[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The following use flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [00:05.840 --> 00:08.360] bulletins for the commodities market. [00:08.360 --> 00:21.440] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.440 --> 00:27.560] Markets for Monday, the 9th of May, 2016, are currently treading with gold at $1,265.40 [00:27.560 --> 00:36.160] an ounce, silver $16.97 an ounce, Texas crude $44.66 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently [00:36.160 --> 00:45.200] sitting at about $464 U.S. currency. [00:45.200 --> 00:51.480] Today in history, the year 1754, the first newspaper cartoon appears in America. [00:51.480 --> 00:56.360] The join or die chopped up snake created by Benjamin Franklin encouraging the 13 colonies [00:56.360 --> 00:58.000] to unite against Great Britain. [00:58.000 --> 01:06.680] The join or die snake was first published in the Pennsylvania Gazette, today in history. [01:06.680 --> 01:11.360] In recent use, Uber and Lyft ride sharing services shut down their Austin, Texas operations [01:11.360 --> 01:15.800] this morning after Proposition 1, which would have barred the city from demanding fingerprint-based [01:15.800 --> 01:20.680] background checks as well as banning pickups and traffic lanes, failed in the voting booth. [01:20.680 --> 01:24.840] It appears opponents of Proposition 1 are in agreement that companies which do operate [01:24.840 --> 01:28.960] should have a stricter vetting process for drivers, along with emergency crews that were [01:28.960 --> 01:33.120] worried that they'll have to avoid pedestrians and mid-street pickups, not to mention the [01:33.120 --> 01:38.680] taxicab union lobby who finds these ride sharing services to be too much competition to handle. [01:38.680 --> 01:42.600] On the other hand, those in favor of Prop 1 not only included the hundreds of drivers [01:42.600 --> 01:46.680] who make a living from these services, but also the users of such ride sharing services [01:46.680 --> 01:55.120] who will now have to pay significantly higher rates for a cab. [01:55.120 --> 01:59.040] The San Francisco-based company Twitter has informed its business partner, Dataminer, [01:59.040 --> 02:04.080] to cut off access for the CIA, NSA, and other government surveillance agencies from a feature [02:04.080 --> 02:07.400] that analyzes the service's entire feed. [02:07.400 --> 02:11.080] Twitter was concerned about appearing too cozy with the U.S. Intel community. [02:11.080 --> 02:15.420] Dataminer is a seven-year-old company founded by Yale University students whose services [02:15.420 --> 02:20.680] use algorithms and geolocation data to discover news developments and behavior patterns. [02:20.680 --> 02:25.120] John Inglis, a former deputy director at the NSA, told the Wall Street Journal, quote, [02:25.120 --> 02:30.760] I think it's a bad sign of lack of appropriate cooperation between a private sector organization [02:30.760 --> 02:32.240] and the government. [02:32.240 --> 02:36.720] Interestingly, just last week, Twitter lost a court fight in which it was seeking to release [02:36.720 --> 02:42.000] more details about the nature and number of U.S. surveillance orders it received about [02:42.000 --> 02:43.000] its users. [02:43.000 --> 02:46.000] The Bone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. [02:46.000 --> 02:49.000] If you have a product or a service you'd like to advertise with us, feel free to give [02:49.000 --> 02:50.000] me a call at 210-363-2257. [02:50.000 --> 03:13.880] This is Rick Roady with your Lowdown for May 9th, 2016. [03:13.880 --> 03:31.280] Thank you. [03:31.280 --> 03:37.280] They didn't get too far, they didn't get too far [03:39.280 --> 03:43.280] Grandpappy told my pappy back in my day's slot [03:43.280 --> 03:47.280] When a man had to answer for the ways that he'd done [03:47.280 --> 03:51.280] Take all the rope in Texas by the tall old tree [03:51.280 --> 03:55.280] Round up all of them bad boys in the high end street [03:55.280 --> 03:59.280] For all the people to see [04:00.280 --> 04:04.280] That justice is the one thing you should always find [04:04.280 --> 04:08.280] You gotta saddle up your boys, you gotta draw a hard line [04:08.280 --> 04:12.280] When the guns were set loose, we'll sing a victory tune [04:12.280 --> 04:16.280] And we'll all be back as a whole soon [04:16.280 --> 04:21.280] We'll raise up our glasses against evil forces singing [04:21.280 --> 04:26.280] Let's get for my men, beer for my horses [04:32.280 --> 04:35.280] We ain't got too many gangsters doing [04:35.280 --> 04:37.280] Alright folks, good evening [04:37.280 --> 04:41.280] This is the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show with your host Eddie Craig [04:41.280 --> 04:49.280] It is, oh my, are we in May still? Yeah, May 9th, 2016 [04:49.280 --> 04:53.280] We go forward ever more, at least until we blow up [04:53.280 --> 04:57.280] Or we get eradicated by our own leaders [04:57.280 --> 04:59.280] And we let them get away with it [04:59.280 --> 05:02.280] This past week has actually been a very good week [05:02.280 --> 05:05.280] I had an excellent Friday and the reason was [05:05.280 --> 05:12.280] I had the friend come to town that I've actually got to meet the first time face to face on Friday [05:12.280 --> 05:14.280] And that was Dave Champion [05:14.280 --> 05:20.280] He came down from Pahrump, Nevada and worked on the movie project with us [05:20.280 --> 05:23.280] We did his taping on Friday [05:23.280 --> 05:29.280] And then he and I got to sit down and do a face to face for the movie as well [05:29.280 --> 05:34.280] And then do our individual movie rants, so to speak, about things [05:34.280 --> 05:40.280] What the producers are calling our calls to action [05:40.280 --> 05:45.280] And hopefully the slated release date for this at the moment [05:45.280 --> 05:48.280] It was originally April 15th, tax day [05:48.280 --> 05:54.280] But because of the content and just the amount of material that they've gotten [05:54.280 --> 05:59.280] They can't really decide what's best to use, it seems, so they're working that out [05:59.280 --> 06:04.280] But what they're trying to do is get it released before the November elections [06:04.280 --> 06:10.280] Which would be great because some of the information that's going to be in this movie [06:10.280 --> 06:14.280] Needs to be known before there's an election [06:14.280 --> 06:17.280] And that's the facts [06:17.280 --> 06:22.280] Now, I can't go into details about everything in the project and so on and so forth [06:22.280 --> 06:26.280] But I did want to, if he's listening or anybody that knows him is listening [06:26.280 --> 06:29.280] Give a shout out to Dave and say thank you very, very much [06:29.280 --> 06:34.280] For coming down to Texas and participating in this project [06:34.280 --> 06:40.280] It was a pleasure to finally get to meet you in person and my privilege to do so [06:40.280 --> 06:43.280] And I look forward to anything else that we get to do together [06:43.280 --> 06:46.280] Whether on this project or any other project [06:46.280 --> 06:49.280] Dave is an excellent guy, if you don't know about Dave [06:49.280 --> 06:52.280] You need to get on YouTube and find out about Dave Champion [06:52.280 --> 06:55.280] Dave wrote the definitive book [06:55.280 --> 07:00.280] I mean, Irwin Schiff knows everything you could ever hope to know about the income taxes [07:00.280 --> 07:02.280] As far as the case law and all that [07:02.280 --> 07:10.280] Well, Dave wrote the book literally on the law associated with the income taxes [07:10.280 --> 07:15.280] And the case law and combined the two into a 400-something page book [07:15.280 --> 07:20.280] That can tell you very clearly what the law actually is [07:20.280 --> 07:27.280] And why it does not and did not ever apply to you [07:27.280 --> 07:32.280] Now, one of the biggest problems we have in this country today [07:32.280 --> 07:36.280] Or this union of states today [07:36.280 --> 07:43.280] Is that people have a real problem with putting forth any effort on their own behalf [07:43.280 --> 07:46.280] If they can let someone else do it for them [07:46.280 --> 07:52.280] It doesn't matter whether it's working and it especially seems not to matter when it's thinking [07:52.280 --> 07:55.280] And that's a problem [07:55.280 --> 08:04.280] The mess we're in is because that is the collective body of voters that you're having to contend with [08:04.280 --> 08:07.280] Okay? [08:07.280 --> 08:11.280] And the proof is in the pudding, so to speak [08:11.280 --> 08:19.280] You can look at those that are being given power and know they are not worthy of wielding that power [08:19.280 --> 08:25.280] Used to, power was something that you were very careful about whose hands you put it in [08:25.280 --> 08:34.280] Now, there are no checks and balances on who wields that power or how they wield that power in America anymore [08:34.280 --> 08:43.280] And that's because you and I have set aside our duty to hold them accountable for doing that [08:43.280 --> 08:49.280] We have allowed them to create the dictates that motivate them and control them rather than us [08:49.280 --> 08:52.280] And that is a problem [08:52.280 --> 08:55.280] So what are we going to do about it, folks? [08:55.280 --> 09:03.280] Well, part of the thing in this movie is to remind you about who we are or at least who we're supposed to be [09:03.280 --> 09:10.280] It's also to remind you of where we are and how we got there [09:10.280 --> 09:16.280] And then is to tell you, here's what we better do to fix it [09:16.280 --> 09:19.280] Now, none of the people in this movie are oracles [09:19.280 --> 09:24.280] None of them are experts in every given area of what needs to be changed [09:24.280 --> 09:27.280] Everybody's got their opinions and their ideas [09:27.280 --> 09:35.280] And of course, it's the minutia that always seems to clog the gears of getting something done [09:35.280 --> 09:40.280] But there's one other thing to remember about those gears [09:40.280 --> 09:48.280] With enough force behind them, the minutia doesn't get in the way for long [09:48.280 --> 09:54.280] So we find a way to grind it through and get it done because it needs to be done [09:54.280 --> 10:01.280] Well, folks, we're at a stage in this country where what needs to be done is those that are serving in public office [10:01.280 --> 10:05.280] Need to be looking at prison walls [10:05.280 --> 10:07.280] It's not a maybe situation [10:07.280 --> 10:10.280] It's not a, well, you can't say that about everybody [10:10.280 --> 10:11.280] Yes, you can [10:11.280 --> 10:15.280] It's just like what you can say about bad cop versus good cop [10:15.280 --> 10:21.280] There are no good cops when no cop will arrest another cop for doing wrong [10:21.280 --> 10:26.280] When no cop will prevent another cop from doing wrong [10:26.280 --> 10:32.280] When they will not arrest those in their brotherhood that they know are doing wrong [10:32.280 --> 10:36.280] You cannot tell me there are good cops [10:36.280 --> 10:38.280] You just can't do it [10:38.280 --> 10:45.280] Plus the fact that even to be a cop, you must take an oath to uphold every little declaratory edict [10:45.280 --> 10:53.280] By every little peonic bureaucrat that wants to meddle in everybody else's life and property [10:53.280 --> 11:00.280] And enforce it for them at the point of a gun or through death if necessary [11:00.280 --> 11:13.280] Doesn't matter how immoral, how unjust or unconstitutional that particular action or the alleged law behind it actually are [11:13.280 --> 11:17.280] You'll do it because you want a paycheck [11:17.280 --> 11:20.280] You'll do it because you're afraid you can't find a job [11:20.280 --> 11:28.280] You'll do it and then try to make excuses that you're just doing your job and following orders [11:28.280 --> 11:30.280] There are no good cops [11:30.280 --> 11:35.280] There are no good politicians because they wouldn't want to be politicians [11:35.280 --> 11:40.280] They would want to be public servants [11:40.280 --> 11:48.280] We have allowed people to hold politics as a career and that should never have been allowed to happen [11:48.280 --> 11:51.280] Never [11:51.280 --> 11:59.280] At the very least, every single public office should have a mandatory constitutional turnover [11:59.280 --> 12:03.280] You cannot go from government job to government job [12:03.280 --> 12:08.280] If you do, it must be with X number of years between those jobs and public service [12:08.280 --> 12:12.280] You can't move from lieutenant governor to governor [12:12.280 --> 12:18.280] You can't move from, you know, sub-mayor to mayor [12:18.280 --> 12:24.280] I don't care, you served in public office, you get X years, you're out for 10 years [12:24.280 --> 12:29.280] You can't run for another public office until it's 10 years down the road [12:29.280 --> 12:37.280] And you most certainly cannot go back into certain careers within that amount of time if you acted in the legislature, for instance [12:37.280 --> 12:42.280] See, this thing about attorneys can serve in the legislature as long as they give up their bar card [12:42.280 --> 12:45.280] No, don't agree with that at all [12:45.280 --> 12:52.280] Because they're still officers of the court per their own law that they wrote while they were in the legislature [12:52.280 --> 12:59.280] Then they go right back to benefiting as attorneys from the laws they created in the legislature [12:59.280 --> 13:05.280] Attorneys should not be allowed to serve in public office of any kind [13:05.280 --> 13:14.280] Any kind, and consider this, these people have completely taken over one department of government entirely [13:14.280 --> 13:20.280] And when they tell you, well, it's not true, people don't have to be attorneys to be judges and things like that [13:20.280 --> 13:24.280] Baloney, yes they do, you wrote the law that makes it where they have to [13:24.280 --> 13:29.280] The attorneys have seized control of the judiciary in every state of the union [13:29.280 --> 13:36.280] And created law without the benefit of the legislature to suit how they want things to run [13:36.280 --> 13:43.280] No non-attorney can act in the judicial department of government [13:43.280 --> 13:50.280] The people's government, folks, can act in any office of actual authority [13:50.280 --> 14:00.280] And the ability to create continuation