[00:00.000 --> 00:05.520] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdowns. [00:05.520 --> 00:09.320] Markets for Wednesday, the 1st of February, 2017, are currently treading with gold at [00:09.320 --> 00:18.160] $1,204.39 an ounce, silver $17.49 an ounce, Texas crude $52.81 a barrel, and Bitcoin is [00:18.160 --> 00:23.000] currently sitting at about $977 U.S. currency. [00:23.000 --> 00:31.800] Today in history, the year 1992, the Chief Judicial Magistrate of Bhopal, India, declared [00:31.800 --> 00:36.320] Warren Anderson, ex-CEO of Union Carbide, a fugitive under Indian law for failing to [00:36.320 --> 00:38.840] appear in the Bhopal disaster case. [00:38.840 --> 00:42.600] The Bhopal gas tragedy is considered one of the world's worst industrial disasters, where [00:42.600 --> 00:47.200] over half a million people were exposed to methyl isocyanate and other chemicals nearly [00:47.200 --> 00:48.200] a decade before. [00:48.200 --> 00:57.000] Today in history, in recent news, the United Nations is facing challenges on how it will [00:57.000 --> 01:01.360] respond to U.S. President Trump's executive order, halting entry for at least 120 days [01:01.360 --> 01:05.160] for refugees and 90 days for visitors from a total of seven nations. [01:05.160 --> 01:09.440] The main issue, funding, since the U.S. is the biggest donating member state with 22 [01:09.440 --> 01:13.360] percent of the U.N.'s regular budget and over 28 percent of the cost of its global peacekeeping [01:13.360 --> 01:18.480] operations, not including the World Health Program, its children's agency, UNICEF, International [01:18.480 --> 01:23.840] Organization for Migration, IOM, and the World Health Organization, which also received substantial [01:23.840 --> 01:26.200] donations by U.S. taxpayers. [01:26.200 --> 01:30.880] The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, or UNHCR, has the stated goal of assisting the [01:30.880 --> 01:35.320] world's downtrodden and persecuted, so it's looking to other countries to take those affected [01:35.320 --> 01:36.720] by the temporary ban. [01:36.720 --> 01:42.520] The UNHCR received $1.5 billion last year alone from the United States, with the UNHCR [01:42.520 --> 01:47.640] estimating 65 million people as being displaced worldwide by conflict and persecution, the [01:47.640 --> 01:49.120] highest number since World War II. [01:49.120 --> 01:54.440] It is calculated that the U.S. could have resettled 20,000 people over the 100-day suspension, [01:54.440 --> 01:56.920] based on the average rate over the last 15 years. [01:56.920 --> 02:01.180] Michael Williams, a distinguished fellow at the Chatham House think tank in London and [02:01.180 --> 02:05.600] former U.N. Undersecretary General, stated that Trump was trying to get more donations [02:05.600 --> 02:08.240] and participation out of other countries. [02:08.240 --> 02:14.200] Quote, particularly with UNHCR, the U.S. has punched way above its weight, and he's [02:14.200 --> 02:15.920] trying to even it out. [02:15.920 --> 02:18.680] And in that regard, I am not without sympathy. [02:18.680 --> 02:23.320] The notion of getting other countries to play a greater role in global affairs is one Trump [02:23.320 --> 02:25.840] discussed several times on his presidential trail. [02:25.840 --> 02:31.040] And the International Organization for Migration, IOM, spokesman Leonard Doyle, encouraged other [02:31.040 --> 02:35.880] countries to show a, quote, a modicum of the same degree of openness that the U.S. has [02:35.880 --> 02:36.880] shown. [02:36.880 --> 02:39.560] From the Latin Americans, let's have it from the Asians. [02:39.560 --> 02:44.480] Let the Europeans show a bit more generosity, saying at a news conference on Tuesday, probably [02:44.480 --> 02:48.680] the most important thing is for other countries to step forward and say, we will take these [02:48.680 --> 02:51.320] people who have been approved and cleared. [02:51.320 --> 02:54.320] Why not? [02:54.320 --> 03:22.880] This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for February 1st, 2017. [03:25.320 --> 03:26.320] Yeah. [03:26.320 --> 03:29.320] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:29.320 --> 03:32.320] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.320 --> 03:35.320] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:35.320 --> 03:38.320] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.320 --> 03:43.320] When you were eight and you had bad treats, you'd go to school and learn the golden rules. [03:43.320 --> 03:46.320] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.320 --> 03:49.320] If you get high, you must get cool. [03:49.320 --> 03:52.320] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:52.320 --> 03:55.320] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:55.320 --> 03:58.320] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:58.320 --> 04:01.320] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:01.320 --> 04:04.320] You took it on that one, you took it on this one. [04:04.320 --> 04:07.240] You took it on your mother and you took it on your father. [04:07.240 --> 04:08.240] You took it on your brother and you took it on your sister. [04:08.240 --> 04:11.240] You took it on that one and you took it on me. [04:11.240 --> 04:33.240] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:33.240 --> 04:43.240] Nobody now give you no break. Police now give you no break. That old soldier man now give you no break. Now keep in your eyes you now give you no break. [05:04.240 --> 05:12.240] It would have been good if I had it already up. I'm sure Alex Jones is real happy about this. [05:12.240 --> 05:24.240] The House hasn't passed the Senate yet, but the House has ruled to get out of the UN completely. [05:24.240 --> 05:35.240] To stop all payments to the UN, even to the point of throwing the UN out of the United States and canceling the lease on the UN headquarters. [05:35.240 --> 05:39.240] I was astounded when I read that. [05:39.240 --> 05:55.240] Let's see, the United Nations was full of blah blah blah. That's the wrong word. I'm looking for the text of the resolution. But this is, a lot of the Patriot communities have been asking for this for a long time. [05:55.240 --> 06:09.240] And it looks like they've given them, at least the House is trying to give everyone what they ask for. Because the House has already ruled. [06:09.240 --> 06:26.240] Let's see, being enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, short title American Sovereignty Restoration Act. [06:26.240 --> 06:41.240] Repeal of United Nations Participation Act of 1945. The United Nations, the Participation Act of 1945 is repealed. [06:41.240 --> 06:59.240] Termination of membership in the United Nations. The President shall terminate all membership by the United States to the United Nations and in any organ, specialized agency, commission, or other formally affiliated body of the United Nations. [06:59.240 --> 07:12.240] Closer of United States mission to the United Nations. United States mission to the United Nations is closed and remaining functions of such offices shall not be carried out. [07:12.240 --> 07:30.240] The United Nations Headquarters Agreement Act. The United Nations Headquarters Agreement Act is repealed. The United States withdraws from the agreement between the United States of America and the United Nations regarding the headquarters of the United States. [07:30.240 --> 07:41.240] Signed at the Lake Success, New York on June 26, 1947, which was brought into effect by the United Nations Headquarters Agreement Act. [07:41.240 --> 07:48.240] United States assessed and voluntary contributions to the United States. [07:48.240 --> 08:00.240] No funds are authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made available for assessed or voluntary contributions of the United States to the United Nations [08:00.240 --> 08:21.240] or any organ, specialized agency, commission, or other formally affiliated body of the United Nations except that funds may be appropriated to facilitate termination of United States membership and withdrawal of United States personnel and equipment in accordance with sections two and three respectively. [08:21.240 --> 08:44.240] Upon termination of United States membership, no payments shall be made to the United Nations or to any organ, specialized agency, commission, or other formally affiliated body of the United Nations out of any funds appropriated prior to such termination or out of any other funds available for such purposes. [08:44.240 --> 09:06.240] And it goes on and on. I was amazed at what I read. We've heard, for so long, we've heard dire predictions based on the United Nations and the United Nations putting in internment camps and preparing to overthrow the United States. [09:06.240 --> 09:18.240] Well, I guess we'll see what happens, but all of those folks who wanted to get rid of the United Nations, it looks like they may actually get their wish. [09:18.240 --> 09:39.240] So I did want to address that. I don't know if anybody else has heard of it. I was certainly surprised when I did. I don't pay a lot of attention to news anyway, but this was quite remarkable. So Trump has been pretty busy lately. [09:39.240 --> 09:55.240] Okay, we already have a couple of callers on. We have Olivier. I'm going to go to Olivier in Tennessee. Hello, Olivier. What is up with you today? [09:55.240 --> 10:10.240] I spoke to you last time personally, but I had a situation where I got locked up this weekend or whatnot, but the grand jury was not this week. It's Monday and Tuesday, so I'm going to try that Monday and Tuesday. [10:10.240 --> 10:29.240] The interesting thing was I went to court today on the offense of them locking me up on Sunday, and when I got there, the public defender filed a motion to remove themselves as an attorney. [10:29.240 --> 10:41.240] When we got there, the judge called the case up, and he looked in. He was like, what's going on? Well, we had a conflict of interest. We'd like to remove Mr. Olivier's case. [10:41.240 --> 10:59.240] This is a general session. This is low court first time. He's looking over the paperwork, and the judge looks over at me. He kind of pleads in bed. He's like, Mr. Olivier, do you have any license? I'm like, yes, I do. It's not a Tennessee license. [10:59.240 --> 11:15.240] He said, can I see it? Because I'm going to dismiss this. I said, can you see it? I'm like, well, let me see it. I went and checked my pockets. I didn't have it on me. I'm like, well, I don't have it on me right now, sir, but I do have it. You've seen it before. [11:15.240 --> 11:39.240] I'm like, yes, well, okay. Bring it on the 7th, and we're going to get this taken care of. Now, my question is, does it matter how the case gets dismissed? Does it matter that I show my ID in this case and the judge tosses out in front of the cop? [11:39.240 --> 12:02.240] Yes, it matters he dismissed for cause. For cause. Yes. You showed that you had a valid license. Now when you come back, now that opens the door for you to sue the officer. [12:02.240 --> 12:09.240] Okay, so it doesn't matter what the judge dismissed the case for. As long as it's dismissed in my favor, I get to sue the officer. [12:09.240 --> 12:26.240] Well, it kind of, sometimes it can matter. As far as you're being able to sue, no, it doesn't matter. As long as the case is dismissed in your favor, as long as it's dismissed, then that opens the door for you to sue. [12:26.240 --> 12:42.240] Now, when you go to court, the reason it was dismissed matters greatly. If it was dismissed over a technical error on the part of the court, that's one thing. [12:42.240 --> 13:05.240] But if it was dismissed because you did in fact have a valid driver's license, that points right at the arresting officer. The arresting officer had to have made an effort to make that determination before he arrested you. [13:05.240 --> 13:23.240] This one stinks of retaliation. Right, because they stopped me at five o'clock. They arrested me at five o'clock, then released me for saying that my Tennessee driver. [13:23.240 --> 13:28.240] Wait a minute, I think I lost you there for a minute. [13:28.240 --> 13:42.240] Olivier, I think we've lost, yeah, we definitely lost Olivier. I'm sure he'll call back in. Olivier has been fighting with these guys for quite a while and he is beginning to get the upper hand. [13:42.240 --> 14:02.240] This was the officer who has arrested him a number of times on exactly the same issue and he keeps getting the cases thrown out and now he has some civil suits against him and it appears as though the officer is just acting in retaliation. [14:02.240 --> 14:14.240] He's back, okay. You're back Olivier. I'm still not hearing you. [14:14.240 --> 14:15.240] Can you hear me? [14:15.240 --> 14:17.240] Now I can hear you. There you go. [14:17.240 --> 14:36.240] Yeah, I was kind of surprised and kind of bewildered because, you know, I'm used to going at least six, seven, eight rounds, nine rounds with him. It was the first time I saw him. He was like, Mr. Olivier, can you just show it to me? Just show it to me. I know, show it to me. I'm going to dismiss it. He was like, what? [14:36.240 --> 14:47.240] The whole issue is the judge probably doesn't want to have any more suits against him or judicial conduct complaints against him. [14:47.240 --> 15:08.240] But the thing is like this judge, me and my group has not filed a complaint or anything against him. He's one of the more, you know, easy, nicer going judges and somehow through all the things that we've been filing, he has never been victim of one of them. [15:08.240 --> 15:15.240] So I don't know if he feels kind of special because everybody else knows that we have all these things on him and he's never received anything. [15:15.240 --> 15:21.240] Okay. You can be sure he knows everything that you've done. [15:21.240 --> 15:29.240] Okay. Yeah, these guys talk to each other all the time and he doesn't want to get into your sights. [15:29.240 --> 15:31.240] I got to, yeah. [15:31.240 --> 15:43.240] They are not accustomed to somebody coming right at them and especially not accustomed to somebody coming right at them with their own law. [15:43.240 --> 15:54.240] So this is something that they, they don't have a way around this. This marks their career, their credibility. [15:54.240 --> 16:05.240] It puts a mark on them that never goes away. So good chance this judge doesn't want you stinging him the way you've been stinging everybody else. [16:05.240 --> 16:17.240] All right. Now, here's another thing I'm thinking, right, a little method because I realized that this charge that they arrested me for is a 10-day sentence. [16:17.240 --> 16:23.240] 10 days, that's a meditation ceremony to me. I need that. [16:23.240 --> 16:43.240] So I'm thinking like, well, after this dismissal, after this dismissal, should I keep on, if this situation happen again, I should just stay in there for the 10 days and then be found not guilty and I'm going to have to pay bonds. [16:43.240 --> 16:48.240] Yeah, then it's false imprisonment. [16:48.240 --> 16:51.240] You ready? I'm playing music. [16:51.240 --> 17:00.240] Oh, okay. I can't, I couldn't hear it for some reason. Okay, hang on. About to go to break. Randy Kalten, David Stevens. We'll be right back. [17:00.240 --> 17:12.240] Dang, Cookie. Cookie? Me love cookies. Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. No, these are yucky cookies. Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [17:12.240 --> 17:20.240] No, can't eat? No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. Me have apples. Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:20.240 --> 17:34.240] Yummy apple. I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.240 --> 17:47.240] Now I go to logosradio network.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [17:47.240 --> 17:57.240] New cookies for me? Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.240 --> 18:00.240] B is for Cookie. B is for classified. [18:00.240 --> 18:09.240] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.240 --> 18:21.240] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too. You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [18:21.240 --> 18:29.240] What to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons. How to answer letters and phone calls. How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [18:29.240 --> 18:38.240] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.240 --> 18:49.240] Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.240 --> 19:00.240] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-m at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:00.240 --> 19:10.240] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosradioNetwork.com. [19:10.240 --> 19:37.240] Look what we've got. We are the Christians. We don't know what to hide. We don't have the answers. We are the Christians. [19:37.240 --> 20:04.240] Look what we've got. We are the Christians. We don't have the answers. We are the Christians. [20:04.240 --> 20:18.240] Look what we've got. We are the Christians. We don't know what to hide. We don't have the answers. We are the Christians. [20:18.240 --> 20:35.240] We are the Christians. We don't know what to hide. We don't know what to hide. We don't know what to hide. We don't know what to hide. [20:35.240 --> 20:51.240] That's a big issue. You should be able to get all of that overturned and your bond money returned. [20:51.240 --> 20:54.240] Okay, did you hear that? [20:54.240 --> 20:59.240] Yes, I heard it. [20:59.240 --> 21:10.240] I petitioned the court to return you the money that you had to pay the bondsman because you were improperly arrested. [21:10.240 --> 21:23.240] You were arrested when you already had a Virginia driver's license and you demonstrated that to the officers at the time, didn't you? [21:23.240 --> 21:30.240] Right. It makes sense, but can we talk about that all the time so I won't cut into everybody else's time? [21:30.240 --> 21:32.240] Wait, I couldn't understand that. [21:32.240 --> 21:40.240] It makes sense, but it sounds like I'm going to need to get some kind of specific instructions. Can we talk about that when we've got more time? [21:40.240 --> 21:43.240] Yes, you can call me off the air on that. [21:43.240 --> 22:01.240] Okay. All right, so I figure that since I figured out the 10 days, and with all the way the appeals court works, that means that I'll be out to answer any lawsuits or do anything that I have. [22:01.240 --> 22:12.240] So I just look at it like that's 10 days. I'm in there good because those 10 days are definitely going to equal out to a suit if I have to deal with that again. [22:12.240 --> 22:20.240] But do you think I should still subject to be falsely imprisoned after they dismiss the case in front of him? [22:20.240 --> 22:29.240] Oh, yeah. The dismissal supports the false imprisonment accusation. [22:29.240 --> 22:47.240] No, no, no. I understand that, but I'm saying the cop has never dismissed the case in front of him or the way he acts is like all the other cases I've been found guilty of. That's the way he used to walk around. [22:47.240 --> 22:55.240] Oh, okay. Well, he probably won't walk around that way this time if he sues him personally. [22:55.240 --> 23:00.240] I already have a lawsuit filed against him. [23:00.240 --> 23:08.240] But the court's blocked him from receiving it. [23:08.240 --> 23:13.240] Yeah, but you still have that on appeal. Those aren't over yet, are they? [23:13.240 --> 23:21.240] Yes, they're still on appeal, but he hasn't physically received the information to be notified that, hey, this is true. [23:21.240 --> 23:28.240] You should petition the Court of Appeals for a restraining order. Have you done that on this officer? [23:28.240 --> 23:40.240] They said that you can't do that. You have to do that, and they're only a reviewing court. They're only reviewing courts. I went to petition, and they said I can't petition. [23:40.240 --> 23:48.240] That is absolutely not true. [23:48.240 --> 23:59.240] They're feeding you a line of crapola. They can absolutely, while this is on appeal, they can absolutely issue a restraining order. [23:59.240 --> 24:05.240] That's not what I got from them in the mail. [24:05.240 --> 24:09.240] You need to check the case law. You need to check the statute and the case law. [24:09.240 --> 24:18.240] Somebody could issue a restraining order. If it's not that, then you go back to the trial court and move the trial court to issue a restraining order. [24:18.240 --> 24:28.240] I understand, but I'm figuring if it's only 10 days, and we're talking about $1,600 a minute, there's a lot of people that I want to give money out to. [24:28.240 --> 24:32.240] So you don't mind them throwing you in jail for two days? [24:32.240 --> 24:42.240] Not after I figure out it's only a 10-day maximum sentence, or I think it's 30 days maximum, but they usually kill it because they have to get me in trial within 10 days. [24:42.240 --> 24:59.240] I was arrested on Sunday, and they got me prepared for trial on the 7th of February, because you're saying that's to get me out of jail on that charge. So it's only a 10-day sentence. [24:59.240 --> 25:07.240] No, no, no, no. That doesn't mean it's a 10-day sentence. They just have to get you to trial in 10 days. [25:07.240 --> 25:13.240] Right, right. But the courts, they usually squash it with the 10 days. [25:13.240 --> 25:16.240] They only give you time served. [25:16.240 --> 25:23.240] Right, right. I'm talking about jail terms now. I'm talking jail lingo. I learned that in there. They told me, like, why are you here now? [25:23.240 --> 25:29.240] Like, I didn't buy nothing. My mother paid it for me. I didn't know. It's only 10 days, a maximum of 30. I'm like, for real? [25:29.240 --> 25:33.240] Like, yeah, they can't give you more than that. It's a misdemeanor. [25:33.240 --> 25:47.240] Yeah, and if it's improper, then all your time in there is false imprisonment. And these judges throwing those out, once you've been through the court of appeals, [25:47.240 --> 25:55.240] there's a very, very good chance you'll get those overturned, those dismissals overturned. [25:55.240 --> 25:57.240] Right. [25:57.240 --> 26:05.240] They think you're just an ignorant pro se, and they can toss your case, and you'll just go away and forget about them. [26:05.240 --> 26:12.240] But they don't, they didn't think that I would do that extra leg to go through the appeal court. [26:12.240 --> 26:14.240] Wait, say that again? [26:14.240 --> 26:18.240] They didn't figure out how you want to go through the extra leg and go to the appeal court. [26:18.240 --> 26:32.240] Exactly. They figure you, 99% of the people will just cave in, and they just want away from this. It's so hard for them and so frightening. [26:32.240 --> 26:39.240] They just want to get away from it. So they get to do whatever they want to to people, and nobody raises an objection. [26:39.240 --> 26:44.240] So that's why I spend all my time looking for people like you who will fight these guys. [26:44.240 --> 26:46.240] Yeah. [26:46.240 --> 26:49.240] And then teach all your neighbors how to fight these guys. [26:49.240 --> 26:50.240] Yeah. [26:50.240 --> 26:58.240] Because once you get your neighbors fighting these guys, then you're not the big problem anymore because they got a lot of big problems. [26:58.240 --> 27:00.240] Right. [27:00.240 --> 27:04.240] Okay, so do you have anything else for us today? [27:04.240 --> 27:13.240] I just want to mention one more thing. It was kind of funny when the attorney was sitting there trying to get me off the representing my case, right? [27:13.240 --> 27:18.240] And then the attorney was like, the judge was like, okay, okay, okay, okay. [27:18.240 --> 27:21.240] Mr. Libby, can I do something? I'm going to dismiss this. [27:21.240 --> 27:24.240] And the attorney was just standing there like, what? [27:24.240 --> 27:29.240] He was just standing there because I done beat him up so much going through the second court. [27:29.240 --> 27:34.240] And like, you know, this is the first day, and the judge was like, I'm just going to throw this away. [27:34.240 --> 27:39.240] And the attorney just standing there paralyzed like, what the hell is going on? [27:39.240 --> 27:43.240] You've bargrieved some of these lawyers, haven't you? [27:43.240 --> 27:45.240] Yeah. [27:45.240 --> 27:48.240] That's what he's afraid of. [27:48.240 --> 27:55.240] If he's a new attorney, if this is his first year and you bargrieve him, his malpractice insurance is history. [27:55.240 --> 28:03.240] No, this is the public defender who's trying to get me off the case and that's of interest because, right. [28:03.240 --> 28:13.240] You bargrieve him, and this is his first year as a lawyer, he'll lose his malpractice insurance immediately. [28:13.240 --> 28:18.240] Right. No, no, I understand all that, but it was just kind of how funny, like how he froze up. [28:18.240 --> 28:22.240] Yeah, that's probably why he froze up. He's terrified. [28:22.240 --> 28:25.240] No, the judge just announced that he's going to toss it out. [28:25.240 --> 28:29.240] Like, I'm going to dismiss this. Can I please see your cards so I can dismiss this? [28:29.240 --> 28:31.240] I'm looking at the judge like, what? [28:31.240 --> 28:34.240] The attorney standing there like frozen like, what? [28:34.240 --> 28:37.240] Mr. Olivier, we should have done this a long time ago. [28:37.240 --> 28:41.240] He didn't beat us up on six, seven different cases. [28:41.240 --> 28:43.240] And you're just going to let him go? [28:43.240 --> 28:45.240] Like, yeah, that's what we're going to do. [28:45.240 --> 28:51.240] And then he appointed me another counsel because he couldn't dismiss it today because he couldn't see the ID. [28:51.240 --> 28:54.240] He appointed me another counsel, a private attorney. [28:54.240 --> 28:59.240] And the private attorney, because we turned it back and we started talking, going over the cases. [28:59.240 --> 29:05.240] And then within 35 minutes, the private attorney admitted that I knew more than he did. [29:05.240 --> 29:13.240] He admitted that I practice law, I know more than he does, and he has a bar license. [29:13.240 --> 29:20.240] He sat there and sat back in his seat, and he said, we're going to have to change this, aren't we? [29:20.240 --> 29:21.240] I said, yeah. [29:21.240 --> 29:22.240] He said, but it's going to be hard. [29:22.240 --> 29:26.240] I said, I'm already fighting it. [29:26.240 --> 29:27.240] He even said it. [29:27.240 --> 29:30.240] He was like, man, I don't need my license. [29:30.240 --> 29:31.240] He admitted it. [29:31.240 --> 29:33.240] He just sat back in his seat. [29:33.240 --> 29:36.240] What is going on? [29:36.240 --> 29:37.240] I just wanted to tell you that. [29:37.240 --> 29:44.240] So you do a good job, and I'm out there spreading the word. [29:44.240 --> 29:49.240] All right, your music is coming on. [29:49.240 --> 30:04.240] Hello? [30:04.240 --> 30:05.240] What's your privacy worth? [30:05.240 --> 30:09.240] Well, it's hard to put a dollar figure on it, but some entrepreneurs want to help people earn money [30:09.240 --> 30:12.240] when marketers pluck their personal data off the web. [30:12.240 --> 30:14.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [30:14.240 --> 30:16.240] Back with details in a moment. [30:16.240 --> 30:18.240] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.240 --> 30:21.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.240 --> 30:26.240] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.240 --> 30:28.240] So protect your rights. [30:28.240 --> 30:32.240] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.240 --> 30:34.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.240 --> 30:41.240] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.240 --> 30:45.240] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.240 --> 30:50.240] In these times of vanishing privacy, marketers are monitoring our behavior on the Internet, [30:50.240 --> 30:54.240] aggregating our clicks, taps, and swipes to make fortunes. [30:54.240 --> 30:57.240] But what if you got paid every time your data was sold? [30:57.240 --> 31:01.240] A startup called Personal thinks it's not only possible, but profitable. [31:01.240 --> 31:02.240] How? [31:02.240 --> 31:07.240] By creating a web marketplace where people could sell access to their personal information. [31:07.240 --> 31:11.240] Users would upload intimate details of their lives to an online vault [31:11.240 --> 31:15.240] and then charge companies to access the data to market to them directly. [31:15.240 --> 31:18.240] Now, I'm all for making privacy vultures pay, [31:18.240 --> 31:22.240] but fighting for privacy by removing it feels like the wrong approach. [31:22.240 --> 31:31.