[00:00.000 --> 00:08.000] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, online at thelibertybeat.com. [00:08.000 --> 00:09.000] This is Justin Arman. [00:09.000 --> 00:11.000] And this is Jessica Arman. [00:11.000 --> 00:15.000] Here with your Liberty Beat for March 20th, 2014. [00:15.000 --> 00:24.000] Gold opened today at $1,326, silver at $20.29, and Bitcoin is trading at $592. [00:24.000 --> 00:30.000] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from SovereignBTC, media, marketing, and consulting for the Bitcoin ecosystem. [00:30.000 --> 00:33.000] Operated by Liberty Beat founder John Bush. [00:33.000 --> 00:36.000] Online at SovereignBTC.com. [00:36.000 --> 00:39.000] And from Dorothy Erminger at Capstar Lending. [00:39.000 --> 00:48.000] For your residential mortgage needs, call Dorothy at 512-343-6494 or apply online at calledorothy.com. [00:48.000 --> 00:51.000] And MLS 216-624. [00:51.000 --> 00:56.000] And from the Soleil School, enrolling children from 5 through 10 in Austin. [00:56.000 --> 01:00.000] Visit soleilschool.com. [01:00.000 --> 01:01.000] And now the news. [01:01.000 --> 01:07.000] Security fixes that address the problems Mt. Gox blamed for the loss of Bitcoins were put into place Wednesday. [01:07.000 --> 01:13.000] PC World reports that the software known as BitcoinQT has been renamed as Bitcoin Core. [01:13.000 --> 01:20.000] The rebranding is intended to show that it runs the core infrastructure of the cryptocurrency's transaction and verification network. [01:20.000 --> 01:31.000] According to the release notes, the latest version of Bitcoin software contains more than a half dozen fixes for transaction malleability. [01:31.000 --> 01:37.000] A surprise appearance Tuesday at the 2014 TED conference in Vancouver, Canada. [01:37.000 --> 01:39.000] Brian Hagan has the story. [01:39.000 --> 01:46.000] NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, by use of a remote-controlled satellite robot, appeared on stage to address the conference-goers. [01:46.000 --> 01:51.000] Outlining why he took the risk to make off with 1.7 million documents from the agency. [01:51.000 --> 01:55.000] I don't want to harm my government. I want to help my government. [01:55.000 --> 02:00.000] Snowden told the crowd that stopping terrorism is not the goal of the NSA's massive surveillance program. [02:00.000 --> 02:06.000] The bottom line is that terrorism has always been what we in the intelligence world would call a cover for action. [02:06.000 --> 02:15.000] Terrorism is something that provokes an emotional response that allows people to rationalize authorizing powers and programs that they wouldn't give otherwise. [02:15.000 --> 02:21.000] Snowden concluded his talk by saying, we don't have to give up our privacy to have good government. [02:21.000 --> 02:25.000] We don't have to give up our liberty to have security. [02:25.000 --> 02:28.000] I'm Brian Hagan reporting for the Liberty Beat. [02:28.000 --> 02:33.000] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Brave New Books, now offering ProPure water filtration, [02:33.000 --> 02:40.000] the only gravity-driven all-in-one fluoride removal system that also alkalizes the water as well. [02:40.000 --> 02:46.000] Find them in Austin at 1904 Guadalupe Street or online at bravenewbookstore.com. [02:46.000 --> 02:54.000] And from Mass Appeal, affordable, high-quality printing, now accepting Bitcoin, online at MassAppealinc.com. [02:54.000 --> 03:11.000] You've been listening to the Liberty Beat. Remember, freeing your mind is freeing our world. [03:25.000 --> 03:32.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.000 --> 03:38.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.000 --> 03:43.000] When you were eight and you had bad traits, you go to school and learn the golden rule. [03:43.000 --> 03:49.000] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? If you get high, then you must get cool. [03:49.000 --> 03:54.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:54.000 --> 04:21.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [04:24.000 --> 04:32.000] To start with, I went to court today and I didn't get beaten into unconsciousness and thrown in jail. [04:32.000 --> 04:44.000] The bailiff did threaten to throw me out, but I insisted that I wouldn't leave him unless he handcuffed me. [04:44.000 --> 04:51.000] And he decided he didn't want to do that. So we kind of got that settled. [04:51.000 --> 04:57.000] I'm beginning to really go after these justices of the peace. [04:57.000 --> 05:08.000] They have gotten to where they absolutely believe that they can do anything they want to. [05:08.000 --> 05:18.000] I went in today and I had actually been sued in this forcible detainer hearing. [05:18.000 --> 05:21.000] I didn't really have anything to do with it. [05:21.000 --> 05:27.000] I had a quiet title in my name so that I could adjudicate this case, [05:27.000 --> 05:30.000] but I didn't have anything to do with possession of the property. [05:30.000 --> 05:35.000] But they sued me anyway. I guess they thought we were gonna be impressed by their suit. [05:35.000 --> 05:49.000] So what we're doing now on unlawful detainer is see the judge can only hear who has a right to possession. [05:49.000 --> 05:54.000] We're going in and saying, these guys don't have any standing. [05:54.000 --> 05:57.000] And the judges are saying, we can't hear that. [05:57.000 --> 06:05.000] So now we're going in saying, you don't have any subject matter jurisdiction [06:05.000 --> 06:13.000] because these guys didn't have standing to invoke your subject matter jurisdiction. [06:13.000 --> 06:23.000] And we have yet to have a single justice of the peace even read the motion. [06:23.000 --> 06:30.000] Not the motion, I'm sorry, the pleading. A challenge to subject matter jurisdiction is a plea. [06:30.000 --> 06:33.000] It's not a motion. [06:33.000 --> 06:36.000] And had a case law in front of them. [06:36.000 --> 06:47.000] Once a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction is filed, jurisdiction is lost, period. [06:47.000 --> 06:56.000] And the court does not get back jurisdiction until it proves jurisdiction. [06:56.000 --> 07:00.000] So in this case, that court didn't bother. [07:00.000 --> 07:07.000] They just went ahead and this is what we did with a judge in Garland, Texas. [07:07.000 --> 07:10.000] Now, I'm not going to mention that his name is Judge Cooper. [07:10.000 --> 07:12.000] I don't think we should mention that on air. [07:12.000 --> 07:15.000] So I'm not going to say that his name is Judge Cooper. [07:15.000 --> 07:18.000] I'll just let you all guess who it is. [07:18.000 --> 07:24.000] I filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction in his court and he refused to read it. [07:24.000 --> 07:32.000] And it showed that the foreclosure these folks were operating under [07:32.000 --> 07:38.000] was a foreclosure that had taken place eight years. [07:38.000 --> 07:42.000] There had already been one taken place eight years earlier. [07:42.000 --> 07:46.000] I'm sorry, 2008, four years earlier. [07:46.000 --> 07:56.000] And because of that previous foreclosure, once a foreclosure is had and there is a foreclosure sale, [07:56.000 --> 08:05.000] the party has two years to file an unlawful detainer hearing to get you removed from the property. [08:05.000 --> 08:08.000] Well, they didn't do it. [08:08.000 --> 08:12.000] So the statute of limitations had ran for two years. [08:12.000 --> 08:18.000] And it looks like they looked in the record and figured it out. [08:18.000 --> 08:20.000] They said, oops, we goofed. [08:20.000 --> 08:24.000] We foreclosed on this thing and for some reason didn't evict the person. [08:24.000 --> 08:26.000] I don't know why they didn't. [08:26.000 --> 08:29.000] And now the statute of limitations just ran. [08:29.000 --> 08:32.000] So what do we do now? [08:32.000 --> 08:44.000] So what they did was they had sold the property to federal mortgage, I forget, to Fannie Mae. [08:44.000 --> 08:55.000] And they put in an assignment from the original lender to Northstar. [08:55.000 --> 09:03.000] And then Northstar assigned a substitute trustee who held a sale and sold it back to Fannie Mae. [09:03.000 --> 09:06.000] The problem was Fannie Mae already owned it. [09:06.000 --> 09:11.000] And they ran this second foreclosure to hide the fact that they missed the first one, [09:11.000 --> 09:16.000] that they were out of time on the first one. [09:16.000 --> 09:19.000] So we challenged subject matter jurisdictions. [09:19.000 --> 09:22.000] Judges didn't read it. [09:22.000 --> 09:28.000] And then the judge ordered an eviction and sheriff's deputies with loaded pistols on their hips [09:28.000 --> 09:36.000] went out and physically removed this woman from the house she's been living in for 30 years, since 1984, [09:36.000 --> 09:39.000] threw her out in the street. [09:39.000 --> 09:41.000] Problem. [09:41.000 --> 09:51.000] Once subject matter jurisdiction was challenged, subject matter jurisdiction was lost. [09:51.000 --> 10:00.000] So the magistrate had no authority to order the eviction. [10:00.000 --> 10:07.000] So the magistrate, lacking authority, acted under the color of his authority [10:07.000 --> 10:17.000] and ordered people with loaded pistols to go out and exert or purport to exert an authority they did not expressly have. [10:17.000 --> 10:26.000] And under 2202B2A, that's an act of first-degree felony aggravated assault. [10:26.000 --> 10:32.000] Now the sheriff's deputies didn't commit first-degree felony aggravated assault, [10:32.000 --> 10:36.000] because they were acting in good faith with some competent authority. [10:36.000 --> 10:39.000] The JP did. [10:39.000 --> 10:46.000] Now, Mr. I'm going to dismiss your challenge to subject matter jurisdiction without even reading it. [10:46.000 --> 10:52.000] We'll see how this flies in front of a grand jury of our peers. [10:52.000 --> 11:03.000] We just went before a judge today, and he allowed the other side to non-suit me. [11:03.000 --> 11:06.000] The lawyer pulled a fast one on me. [11:06.000 --> 11:08.000] I didn't see that one coming. [11:08.000 --> 11:12.000] So she filed a motion for non-suit, and I objected. [11:12.000 --> 11:16.000] And the judge said, you're objecting to a non-suit? Yes, I am. [11:16.000 --> 11:18.000] You can't get to that non-suit. [11:18.000 --> 11:22.000] There is a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction before the court, [11:22.000 --> 11:29.000] and the court can't get to anything until it's heard the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [11:29.000 --> 11:31.000] He said, well, I'm going to hear the motion. [11:31.000 --> 11:36.000] So he ignored the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [11:36.000 --> 11:44.000] And now, once they non-suited me, the other parties weren't there because I was there in their place. [11:44.000 --> 11:56.000] And under the property code, in a forcible detainer hearing, you can represent the person without being a lawyer. [11:56.000 --> 12:02.000] And the judge said I couldn't because I wasn't a lawyer and threw me out of the courtroom. [12:02.000 --> 12:04.000] So I'm sure he issued a default judgment. [12:04.000 --> 12:09.000] Now they're going to go out and evict these people at gunpoint, [12:09.000 --> 12:15.000] and I'll have another judge who will be charging the first degree felony aggravated assault. [12:15.000 --> 12:18.000] In this particular judge, I'll have a lot more complaints. [12:18.000 --> 12:29.000] This one is especially bad because the criminal accusations against the first judge, I filed with this judge. [12:29.000 --> 12:40.000] And his clerks sent me a letter back saying that they accepted the filing in error, that I should file it with the proper court. [12:40.000 --> 12:44.000] Well, sorry, Bubba, this was the proper court. [12:44.000 --> 12:55.000] So the judge had the criminal complaints of first degree felony aggravated assault before him against another judge, [12:55.000 --> 13:03.000] accusing him of that because he did exactly what this judge did. [13:03.000 --> 13:13.000] These guys are not rocket scientists, obviously, or they are absolutely certain that they will never, [13:13.000 --> 13:20.000] ever be prosecuted for anything that they do to a citizen. [13:20.000 --> 13:26.000] Now they might get prosecuted if they mess with a high level public official or something, [13:26.000 --> 13:29.000] but you and I, they're masters. [13:29.000 --> 13:38.000] They are certain they can do anything they want to with absolute impunity. [13:38.000 --> 13:49.000] Well, the reason I filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction is the only time you can sue a judge [13:49.000 --> 13:54.000] is when he acts without subject matter jurisdiction. [13:54.000 --> 14:06.000] And once subject matter jurisdiction is challenged, subject matter jurisdiction as a matter of law is lost. [14:06.000 --> 14:16.000] So both these judges, actually I have five judges that entered a ruling [14:16.000 --> 14:22.000] with a challenge subject matter jurisdiction before the court without reading the challenge. [14:22.000 --> 14:27.000] Not all of them have had the person evicted. They've tried to, but they haven't got it done yet. [14:27.000 --> 14:35.000] So as these people get evicted, I'll charge first degree felony aggravated assault against them. [14:35.000 --> 14:38.000] And we'll see how this works out for them. [14:38.000 --> 14:44.000] I'm just going to do my best to welcome them to the deep end of the pool. [14:44.000 --> 14:50.000] Okay. Enough on that. We have a couple of callers and we have Jeff from Mississippi back. [14:50.000 --> 14:55.000] Jeff, how are things going in Hillbilly land? [14:55.000 --> 14:58.000] Yes, they are going great. Hi, Randy. [14:58.000 --> 15:02.000] Howdy. You sound upbeat. I hope this is good news. [15:02.000 --> 15:06.000] Well, actually my trial has taken another turn. [15:06.000 --> 15:13.000] The last time I called I had been to prison and my trial was up on appeal. [15:13.000 --> 15:20.000] And then I actually won a remand for a retrial from the Supreme Court. [15:20.000 --> 15:24.000] And so I called you and now it's taken another twist. [15:24.000 --> 15:31.000] The state, their appeals attorney has filed a motion for reconsideration. [15:31.000 --> 15:38.000] So it looks like my case is back in the appeals court for reconsideration. [15:38.000 --> 15:42.000] And my appeals attorney is back representing me. [15:42.000 --> 15:47.000] Is this the one you felt like was throwing you under the bus? [15:47.000 --> 15:50.000] Oh, yeah. I've already filed four bar complaints against her. [15:50.000 --> 15:55.000] And I got to say that it doesn't seem to affect any one of these people. [15:55.000 --> 16:00.000] I've called down there and it turns out that these people are bopping around the courthouse [16:00.000 --> 16:03.000] just as happy as little kids in the park. [16:03.000 --> 16:07.000] And it just seems like these kids are just getting thrown in the trash. [16:07.000 --> 16:13.000] Then you might look at a malpractice suit against the lawyer. [16:13.000 --> 16:17.000] Okay. [16:17.000 --> 16:19.000] That'll at least get her attention. [16:19.000 --> 16:22.000] Okay. That's interesting. Okay. [16:22.000 --> 16:28.000] But, okay, hold on. If this lawyer threw you under the bus, [16:28.000 --> 16:32.000] how did she get the appeal turned over? [16:32.000 --> 16:33.000] I don't know. [16:33.000 --> 16:37.000] Or was the case just that bad? [16:37.000 --> 16:40.000] Okay. Hang on. We're about to go to break. [16:40.000 --> 16:44.000] This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rue of La Radio. [16:44.000 --> 16:48.000] Our calling number, 512-646-1984. [16:48.000 --> 16:52.000] We're going to have the phones open all night, so give us a call. [16:52.000 --> 17:00.000] We'll be right back. [17:00.000 --> 17:04.000] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [17:04.000 --> 17:06.000] except in the area of nutrition. [17:06.000 --> 17:09.000] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [17:09.000 --> 17:11.000] and it's time we changed all that. [17:11.000 --> 17:17.000] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [17:17.000 --> 17:22.000] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [17:22.000 --> 17:25.000] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [17:25.000 --> 17:31.000] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [17:31.000 --> 17:34.000] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [17:34.000 --> 17:39.000] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [17:39.000 --> 17:43.000] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [17:43.000 --> 17:47.000] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [17:47.000 --> 17:51.000] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [17:51.000 --> 17:56.000] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, [17:56.000 --> 18:00.000] and increase your income. Order now. [18:00.000 --> 18:05.