[00:00.000 --> 00:07.840] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [00:07.840 --> 00:15.440] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.440 --> 00:23.200] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.200 --> 00:29.360] Markets for Friday, the 8th of June, 2016, are currently trending with gold at $1,365.91 [00:29.360 --> 00:36.080] an ounce, silver, $20.22 an ounce, Texas crude, $45.14 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently [00:36.080 --> 00:44.960] sitting in about 662 U.S. currency. [00:44.960 --> 00:50.640] Today in history, the year 1947, reports are broadcast that a UFO crash landed in Roswell, [00:50.640 --> 00:54.520] New Mexico in what became known as the Roswell UFO incident. [00:54.520 --> 00:59.120] By far the most catalogued, controversial, and covered up UFO crash in American history, [00:59.120 --> 01:07.800] the Roswell incident marks the beginning of modern day UFOlogy, today in history. [01:07.800 --> 01:12.640] In recent news, during a peaceful anti-police brutality protest Thursday night in Dallas, [01:12.640 --> 01:17.560] Texas, 25-year-old Micah Xavier Johnson from Mesquite, Texas, a military veteran in the [01:17.560 --> 01:22.760] U.S. Army Reserve, from March 2009 to April 2015, and combat soldier with deployment in [01:22.760 --> 01:28.160] Afghanistan from late 2013 to mid-2014, who had no criminal record or known terror ties, [01:28.160 --> 01:31.000] suddenly began a police targeting sniper spree. [01:31.000 --> 01:34.520] Though Dallas Police Chief David Brown did suggest that other suspects assisted in the [01:34.520 --> 01:38.800] coordination along with law enforcement, previously stating that three people were in custody [01:38.800 --> 01:42.560] and that multiple shooters were involved, Johnson told negotiators that he was acting [01:42.560 --> 01:43.560] solo. [01:43.560 --> 01:46.840] The reason for his spree, as he then told them, was due to the two African-American [01:46.840 --> 01:50.280] men recently shot by police in Louisiana and Minnesota. [01:50.280 --> 01:54.320] Five police officers were killed and seven officers wounded, along with two non-law enforcement [01:54.320 --> 01:56.400] citizens who were also injured. [01:56.400 --> 02:00.520] Johnson was eventually killed by a bomb drone after several hours of standoff negotiations [02:00.520 --> 02:02.720] with police in a parking garage. [02:02.720 --> 02:05.520] Federal law enforcement are now saying that Johnson was the only shooter. [02:05.520 --> 02:09.720] This is just the deadliest of the shooting sprees that has been occurring nationwide, [02:09.720 --> 02:19.040] where gunmen in Tennessee, Missouri, and Georgia have recently targeted and killed police officers. [02:19.040 --> 02:23.400] Google is testing new cryptography algorithms that hopefully quantum computing in the future [02:23.400 --> 02:27.340] might not be able to decipher the fears that processing power offered by soon-to-emerge [02:27.340 --> 02:31.880] quantum computers could be enough to decrypt any internet communications that were recorded [02:31.880 --> 02:32.880] today. [02:32.880 --> 02:36.760] So in order to preemptively future-proof today's internet communications, Google is deploying [02:36.760 --> 02:41.000] what it's calling post-quantum cryptography, testing its effectiveness with their browser, [02:41.000 --> 02:42.000] Chrome Canary. [02:42.000 --> 02:45.240] For the test, they will be using a cryptographic algorithm called New Hope. [02:45.240 --> 02:48.960] However, with the test lasting two years, Google hopes it can replace the algorithm [02:48.960 --> 02:53.960] with something more up-to-date, down the line. [02:53.960 --> 03:23.720] This is Brook Brody with your Lowdown for July 8th, 2016. [03:23.720 --> 03:46.300] We've got more than enough questions. [03:46.300 --> 03:50.300] Take all the rope in Texas, find a tall old tree [03:50.300 --> 03:56.300] Round up all of them bad boys, hang a high on the street [03:56.300 --> 04:00.300] For all the people to see [04:00.300 --> 04:04.300] And just as there's one thing you should always find [04:04.300 --> 04:08.300] You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line [04:08.300 --> 04:12.300] And the gospel sermons will sing a victory tune [04:12.300 --> 04:16.300] And we'll all meet by the couple of folks who move [04:16.300 --> 04:21.300] We'll raise up our glasses against evil forces singing [04:21.300 --> 04:26.300] Whiskey for my men, beer for my horses [04:32.300 --> 04:37.300] We ain't got too many gangsters to dirty deem [04:37.300 --> 04:40.300] Too much corruption and crime in the streets [04:40.300 --> 04:45.300] All right, folks, good evening. This is the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show with your host Eddie Craig. [04:45.300 --> 04:50.300] It is July 11, 2016. [04:50.300 --> 04:56.300] I would like for any of my class members that are listening to make an apology. [04:56.300 --> 05:00.300] I misstated a number yesterday during class, and I'd like to correct that. [05:00.300 --> 05:07.300] I misread an article that was supposed to tell us how many accumulated deaths there have been in 2016 [05:07.300 --> 05:10.300] relating to police-involved shootings. [05:10.300 --> 05:13.300] The number that I had was 1,011. [05:13.300 --> 05:16.300] That's actually a little bit too high. [05:16.300 --> 05:22.300] The accurate number as of today is 617. [05:22.300 --> 05:29.300] Now, if you want to read up on each and every one of these to find out exactly who's getting killed, how often, and where, [05:29.300 --> 05:33.300] all you've got to do is go to killedbypolice.net. [05:33.300 --> 05:40.300] They keep a complete link there to both the Facebook page, the newspaper and articles, [05:40.300 --> 05:49.300] or news articles period relating to the shooting so that you can verify that it's in fact a police-involved shooting [05:49.300 --> 05:52.300] and what the circumstances of it were. [05:52.300 --> 06:01.300] So I've been doing a lot of writing on this particular issue on the blog site here and on Facebook for the last few days. [06:01.300 --> 06:08.300] Now, the last article, the next to last article I posted on the blog went into this issue hot and heavy, [06:08.300 --> 06:14.300] and I encourage you, if you haven't started following the blog, to do so. [06:14.300 --> 06:23.300] The blog can be found at tauoflaw.wordpress.com, [06:23.300 --> 06:28.300] and it's got a lot of different legal and law issues that I write about there, [06:28.300 --> 06:34.300] but it also deals with some of our political and social issues in relation to how things are going [06:34.300 --> 06:38.300] and things we need to consider doing about it and so on and so forth. [06:38.300 --> 06:48.300] But on the issue of police violence, police brutality, excessive force, I don't care what name you give it, [06:48.300 --> 06:54.300] something has got to be done about it. [06:54.300 --> 07:02.300] Now, I don't care what job you think you have. [07:02.300 --> 07:09.300] When you believe that any job, short of being in a war zone, [07:09.300 --> 07:22.300] authorizes you to physically attack, bodily injure, and or kill a nonviolent, unarmed American, [07:22.300 --> 07:34.300] then there should be serious repercussions for anyone that acts upon that belief. [07:34.300 --> 07:45.300] No police officer in this country should be allowed to freely and indiscriminately pull a firearm and kill anyone. [07:45.300 --> 07:57.300] Even in an active war zone, our troops are given specific orders that they are not to fire unless it is to return fire. [07:57.300 --> 08:04.300] The only exception to that being when they are actually on a mission to go in somewhere [08:04.300 --> 08:13.300] and either take someone out or to recover someone that's been kidnapped or a high-value target. [08:13.300 --> 08:24.300] They do not get to run into the nearest town and indiscriminately kill anyone that's there that happens to say no and resist them. [08:24.300 --> 08:35.300] And it is in no way sensible to make the argument that someone is committing a crime against you [08:35.300 --> 08:46.300] because you invaded their territory fully armed to the teeth and attacking them with those arms and they acted to defend themselves. [08:46.300 --> 08:53.300] I don't care if you're wearing a badge and a uniform. [08:53.300 --> 09:08.300] When you believe that the Bill of Rights, where it says no unreasonable searches or seizures, that somehow killing someone for selling loose cigarettes [09:08.300 --> 09:22.300] or for a broken tail light or for not having a little three-inch square piece of plastic in their pocket is reasonable, you are fricking mentally unstable. [09:22.300 --> 09:29.300] And you should not be wearing a uniform. You should not be allowed access to firearms. [09:29.300 --> 09:35.300] You should not be drawing a public paycheck. [09:35.300 --> 09:46.300] And if you are one of those people that refuse to write laws to correct this problem so that these people can be removed from these positions, [09:46.300 --> 09:58.300] you are as equally incompetent, guilty, and criminal as each and every one of them are. [09:58.300 --> 10:02.300] I just finished posting another video that I found. [10:02.300 --> 10:13.300] You have two van loads of cops at this house, which appears to be a gathering of college to younger age, 30s or so, people. [10:13.300 --> 10:26.300] And there are two cops on the porch of this house grabbing this little old petite girl by the hair of her head and dragging her down the steps [10:26.300 --> 10:40.300] because the cop that has a hold of her is actually wrenching her neck and her arms in a visible attempt to cause serious bodily injury to this girl. [10:40.300 --> 10:52.300] And when someone tries to stop her from wiggling, the cops turn around and start abusing that person, [10:52.300 --> 11:01.300] pushing them out of the way, knocking them down, and standing there protecting the cop, abusing this girl as if he somehow has the right to do it. [11:01.300 --> 11:06.300] And not only does he drag her down the steps, he then proceeds to drag her across the front lawn, [11:06.300 --> 11:19.300] out into the paved street by the hair of her head, and in between the two police vans and throws her inside. [11:19.300 --> 11:24.300] You would think you were at your average county rodeo, and this was a bulldogging event, [11:24.300 --> 11:39.300] rather than a public servant trying to resolve an issue that should not involve violence. [11:39.300 --> 11:48.300] And yet, that is their go-to solution for every encounter. [11:48.300 --> 12:03.300] Do what I say or die. Do what I say or get tased. Do what I say or not and suffer serious bodily injury. [12:03.300 --> 12:10.300] What are we going to say is enough. Enough. [12:10.300 --> 12:21.300] Now, part of the article that I posted on the blog on this issue dealt with the police shootings, the alleged police shootings, in Dallas. [12:21.300 --> 12:31.300] Now, on this issue, there have been allegedly five police officers that were killed or wounded in Dallas just a couple nights ago [12:31.300 --> 12:45.300] by an ex-military sniper or ex-military veteran acting as a sniper, however it worked out. [12:45.300 --> 12:49.300] And he's the one that allegedly killed these officers. [12:49.300 --> 13:09.300] Then allegedly they cornered him in a parking garage, and then they have a photo that supposedly is of this guy laying in a pile of rubble and say that this is him. [13:09.300 --> 13:17.300] And there's all kinds of stories coming out about this, and one story they're saying there wasn't enough left of him to even do a toxicology test, [13:17.300 --> 13:24.300] and yet the picture shows an intact human being that appears to have blood running from his eye sockets on the ground, [13:24.300 --> 13:32.300] but you can't really tell because his eyes are covered by a metal band that was part of the structure and so on. [13:32.300 --> 13:35.300] But there's something off about this picture. [13:35.300 --> 13:51.300] This picture shows a man dressed in camis with a bulletproof vest on, lying in a pile of rubble, but it is what the rubble consists of that raises the question. [13:51.300 --> 13:57.300] The rubble is consisting of wallboard. [13:57.300 --> 14:00.300] Okay, it's sheetrock. [14:00.300 --> 14:12.300] And where the sheetrock used to be a part of the wall, you see the metal U-frames that are used to construct things like hotels and stuff like that for commercial buildings. [14:12.300 --> 14:31.300] But one place I have never seen sheetrock used is in a parking garage where this guy was allegedly blown up by a SWAT team with a robot. [14:31.300 --> 14:48.300] Now get this, remember I told you the human being in this photograph is completely intact, but supposedly the Dallas PD killed him with an explosive device carried into the area by a drone, okay? [14:48.300 --> 14:53.300] A robotic drone, not an aerial one, the kind that runs on treads, okay? [14:53.300 --> 14:55.300] They blew him up. [14:55.300 --> 15:01.300] This was their solution to this sniper. [15:01.300 --> 15:10.300] He holds up allegedly in a parking garage, and they blow him up. [15:10.300 --> 15:12.300] What's wrong with this picture? [15:12.300 --> 15:28.300] You have a police department that instead of apprehending an individual, just like in the Chris Dorner case in California, rather than apprehending the individual and doing what their job requires them to do [15:28.300 --> 15:42.300] and put themselves at risk to secure this individual as safely as possible to stay in trial, they unilaterally decide to exterminate him with an explosive device. [15:42.300 --> 15:59.300] And in Chris Dorner, they cornered him in a log cabin, and instead of waiting him out and capturing him, they intentionally set fire to the cabin to burn him alive. [15:59.300 --> 16:16.300] Does anyone else not see these methods of dealing with these problems as sheer retaliation for going against them? [16:16.300 --> 16:35.300] Now, don't get me wrong, I am not a hater of police. I hate what they do, and I hate what they're about, for the most part. Having been there and been told to do these things and refused to do these things, I know what it's about. [16:35.300 --> 16:43.300] But there are bigger issues here, and we need to start discussing those and dealing with those. [16:43.300 --> 16:48.300] All right, folks, we're going to take a quick break, and I'll be back on the other side to continue this discussion. [16:48.300 --> 16:56.300] And I've got the caller board off right now, so if you can't get in, that's why. So don't panic. When I turn it on, I'll let you know. [16:56.300 --> 17:24.300] All right, we'll be right back until y'all hang in there. [17:26.300 --> 17:51.300] All right, folks, we'll be right back. [17:51.300 --> 17:56.300] We'll be right back. [18:21.300 --> 18:33.300] We'll be right back. [18:33.300 --> 19:00.300] We'll be right back. [19:00.300 --> 19:22.300] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:22.300 --> 19:45.300] All right, folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [19:45.300 --> 19:48.300] All right, so what do we do about this? [19:48.300 --> 19:54.300] I mean, let's look at how this cycle of events gets started. [19:54.300 --> 20:07.300] The people, or at least some of the people, get together in this little part of Pennsylvania in what we have called the Constitutional Convention. [20:07.300 --> 20:26.300] Now, the men that go to this convention are representative of the then-existing individual colony states, and the entire reason that they're authorized to gather together to have their discussion is to iron out some of the issues with the Articles of Confederation. [20:26.300 --> 20:44.300] Now, the problems that existed with the Articles of Confederation were numerous because they were done in a hurry, and they've had some real shortcomings, absolutely no question about that, one of which, of course, was that every colony was printing its own money. [20:44.300 --> 20:47.300] Inflation was running rampant. [20:47.300 --> 21:07.300] But one of the key things about the agreement that they had within the Articles of Confederation is that the Articles of Confederation themselves had a clause that specifically stated that no amendment or other change to the articles could be done [21:07.300 --> 21:23.300] without the express consent of the National Congress and a unanimous agreement by every one of the colony states, okay? [21:23.300 --> 21:28.300] It