[00:00.000 --> 00:07.000] The following use flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [00:07.000 --> 00:15.000] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.000 --> 00:23.000] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.000 --> 00:29.000] Markets for Monday, the 22nd of August, 2016, are currently treading with gold at $1,336.63 [00:29.000 --> 00:36.000] an ounce, silver $18.86 an ounce, Texas crude $47.05 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently [00:36.000 --> 00:45.000] sitting at about $585 U.S. currency. [00:45.000 --> 00:51.000] Today in history, the year 1902, the Cadillac Motor Company is founded and in the same year [00:51.000 --> 00:55.000] President Theodore Roosevelt becomes the first president of the United States to ride in [00:55.000 --> 01:01.000] an automobile, though it wasn't a Cadillac. [01:01.000 --> 01:07.000] In recent news, a U.S. District Judge Lee Yackel denied the request of three University [01:07.000 --> 01:11.000] of Texas and Austin professors to block the implementation of the state's campus carry [01:11.000 --> 01:12.000] law. [01:12.000 --> 01:15.000] The judge said that the professors had failed to establish a substantial likelihood of ultimate [01:15.000 --> 01:21.000] success on the merits of their assertive claims, which were that guns in classrooms violate [01:21.000 --> 01:23.000] free speech and equal protection rights. [01:23.000 --> 01:28.000] UT President Gregory Fanvez said in a written statement that the university would continue [01:28.000 --> 01:31.000] to work with faculty members concerned about the law. [01:31.000 --> 01:35.000] He added that he's committed to upholding the school's core values of academic freedom [01:35.000 --> 01:40.000] and free speech, while Attorney General Ken Paxton said that he was pleased but not surprised [01:40.000 --> 01:45.000] by the decision and that there is simply no legal justification to deny licensed, law-abiding [01:45.000 --> 01:50.000] citizens on campus the same measure of personal protection they are entitled to elsewhere in [01:50.000 --> 01:51.000] Texas. [01:51.000 --> 02:02.000] The Redlands Unified School District settled on and agreed to pay out $6 million to a victim [02:02.000 --> 02:05.000] of sexual abuse by one of their teachers at one of their high schools. [02:05.000 --> 02:09.000] The attorney for the victim, Vince Finaldi, stated that this is the largest child sexual [02:09.000 --> 02:13.000] abuse settlement against a public entity in U.S. history, reason being, he is saying, [02:13.000 --> 02:17.000] that the school district knew that Laura Whitehurst was sexually abusing students and did nothing [02:17.000 --> 02:18.000] about it. [02:18.000 --> 02:23.000] Though a spokesperson for the district obviously denies that they knew anything about the abuse, [02:23.000 --> 02:27.000] clarifying that it was just the district wanting to avoid further costly legal battles. [02:27.000 --> 02:31.000] The school district is assuring teachers and parents that the $6 million settlement will [02:31.000 --> 02:39.000] not affect its budget for teachers and other educational expenses. [02:39.000 --> 02:43.000] If Texas had succeeded before this year, it would have ranked third in the world in the [02:43.000 --> 02:44.000] 2016 Olympics. [02:44.000 --> 02:50.000] Texas alone took home 42 medals, 26 gold, 6 silver, and 10 bronze in the 2016 Rio de [02:50.000 --> 02:51.000] Janeiro Olympics. [02:51.000 --> 02:52.000] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown on August 22, 2016. [02:52.000 --> 03:17.000] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown on August 22, 2016. [03:17.000 --> 03:45.000] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown on August 22, 2016. [03:45.000 --> 04:12.000] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown on August 22, 2016. [04:12.000 --> 04:40.000] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown on August 22, 2016. [04:40.000 --> 05:07.000] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown on August 22, 2016. [05:07.000 --> 05:13.440] So most of them are pretty much the same for all of the states because most of the states [05:13.440 --> 05:21.800] adopted a set of model cannons developed by the American Bar Association. [05:21.800 --> 05:28.420] And then the states made some adjustments, you know, for their particular states. [05:28.420 --> 05:35.240] But for the most part, they're relatively the same because what a judge does wrong and [05:35.240 --> 05:37.760] what's wrong in one state is going to be wrong in another. [05:37.760 --> 05:49.360] So I've been working through the cannons, converting them into statements for the way [05:49.360 --> 05:55.120] to do to put them in terms of questions, but because of the way the cannons are structured, [05:55.120 --> 05:58.240] that was a somewhat clunky. [05:58.240 --> 06:08.600] So I put them in, in the form of statements like cannon one and two. [06:08.600 --> 06:15.560] Cannon one and two, I had to put them together because cannon one was just one paragraph. [06:15.560 --> 06:23.960] And cannon one says, an independent and honorable judiciary is indispensable to justice in our [06:23.960 --> 06:24.960] society. [06:24.960 --> 06:32.080] A judge should participate in establishing, maintaining and enforcing high standards of [06:32.080 --> 06:38.480] conduct and should personally observe those standards so that the integrity and independence [06:38.480 --> 06:40.800] of the judiciary is preserved. [06:40.800 --> 06:48.240] The provisions of this code are to be construed and applied to further that objective. [06:48.240 --> 06:58.680] So I'm trying to rewrite this so that I make a statement that the judge failed to do this [06:58.680 --> 07:00.000] thing. [07:00.000 --> 07:06.320] The judge failed to uphold the integrity and independence of the jury in that. [07:06.320 --> 07:09.080] Then we go to cannon two. [07:09.080 --> 07:15.760] The judge failed to avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety in all of the [07:15.760 --> 07:20.120] judges' activities as the judge. [07:20.120 --> 07:27.880] Now we go to section A. Failed to comply with the law and act at all times in a manner that [07:27.880 --> 07:38.040] promoted public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary as follows. [07:38.040 --> 07:46.840] And once I get this completed, all of this will be in a text box. [07:46.840 --> 07:52.760] So as you go through the cannons, it builds a set of statements. [07:52.760 --> 07:59.480] And then when you get to as follows, then you put in the details of how the judge violated [07:59.480 --> 08:00.800] this particular cannon. [08:00.800 --> 08:06.680] The second one, failed to act at all times in a manner that promoted, that promotes public [08:06.680 --> 08:18.360] confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the jury, of the judiciary as follows. [08:18.360 --> 08:25.000] And then allowed a relationship to influences the judge's judicial conduct and judgment [08:25.000 --> 08:27.880] as follows. [08:27.880 --> 08:37.000] I will have this up on a site relatively shortly, it may take me a few days with all the other [08:37.000 --> 08:40.160] things I've got going on. [08:40.160 --> 08:45.480] I have to find a few minutes in between all the other activities to try to get some of [08:45.480 --> 08:48.120] this done. [08:48.120 --> 08:54.080] But I'm hoping that at least by the end of next week, I will have a site up that will [08:54.080 --> 09:01.840] have a link to this questionnaire, I have a set of technologies I can use to develop [09:01.840 --> 09:09.840] this interactive questionnaire, but it has some weaknesses. [09:09.840 --> 09:18.840] So I have to go in and kind of tweak the innards of it and being old school, all this new technology [09:18.840 --> 09:23.520] is a little tough on the old guy, but I'm struggling through it. [09:23.520 --> 09:30.240] So I would suggest that everybody get out the cannons and read them, there's not really [09:30.240 --> 09:37.640] very many, there's only four that we actually even care about. [09:37.640 --> 09:45.840] The American Bar Association standards about four or five times as large, the cannons for [09:45.840 --> 09:52.200] judges is very short and we all should read them because there are things that judges [09:52.200 --> 09:59.160] require to do that will surprise you, or the things that the judge can get hammered for [09:59.160 --> 10:01.120] will surprise you. [10:01.120 --> 10:08.600] One of the big things in reading through the sanctions against judges, you know, I get [10:08.600 --> 10:14.200] on the show here and I huff and puff and say that the State Commission on Judicial Conduct [10:14.200 --> 10:22.120] never does anything to judges, well that's not true, turns out they do. [10:22.120 --> 10:28.040] They don't do much relative to the number of judges in Texas, but they do go after some [10:28.040 --> 10:30.160] of them. [10:30.160 --> 10:39.840] And on the State Commission on Judicial Conduct website, you can find a list of the actions [10:39.840 --> 10:44.720] that the commission has taken. [10:44.720 --> 10:51.800] And in going through that list of actions, there were two things that stand out. [10:51.800 --> 11:02.520] One is where the judge fails to properly apply the law. [11:02.520 --> 11:05.360] That was probably the biggest one. [11:05.360 --> 11:10.600] And they're going through these cannons, they're constantly admonishing the judge and sending [11:10.600 --> 11:14.520] them for further education. [11:14.520 --> 11:19.880] And most of the people that called into the show and talk about the judges, they talk [11:19.880 --> 11:28.840] about the judges doing whatever they want to and not scrupulously following law. [11:28.840 --> 11:33.040] So it looks like that's what judges get hammered for most. [11:33.040 --> 11:43.000] So that tells me that the things we want to include in a complaint are those things that [11:43.000 --> 11:47.240] get the judge hammered most often. [11:47.240 --> 11:52.200] The one was not knowing the law, not properly applying the law to the facts. [11:52.200 --> 12:00.840] The second one was not effectively administering his court. [12:00.840 --> 12:10.400] And one of the interesting things I found in here is the judge has a duty to train and [12:10.400 --> 12:14.560] direct court personnel. [12:14.560 --> 12:24.520] He must ensure that court personnel conduct themselves in a way that is equivalent to [12:24.520 --> 12:28.400] the responsibility of the judge. [12:28.400 --> 12:37.520] So if a employee fails to conduct himself courteously and responsibly, you hammer the [12:37.520 --> 12:40.240] judge for it. [12:40.240 --> 12:48.600] You blame the judge for not properly training and regulating his own, his personnel. [12:48.600 --> 12:55.640] And for me, that was great because, you know, I talk about the way you generate politics [12:55.640 --> 13:03.120] is you want to get a complaint against somebody who was essentially innocent. [13:03.120 --> 13:09.320] Someone who really didn't have anything to do with what went on, but has some sort of [13:09.320 --> 13:13.840] oversight responsibility. [13:13.840 --> 13:19.280] Like when I take a complaint against a public official to a district attorney and the district [13:19.280 --> 13:24.080] attorney doesn't give it to the grand jury, then I file against the district attorney. [13:24.080 --> 13:31.960] That's going to make him real happy at the guy that got me to go down there in the first [13:31.960 --> 13:32.960] place. [13:32.960 --> 13:38.760] And then when I filed with the judge on the district attorney and the judge doesn't act [13:38.760 --> 13:40.560] on it, then I file against that judge. [13:40.560 --> 13:48.200] Now he feels even more remote from the subject matter of my complaint. [13:48.200 --> 13:50.920] So he's going to be even more righteously indignant. [13:50.920 --> 14:00.800] So in reading the canons, if I got a smart mouth clerk, I file a judicial conduct complaint [14:00.800 --> 14:03.440] against the judge for not training the clerk. [14:03.440 --> 14:11.560] And then one other thing is not administering his, effectively administering his calendar. [14:11.560 --> 14:20.960] This seems to be a favorite tactic of judges, especially in criminal, where they try to [14:20.960 --> 14:26.560] wear someone down because they order them into court and then they don't have a hearing [14:26.560 --> 14:29.840] and they order them back and they order them back and they order them back and they order [14:29.840 --> 14:30.840] them back. [14:30.840 --> 14:36.560] So about the 20th time you have to take a days off work for a traffic ticket, you kind [14:36.560 --> 14:38.000] of get burned out. [14:38.000 --> 14:45.400] Well, that's failing to properly administer the court and they can be subject to sanctioning [14:45.400 --> 14:48.360] for that as well. [14:48.360 --> 15:01.120] So if we're to take control, then we need to walk into court with a number of judicial [15:01.120 --> 15:07.520] conduct complaint blanks and the state commission on judicial conduct for this state and most [15:07.520 --> 15:14.540] of the other states I've looked at so far have a PDF fill in the blank documents. [15:14.540 --> 15:19.600] You can print that document out and fill in the blanks by hand. [15:19.600 --> 15:21.840] I have some in my folder. [15:21.840 --> 15:27.560] When I walk into a court, I've got bar grievance forms, I've got judicial conduct complaint [15:27.560 --> 15:35.720] forms, I've got criminal complaint forms, I have information request forms of several [15:35.720 --> 15:44.640] different genres and I find them very effective. [15:44.640 --> 15:50.920] If you have all of these forms, you're going to be writing in them pretty often. [15:50.920 --> 15:55.960] I fill out judicial conduct complaints right in front of the judge. [15:55.960 --> 16:00.000] When he does something that I think is improper, I take the complaint out and I start writing [16:00.000 --> 16:05.960] in it and ask the court to hold up a second until I can fill out this document. [16:05.960 --> 16:10.160] Go ahead, let him ask me what it is, I'll tell him. [16:10.160 --> 16:15.880] So he's got to stand there and watch me fill out a judicial conduct complaint against him. [16:15.880 --> 16:22.720] Same thing with the bar grievance and complaints against his public officials. [16:22.720 --> 16:27.400] I have public officials stand there and watch me right now, criminal complaints against [16:27.400 --> 16:29.080] them. [16:29.080 --> 16:36.840] So it's good if you're going to take these guys on to have some preparation and some [16:36.840 --> 16:42.280] paraphernalia and have those on Jewish Imprudence and try and recover Jewish Imprudence. [16:42.280 --> 16:49.440] But the guy who set it up for me was very inconvenient in that he died and he has the [16:49.440 --> 16:57.200] access to the server that he set them up on and I'm having trouble trying to recover them. [16:57.200 --> 17:00.720] So we'll be right back. [17:00.720 --> 17:05.320] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [17:05.320 --> 17:06.740] of nutrition. [17:06.740 --> 17:11.480] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed all that. [17:11.480 --> 17:17.120] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [17:17.120 --> 17:23.520] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [17:23.520 --> 17:25.760] provide the nutrients you need. [17:25.760 --> 17:30.640] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [17:30.640 --> 17:31.760] we reject. [17:31.760 --> 17:37.000] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [17:37.000 --> 17:39.840] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [17:39.840 --> 17:46.120] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [17:46.120 --> 17:47.760] quality radio. [17:47.760 --> 17:51.760] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [17:51.760 --> 17:57.320] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [17:57.320 --> 17:59.280] increase your income. [17:59.280 --> 18:00.640] Order now. [18:00.640 --> 18:05.400] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.400 --> 18:09.440] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.440 --> 18:13.760] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.760 --> 18:14.760] can win too. [18:14.760 --> 18:19.560] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.560 --> 18:25.400] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [18:25.400 --> 18:29.960] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [18:29.960 --> 18:34.160] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.160 --> 18:39.280] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.280 --> 18:41.240] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.240 --> 18:46.960] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.960 --> 18:49.880] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.880 --> 18:59.