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.000 --> 18:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.000 --> 18:14.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win, too. 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[19:01.000 --> 19:23.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradio.com. [19:23.000 --> 19:38.000] Thank you very much. [19:53.000 --> 20:11.000] Okay, we are back. [20:11.000 --> 20:16.000] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, and we're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. [20:16.000 --> 20:24.000] Okay, Jeff, how did she get the first trial overturned? [20:24.000 --> 20:31.000] Oh, and by the way, the motion for reconsideration is just huffing and puffing. [20:31.000 --> 20:36.000] Very unlikely that the Court of Appeals is going to reverse itself. [20:36.000 --> 20:40.000] Oh, okay. So they're just basically buying time. [20:40.000 --> 20:41.000] Yes. [20:41.000 --> 20:46.000] Okay, because even when the attorney wrote me the letter, [20:46.000 --> 20:52.000] she stated that it could be another six to nine months. [20:52.000 --> 20:56.000] Well, I'll take you back, and I'll try to keep it really short. [20:56.000 --> 21:05.000] During the trial, the prosecutor refused to bring in the witness that had first-hand knowledge. [21:05.000 --> 21:11.000] And I challenged that. In fact, I threw a fit, and I threw a fit so bad [21:11.000 --> 21:16.000] that my attorney had no choice but to stand up and kind of join in. [21:16.000 --> 21:21.000] And she even said that this is ridiculous. We need to have this witness. [21:21.000 --> 21:25.000] There was a witness that filed a statement, but they didn't bring him to court. [21:25.000 --> 21:28.000] And so I just went ballistic. [21:28.000 --> 21:35.000] And so my attorney wanted to find out who this mysterious witness, because no one knew who it was. [21:35.000 --> 21:40.000] And so what the judge allowed was he allowed the statement to come in, [21:40.000 --> 21:43.000] but they were supposed to redact his identity. [21:43.000 --> 21:51.000] Well, fortunately, my attorney found out who this hidden witness was. [21:51.000 --> 21:53.000] They didn't redact it very well. [21:53.000 --> 21:59.000] And so she stood up in the courtroom and said, I now know who this mysterious witness is, [21:59.000 --> 22:02.000] but my client does not. I'm the client. [22:02.000 --> 22:08.000] So she said, I have to withdraw from the case because now it's a conflict of interest [22:08.000 --> 22:16.000] because I don't know how to tell my client how to proceed because I know the witness and he doesn't, [22:16.000 --> 22:22.000] so I'm withdrawing. I need to withdraw. And the judge refused to let her withdraw. [22:22.000 --> 22:26.000] And that's what my appeals attorney filed in her brief, [22:26.000 --> 22:34.000] is that I was denied counsel because the attorney was not allowed to withdraw. [22:34.000 --> 22:35.000] Oh. [22:35.000 --> 22:39.000] Then the Supreme Court came back and said, you know, we agree with that, [22:39.000 --> 22:45.000] that Mr. Hill should have had counsel, so we're going to give him a new trial. [22:45.000 --> 22:48.000] So you had a compromised counsel. [22:48.000 --> 22:50.000] I guess, yeah. [22:50.000 --> 22:53.000] That's an interesting thing to get an appeal over. [22:53.000 --> 22:59.000] So it wasn't on an error in what they did in the case. [22:59.000 --> 23:03.000] Well, I challenged during court, they had no documentation. [23:03.000 --> 23:07.000] What had happened is I got arrested for having my rifle in my apartment, [23:07.000 --> 23:11.000] but my apartment was across the street from campus. [23:11.000 --> 23:14.000] So it was not physically on campus. [23:14.000 --> 23:18.000] And I kept saying, does anyone have the land title or do you have any documentation [23:18.000 --> 23:21.000] that you actually own or operate these apartments? [23:21.000 --> 23:24.000] And the people, the witnesses that came to court said, [23:24.000 --> 23:28.000] no, actually we don't have any documentation that says that, [23:28.000 --> 23:30.000] and we don't have a land title. [23:30.000 --> 23:33.000] The prosecutor chuckled and said, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, [23:33.000 --> 23:35.000] I don't need a land title. [23:35.000 --> 23:38.000] I mean, that's how arrogant and bold these people were. [23:38.000 --> 23:42.000] And so I fired off a bunch of nasty letters to my appeals attorney [23:42.000 --> 23:47.000] because she did not put that in the brief, that there was no documentation. [23:47.000 --> 23:52.000] She just went on this other deal about me not having counsel. [23:52.000 --> 23:56.000] So to me, it looked like I was getting ripped off, but I don't know. [23:56.000 --> 23:58.000] You could shed some more light on that. [23:58.000 --> 24:02.000] Well, she did get it overturned. [24:02.000 --> 24:08.000] But she didn't get it overturned on issues that would prevent them [24:08.000 --> 24:12.000] from doing the same thing again. [24:12.000 --> 24:17.000] And the problem with an appeal is they got you a new trial. [24:17.000 --> 24:25.000] The rest of it would have made no difference because it's a new trial. [24:25.000 --> 24:29.000] So the other stuff would have got you a new trial. [24:29.000 --> 24:31.000] Big deal. [24:31.000 --> 24:33.000] Now you might have got a ruling saying they had to produce it. [24:33.000 --> 24:35.000] That would have been nice. [24:35.000 --> 24:38.000] And that may come in the next appeal. [24:38.000 --> 24:41.000] You mean to produce the hidden witness? [24:41.000 --> 24:42.000] Yes. [24:42.000 --> 24:43.000] Okay. [24:43.000 --> 24:49.000] That goes to who's charging you. [24:49.000 --> 24:52.000] And you have a right to face the witnesses against you. [24:52.000 --> 24:58.000] This is basic constitutional. [24:58.000 --> 25:03.000] So I wonder why they're challenging this. [25:03.000 --> 25:11.000] This is not something that goes to the merits of the case. [25:11.000 --> 25:13.000] Okay. [25:13.000 --> 25:17.000] So why they would challenge that. [25:17.000 --> 25:21.000] Oh, I know why they would challenge that. [25:21.000 --> 25:25.000] Because if they don't get a reconsideration, they're not going to retry. [25:25.000 --> 25:27.000] Okay. [25:27.000 --> 25:30.000] This is their only shot. [25:30.000 --> 25:36.000] They got to make this conviction stick or the whole thing goes out the window [25:36.000 --> 25:39.000] and you come back and see the crap out of them. [25:39.000 --> 25:42.000] Well, here's what you had told me before. [25:42.000 --> 25:46.000] And just to catch the listeners up, when I got out of prison, [25:46.000 --> 25:51.000] going back to the land title, I ran straight to City Hall and I got the land title. [25:51.000 --> 25:57.000] And it says that it's a private realtor company that owns those apartments. [25:57.000 --> 26:01.000] And I fired off about 20 nasty letters to my appeals attorney saying, [26:01.000 --> 26:02.000] here's the land title. [26:02.000 --> 26:03.000] You need to get this in. [26:03.000 --> 26:06.000] And she would write me back saying, no, it's too late. [26:06.000 --> 26:09.000] I'm not going to do that, you know, this and that. [26:09.000 --> 26:14.000] So if I get a new trial, I'm going to waltz right in there with that land title [26:14.000 --> 26:16.000] and I'm going to beat everybody. [26:16.000 --> 26:17.000] And they know that. [26:17.000 --> 26:23.000] So the only thing they can do is keep you from getting a new trial [26:23.000 --> 26:28.000] because they won't have a chance in a new trial. [26:28.000 --> 26:30.000] And they already know that. [26:30.000 --> 26:34.000] I'll walk in with that land title and that's going to be it. [26:34.000 --> 26:36.000] And that's where I'm going to hit them hardest, too, [26:36.000 --> 26:38.000] because I didn't know this at the time. [26:38.000 --> 26:42.000] I kept challenging jurisdiction, but I never had a basis. [26:42.000 --> 26:46.000] Hang on, Jeff. [26:46.000 --> 26:51.000] I've got someone hanging off a water tower in South Texas. [26:51.000 --> 26:54.000] Can you hang on and let me take Pat? [26:54.000 --> 26:59.000] Pat has to crawl up the water tower in order to get a signal. [26:59.000 --> 27:05.000] So let me take Pat and I'll come right back to you. [27:05.000 --> 27:06.000] Okay? [27:06.000 --> 27:07.000] All right. [27:07.000 --> 27:09.000] Okay, thank you. [27:09.000 --> 27:10.000] Okay. [27:10.000 --> 27:11.000] Pat? [27:11.000 --> 27:12.000] Yes, sir. [27:12.000 --> 27:14.000] You there? [27:14.000 --> 27:20.000] You hanging on that water tower again. [27:20.000 --> 27:28.000] Steve tells me that you filed some complaints with the Chief Justice [27:28.000 --> 27:30.000] and they were returned unanswered. [27:30.000 --> 27:33.000] They were returned unanswered, the whole packet. [27:33.000 --> 27:35.000] Oh, wonderful. [27:35.000 --> 27:40.000] And now we're going to go ahead and file directly either with the grand jury in Austin [27:40.000 --> 27:46.000] or with the DA's office in Austin to see if we can overload that DA, too. [27:46.000 --> 27:52.000] I would suggest that you file with the Attorney General. [27:52.000 --> 27:54.000] Oh, we can. [27:54.000 --> 27:56.000] He's running for office. [27:56.000 --> 27:58.000] He's running for office, too. [27:58.000 --> 28:00.000] I guess I can... [28:00.000 --> 28:05.000] You know, he has concurrent jurisdiction with the prosecuting attorney. [28:05.000 --> 28:09.000] And he's going to tell you, we really need to file these prosecuting attorney [28:09.000 --> 28:12.000] because we can only prosecute with his permission. [28:12.000 --> 28:13.000] Not true. [28:13.000 --> 28:14.000] No. [28:14.000 --> 28:19.000] Well, we got a couple of problems and that's why we dumped everything [28:19.000 --> 28:21.000] on the Chief Justice's lab. [28:21.000 --> 28:26.000] I'm sitting on the grand jury out in my county and sitting next to me, [28:26.000 --> 28:31.000] and I know my wife had talked to you about this, we got the county attorney sitting there. [28:31.000 --> 28:36.000] Well, the county attorney is taking an oath as a prosecutor for the state [28:36.000 --> 28:39.000] who's getting paid by the state not to take any actions, [28:39.000 --> 28:42.000] not to do anything against the interests of the state. [28:42.000 --> 28:51.000] That makes the county attorney an unqualified jury member [28:51.000 --> 28:58.000] because the county attorney cannot be unbiased. [28:58.000 --> 28:59.000] That's... [28:59.000 --> 29:03.000] I've had that issue come up before, [29:03.000 --> 29:10.000] and I can't find anything in law that disqualifies a county attorney. [29:10.000 --> 29:11.000] No. [29:11.000 --> 29:14.000] A district attorney would be disqualified. [29:14.000 --> 29:20.000] The district attorney and the county attorney are both licensed [29:20.000 --> 29:26.000] by the governor's office to be prosecutors for the state. [29:26.000 --> 29:34.000] And all, since the VA is not in our county, but because it's molded county, [29:34.000 --> 29:40.000] all county attorneys are prosecutors for that county. [29:40.000 --> 29:44.000] I still haven't found anything that prevents him from sitting on the grand jury. [29:44.000 --> 29:49.000] Now, if you see that he does anything that appears to be biased, [29:49.000 --> 29:52.000] then you get to go after him. [29:52.000 --> 29:53.000] Hang on. [29:53.000 --> 29:55.000] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue of our radio. [29:55.000 --> 29:59.000] I'll call him number 512-646-1984. [29:59.000 --> 30:05.000] We'll be right... [30:05.000 --> 30:09.000] Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin isn't known to shirk a political fight, [30:09.000 --> 30:14.000] or a hasty retreat when a different kind of opponent showed up in his backyard. [30:14.000 --> 30:19.000] But Dr. Catherine Albrecht, in a moment, I'll tell you what had the governor running scared. [30:19.000 --> 30:21.000] Privacy is under attack. [30:21.000 --> 30:24.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:24.000 --> 30:29.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:29.000 --> 30:31.000] So protect your rights. [30:31.000 --> 30:35.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:35.000 --> 30:37.000] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [30:37.000 --> 30:40.000] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, [30:40.000 --> 30:44.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:44.000 --> 30:47.000] Start over with Startpage. [30:47.000 --> 30:49.000] Wildlife pop quiz. [30:49.000 --> 30:53.000] What do you do if you wake up in the middle of the night and see bears in the yard? [30:53.000 --> 30:56.000] My answer? Check the locks and dive back under the covers. [30:56.000 --> 31:00.000] But Vermont's Governor Peter Shumlin is no city boy. [31:00.000 --> 31:04.000] When he saw four bears feasting on the bird feeders outside his Montpelier home, [31:04.000 --> 31:06.000] he yelled out the window. [31:06.000 --> 31:09.000] If that didn't work, he tried chewing the bears away. [31:09.000 --> 31:14.000] Finally, naked to his toes, he went outside to rescue his feeders. [31:14.000 --> 31:16.000] Mama Bear was not amused. [31:16.000 --> 31:20.000] She chased the bear-bottomed governor right back inside, then returned to her snack. [31:20.000 --> 31:25.000] I guess bears, like many of us, ignore the hand-waving of politicians. [31:25.000 --> 31:31.