[00:00.000 --> 00:05.520] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [00:05.520 --> 00:12.520] Markets for Friday the 3rd of March 2017 are currently trading with Gold $1,234.54 an ounce, [00:12.520 --> 00:19.440] Silver $17.96 an ounce, Texas Crude $52.61 a barrel, and Bitcoin is still rising sitting [00:19.440 --> 00:23.480] at about $1,286 U.S. currency. [00:23.480 --> 00:31.520] Today in history, the year 1924, the Islamic Caliphate in power since 1299 common era is [00:31.520 --> 00:38.200] abolished when the Caliph Abdul Mesed II, the 37th and last of the Ottoman Caliphate [00:38.200 --> 00:40.520] in the Ottoman Empire is deposed. [00:40.520 --> 00:47.480] This gave way to the reformed Turkey of Kemal Ataturk today in history. [00:47.480 --> 00:51.800] In recent news, in President Trump's immigration reform plan, the executive is seeking to hire [00:51.800 --> 00:56.320] and train 10,000 more Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and 5,000 Customs and Border [00:56.320 --> 01:00.920] Protection agents as soon as possible since it takes more than 200 days to hire ICE and [01:00.920 --> 01:04.920] CBP personnel and since the Department of Homeland Security has confirmed that it's [01:04.920 --> 01:09.140] examining its options to beef up staffing, many are concerned requirements and testing [01:09.140 --> 01:14.120] may be loosened up, especially since on average more than 40% of CBP applicants failed to [01:14.120 --> 01:19.000] either schedule or show up for their entrance exams and 60% of applicants who took the polygraph [01:19.000 --> 01:22.160] exam failed, disqualifying them for hiring. [01:22.160 --> 01:26.560] Customs Border Protection spokesman Michael Frayles stated that in order to, quote, meet [01:26.560 --> 01:30.880] our critical hiring needs, we are exploring ways to recruit individuals that the federal [01:30.880 --> 01:35.280] government has already vetted to work in sensitive positions such as military and federal law [01:35.280 --> 01:40.320] enforcement officers while also working to omit redundancies in the hiring process. [01:40.320 --> 01:46.000] For the budget of fiscal 2017, ICE only requested 6.6 million to hire 100 new officers while [01:46.000 --> 01:54.480] the CBP requested 3.83 billion to maintain a staff of 21,000 Border Patrol agents. [01:54.480 --> 01:58.600] Republican Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul, tweeted yesterday, quote, I have been told [01:58.600 --> 02:03.280] that the House Obamacare bill was under lock and key in a secure location and not available [02:03.280 --> 02:05.920] for me or the public to view. [02:05.920 --> 02:09.600] This was after he was denied entry into the Capitol meeting room where members of the [02:09.600 --> 02:14.160] House Energy and Commerce Committee were discussing the details of a possible Affordable Care [02:14.160 --> 02:15.680] Act replacement bill. [02:15.680 --> 02:17.920] Here's what he told reporters right after being denied entry. [02:17.920 --> 02:18.920] We're here today because I would like to read the Obamacare bill. [02:18.920 --> 02:19.920] If you recall when Obamacare was passed in 2010, 2009, 2010, Nancy Pelosi said, don't [02:19.920 --> 02:20.920] know what's in it after we pass it. [02:20.920 --> 02:21.920] The Republican Party shouldn't act in the same way. [02:21.920 --> 02:22.920] We want to see the bill. [02:22.920 --> 02:23.920] We have many objections. [02:23.920 --> 02:24.920] There are many parts of what they're proposing. [02:24.920 --> 02:25.920] And, of course, we've not gotten any of this in writing. [02:25.920 --> 02:26.920] I got it from Clinton. [02:26.920 --> 02:27.920] All right? [02:27.920 --> 02:28.920] I haven't gotten anything in writing. [02:28.920 --> 02:51.920] So we're here asking for a written copy of this because this should be an open and transparent [02:51.920 --> 02:52.920] process. [02:52.920 --> 03:10.240] This is what happens when you call the cops, this is what happens when you call the cops, [03:10.240 --> 03:31.000] this is what happens when you call the cops, this is what happens when you call the cops, [03:31.000 --> 03:54.720] this is what happens when you call the cops, this is what happens when you call the cops, [03:54.720 --> 04:12.640] this is what happens when you call the cops, this is what happens when you call the cops, [04:12.640 --> 04:13.640] this is what happens when you call the cops, this is what happens when you call the cops... [04:13.640 --> 04:14.640] All right, folks. [04:14.640 --> 04:15.640] Good evening. [04:15.640 --> 04:16.980] This is the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show with your host, Eddie Craig. [04:16.980 --> 04:21.500] It is March 6th, 2017. [04:21.500 --> 04:30.260] We are now coming up on one quarter of the new year having gone by. [04:30.260 --> 04:36.940] Now in the past few months, I've had one very great guest in my opinion on this show, and [04:36.940 --> 04:37.940] that was Dave Champion. [04:37.940 --> 04:41.180] And for those of you that were listening to the show that night, you know we had several [04:41.180 --> 04:43.500] callers call in on different issues. [04:43.500 --> 04:48.580] One of those callers was Andrew up in Pennsylvania, and one of the things he was talking about [04:48.580 --> 04:55.540] was how the Supreme Court and I have discussed the use of the term all on prior occasions. [04:55.540 --> 05:05.020] And Dave Champion informed him that the courts have routinely recognized the term all to [05:05.020 --> 05:14.460] only mean those things that are of a serious nature, rather than every like is the common [05:14.460 --> 05:18.140] meaning of the word all. [05:18.140 --> 05:25.620] Now personally, I take exception to that, not to Dave's comment about it, because he [05:25.620 --> 05:29.140] is absolutely correct, it is what the courts do. [05:29.140 --> 05:37.420] What I am taking exception to is the court once again creating a doctrine that has no [05:37.420 --> 05:44.940] legitimate basis in any law, okay? [05:44.940 --> 05:49.700] Those are the times when the court does something like that, the examples it uses to say why [05:49.700 --> 05:57.300] it reached that reasoning and conclusion predate the Constitution or the Bill of Rights that [05:57.300 --> 06:02.580] they're attempting to violate by their opinion. [06:02.580 --> 06:08.060] Now in my estimation, if you have an activity that's going on before a document that says [06:08.060 --> 06:16.260] you can't do that anymore gets accepted by the people at large, then something tells [06:16.260 --> 06:21.180] me that that should no longer be the accepted practice. [06:21.180 --> 06:28.820] And the courts are not free to re-implement it through judicial interpretation in violation [06:28.820 --> 06:34.200] of that Constitution and Bill of Rights or anything else prohibiting it. [06:34.200 --> 06:41.100] Now let me tell you what my biggest logical reasoning for this exception to that application [06:41.100 --> 06:45.460] of understanding and interpretation is. [06:45.460 --> 06:51.180] The courts themselves, as we've discussed on numerous times, fling about the mantra [06:51.180 --> 06:58.260] that if the law does not define a term in a statute and it doesn't give it a particular [06:58.260 --> 07:08.500] meaning there, then the court is obligated as a rule and a duty to apply the common ordinary [07:08.500 --> 07:15.460] meaning to the term or phrase that lacks a statutory definition. [07:15.460 --> 07:17.940] You get that? [07:17.940 --> 07:23.420] Their own rules dictate common and ordinary meaning, which you and I have no for a fact [07:23.420 --> 07:27.740] to be not the common and ordinary meaning. [07:27.740 --> 07:36.420] But always the common and ordinary meaning as used in law, okay? [07:36.420 --> 07:42.020] But this still presents a problem for the court's interpretation of all meaning something [07:42.020 --> 07:50.060] other than every, because the case law that is actually on the books in relation to what [07:50.060 --> 07:55.260] all means clearly states it means every. [07:55.260 --> 07:58.740] Do you understand that? [07:58.740 --> 08:02.860] You see the contradiction in what we're dealing with here. [08:02.860 --> 08:07.460] We have a rule that says we must use the common meaning if it's not defined. [08:07.460 --> 08:15.500] Then we create a judicially fabricated rule that it means something other than every if [08:15.500 --> 08:22.980] it allows us to create a doctrine that legitimizes an activity that shouldn't have been happening [08:22.980 --> 08:30.020] in the first place, but it benefits the government, so we're going to allow it to remain. [08:30.020 --> 08:35.940] And we need a way to legitimize it, so we do it this way, which is a violation of their [08:35.940 --> 08:38.580] own rules. [08:38.580 --> 08:44.740] And then they also have case law that says that they followed their own rules when they [08:44.740 --> 08:51.260] defined the term all. [08:51.260 --> 09:03.380] Now if this is not a clear cut indication and evidence that the judiciary is corrupting [09:03.380 --> 09:09.740] the language for their own ends and that of government to the detriment of the rights [09:09.740 --> 09:17.140] and benefits of the people, I don't know what else would be. [09:17.140 --> 09:24.340] They get told one thing in every opinion they write, they do something else in every other [09:24.340 --> 09:27.980] opinion they write. [09:27.980 --> 09:36.980] If it legitimizes something that the Constitution itself forbids, whether it be the state or [09:36.980 --> 09:40.580] the federal. [09:40.580 --> 09:45.820] For instance, here in Texas, our court of criminal appeals has ruled that you do not [09:45.820 --> 09:49.820] have the right to assistance of counsel in a class C finally misdemeanor case, even though [09:49.820 --> 09:57.860] the Texas Constitution specifically uses the terms all, A-L-L, criminal cases. [09:57.860 --> 10:01.180] And the Code of Criminal Procedure says exactly the same thing. [10:01.180 --> 10:06.740] In all criminal prosecutions, the accused have the right to assistance of counsel. [10:06.740 --> 10:12.820] It does not delineate or discriminate in any way as to the classification of the alleged [10:12.820 --> 10:15.660] criminal offense. [10:15.660 --> 10:21.300] It simply says all, A-L-L. [10:21.300 --> 10:27.540] Now in the hypocritical manner that is so prevalent throughout the judiciary, you and [10:27.540 --> 10:36.180] I are told that we have no ability whatsoever to deny culpability under the law with the [10:36.180 --> 10:47.500] excuse of I didn't know, I didn't understand, because we are deemed to know and understand. [10:47.500 --> 10:55.900] The problem is is what we know and understand is being undermined by what they say and do. [10:55.900 --> 11:03.500] They change the meaning of the terminology when it suits them, and yet we are expected [11:03.500 --> 11:13.180] to know in what given instance they are going to do that. [11:13.180 --> 11:20.660] And you honestly believe that this is a justice system. [11:20.660 --> 11:26.140] How do you achieve justice in a system where the rules are written in pencil and the game [11:26.140 --> 11:35.900] master can rewrite them on the fly any time they want? [11:35.900 --> 11:38.540] Because that is what we have. [11:38.540 --> 11:43.180] You go into a court carrying judicial notices or copies of the statutes and you try to hold [11:43.180 --> 11:47.020] the court to it, and if the court doesn't want to follow it, it won't. [11:47.020 --> 11:51.220] And when you send it up on appeal, the next higher court will go, well, if we interpret [11:51.220 --> 11:55.300] it this way, then the defendant is correct. [11:55.300 --> 11:59.620] But if we turn it upside down, twist it a little bit sideways, skew it in a reflection [11:59.620 --> 12:03.780] off of three other mirrors, we can make it read this way. [12:03.780 --> 12:08.540] So let's do that since it legitimizes what would otherwise be an abuse of governmental [12:08.540 --> 12:14.660] authority, and that's an authority we would actually like to have that we don't currently [12:14.660 --> 12:17.020] have if we follow the rules. [12:17.020 --> 12:21.700] So let's alter the language to suit our ends. [12:21.700 --> 12:25.980] And then that is what they do. [12:25.980 --> 12:33.420] As I've told you before, we have lost all ability to exercise any control or participate [12:33.420 --> 12:41.140] in any way meaningfully of our entire judicial department of government. [12:41.140 --> 12:47.500] The people can no longer sit in any position in the judiciary that has any power to make [12:47.500 --> 12:50.400] change. [12:50.400 --> 12:53.860] Think about that. [12:53.860 --> 13:03.020] Then every other department is populated by a majority or at least a huge portion of the [13:03.020 --> 13:10.380] same individuals that control the entire judiciary, the attorneys. [13:10.380 --> 13:17.380] They sit in our legislature in both houses and completely dominate one house. [13:17.380 --> 13:24.620] They created a law that gave them an unconstitutional monopoly on the practice of law and legal [13:24.620 --> 13:28.320] counsel to others. [13:28.320 --> 13:34.420] They voted on that law when the Constitution itself forbade them to vote on a bill in which [13:34.420 --> 13:39.740] they had a personal interest, and yet they did it anyway. [13:39.740 --> 13:49.700] And they continue to create laws that create conflicts that require us to hire one of them [13:49.700 --> 13:56.180] in order to resolve that conflict because the only way to get the law accepted under [13:56.180 --> 14:00.580] a particular point of view is if you have a bar card number to go with it. [14:00.580 --> 14:03.140] It doesn't matter if that view is right or wrong. [14:03.140 --> 14:11.620] It doesn't matter if that view complies with all of the other law on that subject. [14:11.620 --> 14:17.460] This is the way they control us through their system. [14:17.460 --> 14:20.460] It's got nothing to do with a gold fringe flag. [14:20.460 --> 14:24.220] It's got nothing to do with the form of the money. [14:24.220 --> 14:34.420] It has everything to do with who has the power to betray the people and get away with it. [14:34.420 --> 14:49.020] It is very much a system of he who makes the law makes the exceptions to the law. [14:49.020 --> 14:52.380] And that is the system we have. [14:52.380 --> 14:58.060] For better or for worse, and I am here to tell you it is absolutely for the worst, it [14:58.060 --> 15:01.260] is what is in place. [15:01.260 --> 15:10.700] None of these patronet theories that have no basis in law that I can legitimately source [15:10.700 --> 15:12.620] are going to solve this problem. [15:12.620 --> 15:21.100] In fact, let me tell you something I heard traveling around in the rumor mill on the [15:21.100 --> 15:25.700] wind here this past week. [15:25.700 --> 15:33.180] Someone came up with the patronet theory that in the transportation code, the three forms [15:33.180 --> 15:38.900] of driver's licenses, the temporary license, the learner's or the instructor's permit, [15:38.900 --> 15:46.220] and the occupational license, they came up with a special theory about why that license [15:46.220 --> 15:49.900] is called an occupational license. [15:49.900 --> 15:57.740] The theory is America is occupied by a standing army, so we have an occupational driver's [15:57.740 --> 16:02.240] license for that purpose. [16:02.240 --> 16:12.180] Do you see why we cannot get ahead in this system? [16:12.180 --> 16:17.100] Why we are not taken seriously? [16:17.100 --> 16:25.140] Why this kind of crap puts a lodestone around the necks of those who know what is actually [16:25.140 --> 16:30.060] happening with this and how to use it, and pushes us over the side of the ship in deep [16:30.060 --> 16:32.440] water. [16:32.440 --> 16:40.460] This is the kind of crap that costs us every time it is taken into a courtroom. [16:40.460 --> 16:44.660] But it is out there, and it is out there in large numbers, and there are people willing [16:44.660 --> 16:49.220] to swallow it up just as quickly as they are, the new flat earth theory. [16:49.220 --> 16:52.740] All right, folks, we'll be right back on the other side. [16:52.740 --> 16:57.420] The phones will be on call at number 512-646-1984. [16:57.420 --> 16:59.940] We will be right back after the break. [16:59.940 --> 17:01.420] Dang, cookies. [17:01.420 --> 17:02.420] Cookies? [17:02.420 --> 17:03.420] Me love cookies. [17:03.420 --> 17:04.420] Oh, hi, cookie munchers. [17:04.420 --> 17:05.420] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:05.420 --> 17:06.420] Cookies? [17:06.420 --> 17:07.420] Yucky? [17:07.420 --> 17:08.420] No, no bad cookies. [17:08.420 --> 17:09.420] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:09.420 --> 17:10.420] These are cyber cookies. [17:10.420 --> 17:11.420] No, can't eat it. [17:11.420 --> 17:12.420] No, they are not. [17:12.420 --> 17:14.820] No, can't eat it. [17:14.820 --> 17:16.820] No, they are cyber cookies, and they clog up your computer. [17:16.820 --> 17:17.820] These have apples. [17:17.820 --> 17:18.820] Really? [17:18.820 --> 17:19.820] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:19.820 --> 17:20.820] Yummy apple. [17:20.820 --> 17:26.820] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.820 --> 17:33.020] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:33.020 --> 17:34.540] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.540 --> 17:40.020] Now I go to logosradio.network.com, and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right [17:40.020 --> 17:45.700] hand side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you [17:45.700 --> 17:46.700] some yummy new cookies. [17:46.700 --> 17:47.700] New cookies? [17:47.700 --> 17:48.700] For me? [17:48.700 --> 17:51.060] Consider it an early Christmas present. [17:51.060 --> 17:55.860] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [17:55.860 --> 17:56.860] radio network, too. [17:56.860 --> 17:57.860] C is for cookie. [17:57.860 --> 17:58.860] C is for classified. [17:58.860 --> 18:05.300] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.300 --> 18:09.420] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.420 --> 18:13.740] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.740 --> 18:14.740] can win, too. [18:14.740 --> 18:19.540] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.540 --> 18:24.980] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to [18:24.980 --> 18:29.500] answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [18:29.500 --> 18:34.140] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.140 --> 18:39.260] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.260 --> 18:41.060] Additional consultation is available as well. [18:41.060 --> 18:47.020] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [18:47.020 --> 18:49.900] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.900 --> 18:58.900] 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 [18:58.900 --> 18:59.900] collectors now. [18:59.900 --> 19:08.900] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the Logos Radio Network.com. [19:08.900 --> 19:15.900] The Logos Radio Network.com. [19:38.900 --> 19:52.620] All right, folks, we are back. [19:52.620 --> 19:57.220] This is the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show with your host, Eddie Craig. [19:57.220 --> 20:05.020] And right now, we have the caller board open, calling number 512-646-1984. [20:05.020 --> 20:09.700] And our first caller up for the evening is Truth Raider up in Oregon. [20:09.700 --> 20:11.700] Raider, what can we do for you? [20:11.700 --> 20:12.700] Howdy. [20:12.700 --> 20:13.700] Howdy. [20:13.700 --> 20:16.700] I just got a couple of questions. [20:16.700 --> 20:22.340] The material you were speaking about, the similar material you said a few weeks ago, [20:22.340 --> 20:24.940] you had something supplemental to that. [20:24.940 --> 20:29.300] There's a constitutional challenge motion I'm working on for Texas on it, yes. [20:29.300 --> 20:30.300] Okay, great. [20:30.300 --> 20:40.460] I have this question, if somebody gets into a traffic collision due to their negligence, [20:40.460 --> 20:48.340] what should happen as far as the status of their ability to travel freely following that? [20:48.340 --> 20:54.660] Well, I'm not sure what I'm understanding about your question. [20:54.660 --> 20:59.020] If I am understanding it, then let's go through a couple of situations here. [20:59.020 --> 21:06.900] Then if the injury caused by the accident was one of criminal negligence or bodily injury [21:06.900 --> 21:12.180] due to negligence, then that's somebody that I would say shouldn't be behind the wheel [21:12.180 --> 21:15.060] in the first place. [21:15.060 --> 21:18.180] Because they represent a clear and present danger to others. [21:18.180 --> 21:19.180] Okay? [21:19.180 --> 21:20.180] Okay. [21:20.180 --> 21:25.220] So if it isn't more or less intentional or something in the commission of committing [21:25.220 --> 21:27.220] a crime, perhaps? [21:27.220 --> 21:29.500] Negligence does not have to be intentional. [21:29.500 --> 21:31.860] It simply has to be criminally negligent. [21:31.860 --> 21:34.940] In other words, let's take a scenario. [21:34.940 --> 21:39.820] You're traveling down a three or four lane highway in whatever compass direction you [21:39.820 --> 21:40.820] like. [21:40.820 --> 21:45.540] It is pouring down or even it's lightly raining. [21:45.540 --> 21:50.980] The traffic is light, but there is traffic on both sides of the highway. [21:50.980 --> 21:55.380] But because of the part of the road you're on, you want to try to see how you would fare [21:55.380 --> 22:01.060] as a NASCAR stunt driver and decide to put your car in a flat spin on the highway to [22:01.060 --> 22:03.660] see if you could recover it. [22:03.660 --> 22:08.740] And then you do so, but you jump the median into oncoming traffic and slam into someone [22:08.740 --> 22:13.860] else's car, running them off the road and causing them injury. [22:13.860 --> 22:19.100] Was that intentional to cause the injury or just negligent from stupidity? [22:19.100 --> 22:26.820] That's pretty much describing what happened to one individual here last week. [22:26.820 --> 22:32.420] Well, the difference is whether or not they hide your plane due to something they could [22:32.420 --> 22:40.500] not foresee or intentionally cause the situation that resulted in the accident. [22:40.500 --> 22:44.220] It's one thing to hit a patch of black ice you didn't see coming. [22:44.220 --> 22:49.420] It's another thing to be doing 95 miles an hour down an ice covered road knowing full [22:49.420 --> 22:56.900] well there is no way in heaven's earth you're going to stop, no matter how much sand is [22:56.900 --> 23:00.580] on the road or how hard you apply the brakes. [23:00.580 --> 23:02.140] And you're reaching an incline. [23:02.140 --> 23:03.140] Right. [23:03.140 --> 23:06.660] What's happened to an individual last Tuesday here? [23:06.660 --> 23:09.500] Let's go to the store to get a cup of coffee. [23:09.500 --> 23:12.940] All these police cars come flying around like one of these six or seven units. [23:12.940 --> 23:17.140] Oh, the ambulance, the hook and ladder, the paramedics, everybody, I thought it was some [23:17.140 --> 23:18.140] type of major catastrophe. [23:18.140 --> 23:22.500] But anyway, it was a young lady and her child, she wasn't paying attention to what she was [23:22.500 --> 23:23.500] doing. [23:23.500 --> 23:25.900] She had electronic devices, perhaps texting, et cetera. [23:25.900 --> 23:32.380] The children had, you know, the newer automobiles they had, they had a movie theater, DVD set [23:32.380 --> 23:37.500] up in the automobile and it was not paying attention to what she was doing and she caused [23:37.500 --> 23:42.780] an accident spinning out involving two other automobiles and she hit the wall, went up [23:42.780 --> 23:45.300] into the sidewalk there. [23:45.300 --> 23:50.820] And yeah, they took her, she was okay, but she decided to take the ambulance ride and [23:50.820 --> 23:51.820] all of that. [23:51.820 --> 23:58.620] Well, unless they can actually show that what, other than the presumption of why it happened, [23:58.620 --> 24:05.180] that there was actual criminal negligence involved in why it happened, then you can't [24:05.180 --> 24:09.060] really say that she was directly at fault. [24:09.060 --> 24:13.900] She could have been circumstantially at fault, but unless you've got evidence that she was [24:13.900 --> 24:20.100] directly at fault through some action that she herself took by choice, then you don't [24:20.100 --> 24:21.100] have negligence. [24:21.100 --> 24:22.100] Right. [24:22.100 --> 24:29.100] Well, the basis of the question is if somebody gets involved in being careless, as... [24:29.100 --> 24:34.020] Again, careless is a presumption unless you can articulate specific facts that would prove [24:34.020 --> 24:35.020] careless. [24:35.020 --> 24:36.020] Right. [24:36.020 --> 24:40.700] Because careless is just another word for negligent. [24:40.700 --> 24:44.420] Right. [24:44.420 --> 24:48.020] So you don't feel that that would have any bearing? [24:48.020 --> 24:49.860] I did not say that. [24:49.860 --> 24:55.020] What I said was the circumstances and facts will determine whether or not that has any [24:55.020 --> 24:56.020] bearing. [24:56.020 --> 24:57.020] Okay. [24:57.020 --> 25:02.220] I myself don't get into any traffic collisions at all. [25:02.220 --> 25:05.140] Well, no one usually does on purpose. [25:05.140 --> 25:06.140] No. [25:06.140 --> 25:07.140] No. [25:07.140 --> 25:14.060] The worst of ever as far as having a potential chance to get into an accident, of course, [25:14.060 --> 25:18.460] the number one place would be to get into an accident is just the parking lot. [25:18.460 --> 25:23.460] When people are backing in and backing out, that seems to be the number one cause of most [25:23.460 --> 25:24.460] common accidents. [25:24.460 --> 25:25.460] Okay. [25:25.460 --> 25:30.420] Well, thank you for the insurance mandate update, but what's the question out of this? [25:30.420 --> 25:31.420] Or have we covered it? [25:31.420 --> 25:33.420] That's what I was trying to determine. [25:33.420 --> 25:34.420] Okay. [25:34.420 --> 25:39.540] So does that have any effect on someone's right to travel, should that be canceled out [25:39.540 --> 25:43.940] if they're, take an example, if they have a record of it, they're perpetually... [25:43.940 --> 25:49.980] Well, but that's like saying can someone's right to keep and bear arms be canceled out, [25:49.980 --> 25:52.500] not without a dang good reason. [25:52.500 --> 25:58.620] Like for instance, they only use that right to cause harm to others, or to commit crimes [25:58.620 --> 26:03.060] against others, or they're insane to begin with. [26:03.060 --> 26:04.060] Right. [26:04.060 --> 26:09.140] Those are the only legitimate reasons for canceling out that right. [26:09.140 --> 26:16.460] And that right, even in the first set of circumstances, is only going to apply for a certain amount [26:16.460 --> 26:17.460] of time. [26:17.460 --> 26:24.060] After that, the right they lost because of what they did and they served their time for. [26:24.060 --> 26:28.340] If they actually served the time, they paid their debt. [26:28.340 --> 26:34.940] No matter what modern society wants you to think, if you put a term on a sentence for [26:34.940 --> 26:42.500] an action and you serve that time, then your slate doesn't hold anything that they can [26:42.500 --> 26:43.940] hold over your head anymore. [26:43.940 --> 26:47.220] You served the time. [26:47.220 --> 26:52.060] So the rights that you inherently have to defend yourself and everything else, you may [26:52.060 --> 26:56.340] not be able to carry a gun on your person everywhere you go, maybe. [26:56.340 --> 27:01.260] I'm not saying that's the way I would prefer it to be, but it's something to look at. [27:01.260 --> 27:05.220] But if you can take away the right that far, why can't you take away that right in every [27:05.220 --> 27:06.340] way? [27:06.340 --> 27:13.460] The point is, is that an inherent right can only be suspended, but not permanently taken. [27:13.460 --> 27:14.460] Not in my book anyway. [27:14.460 --> 27:15.460] I see. [27:15.460 --> 27:21.300] Because if I've paid whatever debt I owe, you have no right to keep depriving me that [27:21.300 --> 27:23.300] of which is rightfully mine. [27:23.300 --> 27:29.580] Okay, so after paying their debt, then they can restore those rights, isn't it? [27:29.580 --> 27:35.060] Yeah, well, even in the days of the old west, when they put these guys in prison, there [27:35.060 --> 27:41.940] was no parole, at least not until the late 1800s. [27:41.940 --> 27:46.140] You went to prison, you served the time unless you escaped. [27:46.140 --> 27:52.060] But when you were released, no one told you you couldn't go anywhere near a gun, no one [27:52.060 --> 27:56.020] told you you couldn't have a gun because that was a right they couldn't take away [27:56.020 --> 27:57.020] permanently. [27:57.020 --> 28:05.940] Now, as we know, all those rules have quite changed over the- [28:05.940 --> 28:11.300] No, what we know is that they have attempted to create the appearance that all those rules [28:11.300 --> 28:12.300] have changed. [28:12.300 --> 28:13.300] Right, right. [28:13.300 --> 28:14.300] Very good. [28:14.300 --> 28:19.980] Well, 11 consecutive times, I know this is getting redone, but 11 consecutive times they [28:19.980 --> 28:20.980] had the opportunity to stop me. [28:20.980 --> 28:21.980] They didn't. [28:21.980 --> 28:25.660] They didn't stop Dave today and they didn't bother to follow, so- [28:25.660 --> 28:27.660] Well, congratulations. [28:27.660 --> 28:28.660] Glad you made the point. [28:28.660 --> 28:29.660] Alrighty. [28:29.660 --> 28:30.660] All right. [28:30.660 --> 28:31.660] All right. [28:31.660 --> 28:32.660] Thank you very much. [28:32.660 --> 28:33.660] I'll let you get on to other callers. [28:33.660 --> 28:34.660] I'll talk to you later. [28:34.660 --> 28:35.660] God bless and have a good night. [28:35.660 --> 28:36.660] All right. [28:36.660 --> 28:37.660] Thanks, Raider. [28:37.660 --> 28:38.660] All right. [28:38.660 --> 28:41.460] Folks, I got a minute and 20 seconds before the next break, so I'm not going to take any [28:41.460 --> 28:43.860] other caller before we get to that. [28:43.860 --> 28:48.740] So Trumpet Dave and Mike, you all hang on and I'll get to you on the other side of this [28:48.740 --> 28:49.740] upcoming break. [28:49.740 --> 28:53.060] I don't want to get you started and have to cut you off mid-sentence here. [28:53.060 --> 28:57.380] Now, folks, while I've got this little bit of time, remember that we are in the middle [28:57.380 --> 29:00.820] of the fundraiser right now trying to get money for the network for the year. [29:00.820 --> 29:02.960] This is how we survive. [29:02.960 --> 29:06.380] Right now you can go to the logosradionetwork.com homepage. [29:06.380 --> 29:10.020] All the information you need is in the big box on the top left of the front page for [29:10.020 --> 29:11.300] the fundraiser. [29:11.300 --> 29:18.220] We are giving away an AR-15 from South Texas Gunworks, I believe it is, and we also have [29:18.220 --> 29:26.300] a couple of lower receivers that we'll be giving away in the drawing for AR-15s, I believe. [29:26.300 --> 29:31.780] So remember, if you purchase a traffic seminar, if you haven't, that gets you into the drawing [29:31.780 --> 29:32.780] 10 times. [29:32.780 --> 29:36.140] A drawing is a $25 donation. [29:36.140 --> 29:39.500] So the seminar gets you 10 entries into the drawing. [29:39.500 --> 29:40.500] Okay. [29:40.500 --> 29:46.180] The Constitutional Challenge Motion gets you, what is that, 8 entries into the drawing. [29:46.180 --> 29:49.500] This book gets you 4 entries into the drawing. [29:49.500 --> 29:52.820] So the stuff that you don't have, think about getting. [29:52.820 --> 29:57.260] Also remember to use the Amazon link on the webpage if you're going to shop on Amazon. [29:57.260 --> 30:02.980] We'll be right back, folks, so hang on. [30:02.980 --> 30:07.660] People scan the store shelves when they shop, but soon those shelves may be scanning you [30:07.660 --> 30:09.660] to serve highly personalized ads. [30:09.660 --> 30:14.260] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll have details on the latest creepy marketing scheme [30:14.260 --> 30:15.900] in a moment. [30:15.900 --> 30:17.500] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.500 --> 30:21.100] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.100 --> 30:25.900] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:25.900 --> 30:30.900] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.900 --> 30:33.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [30:33.640 --> 30:37.940] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:37.940 --> 30:41.460] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.460 --> 30:43.460] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.460 --> 30:49.980] Hey, Mike, your birthday's coming, and we know you love rocky roads, so indulge yourself. [30:49.980 --> 30:50.980] Yikes. [30:50.980 --> 30:54.380] What if the billboards knew who you were and what you liked? [30:54.380 --> 30:57.780] It may soon be a reality through facial recognition technology. [30:57.780 --> 31:03.620] Scanners and store displays will snap your photo and transmit your facial map to a computer. [31:03.620 --> 31:07.900] The database will instantly identify you and your buying habits. [31:07.900 --> 31:09.660] It's more than just science fiction. [31:09.660 --> 31:14.700] Most foods in Adidas are testing it, and the Venetian Resort in Vegas is already using [31:14.700 --> 31:16.060] it to profile people. [31:16.060 --> 31:19.700] Maybe it's time for some clown noses and floppy hats. [31:19.700 --> 31:21.