[00:00.000 --> 00:03.960] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty News and [00:03.960 --> 00:08.960] activist updates online at thelibertybeat.com. This is Justin Armand and this is [00:08.960 --> 00:14.560] Jessica Armand here with your Liberty Beat for February 6, 2014. Gold opened [00:14.560 --> 00:22.460] today at $1,262. Silver at $20 and Bitcoin is trading at $782. Today's [00:22.460 --> 00:27.240] Bitcoin price is sponsored by Cash into Coins, the United States largest cash for [00:27.240 --> 00:32.320] Bitcoin service. Get your Bitcoin today at cashintocoins.com. Support for the [00:32.320 --> 00:36.760] Liberty Beat comes from AJ Processing, accepting payment in gold, silver and [00:36.760 --> 00:40.440] Bitcoin for all your typing and transcription needs. Visit them online [00:40.440 --> 00:47.240] at ajprocessing.com and from Sovereign BTC, media, marketing and consulting for [00:47.240 --> 00:53.200] the Bitcoin ecosystem online at sovereignbtc.com and from Mass Appeal, [00:53.200 --> 00:57.800] affordable high-quality printing, now accepting Bitcoin online at [00:57.800 --> 01:02.880] MassAppealInc.com. And now the news. There are two special events happening in [01:02.880 --> 01:06.880] Austin this evening. First, a walk for open carry support will be held with [01:06.880 --> 01:11.640] supporters to gather at 5 p.m. in order to march down Guadalupe Street with the [01:11.640 --> 01:15.200] event focused on the right to self-defense and the right to open carry [01:15.200 --> 01:20.560] long guns and pre-1899 firearms. The meetup is happening near Brave New Books [01:20.560 --> 01:25.600] on the northwest corner of MLK and Guadalupe near the Domino's Pizza. Just [01:25.600 --> 01:29.520] after this event, Brave New Books is hosting Adam and Parker versus the Man. [01:29.520 --> 01:33.960] That event includes an in-person presentation from activist Adam Kokesh [01:33.960 --> 01:38.760] who will focus on his recent experience in jail, his book project and Liberty. [01:38.760 --> 01:42.320] Joining him by Skype will be Parker Leverett, a teenage Liberty lover [01:42.320 --> 01:46.560] fighting for his rights to live with his father in spite of state edicts. The [01:46.560 --> 01:50.640] event runs from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Brave New Books. The public is invited to [01:50.640 --> 01:55.200] attend for a suggested donation of $20. No one will be turned away for lack of [01:55.200 --> 02:01.200] funds. However, please do donate if you have the means. The First Amendment [02:01.200 --> 02:04.880] protects the rights to flash headlights at other drivers in order to warn them [02:04.880 --> 02:09.120] of speed traps ahead. That's the ruling of a federal judge in St. Louis, Missouri [02:09.120 --> 02:13.440] Monday. The Huffington Post reports he issued an order to temporarily block the [02:13.440 --> 02:17.040] town of Ellisville, Missouri from punishing drivers for providing the [02:17.040 --> 02:20.920] warning. The suit was filed by the ACLU on behalf of a driver who had been [02:20.920 --> 02:27.240] ticketed for flashing his lights after driving past speed radars. An outcry from [02:27.240 --> 02:31.120] Bitcoin users with petitions circulating online after Apple removes [02:31.120 --> 02:35.160] blockchain from its mobile store. Blockchain Thursday posted on its website [02:35.160 --> 02:39.520] that the Bitcoin wallet was removed due to an unresolved issue and had received [02:39.520 --> 02:44.080] no prior warning of a problem. Apple has not yet offered any comment. Support for [02:44.080 --> 02:48.400] the Liberty Beat comes from Dorothy Erminger at Cap Star Lending. Dorothy can [02:48.400 --> 02:54.720] walk you through the ins and outs of buying a home. Call her at 512-343-6494 [02:54.720 --> 03:10.160] or apply online at calledorothy.com [03:25.720 --> 03:32.320] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.320 --> 03:37.800] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:37.800 --> 03:43.080] When you were eight and you had bad treats You go to school and learn the golden rules [03:43.080 --> 03:48.920] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? If you get hot then you must get cool [03:48.920 --> 03:54.320] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.320 --> 04:00.120] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.120 --> 04:05.760] You took it on that one, you took it on this one You took it on your mother and you took it on your father [04:05.760 --> 04:11.040] Okay, howdy. This is Randy Kelcom, Debra Stevens, Rubilar Radio. [04:11.040 --> 04:17.720] Except Debra Stevens has the night off tonight. You're stuck with me all night. [04:17.720 --> 04:29.800] This is February the 6th, 2014. And tonight, I haven't went over due processing quite a while. [04:29.800 --> 04:35.000] So I thought tonight I would kind of run down due processing. [04:35.000 --> 04:43.120] Anybody who's ever been arrested in Texas could probably answer the question [04:43.120 --> 05:00.200] Why is the average conviction rate for all crimes across the board in the state of Texas equal to 99.6? [05:00.200 --> 05:13.840] I bushwhacked Acevedo, the chief of police for Austin, at a meeting where he was advocating, [05:13.840 --> 05:22.640] authorizing the city of Austin police to take blood from DUI suspects on the side of the road. [05:22.640 --> 05:33.520] And frankly, I was horrified at the prospect and not for the citizen so much as horrified for the police who had to do that. [05:33.520 --> 05:46.680] My goodness, consider the potential liability when you're corrupting a citizen's blood. [05:46.680 --> 05:54.480] Oh, corruption of blood. That kind of reminds me of something I read in the Constitution. [05:54.480 --> 06:00.280] But it seemed like a really, really bad idea. So I bushwhacked him at the door and asked him, [06:00.280 --> 06:03.880] Why do you want to have your officers take blood on the highway? [06:03.880 --> 06:07.360] He said, Well, so we can increase our conviction rate. [06:07.360 --> 06:12.760] Well, Chief Acevedo, do you know what your conviction rate is now? [06:12.760 --> 06:18.560] Well, I'm not. I don't know. I haven't checked that. Well, give me a guess. He said, Oh, 70, 80 percent. [06:18.560 --> 06:27.480] How about a little higher? 80, 90, 99.6. It rounds up to 100. [06:27.480 --> 06:31.280] He said, Oh, that can't be. I have my statistician here. [06:31.280 --> 06:36.560] Let's get him over here. And he calls this guy over and he asked the guy, What's the average conviction rate? [06:36.560 --> 06:50.680] And he confirmed 99.6. This is the worst police state the world has ever seen. [06:50.680 --> 06:58.080] And nobody even knows. We just cruise along thinking everything's OK. [06:58.080 --> 07:10.920] The only ones who are aware that there is something terribly wrong with the criminal justice system are the ones who've been through it. [07:10.920 --> 07:22.280] Those who think that we live in a land of law, they've never had to deal with a criminal justice system. [07:22.280 --> 07:31.080] And, you know, if you listen to the show often, you will remember that I regularly tell people [07:31.080 --> 07:39.880] that you will never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [07:39.880 --> 07:48.440] To think so is naive. Everything's political. And we have prosecutors. [07:48.440 --> 08:02.360] Now, before I go into this, let me qualify that I do not like trying to find some [08:02.360 --> 08:12.760] focus of evil intent that I can rail at in righteous indignation and heap all the evils of the world on [08:12.760 --> 08:18.400] and blame for all of my problems. And there is a problem. [08:18.400 --> 08:24.040] And if you listen to the show very often, you know what I consider that problem to be. [08:24.040 --> 08:29.360] And I consider that problem to be you. You're the problem. [08:29.360 --> 08:36.200] You're the problem and I'm the problem. We do not live in a democracy here. [08:36.200 --> 08:44.240] Benjamin Franklin, the legend says when he came out of the Continental Congress, a woman asked him, [08:44.240 --> 08:53.840] Mr. Franklin, what have you given us? He did not say I have given you a oligarchy. [08:53.840 --> 09:00.000] He did not say I have given you a dictatorship. [09:00.000 --> 09:07.360] He said I have given you and he did not say I have given you a democracy. [09:07.360 --> 09:11.720] And it's important to understand that he did not give us a democracy. [09:11.720 --> 09:16.400] He said I have given you a republic if you can keep it. [09:16.400 --> 09:22.760] This is a republic. This is a republic as opposed to a democracy. [09:22.760 --> 09:33.000] A democracy is where the people are governed by the will of the people. [09:33.000 --> 09:38.080] And that sounds great unless you happen to be all right now. [09:38.080 --> 09:45.240] If you happen to be a Muslim, Muslim, if now 50 or 100 years ago, [09:45.240 --> 09:48.360] that would be great unless you happen to be a black person. [09:48.360 --> 09:53.680] And that wouldn't be so great because of the common prejudice. [09:53.680 --> 10:00.880] Fortunately, we are not a democracy. We are a democratic republic. [10:00.880 --> 10:12.400] And in a republic, the citizens of the republic have rights that even the citizens can't take away. [10:12.400 --> 10:22.160] We are essentially sovereigns without subjects, thus the problem. [10:22.160 --> 10:33.560] Who is the one who is ultimately responsible for the proper adjudication of the system? [10:33.560 --> 10:37.960] It is the sovereign. [10:37.960 --> 10:49.480] You and I, we are the ones responsible if our system is not working the way we intended. [10:49.480 --> 10:54.640] There's no one to point the finger at but each other. [10:54.640 --> 11:01.880] It was our job to keep the system working properly. [11:01.880 --> 11:18.440] Now, with that said, the system is really complex and it is very difficult to understand the subtle intricacies of how the system should work. [11:18.440 --> 11:24.840] Our forefathers understood that, especially in Texas. [11:24.840 --> 11:36.280] And understanding that everyone tends to act in their own personal self-interest. [11:36.280 --> 11:45.480] Ayn Rand in her book, The Virtues of Selfishness, she talked about everyone doing everything they do [11:45.480 --> 11:51.560] for what they believe to be is in their own personal self-interest. [11:51.560 --> 11:54.520] And we do that. [11:54.520 --> 11:58.280] Fortunately, human beings heard, we're not tigers. [11:58.280 --> 12:04.720] We don't raise our children and send them out in the world and go out on our own. [12:04.720 --> 12:13.640] And if after our children are raised, they encroach on our hunting area, we will fight them or kill them as competition. [12:13.640 --> 12:15.320] We're not tigers. [12:15.320 --> 12:19.240] We're human beings and humans heard, we group together. [12:19.240 --> 12:29.120] And that's fortunate because while we have an instinct for self-preservation, [12:29.120 --> 12:40.520] we have an instinct to preserve the viability of the group. [12:40.520 --> 12:47.560] That's why you can get kids to go to war and risk their lives for some political agenda, [12:47.560 --> 12:51.960] because they have a genetic imperative to protect the group. [12:51.960 --> 13:01.440] And the genetic imperative to protect the group often overrides the genetic need for personal survival. [13:01.440 --> 13:06.920] We call those guys heroes, but we see human beings doing that all the time. [13:06.920 --> 13:12.960] So our founders understood this. [13:12.960 --> 13:21.280] They understood that individuals tend to do for the most part what they think is best, [13:21.280 --> 13:28.320] not just for them, but what is best for the group. [13:28.320 --> 13:39.440] And they understood that those people who tend to gravitate toward positions of power [13:39.440 --> 13:46.040] tend to be the more narcissistic of all of us, the more alpha male. [13:46.040 --> 13:56.320] I shouldn't say alpha male, the more alpha characteristics we have females emerging in those roles now. [13:56.320 --> 14:02.680] But traditionally, it has been the alpha male who rises up and directs everyone else. [14:02.680 --> 14:09.760] And the more power one gains, the more one tends to come to believe [14:09.760 --> 14:15.480] that their judgment is better than everyone else's judgment. [14:15.480 --> 14:23.560] And so as they gain power, the more power they get, it is in the nature of the human animal, [14:23.560 --> 14:29.840] the more powerful we become, the more wise we believe ourselves to be, [14:29.840 --> 14:35.680] and the less wise we believe those under us to be. [14:35.680 --> 14:41.680] Now, that may not be right, but that's how it works in the world that I live in. [14:41.680 --> 14:46.920] And the point of all that is human beings are what human beings are. [14:46.920 --> 14:54.200] And it's inappropriate for us to start standing around pointing fingers and saying, [14:54.200 --> 14:58.400] this guy is a bad guy and this guy is a good guy. [14:58.400 --> 15:02.240] You know, for those of you who aren't about Christians, [15:02.240 --> 15:07.960] Jesus knew exactly what he was talking about when he said, or actually it was Mark that said that, [15:07.960 --> 15:14.800] said, Judge not that ye be not judged for by that judgment which ye judge. [15:14.800 --> 15:16.560] He knew what he was talking about. [15:16.560 --> 15:21.000] Thou, herefore, how considereth thou the moat that is in thy brother's eye, [15:21.000 --> 15:23.760] and considereth not the beam that is in thine own eye. [15:23.760 --> 15:28.880] First pluck out the moat from the beam from that own eye that thou may seek clearly to pluck out [15:28.880 --> 15:32.080] to remove the moat from that brother's eye. [15:32.080 --> 15:36.640] That was really, really important. [15:36.640 --> 15:44.080] If we start passing judgment on our public officials and saying they're just bad guys, [15:44.080 --> 15:48.240] well, what can you do when you got a bunch of bad guys there? [15:48.240 --> 15:51.600] What could you just poor me do? [15:51.600 --> 15:56.800] Well, poor me, you are the sovereign. [15:56.800 --> 15:58.680] You are the master. [15:58.680 --> 16:00.600] They are the subjects. [16:00.600 --> 16:03.040] They are the servants. [16:03.040 --> 16:09.400] And it is your duty to control your servants. [16:09.400 --> 16:14.680] So when we start passing judgment and thinking these are just jackbooted police officers [16:14.680 --> 16:25.080] and corrupt prosecutors and judges, it makes it easier for us to stand back [16:25.080 --> 16:32.320] and make excuses as to why we didn't stand up and exercise our authority [16:32.320 --> 16:35.640] as the masters to try to make things better. [16:35.640 --> 16:38.120] And I'll continue this when I come back. [16:38.120 --> 16:45.920] I hope I'm making sense and I hope not P.O. in too many people, but I really do have a point here [16:45.920 --> 16:49.280] and I'll get to it when I come back on the other side. [16:49.280 --> 16:56.000] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue La Radio, or call in number 512-646-1984. [16:56.000 --> 16:57.720] Jeff, I see you there. [16:57.720 --> 17:00.600] I'll get you after this next. [17:00.600 --> 17:02.120] My name is Jessica Arman. [17:02.120 --> 17:04.960] I'm an activist, a GCN listener, and mother of three. [17:04.960 --> 17:08.440] Our drinking water and food are filled with fluoride and other contaminants [17:08.440 --> 17:09.840] that harm our teeth and gums. [17:09.840 --> 17:14.000] To protect my family, I created My Magic Mud, an all-natural teeth whitening [17:14.000 --> 17:15.120] and strengthening remedy. [17:15.120 --> 17:19.240] My Magic Mud is a soft powder that polishes your teeth, reduces sensitivity, [17:19.240 --> 17:21.840] and removes harmful toxins from deep inside your mouth. [17:21.840 --> 17:23.840] You deserve a bright, healthy smile. [17:23.840 --> 17:26.400] Visit MyMagicMud.com and get yours today. [17:26.400 --> 17:28.560] That's MyMagicMud.com. [17:28.560 --> 17:30.000] Hi, this is Kurt Hildebrandt. [17:30.000 --> 17:31.720] I've been using Magic Mud for a while now, [17:31.720 --> 17:34.720] and I just can't believe how much healthier my teeth and gums feel. [17:34.720 --> 17:36.080] I love the product. [17:36.080 --> 17:38.480] This is Anna Martin, the libertarian homeschooler. [17:38.480 --> 17:40.160] I homeschool, so I drink coffee. [17:40.160 --> 17:42.040] And I drink coffee, so I use Magic Mud. [17:42.040 --> 17:44.040] It gets my teeth really clean. [17:44.040 --> 17:44.920] Give it a try. [17:44.920 --> 17:46.600] This is John Bush of the Liberty Beat. [17:46.600 --> 17:49.560] My wife and I use My Magic Mud because it brightens our smile, [17:49.560 --> 17:52.240] and our daughter uses it because it makes brushing fun. [17:52.240 --> 17:55.560] To get your can of My Magic Mud, go to Brave New Books [17:55.560 --> 18:00.440] or order it online at MyMagicMud.com. [18:00.440 --> 18:04.