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.000 --> 31:37.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [31:37.000 --> 31:39.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [31:39.000 --> 31:44.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [31:44.000 --> 31:47.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [31:47.000 --> 31:49.000] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [31:49.000 --> 31:51.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [31:51.000 --> 31:52.000] I'm a structural engineer. [31:52.000 --> 31:53.000] I'm a New York City correction officer. [31:53.000 --> 31:54.000] I'm an Air Force pilot. [31:54.000 --> 31:56.000] I'm a father who lost his son. [31:56.000 --> 31:58.000] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [31:58.000 --> 32:01.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [32:58.000 --> 33:03.000] We all want and deserve. [33:03.000 --> 33:13.000] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:13.000 --> 33:28.000] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:28.000 --> 33:43.000] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:43.000 --> 33:58.000] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:58.000 --> 34:23.000] Okay. [34:23.000 --> 34:24.000] We are back. [34:24.000 --> 34:30.000] We're in Kelton, Debra Stevens with Live Radio, and we're talking to Pat in Texas. [34:30.000 --> 34:31.000] Yeah. [34:31.000 --> 34:37.000] Anyway, we got everything back from the good chief justice's office, [34:37.000 --> 34:43.000] from him stating that he doesn't do the criminal complaints. [34:43.000 --> 34:46.000] Well, we'll see how that works for him. [34:46.000 --> 34:55.000] Article 2.10, 2.11, when you read 2.09, Code of Criminal Procedure. [34:55.000 --> 34:56.000] Yeah. [34:56.000 --> 34:59.000] Who are magistrates? [34:59.000 --> 35:00.000] Oh, I understand. [35:00.000 --> 35:02.000] First one. [35:02.000 --> 35:05.000] So this is Ms. Feesenson's office. [35:05.000 --> 35:11.000] Randy, the cover letter over the complaint lined it all out. [35:11.000 --> 35:22.000] We'd paste it in the TCCP verbiage verbatim. [35:22.000 --> 35:23.000] Wait, which letter? [35:23.000 --> 35:24.000] Is this the one you sent him? [35:24.000 --> 35:25.000] Well, yeah. [35:25.000 --> 35:29.000] Yeah, it was the cover letter for the complaints going into him, [35:29.000 --> 35:36.000] getting him to do, invoking his duties as a magistrate. [35:36.000 --> 35:44.000] So I'm wondering if we could sue for a writ of mandamus, [35:44.000 --> 35:47.000] ordering him to perform his duty as a magistrate. [35:47.000 --> 35:49.000] Well, that's fine, but who do you go to? [35:49.000 --> 35:52.000] You know, he's top of the feeding chain. [35:52.000 --> 35:53.000] A district court? [35:53.000 --> 35:56.000] No, he's not top of anything in this case. [35:56.000 --> 35:59.000] He's a defendant. [35:59.000 --> 36:06.000] Let him come before a district court and show why he refused to perform a duty. [36:06.000 --> 36:09.000] Well, we'd have to see an option. [36:09.000 --> 36:10.000] You need a Democratic judge. [36:10.000 --> 36:13.000] Is he a Republican? [36:13.000 --> 36:16.000] Yeah, he's a Republican, isn't he? [36:16.000 --> 36:20.000] Okay, we need a Democratic judge. [36:20.000 --> 36:21.000] This is politics. [36:21.000 --> 36:22.000] Everything's political. [36:22.000 --> 36:25.000] He's running for re-election right now anyway. [36:25.000 --> 36:27.000] Oh, this is perfect. [36:27.000 --> 36:30.000] Yeah, whoever's running against him, I guess we could give it to them [36:30.000 --> 36:34.000] and let them kind of chomp on it a little bit. [36:34.000 --> 36:39.000] Send the criminal complaints to his running mate, I mean, his opponent. [36:39.000 --> 36:42.000] That would be wonderful. [36:42.000 --> 36:43.000] Let me know who it is. [36:43.000 --> 36:46.000] I got about 30 alpha on him. [36:46.000 --> 36:49.000] I just wanted to let you know that this is what's going on right now. [36:49.000 --> 36:53.000] We got a bunch of other stuff we're stirring up, so I'll drop off. [36:53.000 --> 36:55.000] You get back to the guy up there. [36:55.000 --> 36:56.000] No, no, no, don't drop off. [36:56.000 --> 36:58.000] Just climb down. [36:58.000 --> 36:59.000] Climb down. [36:59.000 --> 37:00.000] There you go. [37:00.000 --> 37:04.000] I don't have a parachute, so I won't drop far. [37:04.000 --> 37:05.000] Okay. [37:05.000 --> 37:06.000] Thank you, Pat. [37:06.000 --> 37:08.000] Yeah, we'll catch you later. [37:08.000 --> 37:09.000] Okay. [37:09.000 --> 37:12.000] We're going back to Jeff. [37:12.000 --> 37:13.000] Sorry, Jeff. [37:13.000 --> 37:14.000] Sorry about that interruption. [37:14.000 --> 37:17.000] That's fine, everybody. [37:17.000 --> 37:29.000] Okay, so they're trying to get the appeals court ruling overturned, [37:29.000 --> 37:34.000] and the only reason they can be doing that is they know if they try to retry you, [37:34.000 --> 37:35.000] then it's over for them. [37:35.000 --> 37:39.000] They probably don't have their witness anyway. [37:39.000 --> 37:42.000] They never did. [37:42.000 --> 37:45.000] The witness was lost, and that came out in court [37:45.000 --> 37:51.000] because they admitted that they couldn't find him. [37:51.000 --> 37:56.000] And the appeals court actually, in their decision, [37:56.000 --> 38:01.000] came out and named the witness and said that he couldn't be found. [38:01.000 --> 38:04.000] Oh, so they're telling them, you can't retry this guy. [38:04.000 --> 38:06.000] You're toast. [38:06.000 --> 38:10.000] And now they're going to come back and ask for reconsideration. [38:10.000 --> 38:16.000] It depends on how corrupt the court is, but I can't see them overturning [38:16.000 --> 38:19.000] because this will go to the Supreme, [38:19.000 --> 38:25.000] and the Supreme is not going to trash all of their standing law [38:25.000 --> 38:33.000] in order to keep this prosecutor, let this prosecutor save face. [38:33.000 --> 38:40.000] This probably should go to some serious accusations against the prosecutor. [38:40.000 --> 38:44.000] You said the witness couldn't be found. [38:44.000 --> 38:45.000] Yes. [38:45.000 --> 38:49.000] Could he not be found when the trial was going on? [38:49.000 --> 38:50.000] No. [38:50.000 --> 38:55.000] What had happened, the witness turns out to be my roommate, [38:55.000 --> 39:01.000] and there's a lot of speculation as to why he would turn me in for having a rifle, [39:01.000 --> 39:06.000] but it turns out that when I was gone, he took my bedroom and turned it into a game room. [39:06.000 --> 39:10.000] So we never had any bad blood against each other, [39:10.000 --> 39:15.000] and I'm sure he didn't figure out that this would go this far. [39:15.000 --> 39:20.000] But in trial, they claimed that the roommate had gotten drunk [39:20.000 --> 39:23.000] and gotten kicked out of school, and so they admitted, [39:23.000 --> 39:27.000] the policeman admitted that, no, we can't find the roommate. [39:27.000 --> 39:31.000] So during the trial, they couldn't face you with your accuser? [39:31.000 --> 39:32.000] Exactly. [39:32.000 --> 39:36.000] And they knew they couldn't face you with their accuser? [39:36.000 --> 39:37.000] Uh-huh. [39:37.000 --> 39:42.000] And later on in the trial, the policeman admitted that he acted on a phone tip, [39:42.000 --> 39:45.000] and so I said, who made the phone call? [39:45.000 --> 39:49.000] And that's when the prosecutor objected and said that it was a criminal informant, [39:49.000 --> 39:52.000] and his identity needs to be kept secret. [39:52.000 --> 39:56.000] Well, when I started acting like a monkey and getting real loud, [39:56.000 --> 39:58.000] my attorney, for some reason, stood up and said, [39:58.000 --> 40:04.000] you know, I believe that the informant is the roommate who just disappeared, [40:04.000 --> 40:08.000] and because you can't find him, you're calling him a criminal informant, [40:08.000 --> 40:10.000] and you're trying to keep him secret. [40:10.000 --> 40:13.000] And she actually said that for the record. [40:13.000 --> 40:18.000] Ooh, and that's going to turn out to be exactly what the case is. [40:18.000 --> 40:21.000] And so this fellow, you know, just disappeared. [40:21.000 --> 40:24.000] Yeah, we can't find him. [40:24.000 --> 40:25.000] Oh, my. [40:25.000 --> 40:30.000] The judge actually brought his statement in, [40:30.000 --> 40:35.000] and I kept objecting because I demanded on seeing it, and the judge sealed it. [40:35.000 --> 40:42.000] And that's where my attorney accidentally saw that it was the roommate's name. [40:42.000 --> 40:47.000] And so she asked to withdraw, and then he refused. [40:47.000 --> 40:52.000] And it's on the record, they had an ex parte meeting, [40:52.000 --> 40:57.000] and I do have those transcripts, when they brought the lady in, [40:57.000 --> 41:04.000] or my attorney, she said to the judge, I would direct Mr. Hill for a mistrial. [41:04.000 --> 41:06.000] And the judge said, well, we're not going to do that, [41:06.000 --> 41:08.000] so let's bring in another attorney. [41:08.000 --> 41:12.000] And the other attorney came in, another public defender. [41:12.000 --> 41:19.000] He enters the room, and so the judge spills the beans on where we were in the case. [41:19.000 --> 41:22.000] And the other public defender also said, well, [41:22.000 --> 41:25.000] since we've got this weird thing with a hidden witness, [41:25.000 --> 41:31.000] but we know who it is and this and that, I would also direct Mr. Hill for a mistrial. [41:31.000 --> 41:34.000] And the judge said, well, then in that case, you're free to go, [41:34.000 --> 41:39.000] and miss so-and-so, you have to stay on his case. [41:39.000 --> 41:47.000] So he's fishing for a lawyer who will deny you in a proper adjudication. [41:47.000 --> 41:49.000] Okay. [41:49.000 --> 41:53.000] That absolutely goes to disqualify the judge. [41:53.000 --> 41:56.000] And I wish I knew all that during trial. [41:56.000 --> 41:57.000] Yeah. [41:57.000 --> 42:01.000] I could have just been hitting home runs in the courtroom. [42:01.000 --> 42:04.000] You can still disqualify the judge. [42:04.000 --> 42:05.000] Okay. [42:05.000 --> 42:09.000] You need to move to disqualify. [42:09.000 --> 42:17.000] And that could also go to habeas corpus. [42:17.000 --> 42:20.000] They filed a motion for reconsideration. [42:20.000 --> 42:22.000] You should file habeas corpus. [42:22.000 --> 42:29.000] Now, my attorney has written me a threatening letter saying that I can file anything that I want to, [42:29.000 --> 42:32.000] but that relieves her from my case. [42:32.000 --> 42:36.000] She gets to withdraw. [42:36.000 --> 42:41.000] The problem, you give her the habeas, and if she doesn't, you sue her. [42:41.000 --> 42:42.000] Okay. [42:42.000 --> 42:43.000] So I can type up the habeas. [42:43.000 --> 42:45.000] I would like to enter the land title. [42:45.000 --> 42:48.000] Can I still do that? [42:48.000 --> 42:49.000] Not in it. [42:49.000 --> 42:56.000] Well, no, that's not before the appeals court. [42:56.000 --> 42:57.000] Got it. [42:57.000 --> 42:58.000] Okay. [42:58.000 --> 43:00.000] So it doesn't do me any good to enter the land title. [43:00.000 --> 43:01.000] No. [43:01.000 --> 43:08.000] The only thing before the appeals court is the issue with compromised counsel. [43:08.000 --> 43:11.000] Got it. [43:11.000 --> 43:14.000] Well, yeah, that's what the appeal is on. [43:14.000 --> 43:21.000] That's all that's before it, so anything else won't make any difference. [43:21.000 --> 43:22.000] Okay. [43:22.000 --> 43:25.000] Is that the only issue the lawyer appealed on? [43:25.000 --> 43:38.000] Well, the second issue, which seemed really, really phony to me, was that they made this adjudication against overwhelming evidence. [43:38.000 --> 43:40.000] That is a really good one. [43:40.000 --> 43:42.000] That's perfect. [43:42.000 --> 43:43.000] That's right. [43:43.000 --> 43:44.000] Hang on. [43:44.000 --> 43:47.000] About to go to break. [43:47.000 --> 43:52.000] That's when you get to bring in all the evidence you had then and bring in your new evidence. [43:52.000 --> 43:53.000] Hang on. [43:53.000 --> 43:55.000] It's a bad idea. [43:55.000 --> 43:57.000] It's really, really cool. [43:57.000 --> 43:58.000] Hang on. [43:58.000 --> 43:59.000] Wow. [43:59.000 --> 44:00.000] Great. [44:00.000 --> 44:03.000] That's one example of a real danger I have to deal with. [44:03.000 --> 44:08.000] This time, it's a real risk. [44:08.000 --> 44:01.000] That's it. [44:01.000 --> 44:11.000] That's how we'll take you if we don't do something about the call of endeavor forgotten witness [44:11.000 --> 44:14.000] and why you shouldn't participate in this program. [44:14.000 --> 44:17.600] To see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:17.600 --> 44:22.200] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.200 --> 44:26.400] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian EME oil, [44:26.400 --> 44:30.000] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.000 --> 44:37.200] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.200 --> 44:42.800] That's 512-264-4043 naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.800 --> 44:47.000] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.000 --> 44:49.000] naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.400] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [45:07.400 --> 45:15.400] The affordable, easy to understand, 4 CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.400 --> 45:19.200] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.200 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.400] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.400 --> 45:43.