of that authority through precedent in the judicial department [14:00.280 --> 14:07.280] Only according to the statutes created by the attorneys when they served as legislators [14:07.280 --> 14:11.280] Only attorneys can serve as judges in courts of record [14:11.280 --> 14:15.280] Only courts of record can set precedent [14:15.280 --> 14:18.280] See how this is working? [14:18.280 --> 14:27.280] The people have no control over an entire branch of their government [14:27.280 --> 14:37.280] Shouldn't that be making you think? Shouldn't that be making you understand something is wrong? [14:37.280 --> 14:44.280] How did we get so asleep that we don't realize this is what has happened? [14:44.280 --> 14:51.280] How can you logically view the situation and see what's gone on, what's going on, and what it's going to be later [14:51.280 --> 15:00.280] Even if they're not in government, how they're going to benefit from it [15:00.280 --> 15:03.280] It is ridiculous [15:03.280 --> 15:10.280] But you got football to watch, right? [15:10.280 --> 15:18.280] What are we going to do about it, folks? What are you and I going to do to once again be in control of our own lives? [15:18.280 --> 15:26.280] To once again be able to look at a public servant and say, you work for me, you don't get to dictate what I do [15:26.280 --> 15:35.280] The only time you get to tell me anything is if you can show that I've harmed another person or their property and they're complaining about it [15:35.280 --> 15:46.280] Otherwise, your only job in relation to me and mine is to leave me alone [15:46.280 --> 15:54.280] That's it. Nothing difficult about that [15:54.280 --> 16:01.280] If you're going to come and try to steal my property, you're going to suffer the same thing any other thief trying to steal my property would [16:01.280 --> 16:03.280] I don't care that you work for government [16:03.280 --> 16:05.280] I don't care [16:05.280 --> 16:13.280] You have no more right to take from me than someone in the dead of night sneaking from house to house has to take from me [16:13.280 --> 16:18.280] I don't care what title you put on it [16:18.280 --> 16:29.280] You do not get to create a law that gives you more right to do me wrong than I have right to seek redress for that wrong [16:29.280 --> 16:33.280] But that's what the attorneys have done [16:33.280 --> 16:37.280] And you have let them do it [16:37.280 --> 16:47.280] By not knowing what's going on, not knowing what your constitution limits them to, and not making darn sure that you're paying attention to make sure they stay within those limits [16:47.280 --> 16:50.280] Alright folks, the phones are on [16:50.280 --> 16:53.280] 512-646-1984 [16:53.280 --> 17:00.280] Give us a call, we'll be right back after this break [17:23.280 --> 17:27.280] Head on over to logosradionetwork.com to make your contribution [17:27.280 --> 17:32.280] Every $25 donation enters you for a chance to win prizes from Central Texas Gunworks [17:32.280 --> 17:35.280] First prize being a Spiked Skull Lower Receiver [17:35.280 --> 17:37.280] Second prize being a Taurus Curve [17:37.280 --> 17:39.280] Ten winners will receive gift cards from All About Vapor [17:39.280 --> 17:45.280] And if you donate your $25 contribution early enough, you will also receive a complimentary jar of My Magic Mud [17:45.280 --> 17:50.280] Donations by all major credit cards are accepted as well as contributions by Bitcoin [17:50.280 --> 17:53.280] Logos Radio Network fundraiser now through March 17th [17:53.280 --> 18:00.280] Head on over to logosradionetwork.com for more information and to donate to keep the Logos Radio Network on the air [18:00.280 --> 18:05.280] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.280 --> 18:09.280] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method [18:09.280 --> 18:14.280] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too [18:14.280 --> 18:20.280] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [18:20.280 --> 18:24.280] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons [18:24.280 --> 18:26.280] How to answer letters and phone calls [18:26.280 --> 18:29.280] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report [18:29.280 --> 18:33.280] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [18:33.280 --> 18:38.280] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [18:38.280 --> 18:41.280] Personal consultation is available as well [18:41.280 --> 18:46.280] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.280 --> 18:49.280] Or email michaelmears at yahoo.com [18:49.280 --> 18:51.280] That's ruleoflawradio.com [18:51.280 --> 18:57.280] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [18:57.280 --> 19:00.280] To learn how to stop debt collectors next [19:00.280 --> 19:11.280] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:11.280 --> 19:39.280] Alright folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [19:39.280 --> 19:43.280] Calling number 512-646-1984 [19:43.280 --> 19:47.280] Alright, now back on the subject of Dave Champion [19:47.280 --> 19:51.280] I did ask him if he would mind coming on the show with me one of these evenings [19:51.280 --> 19:56.280] And he said that he would try to set up his schedule where he could do that [19:56.280 --> 20:00.280] So in two or three weeks maybe I'll be able to have him on as a guest [20:00.280 --> 20:06.280] And I hope everyone will listen in and just join in the conversation [20:06.280 --> 20:11.280] I don't know that he's ever done a show in this regard where he does anything [20:11.280 --> 20:15.280] Other than just address issues by taking live questions and stuff [20:15.280 --> 20:20.280] But we'll see what he thinks of the format and how much he likes to participate in it [20:20.280 --> 20:22.280] When he's on the air [20:22.280 --> 20:24.280] Provided of course that we get around to doing that [20:24.280 --> 20:27.280] Because Dave's got a wealth of information [20:27.280 --> 20:30.280] He is an extremely intelligent, dedicated individual [20:30.280 --> 20:32.280] He has lots of background experience [20:32.280 --> 20:37.280] He's an ex-army ranger, he is ex-law enforcement [20:37.280 --> 20:39.280] He knows his stuff [20:39.280 --> 20:44.280] And like I say, the book he wrote, Income Tax Shattering the Myths [20:44.280 --> 20:48.280] Which you can find at taxrevolt.us [20:48.280 --> 20:55.280] Will give you more information than you could ever hope to use on the income tax [20:55.280 --> 20:59.280] But he does it in such a way that you will actually enjoy reading about it [20:59.280 --> 21:03.280] He was kind enough to provide me with a copy of his book [21:03.280 --> 21:06.280] When he found out we were going to be doing the movie together [21:06.280 --> 21:11.280] I already had a copy, but I had loaned that out to someone years ago and never got it back [21:11.280 --> 21:13.280] So I'm glad that he sent me a replacement [21:13.280 --> 21:17.280] But it's a great book [21:17.280 --> 21:23.280] And you won't learn about the tax code any better than you will from that book [21:23.280 --> 21:28.280] Because he really breaks it down in a way that virtually anyone can understand it [21:28.280 --> 21:35.280] If you can follow reason and logic, and you can read, you should be set [21:35.280 --> 21:39.280] The only thing we've got to worry about is the first two issues [21:39.280 --> 21:44.280] Most people can read, but very few actually can understand and comprehend what they read [21:44.280 --> 21:49.280] So we have that to overcome, and hopefully we can get there with that [21:49.280 --> 21:52.280] Alright folks, I still don't have any callers up on the board [21:52.280 --> 21:56.280] Despite the fact that normally I've got people waiting in line to want to get on here [21:56.280 --> 21:59.280] But that's okay [21:59.280 --> 22:02.280] Now we also have the Sunday classes coming up [22:02.280 --> 22:07.280] Michael Badnerich has moved back to Texas and is now permanently back here in Austin [22:07.280 --> 22:12.280] And he has decided that he wants to come to the classes as regularly as he can [22:12.280 --> 22:16.280] He came weekend before last, and then this weekend and next weekend [22:16.280 --> 22:22.280] Since he just got back, he is tied up getting other things accomplished to get settled back in [22:22.280 --> 22:26.280] But once he does that, he's going to be down there quite regular [22:26.280 --> 22:31.280] So if he never got a chance to meet Michael Badnerich, now would also be a good time to get that done [22:31.280 --> 22:35.280] Because he'll be in the classes quite a bit on Sundays [22:35.280 --> 22:40.280] Now he's already said that once he gets this information under his belt to the right degree [22:40.280 --> 22:45.280] That he feels comfortable that he can use it, he said the first thing he's going to do is get in his car [22:45.280 --> 22:48.280] And go to and around town trolling for tickets [22:48.280 --> 22:54.280] And I must say that's exactly the way I feel about it when I'm able, that's what I do [22:54.280 --> 23:01.280] But right now we have the lawsuit that we're trying to get completed and filed and ready to be processed [23:01.280 --> 23:05.280] And we've got a fundraiser going for that on GoFundMe [23:05.280 --> 23:08.280] Now I have no clue about GoFundMe and how to use it [23:08.280 --> 23:15.280] I do not know how to find a particular project on GoFundMe to make a donation to it [23:15.280 --> 23:23.280] So that being said, my blog site, I am going to put a link to the page to make the donation [23:23.280 --> 23:30.280] On my blog site, tauoflaw.wordpress.com [23:30.280 --> 23:35.280] Where you can actually go to the GoFundMe and make a donation that way [23:35.280 --> 23:42.280] Or you can still do it the old-fashioned way and make a donation directly through the Donate to Eddie on the Logos Radio Network website [23:42.280 --> 23:49.280] Either way works, the money's going toward getting whatever I need to sustain the lawsuit [23:49.280 --> 23:55.280] And to keep me going while I'm doing the lawsuit so that we can get this done [23:55.280 --> 23:58.280] This needs to be done [23:58.280 --> 24:05.280] I'm sick and tired of people having to call me because they're getting burglarized by the state [24:05.280 --> 24:09.280] Or I should say more like armed robbed by the state [24:09.280 --> 24:22.280] We used to have high women in this country that we called criminal because they would rob people that were traveling up and down the roads [24:22.280 --> 24:30.280] Now we have employees that do exactly the same thing [24:30.280 --> 24:34.280] Exactly the same thing [24:34.280 --> 24:39.280] And no one bats an eye [24:39.280 --> 24:51.280] And the odd part about it is, is instead of going to the king to complain and get whatever justice you could by having them hunted down or whatever [24:51.280 --> 24:58.280] That you had been robbed, this country now thinks it's okay [24:58.280 --> 25:10.280] That when you want to seek redress for being robbed, you have to go see the head of the robbery clan that took your money [25:10.280 --> 25:15.280] Do you see any sense in that? Does that sound logical to you at all? [25:15.280 --> 25:28.280] A city of Austin municipal cop pulls you over at gunpoint basically, he doesn't even have to point the gun at you because he's got a radio that makes it just as effective [25:28.280 --> 25:36.280] And they've got all these prosecutors perfectly willing to make sure you're the bad guy no matter what the cop does during this stop [25:36.280 --> 25:44.280] Even if he tries to kill you, if you fight back and win, they're going to charge you with murder [25:44.280 --> 25:49.280] So pray that there's video [25:49.280 --> 25:56.280] But they're going to come up and instead of actually taking the money directly out of your pocket there on the side of the road [25:56.280 --> 26:05.280] Which by the way they are setting up to do by letting you give them a credit card on the side of the road so they can scan it and steal the money right there [26:05.280 --> 26:16.280] Get this? And in some of the northern states it has already been that way for a long time. You can write a check or you can pay cash to the cop on the side of the road [26:16.280 --> 26:24.280] You know that? But if you want to do something about it, who do you complain to? [26:24.280 --> 26:34.280] You have to go to the people in charge of that highwayman and say he shouldn't have robbed me [26:34.280 --> 26:39.280] I want my money back. And then they're going to look at you and go I'll tell you what [26:39.280 --> 26:44.280] We'll give you a fair hearing on the matter and let you present your case [26:44.280 --> 26:58.280] And if we agree with you, then we will take the money that we now have ourselves and we will give it back to you no problem [26:58.280 --> 27:02.280] No one sees a problem with that? No one sees how that's an issue? [27:02.280 --> 27:12.280] I mean consider that fee that they charge you for court costs and that fine that they assess against you when it never applied to you anyway [27:12.280 --> 27:19.280] Because you never were engaged in the only activity to which that fine relates [27:19.280 --> 27:27.280] They take your money through the fines and the fees and they get to keep part of that [27:27.280 --> 27:33.280] They get to keep all of the fees, the court costs [27:33.280 --> 27:41.280] So they generated money for themselves just by having you present and convicting you, okay? [27:41.280 --> 27:47.280] Then they turn around and get to keep half of whatever the fine is [27:47.280 --> 27:56.280] And the other half gets sent to the state where your appeal has to go if you're coming from a court of record like you would be here in Austin [27:56.280 --> 28:02.280] Now do you see the predicament you're in here with this BS that they've cooked up? [28:02.280 --> 28:09.280] The cop works for the municipality who told him to go out and write these tickets [28:09.280 --> 28:14.280] Does no one understand that? [28:14.280 --> 28:24.280] They then tell you to appear in the same court run by the same municipality that employs the cop [28:24.280 --> 28:26.280] You understand that? [28:26.280 --> 28:34.280] The judge's paycheck and the prosecutor's paycheck, the two people against you in the courtroom and the judge is against you [28:34.280 --> 28:46.280] There is no fair and impartial if you believe otherwise you are seriously deluded or you're eating bad fish, okay? [28:46.280 --> 28:53.280] They are stealing from you because you can't get a fair and impartial trial in this situation [28:53.280 --> 29:03.280] Everyone that's coming against you has a profit motive in coming against you and keeping you guilty [29:03.280 --> 29:15.280] And then if you're in a court of record and you seek an appeal, well, the state gets half of the fine, whatever that is [29:15.280 --> 29:23.280] And you expect this process to change at that level, how? [29:23.280 --> 29:28.280] Because you're taking money back from them too [29:28.280 --> 29:39.280] How much money? Collectively across the state of Texas? Nine billion, yeah, that's nine zeros, folks [29:39.280 --> 29:51.280] A B, folks, a year, folks, out of our pockets, illegally, and we let them [29:51.280 --> 30:00.280] All right, folks, 512-646-1984, we'll be right back after this break, so y'all hang on [30:00.280 --> 30:09.280] With all the immigrants begging to come to America, you'd think people who were born here would be counting their lucky stars [30:09.280 --> 30:13.280] So why then are record numbers of Americans renouncing their U.S. citizenship? [30:13.280 --> 30:17.