[00:00.000 --> 00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.500 --> 00:09.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.500 --> 00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.000 --> 00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [00:16.500 --> 00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.500 --> 00:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.000 --> 00:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.500 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.500 --> 00:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [00:38.000 --> 00:42.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.000 --> 00:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [00:45.500 --> 00:47.500] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.500 --> 00:51.000] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.000 --> 00:54.000] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.000 --> 00:56.500] Spar with an extra P. [00:56.500 --> 01:03.000] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:03.000 --> 01:08.500] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [01:08.500 --> 01:10.500] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.500 --> 01:14.500] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.500 --> 01:17.500] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, [01:17.500 --> 01:21.000] we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.000 --> 01:30.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:30.500 --> 01:34.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.500 --> 01:38.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.000 --> 01:39.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.500 --> 01:43.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:43.000 --> 01:46.000] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.000 --> 01:48.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.000 --> 01:51.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.500 --> 01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.500 --> 01:58.000] So protect your rights. [01:58.000 --> 02:01.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.500 --> 02:04.000] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [02:04.000 --> 02:08.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [02:08.000 --> 02:12.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.000 --> 02:15.500] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.500 --> 02:19.500] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms [02:19.500 --> 02:22.000] around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.000 --> 02:26.000] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [02:26.000 --> 02:30.000] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.000 --> 02:33.500] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.500 --> 02:37.500] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.500 --> 02:38.500] when he said, [02:38.500 --> 02:43.500] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.500 --> 02:47.500] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, [02:47.500 --> 02:51.000] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:51.000 --> 03:14.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:21.000 --> 03:27.500] What you gonna do? What you gonna do? [03:27.500 --> 03:30.500] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [03:30.500 --> 03:33.000] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:33.000 --> 03:36.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [03:36.000 --> 03:38.500] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.500 --> 03:41.500] When you were eight and you had bad traits, [03:41.500 --> 03:44.000] you'd go to school and learn the golden rule. [03:44.000 --> 03:47.000] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:47.000 --> 03:49.500] If you get high, then you must get cool. [03:49.500 --> 03:52.500] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [03:52.500 --> 03:55.000] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:55.000 --> 03:58.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [03:58.000 --> 04:00.500] What you gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.500 --> 04:03.500] You took it on that one, you took it on this one. [04:03.500 --> 04:06.000] You took it on your mother and you took it on your father. [04:06.000 --> 04:08.500] You took it on your brother and you took it on your sister. [04:08.500 --> 04:10.500] Okay, howdy, howdy. [04:10.500 --> 04:15.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, [04:15.500 --> 04:20.000] the fourth day of February, 2022. [04:20.000 --> 04:22.000] I didn't even tell him that. [04:22.000 --> 04:25.000] Yeah, these stem cells, man, they're working. [04:25.000 --> 04:27.500] I got this together. [04:27.500 --> 04:31.500] And heck, as soon as I remember your name, [04:31.500 --> 04:35.500] I'll tell everybody that. [04:35.500 --> 04:36.500] Yeah, okay. [04:36.500 --> 04:38.500] But hey, I'm getting better. [04:38.500 --> 04:43.000] They've gotten over the COVID and I'm back to feeling healthy [04:43.000 --> 04:45.500] and vibrant and vigorous. [04:45.500 --> 04:49.000] And I needed a subject to start off with. [04:49.000 --> 04:55.000] Let me turn on the phones because I don't have a subject [04:55.000 --> 04:56.000] to start off with today. [04:56.000 --> 04:59.500] I was telling Brett that I was working on some new technologies. [04:59.500 --> 05:02.000] I do have the phone lines on. [05:02.000 --> 05:09.500] Our call-in number is 512-646-1984. [05:09.500 --> 05:14.000] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [05:14.000 --> 05:18.000] I have been working with someone in Austin. [05:18.000 --> 05:25.500] Her mother was murdered by doctors when they put her on a ventilator [05:25.500 --> 05:32.000] and refused to give her the medicine she needed to prevent blood clotting. [05:32.000 --> 05:36.500] She went to an outside doctor and he gave her a prescription for it. [05:36.500 --> 05:41.000] He took it to these doctors and they absolutely refused to let her have them [05:41.000 --> 05:48.000] the prescription to prevent the blood clotting and she died of blood clotting. [05:48.000 --> 05:51.000] They murdered her. [05:51.000 --> 05:55.000] That's depraved heart murder. [05:55.000 --> 05:56.000] She went to court. [05:56.000 --> 05:59.500] They fought like crazy so they could murder her. [05:59.500 --> 06:04.000] And they did that so they could collect a lot of money [06:04.000 --> 06:18.000] using the procedures that the NIH wants them to use so they kill everybody. [06:18.000 --> 06:20.000] At least that's the way it appears. [06:20.000 --> 06:28.500] So we're preparing a criminal complaint for every doctor involved in her mother's death, [06:28.500 --> 06:33.500] charging them with depraved heart murder. [06:33.500 --> 06:38.000] Don't care if we get an indictment or not, [06:38.000 --> 06:44.500] but when we start dragging these doctors before grand juries, [06:44.500 --> 06:51.000] I think it'll only take one to get every doctor's attention in the country. [06:51.000 --> 06:53.500] We're not after doctors. [06:53.500 --> 06:59.500] We want to give the doctors plausible deniability. [06:59.500 --> 07:04.000] The NIH comes down and says, you've got to use this medicine, [07:04.000 --> 07:07.000] or Big Pharma comes down and you've got to use this medicine. [07:07.000 --> 07:10.500] They tell them, go scratch. [07:10.500 --> 07:13.000] You go to jail, you do it. [07:13.000 --> 07:14.500] Yeah, absolutely. [07:14.500 --> 07:17.000] I'll stand aside, you do it, you go to jail. [07:17.000 --> 07:20.500] I'm not going to jail. [07:20.500 --> 07:22.500] But I think we can fix this. [07:22.500 --> 07:24.500] I don't think it'll take many. [07:24.500 --> 07:26.500] We start getting people around the country. [07:26.500 --> 07:32.500] I'm trying to build a basically generic complaint. [07:32.500 --> 07:34.500] All these doctors are doing the same thing. [07:34.500 --> 07:36.500] They're killing people the same way. [07:36.500 --> 07:44.500] And we're accumulating data now to find out how much the hospital actually collects [07:44.500 --> 07:52.500] for all of these unnecessary and destructive procedures they're using. [07:52.500 --> 07:54.500] It's all about money. [07:54.500 --> 07:57.500] We're telling the grand jury that the hospitals are killing people [07:57.500 --> 08:00.500] so they can collect more money. [08:00.500 --> 08:08.500] We're going to wind up with a grand jury member who has lost someone to COVID, [08:08.500 --> 08:12.500] and they're going to look at this and say, wait a minute, [08:12.500 --> 08:19.500] whose father or grandfather or uncle died on a ventilator [08:19.500 --> 08:24.500] without any of these remedies that are available that a statute signed into law [08:24.500 --> 08:29.500] by Trump requires them when what they're doing is not working, [08:29.500 --> 08:37.500] and someone has an experimental drug that may help, they're required to use it. [08:37.500 --> 08:40.500] Nobody's talking about that law. [08:40.500 --> 08:42.500] So we're going to craft a criminal complaint [08:42.500 --> 08:47.500] and see if we can start dragging these doctors before grand juries. [08:47.500 --> 08:53.500] And the way I want to do it in Texas is we have 15.09. [08:53.500 --> 08:57.500] I'm already working on judges filing criminal charges against them [08:57.500 --> 09:01.500] for not issuing a warrant when they get a complaint. [09:01.500 --> 09:05.500] 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says, [09:05.500 --> 09:10.500] when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate, [09:10.500 --> 09:20.500] the magistrate shall issue a warrant with no determination of probable cause, [09:20.500 --> 09:23.500] no examine into the sufficiency of the accusation. [09:23.500 --> 09:25.500] He is to issue a warrant. [09:25.500 --> 09:29.500] Then they arrest the accused, bring him before the magistrate, [09:29.500 --> 09:34.500] and the magistrate then holds an examining trial. [09:34.500 --> 09:39.500] That's how the system is set up to work. [09:39.500 --> 09:48.500] I filed criminal charges with the chief justice of the Supreme against the governor, [09:48.500 --> 09:53.500] and the chief justice did not issue a warrant. [09:53.500 --> 09:56.500] We got a fight coming. [09:56.500 --> 10:04.500] I'm going to sue him personally for that because he acted outside of scope. [10:04.500 --> 10:09.500] I filed criminal complaints with the presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals [10:09.500 --> 10:17.500] against the chief justice for not issuing a warrant, and she refused to issue a warrant. [10:17.500 --> 10:25.500] We're going to wind up dragging them all before the federal courts for RICO [10:25.500 --> 10:31.500] and a petition for declaratory judgment. [10:31.500 --> 10:36.500] She issued a petition for declaratory judgment in Texas. [10:36.500 --> 10:48.500] I'm asking the courts, when the legislature said the magistrate shall issue a warrant forthwith, [10:48.500 --> 10:54.500] did they mean precisely what they said? [10:54.500 --> 10:57.500] We've got the chief justice sitting there. [10:57.500 --> 11:07.500] He'll have to disqualify himself because he'll have criminal charges against him for not doing that. [11:07.500 --> 11:10.500] We shake them up enough. [11:10.500 --> 11:14.500] They almost have to say, yes, the legislature meant what it said. [11:14.500 --> 11:19.500] There is no room in that statute to wiggle. [11:19.500 --> 11:22.500] It was very clear. [11:22.500 --> 11:25.500] So we get that done. [11:25.500 --> 11:28.500] We don't really care about these public officials at this point. [11:28.500 --> 11:37.500] We file a criminal complaint against the doctor with a magistrate of any gender. [11:37.500 --> 11:48.500] Once I get the declaratory judgment ruling, the magistrate is now commanded to issue a warrant. [11:48.500 --> 11:52.500] We start getting doctors arrested around the country. [11:52.500 --> 11:55.500] There's going to be something similar in other states. [11:55.500 --> 12:02.500] But just in Texas, we start getting them arrested for depraved heart murder. [12:02.500 --> 12:06.500] Likelihood of them getting indicted is very slim, [12:06.500 --> 12:10.500] but the likelihood of them getting their butts arrested is not so slim. [12:10.500 --> 12:13.500] If you're a doctor here struggling to treat your patients [12:13.500 --> 12:18.500] and you can't treat them with the medicines you think they need, [12:18.500 --> 12:24.500] but you have to do what the insurance companies tell you, [12:24.500 --> 12:31.500] and we have him drug out of his office in cuffs, [12:31.500 --> 12:38.500] every doctor in the country can say, hold on here, guys, hold on, insurance companies. [12:38.500 --> 12:41.500] I'm not going to jail for you. [12:41.500 --> 12:44.500] I think we can change this. [12:44.500 --> 12:47.500] That's my story, and I'm sticking to it. [12:47.500 --> 12:51.500] We have some callers on the line. [12:51.500 --> 12:53.500] We've got four minutes left in this segment. [12:53.500 --> 13:02.500] Tina Kirlish has some crowing to do. [13:02.500 --> 13:04.500] Hello, Tina. [13:04.500 --> 13:06.500] Hello, Randy. [13:06.500 --> 13:08.500] How are you both? [13:08.500 --> 13:11.500] If you're on that Bluetooth, can you disconnect it? [13:11.500 --> 