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.400 --> 45:52.400] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.400 --> 46:04.400] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.400 --> 46:44.400] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Jeff from Mississippi. [46:44.400 --> 46:47.400] We do need to wrap this up. We've got a whole bunch of calls. [46:47.400 --> 46:48.400] Okay. [46:48.400 --> 46:58.400] But it looks like they're doing a last ditch effort to try to bail out their... [46:58.400 --> 47:04.400] Well, real quick, I'm going to read just a paragraph of my decision that will straighten it all out. [47:04.400 --> 47:07.400] Hill challenges conviction based on the following two issues. [47:07.400 --> 47:11.400] Whether Hill's right to counsel on the fair trial under the Sixth Amendment was violated. [47:11.400 --> 47:16.400] When the trial court refused to allow Hill's court appointed counsel to withdraw. [47:16.400 --> 47:22.400] And two, whether the trial court erred when it failed to grant Hill's motion for a new trial on the ground [47:22.400 --> 47:28.400] that the verdict was against the overwhelming weight of evidence. [47:28.400 --> 47:33.400] Finding errors to the first issue, we reverse Hill's conviction and remand the case. [47:33.400 --> 47:34.400] Here's the fun part. [47:34.400 --> 47:42.400] We decline to address the second issue concerning whether the verdict was against overwhelming weight of evidence. [47:42.400 --> 47:44.400] That's because they didn't need to. [47:44.400 --> 47:46.400] Got it. [47:46.400 --> 47:50.400] If they reconsider the first, then they go to the second. [47:50.400 --> 47:52.400] Okay. [47:52.400 --> 48:00.400] So these guys, they're just doing a, you know, this is just making waves. [48:00.400 --> 48:05.400] They're buying time. They're relatively sure they're not going to win this one. [48:05.400 --> 48:07.400] Oh, okay. [48:07.400 --> 48:12.400] That's the only chance is to overturn this. [48:12.400 --> 48:13.400] Okay. [48:13.400 --> 48:17.400] Unless it's much more corrupt than I expected. [48:17.400 --> 48:25.400] But if they overturn this, then you get to appeal both issues to the Supreme. [48:25.400 --> 48:28.400] And you can bring, then you can bring in new evidence. [48:28.400 --> 48:30.400] Really? [48:30.400 --> 48:31.400] Oh yeah. [48:31.400 --> 48:33.400] This evidence wasn't available at the time. [48:33.400 --> 48:34.400] Nice. [48:34.400 --> 48:40.400] To support the whole issues about this witness. [48:40.400 --> 48:44.400] Now you can bring in evidence to show that the witness had disappeared. [48:44.400 --> 48:48.400] The prosecution knew the witness had disappeared. [48:48.400 --> 48:52.400] Could not produce the witness, even if the judge ordered it. [48:52.400 --> 48:56.400] And that's the reason they did this, not for a proper adjudication of the case. [48:56.400 --> 49:00.400] And evidence to support that, now you can bring that back in. [49:00.400 --> 49:01.400] Okay. [49:01.400 --> 49:05.400] Do I need to do anything right now? [49:05.400 --> 49:08.400] No, your lawyer will write an objection. [49:08.400 --> 49:14.400] It's all based on proper representation. [49:14.400 --> 49:18.400] So your lawyer will handle that. [49:18.400 --> 49:19.400] Okay. [49:19.400 --> 49:20.400] So probably not. [49:20.400 --> 49:21.400] Let this play out. [49:21.400 --> 49:25.400] Because if they reconsider, then you get to go to the Supreme. [49:25.400 --> 49:28.400] Unlikely they're going to reconsider. [49:28.400 --> 49:29.400] Got it. [49:29.400 --> 49:30.400] Okay. [49:30.400 --> 49:32.400] Well, thank you very much and I'll call next week. [49:32.400 --> 49:33.400] Alrighty. [49:33.400 --> 49:34.400] Okay. [49:34.400 --> 49:37.400] Now we're going to Susan in Florida. [49:37.400 --> 49:38.400] Susan. [49:38.400 --> 49:39.400] Hi, Randy. [49:39.400 --> 49:40.400] How are you? [49:40.400 --> 49:41.400] I'm good. [49:41.400 --> 49:42.400] Good. [49:42.400 --> 49:43.400] Good. [49:43.400 --> 49:51.400] I talked to you, I think, last week and you were just, we were talking about the grand [49:51.400 --> 49:56.400] jury and getting a complaint in front of the grand jury. [49:56.400 --> 49:57.400] Yes. [49:57.400 --> 50:03.400] Able to call you the next day, but I wanted to, you know, finish the conversation. [50:03.400 --> 50:06.400] Where were we? [50:06.400 --> 50:11.400] Really to ask about, you know, to go about doing a citizen's arrest. [50:11.400 --> 50:14.400] How would you maybe do that? [50:14.400 --> 50:19.400] I would not ever do a citizen's arrest of a public official. [50:19.400 --> 50:21.400] Okay. [50:21.400 --> 50:28.400] All that will get you is beaten into unconsciousness and thrown in jail. [50:28.400 --> 50:34.400] The whole thing, what makes this work best? [50:34.400 --> 50:40.400] The next call is from Johnson County and it was in Johnson County that a prosecuting attorney [50:40.400 --> 50:47.400] called me after she had asked me to take my criminal complaints to the sheriff and I refused. [50:47.400 --> 50:52.400] She called me a week later and said, Mr. Kelton, I filed your complaints with the sheriff and [50:52.400 --> 50:57.400] the sheriff sent them back, said he couldn't do anything with them as there were complaints [50:57.400 --> 50:58.400] against him in there. [50:58.400 --> 51:01.400] And I said, well, yes, as a matter of fact, there were. [51:01.400 --> 51:07.400] She said, Mr. Kelton, I get the impression you planned this this way. [51:07.400 --> 51:11.400] Well, Miss Wyatt, I'm impressed. [51:11.400 --> 51:13.400] You're very astute. [51:13.400 --> 51:18.400] I hope you don't think this is my first rodeo. [51:18.400 --> 51:25.400] By that, she had the impression that I set her up. [51:25.400 --> 51:28.400] She was right. [51:28.400 --> 51:30.400] You never want to arrest one of these officials. [51:30.400 --> 51:37.400] You never ask an official to do what you actually want them to do because you're setting them [51:37.400 --> 51:45.400] up so you can go to another official and use that official to clobber the first one. [51:45.400 --> 51:49.400] Learn this in the military. [51:49.400 --> 51:56.400] In the military, if you go into a military base and anybody gives you a problem as a [51:56.400 --> 52:03.400] civilian, you could go to the base commander, just chew him out like an errand stepchild. [52:03.400 --> 52:06.400] And he's going to be real unhappy about that. [52:06.400 --> 52:11.400] But he's going to be real polite to you because you're a citizen and on a military base. [52:11.400 --> 52:16.400] The only thing higher than a commanding general is a citizen. [52:16.400 --> 52:22.400] They recognize that we're the baddest motor scooter out there because they can call down [52:22.400 --> 52:27.400] the commanding general's throat and there's nothing he can do about it except when you [52:27.400 --> 52:30.400] get done chewing out the general. [52:30.400 --> 52:35.400] The general's going to get the guy below him and chew him out and he's going to get the [52:35.400 --> 52:39.400] guy below him and chew him out and when he gets to the guy at the bottom, he is in big [52:39.400 --> 52:43.400] trouble and nobody cares what he did. [52:43.400 --> 52:50.400] They just want to make sure it never happens again. [52:50.400 --> 52:57.400] Pat, who is calling from South Texas, filed criminal charges with the chief justice of [52:57.400 --> 53:00.400] the Supreme Court. [53:00.400 --> 53:06.400] And the way we usually get there is we start where you're at, right at the bottom. [53:06.400 --> 53:07.400] Go to the first person. [53:07.400 --> 53:10.400] They don't do what they're supposed to. [53:10.400 --> 53:14.400] Then you go to the second person about the first person and they don't do anything. [53:14.400 --> 53:20.400] You go to the next person and now we're up to the chief justice of the Supreme and when [53:20.400 --> 53:27.400] he refuses to act, then we come back down and try to get the one down here that wouldn't [53:27.400 --> 53:30.400] arrest the chump JP on the bottom. [53:30.400 --> 53:33.400] Now we want him to arrest the chief justice of the Supreme. [53:33.400 --> 53:36.400] We start this all over again. [53:36.400 --> 53:38.400] Everything's political. [53:38.400 --> 53:44.400] Every step you take turns the screw a little tighter. [53:44.400 --> 53:49.400] It takes patience. [53:49.400 --> 53:51.400] Just be patient. [53:51.400 --> 53:54.400] You go in, you ask them to do something. [53:54.400 --> 53:57.400] They don't do what you ask them to do. [53:57.400 --> 53:59.400] You feel betrayed. [53:59.400 --> 54:02.400] You feel defeated, angry, frustrated. [54:02.400 --> 54:04.400] Call that out. [54:04.400 --> 54:05.400] No, no, no, no. [54:05.400 --> 54:07.400] That's not how we go in there. [54:07.400 --> 54:10.400] We go in there dangling this carrot in front of them. [54:10.400 --> 54:16.400] Actually, my favorite one is I go in there with this little tar baby. [54:16.400 --> 54:19.400] Here, Judge, I got this tar baby. [54:19.400 --> 54:20.400] That's what I did this morning. [54:20.400 --> 54:22.400] I got this tar baby here. [54:22.400 --> 54:23.400] You want to touch it? [54:23.400 --> 54:24.400] Here, go ahead. [54:24.400 --> 54:25.400] Touch it. [54:25.400 --> 54:27.400] And he touched it. [54:27.400 --> 54:29.400] Now he's stuck to it. [54:29.400 --> 54:32.400] He can't get loose from it. [54:32.400 --> 54:34.400] He denied my motion. [54:34.400 --> 54:40.400] The only thing I said to him when he denied my motion, oh, Judge, we were just about to get to the fun part. [54:40.400 --> 54:43.400] Well, I'm sorry to disappoint you, Mr. Kelton. [54:43.400 --> 54:47.400] Oh, you didn't disappoint me. [54:47.400 --> 54:51.400] So now I will file against him. [54:51.400 --> 54:55.400] He's stuck to this, and he never gets loose from it. [54:55.400 --> 54:58.400] I'll go to the district attorney and file with the district attorney. [54:58.400 --> 55:02.400] And the district attorney will give it to his public integrity unit. [55:02.400 --> 55:07.400] Then I'll file against the district attorney with the attorney general. [55:07.400 --> 55:12.400] And the attorney general refused to act on it, so he sticks to it. [55:12.400 --> 55:17.400] Then I'll go to the chief justice of the Supreme against the attorney general. [55:17.400 --> 55:19.400] And he refused to act on it. [55:19.400 --> 55:22.400] Now you got the guy at the top. [55:22.400 --> 55:29.400] Now you come back down to the bottom and start the rounds with criminal charges against the chief justice. [55:29.400 --> 55:33.400] This just keeps getting uglier. [55:33.400 --> 55:39.400] They will never be afraid of you. [55:39.400 --> 55:46.400] What they'll be afraid of is political cannon fodder. [55:46.400 --> 55:52.400] I got all the highest judges in Texas put in front of a grand jury about four years ago. [55:52.400 --> 55:59.400] We have two high courts in Texas, Supreme Court for Civil, Court of Criminal Appeals for Criminal. [55:59.400 --> 56:02.400] Fifteen judges on the Court of Criminal Appeals. [56:02.400 --> 56:05.400] I got them all put in front of a grand jury. [56:05.400 --> 56:09.400] How did you go about doing that? [56:09.400 --> 56:11.400] I got lucky. [56:11.400 --> 56:18.400] Ron Earl, district attorney, 25-year district attorney in Travis County. [56:18.400 --> 56:21.400] He's the guy that took out Tom DeLay. [56:21.400 --> 56:24.400] He's the second highest level political official in the country. [56:24.400 --> 56:27.400] And Ron Earl took him out illegally. [56:27.400 --> 56:31.400] Nobody ever accused Tom DeLay of a crime. [56:31.400 --> 56:35.400] So this is the scoundrel that took out Tom DeLay. [56:35.400 --> 56:37.400] I go to him with these complaints. [56:37.400 --> 56:40.400] His people refused to take them. [56:40.400 --> 56:42.400] I worked them over for about a year. [56:42.400 --> 56:48.400] I finally went in and bushwhacked the head criminal district judge for Travis County [56:48.400 --> 56:53.400] and dumped the complaints on him against the district attorney for not filing the complaints [56:53.400 --> 56:56.400] against the judges with the grand jury. [56:56.400 --> 57:03.400] And I think Bob Perkins called Ron Earl and said, what the heck is going on here? [57:03.400 --> 57:08.400] And Ron Earl finally looked at him and said, oh, look at this. [57:08.400 --> 57:10.400] Goodie, goodie. [57:10.400 --> 57:12.400] 25-year district attorney. [57:12.400 --> 57:14.400] He's a Democrat. [57:14.400 --> 57:18.400] He's not running for office again, so he don't care. [57:18.400 --> 57:22.400] All 15 of these judges are Republicans. [57:22.400 --> 57:29.400] That scoundrel used my complaints to try to take out those judges with him. [57:29.400 --> 57:33.400] Everything is political. [57:33.400 --> 57:36.400] They're not going to be afraid of you. [57:36.400 --> 57:40.400] They're in a pool full of sharks. [57:40.400 --> 57:48.400] What they're afraid of is one of those sharks will take your cannon fodder and use it against them. [57:48.400 --> 57:58.400] So when you're doing this, always you're thinking about how do I create cannon fodder? [57:58.400 --> 58:06.400] How do I create ugly sounding stuff that this guy's political enemies can use against him? [58:06.400 --> 58:10.400] You will never get upset. You'll never get excited. [58:10.400 --> 58:14.400] And you'll probably find this to be way too much fun. [58:14.400 --> 58:17.400] Hang on. We're about to go to our top of the hour break. [58:17.400 --> 58:21.400] We will pick this up when we come back on the other side. [58:21.400 --> 58:25.400] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Blah Blah Radio. [58:25.400 --> 58:29.400] Our call-in numbers, 512-646-1984. [58:29.400 --> 58:34.400] Bill, Terrence, Rich, Rob. Oh, we've got a bunch of them on there tonight. [58:34.400 --> 58:38.400] I see you there. We will pick you guys up on the other side. [58:38.400 --> 58:44.400] So hang on, and I hope Rob doesn't get too much diesel fumes, [58:44.400 --> 58:47.400] because he'll wind up dead hit if he does. [58:47.400 --> 58:50.400] Hang on. We'll be right back. [58:50.400 --> 58:53.400] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [58:53.400 --> 58:58.400] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.400 --> 59:01.400] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.400 --> 59:06.400] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.400 --> 59:09.400] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.400 --> 59:13.400] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:13.400 --> 59:18.400] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.400 --> 59:22.400] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:22.400 --> 59:28.400] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.400 --> 59:33.400] Author America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.400 --> 59:43.400] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102, [59:43.400 --> 59:47.400] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.400 --> 59:50.400] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.400 --> 01:00:00.400] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.400 --> 01:00:05.400] You're listening to the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, [01:00:05.400 --> 01:00:07.400] online at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:07.400 --> 01:00:09.400] This is Justin Armand. [01:00:09.400 --> 01:00:11.400] And this is Jessica Armand. [01:00:11.400 --> 01:00:15.400] Here with your Liberty Beat for March 20, 2014. [01:00:15.400 --> 01:00:24.400] Gold opened today at $1,326, silver at $20.29, and Bitcoin is trading at $592. [01:00:24.400 --> 01:00:30.400] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Sovereign BTC, media, marketing, and consulting for the Bitcoin ecosystem, [01:00:30.400 --> 01:00:36.400] operated by Liberty Beat founder John Bush, online at sovereignbtc.com. [01:00:36.400 --> 01:00:40.400] And from Dorothy Erminger at Capstar Lending, for your residential mortgage needs, [01:00:40.400 --> 01:00:47.400] call Dorothy at 512-343-6494 or apply online at calledorothy.com. [01:00:47.400 --> 01:00:50.400] And MLS 216-624. [01:00:50.400 --> 01:00:55.400] And from the Soleil School, enrolling children from 5 through 10 in Austin, [01:00:55.400 --> 01:00:59.400] visit solelschool.com. [01:00:59.400 --> 01:01:00.400] And now the news. [01:01:00.400 --> 01:01:06.400] Security fixes that address the problems Mt. Gox