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:21.500 --> 31:30.700] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.700 --> 31:31.700] What are you thinking? [31:31.700 --> 31:37.980] Micro plant powder with iodine and probiotics, or a total body detox for around $10 a month? [31:37.980 --> 31:43.620] NBUSA.org has 12 formulations of micro plant powder for absorbing and removing toxins from [31:43.620 --> 31:48.300] your kidneys, liver, blood, lungs, stomach, and colon, and feel better than ever. [31:48.300 --> 31:53.300] It alkalizes, oxygenates, kills parasites, does the job of 10 products that saves you [31:53.300 --> 31:54.780] space, time, and money. [31:54.780 --> 31:55.780] Call 888-910-4367. [31:55.780 --> 31:56.780] Only at NBUSA.org. [31:56.780 --> 32:04.980] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:04.980 --> 32:08.820] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:08.820 --> 32:12.500] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.500 --> 32:15.980] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:15.980 --> 32:19.660] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.660 --> 32:23.860] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:23.860 --> 32:25.340] our rights through due process. [32:25.340 --> 32:29.220] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.220 --> 32:33.020] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.020 --> 32:35.340] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [32:35.340 --> 32:39.380] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.380 --> 32:40.700] ordering your copy today. [32:40.700 --> 32:44.060] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.060 --> 32:48.460] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.460 --> 32:50.420] documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.420 --> 32:54.740] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.740 --> 33:02.700] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.700 --> 33:03.700] Free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:03.700 --> 33:04.700] I'm on the highway to hell, highway to hell. [33:04.700 --> 33:33.700] I'm on the highway to hell, highway to hell. [33:33.700 --> 33:52.180] All right. [33:52.180 --> 33:57.620] We are back, and we are going to take our next caller, which is Trumpet Dave. [33:57.620 --> 34:00.020] Dave, what can we do for you? [34:00.020 --> 34:13.860] Hey, Eddie, I just got out of a seven-hour trial at J.P. Court, and I'm really tired. [34:13.860 --> 34:14.860] I had a lot of fun. [34:14.860 --> 34:29.940] It was my first trial, pro se, and I learned a lot, and had a lot of fun. [34:29.940 --> 34:46.620] Eddie, something that the management team that I was suing, I cross-examined them, and each [34:46.620 --> 34:52.300] one of them lied about what happened here at my apartment. [34:52.300 --> 34:53.300] Is that unusual? [34:53.300 --> 34:57.260] Well, not... Of course not. [34:57.260 --> 35:02.100] What they count on is the fact that you don't have anything available to refute what lies [35:02.100 --> 35:09.180] they're telling, especially when it's multiple lies against a single rebuttal, as in three's [35:09.180 --> 35:15.380] word against one, or however many it was. [35:15.380 --> 35:22.420] This is the reason why I tell people, do not fail to record your interactions with anybody [35:22.420 --> 35:29.460] in any official capacity. [35:29.460 --> 35:31.860] I secretly recorded the trial. [35:31.860 --> 35:35.700] No, I'm not talking about the trial, I'm talking about the event that you were questioning [35:35.700 --> 35:36.700] about. [35:36.700 --> 35:37.700] Exactly. [35:37.700 --> 35:38.700] Oh, you're right, Eddie. [35:38.700 --> 35:51.380] I mean, I should have a camera in my apartment at all times so I can record everything. [35:51.380 --> 35:56.580] I'm guessing by the fact that they lied, and you're commenting on that, you did not prevail. [35:56.580 --> 35:58.580] That's right, Eddie. [35:58.580 --> 36:02.580] I did not prevail. [36:02.580 --> 36:19.860] Basically, my mistake was that I took... I got the entire Texas, Chapter 72, Texas Code [36:19.860 --> 36:31.940] of Residency and Tenancy, I read the whole code and brought it in, and it was of no use. [36:31.940 --> 36:39.460] Basically, these guys lied, they brought all of my furniture out of my room and put it [36:39.460 --> 36:45.700] in the living room so they could repair my room, and they never repaired my room. [36:45.700 --> 36:55.140] I'm in a wheelchair, so I thought, let's have some fun, so I sued them. [36:55.140 --> 37:00.140] Okay, but let me ask you a question. [37:00.140 --> 37:04.820] Did you bring any of the stuff to court that they gave you in writing saying that they [37:04.820 --> 37:09.300] were going to perform this repair? [37:09.300 --> 37:17.740] No, Eddie, and that's why they won, is because- [37:17.740 --> 37:18.740] That's one of the reasons. [37:18.740 --> 37:23.380] Now, my next question is, since you didn't bring in anything proving that they had told [37:23.380 --> 37:31.460] you they were going to perform these repairs, did you get any video or photographs of before [37:31.460 --> 37:34.020] and after? [37:34.020 --> 37:39.580] Of what your room looked like, of them actually doing the moving, including specific people [37:39.580 --> 37:43.860] doing the moving, and then what it looked like after, and the fact that they didn't [37:43.860 --> 37:45.900] do anything? [37:45.900 --> 37:51.940] The Austin Tenants Council actually came over and recorded all of my furniture in the living [37:51.940 --> 37:52.940] room. [37:52.940 --> 37:56.980] Well, yeah, but there is no recording of who put it there. [37:56.980 --> 38:04.620] For all we know, we're looking at poltergeist activity on a Blair Witch film, okay? [38:04.620 --> 38:10.180] There's nothing there that would prove that the apartment folks were responsible for that [38:10.180 --> 38:19.340] pile in your living room, which is why I was asking, did you video or photograph anything [38:19.340 --> 38:25.940] before this so-called repair job began, once you got notice it was going to happen, and [38:25.940 --> 38:31.860] did you record the procedures as they were doing them and moving your stuff, making the [38:31.860 --> 38:37.180] repair, and then not putting it back, or not making the repair and not putting it back? [38:37.180 --> 38:40.860] No, Eddie, I had a dream that they would... [38:40.860 --> 38:44.300] That combination of things is why you lost. [38:44.300 --> 38:48.180] It isn't just one thing, it's a combination of things. [38:48.180 --> 38:52.060] Yeah, right, right, right. [38:52.060 --> 39:07.300] Okay, Eddie, all right, I'm tired, I'll try to video everything from now on and take pictures. [39:07.300 --> 39:20.220] Thank you for your advice in the last couple of weeks, I'll give you a call soon, all right? [39:20.220 --> 39:21.220] All right, sir. [39:21.220 --> 39:26.020] Hopefully, you've learned enough in this that next time we'll be better prepared about it, [39:26.020 --> 39:27.500] and I wish you luck with it if it happens. [39:27.500 --> 39:28.500] That's why I'm calling. [39:28.500 --> 39:29.500] Okay. [39:29.500 --> 39:30.500] Thank you again. [39:30.500 --> 39:31.500] Yes, sir. [39:31.500 --> 39:37.340] All right, now we're going to go to Mike in Texas, Mike, what can we do for you? [39:37.340 --> 39:46.940] What's going on, Eddie, so yeah, I just have a few questions, I'm a newbie at this, a friend, [39:46.940 --> 39:52.380] you know, he told me about the Rue La Radio, and ever since I've been listening, I've been [39:52.380 --> 39:54.780] learning a lot of things, and so I... [39:54.780 --> 39:58.540] Well, now, wait a minute, is this a prank call from Sylvester Stallone? [39:58.540 --> 40:01.140] What, do I sound like him? [40:01.140 --> 40:05.620] Yeah, you sound like him in his part in Rocky, y'all, I agree on y'all. [40:05.620 --> 40:09.900] Hopefully, yeah, we have to do something, yeah. [40:09.900 --> 40:12.900] I don't dislike Stallone, but you know. [40:12.900 --> 40:18.220] No, that sounds good, actually, I've never had that... [40:18.220 --> 40:21.700] Maybe it's just on the phone and no one's noticed it in person, but you kind of have [40:21.700 --> 40:23.260] that inflection on the phone. [40:23.260 --> 40:30.380] Hopefully, I can have that good effect when I'm in court if I go down into court. [40:30.380 --> 40:39.100] So anyways, well, this happened actually to my mom out there in San Diego, California. [40:39.100 --> 40:43.260] I've been noticing a lot, you know, how important it is to actually do research, to actually [40:43.260 --> 40:48.180] define definitions, the definitions upon the conditions, and then how to use Black's Law [40:48.180 --> 40:54.020] Dictionary, and so I'm starting to, like, kind of educate myself a little bit, but I'm [40:54.020 --> 40:55.020] still... [40:55.020 --> 40:57.020] I know I'm very new at this, so... [40:57.020 --> 41:01.300] Okay, let me put a bug in your ear about the Black's Law Dictionary. [41:01.300 --> 41:08.820] Never cite Black's Law Dictionary as the source of your authority to make a statement of law. [41:08.820 --> 41:11.780] Black's Law is not authoritative. [41:11.780 --> 41:18.940] If you're using Black's Law, most of the definitions, if you're using Version 6 or earlier, will [41:18.940 --> 41:24.220] have the specific court case that made the determination as to the meaning of that term [41:24.220 --> 41:26.220] or phrase. [41:26.220 --> 41:31.100] Cite that court case, not Black's Law. [41:31.100 --> 41:33.100] Okay? [41:33.100 --> 41:39.060] And you can say, when you use the footnote of whatever the case site is, you can also, [41:39.060 --> 41:45.860] at the end of the case site, put, see also Black's Law, whatever edition, page, whatever, [41:45.860 --> 41:48.100] that that definition begins on. [41:48.100 --> 41:49.100] Okay. [41:49.100 --> 41:50.100] All right? [41:50.100 --> 41:56.500] But cite the case law, not Black's Law, or any other legal dictionary for that matter. [41:56.500 --> 41:57.500] Okay. [41:57.500 --> 41:59.500] Okay, yeah, because I was... [41:59.500 --> 42:06.620] Okay, so yeah, so like I said, I was learning about all this, you know, driving versus traveling [42:06.620 --> 42:13.740] and registration, who's supposed to have it and who's not, or, you know, who the law affects [42:13.740 --> 42:14.740] by it. [42:14.740 --> 42:15.740] Right. [42:15.740 --> 42:22.140] So my mom, she went to the store, you know, grocery store, food for less, parked her car. [42:22.140 --> 42:28.860] Apparently, she told me she hadn't paid the registration on the van in about six months. [42:28.860 --> 42:32.780] So when she came out of the parking lot, I mean, out of the store into the parking lot, [42:32.780 --> 42:38.340] she noticed that her vehicle was, or her car was actually no longer there. [42:38.340 --> 42:44.260] And one of the workers had told her that, that I guess the county, the sheriff's county, [42:44.260 --> 42:47.260] you know, deputy had told it. [42:47.260 --> 42:50.820] See, in California, that's called grand theft auto. [42:50.820 --> 42:51.820] Yeah. [42:51.820 --> 42:55.500] No, that's not a joke. [42:55.500 --> 42:57.740] That's exactly what that was. [42:57.740 --> 43:02.300] That county officer had absolutely no authority to tow that car. [43:02.300 --> 43:03.300] None. [43:03.300 --> 43:04.300] Right. [43:04.300 --> 43:05.300] Right. [43:05.300 --> 43:11.900] And so I started to like, okay, like I said, I'm new to research, but I started, okay, [43:11.900 --> 43:17.940] I called, I called the sheriff's department and I asked them, I asked them if, first of [43:17.940 --> 43:25.820] all, if they had towed it and they wanted to know what, what, how I was in the involved [43:25.820 --> 43:26.820] party. [43:26.820 --> 43:30.940] So then I asked them, like, aren't, aren't you guys like a public, you know, office? [43:30.940 --> 43:31.940] I don't know. [43:31.940 --> 43:35.060] You know, I don't even know if what I asked was correct, but if it's a public office, [43:35.060 --> 43:40.180] don't the public have the right to find out or see whatever it is that they're doing, [43:40.180 --> 43:42.380] whether it's legal and legit? [43:42.380 --> 43:44.780] As long as it's considered public information, yes. [43:44.780 --> 43:46.340] Hang on just a second, Mike. [43:46.340 --> 43:49.140] I got to take a break here and then we'll pick you up on the other side. [43:49.140 --> 43:53.060] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio, Monday night show with your host, Eddie Craig, [43:53.060 --> 43:57.780] on number 512-646-1984, get in line, we'll be right back. [44:23.060 --> 44:43.020] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio, Monday night show with your host, Eddie Craig, [44:43.020 --> 44:52.180] on number 512-646-1984, get in line, we'll be right back. [44:52.180 --> 45:09.180] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, and I would like to invite you to come by [45:09.180 --> 45:14.580] our store at 1904 Guadalu Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas, behind Brave New Books [45:14.580 --> 45:18.780] and Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [45:18.780 --> 45:23.900] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:23.900 --> 45:27.780] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian emu oil, [45:27.780 --> 45:31.620] lotion candles, olive oil soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [45:31.620 --> 45:44.460] Call 512-264-4043, or find us online at naturespureorganics.com, that's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [45:44.460 --> 45:48.740] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [45:48.740 --> 45:49.740] Naturespureorganics.com. [46:18.740 --> 46:48.380] All right, folks. [46:48.380 --> 46:49.380] We are back. [46:49.380 --> 46:56.060] This is the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show, calling number 512-646-1984. [46:56.060 --> 47:00.820] We are currently talking to Mike in Texas about an issue in California where his mother's [47:00.820 --> 47:04.380] van was towed from a shopping center parking lot. [47:04.380 --> 47:06.020] All right, Mike, please continue. [47:06.020 --> 47:10.700] Now, as we were saying before we went to break, yes, they're required to give out information [47:10.700 --> 47:16.420] to any person of the public that calls in, provided the information is considered public [47:16.420 --> 47:18.860] information by the laws of that state. [47:18.860 --> 47:25.020] Okay, so that's something that I'd have to look up to see what it is. [47:25.020 --> 47:26.020] Correct. [47:26.020 --> 47:29.660] If you want to make them do what they're supposed to do, already know what the statute says [47:29.660 --> 47:31.620] before you make that phone call. [47:31.620 --> 47:34.620] And that I would find where? [47:34.620 --> 47:39.260] It will be in whatever California considers to be its public information or open records [47:39.260 --> 47:40.260] act. [47:40.260 --> 47:41.260] Public information? [47:41.260 --> 47:47.300] Yeah, I don't know what they'll call it, but here in Texas it used to be the Open Records [47:47.300 --> 47:48.300] Act. [47:48.300 --> 47:50.540] Now it's the Public Information Act. [47:50.540 --> 47:51.540] Okay. [47:51.540 --> 47:52.540] Okay, cool. [47:52.540 --> 47:56.620] So, yeah, so then I called them. [47:56.620 --> 48:02.860] They finally gave me information that, yeah, that they had towed it for the registrations [48:02.860 --> 48:05.540] not being paid over six months. [48:05.540 --> 48:11.420] And I mean, so I just tried, you know, I kind of like winged it, you know, just try to figure [48:11.420 --> 48:14.540] out what, see what I could get, you know, out of these guys. [48:14.540 --> 48:21.540] And basically, the deputy called me back and he gave me, I guess, the article, I don't [48:21.540 --> 48:31.820] even know how to say it, but 12500A, which is under code, which is a person may not drive [48:31.820 --> 48:35.900] a motor vehicle upon a highway unless the person holds a valid driver's license issued [48:35.900 --> 48:40.660] under this code, except those persons who are expressly exempted under this code. [48:40.660 --> 48:45.660] Obviously, I know I have to define drive, you know, motor vehicle. [48:45.660 --> 48:51.300] Well, no, actually California statutes have a section that specifically says that everything [48:51.300 --> 48:57.500] in that statute is relating to transportation for compensation or hire. [48:57.500 --> 48:59.100] You just got to find that statute. [48:59.100 --> 49:00.100] It's in there. [49:00.100 --> 49:05.780] But yeah, it specifically says that all the statutes in there relate to that specific [49:05.780 --> 49:08.780] regulated subject. [49:08.780 --> 49:14.660] Now is that on a current or do I have to dig deep into something like, you know, an older [49:14.660 --> 49:15.660] version of their- [49:15.660 --> 49:18.380] No, it's there in whatever's current. [49:18.380 --> 49:19.380] Okay. [49:19.380 --> 49:25.380] In fact, if there's anybody in California listening that has already looked and found [49:25.380 --> 49:30.500] that from a previous call in or whatever, please call in and let us know exactly where [49:30.500 --> 49:31.500] it's located. [49:31.500 --> 49:34.660] But we do know it's there because we have seen it before. [49:34.660 --> 49:39.220] I just got so little room left in my head to cram crap into that I don't remember every [49:39.220 --> 49:41.500] other state stuff like I do Texas. [49:41.500 --> 49:42.500] Yeah. [49:42.500 --> 49:43.500] Yeah, no, I understand. [49:43.500 --> 49:47.620] Yeah, because that's why I wanted to see where to look, you know, so I can start doing my [49:47.620 --> 49:48.620] own research. [49:48.620 --> 49:52.100] And then, you know, obviously once I do the research, I'll feel more comfortable with [49:52.100 --> 49:53.100] the knowledge. [49:53.100 --> 49:59.700] So yeah, so then I talked to the lady and a deputy as well, and I asked them whether [49:59.700 --> 50:07.340] you know, traveling, whether I need a registration or license to travel. [50:07.340 --> 50:13.940] And sure enough, yes, you do, you need a license and registration to travel or to drive. [50:13.940 --> 50:17.860] And they try to kind of catch me flipping this, they try to catch me saying, well, what [50:17.860 --> 50:19.820] exactly do you mean by travel? [50:19.820 --> 50:24.660] You know, like, are you in the car, are you, you know, I kind of had to get like a little [50:24.660 --> 50:30.540] technical, I guess, where I said I was steering a steering wheel and then, you know, applying [50:30.540 --> 50:33.460] No, you do not have to get technical. [50:33.460 --> 50:34.460] Okay. [50:34.460 --> 50:40.660] I am in control of my private automobile for my private business and pleasure for using [50:40.660 --> 50:41.980] the public right of way. [50:41.980 --> 50:47.300] I am not driving, I am not operating for any commercial related purpose upon a