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with song calls, letters, [18:04.000 --> 18:05.440] or even lawsuits? [18:05.440 --> 18:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.240 --> 18:13.040] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [18:13.040 --> 18:14.840] and now you can win, too. [18:14.840 --> 18:17.600] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [18:17.600 --> 18:21.000] on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [18:21.000 --> 18:24.720] what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, [18:24.720 --> 18:26.760] how to answer letters and phone calls, [18:26.760 --> 18:29.360] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [18:29.360 --> 18:31.280] how to turn the financial tables on them [18:31.280 --> 18:34.040] and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.040 --> 18:36.960] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution [18:36.960 --> 18:38.880] for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.880 --> 18:41.240] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.240 --> 18:44.640] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [18:44.640 --> 18:46.920] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [18:46.920 --> 18:49.680] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.680 --> 18:56.320] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [18:56.320 --> 19:02.240] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:02.240 --> 19:05.760] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [19:05.760 --> 19:07.240] logosradio.com. [19:07.240 --> 19:27.160] Look one again, who we are, we're Christians. [19:27.160 --> 19:37.600] You know what they are, they don't have the answer. [19:37.600 --> 19:44.080] Look one again, they don't have the answer. [19:44.080 --> 19:46.080] I can't go through shoes for free, Lord. [19:46.080 --> 19:47.080] How they want me? [19:47.080 --> 19:49.080] Can't get it easy. [19:49.080 --> 19:51.080] I can't wait to politicalize. [19:51.080 --> 19:57.040] OK, I am back, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule Law Radio. [19:57.040 --> 20:03.560] And that first segment was really kind of a setup, [20:03.560 --> 20:12.400] so that we better understand how things really work. [20:12.400 --> 20:15.080] You know, I've done this show a long time. [20:15.080 --> 20:18.480] I have a lot of people coming in, especially [20:18.480 --> 20:21.280] in the legal reform community, talking [20:21.280 --> 20:25.240] about how things should work. [20:25.240 --> 20:32.240] The problem I have is they talk about how things should work [20:32.240 --> 20:38.360] as if that is how things actually work. [20:38.360 --> 20:42.240] And they seem to think that all you need to do [20:42.240 --> 20:47.520] is find this just right little law [20:47.520 --> 20:52.960] and apply this law in this perfect little way [20:52.960 --> 20:55.760] and everything will be fine. [20:55.760 --> 20:58.000] Horse manure. [20:58.000 --> 20:59.440] You will never win your case simply [20:59.440 --> 21:01.520] because you have the law and the facts on your side [21:01.520 --> 21:04.160] to think so is naive. [21:04.160 --> 21:10.440] You'll only win your case if you understand the politics. [21:10.440 --> 21:18.680] And the most influential political person in a courthouse [21:18.680 --> 21:23.040] is you. [21:23.040 --> 21:25.320] If you listen to Joe a lot, you've heard me say, [21:25.320 --> 21:29.400] when I walk into a courthouse, I am the baddest [21:29.400 --> 21:32.760] motor scooter in the building. [21:32.760 --> 21:35.400] And there's only one reason I'm the best motor [21:35.400 --> 21:37.680] scooter in the building. [21:37.680 --> 21:41.320] And that's because I'm nobody. [21:41.320 --> 21:46.320] I'm not a police officer, a bailiff, a prosecutor, [21:46.320 --> 21:50.040] a lawyer, a judge, a clerk. [21:50.040 --> 21:53.960] I am the master. [21:53.960 --> 21:58.120] They are all my public servants. [21:58.120 --> 22:00.240] Now, they may be your public servants, too, [22:00.240 --> 22:04.160] but first, they're mine. [22:04.160 --> 22:14.400] And I have authorized them to assert and enforce my law. [22:14.400 --> 22:15.680] This is not our law. [22:15.680 --> 22:20.280] If this was a democracy, it would be our law. [22:20.280 --> 22:21.480] But this is not a democracy. [22:21.480 --> 22:23.400] This is a republic. [22:23.400 --> 22:27.440] This is my law, belongs to me. [22:27.440 --> 22:31.960] And I have very generously allowed these public officials [22:31.960 --> 22:37.120] to administer my law in accordance with the law [22:37.120 --> 22:41.680] that I've laid down, I and my other sovereigns [22:41.680 --> 22:43.160] without subjects. [22:43.160 --> 22:46.400] I don't like to call myself sovereign because technically, [22:46.400 --> 22:48.160] we're not really sovereigns. [22:48.160 --> 22:51.760] Sovereigns are the ones that make law. [22:51.760 --> 22:53.440] We don't make law. [22:53.440 --> 22:59.200] We hire other people to do that, or legislators. [22:59.200 --> 23:01.240] We are the masters. [23:01.240 --> 23:04.960] We should always remember that we're the masters. [23:04.960 --> 23:09.320] And if we exercise the checks and balances [23:09.320 --> 23:11.800] that are available, these problems we're complaining [23:11.800 --> 23:13.280] about will go away. [23:13.280 --> 23:16.120] And I'll get to how we can do that. [23:16.120 --> 23:19.640] But first, let me talk about what's wrong. [23:19.640 --> 23:24.680] The reason the average conviction rate in Texas, [23:24.680 --> 23:29.040] and frankly, every other state I've been to, [23:29.040 --> 23:33.240] is that especially in Texas, and that I [23:33.240 --> 23:38.840] can verify with specificity and particularity, [23:38.840 --> 23:43.800] is that every step from arrest to trial, [23:43.800 --> 23:47.600] as currently practiced in the state of Texas, [23:47.600 --> 23:52.840] is not only wrong, it is very specifically [23:52.840 --> 23:56.600] against particular law. [23:56.600 --> 24:00.640] On my website, jurisimprudence.com, [24:00.640 --> 24:06.640] I have a habeas corpus, a read of habeas corpus [24:06.640 --> 24:10.880] that I wrote for a kid in Conroe. [24:10.880 --> 24:14.800] And that habeas corpus walks through due process, [24:14.800 --> 24:17.520] front to back. [24:17.520 --> 24:23.280] And it demonstrates what should be done, [24:23.280 --> 24:27.000] what the law says ought to be done. [24:27.000 --> 24:29.920] It also shows what is actually done, [24:29.920 --> 24:36.200] and demonstrates why it's done the way it's done. [24:36.200 --> 24:39.400] Every step in the process has been carefully [24:39.400 --> 24:43.840] crafted in order to place a person who [24:43.840 --> 24:48.600] has been accused of crime in a position such that they [24:48.600 --> 24:53.760] have no reasonable option but to take the deal. [24:53.760 --> 24:55.200] And I'm looking at my caller board, [24:55.200 --> 25:00.080] and I see Jeff in Mississippi on my caller board. [25:00.080 --> 25:04.480] For every rule, there is an exception. [25:04.480 --> 25:06.240] And Jeff is one of those exceptions. [25:08.960 --> 25:09.600] Excuse me. [25:09.600 --> 25:20.320] Jeff is one of the probably one in 500 that say, no. [25:20.320 --> 25:21.520] Absolutely not. [25:21.520 --> 25:24.840] I'm not going to roll over, lay down for you guys, [25:24.840 --> 25:26.200] and let you run over me. [25:26.200 --> 25:32.360] This show I do is to find Jeff and more people like him. [25:32.360 --> 25:37.800] Fortunately, everybody doesn't have to do what I do. [25:37.800 --> 25:40.360] Everybody doesn't have to stand up and rail [25:40.360 --> 25:42.640] in righteous indignation with these guys [25:42.640 --> 25:45.440] and absolutely demand that they do their job the way [25:45.440 --> 25:47.200] the law says they're supposed to do it, [25:47.200 --> 25:49.200] or you and I are going to fight. [25:49.200 --> 25:50.800] Most people have other focus. [25:50.800 --> 25:53.400] They have other things that are important to them. [25:53.400 --> 26:02.160] And frankly, we don't need everyone to police the system. [26:02.160 --> 26:03.320] We only need a few. [26:03.320 --> 26:06.720] And I do this show to find those few. [26:06.720 --> 26:09.320] What we need to police are the laws. [26:09.320 --> 26:12.080] And this is where it starts. [26:12.080 --> 26:15.080] Now, I'm not going to talk about why someone's arrested. [26:15.080 --> 26:16.800] I don't care. [26:16.800 --> 26:21.200] But if you were arrested for any of these things, [26:21.200 --> 26:24.920] if you were arrested for any reason, [26:24.920 --> 26:28.240] if a police officer arrests you for any reason, [26:28.240 --> 26:33.520] with or without a warrant, he must take you directly [26:33.520 --> 26:38.920] to the nearest magistrate under 14.06 Code of Criminal [26:38.920 --> 26:41.160] Procedure. [26:41.160 --> 26:44.800] That's the section for arrest without a warrant. [26:44.800 --> 26:46.920] And it authorizes a police officer [26:46.920 --> 26:51.880] to arrest, it authorizes actually anyone to arrest [26:51.880 --> 26:59.280] for an on-site felony offense or an on-site breach of the peace. [26:59.280 --> 27:01.600] Even a citizen can arrest for those. [27:01.600 --> 27:05.680] An otherwise misdemeanor that's not a breach of the peace, [27:05.680 --> 27:10.560] a citizen cannot arrest for an on-site. [27:10.560 --> 27:14.760] Now, it used to be that the only time [27:14.760 --> 27:18.480] you could be arrested for an on-site offense [27:18.480 --> 27:24.840] was if it wasn't a felony, was if the police officer personally [27:24.840 --> 27:28.000] saw or heard the offense committed, [27:28.000 --> 27:32.240] or if a magistrate ordered the arrest. [27:32.240 --> 27:35.160] And the only time the magistrate could order an arrest [27:35.160 --> 27:39.040] without a warrant is if the magistrate personally saw [27:39.040 --> 27:43.040] or heard the offense being committed. [27:43.040 --> 27:47.520] At some point, I think it was in 65, [27:47.520 --> 27:54.640] the legislature added to 14.01 Code of Criminal Procedure. [27:54.640 --> 27:58.720] 14.01 said you could arrest for a felony or breach [27:58.720 --> 28:01.800] of the peace or on-site. [28:01.800 --> 28:07.560] For any offense that was a felony or breach of the peace, [28:07.560 --> 28:09.960] a police officer could arrest. [28:09.960 --> 28:16.280] They added paragraph B that said a police officer can arrest [28:16.280 --> 28:21.680] for any offense committed in his sight or in his hearing. [28:21.680 --> 28:28.640] That didn't look like much of a change, but it was. [28:28.640 --> 28:33.840] That turned Texas into a police state. [28:33.840 --> 28:39.760] Prior to the inclusion of paragraph B in 14.01, [28:39.760 --> 28:44.200] a policeman could only arrest for an on-site offense [28:44.200 --> 28:48.760] if it was a felony or an offense designated [28:48.760 --> 28:52.160] as a breach of the peace. [28:52.160 --> 28:55.040] For everything else, he had to go to the magistrate [28:55.040 --> 28:58.600] and square out a complaint, hold an examining trial, [28:58.600 --> 29:00.520] get a determination of probable cause, [29:00.520 --> 29:06.760] have a order written by the judge under 16.17 Code [29:06.760 --> 29:09.400] of Criminal Procedure and an author and a warrant issued [29:09.400 --> 29:12.120] under 16.20 Code of Criminal Procedure, [29:12.120 --> 29:15.440] then he could come back and arrest you. [29:15.440 --> 29:21.480] When they passed 14.01B, an officer could arrest you [29:21.480 --> 29:29.360] for anything, and they do it all the time. [29:29.360 --> 29:36.720] If you give people an opportunity to abuse a system, [29:36.720 --> 29:42.280] they will absolutely abuse it, and they have abused this one [29:42.280 --> 29:45.840] and turned it into the worst police state they've ever seen. [29:45.840 --> 29:48.240] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, [29:48.240 --> 29:53.760] the group of our radio are calling number 512-646-1984. [29:53.760 --> 29:56.000] We'll be right back. [29:56.000 --> 30:07.080] Could you get hooked on your tanning salon? [30:07.080 --> 30:10.960] In fact, researchers say tanning may be as addictive as drugs. [30:10.960 --> 30:13.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll have the not [30:13.080 --> 30:15.520] so sunny details in a moment. [30:15.520 --> 30:17.520] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.520 --> 30:19.360] When you give up data about yourself, [30:19.360 --> 30:22.880] you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy is gone, [30:22.880 --> 30:25.880] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.880 --> 30:28.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [30:28.760 --> 30:31.120] and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.120 --> 30:33.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.520 --> 30:37.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:37.200 --> 30:41.160] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.160 --> 30:44.920] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.920 --> 30:46.680] Despite the risk of skin cancer, [30:46.680 --> 30:49.800] a million Americans use tanning salons every day. [30:49.800 --> 30:52.080] They say they're after that cool bronze look, [30:52.080 --> 30:54.800] but could their motivation be more than skin deep? [30:54.800 --> 30:58.520] A new study in Texas finds the real appeal may not be golden skin, [30:58.520 --> 31:00.880] but rather ultraviolet radiation, [31:00.880 --> 31:03.840] which scientists say may be as addictive as drugs. [31:03.840 --> 31:07.440] When habitual tanners receive the UV light from a tanning session, [31:07.440 --> 31:09.880] the addiction areas of their brains light up. [31:09.880 --> 31:12.720] But when those UV rays are secretly filtered out, [31:12.720 --> 31:15.640] they experience cravings and withdrawal symptoms. [31:15.640 --> 31:19.160] Maybe tanning booths are the opium dens of the 21st century. [31:19.160 --> 31:21.