blamed for the loss of Bitcoins were put into place Wednesday. [01:01:06.400 --> 01:01:12.400] PC World reports that the software, known as Bitcoin QT, has been renamed as Bitcoin Core. [01:01:12.400 --> 01:01:20.400] The rebranding is intended to show that it runs the core infrastructure of the cryptocurrency's transaction and verification network. [01:01:20.400 --> 01:01:31.400] According to the release notes, the latest version of Bitcoin software contains more than a half dozen fixes for transaction malleability. [01:01:31.400 --> 01:01:37.400] A surprise appearance Tuesday at the 2014 TED conference in Vancouver, Canada. [01:01:37.400 --> 01:01:39.400] Brian Hagan has the story. [01:01:39.400 --> 01:01:43.400] NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, by use of a remote-controlled satellite robot, [01:01:43.400 --> 01:01:46.400] appeared on stage to address the conferencegoers, [01:01:46.400 --> 01:01:51.400] outlining why he took the risk to make off with 1.7 million documents from the agency. [01:01:51.400 --> 01:01:55.400] I don't want to harm my government. I want to help my government. [01:01:55.400 --> 01:02:00.400] Snowden told the crowd that stopping terrorism is not the goal of the NSA's massive surveillance program. [01:02:00.400 --> 01:02:05.400] The bottom line is that terrorism has always been what we in the intelligence world would call a cover for action. [01:02:05.400 --> 01:02:15.400] Terrorism is something that provokes an emotional response that allows people to rationalize authorizing powers and programs that they wouldn't give otherwise. [01:02:15.400 --> 01:02:17.400] Snowden concluded his talk by saying, [01:02:17.400 --> 01:02:25.400] We don't have to give up our privacy to have good government. We don't have to give up our liberty to have security. [01:02:25.400 --> 01:02:28.400] I'm Brian Hagan reporting for the Liberty Beat. [01:02:28.400 --> 01:02:33.400] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Brave New Books, now offering ProPure Water Filtration, [01:02:33.400 --> 01:02:40.400] the only gravity-driven all-in-one fluoride removal system that also alkalizes the water as well. [01:02:40.400 --> 01:02:46.400] Find them in Austin at 1904 Guadalupe Street or online at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:02:46.400 --> 01:02:54.400] And from Mass Appeal, affordable high-quality printing, now accepting Bitcoin, online at MassAppealInc.com. [01:02:54.400 --> 01:03:00.400] You've been listening to the Liberty Beat. Remember, freeing your mind is freeing our world. [01:03:24.400 --> 01:03:37.400] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Root of Law Radio. [01:03:37.400 --> 01:03:43.400] And we're talking to Susan in Florida about grand juries. [01:03:43.400 --> 01:03:46.400] This takes a mindset. [01:03:46.400 --> 01:03:49.400] It's not like we think it is. [01:03:49.400 --> 01:03:55.400] We want to be able to go down to the court and get resolution. [01:03:55.400 --> 01:04:04.400] We want to go and invoke the law before our public officials and have our public officials do what the law requires them to do. [01:04:04.400 --> 01:04:09.400] It's not going to happen unless you just beat them up and make them. [01:04:09.400 --> 01:04:19.400] And over time in doing this, I found the best way to beat them up is not to confront them directly. [01:04:19.400 --> 01:04:25.400] Confronting them directly is something they are very good at. [01:04:25.400 --> 01:04:28.400] They do that all the time. [01:04:28.400 --> 01:04:37.400] The way to defeat them and the way to get them to do what they're supposed to is give them the impression [01:04:37.400 --> 01:04:43.400] that everything you do is a setup. [01:04:43.400 --> 01:04:51.400] You're just setting them up so you can hammer them. Everything you ask them to do, you're setting them up so you can hammer them. [01:04:51.400 --> 01:04:55.400] If we're going to fix the system, that's how we're going to fix it. [01:04:55.400 --> 01:05:00.400] If we're going to have influence on the system, that's how we're going to get influence. [01:05:00.400 --> 01:05:16.400] Whether you actually get someone indicted or not, I get a lot of blowback for saying it's never my intention to get someone indicted. [01:05:16.400 --> 01:05:22.400] Now, that doesn't mean that I don't want to get somebody indicted or I wouldn't like that. [01:05:22.400 --> 01:05:28.400] I might not like it. I would love it if some of these people got indicted. [01:05:28.400 --> 01:05:37.400] But that cannot be my purpose. My purpose is a lot bigger than that. [01:05:37.400 --> 01:05:45.400] My purpose is to put every judge in a position such that when he steps up behind the bench [01:05:45.400 --> 01:05:50.400] and looks out across the bar at the gallery, I want him wondering which one. [01:05:50.400 --> 01:06:00.400] Which one of those scoundrels sitting out there just waiting for an opportunity to run down to the grand jury and try to get me indicted. [01:06:00.400 --> 01:06:14.400] That's what will change their behavior. And frankly, it is the most powerful when it comes from left field when they don't see it coming. [01:06:14.400 --> 01:06:27.400] I really like bushwhack. And it's even more powerful when it comes over something incredibly minor. [01:06:27.400 --> 01:06:39.400] I got all the highest judges in Texas put before a grand jury because when I filed a writ of habeas corpus, they demanded that I file a motion for a leave to file. [01:06:39.400 --> 01:06:48.400] I said, say what? This is a writ. You don't have authority to grant or deny leave to heck with you. [01:06:48.400 --> 01:06:54.400] But they wouldn't take my filing. And since the kid was in jail, I'm trying to get him out. [01:06:54.400 --> 01:07:04.400] Then I filed the motion for leave and they denied leave to file, which they did to every pro se who came there. [01:07:04.400 --> 01:07:15.400] When they denied me leave to file, I call that official oppression. The judges exerted or purported to exert an authority they did not expressly have and filed with the grand jury. [01:07:15.400 --> 01:07:24.400] And that's all I filed. Not that they were mean, not that they were biased. [01:07:24.400 --> 01:07:38.400] But this specific act that they took was not specifically authorized by statute. Technical violation 39.03 penal code. [01:07:38.400 --> 01:07:44.400] And they said, what in the heck? We're all going to get indicted over something this minor. [01:07:44.400 --> 01:07:59.400] They're all judges. They knew that they did really horrible stuff. But when it comes up with something tiny out of left field, it makes the big stuff even more worrisome. [01:07:59.400 --> 01:08:09.400] So do your homework. Look at what the court or whatever official you're going to is required to do. [01:08:09.400 --> 01:08:23.400] One of the things I love to do on open records is I go in and try to figure out what are they not going to want to show me. [01:08:23.400 --> 01:08:34.400] And I ask for that. And I don't ask for one record, but a range of records because I want them wondering what I'm looking for. [01:08:34.400 --> 01:08:45.400] And what I'm really trying to do is get someone to say, well, Mr. Kelton, why do you want to see these records? Gotcha. [01:08:45.400 --> 01:08:48.400] Why is that? Why is that? [01:08:48.400 --> 01:08:56.400] There's two questions they can ask me. Who are you? What records do you seek? [01:08:56.400 --> 01:09:05.400] They are forbidden to ask me anything else. If they ask me something else, both, gotcha. [01:09:05.400 --> 01:09:15.400] Exerting importance, exerting authority, do not expressly have. Class A misdemeanor, official misconduct, criminal violation 39.03. [01:09:15.400 --> 01:09:22.400] And they're standing there scratching their head while I'm dialing 911 wondering what happened. [01:09:22.400 --> 01:09:33.400] I had a clerk who wouldn't show me some records because she didn't have the personnel, didn't have time, said I'd have to look at the computer 911. [01:09:33.400 --> 01:09:43.400] And they called the lieutenant and I got the sergeant, the sergeant called the lieutenant and the lieutenant refused to do anything. [01:09:43.400 --> 01:09:51.400] So I called 911 on the lieutenant. And while I'm waiting for the police to show up so I can file criminal charges against both of them, [01:09:51.400 --> 01:09:56.400] the clerk and the lieutenant came and the clerk got a whole handful of folders. [01:09:56.400 --> 01:10:04.400] And the lieutenant started to say something to me and I told him, stop, stop, I can't be talking to you. [01:10:04.400 --> 01:10:11.400] I have a policeman coming. I'll give him a full statement. But since I'm filing criminal charges against both of you, I can't talk to you. [01:10:11.400 --> 01:10:16.400] And the sergeant stepped over and said, well, she has the records you asked for. [01:10:16.400 --> 01:10:23.400] I said, sorry, Bubba, that bell's already been rung. [01:10:23.400 --> 01:10:31.400] And the look on the clerk's face was absolutely priceless. [01:10:31.400 --> 01:10:44.400] She could not believe over something so minor that the sky was falling in on her and she's taking this lieutenant with her. [01:10:44.400 --> 01:10:48.400] Yeah, I didn't want her indicted. And I didn't pursue it. [01:10:48.400 --> 01:10:55.400] But I guarantee you, if you go to Randall County now and ask for some records, you're not going to get any nonsense. [01:10:55.400 --> 01:11:00.400] They're going to bring you those records. This is how you do it. [01:11:00.400 --> 01:11:12.400] You sneak up on them. You bushwhack them. You ask them to do something that the law requires them to do and you hope they don't do it. [01:11:12.400 --> 01:11:18.400] Gotcha. You don't let them know that. You just go away and make your complaint to somebody else. [01:11:18.400 --> 01:11:27.400] And then they get a call from somebody else who says, I have this person down here trying to get me to arrest you. [01:11:27.400 --> 01:11:34.400] You want to tell me what's going on? That's how you get your attention. [01:11:34.400 --> 01:11:39.400] OK, that's my story. I'm sticking to it. Does that make sense? [01:11:39.400 --> 01:11:45.400] That's smart. It makes a lot of sense. And I have a question about this. [01:11:45.400 --> 01:11:52.400] Do you know how lawful is it? Because I've been trying to find this. [01:11:52.400 --> 01:12:03.400] How lawful is it for a process server to pull you over in your vehicle and serve process? [01:12:03.400 --> 01:12:12.400] Whoa. If they were not giving that information, like on the process service paper. [01:12:12.400 --> 01:12:21.400] Wait a minute. He's a process server. When he pulls you over, he's declaring an emergency. [01:12:21.400 --> 01:12:27.400] You say what? He's declaring an emergency. OK. [01:12:27.400 --> 01:12:33.400] I would call that official oppression. You're going to have that in Florida. [01:12:33.400 --> 01:12:37.400] It may be called official misconduct. [01:12:37.400 --> 01:12:46.400] I say official oppression in Texas because we have two statutes, official misconduct and official oppression. [01:12:46.400 --> 01:12:50.400] Most states, both of those are under official oppression. [01:12:50.400 --> 01:13:00.400] In Texas, official misconduct is where you misappropriate public funds or misuse government equipment, [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:06.400] where you interfere with the rights of a citizen while acting under the color authority. [01:13:06.400 --> 01:13:12.400] That's official oppression. But in Florida, I think they're both under official misconduct. [01:13:12.400 --> 01:13:21.400] He impersonated a police officer. I'm sorry. He impersonated a peace officer. [01:13:21.400 --> 01:13:27.400] And he probably is a certified peace officer. OK. [01:13:27.400 --> 01:13:36.400] But at the time he pulled you over, he wasn't functioning in the capacity of a peace officer. [01:13:36.400 --> 01:13:42.400] He was functioning in the capacity of a process server. [01:13:42.400 --> 01:13:47.400] That should get a criminal complaint against him for official misconduct. [01:13:47.400 --> 01:13:51.400] OK. Now, I went to the... [01:13:51.400 --> 01:13:57.400] OK. I understand. This one is perfect. It is so perfect. [01:13:57.400 --> 01:14:05.400] The prosecutor is going to say, there's no way I'm going to prosecute this guy for pulling you over to serve process. [01:14:05.400 --> 01:14:12.400] Oh, wonderful. Now I get to file against you for abuse of discretion, official oppression. [01:14:12.400 --> 01:14:18.400] You file against him. So that is a perfect one. Go ahead. I interrupted you. [01:14:18.400 --> 01:14:27.400] Well, you know, I went to the DA, I went to the internal affairs and the FBI regarding... [01:14:27.400 --> 01:14:29.400] All worthless. [01:14:29.400 --> 01:14:31.400] OK. [01:14:31.400 --> 01:14:36.400] They're all cops. They all protect each other, especially the FBI. [01:14:36.400 --> 01:14:37.400] OK. [01:14:37.400 --> 01:14:45.400] The FBI is merely a political arm of the president, just like Hitler's brown shirts. [01:14:45.400 --> 01:14:51.400] Except I think our guys are much dirtier than the brown shirts were. [01:14:51.400 --> 01:15:08.400] Do not expect the FBI to do anything in your benefit. Do not expect them to enforce law unless it is politically expedient for their boss. [01:15:08.400 --> 01:15:13.400] And I don't mean to disparage FBI agents. [01:15:13.400 --> 01:15:22.400] This is not about FBI agents. This is about the political structure that the FBI agents are forced to function under. [01:15:22.400 --> 01:15:29.400] It's like the police that don't have abscrand with police. I know you see all these videos. [01:15:29.400 --> 01:15:35.400] You got several million police out here and you see a couple hundred videos. [01:15:35.400 --> 01:15:43.400] It is a very few bad police officers and they make it look bad for all of them. [01:15:43.400 --> 01:15:52.400] The police are stuck inside a system they didn't create. It wasn't what they thought they were getting into when they started. [01:15:52.400 --> 01:15:58.400] The same with lawyers. They're stuck in a screwed up system that they didn't create. [01:15:58.400 --> 01:16:08.400] If there's any FBI agents out there listening, I really don't mean to disparage the agents. They're just stuck in a system they didn't create. [01:16:08.400 --> 01:16:12.400] But all that's worthless. [01:16:12.400 --> 01:16:22.400] The one thing our founders did, the one true remedy is the grand jury. [01:16:22.400 --> 01:16:28.400] And in the end it doesn't always matter whether you get there or not. [01:16:28.400 --> 01:16:33.400] But the grand jury is the elephant in the corner. [01:16:33.400 --> 01:16:37.400] Just the threat of possibly getting there is generally enough. [01:16:37.400 --> 01:16:41.400] I really need to move along. I've got a bunch of callers. [01:16:41.400 --> 01:16:43.400] Can you call in tomorrow night? [01:16:43.400 --> 01:16:45.400] Yes, I'll call in tomorrow. [01:16:45.400 --> 01:16:48.400] This happens to be about my favorite subject. [01:16:48.400 --> 01:16:54.400] Okay, we're about to go to break. I will move on on the other side. [01:16:54.400 --> 01:16:58.400] I've got one, two, three, four, five, six callers, so I really have to move along. [01:16:58.400 --> 01:17:00.400] Thank you, Susan. [01:17:00.400 --> 01:17:05.400] My name is Jessica Arman. I'm an activist, a GCN listener, and mother of three. [01:17:05.400 --> 01:17:10.400] Our drinking water and food are filled with fluoride and other contaminants that harm our teeth and gums. 