highway. [50:47.300 --> 50:54.340] I am using my right to access and use my private property on the public right of way. [50:54.340 --> 50:55.340] Okay. [50:55.340 --> 50:58.140] Not a difficult argument. [50:58.140 --> 51:01.340] And it doesn't require all this tap dancing around terminology. [51:01.340 --> 51:02.340] Yeah. [51:02.340 --> 51:03.340] Okay. [51:03.340 --> 51:08.420] Well, I mean, I just wanted to be, I guess, prepared in case they try to, you know, [51:08.420 --> 51:11.780] Well, that's the correct response to be prepared with. [51:11.780 --> 51:12.780] Okay. [51:12.780 --> 51:21.220] And I also noticed that when I, okay, I had here, I had downloaded, let me see here, it [51:21.220 --> 51:26.660] is the, I do not know if this is current or not, it is the 2016, well, obviously, it is [51:26.660 --> 51:29.700] not current, it is the 2016 vehicle code. [51:29.700 --> 51:36.740] And the definition right there, drive, did not state motor vehicle, it stated just vehicle. [51:36.740 --> 51:39.100] And then when I looked up the definition in that code, [51:39.100 --> 51:43.020] A device used to transport persons or property upon a highway, right? [51:43.020 --> 51:47.740] I can't, actually, I can't pull it up right now since I am on the phone. [51:47.740 --> 51:53.140] I have it on my phone, so I actually wanted to write it down before I saw it, but I did [51:53.140 --> 51:54.140] not get a chance to. [51:54.140 --> 51:55.140] Yeah. [51:55.140 --> 51:58.220] Odds are, that is almost verbatim what it is going to say. [51:58.220 --> 52:03.100] A device that is self-propelled and used to transport persons or property upon a highway. [52:03.100 --> 52:05.860] Oh, yes, yes, that is right. [52:05.860 --> 52:08.660] That is what it says. [52:08.660 --> 52:13.780] I mean, don't I have to, like, kind of prove where it says that it is going to be for hire [52:13.780 --> 52:16.580] or where I am getting paid or I am getting some type of compensation? [52:16.580 --> 52:18.620] How would I prove that? [52:18.620 --> 52:23.180] You find the statute I told you to find that says that is exactly what those statutes reply [52:23.180 --> 52:24.580] to. [52:24.580 --> 52:29.860] The other way to do it is to do historical research on the acts directly, okay? [52:29.860 --> 52:38.380] For instance, here in Texas, all current statutory codes and all preceding statutes in the old [52:38.380 --> 52:48.900] codes originate from one period of legislation, 1925. [52:48.900 --> 52:58.100] Everything in existence right now is an amended version of that original statutory scheme [52:58.100 --> 53:00.740] based upon the original law. [53:00.740 --> 53:04.340] They have not amended the law. [53:04.340 --> 53:11.900] They have only amended the statutory scheme that is supposed to implement through regulatory [53:11.900 --> 53:15.540] means the underlying law. [53:15.540 --> 53:22.980] In other words, they have used these statutes to grossly expand the application and use [53:22.980 --> 53:29.540] of the law beyond its legislative scope and intent, an unconstitutional act on its face. [53:29.540 --> 53:36.220] That is what you guys mean when you say the subject matter of the actual law, what is [53:36.220 --> 53:37.220] originally... [53:37.220 --> 53:43.780] Well, every bill in every state, as far as I know, the Constitution in every state requires [53:43.780 --> 53:47.900] legislation to have a title or caption. [53:47.900 --> 53:56.180] In the title or caption, the legislation is limited to a single subject matter subject. [53:56.180 --> 54:02.980] They cannot have multiple subjects in a single bill, only one subject. [54:02.980 --> 54:13.100] Now they can have innumerable amounts of objects relating to that subject within that same [54:13.100 --> 54:14.300] bill. [54:14.300 --> 54:24.100] But the object is not a subject by itself, it is an object relevant and related to the [54:24.100 --> 54:27.940] legislative subject matter and context. [54:27.940 --> 54:34.420] If what is in that code is not an object that fits within that subject matter context, it [54:34.420 --> 54:40.620] doesn't belong in that code and it's unconstitutional because that would be a separate subject within [54:40.620 --> 54:45.820] the same bill and they can't do that. [54:45.820 --> 54:53.260] So when the bill says that these are a recodification of statutes relating to the subject of transportation, [54:53.260 --> 54:58.460] then that is the only thing the objects in that code can relate to. [54:58.460 --> 55:05.180] It is the only context in which they can be read and interpreted. [55:05.180 --> 55:12.500] So if they try to interpret operation of a motor vehicle as something separate and outside [55:12.500 --> 55:18.340] of the context of the legislative subject of transportation, then what the courts are [55:18.340 --> 55:28.340] doing is unconstitutional because they are creating a second subject within the same [55:28.340 --> 55:32.460] legislative bill and the legislature can't even do that. [55:32.460 --> 55:37.580] So how is the court able to do that since they also have no power to create law? [55:37.580 --> 55:49.780] Yeah, that's good, I'm going to have this in the archives so I can go back and re-study [55:49.780 --> 55:50.780] this. [55:50.780 --> 55:56.420] So basically what kind of, as far as the remedy, I mean obviously she... [55:56.420 --> 55:59.140] The remedy is always the same. [55:59.140 --> 56:03.940] Criminal charges with a grand jury in your state and a lawsuit against the offending [56:03.940 --> 56:08.020] officers and their department. [56:08.020 --> 56:14.740] And that includes the towing company being helpful at all because I was trying to call [56:14.740 --> 56:15.740] them. [56:15.740 --> 56:21.020] And if you can show that the department is contracted or has a specific set of tow companies [56:21.020 --> 56:26.820] which it operates with in relation to these thefts, then you can establish grounds to [56:26.820 --> 56:34.300] make the allegation of an ongoing criminal enterprise and car theft ring in California. [56:34.300 --> 56:41.980] Wow, wow, that's going to be good, that's going to be hard, well I mean I guess it's [56:41.980 --> 56:43.340] the research I mean... [56:43.340 --> 56:45.260] Actually no, it's not hard. [56:45.260 --> 56:50.780] If you look at what they did when they took your mother's van and you look at the crime [56:50.780 --> 56:57.740] in the California penal code of grand theft auto and running a chop shop and any of those [56:57.740 --> 57:02.820] kinds of things, you will find out that all of the necessary elements of those particular [57:02.820 --> 57:08.100] crimes were committed when they took that van. [57:08.100 --> 57:14.020] Wow, okay, okay, that's definitely some research to do. [57:14.020 --> 57:20.900] Okay and what about, okay so it was actually, my mom was the registered owner for that vehicle, [57:20.900 --> 57:21.900] so... [57:21.900 --> 57:22.900] I'm sorry for that what? [57:22.900 --> 57:26.340] My mom is the registered owner of that vehicle. [57:26.340 --> 57:28.500] I'm sorry, the registered owner of that what? [57:28.500 --> 57:33.100] She's the registered owner to the van. [57:33.100 --> 57:36.820] Okay or the car or anything but a vehicle. [57:36.820 --> 57:44.900] But okay, so she's the registered owner of the car, is there any way, I mean she would [57:44.900 --> 57:49.860] have to file the lawsuit herself, there's no way where you know since she's my mother [57:49.860 --> 57:53.100] I can somewhat, you know I'm the affected party as well. [57:53.100 --> 57:58.380] Oh yeah, well if she's the registered owner, she's the party that has standing to sue, [57:58.380 --> 58:06.740] not you, unless you go in as her next friend and act as assistance to her to help the suit. [58:06.740 --> 58:11.420] You have the right to do that, but you would have to be in California to do it. [58:11.420 --> 58:18.860] Yeah, yeah definitely, okay so then I can't help her, I can't help her, like I can't write [58:18.860 --> 58:25.260] mostly, would she be the one to have to sign or you know or like I said I can do that for [58:25.260 --> 58:26.260] her right? [58:26.260 --> 58:31.940] Yeah, she could give you power of attorney over the car and everything associated with [58:31.940 --> 58:34.900] it and then you could do it yourself without her. [58:34.900 --> 58:38.500] You just have to have her there as a witness to testify that she gave you that power of [58:38.500 --> 58:42.500] attorney and that she is the owner of the van, all right? [58:42.500 --> 58:43.500] Oh okay. [58:43.500 --> 58:47.740] All right man, I'm sorry I got to take a break here, so if you want to hang on, if you got [58:47.740 --> 58:50.300] anything else you can, I'll be right back. [58:50.300 --> 58:55.700] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.700 --> 58:58.500] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.500 --> 59:03.900] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.900 --> 59:07.140] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.140 --> 59:09.580] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.580 --> 59:14.860] First this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.860 --> 59:18.580] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.580 --> 59:23.580] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.580 --> 59:28.300] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.300 --> 59:33.440] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.440 --> 59:43.900] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.900 --> 59:47.980] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.980 --> 59:48.980] That's freestudybible.com. [59:48.980 --> 01:00:00.820] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.820 --> 01:00:05.540] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdowns. [01:00:05.540 --> 01:00:12.540] Markets for Friday the 3rd of March 2017 are currently trading with gold $1,234.54 an ounce, [01:00:12.540 --> 01:00:19.460] silver $17.96 an ounce, Texas crude $52.61 a barrel, and bitcoin is still rising sitting [01:00:19.460 --> 01:00:23.500] at about $1,286 U.S. currency. [01:00:23.500 --> 01:00:31.540] Today in history, the year 1924, the Islamic Caliphate in power since 1299 common era is [01:00:31.540 --> 01:00:38.220] abolished when the Caliph Abdul Mes'ed II, the 37th and last of the Ottoman Caliphate [01:00:38.220 --> 01:00:40.540] in the Ottoman Empire is deposed. [01:00:40.540 --> 01:00:47.500] This gave way to the reformed Turkey of Kemal Ataturk today in history. [01:00:47.500 --> 01:00:51.820] In recent news, in President Trump's immigration reform plan, the executive is seeking to hire [01:00:51.820 --> 01:00:56.860] and train 10,000 more immigration and custom enforcement agents and 5,000 border protection [01:00:56.860 --> 01:01:02.300] agents as soon as possible since it takes more than 200 days to hire ICE and CBP personnel [01:01:02.300 --> 01:01:06.100] and since the Department of Homeland Security has confirmed that it's examining its options [01:01:06.100 --> 01:01:10.740] to beef up staffing, many are concerned requirements and testing may be loosened up, especially [01:01:10.740 --> 01:01:15.940] since on average more than 40% of CBP applicants failed to either schedule or show up for their [01:01:15.940 --> 01:01:20.940] entrance exams and 60% of applicants who took the polygraph exam failed, disqualifying them [01:01:20.940 --> 01:01:21.940] for hiring. [01:01:21.940 --> 01:01:26.620] Customs Border Protection spokesman Michael Frayles stated that in order to, quote, meet [01:01:26.620 --> 01:01:30.900] our critical hiring needs, we are exploring ways to recruit individuals that the federal [01:01:30.900 --> 01:01:35.340] government has already vetted to work in sensitive positions such as military and federal law [01:01:35.340 --> 01:01:40.380] enforcement officers while also working to omit redundancies in the hiring process. [01:01:40.380 --> 01:01:46.060] For the budget of fiscal 2017, ICE only requested 6.6 million to hire 100 new officers while [01:01:46.060 --> 01:01:54.500] the CBP requested 3.83 billion to maintain a staff of 21,000 border patrol agents. [01:01:54.500 --> 01:01:58.620] Republican Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul, tweeted yesterday, quote, I have been told [01:01:58.620 --> 01:02:03.300] that the House Obamacare bill was under lock and key in a secure location and not available [01:02:03.300 --> 01:02:05.940] for me or the public to view. [01:02:05.940 --> 01:02:09.620] This was after he was denied entry into the Capitol meeting room where members of the [01:02:09.620 --> 01:02:14.180] House Energy and Commerce Committee were discussing the details of a possible Affordable Care [01:02:14.180 --> 01:02:15.700] Act replacement bill. [01:02:15.700 --> 01:02:18.020] This is what he told reporters right after being denied entry. [01:02:18.020 --> 01:02:21.020] We're here today because I would like to read the Obamacare bill. [01:02:21.020 --> 01:02:26.020] If you recall when Obamacare was passed in 2010, 2009, 2010, Nancy Pelosi said, you'll [01:02:26.020 --> 01:02:27.020] know what's in it after we pass it. [01:02:27.020 --> 01:02:28.020] The Republican Party shouldn't act in the same way. [01:02:28.020 --> 01:02:29.020] We want to see the bill. [01:02:29.020 --> 01:02:30.020] We have many objections. [01:02:30.020 --> 01:02:31.020] There are many parts of what they're proposing. [01:02:31.020 --> 01:02:32.020] And, of course, we have not gotten any of this in writing. [01:02:32.020 --> 01:02:33.020] I got it from political. [01:02:33.020 --> 01:02:34.020] All right? [01:02:34.020 --> 01:02:35.020] I haven't gotten anything in writing. [01:02:35.020 --> 01:02:51.940] So we're here asking for a written copy of this because this should be an open and transparent [01:02:51.940 --> 01:02:52.940] process. [01:02:52.940 --> 01:03:05.820] This was Rick Rode with your Lowdown for March 3rd, 2017. [01:03:05.820 --> 01:03:33.980] Thank you very much for joining us, and we'll see you next time on Lowdown for March 3rd. [01:03:33.980 --> 01:03:47.420] All right, folks, we are back. [01:03:47.420 --> 01:03:51.020] This is the Monday Night Rule of Law radio show with your host, Eddie Craig, and we are [01:03:51.020 --> 01:03:52.580] talking to Mike in Texas. [01:03:52.580 --> 01:03:54.580] All right, Mike, got anything else for us? [01:03:54.580 --> 01:03:55.580] Wrap this up. [01:03:55.580 --> 01:03:56.580] Okay, yeah. [01:03:56.580 --> 01:03:59.580] Real quick, I don't know if this information will be relevant or not. [01:03:59.580 --> 01:04:01.580] My brother is listening from San Diego, actually. [01:04:01.580 --> 01:04:09.340] He told me that, I guess, they had put a sticker of the current registration over the old one. [01:04:09.340 --> 01:04:16.660] And it was a coworker that saw a sheriff to take that sticker off and then sew it. [01:04:16.660 --> 01:04:17.660] Now... [01:04:17.660 --> 01:04:22.220] The sheriff removed a current registration sticker from the car? [01:04:22.220 --> 01:04:27.940] The current registration sticker, yeah, but it wasn't an actual legitimate current register. [01:04:27.940 --> 01:04:28.940] It was... [01:04:28.940 --> 01:04:29.940] It wasn't current. [01:04:29.940 --> 01:04:31.940] It was the old one that was in there. [01:04:31.940 --> 01:04:32.940] They put... [01:04:32.940 --> 01:04:34.940] I guess they got one... [01:04:34.940 --> 01:04:37.940] It was the old expired one, right? [01:04:37.940 --> 01:04:41.940] No, it was a new one, but it wasn't for that vehicle. [01:04:41.940 --> 01:04:44.340] It was for another vehicle. [01:04:44.340 --> 01:04:50.140] So it showed if the registration was current, but in reality, it wasn't because the sticker [01:04:50.140 --> 01:04:54.580] showed it was a current year, but it wasn't when they checked when they ran it. [01:04:54.580 --> 01:04:57.940] So they're also worried, like, if that's going to have anything, you know, an effect... [01:04:57.940 --> 01:04:58.940] Okay, now, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:04:58.940 --> 01:05:01.700] I'm not understanding this process here. [01:05:01.700 --> 01:05:04.860] Let me repeat this back and see if I have this. [01:05:04.860 --> 01:05:11.540] You're telling me that someone saw the sheriff's deputy put a new registration sticker on the [01:05:11.540 --> 01:05:12.540] van? [01:05:12.540 --> 01:05:15.340] No, not the one that he took the... [01:05:15.340 --> 01:05:17.520] He took the one that was... [01:05:17.520 --> 01:05:20.340] That was expired, he took that off? [01:05:20.340 --> 01:05:21.340] Yeah. [01:05:21.340 --> 01:05:22.340] Okay. [01:05:22.340 --> 01:05:23.340] All right. [01:05:23.340 --> 01:05:24.340] Next. [01:05:24.340 --> 01:05:25.340] Okay. [01:05:25.340 --> 01:05:31.300] And then also, what if someone had reported the car, like, what if someone obviously that [01:05:31.300 --> 01:05:36.540] we know knew that the place was expired and that we had, like, a fake sticker over it? [01:05:36.540 --> 01:05:37.540] What if... [01:05:37.540 --> 01:05:42.140] Well, now, if you put a fake sticker on that car, now you do have a real problem. [01:05:42.140 --> 01:05:43.140] Don't ever do that. [01:05:43.140 --> 01:05:44.140] Oh, okay. [01:05:44.140 --> 01:05:45.140] Yeah. [01:05:45.140 --> 01:05:46.140] It was a fake sticker. [01:05:46.140 --> 01:05:50.380] Oh, that was on there. [01:05:50.380 --> 01:05:52.140] It was a fake sticker? [01:05:52.140 --> 01:05:53.140] Yeah. [01:05:53.140 --> 01:05:57.940] It was for a current registration, but for a different vehicle, and they put it on that [01:05:57.940 --> 01:06:03.180] vehicle to make it seem as if the registration on the van