had to be absolutely unanimous for any changes to be made. [21:28.300 --> 21:36.300] That was considered to be one of the other shortcomings as the extremely difficult amendment process. [21:36.300 --> 21:57.300] Now, that being said, since the Articles of Confederation specifically forbade them to make any changes, and since the Constitutional Convention was not fully supported by every one of the existing colonies [21:57.300 --> 22:07.300] to make the changes it did by substituting the Articles of Confederation and replacing them entirely with a new Constitution, [22:07.300 --> 22:17.300] how then was our then existing government not in violation of its own agreements with each other to not do the thing it was about to do? [22:17.300 --> 22:27.300] How does that speak to the legitimacy of government to begin with and their willingness to abide by an agreement that they made? [22:27.300 --> 22:40.300] And yet here today, we're being told by the servants that are created by the current Constitution that no state can leave the Union once it's in the Union [22:40.300 --> 22:48.300] because that violates, supposedly, some federal regulation. Now, let me ask you a question. [22:48.300 --> 23:00.300] What has greater authority, the Constitution, the individual powers and sovereignties of the states to participate in said Constitution or to withdraw, [23:00.300 --> 23:12.300] or the regulations created by these servants are created to create the servants through the Constitution itself by those states, [23:12.300 --> 23:26.300] where the servants could then write regulations saying that their masters cannot do things that break the servants' rules. How asinine is that idea? [23:26.300 --> 23:36.300] In other words, I don't give a flying crap what the United States Supreme Court says about a state not being able to secede from the Union. [23:36.300 --> 23:40.300] If you can voluntarily enter, you can voluntarily leave. [23:40.300 --> 24:00.300] Any other argument means that the federal government does not consider the individual states to be sovereign nations, which they have no power to decide since they are a creature created entirely by those sovereign nations. [24:00.300 --> 24:07.300] Does that logic fall on any deaf ears other than those in government? [24:07.300 --> 24:18.300] How does the lesser thing claim to have more power than the greater thing which created it? [24:18.300 --> 24:29.300] It would be an unnatural phenomenon of epic magnitude for that to be the case. [24:29.300 --> 24:42.300] We have forgotten who we were, who we are, and what our own powers are. [24:42.300 --> 25:00.300] The people that call themselves the government are not the masters. They have never been the masters. But they sure as hell want to act like it, and they want you to believe it, [25:00.300 --> 25:14.300] and they want you to accept it because it is the only way they can maintain their power to lie, cheat, and steal from us. [25:14.300 --> 25:18.300] It's the only way they can remain in control of us. [25:18.300 --> 25:33.300] It's the only way they can maintain the illusion that they have the right to interfere with the people of an entirely different country. [25:33.300 --> 25:50.300] In other words, America is run by organized crime, pretending to be government, and the people are actually playing along. [25:50.300 --> 26:06.300] And I have to ask why. Why are you that damn naive and blind to what is going on and what they have no right to be doing? [26:06.300 --> 26:17.300] Not only not in your name, but to you and to others just like you. [26:17.300 --> 26:23.300] We have a Constitution that specifically forbids any state to maintain a standing army. [26:23.300 --> 26:34.300] Yet every damn city in the country has an army of its own in a police force, which can be commandeered on command by the state, [26:34.300 --> 26:49.300] thus creating an entire state army of armed thugs that are just as happy to kill you as they are to ignore you. [26:49.300 --> 26:53.300] Think about that. [26:53.300 --> 27:11.300] This country has not lost its way. This country has stuck its head in the damn sand with its butt up in the air, and all it's waiting on is the line of the desert to come along and bite it off. [27:11.300 --> 27:21.300] You may as well stick a pole in your butt with a flag on it that says, free lunch. [27:21.300 --> 27:28.300] And then tonight when the show is over, y'all go back to thinking about this and go, you know what, he's right. Oh, wait, football game's on. [27:28.300 --> 27:35.300] Now, what do I have to do tomorrow when I go to work? Oh, yeah, I got to type those documents, do that paper, and blah, blah, blah. [27:35.300 --> 27:44.300] Anything except move forward with the knowledge you were given and the information that supports it. [27:44.300 --> 27:48.300] You don't have to take my word that this is the way this country is going down the tubes. [27:48.300 --> 28:13.300] Now, turn on your TV that you already stuck in front of how many hours out of every single day, the radio, your telephone, whatever it is you're staring at more than reality as your personal distraction from having to deal with the world around you. [28:13.300 --> 28:16.300] What do we do? How do we do it? [28:16.300 --> 28:21.300] How many of us will it take to stand together to make the change? [28:21.300 --> 28:30.300] And change has to come. If it don't, Civil War is imminent. It is imminent. We don't have, there's no way to avoid it. [28:30.300 --> 28:43.300] As much as I grieve for the loss of human life of those officers in Dallas, the only real surprise about Dallas is that it took this long for that to begin to happen. [28:43.300 --> 28:46.300] Now, it's not the first incident in that chain of events. [28:46.300 --> 28:57.300] We had that other guy that shot those two police officers in New York or New Jersey or somewhere either earlier this year or the end of last year, shot them while they were sitting in their car. [28:57.300 --> 29:03.300] We had that one that went and shot that deputy at the gas station and so on and so forth. [29:03.300 --> 29:26.300] And at first everybody just thought it was a random thing, but as it turns out, each and every one of them was based upon some previous interaction that those officers had had with those individuals or someone those individuals knew or that officer had wronged them. [29:26.300 --> 29:47.300] Trying to say that what you did to someone is justified because it's your job or because you were given orders to do it or because you're employed by the government is not sufficient cause to protect you from someone that has every right to protect themselves from you. [29:47.300 --> 29:51.300] I don't care who you are, cop or anyone else. [29:51.300 --> 30:01.300] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break and I'll start taking your calls. Y'all hang in there. [30:01.300 --> 30:07.300] It used to be you could trust a hacker. Sure, they broke into computer systems, but most lived by a code of ethics. [30:07.300 --> 30:15.300] But as WikiLeaks informant Bradley Manning found out, things have changed. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you more in a moment. [30:15.300 --> 30:25.300] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.300 --> 30:33.300] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.300 --> 30:44.300] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [30:44.300 --> 30:50.300] Honest hackers live by a code that emphasizes sharing, openness, free access to computers and world improvement. [30:50.300 --> 30:55.300] And they typically have a healthy mistrust of authority that helps keep us all safer. [30:55.300 --> 31:03.300] For example, hackers have exposed serious flaws in technology. They forewarned us that contactless credit card numbers could be siphoned right through our wallets. [31:03.300 --> 31:09.300] They also proved that human chip implants can be cloned, allowing criminals to pretend to be someone else. [31:09.300 --> 31:17.300] But these days, be careful which hackers you trust with your secrets. According to the Hacker Quarterly, one in four hackers is now an FBI informant. [31:17.300 --> 31:21.300] Many have been forced into government service to avoid jail time. [31:21.300 --> 31:40.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.300 --> 32:01.300] A job of 10 products that saves you space, time and money. Call 888-910-4367 only at NUSA.org. [32:01.300 --> 32:05.300] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:05.300 --> 32:07.300] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:07.300 --> 32:12.300] 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. [32:12.300 --> 32:19.300] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.300 --> 32:25.300] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.300 --> 32:35.300] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.300 --> 32:40.300] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.300 --> 32:47.300] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.300 --> 32:50.300] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.300 --> 32:54.300] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.300 --> 33:01.300] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:01.300 --> 33:14.300] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:14.300 --> 33:17.300] Yeah, I got a warrant. [33:17.300 --> 33:20.300] And I'm gonna solve them. [33:20.300 --> 33:23.300] To the head government them. [33:23.300 --> 33:25.300] Prosecute them. [33:25.300 --> 33:28.300] Okay. [33:28.300 --> 33:31.300] All set. [33:31.300 --> 33:36.300] This isn't a race for Mr. Bush. [33:36.300 --> 33:41.300] This isn't a race for the teen. [33:41.300 --> 33:44.300] I need a prosecutor to come and help me. [33:44.300 --> 33:46.300] Prosecute them, wicked leader. [33:46.300 --> 33:48.300] You see, they're all liars. [33:48.300 --> 33:50.300] They tell me, they're all liars. [33:50.300 --> 33:51.300] I tell six stories. [33:51.300 --> 33:52.300] You don't believe me. [33:52.300 --> 33:53.300] See what they tell me. [33:53.300 --> 33:56.300] 3% of Americans vote for Bush. [33:56.300 --> 33:58.300] So how the hell do you get the presidency? [33:58.300 --> 34:01.300] That's why we have a warrant for him. [34:01.300 --> 34:03.300] Everybody listen carefully. [34:03.300 --> 34:05.300] It's into the world that the issues proceed. [34:05.300 --> 34:10.300] This is a race for Mr. Bush. [34:10.300 --> 34:12.300] My warrant. [34:12.300 --> 34:15.300] I need you. [34:15.300 --> 34:17.300] This is a race. [34:17.300 --> 34:18.300] All right, folks. [34:18.300 --> 34:19.300] We are back. [34:19.300 --> 34:21.300] This is Rule of Law Radio. [34:21.300 --> 34:26.300] The call-in number is 512-646-1984. [34:26.300 --> 34:28.300] And we are now going to start with the callers. [34:28.300 --> 34:30.300] Right now we have Tom in Maryland. [34:30.300 --> 34:32.300] Tom, what can we do for you? [34:32.300 --> 34:33.300] Hey, Eddie. [34:33.300 --> 34:35.300] I talked to you a couple of times in the past, [34:35.300 --> 34:39.300] and I'm approaching my deadline for a response on this speeding ticket. [34:39.300 --> 34:41.300] And I have a question. [34:41.300 --> 34:46.300] Do I need to send – do I need to – before – let me back up. [34:46.300 --> 34:50.300] I'm going to file a motion to demand nature and cause. [34:50.300 --> 34:54.300] But do I also need to send in this ticket to request a trial? [34:54.300 --> 34:55.300] Or is it – [34:55.300 --> 34:58.300] No, they're going to have a trial whether you request it or not [34:58.300 --> 35:01.300] unless you get them to dismiss it beforehand. [35:01.300 --> 35:02.300] Correct. [35:02.300 --> 35:05.300] So do I need to file that motion [35:05.300 --> 35:09.300] and then not send in this ticket requesting a trial? [35:09.300 --> 35:12.300] Because it has the three options, and one of them, of course, is no. [35:12.300 --> 35:13.300] Okay. [35:13.300 --> 35:17.300] First off is the ticket for a civil infraction. [35:17.300 --> 35:18.300] It is. [35:18.300 --> 35:19.300] Okay. [35:19.300 --> 35:25.300] Have you looked at my blog to see what you do for discovery? [35:25.300 --> 35:30.300] I have, but I haven't. [35:30.300 --> 35:31.300] Yeah. [35:31.300 --> 35:34.300] In other words, yeah, you've read it, but no, you ain't done it. [35:34.300 --> 35:36.300] That is correct. [35:36.300 --> 35:37.300] Okay. [35:37.300 --> 35:39.300] Then why are we having this conversation? [35:39.300 --> 35:43.300] Why are you asking me about doing something that shouldn't be done at all [35:43.300 --> 35:46.300] until you've done your discovery and gotten it rolling? [35:46.300 --> 35:50.300] You don't want to go to trial before you've got discovery, do you? [35:50.300 --> 35:51.300] No. [35:51.300 --> 35:52.300] Okay. [35:52.300 --> 35:54.300] So you can file a motion for nature and cause, [35:54.300 --> 35:59.300] but you need to be filing that motion for discovery with those interrogatories. [35:59.300 --> 36:01.300] Okay. [36:01.300 --> 36:05.300] So I just filed for the discovery, and I don't have to worry about filing [36:05.300 --> 36:08.300] or sending in this ticket for requesting a trial at all. [36:08.300 --> 36:14.300] That's my concern, is that they're going to just ignore that stuff. [36:14.300 --> 36:16.300] You don't send in the ticket. [36:16.300 --> 36:21.300] If you want to, you can file a motion demanding a trial [36:21.300 --> 36:23.300] and make sure you demand a jury trial, [36:23.300 --> 36:27.300] which they will probably say you're not entitled to in Maryland. [36:27.300 --> 36:28.300] All right. [36:28.300 --> 36:29.300] Okay. [36:29.300 --> 36:30.300] Well, this is one of my options. [36:30.300 --> 36:32.300] What? [36:32.300 --> 36:34.300] We're requesting a trial, but the trial just isn't... [36:34.300 --> 36:36.300] No, you're not listening to me. [36:36.300 --> 36:39.300] Not a trial, a jury trial. [36:39.300 --> 36:41.300] Correct. [36:41.300 --> 36:42.300] Okay. [36:42.300 --> 36:44.300] In states where these are civil infractions, [36:44.300 --> 36:48.300] they almost always say you do not have a right to a jury trial, [36:48.300 --> 36:51.300] but they have a problem with that no matter what they do. [36:51.300 --> 36:56.300] If the value of the amount of money they're trying to take is $20 or more, [36:56.300 --> 37:01.300] the right to a jury trial in a civil proceeding cannot be taken away from the accused. [37:01.300 --> 37:06.300] That's protected by the federal Constitution. [37:06.300 --> 37:07.300] Okay? [37:07.300 --> 37:08.300] Yeah. [37:08.300 --> 37:14.300] So if they're trying to say it's criminal, it also cannot be taken away from the accused. [37:14.300 --> 37:19.300] So if they're trying to tell you that you do not have a right to a jury trial, [37:19.300 --> 37:22.300] then what they're telling you, in fact, is this. [37:22.300 --> 37:30.300] You are on trial for violation of a duty associated with a privilege, [37:30.300 --> 37:38.300] and they must prove that you were attempting to use that privilege in order to charge you. [37:38.300 --> 37:44.300] Because the only way that they can show that you're not entitled to a jury trial in any instance [37:44.300 --> 37:47.300] is to prove that everything they're doing is administrative, [37:47.300 --> 37:53.300] which means they must prove that you're susceptible to the administrative rules they're using. [37:53.300 --> 37:57.300] Okay. [37:57.300 --> 38:04.300] So when I fail to send in this ticket, if I do send in a motion for discovery... [38:04.300 --> 38:07.300] Make a copy of the ticket and attach it to it. [38:07.300 --> 38:11.300] Just don't send in the actual ticket. [38:11.300 --> 38:13.300] I won't. [38:13.300 --> 38:14.300] Okay. [38:14.300 --> 38:15.300] That answers my question. [38:15.300 --> 38:17.300] Okay? [38:17.300 --> 38:18.300] Yes. [38:18.300 --> 38:19.300] All right. [38:19.300 --> 38:20.300] Thanks for calling in. [38:20.300 --> 38:21.300] Thank you, sir. [38:21.300 --> 38:22.300] All right. [38:22.300 --> 38:24.300] Now we're going to go to Jenny in Florida. [38:24.300 --> 38:27.300] Jenny, what can I do for you? [38:27.300 --> 38:28.300] Hi. [38:28.300 --> 38:31.300] Yes, I received a ticket. [38:31.300 --> 38:37.300] Well, I got a suspended license for a canvas light. [38:37.300 --> 38:38.300] Okay, wait. [38:38.300 --> 38:41.300] Now, you got a suspended license prior to getting this ticket, [38:41.300 --> 38:46.300] or are we talking about the suspensions related to the ticket you just talked