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[01:18:51.400 --> 01:18:54.400] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:18:54.400 --> 01:19:10.400] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullying.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:25.400 --> 01:19:35.400] Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:35.400 --> 01:19:40.400] I was blindsided but now I can see your plans. [01:19:40.400 --> 01:19:46.400] You put the fear in my pocket, took the money from my hands. [01:19:46.400 --> 01:19:55.400] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:55.400 --> 01:20:11.400] Ain't gonna fool me. [01:20:11.400 --> 01:20:16.400] Ain't gonna drive me with that same old suck-up money. [01:20:16.400 --> 01:20:22.400] I get it now but then I must have it now. [01:20:22.400 --> 01:20:24.400] Okay, we are back. [01:20:24.400 --> 01:20:27.400] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue La Radio. [01:20:27.400 --> 01:20:30.400] And we're going to Bill in Texas. [01:20:30.400 --> 01:20:31.400] Hello. [01:20:31.400 --> 01:20:33.400] Hello, Bill. [01:20:33.400 --> 01:20:40.400] I'm going to come lately to your program and I am enjoying it very much. [01:20:40.400 --> 01:20:43.400] Okay, what do you have for us? [01:20:43.400 --> 01:20:47.400] Are you the one with the grandson with an issue? [01:20:47.400 --> 01:20:49.400] Yes. [01:20:49.400 --> 01:20:50.400] Okay. [01:20:50.400 --> 01:21:00.400] And what we were talking about and what reason I wanted Bill to call in was we were talking about timelines. [01:21:00.400 --> 01:21:06.400] I cannot overemphasize how important that is. [01:21:06.400 --> 01:21:13.400] You get into one of these situations and things happen. [01:21:13.400 --> 01:21:17.400] Things happen that you react strongly to. [01:21:17.400 --> 01:21:22.400] And one thing will happen and then another thing will happen and then another thing will happen. [01:21:22.400 --> 01:21:24.400] And you tend to talk about these. [01:21:24.400 --> 01:21:29.400] You talk about them with one another and you talk about it with other people. [01:21:29.400 --> 01:21:42.400] The problem with this is you talk about what happened and the context is not always as important or it doesn't appear important. [01:21:42.400 --> 01:21:52.400] And over time you begin to lose referential index to exactly how all of these things came together. [01:21:52.400 --> 01:21:59.400] And because what we do is we look at law. [01:21:59.400 --> 01:22:07.400] And when I look at one of these circumstances, I'm looking for points of due process. [01:22:07.400 --> 01:22:14.400] Well, you don't know they're important because you don't know what they are so you don't know what to look for. [01:22:14.400 --> 01:22:24.400] In order for me to find them, the first thing I need to know is what happened and when it happened. [01:22:24.400 --> 01:22:27.400] I need just a simple timeline. [01:22:27.400 --> 01:22:39.400] And if it's something, I have someone in a family court issue and she wrote me a timeline of things that stood out in her mind. [01:22:39.400 --> 01:22:45.400] And then she sent me a docket sheet that listed all of the things that were filed in court. [01:22:45.400 --> 01:22:49.400] The docket sheet was what I needed. [01:22:49.400 --> 01:22:56.400] So now I go back and have her take all of these things that happened and look at the docket sheet. [01:22:56.400 --> 01:23:06.400] Where along this list of things that were done in court did these other things over here occur and drop them in place? [01:23:06.400 --> 01:23:16.400] You will be surprised how much information will come out that you missed when you start putting all these things in order. [01:23:16.400 --> 01:23:21.400] I don't need argument. I don't need explanation. [01:23:21.400 --> 01:23:30.400] For this purpose, I only need on this day this thing happened and then this thing happened and this thing happened. [01:23:30.400 --> 01:23:44.400] That's all I need for this because what I'll do is show you how to construct a statement of facts that are artful. [01:23:44.400 --> 01:23:52.400] You see, I can tell you what you should think or believe or conclude. You may or may not believe me. [01:23:52.400 --> 01:24:01.400] But if I feed you facts in a way that a reasonable person of ordinary prudence would put these facts together [01:24:01.400 --> 01:24:13.400] and come to the conclusion that I want you to come to, then when I come back and I do my argument in support [01:24:13.400 --> 01:24:20.400] or my what I like to call a statement of factual accusation, I'll have a statement of facts. [01:24:20.400 --> 01:24:24.400] And then I'll follow that with a statement of factual accusation. [01:24:24.400 --> 01:24:37.400] When I start making accusations based on these facts, I will have already tried to get you to come to this conclusion before I tell you about it. [01:24:37.400 --> 01:24:48.400] Because if I can get you to do that and then I come to the same conclusion I got you to come to, you're going to think I'm really smart. [01:24:48.400 --> 01:24:54.400] Because I came to the same conclusion you did and that's called rapport. [01:24:54.400 --> 01:25:04.400] So first we need all of the facts and then we'll go through there and see what facts aren't relevant and we can set those aside. [01:25:04.400 --> 01:25:14.400] And then we go back through there and see which facts go directly to points of law and due process. [01:25:14.400 --> 01:25:24.400] And then sort the facts so that a person reading this would tend to come to the conclusion you wanted to. [01:25:24.400 --> 01:25:27.400] Bill, does that make sense? [01:25:27.400 --> 01:25:35.400] Yes, it does. What threw me on your email was the word calendar. [01:25:35.400 --> 01:25:38.400] I picture a calendar hanging on the wall. [01:25:38.400 --> 01:25:42.400] That's right. That's a perfect way to do it. [01:25:42.400 --> 01:25:51.400] But in making this thing to send to you, and by the way, do you want a hard copy or can we do it by email? [01:25:51.400 --> 01:25:53.400] I would much rather it by email. [01:25:53.400 --> 01:25:58.400] And I was going to say if you're having trouble with it, go find a 10-year-old. [01:25:58.400 --> 01:26:02.400] They'll explain it to you. [01:26:02.400 --> 01:26:07.400] Us old guys, we're used to hard paper and pencil. [01:26:07.400 --> 01:26:13.400] If you have a grandson, get the grandkids and show you how this stuff works. [01:26:13.400 --> 01:26:27.400] What I was wondering is on the timeline, if I could center the month and then do the things underneath that month or right below that, do another month. [01:26:27.400 --> 01:26:42.400] Well, they've got electronic calendars and you can just, you know, just on the day, a calendar is better because it gives you a little room to write in a little note on each of the days that something happened. [01:26:42.400 --> 01:26:46.400] And we're very accustomed to dealing with calendars. [01:26:46.400 --> 01:27:01.400] If you just line things up in chronological order, that's not quite as intuitive and it doesn't give me room to put the happenings that go in between. [01:27:01.400 --> 01:27:05.400] You're not going to have all the information yet. [01:27:05.400 --> 01:27:11.400] When you fill out this timeline, I'm going to look at it and I'm going to say, whoa, hold on here. [01:27:11.400 --> 01:27:18.400] This happened on this day and in two weeks later, this happened or had to be something in between. [01:27:18.400 --> 01:27:25.400] And I'll be able to determine that based on what the law says is supposed to be there. [01:27:25.400 --> 01:27:35.400] And a calendar, just doing it on a, you can get an electronic calendar and electronic pages and just stick it in where it occurred. [01:27:35.400 --> 01:27:48.400] Not only does it put it in a way that's intuitively understandable for me, but you will find it as a very effective mnemonic device. [01:27:48.400 --> 01:27:53.400] When you start doing this, you'll fill it out, go back and look at it. [01:27:53.400 --> 01:28:01.400] You'll find yourself sitting, hold on, wait a minute, that didn't occur here, that occurred over here. [01:28:01.400 --> 01:28:10.400] And there's this other thing that occurred here that I missed, you'll start filling in a lot of gaps that you lose when you tell these stories. [01:28:10.400 --> 01:28:14.400] If you rethink these stories, it don't make all the internal connections. [01:28:14.400 --> 01:28:32.400] Go ahead. [01:28:32.400 --> 01:28:35.400] That's why the first thing I need is a timeline. [01:28:35.400 --> 01:28:42.400] It's strung over this time and you're living inside it. [01:28:42.400 --> 01:28:47.400] You'll tend to get the happenings out of place. [01:28:47.400 --> 01:28:52.400] I need to make sure everything is in the right place at the right time. [01:28:52.400 --> 01:28:56.400] And I understand this is very difficult. [01:28:56.400 --> 01:29:05.400] Because in order to do this, you have to go back and re-experience all the bad feelings you had when all of these things happened. [01:29:05.400 --> 01:29:09.400] So I understand that it's very difficult. [01:29:09.400 --> 01:29:17.400] I'm reliving them every day in this federal lawsuit, which brings up a quick question later on. [01:29:17.400 --> 01:29:26.400] But on these electronic calendars, on the day that this happened, can you expand that day to type in? [01:29:26.400 --> 01:29:28.400] Is that what you're talking about? [01:29:28.400 --> 01:29:30.400] Oh, absolutely, absolutely. [01:29:30.400 --> 01:29:33.400] It doesn't matter. [01:29:33.400 --> 01:29:38.400] We can make notes that refer to the dates. [01:29:38.400 --> 01:29:43.400] I just need something so I can look at it and see what happened on each day. [01:29:43.400 --> 01:29:47.400] Oh, okay. [01:29:47.400 --> 01:29:48.400] Okay, okay. [01:29:48.400 --> 01:29:49.400] Hang on. [01:29:49.400 --> 01:29:50.400] I'm about to go to break. [01:29:50.400 --> 01:29:52.400] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue of Law Radio. [01:29:52.400 --> 01:30:03.400] Our call-in number, 512-646-1984, and we'll be right back. [01:30:03.400 --> 01:30:09.400] With all the immigrants begging to come to America, you'd think people who were born here would be counting their lucky stars. [01:30:09.400 --> 01:30:14.400] So why then are record numbers of Americans renouncing their U.S. citizenship? [01:30:14.400 --> 01:30:17.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the answer next. [01:30:17.400 --> 01:30:19.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.400 --> 01:30:23.400] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:23.400 --> 01:30:28.400] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:28.400 --> 01:30:33.400] Protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.400 --> 01:30:35.400] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:35.400 --> 01:30:42.400] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.400 --> 01:30:46.400] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.400 --> 01:30:52.400] Last year, 1,800 Americans living overseas renounced their citizenship, a record number. [01:30:52.400 --> 01:30:54.400] Do these folks just hate our country? [01:30:54.400 --> 01:30:58.400] No, but they're fed up with burdensome tax laws. [01:30:58.400 --> 01:31:03.400] Most countries don't force citizens living abroad to pay federal taxes, but the U.S. does. [01:31:03.400 --> 01:31:09.400] In fact, since 2004, the government has hit Americans living overseas with steep fines and criminal charges, [01:31:09.400 --> 01:31:14.400] even forcing them to disclose information on spouses who are foreign nationals. [01:31:14.400 --> 01:31:21.400] It's high time the U.S. got off the backs of Americans living overseas, and come to think of it, the rest of ours too. [01:31:21.400 --> 01:31:31.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.400 --> 01:31:35.400] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [01:31:35.400 --> 01:31:39.400] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [01:31:39.400 --> 01:31:43.400] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. 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[01:32:24.400 --> 01:32:28.400] So now you know hemp is not marijuana, and marijuana is not hemp. [01:32:28.400 --> 01:32:31.400] They are different varieties of the same species. [01:32:31.400 --> 01:32:36.400] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts and to help people understand [01:32:36.400 --> 01:32:40.400] that hemp protein powder is the best-kept health secret you need to know about. [01:32:40.400 --> 01:32:47.400] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten-free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, [01:32:47.400 --> 01:32:49.400] and is loaded with nutrients. [01:32:49.400 --> 01:32:58.400] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367, and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [01:32:58.400 --> 01:33:01.400] Only at hempUSA.org. [01:33:01.400 --> 01:33:11.400] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:31.400 --> 01:33:33.400] Okay, we are back. [01:33:33.400 --> 01:33:38.400] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Bill in Texas. [01:33:38.400 --> 01:33:41.400] Okay, Bill, does that kind of make sense to what I'm looking for? [01:33:41.400 --> 01:33:52.400] Yes. I'm not a computer guru, but I did a search and found a calendar where you click on a date, [01:33:52.400 --> 01:33:55.400] and it expanded out where you can type in there. [01:33:55.400 --> 01:34:04.400] When you get that, will something show up on that date where you can click and expand it and read it? [01:34:04.400 --> 01:34:06.400] Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. [01:34:06.400 --> 01:34:09.400] Okay. Okay. I got that straight now. [01:34:09.400 --> 01:34:15.400] Good. Just let me know what the software is, and I'll download the software. [01:34:15.400 --> 01:34:28.400] Okay. The other quick question is, in a federal civil rights lawsuit where you got the three or four statutes that has been violated, [01:34:28.400 --> 01:34:42.400] am I doing the right thing by including a private entity who is acting in concert with a county? [01:34:42.400 --> 01:34:48.400] Oh, absolutely. [01:34:48.400 --> 01:34:55.400] Okay. That's not enough for me to tell anything, but generally, if a private entity is acting in concert, [01:34:55.400 --> 01:35:01.400] any two entities who are acting in concert inclusion with one another can be sued together. [01:35:01.400 --> 01:35:09.400] Okay. Okay. I was wondering about that. I haven't included it. [01:35:09.400 --> 01:35:12.400] Have you filed a federal lawsuit? [01:35:12.400 --> 01:35:14.400] I'm sorry? [01:35:14.400 --> 01:35:16.400] Have you filed a federal lawsuit? [01:35:16.400 --> 01:35:20.400] No. No. I'm