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [18:59.520 --> 19:00.520] now. [19:00.520 --> 19:23.320] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [19:23.320 --> 19:24.320] We are back. [19:24.320 --> 19:31.640] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the 25th day of August [19:31.640 --> 19:32.640] 2016. [19:32.640 --> 19:44.040] This is a live show, so if you have a question or comment, give us a call, 512-646-1984. [19:44.040 --> 19:49.520] Our call lines are open and we'll be taking your calls all night. [19:49.520 --> 19:58.600] Okay, I am working on judicial conduct and I hope in a week to have that ready so that [19:58.600 --> 20:04.720] it will be easy to fill out these complaints. [20:04.720 --> 20:17.000] My plan is the next thing after this is what we'll do is go in and study these canons [20:17.000 --> 20:28.880] and try to determine where in the canon a judge's improper behavior amounts to a denial [20:28.880 --> 20:37.720] in procedural or substantive due process because if you're a public official, you can always [20:37.720 --> 20:43.840] sue them for a denial of due process. [20:43.840 --> 20:53.480] In the federal law, if you sued a state judge, you'd want to sue him in the Fed and you'd [20:53.480 --> 21:00.000] want to sue him for procedural due process primarily. [21:00.000 --> 21:04.400] Substantial due process is there, but it's much harder to get to. [21:04.400 --> 21:09.720] Procedural due process, every judge gives you ample reason to sue him for procedural [21:09.720 --> 21:10.720] due process violations. [21:10.720 --> 21:15.880] You can file that in the Fed. [21:15.880 --> 21:21.840] The judge has to hire a lawyer even if he gets it thrown out for immunity, which he [21:21.840 --> 21:26.880] doesn't have for a due process violation. [21:26.880 --> 21:38.000] His problem is that the feds have ruled that a violation of due process is harm per se, [21:38.000 --> 21:43.040] so you don't have to show that the judge harmed you in what he did. [21:43.040 --> 21:49.240] All you have to show is that he denied you in procedural due process. [21:49.240 --> 21:56.480] For instance, you file a motion that has five different issues in it. [21:56.480 --> 22:01.840] The judge denies the first issue and ignores the rest. [22:01.840 --> 22:07.080] You have a right to a ruling on every single issue. [22:07.080 --> 22:12.520] If he fails to give you a ruling on one, your judge should come to complain him before it [22:12.520 --> 22:16.080] and then ultimately you can sue him for it. [22:16.080 --> 22:27.000] We'll be studying these so that we can write a cause of action for a violation of one of [22:27.000 --> 22:36.040] these where as we develop the questionnaire, we'll move beyond the actual standards and [22:36.040 --> 22:43.080] begin to ask questions about the direct conduct of the judge and those questions will be pointed [22:43.080 --> 22:45.960] toward causes of action against the judge. [22:45.960 --> 22:46.960] Did the judge do this? [22:46.960 --> 22:47.960] Did he do this? [22:47.960 --> 22:48.960] Did he do this? [22:48.960 --> 22:53.080] We'll list all those things you can sue a judge for and we'll ask questions, did he [22:53.080 --> 22:54.440] do one of these things? [22:54.440 --> 23:00.440] Then we'll try to have the cause of action written up in a way that you can fill in the [23:00.440 --> 23:06.880] blanks and this thing will spit you out a lawsuit against the judge. [23:06.880 --> 23:14.000] Technically, we've had the technology to do this for the last 50 years. [23:14.000 --> 23:18.440] Computers have been good enough to, well, maybe 25 years that they could do this. [23:18.440 --> 23:22.200] It's just nobody's got to put together yet. [23:22.200 --> 23:28.560] It sounds like a simple enough idea, but when you start stitching in all the details, it [23:28.560 --> 23:33.120] can get extremely complex, but I'm working on it. [23:33.120 --> 23:39.600] Once I have the standards up, then we can start getting people to tell us, okay, what [23:39.600 --> 23:41.280] did the judge do here? [23:41.280 --> 23:51.600] Let's look at that and how can we take this behavior and attach it to a cause of action? [23:51.600 --> 23:57.880] Lawyers like you to think that law is incredibly complex, so complex that only lawyers can [23:57.880 --> 24:01.640] understand it, horse manure. [24:01.640 --> 24:10.400] There are a very finite and limited number of criminal accusations and causes of action. [24:10.400 --> 24:19.320] There are not that many of them and all we need to do is direct our questioning so that [24:19.320 --> 24:25.800] it leads into one or the other of the causes of action or one or the other of the criminal [24:25.800 --> 24:26.800] accusations. [24:26.800 --> 24:35.760] And you hear me do that on the radio all the time when a judge tells a litigant that he [24:35.760 --> 24:44.680] can't bring up this issue, then that's witness tampering, 3605, and if he threatens him with [24:44.680 --> 24:51.080] contempt of court, if he tries to bring up this issue, that's the destruction of justice. [24:51.080 --> 24:55.800] So yeah, the judge can make all those threats and he can do those things, but he can also [24:55.800 --> 25:03.520] suffer the consequences and that's what we haven't been doing is bringing consequences [25:03.520 --> 25:04.520] back to them. [25:04.520 --> 25:12.880] Okay, we do have a caller, a Mark from Florida, hello Mark, what do you have for us today? [25:12.880 --> 25:22.240] Well, I gave you a little teaser last time we talked about he being in jail for 32 days, [25:22.240 --> 25:28.480] arrested on a capious when there was nothing in the court's record indicating there was [25:28.480 --> 25:29.480] a court date. [25:29.480 --> 25:34.240] So I thought I might fill you in on the details of that. [25:34.240 --> 25:42.880] Okay, this is where you were arrested on the capious, was that after an indictment where [25:42.880 --> 25:47.440] you were never arrested before the indictment? [25:47.440 --> 25:50.800] This would have been a calendar, this was simply a calendar call. [25:50.800 --> 25:58.560] Oh, okay, the capious was issued alleging failure to appear then. [25:58.560 --> 26:00.160] Right. [26:00.160 --> 26:02.120] Okay. [26:02.120 --> 26:07.560] And this was a hearing that you weren't noticed of? [26:07.560 --> 26:10.560] Exactly. [26:10.560 --> 26:15.800] Scott Richardson, he's been after these rock wall and a couple of other counties up here [26:15.800 --> 26:19.760] near Dallas and he just got noticed by the police department. [26:19.760 --> 26:25.480] There's a warrant for his arrest and he went in to get it cleared up and they arrested [26:25.480 --> 26:28.560] him in the court. [26:28.560 --> 26:34.320] They had a big problem with that. [26:34.320 --> 26:39.360] When the judge issues a warrant, the warrant says arrest this person and bring him before [26:39.360 --> 26:40.360] me. [26:40.360 --> 26:45.160] Well, he's standing before him, so it's improper to arrest him. [26:45.160 --> 26:51.920] Anyway, they arrested him when he went there to clear this up and it was over a hearing [26:51.920 --> 27:00.840] that they held and he knew nothing about it and the clerk told him, we get this all the [27:00.840 --> 27:05.040] time. [27:05.040 --> 27:07.040] That was fairytelling. [27:07.040 --> 27:15.320] So I'm wondering, Mark, was this done on purpose? [27:15.320 --> 27:23.800] Well, what caused the situation was I had a calendar call scheduled in February and [27:23.800 --> 27:28.360] the judge, the court canceled that. [27:28.360 --> 27:36.480] I think the judge was going to be on vacation and rescheduled it for May 5th. [27:36.480 --> 27:42.640] The problem is there's nothing in the section, when you look on the clerk's website, in the [27:42.640 --> 27:48.840] section for notices and documents, there's nothing in there about notice and I kept waiting [27:48.840 --> 27:49.840] for notice. [27:49.840 --> 27:51.560] I kept checking the website. [27:51.560 --> 27:58.840] There's nothing in there about notice and I spoke to Eddie about it about a week before [27:58.840 --> 28:05.440] the 5th of May when this court date was alleged and I said, what would you do? [28:05.440 --> 28:07.560] He said, well, I wouldn't show up. [28:07.560 --> 28:08.560] You couldn't pay me to show up. [28:08.560 --> 28:14.080] He said, you do what you want, but I said, well, that's what I was planning on doing [28:14.080 --> 28:20.960] and prepared to get arrested and I did a fairly good job of that. [28:20.960 --> 28:29.400] Before I did anything, I went down and got copies of the case file that shows all the [28:29.400 --> 28:31.200] entries. [28:31.200 --> 28:39.360] I got two certified copies, one for me and one I gave to a friend to hold for me in case [28:39.360 --> 28:48.120] they decided to raid my house and take all the documents. [28:48.120 --> 28:54.440] That was to cover me in case they went back and inserted something and dated it like in [28:54.440 --> 29:02.840] April, insert notice and then say, hey, look, notice was sent on in April and you didn't [29:02.840 --> 29:07.160] show up. [29:07.160 --> 29:12.840] Did the judge give notice in open court? [29:12.840 --> 29:22.760] I was in front of this judge May 4th, one day before the date I was allegedly supposed [29:22.760 --> 29:28.880] to show up on this or the CAPIUS was issued. [29:28.880 --> 29:33.280] May 4th was a different case, just another calendar call. [29:33.280 --> 29:34.280] Okay. [29:34.280 --> 29:42.360] Wait a minute, did you have notice, okay, the judge couldn't be at a hearing on a certain [29:42.360 --> 29:44.000] date he's going on vacation. [29:44.000 --> 29:50.560] Did he issue an order resetting the case for another day? [29:50.560 --> 29:51.560] Hang on. [29:51.560 --> 29:55.560] I'll show you the break, we'll pick this up on the other side, Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, [29:55.560 --> 30:00.360] rule of law radio, we'll be right back. [30:00.360 --> 30:05.040] Alzheimer's disease and dementia are on the rise in our aging population and researchers [30:05.040 --> 30:07.200] are scrambling to find cures. [30:07.200 --> 30:09.360] Could the humble purple beach be the solution? [30:09.360 --> 30:12.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [30:12.960 --> 30:18.320] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [30:18.320 --> 30:20.360] of your personal information. [30:20.360 --> 30:21.360] That's creepy. [30:21.360 --> 30:23.400] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:23.400 --> 30:26.760] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:26.760 --> 30:30.640] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking [30:30.640 --> 30:32.920] cookies and they're third party certified. [30:32.920 --> 30:37.400] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [30:37.400 --> 30:40.240] Great search results and total privacy. [30:40.240 --> 30:43.480] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:43.480 --> 30:48.320] The beet is a root vegetable known for its vivid fuchsia color and earthy taste. [30:48.320 --> 30:52.480] Now researchers have found another distinctive quality, drinking beet juice may help slow [30:52.480 --> 30:55.960] or prevent Alzheimer's disease and dementia. [30:55.960 --> 31:00.280] Doctors believe mental decline is caused by decreased blood flow to the brain as people [31:00.280 --> 31:01.280] age. [31:01.280 --> 31:06.600] Beet juice is high in nitrates that the body turns into nitrites, those open up blood vessels [31:06.600 --> 31:11.040] and increase the flow of oxygen rich blood into the part of the brain that handles cognition. [31:11.040 --> 31:15.960] But don't drink it straight, beet juice is intense and can cause side effects like temporary [31:15.960 --> 31:21.000] paralysis of vocal cords and hives, mixed beet juice with other fruit and veggie juices [31:21.000 --> 31:22.000] and drink up. [31:22.000 --> 31:46.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:52.000 --> 32:20.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:20.560 --> 32:49.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:49.320 --> 33:09.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [33:09.280 --> 33:38.