13:13.500] You're kind of breaking up there. [13:13.500 --> 13:17.500] I just disconnected it already. [13:17.500 --> 13:19.500] Oh, much better. [13:19.500 --> 13:23.500] Okay, you have some crowing to do. [13:23.500 --> 13:27.500] Well, just a little, and it's all your fault. [13:27.500 --> 13:34.500] You turned me into the British bitch, as you called me. [13:34.500 --> 13:43.500] No, no, what Tina suggests is that she's turned into an English bulldog. [13:43.500 --> 13:51.500] I'm not going to speak to the gender for that bulldog. [13:51.500 --> 13:59.500] Well, yes, I do have some good news that I had to share with Randy yesterday, [13:59.500 --> 14:09.500] and now I'm going to share with everyone, and it's in regard to the criminal complaints [14:09.500 --> 14:20.500] against the store owner of a confinement store that filed bankruptcy in 2019, [14:20.500 --> 14:27.500] and I filed an administrative proceeding within that bankruptcy to stop her getting a discharge. [14:27.500 --> 14:31.500] Okay, hold on, hold on. [14:31.500 --> 14:41.500] Consignment store where Tina and a bunch of other people took stuff, this woman sold it, kept the money. [14:41.500 --> 14:48.500] Then when they tried to get their money back, she filed bankruptcy to try to bankrupt out from under them. [14:48.500 --> 14:51.500] Is that essentially correct? [14:51.500 --> 14:53.500] That's essentially correct, yes. [14:53.500 --> 14:56.500] Okay, now go ahead. [14:56.500 --> 15:07.500] So a bunch of those filed complaints with the DA, over 70, but only 50, I think 52 or 54, decided to go forward with them, [15:07.500 --> 15:10.500] and then it's been going on back and forth. [15:10.500 --> 15:12.500] I'm investigating for two and a half years. [15:12.500 --> 15:22.500] We've been holding the AP, the adversary proceeding case, open, fighting her and her multiple attorneys, [15:22.500 --> 15:26.500] and two, three weeks ago I emailed the DA. [15:26.500 --> 15:29.500] Okay, hold on again, hold on again. [15:29.500 --> 15:32.500] Adversarial proceeding. [15:32.500 --> 15:38.500] Most of the time when people file bankruptcies, if you have credit cards, they never show up. [15:38.500 --> 15:46.500] So the court will just, what do you call it, not dismiss the... [15:46.500 --> 15:48.500] They'll give them money to discharge. [15:48.500 --> 15:52.500] They'll discharge that debt. [15:52.500 --> 15:59.500] Well, apparently that's what this woman was told by her lawyers and what she expected, [15:59.500 --> 16:06.500] that everybody would just sit back and not file an adversarial proceeding. [16:06.500 --> 16:13.500] But then we got this English Bulldog that filed this adversarial proceeding, [16:13.500 --> 16:17.500] and that's what's held her in bankruptcy these couple of years. [16:17.500 --> 16:22.500] And that's what got her to this point. [16:22.500 --> 16:25.500] Go ahead, I'll quit interrupting now. [16:25.500 --> 16:29.500] Well, and also just to let you know, when I filed that adversarial proceeding, [16:29.500 --> 16:33.500] I had no clue what I was doing, but I did what Randy... [16:33.500 --> 16:37.500] Oh, you're running me off the key, Randy. [16:37.500 --> 16:38.500] We'll be right back. [16:38.500 --> 16:46.500] He said he's not going to interrupt you anymore, so he's just going to let you go right off the edge of that cliff, [16:46.500 --> 16:48.500] talking to yourself up on the storm. [16:48.500 --> 16:55.500] Okay, Tina, can an English, can a female English Bulldog lie? [16:55.500 --> 16:56.500] Lie? [16:56.500 --> 16:57.500] We'll be right back. [16:57.500 --> 17:26.500] Lie? [17:26.500 --> 17:28.500] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [17:28.500 --> 17:33.500] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.500 --> 17:38.500] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.500 --> 17:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.500 --> 17:46.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [17:46.500 --> 17:49.500] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.500 --> 18:01.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:01.500 --> 18:04.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [18:04.500 --> 18:06.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [18:06.500 --> 18:09.500] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.500 --> 18:12.500] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.500 --> 18:14.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:14.500 --> 18:16.500] the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:16.500 --> 18:19.500] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.500 --> 18:21.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [18:21.500 --> 18:24.500] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:24.500 --> 18:27.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:27.500 --> 18:30.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:30.500 --> 18:34.500] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.500 --> 18:38.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [18:38.500 --> 18:40.500] and ordering your copy today. [18:40.500 --> 18:42.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [18:42.500 --> 18:47.500] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [18:47.500 --> 18:50.500] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.500 --> 18:54.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.500 --> 19:12.500] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:24.500 --> 19:40.500] The world is spinning like it's out of control [19:40.500 --> 19:44.500] on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome [19:44.500 --> 19:50.500] I'm always on the lookout for something to soothe my soul [19:50.500 --> 19:55.500] So I sit back and I watch the evidence unfold [19:55.500 --> 20:03.500] And I see justice is the goal [20:03.500 --> 20:10.500] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton and Brett Felton with Rule of Law Radio [20:10.500 --> 20:13.500] and we're talking to the flying English bulldog. [20:13.500 --> 20:19.500] Okay, Tina, we're just getting to the good part. [20:19.500 --> 20:23.500] Yeah, I had no idea what I was doing. [20:23.500 --> 20:27.500] I didn't know really anything about adversary proceedings. [20:27.500 --> 20:30.500] I just knew that was what I needed to file. [20:30.500 --> 20:32.500] So I did what Randy said. [20:32.500 --> 20:34.500] I went online. I found one. [20:34.500 --> 20:37.500] I plagiarized it. I got it filed on the last day [20:37.500 --> 20:40.500] and then figured out how to amend it later. [20:40.500 --> 20:43.500] And, you know, I learned as I went along [20:43.500 --> 20:49.500] and, you know, we're still learning and still filing stuff in that. [20:49.500 --> 20:53.500] But in the meantime, I emailed the district attorney [20:53.500 --> 20:57.500] because we're all getting fed up with the prosecution of her [20:57.500 --> 21:00.500] or the filing of the charges not happening. [21:00.500 --> 21:07.500] And I just invoked his duty and his promise to his constituents [21:07.500 --> 21:09.500] sitting right there on his website. [21:09.500 --> 21:10.500] And he was very nice. [21:10.500 --> 21:13.500] He responded very, very quickly within 20 minutes. [21:13.500 --> 21:16.500] And we've had a cordial, you know, [21:16.500 --> 21:20.500] discussed over email since and phone. [21:20.500 --> 21:25.500] And he said he didn't know anything about it. [21:25.500 --> 21:27.500] And I'd like to find out afterwards, [21:27.500 --> 21:29.500] maybe you could talk about this afterwards. [21:29.500 --> 21:35.500] I wonder what the criteria is for his staff to tell him about a case. [21:35.500 --> 21:42.500] Anyway, yesterday we got word that the charges had been filed, [21:42.500 --> 21:46.500] the arrest warrant issued, she has made bail, [21:46.500 --> 21:50.500] and a press release was issued yesterday afternoon. [21:50.500 --> 21:56.500] Ten counts of felony embezzlement. [21:56.500 --> 22:00.500] So I've been dancing a jig since then. [22:00.500 --> 22:02.500] Ten counts? [22:02.500 --> 22:06.500] That could get her generally that a felony embezzlement [22:06.500 --> 22:10.500] is probably at least five years. [22:10.500 --> 22:13.500] Three to five. [22:13.500 --> 22:16.500] Should I say that again? [22:16.500 --> 22:18.500] Three to five years for each. [22:18.500 --> 22:19.500] Three to five. [22:19.500 --> 22:24.500] So if they give her the minimum, that's 30 years. [22:24.500 --> 22:27.500] If they convict her on all counts. [22:27.500 --> 22:33.500] If they convict on one, they all have the same facts set. [22:33.500 --> 22:35.500] You almost certainly will convict on all, [22:35.500 --> 22:40.500] but she'll make a deal long before she gets there. [22:40.500 --> 22:47.500] But she didn't get to cheat the system. [22:47.500 --> 22:49.500] She didn't get to cheat the system, [22:49.500 --> 22:55.500] and I called the bankruptcy helpline today, you know, [22:55.500 --> 23:00.500] just to find out about filing a subpoena due to ticum [23:00.500 --> 23:05.500] to get the tax returns that we felt we were owed, [23:05.500 --> 23:08.500] and she's been saying, yes, I'm sending them, yes, [23:08.500 --> 23:10.500] you've got them, yes, yes, [23:10.500 --> 23:13.500] and they're in the mail, but we never got them. [23:13.500 --> 23:15.500] So I, you know, I talked to him, [23:15.500 --> 23:18.500] and he's been following the case when he's been on duty, [23:18.500 --> 23:22.500] and he said, okay, what's the, you know, result now? [23:22.500 --> 23:23.500] What's happening? [23:23.500 --> 23:26.500] And I told him, and he's like, 10 counts? [23:26.500 --> 23:28.500] He said, she's toast. [23:28.500 --> 23:32.500] That's incredible. [23:32.500 --> 23:37.500] The former attorney says he's up the creek without a paddle. [23:37.500 --> 23:45.500] Toast is legalese for up the creek without a paddle. [23:45.500 --> 23:48.500] Is there a British word for that? [23:48.500 --> 23:53.500] I'm sure there is, but I'll have to research it. [23:53.500 --> 23:56.500] He said, this is going to help your case. [23:56.500 --> 23:59.500] He said, I'd like to know when you're going to law school. [23:59.500 --> 24:03.500] He said, you've been following this for a long time. [24:03.500 --> 24:05.500] And then, you know, interestingly enough, [24:05.500 --> 24:08.500] I've been researching the duties of trustees, [24:08.500 --> 24:11.500] because we felt the trustees failed in his duties, [24:11.500 --> 24:15.500] which led us to the debtors' duties under a 521, [24:15.500 --> 24:20.500] and it says that the debtor shall provide the taxes, [24:20.500 --> 24:25.500] and even to any creditor that timely requests the copy, [24:25.500 --> 24:30.500] if they fail to comply, the court shall dismiss the case [24:30.500 --> 24:33.500] unless the debtor demonstrates that the failure to do so [24:33.500 --> 24:38.500] is due to circumstances beyond the control of the debtor. [24:38.500 --> 24:41.500] And it goes on quite a bit about, you know, [24:41.500 --> 24:44.500] any party can request this. [24:44.500 --> 24:49.500] Well, this is telling us that the trustee didn't do his job. [24:49.500 --> 24:51.500] He did not dismiss the case. [24:51.500 --> 24:54.500] You know, they can give them one extension, [24:54.500 --> 24:56.500] and after that, they've got to produce. [24:56.500 --> 24:59.500] He's just like, no, no, no, we're going to give her the discharge, [24:59.500 --> 25:03.500] but the AP proceeding I filed stopped it. [25:03.500 --> 25:05.500] Wait, wait, wait, wait. [25:05.500 --> 25:10.500] Does the trustee have immunity? [25:10.500 --> 25:17.500] I don't know, and I don't know how to find that out. [25:17.500 --> 25:19.500] We need to do some digging on that. [25:19.500 --> 25:25.500] Do California Bankruptcy Trustee immunity? [25:25.500 --> 25:27.500] Google will probably get you that. [25:27.500 --> 25:29.500] You may be able to sue the trustee. [25:29.500 --> 25:37.500] I think I've heard something about you being able to sue the trustee. [25:37.500 --> 25:40.500] Yeah, but he clearly failed in his duty. [25:40.500 --> 25:42.500] They just seem to want to brush it under the rug, [25:42.500 --> 25:46.500] and if the debtor has no asset, they don't want to be bothered. [25:46.500 --> 25:48.500] Well, he should have just dismissed it. [25:48.500 --> 25:51.500] She committed perjury in her filings, [25:51.500 --> 25:57.500] and we pointed each one of them out, and they just didn't do anything. [25:57.500 --> 25:59.500] So if you sue the trustee, [25:59.500 --> 26:08.500] they may dismiss the bankruptcy to get you to leave the trustee alone. [26:08.500 --> 26:14.500] Well, it says here what I found is that any party who doesn't get what they request [26:14.500 --> 26:19.500] can file a motion to dismiss the bankruptcy [26:19.500 --> 26:23.500] upon the fact that the debtor doesn't do what they're supposed to do. [26:23.500 --> 26:31.500] That will be one of my next moves after I file the joint status report with the court, [26:31.500 --> 26:37.500] because our adversary case is coming up for a status conference hearing on March the 8th. [26:37.500 --> 26:41.500] She is being arraigned on February the 23rd, [26:41.500 --> 26:47.500] so I'm going to send her the joint status report the end of next week [26:47.500 --> 26:52.500] after I've sent out the subpoena for the tax return, [26:52.500 --> 26:58.500] and then I'm going to attach to that form the complaint from the district attorney [26:58.500 --> 27:03.500] to let our judge know that these charges are pending, [27:03.500 --> 27:06.500] and we'll see what they say then. [27:06.500 --> 27:11.500] But if she's been indicted, [27:11.500 --> 27:19.500] do you have to be indicted in California, or is there another avenue? [27:19.500 --> 27:21.500] I don't know. [27:21.500 --> 27:27.500] I think you have to be indicted, so she's almost certainly been indicted. [27:27.500 --> 27:33.500] That's a good chance you'll get that bankruptcy dismissed now. [27:33.500 --> 27:37.500] You did really good for a girl. [27:37.500 --> 27:39.500] Oh, geez, thanks. [27:39.500 --> 27:42.500] You're welcome. [27:42.500 --> 27:44.500] Just asking for it. [27:44.500 --> 27:49.500] Yeah, my nickname around the house is male chauvinist pig. [27:49.500 --> 27:55.500] She's just pig for short. [27:55.500 --> 27:59.500] Well, I'm sure I said to the other people in our case, [27:59.500 --> 28:05.500] I said I'm sure this woman is sitting at home with a doll [28:05.500 --> 28:11.500] that looks like me sticking pins in it right now. [28:11.500 --> 28:13.500] Well, good. [28:13.500 --> 28:17.500] This is what we can do. [28:17.500 --> 28:22.500] We can continue research, and we stick to it. [28:22.500 --> 28:28.500] One of the things, one of the biggest issues we have is [28:28.500 --> 28:33.500] people just don't feel their own self-worth. [28:33.500 --> 28:36.500] They don't feel empowered. [28:36.500 --> 28:39.500] When this country, like no other, [28:39.500 --> 28:46.500] and this country empowers the individual citizen like no other, [28:46.500 --> 28:52.500] we are the most powerful people in the United States, [28:52.500 --> 28:55.500] and for the most part, we don't understand it. [28:55.500 --> 28:57.500] Here we've got Tina. [28:57.500 --> 29:05.500] She's an immigrant, and she works our system better than most of us do. [29:05.500 --> 29:10.500] We all ought to be ashamed of ourselves. [29:10.500 --> 29:13.500] That's because I've had to learn, [29:13.500 --> 29:16.500] because the system stole everything from me. [29:16.500 --> 29:19.500] After I worked so hard for so long, [29:19.500 --> 29:22.500] the courts let the banks steal everything, [29:22.500 --> 29:23.500] and I don't like that. [29:23.500 --> 29:25.500] I don't take it lightly. [29:25.500 --> 29:29.500] So they created their own worst enemy, [29:29.500 --> 29:33.500] and we're hoping to take you as a worst enemy [29:33.500 --> 29:36.500] and create a whole lot more for them. [29:36.500 --> 29:37.500] Hang on. [29:37.500 --> 29:39.500] We're about to go to our sponsors, [29:39.500 --> 29:43.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio. [29:43.500 --> 29:45.500] I'll call in number. [29:45.500 --> 29:46.500] Oh, wait. [29:46.500 --> 29:50.500] We've got a full board, so I won't give out the call-in number. [29:50.500 --> 29:54.500] If someone drops off, we'll have a slot open. [29:54.500 --> 29:56.500] We only hold about four on the board at the time. [29:56.500 --> 30:02.500] So we'll be right back. [30:02.500 --> 30:05.500] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, [30:05.500 --> 30:07.500] but have they negatively affected our health? [30:07.500 --> 30:09.500] Hi, Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment [30:09.500 --> 30:11.500] with new findings about how cell phones [30:11.500 --> 30:14.500] may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:14.500 --> 30:16.500] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.500 --> 30:18.500] When you give up data about yourself, [30:18.500 --> 30:20.500] you'll never get it back again. [30:20.500 --> 30:22.500] And once your privacy is gone, [30:22.500 --> 30:25.500] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:25.500 --> 30:28.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [30:28.500 --> 30:30.500] and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.500 --> 30:32.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.500 --> 30:36.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:36.500 --> 30:40.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.500 --> 30:44.500] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.500 --> 30:46.500] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. [30:46.500 --> 30:47.500] It's a fact. [30:47.500 --> 30:49.500] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone [30:49.500 --> 30:52.500] beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [30:52.500 --> 30:54.500] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, [30:54.500 --> 30:57.500] while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:57.500 --> 30:59.500] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association [30:59.500 --> 31:02.500] is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [31:02.500 --> 31:06.500] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism [31:06.500 --> 31:09.500] in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna [31:09.500 --> 31:11.500] increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.500 --> 31:14.500] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, [31:14.500 --> 31:16.500] I'm not taking any chances. [31:16.500 --> 31:18.500] I always keep the phone far from my body, [31:18.500 --> 31:20.500] and I use a corded headset. [31:20.500 --> 31:21.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:21.500 --> 31:24.500] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:24.500 --> 31:30.500] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [31:30.500 --> 31:34.500] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:34.500 --> 31:38.500] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:38.500 --> 31:42.500] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:42.500 --> 31:46.500] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:46.500 --> 31:48.500] and believe there is more to the story. [31:48.500 --> 31:52.500] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my uncle. [31:52.500 --> 31:55.500] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.500 --> 31:57.500] Go to buildingwatt.org. [31:57.500 --> 32:01.500] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.500 --> 32:04.500] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [32:04.500 --> 32:06.500] and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.500 --> 32:09.500] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays [32:09.500 --> 32:12.500] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.500 --> 32:15.500] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures [32:15.500 --> 32:18.500] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:18.500 --> 32:20.500] Study to show thyself approved unto God. [32:20.500 --> 32:22.500] A workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [32:22.500 --> 32:24.500] rightly dividing the word of truth. [32:24.500 --> 32:28.500] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.500 --> 32:32.500] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.500 --> 32:35.500] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week [32:35.500 --> 32:39.500] with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [32:39.500 --> 32:44.500] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.500 --> 32:47.500] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [32:47.500 --> 32:50.500] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.500 --> 32:54.500] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:54.500 --> 32:56.500] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [32:56.500 --> 33:00.500] to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:03.500 --> 33:06.500] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [33:06.500 --> 33:10.500] at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:10.500 --> 33:14.500] Yeah, I got a warrant. [33:14.500 --> 33:17.500] And I'm gonna solve them. [33:17.500 --> 33:20.500] To the head of government, them. [33:20.500 --> 33:22.500] Prosecute them. [33:22.500 --> 33:25.500] Okay. [33:25.500 --> 33:28.500] All set. [33:28.500 --> 33:31.500] Citizens are ready. [33:31.500 --> 33:34.500] All established. [33:34.500 --> 33:36.500] Citizens are ready. [33:36.500 --> 33:38.500] Okay, we are back. [33:38.500 --> 33:41.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio [33:41.500 --> 33:46.500] on this Friday, January the 4th, 2022. [33:46.500 --> 33:48.500] Close, close. [33:48.500 --> 33:51.500] And we're talking to Tina. [33:51.500 --> 33:52.500] Okay, Tina. [33:52.500 --> 33:53.500] February the 4th. [33:53.500 --> 33:55.500] Did I say January? [33:55.500 --> 33:56.500] February. [33:56.500 --> 33:57.500] You did. [33:57.500 --> 33:58.500] I was close. [33:58.500 --> 33:59.500] Okay. [33:59.500 --> 34:02.500] February the 4th. [34:02.500 --> 34:05.500] And I thought I was on a roll. [34:05.500 --> 34:06.500] Okay. [34:06.500 --> 34:10.500] So you came, you saw, you kicked their behinds. [34:10.500 --> 34:16.500] Now you're gonna try to get the bankruptcy dismissed. [34:16.500 --> 34:19.500] And I'm trying to get a judgment [34:19.500 --> 34:22.500] in our adversary proceeding case, [34:22.500 --> 34:24.500] you know, a monetary judgment [34:24.500 --> 34:27.500] so that it will sit on her for a long, long time [34:27.500 --> 34:30.500] because now she's in charge with fraud. [34:30.500 --> 34:34.500] Does she own property? [34:34.500 --> 34:37.500] Does she own property? [34:37.500 --> 34:38.500] No, she doesn't. [34:38.500 --> 34:39.500] But if we get the judgment, [34:39.500 --> 34:42.500] you never know when someone's going to own property. [34:42.500 --> 34:45.500] Her husband is working and he's one of the dependents [34:45.500 --> 34:50.500] so we can attach his wages forever in a day. [34:50.500 --> 34:53.500] So they don't own the home they're living in? [34:53.500 --> 34:55.500] No. [34:55.500 --> 35:04.500] So, bummer, because fraud mediates or mitigates everything. [35:04.500 --> 35:08.500] In Texas, you can't take someone's... [35:08.500 --> 35:10.500] Say that again. [35:10.500 --> 35:15.500] I think the term I've heard is that fraud vitiates. [35:15.500 --> 35:17.500] Okay. [35:17.500 --> 35:19.500] Okay. [35:19.500 --> 35:21.500] Tina will know. [35:21.500 --> 35:24.500] She speaks English. [35:24.500 --> 35:27.500] Anyway. [35:27.500 --> 35:30.500] Anyway, if you have property in Texas, [35:30.500 --> 35:34.500] you normally can't touch it, [35:34.500 --> 35:37.500] except for fraud. [35:37.500 --> 35:41.500] If you're convicted of fraud or you're sued for fraud, [35:41.500 --> 35:44.500] then they could even take your house. [35:44.500 --> 35:49.500] That's why I was asking if she had any assets. [35:49.500 --> 35:56.500] But this would likely keep her from trying to screw somebody else. [35:56.500 --> 35:57.500] Oh, yes. [35:57.500 --> 35:58.500] Okay. [35:58.500 --> 35:59.500] Okay. [35:59.500 --> 36:02.500] Do you have anything else for us, Tina? [36:02.500 --> 36:03.500] No, no. [36:03.500 --> 36:04.500] I'm going to just go onto the listening line [36:04.500 --> 36:06.500] and listen to the rest of the show. [36:06.500 --> 36:08.500] But keep up everyone. [36:08.500 --> 36:09.500] Don't give up. [36:09.500 --> 36:12.500] Don't give up. [36:12.500 --> 36:14.500] And keep up the good work. [36:14.500 --> 36:19.500] If you have any legal issues in California, call Tina. [36:19.500 --> 36:24.500] She'll take care of them for you. [36:24.500 --> 36:25.500] Okay. [36:25.500 --> 36:27.500] Thank you, Tina. [36:27.500 --> 36:29.500] Okay. [36:29.500 --> 36:33.500] Now we're going to Austin in Florida. [36:33.500 --> 36:35.500] Hello, Austin. [36:35.500 --> 36:38.500] What do you have for us today? [36:38.500 --> 36:39.500] Okay. [36:39.500 --> 36:43.500] So last week I kind of started talking to you about this thing I got going on in Florida [36:43.500 --> 36:48.500] where I'm going to work on a lawsuit, but actually I have a bit of a more pressing issue. [36:48.500 --> 36:55.500] I am the defendant in a federal criminal case, and the trial date is a month from Monday. [36:55.500 --> 37:02.500] And this is for failure to obtain a permit for First Amendment activities. [37:02.500 --> 37:04.500] What? [37:04.500 --> 37:05.500] Wait a minute. [37:05.500 --> 37:06.500] Wait a minute. [37:06.500 --> 37:09.500] A permit for First Amendment activities. [37:09.500 --> 37:13.500] How could there possibly be such a permit? [37:13.500 --> 37:15.500] I have no idea. [37:15.500 --> 37:19.500] I told the guy, isn't that antithetical to the First Amendment? [37:19.500 --> 37:25.500] Because permits, you're insinuating that it's therefore illegal, so you give me permission to do it. [37:25.500 --> 37:27.500] Exactly. [37:27.500 --> 37:32.500] I don't want to take too much of your guys' time, so it's actually a really long story. [37:32.500 --> 37:40.500] Quick summary is the year of 2021 I went around the entire United States, and I would do activism in every [37:40.500 --> 37:44.500] prominent place you can think of, telling people, you know, believe it or not, the air is not going to kill you, [37:44.500 --> 37:51.500] and you can let the children breathe, and if we don't stand up for our rights, we'll never be free. [37:51.500 --> 37:58.500] So I was doing this at Yellowstone National Park, but we were actually just in the RV to get gas [37:58.500 --> 