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.240 --> 31:34.240] Did you know there are 3 million edible food plants on Earth [31:34.240 --> 31:37.240] and none have the nutritional value of the hemp plant? [31:37.240 --> 31:40.240] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder. [31:40.240 --> 31:42.240] It does not contain chemicals or THC. [31:42.240 --> 31:45.240] It's non-GMO and is 100% gluten-free. [31:45.240 --> 31:49.240] Hemp protein powder burns fat, builds muscle, contains 53% protein, [31:49.240 --> 31:52.240] and feeds the body the nutrients it needs. [31:52.240 --> 31:58.240] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [31:58.240 --> 32:01.240] Only at HempUSA.org. [32:01.240 --> 32:05.240] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Center. [32:05.240 --> 32:08.240] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:08.240 --> 32:10.240] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.240 --> 32:13.240] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.240 --> 32:16.240] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:16.240 --> 32:18.240] the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:18.240 --> 32:20.240] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.240 --> 32:24.240] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce [32:24.240 --> 32:26.240] and preserve our rights through due process. [32:26.240 --> 32:29.240] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:29.240 --> 32:32.240] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:32.240 --> 32:34.240] that will help you understand what due process is [32:34.240 --> 32:36.240] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.240 --> 32:38.240] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [32:38.240 --> 32:41.240] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.240 --> 32:43.240] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:43.240 --> 32:46.240] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:46.240 --> 32:48.240] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:48.240 --> 32:51.240] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.240 --> 32:55.240] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.240 --> 33:12.240] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:12.240 --> 33:37.240] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, [33:37.240 --> 33:40.240] and I'm having a little technical difficulty here, [33:40.240 --> 33:43.240] so bear with me if I drop off again. [33:43.240 --> 33:47.240] Olivier, if you stop hearing me, let me know and I'll, [33:47.240 --> 33:50.240] I think I may have a bad mic cable. [33:50.240 --> 33:52.240] Okay, where were we? [33:52.240 --> 33:57.240] I was trying to finish it up by telling you that I sat down with the attorney [33:57.240 --> 34:00.240] that they provided me afterwards, which is a paid attorney, [34:00.240 --> 34:03.240] and explained everything to him, [34:03.240 --> 34:06.240] and he explained to me that I was doing the rules of parts, [34:06.240 --> 34:08.240] and I told him, yes, sir, [34:08.240 --> 34:10.240] and then once he understood everything, [34:10.240 --> 34:15.240] he had to sit back and realize that I knew more law than he did. [34:15.240 --> 34:18.240] He admitted that to me. [34:18.240 --> 34:23.240] Well, be careful, he will be dangerous, [34:23.240 --> 34:31.240] because he knows it's his job to make sure you don't have grounds for appeal. [34:31.240 --> 34:35.240] So he's going to try to find a way to throw you under the bus, [34:35.240 --> 34:39.240] and he's going to be afraid to adjudicate your issues, [34:39.240 --> 34:42.240] because he doesn't want the court upset at it. [34:42.240 --> 34:48.240] So in order to make it so that he can adjudicate your issues, [34:48.240 --> 34:52.240] you have to give him plausible deniability. [34:52.240 --> 34:56.240] No, he wants to file all my issues. [34:56.240 --> 34:59.240] He seems to ask me to bring the paperwork to him, [34:59.240 --> 35:02.240] because he was not taught that in school. [35:02.240 --> 35:05.240] I convinced him in the chair. [35:05.240 --> 35:08.240] I convinced him at the table. [35:08.240 --> 35:11.240] He's like, go ahead, go bring all these notes in. [35:11.240 --> 35:13.240] He said, I believe you, but bring the notes in, [35:13.240 --> 35:17.240] because I've only taught on this stage. [35:17.240 --> 35:20.240] You went through all the stages, [35:20.240 --> 35:24.240] and you communicated all this information together. [35:24.240 --> 35:28.240] Bring it to me, because all of this information is relevant, [35:28.240 --> 35:31.240] because he said that he would argue my motions if they're irrelevant, [35:31.240 --> 35:38.240] but when I sat there and proved that the codes and the laws were misconstrued, [35:38.240 --> 35:41.240] then he realized that everything that I must have must be relevant. [35:41.240 --> 35:44.240] So he said, bring all that information. [35:44.240 --> 35:46.240] We'll get together, we're going to file it, [35:46.240 --> 35:50.240] because what you're doing, you're going to change the law. [35:50.240 --> 35:51.240] So he's with it. [35:51.240 --> 35:54.240] He already sees that no judge will rule against us, [35:54.240 --> 35:57.240] but what you're doing is you're forcing their hand. [35:57.240 --> 36:00.240] I said, yes, I'm forcing their hand. [36:00.240 --> 36:02.240] If you have a problem with that, let me know, [36:02.240 --> 36:04.240] and I'll get you removed off the case. [36:04.240 --> 36:06.240] He said, no, I do not have a problem with that. [36:06.240 --> 36:07.240] I will follow your orders, [36:07.240 --> 36:10.240] because you are showing me another side of the law I do not loathe. [36:10.240 --> 36:15.240] He said, I have to admit, Mr. Olivier, I do not know all the laws. [36:15.240 --> 36:20.240] I just know the procedures that I was taught to keep people out of jail and prison. [36:20.240 --> 36:24.240] He said, but you have went another step further. [36:24.240 --> 36:25.240] Wonderful. [36:25.240 --> 36:30.240] If you really do have a real lawyer, that is wonderful. [36:30.240 --> 36:34.240] And if that's the case, I might want to get him on the air. [36:34.240 --> 36:35.240] He's younger. [36:35.240 --> 36:36.240] He's younger. [36:36.240 --> 36:41.240] He's not in that generation where they're stuck in the cult. [36:41.240 --> 36:42.240] He's a young one. [36:42.240 --> 36:43.240] Wait a minute. [36:43.240 --> 36:45.240] He felt perturbed. [36:45.240 --> 36:52.240] He felt disturbed after he realized that what the law is is not what he was taught. [36:52.240 --> 36:54.240] He was looking at me like, [36:54.240 --> 36:56.240] they've been lying this whole time. [36:56.240 --> 36:57.240] I said, yes. [36:57.240 --> 36:58.240] I said, you have a lawyer? [36:58.240 --> 36:59.240] He said, yes. [36:59.240 --> 37:00.240] I said, well, you don't need it. [37:00.240 --> 37:03.240] He said, now I know. [37:03.240 --> 37:07.240] Well, just watch him close, [37:07.240 --> 37:13.240] because when he starts adjudicating issues the court's not happy with, [37:13.240 --> 37:16.240] they're going to put a lot of pressure on him. [37:16.240 --> 37:19.240] I don't think so, because I've been beating them up already. [37:19.240 --> 37:20.240] They already know. [37:20.240 --> 37:26.240] I filed all the motions, all my arguments have already been filed in all the cases. [37:26.240 --> 37:28.240] I'm just saying watch your lawyer. [37:28.240 --> 37:32.240] He's the most dangerous man in the courtroom. [37:32.240 --> 37:34.240] I understand. [37:34.240 --> 37:36.240] They'll try to put pressure on your lawyer, [37:36.240 --> 37:43.240] and the best thing you can do is make the court think that you're willing to crucify your lawyer [37:43.240 --> 37:46.240] if he don't do what you tell him to. [37:46.240 --> 37:52.240] He can go to the court and say, look, you guys gave me this client, [37:52.240 --> 37:54.240] and he's going to kick my behind. [37:54.240 --> 37:57.240] You've got to help me out. [37:57.240 --> 37:59.240] I don't think we're going to have that issue, [37:59.240 --> 38:05.240] because the judge was trying to dismiss the case before he even gave it to the attorney. [38:05.240 --> 38:09.240] You're going to talk to this guy about a malpractice suit. [38:09.240 --> 38:15.240] I'm sorry, not a malpractice suit, false imprisonment and malicious retaliation. [38:15.240 --> 38:18.240] Retaliation against the officer. [38:18.240 --> 38:20.240] Right. [38:20.240 --> 38:23.240] You might talk to him and see if he wants to take the suit on. [38:23.240 --> 38:27.240] He's got a client who'll do all his research for him. [38:27.240 --> 38:29.240] But he's not informed. [38:29.240 --> 38:32.240] He's thinking about it, but he's not informed. [38:32.240 --> 38:36.240] He said his practice has three people in it, and they're all in business. [38:36.240 --> 38:37.240] We're telling this. [38:37.240 --> 38:39.240] I'll do the research. [38:39.240 --> 38:50.240] Let him know that you understand the thing that a lawyer is most afraid of is missing something. [38:50.240 --> 38:55.240] Lawyer, you can go in there as a pro se, and you can screw up all you want to. [38:55.240 --> 38:57.240] They'll throw your pleadings out. [38:57.240 --> 39:00.240] They'll chastise you and wag their finger at you. [39:00.240 --> 39:05.240] But if a lawyer files an action with bad case law, [39:05.240 --> 39:12.240] they file an issue where they miss case law, say you have case law here that looks good, [39:12.240 --> 39:19.240] but you haven't shepardized it, and it may have been distinguished or overturned since... [39:19.240 --> 39:20.240] Oh, okay. [39:20.240 --> 39:27.240] And if he uses that case and the other side comes in and says, oh, well, this case has been distinguished, [39:27.240 --> 39:32.240] they're likely to sanction this lawyer because he's learning counsel. [39:32.240 --> 39:35.240] He can't make these mistakes. [39:35.240 --> 39:40.240] So you have to convince him you're not going to miss anything. [39:40.240 --> 39:41.240] Gotcha, gotcha. [39:41.240 --> 39:44.240] But I'm saying, is that the same thing as far as like the DA? [39:44.240 --> 39:52.240] The DA provided case law in a jury trial, which did not fit the law. [39:52.240 --> 39:57.240] Dad should get a bar grievance every time in a motion for sanctions. [39:57.240 --> 39:58.240] Absolutely. [39:58.240 --> 40:00.240] He is learning counsel. [40:00.240 --> 40:09.240] It may not be presumed that if he files a motion with bad case law in it, [40:09.240 --> 40:19.240] it may not be presumed that he doesn't know full well that case law is bad because he's learning counsel. [40:19.240 --> 40:25.240] You, as pro se, you can make that mistake, but he cannot. [40:25.240 --> 40:30.240] So if he gives you bad case law, sting him every time. [40:30.240 --> 40:33.240] Would that fall under the Brady violation also? [40:33.240 --> 40:35.240] Because they're using... [40:35.240 --> 40:37.240] No, no, no, not necessarily. [40:37.240 --> 40:43.240] Brady is only a failure to disclose. [40:43.240 --> 40:46.240] That falls under malicious prosecution. [40:46.240 --> 40:50.240] Go to bargrievance.website. [40:50.240 --> 40:53.240] But I mean, they're withholding something from you. [40:53.240 --> 40:58.240] So just like they withhold providing the jury with affirmative defense. [40:58.240 --> 40:59.240] Exactly. [40:59.240 --> 41:01.240] That goes to, you know, that's Brady. [41:01.240 --> 41:02.240] Gotcha. [41:02.240 --> 41:03.240] Okay. [41:03.240 --> 41:06.240] Go to bargrievance.website. [41:06.240 --> 41:11.240] And down at the bottom of the first page, there's a link to a questionnaire. [41:11.240 --> 41:15.240] I have the American Bar Association Model Standards. [41:15.240 --> 41:24.240] And I have the American Bar Association Standards for the prosecutorial function. [41:24.240 --> 41:26.240] Look at that one. [41:26.240 --> 41:28.240] Strictly for prosecutors. [41:28.240 --> 41:34.240] I was in court and called my lawyer as a witness. [41:34.240 --> 41:37.240] I'm sorry, called the prosecutor as a witness. [41:37.240 --> 41:41.240] The judge said, Mr. Counselor, do you have any more witnesses? [41:41.240 --> 41:45.240] Yes, Your Honor, I call Stephen Hale. That's the prosecutor. [41:45.240 --> 41:47.240] The prosecutor jumped up. [41:47.240 --> 41:49.240] Your Honor, he can't do that. [41:49.240 --> 41:57.240] The judge looked over at him and smiled and said, well, yes, Mr. Hale, as a matter of fact, he can. [41:57.240 --> 42:03.240] Got the prosecutor on the stand and I said, Mr. Hale, do you consider yourself an ethical attorney? [42:03.240 --> 42:05.240] Yes, Mr. Carlton, I do. [42:05.240 --> 42:09.240] Mr. Hale, were you aware that there were other witnesses to this incident? [42:09.240 --> 42:11.240] Yes, Mr. Carlton, I was. [42:11.240 --> 42:13.240] Did you talk to any of those witnesses? [42:13.240 --> 42:15.240] No, Mr. Carlton, I did not. [42:15.240 --> 42:17.240] Well, why didn't you? [42:17.240 --> 42:20.240] Well, Mr. Carlton, I didn't believe you. [42:20.240 --> 42:22.240] Oh, you didn't believe me, huh? [42:22.240 --> 42:27.240] Well, are you familiar with the American Bar Association Standards for the prosecutorial function? [42:27.240 --> 42:29.240] Yes, Mr. Carlton, I am. [42:29.240 --> 42:32.240] Are you familiar with Standard 3-3.11? [42:32.240 --> 42:36.240] No, Mr. Carlton, I'm not familiar with every single paragraph. [42:36.240 --> 42:39.240] Well, let me familiarize you with it then. [42:39.240 --> 42:45.240] It is unethical conduct for a prosecutor to refrain from pursuing evidence [42:45.240 --> 42:51.240] solely because the evidence may show the innocence of the accused or mitigate the guilt of the accused. [42:51.240 --> 42:57.240] Now, do you still consider yourself an ethical attorney? [42:57.240 --> 43:05.240] I was thinking then if I get convicted and go to jail, this was worth it. [43:05.240 --> 43:07.240] That was fun. [43:07.240 --> 43:16.240] Okay, look through American Bar Association Standards for the prosecutorial function. [43:16.240 --> 43:21.240] Most prosecutors have never read it. [43:21.240 --> 43:25.240] Is that at the bargrievance.website or look on the bargrievance.website? [43:25.240 --> 43:28.240] Yeah, the bargrievance.website. [43:28.240 --> 43:38.240] You'll be able to go in there and sting that lawyer on specific statutes or specific standards [43:38.240 --> 43:41.240] in the American Bar Association Standards for prosecutorial function. [43:41.240 --> 43:46.240] When you bring that up in court, he's going to swallow his gum that he's never seen. [43:46.240 --> 43:49.240] Randy Carlson, Deborah Stevens, The Real Law Radio. [43:49.240 --> 43:53.240] I call it number 512-646-1984. [43:53.240 --> 43:57.240] We've got our fundraiser going, so go check out the Logos Radio Network. [43:57.240 --> 44:02.240] We'll be right back. [44:02.240 --> 44:06.240] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, [44:06.240 --> 44:11.240] and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street Sweet D [44:11.240 --> 44:14.240] here in Austin, Texas behind Brave New Books and Chase Paints [44:14.240 --> 44:18.240] to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.240 --> 44:22.240] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.240 --> 44:27.240] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian Eme oil, [44:27.240 --> 44:30.240] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.240 --> 44:37.240] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.240 --> 44:43.240] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.240 --> 44:47.240] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.240 --> 45:01.240] Visit naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.240 --> 45:04.240] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.240 --> 45:07.240] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:07.240 --> 45:15.240] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.240 --> 45:19.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.240 --> 45:23.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.240 --> 45:28.240] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.240 --> 45:34.240] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.240 --> 45:39.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.240 --> 45:43.240] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.240 --> 45:49.