about? [38:46.300 --> 38:47.300] Right. [38:47.300 --> 38:48.300] Not right. [38:48.300 --> 38:49.300] Which one is it? [38:49.300 --> 38:53.300] You got a ticket before that you didn't deal with, and your license got suspended, [38:53.300 --> 38:57.300] and now you've got a new one, or your license has been suspended [38:57.300 --> 38:59.300] because of the ticket you're asking me about. [38:59.300 --> 39:00.300] Which one is it? [39:00.300 --> 39:02.300] The first one. [39:02.300 --> 39:03.300] Okay. [39:03.300 --> 39:05.300] So you've got a prior ticket you didn't deal with, [39:05.300 --> 39:09.300] they suspended your license, and now you've got another ticket? [39:09.300 --> 39:13.300] The prior ticket was the camera light that I didn't know anything about. [39:13.300 --> 39:18.300] So when I got pulled over, that's when they told me that my license was suspended. [39:18.300 --> 39:20.300] Okay. [39:20.300 --> 39:25.300] Now, in Florida, what are these red light camera tickets in Florida? [39:25.300 --> 39:30.300] Are they crimes or are they civil infractions? [39:30.300 --> 39:34.300] Well, they told me that I don't know. [39:34.300 --> 39:38.300] They told me that they haven't taken it down yet. [39:38.300 --> 39:40.300] It's still valid in Broward. [39:40.300 --> 39:42.300] Taking what down? [39:42.300 --> 39:48.300] The camera lights down to not make it like that we'll get paid for. [39:48.300 --> 39:49.300] Wait a minute. [39:49.300 --> 39:50.300] Correct? [39:50.300 --> 39:53.300] I don't remember if this is related to Florida or not, [39:53.300 --> 39:59.300] but I read something about one of the states has outlawed all red light cameras. [39:59.300 --> 40:03.300] Is Florida one of those? [40:03.300 --> 40:04.300] Yeah. [40:04.300 --> 40:10.300] So Florida has ruled that red light cameras cannot be used anywhere in the state? [40:10.300 --> 40:22.300] Well, certain, like, Palm Beach can't, like, they're working on, like, taking certain camera lights down from, you know... [40:22.300 --> 40:24.300] Yeah, but certain doesn't mean all. [40:24.300 --> 40:26.300] Certain means some. [40:26.300 --> 40:27.300] Right. [40:27.300 --> 40:36.300] Is the rule that only some of them can't be used or is the rule that red light cameras, period, can't be used? [40:36.300 --> 40:39.300] Some of them can't be used. [40:39.300 --> 40:40.300] Okay. [40:40.300 --> 40:41.300] How can it be some of them? [40:41.300 --> 40:46.300] What are they invalidating the sum of them on? [40:46.300 --> 40:48.300] That I don't know. [40:48.300 --> 40:49.300] Okay. [40:49.300 --> 40:50.300] All right. [40:50.300 --> 40:51.300] Well, let's look at it this way. [40:51.300 --> 40:54.300] First off, you say you didn't know anything about the other ticket. [40:54.300 --> 40:57.300] Can they prove that you were ever given notice of that ticket? [40:57.300 --> 41:04.300] Did you get anything certified mail return receipt requested to prove they notified you of the ticket? [41:04.300 --> 41:08.300] Well, they sent it to me, but I didn't open them, though. [41:08.300 --> 41:11.300] I just realized it today when I opened it. [41:11.300 --> 41:12.300] Okay. [41:12.300 --> 41:13.300] Well, here's the other thing, then. [41:13.300 --> 41:14.300] My fault. [41:14.300 --> 41:16.300] Here's the other thing. [41:16.300 --> 41:22.300] You need to look at what the state statute's dealing with those cameras are. [41:22.300 --> 41:30.300] For instance, in almost every state of the union, those things are unconstitutional for exactly the same reason. [41:30.300 --> 41:37.300] They cannot identify the person who owns the car as the person who allegedly committed the offense. [41:37.300 --> 41:44.300] Plus, some states do not authorize citations to be issued based upon the camera. [41:44.300 --> 41:48.300] Here in Texas, for example, that's exactly the way it works. [41:48.300 --> 41:55.300] They are not authorized in any municipality to issue a citation based upon that red light camera. [41:55.300 --> 41:57.300] They can't. [41:57.300 --> 42:01.300] It's fraud for them to send you that notice in the mail demanding money. [42:01.300 --> 42:06.300] Not only is it outright criminal fraud, it's federal mail fraud. [42:06.300 --> 42:07.300] Okay? [42:07.300 --> 42:17.300] So the question is, in Florida, how have the statutes been written to authorize any sort of collection on a red light camera citation? [42:17.300 --> 42:26.300] Here in Texas, the municipality must actually file a lawsuit and sue you for the $75. [42:26.300 --> 42:27.300] Okay? [42:27.300 --> 42:32.300] It'll cost them 10 times that to even start that, but they have to sue you to get it. [42:32.300 --> 42:38.300] They can't issue a citation and defraud you through the mail like they've been doing. [42:38.300 --> 42:46.300] So if you haven't read the statutes in Florida, you might want to do that and get some help on learning how to do it properly, of course. [42:46.300 --> 42:52.300] But do that and see if Florida makes what they're doing actually a crime. [42:52.300 --> 42:54.300] Okay. [42:54.300 --> 43:02.300] And also, I got arrested that day, and when I got arrested, the police officer did not read me my rights. [43:02.300 --> 43:05.300] He just arrested me, took me to jail. [43:05.300 --> 43:10.300] Well, see, in Florida, he took you directly to jail and not before a magistrate. [43:10.300 --> 43:13.300] He took me to a waiting cell. [43:13.300 --> 43:20.300] Okay, that's all we need to know. He locked you up somewhere but didn't take you to a magistrate, right? [43:20.300 --> 43:21.300] Right. [43:21.300 --> 43:22.300] Okay. [43:22.300 --> 43:26.300] There's already case precedent for that in Florida. [43:26.300 --> 43:30.300] The case is Trevizant versus City of Tampa. [43:30.300 --> 43:36.300] A cop arrested Trevizant under more or less the same situation, a traffic infraction. [43:36.300 --> 43:37.300] Okay? [43:37.300 --> 43:38.300] Okay. [43:38.300 --> 43:42.300] Hang on just a minute, and after this break, I'll fill you in on the rest of it, okay? [43:42.300 --> 43:43.300] Okay. [43:43.300 --> 43:45.300] All right, so hang on just a second. [43:45.300 --> 43:52.300] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio, the call in number 512-646-1984. [43:52.300 --> 43:55.300] Y'all hang in there and get in line if you want to talk. [43:55.300 --> 44:00.300] We'll be right back. [44:00.300 --> 44:03.300] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:03.300 --> 44:07.300] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [44:07.300 --> 44:15.300] The affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [44:15.300 --> 44:19.300] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:19.300 --> 44:23.300] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:23.300 --> 44:28.300] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [44:28.300 --> 44:34.300] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [44:34.300 --> 44:43.300] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:43.300 --> 44:52.300] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [44:52.300 --> 45:01.300] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [45:01.300 --> 45:07.300] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, [45:07.300 --> 45:13.300] and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Suite D here in Austin, Texas, [45:13.300 --> 45:19.300] buying Brave New Books and Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [45:19.300 --> 45:23.300] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:23.300 --> 45:27.300] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian Eme oil, [45:27.300 --> 45:31.300] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [45:31.300 --> 45:38.300] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [45:38.300 --> 45:44.300] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [45:44.300 --> 46:02.300] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [46:14.300 --> 46:20.300] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? [46:20.300 --> 46:26.300] If you could not wait any bit too long, would your purpose have to die? [46:26.300 --> 46:32.300] Such a gentleman, a soldier, a warrior of love, scaffolding that keeps his peace. [46:32.300 --> 46:37.300] All it takes is a misunderstanding, when somebody calls the police, [46:37.300 --> 46:53.300] watching the sparks fly. [46:53.300 --> 46:55.300] All right, folks, we are back. [46:55.300 --> 47:03.300] This is Rule of Law Radio 512-646-1984, and we are talking with Ginny in Florida. [47:03.300 --> 47:05.300] All right, Ginny, let's continue. [47:05.300 --> 47:12.300] Now, the case of Trevizant v. City of Tampa, the cop locked him up for 23 minutes [47:12.300 --> 47:18.300] in a holding cell, okay, and he sued and got 25 grand, [47:18.300 --> 47:24.300] which is like $1,063 per minute of incarceration, okay, [47:24.300 --> 47:30.300] because the Florida law specifically requires that the officer take anyone [47:30.300 --> 47:39.300] that's been arrested immediately before a magistrate, not to a jail cell. [47:39.300 --> 47:44.300] So you have a case for false imprisonment against this officer. [47:44.300 --> 47:46.300] Now, let's deal with the suspended license thing, [47:46.300 --> 47:52.300] and this goes back to you still needing to have to read the statutes, okay? [47:52.300 --> 47:53.300] Now, one question. [47:53.300 --> 47:54.300] Okay. [47:54.300 --> 47:57.300] Do I get a lawyer for the false imprisonment? [47:57.300 --> 48:02.300] Okay, if you don't know how to file and maintain a lawsuit, yeah. [48:02.300 --> 48:03.300] Okay. [48:03.300 --> 48:06.300] Okay, but, and I don't know if Trevizant had one, [48:06.300 --> 48:11.300] but there is a cheaper way to go than using an attorney. [48:11.300 --> 48:13.300] We have a product called Jurisdictionary, [48:13.300 --> 48:18.300] which is written by Dr. Frederick Grays, who is an attorney out of Florida, [48:18.300 --> 48:23.300] who's retired now, but he operated in Florida doing civil lawsuits, [48:23.300 --> 48:27.300] and he made a course that teaches you how to do that for yourself without using [48:27.300 --> 48:32.300] an attorney, and if you want to be able to do that, then, I'm sorry? [48:32.300 --> 48:33.300] What is his name? [48:33.300 --> 48:38.300] His name is Dr. Frederick Grays, and he made a course called Jurisdictionary, [48:38.300 --> 48:42.300] which you can get on the Logos Radio Network website. [48:42.300 --> 48:43.300] You can order that, [48:43.300 --> 48:47.300] and it will teach you everything you need to know about making a lawsuit happen. [48:47.300 --> 48:48.300] Great. [48:48.300 --> 48:53.300] Okay, so not only will you know how to do it without a lawyer, [48:53.300 --> 48:57.300] but you will know how to take care of your lawyer if you hire one [48:57.300 --> 49:06.300] and make sure he's doing what he's supposed to do. [49:06.300 --> 49:07.300] Okay. [49:07.300 --> 49:11.300] But you still need to read the statutes and see exactly what authority Florida [49:11.300 --> 49:14.300] has when it comes to these red light camera tickets. [49:14.300 --> 49:20.300] For instance, here in Texas, they cannot threaten you with points on your license, [49:20.300 --> 49:24.300] suspension of your license, or any other form of punishment. [49:24.300 --> 49:30.300] The statute says they can't do any of that, yet the letter they send out as a [49:30.300 --> 49:36.300] citation claiming that you owe them money does exactly that. [49:36.300 --> 49:40.300] It threatens you that your license or your registration or some other thing may [49:40.300 --> 49:45.300] not be available or you won't be able to renew it if you don't pay this ticket. [49:45.300 --> 49:49.300] It's a ball-faced fraudulent lie. [49:49.300 --> 49:54.300] So you have to read the statutes on red light cameras in Florida to see exactly [49:54.300 --> 50:04.300] what they can and cannot do, and most importantly, who they can and cannot do it to. [50:04.300 --> 50:08.300] Yes. [50:08.300 --> 50:12.300] Okay, do you hear that, Jenny? [50:12.300 --> 50:14.300] Yes. [50:14.300 --> 50:19.300] Okay, on the Logos Radio Network website, it is the banner that says no lawyer, [50:19.300 --> 50:23.300] no problem, how to win without one, and so on and so forth. [50:23.300 --> 50:25.300] It's the yellow banner, you know, how to win in court. [50:25.300 --> 50:28.300] It's the yellow banner up there. [50:28.300 --> 50:29.300] Okay. [50:29.300 --> 50:33.300] Okay, but you click on that and it will take you to the order page for [50:33.300 --> 50:35.300] jurisdictionary if you wish to get it. [50:35.300 --> 50:38.300] Otherwise, yes, you can hire an attorney. [50:38.300 --> 50:45.300] What they will charge or if they will take it on, you know, whatever, that's up [50:45.300 --> 50:49.300] to them and you, but I'd much rather keep the money I make and not give it to [50:49.300 --> 50:52.300] some two-bit lawyer trying to steal it. [50:52.300 --> 50:54.300] Okay. [50:54.300 --> 50:56.300] Okay, but that's just me. [50:56.300 --> 50:57.300] That's my preference. [50:57.300 --> 51:00.300] I prefer to do things myself whenever I can. [51:00.300 --> 51:02.300] Okay. [51:02.300 --> 51:03.300] All right. [51:03.300 --> 51:06.300] So you need to do a little bit of reading on the statutes, and if you want to sue [51:06.300 --> 51:10.300] for getting put in that jail cell, then you need to either get a lawyer or get [51:10.300 --> 51:14.300] jurisdictionary and learn how to do it yourself. [51:14.300 --> 51:15.300] Okay. [51:15.300 --> 51:16.300] Okay? [51:16.300 --> 51:17.300] Thank you. [51:17.300 --> 51:18.300] Now, is there any other question you got for me? [51:18.300 --> 51:20.300] I don't want you feeling like I didn't answer something you intended to ask me, [51:20.300 --> 51:23.300] and I don't want to cut you off if I haven't. [51:23.300 --> 51:30.300] No, you said Frederick and can you spell his last name for me? [51:30.300 --> 51:35.300] Graves, just like the hole in the ground they bury you in except with an S. [51:35.300 --> 51:37.300] Oh, okay. [51:37.300 --> 51:38.300] All right. [51:38.300 --> 51:39.300] That's it. [51:39.300 --> 51:42.300] I really appreciate everything, all the information. [51:42.300 --> 51:43.300] Thanks so much. [51:43.300 --> 51:44.300] Yes, ma'am. [51:44.300 --> 51:45.300] You're welcome. [51:45.300 --> 51:46.300] Enjoy. [51:46.300 --> 51:47.300] And good luck. [51:47.300 --> 51:48.300] Bye. [51:48.300 --> 51:49.300] Bye-bye. [51:49.300 --> 51:50.300] Thank you. [51:50.300 --> 51:51.300] All right. [51:51.300 --> 51:52.300] Now we're going to go to Mark in Florida. [51:52.300 --> 51:55.300] Mark, what can we do for you? [51:55.300 --> 51:58.300] Well, first I have a couple things that might help Jenny. [51:58.300 --> 51:59.300] Okay. [51:59.300 --> 52:06.300] If she was making a right turn at the red light and right turn is allowed at that particular [52:06.300 --> 52:15.300] intersection, right turn on red, Florida Statute 316.0083 states that you do not have [52:15.300 --> 52:20.300] to stop as long as there's no traffic coming. [52:20.300 --> 52:22.300] You can roll right through it. [52:22.300 --> 52:23.300] Okay. [52:23.300 --> 52:29.300] So that may help her, and also I do highly recommend Dr. Graves' course, jurisdictionary. [52:29.300 --> 52:30.300] Very good. [52:30.300 --> 52:32.300] Very well worth the money. [52:32.300 --> 52:37.300] Yeah, it'll definitely teach you a lot as long as you're dealing with something civil. [52:37.300 --> 52:41.300] The only thing, the only complaint I have about this material is the fact that it does [52:41.300 --> 52:46.300] not address specifically in any way suing governmental entities. [52:46.300 --> 52:48.300] That's where it doesn't really have a strength. [52:48.300 --> 52:52.300] It's got regular lawsuits sewn up tight, but it doesn't really deal with suing a governmental [52:52.300 --> 52:57.300] entity and dealing with the 12b6 dismissal motions that they inevitably file in every [52:57.300 --> 53:00.300] lawsuit. [53:00.300 --> 53:01.300] True. [53:01.300 --> 53:03.300] I agree with you wholly on that. [53:03.300 --> 53:08.300] It does help you in criminal cases too as far as filing motions. [53:08.300 --> 53:13.300] At least as far as general format and information and how to write one and state facts, yes, [53:13.300 --> 53:14.300] it does do that. [53:14.300 --> 53:19.300] But as far as the actual rules of procedure and things, it doesn't go into the criminal [53:19.300 --> 53:22.300] side of it at all. [53:22.300 --> 53:23.300] Yeah. [53:23.300 --> 53:28.300] Now, another thing that may help, Jenny, I was told this several months ago by a friend [53:28.300 --> 53:34.300] that heard it on the news that the Florida Supreme Court struck down the red light cameras. [53:34.300 --> 53:37.300] They were unconstitutional in Florida. [53:37.300 --> 53:38.300] Okay. [53:38.300 --> 53:39.300] If that's what I thought. [53:39.300 --> 53:42.300] I'd read where several states had made such a ruling in their Supreme Courts. [53:42.300 --> 53:45.300] I couldn't remember if Florida was one of them, and that's what I asked her at first [53:45.300 --> 53:46.300] if it was. [53:46.300 --> 53:52.300] And if it is, then it doesn't matter when that red light camera was written, Jenny. [53:52.300 --> 53:54.300] It doesn't matter. [53:54.300 --> 54:00.300] The suspension of your license based upon that ticket is absolutely illegal. [54:00.300 --> 54:07.300] It's unconstitutional that they suspended your license using an unconstitutional citation. [54:07.300 --> 54:13.300] So what they said about you having to pay and fix it, that's a ball-faced lie if the [54:13.300 --> 54:18.300] Supreme Court of Florida already said they're unconstitutional, because they're unconstitutional [54:18.300 --> 54:25.300] ab initio, which means from the very beginning, not at some point in time when it was declared, [54:25.300 --> 54:33.300] but all the way back to the instant they even conceived of the idea, it was unconstitutional. [54:33.300 --> 54:34.300] So... [54:34.300 --> 54:35.300] Another thing that may help her. [54:35.300 --> 54:36.300] Go ahead. [54:36.300 --> 54:44.300] I too am in Broward County, and Broward County Jail has a policy that processing is six hours [54:44.300 --> 54:46.300] in, six hours out. [54:46.300 --> 54:50.300] You spend a minimum of 12 hours in jail, and that's if you have... [54:50.300 --> 54:51.300] Absolutely. [54:51.300 --> 54:54.300] That's because you have to be there for the morning and evening head count. [54:54.300 --> 55:00.300] They get their federal funds based upon head count. [55:00.300 --> 55:01.300] Yes, sir. [55:01.300 --> 55:05.300] And they do head count twice a day, once in the morning, once in the evening. [55:05.300 --> 55:11.300] So to have you in there for 12 hours is to make sure that you cover that block of time. [55:11.300 --> 55:12.300] Yep. [55:12.300 --> 55:13.300] That's exactly true. [55:13.300 --> 55:16.300] It's not that way in Miami-Dade County. [55:16.300 --> 55:18.300] I've talked to many people. [55:18.300 --> 55:21.300] They said you're in and out of there within two hours. [55:21.300 --> 55:22.300] Yeah. [55:22.300 --> 55:28.300] If they have a policy to incarcerate you for X hours regardless, then that right there [55:28.300 --> 55:32.300] is a lawsuit all by itself. [55:32.300 --> 55:34.300] Yes, sir. [55:34.300 --> 55:43.300] Now, to bring you up to speed, the last time I spoke with you, I informed you that I had [55:43.300 --> 55:50.300] a capious issue by a judge for allegedly missing court on May 5th, and there is nothing in [55:50.300 --> 55:54.300] the clerk of court's record indicating there was no dissent. [55:54.300 --> 55:55.300] Right. [55:55.300 --> 55:56.300] And... [55:56.300 --> 55:57.300] Which means they have a problem. [55:57.300 --> 55:58.300] See what you... [55:58.300 --> 55:59.300] Right. [55:59.300 --> 56:02.300] I asked you what you would do, and you answered exactly like I thought. [56:02.300 --> 56:05.300] You'd be ready, willing, and able to go to jail. [56:05.300 --> 56:08.300] And that's exactly what I did. [56:08.300 --> 56:12.300] Expecting the magistrate the next morning to... [56:12.300 --> 56:18.300] I asked him to take judicial notice of the clerk of court's record and verify that no [56:18.300 --> 56:20.300] notice was sent. [56:20.300 --> 56:22.300] He just turned into a smart aleck. [56:22.300 --> 56:23.300] Said, what? [56:23.300 --> 56:24.300] I don't have that in front of me. [56:24.300 --> 56:25.300] I said, look to your left, sir. [56:25.300 --> 56:28.300] You have a computer screen that's on there. [56:28.300 --> 56:33.300] And he just got belligerent, refused to take judicial notice of it. [56:33.300 --> 56:37.300] So I spent 32 days in jail. [56:37.300 --> 56:39.300] Well, now you know that that... [56:39.300 --> 56:40.300] In front of... [56:40.300 --> 56:45.300] That individual was not acting judicially when they were doing that in that cell, right? [56:45.300 --> 56:50.300] You know that means they have no immunity for being sued for refusing to apply the facts [56:50.300 --> 56:53.300] in law to the case. [56:53.300 --> 56:59.300] In his ministerial capacity, he has a duty to do the exact same thing he does as a judge [56:59.300 --> 57:03.300] and properly apply the laws to the facts. [57:03.300 --> 57:09.300] The rules of procedure does not allow them to incarcerate on a bogus warrant that was [57:09.300 --> 57:17.300] issued without notice for an event that the notice was required to be present for. [57:17.300 --> 57:18.300] That's correct. [57:18.300 --> 57:22.300] So now you get to sue everybody. [57:22.300 --> 57:24.300] I was trying to keep the magistrate out of it. [57:24.300 --> 57:26.300] No, no. [57:26.300 --> 57:30.300] If the magistrate issued the warrant, they're the first guilty party. [57:30.300 --> 57:35.300] If the magistrate that arranged you in the cell refused to act upon the lack of notice [57:35.300 --> 57:43.300] that the first judge never had to back up his probable cause to issue that warrant, [57:43.300 --> 57:50.300] you need to be suing them both because both of them were acting ministerially and not judicially. [57:50.300 --> 57:52.300] Oh, yes, sir. [57:52.300 --> 57:53.300] I intend to. [57:53.300 --> 57:58.300] I attempted to keep the magistrate clear of it, but he chose to jump straight into the [57:58.300 --> 58:00.300] fire, so he's in it. [58:00.300 --> 58:01.300] Yeah. [58:01.300 --> 58:05.300] Now, I hear the music playing. [58:05.300 --> 58:06.300] Yeah. [58:06.300 --> 58:08.300] We've got just a few seconds before we have to go to break on this one. [58:08.300 --> 58:12.300] This is the top of the hour, so what else do you want to get out? [58:12.300 --> 58:13.300] All right. [58:13.300 --> 58:16.300] I was in front of my judge twice. [58:16.300 --> 58:21.300] Both times he refused to take judicial notice of the clerk of court's record. [58:21.300 --> 58:24.300] The first time he tried to put me on... [58:24.300 --> 58:28.300] Please tell me that this is in a court of record. [58:28.300 --> 58:30.300] Yes, sir, it is. [58:30.300 --> 58:33.300] All right, and you had this all on a transcript. [58:33.300 --> 58:35.300] Yes, sir, it is. [58:35.300 --> 58:37.300] You need to get those transcripts. [58:37.300 --> 58:40.300] Hang on just a second, Mark, and we'll finish this up on the other side of the break. [58:40.300 --> 58:45.300] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio 512-646-1984. [58:45.300 --> 58:47.300] We'll be right back. [59:15.300 --> 59:17.300] We'll be right back. [59:45.300 --> 59:47.300] At freestudybible.com. [59:47.300 --> 59:50.300] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.300 --> 59:53.300] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [59:53.300 --> 01:00:00.300] Logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.300 --> 01:00:06.300] The following use flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.300 --> 01:00:09.300] Providing you jelly bulletins for the commodity market. [01:00:09.300 --> 01:00:11.300] Today in history. [01:00:11.300 --> 01:00:13.300] News updates. [01:00:13.300 --> 01:00:22.300] And the inside scoop into the tides of the alternatives. [01:00:22.300 --> 01:00:29.300] Markets for Friday, the 8th of June, 2016, are currently trading with gold at $1,365.91 an ounce. [01:00:29.300 --> 01:00:31.300] Silver, $20.22 an ounce. [01:00:31.300 --> 01:00:34.300] Texas crude, $45.14 a barrel. [01:00:34.300 --> 01:00:44.300] And Bitcoin is currently sitting at about 662 U.S. currency. [01:00:44.300 --> 01:00:51.300] Today in history, the year 1947, reports are broadcast that a UFO crash landed in Roswell, New Mexico [01:00:51.300 --> 01:00:54.300] in what became known as the Roswell UFO incident. [01:00:54.300 --> 01:00:58.300] By far the most catalogued, controversial, and covered up UFO crash in American history, [01:00:58.300 --> 01:01:07.300] the Roswell incident marks the beginning of modern day UFOlogy today in history. [01:01:07.300 --> 01:01:08.300] And recent use. [01:01:08.300 --> 01:01:12.300] During a peaceful anti-police brutality protest Thursday night in Dallas, Texas, [01:01:12.300 --> 01:01:18.300] 25-year-old Micah Xavier Johnson from Mesquite, Texas, a military veteran in the U.S. Army Reserve, [01:01:18.300 --> 01:01:25.300] from March 2009 to April 2015, and combat soldier with deployment in Afghanistan from late 2013 to mid 2014, [01:01:25.300 --> 01:01:30.300] who had no criminal record or known terror ties, suddenly began a police targeting snipers spree. [01:01:30.300 --> 01:01:34.300] Though Dallas Police Chief David Brown did suggest that other suspects assisted in the coordination, [01:01:34.300 --> 01:01:38.300] along with law enforcement previously stating that three people were in custody [01:01:38.300 --> 01:01:42.300] and that multiple shooters were involved, Johnson told negotiators that he was acting solo. [01:01:42.300 --> 01:01:46.300] The reason for his spree, as he then told them, was due to the two African American men [01:01:46.300 --> 01:01:49.300] recently shot by police in Louisiana and Minnesota. [01:01:49.300 --> 01:01:52.300] Five police officers were killed and seven officers wounded, [01:01:52.300 --> 01:01:55.300] along with two non-law enforcement citizens who were also injured. [01:01:55.300 --> 01:02:02.300] Johnson was eventually killed by a bomb drone after several hours of standoff negotiations with police in a parking garage. [01:02:02.300 --> 01:02:05.300] Federal law enforcement are now saying that Johnson was the only shooter. [01:02:05.300 --> 01:02:09.300] This is just the deadliest of the shooting sprees that has been occurring nationwide, [01:02:09.300 --> 01:02:18.300] where gunmen in Tennessee, Missouri, and Georgia have recently targeted and killed police officers. [01:02:18.300 --> 01:02:23.300] Google is testing new cryptography algorithms that hopefully quantum computing in the future [01:02:23.300 --> 01:02:24.300] might not be able to decipher. [01:02:24.300 --> 01:02:28.300] The fears that processing power offered by soon-to-emerge quantum computers [01:02:28.300 --> 01:02:32.300] could be enough to decrypt any internet communications that were recorded today. [01:02:32.300 --> 01:02:35.300] So in order to preemptively future-proof today's internet communications, [01:02:35.300 --> 01:02:38.300] Google is deploying what it's calling post-quantum cryptography, [01:02:38.300 --> 01:02:41.300] testing its effectiveness with their browser, Chrome Canary. [01:02:41.300 --> 01:02:45.300] For the test, they will be using a cryptographic algorithm called New Hope. [01:02:45.300 --> 01:02:48.300] However, with the test lasting two years, Google hopes it can replace the algorithm [01:02:48.300 --> 01:02:53.300] with something more up-to-date down the line. [01:02:53.300 --> 01:03:00.300] This is Brooke Rhodey with your Lowdown for July 8, 2016. [01:03:00.300 --> 01:03:18.300] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. I read his book and it says he cares not for the unsightly. [01:03:18.300 --> 01:03:34.300] All right, folks, we are back. [01:03:34.300 --> 01:03:39.300] This is Rule of Law Radio, the call in number 512-646-1984, [01:03:39.300 --> 01:03:42.300] and we are talking with Mark in Florida still. [01:03:42.300 --> 01:03:45.300] All right, Mark, please continue. [01:03:45.300 --> 01:03:50.300] I had my first appearance in front of my judge. [01:03:50.300 --> 01:03:54.300] You know, I moved to be released. [01:03:54.300 --> 01:03:57.300] You know, I got everything stated on the record that I wanted to get stated. [01:03:57.300 --> 01:04:02.300] I actually basically read what the court's record says, [01:04:02.300 --> 01:04:06.300] you know, that the last court date had been changed by the court. [01:04:06.300 --> 01:04:10.300] I was not given notice of that change. [01:04:10.300 --> 01:04:13.300] The court date was canceled and reset. [01:04:13.300 --> 01:04:18.300] I was not given notice of the cancellation and no notice of the new court date. [01:04:18.300 --> 01:04:20.300] Of course, he refused to look. [01:04:20.300 --> 01:04:25.300] But he wanted to release me on pretrial release with a monitor. [01:04:25.300 --> 01:04:32.300] And I objected, you know, said you have no authority to punish me for missing court. [01:04:32.300 --> 01:04:36.300] And that's exactly what that monitor would be. [01:04:36.300 --> 01:04:41.300] But still, he went ahead with that. [01:04:41.300 --> 01:04:45.300] Wait, wait, wait. Are you saying you're wearing a monitor right now? [01:04:45.300 --> 01:04:51.300] No, sir. No, sir, I am not. Absolutely not. I would have refused it. [01:04:51.300 --> 01:04:55.300] Oh, that's too bad because that would have been a perfect little thing to add to the lawsuit [01:04:55.300 --> 01:04:58.300] because you know what that means, right? [01:04:58.300 --> 01:05:02.300] That's false imprisonment in addition to everything that you've already got. [01:05:02.300 --> 01:05:04.300] That's additional. [01:05:04.300 --> 01:05:09.300] That monitor would have prohibited you free movement outside of a particular area, [01:05:09.300 --> 01:05:14.300] which is the same thing as having you arrested illegally. [01:05:14.300 --> 01:05:15.300] Okay. [01:05:15.300 --> 01:05:21.300] You would have been able to file a writ of habeas to document that as well as video it [01:05:21.300 --> 01:05:24.300] and show that it was done and entered as an order by the court, [01:05:24.300 --> 01:05:29.300] thus increasing your allegations against this individual. [01:05:29.300 --> 01:05:33.300] Okay. I see your point. [01:05:33.300 --> 01:05:39.300] Well, they transferred me back to the main jail for the next morning to see the pretrial release lady. [01:05:39.300 --> 01:05:44.300] And of course, she asked me what my address was and I informed her I don't have one. [01:05:44.300 --> 01:05:50.300] You know, I'm living in a recreational province. [01:05:50.300 --> 01:05:55.300] And she said, well, we can't do this. I said, I'm fully aware of that. [01:05:55.300 --> 01:05:59.300] And the deputy was standing there and he said, well, send him back to the other jail. [01:05:59.300 --> 01:06:01.300] Don't leave him here. [01:06:01.300 --> 01:06:06.300] That was Friday. They left me there until Tuesday before they transferred me back. [01:06:06.300 --> 01:06:14.300] And, you know, then I spent several more weeks there before I got before my judge again. [01:06:14.300 --> 01:06:17.300] He said I could not make verbal motions in court. [01:06:17.300 --> 01:06:18.300] I objected to that. [01:06:18.300 --> 01:06:21.300] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. He said what? [01:06:21.300 --> 01:06:24.300] I could not make verbal motions in court. [01:06:24.300 --> 01:06:33.300] Is there any written rule of procedure in Florida that says oral motions cannot be made in such a case? [01:06:33.300 --> 01:06:39.300] No, sir, but he referenced the rule of criminal procedure and I know for a fact that there's nothing in there about that. [01:06:39.300 --> 01:06:47.300] Yeah, but I'm saying he said it was in the code of criminal procedure, the rules of criminal procedure, but there is no such rule. [01:06:47.300 --> 01:06:48.300] Correct. [01:06:48.300 --> 01:06:49.300] Okay. [01:06:49.300 --> 01:06:50.300] There is not. [01:06:50.300 --> 01:07:01.300] So once again, you have a magistrate that has demonstrated judicial incompetence of the law and is biased, [01:07:01.300 --> 01:07:12.300] prejudiced, and incapable of complying with the rules of procedure, the judicial canons, and the law as it exists. [01:07:12.300 --> 01:07:16.300] He is judicially unfit. [01:07:16.300 --> 01:07:21.300] I read him a short riot act when he said I had to be in writing. [01:07:21.300 --> 01:07:23.300] Yeah, but let me ask you this. [01:07:23.300 --> 01:07:25.300] You cannot take that right away. [01:07:25.300 --> 01:07:31.300] Did you say, Judge, you have proven yourself to be completely ignorant of the law [01:07:31.300 --> 01:07:36.300] and incompetent in its application and