I am the steward of this system for my children and my grandchildren. [01:50:46.120 --> 01:50:52.120] I believe the same. Because my dad and my dad just like, why do you go through all this trouble? [01:50:52.120 --> 01:50:59.640] I know it's wrong, but I'm like, because it's wrong. I mean, we've got to get this fixed and [01:50:59.640 --> 01:51:05.480] everybody needs to jump in and do it so they'll stop. It's ridiculous. And it's not just the due [01:51:05.480 --> 01:51:10.680] process violations that are ridiculous. It's the fact that, you know, like with things I learned [01:51:10.680 --> 01:51:16.920] in Eddie's traffic seminar about the Texas driver's license, the one I have is not even [01:51:16.920 --> 01:51:22.280] there's not even defined in the transportation code. And they're writing me a ticket for being [01:51:22.280 --> 01:51:30.440] invalid. But it's ridiculous. If we don't, if some of us don't start fighting them [01:51:31.800 --> 01:51:37.880] and going after them, they're going to keep doing this. It won't take many of us. [01:51:39.320 --> 01:51:44.200] We start running in there as sovereigns and start grabbing them by their legal throats, [01:51:44.200 --> 01:51:47.640] start filing criminal complaints with a grand jury. Every time they turn around, [01:51:48.280 --> 01:51:52.440] we will get their attention. Can we file criminal complaints or judicial [01:51:52.440 --> 01:51:57.720] conduct complaint against the magistrate failing to perform his duties under 15.17 G, [01:51:57.720 --> 01:52:04.680] which says I'm coming in there in compliance with the citation and he doesn't perform his duties [01:52:04.680 --> 01:52:11.720] under 15.17 A and reading rights and et cetera. If a public official acting under the color, [01:52:11.720 --> 01:52:18.280] acting under the color, color, meaning pretense of his official capacity, fails to perform a [01:52:18.280 --> 01:52:24.280] duty he is required to perform or exerts or purports to exert an authority he does not [01:52:24.280 --> 01:52:29.320] expressly have. And in the process denies citizen full and free access to a drawing of any right. [01:52:30.040 --> 01:52:35.160] That's a class A misdemeanor in Texas. Well, that's what they definitely did [01:52:35.160 --> 01:52:39.800] because they didn't say anything about that. I have a right to an attorney, [01:52:39.800 --> 01:52:44.520] the right to not make a statement. Nothing was told to me when I went up there today [01:52:44.520 --> 01:52:50.360] and it should have been judicial conduct complaints, bar grievances against the attorney [01:52:51.560 --> 01:52:58.200] and criminal charges to the grand jury. I'm telling you, you will be amazed. [01:52:59.000 --> 01:53:03.000] You can turn off the TV and this is better entertainment. [01:53:03.640 --> 01:53:08.280] Oh yeah. I don't have time to watch TV. I don't know what's going on on TV, [01:53:08.280 --> 01:53:18.680] but I don't own one. Yeah, I shouldn't. And great. Another question I had, if you adjudicate [01:53:18.680 --> 01:53:22.840] these things, if they actually do go through due process correctly and we get to trial, [01:53:22.840 --> 01:53:29.320] you adjudicate and prove to them that the fact that you received a citation for an invalid driver's [01:53:29.320 --> 01:53:34.280] license is bogus. I don't have to have a driver's license. Am I going to have to do that all across [01:53:34.280 --> 01:53:39.640] the state every time somebody issues me a bogus citation on that fact? Yes, as long as you're the [01:53:39.640 --> 01:53:45.720] only one. Actually. If we can get more people to do it, if we can get one or two people in every [01:53:45.720 --> 01:53:50.600] county hammering these guys, going to grand juries, filing judicial conduct and criminal complaints. [01:53:51.720 --> 01:53:55.160] When you hammer one of these magistrates, everybody finds out about it. [01:53:56.440 --> 01:54:03.640] I had my justice of the peace in the county I lived in, went to a continuing training [01:54:03.640 --> 01:54:07.560] and in here in Travis County, this is when I was still in Wise County. [01:54:08.840 --> 01:54:13.000] And I went in to see him one day and he said he was down here and he did this training and [01:54:14.600 --> 01:54:21.720] Mr. Kelton, you're getting rather well known around the state. They found out where he was from [01:54:21.720 --> 01:54:27.880] and he had six different JPs asking if they knew me, if he knew me. [01:54:27.880 --> 01:54:33.080] So, you know, and they're telling everybody what I did to them. So this really gets around. [01:54:33.080 --> 01:54:37.480] So it's spreading around. It doesn't take many of us hammering these guys. [01:54:38.440 --> 01:54:41.720] When we hammer them, when I start filing criminal charges against