[00:08.480 --> 00:13.840] I'm Bryan Hagen with your Liberty Beat for Thursday, October 16th, 2014. [00:13.840 --> 00:21.640] Gold opened today at $1,230, silver opened at $17.21, and Bitcoin is trading around $395. [00:21.640 --> 00:26.000] Today's precious metals prices are brought to you by Roberts & Roberts Brokerage Incorporated, [00:26.000 --> 00:29.320] specializing in precious metals since 1977. [00:29.320 --> 00:37.000] Now accepting Bitcoin, online at rrbi.co or by phone, 800-874-9760. [00:37.000 --> 00:41.160] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from the Kevin Ludlow for Texas State House of Representatives [00:41.160 --> 00:43.100] District 46 Campaign. [00:43.100 --> 00:48.560] End the war on drugs, demilitarize the police, and kick the TSA out of Texas. [00:48.560 --> 00:53.980] Explore Kevin Ludlow's platform at Ludlow2014.com, political advertisement paid for by the Kevin [00:53.980 --> 00:55.360] Ludlow Campaign. [00:55.360 --> 01:00.720] In the news, the United Nations Special Rapporteur for Counterterrorism and Human Rights has released [01:00.720 --> 01:05.760] a report detailing how mass surveillance programs are a violation of privacy rights protected [01:05.760 --> 01:07.540] by treaties and conventions. [01:07.540 --> 01:11.520] The special rapporteur told the UN General Assembly there's a large difference between [01:11.520 --> 01:15.800] targeted surveillance aimed at specific suspects and mass surveillance of large portions of [01:15.800 --> 01:16.800] the population. [01:16.800 --> 01:21.000] The report called mass surveillance incompatible with existing concepts of privacy and stated [01:21.000 --> 01:25.900] that although there may be legitimate justifications for such measures, none of the countries involved [01:25.900 --> 01:32.940] have shown a detailed and evidence-based public justification for its necessity. [01:32.940 --> 01:37.120] Police briefly scuffled with protesters camped out in Hong Kong streets overnight, but held [01:37.120 --> 01:41.520] back from dismantling barricades erected by the activists pushing for greater democracy [01:41.520 --> 01:43.560] in the Chinese territory. [01:43.560 --> 01:47.320] Earlier this week, police had removed barriers on the edges of the protest zones. [01:47.320 --> 01:51.120] Later, they occupied an underpass the police then cleared out aggressively, using pepper [01:51.120 --> 01:56.200] spray and dragging activists away. [01:56.200 --> 02:00.580] The search for 43 missing college students continues in Mexico as authorities announced [02:00.580 --> 02:04.400] that bodies recently found in a mass grave did not match the students. [02:04.400 --> 02:08.400] On Monday, hundreds of protesters gathered in the capital of Guerrero and clashed with [02:08.400 --> 02:12.220] riot police, broke windows and set flames to a government building. [02:12.220 --> 02:16.560] The protesters are calling for an investigation into police corruption and accusing the officers [02:16.560 --> 02:20.120] of being connected to the same cartel believed to have taken the students. [02:20.120 --> 02:23.360] Support for Liberty Beat comes from sovereignminers.com. [02:23.360 --> 02:26.240] Interested in mining Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies? [02:26.240 --> 02:28.680] Well Sovereign Miners has you covered. [02:28.680 --> 02:31.200] All purchases come with a free script ISIC miner. [02:31.200 --> 02:35.020] Visit sovereignminers.com to buy your miner today. [02:35.020 --> 02:39.360] Support also comes from the Kent Phillips Frost and City Council District 3 campaign. [02:39.360 --> 02:43.560] Kent Phillips, a principled candidate with a commitment to honest, open and transparent [02:43.560 --> 02:44.560] government. [02:44.560 --> 02:47.040] Learn more at votekentphilips.com. [02:47.040 --> 02:49.760] Political advertisement paid for by Kent Phillips. [02:49.760 --> 02:54.040] This is the Liberty Beat for Thursday, October 16th, 2014. [02:54.040 --> 02:58.960] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com and like us on Facebook at facebook.com slash [02:58.960 --> 03:28.480] the liberty beat. [03:28.480 --> 03:42.640] Howdy, howdy, this is Randy Kelton and Debra Stevens from Union Law Radio on this Thursday, [03:42.640 --> 03:48.720] October the 16th, 2014. [03:48.720 --> 03:55.440] And we're going to have the phones to be open all night, if you have a question or a comment [03:55.440 --> 04:03.240] or a topic you'd like to discuss, give us a call, 512-646-1984. [04:03.240 --> 04:06.880] I want to start out talking about the Ebola. [04:06.880 --> 04:14.780] I know everybody's probably sick of hearing about Ebola, but I kind of had a different [04:14.780 --> 04:19.640] take on what I'm seeing. [04:19.640 --> 04:28.960] I know we hear a lot of talk about this Ebola crisis being engineered and the government [04:28.960 --> 04:32.760] designing all of these issues. [04:32.760 --> 04:43.160] I think the hearings on Capitol Hill today with the senators grilling the head of the [04:43.160 --> 04:53.880] CDC is a good indication that it's hard for the government to engineer a really sophisticated [04:53.880 --> 05:00.400] conspiracy because they can't even get the small things right. [05:00.400 --> 05:15.360] I mean, if this was engineered, it was engineered very, very poorly because in looking at this, [05:15.360 --> 05:26.080] if they were using this as an excuse to institute more controls, I don't see how this will lead [05:26.080 --> 05:30.680] the population to accept more controls. [05:30.680 --> 05:37.780] We have someone come to the hospital and tell them that he was from Africa. [05:37.780 --> 05:43.520] And he had all the symptoms of Ebola, but because the symptoms of Ebola were similar [05:43.520 --> 05:51.120] to other symptoms they've seen before, somehow they seemed not to make a connection between [05:51.120 --> 05:57.680] the symptoms in Africa, then send him home until he had to be brought back in an ambulance. [05:57.680 --> 06:05.800] So he had plenty of time to spread the disease that he had to his family and the people around [06:05.800 --> 06:07.400] him. [06:07.400 --> 06:11.840] However, he didn't do that. [06:11.840 --> 06:21.240] Of all of the people that he apparently came into contact with that were quarantined, none [06:21.240 --> 06:24.680] of them came down with Ebola. [06:24.680 --> 06:32.680] The ones that came down with Ebola are the ones that had reason to believe he was infected, [06:32.680 --> 06:43.440] were trained professionals, and knew how to deal with this kind of a potential threat. [06:43.440 --> 06:50.800] And they just bungled it badly. [06:50.800 --> 06:56.360] Now I think it's inappropriate to blame these nurses. [06:56.360 --> 07:04.800] At first they wanted to blame the nurses and it came out that it really wasn't the nurses. [07:04.800 --> 07:10.280] The nurses followed the protocols they were directed to follow. [07:10.280 --> 07:16.280] And one of the most astounding things I heard in the Senate hearings today was the head [07:16.280 --> 07:26.720] of the CDC was asked about their response when a patient came in that was suspected [07:26.720 --> 07:34.460] of Ebola and did they institute protocols immediately. [07:34.460 --> 07:44.560] And he said to the Senate that the patient had not yet been diagnosed with Ebola, that [07:44.560 --> 07:48.800] was two days before he was diagnosed. [07:48.800 --> 07:55.600] And I was pleased to see that at least one other senator was paying attention because [07:55.600 --> 08:06.520] she interrupted and questioned him on that as if to say, are you kidding me? [08:06.520 --> 08:10.160] Did you really say that to us? [08:10.160 --> 08:18.300] And she grilled him about, so are you going to wait until someone is diagnosed even when [08:18.300 --> 08:27.880] all the indicators are pointing in that direction before you implement the CDC's protocols? [08:27.880 --> 08:33.320] And he did a lot of song and dance and salsa down your pants, but he did not effectively [08:33.320 --> 08:37.320] answer the question. [08:37.320 --> 08:46.200] In listening to the senators grill the head of the CDC, he obviously from his answers [08:46.200 --> 08:56.320] did not either take the situation seriously enough or did not have effective procedures [08:56.320 --> 08:58.120] in place. [08:58.120 --> 09:07.300] Now I saw one interview of a woman in West Africa who half of her family came down with [09:07.300 --> 09:16.560] Ebola and she treated them herself and they showed how she protected herself. [09:16.560 --> 09:18.640] She used garbage bags. [09:18.640 --> 09:27.240] She did have a face mask, but the rest of her person she protected with garbage bags. [09:27.240 --> 09:33.880] Her father died of the disease, the rest of her family survived it. [09:33.880 --> 09:39.060] She treated all of them and never got it. [09:39.060 --> 09:49.520] So how can an untrained ordinary person manage to treat four or five people with full-blown [09:49.520 --> 09:52.100] Ebola? [09:52.100 --> 09:58.200] The only thing she had was a face mask other than what was laying around the house. [09:58.200 --> 10:06.680] How can she do this and not contract it herself? [10:06.680 --> 10:14.600] And then the nurses who treated this individual, two of them came down with it. [10:14.600 --> 10:20.120] And then I heard that one of the nurses flew to Cleveland and I was talking to the wife [10:20.120 --> 10:22.600] and I said, are they out of their minds? [10:22.600 --> 10:31.760] And then it turned out that the CDC cleared her to go to Colitis to Cleveland. [10:31.760 --> 10:37.220] What protocols did they have in place? [10:37.220 --> 10:40.600] Am I missing something here? [10:40.600 --> 10:51.780] The Dallas Presbyterian Hospital, the spokesman for the hospital profusely apologized for [10:51.780 --> 10:55.400] their mistakes. [10:55.400 --> 11:06.160] Now guys, you get to profusely apologize for making a misstatement or for dropping a pan [11:06.160 --> 11:10.280] of urine in the floor. [11:10.280 --> 11:19.940] You don't get to profusely apologize for exposing the whole neighborhood to the potential [11:19.940 --> 11:29.280] plague that on the order of the bubonic plague and just say, oh, gee whiz, we're sorry. [11:29.280 --> 11:34.160] We screwed up everything. [11:34.160 --> 11:40.840] I'm surprised we don't have more nurses coming down with Ebola. [11:40.840 --> 11:49.960] So to think that our government could organize something of this nature, I don't think [11:49.960 --> 11:54.200] they could organize something this stupid. [11:54.200 --> 11:56.600] This is what we get from our government. [11:56.600 --> 12:01.440] Just one blunder after another and I'm going to quit griping now. [12:01.440 --> 12:05.600] I'm still in a bad mood after listening to those hearings. [12:05.600 --> 12:13.840] Now I'm truly concerned that we could have issues with infectious diseases because it [12:13.840 --> 12:22.040] is clear that we have nothing in place to effectively shield us from it. [12:22.040 --> 12:24.920] And that's my story, I'm sticking to it. [12:24.920 --> 12:28.040] We do have Jeff from Mississippi. [12:28.040 --> 12:31.960] Hello Jeff, what do you have for us today? [12:31.960 --> 12:37.160] Hi Randy, I've got some very, very interesting stuff. [12:37.160 --> 12:41.760] I think that this will be a show stopper. [12:41.760 --> 12:43.600] Wonderful. [12:43.600 --> 12:54.080] My court date is set for October 27th and the last time we talked I was rushing to get [12:54.080 --> 13:00.520] motions in and I got all of the motions in that we had talked about just in the nick [13:00.520 --> 13:07.040] of time because then I got this letter from an attorney saying, hi, I'm representing you. [13:07.040 --> 13:09.880] And I emailed her back and said, well, that's great. [13:09.880 --> 13:13.440] I just sent all my motions in the mail, so I'm kind of free and clear. [13:13.440 --> 13:18.520] She can't claim that I sent them in while she was my attorney. [13:18.520 --> 13:20.020] So those went. [13:20.020 --> 13:27.320] Now what has happened is the trial date, and I actually have a court order saying that [13:27.320 --> 13:35.120] my trial was on the 27th, I got an email from her and it has threatened, it is threatening [13:35.120 --> 13:43.600] to arrest me if I'm not sitting in the courthouse on October the 20th, seven days before. [13:43.600 --> 13:50.760] And what they do is since these are small Mississippi counties, they don't run the court [13:50.760 --> 13:51.760] full time. [13:51.760 --> 13:56.640] They just open up for two weeks and then they close down, pack up their tents and they move [13:56.640 --> 13:59.640] to the next county for two weeks. [13:59.640 --> 14:02.600] So they're called two week terms. [14:02.600 --> 14:08.000] And when I first got my public defender two years ago, they would force me to go sign [14:08.000 --> 14:13.680] in every day and sit there for eight hours under threat of arrest because I was on bond [14:13.680 --> 