the pertinent rules of procedure. [01:07:36.300 --> 01:07:43.300] Therefore, I move for your disqualification from this matter immediately. [01:07:43.300 --> 01:07:46.300] I chose not to do that yet. [01:07:46.300 --> 01:07:47.300] Why? [01:07:47.300 --> 01:07:52.300] He's already on the hook so far he swallowed it and crapped the hook out. [01:07:52.300 --> 01:07:53.300] Yes, sir. [01:07:53.300 --> 01:07:54.300] He definitely has. [01:07:54.300 --> 01:07:59.300] So even if you start reeling it back in, he ain't getting off of it. [01:07:59.300 --> 01:08:01.300] Yes, sir. [01:08:01.300 --> 01:08:08.300] I started to go the week after I got out, I was going to the federal courthouse and start the lawsuit. [01:08:08.300 --> 01:08:13.300] I thought, wait, slow down, let me get some motions to dismiss first. [01:08:13.300 --> 01:08:20.300] I think right now he's probably wanting to get rid of me, so he may go ahead and grant these motions. [01:08:20.300 --> 01:08:26.300] Yeah, give him a chance to get rid of the case, but the thing is his goose is already cooked. [01:08:26.300 --> 01:08:31.300] Oh, it's burnt to a crisp. [01:08:31.300 --> 01:08:41.300] So the free trial thing, I finally filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, two pages. [01:08:41.300 --> 01:08:42.300] I borrowed some paper. [01:08:42.300 --> 01:08:47.300] Actually, I traded a hard-boiled egg for a few sheets of paper and a pencil. [01:08:47.300 --> 01:08:56.300] The indigent kit you file for comes with one envelope, two postcards, one sheet of paper, and one golf pencil. [01:08:56.300 --> 01:08:58.300] Now, what are you supposed to do with that? [01:08:58.300 --> 01:09:05.300] Pretend that you have the right to exercise a habeas corpus or any other pleadings on your behalf? [01:09:05.300 --> 01:09:07.300] Yeah, on one sheet of paper? [01:09:07.300 --> 01:09:10.300] Exactly. That's what I'm saying, pretend. [01:09:10.300 --> 01:09:12.300] Yeah. [01:09:12.300 --> 01:09:16.300] You know, I did it on two sheets of paper, and that was a stretch. [01:09:16.300 --> 01:09:19.300] That was a major stretch. [01:09:19.300 --> 01:09:24.300] Now, a few weeks later, when I'd heard nothing about this habeas, [01:09:24.300 --> 01:09:29.300] I went ahead and filed a sixth page to the federal district court. [01:09:29.300 --> 01:09:36.300] A question about that, was filing it with the federal district court proper or should it? [01:09:36.300 --> 01:09:37.300] Absolutely. [01:09:37.300 --> 01:09:40.300] If you're getting no remedy from the state on a habeas corpus, [01:09:40.300 --> 01:09:46.300] that proves the courts are not complying with state law, because every state, as far as I know, [01:09:46.300 --> 01:09:54.300] their rules of procedure is a habeas corpus takes precedent over any other case. [01:09:54.300 --> 01:09:56.300] Doesn't matter what that other case is. [01:09:56.300 --> 01:09:57.300] I understand it. [01:09:57.300 --> 01:10:05.300] If there is a writ of habeas presented to a court, it supersedes everything that court is dealing with. [01:10:05.300 --> 01:10:07.300] Yes, sir, I agree. [01:10:07.300 --> 01:10:12.300] But my question was, should I have sent it to the court of appeals or the district court? [01:10:12.300 --> 01:10:16.300] Does the court of appeals in Florida have jurisdiction over a habeas? [01:10:16.300 --> 01:10:19.300] I doubt it. [01:10:19.300 --> 01:10:24.300] I'm talking about the federal court, federal district or federal court of appeals. [01:10:24.300 --> 01:10:26.300] Did I send it to the wrong court? [01:10:26.300 --> 01:10:29.300] No, you would have sent it to a federal district court. [01:10:29.300 --> 01:10:32.300] But you really only have one problem with federal courts in general [01:10:32.300 --> 01:10:35.300] is that they actually have no jurisdiction to operate within the states. [01:10:35.300 --> 01:10:41.300] If you actually look at the law at the federal level, those are territorial courts. [01:10:41.300 --> 01:10:44.300] They have no authority within the states of the union. [01:10:44.300 --> 01:10:49.300] These bogus federal courthouses, they have no power. [01:10:49.300 --> 01:10:55.300] They can't hear a case if you want to get really technical. [01:10:55.300 --> 01:11:05.300] I believe the federal law on that is 28 USC 1443, [01:11:05.300 --> 01:11:10.300] where you can have your case removed from the state court into the Fed. [01:11:10.300 --> 01:11:12.300] No, no, no, you're missing my point. [01:11:12.300 --> 01:11:14.300] You're missing my point. [01:11:14.300 --> 01:11:20.300] A United States district court is hell and gone from a district court of the United States. [01:11:20.300 --> 01:11:25.300] They are not the same thing, not even close. [01:11:25.300 --> 01:11:29.300] One is a territorial only court. [01:11:29.300 --> 01:11:36.300] It has zero jurisdiction within the states, zero. [01:11:36.300 --> 01:11:42.300] And those are the only ones that exist. [01:11:42.300 --> 01:11:45.300] Can you follow me now? [01:11:45.300 --> 01:11:50.300] Yeah, I'd read that exact thing not too long ago. [01:11:50.300 --> 01:11:54.300] And I don't understand what they're talking about, yes. [01:11:54.300 --> 01:11:57.300] It has to do with the U.S. corporation, correct? [01:11:57.300 --> 01:12:00.300] Well, it has to do where their jurisdiction actually lies. [01:12:00.300 --> 01:12:06.300] Their jurisdiction only lies within D.C., federal territories, enclaves and protectorates, [01:12:06.300 --> 01:12:09.300] but not within the states. [01:12:09.300 --> 01:12:13.300] Right, right. [01:12:13.300 --> 01:12:16.300] Agreed. [01:12:16.300 --> 01:12:20.300] So yeah, you can do it, and someone may act on it. [01:12:20.300 --> 01:12:31.300] But the question is if the state actually challenged it, they would win. [01:12:31.300 --> 01:12:33.300] That I wasn't aware of. [01:12:33.300 --> 01:12:35.300] Well, yeah, if the court has no jurisdiction, [01:12:35.300 --> 01:12:42.300] they don't have any more jurisdiction over the state actors than they would the people, right? [01:12:42.300 --> 01:12:43.300] Right. [01:12:43.300 --> 01:12:45.300] Well, then what's the argument there? [01:12:45.300 --> 01:12:46.300] Nothing left to understand. [01:12:46.300 --> 01:12:51.300] Lack of jurisdiction is lack of jurisdiction for every single purpose. [01:12:51.300 --> 01:12:54.300] Yeah, okay. [01:12:54.300 --> 01:13:00.300] Well, about the time they would have gotten that habeas from me, [01:13:00.300 --> 01:13:05.300] I was back in front of my judge again, which was on the 28th of last month, [01:13:05.300 --> 01:13:09.300] and he says, I've been trying to get you out of jail since June 2nd. [01:13:09.300 --> 01:13:11.300] Yeah, well, Judge, here's the way that's going to work out. [01:13:11.300 --> 01:13:16.300] I filed a federal habeas naming you specifically as the person that ordered by incarceration [01:13:16.300 --> 01:13:19.300] without proper and appropriate jurisdiction on a bogus warrant [01:13:19.300 --> 01:13:22.300] that you yourself issued without a statement of probable cause [01:13:22.300 --> 01:13:25.300] and supporting facts and evidence. [01:13:25.300 --> 01:13:29.300] Think I can get out of jail now? [01:13:29.300 --> 01:13:30.300] And guess what? [01:13:30.300 --> 01:13:35.300] There's a Florida statute that's written as if I wrote it myself that says, [01:13:35.300 --> 01:13:42.300] before a judge issues a habeas warrant, he shall check the clerk court's record [01:13:42.300 --> 01:13:44.300] to make sure that notice was sent. [01:13:44.300 --> 01:13:45.300] Yep. [01:13:45.300 --> 01:13:49.300] So you've got absolutely no question that you've got facts and evidence [01:13:49.300 --> 01:13:53.300] and an official record that proves, by the way, I would highly recommend [01:13:53.300 --> 01:13:57.300] you get a copy of everything in that record and certified by the clerk [01:13:57.300 --> 01:14:01.300] that this is a true and correct copy as of this date and this time [01:14:01.300 --> 01:14:05.300] that shows no notice was in that file. [01:14:05.300 --> 01:14:11.300] Eddie, I got two copies, certified copies, before I risk going to jail, [01:14:11.300 --> 01:14:15.300] one in my possession and one in a friend's possession. [01:14:15.300 --> 01:14:16.300] Okay. [01:14:16.300 --> 01:14:24.300] Now get one after you've been to jail showing it still didn't exist. [01:14:24.300 --> 01:14:25.300] Okay. [01:14:25.300 --> 01:14:29.300] That's your validation that the entire time you were incarcerated [01:14:29.300 --> 01:14:34.300] was illegally continued by the judge. [01:14:34.300 --> 01:14:36.300] Yep. [01:14:36.300 --> 01:14:45.300] Well, at that last appearance, he had the pretrial release lady there again. [01:14:45.300 --> 01:14:47.300] They were trying to put me on the monitor. [01:14:47.300 --> 01:14:51.300] And she suggested, can we do the Tri-County thing? [01:14:51.300 --> 01:14:53.300] And he went for that. [01:14:53.300 --> 01:14:56.300] And I said, well, you know, they were talking about putting me on the monitor, [01:14:56.300 --> 01:14:59.300] and I'd have to be at that location. [01:14:59.300 --> 01:15:02.300] I said, well, that's a death sentence. [01:15:02.300 --> 01:15:06.300] That means I have to sit in my RV. [01:15:06.300 --> 01:15:08.300] I can't leave to go get money. [01:15:08.300 --> 01:15:09.300] I can't leave to go get food. [01:15:09.300 --> 01:15:11.300] I'll sit there and die. [01:15:11.300 --> 01:15:12.300] You're in simple. [01:15:12.300 --> 01:15:15.300] You might as well stake me to the ground somewhere, [01:15:15.300 --> 01:15:17.300] because basically that's what you're doing. [01:15:17.300 --> 01:15:25.300] And as soon as I move away, walk away from there, I'm violated and I'm back in jail. [01:15:25.300 --> 01:15:27.300] That's what they like to do. [01:15:27.300 --> 01:15:30.300] Half the people in jail are there on violation of parole or probation. [01:15:30.300 --> 01:15:35.300] Exactly, and they had no authority to put you on anything of any kind [01:15:35.300 --> 01:15:41.300] for any reason because the screw-up was all originally theirs. [01:15:41.300 --> 01:15:43.300] I raised that point again. [01:15:43.300 --> 01:15:46.300] And he finally decided to go ahead. [01:15:46.300 --> 01:15:50.300] He sat there and read my habeas. [01:15:50.300 --> 01:15:53.300] It took a little time and read through that. [01:15:53.300 --> 01:15:58.300] And then he looked at me and said, he kept calling it a motion. [01:15:58.300 --> 01:15:59.300] And I kept objecting. [01:15:59.300 --> 01:16:00.300] I said, it's not a motion. [01:16:00.300 --> 01:16:02.300] It's a writ of habeas corpus. [01:16:02.300 --> 01:16:04.300] It's not a motion. [01:16:04.300 --> 01:16:08.300] And he did that a couple of times, and I objected every time he said it. [01:16:08.300 --> 01:16:13.300] And he finally said, I'm going to deny your motion, your habeas. [01:16:13.300 --> 01:16:16.300] And I started to come out of my seat. [01:16:16.300 --> 01:16:19.300] And he held out his hand and said, calm down, calm down. [01:16:19.300 --> 01:16:22.300] But I'm going to release your ROR. [01:16:22.300 --> 01:16:25.300] OK. [01:16:25.300 --> 01:16:27.300] I shut up. [01:16:27.300 --> 01:16:28.300] OK. [01:16:28.300 --> 01:16:30.300] So he processed me out. [01:16:30.300 --> 01:16:32.300] That was early in the morning. [01:16:32.300 --> 01:16:37.300] I got out about 8 or 9 PM. [01:16:37.300 --> 01:16:42.300] Well, now you can go in and say, well, judge, you released me on my own recognizance. [01:16:42.300 --> 01:16:46.300] I'm going to sue you, SAM. [01:16:46.300 --> 01:16:47.300] SAM? [01:16:47.300 --> 01:16:51.300] Yeah, stupid A moron. [01:16:51.300 --> 01:16:53.300] OK. [01:16:53.300 --> 01:16:54.300] All right, hang on just a sec. [01:16:54.300 --> 01:16:56.300] We'll finish this up on the other side. [01:16:56.300 --> 01:16:57.300] All right, folks, y'all hang in there. [01:16:57.300 --> 01:17:22.300] We'll be right back. [01:17:27.300 --> 01:17:52.300] We'll be right back. [01:17:52.300 --> 01:18:11.300] We'll be right back. [01:18:11.300 --> 01:18:31.300] The primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:18:31.300 --> 01:18:41.300] But we have come to trust Jungevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:18:41.300 --> 01:18:48.300] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:18:48.300 --> 01:18:52.300] As you realize the benefits of Jungevity, you may want to join us. [01:18:52.300 --> 01:18:59.300] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:18:59.300 --> 01:19:14.300] Now, this is the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:19:14.300 --> 01:19:29.300] Thank you very much. [01:19:29.300 --> 01:19:51.300] All right, folks, we are back and we're still talking with Mark in Florida. [01:19:51.300 --> 01:19:54.300] All right, Mark, let's see if we can wrap you up and get to these other folks. [01:19:54.300 --> 01:19:59.300] So what else you got in the works on this now that we know where you're at? [01:19:59.300 --> 01:20:02.300] I think that's primarily it. [01:20:02.300 --> 01:20:05.300] I had a little problem with my recorder. [01:20:05.300 --> 01:20:16.300] I got another ticket the other week and my recorder failed me, which is a shame because he admitted that I was walking beside the road. [01:20:16.300 --> 01:20:22.300] I was not in traffic, which in no way violates any kind of law. [01:20:22.300 --> 01:20:30.300] And then, of course, when he wrote it up, I'm out there, you know, blocking everybody's 7 or 8 cars honking at me and everything else. [01:20:30.300 --> 01:20:31.300] All right. [01:20:31.300 --> 01:20:38.300] Well, he should still have his audio and video from his body mic and possibly a cruiser cam on somewhere. [01:20:38.300 --> 01:20:43.300] So do a discovery request for that and see if he's got it. [01:20:43.300 --> 01:20:46.300] I didn't think about it until the event was almost over. [01:20:46.300 --> 01:20:49.300] He did not turn on his lights. [01:20:49.300 --> 01:20:52.300] He didn't have his red lights going. [01:20:52.300 --> 01:20:56.300] Yeah, that doesn't necessarily mean his body mic wasn't recording. [01:20:56.300 --> 01:21:04.300] His cruiser camera may not have been recording audio, but it still should have been running and his body mic might have been on. [01:21:04.300 --> 01:21:15.300] As I understand their system, I know it's that way in Texas, I'm pretty sure that the camera is on all the time and the mic only comes on when he hit the red lights. [01:21:15.300 --> 01:21:17.300] Is that true? [01:21:17.300 --> 01:21:20.300] It depends on which mic. [01:21:20.300 --> 01:21:26.300] If they have an independent body camera, it's got its own cam and mic. [01:21:26.300 --> 01:21:32.300] He's got a separate mic that broadcasts back to the car. [01:21:32.300 --> 01:21:44.300] The camera he wears is an all-in-one unit, whereas the microphone that he wears that his cruiser records with the dash cam is a separate mic. [01:21:44.300 --> 01:21:46.300] Okay. [01:21:46.300 --> 01:21:53.300] But the angle he pulled up, he would not have had an angle of where I was. [01:21:53.300 --> 01:21:59.300] Yeah, it wouldn't matter if he's got a body cam and it was on. [01:21:59.300 --> 01:22:01.300] That he did not have. [01:22:01.300 --> 01:22:02.300] You don't know that. [01:22:02.300 --> 01:22:03.300] He wasn't. [01:22:03.300 --> 01:22:04.300] You don't know that. [01:22:04.300 --> 01:22:07.300] You're assuming that. [01:22:07.300 --> 01:22:11.300] They don't necessarily have to be issued a body cam to be using a cam. [01:22:11.300 --> 01:22:17.300] They got the same little pins and key fobs and everything else we got too, you know? [01:22:17.300 --> 01:22:18.300] Yeah. [01:22:18.300 --> 01:22:24.300] And a lot of them do that stuff for their own CYA. [01:22:24.300 --> 01:22:34.300] I've got a couple of recorders, a couple of video recorders that are semi-failing me, not being very dependable. [01:22:34.300 --> 01:22:42.300] I need something that will record a long period of time so I can turn it on and... [01:22:42.300 --> 01:22:43.300] Well, good luck with that. [01:22:43.300 --> 01:22:45.300] There's not many of those things that will do that. [01:22:45.300 --> 01:22:55.300] Most of them have very small storage and it all basically depends upon what resolution you're trying to use as to how long it will record. [01:22:55.300 --> 01:22:59.300] I'd rather have a lower, you know, for storage size factor. [01:22:59.300 --> 01:23:07.300] Yeah, but most of the pre-built devices only have like anywhere