just in the process of making it now. [01:35:20.400 --> 01:35:25.400] Okay. Good. Then get this first, and we have all the facts in order. [01:35:25.400 --> 01:35:26.400] Okay. [01:35:26.400 --> 01:35:32.400] The last thing you want to do is get a fact out of place, because the other side will figure that out [01:35:32.400 --> 01:35:36.400] and come back and use it to discredit everything you're doing. [01:35:36.400 --> 01:35:40.400] This is the most important thing you can do is get a good timeline down. [01:35:40.400 --> 01:35:45.400] Okay. Okay. I think you've answered my questions. [01:35:45.400 --> 01:35:51.400] Okay. Thank you very much, Bill. Now we're going to go to Terrence in Tennessee. [01:35:51.400 --> 01:35:55.400] Hello, Terrence. What do you have for us tonight? [01:35:55.400 --> 01:35:57.400] Well, good evening, and thank you. [01:35:57.400 --> 01:36:02.400] And the answer to part of my questions is make out a timeline. [01:36:02.400 --> 01:36:08.400] The initial question would be the landlord has a vehicle towed, [01:36:08.400 --> 01:36:13.400] and they're allowed to if they do the proper notice, which they manufactured notice. [01:36:13.400 --> 01:36:19.400] But before they tow it, they cut a lock, empty all the contents out. [01:36:19.400 --> 01:36:29.400] It's a cargo trailer. They empty all the contents out, re-lock the trailer, and then have it towed. [01:36:29.400 --> 01:36:35.400] Where are the contents, and who did they have an inventory of the contents? [01:36:35.400 --> 01:36:39.400] I understand you had 1,000 ounces of silver in there? [01:36:39.400 --> 01:36:44.400] 250. [01:36:44.400 --> 01:36:47.400] That's all you could find. Where's the rest of it? [01:36:47.400 --> 01:36:49.400] That's what I can prove. [01:36:49.400 --> 01:36:52.400] Okay. Here's the point I'm making. [01:36:52.400 --> 01:37:00.400] Who is crazy enough to open that locker, to open that trailer? [01:37:00.400 --> 01:37:04.400] You could claim anything was in there. [01:37:04.400 --> 01:37:06.400] Correct. [01:37:06.400 --> 01:37:12.400] That's a real serious problem for them to do something stupid like that. [01:37:12.400 --> 01:37:17.400] Have they returned the property that was in the trailer to you? [01:37:17.400 --> 01:37:22.400] No. What the landlord's claiming is that the trailer was abandoned, [01:37:22.400 --> 01:37:27.400] and therefore anything in it belongs to the landlord. [01:37:27.400 --> 01:37:32.400] Did he have knowledge that it belonged to you? [01:37:32.400 --> 01:37:35.400] Oh, yes. [01:37:35.400 --> 01:37:39.400] You need to go file criminal theft charges. [01:37:39.400 --> 01:37:40.400] I did now. [01:37:40.400 --> 01:37:44.400] Hold on. Did he allow you to put that trailer on the property? [01:37:44.400 --> 01:37:48.400] Oh, yes. It has been there for over six months in the same spot. [01:37:48.400 --> 01:37:51.400] Go file criminal theft against him. [01:37:51.400 --> 01:37:56.400] Well, all the police would let me do so far is make out a stolen property list. [01:37:56.400 --> 01:37:58.400] You don't care what the police say. [01:37:58.400 --> 01:38:02.400] You make up a criminal charge to take it to the justice of the peace. [01:38:02.400 --> 01:38:05.400] Okay. [01:38:05.400 --> 01:38:08.400] The police, they don't want to do their job. [01:38:08.400 --> 01:38:13.400] They want to smooth everything over, and they don't care if you got screwed around. [01:38:13.400 --> 01:38:17.400] So make up criminal charges and file them against them with the JP. [01:38:17.400 --> 01:38:21.400] If the JP don't take them, you're in Tennessee. [01:38:21.400 --> 01:38:24.400] You've got justice as a peace in Tennessee. [01:38:24.400 --> 01:38:29.400] If the JP don't take it, then you file criminal charges against the JP [01:38:29.400 --> 01:38:31.400] and take it to the next step. [01:38:31.400 --> 01:38:35.400] Just start the routine on them. [01:38:35.400 --> 01:38:38.400] Are you in East Tennessee, West Tennessee? [01:38:38.400 --> 01:38:44.400] Chattanooga. [01:38:44.400 --> 01:38:45.400] Oh, East Tennessee. [01:38:45.400 --> 01:38:48.400] Okay, I've got someone I'll get you in contact with. [01:38:48.400 --> 01:38:51.400] Send me an email. [01:38:51.400 --> 01:38:59.400] I've got some contacts in East Tennessee. [01:38:59.400 --> 01:39:05.400] She's absolutely berserk, but she'll show you how to kick their behinds. [01:39:05.400 --> 01:39:10.400] That's okay. I sent you one, and I thought, Randy, I need your help. [01:39:10.400 --> 01:39:12.400] Okay, I remember seeing that. [01:39:12.400 --> 01:39:16.400] I'll get it to her, and I'll get her in contact with you. [01:39:16.400 --> 01:39:18.400] Thank you so much. [01:39:18.400 --> 01:39:20.400] You are most welcome, and I do need to move along. [01:39:20.400 --> 01:39:21.400] We're running out of time. [01:39:21.400 --> 01:39:22.400] Okay. [01:39:22.400 --> 01:39:23.400] We'll make out of time. [01:39:23.400 --> 01:39:25.400] Thank you. [01:39:25.400 --> 01:39:27.400] Okay. [01:39:27.400 --> 01:39:31.400] Thank you, and we're going to go to Rick in North Carolina. [01:39:31.400 --> 01:39:33.400] Hello, Rick. [01:39:33.400 --> 01:39:35.400] Hey, Randy, how you doing? [01:39:35.400 --> 01:39:36.400] Doing good. [01:39:36.400 --> 01:39:38.400] What do you have for us tonight? [01:39:38.400 --> 01:39:39.400] Okay. [01:39:39.400 --> 01:39:43.400] Last time we spoke a couple weeks ago, you asked me to send you some documents [01:39:43.400 --> 01:39:48.400] relating to my buddy's property, and I sent them to you, [01:39:48.400 --> 01:39:50.400] and I was wondering if you could see them and look at them. [01:39:50.400 --> 01:39:52.400] What was his name? [01:39:52.400 --> 01:39:56.400] Mike. [01:39:56.400 --> 01:40:00.400] Don't remember Mike. [01:40:00.400 --> 01:40:08.400] Send me an email tomorrow, and I will check, but I don't remember a Mike. [01:40:08.400 --> 01:40:16.400] I have a woman in North Carolina that has a mortgage issue, but I will check. [01:40:16.400 --> 01:40:21.400] The title of the email said something about North Carolina hillbilly, [01:40:21.400 --> 01:40:25.400] and then I put a man with a gun. [01:40:25.400 --> 01:40:28.400] I don't remember seeing that email. [01:40:28.400 --> 01:40:29.400] Maybe you didn't. [01:40:29.400 --> 01:40:34.400] Do you send it to Randy at Louisville Radio or women's and real estate? [01:40:34.400 --> 01:40:37.400] I sent it to the person who said. [01:40:37.400 --> 01:40:38.400] Okay. [01:40:38.400 --> 01:40:43.400] Well, try it again in case you got a typo in there. [01:40:43.400 --> 01:40:44.400] Okay. [01:40:44.400 --> 01:40:46.400] I'll do that. [01:40:46.400 --> 01:40:47.400] Okay. [01:40:47.400 --> 01:40:48.400] Good. [01:40:48.400 --> 01:40:49.400] Good. [01:40:49.400 --> 01:40:51.400] And I'll get ahold of you tomorrow. [01:40:51.400 --> 01:40:52.400] Okay. [01:40:52.400 --> 01:40:57.400] Just real fast, we've been juggling a quiet title, a bankruptcy, [01:40:57.400 --> 01:40:59.400] and we appealed the foreclosure case. [01:40:59.400 --> 01:41:01.400] Everything's coming to a head now. [01:41:01.400 --> 01:41:05.400] We've got the quiet title coming up on Monday. [01:41:05.400 --> 01:41:06.400] We're not prepared for it. [01:41:06.400 --> 01:41:10.400] We're considering dropping it because we haven't done a clarification. [01:41:10.400 --> 01:41:11.400] Okay. [01:41:11.400 --> 01:41:12.400] That I remember. [01:41:12.400 --> 01:41:13.400] It's coming up Monday. [01:41:13.400 --> 01:41:14.400] Okay. [01:41:14.400 --> 01:41:15.400] Get ahold of me tomorrow. [01:41:15.400 --> 01:41:16.400] Okay. [01:41:16.400 --> 01:41:17.400] I'll have a quick look at it. [01:41:17.400 --> 01:41:19.400] I might be able to get you something by Monday. [01:41:19.400 --> 01:41:20.400] Okay. [01:41:20.400 --> 01:41:21.400] Okay. [01:41:21.400 --> 01:41:22.400] Hold it. [01:41:22.400 --> 01:41:23.400] It's coming up. [01:41:23.400 --> 01:41:25.400] You had already had to have a document in there. [01:41:25.400 --> 01:41:27.400] I didn't get a challenge. [01:41:27.400 --> 01:41:29.400] Did you file the quiet title? [01:41:29.400 --> 01:41:30.400] Yes. [01:41:30.400 --> 01:41:31.400] Okay. [01:41:31.400 --> 01:41:32.400] Okay. [01:41:32.400 --> 01:41:33.400] Okay. [01:41:33.400 --> 01:41:34.400] Good. [01:41:34.400 --> 01:41:36.400] Then I can probably find you some arguments in support. [01:41:36.400 --> 01:41:38.400] What did you file the quiet title on? [01:41:38.400 --> 01:41:40.400] Which document? [01:41:40.400 --> 01:41:46.400] The last thing that we received at the time, which was a notice of foreclosure sale. [01:41:46.400 --> 01:41:47.400] Okay. [01:41:47.400 --> 01:41:55.400] Was the trustee – okay, now this is – you're in a judicial state. [01:41:55.400 --> 01:41:56.400] Okay. [01:41:56.400 --> 01:41:58.400] I'll have to look at chain of title. [01:41:58.400 --> 01:41:59.400] Okay. [01:41:59.400 --> 01:42:00.400] Get ahold of me tomorrow. [01:42:00.400 --> 01:42:03.400] I'll get on it quickly. [01:42:03.400 --> 01:42:04.400] Okay. [01:42:04.400 --> 01:42:09.400] And what we need to do is find an interruption in the chain of title. [01:42:09.400 --> 01:42:15.400] And did they file a response to your quiet title? [01:42:15.400 --> 01:42:17.400] Yes, they did. [01:42:17.400 --> 01:42:18.400] All three parties did. [01:42:18.400 --> 01:42:19.400] Okay. [01:42:19.400 --> 01:42:20.400] Okay. [01:42:20.400 --> 01:42:21.400] I'll need that for sure. [01:42:21.400 --> 01:42:22.400] Okay. [01:42:22.400 --> 01:42:23.400] Okay. [01:42:23.400 --> 01:42:25.400] So give me an email. [01:42:25.400 --> 01:42:27.400] I'll get on that tomorrow. [01:42:27.400 --> 01:42:28.400] Will do. [01:42:28.400 --> 01:42:29.400] Okay. [01:42:29.400 --> 01:42:30.400] Thank you. [01:42:30.400 --> 01:42:32.400] Now we're going to go to Rob in New Mexico. [01:42:32.400 --> 01:42:36.400] Rob, you've been sitting there with that diesel idling. [01:42:36.400 --> 01:42:39.400] No, I got shut off. [01:42:39.400 --> 01:42:42.400] You're not dead-hitting today. [01:42:42.400 --> 01:42:45.400] I've lost too many brain cells listening to you, Randy. [01:42:45.400 --> 01:42:48.400] I can't afford to lose anymore. [01:42:48.400 --> 01:42:49.400] Okay. [01:42:49.400 --> 01:42:50.400] What is up? [01:42:50.400 --> 01:42:53.400] Well, I want to give you a little bit of background. [01:42:53.400 --> 01:42:55.400] I've been real busy the last couple of months. [01:42:55.400 --> 01:42:59.400] I've got three TAR babies going in three districts in New Mexico. [01:42:59.400 --> 01:43:01.400] I'm having a lot of fun. [01:43:01.400 --> 01:43:09.400] The one in Albuquerque, I sent criminal complaints to the DA with a little letter asking the [01:43:09.400 --> 01:43:14.400] DA to notify me of when she intended to present it to the grand jury so I could make myself [01:43:14.400 --> 01:43:17.400] available as a witness. [01:43:17.400 --> 01:43:23.400] The DA opened the letter, called me, said, I can't find a case that these complaints [01:43:23.400 --> 01:43:24.400] relate to. [01:43:24.400 --> 01:43:26.400] And I said, no, there is no case yet. [01:43:26.400 --> 01:43:33.400] I'm initiating these complaints against these lawyers for burglary. [01:43:33.400 --> 01:43:36.400] And I hear the music. [01:43:36.400 --> 01:43:39.400] Oh, that's just a decent fuse. [01:43:39.400 --> 01:43:41.400] Okay. [01:43:41.400 --> 01:43:43.400] Hang on. [01:43:43.400 --> 01:43:45.400] I'll quit picking on you because you're a truck driver. [01:43:45.400 --> 01:43:49.400] This is Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [01:43:49.400 --> 01:43:53.400] I call it number 512-646-1984. [01:43:53.400 --> 01:43:54.400] We'll be right back. [01:43:54.400 --> 01:43:56.400] And Robin, I see you there. [01:43:56.400 --> 01:44:00.400] We'll try to get you before we run out of time. [01:44:00.400 --> 01:44:03.400] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.400 --> 01:44:04.400] Sorry. [01:44:04.400 --> 01:44:07.400] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.400 --> 01:44:08.400] What? [01:44:08.400 --> 01:44:12.400] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.400 --> 01:44:13.400] Hi. [01:44:13.400 --> 01:44:14.400] My name is Steve Holt. [01:44:14.400 --> 01:44:19.400] And like millions of other Americans, I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.400 --> 01:44:23.400] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home [01:44:23.400 --> 01:44:25.400] in America, the television. [01:44:25.400 --> 01:44:28.400] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity. [01:44:28.400 --> 01:44:30.400] But there is hope. [01:44:30.400 --> 01:44:34.400] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering [01:44:34.400 --> 01:44:36.400] from sports zombieism recover. [01:44:36.400 --> 01:44:40.400] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [01:44:40.400 --> 01:44:43.400] without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.400 --> 01:44:50.400] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [01:44:50.400 --> 01:44:54.400] or visit them at 1904Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.400 --> 01:44:58.400] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:58.400 --> 01:45:01.400] and overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:01.400 --> 01:45:04.400] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.400 --> 01:45:08.400] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, [01:45:08.400 --> 01:45:15.400] easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:15.400 --> 01:45:19.400] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.400 --> 01:45:23.400] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.400 --> 01:45:26.400] Thousands have won with our step by step course. [01:45:26.400 --> 01:45:28.400] Now you can too. [01:45:28.400 --> 01:45:34.400] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.400 --> 01:45:39.