38:05.500] and we were blocked in, so I just was talking to people there about the masks and how mask mandates are unlawful [38:05.500 --> 38:12.500] and ridiculous, et cetera, and then they pulled us over once we left so that there was a bolo out, [38:12.500 --> 38:19.500] a be on the lookout for two individuals exercising First Amendment activity at National Park, [38:19.500 --> 38:22.500] and that they got a report on us. [38:22.500 --> 38:25.500] Oh, my goodness. [38:25.500 --> 38:31.500] You have an opportunity to change law. [38:31.500 --> 38:34.500] That's what I actually was thinking. [38:34.500 --> 38:41.500] It's pretty crazy I put this off, but it gets even worse, actually, because I did appear, [38:41.500 --> 38:49.500] and I was asking them if I could get a video appearance, and they said they didn't respond until the morning up, [38:49.500 --> 38:52.500] and I told them that I was hundreds of miles away. [38:52.500 --> 38:56.500] No one returned my call. I had to get real stern with them two days before. [38:56.500 --> 39:02.500] So anyway, I do end up going, driving hundreds of miles back there because I didn't get the email [39:02.500 --> 39:08.500] until like right before the court date that morning, and they told me I couldn't come in without a mask. [39:08.500 --> 39:10.500] I told them I couldn't wear a mask. [39:10.500 --> 39:15.500] She's been trying to explain to her the federal regulations even have place for religious exemptions, [39:15.500 --> 39:18.500] sincerely held religious beliefs, and medical rights. [39:18.500 --> 39:19.500] She said she doesn't care about all that. [39:19.500 --> 39:22.500] She's watched my YouTube. She knows my MO. [39:22.500 --> 39:27.500] And then she said, whatever, you can go do your video appearance in the truck in the parking lot. [39:27.500 --> 39:28.500] I did that. [39:28.500 --> 39:30.500] Heard them on video conference talking to the judge. [39:30.500 --> 39:35.500] The judge then tells them to come outside and tell me I have to come in and wear a mask or I'll be arrested. [39:35.500 --> 39:38.500] And so they did that, and of course, I had to go in there and wear it. [39:38.500 --> 39:40.500] So there's a brief summary of where it rests. [39:40.500 --> 39:41.500] So it's kind of compounding things. [39:41.500 --> 39:46.500] I have a judicial complaint I'm going to send at that guy, that federal magistrate, [39:46.500 --> 39:51.500] but I haven't really made any action, so there's a brief summary. [39:51.500 --> 39:53.500] Sorry, it kind of took a minute. [39:53.500 --> 40:01.500] Look at, consider suing the judge personally for acting outside of scope. [40:01.500 --> 40:04.500] That's the question that needs answered. [40:04.500 --> 40:10.500] When a judge issues a mask order, is that within the scope of his authority? [40:10.500 --> 40:16.500] If it's not, and you can do that with a petition for declaratory judgment. [40:16.500 --> 40:22.500] If it's not within scope, you can sue the federal judge personally. [40:22.500 --> 40:25.500] Okay. [40:25.500 --> 40:30.500] That'll get your attention. [40:30.500 --> 40:41.500] A judge has absolute immunity so long as he acts within scope, and this is not within scope. [40:41.500 --> 40:42.500] Right. [40:42.500 --> 40:46.500] And in the judicial complaint I have written up so far, I say, you know, [40:46.500 --> 40:52.500] this is for him in his individual capacity as well, right, because he acts outside of scope. [40:52.500 --> 40:55.500] So I have a complaint, I guess I'm looking to the suit. [40:55.500 --> 41:01.500] I'm trying to decide what exactly I should do with the courts, should I, not even, [41:01.500 --> 41:03.500] because I have all kinds of tentative things. [41:03.500 --> 41:04.500] I'm learning all of this. [41:04.500 --> 41:05.500] I'm brand new to everything, though. [41:05.500 --> 41:09.500] But I have like a motion to dismiss the failure to state a cause of action, [41:09.500 --> 41:11.500] lack of subject matter jurisdiction, personal jurisdiction. [41:11.500 --> 41:12.500] I have these written up. [41:12.500 --> 41:16.500] The most I've learned to do so, so far, I don't even know. [41:16.500 --> 41:19.500] You need to bring a constitutional challenge, [41:19.500 --> 41:26.500] and when you bring a constitutional challenge, the federal cover sheet has a place for that. [41:26.500 --> 41:31.500] That's something they're not going to want to happen. [41:31.500 --> 41:34.500] They do not want you to bring a constitutional challenge, [41:34.500 --> 41:41.500] because if they happen to lose that challenge, it shuts them down all over the country. [41:41.500 --> 41:55.500] So you bring the constitutional challenge, and very likely these criminal charges will go away. [41:55.500 --> 41:59.500] The criminal charges are straightforward. [41:59.500 --> 42:02.500] I'm sorry, the constitutional challenge is really straightforward. [42:02.500 --> 42:06.500] This is a direct assault on First Amendment, [42:06.500 --> 42:11.500] accusing you of going around exercising your First Amendment right. [42:11.500 --> 42:12.500] It's insane. [42:12.500 --> 42:17.500] I'm literally vocalizing a petition to address the grievances of the government [42:17.500 --> 42:22.500] as they are implementing totalitarian orders and being forced to not be able to do that. [42:22.500 --> 42:26.500] In fact, that order is being forced upon me for doing it. [42:26.500 --> 42:27.500] Okay. [42:27.500 --> 42:31.500] Petitions are essentially worthless. [42:31.500 --> 42:37.500] The courts will use them for toilet paper, file criminal charges against them, [42:37.500 --> 42:41.500] get other people to file criminal charges against them. [42:41.500 --> 42:42.500] Right. [42:42.500 --> 42:44.500] That changes everything. [42:44.500 --> 42:51.500] The right itself is written in the context that the monarch got so crazy with licensing law schemes [42:51.500 --> 42:58.500] that there had to be a new system built so that we can always publicly and freely address [42:58.500 --> 43:01.500] what we don't approve of with the government. [43:01.500 --> 43:10.500] They're literally arresting me for that and then making me wear the mask that I'm speaking out against. [43:10.500 --> 43:15.500] It's so antithetical to the meaning of the Constitution. [43:15.500 --> 43:16.500] Okay. [43:16.500 --> 43:18.500] It's our position. [43:18.500 --> 43:23.500] You never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [43:23.500 --> 43:29.500] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [43:29.500 --> 43:34.500] So you've asked them to give you a mask exemption. [43:34.500 --> 43:35.500] They didn't do it. [43:35.500 --> 43:37.500] Go after them criminally. [43:37.500 --> 43:42.500] When they don't do what the law compels them to or they exert or purport to exert an authority they don't have [43:42.500 --> 43:47.500] and deny you a right, that's a crime in every state and in the Fed. [43:47.500 --> 43:50.500] 18 U.S. Code 242. [43:50.500 --> 43:58.500] In your case it would be 241 because more than one acted in concert inclusion. [43:58.500 --> 44:00.500] Hang on, we'll be right back. [44:00.500 --> 44:06.500] Through advances in technology our lives have greatly improved except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.500 --> 44:11.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.500 --> 44:17.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.500 --> 44:22.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.500 --> 44:25.500] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.500 --> 44:31.500] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.500 --> 44:39.500] We have come to trust young Jevity so much we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.500 --> 44:47.500] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.500 --> 44:51.500] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity you may want to join us. [44:51.500 --> 44:58.500] As a distributor you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.500 --> 45:00.500] Order now. [45:00.500 --> 45:03.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.500 --> 45:07.500] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [45:07.500 --> 45:15.500] The affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.500 --> 45:19.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.500 --> 45:23.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.500 --> 45:28.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [45:28.500 --> 45:34.500] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.500 --> 45:43.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.500 --> 45:52.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.500 --> 46:04.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.500 --> 46:31.500] Okay, we are back. [46:31.500 --> 46:34.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [46:34.500 --> 46:37.500] And we're talking to Austin in Florida. [46:37.500 --> 46:42.500] You may have some really good suits against him here. [46:42.500 --> 46:47.500] Because this just looks outrageous right on his face. [46:47.500 --> 46:53.500] So what have you done so far in your defense? [46:53.500 --> 46:55.500] That's actually a thing. [46:55.500 --> 46:56.500] I've actually done nothing. [46:56.500 --> 47:00.500] I will say I was a bit arrogant about it because I've been so busy on the road. [47:00.500 --> 47:03.500] And so I just thought I should be able to walk in there and tell you that I can. [47:03.500 --> 47:05.500] So I put it off. [47:05.500 --> 47:08.500] So I haven't done anything and I have some stuff to send. [47:08.500 --> 47:09.500] Okay. [47:09.500 --> 47:13.500] I'm going to talk to you about a strange phenomenon. [47:13.500 --> 47:22.500] When they come after you, the more you know about them and the more you know about the law [47:22.500 --> 47:28.500] and what's going on, it seems the harder it is for you to fight them. [47:28.500 --> 47:38.500] And you tend to, people tend to just try to stay away from it and they procrastinate. [47:38.500 --> 47:44.500] So ask me how I know that, the guy that got sentenced to a year in prison [47:44.500 --> 47:48.500] for about the stupidest charge you could imagine. [47:48.500 --> 47:56.500] It was absolutely a struggle to work on my own case. [47:56.500 --> 47:59.500] It was easy to work on other people's cases. [47:59.500 --> 48:04.500] But to sit down and work on mine was a beast. [48:04.500 --> 48:07.500] Don't let that happen. [48:07.500 --> 48:08.500] This is your liberty. [48:08.500 --> 48:11.500] Stay out in front of them. [48:11.500 --> 48:17.500] That's all the preaching I'm going to do today. [48:17.500 --> 48:21.500] So constitutional challenge. [48:21.500 --> 48:22.500] Yes. [48:22.500 --> 48:27.500] They have interfered with your constitutional rights. [48:27.500 --> 48:33.500] So you make this criminal prosecution a constitutional test. [48:33.500 --> 48:39.500] If you win this, they can never do this to anyone. [48:39.500 --> 48:45.500] They are not going to want to risk that happening. [48:45.500 --> 48:50.500] And the politics is changing. [48:50.500 --> 48:57.500] I was listening to public radio, which I almost never do anymore, [48:57.500 --> 49:00.500] and this great program was on. [49:00.500 --> 49:06.500] Everybody on public radio is way liberal. [49:06.500 --> 49:11.500] And they are complaining about all this legislation that's being enacted [49:11.500 --> 49:21.500] all over the country to prevent teachers from teaching critical race theory. [49:21.500 --> 49:24.500] And oh, my God, it was horrible. [49:24.500 --> 49:29.500] They're denying these teachers in their First Amendment right. [49:29.500 --> 49:31.500] No, they're not. [49:31.500 --> 49:35.500] The teacher, when she stepped into the classroom, [49:35.500 --> 49:38.500] she didn't have any First Amendment rights. [49:38.500 --> 49:41.500] She's at work. [49:41.500 --> 49:44.500] When she goes home, she can talk about whatever she wants to. [49:44.500 --> 49:48.500] But when she goes to work, she does what the boss tells them. [49:48.500 --> 49:52.500] And oh, they were just whining about all over the country. [49:52.500 --> 49:59.500] The political wind is changing big time. [49:59.500 --> 50:04.500] You might want to talk to the Republican Party, your local Republican Party. [50:04.500 --> 50:06.500] You're in Florida. [50:06.500 --> 50:08.500] Florida's about as red as it gets. [50:08.500 --> 50:11.500] Talk to the governor. [50:11.500 --> 50:12.500] Go to him. [50:12.500 --> 50:13.500] That's not a bad idea. [50:13.500 --> 50:15.500] Tell him I want to visit. [50:15.500 --> 50:16.500] Sorry. [50:16.500 --> 50:18.500] I just wanted to give you some more time. [50:18.500 --> 50:22.500] You can never expect to win your case simply because you have the law [50:22.500 --> 50:25.500] and the facts on your side. [50:25.500 --> 50:28.500] To think so is naive. [50:28.500 --> 50:33.500] You can't expect to win your case if you have the politics on your side, [50:33.500 --> 50:40.500] and all politics is local, and all politics follows the money. [50:40.500 --> 50:49.500] We are in a position right now where the politics is changing big time. [50:49.500 --> 50:54.500] So absolutely talk to your legislators. [50:54.500 --> 51:00.500] They have powers and abilities far beyond local yokels, [51:00.500 --> 51:03.500] especially something this outrageous