from four to maybe 16 gig on the really expensive ones, [01:23:07.300 --> 01:23:13.300] but most of them are four to eight, which isn't much even at low resolution. [01:23:13.300 --> 01:23:15.300] Yeah. [01:23:15.300 --> 01:23:16.300] Okay. [01:23:16.300 --> 01:23:20.300] But you can keep looking to see what you can find. [01:23:20.300 --> 01:23:25.300] I tried using my cell phone, but it lasts about two hours. [01:23:25.300 --> 01:23:33.300] Yeah, that's going to be the case of most everything, but the only thing that might work longer would be a GoPro camera. [01:23:33.300 --> 01:23:38.300] But those aren't cheap, but they'll damn sure do the job if you set them to low resolution. [01:23:38.300 --> 01:23:42.300] They'll record for quite a while. [01:23:42.300 --> 01:23:44.300] How long do they run? [01:23:44.300 --> 01:23:49.300] Depends on how new the battery is. [01:23:49.300 --> 01:23:57.300] The new ones will run, I've had one run just slightly over four hours. [01:23:57.300 --> 01:23:58.300] That would be good. [01:23:58.300 --> 01:24:02.300] That'd be plenty, because then I can throw a new battery in it. [01:24:02.300 --> 01:24:03.300] Yeah. [01:24:03.300 --> 01:24:13.300] But if you carry around one of those little flat panel solar panels or a little flat panel battery that you can hook it to with a USB port, [01:24:13.300 --> 01:24:21.300] it can actually run off that battery or that solar panel and keep its own battery charged and make an extended life out of everything. [01:24:21.300 --> 01:24:22.300] Okay. [01:24:22.300 --> 01:24:24.300] I'll look into that. [01:24:24.300 --> 01:24:25.300] Okay. [01:24:25.300 --> 01:24:26.300] All right, sir. [01:24:26.300 --> 01:24:27.300] I'll let you get on to the next one. [01:24:27.300 --> 01:24:28.300] All right. [01:24:28.300 --> 01:24:30.300] Well, have a good one, and thanks for calling in. [01:24:30.300 --> 01:24:31.300] Good luck. [01:24:31.300 --> 01:24:42.300] One thing real quick for the girl in Broward County, another thing she needs to look at would be the criminal complaint [01:24:42.300 --> 01:24:52.300] or the complaint affidavit that the cop filled out when he took her to jail was notarized by another cop that is not authorized in Florida. [01:24:52.300 --> 01:24:57.300] Yeah, plus if this is a civil infraction, there couldn't be a criminal complaint in the first place. [01:24:57.300 --> 01:25:01.300] That would be another problem. [01:25:01.300 --> 01:25:04.300] They probably filled out an affidavit. [01:25:04.300 --> 01:25:11.300] If they put her in a jail cell, they were trying to treat her as if she had committed a crime, which means they're doubly screwed. [01:25:11.300 --> 01:25:18.300] Well, the second charge was for... [01:25:18.300 --> 01:25:20.300] Yeah, having a suspended license. [01:25:20.300 --> 01:25:22.300] And that is a crime. [01:25:22.300 --> 01:25:29.300] Yeah, but if they suspended it illegally like they did to you by locking you up, then she's home free in that regard. [01:25:29.300 --> 01:25:33.300] But yeah, I get your point on the double signatures. [01:25:33.300 --> 01:25:36.300] All right, man, let me get somebody else before I'm out of time on this segment. [01:25:36.300 --> 01:25:37.300] Thanks for calling. [01:25:37.300 --> 01:25:39.300] Have a good one. [01:25:39.300 --> 01:25:40.300] You too. [01:25:40.300 --> 01:25:43.300] All right, now we're going to go to Charles in Washington. [01:25:43.300 --> 01:25:46.300] Charles, what can we do for you? [01:25:46.300 --> 01:25:47.300] Hi there, Eddie. [01:25:47.300 --> 01:25:49.300] Again, I want to appreciate, say thank you. [01:25:49.300 --> 01:25:54.300] I didn't see the documents you sent me, and there was quite a few other things in that document. [01:25:54.300 --> 01:25:56.300] Hold on, I got to get you off of speakerphone. [01:25:56.300 --> 01:25:57.300] Sorry. [01:25:57.300 --> 01:25:58.300] That's okay. [01:25:58.300 --> 01:26:03.300] So yeah, I decided before I explained it, I got here and I have a short-minute issue. [01:26:03.300 --> 01:26:05.300] And there was two issues I was concerned about. [01:26:05.300 --> 01:26:13.300] One was the not registering my vehicles because I was the one that had the cars impounded and I had to go to court on those. [01:26:13.300 --> 01:26:18.300] So the information that you sent me, I read over them, and it's in there clear, [01:26:18.300 --> 01:26:25.300] but I have never really presented anything factual to this allegation to the courts. [01:26:25.300 --> 01:26:31.300] So do I just take out of here what you sent me, which was in those papers? [01:26:31.300 --> 01:26:34.300] Well, you take this, you make, okay, listen carefully. [01:26:34.300 --> 01:26:35.300] Okay. [01:26:35.300 --> 01:26:43.300] Everything I sent you, you make dang sure you verify personally and directly against the existing statute. [01:26:43.300 --> 01:26:45.300] That's information I've had for a while. [01:26:45.300 --> 01:26:49.300] I don't know what may have changed, but that's the way it originally was done. [01:26:49.300 --> 01:26:58.300] The case law will not have changed unless the statute has changed, and then the case law could possibly have changed. [01:26:58.300 --> 01:27:01.300] So don't just take what I sent you as the current gospel. [01:27:01.300 --> 01:27:03.300] It still needs to be checked. [01:27:03.300 --> 01:27:04.300] That's first thing. [01:27:04.300 --> 01:27:05.300] Okay. [01:27:05.300 --> 01:27:10.300] Second thing is, is what I sent you referenced the statutes and the case law. [01:27:10.300 --> 01:27:18.300] Once you've verified that it's all still accurate, you have to write a motion that uses it properly. [01:27:18.300 --> 01:27:20.300] Motion is due. [01:27:20.300 --> 01:27:22.300] Okay. [01:27:22.300 --> 01:27:23.300] Got that. [01:27:23.300 --> 01:27:24.300] If it's proper. [01:27:24.300 --> 01:27:25.300] Okay. [01:27:25.300 --> 01:27:27.300] If proper. [01:27:27.300 --> 01:27:30.300] Mm-hmm. [01:27:30.300 --> 01:27:31.300] Okay. [01:27:31.300 --> 01:27:32.300] I got that. [01:27:32.300 --> 01:27:36.300] One, to go check against the statutes or what they're saying about this. [01:27:36.300 --> 01:27:41.300] I'm quite sure Washington's changing laws and rules all the time to fit their purposes. [01:27:41.300 --> 01:27:47.300] Well, yeah, they may be changing all kinds of things all the time, but it doesn't necessarily mean they changed these specific ones. [01:27:47.300 --> 01:27:50.300] They could have, but it doesn't mean they have. [01:27:50.300 --> 01:27:52.300] But you still need to check them. [01:27:52.300 --> 01:27:53.300] Okay. [01:27:53.300 --> 01:27:54.300] Okay. [01:27:54.300 --> 01:27:56.300] So that's the statute against the case law. [01:27:56.300 --> 01:27:57.300] Make sure it's... [01:27:57.300 --> 01:28:03.300] Well, no, no, no, first you'd match what I sent you that deals with the statutes and the case law. [01:28:03.300 --> 01:28:11.300] You look up both of them, find the statute, make sure that what I sent you still matches what's written in the code. [01:28:11.300 --> 01:28:22.300] Then you find the case that's mentioned in what I sent you, and you make sure that everything in that case matches up with the information discussed in what I sent you. [01:28:22.300 --> 01:28:23.300] Okay. [01:28:23.300 --> 01:28:28.300] See, I haven't had time to sit down and verify everything about other states. [01:28:28.300 --> 01:28:39.300] I've looked at some of the stuff in what I sent you, and enough of it was accurate that I went in and said, okay, it appears to be good, so I'll go for it, and as I get time, I'll keep checking it. [01:28:39.300 --> 01:28:41.300] Well, time for me is very spare. [01:28:41.300 --> 01:28:43.300] And just sparing. [01:28:43.300 --> 01:28:44.300] I know. [01:28:44.300 --> 01:28:45.300] I already know. [01:28:45.300 --> 01:28:48.300] And that's why I don't want to waste your time, and I don't want to keep trying to call you back. [01:28:48.300 --> 01:28:55.300] I gave you that strictly as a jumping off point, but you need to check before you jump. [01:28:55.300 --> 01:28:56.300] Okay. [01:28:56.300 --> 01:28:57.300] Okay. [01:28:57.300 --> 01:29:01.300] And I'm talking to some people right now that can help me with that, too. [01:29:01.300 --> 01:29:07.300] I've yet to send the money to get on that program, the class you have, the Jurisdictionary. [01:29:07.300 --> 01:29:08.300] That's not my class. [01:29:08.300 --> 01:29:13.300] That's Dr. Frederick Gave's program that teaches you how to do a lawsuit. [01:29:13.300 --> 01:29:18.300] That's his. Jurisdictionary is his program. It's not mine. [01:29:18.300 --> 01:29:19.300] Oh, okay. [01:29:19.300 --> 01:29:20.300] Didn't you have a class or something? [01:29:20.300 --> 01:29:27.300] I have a class on Sundays, and I have a seminar that you can order that deals with traffic stuff, yes. [01:29:27.300 --> 01:29:30.300] But Jurisdictionary is Dr. Gray's program. [01:29:30.300 --> 01:29:36.300] The Rule of Law traffic seminar, or Eddie's traffic seminar, is my program. [01:29:36.300 --> 01:29:37.300] Okay. [01:29:37.300 --> 01:29:39.300] Well, we've got to go to the Commissioner's hall. [01:29:39.300 --> 01:29:40.300] I'll get out the way, Tashi. [01:29:40.300 --> 01:29:43.300] Yeah, hang on just a second, and we'll pick you up on the other side of the break, okay? [01:29:43.300 --> 01:29:44.300] Okay. [01:29:44.300 --> 01:29:46.300] All right, hold on just a minute. [01:29:46.300 --> 01:29:49.300] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio. [01:29:49.300 --> 01:29:51.300] We've got a half an hour left, two more segments. [01:29:51.300 --> 01:29:53.300] I'll get to everybody I can. [01:29:53.300 --> 01:29:57.300] If you want to call in before the end of the show, 512-646-1984. [01:29:57.300 --> 01:30:02.300] We'll be right back. [01:30:02.300 --> 01:30:06.300] A picnic's a wonderful way to reduce stress and lower your blood pressure, [01:30:06.300 --> 01:30:10.300] but one item in your picnic basket may be doing the job better than medication. [01:30:10.300 --> 01:30:15.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment to tell you what it is. [01:30:15.300 --> 01:30:17.300] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.300 --> 01:30:21.300] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.300 --> 01:30:26.300] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:30:26.300 --> 01:30:31.300] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.300 --> 01:30:33.300] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.300 --> 01:30:37.300] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.300 --> 01:30:41.300] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.300 --> 01:30:44.300] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.300 --> 01:30:47.300] Everyone loves a cold, juicy slice of watermelon. [01:30:47.300 --> 01:30:50.300] It keeps you hydrated, it's packed with potassium, [01:30:50.300 --> 01:30:53.300] and it's a great source of vitamins A, B, and C. [01:30:53.300 --> 01:30:55.300] But now there's a new reason to love watermelon. [01:30:55.300 --> 01:30:58.300] It can help normalize your blood pressure. [01:30:58.300 --> 01:31:04.300] Scientists at Florida State University fed watermelon extract to nine middle-aged adults with high blood pressure. [01:31:04.300 --> 01:31:08.300] In just six weeks, all nine had reduced their blood pressure to normal levels [01:31:08.300 --> 01:31:11.300] without the side effects of statin drugs. [01:31:11.300 --> 01:31:14.300] The researchers say watermelon is a natural vasodilator [01:31:14.300 --> 01:31:19.300] that can help people with pre-hypertension prevent full-blown high blood pressure, [01:31:19.300 --> 01:31:22.300] a major risk factor for heart attacks and strokes. [01:31:22.300 --> 01:31:23.300] How sweet it is. [01:31:23.300 --> 01:31:30.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.300 --> 01:31:35.300] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.300 --> 01:31:37.300] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.300 --> 01:31:42.300] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.300 --> 01:31:45.300] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.300 --> 01:31:48.300] Thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:48.300 --> 01:31:49.300] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.300 --> 01:31:50.300] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.300 --> 01:31:52.300] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.300 --> 01:31:53.300] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.300 --> 01:31:54.300] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:54.300 --> 01:31:57.300] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.300 --> 01:32:22.300] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:28.300 --> 01:32:31.300] to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.300 --> 01:32:38.300] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.300 --> 01:32:40.300] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [01:32:40.300 --> 01:32:45.300] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.300 --> 01:32:50.300] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.300 --> 01:32:56.300] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.300 --> 01:32:58.300] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.300 --> 01:33:03.300] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.300 --> 01:33:12.300] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:12.300 --> 01:33:27.300] Thank you very much. [01:33:43.300 --> 01:33:45.300] All right, folks, we are back. [01:33:45.300 --> 01:33:47.300] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:47.300 --> 01:33:51.300] Call it number 512-646-1984. [01:33:51.300 --> 01:33:54.300] And we are talking with Charles in Washington. [01:33:54.300 --> 01:33:57.300] All right, Charles, go ahead. [01:33:57.300 --> 01:34:00.300] Okay, the other matter was when I had... [01:34:00.300 --> 01:34:02.300] Okay, speakerphone, speakerphone. [01:34:02.300 --> 01:34:04.300] Hello? [01:34:04.300 --> 01:34:07.300] Yeah, I got yourself a speakerphone. [01:34:07.300 --> 01:34:10.300] Yeah, can you hear me better? [01:34:10.300 --> 01:34:14.300] It still sounds like you're on speakerphone, but go ahead. [01:34:14.300 --> 01:34:23.300] Okay, so what I was trying to say was that I talked with you briefly about another case I had where I had backed into a vehicle on the freeway [01:34:23.300 --> 01:34:29.300] and was given a ticket for improper banking and no insurance. [01:34:29.300 --> 01:34:31.300] And I went to court on that. [01:34:31.300 --> 01:34:37.300] I remember telling you before, the first time I missed court, I had not received anything. [01:34:37.300 --> 01:34:43.300] I only got a notice that they had summoned the individual that I was supposed to have hit. [01:34:43.300 --> 01:34:46.300] After that, I went back to court and let them know that I never received anything. [01:34:46.300 --> 01:34:49.300] So we continued with the court from that point. [01:34:49.300 --> 01:34:59.300] When I first went there, the judge told me, because I just requested the court audios, videos for the last few times. [01:34:59.300 --> 01:35:05.300] The last time I went, I was sick and I asked the judge to continue, which I should have asked for a motion, [01:35:05.300 --> 01:35:10.300] because the officer wasn't there and neither had he ever come any of the three other times. [01:35:10.300 --> 01:35:12.300] The judge allowed it to be continued. [01:35:12.300 --> 01:35:19.300] And he said at the next trial, which would be the trial, the last part, to show up. [01:35:19.300 --> 01:35:20.300] So I showed up. [01:35:20.300 --> 01:35:21.300] There was a different judge. [01:35:21.300 --> 01:35:27.300] And this judge decided to continue because the officer had a gun range practiced. [01:35:27.300 --> 01:35:34.300] And for what I understand, anytime there's something like that when there's the last part of the trial or the hearing, [01:35:34.300 --> 01:35:36.300] that they have to be there or give a notice. [01:35:36.300 --> 01:35:41.300] But they never sent me any notice to that effect or anything that was brought up in court. [01:35:41.300 --> 01:35:47.300] So I told the judge I made a motion to suppress the officer's statement because he wasn't there. [01:35:47.300 --> 01:35:48.300] There was no witness. [01:35:48.300 --> 01:35:51.300] The witness does not intend to show up, hasn't showed up. [01:35:51.300 --> 01:36:00.300] And so the judge and I, the motion to suppress and dismiss and settle