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the answer next [30:17.280 --> 30:22.280] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [30:22.280 --> 30:27.280] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [30:27.280 --> 30:32.280] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself [30:32.280 --> 30:35.280] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto [30:35.280 --> 30:42.280] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing [30:42.280 --> 30:46.280] Start over with Startpage [30:46.280 --> 30:52.280] Last year, 1,800 Americans living overseas renounced their citizenship, a record number [30:52.280 --> 30:57.280] Do these folks just hate our country? No, but they're fed up with burdensome tax laws [30:57.280 --> 31:02.280] Most countries don't force citizens living abroad to pay federal taxes, but the U.S. does [31:02.280 --> 31:09.280] In fact, since 2004, the government has hit Americans living overseas with steep fines and criminal charges [31:09.280 --> 31:14.280] Even forcing them to disclose information on spouses who are foreign nationals [31:14.280 --> 31:21.280] It's high time the U.S. got off the backs of Americans living overseas, and come to think of it, the rest of ours too [31:21.280 --> 31:26.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine [31:31.280 --> 31:36.280] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11 [31:36.280 --> 31:38.280] The government says that fire brought it down [31:38.280 --> 31:43.280] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition [31:43.280 --> 31:46.280] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives [31:46.280 --> 31:49.280] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying [31:49.280 --> 31:53.280] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer [31:53.280 --> 31:55.280] I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son [31:55.280 --> 31:58.280] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth [31:58.280 --> 32:01.280] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today [32:03.280 --> 32:06.280] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar [32:06.280 --> 32:08.280] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society [32:08.280 --> 32:13.280] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights [32:13.280 --> 32:18.280] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity [32:18.280 --> 32:20.280] And most importantly, the right to due process of law [32:20.280 --> 32:26.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process [32:26.280 --> 32:32.280] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:32.280 --> 32:36.280] That will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law [32:36.280 --> 32:41.280] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today [32:41.280 --> 32:46.280] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie [32:46.280 --> 32:51.280] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material [32:51.280 --> 32:55.280] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com [32:55.280 --> 33:00.280] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve [33:00.280 --> 33:05.280] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com [33:30.280 --> 33:45.280] Aright folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio [33:45.280 --> 33:51.280] And we have a couple of callers up on the board and our first one is Angie in Texas [33:51.280 --> 33:53.280] Angie, what can we do for you [33:53.280 --> 34:01.240] Hi, I was just going to, I just recently started listening to you and so I haven't heard your [34:01.240 --> 34:08.440] take on the camera red light tickets that get sent out randomly that have a return address [34:08.440 --> 34:12.680] in Arizona and a billing address in Ohio, it's not even in Texas. [34:12.680 --> 34:19.000] That is all very true and there is unconstitutional as you can get as they constitute nothing [34:19.000 --> 34:26.560] less than a bill of pains and penalties because the way the Texas statute set them up, you [34:26.560 --> 34:34.080] have no judicial remedy or recourse in challenging them, absolutely none. [34:34.080 --> 34:39.300] That is the very definition of a bill of pains and penalties. [34:39.300 --> 34:46.780] Something that is either, it is defined as a legislative or administrative determination [34:46.780 --> 34:52.960] of guilt without judicial review and that's exactly what these tickets are. [34:52.960 --> 34:59.200] Now I've got several postings on my blog site relating to the red light camera tickets including [34:59.200 --> 35:04.440] an updated version of the red light camera letter that you send in in response to these [35:04.440 --> 35:06.020] things. [35:06.020 --> 35:12.920] Now on that page with that new letter there is a video where the Texas legislature is [35:12.920 --> 35:20.000] holding a hearing on this and there are three police chiefs or deputy chiefs in that room [35:20.000 --> 35:24.760] trying to convince them not to do away with the red light camera program because they [35:24.760 --> 35:29.640] rely upon them for quote unquote public safety which is a complete crock. [35:29.640 --> 35:35.080] They're not there for safety, have never been there for safety, they're there for money. [35:35.080 --> 35:41.400] But what the legislature, legislative chairman tells them in that video you need to pay attention [35:41.400 --> 35:45.600] to because he is absolutely correct. [35:45.600 --> 35:53.440] They are not authorized by any law to issue a citation to anyone in a red light camera [35:53.440 --> 35:54.440] ticket. [35:54.440 --> 36:06.560] The statute is very clear that the municipality must file a lawsuit and sue for the $75. [36:06.560 --> 36:09.280] That's the only way they can collect that money. [36:09.280 --> 36:24.960] What they count on is with a $0.42 stamp to make a $69.58 profit or I'm sorry $74.58 profit [36:24.960 --> 36:28.320] by getting you to mail it in without challenging it. [36:28.320 --> 36:29.320] That's what they do. [36:29.320 --> 36:37.080] It's fraud through the U.S. mail making it a federal crime as well. [36:37.080 --> 36:40.720] But the red light camera system in every state stinks. [36:40.720 --> 36:43.240] It was never meant to protect the public. [36:43.240 --> 36:44.680] Never meant to protect the public. [36:44.680 --> 36:47.800] None of them are actually. [36:47.800 --> 36:50.800] It doesn't really matter what the program is. [36:50.800 --> 36:53.160] It's not there to protect the public. [36:53.160 --> 36:54.160] Okay. [36:54.160 --> 37:00.920] Okay, so I can go to your website and I can just... [37:00.920 --> 37:05.960] Yes, at the bottom of that page you will find a link to a file that you can download and [37:05.960 --> 37:11.320] it is a copy of the red light camera letter that's been updated since the lawsuit against [37:11.320 --> 37:18.160] the red light cameras was filed by an attorney's firm in Fort Worth or Dallas area. [37:18.160 --> 37:23.080] He filed a lawsuit on behalf of a gentleman in Louisiana because of a red light camera [37:23.080 --> 37:27.600] ticket that was mailed to the gentleman in Louisiana even though he had never been in [37:27.600 --> 37:28.600] Texas. [37:28.600 --> 37:34.640] The entire act is written to make the person who owns the car liable even if that person [37:34.640 --> 37:41.000] was not the one in the car at the time of the alleged infraction. [37:41.000 --> 37:43.000] Nothing about that's constitutional. [37:43.000 --> 37:44.000] Awesome. [37:44.000 --> 37:48.480] Well, thank you very much. [37:48.480 --> 37:49.640] I appreciate your help. [37:49.640 --> 37:51.340] Well, you're very welcome. [37:51.340 --> 37:54.840] And if there's anything more we can do, you now have the phone number. [37:54.840 --> 37:55.840] Thanks. [37:55.840 --> 37:56.840] You're welcome. [37:56.840 --> 37:57.840] Bye. [37:57.840 --> 37:58.840] Bye-bye. [37:58.840 --> 38:03.880] All right, now we have Steven in Texas. [38:03.880 --> 38:05.640] Steven, what can we do for you? [38:05.640 --> 38:10.480] Yeah, I just wanted to comment on what you were talking about. [38:10.480 --> 38:11.480] I had a Westlake... [38:11.480 --> 38:12.480] Wait, wait, wait. [38:12.480 --> 38:13.480] Steven, what kind of phone are you on? [38:13.480 --> 38:14.480] I'm on an Android phone. [38:14.480 --> 38:15.480] Is it bad? [38:15.480 --> 38:16.480] Yeah, yeah. [38:16.480 --> 38:23.480] You're reverberating real bad like you're talking out of the bottom of a tin can. [38:23.480 --> 38:24.480] Okay. [38:24.480 --> 38:25.480] Try back. [38:25.480 --> 38:26.480] Okay. [38:26.480 --> 38:33.800] If you'll do that, I'll get you back up as soon as I can get to you here. [38:33.800 --> 38:35.760] When you return, okay? [38:35.760 --> 38:36.760] Thanks. [38:36.760 --> 38:37.760] All right. [38:37.760 --> 38:43.600] While we're waiting on Steven to reconnect, the board is clear at the moment. [38:43.600 --> 38:49.200] So while I'm waiting on somebody else to pop up here, again, with the things that we have [38:49.200 --> 38:54.840] allowed our government entities to get away with and certain individuals within government [38:54.840 --> 38:59.160] to get away with, it's no wonder we're in such a mess. [38:59.160 --> 39:06.120] When a small group of people seize control of an entire government and then use the power [39:06.120 --> 39:11.560] of that government for their own ends, could you possibly think that there was going to [39:11.560 --> 39:16.960] be anything less than oppression that goes with it? [39:16.960 --> 39:21.320] You can't be self-serving and do the right thing. [39:21.320 --> 39:25.640] I mean, who would have thought that's possible? [39:25.640 --> 39:28.200] Why would you think that was possible? [39:28.200 --> 39:32.360] If you were willing to do the right thing, then self-serving would not even be in the [39:32.360 --> 39:37.120] equation. [39:37.120 --> 39:43.480] What we have here is people that will do the right thing only if it benefits them in some [39:43.480 --> 39:49.080] tangible monetary or power garnering way. [39:49.080 --> 39:50.880] That's it. [39:50.880 --> 39:53.960] And we allow them to get away with it because we're not paying attention. [39:53.960 --> 39:54.960] All right. [39:54.960 --> 39:56.760] We had Steven pop back up on the board here. [39:56.760 --> 39:58.960] Let's see if our connection is any better than it was. [39:58.960 --> 40:01.960] All right, Steven, let's try it again. [40:01.960 --> 40:04.640] It hasn't any better? [40:04.640 --> 40:05.640] Nope. [40:05.640 --> 40:06.640] Same thing. [40:06.640 --> 40:08.640] You're not on a headset or anything, are you? [40:08.640 --> 40:09.640] No. [40:09.640 --> 40:10.640] No. [40:10.640 --> 40:11.640] Okay. [40:11.640 --> 40:12.640] We'll see if we can't make do. [40:12.640 --> 40:15.080] Debra is not going to like it, but let's try it anyway. [40:15.080 --> 40:16.080] Go ahead. [40:16.080 --> 40:26.280] Well, I got a ticket for no license in Westlake, Texas, and I actually fought it. [40:26.280 --> 40:28.960] And I wanted basically lack of jurisdiction. [40:28.960 --> 40:30.720] I was not operating the motor vehicle. [40:30.720 --> 40:35.080] I was using my personal conveyance. [40:35.080 --> 40:39.480] And I actually wanted it to go to jury trial, and two days before I went to jury trial, [40:39.480 --> 40:45.600] they dismissed it, and they said it was in the interest of justice. [40:45.600 --> 40:49.280] I got to know why they did that just because I was getting ready to make them look like [40:49.280 --> 40:54.640] fools and set a precedent, some case precedent in the matter. [40:54.640 --> 41:01.680] Hey, never take credit for something someone does to themselves. [41:01.680 --> 41:08.000] The problem with these attorneys at any level is that they always believe they're smarter [41:08.000 --> 41:09.000] than you. [41:09.000 --> 41:11.520] They always think they know more than you. [41:11.520 --> 41:16.400] What they actually know they would have to admit is smoke and mirrors. [41:16.400 --> 41:22.240] And how they plan to use it they would have to admit is completely unethical, immoral, [41:22.240 --> 41:26.480] and oftentimes quite illegal. [41:26.480 --> 41:31.600] So the key is not to make them look like fools, is to get them in a position where that is [41:31.600 --> 41:35.600] what gets exposed if they continue. [41:35.600 --> 41:37.440] That is what will do it. [41:37.440 --> 41:41.600] And if you can get them in a position where that has been brought to the point of having [41:41.600 --> 41:50.040] to go into the record, they've already lost and they know it, hence the dismissal. [41:50.040 --> 41:54.240] Because from what you're describing, let me ask you this, did you go in there with a not [41:54.240 --> 41:58.680] engaging transportation argument or did you go in there with a right to travel argument? [41:58.680 --> 42:02.760] A right to travel. [42:02.760 --> 42:03.760] Okay. [42:03.760 --> 42:11.000] 99.9% of the time that's going to backfire on you because that is not the correct defense. [42:11.000 --> 42:12.480] Okay. [42:12.480 --> 42:16.520] Because you're not being accused of violating a duty in relation to the right to travel, [42:16.520 --> 42:18.520] are you? [42:18.520 --> 42:24.360] No, no, you're being accused of a violation of a duty relating to engaging in a commercial [42:24.360 --> 