was current. [01:06:03.180 --> 01:06:04.180] Okay. [01:06:04.180 --> 01:06:12.260] Without giving me any names of who did that and set themselves up for a really horrific [01:06:12.260 --> 01:06:19.220] time, if that's found out, my first question is, why? [01:06:19.220 --> 01:06:26.220] And my second question is, to what end? [01:06:26.220 --> 01:06:30.900] I'm guessing just to keep it, you know, they couldn't afford to pay the registration, so... [01:06:30.900 --> 01:06:31.900] Okay. [01:06:31.900 --> 01:06:33.060] Well, that may be the case. [01:06:33.060 --> 01:06:38.540] They can't afford to pay the registration, but rule number one is this. [01:06:38.540 --> 01:06:44.180] Not having the car registered is a fine-only infraction in California, which means they [01:06:44.180 --> 01:06:47.620] have no authority to take the car. [01:06:47.620 --> 01:06:48.860] It's civil. [01:06:48.860 --> 01:06:57.100] They cannot seize property in a civil action without a court order, period, okay? [01:06:57.100 --> 01:07:06.460] The second problem is, fraud, however, is not civil, it is totally criminal. [01:07:06.460 --> 01:07:13.060] And in California, it can have varying degrees of punishment, all the way from justifying, [01:07:13.060 --> 01:07:17.740] all the way up to prison. [01:07:17.740 --> 01:07:22.540] Not jail, not county country club, prison. [01:07:22.540 --> 01:07:26.500] So that just changed the whole ballpark. [01:07:26.500 --> 01:07:30.540] Very much so if someone pursues that issue of the sticker. [01:07:30.540 --> 01:07:31.540] Okay. [01:07:31.540 --> 01:07:32.540] Okay. [01:07:32.540 --> 01:07:33.540] Don't ever do that. [01:07:33.540 --> 01:07:34.540] Okay. [01:07:34.540 --> 01:07:35.540] All right, definitely. [01:07:35.540 --> 01:07:36.540] Okay. [01:07:36.540 --> 01:07:49.860] And then the last thing is, as far as, I guess, where to do, I guess, research and learn more [01:07:49.860 --> 01:07:55.660] about the statutes here, what is that, I don't know, the penal code, as far as... [01:07:55.660 --> 01:07:58.700] California statutes, like every other state, are online. [01:07:58.700 --> 01:08:03.660] The only ones you can't rely on at all are the ones you find in Arkansas because they [01:08:03.660 --> 01:08:08.300] don't put them online, despite the fact their legislature enacted a law that said they had [01:08:08.300 --> 01:08:10.300] to 30 years ago. [01:08:10.300 --> 01:08:14.500] So here in Texas, because I live in Texas and... [01:08:14.500 --> 01:08:15.940] Yeah, but you're not... [01:08:15.940 --> 01:08:18.020] This event did not occur in Texas. [01:08:18.020 --> 01:08:25.300] No, this is on a separate, this is for me to know, for me to know here what I'm... [01:08:25.300 --> 01:08:29.380] Yes, all the current Texas statutes are online. [01:08:29.380 --> 01:08:36.020] And that's the... But that is not the actual law. [01:08:36.020 --> 01:08:37.020] Understand that. [01:08:37.020 --> 01:08:43.300] Speeding, I heard that speeding, there's different, I guess, you have to prove certain elements [01:08:43.300 --> 01:08:48.660] to, you know, or all the elements need to be met before you can get in charge of the [01:08:48.660 --> 01:08:49.660] speeding. [01:08:49.660 --> 01:08:53.660] Now, I ask that because I'm a commercial driver as well, so... [01:08:53.660 --> 01:09:03.860] All the elements you need to know about speeding you can find in three statutes, 201.904, 545.351, [01:09:03.860 --> 01:09:08.940] and 545.352, Texas Transportation Code. [01:09:08.940 --> 01:09:15.140] The combination of those three statutes show you all the required elements of a speeding [01:09:15.140 --> 01:09:16.140] offense. [01:09:16.140 --> 01:09:24.460] None of them apply to non-commercial vehicles and even commercial vehicles rarely would [01:09:24.460 --> 01:09:32.100] qualify to get charged with speeding, because under the statute, one of the mandatory elements [01:09:32.100 --> 01:09:38.180] that must be alleged and proven is that you fail to exercise due care so as to failing [01:09:38.180 --> 01:09:43.660] in controlling your speed to avoid a collision with another person or vehicle either lawfully [01:09:43.660 --> 01:09:48.620] upon or entering the highway. [01:09:48.620 --> 01:09:53.820] And that hardly ever happens in a speeding citation. [01:09:53.820 --> 01:09:59.140] And if it does, and if it is why there's a speeding citation issued, then it's already [01:09:59.140 --> 01:10:00.140] happened. [01:10:00.140 --> 01:10:01.140] Yeah. [01:10:01.140 --> 01:10:02.140] Okay. [01:10:02.140 --> 01:10:03.140] So... [01:10:03.140 --> 01:10:04.140] Yeah, I... [01:10:04.140 --> 01:10:14.300] Yeah, because I did get a speeding in my semi, but I know that they couldn't prove all the [01:10:14.300 --> 01:10:17.900] elements and I just didn't know where to find it. [01:10:17.900 --> 01:10:23.300] See, even if you were in a construction zone when this was happening, the one thing they [01:10:23.300 --> 01:10:31.340] still have to prove is that there was a legitimate speed survey done on that stretch of highway [01:10:31.340 --> 01:10:36.620] for the purpose of lowering that speed limit during the period of construction. [01:10:36.620 --> 01:10:41.920] If they cannot present that evidence in court, then they can't make the charge stick. [01:10:41.920 --> 01:10:47.180] They also, once again, without the element of the collision, they can't make that stick [01:10:47.180 --> 01:10:48.180] either. [01:10:48.180 --> 01:10:51.940] Yeah, because he didn't know there was no collision, there was no damage, nothing was [01:10:51.940 --> 01:10:52.940] done. [01:10:52.940 --> 01:10:54.940] And as a matter of fact, they had actually raised the... [01:10:54.940 --> 01:10:56.620] Oh, no, actually, I take that back. [01:10:56.620 --> 01:11:01.780] I was going to get on the freeway, but there was traffic, so I ended up going back onto [01:11:01.780 --> 01:11:07.580] the service road and the cop was hidden behind some bushes and he caught me. [01:11:07.580 --> 01:11:09.220] But now let me ask you this question. [01:11:09.220 --> 01:11:13.420] When the cop pulled you over and wrote you the citation, did the cop ask to see your [01:11:13.420 --> 01:11:14.420] logbook? [01:11:14.420 --> 01:11:16.580] No, he didn't. [01:11:16.580 --> 01:11:20.160] Did the cop ask you if you were carrying a load or could he see that you were carrying [01:11:20.160 --> 01:11:21.160] a load? [01:11:21.160 --> 01:11:23.460] No, because I had a boxed in... [01:11:23.460 --> 01:11:25.180] A boxed trailer, that's right. [01:11:25.180 --> 01:11:27.820] So he has no idea if you were loaded. [01:11:27.820 --> 01:11:31.660] He didn't check your logbook to see if you were on the clock. [01:11:31.660 --> 01:11:35.900] How did he come to the decision that you were engaging in transportation? [01:11:35.900 --> 01:11:41.940] What is his facts and evidence supporting that particular conclusion of law? [01:11:41.940 --> 01:11:46.900] The fact that you're in a truck alone is not conclusive proof that you are on the clock [01:11:46.900 --> 01:11:50.380] and getting paid, so as to be engaged in transportation. [01:11:50.380 --> 01:11:51.380] Okay. [01:11:51.380 --> 01:11:58.140] I mean, yeah, that case was over in a long time, but I mean, I knew there was something [01:11:58.140 --> 01:11:59.140] to it where... [01:11:59.140 --> 01:12:06.740] I hired a lawyer and she basically like, you know, she set me up, but I mean, she just [01:12:06.740 --> 01:12:07.740] pretty much couldn't do nothing. [01:12:07.740 --> 01:12:12.340] She said I was going to get this ticket no matter what, so... [01:12:12.340 --> 01:12:16.580] That was a piss poor lawyer that you can now sue for malpractice. [01:12:16.580 --> 01:12:24.460] See, fraud in Texas has no statute of limitations until you have become aware of the fraud. [01:12:24.460 --> 01:12:31.460] Now guess what I have in my possession that you can have for 200 little old measly dollars? [01:12:31.460 --> 01:12:36.540] A constitutional challenge motion I'm working on that proves the entire transportation code [01:12:36.540 --> 01:12:43.020] as it currently exists is absolutely unconstitutional under the Texas Constitution. [01:12:43.020 --> 01:12:49.540] In other words, the speeding allegation was used or made from a set of statutes that can't [01:12:49.540 --> 01:12:55.100] have any force and effect of law because they're constitutionally invalid, which means you [01:12:55.100 --> 01:13:00.260] can challenge that prior conviction and you can prove your attorney's an idiot and sue [01:13:00.260 --> 01:13:05.960] her for malpractice as well as the court for what they did in prosecuting you and finding [01:13:05.960 --> 01:13:13.180] you and the officer for participating in making a false allegation against you. [01:13:13.180 --> 01:13:17.860] Yeah, because I mean, the one thing I was more worried about than anything was the point, [01:13:17.860 --> 01:13:18.860] but I mean... [01:13:18.860 --> 01:13:19.860] Right. [01:13:19.860 --> 01:13:26.140] Well, see, in any state of the union, a lack of jurisdiction can be challenged forever. [01:13:26.140 --> 01:13:33.220] If they used an unconstitutional statute or act to railroad you through and fine you and [01:13:33.220 --> 01:13:37.780] take your property, and your property in this case is your time and your money, then they [01:13:37.780 --> 01:13:45.020] committed a crime against you, an actionable crime that you can get compensation for. [01:13:45.020 --> 01:13:46.020] Okay. [01:13:46.020 --> 01:13:47.020] Okay, definitely. [01:13:47.020 --> 01:13:50.020] Then I'm definitely going to be... [01:13:50.020 --> 01:13:55.260] Yeah, I'm already on Facebook and I'm a group and I've been selling a lot of my people's [01:13:55.260 --> 01:13:56.260] assets. [01:13:56.260 --> 01:13:57.260] It's time to get... [01:13:57.260 --> 01:14:02.500] Yeah, my friend's request has exploded in the last two weeks. [01:14:02.500 --> 01:14:09.020] I've gone from 3,700 people to almost 4,500 people in just two weeks. [01:14:09.020 --> 01:14:16.020] Oh, and then after the Harris, the best is to learn, I'm pretty sure it's going to triple. [01:14:16.020 --> 01:14:17.020] Yeah. [01:14:17.020 --> 01:14:18.020] All right. [01:14:18.020 --> 01:14:19.020] Well, thank you, Eddie, for all the information. [01:14:19.020 --> 01:14:24.700] I'll definitely be keeping in contact, definitely keep up online on Facebook and definitely [01:14:24.700 --> 01:14:31.060] be watching out for that project that you're working on, so I appreciate everything you [01:14:31.060 --> 01:14:32.060] do. [01:14:32.060 --> 01:14:33.060] Thank you. [01:14:33.060 --> 01:14:43.300] Oh, I'm sorry, folks, my correction, I misremembered the numbers from 3,500 to 3,765. [01:14:43.300 --> 01:14:45.780] That's where I've gotten to in two weeks. [01:14:45.780 --> 01:14:50.620] I've been getting dozens of friend requests and some I'm about to take and some I don't [01:14:50.620 --> 01:14:55.660] because some of the accounts are obviously fake accounts, but be that as it may, I'm [01:14:55.660 --> 01:14:59.580] not sure where all the word of mouth is coming from, just coming from somewhere. [01:14:59.580 --> 01:15:00.580] All right. [01:15:00.580 --> 01:15:05.060] Well, let's see, again, two minute warning for the next break, but I'm going to go ahead [01:15:05.060 --> 01:15:07.020] and bring Charles in Washington on. [01:15:07.020 --> 01:15:11.340] Charles, we've got about a minute and a half before I got to go to a break and put you [01:15:11.340 --> 01:15:12.340] on hold. [01:15:12.340 --> 01:15:13.740] So what do you got for me so far? [01:15:13.740 --> 01:15:15.740] Okay, Eddie, two things. [01:15:15.740 --> 01:15:21.620] One, when you gave me hours, okay, I'm going to do this quick, remember I told you I got [01:15:21.620 --> 01:15:26.700] stopped on HOV lane by myself and I got the ticket and you gave me the seven derogatories [01:15:26.700 --> 01:15:31.540] to go to court on while I filed the seven derogatory, went to court. [01:15:31.540 --> 01:15:37.980] She removed the registration and drive it in the HOV lane, but still stuck me with the [01:15:37.980 --> 01:15:44.540] no license, which was a current license, but when you don't show a license as I was claiming [01:15:44.540 --> 01:15:49.900] traveling, then they have a code, a statute that says it would be considered as a suspended [01:15:49.900 --> 01:15:52.780] license and she stuck me with the no insurance. [01:15:52.780 --> 01:15:57.180] So I filed an appeal, which is going through the process right now and now I'm at the process, [01:15:57.180 --> 01:15:59.580] now I'm annoying from you, what's my next step? [01:15:59.580 --> 01:16:00.580] What's wrong? [01:16:00.580 --> 01:16:07.580] Well, the next step is to wait for the appeal to be accepted and go forward. [01:16:07.580 --> 01:16:13.540] But my question for you at the trial level is, is what did you do to prove you were not [01:16:13.540 --> 01:16:18.700] engaged in an activity that required the license or the registration and therefore no requirement [01:16:18.700 --> 01:16:21.860] to display either? [01:16:21.860 --> 01:16:28.980] Well, that's funny that you said that because over the period of time we listened to you, [01:16:28.980 --> 01:16:34.060] I know I've gotten information that says, you know, if I show the registration that [01:16:34.060 --> 01:16:37.940] I'm not doing business on the comments, I have a paper showing I'm not registered with [01:16:37.940 --> 01:16:41.980] the state and then the other information, I did not submit that because I thought all [01:16:41.980 --> 01:16:45.620] I would need was that, but during that course of action I realized I should have submitted [01:16:45.620 --> 01:16:46.620] that. [01:16:46.620 --> 01:16:50.700] Well, no, that's not the correct approach and I'll tell you why when we get back after [01:16:50.700 --> 01:16:52.940] this break, if I understood you correctly. [01:16:52.940 --> 01:16:55.540] All right, folks, this is Rule of Law Radio. [01:16:55.540 --> 01:17:00.100] We'll be right back, so y'all hang in there. [01:17:00.100 --> 01:17:01.100] I love Logos. [01:17:01.100 --> 01:17:04.460] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.460 --> 01:17:07.300] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.300 --> 01:17:08.300] I need my truth fixed. [01:17:08.300 --> 01:17:13.180] I'd be lost without Logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.180 --> 01:17:16.940] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [01:17:16.940 --> 01:17:20.300] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.300 --> 01:17:21.300] How can I help Logos? [01:17:21.300 --> 01:17:22.300] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:22.300 --> 01:17:23.300] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [01:17:23.300 --> 01:17:24.300] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:24.300 --> 01:17:25.300] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:25.300 --> 01:17:26.300] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:17:26.300 --> 01:17:27.300] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:27.300 --> 01:17:43.380] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.380 --> 01:17:44.380] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.380 --> 01:17:45.380] No. [01:17:45.380 --> 01:17:46.380] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.380 --> 01:17:47.380] No. [01:17:47.380 --> 01:17:48.380] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:48.380 --> 01:17:49.380] No. [01:17:49.380 --> 01:17:50.380] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.380 --> 01:17:51.380] Wow. [01:17:51.380 --> 01:17:54.380] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:54.380 --> 01:17:55.380] This is perfect. [01:17:55.380 --> 01:17:56.380] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.380 --> 01:17:57.380] We are welcome. [01:17:57.380 --> 01:17:58.380] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:58.380 --> 01:18:06.380] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved except in the area of [01:18:06.380 --> 01:18:07.380] nutrition. [01:18:07.380 --> 01:18:11.820] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed all that. [01:18:11.820 --> 01:18:17.