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:21.080 --> 31:25.040] You can watch more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:25.040 --> 31:31.160] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [31:31.160 --> 31:33.680] that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [31:33.680 --> 31:35.680] The government says that fire brought it down. [31:35.680 --> 31:40.680] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [31:40.680 --> 31:43.680] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, [31:43.680 --> 31:46.280] but thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [31:46.280 --> 31:47.880] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [31:47.880 --> 31:49.080] I'm a structural engineer. [31:49.080 --> 31:51.080] I'm a New York City correction officer. [31:51.080 --> 31:52.080] I'm an Air Force pilot. [31:52.080 --> 31:53.080] I'm a father who lost his son. [31:53.080 --> 31:56.080] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [31:56.080 --> 32:00.080] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [32:00.080 --> 32:04.080] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:04.080 --> 32:06.080] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [32:06.080 --> 32:08.080] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:08.080 --> 32:11.080] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:11.080 --> 32:14.080] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:14.080 --> 32:16.080] the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:16.080 --> 32:19.080] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.080 --> 32:22.080] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn [32:22.080 --> 32:25.080] how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.080 --> 32:28.080] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:28.080 --> 32:31.080] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.080 --> 32:33.080] that will help you understand what due process is [32:33.080 --> 32:35.080] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.080 --> 32:37.080] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [32:37.080 --> 32:40.080] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.080 --> 32:42.080] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:42.080 --> 32:45.080] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie. [32:45.080 --> 32:47.080] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.080 --> 32:50.080] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.080 --> 32:54.080] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.080 --> 32:59.080] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [32:59.080 --> 33:03.080] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:30.080 --> 33:32.080] Okay, we are back. [33:32.080 --> 33:34.080] Randy Carroll, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [33:34.080 --> 33:37.080] We've been talking about due process. [33:37.080 --> 33:42.080] If you're arrested in Texas or in any state in the union for that matter, [33:42.080 --> 33:49.080] the police officer is required by statute to take you directly to the nearest magistrate. [33:49.080 --> 33:53.080] Now, that is not something new. [33:53.080 --> 34:02.080] That's been around since 1216 when the dukes drugged King John down to the River Thames [34:02.080 --> 34:07.080] and threatened to cut his head off if he didn't sign the Magna Carta. [34:07.080 --> 34:14.080] Magna Carta was put together by the dukes, and King John agreed to sign it [34:14.080 --> 34:22.080] if they all came down and helped him stop a French invasion. [34:22.080 --> 34:26.080] The dukes came and helped him stop the French invasion, [34:26.080 --> 34:29.080] and then he wasn't going to sign the Magna Carta. [34:29.080 --> 34:35.080] So the dukes got pretty PO'd about that, drugging down to the River Thames, [34:35.080 --> 34:37.080] and was going to cut his head off, so he signed it. [34:37.080 --> 34:42.080] What it established was magistrates. [34:42.080 --> 34:44.080] You live in Texas, we have justices of the peace, [34:44.080 --> 34:49.080] and you'll notice that justices of the peace are scattered around the county. [34:49.080 --> 34:54.080] The reason for that is back in those days when on a horse [34:54.080 --> 34:58.080] you could reasonably travel 15 to 20 miles a day. [34:58.080 --> 35:05.080] They wanted it such that if a person was arrested for any reason, [35:05.080 --> 35:12.080] with or without a warrant, they were to be taken directly to the nearest magistrate, [35:12.080 --> 35:16.080] and the police officer was to explain himself. [35:16.080 --> 35:23.080] And it wasn't that the people didn't trust their police. [35:23.080 --> 35:27.080] It was important that the police not be perceived [35:27.080 --> 35:32.080] as having the power to arrest and imprison. [35:32.080 --> 35:38.080] It was not intended that the police hold the key to the jailhouse door. [35:38.080 --> 35:45.080] It was intended that the policeman take the person to a magistrate [35:45.080 --> 35:51.080] where the police officer could make his case, the person make their case. [35:51.080 --> 35:58.080] Anybody here who remembers the name of the program, [35:58.080 --> 36:05.080] it was a program in New York, Night Court. [36:05.080 --> 36:10.080] And it was a comedy with John Larroquette and several others. [36:10.080 --> 36:15.080] John Larroquette was the prosecutor, but if a person was arrested, [36:15.080 --> 36:19.080] and this is how it actually works in New York, the way it's supposed to, [36:19.080 --> 36:24.080] if a person is arrested and they can't afford counsel, [36:24.080 --> 36:28.080] they will be held long enough to have counsel appointed, [36:28.080 --> 36:34.080] give the person time to talk to counsel and explain what his situation is. [36:34.080 --> 36:39.080] The police officer and the prosecutor would come before the court. [36:39.080 --> 36:43.080] The accused and his lawyer would come before the court. [36:43.080 --> 36:46.080] The police officer would make his case. [36:46.080 --> 36:48.080] The accused would make his case, [36:48.080 --> 36:53.080] and the judge would make a determination of probable cause. [36:53.080 --> 37:01.080] In Texas, Article 2.10 makes it the duty of every magistrate [37:01.080 --> 37:04.080] to keep the peace in the county by all lawful means. [37:04.080 --> 37:11.080] Article 2.11 states that when a magistrate sits for the purpose of examining [37:11.080 --> 37:17.080] into a criminal accusation, that is an examining trial. [37:17.080 --> 37:20.080] Chapter 16, Code of Criminal Procedure, [37:20.080 --> 37:24.080] specifies what's to be done in an examining trial. [37:24.080 --> 37:28.080] And the person would be advised of his rights. [37:28.080 --> 37:31.080] If he doesn't have counsel, counsels would be appointed for him. [37:31.080 --> 37:33.080] There's a whole list of things. [37:33.080 --> 37:37.080] And then if once the hearing is held, [37:37.080 --> 37:40.080] if the judge, when the judge finishes, [37:40.080 --> 37:47.080] he is to issue an order under 16.17 stating whether he found probable cause [37:47.080 --> 37:50.080] or released the person at his liberty, [37:50.080 --> 37:54.080] sent him to bail or whatever the disposition was. [37:54.080 --> 37:58.080] And if the person, if this was a case where a police officer [37:58.080 --> 38:03.080] came before a magistrate to secure a warrant, [38:03.080 --> 38:08.080] it's also an examining trial, but it's an ex parte examining trial. [38:08.080 --> 38:13.080] The policeman tells his side, and if the policeman presents sufficient evidence [38:13.080 --> 38:16.080] to give a recent person of ordinary provenance reason to believe [38:16.080 --> 38:19.080] that crime has been committed and the accused committed the crime, [38:19.080 --> 38:26.080] then the magistrate can issue the warrant under 16.20 Code of Criminal Procedure. [38:26.080 --> 38:29.080] The officers can then go out and arrest the individual [38:29.080 --> 38:33.080] and bring him back before that magistrate. [38:33.080 --> 38:37.080] If you read what warrants say, [38:37.080 --> 38:44.080] you are to arrest this person and bring him before me. [38:44.080 --> 38:47.080] If I'm not available, you bring him before some magistrate in the county. [38:47.080 --> 38:52.080] The reason for that is the original hearing [38:52.080 --> 38:55.080] or in the warrant was secured was ex parte. [38:55.080 --> 38:59.080] You only heard the cop side or the prosecutor's side. [38:59.080 --> 39:04.080] You're going to bring him back before the magistrate so he can hear both sides. [39:04.080 --> 39:08.080] And once he completes the hearing, [39:08.080 --> 39:13.080] the magistrate is to seal all documents had in the hearing, [39:13.080 --> 39:18.080] cause his name to be written across the seal of the envelope, [39:18.080 --> 39:23.080] and forward it to the clerk or the court of jurisdiction never, ever once. [39:23.080 --> 39:27.080] Have I found that to be done in the state of Texas? [39:27.080 --> 39:31.080] In the state of Texas, if you are arrested with or without a warrant, [39:31.080 --> 39:33.080] you go straight to jail. [39:33.080 --> 39:36.080] You do not pass code. You do not click 200 bucks. [39:36.080 --> 39:38.080] You go straight to jail. [39:38.080 --> 39:44.080] And then maybe the next morning, you'll be brought before a magistrate. [39:44.080 --> 39:50.080] And the magistrate does what is called a magistration. [39:50.080 --> 39:56.080] If you type magistration into Microsoft Word, [39:56.080 --> 40:00.080] Microsoft Word will put a red line under it [40:00.080 --> 40:04.080] because Microsoft Word doesn't recognize it. [40:04.080 --> 40:06.080] And that's because it's not a word. [40:06.080 --> 40:17.080] This was a term made up to designate a procedure that doesn't exist in law. [40:17.080 --> 40:22.080] It's kind of a cross between an examining trial [40:22.080 --> 40:32.080] and the hearing held when there is an existing warrant under 1517. [40:32.080 --> 40:41.080] Chapter 15 covers the procedures for arrest with a warrant. [40:41.080 --> 40:45.080] Chapter 14 covers arrest without a warrant, [40:45.080 --> 40:49.080] and it kind of mixed the two together throughout all the parts [40:49.080 --> 40:52.080] that protect our liberty and just left in the part [40:52.080 --> 40:56.080] where the magistrate comes in and advises you of the charges against you [40:56.080 --> 40:57.080] and sets bail. [40:57.080 --> 41:01.080] He performs no examining trial. [41:01.080 --> 41:05.080] In every arrest in Texas, [41:05.080 --> 41:10.080] I can get you between 15 and 19 felonies and misdemeanors [41:10.080 --> 41:15.080] committed by every single actor in the process. [41:15.080 --> 41:18.080] And if you go to jurisprudence.com [41:18.080 --> 41:22.080] and ignore that little virus swarm thing, [41:22.080 --> 41:24.080] I've got the viruses out of there. [41:24.080 --> 41:26.080] It wasn't a malicious virus anyway, [41:26.080 --> 41:31.080] but I can't get Google to un-blacklist my site. [41:31.080 --> 41:32.080] But anyway, just ignore it. [41:32.080 --> 41:34.080] It won't cause you any harm. [41:34.080 --> 41:41.080] And look at the top frog on the left. [41:41.080 --> 41:46.080] I got a bunch of frogs on there because I call this frog farm conspiracy. [41:46.080 --> 41:50.080] And the reason I call it frog farm conspiracy is this is not something [41:50.080 --> 41:56.080] somebody, some evil individual came along [41:56.080 --> 42:01.080] and decided to create by corrupting the system. [42:01.080 --> 42:04.080] This is something that came about over time [42:04.080 --> 42:08.080] through a series of seemingly minor adjustments [42:08.080 --> 42:16.080] toward adjudicative expediency and judicial efficiency. [42:16.080 --> 42:21.080] But it has led to a horrible mess. [42:21.080 --> 42:25.080] And the only way it's going to get fixed is if you and I stand up [42:25.080 --> 42:27.080] and insist that it not be done anymore. [42:27.080 --> 42:34.080] And in another show, I'll talk about the running the routine on the system, [42:34.080 --> 42:41.080] using the grand jury and criminal complaints to get their attention. [42:41.080 --> 42:45.080] If you've listened to the show much, you've probably heard this a number of times. [42:45.080 --> 42:50.080] But I can assure you this really works. [42:50.080 --> 42:54.080] When you step up before the system in demand, [42:54.080 --> 42:58.080] that they abide by the laws they've sworn to, [42:58.080 --> 43:04.080] and then take actions against them in the way you're authorized to [43:04.080 --> 43:10.080] as the master of the servants, it really does get their attention. [43:10.080 --> 43:15.080] And our calls are building up, so I'm not going to go any further than this tonight. [43:15.080 --> 43:18.080] I may go into this a little deeper tomorrow night [43:18.080 --> 43:22.080] because I haven't been through due process in quite a while. [43:22.080 --> 43:27.080] So when we come back from the break, we've got a break coming up here shortly. [43:27.080 --> 43:28.080] I will take your calls. [43:28.080 --> 43:34.080] I see Jeff in Mississippi, Jeff in Missouri, and Cody in Texas. [43:34.080 --> 43:35.080] We'll be taking your calls. [43:35.080 --> 43:39.080] We'll be taking calls for the rest of the night. [43:39.080 --> 43:43.080] Our call-in number is 512-646-1984. [43:43.080 --> 43:45.080] Give us a call. [43:45.080 --> 43:50.080] We've only got a two-hour show tonight, so we're going into our third segment. [43:50.080 --> 43:55.080] So if you want to ask a question or make a comment, call quickly, get in line. [43:55.080 --> 44:22.080] We'll be right back on the other side. [44:25.080 --> 44:30.080] Our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.080 --> 44:37.080] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.080 --> 44:43.080] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.080 --> 44:47.080] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.080 --> 45:01.080] That's naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.080 --> 45:04.080] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.080 --> 45:08.080] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, [45:08.080 --> 45:15.080] easy-to-understand, core CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.080 --> 45:19.080] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.080 --> 45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.080 --> 45:28.080] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.080 --> 45:34.080] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.080 --> 45:39.080] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.080 --> 45:43.080] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.080 --> 45:49.080] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.080 --> 45:52.080] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.080 --> 46:02.080] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:02.080 --> 46:14.080] ["Living is Not Having a Problem"] [46:32.080 --> 46:48.080] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [46:48.080 --> 46:53.080] And we're going to go to Jeff in Mississippi. Hello, Mr. Jeff. [46:53.080 --> 46:57.080] Hey, Randy. Good to talk to you. [46:57.080 --> 47:03.080] Good to hear from you, Randy. We have a question on a B-scorpius. [47:03.080 --> 47:09.080] Yeah, Randy, I called in last week, and my case is an appeal, [47:09.080 --> 47:16.080] but I have evidence that I want to enter into that appeal, and my attorney is not doing it. [47:16.080 --> 47:22.080] I found out that when you try to add evidence into an appeals court, [47:22.080 --> 47:28.080] it's very tough that they want to kick it out because they only want to look at something [47:28.080 --> 47:31.080] that was in the trial to begin with. [47:31.080 --> 47:37.080] So we're doing a habeas corpus. Now, I've looked up how to do that. [47:37.080 --> 47:40.080] That's where I'm at right now is how to actually get this thing written [47:40.080 --> 47:43.080] because I don't know how to write these things. [47:43.080 --> 47:52.080] I still can't get onto your page, jurisimprudence.com. [47:52.080 --> 47:55.080] Oh, you're getting that virus warning? [47:55.080 --> 47:57.080] Yes. [47:57.080 --> 48:01.080] Okay, just right in the middle of the page there, it says ignore this warning. [48:01.080 --> 48:05.080] You click that, wait a minute, and it should pop up. [48:05.080 --> 48:10.080] I've sent it to Google two or three times, and they keep not clearing, [48:10.080 --> 48:13.080] but I've got most of the other sides clear. [48:13.080 --> 48:19.080] I'll get back on that in the morning and recheck it and resubmit it. [48:19.080 --> 48:22.080] Okay. That actually got me onto the page. [48:22.080 --> 48:26.080] I just didn't want to destroy my computer, so now that I know, I can do that. [48:26.080 --> 48:31.080] No, no. What it was, this is what Google does. [48:31.080 --> 48:39.080] If Google sees on one of your first two, it only looks about three pages deep. [48:39.080 --> 48:50.080] If on one of those pages it sees in the code section, http://, it gets real excited. [48:50.080 --> 48:59.080] It thinks it is a virus program redirecting the user to some malicious page, and it blackballs. [48:59.080 --> 49:01.080] So this was some kind of a mailing page. [49:01.080 --> 49:04.080] It was technically a malicious virus. [49:04.080 --> 49:05.080] I didn't put it in there. [49:05.080 --> 49:07.080] Somebody stuck it in. [49:07.080 --> 49:12.080] I think they got in through my server side, but I found it. [49:12.080 --> 49:14.080] It was two of them, and I found them. [49:14.080 --> 49:16.080] I took them all out. [49:16.080 --> 49:18.080] It didn't infect your system. [49:18.080 --> 49:22.080] It just wanted to send you to their page where they could advertise. [49:22.080 --> 49:27.080] So I took them out, and then you have to submit it to Google, and they go in and check. [49:27.080 --> 49:35.080] I did a search for http://, and everywhere I found it, I boxed out the whole section. [49:35.080 --> 49:41.080] They still won't free up my site, but it doesn't have any issues in there. [49:41.080 --> 49:48.080] On your site, there is supposed to be a template for habeas corpus? [49:48.080 --> 49:52.080] No, there is a habeas corpus, a big one. [49:52.080 --> 50:01.080] It is essentially a template because it goes through all the steps of habeas corpus. [50:01.080 --> 50:05.080] But this is different. You're doing a different type of habeas. [50:05.080 --> 50:11.080] This is a due process habeas, but it shows you the format for text. [50:11.080 --> 50:22.080] If you go into the Supreme Court rules, the rules for Mississippi, do a search for habeas, [50:22.080 --> 50:26.080] they will have in there how they want it. [50:26.080 --> 50:35.080] Like in Texas, they want everything centered. They want a table of contents, a table of authorities, [50:35.080 --> 50:43.080] and there are several requirements that they have, not like a regular motion or something. [50:43.080 --> 50:52.080] However, as with most everything else, the law here, and I suspect it will be the same in Mississippi, [50:52.080 --> 50:56.080] says it shall not be denied for lack of form. [50:56.080 --> 51:05.080] Okay. Well, I've done that. I've looked up the Mississippi Code and it's very strange. [51:05.080 --> 51:09.080] What I pulled up is some real very informative stuff, [51:09.080 --> 51:17.080] but the actual template for the habeas corpus is only one sentence. [51:17.080 --> 51:22.080] And it says that the usual form of the writ is as follows. [51:22.080 --> 51:26.080] The state of Mississippi to, I don't know who to fill out to, [51:26.080 --> 51:31.080] we command you to have the body of Jeffrey Hill by you detained, as it is said before, [51:31.080 --> 51:39.080] blank, a judge of our blank court at blank, forthwith on a given day to do [51:39.080 --> 51:45.080] and receive what may be then and there considered concerning him, witness my hand, et cetera. [51:45.080 --> 51:48.080] And that's the end of it. [51:48.080 --> 51:52.080] So then you, okay, you put in there what you want. [51:52.080 --> 52:02.080] You might look up, I just did a Mississippi State habeas corpus, and I got to step by step how to do it. [52:02.080 --> 52:03.080] Okay. [52:03.080 --> 52:16.080] So I put in Mississippi State habeas corpus production of documents, evidence, production of evidence to see what I get. [52:16.080 --> 52:20.080] I won't get as good of hits on Mississippi as you will, [52:20.080 --> 52:29.080] but on that I got uniform rules of circuit court, county practice, Mississippi habeas corpus, [52:29.080 --> 52:34.080] and precondition extradition matters. [52:34.080 --> 52:37.080] It'll probably all be in that. [52:37.080 --> 52:38.080] Okay, gotcha. [52:38.080 --> 52:39.080] But do it. [52:39.080 --> 52:40.080] Okay. [52:40.080 --> 52:45.080] Drag out the skill you should have honed better than any other as opposed to a litigant. [52:45.080 --> 52:49.080] What skill is that? [52:49.080 --> 52:52.080] Emailing a whole bunch of people. [52:52.080 --> 52:54.080] No, plagiarism. [52:54.080 --> 52:55.080] Oh, plagiarism. [52:55.080 --> 52:59.080] You must be an accomplished, you must be an accomplished plagiarist. [52:59.080 --> 53:03.080] Do a search for... [53:03.080 --> 53:04.080] Okay. [53:04.080 --> 53:10.080] See if you can find a habeas written by someone else for the purpose of securing evidence. [53:10.080 --> 53:11.080] Oh, I got it. [53:11.080 --> 53:17.080] Go to the law library and ask the law librarians. [53:17.080 --> 53:21.080] They are your best resource. [53:21.080 --> 53:27.080] You ask them, I need to tell them I need to file a habeas for production of evidence. [53:27.080 --> 53:28.080] Where do I look? [53:28.080 --> 53:30.080] And they'll go look it up for you. [53:30.080 --> 53:32.080] They sit there all day bored to tears. [53:32.080 --> 53:33.080] Okay. [53:33.080 --> 53:38.080] And they get somebody coming in there asking them a sophisticated question. [53:38.080 --> 53:40.080] They're like having your own paralegals. [53:40.080 --> 53:42.080] Man, they get right after it. [53:42.080 --> 53:44.080] Oh, great. [53:44.080 --> 53:45.080] Okay. [53:45.080 --> 53:51.080] So I've never done a habeas for production of documents. [53:51.080 --> 53:52.080] Uh-huh. [53:52.080 --> 53:59.080] So I don't know how to write that and I certainly don't know the case law for Mississippi. [53:59.080 --> 54:00.080] Yeah. [54:00.080 --> 54:12.080] But in every state, especially a habeas, you're going to have a provision that it shall not be denied for lack of form. [54:12.080 --> 54:18.080] What they may do is when you file it as a habeas, is they're going to say, this is a piece of crap. [54:18.080 --> 54:19.080] You've got to fix it. [54:19.080 --> 54:20.080] Here's the problems. [54:20.080 --> 54:22.080] Do this, this, this, this, and this. [54:22.080 --> 54:37.080] They'll almost certainly show you what all you have to do and check the code for what court you should file it in. [54:37.080 --> 54:38.080] Okay. [54:38.080 --> 54:39.080] That's a good question. [54:39.080 --> 54:40.080] Yeah. [54:40.080 --> 54:42.080] I can do it in my lower court. [54:42.080 --> 54:44.080] Pay attention to the habeas. [54:44.080 --> 54:45.080] Yeah. [54:45.080 --> 54:48.080] I have had some real fun with habeas. [54:48.080 --> 54:49.080] Okay. [54:49.080 --> 54:53.080] I went into Parker County. [54:53.080 --> 54:54.080] That's Parker County. [54:54.080 --> 54:55.080] It's just west of Fort Worth. [54:55.080 --> 55:01.080] And a guy I knew there had been arrested the second time for driving without a license. [55:01.080 --> 55:06.080] He was taking on this right to travel issue, except he didn't do his homework. [55:06.080 --> 55:08.080] He just didn't want to bother getting a license. [55:08.080 --> 55:10.080] So he ran around without a license. [55:10.080 --> 55:11.080] He didn't do the research. [55:11.080 --> 55:14.080] He needed to know how to protect himself. [55:14.080 --> 55:18.080] Second time, they held him for about six months. [55:18.080 --> 55:31.080] And I went in, I went down to the court and looked through the records and I found a habeas he had handwritten from jail. [55:31.080 --> 55:36.080] And I told the clerk, I found a habeas in the record. [55:36.080 --> 55:45.080] Found after the habeas was filed, but I found no return on the habeas. [55:45.080 --> 55:47.080] Where is it? [55:47.080 --> 55:49.080] And she got this confused look. [55:49.080 --> 55:50.080] I don't know. [55:50.080 --> 55:51.080] Everything's in the record. [55:51.080 --> 55:53.080] I said, no, no, no, you don't understand. [55:53.080 --> 55:56.080] This is a habeas. [55:56.080 --> 55:58.080] This is the great writ. [55:58.080 --> 56:03.080] Everything stands down before the writ. [56:03.080 --> 56:08.080] There was a habeas in the record. [56:08.080 --> 56:11.080] It must be heard before the court can hear anything else. [56:11.080 --> 56:15.080] So the court heard something else. [56:15.080 --> 56:17.080] So it must have heard the habeas. [56:17.080 --> 56:21.080] And if it heard the habeas, there would have to be a return on the habeas. [56:21.080 --> 56:22.080] Where is it? [56:22.080 --> 56:26.080] Oh, did they ever get excited? [56:26.080 --> 56:35.080] Well, I think they also went on the internet and looked it up and found out [56:35.080 --> 56:39.080] that I had filed against the highest judges in Texas, the court of criminal appeals, [56:39.080 --> 56:45.080] the habeas against them and almost got them all indicted. [56:45.080 --> 56:47.080] That one was a crap shoot. [56:47.080 --> 56:50.080] Habeas is incredibly powerful. [56:50.080 --> 56:53.080] But you need to know that it's incredibly powerful. [56:53.080 --> 56:54.080] Okay. [56:54.080 --> 57:01.080] So that this goes to what I say about never ask a public official to do anything [57:01.080 --> 57:03.080] you actually want him to do. [57:03.080 --> 57:10.080] Whoever you file this habeas with, don't give them legal advice. [57:10.080 --> 57:21.080] In civil society, if you do something that makes me want to punch you in the nose, [57:21.080 --> 57:30.080] I have a civil duty to let you know that what you did makes me want to punch you in the nose. [57:30.080 --> 57:34.080] It's just polite behavior. [57:34.080 --> 57:37.080] But this doesn't apply in court. [57:37.080 --> 57:44.080] In court, if somebody is doing something to screw himself, never interfere with him. [57:44.080 --> 57:46.080] Okay. [57:46.080 --> 57:52.080] So in court, we go even with the habeas. [57:52.080 --> 57:56.080] We really hope they don't hear the habeas. [57:56.080 --> 57:57.080] Oh, okay. [57:57.080 --> 58:01.080] Because then you can land on like a ton of work backs. [58:01.080 --> 58:02.080] Good. [58:02.080 --> 58:08.080] Then you go to the next step and you go after the judge who should have heard the habeas. [58:08.080 --> 58:10.080] That's what I did in this case. [58:10.080 --> 58:14.080] The judge came out and he was in plain clothes. [58:14.080 --> 58:17.080] And the way he talked to me finally occurred to me. [58:17.080 --> 58:18.080] I said, are you the judge? [58:18.080 --> 58:19.080] Well, yes, I am. [58:19.080 --> 58:20.080] Oh, I can't talk to you. [58:20.080 --> 58:23.080] He said, well, if you want this information, you'll have to file a motion. [58:23.080 --> 58:25.080] He said, oh, no, no, no, no. [58:25.080 --> 58:26.080] This goes to criminal. [58:26.080 --> 58:28.080] I'd have to go over the grand jury. [58:28.080 --> 58:30.080] Okay. [58:30.080 --> 58:34.080] Next time this kid came into court, they bumped him out on the street. [58:34.080 --> 58:40.080] It is really powerful when you know what the law is, know what their duties are, [58:40.080 --> 58:43.080] and get them to breach them so you can bump them good. [58:43.080 --> 58:44.080] Hang on. [58:44.080 --> 58:46.080] Randy Keltender with Stephen's Rule of Law Radio. [58:46.080 --> 59:14.080] We'll be right back. [59:16.080 --> 59:18.080] We'll be right back. [59:47.080 --> 59:53.080] That's freestudybible.com. [59:53.080 --> 01:00:00.080] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.080 --> 01:00:02.080] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, [01:00:02.080 --> 01:00:07.080] your daily source for Liberty News and activist updates online at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:07.080 --> 01:00:08.080] This is Justin Armand. [01:00:08.080 --> 01:00:10.080] And this is Jessica Armand. [01:00:10.080 --> 01:00:14.080] Here with your Liberty Beat for February 6, 2014. [01:00:14.080 --> 01:00:17.080] Gold opens today at $1,262. [01:00:17.080 --> 01:00:19.080] Silver at $20. [01:00:19.080 --> 01:00:22.080] And Bitcoin is trading at $782. [01:00:22.080 --> 01:00:25.080] Today's Bitcoin price is sponsored by Cash into Coin, [01:00:25.080 --> 01:00:28.080] the United States' largest cash-for-Bitcoin service. [01:00:28.080 --> 01:00:31.080] Get your Bitcoin today at cashintocoins.com. [01:00:31.080 --> 01:00:34.080] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from AJ Processing, [01:00:34.080 --> 01:00:39.080] accepting payment in gold, silver, and Bitcoin for all your typing and transcription needs. [01:00:39.080 --> 01:00:42.080] Visit them online at ajprocessing.com. [01:00:42.080 --> 01:00:49.080] And from SovereignBTC, media, marketing, and consulting for the Bitcoin ecosystem, [01:00:49.080 --> 01:00:52.080] online at sovereignbtc.com. [01:00:52.080 --> 01:00:55.080] And from Mass Appeal, affordable, high-quality printing, [01:00:55.080 --> 01:00:59.080] now accepting Bitcoin, online at massappealing.com. [01:00:59.080 --> 01:01:01.080] And now the news. [01:01:01.080 --> 01:01:04.080] There are two special events happening in Austin this evening. [01:01:04.080 --> 01:01:09.080] First, a walk for open carry support will be held with supporters to gather at 5 p.m. [01:01:09.080 --> 01:01:11.080] in order to march down Guadalupe Street. [01:01:11.080 --> 01:01:14.080] With the event focused on the right to self-defense [01:01:14.080 --> 01:01:18.080] and the right to open carry long guns and pre-1899 firearms. [01:01:18.080 --> 01:01:23.080] The meetup is happening near Brave New Books on the northwest corner of MLK and Guadalupe, [01:01:23.080 --> 01:01:25.080] near the Domino's Pizza. [01:01:25.080 --> 01:01:30.080] Just after this event, Brave New Books is hosting Adam and Parker vs. the Man. [01:01:30.080 --> 01:01:34.080] That event includes an in-person presentation from activist Adam Kokesh, [01:01:34.080 --> 01:01:39.080] who will focus on his recent experience in jail, his book project, and liberty. [01:01:39.080 --> 01:01:42.080] Joining him by Skype will be Parker Leverett, a teenage liberty lover, [01:01:42.080 --> 01:01:46.080] fighting for his rights to live with his father in spite of state edicts. [01:01:46.080 --> 01:01:49.080] The event runs from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Brave New Books. [01:01:49.080 --> 01:01:53.080] The public is invited to attend for a suggested donation of $20. [01:01:53.080 --> 01:01:55.080] No one will be turned away for lack of funds. [01:01:55.080 --> 01:02:00.080] However, please do donate if you have the means. [01:02:00.080 --> 01:02:04.080] The First Amendment protects their rights to flash headlights at other drivers [01:02:04.080 --> 01:02:06.080] in order to warn them of speed traps ahead. [01:02:06.080 --> 01:02:10.080] That's the ruling of a federal judge in St. Louis, Missouri, Monday. [01:02:10.080 --> 01:02:12.080] The Huffington Post reports he issued an order [01:02:12.080 --> 01:02:15.080] to temporarily block the town of Ellisville, Missouri, [01:02:15.080 --> 01:02:17.080] from punishing drivers for providing the warning. [01:02:17.080 --> 01:02:20.080] The suit was filed by the ACLU on behalf of a driver [01:02:20.080 --> 01:02:26.080] who had been ticketed for flashing his lights after driving past speed radars. [01:02:26.080 --> 01:02:30.080] An outcry from Bitcoin users with petitions circulating online [01:02:30.080 --> 01:02:33.080] after Apple removes blockchain from its mobile store. [01:02:33.080 --> 01:02:37.080] Blockchain Thursday posted on its website that the Bitcoin wallet was removed [01:02:37.080 --> 01:02:41.080] due to an unresolved issue and had received no prior warning of a problem. [01:02:41.080 --> 01:02:43.080] Apple has not yet offered any comment. [01:02:43.080 --> 01:02:47.080] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Dorsey Erminger at Cap Star Lending. [01:02:47.080 --> 01:02:50.080] Dorsey can walk you through the ins and outs of buying a home. [01:02:50.080 --> 01:03:04.080] Call her at 512-343-6494 or apply online at calledorsey.com. [01:03:20.080 --> 01:03:35.080] OK. [01:03:35.080 --> 01:03:36.080] We are back. [01:03:36.080 --> 01:03:40.080] We're in the Kelt and Deborah Stevens and we're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. [01:03:40.080 --> 01:03:43.080] Jeff, you look up the procedures in Mississippi, [01:03:43.080 --> 01:03:47.080] but here are some things that's not in the book. [01:03:47.080 --> 01:03:51.080] The habeas corpus is the writ of right. [01:03:51.080 --> 01:03:53.080] It's the great writ. [01:03:53.080 --> 01:03:56.080] Everything stands down before the writ. [01:03:56.080 --> 01:04:02.080] So the way I file a writ is I take it to the clerk, [01:04:02.080 --> 01:04:07.080] hand