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.400 --> 01:45:43.400] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.400 --> 01:45:49.400] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.400 --> 01:45:56.400] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:56.400 --> 01:46:01.400] or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.400 --> 01:46:19.400] Music [01:46:19.400 --> 01:46:23.400] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, [01:46:23.400 --> 01:46:26.400] and we're talking to Rob in New Mexico. [01:46:26.400 --> 01:46:32.400] Yeah, so rather than sending my letter back in the self-addressed envelope that I gave the DA, [01:46:32.400 --> 01:46:38.400] self-addressed envelope, the DA put everything back in the original envelope, [01:46:38.400 --> 01:46:42.400] taped it shut, and returned the sender on it. [01:46:42.400 --> 01:46:51.400] Then file a complaint against the DA and send it to the Foreman of the Grand Jury, [01:46:51.400 --> 01:46:57.400] registered restricted at the DA's address. [01:46:57.400 --> 01:46:59.400] Excellent. [01:46:59.400 --> 01:47:05.400] And when the idiot DA opens it, it'll be a complaint against him for misfeasance in office. [01:47:05.400 --> 01:47:11.400] Right. Now, I've got a question. Did you get anything from the Valencia County, [01:47:11.400 --> 01:47:13.400] New Mexico County clerk? [01:47:13.400 --> 01:47:17.400] Yes, I did, and I was wondering where that came from. [01:47:17.400 --> 01:47:22.400] Okay, because I haven't heard anything back from them. They haven't filed the documents. [01:47:22.400 --> 01:47:25.400] Why did they send it to me? [01:47:25.400 --> 01:47:32.400] Because I put R. Kelton ESQ on the return address on the original envelope. [01:47:32.400 --> 01:47:39.400] Ooh, you're trying to get me arrested. I'm not an Esquire. [01:47:39.400 --> 01:47:44.400] I didn't put your name anywhere inside. [01:47:44.400 --> 01:47:48.400] Okay, that's why. I just picked it up for yesterday, as a matter of fact. [01:47:48.400 --> 01:47:53.400] Okay, that's weird, because they got it like a month ago. [01:47:53.400 --> 01:47:58.400] Yeah, as a matter of fact, I have it right here. But, okay, that was, I looked it over, [01:47:58.400 --> 01:48:02.400] and I don't remember what it was. I had a whole bunch of mail. [01:48:02.400 --> 01:48:03.400] Okay. [01:48:03.400 --> 01:48:16.400] It says, Peggy, Carabaja, Valencia. Yes, I have it right here. [01:48:16.400 --> 01:48:24.400] Recording requested a notice of lender's default. They didn't file it. They returned it. [01:48:24.400 --> 01:48:26.400] Yeah. [01:48:26.400 --> 01:48:30.400] The document requested sent to our office to be returned to you for the following reasons. [01:48:30.400 --> 01:48:33.400] You didn't pay a 25-buck filing fee. [01:48:33.400 --> 01:48:35.400] Oh, okay. [01:48:35.400 --> 01:48:43.400] That's okay. You can redo it with the filing fee. You should be good. [01:48:43.400 --> 01:48:47.400] I remember looking at it and seeing what it was, and that's why I went ahead to see why they returned it. [01:48:47.400 --> 01:48:51.400] So that's good. They didn't return it because it wasn't in proper form, [01:48:51.400 --> 01:48:54.400] or we don't file these kind of documents. [01:48:54.400 --> 01:48:57.400] Okay, she did her job right for once. [01:48:57.400 --> 01:48:59.400] Yeah, that's good. That's good. [01:48:59.400 --> 01:49:04.400] Now, I can't find shielding from prosecution or abuse of discretion in New Mexico. [01:49:04.400 --> 01:49:07.400] What else can I look under? [01:49:07.400 --> 01:49:10.400] Official misconduct. [01:49:10.400 --> 01:49:12.400] Okay, that'll work. [01:49:12.400 --> 01:49:15.400] Fails to perform a duty they're required to perform. [01:49:15.400 --> 01:49:19.400] Okay, and then I got a de novo review question. [01:49:19.400 --> 01:49:21.400] Okay. [01:49:21.400 --> 01:49:26.400] If I object to a magistrate's ruling and the judge conducts a de novo review, [01:49:26.400 --> 01:49:30.400] is it sufficient for him to say I have conducted a de novo review [01:49:30.400 --> 01:49:35.400] and find the objections lack merit, and that's it? [01:49:35.400 --> 01:49:43.400] Well, he can do that, but you need to file a motion for findings of fact and conclusions at law. [01:49:43.400 --> 01:49:45.400] Okay. All right, I'm done. [01:49:45.400 --> 01:49:46.400] Yes. [01:49:46.400 --> 01:49:48.400] Go on to the next guy. Thank you very much. [01:49:48.400 --> 01:49:50.400] Okay, thank you. [01:49:50.400 --> 01:49:54.400] Okay, now we're going to Robin in Florida. [01:49:54.400 --> 01:49:57.400] Hello, Robin. What do you have for us today? [01:49:57.400 --> 01:50:00.400] Hello, Randy. Good evening. You can hear me okay? [01:50:00.400 --> 01:50:02.400] I can hear you. [01:50:02.400 --> 01:50:06.400] Okay, good. This is a question about sort of an employment issue I have. [01:50:06.400 --> 01:50:10.400] Actually, it's for my wife. [01:50:10.400 --> 01:50:14.400] She works in a – and it has some legal ramifications here. [01:50:14.400 --> 01:50:19.400] She works in a boutique in a mall. She's like a sales associate. [01:50:19.400 --> 01:50:23.400] And, you know, she's been there for three months. [01:50:23.400 --> 01:50:27.400] She's had many run-ins with the management because the management has sales goals. [01:50:27.400 --> 01:50:29.400] They have sales goals. [01:50:29.400 --> 01:50:35.400] You know, she's complaining to me about this because they're not letting her sell and all this kind of stuff. [01:50:35.400 --> 01:50:37.400] So I said, well, there's nothing really we can do. [01:50:37.400 --> 01:50:44.400] It's just sort of, you know, fighting within the company that you can't do anything about. [01:50:44.400 --> 01:50:51.400] But what has happened is that they had an audit within the company, [01:50:51.400 --> 01:51:01.400] and her managers haven't heard falsified training documents that she did training and stuff like this. [01:51:01.400 --> 01:51:04.400] And this training was supposed to be done three months ago when she originally started, [01:51:04.400 --> 01:51:06.400] but they did it just three weeks ago. [01:51:06.400 --> 01:51:13.400] They changed previous employees' documents to put her name on it and things of that nature. [01:51:13.400 --> 01:51:17.400] So basically, they're falsifying documents. [01:51:17.400 --> 01:51:23.400] You know, this is, okay, when you say they're falsifying documents, [01:51:23.400 --> 01:51:31.400] but this so far, unless this is training that's required by some governmental agency, [01:51:31.400 --> 01:51:35.400] is that the case or is this internal training? [01:51:35.400 --> 01:51:36.400] It's within the company. [01:51:36.400 --> 01:51:41.400] My goal is here to, she can't get anywhere. [01:51:41.400 --> 01:51:44.400] They're reducing her hours and such and such. [01:51:44.400 --> 01:51:46.400] But it's just within the company. [01:51:46.400 --> 01:51:47.400] That's the problem. [01:51:47.400 --> 01:51:54.400] I don't know any options, but they're also starting to take away actual pay that she worked. [01:51:54.400 --> 01:51:55.400] Now, that's different. [01:51:55.400 --> 01:51:59.400] Is Florida a right-to-work state? [01:51:59.400 --> 01:52:01.400] I believe so, yes. [01:52:01.400 --> 01:52:10.400] Then she can bring an issue because the courts will say that you have an investment in your job, [01:52:10.400 --> 01:52:19.400] you have a property right in the job that you do because you invest a lot of your time into the job [01:52:19.400 --> 01:52:22.400] and you do extra learning the job and such. [01:52:22.400 --> 01:52:32.400] So if they terminate you or do something to cause you to make less money that's unfair, [01:52:32.400 --> 01:52:36.400] then you will generally have a claim against them. [01:52:36.400 --> 01:52:44.400] However, this is really specific to local law. [01:52:44.400 --> 01:52:54.400] But if she can establish that she earned money that they didn't pay her, that's a whole other animal. [01:52:54.400 --> 01:52:56.400] There you could file a civil action. [01:52:56.400 --> 01:53:00.400] Then once the managers went in and took away the extra hour that she worked, [01:53:00.400 --> 01:53:03.400] that she got permission to work without telling them, [01:53:03.400 --> 01:53:08.400] and somehow one of the other managers found out because they're having all these infighting issues, [01:53:08.400 --> 01:53:12.400] and she would have never known that they took that actually as a half hour away. [01:53:12.400 --> 01:53:16.400] She doesn't keep track of all of it, and they found out and the other managers, [01:53:16.400 --> 01:53:20.400] so hey, what are you doing taking away her pay like that and all that kind of stuff? [01:53:20.400 --> 01:53:29.400] So my end goal is I want her to be able to put some pressure on the company to get rid of these people [01:53:29.400 --> 01:53:33.400] because they're doing all kinds, this is just the tip of the iceberg [01:53:33.400 --> 01:53:35.400] what I've given you here on the radio. [01:53:35.400 --> 01:53:39.400] Okay, this goes more to politics. [01:53:39.400 --> 01:53:41.400] That's what I meant. [01:53:41.400 --> 01:53:46.400] And to Ken's first rule, everything is political. [01:53:46.400 --> 01:53:56.400] If your wife raises too much of an issue, her managers will probably fire her, [01:53:56.400 --> 01:53:58.400] and they'll come up with a reason. [01:53:58.400 --> 01:54:07.400] But if her irate husband goes and he's just a bull in a china shop, [01:54:07.400 --> 01:54:12.400] and he goes to her boss's boss's boss's boss and chews him out [01:54:12.400 --> 01:54:18.400] because these guys are screwing her around, you see, in these major companies. [01:54:18.400 --> 01:54:21.400] You know, I ran my own company for a long time. [01:54:21.400 --> 01:54:26.400] And I'm the guy that had the money invested in the company. [01:54:26.400 --> 01:54:29.400] And the people I had working for me on the bottom, [01:54:29.400 --> 01:54:34.400] if they go out there and they really screw something up, [01:54:34.400 --> 01:54:39.400] they're going to come to me and say, hey, you know, I really screwed something up, [01:54:39.400 --> 01:54:41.400] not in this lifetime. [01:54:41.400 --> 01:54:47.400] The hardest thing for upper management to find out is what's going on below them [01:54:47.400 --> 01:54:51.400] because nobody wants to bring anything bad up. [01:54:51.400 --> 01:54:53.400] And that's exactly where I'm going with this. [01:54:53.400 --> 01:54:55.400] How should I handle it? [01:54:55.400 --> 01:54:57.400] Do we want to go to the country? [01:54:57.400 --> 01:55:01.400] Well, you could make some inquiries, just innocent inquiries. [01:55:01.400 --> 01:55:06.400] I'll give you an idea of what we did once. [01:55:06.400 --> 01:55:09.400] We put in a phone, a friend of mine moved down from Colorado [01:55:09.400 --> 01:55:11.400] and he wanted to put in a phone system. [01:55:11.400 --> 01:55:15.400] And we were out in the country and he needed a private line. [01:55:15.400 --> 01:55:17.400] At the time they had a lot of party lines. [01:55:17.400 --> 01:55:20.400] They said they had to put in 200 feet underground cable. [01:55:20.400 --> 01:55:21.400] We did that. [01:55:21.400 --> 01:55:25.400] They came out, hooked him up, put him on a six-party line. [01:55:25.400 --> 01:55:29.400] So he called the local office and they were not helpful. [01:55:29.400 --> 01:55:35.400] So I happened to know that the headquarters of the company wasn't in Colleen, [01:55:35.400 --> 01:55:37.400] like they said, but it was actually in Chicago. [01:55:37.400 --> 01:55:40.400] So I called Chicago and asked for the president of the company. [01:55:40.400 --> 01:55:44.400] First I called and asked the secretary who the president was. [01:55:44.400 --> 01:55:46.400] And they said, is there a problem? [01:55:46.400 --> 01:55:48.400] I said, yeah, I don't know who the president is. [01:55:48.400 --> 01:55:50.400] Well, is there something I can help you with? [01:55:50.400 --> 01:55:52.400] You can tell me who the president is. [01:55:52.400 --> 01:55:53.400] And finally they did. [01:55:53.400 --> 01:55:58.400] I called back, hung up, called back and asked for the president by name. [01:55:58.400 --> 01:56:00.400] I get his secretary. [01:56:00.400 --> 01:56:02.400] And I asked for him. [01:56:02.400 --> 01:56:03.400] Well, he's not here. [01:56:03.400 --> 01:56:04.400] Well, who is here? [01:56:04.400 --> 01:56:05.400] Well, Mr. Rice is here. [01:56:05.400 --> 01:56:06.400] Well, who is he? [01:56:06.400 --> 01:56:09.400] Well, he's the chairman of the board. [01:56:09.400 --> 01:56:11.400] Oh, that'll do. [01:56:11.400 --> 01:56:14.400] And I said, hey, Mark, this guy's name is Rice. [01:56:14.400 --> 01:56:15.400] He's in Chicago. [01:56:15.400 --> 01:56:16.400] He can help you. [01:56:16.400 --> 01:56:18.400] And Mark is PO'd. [01:56:18.400 --> 01:56:20.400] I grabbed the phone out of my hand. [01:56:20.400 --> 01:56:23.400] Look, you SOB. [01:56:23.400 --> 01:56:25.400] I paid you people for a private line. [01:56:25.400 --> 01:56:28.400] You put me on a six-party line. [01:56:28.400 --> 01:56:30.400] I'm going to have my private line if I have to come up to Chicago [01:56:30.400 --> 01:56:32.400] and kick your behind again. [01:56:32.400 --> 01:56:33.400] Bam. [01:56:33.400 --> 01:56:35.400] It hangs up. [01:56:35.400 --> 01:56:39.400] I said, Mark, you know who that was? [01:56:39.400 --> 01:56:40.400] Some Rice guy. [01:56:40.400 --> 01:56:41.400] I don't know. [01:56:41.400 --> 01:56:43.400] It was the chairman of the board. [01:56:43.400 --> 01:56:47.400] The next day, I bet they had 200 guys out there. [01:56:47.400 --> 01:56:52.400] Up telephone poles, back holes everywhere. [01:56:52.400 --> 01:56:53.400] It works. [01:56:53.400 --> 01:56:57.400] So is that something that you think I should do or my wife should do? [01:56:57.400 --> 01:56:58.400] Well, no. [01:56:58.400 --> 01:57:01.400] You might call down there and make inquiries. [01:57:01.400 --> 01:57:04.400] Call the president and make inquiries. [01:57:04.400 --> 01:57:07.400] You know, your wife's having difficulty, these people at the bottom, [01:57:07.400 --> 01:57:13.400] and explain what's happening and say, where would I go to get this resolved? [01:57:13.400 --> 01:57:16.400] And it will start down from the top. [01:57:16.400 --> 01:57:19.400] And because it comes from the top, it's most likely to protect your wife, [01:57:19.400 --> 01:57:25.400] but always when you do something like that, it's dangerous. [01:57:25.400 --> 01:57:29.400] But she'll have plausible deniability because her chump husband [01:57:29.400 --> 01:57:32.400] didn't know better than to call the president of the company [01:57:32.400 --> 01:57:36.400] and tell them how bad these guys are screwing up at the bottom. [01:57:36.400 --> 01:57:41.400] Generally, the guys at the top want good information. [01:57:41.400 --> 01:57:44.400] Yeah, that's exactly where I was going with this whole process. [01:57:44.400 --> 01:57:48.400] Yeah, just be polite, be inquisitive. [01:57:48.400 --> 01:57:51.400] You know, she's having these problems but can't get them fixed. [01:57:51.400 --> 01:57:52.400] Who would I talk to? [01:57:52.400 --> 01:57:57.400] I mean, she's afraid to say anything, and they're screwing her around down there, [01:57:57.400 --> 01:58:00.400] so how would I go about fixing this? [01:58:00.400 --> 01:58:05.400] And that'll start the phones ringing and it's likely to get real hot down there. [01:58:05.400 --> 01:58:08.400] Okay, I really appreciate it. [01:58:08.400 --> 01:58:09.400] Okay. [01:58:09.400 --> 01:58:10.400] Thank you for listening. [01:58:10.400 --> 01:58:12.400] Thank you for calling. [01:58:12.400 --> 01:58:16.400] This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Wheel of Life Radio, [01:58:16.400 --> 01:58:22.400] and coming back tomorrow night, we'll do our four-hour info marathon, [01:58:22.400 --> 01:58:24.400] and we'll have a lot more time. [01:58:24.400 --> 01:58:28.400] We'll have the phones open all night. [01:58:28.400 --> 01:58:32.400] So give us a call and make sure you listen, [01:58:32.400 --> 01:58:37.400] and go to our homepage and those of us at Radio Network [01:58:37.400 --> 01:58:42.400] and look at our advertisers there. [01:58:42.400 --> 01:58:44.400] We can sure use the help to keep this on the air. [01:58:44.400 --> 01:58:50.400] Thank you all for listening, and good night. 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