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:18:17.500 --> 01:18:23.820] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [01:18:23.820 --> 01:18:25.940] provide the nutrients you need. [01:18:25.940 --> 01:18:30.940] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [01:18:30.940 --> 01:18:31.940] we reject. [01:18:31.940 --> 01:18:37.300] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [01:18:37.300 --> 01:18:40.140] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:18:40.140 --> 01:18:46.420] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:18:46.420 --> 01:18:48.060] quality radio. [01:18:48.060 --> 01:18:52.140] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:18:52.140 --> 01:18:57.660] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [01:18:57.660 --> 01:18:58.660] increase your income. [01:18:58.660 --> 01:18:59.660] Order now. [01:18:59.660 --> 01:19:23.260] This is the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:19:23.260 --> 01:19:28.300] As I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I take a look at my life and realize [01:19:28.300 --> 01:19:33.580] there's nothing left, because I've been brassin' and laughin' so long that even my mama thinks [01:19:33.580 --> 01:19:38.100] that my mind is gone, but I ain't never crossed a man that didn't deserve it. [01:19:38.100 --> 01:19:41.300] Me be treated like a punk, you know that's unheard of. [01:19:41.300 --> 01:19:45.820] You better watch how you're talkin', and where you're walkin', or you and your homies might [01:19:45.820 --> 01:19:46.820] be lyin' and talkin'. [01:19:46.820 --> 01:19:52.060] I really hate to drift, but I gotta know, as they grow, I see myself in the past. [01:19:52.060 --> 01:19:53.780] Alright folks, we are back. [01:19:53.780 --> 01:19:57.780] This is Rule of Law Radio Charles, I know I'm talking to you, but I got somebody with [01:19:57.780 --> 01:19:59.860] a cell phone issue and a low battery. [01:19:59.860 --> 01:20:03.980] I'm gonna go ahead and take them before they lose everything, and then I'll get back to [01:20:03.980 --> 01:20:04.980] you as soon as I'm done. [01:20:04.980 --> 01:20:05.980] Adam, what do you got? [01:20:05.980 --> 01:20:06.980] Hello? [01:20:06.980 --> 01:20:07.980] Hello? [01:20:07.980 --> 01:20:08.980] Yeah, can you hear me alright? [01:20:08.980 --> 01:20:09.980] Yeah, I can hear you. [01:20:09.980 --> 01:20:10.980] Great. [01:20:10.980 --> 01:20:11.980] Hey man, I just want to report a small victory down here. [01:20:11.980 --> 01:20:12.980] Alright, what you got? [01:20:12.980 --> 01:20:34.180] Well, I tried to put, that's how I describe it, it's my first go, it's been a long time, [01:20:34.180 --> 01:20:40.860] but he gave me my helmet and my training wheels, and I got on my little trike of truth, and [01:20:40.860 --> 01:20:48.100] I smashed through those road blocks they call JP, and the referee, the county attorney, [01:20:48.100 --> 01:20:51.460] he blew a whistle and stopped the fight, so. [01:20:51.460 --> 01:20:52.460] Oh really? [01:20:52.460 --> 01:20:53.460] Come on. [01:20:53.460 --> 01:20:54.460] Good. [01:20:54.460 --> 01:20:57.820] Come on man, I got rid of them, and it's all, I give credit to you and Randy and Rule of [01:20:57.820 --> 01:21:03.420] Law Radio completely, man, that, boy, I mean, I did my own legal research and stuff, and [01:21:03.420 --> 01:21:08.060] all that, but we got a little victory down here, and I just want to report that. [01:21:08.060 --> 01:21:09.940] Well, I appreciate that. [01:21:09.940 --> 01:21:10.940] What was the issue? [01:21:10.940 --> 01:21:17.460] It was a class C, finally, charged out of the Texas Health and Safety Code. [01:21:17.460 --> 01:21:18.460] Alright. [01:21:18.460 --> 01:21:22.620] Well, congratulations, glad we were useful. [01:21:22.620 --> 01:21:27.180] I sure hate being here just to take up space and good oxygen if I can't be useful. [01:21:27.180 --> 01:21:33.740] Oh no, for real, man, you and Randy were all, I don't think I would have ever done all that [01:21:33.740 --> 01:21:41.500] if I didn't have a show, and it's all about listening and pretty much doing what y'all [01:21:41.500 --> 01:21:42.500] say. [01:21:42.500 --> 01:21:48.780] I do what y'all told me, but I'm stuck now because I learned how to ride a bike, y'all [01:21:48.780 --> 01:21:50.780] taught me how to ride that little bike, and. [01:21:50.780 --> 01:21:54.340] Yeah, now you're going to be a pain in the ass to yourself and others for the rest of [01:21:54.340 --> 01:21:55.340] your life. [01:21:55.340 --> 01:21:56.340] Congratulations. [01:21:56.340 --> 01:22:03.260] Well, I don't want to quit fighting the good fight just because I got my own butt out of [01:22:03.260 --> 01:22:04.260] the hot water. [01:22:04.260 --> 01:22:05.260] I want to keep going. [01:22:05.260 --> 01:22:08.260] I'm just not sure about the best way to have a. [01:22:08.260 --> 01:22:12.380] Well, for the moment, let me just put a bug in your ear. [01:22:12.380 --> 01:22:13.380] Support the network. [01:22:13.380 --> 01:22:19.180] Whatever money you didn't lose because of the help we gave you, consider sharing. [01:22:19.180 --> 01:22:23.100] That's how you keep us out here helping everybody else, and thus, that's how you help everybody [01:22:23.100 --> 01:22:26.060] else, at least for the moment. [01:22:26.060 --> 01:22:29.020] You can teach them what you've learned and everything else, that'll help too. [01:22:29.020 --> 01:22:34.820] But right now, without folks supporting us through the finances that we need, we're not [01:22:34.820 --> 01:22:38.940] going to be able to stay here and do what we're doing without it. [01:22:38.940 --> 01:22:41.220] So give that a consideration if nothing else. [01:22:41.220 --> 01:22:47.220] Yeah, no, I mean, I want to get Randy's book and I want to get your MNR and all that, but [01:22:47.220 --> 01:22:52.620] I'm not on Facebook and I don't have a computer, so I've been having a little trouble trying [01:22:52.620 --> 01:22:56.940] to get that stuff for years, but I guess I'm a little out of the technological loop. [01:22:56.940 --> 01:23:02.020] Well, it would definitely behoove you to get it. [01:23:02.020 --> 01:23:04.220] Yeah, yes, sir. [01:23:04.220 --> 01:23:13.260] Oh, quick story though, what I think, like I said, I just went after the JPs and I knocked [01:23:13.260 --> 01:23:14.260] him out. [01:23:14.260 --> 01:23:16.660] The reversal recusals fell for bias and prejudice. [01:23:16.660 --> 01:23:22.380] The second one, I just qualified because she wasn't qualified or properly appointed. [01:23:22.380 --> 01:23:27.700] But I'll tell you though, one mistake I made when I disqualified the second judge, the [01:23:27.700 --> 01:23:33.140] Judge Pro Tem, I forgot to notarize the disqualification. [01:23:33.140 --> 01:23:37.780] Ah, that's how they wiggled past, huh? [01:23:37.780 --> 01:23:42.820] Well that's why, and I didn't figure it out, man, for a minute, but that's why she denied [01:23:42.820 --> 01:23:45.700] her own disqualifications because it wasn't even notarized. [01:23:45.700 --> 01:23:48.660] She could do that, right? [01:23:48.660 --> 01:23:50.820] I don't know that she could do it that way. [01:23:50.820 --> 01:23:55.500] I don't see anything in the statute that says even if it's improperly filed in form, that [01:23:55.500 --> 01:23:58.180] they have the ability to rule on it. [01:23:58.180 --> 01:24:03.900] I don't see that in the statute, but it's possible that they could consider that since [01:24:03.900 --> 01:24:10.300] it isn't properly filed, it's a non-motion and therefore she can rule. [01:24:10.300 --> 01:24:14.700] Once again, this is the way they like to split hairs to get it the way they want it instead [01:24:14.700 --> 01:24:16.820] of how it's supposed to work. [01:24:16.820 --> 01:24:18.620] Right, correct. [01:24:18.620 --> 01:24:25.460] Now, one thing I learned though is when you're dealing with JPs, I guess, especially here [01:24:25.460 --> 01:24:30.660] in Texas, in small rural counties, the real judge is the County Prosecutor because he's [01:24:30.660 --> 01:24:31.660] the only one. [01:24:31.660 --> 01:24:34.380] Yeah, he's the one that tells them everything they're going to do, which means there is [01:24:34.380 --> 01:24:35.940] no fair and impartial trial. [01:24:35.940 --> 01:24:40.780] Yeah, no, I learned that firsthand, that is very true, and there's no telling what kind [01:24:40.780 --> 01:24:43.540] of ex parte communications are going on between them. [01:24:43.540 --> 01:24:44.540] Oh, absolutely. [01:24:44.540 --> 01:24:48.380] Yeah, you just can't get it documented. [01:24:48.380 --> 01:24:55.380] But no, the funny thing was when I was wrestling with them for a minute, they would send me [01:24:55.380 --> 01:25:03.180] the trial continuance or trial setting or this or that, but they would never send them- [01:25:03.180 --> 01:25:04.180] Certified mail. [01:25:04.180 --> 01:25:05.180] Yeah, right. [01:25:05.180 --> 01:25:16.180] So one day, the clerk called me and she asked me, have I ever sent you a trial setting? [01:25:16.180 --> 01:25:22.420] And I said, no, ma'am, she said, okay, well, I'm going to work on it, and this time we're [01:25:22.420 --> 01:25:27.100] going to send it to you, certified returns, she requested, and I said, oh, that'd be great. [01:25:27.100 --> 01:25:28.100] Thank you. [01:25:28.100 --> 01:25:33.380] So I don't know, I called enough stirs, somebody started looking through the rules and looking [01:25:33.380 --> 01:25:35.900] up what they're supposed to be doing. [01:25:35.900 --> 01:25:45.340] So anyway, the funny thing is the judge from 10 that I just qualified, you know, she jumped [01:25:45.340 --> 01:25:50.020] up there on the bench and they had their little pre-trial and I wasn't there, and she just, [01:25:50.020 --> 01:25:56.140] you know, denied my motions and all that, the thing is she never saw my face until the [01:25:56.140 --> 01:25:57.140] very end. [01:25:57.140 --> 01:26:03.020] And it was funny because my wife went to the post office just last week and, oh, we got [01:26:03.020 --> 01:26:07.100] a little orange card that says, you know, sorry, we missed you, and it's a certified [01:26:07.100 --> 01:26:09.780] one of those little orange cards. [01:26:09.780 --> 01:26:14.100] And so the next day we go in there and I'm just, you know, I'm itching, man, I'm like, [01:26:14.100 --> 01:26:19.260] oh, man, you know, are they really going to, after all this, are they really going to drag [01:26:19.260 --> 01:26:21.420] me into trial? [01:26:21.420 --> 01:26:29.500] And so we go into the post office and there's the judge from 10 that I had just qualified [01:26:29.500 --> 01:26:34.100] and she had never really seen my face and she was sitting there in the line in front [01:26:34.100 --> 01:26:39.020] of me talking to the post office lady and the post office lady was teaching her how [01:26:39.020 --> 01:26:45.300] to send certified returns to receive requests to bail and the judge from 10, the JP, had [01:26:45.300 --> 01:26:50.780] a stack of court letters in her hand and the post office lady was handing her a stack of [01:26:50.780 --> 01:26:56.020] the little green cards, which is what you need, and I don't know, I'd like to think [01:26:56.020 --> 01:26:57.580] that's a tribute to what I've done. [01:26:57.580 --> 01:27:01.380] I taught them how to do their jobs a little better, so maybe that'll cost them a little [01:27:01.380 --> 01:27:05.180] more money and now everything they send out is going to be certified returns to the request [01:27:05.180 --> 01:27:08.180] because they don't want to get sued. [01:27:08.180 --> 01:27:12.740] Well, that just proves they don't know how to do most of the stuff they're doing. [01:27:12.740 --> 01:27:20.020] And you are right, JP's and non-record municipal courts are the only offices in the judiciary [01:27:20.020 --> 01:27:26.220] where a non-attorney can hold the position, but they are absolutely not positions of any [01:27:26.220 --> 01:27:33.060] real power to set precedent or change in the way the law is done. [01:27:33.060 --> 01:27:38.660] So that's why I say the people will no longer have control of that department of government [01:27:38.660 --> 01:27:40.360] at all. [01:27:40.360 --> 01:27:43.220] We can't serve in any position of authority. [01:27:43.220 --> 01:27:48.700] We cannot do what we know to be the right thing to do with the law because the only [01:27:48.700 --> 01:27:57.180] people that control it are those that wrote the law to control us. [01:27:57.180 --> 01:28:00.980] So yeah, that's one of the biggest problems you're going to run into with the JP court [01:28:00.980 --> 01:28:08.860] is that an attorney is leading around a num-nuts that knows nothing, nine times out of ten. [01:28:08.860 --> 01:28:20.020] Now here in Austin, almost every single JP is an attorney outside of being a JP. [01:28:20.020 --> 01:28:21.540] These JP's were not attorneys. [01:28:21.540 --> 01:28:25.660] No, most rural towns, they're not. [01:28:25.660 --> 01:28:30.420] The attorney does not want to be JP because it cuts into his money-making practice. [01:28:30.420 --> 01:28:34.860] That's why they get nobodies to do it, and when I say nobodies, I just simply mean non-attorneys [01:28:34.860 --> 01:28:35.860] in their eyes. [01:28:35.860 --> 01:28:36.860] Yeah. [01:28:36.860 --> 01:28:44.380] Well, as far as I know, the Texas Judicial Conduct Committee is still investigating the [01:28:44.380 --> 01:28:49.540] first judge that I recused because he refused to let me file a motion. [01:28:49.540 --> 01:28:50.540] Want a bet? [01:28:50.540 --> 01:28:51.540] Yeah, right. [01:28:51.540 --> 01:28:58.340] Well, that's why they sent me a letter saying, you know, we're continuing our investigation [01:28:58.340 --> 01:28:59.340] problem. [01:28:59.340 --> 01:29:03.700] By the point the person retires, it'll go, well, we no longer see a need to further this [01:29:03.700 --> 01:29:09.460] investigation if they retired on such and such date, can do no further harm. [01:29:09.460 --> 01:29:12.420] Therefore, your complaint is hereby dismissed. [01:29:12.420 --> 01:29:13.420] Yeah. [01:29:13.420 --> 01:29:22.420] Well, yeah, so the prosecution, he dismissed it in the interest of justice after I knocked [01:29:22.420 --> 01:29:28.980] two JP's, and basically, I guess, I don't know, maybe he was starting to think that... [01:29:28.980 --> 01:29:32.180] Maybe you knew more than he was going to give you credit for, and it was going to be a real [01:29:32.180 --> 01:29:34.780] fight that would cost him time and money he didn't have. [01:29:34.780 --> 01:29:35.780] Correct. [01:29:35.780 --> 01:29:40.780] So you have to remember, the county attorney has a budget he has to watch out for, and [01:29:40.780 --> 01:29:45.420] when he decides to prosecute cases like this, the longer it takes, the more it costs from [01:29:45.420 --> 01:29:47.340] his budget. [01:29:47.340 --> 01:29:51.740] He would rather abandon that fight whenever he can than pursue it when there's no money [01:29:51.740 --> 01:29:52.740] at the end of it. [01:29:52.740 --> 01:29:54.740] All right, hang on just a second, Adam. [01:29:54.740 --> 01:29:59.500] We'll be right back after this break. [01:29:59.500 --> 01:30:05.340] Is too much Internet driving Americans crazy? [01:30:05.340 --> 01:30:10.180] New research says the Web can make us lonely and depressed and even psychotic. [01:30:10.180 --> 01:30:15.580] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll talk about the Internet's impact on our state of mind [01:30:15.580 --> 01:30:17.780] in a moment. [01:30:17.780 --> 01:30:19.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.500 --> 01:30:23.900] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [01:30:23.900 --> 01:30:28.100] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:28.100 --> 01:30:33.340] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.340 --> 01:30:35.880] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.880 --> 01:30:41.500] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:41.500 --> 01:30:43.220] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:43.220 --> 01:30:45.180] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.180 --> 01:30:51.780] It's no secret many Americans spend more time tweeting, texting, and emailing than they do [01:30:51.780 --> 01:30:54.940] online, but can too much time online make us plum crazy? [01:30:54.940 --> 01:30:59.940] Proof is piling up that the Internet may be making us lonelier, more depressed, prone to [01:30:59.940 --> 01:31:05.260] obsessive compulsive disorders, and in extreme cases, even psychotic. [01:31:05.260 --> 01:31:10.540] Researchers are documenting actual changes in the brain caused by even moderate Web exposure. [01:31:10.540 --> 01:31:15.820] They're finding that digitized minds are constantly scanning for a fix, just like drug addicts, [01:31:15.820 --> 01:31:21.500] with every ping delivering a squirt of dopamine, that mini reward system for opening that message. [01:31:21.500 --> 01:31:23.660] Each time, we stop answering the call. [01:31:23.660 --> 01:31:30.