it to the clerk, and you check Mississippi. [01:04:07.080 --> 01:04:14.080] In Texas, the statute says it's 11.51. [01:04:14.080 --> 01:04:17.080] They can't charge you for a filing writ. [01:04:17.080 --> 01:04:21.080] I filed one in Randall County where I went to file one, [01:04:21.080 --> 01:04:25.080] and I'll give you an idea of how I handle these things. [01:04:25.080 --> 01:04:28.080] I handed it to the clerk and she looked it over. [01:04:28.080 --> 01:04:32.080] She said, OK, that'll be a $241 filing fee. [01:04:32.080 --> 01:04:35.080] I said, no, ma'am, no fee. [01:04:35.080 --> 01:04:38.080] Oh, yeah, well, we have to charge this filing fee. [01:04:38.080 --> 01:04:40.080] Don't tell me that. [01:04:40.080 --> 01:04:42.080] She said, well, I have to tell you that. [01:04:42.080 --> 01:04:45.080] No, no, no, don't you tell me that. [01:04:45.080 --> 01:04:46.080] Go get Lloyd. [01:04:46.080 --> 01:04:50.080] He was the elected district clerk. [01:04:50.080 --> 01:04:53.080] Go get Lloyd to tell me that because whoever tells me that, [01:04:53.080 --> 01:04:56.080] I'm going to take out this phone dial 911 [01:04:56.080 --> 01:04:58.080] and ask the sheriff to come out and arrest him. [01:04:58.080 --> 01:05:01.080] And I don't want it to be you. [01:05:01.080 --> 01:05:04.080] She said, oh, OK. [01:05:04.080 --> 01:05:07.080] So she goes and gets the district clerk. [01:05:07.080 --> 01:05:13.080] He comes out and he said, Mr. Cowan, that will be a $240 filing fee. [01:05:13.080 --> 01:05:17.080] I said, Lloyd, wait right there. [01:05:17.080 --> 01:05:19.080] Don't go anywhere. [01:05:19.080 --> 01:05:22.080] Somebody's going to want to talk to you. [01:05:22.080 --> 01:05:28.080] I take out my cell phone, dial 911, and I get to the local police department. [01:05:28.080 --> 01:05:35.080] I had a little argument with the dispatcher because they always want to play lawyer. [01:05:35.080 --> 01:05:38.080] I asked the dispatcher if she was a prosecuting attorney. [01:05:38.080 --> 01:05:39.080] She said, no, I'm not. [01:05:39.080 --> 01:05:40.080] I'm the dispatcher. [01:05:40.080 --> 01:05:43.080] Then don't give me legal advice. [01:05:43.080 --> 01:05:45.080] Dispatch. [01:05:45.080 --> 01:05:47.080] OK. [01:05:47.080 --> 01:05:53.080] They dispatched the policeman, and this big old fat guy comes in the back. [01:05:53.080 --> 01:05:55.080] He didn't come in the section where I was. [01:05:55.080 --> 01:05:56.080] He came in the back of the office. [01:05:56.080 --> 01:06:03.080] And he kind of struts in there and says, what seems to be the problem here? [01:06:03.080 --> 01:06:08.080] And I said, the problem is you don't have pencil and paper. [01:06:08.080 --> 01:06:11.080] Well, why do I need pencil and paper? [01:06:11.080 --> 01:06:18.080] You need pencil and paper to take my criminal complaint against this district clerk right here. [01:06:18.080 --> 01:06:20.080] I couldn't have choreographed this better. [01:06:20.080 --> 01:06:25.080] He said, well, why would I take a criminal complaint against the district clerk? [01:06:25.080 --> 01:06:28.080] And I said, because he's a criminal. [01:06:28.080 --> 01:06:31.080] That's why. [01:06:31.080 --> 01:06:34.080] It kind of deteriorated from there. [01:06:34.080 --> 01:06:39.080] And he finally asked me what the clerk did. [01:06:39.080 --> 01:06:43.080] He said, well, he demanded a filing fee for a writ of habeas corpus. [01:06:43.080 --> 01:06:45.080] He said, well, what's wrong with that? [01:06:45.080 --> 01:06:50.080] And I turned my computer around, and I had it set to 11.051. [01:06:50.080 --> 01:06:52.080] I said, read that. [01:06:52.080 --> 01:07:00.080] It says, a filing fee for a writ of habeas corpus is prohibited. [01:07:00.080 --> 01:07:06.080] Now, what part of that is hard to understand? [01:07:06.080 --> 01:07:11.080] Well, they obviously didn't want to arrest the district clerk. [01:07:11.080 --> 01:07:16.080] So they brought in the sergeant, and we had this big argument back and forth. [01:07:16.080 --> 01:07:18.080] I didn't want him arrested. [01:07:18.080 --> 01:07:21.080] I wanted his attention. [01:07:21.080 --> 01:07:28.080] I saw Lloyd in the courthouse the next day, and I said, hey, Lloyd, how are things going? [01:07:28.080 --> 01:07:30.080] Well, they're going fine, Mr. Kelton. [01:07:30.080 --> 01:07:32.080] You're going to try to get me arrested again today? [01:07:32.080 --> 01:07:33.080] Oh, no. [01:07:33.080 --> 01:07:35.080] Heck, Lloyd, I just screwed around. [01:07:35.080 --> 01:07:37.080] Wasn't that a hoot? [01:07:37.080 --> 01:07:38.080] Yeah. [01:07:38.080 --> 01:07:39.080] He said. [01:07:39.080 --> 01:07:40.080] I didn't. [01:07:40.080 --> 01:07:41.080] He's very funny. [01:07:41.080 --> 01:07:47.080] But I can assure you, if somebody else comes into that office to file a habeas corpus, [01:07:47.080 --> 01:07:49.080] they're not going to give you crap. [01:07:49.080 --> 01:07:50.080] Okay. [01:07:50.080 --> 01:07:51.080] That's the first thing. [01:07:51.080 --> 01:07:52.080] Check. [01:07:52.080 --> 01:07:54.080] There should be no fee for habeas. [01:07:54.080 --> 01:08:05.080] Second thing is you hand it to the clerk and ask the clerk which court are you assigning it to. [01:08:05.080 --> 01:08:14.080] And if she does anything but tell you, then you ask for it back and you take it to a court yourself. [01:08:14.080 --> 01:08:27.080] If she tells you what court, then you ask her, do you want me to take it to the judge or are you going to take it to the judge right now? [01:08:27.080 --> 01:08:28.080] Okay. [01:08:28.080 --> 01:08:35.080] And if they don't know the procedure, then they will say, well, we'll get it to the judge or whatever. [01:08:35.080 --> 01:08:36.080] No, no, no. [01:08:36.080 --> 01:08:40.080] This is the writ of habeas corpus. [01:08:40.080 --> 01:08:45.080] You don't do anything until this gets to the judge. [01:08:45.080 --> 01:08:52.080] And when the judge gets it, he doesn't do anything until he hears the writ. [01:08:52.080 --> 01:08:59.080] Montgomery County, the writ that's on the website, I went to Montgomery County. [01:08:59.080 --> 01:09:04.080] The clerk gave it to her, asked her which judge she was going to give it to. [01:09:04.080 --> 01:09:10.080] She said, well, the only judge in the building is in a murder trial right now. [01:09:10.080 --> 01:09:11.080] Well, stop the murder trial. [01:09:11.080 --> 01:09:12.080] We can't do that. [01:09:12.080 --> 01:09:14.080] Yes, ma'am, you can. [01:09:14.080 --> 01:09:17.080] Are you going to take it to the judge or do I need to take it to the judge? [01:09:17.080 --> 01:09:18.080] I'll take it. [01:09:18.080 --> 01:09:19.080] I'll take it. [01:09:19.080 --> 01:09:20.080] She takes it. [01:09:20.080 --> 01:09:22.080] I go in and sit down. [01:09:22.080 --> 01:09:26.080] They finished examining a witness. [01:09:26.080 --> 01:09:31.080] And when they were done, they stopped the trial, sent the jury out, cleared the courtroom. [01:09:31.080 --> 01:09:36.080] Anybody had any witnesses or anything to do with the trial? [01:09:36.080 --> 01:09:39.080] And the judge said, Ms. Kelton, yes, Your Honor. [01:09:39.080 --> 01:09:42.080] He said, Ms. Kelton, are you a lawyer? [01:09:42.080 --> 01:09:44.080] Oh, no, Your Honor. [01:09:44.080 --> 01:09:47.080] I sleep well at night and I keep my hands in my own pockets. [01:09:47.080 --> 01:09:49.080] Thank you very much. [01:09:49.080 --> 01:09:50.080] Well, he did not. [01:09:50.080 --> 01:09:54.080] He did not find the humor in that, but I did not care. [01:09:54.080 --> 01:10:01.080] Well, Mr. Kelton, since you're not a lawyer, I'm not going to accept this writ. [01:10:01.080 --> 01:10:04.080] I turned to the bailiff, Mr. Bailiff. [01:10:04.080 --> 01:10:05.080] Did you hear that? [01:10:05.080 --> 01:10:07.080] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. [01:10:07.080 --> 01:10:09.080] Bring that judge down off that bench. [01:10:09.080 --> 01:10:12.080] Judge, you get off that bench, you're disqualified. [01:10:12.080 --> 01:10:17.080] Get me the fair and honest jurist that I have a right to in the first instance. [01:10:17.080 --> 01:10:21.080] And the bailiff said, I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:10:21.080 --> 01:10:24.080] He said, come on, Mr. Bailiff, take the chicken suit off. [01:10:24.080 --> 01:10:26.080] He said, this will be fun. [01:10:26.080 --> 01:10:27.080] It will be interesting. [01:10:27.080 --> 01:10:28.080] I don't want fun, Mr. Bailiff. [01:10:28.080 --> 01:10:29.080] I'm not arresting the judge. [01:10:29.080 --> 01:10:32.080] He said, well, bubba, life's full of little decisions. [01:10:32.080 --> 01:10:33.080] We all get to make some. [01:10:33.080 --> 01:10:35.080] Your turn. [01:10:35.080 --> 01:10:46.080] Are you going to do your job as prescribed by Article 2.13 Code of Criminal Procedure? [01:10:46.080 --> 01:10:51.080] Are you going to shield that judge's execution violation of 3805 Penal Code? [01:10:51.080 --> 01:10:52.080] That's your call. [01:10:52.080 --> 01:10:54.080] You'll make no mistake. [01:10:54.080 --> 01:10:55.080] I don't care what you do. [01:10:55.080 --> 01:10:57.080] Well, I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:10:57.080 --> 01:11:02.080] And then when the bailiff absolutely refused, the judge sat there and kept his mouth shut. [01:11:02.080 --> 01:11:07.080] And the bailiff absolutely refused to arrest him. [01:11:07.080 --> 01:11:12.080] Then he said to me, said, Mr. Bailiff, if Mr. Kelton doesn't leave my court, [01:11:12.080 --> 01:11:14.080] we're mute to arrest him. [01:11:14.080 --> 01:11:17.080] I said, Your Honor, that's cheating. [01:11:17.080 --> 01:11:19.080] He reached down and picked up the gavel. [01:11:19.080 --> 01:11:23.080] He said, yes, Mr. Kelton, but I've got the gavel. [01:11:23.080 --> 01:11:26.080] Good point. [01:11:26.080 --> 01:11:30.080] I turned to the bailiff, you, I need you outside. [01:11:30.080 --> 01:11:33.080] Turned and stomped out of the courtroom. [01:11:33.080 --> 01:11:35.080] Oh, that was so much fun. [01:11:35.080 --> 01:11:40.080] But the point is, they had rules. [01:11:40.080 --> 01:11:44.080] When you file a writ, they're not going to want to follow their rules. [01:11:44.080 --> 01:11:47.080] Okay. [01:11:47.080 --> 01:11:48.080] But you are the master. [01:11:48.080 --> 01:11:53.080] You don't care what they want to do and what they don't want to do. [01:11:53.080 --> 01:11:54.080] Read the law. [01:11:54.080 --> 01:11:57.080] Read what their duty is. [01:11:57.080 --> 01:12:06.080] Don't tell them what their duty is. [01:12:06.080 --> 01:12:11.080] If the judge fails to perform his duty, you don't have to call it the bailiff [01:12:11.080 --> 01:12:16.080] like I like to do, but I have a little too much fun with this sometimes. [01:12:16.080 --> 01:12:19.080] But go out of the courtroom and call the sheriff and ask the sheriff to come [01:12:19.080 --> 01:12:21.080] and arrest him. [01:12:21.080 --> 01:12:27.080] I did that in Sydney when the judge wouldn't turn up his sound system so I [01:12:27.080 --> 01:12:29.080] could hear. [01:12:29.080 --> 01:12:33.080] And then when he didn't turn up the sound system, I asked him to speak up. [01:12:33.080 --> 01:12:34.080] He wouldn't do that either. [01:12:34.080 --> 01:12:38.080] So when I walked out of the courtroom, I called 911 and asked for an [01:12:38.080 --> 01:12:41.080] officer to come down and arrest the judge, denying me the right to a [01:12:41.080 --> 01:12:46.080] public court. [01:12:46.080 --> 01:12:49.080] So you have an opportunity here. [01:12:49.080 --> 01:12:52.080] You already served the time for this crime. [01:12:52.080 --> 01:12:53.080] Yeah. [01:12:53.080 --> 01:12:57.080] So they've already done what they can do. [01:12:57.080 --> 01:13:01.080] Now you have an opportunity to take them to task. [01:13:01.080 --> 01:13:07.080] And any of these due process rights they violate, you may not be able to [01:13:07.080 --> 01:13:14.080] sue the judge himself unless the judge acts outside subject matter [01:13:14.080 --> 01:13:20.080] jurisdiction or unless the judge commits a crime against you because that [01:13:20.080 --> 01:13:25.080] would not be construed to be within the scope of his authority. [01:13:25.080 --> 01:13:32.080] And I'm assuming that Mississippi law is essentially the same as Texas law. [01:13:32.080 --> 01:13:34.080] And I've done seminars all over the country. [01:13:34.080 --> 01:13:40.080] And for the most part, the body of law is the same everywhere. [01:13:40.080 --> 01:13:45.080] Where you find these laws are different places, but basically what is just [01:13:45.080 --> 01:13:48.080] in one place is just in another. [01:13:48.080 --> 01:13:55.080] The checks and balances necessary to maintain the system applied to human [01:13:55.080 --> 01:13:57.080] beings. [01:13:57.080 --> 01:14:00.080] So they will all be basically the same everywhere. [01:14:00.080 --> 01:14:02.080] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:14:02.080 --> 01:14:04.080] Just look them up. [01:14:04.080 --> 01:14:11.080] And when you start taking these officials to task before somebody else, [01:14:11.080 --> 01:14:15.080] then you get to the area where you win your case. [01:14:15.080 --> 01:14:19.080] You don't win your case because you have the facts on your side. [01:14:19.080 --> 01:14:24.080] You win your case if you can get the politics on your side. [01:14:24.080 --> 01:14:30.080] And if you're hammering the judge because the judge is trying to cover the [01:14:30.080 --> 01:14:36.080] prosecutor for his prosecution, the judge is going to get real excited when [01:14:36.080 --> 01:14:43.080] you climb over his head and start bringing down attorney generals and [01:14:43.080 --> 01:14:47.080] chief justices of the Supreme down on him, he is not going to be happy with [01:14:47.080 --> 01:14:50.080] the prosecutor. [01:14:50.080 --> 01:14:52.080] Okay. [01:14:52.080 --> 01:14:56.080] Do you understand about the habeas? [01:14:56.080 --> 01:14:59.080] The most important thing to understand is the great written it stands before [01:14:59.080 --> 01:15:01.080] everything. [01:15:01.080 --> 01:15:06.080] Well, I've got two questions real quick. [01:15:06.080 --> 01:15:07.080] Okay. [01:15:07.080 --> 01:15:13.080] Yeah, first question is my case is now at the Mississippi appeals court, [01:15:13.080 --> 01:15:15.080] court of appeals. [01:15:15.080 --> 01:15:18.080] So that's a totally separate court from the county court or the district [01:15:18.080 --> 01:15:20.080] court that I was convicted in. [01:15:20.080 --> 01:15:26.080] And where do you think that I should put this habeas corpus at? [01:15:26.080 --> 01:15:34.080] The only court that has jurisdiction at this point is the court of appeals. [01:15:34.080 --> 01:15:36.080] Take it to them. [01:15:36.080 --> 01:15:37.080] Okay. [01:15:37.080 --> 01:15:38.080] Take it to them. [01:15:38.080 --> 01:15:42.080] Second question, and I kind of feel like a dangling saying this because I [01:15:42.080 --> 01:15:47.080] can't get some to email me, but there is a website that is screaming out to [01:15:47.080 --> 01:15:52.080] put in an entry of appearance because their claim is that if you don't put in [01:15:52.080 --> 01:15:57.080] an entry of appearance, the court doesn't have to listen to you anyway because [01:15:57.080 --> 01:16:00.080] you don't exist. [01:16:00.080 --> 01:16:02.080] So what is your opinion? [01:16:02.080 --> 01:16:06.080] That is only if you are not the principal. [01:16:06.080 --> 01:16:09.080] You are the one that filed in the court. [01:16:09.080 --> 01:16:12.080] That is your entry of appearance. [01:16:12.080 --> 01:16:18.080] Now, if you had a lawyer representing you, you are the principal. [01:16:18.080 --> 01:16:20.080] The lawyer is the agent. [01:16:20.080 --> 01:16:23.080] The agent would have to put in an entry of appearance. [01:16:23.080 --> 01:16:29.080] This goes to a lot of this patriot mythology. [01:16:29.080 --> 01:16:35.080] We have a lot of people, and well-intended people, who study law from [01:16:35.080 --> 01:16:39.080] outside the law circles. [01:16:39.080 --> 01:16:45.080] So they tend to focus on one little area, and they kind of miss the overall [01:16:45.080 --> 01:16:46.080] scope of things. [01:16:46.080 --> 01:16:50.080] So they tend to get things kind of out of kilter. [01:16:50.080 --> 01:16:51.080] Hang on. [01:16:51.080 --> 01:16:54.080] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, we have our radio. [01:16:54.080 --> 01:16:57.080] I call it number 512-646-1984. [01:16:57.080 --> 01:16:59.080] I'm Jeff Cody. [01:16:59.080 --> 01:17:28.080] My name is Jessica Armand. [01:17:28.080 --> 01:17:30.080] Hi, this is Kurt Hildebrand. 