them, [01:54:42.840 --> 01:54:48.520] you dial 911 and ask the police to come and arrest the justice of the peace, [01:54:48.520 --> 01:54:56.040] you really get his attention. And he tells everybody about it. So it really gets to the [01:54:56.040 --> 01:54:58.680] ground. It won't take many of us to change this system. [01:54:59.320 --> 01:55:03.160] Yeah. And I think we got to get control of these folks because of the way everything's going. [01:55:04.040 --> 01:55:07.480] I mean, you know, like you always say, you need to recognize a police aid when you see one. [01:55:07.480 --> 01:55:10.280] We've got to get control of these people because it's just getting worse. [01:55:10.280 --> 01:55:14.680] Precisely. Okay. We really need to move along. We've got two, three more calls. [01:55:14.680 --> 01:55:18.280] All right. Thanks, Tondo. Okay. We're going to go now to Gary in Georgia. [01:55:19.080 --> 01:55:21.480] Gary, you said you had something quick. What's up? [01:55:21.480 --> 01:55:31.960] Oh, yeah. What's up is the question about Randy about mortgages. And I would suggest that people [01:55:31.960 --> 01:55:39.000] get an abstractive title and you can get that from the American Title Association in Washington, D.C. [01:55:39.800 --> 01:55:45.960] It will show that your mortgage has already been paid. So you do your abstractive title and ask [01:55:45.960 --> 01:55:53.480] them, you know, to provide the title for you. And also, that a deed of trust is a security. [01:55:54.280 --> 01:56:00.760] So therefore, your attorneys, they never had personal knowledge of anything. They have no [01:56:00.760 --> 01:56:11.800] witnesses. They're committing felonies. And in my state, where public officials make false statements, [01:56:11.800 --> 01:56:18.360] it's a felony and it's a violation of our oath. Since it's quick, I'll let it go. [01:56:18.360 --> 01:56:24.120] Got some traffic things, but I guess it'll be tomorrow. Thank you, ma'am. Have a nice night. [01:56:24.120 --> 01:56:27.640] Thank you, Gary. That has to be a record for Gary. [01:56:27.640 --> 01:56:29.720] Any comments on what Gary said, Randy? [01:56:29.720 --> 01:56:35.800] Yes. Okay. He said the abstractive title from the deed of, okay, who was the, [01:56:35.800 --> 01:56:37.080] what was the organization in D.C.? [01:56:37.080 --> 01:56:43.160] All right. If you want me to slow down. I said it's quick. [01:56:44.280 --> 01:56:45.240] You were too quick. [01:56:45.960 --> 01:56:54.040] All right. So I go to the American Title Association, Google it. I did. And then you [01:56:54.920 --> 01:57:04.760] ask for the abstractive title because remember, they have to be insured by Title Company. [01:57:04.760 --> 01:57:11.800] I always mortgage it. And if it's, if it, you can't get the right person there to show, [01:57:11.800 --> 01:57:17.240] or that since it's been securitized, we do have a deed of trust, like a deed of trust state, [01:57:17.240 --> 01:57:21.000] this is security. And it's been sold by the time. [01:57:21.000 --> 01:57:26.920] Okay. Here's the concern. The title insurance only protects the title [01:57:27.640 --> 01:57:31.240] up until the point of consummation of the note. [01:57:32.120 --> 01:57:32.840] Okay. [01:57:32.840 --> 01:57:40.280] Once the note is signed, and this is an allegation we're making, after the note is signed, [01:57:41.000 --> 01:57:51.640] the lender sells the security instrument into a secondary market that clouds the title. [01:57:52.920 --> 01:57:57.480] So the, the borrower who paid for the title insurance is not protected [01:57:57.480 --> 01:58:02.600] past the point of sale. So they create a cloud on the title after point of sale, [01:58:02.600 --> 01:58:08.040] and then the holder of the title, and the borrower has no protection after that. [01:58:09.800 --> 01:58:15.240] Okay. Well, I was told that if you, if you get the abstractive title, [01:58:16.040 --> 01:58:18.840] then it will show the mortgage is already been paid. [01:58:18.840 --> 01:58:22.120] That I would, that I would very much like to see. [01:58:22.120 --> 01:58:31.240] Yes. So contact a title insurer, America, a title company that does title searches, [01:58:31.960 --> 01:58:38.200] because it has to be real owner. And so anyway, this is a, a, a [01:58:38.200 --> 01:58:43.160] hypothesization on my part. I have to do it myself, but I'm going to pass that on to you. [01:58:43.160 --> 01:58:45.000] Okay. Thank you very much, Gary. [01:58:45.000 --> 01:58:50.040] Okay. We're at the end of the show. Sorry, Jim had called back an anonymous police call back tomorrow [01:58:50.040 --> 01:58:56.040] for a four hour info marathon here on ruleoflawradio.com. We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:59:50.040 --> 01:59:52.040] It's a dream.