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [33:38.840 --> 33:44.160] We are back, Randy Talton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Mark [33:44.160 --> 33:45.160] in Florida. [33:45.160 --> 33:52.640] Okay, Mark, go ahead, I kind of interrupted you there. [33:52.640 --> 33:58.000] So yeah, the judge had rescheduled the case. [33:58.000 --> 34:01.800] Did he do that in open court? [34:01.800 --> 34:03.480] I guess so. [34:03.480 --> 34:04.480] I don't know. [34:04.480 --> 34:07.280] Now wait a minute, here's the issue. [34:07.280 --> 34:14.920] If you're in open court and the judge says, okay, we got this hearing for that day, we're [34:14.920 --> 34:19.680] going to cancel that hearing and set it for another day, then you have notice. [34:19.680 --> 34:20.680] Did that happen? [34:20.680 --> 34:21.680] No, no. [34:21.680 --> 34:27.680] No, no, this was, this happened on a date that, you know, I was waiting for my calendar [34:27.680 --> 34:29.760] call in February. [34:29.760 --> 34:37.520] And then, because I checked the clerk's record often, I saw that that had been canceled. [34:37.520 --> 34:41.320] You never had notice of a resetting? [34:41.320 --> 34:42.320] Perfect. [34:42.320 --> 34:43.320] That's perfect. [34:43.320 --> 34:44.320] No, sir. [34:44.320 --> 34:50.600] And now, mind you, this is, there's actually two calendar calls. [34:50.600 --> 34:57.960] There's two cases, two charges I'm facing, separate cases, but they're scheduled together, [34:57.960 --> 35:01.600] you know, so I don't have to make two appearances each time. [35:01.600 --> 35:06.120] So it was actually, there were two capias, you know, one for each case. [35:06.120 --> 35:10.600] But I waited until May 5th passed. [35:10.600 --> 35:19.360] And since I found out right before that, that Florida has a law to where you cannot be served [35:19.360 --> 35:23.000] any documents on Sunday. [35:23.000 --> 35:24.800] I believe I sent you a copy of that. [35:24.800 --> 35:25.800] Yes, yes. [35:25.800 --> 35:31.600] And there's a few other states that have that too. [35:31.600 --> 35:37.320] New York even goes to the extent that if your religious holiday is on Saturday, you cannot [35:37.320 --> 35:40.040] be served on Saturday. [35:40.040 --> 35:44.240] But I went out and tried to get arrested. [35:44.240 --> 35:51.840] I tried to get arrested on Sunday and it didn't work. [35:51.840 --> 36:00.520] But the following week, my favorite deputy came up to me and said, you know, you have [36:00.520 --> 36:01.920] warrants for your arrest? [36:01.920 --> 36:04.760] I said, well, how could I possibly have warrants? [36:04.760 --> 36:11.440] I was just in court May 4th and the judge said, don't forget, you got court again on [36:11.440 --> 36:12.440] June 23rd. [36:12.440 --> 36:16.120] I said, yes, sir, I got the notice. [36:16.120 --> 36:21.080] And I smiled, walking out the courtroom, thinking, yeah, he's going to issue a capias on me for [36:21.080 --> 36:22.080] tomorrow. [36:22.080 --> 36:27.040] He didn't say a word about it, neither did I. [36:27.040 --> 36:33.040] You know, wouldn't have mattered much, you know, no notice is no notice. [36:33.040 --> 36:35.040] Right. [36:35.040 --> 36:43.280] So my deputy took me to jail and after a long search, you know, I told him, I said, there [36:43.280 --> 36:45.680] couldn't possibly be a warrant for me. [36:45.680 --> 36:49.800] So they did a lot of checking and it came back, you know, the warrant was active, both [36:49.800 --> 36:50.800] warrants were active. [36:50.800 --> 36:59.920] So they took me on both capias and a hundred dollar bond on one and a thousand on the other. [36:59.920 --> 37:05.240] And went before the magistrates the next day and I, and it's all planned out that I was [37:05.240 --> 37:11.480] going to have the magistrate check Clark's record and see that there's no notice. [37:11.480 --> 37:13.520] And then he'd set me free. [37:13.520 --> 37:14.520] Right. [37:14.520 --> 37:19.200] Well, I asked him to take judicial notice of the clerk of court's record and verify [37:19.200 --> 37:24.080] that notice and show me where notice was sent. [37:24.080 --> 37:27.040] And he just threw his hands up in the air and looked at it, looked down at his desk [37:27.040 --> 37:28.440] and said, what, what, what? [37:28.440 --> 37:33.920] I don't have that in front of me, you know, just being a real smart aleck. [37:33.920 --> 37:42.000] And I said, look to your right, sir, that large computer screen, you have access there. [37:42.000 --> 37:47.320] And he looked at me and he looked at the screens and something, he mumbled something and everything, [37:47.320 --> 37:50.560] you know, I was trying to keep this guy out of the hot water. [37:50.560 --> 37:58.320] I didn't know this, this magistrate from Adam and he refused to do that. [37:58.320 --> 38:01.920] So I said, well, okay, I'll shut up. [38:01.920 --> 38:09.160] You know, you want to, you want to be part of the lawsuit and part of the crime? [38:09.160 --> 38:10.960] You want to touch my tar baby? [38:10.960 --> 38:11.960] That's exactly right. [38:11.960 --> 38:18.880] That's what I was thinking the whole time. [38:18.880 --> 38:26.760] So this guy, he raised everybody's bond in that room, except for mine. [38:26.760 --> 38:31.320] I mean, he raised a guy, $25 bond, made it 500. [38:31.320 --> 38:36.960] One guy had three $1,000 bonds, he made them all three, 5,000 a piece. [38:36.960 --> 38:40.680] The guy was just unreal jerk. [38:40.680 --> 38:47.480] He'd been a judge for a long, long time, his wife's a judge too. [38:47.480 --> 38:57.760] But the whole time I'm in jail, I actually went before my judge just a few days later, [38:57.760 --> 39:03.880] you know, and demanded that he take judicial notice of the court's record. [39:03.880 --> 39:08.840] There was no notice sent, there's no notice, you know, I'm being falsely imprisoned. [39:08.840 --> 39:14.960] He refused, I was in front of him another time, a couple of weeks later, he refused [39:14.960 --> 39:15.960] then. [39:15.960 --> 39:23.360] But the first time he decided he's going to sign me up for pre-trial release with an ankle [39:23.360 --> 39:31.000] bracelet and all that, so they transferred me from one jail to the next and back to the [39:31.000 --> 39:37.080] other one all in the same day and then the next day I saw the pre-trial release lady [39:37.080 --> 39:40.760] and the first thing she did was ask me my address, I said I don't have an address ma'am, [39:40.760 --> 39:43.760] I'm homeless. [39:43.760 --> 39:51.440] I live on a, my home was on wheels, with a steering wheel, what most people call an RV [39:51.440 --> 39:52.440] or a motor home. [39:52.440 --> 39:57.200] And she said, well you can't be on pre-trial release, I said I'm fully aware of that. [39:57.200 --> 40:03.480] I said so is the judge, the judge has known me for a long time, he knows how I live. [40:03.480 --> 40:06.720] He did this as some kind of sick joke. [40:06.720 --> 40:13.840] Now by doing what he did, putting me for pre-trial release, that took away the bond. [40:13.840 --> 40:21.800] The bond disappeared, so I couldn't even bond out. [40:21.800 --> 40:25.960] So he set that up so he could trap you in jail? [40:25.960 --> 40:30.320] Yes, that's what I believe. [40:30.320 --> 40:34.720] Makes a good charge, have you filed a judicial complaint against him yet? [40:34.720 --> 40:46.120] I haven't filed anything yet, I've got a motions hearing on the 12th because the state [40:46.120 --> 40:51.200] has failed to answer interrogatories, they didn't even respond to any of them. [40:51.200 --> 40:59.560] And I want to get these statements from the two officers on record under oath so I can [40:59.560 --> 41:03.360] nail them a little harder in federal court. [41:03.360 --> 41:05.320] I really need this. [41:05.320 --> 41:10.800] Have you started the criminal complaint process? [41:10.800 --> 41:16.640] Not yet, that's why I asked you for copies of these things and everything so I can, I'm [41:16.640 --> 41:20.240] having a serious problem with writer's block. [41:20.240 --> 41:26.120] I open up my laptop and start a page and put my headings on and everything and I just sit [41:26.120 --> 41:28.320] there and I'm stuck. [41:28.320 --> 41:32.520] Okay, I am familiar with that. [41:32.520 --> 41:41.840] Anytime you're writing about something in which you are personally involved, it becomes [41:41.840 --> 41:44.840] difficult. [41:44.840 --> 41:51.760] So what I suggested, what I've developed is timeline. [41:51.760 --> 41:57.480] Timeline, all you do is say, you write down, make a list, this happened, this happened, [41:57.480 --> 42:01.760] this happened, this happened and that's kind of your table of contents. [42:01.760 --> 42:10.440] Once you have a table of times, now you go back and instead of focusing on the trauma [42:10.440 --> 42:17.240] and the frustration and the anger of the whole incident, you focus on what went on between [42:17.240 --> 42:23.780] this detail and this detail, it gets a whole lot easier. [42:23.780 --> 42:32.040] But you can do much more easily and that will help you with your writer's block. [42:32.040 --> 42:42.520] I will try that, I'll try anything, but I just get stuck and it takes me just days sometimes [42:42.520 --> 42:44.920] to write a two page document. [42:44.920 --> 42:51.520] This is exactly what the condition they try to create, it's what they count on. [42:51.520 --> 42:57.840] Once you are involved, you have an emotional stake in it and it makes this very difficult. [42:57.840 --> 43:06.040] When I was prosecuted in Cherokee County, it was a struggle to write those documents [43:06.040 --> 43:09.920] and that's where I developed this tool. [43:09.920 --> 43:15.560] Once I began to just start writing down dates and times, dates and times and then start [43:15.560 --> 43:20.600] filling in the blanks, then I was able to keep moving. [43:20.600 --> 43:28.120] Once you get moving a little bit, then it starts to kind of tumble out of you and begins [43:28.120 --> 43:30.680] to build up. [43:30.680 --> 43:37.880] But you need to have copies of criminal complaints, judicial conduct complaints and bar grievances [43:37.880 --> 43:45.360] with you and when something happens, you write it out right then. [43:45.360 --> 43:53.920] I've got stacks of criminal complaints that I never really needed to file but I have them. [43:53.920 --> 43:58.880] Randall County, when the clerk wouldn't show me the records, I called 911. [43:58.880 --> 44:02.320] I'm sitting down here. [44:02.320 --> 44:07.920] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come buy [44:07.920 --> 44:12.320] our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas. [44:12.320 --> 44:16.240] I'm Brave New Books and Chase Payne to see all our fantastic health and wellness products [44:16.240 --> 44:18.240] with your very own eyes. [44:18.240 --> 44:22.640] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.640 --> 44:26.640] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Alchalian Eme oil, [44:26.640 --> 44:30.360] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.360 --> 44:42.240] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com, that's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.240 --> 45:01.280] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.280 --> 45:04.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.480 --> 45:09.720] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [45:09.720 --> 45:14.400] 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.400 --> 45:18.920] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.920 --> 45:23.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.240 --> 45:28.120] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [45:28.120 --> 45:34.880] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.880 --> 45:39.440] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.440 --> 45:43.680] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.680 --> 45:49.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.840 --> 45:52.120] pro se tactics and much more. [45:52.120 --> 46:17.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:17.000 --> 46:18.320] We are back. [46:18.320 --> 46:20.840] I survived running off the cliff. [46:20.840 --> 46:23.880] Sorry about that guys. [46:23.880 --> 46:34.240] Okay Mark, it gets a lot more fun when you go on the attack and it makes this a lot easier [46:34.240 --> 46:35.240] to deal with. [46:35.240 --> 46:40.120] Right now they're coming after you with one thing after another. [46:40.120 --> 46:46.480] If you have a set of complaints, blank complaints with you and you fill them out right on the [46:46.480 --> 46:52.760] spot, you'll get much better statements. [46:52.760 --> 46:53.960] There's a problem with memory. [46:53.960 --> 47:00.760] I was reading some research on memory recently and it was surprising. [47:00.760 --> 47:10.760] This date-rate drug, Rohippenol or something like that, it causes short-term memory loss [47:10.760 --> 47:18.480] and they were doing some research with trained rats to see how this affected their behavior [47:18.480 --> 47:31.640] short-term memory loss and they came across a surprising phenomena when they took a trained [47:31.640 --> 47:43.440] rat and gave him this drug and had the rat, they would put him in a cage and he could [47:43.440 --> 47:49.000] walk across this metal screen and get some food and they were doing experiments where [47:49.000 --> 47:55.360] they electrified the cage. [47:55.360 --> 48:04.680] They found that when they gave them this drug that they would have them access a memory [48:04.680 --> 48:13.880] of being able to get this food and then they wanted to shock their feet so that they wouldn't [48:13.880 --> 48:15.720] see how it interfered with the memory. [48:15.720 --> 48:22.400] Well, it's a little complex how they got there but what it turned out was is when they were [48:22.400 --> 48:31.840] on this Rohippenol, when they had to do something they knew how to do, they would go inside [48:31.840 --> 48:42.040] and access the memory but then the next time they would have forgotten how to do that altogether. [48:42.040 --> 48:51.120] So what it turned out was is we think that when we remember something that we go in and [48:51.120 --> 48:57.720] read it off our memory like a computer has a memory and we can go in and read it and [48:57.720 --> 49:02.280] they're finding that the brain doesn't really work that way, that the brain goes in and [49:02.280 --> 49:11.640] gets it and takes it out and re-experiences it and then puts it back and the problems [49:11.640 --> 49:15.840] the rats had to give them the Rohippenol they couldn't put it back so once they took it [49:15.840 --> 49:18.720] out it was gone. [49:18.720 --> 49:27.320] See the problem, this kind of explains why stories change and why witnesses are so notoriously [49:27.320 --> 49:39.000] inaccurate because first they experience things through their emotional lenses and then when [49:39.000 --> 49:47.200] they pull a story and tell it and put it back they don't