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[01:19:38.080 --> 01:19:45.080] We're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. [01:19:45.080 --> 01:19:46.080] Okay, Jeff, where were we? [01:19:46.080 --> 01:19:48.080] We do need to move quickly. [01:19:48.080 --> 01:19:50.080] We've got a couple more calls and we're running out of time. [01:19:50.080 --> 01:19:54.080] I was just asking you about an entry of appearance just so to see if the [01:19:54.080 --> 01:19:56.080] judge would recognize me or not. [01:19:56.080 --> 01:20:01.080] And you basically said I don't need to have one. [01:20:01.080 --> 01:20:06.080] Yeah, when you get a lawyer, say you've got one lawyer and he has to be [01:20:06.080 --> 01:20:10.080] removed, and you get another lawyer, that lawyer is going to have to file an [01:20:10.080 --> 01:20:12.080] entry of appearance. [01:20:12.080 --> 01:20:13.080] Got it. [01:20:13.080 --> 01:20:18.080] And it notices the court that he is the attorney of record. [01:20:18.080 --> 01:20:21.080] But you're the principal. [01:20:21.080 --> 01:20:23.080] You don't have to put in that. [01:20:23.080 --> 01:20:25.080] Okay, next question. [01:20:25.080 --> 01:20:26.080] That's it. [01:20:26.080 --> 01:20:27.080] I'm done. [01:20:27.080 --> 01:20:28.080] I'm going to try to get this typed up. [01:20:28.080 --> 01:20:30.080] And I've got your email address. [01:20:30.080 --> 01:20:32.080] Can I send you what I type up? [01:20:32.080 --> 01:20:36.080] And then if it's wrong or something, you could respond and say, no, you [01:20:36.080 --> 01:20:38.080] messed up here. [01:20:38.080 --> 01:20:39.080] Absolutely. [01:20:39.080 --> 01:20:40.080] I'd be glad to. [01:20:40.080 --> 01:20:41.080] Okay, good. [01:20:41.080 --> 01:20:43.080] Well, I will let you go and we will talk to you soon. [01:20:43.080 --> 01:20:44.080] Thank you. [01:20:44.080 --> 01:20:45.080] All right. [01:20:45.080 --> 01:20:46.080] Thank you, Jeff. [01:20:46.080 --> 01:20:51.080] Okay, now we're going to go to Jeff in Missouri. [01:20:51.080 --> 01:20:55.080] Jeff, I hear you have a number of questions. [01:20:55.080 --> 01:20:57.080] Hello, Jeff. [01:20:57.080 --> 01:21:01.080] Hi, I want to thank you guys very much for all that you do. [01:21:01.080 --> 01:21:05.080] And I think that God has blessed you a great amount. [01:21:05.080 --> 01:21:10.080] And I wish I was like you guys already. [01:21:10.080 --> 01:21:12.080] Well, it's a process. [01:21:12.080 --> 01:21:17.080] And one of the things we can help you with is I can tell you a lot of things [01:21:17.080 --> 01:21:19.080] not to do. [01:21:19.080 --> 01:21:20.080] Yeah. [01:21:20.080 --> 01:21:25.080] Three dislocated ribs, two broken collar bones, a chip devil and a tooth [01:21:25.080 --> 01:21:27.080] knocked out. [01:21:27.080 --> 01:21:32.080] So I know lots of things not to do. [01:21:32.080 --> 01:21:34.080] But you can get their attention. [01:21:34.080 --> 01:21:42.080] It doesn't take many to make incredible change. [01:21:42.080 --> 01:21:50.080] If we do our jobs right, you and I, and we treat our public officials the way [01:21:50.080 --> 01:21:57.080] I treat my grandkids, I love my grandkids dearly, but if one of them runs [01:21:57.080 --> 01:22:04.080] down the road, I'm fixing to tan his hide, and we try to show people how to [01:22:04.080 --> 01:22:11.080] tan public officials' hides, not how to ruin their careers, not how to destroy [01:22:11.080 --> 01:22:15.080] their lives, just tan their hide a bit. [01:22:15.080 --> 01:22:19.080] We could get rid of all of our public officials, replace them all, we'd have [01:22:19.080 --> 01:22:21.080] the same problem. [01:22:21.080 --> 01:22:28.080] It's better to take the ones we've got and get their attention, get them to do [01:22:28.080 --> 01:22:31.080] things right, and everybody benefits. [01:22:31.080 --> 01:22:33.080] Okay, you had a number of questions. [01:22:33.080 --> 01:22:42.080] Well, back in July of last year, I had an encounter with an officer, and it [01:22:42.080 --> 01:22:49.080] was, of course, it was late at night, and I was speeding that night, and I [01:22:49.080 --> 01:22:56.080] pulled over for him, and I had my window down about four inches, and he came up [01:22:56.080 --> 01:23:01.080] to me and said, sir, I need you to have your window down all the way, and I [01:23:01.080 --> 01:23:05.080] said, well, I can hear you just fine, and of course, this went back and forth [01:23:05.080 --> 01:23:09.080] until he said, you have to obey me. [01:23:09.080 --> 01:23:14.080] And then I thought, okay, I said, well, you're not a dictator here, so I began [01:23:14.080 --> 01:23:21.080] to declare my inalienable rights, and he didn't like that, and he smashed in [01:23:21.080 --> 01:23:27.080] my window, and of course, at that point, I panicked, and I flew, and so now [01:23:27.080 --> 01:23:38.080] the Highway Patrol is in on this case, and the state has now brought me to [01:23:38.080 --> 01:23:44.080] court, and they're completely ignoring the fact that I had panicked because of [01:23:44.080 --> 01:23:45.080] this officer. [01:23:45.080 --> 01:23:47.080] They won't recognize it whatsoever. [01:23:47.080 --> 01:23:52.080] Okay, have you charged the officer with aggravated assault? [01:23:52.080 --> 01:24:00.080] Well, let's see, this happened in a city zone, and what happened is two days, [01:24:00.080 --> 01:24:06.080] three days before the trial, or three days before the hearing, I get this [01:24:06.080 --> 01:24:11.080] subpoena to appear in court, and so what I do is I know a little bit about the [01:24:11.080 --> 01:24:18.080] law, and so what I did is I wrote on the envelope, no person here by that name, [01:24:18.080 --> 01:24:26.080] and I wrote on it 18 U.S.C. Chapter 13, subsection 241 and 242, and then I [01:24:26.080 --> 01:24:32.080] quoted the Missouri State statutes on there that what he did was a violation. [01:24:32.080 --> 01:24:37.080] Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, you can't do it that way. [01:24:37.080 --> 01:24:40.080] That's not a complaint. [01:24:40.080 --> 01:24:41.080] Right. [01:24:41.080 --> 01:24:45.080] In order, and besides, that's a federal complaint, and it doesn't apply. [01:24:45.080 --> 01:24:49.080] Uh-huh, well, it worked, though, believe it or not, because... [01:24:49.080 --> 01:24:57.080] You weren't, well, it may have, because they're, okay, we have a lot of people [01:24:57.080 --> 01:25:02.080] in the patriot movement that come on and says this works, that works, the other [01:25:02.080 --> 01:25:03.080] works. [01:25:03.080 --> 01:25:07.080] Yeah, it may work, and a lot of times that's because they really don't know [01:25:07.080 --> 01:25:17.080] what to do, but here, this was a state issue, and you quoted it 18 U.S.C. 242. [01:25:17.080 --> 01:25:22.080] Every state has a corresponding state statute. [01:25:22.080 --> 01:25:29.080] In Texas, the corresponding statute would be a 39.03 Texas penal code, [01:25:29.080 --> 01:25:32.080] official oppression. [01:25:32.080 --> 01:25:40.080] It almost exactly mimics the federal statute, and everybody should have this [01:25:40.080 --> 01:25:46.080] memorized, and I'm not, certainly not criticizing you for citing it because [01:25:46.080 --> 01:25:50.080] you got the right statute. [01:25:50.080 --> 01:25:52.080] Everybody should have this one down. [01:25:52.080 --> 01:25:56.080] It says that if a public official acting under the color, color meaning [01:25:56.080 --> 01:26:01.080] pre-judge, if his authority exerts or purports to exert an authority he does [01:26:01.080 --> 01:26:08.080] not explicitly have or fails to perform a duty he's required to perform, and [01:26:08.080 --> 01:26:12.080] in the process, denies a citizen the full or free access to or enjoyment of [01:26:12.080 --> 01:26:18.080] a right, that's a class A misdemeanor, in Texas it's a class A misdemeanor, [01:26:18.080 --> 01:26:22.080] you're in jail $10,000 fine. [01:26:22.080 --> 01:26:28.080] It's a big deal, but there's more. [01:26:28.080 --> 01:26:37.080] When the officer broke out your window because you didn't roll it down, when [01:26:37.080 --> 01:26:44.080] you first started asking, when he insisted that you roll the window down [01:26:44.080 --> 01:26:57.080] and started getting agitated, when an officer tells me to do something that I [01:26:57.080 --> 01:27:04.080] don't think he has authority to tell me to do, the first thing I ask him, the [01:27:04.080 --> 01:27:12.080] first thing I say to him is, I see you wearing a pistol, tell me, is that [01:27:12.080 --> 01:27:14.080] pistol loaded? [01:27:14.080 --> 01:27:16.080] And they'll say, yes it is. [01:27:16.080 --> 01:27:21.080] I had woken in Weatherford, I spoke about earlier, when they couldn't find [01:27:21.080 --> 01:27:25.080] the return on the, at Weatherford, I went straight to the district attorney and [01:27:25.080 --> 01:27:28.080] asked for a district attorney so I could file a criminal complaint and they [01:27:28.080 --> 01:27:32.080] sent out these two smart mouth investigators and they were getting pretty [01:27:32.080 --> 01:27:35.080] hussy with me in order to leave the building because they wouldn't take my [01:27:35.080 --> 01:27:38.080] complaint and I asked the officer, I said, I see you have a pistol on you up [01:27:38.080 --> 01:27:42.080] there, tell me, is that pistol loaded? [01:27:42.080 --> 01:27:47.080] He said, no, I'm wearing a pistol with no bullets in it, you just be smart with [01:27:47.080 --> 01:27:51.080] me, but you have bullets in that pistol, now of course it's loaded. [01:27:51.080 --> 01:27:56.080] So tell me, I don't do what you order me to do, you fix it to pull that pistol [01:27:56.080 --> 01:27:58.080] on me? [01:27:58.080 --> 01:28:04.080] He said, I will if I have to, that's all I need. [01:28:04.080 --> 01:28:09.080] You need to check the aggravated assault statute in Missouri. [01:28:09.080 --> 01:28:24.080] In Texas, 2202B2A, 2202 says if someone commits simple assault as defined by [01:28:24.080 --> 01:28:33.080] 2204, 2202 is simple assault, 2204 is aggravated, 2204B2A, if someone commits [01:28:33.080 --> 01:28:41.080] simple assault as defined by 2202 and simple assault is if they touch you in a [01:28:41.080 --> 01:28:49.080] way a reasonable person of ordinary prudence would find defensive or if they [01:28:49.080 --> 01:28:53.080] use threatening verbiage that a reasonable person of ordinary prudence [01:28:53.080 --> 01:28:57.080] would find offensive, that's simple assault. [01:28:57.080 --> 01:29:04.080] If a person commits simple assault while prominently displaying a deadly weapon, [01:29:04.080 --> 01:29:07.080] that's a second degree felony. [01:29:07.080 --> 01:29:16.080] However, under 2204D2B is a second degree felony. [01:29:16.080 --> 01:29:28.080] 2202A says that if the person is a public official acting under the color, [01:29:28.080 --> 01:29:38.080] meaning pretense, of an official authority, that is a first degree felony 25 to life. [01:29:38.080 --> 01:29:44.080] That is a big deal and what this officer did is threaten your life, [01:29:44.080 --> 01:29:49.080] I feel better and have really good reason. [01:29:49.080 --> 01:29:52.080] When you explain that to a grand jury, your peers will see what they think [01:29:52.080 --> 01:29:53.080] about it. [01:29:53.080 --> 01:30:02.080] Randy and Calvin Davis Stevens, Wheel of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [01:30:02.080 --> 01:30:07.080] This performance enhancing drug shows up on drug tests, but it hasn't been banned [01:30:07.080 --> 01:30:09.080] from professional sports. [01:30:09.080 --> 01:30:12.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll bet you're taking this drug too. [01:30:12.080 --> 01:30:15.080] I'll be back to tell you what it is. [01:30:15.080 --> 01:30:17.080] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.080 --> 01:30:20.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.080 --> 01:30:25.080] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.080 --> 01:30:30.080] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.080 --> 01:30:33.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:33.080 --> 01:30:36.080] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:36.080 --> 01:30:40.080] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:40.080 --> 01:30:44.080] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.080 --> 01:30:46.080] Caffeine, can it make you a better athlete? [01:30:46.080 --> 01:30:49.080] The verdict is as muddy as a cup of joe. [01:30:49.080 --> 01:30:53.080] Researchers studying cyclists, runners and rowers found caffeine does boost [01:30:53.080 --> 01:30:56.080] performance for short-term power events. [01:30:56.080 --> 01:30:59.080] Tennis players' accuracy and speed improved and they had more endurance to get [01:30:59.080 --> 01:31:00.080] through the match. [01:31:00.080 --> 01:31:04.080] But caffeine doesn't help in all sports and the correct dose varies widely [01:31:04.080 --> 01:31:05.080] between individuals. [01:31:05.080 --> 01:31:08.080] Caffeine contributes to dehydration. [01:31:08.080 --> 01:31:12.080] Plus it can give you the jitters and nervousness is the last thing you want in [01:31:12.080 --> 01:31:13.080] a competition. [01:31:13.080 --> 01:31:17.080] Athletes quickly build up a tolerance to caffeine and it's addictive, [01:31:17.080 --> 01:31:20.080] as anyone who's ever had a caffeine headache can tell you. [01:31:20.080 --> 01:31:21.