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.240 --> 45:52.240] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.240 --> 46:02.240] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:02.240 --> 46:14.240] Music [46:14.240 --> 46:20.240] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? [46:20.240 --> 46:26.240] If you could not wage any bouts of love, would your purpose must be done? [46:26.240 --> 46:32.240] Would you step in at the soldier or warrior or club scuffle and achieve defeat? [46:32.240 --> 46:35.240] All is taken into misunderstanding. [46:35.240 --> 46:37.240] Somebody calls the police. [46:37.240 --> 47:00.240] Music [47:00.240 --> 47:02.240] Okay, we are back. [47:02.240 --> 47:08.240] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we have our fundraiser going, [47:08.240 --> 47:13.240] and this year we're giving away, in the gun giveaway, [47:13.240 --> 47:20.240] we're giving away a Spikes Tactical AR-15 Rifle Complete. [47:20.240 --> 47:30.240] So if you, for every $25 you donate to the network, you'll get one chance in the drawing for the AR-15. [47:30.240 --> 47:33.240] And we also have my e-book. [47:33.240 --> 47:35.240] I finally got it out. [47:35.240 --> 47:37.240] It's on the website. [47:37.240 --> 47:39.240] We're offering it for $100. [47:39.240 --> 47:46.240] And if you purchase the e-book, you get four chances for the AR-15. [47:46.240 --> 47:49.240] And also, Eddie's traffic seminar. [47:49.240 --> 47:59.240] Right now, Deborah's been, she spent the last two or three weeks working on trying to update the station and keep it going. [47:59.240 --> 48:02.240] We're only trying to raise $10,000. [48:02.240 --> 48:12.240] And in the overall scheme of things, that's barely enough just for parts we need to keep the equipment going. [48:12.240 --> 48:23.240] Actually, most of the hosts on the network contribute to the network themselves to keep it going. [48:23.240 --> 48:27.240] And some of us have contributed quite a bit to keep it going. [48:27.240 --> 48:30.240] Because it's valuable to us. [48:30.240 --> 48:33.240] I know that people call in and say it's valuable to them. [48:33.240 --> 48:35.240] Well, frankly, it's valuable to us as well. [48:35.240 --> 48:38.240] And we really want to keep it going. [48:38.240 --> 48:43.240] We're not asking for a lot from people, just enough so we can keep this thing going. [48:43.240 --> 48:55.240] So if you find value from what we offer, go to the website and don't tell Deborah, but look up Randy's Beer Fund. [48:55.240 --> 48:57.240] Okay. [48:57.240 --> 49:02.240] Anything you put in a beer fund goes to the station because Randy don't drink much beer. [49:02.240 --> 49:04.240] But anyway, we need all the help we can get. [49:04.240 --> 49:09.240] And we'd like to get this fundraiser over as quickly as possible. [49:09.240 --> 49:10.240] So help us out there. [49:10.240 --> 49:15.240] We're going to go back now to Olivier in Tennessee. [49:15.240 --> 49:20.240] Okay, Olivier, I'm just saying be careful of that lawyer. [49:20.240 --> 49:21.240] Right. [49:21.240 --> 49:27.240] Always when you first get a lawyer, they're all gung-ho and oh yeah, we could do this, we could do that. [49:27.240 --> 49:31.240] But as you get down the road, their attitude tends to change. [49:31.240 --> 49:44.240] And as he starts grating on the nerves of these judges and starts putting them in a position to where he's trying to force rulings that will prove that you're right and give you grounds to sue them, [49:44.240 --> 49:48.240] they're going to start putting political pressure on your attorney. [49:48.240 --> 49:53.240] So you owe it to your attorney to give him plausible deniability. [49:53.240 --> 49:59.240] And the way you do that is to be a very difficult client. [49:59.240 --> 50:00.240] Right. [50:00.240 --> 50:03.240] You're not reasonable and you're not understanding. [50:03.240 --> 50:06.240] And Judge, you've got to help me out with this guy. [50:06.240 --> 50:09.240] He's going to ruin my career. [50:09.240 --> 50:17.240] So give me a ruling that he'll be happy with and all of us can go home and I'll pay you back with the next client. [50:17.240 --> 50:19.240] That's kind of how it works in the real world. [50:19.240 --> 50:20.240] Okay, go ahead. [50:20.240 --> 50:27.240] Yeah, I understand what you're saying, but this arrest, they got a warrant to go arrest me. [50:27.240 --> 50:33.240] So if they had anything, he wouldn't be trying to dismiss it without an attorney being there. [50:33.240 --> 50:37.240] The attorney was not appointed to me. [50:37.240 --> 50:41.240] He was trying to dismiss it right then and there, like get out of here, Mr. Olivier, you're a troublemaker. [50:41.240 --> 50:42.240] Go home. [50:42.240 --> 50:46.240] Well, you told him you had a valid driver's license. [50:46.240 --> 50:47.240] Right. [50:47.240 --> 50:52.240] I had a valid driver's license when they pulled me over and arrested me. [50:52.240 --> 50:57.240] So the judge, he already knows that you've been hammering him. [50:57.240 --> 51:02.240] He can see the light at the end of the tunnel and he knows it's a train coming at him. [51:02.240 --> 51:03.240] Right. [51:03.240 --> 51:07.240] He's trying to switch the tracks to get you in another direction. [51:07.240 --> 51:11.240] So your lawyer may not have a difficult time. [51:11.240 --> 51:12.240] Right. [51:12.240 --> 51:20.240] But there's a good chance that he's talked to the prosecutor and the judges and they've told him what a stinker you are. [51:20.240 --> 51:24.240] So he already knows that they don't want, you know, they're concerned about you. [51:24.240 --> 51:28.240] So that'll help give him possible deniability. [51:28.240 --> 51:29.240] Right. [51:29.240 --> 51:31.240] They already want my case is gone. [51:31.240 --> 51:33.240] The thing is, I've just been beating them up in second court. [51:33.240 --> 51:36.240] I haven't given them a chance to dismiss it. [51:36.240 --> 51:42.240] I'm just saying watch your lawyer close because they are, he is the most dangerous guy in the courtroom. [51:42.240 --> 51:43.240] Okay. [51:43.240 --> 51:45.240] Do you have anything else for us? [51:45.240 --> 51:46.240] No. [51:46.240 --> 51:50.240] But the judges are used to me bounding it over and he's trying to catch me before I do that late. [51:50.240 --> 51:52.240] Can I dismiss it now? [51:52.240 --> 51:53.240] Don't do this. [51:53.240 --> 51:54.240] You're making us spend money. [51:54.240 --> 51:55.240] Let me just kick it out right now. [51:55.240 --> 52:02.240] Because if your script is bounded over, jury trial, slamming with a lot of motions, then they're going to release you anyway. [52:02.240 --> 52:04.240] So can I do it right now? [52:04.240 --> 52:06.240] That's what it sounds like to me. [52:06.240 --> 52:08.240] He was begging to release me right now. [52:08.240 --> 52:10.240] No attorney, no nothing. [52:10.240 --> 52:11.240] Do go home. [52:11.240 --> 52:13.240] I don't have it on me, Your Honor. [52:13.240 --> 52:14.240] Okay. [52:14.240 --> 52:15.240] Come back. [52:15.240 --> 52:16.240] Come back on the 7th. [52:16.240 --> 52:17.240] Let me see it. [52:17.240 --> 52:18.240] I'm going to let you go home. [52:18.240 --> 52:20.240] All this is gone. [52:20.240 --> 52:22.240] Sounds like he don't want to have a fight with you. [52:22.240 --> 52:25.240] Sounds like my tickets. [52:25.240 --> 52:30.240] I didn't show up for the pre-trial hearing on the last ticket. [52:30.240 --> 52:34.240] And that dirty rotten prosecutor dismissed my case. [52:34.240 --> 52:39.240] Because the chief of police told him to. [52:39.240 --> 52:45.240] And the one before that, the judge asked the prosecutor, is the prosecution ready? [52:45.240 --> 52:49.240] The prosecutor said, no, Your Honor, the prosecution is not ready. [52:49.240 --> 52:50.240] Case dismissed. [52:50.240 --> 52:51.240] I object. [52:51.240 --> 52:54.240] Well, Mr. Kelton, you can't object to me dismissing the case. [52:54.240 --> 52:55.240] He said, sure I can. [52:55.240 --> 52:57.240] We'll just get to the fun part. [52:57.240 --> 53:00.240] Get out of my court. [53:00.240 --> 53:03.240] So yeah, it's a lot better when it turns that way. [53:03.240 --> 53:05.240] So I'm real proud of you. [53:05.240 --> 53:06.240] Yeah, I would like to know. [53:06.240 --> 53:08.240] It might be a little struggle at first. [53:08.240 --> 53:11.240] But you know, just get your wits about yourself. [53:11.240 --> 53:13.240] Because it's time to be free. [53:13.240 --> 53:16.240] And it is worth it once you get to this part. [53:16.240 --> 53:17.240] It is. [53:17.240 --> 53:19.240] I'm still supposed to get like 30 days. [53:19.240 --> 53:21.240] Come on, let's go. [53:21.240 --> 53:22.240] You took my house and my property. [53:22.240 --> 53:23.240] 30 days is fine. [53:23.240 --> 53:25.240] You deserve to take care of me and pay me. [53:25.240 --> 53:26.240] Come on. [53:26.240 --> 53:28.240] So I'm doing this for everybody else. [53:28.240 --> 53:31.240] As soon as I get that check, I'm going to come see Ruelo already. [53:31.240 --> 53:33.240] Because it's all because of y'all. [53:33.240 --> 53:34.240] I can't say I'm smart. [53:34.240 --> 53:35.240] But I ain't here. [53:35.240 --> 53:36.240] I'm not that smart. [53:36.240 --> 53:37.240] So thank you. [53:37.240 --> 53:38.240] Help somebody else. [53:38.240 --> 53:41.240] Now, can I stay online and continue listening? [53:41.240 --> 53:45.240] Because I can't get you pulled up on the radio. [53:45.240 --> 53:46.240] Oh, OK. [53:46.240 --> 53:48.240] Normally, we don't like that. [53:48.240 --> 53:49.240] But go ahead. [53:49.240 --> 53:51.240] I pay for the phone lines. [53:51.240 --> 53:54.240] It costs us by the minute. [53:54.240 --> 53:55.240] But I pay for it. [53:55.240 --> 53:57.240] So go ahead. [53:57.240 --> 53:58.240] Thank you. [53:58.240 --> 53:59.240] But don't tell Debra. [53:59.240 --> 54:01.240] Maybe she's not listening. [54:01.240 --> 54:02.240] All right. [54:02.240 --> 54:03.240] OK. [54:03.240 --> 54:04.240] Yeah. [54:04.240 --> 54:05.240] Go ahead. [54:05.240 --> 54:06.240] Stay on. [54:06.240 --> 54:07.240] OK. [54:07.240 --> 54:10.240] Now we're going to go to Dave in Texas. [54:10.240 --> 54:12.240] Hello, Dave. [54:12.240 --> 54:13.240] Yes. [54:13.240 --> 54:15.240] Hello, Randy. [54:15.240 --> 54:21.240] I have a justice of the peace trial, March 6. [54:21.240 --> 54:29.240] And I'm suing the management company of this apartment complex for discrimination against [54:29.240 --> 54:33.240] a disabled American. [54:33.240 --> 54:38.240] Randy, how strong? [54:38.240 --> 54:39.240] I have some witnesses. [54:39.240 --> 54:40.240] I have some pictures. [54:40.240 --> 54:47.240] I have some film to show the jury. [54:47.240 --> 54:52.240] If I, I mean, I don't want to spend a lot of money. [54:52.240 --> 55:00.240] But if I paid an investigator, I just would need him for a couple hours. [55:00.240 --> 55:01.240] Would that be costly? [55:01.240 --> 55:02.240] Would it help my case? [55:02.240 --> 55:03.240] I don't know. [55:03.240 --> 55:08.240] I don't know what your case is. [55:08.240 --> 55:14.240] Well, there's trash in front of my apartment. [55:14.240 --> 55:18.240] There's things wrong inside the apartment. [55:18.240 --> 55:21.240] But I have pictures and film of it all. [55:21.240 --> 55:25.240] If you have pictures and film, you don't need an investigator. [55:25.240 --> 55:35.240] The only thing you need a private investigator for is to get access to computers that private [55:35.240 --> 55:38.240] citizens can't get access to. [55:38.240 --> 55:42.240] Otherwise, you can do anything that the investigator does. [55:42.240 --> 55:51.240] And if you don't have to find hidden information, I can't see the reason why you would need [55:51.240 --> 55:53.240] a private investigator. [55:53.240 --> 55:54.240] Okay. [55:54.240 --> 55:56.240] Especially if you got pictures. [55:56.240 --> 56:00.240] Pictures go a long way. [56:00.240 --> 56:07.240] Is the nature of your disability aggravated by the trash and stuff that you're complaining [56:07.240 --> 56:08.240] about? [56:08.240 --> 56:09.240] Right. [56:09.240 --> 56:14.240] Okay, then the pictures is probably all you need. [56:14.240 --> 56:15.240] Good. [56:15.240 --> 56:16.240] Good. [56:16.240 --> 56:21.240] Randy, I imagine if I win, that they'll appeal. [56:21.240 --> 56:27.240] Wait, this is in a JP court? [56:27.240 --> 56:28.240] Yeah. [56:28.240 --> 56:35.240] Have you bar grieved the lawyer on the other side? [56:35.240 --> 56:36.240] No. [56:36.240 --> 56:45.240] We had a pre-trial hearing. [56:45.240 --> 56:47.240] But I really shouldn't. [56:47.240 --> 56:48.240] Okay. [56:48.240 --> 56:50.240] What I'm going to is politics. [56:50.240 --> 56:51.240] Yeah. [56:51.240 --> 56:54.240] It's all political. [56:54.240 --> 56:59.240] And the maximum the JP can grant is 10 grand. [56:59.240 --> 57:03.240] And a lawyer will eat that up and nothing flat. [57:03.240 --> 57:09.240] If they're ill, then the lawyer, it's going to cost them a lot more than 10 grand to get [57:09.240 --> 57:13.240] a lawyer to do an appeal for them. [57:13.240 --> 57:14.240] Okay. [57:14.240 --> 57:16.240] So unlike, I don't know. [57:16.240 --> 57:18.240] It's hard to say. [57:18.240 --> 57:21.240] It may be that they don't want a ruling against them. [57:21.240 --> 57:27.240] Most likely what they're going to do is they're going to come to you on the courthouse steps [57:27.240 --> 57:31.240] and say, let's make a deal. [57:31.240 --> 57:39.240] That's where most cases are settled is on the courthouse steps. [57:39.240 --> 57:49.240] Both sides tend to play brinksmanship and they refuse to entertain a settlement because [57:49.240 --> 57:51.240] they hope they can get the other one to cave. [57:51.240 --> 57:54.240] Until they get to the courthouse steps, then they get serious. [57:54.240 --> 58:02.240] So if I were you, I would hold out, I would be unreasonable and obnoxious and would not [58:02.240 --> 58:07.240] be understanding until you get to the courthouse steps. [58:07.240 --> 58:08.240] Okay. [58:08.240 --> 58:13.240] Don't be the first one to offer the deal either. [58:13.240 --> 58:20.240] When you get into the court, you want to look as pitiful as you can. [58:20.240 --> 58:23.240] For the jury, it's all politics. [58:23.240 --> 58:28.240] Is this lawyer, is there a lawyer going to cross examine me? [58:28.240 --> 58:31.240] Almost certainly. [58:31.240 --> 58:32.240] Okay. [58:32.240 --> 58:33.240] Hang on. [58:33.240 --> 58:34.240] We'll come back on the other side. [58:34.240 --> 58:38.240] I'll give you a little trick to drive the lawyer crazy. [58:38.240 --> 58:41.240] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rue de la Radio. [58:41.240 --> 58:45.240] I call it number 512-646-1984. [58:45.240 --> 58:50.240] We'll be right back. [58:50.240 --> 58:55.240] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.240 --> 58:58.240] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.240 --> 59:03.240] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.240 --> 59:06.240] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:06.240 --> 59:09.240] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.240 --> 59:14.240] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.240 --> 59:17.240] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.240 --> 59:23.240] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.240 --> 59:27.240] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.240 --> 59:32.240] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.240 --> 59:43.240] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.240 --> 59:47.240] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.240 --> 59:52.240] That's freestudybible.com. [59:52.240 --> 01:00:00.240] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.240 --> 01:00:05.240] The following use flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:05.240 --> 01:00:09.240] Markets for Wednesday, the 1st of February, 2017, are currently trending with gold at [01:00:09.240 --> 01:00:18.240] $1,204.39 an ounce, silver $17.49 an ounce, Texas crude $52.81 a barrel, and Bitcoin [01:00:18.240 --> 01:00:26.240] is currently sitting at about $977 U.S. currency. [01:00:26.240 --> 01:00:31.240] Today in history, the year 1992, the Chief Judicial Magistrate of Bhopal, India, declared [01:00:31.240 --> 01:00:36.240] Warren Anderson, ex-CEO of Union Carbine, a fugitive under Indian law for failing to [01:00:36.240 --> 01:00:38.240] appear in the Bhopal disaster case. [01:00:38.240 --> 01:00:42.240] The Bhopal gas tragedy is considered one of the world's worst industrial disasters, where [01:00:42.240 --> 01:00:47.240] over half a million people were exposed to methyl isocyanate and other chemicals nearly [01:00:47.240 --> 01:00:48.240] a decade before. [01:00:48.240 --> 01:00:57.240] Today in history, in recent news, the United Nations is facing challenges on how it will [01:00:57.240 --> 01:01:01.240] respond to U.S. President Trump's executive order, halting entry for at least 120 days [01:01:01.240 --> 01:01:05.240] for refugees and 90 days for visitors from a total of seven nations. [01:01:05.240 --> 01:01:09.240] The main issue, funding, since the U.S. is the biggest donating member state with 22% [01:01:09.240 --> 01:01:14.240] of the U.N.'s regular budget and over 28% of the cost of its global peacekeeping operations, [01:01:14.240 --> 01:01:18.240] not including the World Health Program, its children's agency, UNICEF, International [01:01:18.240 --> 01:01:23.240] Organization for Migration, IOM, and the World Health Organization, which all also receive [01:01:23.240 --> 01:01:26.240] substantial donations by U.S. taxpayers. [01:01:26.240 --> 01:01:31.240] The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, or UNHCR, has a stated goal of assisting the [01:01:31.240 --> 01:01:35.240] world's downtrodden and persecuted, so it's looking to other countries to take those affected [01:01:35.240 --> 01:01:37.240] by the temporary ban. [01:01:37.240 --> 01:01:42.240] The UNHCR received $1.5 billion last year alone from the United States, with the UNHCR [01:01:42.240 --> 01:01:47.240] estimating 65 million people as being displaced worldwide by conflict and persecution, the [01:01:47.240 --> 01:01:49.240] highest number since World War II. [01:01:49.240 --> 01:01:54.240] It is calculated that the U.S. could have resettled 20,000 people over the 100-day suspension, [01:01:54.240 --> 01:01:57.240] based on the average rate over the last 15 years. [01:01:57.240 --> 01:02:01.240] Michael Williams, a distinguished fellow at the Chatham House think tank in London and [01:02:01.240 --> 01:02:05.240] former U.N. Undersecretary General, stated that Trump was trying to get more donations [01:02:05.240 --> 01:02:08.240] and participation out of other countries. [01:02:08.240 --> 01:02:14.240] Quote, particularly with UNHCR, the U.S. has punched way above its weight, and he's trying [01:02:14.240 --> 01:02:18.240] to even it out, and in that regard, I am not without sympathy. [01:02:18.240 --> 01:02:23.240] The notion of getting other countries to play a greater role in global affairs is one Trump [01:02:23.240 --> 01:02:27.240] discussed several times on his presidential trail, and the International Organization [01:02:27.240 --> 01:02:32.240] for Migration, IOM, spokesman Leonard Doyle, encouraged other countries to show a, quote, [01:02:32.240 --> 01:02:36.240] a modicum of the same degree of openness that the U.S. has shown. [01:02:36.240 --> 01:02:38.240] Let's have it from the Latin Americans. [01:02:38.240 --> 01:02:39.240] Let's have it from the Asians. [01:02:39.240 --> 01:02:42.240] Let the Europeans show a bit more generosity. [01:02:42.240 --> 01:02:46.240] Saying at a news conference on Tuesday, probably the most important thing is for other countries [01:02:46.240 --> 01:02:51.240] to step forward and say, we will take these people who have been approved and cleared. [01:02:51.240 --> 01:02:54.240] Why not? [01:02:54.240 --> 01:03:22.240] This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown from February 1, 2017. [01:03:22.240 --> 01:03:49.240] Let's have it from the Latin Americans. [01:03:49.240 --> 01:04:09.240] Let the Europeans show a bit more generosity. [01:04:09.240 --> 01:04:23.240] Let the Europeans show a bit more generosity. [01:04:23.240 --> 01:04:24.240] Okay. [01:04:24.240 --> 01:04:25.240] We are back. [01:04:25.240 --> 01:04:29.240] Randy Kelton, Rue La Radio, and we're talking to, we're talking to Dave. [01:04:29.240 --> 01:04:31.240] It looks like he dropped off. [01:04:31.240 --> 01:04:34.240] Oh, there he is. [01:04:34.240 --> 01:04:35.240] Okay. [01:04:35.240 --> 01:04:36.240] I found him. [01:04:36.240 --> 01:04:37.240] Okay. [01:04:37.240 --> 01:04:39.240] Hello, Dave. [01:04:39.240 --> 01:04:41.240] Hello, Randy. [01:04:41.240 --> 01:04:42.240] Okay. [01:04:42.240 --> 01:04:50.240] So do you have anything else about this upcoming? [01:04:50.240 --> 01:05:00.240] Well, Randy, you said you had an idea of how I can drive this lawyer crazy or something. [01:05:00.240 --> 01:05:07.240] Has he filed any pleadings? [01:05:07.240 --> 01:05:10.240] Yes. [01:05:10.240 --> 01:05:17.240] After the, he filed an answer to the petition where he says that I have no evidence. [01:05:17.240 --> 01:05:32.240] And at the pre-trial, he complained that my petition was handwritten, that it wasn't typed. [01:05:32.240 --> 01:05:42.240] So I can bar-grieve him for that because I have every right to write any legal statement in my own handwriting. [01:05:42.240 --> 01:05:46.240] Let me tell you a quick little story. [01:05:46.240 --> 01:05:59.240] I went to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and asked to see all of the habeas corpuses filed by pro se litigants in the last five years. [01:05:59.240 --> 01:06:09.240] They brought me out a stack of them, and the one on the top was a roll of toilet paper. [01:06:09.240 --> 01:06:13.240] This guy wrote a habeas corpus. [01:06:13.240 --> 01:06:17.240] He used up the whole roll of toilet paper. [01:06:17.240 --> 01:06:28.240] There was not one cross out, not one apparent error, not one hole poked in the toilet paper. [01:06:28.240 --> 01:06:32.240] I was absolutely astounded. [01:06:32.240 --> 01:06:47.240] If the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals will accept the habeas corpus on toilet paper, bar-grieve the lawyer for frivolous arguments. [01:06:47.240 --> 01:06:52.240] Good. Good. I will do that. I will do that. I will do that. [01:06:52.240 --> 01:06:56.240] Once you've stung him, he's going to want to hit the road. [01:06:56.240 --> 01:07:04.240] He's going to tell his client, you're either going to have to pay me a whole lot of money or you're going to have to get another lawyer. [01:07:04.240 --> 01:07:07.240] Then their cost goes up. [01:07:07.240 --> 01:07:16.240] The jury will, I'm suing for 10 grand, will they decide on their own figures? [01:07:16.240 --> 01:07:20.240] Will they come up with their own amount of money if they win? [01:07:20.240 --> 01:07:22.240] Yes, they will. [01:07:22.240 --> 01:07:24.240] Okay. [01:07:24.240 --> 01:07:27.240] You come in with a number. [01:07:27.240 --> 01:07:34.240] The jury can use that number or they can determine any amount they want to. [01:07:34.240 --> 01:07:36.240] Okay. [01:07:36.240 --> 01:07:51.240] Once, if they determine a number for me, because I think I've got one case, is when do I get the check or how do I get it? [01:07:51.240 --> 01:07:54.240] After appeal. [01:07:54.240 --> 01:08:02.240] And almost certainly you'll have to petition the court for a order. [01:08:02.240 --> 01:08:06.240] It's hard to collect even when you win. [01:08:06.240 --> 01:08:11.240] I have a friend with a quarter of a million dollar judgment that he can't collect. [01:08:11.240 --> 01:08:25.240] But on 10,000, now we did have a guy in Fort Worth who got a $6,000 judgment against the IRS and the IRS refused to pay it. [01:08:25.240 --> 01:08:40.240] And he went down there with sheriff's deputies and started taking the furniture out of the IRS office because he got a judge to give him a judgment against the properties in the office. [01:08:40.240 --> 01:08:46.240] And when they started carrying the furniture out, the IRS came up with the check real fast. [01:08:46.240 --> 01:08:52.240] So for 10 grand, is this an apartment complex you're suing? [01:08:52.240 --> 01:08:55.240] Yes, there's 50 apartment complexes. [01:08:55.240 --> 01:09:01.240] The property itself is worth $50 million, I call it the tax collector's office. [01:09:01.240 --> 01:09:17.240] Okay, so what you do is if you get a judgment and they don't pay it, then you go to the court and ask them to give you a claim against all their office furniture. [01:09:17.240 --> 01:09:24.240] And then you get the sheriff to come down there and they'll take it out for you. [01:09:24.240 --> 01:09:28.240] Good, good, I could use some furniture. [01:09:28.240 --> 01:09:29.240] Great, great. [01:09:29.240 --> 01:09:35.240] So 10 grand and it's a company that big, you can collect that because there are ways you can sting them. [01:09:35.240 --> 01:09:39.240] When you get the claim against them, it goes on their credit. [01:09:39.240 --> 01:09:45.240] And for them, an unpaid judgment to really be hit on their credit. [01:09:45.240 --> 01:09:47.240] Good. [01:09:47.240 --> 01:09:56.240] Randy, again, this is a $10,000 suit against the management company of this apartment complex. [01:09:56.240 --> 01:10:12.240] Now I'm hoping that when I win this case on March 6, that I can, I've already sued the owner of this apartment complex. [01:10:12.240 --> 01:10:32.240] And I'm going to my case, and maybe this is the wrong way to go, but if I win this case, which is discrimination, then I'm going, I've already sued the owner for abuse of disabled Americans. [01:10:32.240 --> 01:10:49.240] So when I win, I'm going to use this win in district court. I've already filed. I'm just waiting for this trial so I can use it as fuel to go after the bigger guy. [01:10:49.240 --> 01:10:53.240] Is that something I can do? [01:10:53.240 --> 01:10:59.240] Maybe. It depends on the nature of this suit. [01:10:59.240 --> 01:11:15.240] If you're suing the Americans with disabilities, if you sued them because they haven't kept the apartments clean and they've left items that would cause a danger to you, [01:11:15.240 --> 01:11:24.240] that is not likely to be something you can use in an ADA suit because they did not discriminate against you personally. [01:11:24.240 --> 01:11:27.240] They discriminated against everybody generally. [01:11:27.240 --> 01:11:28.240] Yeah. [01:11:28.240 --> 01:11:33.240] In order to make an ADA claim, you have to make the claim that they singled you out. [01:11:33.240 --> 01:11:35.240] Yeah. [01:11:35.240 --> 01:11:51.240] Randy, this is a strong case because the heart of this case in both courts is that they moved all my stuff out of my room into the kitchen. [01:11:51.240 --> 01:12:03.240] And this was a week before a major surgery and I came back home from surgery a week later and my stuff was still in the kitchen. [01:12:03.240 --> 01:12:09.240] And the surgery went bad and the nurse had to come. There was blood everywhere. [01:12:09.240 --> 01:12:24.240] And these people, why did they move my stuff out and why didn't they move it back in or allow me to? It's very complicated, but there's pictures of the blood. [01:12:24.240 --> 01:12:29.240] Wait a minute. We don't have time to go through this whole case. Is there a question? [01:12:29.240 --> 01:12:44.240] I understand that you want to go through the case and actually you've been through this before on the air. [01:12:44.240 --> 01:12:48.240] It's just that I've got more callers that are waiting. [01:12:48.240 --> 01:13:01.240] Yeah. So we're finished here, Brandy. I'll give you a call. Are you reachable? Do you have an office? [01:13:01.240 --> 01:13:11.240] Yeah. You can just go to the Logos Radio Network and you will find a link to my email there. It's randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:13:11.240 --> 01:13:18.240] So just go on Logos Radio Network and you can find my email and send me an email. [01:13:18.240 --> 01:13:30.240] All right, Brandy. Look out for it. My name's Trumpet Dave. I was formerly a professional trumpet player in Austin and I've had some bad surgeries. [01:13:30.240 --> 01:13:35.240] So I'll try to connect with you and thank you very much. [01:13:35.240 --> 01:13:46.240] Okay. Thank you, Dave. Okay. Now we're going to Scott in Texas. Okay, Scott. [01:13:46.240 --> 01:13:47.240] Howdy, howdy. [01:13:47.240 --> 01:13:54.240] So you went to court today and you didn't wind up beaten into unconsciousness. [01:13:54.240 --> 01:14:05.240] No, actually I didn't. So I went in there and they set it for trial for two months from now. [01:14:05.240 --> 01:14:12.240] And I have so much paperwork on them. It's ridiculous. [01:14:12.240 --> 01:14:28.240] But we were talking when I contacted you because I wanted to go ahead and start issuing complaints against the judge. Since I did go in there and they set it for trial, [01:14:28.240 --> 01:14:38.240] that couldn't be considered an abusive process because they didn't have a motion sharing or anything like we were talking about. [01:14:38.240 --> 01:14:45.240] Okay. Look at 28.01 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:14:45.240 --> 01:14:52.240] It lists all of those things that you can be summoned to court for. [01:14:52.240 --> 01:14:57.240] The first one is an arraignment. [01:14:57.240 --> 01:15:03.240] An arraignment is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and taking his plea. [01:15:03.240 --> 01:15:19.240] However, 26.01 states that an arraignment can be held in a felony case or a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [01:15:19.240 --> 01:15:24.240] If yours is a Class C misdemeanor, they cannot hold an arraignment. [01:15:24.240 --> 01:15:32.240] The only other things is a whole list of them, but all of them go to motions or pleadings filed with the court. [01:15:32.240 --> 01:15:40.240] So if there's nothing filed with the court that the court has to hear, they don't have power to call you in. [01:15:40.240 --> 01:15:47.240] And if they want to set a hearing date, they just need you notice. [01:15:47.240 --> 01:15:59.240] So your question is, under what authority was I ordered to appear at court? [01:15:59.240 --> 01:16:03.240] Okay. [01:16:03.240 --> 01:16:07.240] So move for sanctions. [01:16:07.240 --> 01:16:12.240] Did you just kind of complain to judge and charge the judge with abuse of process? [01:16:12.240 --> 01:16:15.240] Yeah, I've already got the complaint sitting right here just ready to go. [01:16:15.240 --> 01:16:19.240] I mean, all I got to do is just hit print and I got another one. [01:16:19.240 --> 01:16:21.240] Of course, I'm getting pretty good at this. [01:16:21.240 --> 01:16:28.240] But I was just wanting to kind of get a little understanding on that since I didn't want them to have wiggle room to