always put it back in the same [49:47.200 --> 49:50.360] context they experienced it. [49:50.360 --> 49:58.560] I mean who of us hasn't told a story so many times that we forgot where it came from. [49:58.560 --> 50:05.360] I've had people say did that happen to you or somebody else and I stop and think and [50:05.360 --> 50:13.240] I don't remember, it was a great story but I don't remember if it happened to me or someone [50:13.240 --> 50:19.720] else and that's because when I pulled the story out of memory and told it, whether it [50:19.720 --> 50:24.960] happened to me or somebody else wasn't important, wasn't a relevant issue so when I put it back [50:24.960 --> 50:27.360] I didn't put that back with it. [50:27.360 --> 50:30.560] Does that make sense Mark? [50:30.560 --> 50:37.160] Yeah, lately I've been having a, go ahead. [50:37.160 --> 50:45.160] So you want to write out what happened immediately before you've had a chance to dwell on it [50:45.160 --> 50:51.960] and think about it and mull it over, you want to write it down immediately and if you're [50:51.960 --> 50:58.400] writing it down in the form of a criminal complaint you know I'd like to call 911 right [50:58.400 --> 51:01.560] on the spot. [51:01.560 --> 51:07.360] That is very effective, the habeas corpus that's on jurisprudence if I can get it back [51:07.360 --> 51:17.680] up, I filed that habeas in a court in Conroe, Texas and the judge, they stopped a murder [51:17.680 --> 51:22.200] trial to hear the habeas and the judge said Mr. Kelton are you an attorney? [51:22.200 --> 51:28.720] Oh no your honor, asleep well at night, keep hands in my own pockets, thank you very much [51:28.720 --> 51:34.640] and he said well since you're not an attorney I'm not going to accept this habeas. [51:34.640 --> 51:37.560] I turned to the bailiff, Mr. Bailiff did you hear that? [51:37.560 --> 51:42.520] Yes Mr. Kelton I did, arrest that judge. [51:42.520 --> 51:46.280] The judge sat there and kept his mouth shut while I argued with the bailiff on whether [51:46.280 --> 51:53.000] or not he was going to arrest him, you haven't lived until you've done that. [51:53.000 --> 52:00.320] It's much better and it gets a lot easier if you're not always on the defense. [52:00.320 --> 52:06.320] I walk into a courthouse, I'm just waiting for them to touch my tar baby so I can thump [52:06.320 --> 52:07.320] them. [52:07.320 --> 52:15.160] I'm not going to wait until my case is all adjudicated, I'm going after them right now. [52:15.160 --> 52:19.080] Say you guys want to start a fight with me? [52:19.080 --> 52:28.200] I will take the fight to you, you're not going to get a free ride on me and generally before [52:28.200 --> 52:32.240] long they want me out of there. [52:32.240 --> 52:39.120] Last ticket I got was in Decatur Texas, the policeman handed me this ticket and I didn't [52:39.120 --> 52:45.120] do any of that stuff that Eddie suggests. [52:45.120 --> 52:54.400] The guy pulled me over and all I did was say did you run my name on the DOT? [52:54.400 --> 52:59.920] No Mr. Kelton I did not, well you might want to do that, whether he did or not I don't [52:59.920 --> 53:00.920] know. [53:00.920 --> 53:07.040] Came back and wrote me a ticket because my registration was expired, well it had only [53:07.040 --> 53:12.320] been expired for six months, what was his problem? [53:12.320 --> 53:20.520] He handed me the ticket and I signed a promise to appear and I said but I'm fixing to give [53:20.520 --> 53:25.280] you a romp through the legal system, you are not going to believe. [53:25.280 --> 53:30.960] He said oh you are Mr. Kelton, yes I am, this is going to be a great time, well then have [53:30.960 --> 53:33.280] a nice day. [53:33.280 --> 53:38.680] They never got me to court, they dismissed it before I ever got to court. [53:38.680 --> 53:44.480] And the reason they did was the chief of police knew me and he went to the mayor and told [53:44.480 --> 53:51.320] the mayor you tell that municipal court to dismiss this case, you do not want to get [53:51.320 --> 53:55.080] in a fight with this guy. [53:55.080 --> 54:01.360] He and the chief of police has had me asking him to arrest public officials on several [54:01.360 --> 54:07.120] occasions and he is doing a song and dance to try to keep from it and try to keep me [54:07.120 --> 54:09.720] from coming after him. [54:09.720 --> 54:17.400] I suggest you take the fight back to them but don't take it back to them in a way they [54:17.400 --> 54:24.960] can handle, they are used to people getting angry at them and getting agitated. [54:24.960 --> 54:33.200] I don't get agitated anymore, what I do is get them agitated when I ask them to take [54:33.200 --> 54:35.880] off their chicken suits. [54:35.880 --> 54:40.080] If you listen to my show you will hear me say that a lot and I always ask them to take [54:40.080 --> 54:44.960] off their chicken suits when they refuse to arrest one of their buddies, the reason I [54:44.960 --> 54:50.960] do that is so they can't accuse me of being agitated. [54:50.960 --> 54:58.800] You start taking the fight back to them, that's when they start getting a lot more careful. [54:58.800 --> 55:05.040] That's what I am trying to prepare, when I was in jail and appeared in front of that [55:05.040 --> 55:14.600] judge twice, of course I am in chains and shackles and everything else, I am trying [55:14.600 --> 55:19.960] to make oral motions in court, they said you know the first rule of motions don't you? [55:19.960 --> 55:23.520] I said well sir I know a lot of rules about motions, which one are you referring to? [55:23.520 --> 55:26.760] He said all motions must be in writing. [55:26.760 --> 55:38.280] Give me a pencil and paper, that is not true. [55:38.280 --> 55:44.080] I know it's not true, all the time while he is accepting oral motions from everybody else, [55:44.080 --> 55:50.760] attorneys and what not, they make a motion for a continuous grant and all that stuff [55:50.760 --> 55:56.060] right in front of me and I ask him, I said give me a notepad and a pen, they won't give [55:56.060 --> 56:00.840] me any paper in jail, he said oh well, they will give you paper when they want. [56:00.840 --> 56:06.000] Okay, you need to sit down and write a novel. [56:06.000 --> 56:15.920] Okay, this is how we do this, you write a timeline first and then you go through and [56:15.920 --> 56:25.360] you start filling in facts, but you don't just fill in facts, you fill in facts for [56:25.360 --> 56:29.280] the purpose of building a novel. [56:29.280 --> 56:37.600] You're building a story that someone can read and it would be compelling and lead them to [56:37.600 --> 56:40.880] conclusions you want them to come to. [56:40.880 --> 56:46.120] So you put in all the facts and then you go back and you look at the argument you want [56:46.120 --> 56:54.480] to make, now you go back and look at those facts and see how you can order those facts [56:54.480 --> 57:01.640] so that they would lead a reasonable person of ordinary prudence to come to the conclusion [57:01.640 --> 57:06.000] you want them to come to. [57:06.000 --> 57:13.080] Statement of facts is an art form, if you do it right, the person will read your statement [57:13.080 --> 57:19.920] of facts and they have to have a referential index to understand what you're talking about. [57:19.920 --> 57:25.120] So when they read your facts, they have to establish reference, they have to determine [57:25.120 --> 57:31.160] how these facts refer to one another if you carefully craft them. [57:31.160 --> 57:35.640] That will lead them directly to the conclusions you want them to come to. [57:35.640 --> 57:43.680] And then when you go to your argument in support where you deliver the conclusions that you [57:43.680 --> 57:51.880] already encouraged them to come to, that will cause an experience in the human mind we generally [57:51.880 --> 57:54.880] refer to as rapport. [57:54.880 --> 58:03.760] Even if they don't like you, even if they want you to screw up, the mind can't help [58:03.760 --> 58:04.760] it. [58:04.760 --> 58:10.720] We can trick them out by artfully designing these things. [58:10.720 --> 58:14.400] So the first thing you want to give is that timeline, once you've got the timeline then [58:14.400 --> 58:19.160] you go in, you fill in the spaces in the timeline, once you've got all that done, then you go [58:19.160 --> 58:24.400] back and say, what, I don't want this fact in there, I don't want that fact in, you have [58:24.400 --> 58:30.320] to leave in the pertinent facts that have come out anyway, even if they're against you. [58:30.320 --> 58:38.160] But then you assign facts around it that negate that fact, it's kind of an art, hang on, going [58:38.160 --> 58:45.720] to break, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue La Radio, I call it number 512-646-1984, Mark [58:45.720 --> 58:50.400] Wisconsin, I see you there, we'll get to you, we'll be right back. [58:50.400 --> 58:55.800] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.800 --> 58:58.600] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.600 --> 59:04.000] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:04.000 --> 59:07.240] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.240 --> 59:09.120] After the recovery version. [59:09.120 --> 59:14.960] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.960 --> 59:18.680] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.680 --> 59:23.680] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.680 --> 59:28.400] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.400 --> 59:33.560] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.560 --> 59:44.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.000 --> 59:48.080] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.080 --> 59:49.080] That's freestudybible.com. [59:49.080 --> 01:00:02.800] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.800 --> 01:00:07.600] You're following these flashes brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the [01:00:07.600 --> 01:00:14.920] jelly bulletins for the commodities market, Today in History, News Updates, and the inside [01:00:14.920 --> 01:00:23.400] scoop into the tides of the alternatives. [01:00:23.400 --> 01:00:28.640] Markets for Monday, the 22nd of August, 2016, are currently treading with gold at $1,336.63 [01:00:28.640 --> 01:00:36.880] an ounce, silver, $18.86 an ounce, Texas crude, $47.05 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently [01:00:36.880 --> 01:00:45.600] sitting at about $585 U.S. currency. [01:00:45.600 --> 01:00:51.040] Today in history, the year 1902, the Cadillac Motor Company is founded, and in the same [01:00:51.040 --> 01:00:55.000] year President Theodore Roosevelt becomes the first president of the United States to [01:00:55.000 --> 01:01:01.960] ride in an automobile, though it wasn't a Cadillac. [01:01:01.960 --> 01:01:06.960] In recent years, a U.S. District Judge Lee Yackel denied the request of three University [01:01:06.960 --> 01:01:11.440] of Texas and Austin professors to block the implementation of the state's campus carry [01:01:11.440 --> 01:01:12.440] law. [01:01:12.440 --> 01:01:15.800] The judge said that the professors had failed to establish a substantial likelihood of ultimate [01:01:15.800 --> 01:01:21.280] success on the merits of their assertive claims, which were that guns in classrooms violate [01:01:21.280 --> 01:01:23.720] free speech and equal protection rights. [01:01:23.720 --> 01:01:28.280] UT President Gregory Fanvez said in a written statement that the university would continue [01:01:28.280 --> 01:01:31.480] to work with faculty members concerned about the law. [01:01:31.480 --> 01:01:35.380] He added that he's committed to upholding the school's core values of academic freedom [01:01:35.380 --> 01:01:40.560] and free speech, while Attorney General Ken Paxton said that he was pleased but not surprised [01:01:40.560 --> 01:01:45.600] by the decision and that there is simply no legal justification to deny licensed, law-abiding [01:01:45.600 --> 01:01:50.760] citizens on campus the same measure of personal protection they are entitled to elsewhere in [01:01:50.760 --> 01:01:57.440] Texas. [01:01:57.440 --> 01:02:02.160] The Redlands Unified School District settled on and agreed to pay out $6 million to a victim [01:02:02.160 --> 01:02:05.560] of sexual abuse by one of their teachers at one of their high schools. [01:02:05.560 --> 01:02:09.080] The attorney for the victim, Vince Finaldi, stated that this is the largest child sexual [01:02:09.080 --> 01:02:13.640] abuse settlement against a public entity in U.S. history, reason being, he is saying, [01:02:13.640 --> 01:02:17.880] that the school district knew that Laura Whitehurst was sexually abusing students and did nothing [01:02:17.880 --> 01:02:18.880] about it. [01:02:18.880 --> 01:02:21.880] The school district, as a spokesperson for the district, obviously denies that they knew [01:02:21.880 --> 01:02:25.840] anything about the abuse, clarifying that it was just the district wanting to avoid [01:02:25.840 --> 01:02:27.720] further costly legal battles. [01:02:27.720 --> 01:02:31.120] The school district is assuring teachers and parents that the $6 million settlement will [01:02:31.120 --> 01:02:39.320] not affect its budget for teachers and other educational expenses. [01:02:39.320 --> 01:02:43.240] If Texas had succeeded before this year, it would have ranked third in the world in the [01:02:43.240 --> 01:02:44.240] 2016 Olympics. [01:02:44.240 --> 01:02:50.280] Texas alone took home 42 medals, 26 gold, 6 silver, and 10 bronze in the 2016 Rio de [01:02:50.280 --> 01:02:51.280] Janeiro Olympics. [01:02:51.280 --> 01:02:52.280] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown August 22, 2016. [01:02:52.280 --> 01:03:15.280] This is Brooke Rody for your Lowdown August 22, 2016. [01:03:15.280 --> 01:03:35.360] Okay. [01:03:35.360 --> 01:03:36.360] We are back. [01:03:36.360 --> 01:03:43.840] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rue La Radio, and we're talking to Mark in Florida. [01:03:43.840 --> 01:03:53.120] Okay, on the break, I went to Bar Greenstock website and I've got the site up, but it's [01:03:53.120 --> 01:03:54.600] kind of a mess. [01:03:54.600 --> 01:04:00.400] There was something I wanted to link you to in there, and it's an e-book that I'm working [01:04:00.400 --> 01:04:10.680] on, Legal 101, the stuff they don't teach in law school and they certainly don't tell [01:04:10.680 --> 01:04:21.240] you in high school on how it really works in court, so I will get that up in the next [01:04:21.240 --> 01:04:25.800] day or so so you can find this thing, and it gives you a lot of little tricks, and there's [01:04:25.800 --> 01:04:36.040] a section