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.860 --> 01:31:36.220] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.220 --> 01:31:41.660] The government says that fire brought it down, however, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [01:31:41.660 --> 01:31:43.260] it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.260 --> 01:31:47.260] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.260 --> 01:31:48.700] first responders are dying. [01:31:48.700 --> 01:31:51.060] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.060 --> 01:31:52.540] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.540 --> 01:31:53.540] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.540 --> 01:31:55.220] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.220 --> 01:31:57.820] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.820 --> 01:32:00.060] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.060 --> 01:32:03.180] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.180 --> 01:32:06.460] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.460 --> 01:32:10.100] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their Kim Trails, but good luck getting [01:32:10.100 --> 01:32:11.100] them to pay for it. [01:32:11.100 --> 01:32:14.740] Okay, I might be kidding about the Kim Trails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.740 --> 01:32:18.540] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:18.540 --> 01:32:23.780] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense, and we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus [01:32:23.780 --> 01:32:26.900] member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.900 --> 01:32:31.260] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [01:32:31.260 --> 01:32:32.340] first time. [01:32:32.340 --> 01:32:41.020] Just call 512-992-8745, or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, mention the crypto show, and get $100 off, [01:32:41.020 --> 01:32:45.620] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming, [01:32:45.620 --> 01:32:50.780] so if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.780 --> 01:32:56.740] That's 512-992-8745, or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.740 --> 01:32:58.740] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.740 --> 01:33:16.820] May not actually be kidding about Kim Trails. [01:33:16.820 --> 01:33:45.180] Now, look at them yo-yos, that's the way you do it, you play the guitar on MTV, and you [01:33:45.180 --> 01:33:55.140] work it, that's the way you do it, money for nothing and you're too free, now that ain't [01:33:55.140 --> 01:33:58.460] working, that's the way you do it. [01:33:58.460 --> 01:34:04.060] All right, folks, we are back, this is Rule of Law Radio, and we are still talking with [01:34:04.060 --> 01:34:05.060] Adam. [01:34:05.060 --> 01:34:07.540] All right, Adam, let's see what we can wrap up here real quick. [01:34:07.540 --> 01:34:09.540] Yeah, I'm here. [01:34:09.540 --> 01:34:14.540] All right, so where were we? [01:34:14.540 --> 01:34:19.660] Like y'all, Rule of Law's radio, Radio's help, I whipped him. [01:34:19.660 --> 01:34:25.180] Well good, and like I said, yeah, if you're about to cause a big dent in his financial [01:34:25.180 --> 01:34:30.780] budget by eating up his time and resources, he's more likely than not to abandon the fight [01:34:30.780 --> 01:34:35.460] when he knows it's not going to get him anything in return. [01:34:35.460 --> 01:34:40.620] Even if you're dead wrong, that could be the case, but I'm quite sure that that is not [01:34:40.620 --> 01:34:41.620] what you were. [01:34:41.620 --> 01:34:46.780] He was more than likely right, and he knew that you were right enough that it was going [01:34:46.780 --> 01:34:50.460] to cost him too much to try to make the point himself. [01:34:50.460 --> 01:34:51.460] So he quit. [01:34:51.460 --> 01:34:52.460] Right. [01:34:52.460 --> 01:34:56.980] Well, so it is possible, yeah, what y'all speak of can happen. [01:34:56.980 --> 01:35:03.180] Hey, quick question, does the county judge in Texas have to be a lawyer, an attorney, [01:35:03.180 --> 01:35:04.860] bar card carrier? [01:35:04.860 --> 01:35:07.780] Not the county judge, no. [01:35:07.780 --> 01:35:14.980] In fact, I'm pretty sure the constitutional county judge is prohibited from being an attorney. [01:35:14.980 --> 01:35:17.380] Okay. [01:35:17.380 --> 01:35:23.580] But they don't have any power anymore either because the legislature took it all away. [01:35:23.580 --> 01:35:28.700] They used to be the one true people's court in the entire state, in every county. [01:35:28.700 --> 01:35:31.180] Every county's required to have one. [01:35:31.180 --> 01:35:36.340] But the legislature, because they can set the jurisdiction of a court by law, took all [01:35:36.340 --> 01:35:43.180] of the power of the constitutional county court away because they wanted their statutory [01:35:43.180 --> 01:35:49.860] courts to be the controlling interest in Texas for the stealing of revenue. [01:35:49.860 --> 01:35:50.860] Yeah. [01:35:50.860 --> 01:35:51.860] Last question. [01:35:51.860 --> 01:36:01.140] When I originally started all this, I believe it was y'all's direction anyway, you know, [01:36:01.140 --> 01:36:06.580] you file with the J.P.'s court and then you also file with the county court, when I went [01:36:06.580 --> 01:36:12.980] into the county court, kind of raised a little bit of a ruckus and, you know, asking to see [01:36:12.980 --> 01:36:18.140] the judge's oath of office and then I was saving all that and I was a little perky [01:36:18.140 --> 01:36:19.140] for running around. [01:36:19.140 --> 01:36:20.860] It really was pretty fun. [01:36:20.860 --> 01:36:29.860] But I was just, all I was simply trying to do was file a copy of the records that I was [01:36:29.860 --> 01:36:35.940] filing to the court of original jurisdiction, quote unquote, the J.P.'s at the county level [01:36:35.940 --> 01:36:41.020] and they told me, the clerk told me, well, we just, we don't have a number for it. [01:36:41.020 --> 01:36:45.780] And I said, well, just stop being number one there and so on and she ran off for a minute [01:36:45.780 --> 01:36:46.780] and she come back. [01:36:46.780 --> 01:36:51.620] Well, we just, we don't have a number for it and then they tried to tell me it was going [01:36:51.620 --> 01:36:58.300] to, just to file a two motion, a motion to dismiss and a motion to suppress evidence [01:36:58.300 --> 01:37:00.020] which was like four pages. [01:37:00.020 --> 01:37:05.100] They wanted like $227 to file it in the court of court record. [01:37:05.100 --> 01:37:06.100] I was- [01:37:06.100 --> 01:37:13.860] No, they cannot charge you a fee to file a defense motion in an action against you. [01:37:13.860 --> 01:37:19.500] Only the plaintiff can be made to pay a fee in a civil case. [01:37:19.500 --> 01:37:25.060] This was a criminal and the J.P. I just wanted to back up the record in the county and they [01:37:25.060 --> 01:37:27.700] were trying to charge me all this outraged money. [01:37:27.700 --> 01:37:28.700] I haven't told them. [01:37:28.700 --> 01:37:31.820] I said, oh, you're going to get the money one way or another, huh? [01:37:31.820 --> 01:37:38.220] And the lady laughed, but I just figured it was B to F, but where would I find the- [01:37:38.220 --> 01:37:39.220] Oh, wait a minute. [01:37:39.220 --> 01:37:42.860] Are you talking about, when you say back up the record, what are we talking about here? [01:37:42.860 --> 01:37:49.340] Well, like I said, I've been with the J.P. a long time and I don't remember which show, [01:37:49.340 --> 01:37:55.340] but a long time ago, if I'm going up for a traffic ticket or something like that, you [01:37:55.340 --> 01:38:01.460] file with the J.P. court and the insta court, but you also file a copy of the records with [01:38:01.460 --> 01:38:02.460] the county court. [01:38:02.460 --> 01:38:03.700] Is that not correct? [01:38:03.700 --> 01:38:05.260] No, that's not correct. [01:38:05.260 --> 01:38:07.340] I don't know where you got that from. [01:38:07.340 --> 01:38:08.340] Okay. [01:38:08.340 --> 01:38:09.340] Okay. [01:38:09.340 --> 01:38:11.340] Maybe I heard wrong. [01:38:11.340 --> 01:38:16.220] No, the only time you file something in the county court is if you have a case going there [01:38:16.220 --> 01:38:22.340] for adjudication or appeal, actual trial or appeal. [01:38:22.340 --> 01:38:23.340] In the county court. [01:38:23.340 --> 01:38:24.340] Right. [01:38:24.340 --> 01:38:25.340] It depends. [01:38:25.340 --> 01:38:27.580] It depends on where you are. [01:38:27.580 --> 01:38:30.340] Like for here in Austin, you don't go to the county court. [01:38:30.340 --> 01:38:35.220] You go to the county court at law, which is one of their statutory courts. [01:38:35.220 --> 01:38:39.220] That's your appellate level court from any court of record. [01:38:39.220 --> 01:38:44.980] It's also your appellate level court from the J.P. courts here and the non-record municipal [01:38:44.980 --> 01:38:45.980] courts. [01:38:45.980 --> 01:38:51.540] So, the county court at law is the catch all for every low level court here in Texas, including [01:38:51.540 --> 01:38:53.540] the county court. [01:38:53.540 --> 01:38:54.540] Okay. [01:38:54.540 --> 01:39:01.660] So, my question would be if the first judge, justice of the peace, recused himself for [01:39:01.660 --> 01:39:09.260] vice president and then the judge pro tem, the second J.P. was disqualified for on legal [01:39:09.260 --> 01:39:17.140] grounds, how do they still have the power to dismiss it and how are they still sitting [01:39:17.140 --> 01:39:18.780] on the bench to even... [01:39:18.780 --> 01:39:23.940] Because the one power every judge has is to determine whether or not they have jurisdiction [01:39:23.940 --> 01:39:24.940] to hear a case. [01:39:24.940 --> 01:39:29.820] And the only determination they can make is either that they do or that they don't. [01:39:29.820 --> 01:39:32.860] And a don't requires a dismissal. [01:39:32.860 --> 01:39:38.300] Now, the question is whether or not in your particular case with this particular judge [01:39:38.300 --> 01:39:42.900] is did she have the power to even enter such a ruling if she was not qualified to even [01:39:42.900 --> 01:39:44.380] sit as a judge? [01:39:44.380 --> 01:39:48.300] And the answer there is absolutely not. [01:39:48.300 --> 01:39:52.460] What she did was impersonate a judicial officer. [01:39:52.460 --> 01:39:56.460] That is a crime in Texas. [01:39:56.460 --> 01:40:03.540] She posed as a judicial officer with the authority to sit in a judicial capacity and that is [01:40:03.540 --> 01:40:06.820] illegal when she doesn't actually have it. [01:40:06.820 --> 01:40:07.820] Okay. [01:40:07.820 --> 01:40:12.420] Well, that begs my last question is where do I go from here? [01:40:12.420 --> 01:40:17.780] You file a criminal complaint with the district attorney's office or the county attorney's [01:40:17.780 --> 01:40:20.540] office, but don't stop with them. [01:40:20.540 --> 01:40:24.460] File a criminal complaint with the grand jury in your district. [01:40:24.460 --> 01:40:25.460] Okay. [01:40:25.460 --> 01:40:32.180] Easier said than done according to Randy, but yeah, so I'm trying to, I don't know, [01:40:32.180 --> 01:40:34.820] maybe I should go court watching once a week. [01:40:34.820 --> 01:40:36.820] I want to stay in the game. [01:40:36.820 --> 01:40:38.620] Maybe I'll go pester the grand jury. [01:40:38.620 --> 01:40:39.620] Yeah. [01:40:39.620 --> 01:40:42.820] The more you watch and the more you learn, the better off you're going to be every time [01:40:42.820 --> 01:40:43.820] you go. [01:40:43.820 --> 01:40:44.820] Yeah. [01:40:44.820 --> 01:40:45.820] Open up doors. [01:40:45.820 --> 01:40:47.460] Clean this county up. [01:40:47.460 --> 01:40:48.460] Yeah. [01:40:48.460 --> 01:40:49.460] All right, Eddie. [01:40:49.460 --> 01:40:50.460] That's all, man. [01:40:50.460 --> 01:40:51.460] Appreciate it. [01:40:51.460 --> 01:40:52.460] Yes, sir. [01:40:52.460 --> 01:40:53.460] Thanks for calling in. [01:40:53.460 --> 01:40:54.460] I'm going. [01:40:54.460 --> 01:40:55.460] You too. [01:40:55.460 --> 01:40:56.460] All right. [01:40:56.460 --> 01:40:57.460] Now we're going back to Charles in Washington. [01:40:57.460 --> 01:40:58.460] All right, Charles. [01:40:58.460 --> 01:40:59.460] Let's finish up with what you had here. [01:40:59.460 --> 01:41:00.460] Okay. [01:41:00.460 --> 01:41:06.580] So what I was talking about was after I went before the judge and she ruled against me [01:41:06.580 --> 01:41:11.740] based upon the no insurance and the no license, I filed the appeal, which I'm now waiting [01:41:11.740 --> 01:41:13.660] for the decision to continue. [01:41:13.660 --> 01:41:18.340] So what I need to know now, because I didn't submit any documents to show that I wasn't [01:41:18.340 --> 01:41:20.620] registered with the Secretary of State. [01:41:20.620 --> 01:41:21.620] Right. [01:41:21.620 --> 01:41:26.140] But the only people that have to be registered with the Secretary of State are corporations. [01:41:26.140 --> 01:41:31.740] Why would you put in paperwork that said, I was not registered as a corporation, but [01:41:31.740 --> 01:41:36.180] I was acting as a corporation within the state illegally? [01:41:36.180 --> 01:41:37.180] I didn't do that. [01:41:37.180 --> 01:41:40.100] I just went and got a form way back to show that... [01:41:40.100 --> 01:41:42.260] But that's what that form does. [01:41:42.260 --> 01:41:43.740] That's my point. [01:41:43.740 --> 01:41:44.740] Okay. [01:41:44.740 --> 01:41:47.620] Well, I won't submit that then ever in life, but I haven't done anything with that. [01:41:47.620 --> 01:41:51.580] I just submitted the seven interrogatories that you thought would have been enough when [01:41:51.580 --> 01:41:52.860] I went to court. [01:41:52.860 --> 01:41:57.540] And at that point, she looked at that, she knew where I was coming from. [01:41:57.540 --> 01:42:00.100] Well, but see, here's her problem. [01:42:00.100 --> 01:42:05.740] Those seven interrogatories cover every single allegation against you because they all stem [01:42:05.740 --> 01:42:10.620] from the exact same action by the officer. [01:42:10.620 --> 01:42:17.700] Everything about the initial seizure was illegal, every single thing, every piece of information [01:42:17.700 --> 01:42:24.540] he got about anything he charged you with was fruit of the poison tree and absolutely [01:42:24.540 --> 01:42:25.540] inadmissible. [01:42:25.540 --> 01:42:26.540] Okay. [01:42:26.540 --> 01:42:27.540] All right. [01:42:27.540 --> 01:42:30.620] Well, that's what I submitted, so now... [01:42:30.620 --> 01:42:37.340] So what you have to do in your appeal, I hope, did they make you file an appeal brief? [01:42:37.340 --> 01:42:38.780] I haven't done anything yet. [01:42:38.780 --> 01:42:43.460] Then you need to do that, and in your appeal brief, you charge the judge with abuse of [01:42:43.460 --> 01:42:44.460] discretion. [01:42:44.460 --> 01:42:45.460] Brief. [01:42:45.460 --> 01:42:53.980] They have no authority to cut loose some charges in a case where everything is tainted by the [01:42:53.980 --> 01:42:54.980] initial arrest. [01:42:54.980 --> 01:42:55.980] Okay. [01:42:55.980 --> 01:43:01.980] So I charge you with abuse of discretion. [01:43:01.980 --> 01:43:02.980] Right. [01:43:02.980 --> 01:43:03.980] Abuse of judicial discretion. [01:43:03.980 --> 01:43:04.980] With a judicial discretion, I'm sorry. [01:43:04.980 --> 01:43:05.980] Yeah. [01:43:05.980 --> 01:43:06.980] Okay. [01:43:06.980 --> 01:43:15.020] Because she erred in not suppressing the evidence because the warrantless seizure and arrest [01:43:15.020 --> 01:43:17.020] and search was illegal. [01:43:17.020 --> 01:43:18.020] Suppress. [01:43:18.020 --> 01:43:19.020] Okay. [01:43:19.020 --> 01:43:20.020] Evidence. [01:43:20.020 --> 01:43:21.020] Okay. [01:43:21.020 --> 01:43:22.020] I got that. [01:43:22.020 --> 01:43:25.020] So not suppress evidence and abuse of judicial discretion. [01:43:25.020 --> 01:43:26.020] Okay. [01:43:26.020 --> 01:43:27.020] Got it. [01:43:27.020 --> 01:43:39.540] So that's one of the things I need to put in there, I guess. [01:43:39.540 --> 01:43:44.740] That's not the only two things that you put in everything you've got error for, but those [01:43:44.740 --> 01:43:48.420] are the two primary points that you want to make sure you make. [01:43:48.420 --> 01:43:49.420] Okay? [01:43:49.420 --> 01:43:50.420] Okay. [01:43:50.420 --> 01:43:51.420] You said error. [01:43:51.420 --> 01:43:52.420] That's not the only thing. [01:43:52.420 --> 01:43:53.420] So do I go back to that? [01:43:53.420 --> 01:43:54.420] Hang on, Charles. [01:43:54.420 --> 01:43:57.420] I'll be right back. [01:44:54.620 --> 01:44:55.620] Okay. [01:44:55.620 --> 01:45:00.620] I'm going to do it. [01:45:00.620 --> 01:45:05.380] I'm going to do it. [01:45:05.380 --> 01:45:06.380] Okay. [01:45:06.380 --> 01:45:14.580] If you don't have an attorney, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:14.580 --> 01:45:22.980] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.980 --> 01:45:27.980] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:27.980 --> 01:45:33.980] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.980 --> 01:45:38.980] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.980 --> 01:45:42.980] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.980 --> 01:45:48.980] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:48.980 --> 01:45:55.980] pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, [01:45:55.980 --> 01:46:00.980] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:00.980 --> 01:46:20.980] Yes, sir, it is a joy to be bad to the bone. Ain't no question about it. [01:46:20.980 --> 01:46:23.980] All right, Charles, let's see if we can wrap this up here real quick. [01:46:23.980 --> 01:46:31.980] By error, E-R-R-O-R, anything else the court did that was a violation of law, [01:46:31.980 --> 01:46:37.980] the rules of evidence, the rights of due process, or the rules of procedure itself. [01:46:37.980 --> 01:46:45.980] That's all appealable error, provided you preserve the error with some form of objection. [01:46:45.980 --> 01:46:46.980] Okay? [01:46:46.980 --> 01:46:49.980] Yeah, I was objecting to everything that she was saying at that point, [01:46:49.980 --> 01:46:51.980] because I kept talking about being under arrest. [01:46:51.980 --> 01:46:53.980] And she said, well, he wasn't under arrest. [01:46:53.980 --> 01:46:57.980] I said, as long as he had me stopped and allowed me to go on my merry way. [01:46:57.980 --> 01:47:00.980] I said, I was, you know, because I was reading the whole thing, [01:47:00.980 --> 01:47:03.980] and she kept trying to interject that I was not arrested. [01:47:03.980 --> 01:47:06.980] I said, well, I was being detained, so therefore I was being arrested. [01:47:06.980 --> 01:47:10.980] And so I read, she allowed me to read the whole seven interrogatories, [01:47:10.980 --> 01:47:12.980] and that was basically, and then I... [01:47:12.980 --> 01:47:18.980] Why are you reading the interrogatories to the judge? Where was the cop? [01:47:18.980 --> 01:47:23.980] Oh, he wasn't, they said he'd have to be there, and I did try to subpoena him. [01:47:23.980 --> 01:47:24.980] Hold on, wait a minute. [01:47:24.980 --> 01:47:31.980] How can they find you guilty without a witness of the allegations against you? [01:47:31.980 --> 01:47:34.980] That's what I was challenging, but she said all of us would have to be there. [01:47:34.980 --> 01:47:35.980] They were using his notes. [01:47:35.980 --> 01:47:36.980] And I said what I thought... [01:47:36.980 --> 01:47:39.980] No, that's not even a