and blatant. [51:03.500 --> 51:10.500] You're out preaching the Republican mantra, or mantra, [51:10.500 --> 51:14.500] and they come after you at the most ludicrous charge, [51:14.500 --> 51:20.500] exercising your First Amendment right without a permit. [51:20.500 --> 51:31.500] What law is there that requires a permit to exercise your First Amendment right in a national park? [51:31.500 --> 51:34.500] Yeah, he did try to do that in a public place. [51:34.500 --> 51:38.500] I mean, other people could have seen him exercising his rights. [51:38.500 --> 51:44.500] What I'm thinking is they're charging him under a law [51:44.500 --> 51:53.500] that forbids protests or mass gatherings in a national park. [51:53.500 --> 51:57.500] Okay, I can give you a little bit of clarity on what they're doing charge-wise. [51:57.500 --> 52:02.500] So this actually is a long story, but this actually happened in Rushmore as well. [52:02.500 --> 52:05.500] I got arrested in Rushmore for the same thing. [52:05.500 --> 52:06.500] I have two federal cases. [52:06.500 --> 52:08.500] The Yellowstone one just comes up first. [52:08.500 --> 52:14.500] But Yellowstone originally charged me with a CFR regulation about licensing like a permit requirement. [52:14.500 --> 52:21.500] They amended the charge, filed a motion to amend the charge to demonstration outside of a designated area. [52:21.500 --> 52:26.500] So what constitutes a demonstration? [52:26.500 --> 52:33.500] He said to me anything where it gets the attention of onlookers. [52:33.500 --> 52:38.500] Is that what the law says? [52:38.500 --> 52:48.500] The CFR regulation is very ambiguous and leaves like a lot of power into the discretion of them, whoever is enforcing it. [52:48.500 --> 52:50.500] Oh, void for vagueness. [52:50.500 --> 52:51.500] Void for vagueness. [52:51.500 --> 52:56.500] You need to talk to Martichet Olivier. [52:56.500 --> 53:01.500] He's in Florida and he's taking them on for that right now. [53:01.500 --> 53:02.500] Okay. [53:02.500 --> 53:11.500] Send me an email, Randy at ruleoflawradio.com, and I will forward it to Martichet. [53:11.500 --> 53:12.500] You need to talk to him. [53:12.500 --> 53:16.500] He's done a lot of your research for you. [53:16.500 --> 53:18.500] Perfect. [53:18.500 --> 53:21.500] So good. [53:21.500 --> 53:23.500] This is a CFR. [53:23.500 --> 53:26.500] It's not a statute. [53:26.500 --> 53:30.500] That makes it even easier to handle. [53:30.500 --> 53:38.500] This is a federal regulation issued by an agency. [53:38.500 --> 53:43.500] This was not written by the legislature. [53:43.500 --> 53:56.500] It is much easier to get a CFR amended than it is to get a statute rendered void for vagueness. [53:56.500 --> 54:01.500] Very good chance you can fix this for everybody else. [54:01.500 --> 54:09.500] And if they rule that the statute is void for vagueness, all bets are off. [54:09.500 --> 54:17.500] Because if it's void for vagueness now, it was always void for vagueness. [54:17.500 --> 54:23.500] Go back and sue them for every time they used it in a private attorney general suit. [54:23.500 --> 54:25.500] They're going to love that. [54:25.500 --> 54:37.500] You won't win it, but what they're likely to do is come to you and say, let's make a deal. [54:37.500 --> 54:44.500] They're coming after you criminally, but they've opened up their pockets potentially. [54:44.500 --> 54:48.500] They may fund your trips across the country. [54:48.500 --> 54:51.500] Now we're talking. [54:51.500 --> 54:56.500] Have you filed criminal complaints against the judge? [54:56.500 --> 54:57.500] I have not yet. [54:57.500 --> 54:58.500] I have not yet. [54:58.500 --> 55:01.500] I only filled out the judicial complaint today. [55:01.500 --> 55:03.500] Good. [55:03.500 --> 55:09.500] Every federal judge aspires to the appellate bench. [55:09.500 --> 55:17.500] And one thing they really don't like are judicial conduct complaints. [55:17.500 --> 55:27.500] Brenda out of Colorado called in complaining about the lawyers on the other side and the judge. [55:27.500 --> 55:30.500] I said, how many bar grievances have you filed? [55:30.500 --> 55:32.500] Well, none. [55:32.500 --> 55:34.500] How many judicial conduct complaints? [55:34.500 --> 55:35.500] None. [55:35.500 --> 55:36.500] Well, why not? [55:36.500 --> 55:38.500] She said, I didn't think about it. [55:38.500 --> 55:41.500] A month or so later she called back. [55:41.500 --> 55:46.500] Twenty-six bar grievances, six judicial conduct complaints later. [55:46.500 --> 55:48.500] They went into court. [55:48.500 --> 55:57.500] The judge called the bailiff over and said, you go out and you lock that door and get out of here. [55:57.500 --> 56:00.500] So he goes out and locks the door and leaves. [56:00.500 --> 56:05.500] The judge holds up the key and calls up the lawyers on the other side. [56:05.500 --> 56:07.500] I said, I have this key for you. [56:07.500 --> 56:08.500] You take this. [56:08.500 --> 56:10.500] I'm leaving. [56:10.500 --> 56:13.500] This courtroom is yours all evening. [56:13.500 --> 56:21.500] But when I come back tomorrow, you will have made Ms. Burton an offer she cannot refuse. [56:21.500 --> 56:25.500] I do not want to see her face in my courtroom again. [56:25.500 --> 56:30.500] Do I make myself clear? [56:30.500 --> 56:33.500] He didn't want any more judicial conduct complaints. [56:33.500 --> 56:36.500] He could not speak to Ms. Burton. [56:36.500 --> 56:40.500] One word to her about that gives him another one. [56:40.500 --> 56:44.500] But he could talk to the lawyers on the other side. [56:44.500 --> 56:50.500] If the judge wants a fight, give him one. [56:50.500 --> 56:55.500] The best defense is a good aggressive offense. [56:55.500 --> 57:04.500] U.S. attorneys become U.S. attorneys because it really looks good on their resume. [57:04.500 --> 57:08.500] They want to stay in government employ. [57:08.500 --> 57:14.500] So once they get out of being a U.S. attorney, then they wind up either going into politics [57:14.500 --> 57:19.500] or going into other areas of government. [57:19.500 --> 57:22.500] So he'll bargain him in the Stone Age. [57:22.500 --> 57:30.500] That will make him nuts because if he gets three bar grievances, [57:30.500 --> 57:37.500] there is not a law firm in the country that will touch him with a 10-foot pole. [57:37.500 --> 57:45.500] They like to get out and go to work for these agencies, law firms that deal with the government. [57:45.500 --> 57:47.500] They make big money. [57:47.500 --> 57:50.500] You'll cost him a fortune. [57:50.500 --> 57:53.500] And they'll want to get rid of you. [57:53.500 --> 57:57.500] You have no need to be a nice guy. [57:57.500 --> 57:59.500] Does that make sense? [57:59.500 --> 58:02.500] Yes, it does. [58:02.500 --> 58:05.500] That part can really get to be fun. [58:05.500 --> 58:09.500] You guys want a fight? I'll give you one. [58:09.500 --> 58:16.500] And what happens after that fight, if an officer pulls in behind you and runs your plates, [58:16.500 --> 58:20.500] he'll get this screen with a red line across it that says, [58:20.500 --> 58:24.500] do not detain. [58:24.500 --> 58:31.500] That means to the officer, this guy's a real SOB and he'll kick your behind, so leave him alone. [58:31.500 --> 58:37.500] I'm in Texas, you can't tie a policeman up and throw him at me. [58:37.500 --> 58:42.500] Okay, hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [58:42.500 --> 58:49.500] Call in number 512-646-1984, but it looks like we still have a full... [59:13.500 --> 59:18.500] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.500 --> 59:21.500] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:21.500 --> 59:24.500] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:24.500 --> 59:27.500] growing in Christ and how to build up the Church. [59:27.500 --> 59:30.500] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version [59:30.500 --> 59:33.500] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.500 --> 59:40.500] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.500 --> 59:44.500] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.500 --> 59:49.500] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:00:01.500 --> 01:00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.500 --> 01:00:09.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.500 --> 01:00:11.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.500 --> 01:00:14.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:14.500 --> 01:00:17.500] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.500 --> 01:00:19.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.500 --> 01:00:22.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.500 --> 01:00:27.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.500 --> 01:00:29.500] So protect your rights. [01:00:29.500 --> 01:00:32.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.500 --> 01:00:35.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.500 --> 01:00:38.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com. [01:00:38.500 --> 01:00:42.500] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.500 --> 01:00:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:45.500 --> 01:00:48.500] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.500 --> 01:00:51.500] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.500 --> 01:00:54.500] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.500 --> 01:00:57.500] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me [01:00:57.500 --> 01:01:00.500] what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.500 --> 01:01:03.500] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.500 --> 01:01:06.500] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.500 --> 01:01:09.500] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.500 --> 01:01:12.500] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.500 --> 01:01:17.500] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.500 --> 01:01:21.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.500 --> 01:01:35.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.500 --> 01:01:38.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.500 --> 01:01:40.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.500 --> 01:01:43.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.500 --> 01:01:46.500] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.500 --> 01:01:48.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.500 --> 01:01:52.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.500 --> 01:01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.500 --> 01:01:58.500] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.500 --> 01:02:02.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.500 --> 01:02:05.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.500 --> 01:02:08.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.500 --> 01:02:12.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:16.500] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:16.500 --> 01:02:20.500] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:20.500 --> 01:02:22.500] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.500 --> 01:02:25.500] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.500 --> 01:02:27.500] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.500 --> 01:02:31.500] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:31.500 --> 01:02:34.500] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:34.500 --> 01:02:35.500] in the name of security. [01:02:35.500 --> 01:02:40.500] Keys and point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.500 --> 01:02:44.500] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:44.500 --> 01:02:47.500] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.500 --> 01:02:50.500] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:50.500 --> 01:02:54.500] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:54.500 --> 01:02:55.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.500 --> 01:03:01.500] For more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:01.500 --> 01:03:26.500] We'll be right back. [01:03:31.500 --> 01:03:37.500] Okay, we are back. [01:03:37.500 --> 01:03:43.