in there on flow, and when I get it back up, I'll try to have it up tomorrow [01:04:36.040 --> 01:04:38.360] so that you can find it. [01:04:38.360 --> 01:04:48.080] And it's just 30 years of messing with these guys that figured out some ways to avoid the [01:04:48.080 --> 01:04:52.720] pressures they try to put on you. [01:04:52.720 --> 01:05:01.880] When I suggest that you go after these guys, Mark, it's not so that you can beat them up. [01:05:01.880 --> 01:05:04.600] Don't really care about that. [01:05:04.600 --> 01:05:11.800] It's about keeping you immune from the influence that they try to have. [01:05:11.800 --> 01:05:21.560] Keep you from feeling trodden and downtrodden and overwhelmed and frustrated. [01:05:21.560 --> 01:05:31.240] When you're the one going after them, it is a lot more fun, and you should be pedantic. [01:05:31.240 --> 01:05:39.840] I mean, I go into the City of Arlington Municipal Court and people standing in line, there's [01:05:39.840 --> 01:05:45.800] two different lines, and I ask the guard there, which line do I stand in to look at the criminal [01:05:45.800 --> 01:05:46.800] complaints? [01:05:46.800 --> 01:05:47.800] He said, are you a lawyer? [01:05:47.800 --> 01:05:48.800] I said, no, I'm not. [01:05:48.800 --> 01:05:49.800] Do you have a case here? [01:05:49.800 --> 01:05:50.800] No, I don't. [01:05:50.800 --> 01:05:51.800] You can't look at those. [01:05:51.800 --> 01:05:52.800] Okay, Mark, what's wrong with that? [01:05:52.800 --> 01:06:04.640] He lied to me. [01:06:04.640 --> 01:06:08.680] He lied to me to deny me access to public records. [01:06:08.680 --> 01:06:13.960] That's a violation of 3903 penal code. [01:06:13.960 --> 01:06:16.640] I said, do you have a supervisor handy? [01:06:16.640 --> 01:06:19.240] Yes, I have a supervisor. [01:06:19.240 --> 01:06:20.240] Why do you need a supervisor? [01:06:20.240 --> 01:06:22.600] Because I need to talk to him, get him. [01:06:22.600 --> 01:06:26.920] So he calls his supervisor out, and the supervisor comes out and said, he told me who he was, [01:06:26.920 --> 01:06:27.920] and said, what can I do for you? [01:06:27.920 --> 01:06:31.580] I need you to arrest him. [01:06:31.580 --> 01:06:36.440] The cop is looking up at me in disbelief. [01:06:36.440 --> 01:06:38.040] Why would I arrest him? [01:06:38.040 --> 01:06:44.400] Well, Class A misdemeanor, official oppression, criminal violation 3903 penal code, in that [01:06:44.400 --> 01:06:51.160] he denied me phone free access to enjoyment right, and he did so under color or pretense [01:06:51.160 --> 01:06:53.760] of his official capacity. [01:06:53.760 --> 01:06:55.560] And the cop said, what did I do? [01:06:55.560 --> 01:06:57.600] He said, you lied to me. [01:06:57.600 --> 01:07:02.840] Well, I didn't think you could go look at him. [01:07:02.840 --> 01:07:04.680] Your problem, not my problem. [01:07:04.680 --> 01:07:08.200] My problem is you lied to me, denied me access to these records. [01:07:08.200 --> 01:07:09.400] That's a violation of law. [01:07:09.400 --> 01:07:10.800] I want you to arrest him. [01:07:10.800 --> 01:07:17.000] Oh, and this supervisor's doing this song and dance and sell so many pants. [01:07:17.000 --> 01:07:21.400] I didn't want to have that fight, and I didn't care about arresting him. [01:07:21.400 --> 01:07:25.000] Us didn't want to be messed with. [01:07:25.000 --> 01:07:32.000] Mark, this changes everything. [01:07:32.000 --> 01:07:38.040] And the ones that are the most powerful and the most fun to go after are the really, really [01:07:38.040 --> 01:07:40.300] minor ones. [01:07:40.300 --> 01:07:47.280] You want them to think, boy, I didn't see that coming, so that the next time you come [01:07:47.280 --> 01:07:52.160] in there, they're wondering what they're not going to see coming. [01:07:52.160 --> 01:08:01.680] And I suggest that you sit down and start thinking in terms of a criminal investigator. [01:08:01.680 --> 01:08:05.360] What crimes have they violated? [01:08:05.360 --> 01:08:06.360] List them out. [01:08:06.360 --> 01:08:10.200] You will be surprised. [01:08:10.200 --> 01:08:17.880] And as soon as I can get your judicial conduct back up and read that habeas corpus I've got [01:08:17.880 --> 01:08:23.000] on there, you'll be even more surprised. [01:08:23.000 --> 01:08:29.880] If you were arrested and taken to jail, I can generally count about 19 felonies and [01:08:29.880 --> 01:08:32.000] misdemeanors I can charge him with. [01:08:32.000 --> 01:08:40.120] You spoke about that magistrate that you went before, and he wouldn't look up this information. [01:08:40.120 --> 01:08:49.760] You need to be filing criminal charges against him, just for yucks, and then you try to give [01:08:49.760 --> 01:08:56.920] the criminal complaint to somebody who's going to want to shield him from prosecution. [01:08:56.920 --> 01:09:00.600] Well, knock yourself out, baby. [01:09:00.600 --> 01:09:05.920] And when the guy comes to you and he says, well, you know, Mark, you really have to be [01:09:05.920 --> 01:09:06.920] careful. [01:09:06.920 --> 01:09:11.720] When you start making these complaints, you can get in big trouble pampering with a witness [01:09:11.720 --> 01:09:13.960] obstruction of justice. [01:09:13.960 --> 01:09:14.960] Let's dance guys. [01:09:14.960 --> 01:09:18.520] You want some more? [01:09:18.520 --> 01:09:25.360] They will give you more complaints than you could ever possibly file. [01:09:25.360 --> 01:09:30.760] And I suggest you take a blank complaint form down there with you. [01:09:30.760 --> 01:09:35.160] And as soon as they step across the line, you start filling it out. [01:09:35.160 --> 01:09:42.800] And there's nothing I like more than to call 911 on the police. [01:09:42.800 --> 01:09:44.760] I've done that twice recently. [01:09:44.760 --> 01:09:46.440] Oh, wonderful. [01:09:46.440 --> 01:09:50.880] Okay, you need to put a criminal complaint in their hand. [01:09:50.880 --> 01:09:54.000] Okay, here's the deal. [01:09:54.000 --> 01:09:59.840] The police want you to give them a voluntary statement. [01:09:59.840 --> 01:10:03.220] Screw that. [01:10:03.220 --> 01:10:07.520] You give them a criminal affidavit. [01:10:07.520 --> 01:10:12.960] We get you a set of criminal forms and a Florida criminal form looks like a lawsuit and has [01:10:12.960 --> 01:10:20.080] the court heading and such on it in the state of Florida versus whoever this person is. [01:10:20.080 --> 01:10:26.760] And you fill it out and you tell the officer you want him to verify your affirmation on [01:10:26.760 --> 01:10:27.760] the document. [01:10:27.760 --> 01:10:30.840] And they always refuse. [01:10:30.840 --> 01:10:35.000] I have offered them the criminal complaint and they refuse to take it. [01:10:35.000 --> 01:10:39.160] And they give me this voluntary statement. [01:10:39.160 --> 01:10:44.600] So I fill out the voluntary statement and I clip the criminal complaint behind it and [01:10:44.600 --> 01:10:45.600] hand it to them. [01:10:45.600 --> 01:10:52.680] The guy in Stephenville, I hand it to him and he's got it in his hand and he feels there's [01:10:52.680 --> 01:10:54.040] another copy in there. [01:10:54.040 --> 01:10:55.040] What's this? [01:10:55.040 --> 01:10:57.680] He turns the page and there's that criminal complaint. [01:10:57.680 --> 01:10:59.880] I told you I wasn't going to take this. [01:10:59.880 --> 01:11:01.200] Sorry, Bubba. [01:11:01.200 --> 01:11:02.200] You already got it. [01:11:02.200 --> 01:11:03.200] Well, I'm not going to take it. [01:11:03.200 --> 01:11:04.200] I'm not going to take it. [01:11:04.200 --> 01:11:05.200] I'll throw it in the trash. [01:11:05.200 --> 01:11:08.880] You just do anything you want to with it. [01:11:08.880 --> 01:11:13.160] I don't care. [01:11:13.160 --> 01:11:15.160] It changes everything. [01:11:15.160 --> 01:11:22.840] It'll make this a lot easier and good chance it'll make these false accusations go away [01:11:22.840 --> 01:11:23.840] in a hurry. [01:11:23.840 --> 01:11:28.000] Well, let me tell you about the habeas. [01:11:28.000 --> 01:11:35.280] While I was in jail, I managed to trade some food for two pieces of paper and something [01:11:35.280 --> 01:11:43.640] to write with and I hammered out a small petition for a rent of habeas corpus, addressed it [01:11:43.640 --> 01:11:47.680] to the circuit judge, circuit court. [01:11:47.680 --> 01:11:51.720] Now the county judges and the circuit judges are all in the same building. [01:11:51.720 --> 01:11:57.520] There's 273 judges in Broward County. [01:11:57.520 --> 01:12:01.720] The least of which makes 138,000 a year. [01:12:01.720 --> 01:12:06.360] Circuit judges make about 8,000 more, I think. [01:12:06.360 --> 01:12:13.120] I addressed this to the circuit court because I didn't want my county judge ruling on his [01:12:13.120 --> 01:12:19.800] own mistake, false imprisonment, kidnapping. [01:12:19.800 --> 01:12:21.840] It got filed. [01:12:21.840 --> 01:12:26.360] Almost two weeks later, I hadn't been before the court. [01:12:26.360 --> 01:12:36.800] So I got some more paper, six pages, and filed one to the U.S. District Court up the street [01:12:36.800 --> 01:12:41.520] writ of habeas corpus or petition for a writ. [01:12:41.520 --> 01:12:42.800] That was on Friday. [01:12:42.800 --> 01:12:48.360] On Tuesday, I was back in front of my judge and he said, I got your motion. [01:12:48.360 --> 01:12:51.440] I said, which motion? [01:12:51.440 --> 01:12:55.560] He said, the one you hand wrote. [01:12:55.560 --> 01:12:57.280] I said, that's not a motion, sir. [01:12:57.280 --> 01:12:59.640] That's a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. [01:12:59.640 --> 01:13:00.840] He kept calling it a motion. [01:13:00.840 --> 01:13:03.840] Every time he did it, I objected. [01:13:03.840 --> 01:13:04.840] Discharacterization. [01:13:04.840 --> 01:13:05.840] Yeah. [01:13:05.840 --> 01:13:10.040] He denied the motion. [01:13:10.040 --> 01:13:15.120] And before I could, I started to jump up out of my seat and object, and he held his hand. [01:13:15.120 --> 01:13:16.120] Wait a minute. [01:13:16.120 --> 01:13:17.120] Wait a minute. [01:13:17.120 --> 01:13:20.120] I'm going to go ahead and release the ROR. [01:13:20.120 --> 01:13:22.520] So I shut up. [01:13:22.520 --> 01:13:26.320] Because the main thing was I had to get out of jail because I can't get anything done [01:13:26.320 --> 01:13:27.320] in jail. [01:13:27.320 --> 01:13:28.320] Exactly. [01:13:28.320 --> 01:13:31.200] Liberty first. [01:13:31.200 --> 01:13:34.240] Now I have some questions. [01:13:34.240 --> 01:13:40.880] You wrote that habeas and you put it in the hand of a jailer. [01:13:40.880 --> 01:13:45.760] The law in Texas, and I'm certain it's the same in Florida. [01:13:45.760 --> 01:13:53.040] When you put that in the hand of the jailer, the jailer had an absolute duty to take that [01:13:53.040 --> 01:13:54.040] to the court. [01:13:54.040 --> 01:13:59.760] It was directed to, do you have knowledge that that was done? [01:13:59.760 --> 01:14:00.760] Yes. [01:14:00.760 --> 01:14:05.760] They got, the clerk's office got the letter, got a letter. [01:14:05.760 --> 01:14:06.760] Now wait a minute. [01:14:06.760 --> 01:14:07.760] Wait a minute. [01:14:07.760 --> 01:14:08.760] You directed it to the district courts. [01:14:08.760 --> 01:14:20.680] As far as I know, a county court can generally not hear habeas that goes to a district court. [01:14:20.680 --> 01:14:21.680] Circuit here. [01:14:21.680 --> 01:14:22.680] Yes. [01:14:22.680 --> 01:14:23.680] Circuit. [01:14:23.680 --> 01:14:24.680] Yeah. [01:14:24.680 --> 01:14:30.120] So did they deliver it to the court you directed it to? [01:14:30.120 --> 01:14:33.400] It's all the same clerk. [01:14:33.400 --> 01:14:35.560] It doesn't matter. [01:14:35.560 --> 01:14:39.240] The courts aren't the same. [01:14:39.240 --> 01:14:40.560] They did not. [01:14:40.560 --> 01:14:44.520] They delivered to my judge and he's not authorized. [01:14:44.520 --> 01:14:53.040] You need to find out who the jailer is that you gave the complaint to and file against [01:14:53.040 --> 01:14:54.040] him. [01:14:54.040 --> 01:15:03.720] Well, see they pick up the mail out, the in-house mail, they pick it up out of the box at midnight [01:15:03.720 --> 01:15:06.200] and weren't locked down, you know, at that time. [01:15:06.200 --> 01:15:07.200] Okay. [01:15:07.200 --> 01:15:13.920] You can find out who picks it up, who was the jailer on duty and you don't really need [01:15:13.920 --> 01:15:16.160] to find out. [01:15:16.160 --> 01:15:21.040] You just go down there and start fishing. [01:15:21.040 --> 01:15:29.280] You request a list of all jailers on duty at this time and request a list of all jailers [01:15:29.280 --> 01:15:37.040] authorized to pick up mail and they're going to say, what is he looking for this for? [01:15:37.040 --> 01:15:42.080] But if they ask you, that's generally a crime. [01:15:42.080 --> 01:15:48.400] I know that the Texas open government law says that the custodian of the record may [01:15:48.400 --> 01:15:56.560] make no inquiry of the request or other than to determine his name in the records sought. [01:15:56.560 --> 01:16:01.880] To ask any other questions, it's a Class A misdemeanor. [01:16:01.880 --> 01:16:09.440] So I try to frame my requests in a way that'll get them to ask me why I want to see it. [01:16:09.440 --> 01:16:13.240] That always gets a 911 call. [01:16:13.240 --> 01:16:19.240] That's a Class A misdemeanor and it, once they ask, the bell is rung, they can't unring [01:16:19.240 --> 01:16:20.240] it. [01:16:20.240 --> 01:16:27.000] The jailer didn't do anything wrong in this case. [01:16:27.000 --> 01:16:33.120] He got it to the clerk of court and the clerk of court is the clerk for both county and [01:16:33.120 --> 01:16:34.120] circuit. [01:16:34.120 --> 01:16:39.680] It's the clerk of court that delivered it to Mike, the circuit judge. [01:16:39.680 --> 01:16:46.960] So then file against the clerk of the court and the clerk is probably going to say that [01:16:46.960 --> 01:16:50.600] the judge told her to file it here. [01:16:50.600 --> 01:16:51.600] Wonderful. [01:16:51.600 --> 01:16:56.640] Because the judge told her where to file it, the judge gave him legal advice. [01:16:56.640 --> 01:16:57.640] Hang on. [01:16:57.640 --> 01:16:58.640] Be right back. [01:16:58.640 --> 01:17:04.920] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.920 --> 01:17:09.120] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:17:09.120 --> 01:17:13.440] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:17:13.440 --> 01:17:14.440] can win too. [01:17:14.440 --> 01:17:19.360] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:17:19.360 --> 01:17:25.000] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer [01:17:25.000 --> 01:17:29.640] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the [01:17:29.640 --> 01:17:33.840] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.840 --> 01:17:38.960] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.960 --> 01:17:40.920] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.920 --> 01:17:46.640] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:17:46.640 --> 01:17:49.640] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.640 --> 01:17:58.640] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [01:17:58.640 --> 01:18:00.640] collectors now. [01:18:00.640 --> 01:18:06.720] Non-GMOsolutions.com is now a proud sponsor of the Logos Radio Network with promo code [01:18:06.720 --> 01:18:07.720] Logos. [01:18:07.720 --> 01:18:12.320] We thank you for the opportunity to be your source for new manna foods, the leader in [01:18:12.320 --> 01:18:15.000] high quality food that you will truly enjoy. [01:18:15.000 --> 01:18:20.840] You'll find gluten-free options and all products are free from high fructose corn syrup, aspartame, [01:18:20.840 --> 01:18:21.840] soy and MSG. [01:18:21.840 --> 01:18:27.120] Whether you're on a tight budget, looking for options to reduce food costs without compromising [01:18:27.120 --> 01:18:33.920] health or securing long-term 25-year storable food for an uncertain future, then non-GMOsolutions.com [01:18:33.920 --> 01:18:35.920] is your common sense answer. [01:18:35.920 --> 01:18:39.320] Take advantage of a 10% discount with promo code Logos. [01:18:39.320 --> 01:18:44.200] No longer will you compromise taste and quality for full-term shelf life or eat poor quality [01:18:44.200 --> 01:18:45.560] food due to cost. [01:18:45.560 --> 01:18:50.120] Check out our flex pay options and design a no-contract plan to satisfy your needs. [01:18:50.120 --> 01:18:55.960] Go to non-GMOsolutions.com today and get 10% off with promo code Logos. [01:18:55.960 --> 01:18:59.400] That's non-GMOsolutions.com with promo code Logos. [01:18:59.400 --> 01:19:07.840] This is the Logos Lafogos Radio Network. [01:19:07.840 --> 01:19:22.040] Ain't gonna blame me Don't blame me [01:19:22.040 --> 01:19:36.120] Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:36.120 --> 01:19:44.040] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan You put the fear in my pocket [01:19:44.040 --> 01:19:47.800] Took the money from my hand Ain't gonna fool me [01:19:47.800 --> 01:19:53.080] Okay, we are back Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue La Radio, and we're talking to Mark in [01:19:53.080 --> 01:19:54.080] Wisconsin. [01:19:54.080 --> 01:20:03.120] I do need to move along, but I'm Mark in Florida because Mark's been in Wisconsin's been waiting [01:20:03.120 --> 01:20:08.880] a long time, but this is a one of my favorite subjects. [01:20:08.880 --> 01:20:16.600] Mark can you call in tomorrow night because what I would like to do is do an analysis [01:20:16.600 --> 01:20:21.680] of this case. [01:20:21.680 --> 01:20:30.920] Let's start at the beginning and do an analysis to mark out where officials failed to follow [01:20:30.920 --> 01:20:33.560] law. [01:20:33.560 --> 01:20:41.480] The most powerful thing you can do is file criminally against these guys for following [01:20:41.480 --> 01:20:45.080] policy. [01:20:45.080 --> 01:20:48.400] That makes them nuts. [01:20:48.400 --> 01:20:54.360] The guys are saying what I do, what I do, now this guy's coming after me criminally. [01:20:54.360 --> 01:20:59.560] And what I really want them to do is throw somebody under the bus. [01:20:59.560 --> 01:21:04.760] And here's a little subtle way of got to go in after them. [01:21:04.760 --> 01:21:12.760] I filed complaints with the grand jury in Tarrant County, that's Fort Worth, against [01:21:12.760 --> 01:21:16.520] the district attorney in Dallas County. [01:21:16.520 --> 01:21:22.520] And the foreman sent me a letter back saying we examined into your accusations and find [01:21:22.520 --> 01:21:29.200] no crimes, no Tarrant County crimes subject to indictment. [01:21:29.200 --> 01:21:35.240] Now where in the heck did he come up with that? [01:21:35.240 --> 01:21:40.640] He's a grand jury foreman and he's just an ordinary lay person. [01:21:40.640 --> 01:21:50.920] So where did he come up with the notion that he could only hear Tarrant County accusations? [01:21:50.920 --> 01:21:53.640] I did massive research. [01:21:53.640 --> 01:21:56.840] That's not in law anywhere. [01:21:56.840 --> 01:22:06.720] So somebody told him to do that and it's almost certainly the judge that impaneled this grand [01:22:06.720 --> 01:22:15.720] jury because it wouldn't be the district attorney because the district attorney wanted that [01:22:15.720 --> 01:22:19.280] Dallas County DA indicted. [01:22:19.280 --> 01:22:27.120] So who told him to do that and whoever did was giving legal advice. [01:22:27.120 --> 01:22:34.280] And when you're giving legal advice, you don't have any immunity at all. [01:22:34.280 --> 01:22:37.360] You see where I'm going, Mark? [01:22:37.360 --> 01:22:38.360] Oh yeah. [01:22:38.360 --> 01:22:43.840] Now let me tell you the juiciest part of this whole ordeal with this judge, two things real [01:22:43.840 --> 01:22:44.840] quick. [01:22:44.840 --> 01:22:49.240] Florida does have it, I think it was in the rules of criminal procedure, but somewhere [01:22:49.240 --> 01:22:57.240] in the Florida statutes, before a judge will issue a capias, he shall check the clerk court's [01:22:57.240 --> 01:23:01.000] record to make sure that notice was sent. [01:23:01.000 --> 01:23:02.760] He shall check it. [01:23:02.760 --> 01:23:07.480] You mean it doesn't say it may, might, or can if he wants to? [01:23:07.480 --> 01:23:08.480] No, sir. [01:23:08.480 --> 01:23:09.480] No, sir. [01:23:09.480 --> 01:23:14.120] It's as if me or you wrote the thing. [01:23:14.120 --> 01:23:20.280] Do you have official oppression or official misconduct in Florida? [01:23:20.280 --> 01:23:21.920] We have official misconduct. [01:23:21.920 --> 01:23:24.040] I have that in my file. [01:23:24.040 --> 01:23:25.040] Wonderful. [01:23:25.040 --> 01:23:30.280] That should absolutely get the criminal complaint against the judge. [01:23:30.280 --> 01:23:33.920] You won't see that coming. [01:23:33.920 --> 01:23:38.080] Every time I find something in the statutes that goes against them, I make a copy and [01:23:38.080 --> 01:23:40.120] put it in my file. [01:23:40.120 --> 01:23:47.160] Now the juiciest part of this whole ordeal is this judge was appointed two years ago, [01:23:47.160 --> 01:23:51.320] I think this month, and he's up for election. [01:23:51.320 --> 01:23:52.320] Oh, wonderful. [01:23:52.320 --> 01:24:00.800] He's going to make sure he doesn't get reelected and he has somebody running against him. [01:24:00.800 --> 01:24:07.680] Oh, you need to get these complaints to his opponent. [01:24:07.680 --> 01:24:09.880] And federal indictments. [01:24:09.880 --> 01:24:12.720] Oh, wonderful. [01:24:12.720 --> 01:24:23.120] If you can take out a judge, oh, a homeless person that lives in a mobile home takes out [01:24:23.120 --> 01:24:24.120] a judge. [01:24:24.120 --> 01:24:25.120] Oh yeah. [01:24:25.120 --> 01:24:26.120] That's right. [01:24:26.120 --> 01:24:27.120] We bad. [01:24:27.120 --> 01:24:32.920] And that's exactly why I do the show. [01:24:32.920 --> 01:24:39.720] It is my stated purpose to put every judge in the country in a position such that when [01:24:39.720 --> 01:24:44.600] they step up behind the bench and look out across the bar at the gallery, I want them [01:24:44.600 --> 01:24:51.200] wondering which one, which one of those scoundrels are out there waiting for me to render a decision [01:24:51.200 --> 01:24:55.200] so they can run down and try to get me indicted. [01:24:55.200 --> 01:25:03.280] If you take out, if you prevent the judge from getting elected, that's what we're talking [01:25:03.280 --> 01:25:05.240] about politics. [01:25:05.240 --> 01:25:08.240] Everything's political. [01:25:08.240 --> 01:25:15.080] So now, now you need to start filing the complaints so that everybody can start shielding the [01:25:15.080 --> 01:25:24.080] judge from prosecution so you can kind of get a lot of politics against all of them. [01:25:24.080 --> 01:25:27.760] And if he's a newly elected judge, they're likely to throw him under the bus just to [01:25:27.760 --> 01:25:30.000] get you off the rest of them. [01:25:30.000 --> 01:25:31.000] Yeah. [01:25:31.000 --> 01:25:35.920] So it's all political in the end. [01:25:35.920 --> 01:25:37.440] You mentioned my motor home I live in. [01:25:37.440 --> 01:25:42.200] I should mention that just about everything in here is broke. [01:25:42.200 --> 01:25:44.600] The motor is barely still going. [01:25:44.600 --> 01:25:48.840] But the last thing, to change the subject, something I thought about, you're talking [01:25:48.840 --> 01:25:50.320] about the vampire lenders. [01:25:50.320 --> 01:25:56.080] Now, mind you, just everything I know about lending and that kind of the foreclosure stuff, [01:25:56.080 --> 01:26:01.080] almost all that I learned from you and Deborah and, you know, guests on your show. [01:26:01.080 --> 01:26:06.240] I'd say about 95 to 98 percent I've learned from you guys. [01:26:06.240 --> 01:26:13.840] But this thought hit me about the vampire lenders, you know, the dead guy. [01:26:13.840 --> 01:26:17.520] Have you sued the dead guy? [01:26:17.520 --> 01:26:26.240] I have an appeal in the New York Court of Appeals Second Circuit, I'm sorry, in the [01:26:26.240 --> 01:26:34.280] federal court, Second Circuit New York right now on the dead guy issue. [01:26:34.280 --> 01:26:41.960] We also have, we just got an appeal denied in San Diego and directly on the dead guy [01:26:41.960 --> 01:26:49.840] issue and they're preparing an appeal to the California Supreme. [01:26:49.840 --> 01:26:50.840] You're missing the point. [01:26:50.840 --> 01:26:51.840] You're missing the point. [01:26:51.840 --> 01:26:52.840] Let me ask this again. [01:26:52.840 --> 01:26:53.840] Okay. [01:26:53.840 --> 01:26:56.840] Have you sued the dead guy? [01:26:56.840 --> 01:26:59.840] Have you filed suit against the dead guy? [01:26:59.840 --> 01:27:00.840] Yes. [01:27:00.840 --> 01:27:03.080] I've done that several times. [01:27:03.080 --> 01:27:07.160] I generally do that with a declaratory judgment suit. [01:27:07.160 --> 01:27:12.760] I sue the dead guy for rescission and he never responds. [01:27:12.760 --> 01:27:17.200] So then I move for default judgment and then somebody else comes along and say, oh, no, [01:27:17.200 --> 01:27:18.200] no, no, no. [01:27:18.200 --> 01:27:19.200] He's not the holder. [01:27:19.200 --> 01:27:24.200] I'm the holder. [01:27:24.200 --> 01:27:27.280] Here's what I think you have to do. [01:27:27.280 --> 01:27:28.620] Hear my reasoning. [01:27:28.620 --> 01:27:33.600] You sue the dead guy where the court has to make a decision on it. [01:27:33.600 --> 01:27:36.400] Once they make, and they're going to decide, well, you can't sue that guy. [01:27:36.400 --> 01:27:37.400] He's dead. [01:27:37.400 --> 01:27:39.280] You can't sue that corporation. [01:27:39.280 --> 01:27:40.280] It doesn't exist. [01:27:40.280 --> 01:27:42.520] You've got res due to Cata. [01:27:42.520 --> 01:27:43.520] Very good. [01:27:43.520 --> 01:27:47.040] Then you've got it all in black and white. [01:27:47.040 --> 01:27:55.600] You have the precedent set and now anytime the vampire lender arises, you got this case [01:27:55.600 --> 01:27:56.600] to refer to. [01:27:56.600 --> 01:28:01.520] Say he's a dead guy and his collateral estoppel. [01:28:01.520 --> 01:28:04.000] Doesn't matter what case it's brought into. [01:28:04.000 --> 01:28:09.760] Once it's ruled that he's non-existent, he can't return to existence. [01:28:09.760 --> 01:28:12.500] He's collateral estoppel. [01:28:12.500 --> 01:28:19.200] If you cannot sue the dead guy, then the dead guy obviously could not have transferred assignment. [01:28:19.200 --> 01:28:20.200] Exactly. [01:28:20.200 --> 01:28:21.200] Good point. [01:28:21.200 --> 01:28:22.200] Okay. [01:28:22.200 --> 01:28:26.120] Can you call in tomorrow night? [01:28:26.120 --> 01:28:30.400] I'd like to go over this some more, but I really need to get to Mark. [01:28:30.400 --> 01:28:33.720] He's going to beat me up if I run him out of time. [01:28:33.720 --> 01:28:35.720] Sorry, Mark. [01:28:35.720 --> 01:28:37.640] Thanks, Randy. [01:28:37.640 --> 01:28:38.640] Okay. [01:28:38.640 --> 01:28:40.120] Thank you, Mark. [01:28:40.120 --> 01:28:41.120] Okay. [01:28:41.120 --> 01:28:43.160] Now we're going to go to Mark in Wisconsin. [01:28:43.160 --> 01:28:44.160] Hello, Mark. [01:28:44.160 --> 01:28:48.160] Hello, Mr. Kelton. [01:28:48.160 --> 01:28:52.240] You are really good at calling me when I've got another Mark on. [01:28:52.240 --> 01:28:56.960] You've got a Mark in Texas that you often fall behind. [01:28:56.960 --> 01:28:57.960] Yes. [01:28:57.960 --> 01:29:00.960] Well, remarkable, isn't it? [01:29:00.960 --> 01:29:04.720] I've got a couple of things to bring up. [01:29:04.720 --> 01:29:12.680] The first thing, previous call I mentioned, I was getting involved in a situation where [01:29:12.680 --> 01:29:17.440] a lawyer was accused of pedophilia against his own child. [01:29:17.440 --> 01:29:24.040] Well, he decided to take a shotgun to his face to terminate his case. [01:29:24.040 --> 01:29:31.600] And so now the situation is the lawyer who's still working his criminal case wants to see [01:29:31.600 --> 01:29:32.600] over- [01:29:32.600 --> 01:29:33.600] Okay, great. [01:29:33.600 --> 01:29:34.600] Hold on. [01:29:34.600 --> 01:29:35.600] About to go to break. [01:29:35.600 --> 01:29:39.800] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Mark in Wisconsin. [01:29:39.800 --> 01:30:00.920] About to go to break, our call-in number is 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. [01:30:00.920 --> 01:30:02.960] Is noise at work killing you? [01:30:02.960 --> 01:30:03.960] Could be, say researchers. [01:30:03.960 --> 01:30:08.320] A new study finds that hearing loss may be the least of your health worries in a loud [01:30:08.320 --> 01:30:09.320] workplace. [01:30:09.320 --> 01:30:12.