say, [01:16:28.240 --> 01:16:35.240] oh, no, you came to court here because we set this for a trial date. [01:16:35.240 --> 01:16:39.240] But it's like they just made it up as they go, you know? [01:16:39.240 --> 01:16:44.240] And they're used to people not knowing, not reading the code. [01:16:44.240 --> 01:16:48.240] They're used to being able to do anything they want to. [01:16:48.240 --> 01:16:51.240] Right. So we're holding their feet to the fire. [01:16:51.240 --> 01:16:55.240] Exactly. So this will probably come as a big surprise. [01:16:55.240 --> 01:17:00.240] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to break. We'll be right back. [01:17:00.240 --> 01:17:04.240] I love Logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.240 --> 01:17:07.240] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.240 --> 01:17:10.240] I need my truth fit. I'd be lost without Logos. [01:17:10.240 --> 01:17:13.240] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.240 --> 01:17:16.240] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:17:16.240 --> 01:17:20.240] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.240 --> 01:17:22.240] How can I help Logos? [01:17:22.240 --> 01:17:24.240] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:24.240 --> 01:17:29.240] If you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos in ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.240 --> 01:17:31.240] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:31.240 --> 01:17:34.240] Now, go to LogosRegionetwork.com. [01:17:34.240 --> 01:17:37.240] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.240 --> 01:17:43.240] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.240 --> 01:17:44.240] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.240 --> 01:17:45.240] No. [01:17:45.240 --> 01:17:47.240] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.240 --> 01:17:48.240] No. [01:17:48.240 --> 01:17:49.240] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:49.240 --> 01:17:50.240] No. [01:17:50.240 --> 01:17:51.240] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.240 --> 01:17:54.240] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:54.240 --> 01:17:57.240] This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:17:57.240 --> 01:17:58.240] We are welcome. [01:17:58.240 --> 01:18:00.240] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:18:00.240 --> 01:18:05.240] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.240 --> 01:18:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:18:09.240 --> 01:18:15.240] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win too. [01:18:15.240 --> 01:18:21.240] Check its step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [01:18:21.240 --> 01:18:25.240] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:18:25.240 --> 01:18:27.240] How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:18:27.240 --> 01:18:29.240] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:18:29.240 --> 01:18:34.240] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:34.240 --> 01:18:39.240] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:39.240 --> 01:18:41.240] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.240 --> 01:18:49.240] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.240 --> 01:19:00.240] 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 now. [01:19:00.240 --> 01:19:25.240] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:25.240 --> 01:19:30.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Devin Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:30.240 --> 01:19:32.240] And we have our fundraiser going. [01:19:32.240 --> 01:19:36.240] So go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:19:36.240 --> 01:19:38.240] Check out our gun giveaway. [01:19:38.240 --> 01:19:41.240] We're giving away a Spike's Tactical AR-15. [01:19:41.240 --> 01:19:48.240] Every $25 donation gets you a chance in the drawing. [01:19:48.240 --> 01:19:55.240] I also have my e-book up, Legal 101. [01:19:55.240 --> 01:19:57.240] And we're selling that for $100. [01:19:57.240 --> 01:20:02.240] And you get four chances in the gun giveaway. [01:20:02.240 --> 01:20:04.240] So check out our website. [01:20:04.240 --> 01:20:12.240] And if you get the e-book, everybody who has a legal issue should read that thing. [01:20:12.240 --> 01:20:20.240] This is, for 10 years I've been doing this show. [01:20:20.240 --> 01:20:37.240] And I struggle to find ways of structuring explanations that will help you understand how things actually work, [01:20:37.240 --> 01:20:44.240] as opposed to the way your social studies teacher wanted you to think they worked. [01:20:44.240 --> 01:20:49.240] All that crap you learned in high school, a bunch of propaganda. [01:20:49.240 --> 01:20:51.240] None of it works that way. [01:20:51.240 --> 01:20:57.240] And for the most part, the way people think about the courts is just wrong. [01:20:57.240 --> 01:20:58.240] It doesn't work that way. [01:20:58.240 --> 01:21:02.240] I had a call from North Carolina today, Art Patton, [01:21:02.240 --> 01:21:07.240] and he went to the court and they didn't do what he wanted them to do. [01:21:07.240 --> 01:21:10.240] And he said he was just furious. [01:21:10.240 --> 01:21:14.240] And that told me that he didn't understand. [01:21:14.240 --> 01:21:17.240] If you get this e-book and go through it a time or two, [01:21:17.240 --> 01:21:22.240] then when you go into court, your whole perspective will change. [01:21:22.240 --> 01:21:31.240] When I go to court or to the courthouse and they don't do what the law says they're supposed to do, [01:21:31.240 --> 01:21:34.240] it doesn't make me furious. [01:21:34.240 --> 01:21:39.240] I think, oh goody, am I going to get to kick your behind? [01:21:39.240 --> 01:21:48.240] And Art Patton in this case may actually get his district clerk removed from office. [01:21:48.240 --> 01:21:53.240] What she did made him furious, but it shouldn't have. [01:21:53.240 --> 01:21:55.240] Because by the time he got through today, [01:21:55.240 --> 01:22:03.240] he had the assistant attorney general for the state of North Carolina examining into what this clerk has been doing. [01:22:03.240 --> 01:22:07.240] He's got the local district attorney after. [01:22:07.240 --> 01:22:10.240] He's got everybody after this clerk. [01:22:10.240 --> 01:22:15.240] So by today, his whole perspective changed. [01:22:15.240 --> 01:22:20.240] If you go through this e-book and you're driving down the street [01:22:20.240 --> 01:22:24.240] and you see those red lights come on in your rearview mirror, [01:22:24.240 --> 01:22:29.240] you won't get that empty feeling in the bit of your stomach. [01:22:29.240 --> 01:22:33.240] You look in your rearview mirror and think, go ahead, Bubba, [01:22:33.240 --> 01:22:43.240] take your best shot because I'm fixing to give you a romp through the legal system you are not going to believe. [01:22:43.240 --> 01:22:45.240] So have a look at it. [01:22:45.240 --> 01:22:47.240] It's well worth $100. [01:22:47.240 --> 01:22:57.240] It's 10 years of working these approaches out so that what actually goes on makes sense. [01:22:57.240 --> 01:23:01.240] OK, going back to Scott in Texas. [01:23:01.240 --> 01:23:10.240] OK, Scott, you're kind of getting the idea of how it actually works as opposed to how you were led to believe it works. [01:23:10.240 --> 01:23:14.240] Would that sound like a true statement, Scott? [01:23:14.240 --> 01:23:17.240] Agreed. [01:23:17.240 --> 01:23:25.240] So just for clarification on that, under what authority was a person called to court [01:23:25.240 --> 01:23:30.240] because the last four times it's always been reset, reset, reset, reset. [01:23:30.240 --> 01:23:33.240] I mean, I think it's just reset to infinity. [01:23:33.240 --> 01:23:42.240] And then after I already put in a complaint to the district judge and the county judge on this judge, [01:23:42.240 --> 01:23:49.240] the court at law judge, resetting my case over and over, asking the district judge to hold an examining trial [01:23:49.240 --> 01:23:59.240] or a court of inquiry, which I've already wrote a letter back asking for the outcome of that. [01:23:59.240 --> 01:24:05.240] And since I'm not going to probably get anything, I figure, in the mail. [01:24:05.240 --> 01:24:14.240] So by the next Friday, since I already have a federal lawsuit on them for a million plus, [01:24:14.240 --> 01:24:19.240] then I'm going to go ahead and file criminal complaints with the SAC or the FBI [01:24:19.240 --> 01:24:28.240] so I can go ahead and get federal criminal complaints going on them while my federal Title 42 is in action. [01:24:28.240 --> 01:24:33.240] OK, you're familiar with 28 USC 535. [01:24:33.240 --> 01:24:35.240] Not yet. [01:24:35.240 --> 01:24:42.240] OK, let's talk about 28 USC 535. [01:24:42.240 --> 01:24:54.240] It says that if, and this is paraphrasing, that if a public, if a federal employee has knowledge [01:24:54.240 --> 01:25:01.240] that another federal employee has committed a crime, [01:25:01.240 --> 01:25:09.240] the employee is required to give notice to the Attorney General of the United States. [01:25:09.240 --> 01:25:15.240] Now, the way I read that, it's essentially a whistleblower statute. [01:25:15.240 --> 01:25:19.240] It gives the employee plausible deniability. [01:25:19.240 --> 01:25:22.240] This is a statutory requirement. [01:25:22.240 --> 01:25:32.240] If they don't perform this duty, then they're subject to prosecution under 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:25:32.240 --> 01:25:37.240] So they have plausible deniabilities. [01:25:37.240 --> 01:25:42.240] Man, I don't have any choice here. If I don't do this, then I get prosecuted. [01:25:42.240 --> 01:25:47.240] Might, depending on the severity of the charge, if it's a felony, [01:25:47.240 --> 01:25:53.240] I'll also be prosecuted under misprision of felony 18 U.S. Code 4. [01:25:53.240 --> 01:26:01.240] So it's like a whistleblower statute, but I don't think any of them knows it exists. [01:26:01.240 --> 01:26:11.240] I just filed criminal charges against Federal District Judge John Distinker McBride. [01:26:11.240 --> 01:26:14.240] This guy is a scoundrel. [01:26:14.240 --> 01:26:22.240] If you are a pro se and you file an action in the state court and the defendant removes it to the federal court, [01:26:22.240 --> 01:26:27.240] and Judge McBride gets it, he will dismiss it with prejudice, [01:26:27.240 --> 01:26:31.240] out of hand, without regard to the right of things or the rule of law. [01:26:31.240 --> 01:26:34.240] He does not care. [01:26:34.240 --> 01:26:37.240] That's what he did with mine. [01:26:37.240 --> 01:26:43.240] His problem was he dismissed mine for failure to state a claim of which recovery could be had. [01:26:43.240 --> 01:26:48.240] The problem was it was a declaratory judgment suit, so there was no recovery. [01:26:48.240 --> 01:26:53.240] He didn't even bother to read it. [01:26:53.240 --> 01:26:59.240] His other problem is that he dismissed it the same day I non-suited it. [01:26:59.240 --> 01:27:04.240] So I don't care. He didn't hurt me. [01:27:04.240 --> 01:27:08.240] I'm not upset at the judge. I don't have an ax to grind with him. [01:27:08.240 --> 01:27:11.240] So it makes this a perfect complaint. [01:27:11.240 --> 01:27:18.240] I sent it to the special agent in charge in Dallas by certified mail return receipt. [01:27:18.240 --> 01:27:24.240] I get a call from an intake specialist, and he asked me, [01:27:24.240 --> 01:27:28.240] Mr. Caltron, what do you want us to do with this complaint? [01:27:28.240 --> 01:27:37.240] And I said, I want you to do exactly what the law commands you to do. [01:27:37.240 --> 01:27:40.240] And I'm not going to tell you what that is. [01:27:40.240 --> 01:27:44.240] And I'm certain that neither you nor your boss knows what that is. [01:27:44.240 --> 01:27:48.240] So guys, this is a setup. [01:27:48.240 --> 01:27:53.240] I'm just waiting for you not to do what the law says. [01:27:53.240 --> 01:28:01.240] And he asked me to explain the problem, and I went through the issue that the judge had no jurisdiction. [01:28:01.240 --> 01:28:05.240] The only thing he could do is dismiss the case, [01:28:05.240 --> 01:28:11.240] and he remand the case to the state because he had no jurisdiction. [01:28:11.240 --> 01:28:14.240] But instead, he dismissed his prejudice. [01:28:14.240 --> 01:28:18.240] That was a dispositive ruling with no subject matter jurisdiction. [01:28:18.240 --> 01:28:20.240] He had no power to do that. [01:28:20.240 --> 01:28:24.240] So he exerted or purported to exert an authority he did not have, [01:28:24.240 --> 01:28:29.240] and in the process denied me full and free access to or enjoyment of a right. [01:28:29.240 --> 01:28:35.240] Ku Klux Klan Act, 18 U.S. Code 242 as a Class A misdemeanor. [01:28:35.240 --> 01:28:43.240] So the SAC, I can almost assure you, unless he's listening to this program, [01:28:43.240 --> 01:28:50.240] will not forward that or give notice to the Attorney General of the United States [01:28:50.240 --> 01:28:55.240] because it's been two weeks, so I'm going to send a FOIA request to the Attorney General [01:28:55.240 --> 01:29:03.240] requesting the disposition of my criminal charge against Federal District Judge McBride. [01:29:03.240 --> 01:29:07.240] And I'm almost certainly going to get a response back saying, [01:29:07.240 --> 01:29:10.240] we have no records responsive to your request. [01:29:10.240 --> 01:29:12.240] Aha, gotcha. [01:29:12.240 --> 01:29:22.240] So now I create a complaint against the SAC in Dallas and file it with a U.S. Attorney. [01:29:22.240 --> 01:29:30.240] The way I read the code, there is no exclusion for any employee, not even the U.S. Attorney. [01:29:30.240 --> 01:29:36.240] So when he doesn't send it to the Attorney General, I file on him. [01:29:36.240 --> 01:29:38.240] Does that sound like fun, Scott? [01:29:38.240 --> 01:29:41.240] Oh, well, it's going to be. [01:29:41.240 --> 01:29:43.240] Okay, hang on, about to go to break. [01:29:43.240 --> 01:30:03.240] I'm ready to tell them Deborah Singleton's rule of law radio will be right back. [01:30:03.240 --> 01:30:05.240] Can reality TV make you dumber? [01:30:05.240 --> 01:30:11.240] New research suggests watching people do stupid things can dumb you down more than you realize. [01:30:11.240 --> 01:30:17.240] We'll be right back with the details on the mind-smelling effects of reality TV in a moment. [01:30:17.240 --> 01:30:19.240] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.240 --> 01:30:22.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.240 --> 01:30:27.240] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.240 --> 01:30:29.240] So protect your rights. [01:30:29.240 --> 01:30:33.240] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.240 --> 01:30:35.