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, [01:03:43.500 --> 01:03:47.500] the fourth day of what, Brett? [01:03:47.500 --> 01:03:50.500] Come on, you had it just a minute ago. [01:03:50.500 --> 01:03:58.500] February, 2022, and we're talking to Austin in Florida. [01:03:58.500 --> 01:04:05.500] Austin, you're in a good position to file a petition for declaratory judgment [01:04:05.500 --> 01:04:11.500] under the Declaratory Judgments Act. [01:04:11.500 --> 01:04:13.500] Tina was on earlier. [01:04:13.500 --> 01:04:15.500] She filed a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:04:15.500 --> 01:04:18.500] I filed them. [01:04:18.500 --> 01:04:27.500] This is relatively new, and I have yet to find a federal judge who knew what it was. [01:04:27.500 --> 01:04:31.500] I filed one in Fort Worth, Judge McBride. [01:04:31.500 --> 01:04:35.500] This guy was a real stinker. [01:04:35.500 --> 01:04:44.500] And the other side filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12B6, [01:04:44.500 --> 01:04:48.500] and the judge dismissed it with prejudice. [01:04:48.500 --> 01:04:50.500] Problem. [01:04:50.500 --> 01:04:54.500] Declaratory judgment suits don't have claims. [01:04:54.500 --> 01:04:57.500] So it's immune from a 12B6. [01:04:57.500 --> 01:05:00.500] That's why I filed it. [01:05:00.500 --> 01:05:06.500] Because it's immune from 12B6 and gets you immediately to discovery. [01:05:06.500 --> 01:05:12.500] But McBride didn't know what it was, so he dismissed it with prejudice. [01:05:12.500 --> 01:05:15.500] So what do you do? [01:05:15.500 --> 01:05:19.500] Went straight to the special agent in charge of the FBI [01:05:19.500 --> 01:05:22.500] and filed criminal charges against the jackleg. [01:05:22.500 --> 01:05:25.500] Oh, that was a boot. [01:05:25.500 --> 01:05:32.500] And then we can explain to you the methodology for working this through the Fed. [01:05:32.500 --> 01:05:34.500] There's a process to it. [01:05:34.500 --> 01:05:40.500] You file it with your complaints with the Fed, with the special agent in charge, [01:05:40.500 --> 01:05:45.500] because that's the only agent whose name you can get. [01:05:45.500 --> 01:05:49.500] All the other agents are secret agents. [01:05:49.500 --> 01:05:51.500] They won't identify themselves. [01:05:51.500 --> 01:05:53.500] But the special agent in charge does. [01:05:53.500 --> 01:05:55.500] So you file with him. [01:05:55.500 --> 01:06:00.500] You include a cover letter asking him to initial it and send it back to you [01:06:00.500 --> 01:06:02.500] so you know he got it. [01:06:02.500 --> 01:06:05.500] Well, you're not going to get that cover letter back. [01:06:05.500 --> 01:06:08.500] So then you file a criminal complaint. [01:06:08.500 --> 01:06:12.500] I'm sorry, then you call the postal inspectors. [01:06:12.500 --> 01:06:20.500] And I'm sorry, I forgot to tell you, you always insure this document for like 500 bucks. [01:06:20.500 --> 01:06:29.500] When you don't get your cover letter back, you call the postal inspectors. [01:06:29.500 --> 01:06:30.500] And you want your 500 bucks. [01:06:30.500 --> 01:06:33.500] Well, they're not going to want to give you 500 bucks. [01:06:33.500 --> 01:06:36.500] They're going to send two postal inspectors down there [01:06:36.500 --> 01:06:43.500] and force the special agent in charge to admit that he got it. [01:06:43.500 --> 01:06:50.500] Then you file against him with the grand jury by way of the U.S. attorney. [01:06:50.500 --> 01:06:54.500] And you put a cover letter on it that says this. [01:06:54.500 --> 01:07:00.500] You ask the foreman of the grand jury to initial this document [01:07:00.500 --> 01:07:06.500] and return it to us in the included stamped self-addressed envelope. [01:07:06.500 --> 01:07:09.500] Please do not sign it. [01:07:09.500 --> 01:07:14.500] As the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it [01:07:14.500 --> 01:07:22.500] that he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments. [01:07:22.500 --> 01:07:28.500] So what the Fed does is they go in and get the easiest indictment they can get. [01:07:28.500 --> 01:07:33.500] Once they get an indictment, then they start doing their research. [01:07:33.500 --> 01:07:42.500] And as they find more charges, the U.S. attorney just rubber stamps them. [01:07:42.500 --> 01:07:45.500] We caught them doing this in California. [01:07:45.500 --> 01:07:49.500] The way you catch them doing that is you ask for the voucher, [01:07:49.500 --> 01:07:59.500] payment voucher for the court reporter for the grand jury on the day of the indictment. [01:07:59.500 --> 01:08:04.500] And they came back and said there was no grand jury meeting on that day. [01:08:04.500 --> 01:08:07.500] Oops. [01:08:07.500 --> 01:08:09.500] Then you go after the U.S. attorney. [01:08:09.500 --> 01:08:12.500] What you do is just wind their clocks. [01:08:12.500 --> 01:08:17.500] The U.S. attorney in Fort Lauderdale, when I did this, [01:08:17.500 --> 01:08:22.500] we tried to get an IRS agent arrested. [01:08:22.500 --> 01:08:33.500] I filed against the highest level superior who had to sign off on an IRS raid. [01:08:33.500 --> 01:08:35.500] I filed criminal charges against him. [01:08:35.500 --> 01:08:40.500] The U.S. attorney called me and told me that if I tried to reach the grand jury again, [01:08:40.500 --> 01:08:45.500] that he would charge me with jury tampering. [01:08:45.500 --> 01:08:48.500] I told him, knock yourself out. [01:08:48.500 --> 01:08:53.500] You charge me with jury tampering, I'll charge you with obstruction. [01:08:53.500 --> 01:08:55.500] We'll see how this works out for you. [01:08:55.500 --> 01:08:58.500] Boom, he hung up. [01:08:58.500 --> 01:09:03.500] The IRS fired the agent the next day. [01:09:03.500 --> 01:09:05.500] Whoa. [01:09:05.500 --> 01:09:08.500] You can fight these guys. [01:09:08.500 --> 01:09:12.500] It's all about politics. [01:09:12.500 --> 01:09:18.500] You start going after the actors, then they want this to go away. [01:09:18.500 --> 01:09:22.500] They try to go after people and beat them down and bully them, [01:09:22.500 --> 01:09:27.500] so they just, oh, please don't beat me up. [01:09:27.500 --> 01:09:30.500] I'll sign anything you want. [01:09:30.500 --> 01:09:36.500] When you fight them back, it changes everything. [01:09:36.500 --> 01:09:39.500] Does that sound like fun? [01:09:39.500 --> 01:09:40.500] It does. [01:09:40.500 --> 01:09:44.500] I feel like it was supposed to happen in a way. [01:09:44.500 --> 01:09:48.500] I'm very new to all this, but when I was looking into it, [01:09:48.500 --> 01:09:52.500] the Supreme Court actually had a case about this very thing come up, [01:09:52.500 --> 01:09:56.500] and let us be honest, at Rushmore, which we do have to appreciate. [01:09:56.500 --> 01:10:02.500] It's almost poetic that I was arrested for free speech in front of the founding fathers. [01:10:02.500 --> 01:10:04.500] Anyway, it happened. [01:10:04.500 --> 01:10:13.500] When I went to appeal it, they said, well, basically, that the guy didn't file his complaint correctly. [01:10:13.500 --> 01:10:17.500] He didn't make the right argument, or we would have had an issue determining what's public forum [01:10:17.500 --> 01:10:20.500] and what's not within these national parks. [01:10:20.500 --> 01:10:24.500] There's actually a little break here. [01:10:24.500 --> 01:10:29.500] That was not a mistake. [01:10:29.500 --> 01:10:39.500] We filed a petition for writ of mandamus claiming that the application of municipal ordinances [01:10:39.500 --> 01:10:46.500] to a citizen rendered the ordinance unconstitutional, [01:10:46.500 --> 01:10:51.500] as only the legislature is authorized to write law. [01:10:51.500 --> 01:11:01.500] The legislature purported to delegate that authority to municipal corporations and counties, [01:11:01.500 --> 01:11:08.500] but the legislature was granted no power to delegate its lawmaking authority. [01:11:08.500 --> 01:11:20.500] We filed this, and in text, only 12% of the petitions for writ of mandamuses are accepted. [01:11:20.500 --> 01:11:23.500] Two percent are ruled in favor of the filer. [01:11:23.500 --> 01:11:26.500] We filed one, pro se. [01:11:26.500 --> 01:11:34.500] They took five months and came back and said, well, the city, before they could hold this type of hearing they held, [01:11:34.500 --> 01:11:44.500] they had to have a special hearing meeting, and the council had to vote on whether they could hold this kind of hearing. [01:11:44.500 --> 01:11:48.500] And I said, what in the heck is that crap? [01:11:48.500 --> 01:12:01.500] These guys dug through the codes to find a way to dismiss this case without addressing our constitutional issue. [01:12:01.500 --> 01:12:12.500] Because if they lost that constitutional issue, every ordinance in the state of Texas would go in the trash can. [01:12:12.500 --> 01:12:15.500] The stakes were too high. [01:12:15.500 --> 01:12:16.500] Exactly. [01:12:16.500 --> 01:12:19.500] That's why you want a constitutional issue. [01:12:19.500 --> 01:12:35.500] Here you're going to say, you file a petition for declaratory judgment and ask the court to rule that this CFR is void for vagueness. [01:12:35.500 --> 01:12:40.500] They're likely to find another way to throw this out. [01:12:40.500 --> 01:12:44.500] You see, they dismissed our case with prejudice. [01:12:44.500 --> 01:12:46.500] I'm sorry, they dismissed our case. [01:12:46.500 --> 01:12:48.500] They didn't dismiss it with prejudice. [01:12:48.500 --> 01:12:58.500] On an issue we didn't bring, they brought that up themselves because they did not want to rule on our Constitution challenge. [01:12:58.500 --> 01:13:09.500] Since we got our dismissal, we had no grounds, no standing to appeal, and the city was not even going to appeal it. [01:13:09.500 --> 01:13:13.500] So that way they avoided the constitutional issue. [01:13:13.500 --> 01:13:14.500] Did that make sense? [01:13:14.500 --> 01:13:17.500] Yes. [01:13:17.500 --> 01:13:23.500] That's why I was trying to figure out, would you almost want them to go to trial then? [01:13:23.500 --> 01:13:27.500] Would I almost want them to go through with it? [01:13:27.500 --> 01:13:28.500] Absolutely. [01:13:28.500 --> 01:13:34.500] You let them know, oh no, Bub, they're going to come to you and say, let's make a deal. [01:13:34.500 --> 01:13:36.500] Screw your deal. [01:13:36.500 --> 01:13:38.500] You're going to make me famous, guys. [01:13:38.500 --> 01:13:42.500] I'm going to be the one to get this CFR trashed. [01:13:42.500 --> 01:13:48.500] You guys won't be able to do this anywhere to anybody anymore. [01:13:48.500 --> 01:13:55.500] They're going to eventually come back and dismiss the case for one reason or another. [01:13:55.500 --> 01:13:58.500] It's not about law. [01:13:58.500 --> 01:14:02.500] It's about politics. [01:14:02.500 --> 01:14:08.500] Do you start going to your legislators and raising this issue with them? [01:14:08.500 --> 01:14:12.500] That's why I suggested you go to the governor. [01:14:12.500 --> 01:14:14.500] You've got a good governor. [01:14:14.500 --> 01:14:20.500] He has no compunction about kicking the feds behind. [01:14:20.500 --> 01:14:22.500] So you don't want to talk to the governor. [01:14:22.500 --> 01:14:25.500] You want to talk to one of his aides. [01:14:25.500 --> 01:14:29.500] The aide will have the governor's ear. [01:14:29.500 --> 01:14:38.500] And what is likely to happen is the governor will behind the scenes start making noise, [01:14:38.500 --> 01:14:44.500] and your case will simply go away, unless he decides to pick it up. [01:14:44.500 --> 01:14:51.500] And right now, the political winds are in your favor. [01:14:51.500 --> 01:14:56.500] It's all politics. [01:14:56.500 --> 01:14:59.500] So what do you think? [01:14:59.500 --> 01:15:01.500] Yeah, I think that's a great idea. [01:15:01.500 --> 01:15:02.500] I'm definitely down. [01:15:02.500 --> 01:15:03.500] I don't know. [01:15:03.500 --> 01:15:07.500] If the scientists want to listen, then who's going to, right? [01:15:07.500 --> 01:15:16.500] Yeah, and the one thing you don't want them to do is get the idea that you're afraid of them. [01:15:16.500 --> 01:15:19.500] Oh, no, I don't want to plead out. [01:15:19.500 --> 01:15:22.500] Man, this is going to make me famous. [01:15:22.500 --> 01:15:24.500] I'm going to make a lot of money. [01:15:24.500 --> 01:15:26.500] Everybody's going to donate to my cause. [01:15:26.500 --> 01:15:27.500] This is wonderful. [01:15:27.500 --> 01:15:32.500] You guys are great. [01:15:32.500 --> 01:15:34.500] I have done this kind of thing several times. [01:15:34.500 --> 01:15:37.500] I've got people out of jail. [01:15:37.500 --> 01:15:43.500] I called the sheriff in Michigan and told him that I was with Roosevelt Radio, [01:15:43.500 --> 01:15:49.500] and I got a camera crew going up to Minnesota because a judge up there is trying to kill this woman [01:15:49.500 --> 01:15:55.500] and a divorce by forcing her to represent herself while she's in chemotherapy and sick with cancer. [01:15:55.500 --> 01:16:00.500] But I understand you're trying to kill this Ed Gosner. [01:16:00.500 --> 01:16:01.500] You got him in your jail. [01:16:01.500 --> 01:16:04.500] You're denying him his heart medicine. [01:16:04.500 --> 01:16:07.500] And I had the head of the jail, and he said, well, I don't think that's happening. [01:16:07.500 --> 01:16:09.500] And I said, who cares? [01:16:09.500 --> 01:16:11.500] Heck, this is a great story. [01:16:11.500 --> 01:16:13.500] You guys are going to make me famous. [01:16:13.500 --> 01:16:15.500] I got a call two hours later. [01:16:15.500 --> 01:16:17.500] What did you do? [01:16:17.500 --> 01:16:19.500] I said, why? [01:16:19.500 --> 01:16:22.500] You got to add on a plane back to North Carolina. [01:16:22.500 --> 01:16:26.500] They couldn't get him out of their jail fast enough. [01:16:26.500 --> 01:16:30.500] You can do that to the feds. [01:16:30.500 --> 01:16:34.500] I appreciate it, man, because I've been listening to you since Rose 777 told me about you. [01:16:34.500 --> 01:16:37.500] And you guys motivate me. [01:16:37.500 --> 01:16:39.500] I'm not scared of them in the federal court or not. [01:16:39.500 --> 01:16:41.500] So I think it's a beautiful thing. [01:16:41.500 --> 01:16:43.500] I really appreciate what you do. [01:16:43.500 --> 01:16:44.500] OK. [01:16:44.500 --> 01:16:45.500] Keep it up. [01:16:45.500 --> 01:16:46.500] Awesome. [01:16:46.500 --> 01:16:48.500] Keep it up to speed. [01:16:48.500 --> 01:16:49.500] OK. [01:16:49.500 --> 01:16:53.500] Now we are going to our sponsors. [01:16:53.500 --> 01:16:57.500] You thought I was going to miss that, didn't you, Brett? [01:16:57.500 --> 01:17:00.500] Well, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.500 --> 01:17:05.