for continuous for the officer to show up again. [01:36:00.300 --> 01:36:09.300] I was told at this time he had to show up or else if it was me, it would be dismissed on default or whatever. [01:36:09.300 --> 01:36:13.300] So he didn't do that in my case, but allowed it to continue. [01:36:13.300 --> 01:36:18.300] So now I missed the court date, which was back in the 23rd of May. [01:36:18.300 --> 01:36:24.300] So now they're talking about suspending my license because of that dismissal. [01:36:24.300 --> 01:36:28.300] So I requested the court records to show what transpired at that time [01:36:28.300 --> 01:36:32.300] because I felt it should have been dismissed then because the officer didn't give notice [01:36:32.300 --> 01:36:37.300] that he wasn't going to be able to show to the prosecutor and neither did the witness show. [01:36:37.300 --> 01:36:41.300] So they had no evidence or no jurisdiction. [01:36:41.300 --> 01:36:48.300] So I did send the paperwork in for a review based upon my license being suspended improperly. [01:36:48.300 --> 01:36:54.300] You had told me something I needed to file a grievance, some kind of against the court. [01:36:54.300 --> 01:37:00.300] A judicial conduct complaint or whatever the equivalent is in Washington. [01:37:00.300 --> 01:37:02.300] Judicial conduct? [01:37:02.300 --> 01:37:06.300] Yes. Here it's called a judicial conduct complaint. [01:37:06.300 --> 01:37:15.300] But now the only thing about it is if the judge had discretion under the law to deny the motion, [01:37:15.300 --> 01:37:17.300] then you're not going to have anything against the judge. [01:37:17.300 --> 01:37:24.300] If, however, the statute says that it shall be done, he had no discretion. [01:37:24.300 --> 01:37:32.300] And the fact that he refused to do it is a violation of his duties under the rules of procedure. [01:37:32.300 --> 01:37:37.300] And that's what I was talking about when the other judge said it would continue at the other. [01:37:37.300 --> 01:37:39.300] Okay, because he could continue if he wanted to. [01:37:39.300 --> 01:37:42.300] I didn't know if he had the right to do that. [01:37:42.300 --> 01:37:44.300] He was just trying to point out because they did it before for me, [01:37:44.300 --> 01:37:46.300] he was going to not do it again for the officer. [01:37:46.300 --> 01:37:48.300] But the officer never at any point showed up. [01:37:48.300 --> 01:37:52.300] So I was trying to find out. [01:37:52.300 --> 01:37:53.300] Wait a minute. [01:37:53.300 --> 01:37:54.300] You were trying to find out what? [01:37:54.300 --> 01:37:56.300] You broke up and disappeared. [01:37:56.300 --> 01:38:01.300] Yeah, I was trying to find out if the officer showed up at the last hearing that I missed [01:38:01.300 --> 01:38:04.300] so that that was supposed to continue as well as finish. [01:38:04.300 --> 01:38:10.300] And if he didn't, then I was trying to find out what would be my recourse. [01:38:10.300 --> 01:38:12.300] Okay. So what's your question on that? [01:38:12.300 --> 01:38:13.300] I was going to go there. [01:38:13.300 --> 01:38:18.300] You're going to find out what the court records said about if they called a roll to see who was present [01:38:18.300 --> 01:38:19.300] and who wasn't. [01:38:19.300 --> 01:38:23.300] Yeah. So on that situation, how I've been there, [01:38:23.300 --> 01:38:27.300] I was going to try to make that case that they have no jurisdiction. [01:38:27.300 --> 01:38:32.300] Well, you have the stuff in front of you now to make the case they have no jurisdiction. [01:38:32.300 --> 01:38:34.300] They never had jurisdiction. [01:38:34.300 --> 01:38:37.300] So even if that case is over and done with, [01:38:37.300 --> 01:38:43.300] you can file a motion to reconsider and try to revive it to challenge the original jurisdiction [01:38:43.300 --> 01:38:45.300] if it's already done and gone. [01:38:45.300 --> 01:38:49.300] If it's still current, then you can challenge jurisdiction based upon the fact [01:38:49.300 --> 01:38:53.300] that you have case law that says none of this ever applied to me, [01:38:53.300 --> 01:38:55.300] the officer knew it didn't apply to me, [01:38:55.300 --> 01:39:01.300] and he acted unlawfully by trying to compel me to allow it to apply to me. [01:39:01.300 --> 01:39:06.300] Gotcha. And that's what I was calling to ask you, if I could main this back up. [01:39:06.300 --> 01:39:09.300] And I don't know how many days I have after this bill, 30 days. [01:39:09.300 --> 01:39:11.300] So I don't know how much time or statutes in there. [01:39:11.300 --> 01:39:15.300] Yeah. I don't know specifically what the procedural rules in Washington is either, [01:39:15.300 --> 01:39:17.300] and you need to find out. [01:39:17.300 --> 01:39:20.300] But here, that's how you would do it. [01:39:20.300 --> 01:39:22.300] Okay. And that's what I want to find out. [01:39:22.300 --> 01:39:24.300] All right. Then you answer my question. [01:39:24.300 --> 01:39:25.300] Now, one last thing. [01:39:25.300 --> 01:39:29.300] You have a radio show on Mondays, Thursdays, and Fridays. [01:39:29.300 --> 01:39:30.300] I'm just on on Mondays. [01:39:30.300 --> 01:39:34.300] Randy and Deborah are on on Thursdays and Fridays, or Randy is now. [01:39:34.300 --> 01:39:38.300] I don't know if Deborah's even still doing the show with him on a regular basis or not. [01:39:38.300 --> 01:39:42.300] But Thursday and Friday nights, Randy's on, and whoever else. [01:39:42.300 --> 01:39:45.300] He's got a new co-host I know for Fridays. [01:39:45.300 --> 01:39:46.300] I haven't got to meet her yet. [01:39:46.300 --> 01:39:49.300] I've only talked to her once on one of the shows. [01:39:49.300 --> 01:39:53.300] But thereon then, my only time on the air right now, [01:39:53.300 --> 01:39:55.300] unless I'm a guest on with them or something, [01:39:55.300 --> 01:40:01.300] or participate in something with them because we need to, mine is on Mondays. [01:40:01.300 --> 01:40:06.300] Okay. So I'm going to email you another video that he wasn't going to help me with, [01:40:06.300 --> 01:40:11.300] but I think it might be something you'd be interested in looking at and bring up for discussion. [01:40:11.300 --> 01:40:14.300] So I'll email that to you now that I got the right email. [01:40:14.300 --> 01:40:15.300] It was a flaw in there. [01:40:15.300 --> 01:40:17.300] We didn't have the radio on the email. [01:40:17.300 --> 01:40:22.300] Yeah, I was wondering because I'm going, dude, I'm sorry, but I got nothing from you. [01:40:22.300 --> 01:40:24.300] Yeah, no, I said six of them. [01:40:24.300 --> 01:40:26.300] And I said, he's got to be kidding them. [01:40:26.300 --> 01:40:27.300] And I thought it wasn't. [01:40:27.300 --> 01:40:29.300] It was a type error on her part. [01:40:29.300 --> 01:40:31.300] So I do appreciate you getting it out. [01:40:31.300 --> 01:40:32.300] You got it out. [01:40:32.300 --> 01:40:33.300] I'll prompt each of you. [01:40:33.300 --> 01:40:35.300] So I'll get that one other video. [01:40:35.300 --> 01:40:37.300] It says, people voluntarily go to jail. [01:40:37.300 --> 01:40:39.300] And it was part one, two, and four. [01:40:39.300 --> 01:40:42.300] One is what I want you to look at the first two minutes. [01:40:42.300 --> 01:40:45.300] And then at that point, you'll know where I'm coming from [01:40:45.300 --> 01:40:47.300] and see if we can address that on the radio next time. [01:40:47.300 --> 01:40:49.300] I'll see what I can do. [01:40:49.300 --> 01:40:50.300] Can't make promises, but I'll try. [01:40:50.300 --> 01:40:52.300] Okay. I know, Andy. I know. [01:40:52.300 --> 01:40:53.300] All right. [01:40:53.300 --> 01:40:54.300] Again, thank you so much. [01:40:54.300 --> 01:40:55.300] And like I said, that money's coming. [01:40:55.300 --> 01:40:56.300] Thank you. [01:40:56.300 --> 01:40:57.300] Yes, sir. [01:40:57.300 --> 01:40:58.300] Thank you. [01:40:58.300 --> 01:40:59.300] All right. [01:40:59.300 --> 01:41:01.300] Now we're going to go to Gale. [01:41:01.300 --> 01:41:05.300] Gale, you're in Missouri or Montana? [01:41:05.300 --> 01:41:06.300] Missouri. [01:41:06.300 --> 01:41:07.300] Missouri. All right. [01:41:07.300 --> 01:41:08.300] What you got? [01:41:08.300 --> 01:41:12.300] And you don't sound like a Gale, just in case you're wondering. [01:41:12.300 --> 01:41:13.300] Say that again? [01:41:13.300 --> 01:41:18.300] I said, you don't sound like a Gale, just in case you're wondering. [01:41:18.300 --> 01:41:20.300] I've been accused of that a lot. [01:41:20.300 --> 01:41:21.300] All right. [01:41:21.300 --> 01:41:23.300] What can we do for you? [01:41:23.300 --> 01:41:25.300] Well, I had emailed you. [01:41:25.300 --> 01:41:27.300] We'd gone back and forth a couple of times. [01:41:27.300 --> 01:41:32.300] I had gotten a ticket in March in a little town called Milano, Texas, [01:41:32.300 --> 01:41:38.300] eight or nine miles up the road from Cameron and Rockdale. [01:41:38.300 --> 01:41:43.300] And the thing that struck me is as the officer pulled me over, [01:41:43.300 --> 01:41:46.300] this was a little town of 420 people. [01:41:46.300 --> 01:41:51.300] And they had a big shiny new SUV with all the lights and tricked out equipment in it. [01:41:51.300 --> 01:41:55.300] And the officer came back after he'd written up the citation [01:41:55.300 --> 01:41:59.300] on one of these heat-sensitive laser printers and said, [01:41:59.300 --> 01:42:02.300] handed me back my license and the citation on a clipboard and said, [01:42:02.300 --> 01:42:07.300] the information is there on the ticket for you to take care of it. [01:42:07.300 --> 01:42:10.300] And I thought, he's just assuming I'm going to toss my hands in the air, [01:42:10.300 --> 01:42:13.300] mail in the money, and be done with it, [01:42:13.300 --> 01:42:19.300] since I am a 10-hour drive from Milano, Texas. [01:42:19.300 --> 01:42:25.300] And I decided I wasn't going to toss my hands in the air and mail in the money [01:42:25.300 --> 01:42:33.300] and got a registered letter saying that you have to appear for hearing in May. [01:42:33.300 --> 01:42:36.300] So I went down in May and the prosecutor, [01:42:36.300 --> 01:42:41.300] who was a young 30-something blonde from Cameron, [01:42:41.300 --> 01:42:44.300] was accustomed to making deals with people. [01:42:44.300 --> 01:42:47.300] She wasn't accused of anybody challenging her. [01:42:47.300 --> 01:42:50.300] This was the judge or the prosecutor? [01:42:50.300 --> 01:42:51.300] Pardon me? [01:42:51.300 --> 01:42:53.300] The judge or the prosecutor? [01:42:53.300 --> 01:42:54.300] The prosecutor. [01:42:54.300 --> 01:42:59.300] Okay. [01:42:59.300 --> 01:43:01.300] And so we went back and forth, [01:43:01.300 --> 01:43:04.300] and the conversation got more contentious as it went along. [01:43:04.300 --> 01:43:08.300] And so finally I petitioned the judge to dismiss on a couple of different points, [01:43:08.300 --> 01:43:13.300] and he refused, said, okay, let's go to trial. [01:43:13.300 --> 01:43:17.300] So I was scheduled for trial July 8, [01:43:17.300 --> 01:43:22.300] and with your material that I got offline and going back and forth, [01:43:22.300 --> 01:43:26.300] I literally spent about 20 hours in preparation for that trial, [01:43:26.300 --> 01:43:29.300] thinking I'm ready to do battle with them. [01:43:29.300 --> 01:43:34.300] Well, I found out when I was booking my hotel room in Rockdale. [01:43:34.300 --> 01:43:36.300] Hang on just a sec, sir. [01:43:36.300 --> 01:43:37.300] Sorry about that. [01:43:37.300 --> 01:43:41.300] We are up on a break, and this is one I can't put the brakes off. [01:43:41.300 --> 01:43:43.300] So give me just a second, and we'll take this break, [01:43:43.300 --> 01:43:46.300] and then we'll come back and finish up with you, okay? [01:43:46.300 --> 01:43:47.300] All right. [01:43:47.300 --> 01:43:49.300] All right, hold on for just a few minutes. [01:43:49.300 --> 01:43:51.300] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break. [01:43:51.300 --> 01:43:53.300] We are coming into the last segment of the show, [01:43:53.300 --> 01:43:56.300] so be attentive, pay attention, and listen up. [01:43:56.300 --> 01:44:00.300] Here we go. [01:44:00.300 --> 01:44:03.300] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.300 --> 01:44:04.300] Sorry. [01:44:04.300 --> 01:44:07.300] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.300 --> 01:44:08.300] What? [01:44:08.300 --> 01:44:12.300] So you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.300 --> 01:44:16.300] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:16.300 --> 01:44:19.300] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.300 --> 01:44:22.300] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found [01:44:22.300 --> 01:44:25.300] in almost every home in America, the television. [01:44:25.300 --> 01:44:29.300] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, [01:44:29.300 --> 01:44:30.300] but there is hope. [01:44:30.300 --> 01:44:32.300] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me [01:44:32.300 --> 01:44:36.300] and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover, [01:44:36.300 --> 01:44:39.300] and because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading [01:44:39.300 --> 01:44:43.300] and watching educational documentaries without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.300 --> 01:44:46.300] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.300 --> 01:44:53.300] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them at 1904Guadalupe [01:44:53.300 --> 01:44:55.300] or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:55.300 --> 01:44:57.300] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include [01:44:57.300 --> 01:45:01.300] discernment and enlarged vocabulary and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:01.300 --> 01:45:04.300] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.300 --> 01:45:07.300] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.300 --> 01:45:12.300] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how [01:45:12.300 --> 01:45:15.300] in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.300 --> 01:45:19.300] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.300 --> 01:45:23.300] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.300 --> 01:45:28.300] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.300 --> 01:45:31.300] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:31.300 --> 01:45:34.300] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.300 --> 01:45:39.300] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.300 --> 01:45:43.300] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.300 --> 01:45:48.300] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:48.300 --> 01:45:52.300] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.300 --> 01:45:56.300] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:56.300 --> 01:46:01.300] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.300 --> 01:46:30.300] All right, folks. [01:46:30.300 --> 01:46:31.300] We are back. [01:46:31.300 --> 01:46:35.300] This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are talking to Gayle in Missouri. [01:46:35.300 --> 01:46:39.300] Gayle, all right, go ahead and continue, please. [01:46:39.300 --> 01:46:45.300] But, well, I had called down to Rockdale to reserve a room, [01:46:45.300 --> 01:46:48.300] and in the process, I kind of struck up a conversation [01:46:48.300 --> 01:46:51.300] with the booking agent there, and he said, [01:46:51.300 --> 01:46:54.300] well, did you know that the police department in Milano [01:46:54.300 --> 01:46:56.300] had been disbanded in March? [01:46:56.300 --> 01:47:00.300] Now, was this before or after your citation had been issued? [01:47:00.300 --> 01:47:02.300] Shortly after. [01:47:02.300 --> 01:47:04.300] Okay. [01:47:04.300 --> 01:47:08.300] By any chance, was the basis police corruption? [01:47:08.300 --> 01:47:09.300] No. [01:47:09.300 --> 01:47:13.300] Okay, too bad, because that would have got the ticket thrown out immediately. [01:47:13.300 --> 01:47:15.300] Well, two different stories. [01:47:15.300 --> 01:47:20.300] One, the county seat and camera, and I contacted the newspaper, [01:47:20.300 --> 01:47:26.300] and they said, well, they had had a vote in the city council [01:47:26.300 --> 01:47:28.300] to disband because of financial problems, [01:47:28.300 --> 01:47:31.300] and I'd heard another one that they'd lost their certification [01:47:31.300 --> 01:47:36.300] because they didn't have facilities to run a police department