42:30.400] activity for which your license applies, if you've got one. [42:30.400 --> 42:31.400] Which I don't. [42:31.400 --> 42:32.400] Right. [42:32.400 --> 42:36.720] But see, this is the problem they face with the way the statute in Texas reads. [42:36.720 --> 42:42.360] The statute in Texas does not create an offense for not having a license, thus driving while [42:42.360 --> 42:44.640] license invalid. [42:44.640 --> 42:52.400] It only creates an offense if the license was taken away for some reason and you're [42:52.400 --> 42:55.800] still doing it. [42:55.800 --> 43:00.160] That's the part they don't want you to know about or expose, but it's a fact. [43:00.160 --> 43:04.720] Plus the fact that the license that you're required to have, what they also don't want [43:04.720 --> 43:09.920] you to know is when you go down and fill out the little form to get that license, you actually [43:09.920 --> 43:17.720] have to commit three felonies to get a license in order to avoid being charged with a class [43:17.720 --> 43:20.520] C final misdemeanor. [43:20.520 --> 43:26.440] So the state has actually compelled you to commit higher crimes to avoid punishment for [43:26.440 --> 43:28.240] a lesser crime. [43:28.240 --> 43:30.520] You get that? [43:30.520 --> 43:31.940] Yeah. [43:31.940 --> 43:36.200] Because the three licenses they have, it is impossible for anyone permanently living in [43:36.200 --> 43:42.920] Texas over the age of 18 to get without falsifying a government document. [43:42.920 --> 43:47.120] Hang on just a second and we'll pick this up on the other side. [43:47.120 --> 43:52.520] All right, folks, call in number 512-646-1984. [43:52.520 --> 43:57.240] Give us a call and we'll continue all this when we get back. [43:57.240 --> 44:04.040] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:04.040 --> 44:10.800] In your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [44:10.800 --> 44:17.440] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step, if you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer [44:17.440 --> 44:18.440] should be doing. [44:18.440 --> 44:22.840] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.840 --> 44:27.680] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [44:27.680 --> 44:33.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:33.960 --> 44:38.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [44:38.960 --> 44:43.280] principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:43.280 --> 44:49.400] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [44:49.400 --> 44:51.920] pro se tactics, and much more. [44:51.920 --> 45:01.360] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [45:01.360 --> 45:09.120] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by [45:09.120 --> 45:14.080] our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas, behind Brave New [45:14.080 --> 45:17.920] Books and Chase Tank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very [45:17.920 --> 45:18.920] own eyes. [45:18.920 --> 45:23.800] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:23.800 --> 45:27.800] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Eme oil, [45:27.800 --> 45:31.560] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [45:31.560 --> 45:38.160] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [45:38.160 --> 45:44.400] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [45:44.400 --> 45:48.680] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [45:48.680 --> 45:58.680] Naturespureorganics.com. [45:58.680 --> 46:25.560] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com. [46:25.560 --> 46:46.140] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are still talking with [46:46.140 --> 46:51.320] Stephen in Texas. All right, Stephen. Anyway, you get what I'm saying about that? Why that [46:51.320 --> 46:55.840] normally was not going to be the way that it works. Every now and then, you'll come [46:55.840 --> 47:01.120] across a small town that doesn't want to take the time out of their busy, we barely got [47:01.120 --> 47:04.080] enough money to survive, so we need to get this guy out of the way and get some more [47:04.080 --> 47:05.080] job. [47:05.080 --> 47:15.440] Well, the question is, can they, my question is, can they charge me again with that, even [47:15.440 --> 47:16.440] though it's... [47:16.440 --> 47:20.920] It depends on how they dismissed it. If they dismissed it without prejudice, they can charge [47:20.920 --> 47:26.720] you with it for up to two years, yes, unless they had actually gotten to a point, did they [47:26.720 --> 47:30.280] ever issue a signed and sworn complaint? [47:30.280 --> 47:31.480] No. [47:31.480 --> 47:37.000] Okay. Had they done that and then tried to prosecute after dismissing, you could have [47:37.000 --> 47:42.320] challenged them on double jeopardy. But because jeopardy never attached and they never got [47:42.320 --> 47:48.960] to trial, they have up to two years to refile that. If they did file a complaint, they've [47:48.960 --> 47:54.840] only got up to five months maximum, according to the way the Texas Supreme Court's ruled [47:54.840 --> 48:02.240] on speedy trial here, that they have up only five months after the filing of the complaint [48:02.240 --> 48:07.440] to prosecute the case, so they have denied you in a speedy trial. [48:07.440 --> 48:09.440] Right. [48:09.440 --> 48:17.320] So, that's what controls the answer to your question, which one of those situations exists. [48:17.320 --> 48:24.480] Okay. Okay. Well, I will look into it further. [48:24.480 --> 48:30.040] All right. Well, if they dismissed it, odds are they will not refile it, okay? Odds are [48:30.040 --> 48:36.240] they won't. No one's ever brought back one of the cases I've gotten dismissed that way. [48:36.240 --> 48:40.120] They've never brought it back. Even though that they didn't do it with prejudice, they [48:40.120 --> 48:45.440] haven't brought it back. So, odds are they're not, but at least it should give you an indication [48:45.440 --> 48:49.760] of what to be looking for and trying to get them to do, and do not expect what you did. [48:49.760 --> 48:55.040] I'm assuming this is, you said Lake Way, right? [48:55.040 --> 48:56.040] West Lake. [48:56.040 --> 48:59.480] Or West Lake. I don't know how big that court is there, how much business it does, but in [48:59.480 --> 49:03.680] most of these little municipalities around this area, that would have never gotten off [49:03.680 --> 49:09.720] the ground in there. So, congratulations, but don't cat on that working every time. [49:09.720 --> 49:17.080] Okay, but can I be charged then, since I beat the state of Texas, it was dismissed by the [49:17.080 --> 49:18.080] state of Texas? [49:18.080 --> 49:23.160] No, it was dismissed by the prosecuting attorney who tells you that they're representing the [49:23.160 --> 49:25.280] state of Texas when they're actually not. [49:25.280 --> 49:30.360] Oh, okay. Okay. Okay, I understand. [49:30.360 --> 49:33.680] Okay. All right. Anything else? [49:33.680 --> 49:34.680] Yeah, I appreciate it. [49:34.680 --> 49:37.360] Hey, no problem, man. Thanks for calling in. Glad to hear it. [49:37.360 --> 49:38.360] Thanks. [49:38.360 --> 49:43.440] All right, now we're going to Ralph in New Hampshire. Ralph, what can we do for you? [49:43.440 --> 49:47.480] Hey, Eddie. I've got a speeding ticket. [49:47.480 --> 49:48.480] Okay. [49:48.480 --> 49:55.120] I found the case law, state versus Fitzgerald, that states it's a civil infraction. And I [49:55.120 --> 50:03.720] also found the RSA 265-67, which states there must be an accident to be charged with a speeding [50:03.720 --> 50:04.720] violation. [50:04.720 --> 50:08.960] Absolutely, and that would be true in almost any state. In almost any state, they're prima [50:08.960 --> 50:14.960] facie speed limits, which means you've got two issues to fight the ticket on here. One [50:14.960 --> 50:22.560] is an illegal arrest. Okay? And this is how we make this argument. If New Hampshire says [50:22.560 --> 50:29.160] that these are civil infractions, then there is no criminal activity, correct? [50:29.160 --> 50:30.480] Correct. [50:30.480 --> 50:37.160] If there is no criminal activity, by what mechanism of law did the officer obtain reasonable [50:37.160 --> 50:44.880] suspicion or probable cause to seize you without a warrant? [50:44.880 --> 50:48.640] Okay. [50:48.640 --> 50:51.960] Not a rhetorical question. Do you know? [50:51.960 --> 50:52.960] No. [50:52.960 --> 51:00.280] That's because there isn't any. He didn't have a warrant, there was no criminal activity, [51:00.280 --> 51:06.640] therefore, there absolutely could not be reasonable suspicion or articulable probable cause to [51:06.640 --> 51:19.000] seize you, not for civil infraction. Okay? That makes the initial arrest illegal, unconstitutional [51:19.000 --> 51:20.720] on its face. [51:20.720 --> 51:25.920] Oh, you weren't arrested, you were detained. This is the reason why the transportation [51:25.920 --> 51:31.480] transcript tells you to ask them, are you under arrest or are you free to go? Once you [51:31.480 --> 51:38.560] establish that you cannot leave of your own volition, you're in a custodial arrest. Okay? [51:38.560 --> 51:43.640] I did find the RSA that states the same thing, pretty much. I wonder if they could detain [51:43.640 --> 51:46.880] or arrest anybody they need in the states they need to... [51:46.880 --> 51:52.400] Right. Even to detain, they have to have criminal activity. So when he says that I detained [51:52.400 --> 51:59.320] you, I didn't arrest you, so what? So what? That's just as illegal as putting me in cusp [51:59.320 --> 52:07.040] for no reason. That makes not only the arrest illegal, that makes his search and seizure [52:07.040 --> 52:12.560] of your person and information illegal and thus inadmissible under the fruit of the poison [52:12.560 --> 52:13.560] tree doctrine. [52:13.560 --> 52:25.040] There's also the conscription of the citation. He stated there was no license presented, [52:25.040 --> 52:29.600] but on the actual complaint, it says that that's how he IDed me, was through my driver's [52:29.600 --> 52:30.600] license. [52:30.600 --> 52:34.440] Right. Which means, did you give him the information? [52:34.440 --> 52:37.840] No, I didn't give him the license at all. [52:37.840 --> 52:40.960] Okay. Well, what they did was they pulled up your name in the computer and saw that [52:40.960 --> 52:49.400] you had one. And whoever did the complaint got it from that. Okay. So the officer's not [52:49.400 --> 52:51.360] lying then, is he? [52:51.360 --> 52:54.720] I guess not, I think. [52:54.720 --> 52:58.560] And then neither would the person that signed the complaint, unless you're saying the officer [52:58.560 --> 53:03.080] is the one that signed the complaint, is he Affian? Is he? [53:03.080 --> 53:05.880] Yeah. [53:05.880 --> 53:07.360] He is the one that signed it? [53:07.360 --> 53:08.360] Citation. [53:08.360 --> 53:11.400] No, I'm not talking about the citation now. [53:11.400 --> 53:16.720] But he didn't sign the citation either. He didn't, it was only half completed. [53:16.720 --> 53:22.680] Okay. But I'm not asking about the citation. You said on the complaint, it says they got [53:22.680 --> 53:28.320] your name off your driver's license. Who signed the complaint as the Affian? [53:28.320 --> 53:33.440] It's not the one. [53:33.440 --> 53:34.440] It's what? [53:34.440 --> 53:37.520] I'm not sure I don't have it with me right now. [53:37.520 --> 53:42.240] Okay. Well, check it. If it was the officer, now you've got the officer in conflicting [53:42.240 --> 53:49.840] facts. That's another problem for them. If it's not the officer, then whoever put that [53:49.840 --> 53:54.240] information on there most likely did look up your license and get the information from [53:54.240 --> 53:57.240] that. [53:57.240 --> 54:13.720] Now on my blog site, thetoweloflaw.wordpress.com, that's T-A-O-O-F-L-A-W.wordpress.com. I have [54:13.720 --> 54:20.200] a post up there and I'll tell you what the title of it here is. At least I thought that [54:20.200 --> 54:36.640] I was going to tell you what the title is. Hang on just a second. Well, I guess that's [54:36.640 --> 54:50.400] not going to work the way I want it to. All right. I have to log back into it here when [54:50.400 --> 54:53.880] I get it. Somebody just not let me log in. But anyway, on there, there is an article [54:53.880 --> 55:00.720] talking about civil infractions. If your state has civil infractions, okay? In that, down [55:00.720 --> 55:10.040] at the, you did read it? If you did, down at the bottom, there are seven specific interrogatories. [55:10.040 --> 55:18.200] Okay? You need to file those along with a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction [55:18.200 --> 55:25.880] and lack of evidence. Okay? Make sure that these are filed under special appearance. You [55:25.880 --> 55:29.640] reserved the right for a special appearance to challenge the jurisdiction of the court [55:29.640 --> 55:36.760] and move to dismiss for lack of said jurisdiction on these grounds. And they, they have an issue [55:36.760 --> 55:43.760] with unlawful search and seizure. They have an issue with fruit of the poison tree and [55:43.760 --> 55:50.120] inadmissible evidence. And they have the issue of detaining under a civil infraction, [55:50.120 --> 56:02.480] which is illegal. Got it? All right. Now there's also an article on the blog fruit of dealing [56:02.480 --> 56:07.120] with fruit of the poison tree and understanding the doctrine. You need to read that in conjunction [56:07.120 --> 56:20.920] with those seven interrogatories. Okay. Okay. Great. Okay. I think that's all my question. [56:20.920 --> 56:27.560] All right. Well, I appreciate your help. Thanks. Yes, sir. No problem. Thanks for calling in. [56:27.560 --> 56:34.640] All right. Now we have Dave in Delaware. Dave, what can we do for you? Re-reading the movie [56:34.640 --> 56:41.360] that you and Dave Champion are going to be in. Yes, sir. The constitution says that Congress [56:41.360 --> 56:48.600] shall coin the money and regulate the value thereof. And Congress is not doing it. It [56:48.600 --> 56:53.960] does not say Congress shall rent the nation's money supply at interest from a private for-profit [56:53.960 --> 56:59.840] corporation. I agree with you. They have done. Well, the United States Supreme court has [56:59.840 --> 57:09.360] ruled in a case titled SINAR, S-Y-N-A-R, U.S. Representative Mike SINAR versus Bowsher, [57:09.360 --> 57:16.960] B-O-W-S-H-E-R, who was at that point in history, the head of the GAO, Government Accounting [57:16.960 --> 57:23.960] Office or Accountability Office. And the United States Supreme court said in that case that [57:23.960 --> 57:33.320] Congress, being a legislative branch agency, does not have authority to delegate to an [57:33.320 --> 57:44.400] executive branch agency, such as a GAO, a constitutionally mandated responsibility. [57:44.400 --> 57:51.400] I absolutely agree. You do. And no one has made the comparison that if they cannot do [57:51.400 --> 57:57.600] it with the GAO, they also cannot do it with the Federal Reserve Corporation. Correct. [57:57.600 --> 58:04.200] For some strange reason, for some strange reason, every time a state creates a case [58:04.200 --> 58:10.280] that the guy dies or they prosecute him. Oh, wait, Dave, Dave, what year was that Supreme [58:10.280 --> 58:20.680] court case in? Whatever year the Bowsher was the head of the GAO. Well, that's not answering [58:20.680 --> 58:24.880] my question. There's a reason I'm asking that question. See if you can find what year [58:24.880 --> 58:30.360] it's in and we'll talk about that on the other side, okay? You look that up while we're [58:30.360 --> 58:39.200] at break. I don't have enough time. Well, you got four minutes. All right, I'll try. [58:39.200 --> 58:45.600] All right. All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio 512-646-1984. We'll be right [58:45.600 --> 58:53.000] back after this break. The Bible remains the most popular book in [58:53.000 --> 58:58.640] the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. Some [58:58.640 --> 59:04.040] new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:04.040 --> 59:11.080] the profound meaning of the scripture. Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation [59:11.080 --> 59:17.000] is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory [59:17.000 --> 59:23.000] footnotes. Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing [59:23.000 --> 59:28.440] an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. Bibles [59:28.440 --> 59:33.560] for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. This [59:33.560 --> 59:44.000] comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.000 --> 59:51.880] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. You are listening [59:51.880 --> 01:00:21.120] to the Logos Radio Network, logosradio network.com. [01:00:21.120 --> 01:00:28.320] The markets for Monday, the 9th of May, 2016, are currently treading with gold at $1,265.40 [01:00:28.320 --> 01:00:36.360] an ounce, silver $16.97 an ounce, Texas crude $44.66 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently [01:00:36.360 --> 01:00:49.520] sitting at about 464 U.S. currency. Today in history, the year 1754, the first newspaper [01:00:49.520 --> 01:00:55.080] cartoon appears in America. The join or die chopped up snake created by Benjamin Franklin [01:00:55.080 --> 01:00:59.560] encouraging the 13 colonies to unite against Great Britain. The join or die snake was first [01:00:59.560 --> 01:01:06.840] published in the Pennsylvania Gazette. Today in history. [01:01:06.840 --> 01:01:11.520] In recent news, Uber and Lyft ride sharing services shut down their Austin, Texas operations [01:01:11.520 --> 01:01:15.960] this morning after Proposition 1, which would have barred the city from demanding fingerprint-based [01:01:15.960 --> 01:01:20.880] background checks as well as banning pickups and traffic lanes failed in the voting booth. [01:01:20.880 --> 01:01:25.040] It appears opponents of Proposition 1 are in agreement that companies which do operate [01:01:25.040 --> 01:01:29.160] should have a stricter vetting process for drivers, along with emergency crews that were [01:01:29.160 --> 01:01:33.300] worried that they'll have to avoid pedestrians and mid-street pickups, not to mention the [01:01:33.300 --> 01:01:37.960] taxi cab union lobby who finds these ride sharing services to be too much competition [01:01:37.960 --> 01:01:42.320] to handle. On the other hand, those in favor of Prop 1 not only included the hundreds of [01:01:42.320 --> 01:01:46.880] drivers who make a living from these services, but also the users of such ride sharing services [01:01:46.880 --> 01:01:55.320] who will now have to pay significantly higher rates for a cab. [01:01:55.320 --> 01:01:59.240] The San Francisco-based company Twitter has informed its business partner Dataminer to [01:01:59.240 --> 01:02:04.280] cut off access for the CIA, NSA, and other government surveillance agencies from a feature [01:02:04.280 --> 01:02:09.080] that analyzes the service's entire feed. Twitter was concerned about appearing too [01:02:09.080 --> 01:02:13.760] cozy with the U.S. intel community. Dataminer is a seven-year-old company founded by Yale [01:02:13.760 --> 01:02:19.560] University students whose services use algorithms and geolocation data to discover news developments [01:02:19.560 --> 01:02:24.240] and behavior patterns. John Inglis, a former deputy director at the NSA, told the Wall [01:02:24.240 --> 01:02:29.240] Street Journal, quote, I think it's a bad sign of lack of appropriate cooperation between [01:02:29.240 --> 01:02:34.760] a private sector organization and the government. Interestingly, just last week, Twitter lost [01:02:34.760 --> 01:02:39.840] a court fight in which it was seeking to release more details about the nature and number of [01:02:39.840 --> 01:03:08.600] U.S. surveillance orders it received about its users. [01:03:09.840 --> 01:03:39.760] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are standing by. [01:03:39.760 --> 01:03:43.720] Here's Joe talking with Dave in Delaware. Dave, were you able to locate what year that [01:03:43.720 --> 01:03:57.040] case was in? Hello, Dave? All right. Well, I guess Dave didn't find the year that it [01:03:57.040 --> 01:04:06.760] was in and is not there any longer. All right. Let's see. I do not know who the other caller [01:04:06.760 --> 01:04:26.560] here is. It just says Dallas, Texas. Hello, can you hear me? Hello? Just say yes. Okay. [01:04:26.560 --> 01:04:31.080] Someone with Erica. All right. And they just suddenly disappeared. Okay. Well, in that [01:04:31.080 --> 01:04:36.920] case, let's go to Tommy in Texas. At least he's got a name. Tommy, what can we do for [01:04:36.920 --> 01:04:43.680] you? Hey, Eddie. Thanks for taking my call. I've got an upcoming first appearance in Alto, [01:04:43.680 --> 01:04:49.160] Texas, which is Cherokee County. Oh, I know where Alto is. It's not far from home. It's [01:04:49.160 --> 01:04:56.280] 12 miles outside or 21 miles outside of Nacogdoches. Well, on State Highway 21, which is a rural [01:04:56.280 --> 01:05:04.440] highway, two lane, no shoulder, I was lit up by the DPS and I had to travel about five [01:05:04.440 --> 01:05:09.800] miles before I found a safe place to pull over. By that time, I was reaching the outskirts [01:05:09.800 --> 01:05:16.920] of Alto, if they have outskirts, and I found a place to pull over and there was a suburban [01:05:16.920 --> 01:05:23.480] up ahead with his lights on blocking the highway. And as I pulled over, I had three other cop [01:05:23.480 --> 01:05:29.600] cars pull up and surround my car. And the whole time they turned the sirens on saying, [01:05:29.600 --> 01:05:33.760] pull over, pull over on the loud speaker. And I'm like, I turned on my flashers, like [01:05:33.760 --> 01:05:38.400] you said, and I slowed down and I finally found a place to pull over five miles down [01:05:38.400 --> 01:05:44.640] the road. And he asked me to get out of the car and I refused to do so. I rolled my car [01:05:44.640 --> 01:05:51.680] window down two inches. And well, he was threatening me with evading. [01:05:51.680 --> 01:05:55.680] If they like to do, but they know darn good and well, you have a right to seek a safe [01:05:55.680 --> 01:06:00.280] place to pull over. They have no right to endanger you by forcing you to pull over [01:06:00.280 --> 01:06:06.080] on a road with no shoulder, which 21 and that area absolutely does not have. [01:06:06.080 --> 01:06:11.080] And it's not even considered urban because there's no businesses or houses less than [01:06:11.080 --> 01:06:20.360] 100 feet apart. So it was rural. And he ended up just giving me a speeding ticket for 72 [01:06:20.360 --> 01:06:26.880] and a 60. And I had told him upfront, you know, I'm not engaged in commerce. And he, [01:06:26.880 --> 01:06:29.480] we argued back and forth on a couple of different points. [01:06:29.480 --> 01:06:31.480] Which agency was this? [01:06:31.480 --> 01:06:33.480] DPS trooper. [01:06:33.480 --> 01:06:34.480] Okay. [01:06:34.480 --> 01:06:42.800] So anyways, what he ended up putting on the citation was, and he was pretty upset because [01:06:42.800 --> 01:06:49.680] I signed it under threat, duress and coercion. And the only reason I gave him my, ended up [01:06:49.680 --> 01:06:54.280] giving him my license and my insurance is because I was on my way to meet my son who's [01:06:54.280 --> 01:06:59.960] in a structured visitation program. And so I didn't want to be, so I relented and gave [01:06:59.960 --> 01:07:03.880] him the information he requested. And I told him it was under threat, duress and coercion [01:07:03.880 --> 01:07:07.760] that I was giving it to him because I was not engaged in commerce. [01:07:07.760 --> 01:07:16.400] So the citation says, speeding 10% or more above postage speed. And then it says Texas [01:07:16.400 --> 01:07:26.160] transportation code 545.351 and 352. And so the court, the court clerk refused to give [01:07:26.160 --> 01:07:32.760] me a copy of the citation given to her by the DPS trooper. And also refused to give [01:07:32.760 --> 01:07:41.440] me a copy of the verified complaint. And the judge told her to tell me that they went forward [01:07:41.440 --> 01:07:45.520] my request to the county attorney. And she told me to stop calling. [01:07:45.520 --> 01:07:50.080] Nope. File judicial conduct complaints against the judge and file a motion to disqualify. [01:07:50.080 --> 01:07:56.680] Those records are 100% public and they have no right whatsoever to refuse access by anyone. [01:07:56.680 --> 01:08:02.680] Anything in that record can be copied by anyone that wants it. [01:08:02.680 --> 01:08:05.960] They don't believe that is true. I don't care what they believe. I'm telling [01:08:05.960 --> 01:08:13.000] you what the act says. File a judicial conduct complaint. File an open rec, file a public [01:08:13.000 --> 01:08:17.880] information act complaint with the attorney general's office on top of that. [01:08:17.880 --> 01:08:23.800] Okay. Okay. Yeah. My first appearance is this Friday. [01:08:23.800 --> 01:08:34.680] File a motion to disqualify and that will change. Okay. Okay. And I did have that program [01:08:34.680 --> 01:08:40.560] on my phone that you had suggested the record all your phone calls. [01:08:40.560 --> 01:08:45.000] Right. Or app. So I've got it all on phone, on recorded [01:08:45.000 --> 01:08:51.600] her telling me this. Her boss, Judge Johnson said he will forward my request to the county [01:08:51.600 --> 01:08:55.960] attorney and stop calling. Okay. Then what you need to do is make a copy [01:08:55.960 --> 01:09:02.360] of that recording in some easy to access fashion, preferably an audio CD. [01:09:02.360 --> 01:09:09.360] And you will send that along with your complaint, certified mail to the attorney general's office [01:09:09.360 --> 01:09:15.320] stating that this particular court and judge feels that they have the power to refuse to [01:09:15.320 --> 01:09:22.320] produce public records in compliance with the public information act. [01:09:22.320 --> 01:09:29.880] And that the county attorney is aware of their refusal and is in complicit conspiracy with [01:09:29.880 --> 01:09:37.680] them to deny public access to those records. Kill two birds with one stone, so to speak. [01:09:37.680 --> 01:09:43.640] Because I called the county attorney and told him what was going on and tried to get him [01:09:43.640 --> 01:09:47.800] to say that the judge had talked to him about it already to get him caught up in ex parte [01:09:47.800 --> 01:09:51.520] also. But he said no, and no, they're not breaking [01:09:51.520 --> 01:09:58.280] the law. And that was that. So they absolutely are breaking the law. [01:09:58.280 --> 01:10:03.160] They are absolutely. I'm sorry, go ahead. [01:10:03.160 --> 01:10:11.440] No, so I go up there this Friday, which and I've already faxed them a request. I don't [01:10:11.440 --> 01:10:16.080] have a case number. All I have is a citation number. So I faxed them a request and I got [01:10:16.080 --> 01:10:23.120] her to date stamp it and send the date stamp request back faxed it back to me. So I do [01:10:23.120 --> 01:10:30.880] have that so that they do have my request on file. [01:10:30.880 --> 01:10:37.080] So I'm not sure what I'm going to file all my motions when I go there on Friday. She's [01:10:37.080 --> 01:10:40.840] probably going to jump six feet in the air, but I'm going to do it anyways. [01:10:40.840 --> 01:10:46.200] Well, like I say, file a motion to disqualify and there's nothing they can do. They have [01:10:46.200 --> 01:10:50.600] to cease and desist. This is a municipal court or a JP court? [01:10:50.600 --> 01:10:55.000] It's a JP court. Okay, yeah, just file a motion to disqualify [01:10:55.000 --> 01:11:00.840] and without them even being involved in it, go ahead and forward that while you're in [01:11:00.840 --> 01:11:11.520] there that they say, I need the mailing address and name of the head judge for this district. [01:11:11.520 --> 01:11:17.280] Well, why do you need that? Because I am foring them a copy of the motion to disqualify this [01:11:17.280 --> 01:11:21.440] judge and a copy of the judicial conduct complaints against this judge and I need to know how [01:11:21.440 --> 01:11:25.240] to get this to them because I'm not trusting you people to do it. [01:11:25.240 --> 01:11:31.480] Okay, and the judicial complaint goes to the Texas Supreme Court? [01:11:31.480 --> 01:11:36.120] No, to the Texas Judicial Commission. Yeah, okay, that's what I was trying. That's [01:11:36.120 --> 01:11:47.360] what I was searching for. Yeah. Okay, I will do that. So and I really, I should turn all [01:11:47.360 --> 01:11:53.120] this