judge then. [01:47:39.980 --> 01:47:43.980] This is a complete administrative hearing. [01:47:43.980 --> 01:47:47.980] There's no judge in this at all. [01:47:47.980 --> 01:47:48.980] Well, probably not. [01:47:48.980 --> 01:47:52.980] You should have said, I object, no witness, no judicial officer. [01:47:52.980 --> 01:47:54.980] This is not a proper proceeding. [01:47:54.980 --> 01:47:56.980] I object, and I'm out of here. [01:47:56.980 --> 01:48:00.980] No jurisdiction. Bye-bye. [01:48:00.980 --> 01:48:04.980] Okay, well, I did try, and they said if they don't, they don't have them come there. [01:48:04.980 --> 01:48:05.980] I thought that was strange. [01:48:05.980 --> 01:48:09.980] I'm in Tacoma, Washington now, not Seattle, and they do things totally different. [01:48:09.980 --> 01:48:12.980] No, they don't. It's still Washington. [01:48:12.980 --> 01:48:16.980] They can't do it any different than the law allows. [01:48:16.980 --> 01:48:19.980] That's what I've been challenging ever since I've been down here going to court. [01:48:19.980 --> 01:48:20.980] They're doing things different. [01:48:20.980 --> 01:48:22.980] I said it should be the thing. [01:48:22.980 --> 01:48:24.980] Well, guess what you have? [01:48:24.980 --> 01:48:28.980] You have a lawsuit for impersonating a judicial officer [01:48:28.980 --> 01:48:33.980] and perpetrating fraud upon the general public, you specifically. [01:48:33.980 --> 01:48:36.980] That's what you're just telling Adams, the other guy, I know. [01:48:36.980 --> 01:48:41.980] Yeah, but the problem is you didn't object to that particular thing. [01:48:41.980 --> 01:48:45.980] You participated. [01:48:45.980 --> 01:48:46.980] Okay. [01:48:46.980 --> 01:48:50.980] It's like screaming cheat in the game of three-card Monte on the street, [01:48:50.980 --> 01:48:53.980] knowing full well the game was rigged when you started [01:48:53.980 --> 01:48:56.980] and then acting surprised when you lost your money. [01:48:56.980 --> 01:48:58.980] Okay, and this is what I was asking you way back. [01:48:58.980 --> 01:49:05.980] Do you have some kind of seminar course, Rodney, I mean, the other gentleman lawyer, [01:49:05.980 --> 01:49:10.980] that I could take because a lot of us are going through this stuff not really knowing the game. [01:49:10.980 --> 01:49:14.980] Well, that's the whole point of what we try to teach you here so you learn the game. [01:49:14.980 --> 01:49:18.980] You need to learn the difference between the three types of proceedings, [01:49:18.980 --> 01:49:21.980] administrative, civil, and criminal. [01:49:21.980 --> 01:49:27.980] And you are obligated to understand which one you are engaging in [01:49:27.980 --> 01:49:32.980] and what the rules for that particular type of setting are. [01:49:32.980 --> 01:49:38.980] You're obligated to know that if you intend to go in and fight. [01:49:38.980 --> 01:49:43.980] It's like I keep telling you guys, why do you pick a fight with Mike Tyson [01:49:43.980 --> 01:49:46.980] when you don't even know how to box? [01:49:46.980 --> 01:49:48.980] I got you. [01:49:48.980 --> 01:49:50.980] Well, that's what I was asking you guys. [01:49:50.980 --> 01:49:51.980] Is there a course we could take? [01:49:51.980 --> 01:49:55.980] You may as well slap Joe Foreman in the forehead with one of his own damn grills [01:49:55.980 --> 01:49:58.980] and say, how do you like them apples? [01:49:58.980 --> 01:50:00.980] I know. [01:50:00.980 --> 01:50:02.980] I have my frustration. [01:50:02.980 --> 01:50:04.980] I have all this frustration when they call the show [01:50:04.980 --> 01:50:06.980] because I know they're in the same situation I'm in. [01:50:06.980 --> 01:50:09.980] And I thought just those seven interrogatories should have been sufficient. [01:50:09.980 --> 01:50:11.980] And it should have been. [01:50:11.980 --> 01:50:15.980] Those interrogatories are meant to be filed in a written brief [01:50:15.980 --> 01:50:18.980] and motion for dismissal, [01:50:18.980 --> 01:50:23.980] not to be read to some idiot that thinks they know what they're doing. [01:50:23.980 --> 01:50:25.980] Well, I know she did know because at the same time... [01:50:25.980 --> 01:50:27.980] You're kind of missing the point, Charles. [01:50:27.980 --> 01:50:32.980] The point is to make a written record that you can use to go after them. [01:50:32.980 --> 01:50:34.980] That is always how we do things. [01:50:34.980 --> 01:50:40.980] Have you not listened to this show enough to know, A, number one rule of court, [01:50:40.980 --> 01:50:46.980] that everything is done in writing, every single thing? [01:50:46.980 --> 01:50:48.980] OK, well, I did that. [01:50:48.980 --> 01:50:51.980] And the thing was she did not get it when I went to court. [01:50:51.980 --> 01:50:54.980] What do you mean she didn't get it? [01:50:54.980 --> 01:50:57.980] I submitted everything two weeks in advance, [01:50:57.980 --> 01:50:59.980] so she would have it when I come there, [01:50:59.980 --> 01:51:01.980] so I figured I wouldn't have to be doing no talking, [01:51:01.980 --> 01:51:03.980] but I took my copy in the meantime. [01:51:03.980 --> 01:51:06.980] So when I got there at the court, she didn't have nothing from me. [01:51:06.980 --> 01:51:10.980] Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:51:10.980 --> 01:51:16.980] Do you not recognize the shell game when you see it? [01:51:16.980 --> 01:51:17.980] Did you send that in, [01:51:17.980 --> 01:51:20.980] certified mail return receipt requested or hand-delivered [01:51:20.980 --> 01:51:23.980] and get it stamped as received by the clerk? [01:51:23.980 --> 01:51:26.980] I did get it stamped and she gave me back my copy. [01:51:26.980 --> 01:51:30.980] OK, then right there you have in your hand, proof positive, [01:51:30.980 --> 01:51:32.980] the individual sitting before you saying, [01:51:32.980 --> 01:51:37.980] I ain't never seen it, I ain't got it, is lying to your face. [01:51:37.980 --> 01:51:39.980] Oh, I knew that. [01:51:39.980 --> 01:51:42.980] So why was the answer not, well, excuse me, [01:51:42.980 --> 01:51:44.980] if you're the one presiding over this [01:51:44.980 --> 01:51:47.980] and you claim to have the legal authority to do it, [01:51:47.980 --> 01:51:50.980] I want to know why you have not applied yourself [01:51:50.980 --> 01:51:52.980] to learning of the facts of this case [01:51:52.980 --> 01:51:57.980] and reading the information that was filed here two weeks ago. [01:51:57.980 --> 01:51:59.980] Well, this was the third time I've been against that [01:51:59.980 --> 01:52:02.980] when even in another situation had to do with Al and I, [01:52:02.980 --> 01:52:05.980] they didn't have the facts and yet they made rulings against me. [01:52:05.980 --> 01:52:08.980] The problem is, is you keep letting this person sit there [01:52:08.980 --> 01:52:12.980] as if they have any real authority to sit there and they don't. [01:52:12.980 --> 01:52:15.980] You keep participating. [01:52:15.980 --> 01:52:17.980] Why do you do that? [01:52:17.980 --> 01:52:21.980] Because I don't have the ammunition to learn from you yet [01:52:21.980 --> 01:52:24.980] to know how to go about picking these things out when I'm... [01:52:24.980 --> 01:52:27.980] What do you mean you don't have the ammunition? [01:52:27.980 --> 01:52:29.980] What kind of ammunition do you need to walk in [01:52:29.980 --> 01:52:33.980] and please tell me what is the nature and cause against me? [01:52:33.980 --> 01:52:36.980] Is it civil, criminal or administrative? [01:52:36.980 --> 01:52:39.980] You are obligated to provide that information to me [01:52:39.980 --> 01:52:41.980] for the purpose of due process. [01:52:41.980 --> 01:52:46.980] Is it civil, criminal or administrative? [01:52:46.980 --> 01:52:47.980] Civil. [01:52:47.980 --> 01:52:48.980] It's not. [01:52:48.980 --> 01:52:53.980] It's administrative if she's not judicial. [01:52:53.980 --> 01:52:56.980] See, again, I should have known that and I don't. [01:52:56.980 --> 01:53:00.980] So do you have a program of course I could take? [01:53:00.980 --> 01:53:02.980] Yeah, the traffic seminar. [01:53:02.980 --> 01:53:04.980] That's what it's for. [01:53:04.980 --> 01:53:06.980] Okay, traffic seminar. [01:53:06.980 --> 01:53:08.980] Okay. [01:53:08.980 --> 01:53:10.980] All right, that's what I need to know. [01:53:10.980 --> 01:53:12.980] That's exactly what I've been asked before me [01:53:12.980 --> 01:53:14.980] or I was asked the wrong way, seminar. [01:53:14.980 --> 01:53:16.980] And I asked you before about a seminar, [01:53:16.980 --> 01:53:18.980] but you've mentioned something. [01:53:18.980 --> 01:53:23.980] Yeah, my transportation code seminar and up there where you're at, [01:53:23.980 --> 01:53:26.980] there's several people in Washington and Oregon, Raider, [01:53:26.980 --> 01:53:28.980] the first caller on the show tonight is up in Oregon. [01:53:28.980 --> 01:53:31.980] And there are lots of people, but the statutes in Washington, [01:53:31.980 --> 01:53:35.980] I'm pretty sure I provided you with the statutes that clearly, [01:53:35.980 --> 01:53:39.980] clearly state the Washington revised statutes [01:53:39.980 --> 01:53:43.980] only apply to commercial operators. [01:53:43.980 --> 01:53:45.980] I have something relating to that. [01:53:45.980 --> 01:53:46.980] I know you do. [01:53:46.980 --> 01:53:51.980] I emailed it to you months and months ago, if not over a year ago. [01:53:51.980 --> 01:53:53.980] The problem I'm having now is my phone broke down [01:53:53.980 --> 01:53:56.980] and I have no way of getting into my email. [01:53:56.980 --> 01:53:59.980] Hey, man, all you got to do is find any library [01:53:59.980 --> 01:54:02.980] with a computer or any computer rental store [01:54:02.980 --> 01:54:04.980] and you can get computer time for that. [01:54:04.980 --> 01:54:08.980] I don't know if you're living off Mother Nature in the backwoods. [01:54:08.980 --> 01:54:11.980] Actually, I did that last week to you. [01:54:11.980 --> 01:54:17.980] I sent it under the ranger because I didn't have your actual email. [01:54:17.980 --> 01:54:19.980] So I sent it under the ranger when I was talking about my friend [01:54:19.980 --> 01:54:21.980] that got arrested in the park. [01:54:21.980 --> 01:54:23.980] And so I haven't gotten anything back. [01:54:23.980 --> 01:54:27.980] And I was hoping I had some kind of fax machine I could fax you this. [01:54:27.980 --> 01:54:29.980] No, I do not do faxes. [01:54:29.980 --> 01:54:31.980] I have no way of doing faxes. [01:54:31.980 --> 01:54:34.980] You need a landline to do faxes or you've got to pay for a service. [01:54:34.980 --> 01:54:37.980] I never know when I'm going to have money to pay for either, [01:54:37.980 --> 01:54:40.980] so I don't have either. [01:54:40.980 --> 01:54:41.980] Got you. [01:54:41.980 --> 01:54:44.980] That was a question I was going to ask. [01:54:44.980 --> 01:54:46.980] So I have to just keep on emailing you, Dan. [01:54:46.980 --> 01:54:47.980] Emailing is all I got. [01:54:47.980 --> 01:54:50.980] The only problem is you've got stiff competition on the response front [01:54:50.980 --> 01:54:53.980] because I get hundreds a day. [01:54:53.980 --> 01:54:56.980] Trust me, I've been dealing with you almost a year now. [01:54:56.980 --> 01:54:57.980] I already know that. [01:54:57.980 --> 01:54:59.980] And this boy is about to get a seven-year sentence [01:54:59.980 --> 01:55:04.980] because you have to get your stuff to you on how to handle him. [01:55:04.980 --> 01:55:05.980] Oh, gosh. [01:55:05.980 --> 01:55:11.980] Okay, well, all right, so I've got to get with you on this traffic seminar. [01:55:11.980 --> 01:55:14.980] Well, you can do that at the Logos Radio website. [01:55:14.980 --> 01:55:15.980] You can go there and do the ordering. [01:55:15.980 --> 01:55:18.980] You've got to order it directly online, [01:55:18.980 --> 01:55:23.980] unless you're actually here in Austin where you can get it directly from me personally. [01:55:23.980 --> 01:55:25.980] No, Logos, Austin. [01:55:25.980 --> 01:55:28.980] Logosradionetwork.com. [01:55:28.980 --> 01:55:29.980] Okay, got you. [01:55:29.980 --> 01:55:31.980] Logosradionetwork.com. [01:55:31.980 --> 01:55:33.980] Okay, it's right there on the front page. [01:55:33.980 --> 01:55:35.980] All right. [01:55:35.980 --> 01:55:36.980] Okay, got you. [01:55:36.980 --> 01:55:37.980] Thanks, Eddie. [01:55:37.980 --> 01:55:38.980] All right, Charles. [01:55:38.980 --> 01:55:41.980] All right, now we have Terrence in Florida and not a lot of time. [01:55:41.980 --> 01:55:46.980] So, Terrence, how quick can you be? [01:55:46.980 --> 01:55:47.980] Thank you, Eddie. [01:55:47.980 --> 01:55:48.980] Can you hear me okay? [01:55:48.980 --> 01:55:50.980] Yeah, I hear you. [01:55:50.980 --> 01:55:55.980] Okay, well, I won't get through what I wanted to do, which is okay. [01:55:55.980 --> 01:56:01.980] And also logosradio.network.com slash T-A-O, I think is where you... [01:56:01.980 --> 01:56:08.980] Yeah, that's where my practice scripts and information on what I hope to be my future website will be, yes. [01:56:08.980 --> 01:56:11.980] And you have a blog somewhere. [01:56:11.980 --> 01:56:15.980] Yeah, tileoflaw.wordpress.com. [01:56:15.980 --> 01:56:16.980] T-A-O? [01:56:16.980 --> 01:56:22.980] T-A-O-O-F-L-A-W.wordpress.com. [01:56:22.980 --> 01:56:28.980] Okay, well, I got a case for a friend of mine that is going to ask you questions along the way, [01:56:28.980 --> 01:56:33.980] and he kind of messed up a bit, and I was going to play him with your advice. [01:56:33.980 --> 01:56:38.980] But I don't really have time to do that. [01:56:38.980 --> 01:56:47.980] And I tell you what, Eddie, it's just, like you say, it's hard to get people to stand up for themselves. [01:56:47.980 --> 01:56:48.980] It is. [01:56:48.980 --> 01:56:50.980] It's very hard. [01:56:50.980 --> 01:56:56.980] He wants to throw himself at the mercy of the court, thinking that they'll be kind to him [01:56:56.980 --> 01:57:04.980] when they've robbed him of $600 already. [01:57:04.980 --> 01:57:06.980] Maybe I can do a quick one here. [01:57:06.980 --> 01:57:12.980] When they get you in the jail and they start having you sign papers, [01:57:12.980 --> 01:57:19.980] and all of them are bonds and creating a bond and agreeing to this bill and that bill, [01:57:19.980 --> 01:57:26.980] isn't that an inducement to financial instruments that you have no idea what you're getting into? [01:57:26.980 --> 01:57:30.980] It is if you're signing anything without assistance of counsel to understand what it is [01:57:30.980 --> 01:57:33.980] or don't have the capability to do it, understand it yourself, [01:57:33.980 --> 01:57:38.980] because anything you sign, you're presumed to have understood when you signed it, [01:57:38.980 --> 01:57:45.980] unless you can show that you were never given the opportunity to read it. [01:57:45.980 --> 01:57:47.980] Well, even then, aren't they... [01:57:47.980 --> 01:57:55.980] Or if you can prove that they were threatening never to release you from jail if you didn't sign it. [01:57:55.980 --> 01:57:57.980] Well, then they kind of back that up with, [01:57:57.980 --> 01:58:03.980] he could have gone in front of the magistrate at 8 a.m. to plead his probable cause, [01:58:03.980 --> 01:58:06.980] but they don't let you know anything. [01:58:06.980 --> 01:58:11.980] Well, again, any rights you waive by doing things like that, you're not getting back. [01:58:11.980 --> 01:58:17.980] You're expected to know what you're signing away when you do that. [01:58:17.980 --> 01:58:20.980] Right, and the choice is if you don't sign, you get to stay here. [01:58:20.980 --> 01:58:24.980] Well, that in and of itself is actionable. [01:58:24.980 --> 01:58:28.980] It's a harm when they do it that way, but you've got to be able to show they did it. [01:58:28.980 --> 01:58:30.980] And that won't be too hard, [01:58:30.980 --> 01:58:33.980] but you've got to be prepared to accept the consequences of doing it [01:58:33.980 --> 01:58:37.980] so that you can get after them later for it. [01:58:37.980 --> 01:58:39.980] All right, man, I am out of time. [01:58:39.980 --> 01:58:41.980] Folks, this has been the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show. [01:58:41.980 --> 01:58:43.980] Thank you for all the callers and all the listeners. [01:58:43.980 --> 01:58:45.980] I hope you all have a great week. [01:58:45.980 --> 01:58:47.980] Keep us in your financial prayers and in your donations. [01:58:47.980 --> 01:58:49.980] Good night and God bless you. [01:58:49.980 --> 01:58:54.980] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible [01:58:54.980 --> 01:58:57.980] called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.980 --> 01:59:00.980] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes [01:59:00.980 --> 01:59:03.980] that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:03.980 --> 01:59:07.980] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:07.980 --> 01:59:10.980] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:10.980 --> 01:59:19.980] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:19.980 --> 01:59:25.980] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:25.980 --> 01:59:29.980] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.980 --> 01:59:31.980] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:31.980 --> 01:59:35.980] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, [01:59:35.980 --> 01:59:40.980] call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.980 --> 01:59:50.980] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:50.980 --> 01:59:52.980] Looking for some truth? [01:59:52.980 --> 02:00:06.980] You found it, logosradionetwork.com.