14:16.040] and I had public defender. [14:16.040 --> 14:18.480] And now they're back to doing it. [14:18.480 --> 14:25.460] And she has threatened me with arrest in writing, which I think is kind of stupid, but I will [14:25.460 --> 14:26.460] run that past you. [14:26.460 --> 14:34.160] I tried to forward those emails to you, but you've probably been busy today, so you probably [14:34.160 --> 14:37.960] haven't had a chance to see them. [14:37.960 --> 14:41.320] My email is giving me some issues today. [14:41.320 --> 14:44.720] Okay, that's fine. [14:44.720 --> 14:52.220] She has sent me quite an interesting, I emailed her and asked her about, there is a witness [14:52.220 --> 14:54.880] in my case who is missing. [14:54.880 --> 15:02.880] And so I asked her about that, about him, and I got arrested for a rifle on campus, [15:02.880 --> 15:06.120] but the land title says that those apartments are private property. [15:06.120 --> 15:09.160] So I emailed her that. [15:09.160 --> 15:17.520] Her response a month after she was assigned is I cannot send you the discovery. [15:17.520 --> 15:24.580] It is too voluminous to mail and furthermore, I'm not sure that I have all the discovery. [15:24.580 --> 15:29.080] So she's telling me that she doesn't have the discovery. [15:29.080 --> 15:30.300] Where is she? [15:30.300 --> 15:31.880] How far from you? [15:31.880 --> 15:35.880] Oh, she's about 500 miles away. [15:35.880 --> 15:42.360] Oh, ask her to scan it and email it. [15:42.360 --> 15:43.360] Scan what? [15:43.360 --> 15:44.360] The discovery? [15:44.360 --> 15:47.480] Ask her to scan the pertinent discovery. [15:47.480 --> 15:48.480] Okay. [15:48.480 --> 15:50.560] Well, it gets better. [15:50.560 --> 15:59.720] I asked her who has been subpoenaed and she said, no one has been subpoenaed for trial. [15:59.720 --> 16:08.400] And then she responds and says, I repeat, I cannot be ready for this trial until I have [16:08.400 --> 16:09.680] all the discovery. [16:09.680 --> 16:11.240] It will be continued. [16:11.240 --> 16:14.760] If you are happy with that, you should hire a lawyer. [16:14.760 --> 16:19.760] I wrote back and said, you will not continue this. [16:19.760 --> 16:26.000] So she is admitting after a month that she does not have discovery. [16:26.000 --> 16:33.560] So finally, she writes me a very angry letter and says, first, let's get one thing straight. [16:33.560 --> 16:35.480] Hold on. [16:35.480 --> 16:36.640] Let's get one thing straight. [16:36.640 --> 16:39.080] We're about to go to break. [16:39.080 --> 16:40.080] Hang on. [16:40.080 --> 16:45.760] I said, I wanted to get it straight that we're about to go to break. [16:45.760 --> 16:46.760] Okay. [16:46.760 --> 16:47.760] Hang on. [16:47.760 --> 16:48.760] We will be right back. [16:48.760 --> 16:49.760] My name is Randy Kelton. [16:49.760 --> 16:50.760] Deborah Stevens. [16:50.760 --> 16:51.760] We live on radio. [16:51.760 --> 17:00.640] Our call in number 512-646-1984 will be right back. [17:00.640 --> 17:05.240] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [17:05.240 --> 17:06.640] of nutrition. [17:06.640 --> 17:11.360] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [17:11.360 --> 17:17.120] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [17:17.120 --> 17:23.400] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, Young Jevity can [17:23.400 --> 17:25.680] provide the nutrients you need. 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[18:49.200 --> 18:59.440] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com, or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at Yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [18:59.440 --> 19:00.440] now. [19:00.440 --> 19:08.080] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:08.080 --> 19:31.200] Look what we got here, we asked a Christian, I wonder what they're hiding, don't have the [19:31.200 --> 19:39.880] answer, I hope they're not hiding, we asked a Christian, look what we got here, and they [19:39.880 --> 19:45.560] don't have the answer, I'm slow and slip and slide, they might turn goat fish ooze past [19:45.560 --> 19:50.680] sea, Lord, how they want to eat them, take it easy, they might turn way too politically [19:50.680 --> 19:56.680] and then get him mad and angry, but they're not standing up and fighting, fight for their [19:56.680 --> 20:03.000] freedom and be free, and they let them love slavery and get hand out from the government, [20:03.000 --> 20:10.640] that's what we get, we asked a Christian, I wonder what they're hiding, don't have the [20:10.640 --> 20:20.200] answer, I hope they're not hiding, we asked a Christian, look what we got, and they don't [20:20.200 --> 20:26.440] have the answer, I'm slow and slip and slide, they might turn goat fish ooze past sea, Lord, [20:26.440 --> 20:32.900] how they want to eat them, they might turn way too politically and then get him mad and [20:32.900 --> 20:39.680] in the moment, they left, they left, they found their grandfather, they fed their parents, [20:39.680 --> 20:46.240] Gall and seven of his sons, they thought they had the answers toil and they Excited! [20:46.240 --> 20:52.400] judge. It would rather be difficult for me to argue them as I don't have the discovery. [20:52.960 --> 21:00.960] And then later on, she tells me that these motions are frivolous. She actually says your motion is [21:00.960 --> 21:07.280] frivolous. Your motion to dismiss is frivolous in capital letters. [21:07.840 --> 21:11.440] Did you ask her for points and authorities? [21:11.440 --> 21:16.880] No, I've never heard of that word, so I will write that down for that purpose. [21:17.760 --> 21:23.360] Send her back a request for points of authorities showing that your motion is frivolous, [21:23.360 --> 21:28.960] so you will be more adequately prepared to defend against it. [21:30.240 --> 21:38.000] Okay. Now, then the next thing is that you do not have the right to a speeded trial [21:38.000 --> 21:44.480] as you have already had a trial. I won my appeal and it got remanded, so they gave me a new trial. [21:44.480 --> 21:51.280] That means the state does not have to comply with the now defunct 270-day rule, [21:51.280 --> 21:56.640] nine months to convict after your indictment. Is that a lie or is that true? [21:57.200 --> 22:02.000] I think that's a lie because it was remanded, the conviction was overturned, [22:02.000 --> 22:05.040] the conviction never happened. Okay. [22:05.040 --> 22:12.240] At least you need to look at the case law. It may well be that they did get you to trial, [22:12.240 --> 22:15.200] but they didn't get you to trial within the time limit, did they? [22:16.480 --> 22:22.560] Well, this one, this trial here is nine months. If they miss it, then they're going to expire. [22:23.520 --> 22:29.200] And she's telling me that that's a lie, that they can continue this case for as long as they want. [22:30.080 --> 22:33.040] And that's what she's telling me, is that we're going to continue it [22:33.040 --> 22:37.360] and you don't have a trial, you just have a motion hearing and we're going to continue, [22:37.360 --> 22:42.880] whether you like it or not. And I'm going to be arrested if I don't sit in the courtroom [22:42.880 --> 22:54.960] every day for two weeks. So you're having to drive 500 miles to the court and sit in [22:54.960 --> 23:09.040] the courtroom every day for two weeks. Why? They claim that that is the rules. Let me get it for [23:09.040 --> 23:22.640] you. They, yeah, they claim that if I don't go, that the district attorney will, okay, [23:22.640 --> 23:29.360] if you do not appear and sign in on October the 20th, which is a week before my court date, [23:29.360 --> 23:35.920] the DA can and usually just does ask the judge to issue a bench warrant. The warrant is issued [23:35.920 --> 23:42.800] and you will remain in jail without bond until your case is tried. That will not be October the [23:42.800 --> 23:49.280] 27th. Your motions are set for hearing on the 27th. So she's saying, I don't have a trial. [23:49.280 --> 23:54.080] It'll be my motions hearing, but she's telling me that I have to sit in the lobby basically [23:54.080 --> 24:03.680] for a week. So you have to appear both days at nine. Okay. Have you read the rule? [24:05.920 --> 24:12.480] I can't, there is no rule that requires anyone that I can find that requires anyone to have [24:12.480 --> 24:19.760] to sit at the courthouse. What they had claimed in, uh, several years ago when I was in at trial, [24:19.760 --> 24:27.680] cause I brought this up, they had claimed that since I was on bond and I, and had retained a [24:27.680 --> 24:33.040] public defender that therefore you have to come down to the courthouse for the whole two weeks [24:33.040 --> 24:38.800] and sit there in the lobby because supposedly under the guise that the public defender may [24:38.800 --> 24:44.640] want to come out and talk to you. But really they're just, really, they're just torturing [24:44.640 --> 24:53.040] you into pleading guilty. Now the problem is, is when I won my first trial, I don't [24:53.040 --> 25:03.360] remember having to get reinstated with my bond. Oh, that is interesting. So that's another [25:03.360 --> 25:08.880] question. Um, because they brought it up as, uh, they even asked the, uh, the bondsman, [25:09.440 --> 25:13.120] you know, are we going to have to put this guy back on bond? And she said, no, no, we won't, [25:15.680 --> 25:21.760] but I have torn apart the codes and the rules of court. And I don't see anywhere where you [25:21.760 --> 25:28.480] have to sit in the lobby of the courthouse for two weeks, for eight hours a day. If you are [25:28.480 --> 25:36.880] on bond and on a defender file criminally against the judge and a judicial conduct complaint against [25:36.880 --> 25:44.080] the judge. Okay. Well now I've got a judicial conduct complaint form so I can go ahead and [25:44.080 --> 25:53.600] fill that out. Yes. For exerting or purporting to exert an authority he doesn't have and [25:53.600 --> 26:00.080] denying you in your, in your Liberty. Cause she, at this point, you're apparently not on bond. [26:01.840 --> 26:05.600] Yeah. So they're asking you to come to court without a subpoena. [26:07.520 --> 26:18.080] Yes, exactly. Make sure you write a letter, demand that the lawyer ensure that the court [26:18.080 --> 26:25.200] sends you a subpoena ordering you to be in court on each of these days. Oh, that's a good idea. [26:25.200 --> 26:33.440] Okay. Now I did read you my email where my lawyer says you are back on bond, [26:35.600 --> 26:43.520] but I ask your lawyer who is your bondsman. Okay. Cause I haven't had to call anybody. Okay. [26:43.520 --> 26:51.440] Okay. Have you posted a bond? I did. I did four years ago, but when I went to [26:52.240 --> 26:57.600] the first trial, I guess that relinquished it. I really don't know. [26:58.800 --> 27:03.280] Call the original bondsman and ask him if he has a release from your bond. [27:04.480 --> 27:10.080] A release from the bond. Okay. Got it. And he probably has, or he'd have been talking to you. [27:10.080 --> 27:16.560] He's not going to want his assets tied up over this time. Okay. [27:17.520 --> 27:23.200] So if the, you get from the bondsman that he's released you, he's been released, [27:24.400 --> 27:30.400] then you want from your lawyer who has the bond. And if the lawyer can't tell you, [27:31.120 --> 27:36.160] then you might move to disqualify this lawyer for incompetence. [27:36.160 --> 27:41.120] Uh-huh. That'll really hurt her feelings. And then bar grieve the lawyer. [27:42.240 --> 27:49.200] She's a court appointed. She has a problem. Now the next step that they will do after [27:49.200 --> 27:53.280] that is they will say, okay, we'll have to get you another lawyer and we're going to [27:53.280 --> 27:57.280] continue this case. And I'm going to object and then they'll throw me out of the courthouse. [27:58.160 --> 28:01.280] Probably, but you need the objection on the record. [28:01.280 --> 28:07.600] Okay. Got it. They're deliberately appointing incompetent counsel. [28:08.720 --> 28:12.960] Well, this is sabotage. I've never received a very rageful [28:12.960 --> 28:15.600] letter like this, which really could play into my favor. [28:18.880 --> 28:23.280] Why is she so rageful all right off the bat? Did you? [28:24.560 --> 28:27.760] Because everybody knows me. I've been through six public defenders. [28:27.760 --> 28:32.080] Oh, and now she got stuck with you and she's upset about it. [28:33.040 --> 28:39.040] Yes. So she's written me saying, don't ever tell me what to do. I'm not going to do what you say. [28:39.040 --> 28:42.400] I'm not going to file your motions. I'm not going to argue your motions [28:43.600 --> 28:47.440] and so on and so on. And then she sends me a threatening letter telling me to come to [28:47.440 --> 28:51.440] the courthouse. Now, during my second trial, I never had to come to the courthouse, but all [28:51.440 --> 28:56.000] of a sudden this one, I have to come and sit at the courthouse, which sounds like revenge. [28:56.000 --> 29:06.960] I would ask for points and authorities. And if you don't get it by, she only has a few days, [29:09.280 --> 29:12.720] then you might file a, [29:16.480 --> 29:23.440] since she's made the claim, you might file with the court of appeals asking for a writ of [29:23.440 --> 29:35.040] prohibition to prevent them from depriving you your rights without due course. [29:37.600 --> 29:44.960] Hang on. We'll pick this up on the other side. It does sound like revenge. And this is always stuff [29:44.960 --> 29:49.760] we get to use against them. Hang on. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [29:49.760 --> 29:54.640] I call in number 512-646-1984. You'll be right back. [30:19.760 --> 30:24.720] Give up data about yourself. You'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [30:24.720 --> 30:30.960] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. 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In today's America, we live in an us against them [32:07.840 --> 32:11.520] society and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [32:11.520 --> 32:15.680] stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place [32:15.680 --> 32:19.520] to place, the right to act in our own private capacity and most importantly, the right to due [32:19.520 --> 32:24.320] process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and [32:24.320 --> 32:28.560] preserve our rights through due process. Former sheriff's deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with [32:28.560 --> 32:32.080] Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will [32:32.080 --> 32:36.640] help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your [32:36.640 --> 32:41.360] own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleOfLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.360 --> 32:44.800] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.800 --> 32:49.360] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:49.360 --> 32:53.040] documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights with the help [32:53.040 --> 32:57.280] of this material from RuleOfLawRadio.com. Order your copy today and together we can [32:57.280 --> 33:07.200] have a free society we all want and deserve. Live free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:27.280 --> 33:45.200] When you gonna stop abuse, your power When you gonna stop abuse, your power [33:57.280 --> 34:05.440] So please Mr. Macklin, teach officers not to abuse the power. Send a request to the leader, [34:05.440 --> 34:10.320] the captain of all officers. Tell them to uphold the rule of law. [34:10.320 --> 34:15.360] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Jeff in [34:15.360 --> 34:25.680] Mississippi. It does sound like this lawyer got forced into this position and is real unhappy [34:25.680 --> 34:34.000] about it. She apparently knows you've been bar grieving other lawyers. So why is she [34:35.760 --> 34:42.240] pushing you to bar grieve her? Well, if I bar grieve her, she's gonna walk [34:42.240 --> 34:46.160] right into that courtroom and say, oops, conflict of interest. I have to withdraw [34:46.160 --> 34:51.280] and the judge is gonna agree. Continued the case and I'm gonna get mad and they're gonna [34:51.280 --> 34:55.440] throw me out of the courtroom. Try not to get mad. [34:57.440 --> 35:02.320] It happens. We will continue this case for the next 30 years. I see what they're doing. [35:03.360 --> 35:07.680] Then sue the state of Mississippi in the federal court. [35:08.720 --> 35:13.120] Okay. That might be a way to get this taken care of. [35:13.120 --> 35:25.040] I'm sorry. Go ahead. I was going to say, you might could hire an attorney, but I don't see that you [35:25.040 --> 35:29.760] will have any advantage to a hired attorney other than he'll charge you a whole lot of money to screw [35:29.760 --> 35:38.560] you. Yes. One major roadblock that I have always been hitting in the courtroom is the judge never [35:38.560 --> 35:46.400] answers my questions. He always diverts them or, or, you know, says that's untimely or some way he [35:46.400 --> 35:53.200] avoids the question. How do you get him to answer your question? Do it in writing. [35:55.920 --> 36:00.320] Okay. But now I'm fixing to get in the car here in a couple of days and I'll be sitting in that [36:00.320 --> 36:08.880] courthouse. So you need, you need a petition for writ of mandamus or rent prohibition to the court [36:08.880 --> 36:17.120] of appeals, asking them to stay the court from ordering you to be in the courtroom. And you might [36:17.120 --> 36:26.640] make a big deal about the judge intentionally trying to punish you by these requirements. [36:26.640 --> 36:33.680] Now the judge may have nothing to do with it and judicial conduct, the judge for doing it, [36:35.200 --> 36:39.520] okay. Ordering you to be in the courtroom when he has no authority. Now, if the judge didn't [36:40.240 --> 36:45.760] have anything to do with this, he is not going to be a happy camper. [36:46.880 --> 36:52.080] Oh, that's very good. Just be lying to me and threatening me. [36:52.080 --> 36:57.280] Lying to me and threatening me. Yeah. Doing a little, generating a little [36:57.280 --> 37:00.080] righteous indignation. Yeah. [37:00.800 --> 37:04.480] So you've been going after the lawyers. It may be the time to go after the judge [37:05.600 --> 37:12.160] and then in your petition to the court of appeals, asking for the mandamus, because this is, [37:12.960 --> 37:18.800] this is undue oppression and you can find nothing in the code. Make sure [37:18.800 --> 37:26.800] your first thing in the morning, you email your lawyer and demand points in authorities. [37:28.080 --> 37:34.720] You know, tell her that you've researched and you can find no law rule or regulation that requires [37:34.720 --> 37:40.080] you to sit in that courtroom. Please provide points in authorities so that I may prepare [37:40.080 --> 37:49.440] and petition for writ of mandamus to the court of appeals. They're the ones that threw this out in [37:49.440 --> 37:53.520] the first place. Okay. Ask for a subpoena also, [37:53.520 --> 37:57.040] because I have to be subpoenaed to that courthouse every day, right? [37:57.040 --> 37:59.120] Absolutely. Okay. [38:00.160 --> 38:05.600] Probably only one subpoena, but if the subpoena requires you to be there every day, [38:05.600 --> 38:13.680] you can challenge the subpoena. Okay. Got it. Okay. We've already talked [38:13.680 --> 38:16.560] about bar complaints, so it's okay to bar grieve her now? [38:17.360 --> 38:22.960] I would say so. Okay. She's got to be expecting it. [38:24.400 --> 38:28.480] Yeah. Has she said anything to that effect? [38:28.480 --> 38:34.720] No, no, but she probably wants off and that's how she's going to, her exit strategy. [38:37.840 --> 38:42.400] Whether it'll help her or not is probably going to depend on [38:44.560 --> 38:49.120] how you grieve her and your grieving her does not create a conflict of interest. [38:50.880 --> 38:55.760] Oh, okay. I did not know that. Yeah, she is. You're grieving her [38:55.760 --> 39:03.920] for incompetence and for malpractice, for not doing her job. That's not a conflict of interest. [39:05.120 --> 39:08.080] I did not know that because that's what the last attorney said. [39:08.080 --> 39:11.280] There's a conflict of interest. And then of course the judge lets him go. [39:12.320 --> 39:16.880] Well, you should ask, well, what exactly is the nature of the conflict of interest? [39:16.880 --> 39:27.760] What I see is a breach of contract and a breach of your oath of office as a learned counsel. [39:28.720 --> 39:32.880] You're simply not doing your job. That doesn't create a conflict of interest. [39:34.240 --> 39:42.800] Okay. All right. Now when I'm in court and I'm cross examining the witness [39:42.800 --> 39:47.360] and the witness says something wrong, you know, that could literally destroy their case. [39:48.080 --> 39:53.600] Can I then turn to the judge and say, I object, he just admitted to having a bloody knife. [39:56.240 --> 40:05.600] No, don't object. Okay. Goes to the rule, never interfere with someone who is screwing up. [40:05.600 --> 40:11.440] If they make a, if you ask a question and they answer it in a way that will hurt them, [40:12.320 --> 40:20.640] don't interfere with that. Especially don't object to it. Oh, okay. You want that absolutely [40:20.640 --> 40:29.440] on the record. Now that's in the record. And if they do something like that, then ask the court [40:29.440 --> 40:36.000] to take judicial notice of what he just said. And can I say that while I'm standing there? [40:36.000 --> 40:47.760] Absolutely. I'm going to suggest that you don't. Okay. You have to shift gears here. There's a, [40:50.560 --> 40:56.640] these patterns of civil behavior that we practice out here in the real world. [40:56.640 --> 41:05.280] If you do something wrong, it's kind of a cultural requirement for me, [41:06.320 --> 41:12.240] rather than take advantage of you're doing something wrong. Culturally, it's proper for me to [41:12.800 --> 41:19.040] to notice you that you did something wrong. Well, this is not civil society you're dealing with [41:19.040 --> 41:29.680] here. These are the courts. And bushwhack is the name of the game. If he says something wrong, [41:29.680 --> 41:35.680] that's going to hurt him. You don't bring that up until you're closing statements. [41:37.680 --> 41:44.880] Or, or unless he says something later that contradicts the statement. [41:44.880 --> 41:49.520] Now you can take him apart on it, but don't give him opportunity to recant. [41:51.840 --> 41:58.480] If you get, get on the stand and lie like a dog, but then recant your lying, [41:59.360 --> 42:09.920] then you can't be charged with, if you recant before it becomes obvious that the falsity of [42:09.920 --> 42:16.240] the statement will become apparent, then you can't be charged with perjury. [42:18.000 --> 42:22.640] So you don't want to, if he said something really, really bad, really, really dumb, [42:22.640 --> 42:27.520] it's going to hurt him. Don't give him opportunity to recant. [42:30.080 --> 42:37.520] So, you know, I was in court on a disorderly conduct charge. I was in court on a [42:37.520 --> 42:46.000] disorderly conduct charge. When I asked a bailiff to tell the prosecuting attorney [42:46.000 --> 42:51.280] that I wanted to speak with her, and he asked me why, I said, I have some criminal complaints [42:51.280 --> 42:58.640] to file against some public officials. And he ordered me from the, from the building, [42:58.640 --> 43:04.320] or he would arrest me. And I told him, well, this is not the high school parking lot. [43:04.320 --> 43:08.240] If you want to impress somebody, go down there. But if you're going to arrest me, [43:08.880 --> 43:16.480] don't huff and puff, just get it done. And he did. And then I stood, went to trial for it. [43:16.480 --> 43:22.000] And he got on the stand and testified that he was a constable for the county of Denton and [43:22.000 --> 43:32.960] on and on and on. And I beat him in the trial because I walked him through the statutory [43:32.960 --> 43:41.520] definition of official, I'm sorry, not official misconduct, disturbing the peace, breach of the [43:41.520 --> 43:48.320] peace. Did I fire a gun across a highway? Did I show my anus through genitals in public? There's [43:48.320 --> 43:52.640] a whole list of that stuff. And he said no to every one of them. I'll finish this when I come [43:52.640 --> 43:56.400] back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Real Raw Radio, and we'll be right back. [43:56.400 --> 44:01.200] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from nature's pure organics.com. And I would like to invite [44:01.200 --> 44:06.880] you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe street, sweet D here in Austin, Texas behind Brave New [44:06.880 --> 44:10.880] Books and Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own [44:10.880 --> 44:16.320] eyes. Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:16.320 --> 44:20.560] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian emu oil, [44:20.560 --> 44:28.800] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold call 512-264-4043 or find us [44:28.800 --> 44:37.040] online at nature's pure organics.com. That's 512-264-4043 nature's pure organics.com. Don't [44:37.040 --> 44:52.960] forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products nature's pure organics.com. [45:00.960 --> 45:03.440] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.440 --> 45:09.600] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [45:09.600 --> 45:17.440] four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours step by step. If you have a lawyer, know what your [45:17.440 --> 45:23.520] lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands [45:23.520 --> 45:30.320] have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed [45:30.320 --> 45:36.960] attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn [45:36.960 --> 45:41.840] what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our [45:41.840 --> 45:49.520] American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.520 --> 45:56.320] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.320 --> 46:09.840] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EASY. [46:09.840 --> 46:27.760] Okay. We are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [46:30.240 --> 46:38.480] When we were going out, I was talking about something. Oh, no. Duh, duh, duh, duh. [46:38.480 --> 46:41.840] I hate it when that happens. Oh, the- [46:41.840 --> 46:43.440] Talking about when you had been arrested. [46:43.440 --> 46:51.040] Yeah, right. Denton County. He came into the court and he said he was a constable for Denton [46:51.040 --> 47:00.720] County, but he had been fired. And I said nothing about it. And when the court was over, the judge, [47:00.720 --> 47:08.640] for whom he was a constable, hated this guy. Apparently, the guy had ran against him for JP [47:08.640 --> 47:15.040] and was so malicious that the judge sued him and the political party talked him into dropping the [47:15.040 --> 47:22.320] suit. So he hates this guy. And he stopped me coming out. He had recused himself and I had a [47:22.320 --> 47:29.520] different judge. When I came out, he said, you know, he lied about being a constable. I said, [47:29.520 --> 47:37.840] yeah, I know that. He said, well, why didn't you bring that up? I said, well, at the time [47:37.840 --> 47:44.240] that he took the action, he was a constable. The fact that he's not now really wasn't relevant [47:44.240 --> 47:50.480] to the case. And besides, if I brought it up, he would have opportunity to recant. [47:52.400 --> 47:57.360] Judge stood there a minute. He kind of stepped back and looked at me a minute. He said, [47:57.360 --> 48:05.600] why, Mr. Kelton, you can be a real scoundrel. I said, well, thank you, your honor. I take that [48:05.600 --> 48:15.600] as high praise. But that's the point. Have you listed out all of the elements of the crime? [48:15.600 --> 48:21.680] Yes. Do you have a jury charge for this crime? [48:23.360 --> 48:24.720] I don't know what that means. [48:24.720 --> 48:36.960] Okay. There are pattern jury charges for every crime. Look up pattern jury charges. Every case, [48:37.840 --> 48:45.920] every defense and every prosecution should start with the pattern jury charge. Because the pattern [48:45.920 --> 48:54.400] jury charge tells the jury, this is what must be proven for you to find him guilty. And they'll [48:54.400 --> 49:05.120] walk down all the things that must be proven. Nothing else matters. So do a search for pattern [49:05.120 --> 49:10.960] jury charges in Mississippi. You'll find them. If not, go to a legal library, they'll be able [49:10.960 --> 49:20.160] to find them for you. And look at that. That's the only thing you care about. At the end of the day, [49:20.160 --> 49:27.760] nothing else matters. What's in there must be proven. And then you back up to who's doing the [49:27.760 --> 49:36.640] proving and are they authoritative? Are they believable? But make sure you work from the end, [49:37.680 --> 49:48.080] back to the front, and then you'll be ready for them. Never give fair warning. This is not out on [49:48.080 --> 49:56.560] the street, civil behavior. This is court. If they screw up, don't tell them what they're supposed to [49:56.560 --> 50:03.120] do. Don't tell them what they should have done. Just ask them to admit one thing or another, [50:03.120 --> 50:10.480] you know, when I go into these courthouses and these guys do stuff they're not supposed to do, [50:10.480 --> 50:17.680] I don't say, well, you got these rights and you're denying me in my right, blah, blah. I don't do [50:17.680 --> 50:28.800] that stuff. What I do, you know, we have this need to kind of let it out. I dial 911 and I rail [50:28.800 --> 50:35.760] against the 911 operator. He did this and he did that. I'm not telling him, I'm telling him a [50:35.760 --> 50:45.600] third party. And when you do that to them, they realize you set him up. So if these guys are going [50:45.600 --> 50:56.160] to lie, you might, do you have any friends who can help you do a mock trial? No. That is so powerful. [50:56.160 --> 51:03.280] All my friends think I'm crazy. Pardon me? All my friends think I'm nuts. So I pretty much [51:03.280 --> 51:12.240] chased all my friends away. Okay, that happens. I know the feeling. When you beat them or when [51:12.240 --> 51:19.040] one of your friends winds up with a problem themselves, all of a sudden you're not going [51:19.040 --> 51:27.600] to be near as nuts as you used to be. Your friends are afraid. They see you doing what [51:27.600 --> 51:37.040] they don't have the gumption to do and you're going to a place that terrifies them. So don't [51:37.040 --> 51:47.840] really blame them. You've kind of stepped outside their box. I have the same issue that all my [51:47.840 --> 51:55.840] friends thought I was crazy and I scared them away. I stopped letting that bother me. And I [51:55.840 --> 52:06.000] gained new friends that aren't afraid of me, that aren't afraid of what I'm doing. I actually have [52:06.000 --> 52:14.560] people doing what I'm doing. And a good portion of the friends that walked away, when they got [52:14.560 --> 52:21.280] in trouble, they came running back. So I wouldn't put too much in that. But it would be nice if you [52:21.280 --> 52:27.920] could find some guys to help you do a mock trial. Do you have a Young Lawyers Association? [52:29.360 --> 52:32.160] Probably. I've never heard of that. So I'll look that up. [52:32.720 --> 52:39.040] Or is there a law school around? In Little Rock, which is quite a distance, [52:39.040 --> 52:45.280] that's about 120 miles. I could Facebook them or something. [52:45.280 --> 52:52.080] Yeah, you might do that and see if they would be willing to hold a mock trial. [52:53.280 --> 52:57.920] We won't have much time before the 27th, but somehow I suspect there's not going to be a trial [52:57.920 --> 53:03.760] on the 27th, no matter what you do. Well, obviously not because you have motions. [53:05.680 --> 53:09.280] And your lawyers already told you they don't plan on holding a. [53:09.280 --> 53:15.600] Well, now, that's what she said. I actually don't have an order giving me a motions hearing. [53:17.760 --> 53:20.880] Because she said that she would set up the hearing herself. [53:23.200 --> 53:30.320] Tell her to get it done. And you go in and argue the motion. [53:31.760 --> 53:36.880] And you tell her to sit there and keep your mouth shut. If I need you, I will summon you. [53:36.880 --> 53:42.480] And when I do need you, I'm going to expect you to give me adequate counsel. [53:44.240 --> 53:49.760] And this may be a good opportunity. I'm hearing something that's concerning me. [53:51.920 --> 53:56.480] You want this thing over with. Well, I want to get into trial. [53:56.480 --> 53:59.680] I'm ready to start boxing Mike Tyson. I'm feisty. [53:59.680 --> 54:04.240] OK, OK. That's your weakness. And they will use that against you. [54:04.240 --> 54:07.840] OK. I'm going to suggest [54:07.840 --> 54:11.520] you start becoming a sharpshooter. All right. [54:12.480 --> 54:17.120] These guys want to keep you around for a long time. Let's make it interesting for them. [54:18.560 --> 54:26.160] File a lawsuit against the state of Mississippi in the federal court. It's a lot easier than you [54:26.160 --> 54:36.480] think. OK. You start accusing them of RICO, of an organized criminal enterprise designed to force [54:36.480 --> 54:45.280] people accused of crime into taking a deal. This is something everybody who deals with this will [54:45.280 --> 54:57.040] know is true. And there's absolutely no doubt that it's true and they all know that it's true. [54:57.040 --> 55:05.280] They are not going to want you taking them on. I would not name the suit RICO. RICO invokes [55:06.160 --> 55:13.120] a lot of issues and a lot of briefing and problems that you won't have in a normal civil suit. [55:13.120 --> 55:19.040] Mm hmm. So you might try suing your current lawyer [55:19.840 --> 55:26.000] and the previous six lawyers for malpractice. OK, good. [55:27.440 --> 55:30.560] Name them all for malpractice. They are going to have a fit. [55:31.760 --> 55:34.880] But sue them in the federal court because you're not in Mississippi. [55:34.880 --> 55:42.880] No. So sue them in your local federal court for the due process. Now, [55:43.600 --> 55:51.120] they may play a lot of games in their own backyard, but when you drag them out to the [55:51.120 --> 55:59.600] federal court, that's going to change everything. So these guys want to play hardball? Raise the [55:59.600 --> 56:05.440] stakes a little bit. OK. When you sue these lawyers, that's going to hurt them. [56:06.320 --> 56:11.840] Now, bar grievance is bad, but it's not near what a malpractice suit is, [56:12.800 --> 56:17.680] especially if you sue them for deliberate acts of fraud and incompetence. [56:17.680 --> 56:27.440] Mm hmm. Acting in concert and collusion, one with the other, in an ongoing criminal conspiracy to deprive [56:29.520 --> 56:33.920] anyone accused of crime of their right to due process in a fair trial. [56:34.960 --> 56:43.280] They all know this is true. Most of them hate it. They get out of law school and they really want [56:43.280 --> 56:49.440] to be lawyers and they find out that they're not going to get to be lawyers. What they're going to [56:49.440 --> 56:54.960] do is kiss arrogant judges behinds because if they don't, the arrogant judge will put them out of [56:54.960 --> 57:02.880] business. Well, they have a problem. They're dealing with a – I don't use the term sovereign. [57:02.880 --> 57:09.840] They're dealing with the master. They're all public servants. Even lawyers are considered [57:09.840 --> 57:19.440] public servants because they're quasi-public officials. You are the master. Think of it that [57:19.440 --> 57:27.760] way. It's an important juxtaposition. Let's say you're the CEO of a corporation [57:29.120 --> 57:33.520] and you walk through your warehouse and you see the mailroom guy [57:33.520 --> 57:40.240] doing something that's just blatantly improper, asleep in the corner when he's supposed to be [57:40.240 --> 57:46.960] working. What do you do? Do you go wake up the mailroom guy, chew him out? No, you're the CEO. [57:46.960 --> 57:53.600] You don't do that kind of stuff. You go to your executive vice president of whatever section he [57:53.600 --> 58:01.520] works for and say, what in the heck is going on with your people? You're going to be the CEO of [58:01.520 --> 58:08.000] with your people. Then the executive vice president goes to the next guy under him and [58:08.000 --> 58:18.320] chews him out. Then you chewed him out. This goes downhill. This really works. When you drag these [58:18.320 --> 58:27.360] guys out of the state into the Fed, they are not going to be happy campers. When you do it from [58:27.360 --> 58:35.120] the perspective of the sovereign, they're going to feel like you set them up because you never [58:35.120 --> 58:39.600] argued with them. You never gave them fair warning. You never told them what you were going to do. [58:39.600 --> 58:42.960] First time they found out is when they got the subpoena. Hang on, [58:42.960 --> 58:47.280] Randy Kelton. Deborah Stevens, ruler of our radio. We'll be right back. [58:50.080 --> 58:55.600] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. Yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.600 --> 59:01.680] because they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.680 --> 59:05.840] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:06.720 --> 59:13.200] Enter the recovery version. 