in a town of 420, [01:47:36.300 --> 01:47:40.300] but they had three officers and two reservists. [01:47:40.300 --> 01:47:44.300] So I'm wondering how they're, with one gas station and convenience store, [01:47:44.300 --> 01:47:48.300] how they're generating the revenue to support three officers and two reservists [01:47:48.300 --> 01:47:54.300] and a nice shiny new SUV. [01:47:54.300 --> 01:47:58.300] Well, that would be the theft they're doing with the citation, see. [01:47:58.300 --> 01:48:05.300] Yeah, well, I had mailed off a motion to dismiss requests for discovery [01:48:05.300 --> 01:48:12.300] and Brady requests on June 1st and had never heard back from the prosecutor. [01:48:12.300 --> 01:48:15.300] And I thought, well, I'm not sure what game she's playing either. [01:48:15.300 --> 01:48:19.300] And I didn't let them know that I knew that the Milano PD had been disbanded, [01:48:19.300 --> 01:48:22.300] but I didn't know what kind of a game she was playing, [01:48:22.300 --> 01:48:26.300] so I had no contact with her at all. [01:48:26.300 --> 01:48:30.300] And since court was scheduled for the 8th, [01:48:30.300 --> 01:48:33.300] I left early in the morning on the 7th to drive down there [01:48:33.300 --> 01:48:35.300] so I could be in court the next morning. [01:48:35.300 --> 01:48:39.300] And I was in the courthouse in Cameron, Texas, the county seat, at 415, [01:48:39.300 --> 01:48:43.300] and got a text from the clerk of the court saying, [01:48:43.300 --> 01:48:48.300] the prosecutor has filed a motion to dismiss. [01:48:48.300 --> 01:48:51.300] Well, I was kind of relieved and ticked off at the same time [01:48:51.300 --> 01:48:53.300] because they could have done that 24 hours earlier [01:48:53.300 --> 01:48:57.300] and saved me a 20-hour road trip. [01:48:57.300 --> 01:49:00.300] But I assume that's just how those people run. [01:49:00.300 --> 01:49:03.300] And I've gotten from talking to the two previous guests, [01:49:03.300 --> 01:49:07.300] I get the impression that they're going to put their boot to your neck [01:49:07.300 --> 01:49:10.300] as hard as they can to show you who's boss. [01:49:10.300 --> 01:49:13.300] They are not going to let, you know, [01:49:13.300 --> 01:49:18.300] they're going to subjugate the population as best they can. [01:49:18.300 --> 01:49:26.300] The two guests that I was listening to before me pretty well reinforced that. [01:49:26.300 --> 01:49:28.300] Well, the thing is, if they dis… [01:49:28.300 --> 01:49:29.300] well, it won't matter. [01:49:29.300 --> 01:49:34.300] In your particular case, there won't be an officer to testify against you. [01:49:34.300 --> 01:49:36.300] They disbanded the force. [01:49:36.300 --> 01:49:37.300] He had to go look for a job. [01:49:37.300 --> 01:49:42.300] I doubt very much so if he went to work for the local feed market, [01:49:42.300 --> 01:49:44.300] if you know what I mean. [01:49:44.300 --> 01:49:48.300] Yeah, but they… the dismissal, I got in the mail today. [01:49:48.300 --> 01:49:49.300] Right, okay. [01:49:49.300 --> 01:49:54.300] Had said that they had dismissed because of lack of witness [01:49:54.300 --> 01:49:58.300] and the fact… I forget how the term was. [01:49:58.300 --> 01:50:02.300] The fact witness was no longer employed by the Milano PD [01:50:02.300 --> 01:50:04.300] and was uncooperative in testifying. [01:50:04.300 --> 01:50:08.300] Yeah, because he would have to come back on his own dime. [01:50:08.300 --> 01:50:12.300] Well, did they say anything about my motion to dismiss? [01:50:12.300 --> 01:50:13.300] Well, they don't have to. [01:50:13.300 --> 01:50:19.300] The dismissal is the dismissal. [01:50:19.300 --> 01:50:23.300] Well, the problems that I'm having are a lot less than the guests that went on before me. [01:50:23.300 --> 01:50:26.300] I was wondering if there's any way I could go against these people for time and trouble. [01:50:26.300 --> 01:50:28.300] I went by there. [01:50:28.300 --> 01:50:31.300] If they had just dismissed 24 hours prior, [01:50:31.300 --> 01:50:38.300] I can't imagine a prosecutor not knowing where their witness is. [01:50:38.300 --> 01:50:41.300] But I don't know if I've got any recourse against them or not. [01:50:41.300 --> 01:50:42.300] I doubt it. [01:50:42.300 --> 01:50:44.300] Well, if they never… it depends on what they did. [01:50:44.300 --> 01:50:48.300] You'd have to check the court record to see what they did. [01:50:48.300 --> 01:50:49.300] There's no court record. [01:50:49.300 --> 01:50:51.300] It was not a court of record. [01:50:51.300 --> 01:50:52.300] No, no, no, no. [01:50:52.300 --> 01:50:54.300] There is a court record. [01:50:54.300 --> 01:50:57.300] There may not be a transcript of the proceedings, [01:50:57.300 --> 01:51:03.300] but there is always a court file which is the court record. [01:51:03.300 --> 01:51:08.300] And any paperwork relating to that case other than the administrative paperwork [01:51:08.300 --> 01:51:15.300] of the functions of the court itself maintained by the judge is required to be in that file. [01:51:15.300 --> 01:51:20.300] In other words, a copy of the citation, the criminal complaint, any pleadings you filed, [01:51:20.300 --> 01:51:25.300] all of that will be in that record. [01:51:25.300 --> 01:51:28.300] Ah. [01:51:28.300 --> 01:51:31.300] One thing I realized in hindsight, [01:51:31.300 --> 01:51:34.300] that if I were to go back and do that again at another hearing, [01:51:34.300 --> 01:51:36.300] one, I would skip the hearing. [01:51:36.300 --> 01:51:40.300] That's 40 hours of driving, 20 hours of driving for nothing. [01:51:40.300 --> 01:51:49.300] I would have a laptop in there with a camera in it and record the proceedings on my own. [01:51:49.300 --> 01:51:54.300] If you can get one in there and they don't make you turn it off, yeah. [01:51:54.300 --> 01:51:55.300] What's a public venue? [01:51:55.300 --> 01:51:56.300] How can they deny it? [01:51:56.300 --> 01:52:01.300] Well, again, you're talking about a place where the judge is the ultimate authority right or wrong. [01:52:01.300 --> 01:52:02.300] Yes, it's wrong. [01:52:02.300 --> 01:52:04.300] Yes, you have a right to record. [01:52:04.300 --> 01:52:08.300] Does it mean they're going to let you? [01:52:08.300 --> 01:52:16.300] So if you're going to do it, make darn sure you do it in a way that they don't know you're doing it. [01:52:16.300 --> 01:52:22.300] I'd also had someone tell me a couple of months ago about having a court observer in there, [01:52:22.300 --> 01:52:27.300] sit there with a legal pad and just make notes. [01:52:27.300 --> 01:52:28.300] And I've never had that before. [01:52:28.300 --> 01:52:29.300] You can do that too. [01:52:29.300 --> 01:52:30.300] You can even have them recording. [01:52:30.300 --> 01:52:36.300] But once again, not in a way that anyone in the courtroom knows they're doing it. [01:52:36.300 --> 01:52:39.300] I guarantee you if the judge finds out you're recording what they're doing, [01:52:39.300 --> 01:52:42.300] you will suffer for it one way or the other. [01:52:42.300 --> 01:52:44.300] They'll steal your property. [01:52:44.300 --> 01:52:46.300] They'll charge you with contempt. [01:52:46.300 --> 01:52:55.300] They'll find some way to retaliate if they find out you're recording them. [01:52:55.300 --> 01:52:57.300] Interesting. [01:52:57.300 --> 01:53:02.300] Well, I can suggest based on my results, people go out and intentionally get traffic tickets. [01:53:02.300 --> 01:53:09.300] But with your help, there's a way of getting them dismissed. [01:53:09.300 --> 01:53:10.300] I appreciate that. [01:53:10.300 --> 01:53:11.300] Yes, sir. [01:53:11.300 --> 01:53:13.300] Not a problem. [01:53:13.300 --> 01:53:14.300] That's all I had. [01:53:14.300 --> 01:53:17.300] All right. Well, I appreciate you calling in. [01:53:17.300 --> 01:53:18.300] Have a good one. [01:53:18.300 --> 01:53:19.300] You too. [01:53:19.300 --> 01:53:20.300] Thanks for calling. [01:53:20.300 --> 01:53:21.300] Bye. [01:53:21.300 --> 01:53:22.300] Bye-bye. [01:53:22.300 --> 01:53:23.300] All right. [01:53:23.300 --> 01:53:28.300] Now we're going to move to next up here, David in Arkansas. [01:53:28.300 --> 01:53:30.300] David, what do you got? [01:53:30.300 --> 01:53:32.300] So, hey, Mr. Eddie. [01:53:32.300 --> 01:53:37.300] I'm only 18, so I don't know much about courts and how they work and all. [01:53:37.300 --> 01:53:40.300] And I got a traffic ticket. [01:53:40.300 --> 01:53:44.300] It was for going 88 and a 40, and so it's 48 over. [01:53:44.300 --> 01:53:48.300] And I know that he caught me with radar because I did have a radar detector. [01:53:48.300 --> 01:53:51.300] So I know I probably would not be able to fight it in court. [01:53:51.300 --> 01:53:57.300] And I was wondering, is there a way to get the ticket, like not on my driving record, [01:53:57.300 --> 01:54:00.300] like something that I could propose to the... [01:54:00.300 --> 01:54:01.300] Okay. [01:54:01.300 --> 01:54:02.300] Whoa, whoa, whoa. [01:54:02.300 --> 01:54:03.300] Let me jump in real quick. [01:54:03.300 --> 01:54:04.300] I don't mean to interrupt you. [01:54:04.300 --> 01:54:06.300] And I know you're trying to get an answer here. [01:54:06.300 --> 01:54:08.300] But here's problem number one. [01:54:08.300 --> 01:54:12.300] I am not familiar with the exact statutes in Arkansas. [01:54:12.300 --> 01:54:13.300] Let me say that up front. [01:54:13.300 --> 01:54:17.300] The general principle of transportation is the same in any state. [01:54:17.300 --> 01:54:18.300] That much is true. [01:54:18.300 --> 01:54:24.300] But the actual statutes and what they can and cannot do in relation to charging you, [01:54:24.300 --> 01:54:29.300] putting on your record, or how to avoid it, that will all be different. [01:54:29.300 --> 01:54:30.300] Now... [01:54:30.300 --> 01:54:31.300] Okay. [01:54:31.300 --> 01:54:36.300] So if you're 48 over in Arkansas, or as all I know, [01:54:36.300 --> 01:54:39.300] that's a Class B misdemeanor with six months in jail potentially. [01:54:39.300 --> 01:54:40.300] I don't know. [01:54:40.300 --> 01:54:44.300] It's not just a fine only, because it could be considered negligence possibly, [01:54:44.300 --> 01:54:48.300] and criminal negligence to boot, which would be a stiff penalty. [01:54:48.300 --> 01:54:49.300] So... [01:54:49.300 --> 01:54:52.300] Still be considered because my ticket does only say it was for speeding. [01:54:52.300 --> 01:54:54.300] It's only one traffic violation. [01:54:54.300 --> 01:54:57.300] So could I still possibly get the six months in prison or jail? [01:54:57.300 --> 01:54:58.300] I don't know. [01:54:58.300 --> 01:55:02.300] Like I say, I do not know specifically what the punishments available to the judge [01:55:02.300 --> 01:55:06.300] and the prosecutor are for that much over the speed limit, [01:55:06.300 --> 01:55:08.300] or if that even matters in Arkansas. [01:55:08.300 --> 01:55:09.300] I don't know. [01:55:09.300 --> 01:55:13.300] So you're going to have to read to see specifically what you can and cannot do there. [01:55:13.300 --> 01:55:18.300] Now, the judge, it's up to their discretion as to whether or not they grant you [01:55:18.300 --> 01:55:21.300] the ability to take defensive driving or anything like that [01:55:21.300 --> 01:55:24.300] to keep it from going on your record. [01:55:24.300 --> 01:55:25.300] All right? [01:55:25.300 --> 01:55:26.300] Okay. [01:55:26.300 --> 01:55:28.300] Now, would you suggest talking to like the prosecuting attorney? [01:55:28.300 --> 01:55:29.300] No. [01:55:29.300 --> 01:55:32.300] Anything you say to prosecuting attorney, they're going to turn right around [01:55:32.300 --> 01:55:35.300] and use against you in the court. [01:55:35.300 --> 01:55:38.300] That's the person trying to prosecute you. [01:55:38.300 --> 01:55:43.300] You don't ever carry on a conversation with that person. [01:55:43.300 --> 01:55:44.300] Okay. [01:55:44.300 --> 01:55:45.300] Okay, good. [01:55:45.300 --> 01:55:46.300] I think that's what I was reading online. [01:55:46.300 --> 01:55:47.300] I wasn't sure about that. [01:55:47.300 --> 01:55:48.300] Yeah. [01:55:48.300 --> 01:55:50.300] Anything you do in dealing with that person, [01:55:50.300 --> 01:55:53.300] you only do it in court before the judge, [01:55:53.300 --> 01:55:59.300] but never by making an admission of wrongdoing of any kind. [01:55:59.300 --> 01:56:00.300] Okay. [01:56:00.300 --> 01:56:01.300] Okay? [01:56:01.300 --> 01:56:04.300] Never, ever do that. [01:56:04.300 --> 01:56:09.300] Now, the other thing is, is if the Arkansas statute specifically relate only to [01:56:09.300 --> 01:56:12.300] transportation, i.e. commercial use of the roads, [01:56:12.300 --> 01:56:17.300] none of this applies to you in the first place, no matter how fast you are going. [01:56:17.300 --> 01:56:18.300] Okay? [01:56:18.300 --> 01:56:23.300] But the problem there is it may remove you from the transportation side of [01:56:23.300 --> 01:56:26.300] things and put you directly in the criminal side of things for the criminal [01:56:26.300 --> 01:56:29.300] negligence I was talking about. [01:56:29.300 --> 01:56:33.300] So you kind of got to figure out which way you're going to be more adversely [01:56:33.300 --> 01:56:39.300] impacted here, because just because they can charge you under transportation [01:56:39.300 --> 01:56:43.300] and chose to do so does not necessarily mean that they can't charge you [01:56:43.300 --> 01:56:48.300] somewhere else if they chose to do so. [01:56:48.300 --> 01:56:49.300] All right. [01:56:49.300 --> 01:56:50.300] All right. [01:56:50.300 --> 01:56:51.300] So you got to look. [01:56:51.300 --> 01:56:52.300] It takes a little bit of reading. [01:56:52.300 --> 01:56:57.300] Check the criminal, if this is all dealing with traffic and things like that [01:56:57.300 --> 01:57:02.300] and there's no penal code requirement for anything that they could prosecute [01:57:02.300 --> 01:57:07.300] you for, then by all means challenge it on the grounds of not in transportation [01:57:07.300 --> 01:57:10.300] or make your deal to keep it off your driving record if you actually are a [01:57:10.300 --> 01:57:12.300] driver of some kind. [01:57:12.300 --> 01:57:19.300] But if that's the case, stop doing 48 over in those zones, because there could [01:57:19.300 --> 01:57:24.300] also be this little caveat that once it's only a misdemeanor that we can find [01:57:24.300 --> 01:57:25.300] you for. [01:57:25.300 --> 01:57:28.300] Twice it's a Class B six months. [01:57:28.300 --> 01:57:32.300] Three times it's a Class A up to a year and the loss of your license. [01:57:32.300 --> 01:57:34.300] You see what I mean? [01:57:34.300 --> 01:57:35.300] Yes, sir. [01:57:35.300 --> 01:57:37.300] It all depends on what the statute says. [01:57:37.300 --> 01:57:44.300] So learn what applies and what doesn't and what they can do and what they can't. [01:57:44.300 --> 01:57:48.300] Then you'll have the answer to these questions and how to fight back and how to [01:57:48.300 --> 01:57:50.300] deal with it, okay? [01:57:50.300 --> 01:57:51.300] All right. [01:57:51.300 --> 01:57:54.300] It takes diligent effort and study, but you sound like somebody that's capable [01:57:54.300 --> 01:57:57.300] enough to learn it, so get with it. [01:57:57.300 --> 01:57:58.300] All right. [01:57:58.300 --> 01:57:59.300] Thank you very much, Eddie. [01:57:59.300 --> 01:58:00.300] You're welcome. [01:58:00.300 --> 01:58:01.300] Thanks for calling in. [01:58:01.300 --> 01:58:02.300] All right, callers, I am sorry. [01:58:02.300 --> 01:58:04.300] I am out of time. [01:58:04.300 --> 01:58:08.300] We had a lot of issues tonight, it seems, with some details and had to get into a [01:58:08.300 --> 01:58:09.300] few. [01:58:09.300 --> 01:58:11.300] So for everybody I didn't get, I apologize. [01:58:11.300 --> 01:58:17.300] If you have a pressing issue, please send me an email, eddieatruleoflawradio.com, [01:58:17.300 --> 01:58:20.300] and I'll get back to you as quickly as I can. [01:58:20.300 --> 01:58:22.300] Everybody, thank you for listening. [01:58:22.300 --> 01:58:25.300] I hope that you found the show worthwhile. [01:58:25.300 --> 01:58:29.300] And if so, please keep us on the air by keeping us in your financial prayers and [01:58:29.300 --> 01:58:34.300] in your financial dealings, because we need your support financially to stay [01:58:34.300 --> 01:58:36.300] where we're at doing what we do. [01:58:36.300 --> 01:58:38.300] So please keep us financing going. 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