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you more in just a moment. [01:30:12.960 --> 01:30:18.280] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [01:30:18.280 --> 01:30:20.000] of your personal information. [01:30:20.000 --> 01:30:21.000] That's creepy. [01:30:21.000 --> 01:30:23.360] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:23.360 --> 01:30:26.480] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:26.480 --> 01:30:30.600] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking [01:30:30.600 --> 01:30:32.880] cookies and they're third party certified. [01:30:32.880 --> 01:30:37.360] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [01:30:37.360 --> 01:30:42.320] Private search results and total privacy, Startpage.com, the world's most private search [01:30:42.320 --> 01:30:43.320] engine. [01:30:43.320 --> 01:30:46.000] Noise at work could be killing you, literally. [01:30:46.000 --> 01:30:49.840] A new study looked at employees who worked in noisy environments for at least a year [01:30:49.840 --> 01:30:50.840] and a half. [01:30:50.840 --> 01:30:54.840] They found their risk of serious heart trouble was triple that of employees who worked in [01:30:54.840 --> 01:30:55.840] a quiet environment. [01:30:55.840 --> 01:30:58.280] What is a noisy workspace? [01:30:58.280 --> 01:31:01.880] Researchers say if you have to raise your voice to carry on a normal conversation, it's [01:31:01.880 --> 01:31:02.880] noisy. [01:31:02.880 --> 01:31:07.120] By that definition, more than 22 million Americans face noise hazards on the job every [01:31:07.120 --> 01:31:08.120] day. [01:31:08.120 --> 01:31:12.200] If finding a quieter job isn't an option, take precautions to help offset the effects [01:31:12.200 --> 01:31:13.200] of noise. [01:31:13.200 --> 01:31:17.600] Use earplugs, take good care of yourself and limit the other stressors in your life. [01:31:17.600 --> 01:31:19.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:19.400 --> 01:31:30.720] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.720 --> 01:31:36.080] This is building seven, a 47 story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.080 --> 01:31:38.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.240 --> 01:31:43.160] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.160 --> 01:31:45.880] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.880 --> 01:31:48.600] Thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:48.600 --> 01:31:50.080] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.080 --> 01:31:51.080] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.080 --> 01:31:52.440] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.440 --> 01:31:53.440] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.440 --> 01:31:55.120] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.120 --> 01:31:57.720] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.720 --> 01:31:59.680] Go to rememberbuildingseven.org today. [01:31:59.680 --> 01:32:03.280] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.280 --> 01:32:06.240] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.240 --> 01:32:09.920] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [01:32:09.920 --> 01:32:10.920] them to pay for it. [01:32:10.920 --> 01:32:14.520] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.520 --> 01:32:18.320] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:18.320 --> 01:32:21.080] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:21.080 --> 01:32:22.080] And we accept Bitcoin. [01:32:22.080 --> 01:32:26.680] As a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints, you [01:32:26.680 --> 01:32:31.040] can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [01:32:31.040 --> 01:32:32.120] first time. [01:32:32.120 --> 01:32:38.440] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.440 --> 01:32:42.800] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos [01:32:42.800 --> 01:32:45.400] Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.400 --> 01:32:50.560] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.560 --> 01:32:56.960] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.960 --> 01:32:58.440] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.440 --> 01:33:05.440] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:28.440 --> 01:33:42.960] Okay. [01:33:42.960 --> 01:33:43.960] We are back. [01:33:43.960 --> 01:33:50.200] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Mark in Wisconsin, [01:33:50.200 --> 01:33:52.440] and I know you're causing trouble again. [01:33:52.440 --> 01:33:54.960] At least I hope you are. [01:33:54.960 --> 01:33:59.400] Well, I'm going to try to cause some trouble. [01:33:59.400 --> 01:34:04.240] So what's happening with the particular criminal case? [01:34:04.240 --> 01:34:05.240] Okay. [01:34:05.240 --> 01:34:06.240] Wait a minute. [01:34:06.240 --> 01:34:11.040] This is the lawyer that, okay, the lawyer shot himself, and now a case is still going [01:34:11.040 --> 01:34:12.040] on. [01:34:12.040 --> 01:34:15.160] It's, you know, he's dead. [01:34:15.160 --> 01:34:22.440] So he's legally considered innocent of all charges based on this idea that dead people [01:34:22.440 --> 01:34:25.800] were never convicted, therefore are innocent. [01:34:25.800 --> 01:34:35.000] The attorney that was defending him is moving the court to have the case expunged. [01:34:35.000 --> 01:34:45.200] And the mother and ex-wife of the now five-year-old victim would like it to not be expunged. [01:34:45.200 --> 01:34:50.000] And they asked me, hey, how can we do this? [01:34:50.000 --> 01:34:54.480] And I went ahead and thought about it and said, well, after it's expunged, I could go [01:34:54.480 --> 01:35:02.400] and have a motion to have a hearing to reopen it, because how they're going to do the expunging [01:35:02.400 --> 01:35:03.720] is this. [01:35:03.720 --> 01:35:08.040] At this point, the state's attorney isn't going to specifically disagree with the defense [01:35:08.040 --> 01:35:13.520] attorney, and intends to sign the defense attorney stipulation to seal the case. [01:35:13.520 --> 01:35:16.840] After that, it will go to the judge who will make a determination whether or not he agrees [01:35:16.840 --> 01:35:18.720] with both parties. [01:35:18.720 --> 01:35:28.400] So they're going to make a decision on a public record without a hearing and just two parties, [01:35:28.400 --> 01:35:35.320] one of them who, in theory, represents my law and my rules, and is doing a poor job [01:35:35.320 --> 01:35:42.760] of what I feel should be my laws and my rules represented in the state's attorney, and of [01:35:42.760 --> 01:35:46.920] course, the accused attorney. [01:35:46.920 --> 01:35:53.280] I'm wondering what I could do beforehand, or if I'm just going to have to wait for [01:35:53.280 --> 01:36:00.400] the judge to go, yeah, I'll expunge this, and then go and make a motion and a filing [01:36:00.400 --> 01:36:13.040] to say, no, this goes also to a public need of the lawyer regulation, and go with my accusation [01:36:13.040 --> 01:36:17.320] that they were cutting him a deal because he was a lawyer, and lawyers weren't lawyers [01:36:17.320 --> 01:36:18.320] here. [01:36:18.320 --> 01:36:26.040] If you let them expunge, it will be extremely difficult to get them to undo something they've [01:36:26.040 --> 01:36:27.040] already done. [01:36:27.040 --> 01:36:28.040] Okay. [01:36:28.040 --> 01:36:35.600] I would suggest you throw a roadblock in front of them in filing an objection to the expungement, [01:36:35.600 --> 01:36:43.360] because there are circumstances of public interest. [01:36:43.360 --> 01:36:46.000] Okay. [01:36:46.000 --> 01:36:50.440] See if you can't block them from getting it done in the first place, and you might just [01:36:50.440 --> 01:36:54.280] bar-grieve that prosecutor for being a chump. [01:36:54.280 --> 01:37:02.720] Well, I was going to bar-grieve... In the way in which I filed paperwork, I stated that [01:37:02.720 --> 01:37:11.720] the DA's office ignore or cut this guy a deal in the past so he could keep his law license, [01:37:11.720 --> 01:37:19.960] and then I tossed in how there was a threat against the ex-wife and himself doing self-harm [01:37:19.960 --> 01:37:27.520] that he was going to take a gun, shoot her, and then shoot himself, and now that he committed [01:37:27.520 --> 01:37:34.640] suicide with a shotgun, the court is kind of going, ugh, nobody really wants to touch [01:37:34.640 --> 01:37:35.640] that. [01:37:35.640 --> 01:37:45.240] So I guess then what I will be doing is filing paperwork nigh immediately to say, no, there's [01:37:45.240 --> 01:37:50.120] a public interest here and try and stop this thing. [01:37:50.120 --> 01:37:54.680] Should I do it as a writ of mandamus? [01:37:54.680 --> 01:37:55.680] No. [01:37:55.680 --> 01:37:59.400] Or just file the paperwork? [01:37:59.400 --> 01:38:08.560] You can file as an intervener because it goes to public interest and amicus curia. [01:38:08.560 --> 01:38:10.960] Okay, amicus curia. [01:38:10.960 --> 01:38:18.520] Oh, I've attempted to do an amicus curia before, and the appellate court half entertained it [01:38:18.520 --> 01:38:25.040] and then backtracked, so good. [01:38:25.040 --> 01:38:33.480] Be you enough that you waive the motion in front of them, even if they don't take your [01:38:33.480 --> 01:38:41.080] motion, odds are they're going to stop this procedure to keep from having to argue why [01:38:41.080 --> 01:38:44.680] they've written this direction. [01:38:44.680 --> 01:38:48.840] Okay, all right. [01:38:48.840 --> 01:38:57.400] I think that covers the main question, then I have two other, an observation and a question. [01:38:57.400 --> 01:39:03.080] Observation, under the Americans with Disabilities Act, have you considered filling out your [01:39:03.080 --> 01:39:07.880] request for public records and these government forms in Braille? [01:39:07.880 --> 01:39:11.960] Wait, see, I missed that last part. [01:39:11.960 --> 01:39:14.600] I couldn't hear you well. [01:39:14.600 --> 01:39:23.040] Yeah, because you may not need Braille now, but I'm going to have to reference this later, [01:39:23.040 --> 01:39:29.240] and so I should put it in a way in which I can access the data later, and that's Braille, [01:39:29.240 --> 01:39:35.520] and fill out the public information requests in Braille. [01:39:35.520 --> 01:39:38.520] That could be fun. [01:39:38.520 --> 01:39:42.640] Yeah, yeah. [01:39:42.640 --> 01:39:49.960] The reason that I came up with that is we, or what's going on in Milwaukee County besides [01:39:49.960 --> 01:39:59.680] riots and stuff like that, we've got the public park system demanding that a company that [01:39:59.680 --> 01:40:05.120] has virtual things in a game called Pokemon Go. [01:40:05.120 --> 01:40:09.080] Yeah, I saw your emails on that. [01:40:09.080 --> 01:40:13.000] Go ahead, tell everybody. [01:40:13.000 --> 01:40:20.000] Okay, so at a certain point, the geocaching is a thing, and geocaching, for those of you [01:40:20.000 --> 01:40:25.360] who don't know, is this idea of somebody puts a box with a bunch of knickknacks in it and [01:40:25.360 --> 01:40:31.440] then says, you can find it here, and then people go to the box and they throw in their [01:40:31.440 --> 01:40:36.640] own knickknack, take out a knickknack or write their name in a book or stamp or something [01:40:36.640 --> 01:40:41.160] else, and then somebody else said, hey, why don't we just get rid of the box and we'll [01:40:41.160 --> 01:40:43.240] make virtual geocaching. [01:40:43.240 --> 01:40:48.520] So you go to a spot where you can overlook a cliff and go, wow, this would be pretty [01:40:48.520 --> 01:40:55.320] if it wasn't for rioting or whatever there. [01:40:55.320 --> 01:41:00.840] This colony said, what we need is a law, and so they throw an ordinance, and they create [01:41:00.840 --> 01:41:08.480] an ordinance that if you have a geocache or a virtual geocache, this must be approved. [01:41:08.480 --> 01:41:18.200] And so the Pokemon Go has ultimately resulted in Wisconsin's Lake Park having the top ten [01:41:18.200 --> 01:41:21.160] most popular place to go and get your Pokemon. [01:41:21.160 --> 01:41:27.680] So you have a virtual thing that exists not in the real world that they want you to create [01:41:27.680 --> 01:41:31.600] a real world permit for. [01:41:31.600 --> 01:41:33.600] That's interesting. [01:41:33.600 --> 01:41:41.040] Yeah, they wrote a letter, and I've got to quick pull it up, unfortunately I didn't have [01:41:41.040 --> 01:41:45.880] it in front of me here, but I should be able to pull it up real quick. [01:41:45.880 --> 01:41:53.360] They wrote a letter to the company where they said, be advised, the second page, be advised [01:41:53.360 --> 01:42:00.640] that until such approval is obtained, Niantic Inc. must deactivate and remove all Pokemon [01:42:00.640 --> 01:42:06.480] Go sites within the county parks, including not limited to Lake Park. [01:42:06.480 --> 01:42:14.120] Now nowhere do they say the next sentence, if you don't do this, we're going to be sued. [01:42:14.120 --> 01:42:22.400] But what they did do is they come out with a statement saying, we are not going to force [01:42:22.400 --> 01:42:32.720] you people, we're not going to force this issue, because we don't want to create a precedent. [01:42:32.720 --> 01:42:35.440] And I'm just trying to find that. [01:42:35.440 --> 01:42:39.720] I think they know what precedent they would get. [01:42:39.720 --> 01:42:41.320] Right, right. [01:42:41.320 --> 01:42:46.560] Milwaukee County has already ruled out following this letter up with legal action demanding [01:42:46.560 --> 01:42:49.440] that the gyms, stops and gyms be removed. [01:42:49.440 --> 01:42:54.520] Specifically, Milwaukee County does not want to be involved in the precedent-setting lawsuit [01:42:54.520 --> 01:42:58.800] regarding virtual use of public property. [01:42:58.800 --> 01:43:11.040] So is a letter where they say, be advised that you shall remove these things, but not [01:43:11.040 --> 01:43:18.760] saying or be sued, has the attorney violated the American Bar Association model rules where [01:43:18.760 --> 01:43:27.240] it says, attorneys shall not make legal threats, they have no intention of backing up. [01:43:27.240 --> 01:43:31.200] I would say absolutely that he's violated. [01:43:31.200 --> 01:43:35.600] So I can bar-grieve this gal then. [01:43:35.600 --> 01:43:40.600] Wonderful. [01:43:40.600 --> 01:43:54.240] This is way out there in virtual land, so they're saying that they can control non-existent. [01:43:54.240 --> 01:43:55.840] Hang on, we have to go to break. [01:43:55.840 --> 01:43:57.520] I'll figure this out over the break. [01:43:57.520 --> 01:43:58.520] We'll be right back. [01:43:58.520 --> 01:44:04.800] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [01:44:04.800 --> 01:44:09.200] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [01:44:09.200 --> 01:44:12.720] We provide a wide assortment of our favorite products featuring a great selection of high [01:44:12.720 --> 01:44:14.680] quality coins and precious metals. [01:44:14.680 --> 01:44:18.560] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [01:44:18.560 --> 01:44:23.280] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metals dealers [01:44:23.280 --> 01:44:24.280] and journalists. [01:44:24.280 --> 01:44:27.120] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [01:44:27.120 --> 01:44:31.520] In addition, we carry popular young Jevity products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and [01:44:31.520 --> 01:44:32.520] Polynburps. [01:44:32.520 --> 01:44:37.360] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storable Foods, Berkey Water Products, ammunition [01:44:37.360 --> 01:44:39.560] at 10% above wholesale, and more. [01:44:39.560 --> 01:44:43.160] We broke through metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:44:43.160 --> 01:44:46.520] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:44:46.520 --> 01:44:51.440] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:44:51.440 --> 01:44:54.600] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:44:54.600 --> 01:45:01.240] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:45:01.240 --> 01:45:04.400] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.400 --> 01:45:11.200] Find your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4 CD course [01:45:11.200 --> 01:45:15.000] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:15.000 --> 01:45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.000 --> 01:45:23.200] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.200 --> 01:45:28.080] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [01:45:28.080 --> 01:45:34.