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I'm Bryan Hagen with your Liberty Beat for Thursday, [01:00:11.360 --> 01:00:18.320] October 16th, 2014. Gold opened today at $1,230, silver opened at $17.21, [01:00:18.320 --> 01:00:23.680] and Bitcoin is trading around $395. Today's precious metals prices are brought to you by [01:00:23.680 --> 01:00:28.640] Roberts & Roberts Brokerage Incorporated, specializing in precious metals since 1977. [01:00:29.200 --> 01:00:36.880] Now accepting Bitcoin online are rbi.co or by phone 800-874-9760. [01:00:36.880 --> 01:00:41.040] Support for Liberty Beat comes from the Kevin Ludlow for Texas State House of Representatives [01:00:41.040 --> 01:00:47.280] District 46 campaign. End the war on drugs, demilitarize the police, and kick the TSA out [01:00:47.280 --> 01:00:53.280] of taxes. Explore Kevin Ludlow's platform at Ludlow2014.com. Political advertisement paid [01:00:53.280 --> 01:00:58.160] for by the Kevin Ludlow campaign. In the news, the United Nations Special Rapporteur for [01:00:58.160 --> 01:01:03.440] Counterterrorism and Human Rights has released a report detailing how mass surveillance programs [01:01:03.440 --> 01:01:08.480] are a violation of privacy rights protected by treaties and conventions. The Special Rapporteur [01:01:08.480 --> 01:01:12.720] told the UN General Assembly there's a large difference between targeted surveillance aimed [01:01:12.720 --> 01:01:17.040] at specific suspects and mass surveillance of large portions of the population. The report [01:01:17.040 --> 01:01:21.200] called mass surveillance incompatible with existing concepts of privacy and stated that [01:01:21.200 --> 01:01:25.760] although there may be legitimate justifications for such measures, none of the countries involved [01:01:25.760 --> 01:01:30.000] have shown a detailed and evidence-based public justification for its necessity. [01:01:32.480 --> 01:01:36.560] Police briefly scuffled with protesters camped out in Hong Kong streets overnight, [01:01:36.560 --> 01:01:41.440] but held back from dismantling barricades erected by the activists pushing for greater democracy [01:01:41.440 --> 01:01:46.080] in the Chinese territory. Earlier this week, police had removed barriers on the edges of [01:01:46.080 --> 01:01:50.480] the protest zones. Later, they occupied an underpass the police then cleared out aggressively [01:01:50.480 --> 01:01:58.800] using pepper spray and dragging activists away. The search for 43 missing college students continues [01:01:58.800 --> 01:02:03.440] in Mexico as authorities announced that bodies recently found in a mass grave did not match the [01:02:03.440 --> 01:02:08.160] students. On Monday, hundreds of protesters gathered in the capital of Guerrero and clashed [01:02:08.160 --> 01:02:13.040] with riot police, broke windows, and set flames to a government building. The protesters are calling [01:02:13.040 --> 01:02:17.200] for an investigation into police corruption and accusing the officers of being connected [01:02:17.200 --> 01:02:21.360] to the same cartel believed to have taken the students. Support for Liberty Beat comes from [01:02:21.360 --> 01:02:27.120] sovereignminers.com. Interested in mining bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies? Well Sovereign Miners [01:02:27.120 --> 01:02:32.720] has you covered. All purchases come with a free script ISIC miner. Visit sovereignminers.com to [01:02:32.720 --> 01:02:38.160] buy your miner today. Support also comes from the Kent Phillips-Frost and City Council District 3 [01:02:38.160 --> 01:02:43.440] campaign. Kent Phillips, a principled candidate with a commitment to honest, open, and transparent [01:02:43.440 --> 01:02:48.880] government. Learn more at votekentphilips.com. Political advertisement paid for by Kent Phillips. [01:02:49.440 --> 01:02:54.800] This is the Liberty Beat for Thursday, October 16th, 2014. Check out the website [01:02:54.800 --> 01:03:09.040] at thelibertybeat.com and like us on Facebook at facebook.com slash the Liberty Beat. [01:03:24.800 --> 01:03:30.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, [01:03:32.000 --> 01:03:37.280] and we're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. And if I sounded like I was [01:03:38.720 --> 01:03:48.320] stumbling over my words, it's because I'm trying to find a way to craft an understanding. [01:03:48.320 --> 01:03:58.560] In doing what I do, I've been dealing with these officials for quite a while. And I know a lot of [01:03:58.560 --> 01:04:05.520] things that don't work. Two broken collar bones, three dislocated ribs, and a broken elbow, and a [01:04:05.520 --> 01:04:16.240] tooth knocked out. Those things I know not to do anymore. And in doing this stuff, I've worked out [01:04:16.240 --> 01:04:24.240] a way to think about what I'm doing. The most important thing you can do is hold your mind in [01:04:24.240 --> 01:04:31.360] the right place. If you get your mind in the right place, your behavior will work out correctly, [01:04:32.160 --> 01:04:40.240] or work out in a way that will be more to your benefit. These officials are very accustomed to [01:04:40.240 --> 01:04:49.360] confrontation. That's the first thing you want to avoid. And it really took me a long time to get [01:04:49.360 --> 01:05:03.680] over this internal automatic reaction to being mistreated by my public officials. I want to say, [01:05:03.680 --> 01:05:13.600] I got these rights, react and respond with righteous indignation. In these cases, [01:05:13.600 --> 01:05:20.960] righteous indignation is a bad strategy. Righteous indignation has never ever got me [01:05:20.960 --> 01:05:27.760] further toward my intended outcomes. They make me feel better for a second. I feel like I let them [01:05:27.760 --> 01:05:37.760] know how the cow ate the cabbage. But in the end, it is not useful. What I have found is useful [01:05:37.760 --> 01:05:48.480] is bushwhack. And the only way you can get to bushwhack is not to give them a clue. And in [01:05:48.480 --> 01:05:55.920] working toward that, I had worked toward the idea that I want to give them the impression by [01:05:55.920 --> 01:06:04.560] my behavior that I'm setting them up. I don't tell them anything. One thing I found out, the [01:06:04.560 --> 01:06:14.560] less you say, the more they presume. And they will always presume something worse than what you [01:06:14.560 --> 01:06:23.600] would have said. I went to the most corrupt county at the time in North Texas, Williamson County, [01:06:23.600 --> 01:06:29.040] and I went in and asked to see some records. A record was missing, so I asked them where this [01:06:29.040 --> 01:06:33.360] record was and gave them a bit of a hard time about that. I then went and sat in the courtroom [01:06:33.360 --> 01:06:40.080] and watched the court proceedings. I didn't say anything to anybody. And then a prosecutor came [01:06:40.080 --> 01:06:46.640] over and asked me, he said, sir, sir, and I was sitting here writing. I'm writing stuff down, [01:06:46.640 --> 01:06:53.520] watching what they're doing. So they think I'm auditing them. So he came over and said, sir, [01:06:53.520 --> 01:06:59.280] sir. And I looked up at him and said, yes. And I'm always in a suit. And yes, he said, sir, [01:06:59.280 --> 01:07:04.640] do you have a case here today? Oh, no, no, no. And I looked back down and go back to writing, [01:07:04.640 --> 01:07:11.360] just like he's not there. And he stands there a minute. And then he says, sir, sir. And I look up [01:07:11.360 --> 01:07:18.880] again. Yes. Do you have a civil case in this court? Oh, no, no, nothing like that. You know, [01:07:18.880 --> 01:07:31.600] obviously he's saying, why are you in my courtroom? And he's expecting me to respond. And I feel it. [01:07:31.600 --> 01:07:38.320] And this is important, especially with something that's this important to you. Pay attention [01:07:38.320 --> 01:07:48.240] to the difference between what you think and what you feel. What you feel is generally [01:07:48.800 --> 01:07:56.560] a response that has been elicited by someone else. Even beings, so far as I understand, [01:07:56.560 --> 01:08:02.240] are the only creatures on the planet that have the capacity to pause and reflect. [01:08:02.240 --> 01:08:09.440] Stop, objectively analyze, determine on a course of action and initiate. We can do that. [01:08:10.480 --> 01:08:16.480] But for the most part, we don't. For the most part, we do whatever we feel like doing. [01:08:16.480 --> 01:08:23.120] Someone says something or does something, and this response just comes out. Stop, [01:08:23.120 --> 01:08:35.200] stop, stop, stop. If someone says something or does something and you feel like responding to [01:08:35.200 --> 01:08:42.000] them, rather than stop and think about what your best response would be, I suggest that you [01:08:43.200 --> 01:08:52.000] set that in your mind's eye to send up a red flag. Someone has just reached in and touched [01:08:52.000 --> 01:09:00.640] one of your response buttons, and they pretty well know what they can expect as a response. [01:09:01.600 --> 01:09:07.360] And if you respond the way you feel like responding, you'll be manipulated [01:09:08.080 --> 01:09:15.520] into their response system. So it took a long time for me to find a way [01:09:15.520 --> 01:09:22.960] to hold my mind that protected me from that. And I can't use sovereign because that gets [01:09:22.960 --> 01:09:36.240] all kinds of prejudicial garbage. So master, master works. I told a lawyer in Johnson County, [01:09:36.240 --> 01:09:42.720] a little smart-mouthed little guy, a prosecutor. I said, Mr. Brown, I think you misunderstand [01:09:42.720 --> 01:09:49.760] something. Well, what's that, Mr. Kelton? Well, you are a public servant. Yes, Mr. Kelton, [01:09:49.760 --> 01:09:57.920] I'm a public servant. You are the servant, and I tap my chest, I am the master. And you are not to [01:09:57.920 --> 01:10:05.520] forget it. And using the term master in front of him, he looked like I had hit him with a baseball [01:10:05.520 --> 01:10:15.920] bat. He had just no idea what to say. In psychology, we call that pattern interruption. [01:10:17.120 --> 01:10:26.080] In this case, it was really obvious. But when you're able to interrupt your automatic responses [01:10:27.520 --> 01:10:30.320] and give them something they don't expect, [01:10:30.320 --> 01:10:36.880] that is one of the most powerful things you can do to someone. This little lawyer came over and [01:10:36.880 --> 01:10:43.040] asked me a question. I just told him, no, no, no, nothing like that. I looked away from him. [01:10:43.040 --> 01:10:52.320] He did not expect that. He's accustomed being an ADA that when he asks questions, [01:10:52.320 --> 01:11:00.320] people respond to him. I just ignore him. Well, who ignores him? He asks another question. I give [01:11:00.320 --> 01:11:06.560] him a, oh, no, no, no, and look away again. Third time, he asks, sir, sir, and I look up at him, [01:11:06.560 --> 01:11:14.480] hold up both hands with my palms out, no more questions. And he was just stunned. [01:11:14.480 --> 01:11:23.920] He had no behavior that he could call up in that situation. I can tell you from experience, [01:11:24.720 --> 01:11:31.440] there's nothing in human response more devastating than to have someone say something [01:11:31.440 --> 01:11:40.800] or do something, and we have no idea what to do. I can pretty well guarantee you that little guy [01:11:40.800 --> 01:11:45.040] will remember that experience in his conscious awareness to the day he dies. [01:11:47.600 --> 01:11:56.000] It makes us feel totally helpless. All of our warning buzzers goes off. Something's wrong here. [01:11:56.560 --> 01:12:00.560] And the more subtly you can do that, the more powerful it is. [01:12:01.920 --> 01:12:07.040] I got this little invisible hook. Now it's invisible, so you can't see it. [01:12:07.040 --> 01:12:12.880] But it's just a little one, because if it was a big one, and I catch you trying to manipulate [01:12:12.880 --> 01:12:18.080] me and I reach out and trip you and knock you flat on your face, you might not know what I did, [01:12:18.080 --> 01:12:24.800] but you're going to know I pulled something on you. But if it's just a little one, like this guy, [01:12:25.760 --> 01:12:32.960] I didn't respond negatively to him. He expected me to either act like I had asked him to, [01:12:32.960 --> 01:12:40.560] either act like he had asked me why I was there and tell him what he wanted to know, [01:12:42.080 --> 01:12:44.720] or he expected me to respond negatively. [01:12:47.200 --> 01:12:51.840] I gave him something he didn't expect, and he had no way to deal with it. [01:12:53.200 --> 01:12:56.720] You know, tell the story on here about telling the head of the [01:12:56.720 --> 01:13:03.440] criminal intake section of Denton County, tell you what, Mr. Jones, if you'll just bend over, [01:13:03.440 --> 01:13:08.720] I'll pull that wild hair out of your behind for you. And we'd go back treating one another like [01:13:08.720 --> 01:13:17.040] mature and responsible adults. He was just frozen in his tracks. He was being very aggressive with [01:13:17.040 --> 01:13:26.960] me. He was stuck. Nothing he could do. Now, that was obvious. But when I go in and I asked [01:13:28.160 --> 01:13:36.480] to see a particular document, and they say, well, you have to fill out a request. Now I got my own. [01:13:37.920 --> 01:13:42.320] Well, if you don't fill out ours, you won't get the documents. I say, well, [01:13:42.320 --> 01:13:48.720] we'll see how that works out. I'll give you mine. You just do whatever you want to. They always get [01:13:48.720 --> 01:13:54.480] me the documents. Now, I could argue with them and read them the riot act. That won't get me [01:13:54.480 --> 01:14:02.320] the documents. That's exactly what happened in Judge Wright's court. And then after I got the [01:14:02.320 --> 01:14:09.040] documents, because they didn't know what to do with me, they brought me the documents and Judge [01:14:09.040 --> 01:14:16.400] Wright came up and said, sir, well, she knew my name. I told him, Mr. Kelton, you can't see those. [01:14:16.400 --> 01:14:23.360] You're a security risk. Oh, I'm a security risk? Yes, Mr. Kelton, you are. Now, clearly, [01:14:23.360 --> 01:14:30.800] she's trying to get me to debate that with her. I took the record I had open and closed it, [01:14:30.800 --> 01:14:36.240] pushed it across the table. And she just stood there. She didn't know what to say. [01:14:36.240 --> 01:14:41.840] And by this time, the bailiff had walked up and I turned to the bailiff and said, Mr. Bailiff, [01:14:41.840 --> 01:14:48.720] did you see that? Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. Arrest that woman. I'm not talking to her. [01:14:49.360 --> 01:14:55.680] I'm talking to the bailiff. Well, I can't arrest the judge. This is her court. Oh, [01:14:55.680 --> 01:15:02.080] oh, you're mistaken, Mr. Bailiff. This is not her court. This is my court. And I very generously [01:15:02.080 --> 01:15:08.160] allow her to administer it according to my law. But she breached one of them. Now I want you to [01:15:08.160 --> 01:15:13.920] arrest her. What would I arrest her for? Class A misdemeanor, official misconduct, criminal violation [01:15:13.920 --> 01:15:20.960] 3903 penal code in that she failed to perform it. She exerted or purported to exert an authority she [01:15:20.960 --> 01:15:25.920] did not expressly have or failed to perform a duty she was required to perform it in the process, [01:15:25.920 --> 01:15:29.680] denied meaningful free access to and drawing a right. And she did it in your sight and in [01:15:29.680 --> 01:15:36.720] your presence. So under 1401 code of criminal procedure, you have a duty to arrest her. [01:15:36.720 --> 01:15:43.280] So arrest her. Well, I'm not going to arrest the judge. Ah, come on, Mr. Bailiff, take your [01:15:43.280 --> 01:15:53.440] chicken suit off. That turned out to be one of the most powerful things I ever did was ask the [01:15:53.440 --> 01:16:04.880] guy to take his chicken suit off. Now I didn't call him a chicken directly. He's not sure if I'm [01:16:04.880 --> 01:16:14.240] joking or not. And every time I do that, they're just stuck. Except for one guy in Garland, [01:16:14.240 --> 01:16:20.880] he's walking away. 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[01:19:24.800 --> 01:19:27.840] Well [01:19:31.520 --> 01:19:35.520] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:36.400 --> 01:19:44.400] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan You put the fear in my pockets [01:19:44.400 --> 01:19:55.600] Took the money from my ass Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:55.600 --> 01:20:04.800] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old sucka punch [01:20:04.800 --> 01:20:12.000] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old sucka punch [01:20:12.000 --> 01:20:15.440] Ain't gonna drop me with that same old sucka punch [01:20:16.480 --> 01:20:20.480] I get it now but then I must have been [01:20:20.480 --> 01:20:24.320] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevens, Lulu La Radio. [01:20:25.840 --> 01:20:29.200] And I don't want to get into too many of my stories, but [01:20:29.200 --> 01:20:38.240] when you shift that gear, and the best way I could define this so that we can [01:20:38.240 --> 01:20:46.240] create a familiar image in our mind is that of realizing that we are the masters and they are the servants. [01:20:46.240 --> 01:20:53.200] And as the master, you may do anything that you want to do unless the law specifically forbids you to do it. [01:20:53.200 --> 01:21:01.360] And as the public servant, they may only do what they are specifically authorized to do by statute. [01:21:03.200 --> 01:21:09.840] Once you get that, everything changes and when you, in the case with this judge, [01:21:11.120 --> 01:21:18.000] I walked, the bailiff wouldn't arrest the judge, so I, he said he would take me down to his boss, [01:21:18.000 --> 01:21:23.920] the head constable. So he went to the head constable and the constable said, what can I do for you? [01:21:23.920 --> 01:21:30.000] He told the constable, the bailiff introduced me. What can I do for you? I need you to arrest the bailiff. [01:21:31.200 --> 01:21:34.000] Well, why would I arrest the bailiff? Because he wouldn't arrest the judge. [01:21:36.000 --> 01:21:42.160] And the bailiff, the constable wouldn't arrest his bailiff. Okay, so you're certified police. [01:21:42.160 --> 01:21:49.760] He said, we have a, we don't do that. I said, well, in this case, you do that. We have a policy. [01:21:49.760 --> 01:21:55.440] I said, well, are you a certified police officer? He said, yes, I am. I said, well, you have a policy. [01:21:55.440 --> 01:22:00.560] I have a constitution. I have a statute. And I have case law that says you can wipe your [01:22:00.560 --> 01:22:06.640] behind with your policy. Now do your job and arrest him. No, I'm not going to arrest my bailiff. [01:22:06.640 --> 01:22:12.000] I said, well, so you're going to refuse to perform your duty as prescribed by article 2.11 code of [01:22:12.000 --> 01:22:16.880] good procedure. Well, I'm not going to arrest the bailiff. Okay. I go across the street to the [01:22:16.880 --> 01:22:23.280] sheriff's department. And while I'm waiting for a sheriff's deputy, the constable comes over and [01:22:23.280 --> 01:22:28.800] he said, well, Mr. Kelton, if you want, I can take this issue to the district attorney. Oh no, no, [01:22:28.800 --> 01:22:37.440] no, don't, don't do that. I will get it to the district attorney, but I don't have everybody [01:22:37.440 --> 01:22:44.400] stuck to my tar baby yet. And he just stood there and looked at me. I didn't have to explain it. [01:22:45.280 --> 01:22:50.400] He knew exactly what I was telling him. He just stood there and stared at me. [01:22:52.080 --> 01:22:58.080] So you want everybody stuck to your tar baby? I've just got one more. And then this captain [01:22:58.080 --> 01:23:03.440] came in and he was in plain clothes because he was going home. And he said, well, what can I do [01:23:03.440 --> 01:23:07.840] for you? I need you to arrest the constable over here. The constable just shook his head. [01:23:09.760 --> 01:23:13.920] I'm not going to arrest the constable. Besides I'm off duty. So wait a minute, [01:23:13.920 --> 01:23:19.040] you certified police officer? Yes, I am. Well, you're never off duty. You know that. [01:23:19.040 --> 01:23:25.200] Arrest him. I'm not going to arrest the constable. Come on, captain, take your chicken suit off me. [01:23:25.200 --> 01:23:33.040] I'm not taking my chicken suit off. Come on, be a man. Pony up. Arrest him. Why? I can't [01:23:33.040 --> 01:23:38.160] arrest the constable. I sure can. Nothing to it. Just throw a cuss on him, drag him off to jail. [01:23:38.160 --> 01:23:44.720] Heck, you don't have far to go. You're already in jailhouse. You refused to arrest the constable. [01:23:44.720 --> 01:23:49.440] I turned to the constable and said, now I can take this to the district attorney. [01:23:49.440 --> 01:23:56.160] So the constable is thinking, this guy set us up. Yeah, as a matter of fact, I did. [01:23:57.920 --> 01:24:04.720] And, Jeff, best thing you can do now is start setting them up. [01:24:06.720 --> 01:24:12.800] And if you filed a malpractice against your lawyer and the other six lawyers, [01:24:12.800 --> 01:24:19.600] if you filed against one, it might not carry so much weight. But if you filed against all [01:24:19.600 --> 01:24:27.040] six of them and accused them of acting in furtherance of an ongoing criminal enterprise [01:24:27.040 --> 01:24:34.720] for the purpose of forcing anyone accused of crime into taking a deal, and you can establish [01:24:34.720 --> 01:24:41.520] that by the average conviction rate, which is going to be in the 99.5 to 6 percent range. [01:24:41.520 --> 01:24:50.960] That is a RICO suit. You just haven't called it RICO. [01:24:52.240 --> 01:24:59.760] All right. And when they call it RICO, then you name the judge and the prosecutor. [01:25:02.160 --> 01:25:04.480] And they're going to feel like you set them up for that. [01:25:04.480 --> 01:25:14.800] I just recently filed a criminal trespass complaint against a guy and the [01:25:16.000 --> 01:25:22.640] police officer did not give it to the justice of the peace. And I talked to him about it. [01:25:22.640 --> 01:25:26.000] The chief of police said, well, he knew that the prosecuting attorney wouldn't accept it, [01:25:26.000 --> 01:25:30.720] so he wasn't going to waste the taxpayer's money. I said, well, that's interesting. [01:25:30.720 --> 01:25:37.200] I personally don't care if you waste the taxpayer's money. What I care about is the [01:25:37.200 --> 01:25:42.320] Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which requires you to give that to the magistrate. [01:25:43.520 --> 01:25:48.080] He said, well, the officer told me that he talked to the district, the county attorney, [01:25:48.080 --> 01:25:51.840] and the county attorney told him not to file it. So I went to see the county attorney. [01:25:53.520 --> 01:25:58.240] They'd already called him, so he knew I was coming. When he came out, he said, Mr. Kelton, [01:25:58.240 --> 01:26:04.720] do you think I'm out of my mind? Do you really think I would waive my sovereign immunity? Because [01:26:04.720 --> 01:26:11.920] he knew exactly where I was going. I said, I didn't think so. But what I was told, so I had [01:26:11.920 --> 01:26:22.240] to check. I went back to the police department, got the chief of police, and I said, well, chief, [01:26:22.240 --> 01:26:29.920] the county attorney just threw your behind under the bus, and I'm here to run you over with it. [01:26:31.920 --> 01:26:39.600] He just shook his head and said, come on in, Mr. Kelton. And the officer was there who had taken [01:26:39.600 --> 01:26:49.840] the complaint. And I told him, this is unconscionable. They have used you to keep [01:26:49.840 --> 01:26:59.120] them from having to do their jobs. They told him not to give this to the justice of the peace. [01:26:59.120 --> 01:27:05.440] And now when I call him on it, they threw him under the bus. So if this guy that committed [01:27:05.440 --> 01:27:11.200] criminal trespass comes back on my property and does something wrong or hurts somebody, [01:27:11.200 --> 01:27:21.120] I'm going to come back after him for depraved heart assault. They put this in his lap, [01:27:21.120 --> 01:27:28.800] and he has no business being in this position. He just takes the complaint. He don't have any [01:27:28.800 --> 01:27:33.200] authority to make a judicial determination. He used to give it to the magistrate, and anybody [01:27:33.200 --> 01:27:43.280] who tells him otherwise is telling him wrongly. So they felt like I set them up for that. [01:27:45.200 --> 01:27:49.280] And they were right, I did. Walked them right down the code. [01:27:51.280 --> 01:27:57.520] They do not want me coming to their office. They don't want to talk to me. The chief of police is [01:27:57.520 --> 01:28:04.000] really good. But I am very dangerous to them because they feel like [01:28:04.800 --> 01:28:12.880] everything that Kelton is doing is a setup. You want them to think that about you, Jeff. [01:28:15.200 --> 01:28:25.520] Read your code. Look at the Mississippi bar standards. Walk them right down the code. [01:28:25.520 --> 01:28:32.000] You go through the bar standards, it reads like a comic book. You will be chuckling and laughing. [01:28:32.000 --> 01:28:40.960] You will not believe how many things you can grieve a lawyer for. And while the standards say [01:28:42.000 --> 01:28:53.680] a bar grievance does not give grounds for malpractice suit, no, it doesn't. But the behavior [01:28:53.680 --> 01:29:01.200] that gave you cause to file a bar grievance, that does give you grounds for a malpractice suit. [01:29:03.200 --> 01:29:09.120] They're trying to defend, they're trying to keep you from doing the malpractice suit, [01:29:09.120 --> 01:29:16.160] and they give you the pretense of a remedy, and it's only pretense. And I'm sure you already [01:29:16.160 --> 01:29:24.400] know that. So, now you filed a malpractice suit. Now these guys will really go ballistic. [01:29:24.400 --> 01:29:29.360] Well, Randy, one last thing, because they've done this before, so they're going to do it again. [01:29:29.360 --> 01:29:32.960] And that is that when I'm at the courthouse waiting on my trial, [01:29:33.760 --> 01:29:37.360] I'm going to go to the bathroom or out to lunch, and then they're going to claim that I skipped [01:29:37.360 --> 01:29:46.160] court and had me arrested. That's easy to fix. Call the bailiff, tell him where you're going. [01:29:47.360 --> 01:29:50.160] Hang on, let's pick this up on the other side. Randy Kelton, [01:29:50.160 --> 01:30:07.920] Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and I didn't fall off the cliff this time. We'll be right back. [01:30:21.040 --> 01:30:25.920] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.920 --> 01:30:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:30:32.000 --> 01:30:37.280] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:37.280 --> 01:30:43.200] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:30:44.720 --> 01:30:49.280] The internet can be a scary place, but concerns about predators haven't stopped [01:30:49.280 --> 01:30:55.280] parents from posting their kids' pictures online. A recent study by online security company AVG [01:30:55.280 --> 01:31:01.680] found that a shocking 92% of U.S. babies have an online presence by age two, a third of American [01:31:01.680 --> 01:31:07.600] mothers report posting snapshots of their newborns online, and over 5% of U.S. babies have email [01:31:07.600 --> 01:31:13.120] addresses or online profiles years before they can even type. Most of these parents merely want [01:31:13.120 --> 01:31:17.920] to share their happiness with friends and family, but please give some thought to how strangers [01:31:17.920 --> 01:31:23.920] might abuse the information. Play it safe and keep photos private. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More [01:31:23.920 --> 01:31:33.840] news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that [01:31:33.840 --> 01:31:38.320] fell on the afternoon of September 11th. The government says that fire brought it down. 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You are listening to [01:33:02.720 --> 01:33:06.800] the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:32.720 --> 01:33:38.400] your daddy, chipping at your grandpa and the grand me, chipping at me, chipping at your baby, [01:33:38.400 --> 01:33:43.200] chipping at your family, your whole family, chipping at your dad and the cat around me, [01:33:43.200 --> 01:33:48.000] chipping at the beef and you still got E.T., chipping at the fish, them all in the sea, [01:33:48.000 --> 01:33:52.800] chipping at the shark and the reel around me. You must see mankind gone chip crazy. [01:33:52.800 --> 01:33:58.480] They the kind of thing man they want to be. Social security, they better be. Number with them give [01:33:58.480 --> 01:34:02.800] me the repeat of your sea. I'm chipping in the morning, chipping in the evening, chipping [01:34:02.800 --> 01:34:09.280] all the dinner time. Experiment and mankind. But man, you know, say them right. Well, [01:34:10.400 --> 01:34:16.560] OK, we are back. I'm Kelton. Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Jeff in the city. [01:34:18.240 --> 01:34:24.960] And we're talking about how to set them up, how to hold your mind so that you set them up. [01:34:24.960 --> 01:34:31.200] About them waiting for you to leave the building, [01:34:33.200 --> 01:34:36.800] I would suggest that if you're going to leave the building, you take a note, [01:34:37.760 --> 01:34:43.360] go into the courtroom and ask the bailiff to give this note to the [01:34:43.360 --> 01:34:53.600] what are they, the judge's clerk or administrator, whatever she is. They tend to always be in the [01:34:53.600 --> 01:35:00.240] courtroom and just hand it to the bailiff and say, you know, this is a notice I'm going to lunch, [01:35:00.240 --> 01:35:08.880] so if you need me, you know where to find me. Put it in writing. If you're going to go to the [01:35:08.880 --> 01:35:13.440] men's room, go into the bailiff and hand him a note, I'm going to the men's room. [01:35:15.360 --> 01:35:16.720] That'll take care of that. [01:35:20.160 --> 01:35:24.960] Oh, they tase me and then hold up a bag of marijuana and claim that I snuck that [01:35:24.960 --> 01:35:30.080] into the courthouse. That is OK. That's a risk. [01:35:30.080 --> 01:35:41.040] That is always a risk. However, if you, OK, now the way that I protect myself from that [01:35:42.880 --> 01:35:51.040] is I go after the highest level official that I can and file charges against him. [01:35:52.320 --> 01:35:57.360] And they always give you reason. You're in a district court, right? [01:35:57.360 --> 01:36:02.320] Yes. OK, then [01:36:04.240 --> 01:36:08.960] file a complaint against the district judge for denying you in due process [01:36:09.760 --> 01:36:13.600] for ordering you to come and sit in the courtroom courthouse for a week. [01:36:15.040 --> 01:36:19.360] OK, that's absolutely unreasonable. Call it official misconduct [01:36:20.000 --> 01:36:23.440] and go to the district attorney and file a criminal complaint against him. [01:36:23.440 --> 01:36:27.520] And he's going to, of course, the attorney that's bringing charges against me. [01:36:28.080 --> 01:36:29.680] Yep. OK. [01:36:30.320 --> 01:36:36.400] Name one. And he's going to refuse to take it. Well, you know. It's your call. Life's filled [01:36:36.400 --> 01:36:44.560] with little decisions. And then when he refuses to take it, go to the attorney general for the state [01:36:44.560 --> 01:36:50.400] of Mississippi and file criminal charges against both of them. OK. And the attorney general is [01:36:50.400 --> 01:36:58.400] going to refuse to act. Yeah, he's going to call you back. Yeah, then give him three or four days [01:36:58.400 --> 01:37:05.200] called down and ask him, have you taken my complaint to some magistrate? And when you [01:37:05.200 --> 01:37:10.400] don't get an answer, assume he hasn't, go to the chief justice of the Supreme for the state of [01:37:10.400 --> 01:37:16.320] Mississippi and file a complaint with him in his capacity as a magistrate against the attorney [01:37:16.320 --> 01:37:27.280] general. Get this up out of their hands. And when they refuse to act, now you have grounds to go to [01:37:27.280 --> 01:37:38.000] the Fed. And when you take the chief justice of the Supreme to the Fed for protecting the attorney [01:37:38.000 --> 01:37:44.240] general, for protecting the district attorney, for protecting the district judge, everybody's going [01:37:44.240 --> 01:37:50.080] to get unhappy. Now, I know if there's any lawyers listening out there, they're going to say, well, [01:37:51.120 --> 01:37:54.400] even if I'll say it won't do any good, you'll lose. Who cares? [01:37:56.720 --> 01:38:00.800] Lawyers have to think in terms of being able to win their suit. You don't. [01:38:02.480 --> 01:38:10.800] You get to think in terms of politics. I once got all of the highest judges in Texas put in front of [01:38:10.800 --> 01:38:19.280] a grand jury. And I thought it was because of all the pressure I put on them and my eloquent oratory. [01:38:20.160 --> 01:38:27.440] It had nothing to do with any of that. What it had to do with was a 25-year district attorney [01:38:27.440 --> 01:38:35.680] who wasn't running for office again, who was a Democrat, and 15 judges on the Court of Criminal [01:38:35.680 --> 01:38:44.000] Appeals, who were all Republicans. That's what it had to do with. And I gave the district attorney [01:38:44.000 --> 01:38:53.120] cannon fodder to use against his political enemies. That's where the power is. [01:38:55.120 --> 01:39:02.000] The attorney general, chief justice of the Supreme, they all got either direct political [01:39:02.000 --> 01:39:10.720] enemies or people simply vying for their position. The higher up you go, the more politically [01:39:10.720 --> 01:39:18.800] sensitive the officials become. And when you start hammering on the chief justice and the [01:39:19.360 --> 01:39:28.480] attorney general, you are the master. They are the servants. The chief justice is a servant, [01:39:28.480 --> 01:39:34.640] just like the rest of them. When I had problems years ago with DPS, [01:39:35.520 --> 01:39:41.760] I called the colonel. I don't want to talk to anybody else. I got the second number two man [01:39:41.760 --> 01:39:48.800] in the DPS. I get him on the phone. He's a real gruff sounding character. I forgot his name. And [01:39:48.800 --> 01:39:56.640] I said, you're the second highest man in the DPS? Yes, may I help you? No, you cannot help me. You [01:39:56.640 --> 01:40:01.680] get me the colonel. I don't want to talk to any subordinates. And you could hear him breathing in [01:40:01.680 --> 01:40:09.440] the phone. He was furious, but he was a subordinate and he got me the colonel. And I chewed out the [01:40:09.440 --> 01:40:14.800] colonel like he was an errant stepchild. While I'm chewing him out, he's trying to figure out [01:40:14.800 --> 01:40:22.400] what I'm calling about. And he got it real fast that I had a problem with a sergeant. [01:40:22.400 --> 01:40:30.080] And I didn't take that problem to the lieutenant. Well, he asked me if I went to his superior. Not [01:40:30.080 --> 01:40:40.560] my place. I am the superior. That's your place. Well, he did not like being chewed out by some [01:40:41.760 --> 01:40:50.160] arrogant citizen, but there was nothing he could do about that. And I could call back and chew him [01:40:50.160 --> 01:41:00.000] out anytime I wanted to. And he knew that. This works. You will not win your case simply because [01:41:00.000 --> 01:41:07.440] you have the law and the facts on your side. Politics. It's all politics. You've already got [01:41:07.440 --> 01:41:15.440] a lot of politics. You've got all the court appointed counsel terrified of your case. And it [01:41:15.440 --> 01:41:22.560] seems apparent that this lawyer wants off your case and is trying to get you to give her reason [01:41:22.560 --> 01:41:34.240] to get off your case. Yes. So I suggest a strategy. One thing is, do not let your need to have this [01:41:34.240 --> 01:41:43.680] before the court immediately cause you to wind up losing everything. Okay. Take them to task. [01:41:43.680 --> 01:41:52.000] There's another way to go about this. You start going after them. Changes the whole perspective. [01:41:53.680 --> 01:42:01.680] You file a malpractice suit against the court-appointed hall. We might try [01:42:01.680 --> 01:42:08.240] filing against all of the previous court-appointed counsels and not this one. [01:42:08.240 --> 01:42:19.360] Gives her no standing to ask to be removed from the case. [01:42:21.040 --> 01:42:28.320] And if she does ask to be removed from the case, you object strenuously. And if the court removes [01:42:28.320 --> 01:42:32.560] her from the case, then sue the court for interfering with the private contract. [01:42:32.560 --> 01:42:37.360] Okay, good. That he's not going to expect. [01:42:39.920 --> 01:42:46.000] When I told my, they appointed an attorney for me here in Austin. And when I told him how things [01:42:46.000 --> 01:42:50.160] were going to go, he started telling me how things were going to go. And I said, no, no, no, no, [01:42:50.160 --> 01:42:53.680] that's not how they're going to go. Well, how are they going to go, Mr. Kelton? You're going to go [01:42:53.680 --> 01:42:58.640] to the judge and ask the judge to be removed from this case. And I'm going to go to the judge and [01:42:58.640 --> 01:43:03.920] tell him, don't you dare remove him from this case. He's my counsel of choice. And the judge [01:43:03.920 --> 01:43:08.400] will remove you. And he said, yes, Mr. Kelton, he would. Then I get to sue the judge for interfering [01:43:08.400 --> 01:43:13.600] with the private contract. Well, Mr. Kelton, I don't have a contract with you. I have a contract [01:43:13.600 --> 01:43:18.880] with the state. Yes, you do. But I'm the intended third party beneficiary. And I have standing to [01:43:18.880 --> 01:43:27.840] enforce the contract. He sat back and looked at me with his look on his face and said, [01:43:27.840 --> 01:43:37.280] you're going to beat this board. That got him busy. Hang on, Granny Kelton, [01:43:37.280 --> 01:43:43.440] Devin Stevens, Read About Radio, about to go to break. And we'll finish this up on the other side. [01:43:43.440 --> 01:43:48.800] This is our last segment. So if you don't have any college tonight, [01:43:48.800 --> 01:44:00.000] maybe I've been talking too much. Hang on. We'll be right back. 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[01:45:19.200 --> 01:45:24.800] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step [01:45:24.800 --> 01:45:31.040] by step course, and now you can too. Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:31.040 --> 01:45:37.360] with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what [01:45:37.360 --> 01:45:43.440] everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.440 --> 01:45:51.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, [01:45:51.120 --> 01:46:08.800] and much more. Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EASY. [01:46:21.120 --> 01:46:30.160] Some things in this world I will never understand. Some things I realize fully. [01:46:31.600 --> 01:46:38.240] Somebody's on a police, a policeman. Somebody's on a bully, bully. [01:46:40.080 --> 01:46:47.440] There's always a room at the top of the hill. I hear through the grave mine and it's lonely [01:46:47.440 --> 01:46:54.880] love still. They're wishing it was more than opposition to fill. They know that if they don't [01:46:54.880 --> 01:47:00.240] do it, somebody will come back. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, [01:47:00.240 --> 01:47:03.280] Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. [01:47:04.800 --> 01:47:12.000] Jeff, with all the stuff that I've talked about, ignore it all. Look at your case [01:47:12.000 --> 01:47:19.040] and decide based on what you know about the court there and your interactions, [01:47:20.080 --> 01:47:25.200] how you could best generate some political pressure in your favor. [01:47:25.200 --> 01:47:33.360] Well, this is what's going to happen is they'll tackle me in the parking lot and claim that I have [01:47:33.360 --> 01:47:39.760] marijuana or a bloody knife and then I will be in an orange jumpsuit standing in front of the [01:47:39.760 --> 01:47:47.120] judge. And I want to know what to say. Nothing. The judge is not the place, [01:47:47.120 --> 01:47:53.120] if he's the one that ordered it, not the place to be. You absolutely need someone with you. [01:47:55.120 --> 01:48:03.920] You need a witness. Get the witness a press pass to hang around their neck and get them to go [01:48:03.920 --> 01:48:15.440] around asking questions. Call me Monday or send me an email. I'll send you my phone number. [01:48:15.440 --> 01:48:21.520] Call me Monday and I'll call down there and start asking some questions you're not going to like. [01:48:22.400 --> 01:48:25.760] Okay. I've done this before. It works really well. [01:48:26.960 --> 01:48:32.400] Okay. Because yeah, they'll claim that I jumped skip court. And even if they don't have a lot of [01:48:32.400 --> 01:48:36.160] and even if they don't have a leg to stand on, they'll still arrest me and I'll be in [01:48:36.160 --> 01:48:41.920] jail and I'll sit there. And I've done that before. Yeah, I know. So let me call down there. [01:48:41.920 --> 01:48:46.880] I might be able to interrupt them. So when I go in front of the judge, [01:48:46.880 --> 01:48:50.400] it doesn't matter what I say. He's just going to smile and put me back in jail. [01:48:50.400 --> 01:48:56.720] So do I, is there anything I need to say? No. Okay. [01:48:56.720 --> 01:49:05.520] You have to take your issues to another court. They'll tell you anything you say can and will [01:49:05.520 --> 01:49:09.760] be used against you. And in this case, you can be certain that it will be used against you. [01:49:09.760 --> 01:49:16.160] So get home Monday and I'll call down there. I have done this before. I had someone in jail [01:49:16.160 --> 01:49:24.160] in Michigan that they were withholding his heart medicine. He had made accusations against a [01:49:24.160 --> 01:49:31.840] district attorney in North Carolina. And I called down there and got a hold of the head of the jail [01:49:32.800 --> 01:49:38.480] and told them that I do a radio show out of Austin. And I understand that you have a guy [01:49:38.480 --> 01:49:44.000] down there. And I told him who it was and that since he made accusations against the [01:49:44.000 --> 01:49:50.720] district attorney in North Carolina for running drugs, that you had him in the jail down there [01:49:50.720 --> 01:49:56.960] and you were trying to murder him by withholding his heart medicine. And he said, well, I don't [01:49:56.960 --> 01:50:02.480] think that's the case. Oh, who cares? You guys are going to make me famous. So I got a camera crew [01:50:02.480 --> 01:50:08.400] coming up to Minnesota. I'd like to swing by Michigan and interview the sheriff. You think [01:50:08.400 --> 01:50:13.920] he'll give me a five minute, we're making some YouTube interviews and I'd like to do about a [01:50:13.920 --> 01:50:21.200] five minute on camera interview. Well, I'll talk to the sheriff. Oh yeah, tell him I'll be there [01:50:21.200 --> 01:50:29.760] day after tomorrow. The next morning I get a call. What did you do? This guy's out of their jail on [01:50:29.760 --> 01:50:40.240] his way back to North Carolina. So they do not like sunshine. Is it the same number that I'm [01:50:40.240 --> 01:50:51.520] calling? No, send me an email. My number is 512-430-4140. That's my Skype number and you [01:50:51.520 --> 01:50:59.840] go to Skype and roll over to me. That's 512-430-4140. Okay, I'll be in Mississippi, [01:50:59.840 --> 01:51:04.800] so I won't have access to a landline, but I probably will have my lamp laptop. [01:51:04.800 --> 01:51:09.600] Okay, that's my Skype number. I'm not sure how well it'll work. [01:51:12.320 --> 01:51:20.320] Oh, okay. Well, call me tomorrow. I'll get the information and we'll wind them up. [01:51:21.680 --> 01:51:26.880] Okay. Well, just to let the nation know, if you find out I got tackled in the bathroom and they [01:51:26.880 --> 01:51:32.560] found marijuana on me, it's not true. Okay, I'll call down there and see if I can interrupt some [01:51:32.560 --> 01:51:39.840] of that. All right. Thank you, Randy. All righty. Okay. We have one more caller, [01:51:39.840 --> 01:51:45.680] Alex in California. Hello, Alex. What do you have for us? Yeah. Hello, Randy. You hear me? [01:51:46.240 --> 01:51:51.760] Yes. Okay. Did you get my email? I talked to you last Friday in the last segment of the show [01:51:52.720 --> 01:51:57.680] and I sent you an email on a Sunday, I think I got. What was the nature of the email? [01:51:57.680 --> 01:52:03.120] It's in jail. It's been in jail for almost two years and they had. Oh, yeah. Okay. The X seal. [01:52:04.640 --> 01:52:11.680] I got, I saw an email. I wasn't able to get to it. Here, you give me the crux of what was in there. [01:52:13.520 --> 01:52:15.840] I'm having some email issues the last couple of days. [01:52:17.360 --> 01:52:24.000] I just hear your brief history of what happened, how he got arrested and has been in jail and [01:52:24.000 --> 01:52:29.680] they've given him flight evaluations and he's fine. They're just, it's like, there's a, [01:52:31.360 --> 01:52:36.880] the judge is just preventing him from, preventing him from going to trial and he doesn't want to [01:52:37.440 --> 01:52:43.360] flee. No, he just, he is absolutely innocent. And, and he's just refuses to take a plea. [01:52:43.920 --> 01:52:46.800] Has he filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction? [01:52:46.800 --> 01:52:54.400] I don't know. I don't think so. Okay. This last week on Wednesday, he was supposed to go to court. [01:52:54.400 --> 01:53:00.240] I confirmed that with his attorney, his attorney's office. They said he had a court date and he called [01:53:00.240 --> 01:53:06.080] me from jail and he wasn't in court, but he had a court date and they're not letting him go to his [01:53:06.080 --> 01:53:12.560] own hearings. And he's not, he hasn't been, he hasn't been, well, I don't know if he's got a [01:53:12.560 --> 01:53:18.880] incompetency evaluation or not. His attorney says he does. He says he doesn't. It's, I kind of know [01:53:18.880 --> 01:53:23.520] that, but I don't think he's really had a bad psych evaluation. I'm a legitimate one. Anyway. [01:53:24.400 --> 01:53:29.680] Okay. What was he originally charged with? Assault with a deadly weapon. Probably trying to [01:53:29.680 --> 01:53:37.360] hit somebody with his car. I think what they're trying to say. And how long has he been in jail? [01:53:37.360 --> 01:53:46.480] Since May of 2013. And he hasn't went to court yet. Oh, he's been to court. He's been to court. [01:53:46.480 --> 01:53:50.960] He tried to go pro se for a while. And I guess that's when he pissed the judge off. [01:53:52.720 --> 01:53:58.080] And, uh, and now they, they, somebody, a friend, uh, hired an attorney for him, [01:53:58.880 --> 01:54:01.920] a private attorney. And I talked to his private attorney and he, uh, [01:54:01.920 --> 01:54:07.040] he's well, I smoked up. Yeah. And my way as well. I think, um, [01:54:09.520 --> 01:54:13.360] excuse me, I'm walking my dogs right now. So I'm not, I gotta get distracted a little bit. Anyway. [01:54:15.360 --> 01:54:18.960] I don't know what else I can tell you. Right off the top of my head. I wasn't too much fun. [01:54:18.960 --> 01:54:25.760] Okay. The problem is one is he's in California and while all the courts are corrupt, [01:54:25.760 --> 01:54:29.680] they're even more corrupt. I mean, they're, they're, they're, they're, they're, they're, [01:54:29.680 --> 01:54:33.280] they're, while all the courts are corrupt, they're even more corrupt in California. [01:54:34.880 --> 01:54:42.800] But I know in Texas, there is a limit on how long you can hold someone. And for a felony, [01:54:42.800 --> 01:54:51.280] it's 180 days. If you someone's incarcerated and they're held without, they're unable to make bail, [01:54:52.240 --> 01:54:55.840] you can only hold them 180 days. You have to release them on PR bond. [01:54:55.840 --> 01:55:00.320] There is most likely a similar statute in California. [01:55:02.480 --> 01:55:06.560] Yeah. Yeah. You can't wait, wait time. [01:55:10.080 --> 01:55:13.520] Have you read, have you looked through the penal code in California? [01:55:14.960 --> 01:55:19.600] I have, but not in, not for this particular case, but I can do that. [01:55:19.600 --> 01:55:24.320] Yeah. Look, look at his case. Look what he's charged with. Look, [01:55:24.320 --> 01:55:32.560] look at the elements and, you know, ask, you know, I talked earlier about the, [01:55:34.560 --> 01:55:39.360] what do you call it? The jury charges, the pattern jury charges. [01:55:41.520 --> 01:55:46.000] Just do a, look what he's charged with. I guess it's assault with a motor vehicle. [01:55:46.000 --> 01:55:53.360] Look at the pattern jury charges for that crime. And that'll tell you every, all the elements they [01:55:53.360 --> 01:55:59.200] have to prove. And then look at the facts of the case and see what elements are there. [01:56:00.560 --> 01:56:06.480] That's the first place to start. And then you need to look at California's criminal procedure [01:56:06.480 --> 01:56:14.960] code, especially how long can they hold someone in jail without bringing him to trial when he [01:56:14.960 --> 01:56:21.760] can't make bail. You just can't hold someone for the rest of their life. Every state's going to [01:56:21.760 --> 01:56:27.120] have a statute similar to the one in Texas that limits the amount of time they can hold him. [01:56:29.840 --> 01:56:35.280] That's probably the first one we can use to move for a dismissal. [01:56:35.280 --> 01:56:43.920] But, but without having read the facts and the details, I really don't know how to address this. [01:56:43.920 --> 01:56:48.560] I'll go through that email and maybe I can call down there too. It's been a long time since I've [01:56:48.560 --> 01:56:56.960] called and jerked the jails around. He's in, he was in, in, in, in, in, in, in, in, in, in, [01:56:56.960 --> 01:57:07.440] or You know, he's in the right now. He's in the North County correctional facility center, like [01:57:07.440 --> 01:57:13.840] state park where the size of his head is at. But I gave you his, your, his case number and how to [01:57:13.840 --> 01:57:18.400] look it up on the. The Sheriff's place. Yes. I remember seeing that. I haven't looked it up [01:57:18.400 --> 01:57:24.240] yet. I've been re-° buried something but I'm kind of cataclysmic and yeah, I don't look proud [01:57:24.240 --> 01:57:29.520] looked it up yet. I've been really buried in something, but I'm kind of catching up. [01:57:29.520 --> 01:57:34.680] Send me an email tomorrow and remind me. I'll have a look at this case and maybe I can call [01:57:34.680 --> 01:57:40.080] down there and ask some pointed questions. That has a way of getting them off the dime [01:57:40.080 --> 01:57:41.080] sometimes. [01:57:41.080 --> 01:57:42.080] Great. Okay. [01:57:42.080 --> 01:57:43.080] Okay. [01:57:43.080 --> 01:57:47.460] Send me an email. [01:57:47.460 --> 01:57:54.360] Thank you. And I especially thank you for stepping up for a friend. You never know who [01:57:54.360 --> 01:57:59.840] your friends really are until you really need one. And that's when they stand out from the [01:57:59.840 --> 01:58:06.160] crowd. And generally there aren't very many that stand out. So I do appreciate you. Send [01:58:06.160 --> 01:58:11.200] me an email in the morning. I will get on it and we'll look up a strategy. See if we [01:58:11.200 --> 01:58:13.320] can generate some politics. [01:58:13.320 --> 01:58:20.280] Okay. This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens and Rule of Law Radio. Thank you all for listening. [01:58:20.280 --> 01:58:27.480] We'll be back tomorrow night on our four hour info marathon. So if you have a question or [01:58:27.480 --> 01:58:33.080] comment, give us a call. We don't have the phone lines open all night. So we have a lot [01:58:33.080 --> 01:58:40.320] more time tomorrow so we can spend more time on your issues. So, and we'll start out with [01:58:40.320 --> 01:58:45.400] foreclosures. If you have a foreclosure question, give us a call. Thank you all for listening [01:58:45.400 --> 01:58:50.600] and good night. 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