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.500 --> 01:17:09.500] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:17:09.500 --> 01:17:14.500] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:17:14.500 --> 01:17:20.500] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:17:20.500 --> 01:17:24.500] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, [01:17:24.500 --> 01:17:26.500] how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:17:26.500 --> 01:17:28.500] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:17:28.500 --> 01:17:33.500] how to turn your financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.500 --> 01:17:38.500] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.500 --> 01:17:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.500 --> 01:17:46.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [01:17:46.500 --> 01:17:49.500] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.500 --> 01:18:00.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.500 --> 01:18:01.500] I love logos. [01:18:01.500 --> 01:18:04.500] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.500 --> 01:18:07.500] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.500 --> 01:18:08.500] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.500 --> 01:18:13.500] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.500 --> 01:18:16.500] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.500 --> 01:18:20.500] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.500 --> 01:18:22.500] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.500 --> 01:18:24.500] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.500 --> 01:18:27.500] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.500 --> 01:18:29.500] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, [01:18:29.500 --> 01:18:31.500] the first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.500 --> 01:18:34.500] Now, go to logosradio.network.com. [01:18:34.500 --> 01:18:37.500] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.500 --> 01:18:43.500] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.500 --> 01:18:44.500] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.500 --> 01:18:45.500] No. [01:18:45.500 --> 01:18:47.500] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.500 --> 01:18:48.500] No. [01:18:48.500 --> 01:18:49.500] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.500 --> 01:18:50.500] No. [01:18:50.500 --> 01:18:51.500] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.500 --> 01:18:54.500] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.500 --> 01:18:55.500] This is perfect. [01:18:55.500 --> 01:18:57.500] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.500 --> 01:18:58.500] You're welcome. [01:18:58.500 --> 01:19:00.500] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.500 --> 01:19:10.500] This is the Logos, the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:31.500 --> 01:19:34.500] Okay, we are back. [01:19:34.500 --> 01:19:36.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:36.500 --> 01:19:46.500] And we're going to a looks like a first-time caller. [01:19:46.500 --> 01:19:52.500] David, it came up with an 818 area code. [01:19:52.500 --> 01:19:58.500] If you're in an 818 area code, talk to us. [01:19:58.500 --> 01:20:07.500] Well, you're not going to believe this, but this is Rose777 from CO777 Radio. [01:20:07.500 --> 01:20:08.500] Oh, wait a minute. [01:20:08.500 --> 01:20:11.500] Say that again? [01:20:11.500 --> 01:20:12.500] Hi, Rose. [01:20:12.500 --> 01:20:14.500] Rose, I started saying, is this Rose? [01:20:14.500 --> 01:20:16.500] I can't recognize the voice. [01:20:16.500 --> 01:20:19.500] But you were talking faster than I could listen. [01:20:19.500 --> 01:20:24.500] It seems that I had my hearing aid on wife mode. [01:20:24.500 --> 01:20:27.500] I hope she didn't hear that. [01:20:27.500 --> 01:20:30.500] She probably had hers on husband mode. [01:20:30.500 --> 01:20:33.500] She never thinks I'm as funny as I do. [01:20:33.500 --> 01:20:34.500] Well, hello, Ms. Rose. [01:20:34.500 --> 01:20:37.500] What do you have for us today? [01:20:37.500 --> 01:20:38.500] Hello. [01:20:38.500 --> 01:20:40.500] Well, I will try to speak slowly. [01:20:40.500 --> 01:20:44.500] I know that I have the capacity to do so. [01:20:44.500 --> 01:20:45.500] No, it's okay. [01:20:45.500 --> 01:20:46.500] I put my hearing aid. [01:20:46.500 --> 01:20:49.500] I turned it off wife mode so I can hear. [01:20:49.500 --> 01:20:52.500] Okay. [01:20:52.500 --> 01:20:54.500] You know, Austin's really quick too. [01:20:54.500 --> 01:20:56.500] He can speak almost. [01:20:56.500 --> 01:21:01.500] I can speak almost as fast as Austin can sometimes. [01:21:01.500 --> 01:21:07.500] Well, I often get people speaking faster than I can listen. [01:21:07.500 --> 01:21:08.500] We're on radio. [01:21:08.500 --> 01:21:12.500] And on radio, they can't see our lips. [01:21:12.500 --> 01:21:20.500] So it takes just a little bit longer to take what you're hearing and turn it into words. [01:21:20.500 --> 01:21:23.500] When you can see people's lips, it's a lot faster. [01:21:23.500 --> 01:21:29.500] And as you get old like me and you lose high tones, you wind up reading lips. [01:21:29.500 --> 01:21:31.500] I got called out on that one. [01:21:31.500 --> 01:21:32.500] Okay. [01:21:32.500 --> 01:21:35.500] Go ahead. [01:21:35.500 --> 01:21:36.500] Okay. [01:21:36.500 --> 01:21:48.500] So the last time we talked, I was connected with you as a guest and explaining all of the different things that we have on the CRO 777 Law Packet. [01:21:48.500 --> 01:22:00.500] But now I have been through certain experiences and I feel that I want to start to take a stand myself. [01:22:00.500 --> 01:22:14.500] When we first met and I talked to you on the phone about coming on to our show, you said that it would be really great if I could be able to do the kinds of things that you do. [01:22:14.500 --> 01:22:21.500] And I really wasn't in a position to do so because of my health. [01:22:21.500 --> 01:22:39.500] Well, I found out finally that my symptoms that were holding me back were because of previous box surgeries and a foreign object was left inside of me and now blah, blah, blah. [01:22:39.500 --> 01:22:44.500] So now I had to go into the hospital. [01:22:44.500 --> 01:23:03.500] And I'm not sure if you heard about that incident, but I think that I have a lawsuit against one hospital and so many things happened in the second hospital that I feel really overwhelmed because there are so many golden tickets here. [01:23:03.500 --> 01:23:06.500] And I don't know as much as you do. [01:23:06.500 --> 01:23:29.500] And so I was thinking about this, about what if I just showed up to some kind of city hall meeting and just genuinely kind of soak my mind for two minutes about how my rights were deprived and speak from my heart about how it felt to be put in that position. [01:23:29.500 --> 01:23:39.500] And then at that time, I'm looking into the eyes of everyone sitting there and that's when I start to do my research about those individuals. [01:23:39.500 --> 01:23:47.500] And I thought that I can go back the next month and start to cite the laws that were broken. [01:23:47.500 --> 01:24:09.500] And so I'll stop there for now because now I'd like to explain to you about some examples of people that were co-conspirators in crime and ask you if certain people would be considered accomplices when I put them on notice for the crimes that were being committed against me. [01:24:09.500 --> 01:24:19.500] Okay. Probably the first thing I would need is a timeline of events that occurred. [01:24:19.500 --> 01:24:28.500] So we get all the characters in the proper place in the time frame. [01:24:28.500 --> 01:24:29.500] Okay. [01:24:29.500 --> 01:24:55.500] And I am in the process right now of building a criminal complaint against doctors treating COVID patients and using methodologies that are known to kill patients, but doing so because they're being forced to by the insurance companies and the NIH. [01:24:55.500 --> 01:25:12.500] I'm aware of this and I actually put some nurses on notice while I was in the hospital and I showed them the Ebola study that proved that when Remdesivir was designated as the recommended protocol for COVID-19 in May 2020, [01:25:12.500 --> 01:25:25.500] he was basing it on a study that proved that Remdesivir causes renal failure in 30% of humans and kills 50% of cases in that Ebola study in Africa in the fall of 2019. [01:25:25.500 --> 01:25:47.500] I looked into the eyes of this nurse and asked her and I found out that she did in fact administer Remdesivir a lot while people were on events later and she also performed the protocol of administering sedation with all of the nurses thinking that they were giving their patients a desk of dignity. [01:25:47.500 --> 01:26:01.500] And I asked her if there was anything that she was going to do after I explained to her about what she was part of and what she was witnessing and she basically admitted to me that she was going to do nothing. [01:26:01.500 --> 01:26:12.500] And so at that moment I told her, yes, but now that you are aware of this, this is a crime against humanity and how do you feel about that? [01:26:12.500 --> 01:26:31.500] You know, so what I'm asking you now, am I just some blithering person who doesn't know anything about law, who's acting crazy, or is it true that when you tell a nurse that she is committing murder and she does nothing, that she is a helpless or a murderer? [01:26:31.500 --> 01:26:34.500] I want to ask your opinion on that first. [01:26:34.500 --> 01:26:40.500] That's depraved hard murder. Does she even have to be told though? [01:26:40.500 --> 01:26:55.500] I mean, yes, when you tell her, that I guess gives an additional impetus where she should have that extra pressure to, if she didn't know, then she should at least check it out, but she's supposed to know. [01:26:55.500 --> 01:26:59.500] Yes, she has a duty to know. [01:26:59.500 --> 01:27:06.500] She's a licensed medical professional. She has a duty to know. You don't get to be ignorant. [01:27:06.500 --> 01:27:12.500] It's like when a policeman pulls me over for a non-existent law, he does not get to be ignorant. [01:27:12.500 --> 01:27:17.500] He may be, but that won't protect him. [01:27:17.500 --> 01:27:23.500] And we understand why this nurse would do that. She's trying to keep her job. [01:27:23.500 --> 01:27:27.500] So we charge her with depraved hard murder. [01:27:27.500 --> 01:27:31.500] That gives her plausible deniability. [01:27:31.500 --> 01:27:40.500] So when the hospital comes and says, you need to do these things that will kill this patient, she'll tell the hospital, yeah, you do those things. [01:27:40.500 --> 01:27:43.500] I'm not going to jail for it. [01:27:43.500 --> 01:27:45.500] That's what we're working on now. [01:27:45.500 --> 01:27:51.500] I told her that she could do that, and when she said she wouldn't, I said, well, then I guess you're a coward. [01:27:51.500 --> 01:28:02.500] And really, what I try to do at that hospital, because I'm sorry I know I dressed for a timeline, but this is the second hospital when I conducted myself completely differently, [01:28:02.500 --> 01:28:05.500] and I won't be filing charges against this hospital. [01:28:05.500 --> 01:28:08.500] I think I'm going to kind of go a different route. [01:28:08.500 --> 01:28:19.500] But with the original hospital, what happened first started the altercation and the declaration of rights was that I was admitted never wearing a mask, [01:28:19.500 --> 01:28:27.500] never being asked to vaccinate, never being asked to test, because I was there for a legitimate emergency. [01:28:27.500 --> 01:28:35.500] As you know, I'm a paraplegic, and at the time I didn't know yet, but I was having a foreign object in my body causing, infecting my intestines. [01:28:35.500 --> 01:28:40.500] So I was showing all of the vital signs that I deserve to be there. [01:28:40.500 --> 01:28:50.500] And then I get up to the room, and at one point, Jason, you know him, co-host of Crowe 777, he came up without a mask as well. [01:28:50.500 --> 01:28:54.500] He walked up with honor. He never really had to show any paperwork. [01:28:54.500 --> 01:28:58.500] He just looked like someone that you don't really want to mess with. [01:28:58.500 --> 01:29:11.500] But when he was in the hospital room with me alone, you know, unable to really spread our germs through the walls to the other patients and employees, [01:29:11.500 --> 01:29:23.500] all of a sudden this nurse holding the visiting policy in a binder in her arm walks in and starts telling Jason that he needs to leave because he won't wear a mask. [01:29:23.500 --> 01:29:32.500] And so it just, it started to get to the point where he decided, this is where I made my big mistake. [01:29:32.500 --> 01:29:36.500] I should have asked for the supervisor when the cops came. [01:29:36.500 --> 01:29:39.500] But basically, you're going to go to break? [01:29:39.500 --> 01:29:44.500] Yes, we've got, yeah, yeah, we've got about 15 seconds. [01:29:44.500 --> 01:29:48.500] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Blue Law Radio. [01:29:48.500 --> 01:29:53.500] Let's see, we've got a full board of callers, so we won't give up to call it number. [01:29:53.500 --> 01:29:57.500] Hang on, go on to our sponsors. We'll be right back. [01:30:01.500 --> 01:30:05.500] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.500 --> 01:30:11.500] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:11.500 --> 01:30:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.500 --> 01:30:22.