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.000 --> 01:45:39.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.400 --> 01:45:43.200] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.200 --> 01:45:49.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.800 --> 01:45:52.200] pro se tactics and much more. [01:45:52.200 --> 01:46:17.200] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:17.200 --> 01:46:22.600] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Mark [01:46:22.600 --> 01:46:28.600] in Wisconsin and that brings up a problem, Mark. [01:46:28.600 --> 01:46:37.000] I have an old copy of Flight Simulator and in that old copy of Flight Simulator, I get [01:46:37.000 --> 01:46:42.200] to simulate flying out of Migs Field. [01:46:42.200 --> 01:46:49.000] Migs Field, for those who aren't familiar with it, was right on Lake Michigan in Chicago [01:46:49.000 --> 01:46:56.800] and I used to come in over Lake Michigan and then I'd cross the peninsula where the planetarium [01:46:56.800 --> 01:46:59.200] was and sit down on the field. [01:46:59.200 --> 01:47:09.360] Well, I still have it as a virtual field so could Chicago prevent me from landing my virtual [01:47:09.360 --> 01:47:15.600] airplane on that virtual airport? [01:47:15.600 --> 01:47:19.200] I don't know. [01:47:19.200 --> 01:47:27.600] Certainly, what my gut reaction on this is the city wants forms, why not have everybody [01:47:27.600 --> 01:47:35.520] send in forms and what about an application that lets you take, say for example, emojis [01:47:35.520 --> 01:47:43.200] and allows you to virtually place an emoji and perhaps it's an emoji expressing, as they [01:47:43.200 --> 01:47:50.480] would call it, the flying fickle finger of fate from laughing and so you would have that [01:47:50.480 --> 01:47:53.840] appear in Milwaukee County parks. [01:47:53.840 --> 01:47:59.680] Well, if every person who decides to play and put their own monument, they have to submit [01:47:59.680 --> 01:48:07.720] their own paperwork and, you know, paperwork in Braille, paperwork in Russian, paperwork [01:48:07.720 --> 01:48:16.160] in Polish, you know, there's lots of paperwork opportunities there for the cost of a stamp. [01:48:16.160 --> 01:48:21.280] They'd have to spend time responding because, of course, they created a system that says [01:48:21.280 --> 01:48:22.280] they have to respond. [01:48:22.280 --> 01:48:29.800] Well, could they do it with email because email would be more appropriate because they're [01:48:29.800 --> 01:48:36.520] talking about a virtual world, they could send virtual mail. [01:48:36.520 --> 01:48:43.440] Well, and the form does say mailed so it could be you could take it as email and certainly [01:48:43.440 --> 01:48:50.760] the application could then email and email the emoji that was chosen by the user. [01:48:50.760 --> 01:48:56.960] Those people who want to have virtual protests then with virtual signs, I mean, there's lots [01:48:56.960 --> 01:49:02.160] of virtual opportunity for virtually anything here. [01:49:02.160 --> 01:49:09.240] They apparently are going to redo their ordinance but it's one of those little things that, [01:49:09.240 --> 01:49:13.800] you know, Milwaukee County and like the city of Milwaukee where they haven't really sought [01:49:13.800 --> 01:49:21.640] out their jurisprudence, an example of this, the city wants to tax all computer software. [01:49:21.640 --> 01:49:26.120] Well, what's the value of an open source piece of software? [01:49:26.120 --> 01:49:27.640] Is it the value that it doesn't? [01:49:27.640 --> 01:49:33.560] Well, how are they going to tax the software that doesn't cost anything? [01:49:33.560 --> 01:49:39.280] Well, that's it but here's the thing, it's a software and equivalent, it's like finding [01:49:39.280 --> 01:49:41.520] a gold bar on the street. [01:49:41.520 --> 01:49:45.840] Well, what's the value from a taxing standpoint of the gold bar? [01:49:45.840 --> 01:49:51.040] Well, it's what it's worth when you sell it or what its street value is when it's done. [01:49:51.040 --> 01:49:56.800] Well, if the software has a street value of zero, fine but is the software the street [01:49:56.800 --> 01:50:02.240] value of the thing that it is copying that is a commercial package? [01:50:02.240 --> 01:50:06.880] There's all these very interesting questions and the city of Milwaukee have been gutless [01:50:06.880 --> 01:50:09.640] cowards on, you know, actually answering those questions. [01:50:09.640 --> 01:50:15.800] So, I have a virtual issue here. [01:50:15.800 --> 01:50:29.440] How does the city accrue jurisdiction over something that doesn't actually exist? [01:50:29.440 --> 01:50:37.880] They have the power of the pen and writing the letter and making the threatening noise [01:50:37.880 --> 01:50:43.760] and hope that somebody goes ahead and says, yes sir, and steps to it. [01:50:43.760 --> 01:50:51.520] I virtually don't know, I guess that's why they go, we don't want to have set precedence. [01:50:51.520 --> 01:51:04.160] Well, I'd love to force them into it but certainly writing a bar grievance, not virtually and [01:51:04.160 --> 01:51:09.760] point out that this appears to violate the writing threatening letters that you have [01:51:09.760 --> 01:51:12.000] no intention of doing. [01:51:12.000 --> 01:51:16.320] I think that goes to overshadowing. [01:51:16.320 --> 01:51:17.320] Okay. [01:51:17.320 --> 01:51:23.120] I think that's the legal term for it is overshadowing. [01:51:23.120 --> 01:51:28.480] All right, I'll look into that. [01:51:28.480 --> 01:51:36.360] I know that's in the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. [01:51:36.360 --> 01:51:42.000] If you threaten to do something you don't have the power to do or don't intend to do, [01:51:42.000 --> 01:51:51.200] that's overshadowed and the lawyer who did that absolutely needs a bar grievance. [01:51:51.200 --> 01:51:53.840] Sure. [01:51:53.840 --> 01:52:02.400] It's about as far out there in left field and I understand why they don't want precedence [01:52:02.400 --> 01:52:07.280] because if they try to put that through the courts they're going to get smacked. [01:52:07.280 --> 01:52:12.560] I don't understand what their issue is, is it that someone will have to come to that [01:52:12.560 --> 01:52:20.840] virtual location so that the GPS can register them being at that location and the city doesn't [01:52:20.840 --> 01:52:24.760] want people coming to their parks, is that the idea? [01:52:24.760 --> 01:52:29.440] Oh no, they've had two different rationale. [01:52:29.440 --> 01:52:34.680] The first version of the rationale in the written letter said we have an ordinance and [01:52:34.680 --> 01:52:37.240] it needs to be followed. [01:52:37.240 --> 01:52:46.240] Now they've backtracked and said well the company needs to share the expense that's [01:52:46.240 --> 01:52:52.360] being incurred with people coming to the park, which that has had a bunch of people saying [01:52:52.360 --> 01:52:58.160] we'll pay taxes for that park, it's meant to be enjoyed if some people are enjoying [01:52:58.160 --> 01:53:05.120] it by looking at their screen and tapping a screen on their cell phone. [01:53:05.120 --> 01:53:12.040] It's better than enjoying it by burning it down like it happens in other parts of Milwaukee. [01:53:12.040 --> 01:53:26.200] People have been having entertainment outside the park, are they taxing the barbecues? [01:53:26.200 --> 01:53:34.280] It would seem that the City Council of Milwaukee would have some important issues to be addressing [01:53:34.280 --> 01:53:38.360] or are they creating a straw man issue to draw everybody's attention away from the [01:53:38.360 --> 01:53:41.880] problem, sir? [01:53:41.880 --> 01:53:49.680] What I guess happens is this park is overlooked by some expensive real estate and people who [01:53:49.680 --> 01:53:56.320] are politically connected are complaining about my park has more people and this offends [01:53:56.320 --> 01:53:57.600] me. [01:53:57.600 --> 01:54:04.120] One of the things that was offensive in the Milwaukee park earlier this year, an artist [01:54:04.120 --> 01:54:12.720] had letters all welded together and made it look like a person and apparently somebody [01:54:12.720 --> 01:54:20.280] looked at the jumble of letters and found racial slurs in the jumble of letters and [01:54:20.280 --> 01:54:28.360] then went so far as he found like three letters together that said sex, okay fine, we can't [01:54:28.360 --> 01:54:33.640] have that in our public parks, we can't have that, but some of the stuff he had to jump [01:54:33.640 --> 01:54:43.600] letters and work to make this thing hit and there was outrage, they removed it, they redid [01:54:43.600 --> 01:54:48.320] all the letters in the artwork and put it back. [01:54:48.320 --> 01:54:57.080] So some of this is just busy work apparently for bureaucrats. [01:54:57.080 --> 01:55:04.800] They've got to make their, they've got to become relevant. [01:55:04.800 --> 01:55:09.160] That and the social justice lawyer stepping up to the plate and going there's a social [01:55:09.160 --> 01:55:14.080] outrage here and social justice. [01:55:14.080 --> 01:55:20.080] If somebody bar grieves the lawyer every time they pull some garbage like that, that'll [01:55:20.080 --> 01:55:25.120] make that a whole lot harder to accomplish. [01:55:25.120 --> 01:55:34.560] And I like your idea of bar grieving this lawyer for, this sounds like baritory. [01:55:34.560 --> 01:55:43.760] Now you don't have baritory laws in Wisconsin, but you could use full faith and credit and [01:55:43.760 --> 01:55:51.760] address the baritory laws in Texas because this is, there's another term for what they're [01:55:51.760 --> 01:56:01.160] doing here, where a lawyer advises a client to take an action that will lead to litigation [01:56:01.160 --> 01:56:03.960] that the lawyer will then get to represent. [01:56:03.960 --> 01:56:08.800] In Texas, that's a felony. [01:56:08.800 --> 01:56:15.760] And in fact the lawyer is- Oh, I'm sorry, fomenting litigation. [01:56:15.760 --> 01:56:19.680] The lawyer is listed as interim corporate counsel. [01:56:19.680 --> 01:56:25.240] So it's quite possible that they are just under contract anyway so that they're getting [01:56:25.240 --> 01:56:28.640] paid for fomenting litigation. [01:56:28.640 --> 01:56:35.360] So I guess I will be adding to my public information request exactly how this particular lawyer [01:56:35.360 --> 01:56:36.960] is getting paid. [01:56:36.960 --> 01:56:44.000] And as a fun side note, she has the same last name of the gentleman who started me down [01:56:44.000 --> 01:56:49.480] this path and calling you back as far as 2011, 2012. [01:56:49.480 --> 01:56:53.280] No relation that I can tell, just the same last name. [01:56:53.280 --> 01:56:55.280] So that'll be fun. [01:56:55.280 --> 01:57:05.480] Well, that may be a very effective remedy for this kind of problem since we have too [01:57:05.480 --> 01:57:11.920] many lawyers that don't have enough to do and the lawyers are creating these problems. [01:57:11.920 --> 01:57:16.400] By bar grieving the lawyer, we make it expensive for them. [01:57:16.400 --> 01:57:17.400] Yeah. [01:57:17.400 --> 01:57:27.680] It may be look at suing the lawyer to recover the funds the city paid to the lawyer for [01:57:27.680 --> 01:57:40.360] fomenting this absolutely ridiculous legislation, which also goes to another thing we didn't [01:57:40.360 --> 01:57:42.320] get to. [01:57:42.320 --> 01:57:53.440] How does the company, how did the company enter into a business relationship with the [01:57:53.440 --> 01:58:02.680] municipality that would bring the company under the regulatory scheme? [01:58:02.680 --> 01:58:05.680] Unknown and this is the end of the show. [01:58:05.680 --> 01:58:07.680] Yes, it is. [01:58:07.680 --> 01:58:12.640] So let me, this is the end of this virtual show. [01:58:12.640 --> 01:58:18.720] So we are virtually out of time, but we'll be back tomorrow night with our four hour [01:58:18.720 --> 01:58:24.880] info marathon and we'll have a bit more time and I'll have a little more time to think [01:58:24.880 --> 01:58:35.480] over this, the virtual nature of taxi, something that doesn't exist. [01:58:35.480 --> 01:58:40.080] Randy Kelton, David Stevens, we'll be back tomorrow night. [01:58:40.080 --> 01:58:50.680] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:50.680 --> 01:58:56.760] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.760 --> 01:58:57.960] recovery version. [01:58:57.960 --> 01:59:02.920] The New Testament recovery version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.920 --> 01:59:08.600] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.600 --> 01:59:11.880] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.880 --> 01:59:20.860] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.860 --> 01:59:26.380] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references plus [01:59:26.380 --> 01:59:30.400] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.400 --> 01:59:32.960] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.960 --> 01:59:41.320] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.320 --> 01:59:48.320] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:48.320 --> 01:59:59.680] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.