stuff in in person, right? Or do I need to or can I just send it in certified mail [01:11:53.120 --> 01:11:57.560] return receipt requested? Yeah, you want it returned receipt requested. [01:11:57.560 --> 01:12:01.000] You want to make sure that you have proof they received it and they can't deny that [01:12:01.000 --> 01:12:05.200] they received it. But I should for the first appear if I need [01:12:05.200 --> 01:12:09.360] to appear there in person, right? Doesn't matter. You still sent, you can take [01:12:09.360 --> 01:12:14.320] one in there and hand deliver it, but you still want a certified mail copy. [01:12:14.320 --> 01:12:23.160] Oh, to that justice court, correct. Okay. Okay, perfect. Perfect. I'll do that. I'll [01:12:23.160 --> 01:12:26.840] do that. I'll draw that up tonight or first thing in the morning have it sent off tomorrow. [01:12:26.840 --> 01:12:30.760] Okay. All right. That's all I got for you, Eddie. Thank you [01:12:30.760 --> 01:12:33.120] so much. You're very welcome. Do you have the seminar [01:12:33.120 --> 01:12:36.360] material? I take it. Yes, sir. I do. [01:12:36.360 --> 01:12:40.440] Okay. When was the last time you got updates on it? [01:12:40.440 --> 01:12:45.760] It's been about eight months. Okay. Nothing's changed as far as documents [01:12:45.760 --> 01:12:51.000] in that regard. So you should be good then. Okay, perfect. Thank you, Eddie. [01:12:51.000 --> 01:12:55.520] You're welcome. Have a good one and good luck, man. And just email me if you got questions. [01:12:55.520 --> 01:12:58.320] Yes, sir. All right. You have a good day. [01:12:58.320 --> 01:13:01.760] Have a good day. All right. We're going to try once more to [01:13:01.760 --> 01:13:08.280] see if Dave in Delaware is there. Dave, are you there? [01:13:08.280 --> 01:13:10.960] Dave in Delaware? Yes. [01:13:10.960 --> 01:13:16.920] All right. What do you got? I don't have it. I don't have to look it up [01:13:16.920 --> 01:13:19.960] on the internet tomorrow and send you an email about it. [01:13:19.960 --> 01:13:24.360] Okay. All right. That'll be fine. The reason I'm asking is because if they're [01:13:24.360 --> 01:13:32.720] ignoring it, it makes me wonder if the case is pre-1934. Because for some reason, the [01:13:32.720 --> 01:13:37.480] judicial system suddenly decided that it doesn't have to honor any Supreme Court case that [01:13:37.480 --> 01:13:42.960] predates 34. And I'm not sure how they came to that conclusion [01:13:42.960 --> 01:13:47.720] that they could do that, but it's what they're doing. That's how they get away with the income [01:13:47.720 --> 01:13:52.920] tax convictions they get because they deny the admissibility of the cases that predate [01:13:52.920 --> 01:14:00.720] 34 that prove that what they're doing is illegal. Well, we just have to figure out to point [01:14:00.720 --> 01:14:05.640] out that there's no distinction between the GAO or the Federal Reserve. It's an executive [01:14:05.640 --> 01:14:13.240] agency, and Congress has said... I got a simpler solution than trusting those [01:14:13.240 --> 01:14:19.240] that have already done you wrong with actually changing their mind to do you right. [01:14:19.240 --> 01:14:24.660] My personal consensus on this is instead of going through the system that refuses to do [01:14:24.660 --> 01:14:28.360] the right thing, and we know it refuses to do the right thing because it's got its own [01:14:28.360 --> 01:14:32.440] butt to cover and cares less about you and me, what we need to do is be able to point [01:14:32.440 --> 01:14:37.040] over to the shade of the nearest oak tree and show them the silhouette of the bodies [01:14:37.040 --> 01:14:42.480] from yesterday. Well, I personally am willing to sign a sworn [01:14:42.480 --> 01:14:49.520] under penalty of perjury, notarized signature affidavit that Congress is committing treason [01:14:49.520 --> 01:14:53.160] by... Yeah, but who are you going to give it to? [01:14:53.160 --> 01:15:00.960] That's the question. A signed piece of paper is a great thing if you need to start a fire. [01:15:00.960 --> 01:15:06.000] But without someone willing to act on it, what good does it do you? [01:15:06.000 --> 01:15:13.040] It says if two people sign sworn affidavits, that's enough. [01:15:13.040 --> 01:15:20.000] No, that's not what it says. What it says is that there must be two witnesses [01:15:20.000 --> 01:15:25.920] to the act. That's anything about them requiring to do an affidavit. There has to be two witnesses [01:15:25.920 --> 01:15:35.440] willing to swear to... They saw the act personally. Now, that, of course, in today's world is [01:15:35.440 --> 01:15:41.280] completely moot considering that they commit their crimes on TV in front of millions. [01:15:41.280 --> 01:15:48.080] Well, they've committed it in front of me and I'm willing to sign an affidavit and go [01:15:48.080 --> 01:15:50.440] to Congress about it. Yeah, but that's the point. [01:15:50.440 --> 01:15:53.520] One more person. That's the point. Who are you going to get [01:15:53.520 --> 01:15:59.480] to act upon it? Even if there are two or 200 or 2,000, who are you going to get to act [01:15:59.480 --> 01:16:06.480] on it? Congress themselves can't act on it other than just changing the law. The courts [01:16:06.480 --> 01:16:12.200] won't act on it because they're in on it as is Congress, which is why they won't change [01:16:12.200 --> 01:16:16.040] the law. See, Congress knows all these problems exist. [01:16:16.040 --> 01:16:19.400] Congress doesn't care because if they cared, it would have been a very simple job for them [01:16:19.400 --> 01:16:24.080] to come together and say, why don't we keep creating new laws when we haven't dealt with [01:16:24.080 --> 01:16:28.520] the old problems that everybody's complaining about? Why don't we fix those first? [01:16:28.520 --> 01:16:34.520] Yeah, they don't obey the existing laws. Bingo. So I'll ask again. Your affidavit [01:16:34.520 --> 01:16:41.280] is going to accomplish what? It'll make you feel better, but after that, then what? [01:16:41.280 --> 01:16:47.520] Is President Trump or anarchy in the streets? Well, I'm not so sure Trump is going to continue [01:16:47.520 --> 01:16:53.280] the status quo regardless of what he tells you, but let's find out. Anyway, folks, hang [01:16:53.280 --> 01:17:01.880] on, Dave, anything else? If not, we'll be right back. Hang on if you do. 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If you haven't yet experienced My Magic Mud, it's never too late to brighten [01:18:49.160 --> 01:18:53.760] your smile and strengthen your teeth. Get your jar of My Magic Mud today at Brave New [01:18:53.760 --> 01:19:02.760] Books, located at 1904 Guadalupe Street, or order online today at MyMagicMud.com. This [01:19:02.760 --> 01:19:09.760] is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:32.760 --> 01:19:54.520] Hi, folks. We are back, and it would appear that Tommy has called back in. Tommy, what [01:19:54.520 --> 01:19:55.520] do you got? [01:19:55.520 --> 01:20:00.760] Eddie, thanks for taking my call again. I have a follow-up question that I forgot to [01:20:00.760 --> 01:20:08.920] ask you, and it's really bugging me. Regarding the DDS trooper threatening to charge me with [01:20:08.920 --> 01:20:14.840] felony evading, can they come back and try to charge me with that? [01:20:14.840 --> 01:20:20.080] They can always try to come back and do anything, but what you need to be doing is getting your [01:20:20.080 --> 01:20:25.360] hands on a copy of the video. If you follow through with anything else, always follow [01:20:25.360 --> 01:20:29.200] the motions that are in the thing under special appearance. They're going to deny special [01:20:29.200 --> 01:20:34.600] appearance and all that, but don't ever stop demanding it. Even in your motion for discovery, [01:20:34.600 --> 01:20:39.080] make sure it says that you're doing it under special appearance. But in your motion for [01:20:39.080 --> 01:20:43.880] discovery, you're going to demand copies of the audio and video from the police cruiser [01:20:43.880 --> 01:20:49.200] and the cop's body mic and camera, and all the other ones that are there as well. [01:20:49.200 --> 01:20:54.200] Okay, and request copies of the radio conversations. [01:20:54.200 --> 01:21:02.840] CAD reports, radio dispatch recordings, communications recordings, everything. Go through that, transcribe [01:21:02.840 --> 01:21:10.100] them, make notes, cross-reference those notes, because odds are, even though they may cease [01:21:10.100 --> 01:21:14.560] and desist on going after the speeding ticket, it'll be there for you to defend yourself [01:21:14.560 --> 01:21:21.440] with later or to possibly sue them with now. Because the DPS very clearly in the Texas [01:21:21.440 --> 01:21:26.760] Administrative Code, as an administrative agency, the administrative code says very [01:21:26.760 --> 01:21:32.000] clearly their authority and mission is limited to commercial and for hire traffic. That's [01:21:32.000 --> 01:21:36.480] exactly what they're there for. That's the only thing their regulatory programs apply [01:21:36.480 --> 01:21:38.280] to. [01:21:38.280 --> 01:21:50.040] Okay. Now, I did not... In your seminar material, there's a list of all the radio, and I kind [01:21:50.040 --> 01:21:54.800] of can't remember exactly what you said when I requested radio transmissions and such. [01:21:54.800 --> 01:21:56.320] Is that in your... [01:21:56.320 --> 01:22:02.120] There are several different motions for discovery and public information requests. You can use [01:22:02.120 --> 01:22:07.680] each one of those to gather the information you need into a single motion. [01:22:07.680 --> 01:22:13.880] There's a folder on there called Getting Your Records, okay? And it's got a whole bunch [01:22:13.880 --> 01:22:15.880] of PIRs in it. [01:22:15.880 --> 01:22:19.280] Okay, and it does list the different... [01:22:19.280 --> 01:22:23.200] It lists each thing you're asking for in the public information request. It's easy enough [01:22:23.200 --> 01:22:28.320] to copy that out and put it into the motion for discovery. [01:22:28.320 --> 01:22:32.600] I guess what I'm asking is, does it contain... Because I can't remember what you just said [01:22:32.600 --> 01:22:37.960] as far as the radio transmissions and the stats or the something and then... [01:22:37.960 --> 01:22:48.560] Radio, okay. Dispatches, communications, contact or in-contact communications, which is when [01:22:48.560 --> 01:22:53.360] they're actually... They're pursuing you or they're dealing with you, they'll be communicating [01:22:53.360 --> 01:22:57.000] back and forth on the radio. That traffic is all recorded. [01:22:57.000 --> 01:23:03.120] Okay. Okay, perfect. Perfect. [01:23:03.120 --> 01:23:10.080] Now you also want the hard copy CAD reports, okay, which is the computer aided dispatch. [01:23:10.080 --> 01:23:14.320] They'll be in the same place as the place you get the audio recordings from, but you [01:23:14.320 --> 01:23:20.760] also want the audio and video from the officers themselves and their cars. [01:23:20.760 --> 01:23:36.880] Okay. Okay, that's what I needed. Perfect. Okay, Eddie, that's all I needed. [01:23:36.880 --> 01:23:37.880] Okay. [01:23:37.880 --> 01:23:38.880] I feel better now. [01:23:38.880 --> 01:23:39.880] All right, you're welcome. [01:23:39.880 --> 01:23:40.880] All right, bye. [01:23:40.880 --> 01:23:48.840] All right, now we have Mike in Texas. Mike, what do you got? [01:23:48.840 --> 01:23:58.280] Hey, Eddie. I got a traffic ticket down in Beaumont, Texas. When I went to the arraignment [01:23:58.280 --> 01:24:05.680] and pointed out that the ticket didn't meet 708105 of Texas transportation code. He just [01:24:05.680 --> 01:24:13.560] pretty much blew me off and told me that he knew his tickets were legal, and the judge [01:24:13.560 --> 01:24:14.560] did. So anyway... [01:24:14.560 --> 01:24:15.560] Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. [01:24:15.560 --> 01:24:16.560] Back for... [01:24:16.560 --> 01:24:23.840] The judge... I'm sorry. Tell me what the judge said again. [01:24:23.840 --> 01:24:29.360] I said, I challenged subject matter jurisdiction because it didn't meet 708105 of the Texas [01:24:29.360 --> 01:24:35.240] transportation code, and he just went, I know my tickets are legal. And I said, you don't [01:24:35.240 --> 01:24:40.720] want to look at the proof. And I tried to hand him a copy of that part of the statute. [01:24:40.720 --> 01:24:46.040] And he said, no, you're... I'm just going to say that he pled not guilty and... [01:24:46.040 --> 01:24:50.840] Okay. What did you do in response to that? [01:24:50.840 --> 01:24:51.840] I did nothing yet. [01:24:51.840 --> 01:24:54.520] What do you mean nothing yet? [01:24:54.520 --> 01:25:04.440] Well, wait, let me finish. So I went to go and meet with the prosecutor, which was a [01:25:04.440 --> 01:25:05.880] couple of months later. [01:25:05.880 --> 01:25:08.600] Was the prosecutor not present in the courtroom? [01:25:08.600 --> 01:25:14.680] No, not at that time. That was just the arraignment. So she wasn't there. It was just the judge [01:25:14.680 --> 01:25:18.840] and the bailiff and the court people. [01:25:18.840 --> 01:25:20.840] Okay. [01:25:20.840 --> 01:25:30.920] So I showed it to her, which she had to take a copy of my transportation code because funny [01:25:30.920 --> 01:25:37.000] is she didn't have one, although she's prosecuting the Texas transportation code. And then she [01:25:37.000 --> 01:25:42.120] went and she took it before the judge because she told me that she is not allowed to dismiss [01:25:42.120 --> 01:25:46.760] the case without permission from the judge, which I found. [01:25:46.760 --> 01:25:53.000] That's true. The statute is specifically written that way. They get to decide whether or not [01:25:53.000 --> 01:26:00.480] to prosecute if they have the evidence. But see, the problem here in this particular case, [01:26:00.480 --> 01:26:06.960] that would not be true because the prosecutor can move to dismiss for lack of evidence. [01:26:06.960 --> 01:26:11.280] If they can't introduce the citation, they have no evidence. [01:26:11.280 --> 01:26:14.280] Right. [01:26:14.280 --> 01:26:17.880] He was charged with, well, what was he charged with on all? He was charged by complaint. [01:26:17.880 --> 01:26:22.160] Did he ever get a ticket? No. Why didn't he get a ticket? Well, because all of our tickets [01:26:22.160 --> 