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:21.080 --> 01:31:30.080] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.080 --> 01:31:31.080] I lost my son. [01:31:31.080 --> 01:31:32.080] My nephew. [01:31:32.080 --> 01:31:33.080] My uncle. [01:31:33.080 --> 01:31:34.080] My son. [01:31:34.080 --> 01:31:35.080] On September 11, 2001. [01:31:35.080 --> 01:31:38.080] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [01:31:38.080 --> 01:31:42.080] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [01:31:42.080 --> 01:31:46.080] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [01:31:46.080 --> 01:31:50.080] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence. [01:31:50.080 --> 01:31:52.080] And believe there is more to the story. [01:31:52.080 --> 01:31:53.080] Bring justice to my son. [01:31:53.080 --> 01:31:54.080] My uncle. [01:31:54.080 --> 01:31:55.080] My nephew. [01:31:55.080 --> 01:31:56.080] My son. [01:31:56.080 --> 01:31:57.080] Go to buildingwhat.org. [01:31:57.080 --> 01:32:00.080] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [01:32:00.080 --> 01:32:03.080] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:32:03.080 --> 01:32:06.080] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, [01:32:06.080 --> 01:32:09.080] and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:32:09.080 --> 01:32:13.080] Did you know the U.S. government banned the hemp plant from growing in the United States [01:32:13.080 --> 01:32:17.080] and classified it as a Schedule I drug to hide it behind the marijuana plant? [01:32:17.080 --> 01:32:21.080] People have been confused about this plant for over 80 years, [01:32:21.080 --> 01:32:23.080] and many still don't know what hemp is. [01:32:23.080 --> 01:32:27.080] So now you know hemp is not marijuana, and marijuana is not hemp. [01:32:27.080 --> 01:32:30.080] They are different varieties of the same species. [01:32:30.080 --> 01:32:34.080] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts, [01:32:34.080 --> 01:32:39.080] and to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best kept health secret you need to know about. [01:32:39.080 --> 01:32:48.080] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten-free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. [01:32:48.080 --> 01:32:57.080] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367, and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [01:32:57.080 --> 01:33:01.080] Only at HempUSA.org. [01:33:01.080 --> 01:33:04.080] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:04.080 --> 01:33:31.080] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:34.080 --> 01:33:41.080] Hey, we are back. [01:33:41.080 --> 01:33:42.080] Brenda Kelper. [01:33:42.080 --> 01:33:44.080] You've never seen the Logos Radio. [01:33:44.080 --> 01:33:47.080] And we're talking to Jeff in this room. [01:33:47.080 --> 01:33:51.080] And I need to put this in perspective. [01:33:51.080 --> 01:33:54.080] Jeff, have you ever been in the military? [01:33:54.080 --> 01:33:56.080] Oops, hold on. [01:33:56.080 --> 01:33:57.080] There. [01:33:57.080 --> 01:33:59.080] Have you ever been in the military? [01:33:59.080 --> 01:34:02.080] No, I have not. [01:34:02.080 --> 01:34:04.080] Well, I have. [01:34:04.080 --> 01:34:06.080] I'm a combat veteran. [01:34:06.080 --> 01:34:14.080] And while I advocate gun rights, I don't own one. [01:34:14.080 --> 01:34:18.080] I was a weapons specialist in the military. [01:34:18.080 --> 01:34:23.080] I went into, I went to Vietnam during the heart of the Tet Offensive. [01:34:23.080 --> 01:34:29.080] And I have spent a considerable amount of time on the sharp end of those things. [01:34:29.080 --> 01:34:32.080] I don't want anyone in my hand. [01:34:32.080 --> 01:34:38.080] I don't ever want to point one in anger at anybody ever for the rest of my life. [01:34:38.080 --> 01:34:42.080] And I don't want one pointing at me. [01:34:42.080 --> 01:34:49.080] When I see a police officer with a loaded pistol strapped to his hip, [01:34:49.080 --> 01:34:56.080] for me, that is a very big deal. [01:34:56.080 --> 01:35:02.080] Sometimes these police officers forget how big a deal that is. [01:35:02.080 --> 01:35:06.080] And they needed to have spent some time in the third field hospital, [01:35:06.080 --> 01:35:14.080] Saigon, with me, watching people die really agonizing deaths [01:35:14.080 --> 01:35:18.080] from the effects of what those things do to people. [01:35:18.080 --> 01:35:22.080] When I see a police officer with a pistol on his hip, [01:35:22.080 --> 01:35:27.080] especially if his hand moves toward that pistol, [01:35:27.080 --> 01:35:32.080] I consider my life in immediate jeopardy. [01:35:32.080 --> 01:35:38.080] If I see a policeman prominently displaying a deadly weapon [01:35:38.080 --> 01:35:43.080] and he takes aggressive action like breaking my window out, [01:35:43.080 --> 01:35:49.080] he better have himself a really, really good reason [01:35:49.080 --> 01:35:56.080] because I'm going to consider that my life is in immediate jeopardy. [01:35:56.080 --> 01:35:58.080] I have asked a number of policemen, [01:35:58.080 --> 01:36:02.080] how many ounces of pull does it take to release your trigger? [01:36:02.080 --> 01:36:05.080] And they all said about an ounce and a half to two ounces. [01:36:05.080 --> 01:36:14.080] When was the last time you had the trigger pull strength on your weapon tested? [01:36:14.080 --> 01:36:20.080] Every time they stood there and looked at me with this blank stare on their face. [01:36:20.080 --> 01:36:26.080] They don't know how much pressure it takes to release that trigger. [01:36:26.080 --> 01:36:28.080] My life hangs in the balance. [01:36:28.080 --> 01:36:30.080] That's a big deal. [01:36:30.080 --> 01:36:36.080] You had someone break your window out because you wouldn't roll it down. [01:36:36.080 --> 01:36:40.080] What was the nature of his probable cause [01:36:40.080 --> 01:36:44.080] to give him reason to believe it was necessary for him [01:36:44.080 --> 01:36:49.080] to potentially use deadly force against you? [01:36:49.080 --> 01:36:54.080] He didn't have one. [01:36:54.080 --> 01:36:56.080] Interesting. [01:36:56.080 --> 01:37:00.080] Why have you not done your duty under law? [01:37:00.080 --> 01:37:06.080] Every state has a statutory requirement for a citizen [01:37:06.080 --> 01:37:10.080] who has knowledge that a felony has been committed to report that felony. [01:37:10.080 --> 01:37:16.080] Why have you not reported that felony? [01:37:16.080 --> 01:37:20.080] You realize you could be prosecuted for not reporting that. [01:37:20.080 --> 01:37:23.080] Oh, really? That's interesting. [01:37:23.080 --> 01:37:26.080] Absolutely. [01:37:26.080 --> 01:37:33.080] Every state has a statute for a citizen, not misdemeanors, but felonies. [01:37:33.080 --> 01:37:40.080] First degree felony aggravated assault in any state is going to be a felony. [01:37:40.080 --> 01:37:42.080] Yes. [01:37:42.080 --> 01:37:46.080] Now, have you listened to the show before? [01:37:46.080 --> 01:37:49.080] No, this is my first time. [01:37:49.080 --> 01:37:51.080] Okay. [01:37:51.080 --> 01:37:53.080] You need to listen more. [01:37:53.080 --> 01:37:55.080] We talk about a routine. [01:37:55.080 --> 01:37:58.080] One of the things I constantly tell people, [01:37:58.080 --> 01:38:02.080] never ask public officials to do anything you actually want them to do [01:38:02.080 --> 01:38:07.080] because you will never win your case [01:38:07.080 --> 01:38:11.080] simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [01:38:11.080 --> 01:38:16.080] You will only win your case if you have the politics on your side [01:38:16.080 --> 01:38:20.080] and all politics is local. [01:38:20.080 --> 01:38:22.080] Right. [01:38:22.080 --> 01:38:28.080] The reason you never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do [01:38:28.080 --> 01:38:34.080] is because you've got the law in your hand that tells him he must do this thing. [01:38:34.080 --> 01:38:39.080] You also have the law in your hand, which you already know about, [01:38:39.080 --> 01:38:45.080] 18 U.S. Code 242 and the Missouri state equivalent [01:38:45.080 --> 01:38:49.080] that makes it an official misconduct or official oppression. [01:38:49.080 --> 01:38:52.080] I think Texas is the only one that causes an official oppression. [01:38:52.080 --> 01:38:54.080] Most states call it an official misconduct. [01:38:54.080 --> 01:38:58.080] Public official fails to perform what he's required to perform. [01:38:58.080 --> 01:38:59.080] You have that statute. [01:38:59.080 --> 01:39:04.080] So you go out there and you say, here, I've got this little tar baby. [01:39:04.080 --> 01:39:06.080] You want to touch it? [01:39:06.080 --> 01:39:07.080] Here you go. [01:39:07.080 --> 01:39:08.080] Touch my little tar baby. [01:39:08.080 --> 01:39:10.080] I'm going to ask you to do this thing. [01:39:10.080 --> 01:39:14.080] When you don't do this thing, when you get to touch my little tar baby, [01:39:14.080 --> 01:39:16.080] then you stick to it. [01:39:16.080 --> 01:39:22.080] Now I come back and instead of getting all upset and angry [01:39:22.080 --> 01:39:28.080] because you didn't do what you were supposed to do, I say yes. [01:39:28.080 --> 01:39:34.080] Now I get to file against you for failing to perform a duty you're required to perform. [01:39:34.080 --> 01:39:36.080] So I go to the next step. [01:39:36.080 --> 01:39:40.080] I recently went to a J.P. to ask to see some records. [01:39:40.080 --> 01:39:44.080] And I had to argue with the clerks a little bit, but they brought me the records. [01:39:44.080 --> 01:39:47.080] And then the J.P. came out and said, sir, you can't look at those. [01:39:47.080 --> 01:39:49.080] You're a security risk. [01:39:49.080 --> 01:39:52.080] And I've already got one open. [01:39:52.080 --> 01:39:53.080] Oh, these I'm looking at. [01:39:53.080 --> 01:39:54.080] I can't look at these. [01:39:54.080 --> 01:39:55.080] No, you can't look at those. [01:39:55.080 --> 01:39:59.080] So I closed it real quick, pushed them back across the counter. [01:39:59.080 --> 01:40:04.080] By this time, the bailiff had kind of sidled up next to us. [01:40:04.080 --> 01:40:07.080] I turned to the bailiff and said, Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? [01:40:07.080 --> 01:40:08.080] Yes. [01:40:08.080 --> 01:40:09.080] Yes, I did. [01:40:09.080 --> 01:40:12.080] I said, arrest that woman. [01:40:12.080 --> 01:40:13.080] Why can't you arrest her? [01:40:13.080 --> 01:40:14.080] This is her court. [01:40:14.080 --> 01:40:16.080] Oh, no, no, no, no. [01:40:16.080 --> 01:40:18.080] You're mistaken. [01:40:18.080 --> 01:40:20.080] And she's about three feet away from me. [01:40:20.080 --> 01:40:22.080] This is not her court. [01:40:22.080 --> 01:40:24.080] This is my court. [01:40:24.080 --> 01:40:29.080] And I very generously allow her to be adjudicated according to my law. [01:40:29.080 --> 01:40:31.080] And she just breached one of them. [01:40:31.080 --> 01:40:34.080] She breached one of them in your sight and in your presence. [01:40:34.080 --> 01:40:36.080] What law did she violate? [01:40:36.080 --> 01:40:42.080] 1.29 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which says all courts shall be public, [01:40:42.080 --> 01:40:44.080] which reflects Texas Constitution. [01:40:44.080 --> 01:40:49.080] Article 1, paragraph 10, arrest her. [01:40:49.080 --> 01:40:52.080] Well, you're not going to arrest a judge. [01:40:52.080 --> 01:40:55.080] And I always do this. [01:40:55.080 --> 01:41:03.080] I say, Mr. Bailiff, I want you to take your chicken suit off. [01:41:03.080 --> 01:41:09.080] Now, that sounds like I'm just kind of playing with you, but I'm not. [01:41:09.080 --> 01:41:13.080] I recently had a friend of mine whose brother was a city attorney for Mansfield, Texas. [01:41:13.080 --> 01:41:19.080] I called the Mansfield Texas police to arrest him, the justice to the peace, and he wouldn't do it. [01:41:19.080 --> 01:41:29.080] He told the city attorney that I was agitated. [01:41:29.080 --> 01:41:33.080] And Ken Magnuson, a friend of mine, was the city attorney's brother. [01:41:33.080 --> 01:41:35.080] And that's what the brother told him. [01:41:35.080 --> 01:41:42.080] I said, Ken, ask Craig if I got agitated before I asked the officer to take off his chicken suit [01:41:42.080 --> 01:41:49.080] or after I asked him to take his chicken suit off. [01:41:49.080 --> 01:41:55.080] Always ask him to take his chicken suit off. [01:41:55.080 --> 01:41:57.080] That sets him up. [01:41:57.080 --> 01:42:00.080] And if you got a smart one, he'll know what you're doing. [01:42:00.080 --> 01:42:02.080] But you don't care if they do or not. [01:42:02.080 --> 01:42:06.080] You ask them to do something they're required to do, and when they don't, [01:42:06.080 --> 01:42:12.080] you go to the next step and you file criminal charges against him. [01:42:12.080 --> 01:42:17.080] If a police officer doesn't take my complaint, then I go to the district attorney [01:42:17.080 --> 01:42:23.080] and demand that the district attorney present my complaint against the officer to the grand jury, [01:42:23.080 --> 01:42:25.080] and he's going to refuse. [01:42:25.080 --> 01:42:33.080] At least I hope he does, because then I take a complaint against the district attorney to the district court, [01:42:33.080 --> 01:42:38.080] to the district judge, and then ask the district judge to take my complaint against the district attorney [01:42:38.080 --> 01:42:43.080] for not taking my complaint against the police officer. [01:42:43.080 --> 01:42:45.080] And he's going to refuse. [01:42:45.080 --> 01:42:47.080] At least I hope he does. [01:42:47.080 --> 01:42:51.080] Because if he does, now I get to go to the state attorney general [01:42:51.080 --> 01:42:58.080] and ask the attorney general to present the district judge to the grand jury. [01:42:58.080 --> 01:43:03.080] And he's going to refuse. At least I hope he does. [01:43:03.080 --> 01:43:08.080] Because now I get to go to the chief justice of the Supreme and invoke his duty as the magistrate [01:43:08.080 --> 01:43:17.080] and ask him to send them all to the grand jury to find out I'm all guilty and get them all prosecuted. [01:43:17.080 --> 01:43:19.080] And he's going to refuse. [01:43:19.080 --> 01:43:30.080] Now I get to sue the state under WICO for an ongoing criminal conspiracy to violate law. [01:43:30.080 --> 01:43:35.080] Now, you may not get all of that adjudicated, [01:43:35.080 --> 01:43:42.080] but you are going to have some big fishes re-PO'd at some little fishes, [01:43:42.080 --> 01:43:46.080] and big fishes eat little fishes. [01:43:46.080 --> 01:43:50.080] This is Randy Kelton, Robert Stevens, School of Law and Radio. [01:43:50.080 --> 01:43:53.080] I call it number 512-6469-84. [01:43:53.080 --> 01:43:56.080] We'll go to our last segment, and Cody, I see you there. [01:43:56.080 --> 01:44:00.080] We will finish this up, and thank you. [01:44:00.080 --> 01:44:04.080] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:04.080 --> 01:44:08.080] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:08.080 --> 01:44:13.080] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:13.080 --> 01:44:16.080] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:16.080 --> 01:44:19.080] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.080 --> 01:44:25.080] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. [01:44:25.080 --> 01:44:30.080] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [01:44:30.080 --> 01:44:36.080] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sport zombieism recover. [01:44:36.080 --> 01:44:40.080] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [01:44:40.080 --> 01:44:43.080] without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.080 --> 01:44:50.080] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [01:44:50.080 --> 01:44:54.080] or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.080 --> 01:44:57.080] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:57.080 --> 01:45:00.080] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:00.080 --> 01:45:03.080] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.080 --> 01:45:07.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:07.080 --> 01:45:15.080] The affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.080 --> 01:45:19.080] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.080 --> 01:45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.080 --> 01:45:28.080] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.080 --> 01:45:34.