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.240 --> 01:30:38.240] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.240 --> 01:30:42.240] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.240 --> 01:30:46.240] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.240 --> 01:30:51.240] Twenty-somethings drunk in nightclubs, teenage girls having babies with no husbands or money, [01:30:51.240 --> 01:30:54.240] catty drama queens sniping at their families. [01:30:54.240 --> 01:30:58.240] Every night, Americans tune into the mindless universe of reality TV. [01:30:58.240 --> 01:31:02.240] But does watching such nonsense do more than just entertain us? [01:31:02.240 --> 01:31:04.240] Researchers in Australia say yes. [01:31:04.240 --> 01:31:08.240] They had volunteers watch a soccer hooligan get drunk with friends, [01:31:08.240 --> 01:31:11.240] get into a fight, and spend the whole next day sleeping. [01:31:11.240 --> 01:31:14.240] Then they took a knowledge test on an unrelated topic. [01:31:14.240 --> 01:31:17.240] They scored well below people who would not watch the show. [01:31:17.240 --> 01:31:20.240] So the next time Jersey Shore comes on, switch it off. [01:31:20.240 --> 01:31:22.240] Your brain will like you better for it. [01:31:22.240 --> 01:31:31.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.240 --> 01:31:36.240] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.240 --> 01:31:38.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.240 --> 01:31:43.240] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.240 --> 01:31:46.240] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.240 --> 01:31:49.240] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.240 --> 01:31:51.240] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.240 --> 01:31:54.240] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.240 --> 01:31:58.240] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.240 --> 01:32:01.240] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:29.240 --> 01:32:32.240] to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:32.240 --> 01:32:39.240] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:39.240 --> 01:32:41.240] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:41.240 --> 01:32:46.240] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:46.240 --> 01:32:51.240] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:51.240 --> 01:32:57.240] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:57.240 --> 01:32:59.240] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.240 --> 01:33:02.240] Me and I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:02.240 --> 01:33:05.240] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:05.240 --> 01:33:08.240] logosradionetwork.com [01:33:13.240 --> 01:33:16.240] Yeah, who you want to tip? Who you take me for? Free Tony? [01:33:16.240 --> 01:33:20.240] Who you want to tip? Me no free Tony. You can't tip me. [01:33:20.240 --> 01:33:23.240] I'm a fan. Don't let them tip you in the morning. [01:33:23.240 --> 01:33:26.240] Tip you in the evening. Put the tip in your body. [01:33:26.240 --> 01:33:31.240] And then when you go computer reading, you can't hide me from nobody. [01:33:31.240 --> 01:33:34.240] When you say, tip in your mom, tip in your daddy. [01:33:34.240 --> 01:33:36.240] Tip in your grandpa and the granny. [01:33:36.240 --> 01:33:39.240] Tip in me, tip in your baby. [01:33:39.240 --> 01:33:41.240] Tip in your family, whole family. [01:33:41.240 --> 01:33:43.240] Tip in your dog and the cat around me. [01:33:43.240 --> 01:33:46.240] Tip in the beef and you still go eat it. [01:33:46.240 --> 01:33:48.240] Tip in the fish, them all in the sea. [01:33:48.240 --> 01:33:51.240] Tip in the shark and the whale around me. [01:33:51.240 --> 01:33:53.240] You see mankind going crazy. [01:33:53.240 --> 01:33:59.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with the Logos Radio and we're talking to Scott in Texas. [01:33:59.240 --> 01:34:03.240] Okay, Scott, we need to move along because I got Mark from Wisconsin. [01:34:03.240 --> 01:34:07.240] I haven't talked to him in a long time and I know he's causing trouble. [01:34:07.240 --> 01:34:12.240] Well, if you would quit talking long enough for me to delineate one question, I could get off here. [01:34:12.240 --> 01:34:15.240] All I want to know is... [01:34:15.240 --> 01:34:18.240] Wait a minute. I want to talk about that for a minute. [01:34:18.240 --> 01:34:21.240] Go ahead. [01:34:21.240 --> 01:34:27.240] I'm just teasing. Under what authority was a person called to court? [01:34:27.240 --> 01:34:34.240] What I'm getting at is all the times before I was called to court is reset, reset, reset, reset. [01:34:34.240 --> 01:34:39.240] And then when I filed all the criminal complaints against them, now all of a sudden they want to... [01:34:39.240 --> 01:34:42.240] Oh, it's going to be set for trial immediately the next time. [01:34:42.240 --> 01:34:58.240] So how... I mean, was there supposed to be something filed in the court for me to be called specifically for a motion to set a trial? [01:34:58.240 --> 01:34:59.240] No. [01:34:59.240 --> 01:35:03.240] Should there have been something on the record is what I'm getting at. [01:35:03.240 --> 01:35:12.240] Not to set for trial. They don't need to call you to court to set a trial hearing. [01:35:12.240 --> 01:35:18.240] The 28.01 exists what they can call you to court for. [01:35:18.240 --> 01:35:24.240] And to set a trial hearing is not one of those things. [01:35:24.240 --> 01:35:27.240] I'll bring it up here in a second. [01:35:27.240 --> 01:35:29.240] But I don't get that. [01:35:29.240 --> 01:35:40.240] So if they're sitting there bringing you to court all these times, doing all these resets, and then all of a sudden the magic day, oh, well, you're here for this. [01:35:40.240 --> 01:35:43.240] We're going to go ahead and set it for a trial because I got a goofy... [01:35:43.240 --> 01:35:45.240] Well, he's not goofy, but I have a... [01:35:45.240 --> 01:35:49.240] Let me read you 28.01. [01:35:49.240 --> 01:36:04.240] The court may set any criminal case for a pretrial hearing before it is set for trial on its merits and direct the defendant and his attorney, if any of record, [01:36:04.240 --> 01:36:11.240] and the state's attorney to appear before the court at the time and place stated in the court's order for a conference and hearing. [01:36:11.240 --> 01:36:21.240] The defendant must be present at the arraignment, and his presence is required during any pretrial proceedings. [01:36:21.240 --> 01:36:28.240] The pretrial hearing shall be to determine any of the following matters. [01:36:28.240 --> 01:36:31.240] Arraignment of the defendant. [01:36:31.240 --> 01:36:36.240] And in this case, there can't be an arraignment of the defendant because of Class C misdemeanor. [01:36:36.240 --> 01:36:38.240] That's under 26.01. [01:36:38.240 --> 01:36:40.240] Pleadings of the defendant. [01:36:40.240 --> 01:36:42.240] Special pleas. [01:36:42.240 --> 01:36:47.240] Exceptions to the form of substance of the indictment or information. [01:36:47.240 --> 01:36:51.240] Motions for continuance, either by the state or defendant. [01:36:51.240 --> 01:36:53.240] Motions to suppress evidence. [01:36:53.240 --> 01:36:58.240] Motions for change of venue, discovery, entrapment. [01:36:58.240 --> 01:37:01.240] Motions for appointment of interpreter. [01:37:01.240 --> 01:37:05.240] And that's it. [01:37:05.240 --> 01:37:12.240] Which one of those were you got to come to court so we can continue till next month? [01:37:12.240 --> 01:37:15.240] Or you got to come to court so we can set a hearing date? [01:37:15.240 --> 01:37:19.240] Which one of those is listed in 28.01? [01:37:19.240 --> 01:37:21.240] It's not in there. [01:37:21.240 --> 01:37:34.240] And the legislature very specifically limited the authority of the court to order you to appear to these issues. [01:37:34.240 --> 01:37:38.240] So what is not included is excluded. [01:37:38.240 --> 01:37:45.240] What I'm getting at is this is the very little minut stuff that we need to be addressing right here [01:37:45.240 --> 01:37:51.240] because people are being summoned over and over and over and over and over and they're violating all this stuff. [01:37:51.240 --> 01:37:54.240] That's what I want to know, this minutia crap. [01:37:54.240 --> 01:37:56.240] Well, that's what I'm telling you. [01:37:56.240 --> 01:37:57.240] This is illegal. [01:37:57.240 --> 01:38:02.240] They have no authority. [01:38:02.240 --> 01:38:04.240] And it's just that. [01:38:04.240 --> 01:38:05.240] Okay. [01:38:05.240 --> 01:38:11.240] What is the crime when a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority they do not express behalf [01:38:11.240 --> 01:38:17.240] and in the process denies the citizen in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right? [01:38:17.240 --> 01:38:19.240] You should know that one by now. [01:38:19.240 --> 01:38:20.240] I do, I do, I do. [01:38:20.240 --> 01:38:28.240] I'm just, I mean, there's a lot of goofy little things that, I mean, because it's like they just flip the switch [01:38:28.240 --> 01:38:34.240] and they say that they have authority and authority only means permission in law. [01:38:34.240 --> 01:38:37.240] So, you know, that's the legal definition. [01:38:37.240 --> 01:38:38.240] Okay. [01:38:38.240 --> 01:38:40.240] So what's your question? [01:38:40.240 --> 01:38:41.240] I don't have one now. [01:38:41.240 --> 01:38:43.240] I mean, it's just they don't have no authority. [01:38:43.240 --> 01:38:44.240] Okay, boom. [01:38:44.240 --> 01:38:45.240] Okay. [01:38:45.240 --> 01:38:46.240] That's right. [01:38:46.240 --> 01:38:47.240] They don't. [01:38:47.240 --> 01:38:48.240] This list, this is it. [01:38:48.240 --> 01:38:51.240] This is authority they have. [01:38:51.240 --> 01:38:53.240] They need to go find another one somewhere. [01:38:53.240 --> 01:38:57.240] It's not in here. [01:38:57.240 --> 01:39:00.240] No, that's, okay. [01:39:00.240 --> 01:39:01.240] I'll let you go. [01:39:01.240 --> 01:39:02.240] Thanks. [01:39:02.240 --> 01:39:03.240] Bye. [01:39:03.240 --> 01:39:04.240] All right. [01:39:04.240 --> 01:39:07.240] Now we're going to go to Mark in Wisconsin. [01:39:07.240 --> 01:39:09.240] Hello, Mark. [01:39:09.240 --> 01:39:11.240] Hello, Mr. Kelton. [01:39:11.240 --> 01:39:14.240] I know you have been causing trouble. [01:39:14.240 --> 01:39:23.240] Well, managed to get the chief judge to send me an inch, inch and a half worth of paperwork [01:39:23.240 --> 01:39:28.240] for a public information request, so that's been fun. [01:39:28.240 --> 01:39:38.240] But the more interesting thing for the listeners would be running, informing them about somebody [01:39:38.240 --> 01:39:42.240] else's attempt to do a John Doe. [01:39:42.240 --> 01:39:50.240] Now, the old listeners, this will be catch up and repeating, but new listeners will just [01:39:50.240 --> 01:39:53.240] have to bear with me here while I go over this. [01:39:53.240 --> 01:39:54.240] All right. [01:39:54.240 --> 01:39:55.240] The old listeners bear with me. [01:39:55.240 --> 01:39:57.240] New listeners go over this. [01:39:57.240 --> 01:40:07.240] No, I read, went ahead and followed what your old host Francis, not Francis, but Mr. Graves [01:40:07.240 --> 01:40:09.240] would say, go read the actual law. [01:40:09.240 --> 01:40:15.240] So I read the law and said, oh, look, a person may make a criminal complaint based on information [01:40:15.240 --> 01:40:21.240] or belief submitted to a judge or the district attorney for signing. [01:40:21.240 --> 01:40:26.240] So I walked into a court, had my own criminal complaint. [01:40:26.240 --> 01:40:28.240] Judge wouldn't sign it. [01:40:28.240 --> 01:40:33.240] So they told me at that point in time, oh, you need to submit a John Doe. [01:40:33.240 --> 01:40:36.240] Well, I've been watching the John Doe's. [01:40:36.240 --> 01:40:43.240] Ten years worth of John Doe's and suddenly one popped up from last year where a John [01:40:43.240 --> 01:40:48.240] Doe wasn't dismissed immediately, didn't go to a judge and get dismissed, didn't get [01:40:48.240 --> 01:40:51.240] dismissed, went to the appeals and got dismissed. [01:40:51.240 --> 01:40:56.240] This John Doe was actually rolling forward and had a hearing. [01:40:56.240 --> 01:40:58.240] So I went to the hearing. [01:40:58.240 --> 01:41:04.240] There was only the two lawyers there, the judge, the judge's staff and myself. [01:41:04.240 --> 01:41:08.240] So I got invited on the other side of the bar because the judge couldn't figure out [01:41:08.240 --> 01:41:11.240] the speaker system so I could hear. [01:41:11.240 --> 01:41:18.240] What had happened with this gentleman who filed the John Doe, he got in an altercation [01:41:18.240 --> 01:41:27.240] with a state employee who pulls in around $90K a year and he was charged with [01:41:27.240 --> 01:41:29.240] disturbing the peace. [01:41:29.240 --> 01:41:35.240] He represented himself and beat the charge of the disturbing the peace with the state [01:41:35.240 --> 01:41:36.240] worker. [01:41:36.240 --> 01:41:42.240] During the trial apparently the state worker ended up recanting some of the testimony [01:41:42.240 --> 01:41:47.240] that caused the original lawsuit and criminal charges of disturbing the peace to be [01:41:47.240 --> 01:41:48.240] filed. [01:41:48.240 --> 01:41:55.240] So there was a three-year statute of limitations on the misdemeanors that this citizen [01:41:55.240 --> 01:41:58.240] claimed the state worker had done to him. [01:41:58.240 --> 01:42:06.240] It took a year to year and a half for his criminal trial of disturbing the peace to [01:42:06.240 --> 01:42:11.240] happen and get exonerated by the jury. [01:42:11.240 --> 01:42:17.240] So he then asked the district attorney to file seven misdemeanor charges against the [01:42:17.240 --> 01:42:18.240] state worker. [01:42:18.240 --> 01:42:23.240] The district attorney dragged his heels, didn't do anything. [01:42:23.240 --> 01:42:30.240] Finally, two months before the statute of limitations ran out, wrote a letter back [01:42:30.240 --> 01:42:32.240] saying we're not going to do anything. [01:42:32.240 --> 01:42:35.240] The John Doe was filed. [01:42:35.240 --> 01:42:41.240] They sat on the John Doe and bounced it around for this hearing. [01:42:41.240 --> 01:42:47.240] By the time the hearing happened, over three years has passed. [01:42:47.240 --> 01:42:52.240] So the purpose of the hearing as far as the court was concerned was to decide whether [01:42:52.240 --> 01:42:55.240] or not they'd allow criminal charges to be pressed. [01:42:55.240 --> 01:43:02.240] And amazingly, the judge decided, oh, look, more than three years has passed since the [01:43:02.240 --> 01:43:03.240] incident. [01:43:03.240 --> 01:43:09.240] We can't charge this guy. [01:43:09.240 --> 01:43:11.240] That's not surprising. [01:43:11.240 --> 01:43:19.240] The guy should file against the prosecuting attorney for shielding from prosecution. [01:43:19.240 --> 01:43:22.240] Okay. [01:43:22.240 --> 01:43:24.240] I will. [01:43:24.240 --> 01:43:29.240] Now, can he do that or do I get to do that? [01:43:29.240 --> 01:43:31.240] You can do that. [01:43:31.240 --> 01:43:34.240] Oh, joy. [01:43:34.240 --> 01:43:36.240] Yeah, you have knowledge. [01:43:36.240 --> 01:43:38.240] Great. [01:43:38.240 --> 01:43:39.240] Okay. [01:43:39.240 --> 01:43:42.240] Oh, you're on information and belief. [01:43:42.240 --> 01:43:44.240] And belief. [01:43:44.240 --> 01:43:47.240] Wonderful. [01:43:47.240 --> 01:43:50.240] Oh, and that will so make them crazy. [01:43:50.240 --> 01:43:51.240] Hang on. [01:43:51.240 --> 01:43:52.240] Going to break. [01:43:52.240 --> 01:43:55.240] Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens Rule Well Radio. [01:43:55.240 --> 01:44:00.240] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.240 --> 01:44:02.240] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:44:02.240 --> 01:44:08.240] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:44:08.240 --> 01:44:12.240] Did you know the U.S. government banned the hemp plant from growing in the United States [01:44:12.240 --> 01:44:17.240] and classified it as a Schedule I drug to hide it behind the marijuana plant? 