01:26:25.800] are illegal. You see how that would play out? [01:26:25.800 --> 01:26:32.360] Yeah. So she did go to the judge without me, which I guess, I don't know if that's ex parte [01:26:32.360 --> 01:26:33.360] meeting. [01:26:33.360 --> 01:26:37.800] It absolutely is. But then so was yours if you started arguing those things with the [01:26:37.800 --> 01:26:39.800] judge at that hearing. [01:26:39.800 --> 01:26:47.800] Oh, okay. But they did dismiss the case based on that, which I was really surprised. [01:26:47.800 --> 01:26:52.600] Yeah. And see, that's the thing. They're required to dismiss it. The officer cannot pull you [01:26:52.600 --> 01:26:56.600] over so he can issue something that's illegal. [01:26:56.600 --> 01:26:58.520] Right. [01:26:58.520 --> 01:27:07.440] But that's exactly what virtually every municipality in Texas does. That's what every county sheriff's [01:27:07.440 --> 01:27:15.400] department or constable does. The DPS is the only agency that can change their tickets [01:27:15.400 --> 01:27:20.880] electronically through that electronic pad they use. And they can actually change type [01:27:20.880 --> 01:27:28.240] sizes by updating the firmware in that pad. But not everyone has those updates because [01:27:28.240 --> 01:27:31.920] some DPS tickets do it correctly and some do not. [01:27:31.920 --> 01:27:37.640] But there are actually two different clauses in the transportation code that's required [01:27:37.640 --> 01:27:45.760] to be on those tickets a very specific way. And 708.105 is only one of them. The other [01:27:45.760 --> 01:27:51.440] one deals with a statement, a notice that's required to be on there in relation to financial [01:27:51.440 --> 01:27:54.880] responsibility. Most of them do not have that on there correctly either. [01:27:54.880 --> 01:28:03.800] Well, I just wanted to let everybody know I learned that from you. And if you stick [01:28:03.800 --> 01:28:08.360] to your guns and read the Texas transportation code, you can beat me. [01:28:08.360 --> 01:28:12.120] Well, I appreciate you letting everybody know that. Yeah, folks, that's one of the first [01:28:12.120 --> 01:28:16.760] things I brought up to people with this. Every citation in Texas just about is illegal. Austin [01:28:16.760 --> 01:28:22.600] has been aware of this for years now, and they still haven't changed their tickets. [01:28:22.600 --> 01:28:26.920] And I have yet to see anything other than a DPS ticket that has complied. [01:28:26.920 --> 01:28:32.800] Wow. All right. Well, I appreciate it, Eddie. I love your show. [01:28:32.800 --> 01:28:36.640] All right. Thank you, Mike. I'm glad that we got it done for you and you were able to [01:28:36.640 --> 01:28:39.680] use it effectively. All right. Thanks. Bye-bye. [01:28:39.680 --> 01:28:47.040] Bye-bye. All right, folks. 512-646-1984. I got a half an hour to go, and that was my [01:28:47.040 --> 01:28:51.120] last caller in this segment. So we got two more of those to go, and I'd like somebody [01:28:51.120 --> 01:28:55.520] else to talk to. If you're out there and listening in, please give us a call. But while we're [01:28:55.520 --> 01:29:00.320] waiting on someone to do that, I am glad Mike called in and gave us his experience and said [01:29:00.320 --> 01:29:05.600] that he did well. I've also gotten notice that there have been several other successes [01:29:05.600 --> 01:29:09.600] lately that have been fighting their tickets, and we managed to get those dismissed as well. [01:29:09.600 --> 01:29:15.600] They've been notifying me either by email or on Facebook. And it's nice to know that [01:29:15.600 --> 01:29:20.280] people are paying attention and that they're standing their ground and not letting these [01:29:20.280 --> 01:29:27.760] corrupt little bureaucracies continue their roadside theft, because that's all this is, [01:29:27.760 --> 01:29:31.520] folks. If you didn't listen to the beginning of this show, you need to get the archive [01:29:31.520 --> 01:29:39.000] and do that, because this is nothing more than a gang of highwaymen that have been organized [01:29:39.000 --> 01:29:48.040] to steal from the people illegally in an unconstitutional form of taxation that none of us approved [01:29:48.040 --> 01:29:55.400] and ever got to vote on. All right, folks, y'all hang on. Call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:55.400 --> 01:29:57.880] We'll be right back. [01:29:57.880 --> 01:30:07.880] We all know smoking is bad, but new evidence shows babies whose fathers smoked around the [01:30:07.880 --> 01:30:13.320] time of their conception have an increased risk of developing childhood cancer. I'm Dr. [01:30:13.320 --> 01:30:17.080] Catherine Albrecht. Back with details in a moment. [01:30:17.080 --> 01:30:21.600] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back [01:30:21.600 --> 01:30:27.400] again. 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[01:33:42.440 --> 01:33:47.120] Got a half an hour to go, and we got a couple of people up on the board now. First one up, [01:33:47.120 --> 01:33:49.640] Mark in Florida. Mark, what can we do for you? [01:33:49.640 --> 01:33:56.160] I just thought I'd give you an update, Eddie, since I talked to you last week and told you [01:33:56.160 --> 01:34:03.040] that I had a court date allegedly scheduled that I had no notice on. You remember that? [01:34:03.040 --> 01:34:04.040] Yes, sir. [01:34:04.040 --> 01:34:12.680] All right. Well, the update is there is two KPS wars out for me. One has a $100 bond. [01:34:12.680 --> 01:34:17.840] That was the case that I didn't go to jail for, so there was no bail. The other one that [01:34:17.840 --> 01:34:26.680] I had a $100 bond, the KPS has a $1,000 bond on it. [01:34:26.680 --> 01:34:35.200] So I've taken screenshots of the clerk court's record, showing that there was no notice ever [01:34:35.200 --> 01:34:41.520] sent, no notice on the record, and I've done that on my laptop and phone both. I've had [01:34:41.520 --> 01:34:47.640] a couple of people witness the clerk's website with me, and as soon as I get some documents [01:34:47.640 --> 01:34:55.240] done that I want to file, I want to get a copy of the file when I go to the clerk's [01:34:55.240 --> 01:34:59.920] website. Any other advice you can give me on this subject? [01:34:59.920 --> 01:35:06.320] Yeah, don't get caught. At least not until you've got what you need to have your ducks [01:35:06.320 --> 01:35:07.320] in a row. [01:35:07.320 --> 01:35:17.560] Yeah, that's the whole thing. I'm a little weary about traveling around by motor, but [01:35:17.560 --> 01:35:21.000] being very careful right now. [01:35:21.000 --> 01:35:23.160] Yeah, don't blame you. [01:35:23.160 --> 01:35:31.320] I read an interesting statute today that the arresters in Florida will be interested in [01:35:31.320 --> 01:35:37.000] hearing, and this may apply in other states. You'll have to check your local state statutes. [01:35:37.000 --> 01:35:47.120] They have a Sunday clause in the Florida statutes that you cannot be served any documents, warrants, [01:35:47.120 --> 01:35:55.800] or anything, no service of process, on Sunday. It's a very short paragraph. It's in plain [01:35:55.800 --> 01:36:03.560] English, and it says in essence, if you are served on Sunday, it is void. It says that [01:36:03.560 --> 01:36:13.040] word for word, and you have a civil remedy against the person as if the document never [01:36:13.040 --> 01:36:19.680] existed. Do they have that in Texas? [01:36:19.680 --> 01:36:25.160] I'm not sure I understand. I'm following what you're talking about. [01:36:25.160 --> 01:36:27.880] A process server of any type. [01:36:27.880 --> 01:36:32.160] Yeah, anyone in Texas can be a process server as long as they're over the age of 18 and [01:36:32.160 --> 01:36:36.280] not a convicted felon and not a member of the, not a party to whatever it is they're [01:36:36.280 --> 01:36:38.280] serving notice of. [01:36:38.280 --> 01:36:44.560] Well, what I'm saying is service cannot be done on Sunday. [01:36:44.560 --> 01:36:45.560] Okay. [01:36:45.560 --> 01:36:46.560] It's forbidden. [01:36:46.560 --> 01:36:47.560] All right. [01:36:47.560 --> 01:36:48.560] By law. [01:36:48.560 --> 01:36:54.560] I don't know that we've got a forbidden timeframe here in Texas. I don't recall ever seeing [01:36:54.560 --> 01:37:01.720] anything that said we did. Just who can do the service? Generally, constables do service [01:37:01.720 --> 01:37:09.120] the process here. City marshals will do it on occasion for city issues, but I don't know [01:37:09.120 --> 01:37:12.440] that they're limited to only certain days of the week. [01:37:12.440 --> 01:37:21.800] Yeah, that surprised me when I found out. I thought if I do go out to get arrested, [01:37:21.800 --> 01:37:25.720] I'm going to make myself public on Sunday. [01:37:25.720 --> 01:37:33.920] Well, now the thing is, is notice or service is one thing. Arresting on a warrant has no [01:37:33.920 --> 01:37:34.920] day limit. [01:37:34.920 --> 01:37:47.760] The first part of this says service or execution on Sunday of a writ, process, warrant or judgment [01:37:47.760 --> 01:37:52.200] is void. And the person serving or executing- [01:37:52.200 --> 01:37:59.480] Well, you better see if it qualifies the type of warrant. [01:37:59.480 --> 01:38:03.680] Don't assume that it's a blanket statement regarding all warrants. Look and see if it [01:38:03.680 --> 01:38:08.960] gives any qualifications anywhere else in that chapter or code in relation to what is [01:38:08.960 --> 01:38:15.440] void on Sunday. Because I don't really see that they're going to void a felony arrest [01:38:15.440 --> 01:38:18.800] made on a Sunday with a warrant. [01:38:18.800 --> 01:38:26.400] They might because the law says so, but I wouldn't hang my hat on that if I were you. [01:38:26.400 --> 01:38:36.120] Well, the history of this law looks like the first history of it is November 23rd, 1828. [01:38:36.120 --> 01:38:42.640] Yeah. Well, find a case law that has done what you're talking about doing, voiding it [01:38:42.640 --> 01:38:44.560] and see if they agree. [01:38:44.560 --> 01:38:54.160] Okay. It was just a curious little court I came up with. [01:38:54.160 --> 01:38:59.480] Yeah. Well, go to your state law library or something like that and just have the law [01:38:59.480 --> 01:39:04.960] library and help you look up the case law relative to that statute and trace it back. [01:39:04.960 --> 01:39:05.960] Okay. [01:39:05.960 --> 01:39:14.760] I just called in because I put it in just before the other caller got off. I heard you [01:39:14.760 --> 01:39:18.360] say you didn't have a caller, so I figured I'd call in. [01:39:18.360 --> 01:39:21.440] We appreciate it as always. [01:39:21.440 --> 01:39:23.480] And you got another guy on, so I'll let you go. [01:39:23.480 --> 01:39:26.720] All right, sir. You have a good one. Thank you. [01:39:26.720 --> 01:39:33.960] All right. Now we're going to go to Eric in California. Eric, what do you got? [01:39:33.960 --> 01:39:40.640] I wanted to update you. I talked to you last week concerning their request that I file [01:39:40.640 --> 01:39:46.000] the minutes of the clerk's office after the arraignment. And you were telling me that [01:39:46.000 --> 01:39:50.920] my failure to do so could be a felony. So I just wanted to update you about that. I [01:39:50.920 --> 01:40:00.760] took it back to the clerk's office and handed it to them. And they looked at it and then [01:40:00.760 --> 01:40:04.200] I asked them a question about the status of the case and asked them again about the jury [01:40:04.200 --> 01:40:07.840] trial. But then they just handed it back to me and said I didn't need to file it. There [01:40:07.840 --> 01:40:13.680] was no mention ever of the fact that I didn't turn it in on the day. [01:40:13.680 --> 01:40:21.280] So be very careful about taking back an official document when they do that. Yeah. Be very [01:40:21.280 --> 01:40:25.600] careful because that right there could be a complete setup. [01:40:25.600 --> 01:40:31.800] Right. Okay. Well, nothing came of it, thank God. [01:40:31.800 --> 01:40:35.280] That you're aware of yet. [01:40:35.280 --> 01:40:46.040] I guess so. Well, my question for you now is the court date is on the 24th. And I just [01:40:46.040 --> 01:40:51.480] want to know how to approach that. Should I focus on the interrogatory that I had filed [01:40:51.480 --> 01:40:54.080] and the motion that I filed? [01:40:54.080 --> 01:40:58.720] Absolutely. Don't let them don't let them do an in run and tell you it's irrelevant [01:40:58.720 --> 01:41:04.940] or ignore it. Because they absolutely have no grounds to ignore a lack of jurisdiction [01:41:04.940 --> 01:41:11.880] because of an illegal seizure. Now I'm going to assume that you were listening beforehand [01:41:11.880 --> 01:41:14.880] and you've heard what I told the person earlier. [01:41:14.880 --> 01:41:15.880] Yeah. [01:41:15.880 --> 01:41:19.280] Okay. That applies to you as well. [01:41:19.280 --> 01:41:28.280] Right. Okay. Now what do I say to them if they say it's irrelevant? Do I object? [01:41:28.280 --> 01:41:30.280] You absolutely object. [01:41:30.280 --> 01:41:31.840] Okay. [01:41:31.840 --> 01:41:37.200] And you demand their supervisor. Because remember, this is not a judge in California. You're [01:41:37.200 --> 01:41:42.880] not dealing with a judge. Most likely you are dealing with a court clerk that's been [01:41:42.880 --> 01:41:46.680] given a new title to sit in and steal your money. [01:41:46.680 --> 01:41:49.000] That's true. [01:41:49.000 --> 01:41:54.960] Okay. So they can't hold you in contempt. They can't do any of that. But what you can [01:41:54.960 --> 01:42:00.160] do is demand that they follow the law. And if they won't do that, then they have no [01:42:00.160 --> 01:42:05.560] immunity for what they're doing. And you're going to have their ass. [01:42:05.560 --> 01:42:14.240] Right. So if they say that and I object, what's the grounds for the objection? How do I word [01:42:14.240 --> 01:42:15.240] that? [01:42:15.240 --> 01:42:21.040] Do you intend to comply with state law and the rules of evidence and my rights or not? [01:42:21.040 --> 01:42:27.280] Now remember, since the, well, I take that back. Since this is an entirely administrative [01:42:27.280 --> 01:42:36.040] proceeding, the rules of evidence that aren't actually going to apply. [01:42:36.040 --> 01:42:40.140] At least that's the way they've interpreted here in Texas. But that is for the purpose [01:42:40.140 --> 01:42:48.640] of an examining trial. No, actually that's correct. I've got that backwards, I think. [01:42:48.640 --> 01:42:52.520] No, that is correct. In an examining trial or an administrative proceeding, the rules [01:42:52.520 --> 01:42:57.160] of evidence aren't going to apply. [01:42:57.160 --> 01:43:00.400] Why do you call it an administrative proceeding? Is it because of the civil impractical? [01:43:00.400 --> 01:43:06.680] Because this is not a judge. It can't be anything but administrative when no one is acting in [01:43:06.680 --> 01:43:08.680] a judicial capacity. [01:43:08.680 --> 01:43:12.040] Okay. [01:43:12.040 --> 01:43:17.840] If there is no actual, it doesn't even matter if the person is sitting there and at some [01:43:17.840 --> 01:43:23.840] other time in their day, they are a real judge. For the purposes of this proceeding, they [01:43:23.840 --> 01:43:32.920] are not a judge if it's administrative. They're not because a judge is a judicial functionary [01:43:32.920 --> 01:43:36.800] and they don't function in administrative proceedings. [01:43:36.800 --> 01:43:43.880] All right. So anything else? [01:43:43.880 --> 01:43:48.080] No, I think that's it. [01:43:48.080 --> 01:43:51.720] Okay. Well, thanks for calling in and I'll take the next call when I get back off this [01:43:51.720 --> 01:43:53.320] break. Appreciate you, Eric. [01:43:53.320 --> 01:44:00.440] All right, folks. We'll be right back. 