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.080 --> 01:45:39.080] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.080 --> 01:45:43.080] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.080 --> 01:45:49.080] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.080 --> 01:45:52.080] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.080 --> 01:46:05.080] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:05.080 --> 01:46:23.080] Hello, oh man, in jail, got something in there, oh man, I'm broke, man. [01:46:23.080 --> 01:46:27.080] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:46:27.080 --> 01:46:31.080] Some things I realize fully. [01:46:31.080 --> 01:46:35.080] Somebody's gonna police that policeman. [01:46:35.080 --> 01:46:39.080] Somebody's gonna police the bully. [01:46:39.080 --> 01:46:44.080] Hey, we are back, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, [01:46:44.080 --> 01:46:47.080] and we're talking to Jeff in Missouri. [01:46:47.080 --> 01:46:51.080] Jeff, have we given you something to work with? [01:46:51.080 --> 01:46:56.080] Well, actually, let me finish what's going on here. [01:46:56.080 --> 01:47:01.080] The officer quit, or either that, they fired him. [01:47:01.080 --> 01:47:09.080] But what's happened now is that the state has filed charges against me for resisting arrest, [01:47:09.080 --> 01:47:12.080] and I mean, this is the Highway Patrol. [01:47:12.080 --> 01:47:19.080] That was a city incident, and they charged me with doing 65 miles over the speed limit, [01:47:19.080 --> 01:47:23.080] going through red lights, trying to get away from these people. [01:47:23.080 --> 01:47:31.080] And they're not, I have a trial next, the 20th of this month, [01:47:31.080 --> 01:47:37.080] and the judge warned me, or he threatened me with jail and $1,000, [01:47:37.080 --> 01:47:40.080] if I did not accept a public defender. [01:47:40.080 --> 01:47:43.080] And so I said, you know, I went ahead and consented. [01:47:43.080 --> 01:47:47.080] So this public defender, of course, is going to the state, too. [01:47:47.080 --> 01:47:51.080] Okay, he's going to try to screw you. [01:47:51.080 --> 01:47:52.080] Yeah. [01:47:52.080 --> 01:47:53.080] What do you want him to do? [01:47:53.080 --> 01:47:56.080] He wants to make sure you don't have a right to appeal. [01:47:56.080 --> 01:47:58.080] Okay, this is what you do. [01:47:58.080 --> 01:48:01.080] You tell him what you want him to do. [01:48:01.080 --> 01:48:06.080] And if he doesn't, if he indicates he's not going to do something, [01:48:06.080 --> 01:48:12.080] you tell him, okay, I'll bargain with you. [01:48:12.080 --> 01:48:16.080] I know what my rights are, and this is what happened when the DPS [01:48:16.080 --> 01:48:20.080] at the Secretary of State's building knocked out my tooth, [01:48:20.080 --> 01:48:23.080] when I told him what part of, I do not want to talk to you, [01:48:23.080 --> 01:48:26.080] do you not understand, he lost it and slammed me into a wall [01:48:26.080 --> 01:48:29.080] and broke one of my teeth. [01:48:29.080 --> 01:48:31.080] They appointed me counsel. [01:48:31.080 --> 01:48:34.080] I went into court because they ordered me to come to court [01:48:34.080 --> 01:48:37.080] and didn't tell me why, so I get there, [01:48:37.080 --> 01:48:40.080] and they wanted to find out if I have counsel. [01:48:40.080 --> 01:48:44.080] I told the judge, Your Honor, I have 28.01 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, [01:48:44.080 --> 01:48:48.080] and it lists all the things you can order me to come to court for, [01:48:48.080 --> 01:48:51.080] because I have an attorney, he's not one of them. [01:48:51.080 --> 01:48:57.080] And she got pretty tense, but she was Ron Earl's daughter, [01:48:57.080 --> 01:48:59.080] the ex-district attorney, and I figured she was political, [01:48:59.080 --> 01:49:02.080] so she's probably the best judge I could get, so I backed off. [01:49:02.080 --> 01:49:05.080] And she said, well, Mr. Kelton, we didn't know if you had counsel. [01:49:05.080 --> 01:49:07.080] I said, she said, do you have an attorney? [01:49:07.080 --> 01:49:09.080] No, I don't. [01:49:09.080 --> 01:49:10.080] Are you going to hire one? [01:49:10.080 --> 01:49:11.080] No, I'm not. [01:49:11.080 --> 01:49:13.080] Would you like us to appoint one? [01:49:13.080 --> 01:49:15.080] I don't care what you do. [01:49:15.080 --> 01:49:17.080] Well, Mr. Kelton, I'm going to appoint you counsel. [01:49:17.080 --> 01:49:21.080] I said, well, if you do, judge, make sure you appoint one you really don't like. [01:49:21.080 --> 01:49:24.080] And she kind of laughed and said, well, we have an attorney, [01:49:24.080 --> 01:49:26.080] will you just get the next one? [01:49:26.080 --> 01:49:29.080] So you're off the hook, yes, I am. [01:49:29.080 --> 01:49:32.080] The appoint counsel, he comes in, we go in a room, [01:49:32.080 --> 01:49:34.080] and he starts telling me how things are going to go. [01:49:34.080 --> 01:49:38.080] And I tell him, no, no, no, no, no, they're not going to go that way. [01:49:38.080 --> 01:49:40.080] This is how it's going to go. [01:49:40.080 --> 01:49:44.080] You're going to go to that judge and ask the judge to remove you from this case. [01:49:44.080 --> 01:49:49.080] And I'm going to go to that judge and tell the judge, don't you dare remove him from this case. [01:49:49.080 --> 01:49:52.080] He's my attorney of choice, and he's under contract. [01:49:52.080 --> 01:49:55.080] And the lawyer said, well, I'm not under contract to you, Mr. Kelton. [01:49:55.080 --> 01:49:57.080] I'm under contract to the state. [01:49:57.080 --> 01:49:59.080] Yes, you are, but I'm the intended third party beneficiary, [01:49:59.080 --> 01:50:02.080] and I have standing under the contract. [01:50:02.080 --> 01:50:05.080] And the judge is going to remove him from the case. [01:50:05.080 --> 01:50:08.080] And he said, yes, he would. [01:50:08.080 --> 01:50:12.080] Then I get to sue the judge. [01:50:12.080 --> 01:50:17.080] And the lawyer sat back and looked at me, and I could see it in his eyes. [01:50:17.080 --> 01:50:22.080] He's thinking, is SOP going to get me disbarred? [01:50:22.080 --> 01:50:27.080] And later that night, I called him on the phone because he had his home phone on the card he gave me. [01:50:27.080 --> 01:50:31.080] And I told him, you know, I felt like I owe you something. [01:50:31.080 --> 01:50:36.080] I didn't tell you everything this morning in court. [01:50:36.080 --> 01:50:44.080] I'm going to do a radio show in a few minutes, and I'll explain what I'm going to do and explain my strategy. [01:50:44.080 --> 01:50:45.080] You might want to listen. [01:50:45.080 --> 01:50:47.080] Well, Mr. Kelton, I don't like mysteries. [01:50:47.080 --> 01:50:48.080] Why don't you just tell me? [01:50:48.080 --> 01:50:49.080] I said, okay. [01:50:49.080 --> 01:50:54.080] I have a motion filed in the court with 21 due process violation allegations in it. [01:50:54.080 --> 01:50:58.080] You will adequately adjudicate every single one of those. [01:50:58.080 --> 01:51:06.080] If you fail to adjudicate a single due process issue, a bar grieve year. [01:51:06.080 --> 01:51:09.080] You bar grieve a lawyer? [01:51:09.080 --> 01:51:13.080] That really hurts, especially if they're a due lawyer. [01:51:13.080 --> 01:51:15.080] Just start now. [01:51:15.080 --> 01:51:18.080] One bar grievance your first year of practice, they'll cancel immediately. [01:51:18.080 --> 01:51:21.080] Two bar grievances in one year of practice, they'll cancel. [01:51:21.080 --> 01:51:25.080] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [01:51:25.080 --> 01:51:34.080] If you grieve the attorney from the wrong side, it won't make any difference. [01:51:34.080 --> 01:51:40.080] If you file a bar grievance against a lawyer in the state of Texas and most every other state I've seen, [01:51:40.080 --> 01:51:43.080] the state bar will get that grievance and they'll throw it in the trash. [01:51:43.080 --> 01:51:54.080] So how is your insurance carrier to gauge your level of risk by valid bar grievances? [01:51:54.080 --> 01:51:57.080] Hell, they throw them all in the trash by the numbers. [01:51:57.080 --> 01:51:58.080] They don't care what it is. [01:51:58.080 --> 01:52:02.080] You get one, they double your malpractice insurance immediately. [01:52:02.080 --> 01:52:04.080] If it's your first year, they cancel. [01:52:04.080 --> 01:52:09.080] This terrified my lawyer, but I wasn't trying to pick on my lawyer. [01:52:09.080 --> 01:52:12.080] I had no intention of filing a bar grievance against him. [01:52:12.080 --> 01:52:17.080] What I was doing was giving him plausible deniability. [01:52:17.080 --> 01:52:23.080] We stood in court and he said, Mr. Kelton, the prosecutor said she knows who you are [01:52:23.080 --> 01:52:29.080] and if you start filing criminal complaints, she's going to charge you with tampering with the government document. [01:52:29.080 --> 01:52:33.080] And we're outside the bar and the prosecutor is up by the bench talking to the judge. [01:52:33.080 --> 01:52:35.080] And I said, she said that? [01:52:35.080 --> 01:52:36.080] Yes, she did. [01:52:36.080 --> 01:52:39.080] And I pointed at her, get over here. [01:52:39.080 --> 01:52:41.080] And I told my lawyer, get over here. [01:52:41.080 --> 01:52:45.080] I got 30 criminal complaints and I pulled them out of my case. [01:52:45.080 --> 01:52:51.080] I need her to verify these in accordance with her duty under Article 2.06 Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:52:51.080 --> 01:52:52.080] Get over here. [01:52:52.080 --> 01:52:55.080] He held up both hands and he said, I'm not going to touch them. [01:52:55.080 --> 01:52:56.080] I'm not going to kick them. [01:52:56.080 --> 01:52:59.080] Kick them, you chicken. [01:52:59.080 --> 01:53:02.080] This was in front of the judge. [01:53:02.080 --> 01:53:07.080] So, you know, he thought I was giving him a hard time, but I wasn't. [01:53:07.080 --> 01:53:14.080] Now, the judge knows this guy's got a client that's out of control. [01:53:14.080 --> 01:53:17.080] Everything is political. [01:53:17.080 --> 01:53:28.080] Go in there and your court appointed counsel is going to try to make sure you don't have a reason to appeal. [01:53:28.080 --> 01:53:31.080] Now you land on him like a ton of bricks. [01:53:31.080 --> 01:53:34.080] They've been using court appointed counsel to screw you. [01:53:34.080 --> 01:53:36.080] Now you're screwing the lawyer. [01:53:36.080 --> 01:53:40.080] Now he goes to the judge and your honor, you got to help me out here. [01:53:40.080 --> 01:53:43.080] This guy's kicking my behind. [01:53:43.080 --> 01:53:47.080] I went to the, we went to lunch, they dismissed my case. [01:53:47.080 --> 01:53:51.080] I gave my lawyer plausible deniability. [01:53:51.080 --> 01:53:56.080] Now he didn't like it, but that wasn't necessarily important. [01:53:56.080 --> 01:54:02.080] I gave the judge a reason to dismiss my case to protect this lawyer. [01:54:02.080 --> 01:54:05.080] It's all politics. [01:54:05.080 --> 01:54:07.080] It's not about law. [01:54:07.080 --> 01:54:13.080] You start filing criminal charges against this police officer, even if he's not there anymore, [01:54:13.080 --> 01:54:16.080] they're going to feel like they have to protect him. [01:54:16.080 --> 01:54:24.080] And if the only way they can protect him is dismiss the charges against you to get you to leave him alone, they'll do that. [01:54:24.080 --> 01:54:27.080] It's all politics. [01:54:27.080 --> 01:54:28.080] Right. [01:54:28.080 --> 01:54:29.080] Yep. [01:54:29.080 --> 01:54:31.080] Does that make sense? [01:54:31.080 --> 01:54:32.080] Yes, it sure does. [01:54:32.080 --> 01:54:41.080] I didn't know, I figured that since he had quit in the police department that I couldn't do anything against him. [01:54:41.080 --> 01:54:43.080] But now I feel like... [01:54:43.080 --> 01:54:46.080] Oh, no. [01:54:46.080 --> 01:54:50.080] Yeah, he is open, he is fair game. [01:54:50.080 --> 01:54:52.080] Okay, let me, I got one more caller. [01:54:52.080 --> 01:54:54.080] If you have more stuff, think about it tonight. [01:54:54.080 --> 01:54:56.080] You might want to call in tomorrow night. [01:54:56.080 --> 01:55:01.080] I do a four-hour show and I'll go through the politics in a little more detail. [01:55:01.080 --> 01:55:02.080] Okay. [01:55:02.080 --> 01:55:03.080] Thank you. [01:55:03.080 --> 01:55:04.080] Okay. [01:55:04.080 --> 01:55:05.080] Thank you, Jeff. [01:55:05.080 --> 01:55:06.080] Appreciate it. [01:55:06.080 --> 01:55:07.080] God bless. [01:55:07.080 --> 01:55:08.080] Okay. [01:55:08.080 --> 01:55:10.080] Now we're going to go to Jody in Texas. [01:55:10.080 --> 01:55:11.080] I'm calling Jody. [01:55:11.080 --> 01:55:12.080] Jody in Texas. [01:55:12.080 --> 01:55:13.080] Hello. [01:55:13.080 --> 01:55:14.080] Jody. [01:55:14.080 --> 01:55:15.080] Hey, Andy. [01:55:15.080 --> 01:55:16.080] How's it going? [01:55:16.080 --> 01:55:17.080] Hello. [01:55:17.080 --> 01:55:18.080] Okay. [01:55:18.080 --> 01:55:21.080] What do you have for us tonight? [01:55:21.080 --> 01:55:36.080] Well, I called you a few months back about a case in Lano County where I had been pulled over while traveling from another state in a rented conveyance. [01:55:36.080 --> 01:55:39.080] And, you know, the whole rest went through. [01:55:39.080 --> 01:55:41.080] And now I'm in court. [01:55:41.080 --> 01:55:43.080] Okay, hold on a second. [01:55:43.080 --> 01:55:49.080] For those who are not familiar. [01:55:49.080 --> 01:55:57.080] When you go to court, they don't speak English. [01:55:57.080 --> 01:55:59.080] They speak English. [01:55:59.080 --> 01:56:03.080] Travel, drive are commercial terms. [01:56:03.080 --> 01:56:04.080] I'm sorry. [01:56:04.080 --> 01:56:10.080] Driving and motor vehicle, those are commercial terms. [01:56:10.080 --> 01:56:15.080] Travel and conveyance, those are not commercial terms. [01:56:15.080 --> 01:56:19.080] So he had a reason for using those. [01:56:19.080 --> 01:56:21.080] All right. [01:56:21.080 --> 01:56:35.080] In the act of traveling, at one in the morning, I had to avoid a car on a two-lane highway that was slamming on their brakes to initially make a left turn that they decided halfway through they didn't want to make. [01:56:35.080 --> 01:56:48.080] And so I had to kind of accelerate to the left and into this middle divide area as a state trooper was coming over the hill and they caught me and pulled me over for speeding. [01:56:48.080 --> 01:57:05.080] So in the midst of giving me a ticket for speeding, they saw that there was not just me but two other young, you know, 25-age people in the car and decided, oh, well, you know, there's got to be something going on. [01:57:05.080 --> 01:57:06.080] I'm just going to throw out the catch-all phase. [01:57:06.080 --> 01:57:09.080] I smell marijuana and I'm going to search the vehicle. [01:57:09.080 --> 01:57:18.080] Well, being that I just rented this car, after getting off the plane and immediately took off, there, you know, there's nothing in this car. [01:57:18.080 --> 01:57:20.080] We've been driving for 24 hours. [01:57:20.080 --> 01:57:21.080] Go ahead. [01:57:21.080 --> 01:57:22.080] Sure, whatever. [01:57:22.080 --> 01:57:25.080] You know, if this is what you got to do. [01:57:25.080 --> 01:57:31.080] In the midst of searching, they did actually find something and proceeded to charge us with it. [01:57:31.080 --> 01:57:41.080] And now we're going through the whole felony criminal, you know, court system because of something that Avis did not remove from the vehicle. [01:57:41.080 --> 01:57:47.080] I'm sorry, the rental car company. [01:57:47.080 --> 01:57:49.080] I am sorry. [01:57:49.080 --> 01:57:53.080] I meant to get to you before I ran out of time. [01:57:53.080 --> 01:57:55.080] Will you be able to call in tomorrow night? [01:57:55.080 --> 01:57:57.080] We have a four-hour show. [01:57:57.080 --> 01:58:00.080] Okay. [01:58:00.080 --> 01:58:01.080] All right. Thank you. [01:58:01.080 --> 01:58:02.080] I'm sorry. [01:58:02.080 --> 01:58:06.080] I tried to get to you quickly, but we ran out of time. [01:58:06.080 --> 01:58:07.080] Call tomorrow night. [01:58:07.080 --> 01:58:13.080] We have a lot more time and I'll take you in the head of the list. [01:58:13.080 --> 01:58:14.080] Okay. [01:58:14.080 --> 01:58:18.080] This is Randy Carpenter from Skid Row Radio. [01:58:18.080 --> 01:58:19.080] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:19.080 --> 01:58:26.080] We will be back all night with our four-hour info marathon. [01:58:26.080 --> 01:58:33.080] Especially on Saturdays, we have Skid Row and we like to play Stump the Chumps. [01:58:33.080 --> 01:58:44.080] And when I say that, everybody thinks I'm talking about me, but actually I'm really talking about Steve because I really like to chump him on the air. [01:58:44.080 --> 01:58:46.080] Give us a call tomorrow night. [01:58:46.080 --> 01:58:50.080] Thank you for listening and good night. [01:58:50.080 --> 01:58:57.080] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.080 --> 01:59:08.080] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.080 --> 01:59:11.080] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.080 --> 01:59:20.080] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.080 --> 01:59:30.080] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.080 --> 01:59:32.080] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.080 --> 01:59:40.080] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.080 --> 01:59:50.080] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:50.080 --> 02:00:10.080] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.