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[01:45:04.240 --> 01:45:08.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:08.240 --> 01:45:16.240] It's the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:16.240 --> 01:45:20.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:20.240 --> 01:45:24.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.240 --> 01:45:29.240] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.240 --> 01:45:35.240] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.240 --> 01:45:40.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [01:45:40.240 --> 01:45:44.240] and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.240 --> 01:45:50.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.240 --> 01:45:53.240] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.240 --> 01:46:21.240] Visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.240 --> 01:46:23.240] Okay, we are back. [01:46:23.240 --> 01:46:28.240] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Mark in Wisconsin. [01:46:28.240 --> 01:46:36.240] Okay, Mark, yep, the way I read the code, if you have knowledge that a crime has been committed [01:46:36.240 --> 01:46:43.240] and the crime is a felony and you don't report that crime, most every state has a, [01:46:43.240 --> 01:46:55.240] I wouldn't say most every, not all states have a state statute that mimics 4 U.S. Code, 18 U.S. Code 4. [01:46:55.240 --> 01:47:03.240] This prison a felony, Texas has one, and it's 38.171. [01:47:03.240 --> 01:47:09.240] So we have a duty to report crime if we have knowledge that a crime has been committed. [01:47:09.240 --> 01:47:16.240] All you have to do is observe. You do not have to be involved in the crime. [01:47:16.240 --> 01:47:18.240] You don't have to be the victim. [01:47:18.240 --> 01:47:28.240] I just tried to file 58 felony charges against a municipal attorney in Southlake, Texas. [01:47:28.240 --> 01:47:33.240] I went to a hearing where people were summoned to the hearing, [01:47:33.240 --> 01:47:43.240] and instead of a judge holding a hearing, I had a prosecuting attorney holding these let's make a deal meetings. [01:47:43.240 --> 01:47:47.240] And when the guy I went there with was called up, I went with him. [01:47:47.240 --> 01:47:50.240] And the bailiff ran up and said, wait, wait, you can't go in there. [01:47:50.240 --> 01:47:52.240] I said, sure I can. [01:47:52.240 --> 01:47:57.240] This guy was summoned to a hearing and I came with him. I want to watch the hearing. [01:47:57.240 --> 01:48:01.240] He said, oh, well, this is just a meet with the prosecutor. [01:48:01.240 --> 01:48:05.240] Oh, so it's not a hearing? Oh, no, it's not a hearing. [01:48:05.240 --> 01:48:12.240] Well, in that case, I want you to take my criminal complaint against that prosecutor and therefore impersonating a public official. [01:48:12.240 --> 01:48:15.240] And he said, well, she is a public official. [01:48:15.240 --> 01:48:20.240] Yeah, but the problem is she's a prosecuting attorney impersonating the judge. [01:48:20.240 --> 01:48:25.240] And he said, oh, okay. [01:48:25.240 --> 01:48:30.240] He was easy to get along with because this was Southlake and they knew who I was. [01:48:30.240 --> 01:48:47.240] So I came back at the next hearing and presented the judge with 58 state jail felony charges against this brand new young municipal attorney. [01:48:47.240 --> 01:48:54.240] And the municipal judge asked me if I was involved in the case. [01:48:54.240 --> 01:48:58.240] And I said, no. He said, well, then you don't have standing. [01:48:58.240 --> 01:49:03.240] I have to have standing to give notice of a crime? [01:49:03.240 --> 01:49:06.240] Yes, Ms. Kelton, you can't file this without standing. [01:49:06.240 --> 01:49:17.240] I said, well, under 38.171, if I have knowledge that a felony has been committed and I don't report it, that would be a class A misdemeanor. [01:49:17.240 --> 01:49:24.240] So according to you, I have to have some kind of standing before I could report it. [01:49:24.240 --> 01:49:29.240] How does that work? Well, I'm not here to give you legal advice. [01:49:29.240 --> 01:49:34.240] Oh, okay. That'll work. [01:49:34.240 --> 01:49:40.240] So Mark, guess what I'm going to do? [01:49:40.240 --> 01:49:45.240] Put on your cleats and tap dance on somebody's forehead? [01:49:45.240 --> 01:50:00.240] Yeah, I'm going to go to the local JP and file 58 counts of shielding from prosecution against this municipal judge. [01:50:00.240 --> 01:50:02.240] Sounds wonderful. [01:50:02.240 --> 01:50:06.240] I wonder what the JP is going to do. [01:50:06.240 --> 01:50:10.240] Probably have the bailiffs toss me into the street. [01:50:10.240 --> 01:50:20.240] Then we will walk this right up the line all the way to the chief justice of the state supreme. [01:50:20.240 --> 01:50:23.240] We'll create ourselves a lot of politics. [01:50:23.240 --> 01:50:37.240] So in your case, absolutely, not only can you file, you have a duty to file. [01:50:37.240 --> 01:50:39.240] Wonderful. Wonderful. [01:50:39.240 --> 01:50:43.240] Okay. Was that the only thing you had? Did you have something else? [01:50:43.240 --> 01:50:47.240] You've got to have something else. You caused way too much trouble. [01:50:47.240 --> 01:50:50.240] Well, I got new trouble I could be causing. [01:50:50.240 --> 01:50:59.240] I got a gentleman who is an ex-cop who didn't particularly care for me calling him on his phone [01:50:59.240 --> 01:51:07.240] when I noticed the ex-cop was busy poking around in the electronic records that exist for me. [01:51:07.240 --> 01:51:15.240] And it turns out that he is, according to a third party, [01:51:15.240 --> 01:51:30.240] he actively shielded his grandson from prosecution of inappropriate contact with a minor and setting a church on fire. [01:51:30.240 --> 01:51:33.240] Oh, he sounds like a really neat guy. [01:51:33.240 --> 01:51:39.240] Oh, he's a real special kind of snowflake, all right. [01:51:39.240 --> 01:51:45.240] And what did the cop do concerning the charges against the grandson? [01:51:45.240 --> 01:51:53.240] Well, what he did, according to a third party, is actual charges were delivered to the house. [01:51:53.240 --> 01:51:59.240] And then he worked magic and got the charges dismissed. [01:51:59.240 --> 01:52:09.240] You know, the claim is because he's an ex-cop, he pulled strings to make things disappear. [01:52:09.240 --> 01:52:15.240] Oh, okay. And he didn't like you calling him? [01:52:15.240 --> 01:52:25.240] He didn't like me calling him because I found that he was poking around in electronic records asking questions about me. [01:52:25.240 --> 01:52:30.240] I called him up directly and I said, I understand you have questions about me. [01:52:30.240 --> 01:52:35.240] Why don't you call my number here and ask me the questions directly? [01:52:35.240 --> 01:52:44.240] And he considered that intimidation and went off for five, 10 minutes with a rant in my voicemail. [01:52:44.240 --> 01:52:46.240] Oh, wonderful. [01:52:46.240 --> 01:52:47.240] Yeah. [01:52:47.240 --> 01:52:51.240] Did they contain any threats? [01:52:51.240 --> 01:53:02.240] He, since he had some 20-plus years of being on the force, he's pretty good at the non-threats, you know, but trying to sound threatening. [01:53:02.240 --> 01:53:15.240] And, you know, I got to when he blew up in the court, amazingly decided not to attend a hearing where I was. [01:53:15.240 --> 01:53:17.240] He was suddenly busy. [01:53:17.240 --> 01:53:30.240] He blew up in the gallery where I was and I did get to, as he was leaving, explain that he sounded agitated and he needed to calm down. [01:53:30.240 --> 01:53:36.240] Wait a minute, you accused him of being agitated? [01:53:36.240 --> 01:53:37.240] Oh, yeah. [01:53:37.240 --> 01:53:41.240] Now, he's the cop. The cops are the ones that accuse you of being agitated. [01:53:41.240 --> 01:53:46.240] Yes, ex-cop, retired cop, retired cop. [01:53:46.240 --> 01:54:02.240] That's good. I like, if I can get a public official to get excited, then first thing I do is tell them that you appear to be agitated. [01:54:02.240 --> 01:54:06.240] You need to get control of yourself. [01:54:06.240 --> 01:54:16.240] Because I'm always thinking, what's going to play well in front of the grand jury of my peers? [01:54:16.240 --> 01:54:26.240] And a grand jury that's set for any time have heard lots of cops accuse a citizen of being agitated. [01:54:26.240 --> 01:54:37.240] If you don't do exactly what the police officer says, exactly when he says it, he considers you agitated and fears for his life. [01:54:37.240 --> 01:54:40.240] And good chance his hand would go to his pistol. [01:54:40.240 --> 01:54:48.240] I was in Bowie, Texas, and this is right after I bought this brand new Avalanche. [01:54:48.240 --> 01:54:51.240] It was the first year they come out, so it was an unusual looking piece. [01:54:51.240 --> 01:54:57.240] I went to a convenience store and got a cold drink and then went to work in this shopping center. [01:54:57.240 --> 01:55:01.240] I was building a donut shop in an old chicken place. [01:55:01.240 --> 01:55:11.240] And some woman worked at the convenience store, then went to the grocery store behind where I was working, came out and saw my Avalanche out there. [01:55:11.240 --> 01:55:18.240] And she had seen it at the convenience store, and she thought I was following her. [01:55:18.240 --> 01:55:23.240] But she didn't realize that she didn't see it when she came in because it was already there. [01:55:23.240 --> 01:55:27.240] Well, she called the police, and the police come to talk to me. [01:55:27.240 --> 01:55:30.240] And I was up on the roof with a tool belt on. [01:55:30.240 --> 01:55:35.240] And the policeman looked up the ladder and said, you on this Avalanche? [01:55:35.240 --> 01:55:36.240] I said, yes, I do. [01:55:36.240 --> 01:55:37.240] He said, well, I'd like to talk to you. [01:55:37.240 --> 01:55:38.240] I said, well, come on up. [01:55:38.240 --> 01:55:40.240] He said, no, I need you to come down here. [01:55:40.240 --> 01:55:42.240] He said, no, I'm busy. [01:55:42.240 --> 01:55:43.240] You want to talk to me? [01:55:43.240 --> 01:55:44.240] You need to come up here. [01:55:44.240 --> 01:55:49.240] So we had a little back and forth, and these were Korean guys I was building this for. [01:55:49.240 --> 01:55:53.240] So they were getting concerned, and I didn't want to frighten my client. [01:55:53.240 --> 01:55:55.240] So I came down and talked to him. [01:55:55.240 --> 01:56:00.240] And he said that this woman thought I was stalking her. [01:56:00.240 --> 01:56:02.240] I said, oh, she did. [01:56:02.240 --> 01:56:05.240] So I was stalking her from the roof up there, right? [01:56:05.240 --> 01:56:08.240] Well, I just need to ask you some questions. [01:56:08.240 --> 01:56:14.240] He said, no, we're done here, you're dismissed, you can go. [01:56:14.240 --> 01:56:18.240] And then he moved his hand over to his pistol. [01:56:18.240 --> 01:56:22.240] So I reached in the car, and then he got real intense. [01:56:22.240 --> 01:56:26.240] But I came out with my cell phone and dialed 911. [01:56:26.240 --> 01:56:32.240] And I got the dispatcher, and I told him the guy's name was Felton. [01:56:32.240 --> 01:56:36.240] I told him where I was at, and there's an officer, Felton, here. [01:56:36.240 --> 01:56:41.240] And he appears to be terrified, but he's got his hand on his pistol. [01:56:41.240 --> 01:56:44.240] Now, I'm afraid he's going to wet his drawers, [01:56:44.240 --> 01:56:49.240] but I'm more concerned that he might shoot me first because he's so afraid of me. [01:56:49.240 --> 01:56:53.240] And the officer stood there and looked at me like, [01:56:53.240 --> 01:56:58.240] I don't believe you just said that to my dispatcher. [01:56:58.240 --> 01:57:02.240] Well, he deserved it. [01:57:02.240 --> 01:57:04.240] Anyway, off topic. [01:57:04.240 --> 01:57:06.240] Yeah, well, it's all right. [01:57:06.240 --> 01:57:12.240] It gives nice phrases to use because, again, I went right to, [01:57:12.240 --> 01:57:17.240] why are you so agitated with the gentleman? [01:57:17.240 --> 01:57:23.240] I also went ahead and pointed to the lapel pin that I had on my suit, [01:57:23.240 --> 01:57:28.240] the CIA lapel pin with the deputy who is still in the courtroom, [01:57:28.240 --> 01:57:32.240] in the courtroom, deputy, and pointed out that, you know, [01:57:32.240 --> 01:57:37.240] those CIA lapel pins, they just don't hand them out at trade shows. [01:57:37.240 --> 01:57:41.240] And, of course, actually, they do hand them out at trade shows, [01:57:41.240 --> 01:57:47.240] and that's exactly how I got it. [01:57:47.240 --> 01:57:52.240] But I should give them all something to talk about in the courthouse. [01:57:52.240 --> 01:57:53.240] Well, they need that. [01:57:53.240 --> 01:57:56.240] They need somebody that they can't push around. [01:57:56.240 --> 01:58:02.240] And if you file against this prosecutor for something you witnessed, [01:58:02.240 --> 01:58:06.240] that's going to terrify them because now they don't know who out there [01:58:06.240 --> 01:58:11.240] is waiting to drop the sky on them. [01:58:11.240 --> 01:58:12.240] Yeah. [01:58:12.240 --> 01:58:13.240] Okay. [01:58:13.240 --> 01:58:16.240] Well, we are about out of time. [01:58:16.240 --> 01:58:17.240] Thank you for calling, Mark. [01:58:17.240 --> 01:58:19.240] And don't be a stranger and send me an email. [01:58:19.240 --> 01:58:25.240] Show me how to pay for BarGrimmings.net so I can get that back up. [01:58:25.240 --> 01:58:26.240] You bet. [01:58:26.240 --> 01:58:33.240] Also, that kind of thing works great for an email address to attorneys. [01:58:33.240 --> 01:58:34.240] Wait, I missed that. [01:58:34.240 --> 01:58:36.240] What kind of thing? [01:58:36.240 --> 01:58:38.240] Oh, BarGrimmings.net. [01:58:38.240 --> 01:58:40.240] Randy, BarGrimmings.net. [01:58:40.240 --> 01:58:41.240] Yeah. [01:58:41.240 --> 01:58:42.240] That's good. [01:58:42.240 --> 01:58:43.240] Okay. [01:58:43.240 --> 01:58:44.240] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:44.240 --> 01:58:46.240] We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:58:46.240 --> 01:58:47.240] We'll reveal our radio. [01:58:47.240 --> 01:58:50.240] Good night. [01:58:50.240 --> 01:58:55.240] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible [01:58:55.240 --> 01:58:57.240] called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.240 --> 01:59:01.240] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes [01:59:01.240 --> 01:59:04.240] that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.240 --> 01:59:08.240] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. 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