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[01:45:14.600 --> 01:45:21.160] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, [01:45:21.160 --> 01:45:26.440] know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and [01:45:26.440 --> 01:45:33.320] now you can too. JurisDictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning [01:45:33.320 --> 01:45:39.240] experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.240 --> 01:45:44.760] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio [01:45:44.760 --> 01:45:51.760] classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much [01:45:51.760 --> 01:45:52.760] more. [01:45:52.760 --> 01:45:59.760] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.760 --> 01:46:51.400] Hi folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio and we are going to Pat in Texas. Pat, [01:46:51.400 --> 01:46:59.640] what can we do for you? Hi Eddie, long time no hear. Yes sir, how are you doing? Oh, pretty [01:46:59.640 --> 01:47:06.000] good. It's a little dry out here in West Texas. I can imagine. A couple of things. Number [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:14.320] one, you had a caller earlier and you were talking about that split in 1934 in what they [01:47:14.320 --> 01:47:22.480] call relevant, what's not relevant on a lot of judicial decisions. Presidential Proclamation [01:47:22.480 --> 01:47:34.560] 2039 happened on March 6th, 1933. It was the proclamation that put the United States into [01:47:34.560 --> 01:47:42.720] an emergency declaration and called out martial law basically because of the bankruptcy that [01:47:42.720 --> 01:47:52.800] happened in 1932 that Congress declared. That didn't have any congressional support. There [01:47:52.800 --> 01:47:59.960] was no law there to back it up, so they passed the Emergency Bank Relief Act after a two-hour [01:47:59.960 --> 01:48:08.760] session of Congress on March 9th, 1933 and Presidential Proclamation 2040 immediately, [01:48:08.760 --> 01:48:18.320] which was identical to 2039, was read on the radio error waves and that's what got the [01:48:18.320 --> 01:48:28.820] change to the Trading with the Enemies Act, Section 5B from 1917 to allow the federal [01:48:28.820 --> 01:48:36.920] government to confiscate everybody's gold by declaring all U.S. citizens belligerents [01:48:36.920 --> 01:48:42.480] and enemies of the state. Yeah, but the thing about it is, is that Presidential Proclamation [01:48:42.480 --> 01:48:49.520] had no effect outside of the executive branch of government. That's the thing. The proclamations [01:48:49.520 --> 01:48:57.200] and the other things the president signs off on are not law. They don't have any binding [01:48:57.200 --> 01:49:02.540] authority upon anyone except those that work in government in the executive department [01:49:02.540 --> 01:49:08.680] as functionaries of that department. So when he declared them enemy combatants, he declared [01:49:08.680 --> 01:49:15.240] his entire department enemy combatants, but he didn't declare the people enemy combatants. [01:49:15.240 --> 01:49:22.520] Thank you, but we in general are being treated as such. Well, but they made themselves our [01:49:22.520 --> 01:49:26.640] enemy. We're not the enemy, but they made themselves our enemy and then they go out [01:49:26.640 --> 01:49:34.480] and prove that every day. Oh, tell me about it. You know, I'm still facing this. That [01:49:34.480 --> 01:49:45.600] second attorney I hired, he quit. So I'm doing it myself. But that was the tipping point. [01:49:45.600 --> 01:49:51.600] That's why they say that the judicial decisions don't matter before and after. That's where [01:49:51.600 --> 01:49:56.760] that that date comes in. Also, they have a compact signed by all the governors from that [01:49:56.760 --> 01:50:03.080] time. The 48 governors took them three years to get everybody to sign off on. And that's [01:50:03.080 --> 01:50:08.920] where you get the League of Governors. The League of Criminals, you mean? Federalism. [01:50:08.920 --> 01:50:17.400] Yeah. Extended federalism into the many states. And that's where the term in the state actually [01:50:17.400 --> 01:50:26.200] comes from. And we both know what that means. Yes, we do. I wanted to ask you, do you still [01:50:26.200 --> 01:50:33.800] have Mike Handel's contact info? I do. Could you send me an email with it, please, kind [01:50:33.800 --> 01:50:41.440] sir? I'm trying to get a hold of him. Sure. He's got some information on the international [01:50:41.440 --> 01:50:48.880] traffic inspection certificates that the traffic cops all are required to have on them after [01:50:48.880 --> 01:50:55.520] completing a 35-hour course. And none of them do. Right. But it's just one of those little [01:50:55.520 --> 01:51:02.240] things that's a nitpicky type thing. Okay. And if you could shoot that to me, I would [01:51:02.240 --> 01:51:08.320] appreciate it very, very much. Yes, sir. Will do. Thank you, sir. You're welcome. It says [01:51:08.320 --> 01:51:14.800] bye. Well, tell her I said howdy back and y'all be good and be careful and good luck. [01:51:14.800 --> 01:51:21.840] Yeah, we're keeping our heads down. Good idea. They haven't killed us yet. Well, it ain't [01:51:21.840 --> 01:51:26.680] too long before they're going to start looking for the lot of us, Pat. And you know that. [01:51:26.680 --> 01:51:30.480] I already know that. I'm on the red list. It doesn't make a damn bit of difference to [01:51:30.480 --> 01:51:35.200] me anymore. You know that. I wouldn't be here if it did to me either. It's just you got [01:51:35.200 --> 01:51:43.080] to do what you got to do, regardless of the risks at some point. Yeah. Just full speed [01:51:43.080 --> 01:51:48.800] ahead. Got speed, senior. Yes, sir. You have a good night and thanks for calling. Bye. [01:51:48.800 --> 01:51:54.200] Bye-bye. All right. Now we're going to go to Bryden in Texas. Bryden, what can we do [01:51:54.200 --> 01:52:02.320] for you? Hey, Eddie. I was trying to clear something up with your call spanner regarding [01:52:02.320 --> 01:52:09.840] the constitutional challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. Can you use that on retro cases [01:52:09.840 --> 01:52:16.200] and not that if so? What do you mean retro? Retro cases. Well, cases that, you know, that [01:52:16.200 --> 01:52:20.440] I've already got. I've already got a ticket. Yeah. The thing about a constitutional challenge [01:52:20.440 --> 01:52:28.040] is it raises a jurisdictional challenge issue. Subject matter jurisdiction can be challenged [01:52:28.040 --> 01:52:39.520] at any time, past, present or future. So technically speaking, yes. Okay. I remember you're saying [01:52:39.520 --> 01:52:47.680] that before our previous show. And so are there certain cases that you would not be [01:52:47.680 --> 01:52:54.880] able to do that in? Well, you can't do it in any case where you can't rely on something [01:52:54.880 --> 01:53:05.560] that would allow you to challenge jurisdiction after the fact. Okay. I see. Also regarding [01:53:05.560 --> 01:53:12.720] your, I've been trying to get my schedule changed so I can take part in your class on [01:53:12.720 --> 01:53:19.440] Sundays. You know, on an average, what does it take for somebody on average say to get [01:53:19.440 --> 01:53:25.560] a good grasp on the... Well, I've learned one thing in teaching this class, Bryden, [01:53:25.560 --> 01:53:29.040] and I don't mean to make it sound like I'm trying to belittle your question. I'm not, [01:53:29.040 --> 01:53:35.800] but please understand. There is no way for me to answer that because there is no average. [01:53:35.800 --> 01:53:40.920] And the reason there isn't is because even if you can pick it up intellectually, that [01:53:40.920 --> 01:53:47.440] doesn't mean you can use it properly when you need to. It takes a varied set of skills [01:53:47.440 --> 01:53:53.640] and it takes a little while to develop those skills to see if you actually have them. Right. [01:53:53.640 --> 01:53:59.320] So there is absolutely no way I can gauge that just by telling you, oh, on average it [01:53:59.320 --> 01:54:07.840] takes this long because it varies for everyone. And I do mean everyone. Sure. It's one of [01:54:07.840 --> 01:54:13.360] those things why I keep saying there are only a handful of actual real trial attorneys in [01:54:13.360 --> 01:54:18.800] the entire country that are good. And that's because they are one of those very, very few [01:54:18.800 --> 01:54:24.880] that can actually do what they have to do at trial. Yeah. Everybody else is a paper [01:54:24.880 --> 01:54:28.800] pushing attorney. They can do all the prep work, the research and the writing, but they [01:54:28.800 --> 01:54:36.880] cannot get up in the courtroom and win a case. Right. Yeah. But that makes sense. I mean, [01:54:36.880 --> 01:54:41.840] have you seen a few good men with Tom Cruise and Demi Moore and Jack Nicholson? Yeah. All [01:54:41.840 --> 01:54:49.440] right. You know why they sent Tom Cruise in there, right? Why they sent him in there. [01:54:49.440 --> 01:54:57.400] Why they sent him in as the attorney. Well, I can't remember that. Because Demi Moore [01:54:57.400 --> 01:55:03.880] wanted to be the attorney. And even though she knew everything she needed to know, as [01:55:03.880 --> 01:55:08.880] her commanding officer put it, yeah, yeah, yeah, all intelligence and book smarts, but [01:55:08.880 --> 01:55:16.880] no street smarts. Yeah. He was a good performer. Yeah. So the reason Tom Cruise got the case [01:55:16.880 --> 01:55:22.480] was because Demi Moore could never have won it and defend it by defending them. Right. [01:55:24.880 --> 01:55:33.120] Well, that makes sense. Totally. I know you're only on on on Mondays, but man, [01:55:33.120 --> 01:55:41.520] we sure would like to hear you on four other nights, too. Well, I appreciate that. And I [01:55:41.520 --> 01:55:46.560] used to be on three nights a week, but that sure got to where it ate into an awful lot of time to [01:55:46.560 --> 01:55:56.320] get anything done on a personal basis or any other basis. Right. Yeah. Well, we appreciate it. And [01:55:56.320 --> 01:56:01.760] I sure enjoy your show. I'm turning some people on. Well, I appreciate that, too. I know it's [01:56:01.760 --> 01:56:08.160] getting closer to time. So. All right. Well, thanks for calling in, man. All right. Thank you. [01:56:08.160 --> 01:56:14.240] All right. Bye bye. All right. We got Terrence in Florida. Alan, I don't know if I can get to you, [01:56:14.240 --> 01:56:20.400] but I'm going to try. Terrence, what do you got? Oh, just real fast. He was talking about a guy [01:56:20.400 --> 01:56:26.880] that wrote a tax book at the beginning of the show. Dave Champion. And the name of the book is [01:56:26.880 --> 01:56:36.000] Income Tax Shattering the Myths. And it can be ordered at taxrevolt.us or taxrevolt.us. [01:56:38.800 --> 01:56:47.040] Okay. And can you talk him into narrowing it down to say 150 pages instead of 400? [01:56:47.040 --> 01:56:52.800] Absolutely not. Because he has to cover every single argument the IRS tries to use to get you [01:56:52.800 --> 01:56:57.840] caught up in what they do. And those everything he's put in that book is imperative to defending [01:56:57.840 --> 01:57:04.560] yourself. Dave's a highly intelligent guy. If he could have distilled it down any further [01:57:04.560 --> 01:57:13.040] and made it effective, he would have. Sounds good. Okay. Okay. All right. Thanks. Yep. [01:57:14.720 --> 01:57:19.760] All right. Well, it looks like my other caller dropped off the board here. Well, all right. [01:57:19.760 --> 01:57:24.320] I got a minute and a half left. So I want to say thank you everybody for calling in and for [01:57:24.320 --> 01:57:27.920] listening. If I actually have any listeners out there besides those that called in, who knows? [01:57:28.880 --> 01:57:32.160] Luck may be with me and people actually will listen to the show from time to time. [01:57:32.880 --> 01:57:40.240] In any case, this has been one of those nights where the call to action is loud. [01:57:40.240 --> 01:57:46.000] The call to action is necessary because we are being too inactive in taking control of our own [01:57:46.000 --> 01:57:56.400] lives and our own country. We have to change that. We have to fix that. Get educated, get motivated, [01:57:56.400 --> 01:58:05.200] get up, get out, get going, get together and let's change America back to the better [01:58:05.200 --> 01:58:10.640] vision it was intended for. We don't have to go back to the good old days. We don't have to go [01:58:10.640 --> 01:58:16.640] back to where we are now. Let's go for the vision of what we were supposed to be able to become [01:58:16.640 --> 01:58:23.760] instead. I don't want to regress. I want to progress, but I want to do it the way we were [01:58:23.760 --> 01:58:29.680] intended to do it, free as individuals. All right, folks. 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