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.500 --> 01:30:27.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.500 --> 01:30:32.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.500 --> 01:30:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.500 --> 01:30:38.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:38.500 --> 01:30:42.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.500 --> 01:30:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:45.500 --> 01:30:50.500] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? Wrong. [01:30:50.500 --> 01:30:55.500] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:55.500 --> 01:31:02.500] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:02.500 --> 01:31:06.500] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:31:06.500 --> 01:31:09.500] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.500 --> 01:31:15.500] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:15.500 --> 01:31:18.500] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:31:18.500 --> 01:31:23.500] and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:23.500 --> 01:31:29.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.500 --> 01:31:35.500] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.500 --> 01:31:42.500] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.500 --> 01:31:45.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.500 --> 01:31:48.500] Thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [01:31:48.500 --> 01:31:50.500] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.500 --> 01:31:53.500] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.500 --> 01:31:57.500] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.500 --> 01:32:01.500] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.500 --> 01:32:05.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.500 --> 01:32:07.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:07.500 --> 01:32:09.500] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:09.500 --> 01:32:12.500] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:12.500 --> 01:32:15.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:15.500 --> 01:32:19.500] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:19.500 --> 01:32:25.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:25.500 --> 01:32:28.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy A. Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:28.500 --> 01:32:33.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:33.500 --> 01:32:35.500] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.500 --> 01:32:40.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.500 --> 01:32:45.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.500 --> 01:32:50.500] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.500 --> 01:32:54.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:54.500 --> 01:32:59.500] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:24.500 --> 01:33:53.500] Okay, we are back. [01:33:53.500 --> 01:34:02.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Rose and I think Louisiana, isn't it? [01:34:02.500 --> 01:34:08.500] That's right, Covington, Louisiana on the other side of Lake Washington from New Orleans. [01:34:08.500 --> 01:34:12.500] Oh, okay. You're way down there in the corner. [01:34:12.500 --> 01:34:15.500] Yes. [01:34:15.500 --> 01:34:24.500] Okay. You're wanting to go talk to these public officials. They did that a lot. [01:34:24.500 --> 01:34:29.500] Yeah, I know they do. So that's why I did some stuff first. [01:34:29.500 --> 01:34:35.500] So I identified that Officer Wood, who came into the hospital room, [01:34:35.500 --> 01:34:40.500] who didn't care about anything we had to say about the letter of the law, [01:34:40.500 --> 01:34:46.500] didn't care about understanding the definition of a public accommodation [01:34:46.500 --> 01:34:55.500] or patient visitation rights for disabled people regarding being separated from your patient advocate or care. [01:34:55.500 --> 01:35:04.500] And then the visitor policy lady, she also didn't care about the law and she only cared about company policy. [01:35:04.500 --> 01:35:14.500] And so I just, in my mind, they were co-conspirators in a Title 42, 1983, deprivation of rights under color law [01:35:14.500 --> 01:35:17.500] because he was asking out of his capacity. [01:35:17.500 --> 01:35:24.500] So I talked to Jesse D. Frank at St. Tammany Police Department and he, guess this, you guys, [01:35:24.500 --> 01:35:29.500] he was actually on our side saying that we got to get that body cam footage [01:35:29.500 --> 01:35:34.500] because he said that the St. Tammany, and this was a recorded call, as you know, [01:35:34.500 --> 01:35:41.500] he said that the St. Tammany Paris Police Department had a political interest [01:35:41.500 --> 01:35:49.500] in working with the policies of the Lakeview Regional Mandeville Medical Center. [01:35:49.500 --> 01:36:02.500] So that should get criminal complaints directly against the officer, excuse me, the officer who performed that act. [01:36:02.500 --> 01:36:06.500] They're doing what they're instructed to do. [01:36:06.500 --> 01:36:09.500] They do not care what you say. [01:36:09.500 --> 01:36:13.500] It has been my experience with police and I've had a lot of it. [01:36:13.500 --> 01:36:18.500] The only time you get their attention is when you call 911. [01:36:18.500 --> 01:36:20.500] And that's what we did. [01:36:20.500 --> 01:36:25.500] And then you give them plausible deniability. [01:36:25.500 --> 01:36:29.500] If you call 911, try to get this guy arrested. [01:36:29.500 --> 01:36:31.500] I'm sorry, pick this up, Brett. [01:36:31.500 --> 01:36:34.500] I'm having a throat issue. [01:36:34.500 --> 01:36:42.500] Yeah, once you are calling 911, then that gives the officer the opportunity to address that [01:36:42.500 --> 01:36:47.500] with his supervisors and say, look, you want me doing this, [01:36:47.500 --> 01:36:56.500] you're going to have to do it yourself because this is, following your policy is getting me in trouble. [01:36:56.500 --> 01:36:59.500] That was a big mistake I made is that when Officer Woods came in the room [01:36:59.500 --> 01:37:02.500] and he said he didn't care about following the law, [01:37:02.500 --> 01:37:06.500] that's the moment I should have asked to talk to a supervisor. [01:37:06.500 --> 01:37:10.500] So that was the mistake and the lesson learned. [01:37:10.500 --> 01:37:12.500] Yeah, that would be a great moment for it. [01:37:12.500 --> 01:37:15.500] But it also is, even if you don't have a recording of it, [01:37:15.500 --> 01:37:20.500] you're still working on that records request for his body cam footage, [01:37:20.500 --> 01:37:24.500] you still can go ahead and set that up yourself in an affidavit. [01:37:24.500 --> 01:37:25.500] You witnessed it. [01:37:25.500 --> 01:37:26.500] You experienced it. [01:37:26.500 --> 01:37:27.500] You're an eyewitness. [01:37:27.500 --> 01:37:31.500] You can put that down as your personal firsthand knowledge. [01:37:31.500 --> 01:37:38.500] And I can assure you that if I had been in your place, I would have been dialing 911. [01:37:38.500 --> 01:37:40.500] Oh, you don't care, Bubba? [01:37:40.500 --> 01:37:42.500] We see how this works out for you. [01:37:42.500 --> 01:37:48.500] And then when the officer gets there and responds to your 911 call, [01:37:48.500 --> 01:37:53.500] do you tell him all the stuff you want the first guy to hear? [01:37:53.500 --> 01:37:56.500] If you tell it to the first guy, he's not going to pay attention. [01:37:56.500 --> 01:38:03.500] But when you tell it to the guy responding to your 911 call, now you got their attention. [01:38:03.500 --> 01:38:08.500] Well, we called the 911 in the first place as soon as we realized [01:38:08.500 --> 01:38:13.500] that Shana was trying to get you asked us to leave, which was against the law. [01:38:13.500 --> 01:38:17.500] So we called 911, but when he showed up, just like you said, [01:38:17.500 --> 01:38:21.500] he didn't care about anything even though we were the ones calling, [01:38:21.500 --> 01:38:23.500] even though we were the ones asking for help. [01:38:23.500 --> 01:38:24.500] And that happens a lot. [01:38:24.500 --> 01:38:26.500] People end up who call 911. [01:38:26.500 --> 01:38:27.500] They end up getting taken to jail. [01:38:27.500 --> 01:38:29.500] But we didn't have a fight. [01:38:29.500 --> 01:38:34.500] As soon as we found out that he was just a button pusher who was just going to listen to Shana, [01:38:34.500 --> 01:38:36.500] Jason just left. [01:38:36.500 --> 01:38:39.500] He smiled, and he said the whole time he was in the elevator going down, [01:38:39.500 --> 01:38:43.500] he was just looking at his badge and smiling at him and never said a word. [01:38:43.500 --> 01:38:45.500] And it was like, you know, it wasn't a fight at all. [01:38:45.500 --> 01:38:51.500] But then I was there so pissed because Jason wanted me to stay there to get myself taken care of. [01:38:51.500 --> 01:38:57.500] But then I ended up, you know, ripping out my IV and leaving AMA and getting my emotions invested in me. [01:38:57.500 --> 01:39:02.500] But I was glad I left because I couldn't handle being around the people that did that to me, [01:39:02.500 --> 01:39:06.500] that put me in isolation and then did sadistic things like a punishment. [01:39:06.500 --> 01:39:13.500] So I'm glad I got out and then ended up at this next hospital where I was, [01:39:13.500 --> 01:39:16.500] there was, you know, different issues. [01:39:16.500 --> 01:39:22.500] But it was nothing like at this other Lakeview where they were blatantly breaking the law. [01:39:22.500 --> 01:39:24.500] The second hospital, I just stayed in isolation. [01:39:24.500 --> 01:39:26.500] I didn't have anyone visit me. [01:39:26.500 --> 01:39:29.500] And everyone I spoke to, I explained why. [01:39:29.500 --> 01:39:32.500] You have to understand it's not about law. [01:39:32.500 --> 01:39:35.500] It's always about the money. [01:39:35.500 --> 01:39:39.500] So send them a court letter. [01:39:39.500 --> 01:39:43.500] You're going to sue them for an incredible amount of money. [01:39:43.500 --> 01:39:47.500] Now you've got their attention. [01:39:47.500 --> 01:39:50.500] You're not going to get their attention otherwise. [01:39:50.500 --> 01:39:53.500] Am I sending this court letter to the St. Sammonie Police Department, [01:39:53.500 --> 01:40:02.500] Lakeview Regional, or the people who are murdering people at North Oaks and Hammond? [01:40:02.500 --> 01:40:03.500] Okay. [01:40:03.500 --> 01:40:08.500] I need to understand what your intended outcome is. [01:40:08.500 --> 01:40:10.500] What is your primary issue? [01:40:10.500 --> 01:40:12.500] What do you want to take on? [01:40:12.500 --> 01:40:13.500] Okay. [01:40:13.500 --> 01:40:14.500] Okay. [01:40:14.500 --> 01:40:16.500] That's my question to you. [01:40:16.500 --> 01:40:21.500] I feel like in the past short period of time, I have seen so much injustice. [01:40:21.500 --> 01:40:23.500] I don't know whether to fight for myself. [01:40:23.500 --> 01:40:26.500] I don't know whether it's to fight against hospital policy. [01:40:26.500 --> 01:40:31.500] I don't know whether it's to fight for the patients that are being murdered. [01:40:31.500 --> 01:40:38.500] So I thought maybe I need to take it slow since I don't know as much as you guys. [01:40:38.500 --> 01:40:41.500] Yeah, because there's so much wrong. [01:40:41.500 --> 01:40:42.500] Yeah. [01:40:42.500 --> 01:40:43.500] Make them scare to me. [01:40:43.500 --> 01:40:48.500] Make them know that I'm looking into them and I'm finding out their politics and who likes who [01:40:48.500 --> 01:40:52.500] and just kind of show up to scare them with my strategy. [01:40:52.500 --> 01:40:53.500] I don't know where to begin. [01:40:53.500 --> 01:40:54.500] What do you guys think? [01:40:54.500 --> 01:40:56.500] What would you do if you were a little old me? [01:40:56.500 --> 01:40:58.500] It hurts me just to get in the car. [01:40:58.500 --> 01:41:02.500] So showing up to City Hall would be a tremendous act. [01:41:02.500 --> 01:41:04.500] You don't have to do any of that. [01:41:04.500 --> 01:41:14.500] I'm going to suggest first place to go is criminal because when you go criminal, [01:41:14.500 --> 01:41:20.500] everybody is going to get in line to try to protect everybody else. [01:41:20.500 --> 01:41:22.500] And we have this rule. [01:41:22.500 --> 01:41:29.500] Never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want him to do [01:41:29.500 --> 01:41:35.500] because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [01:41:35.500 --> 01:41:46.500] So when you, the 911 responder, that should get obstruction and retaliation. [01:41:46.500 --> 01:41:47.500] No, just obstruction. [01:41:47.500 --> 01:41:49.500] He didn't make any threats toward you. [01:41:49.500 --> 01:41:59.500] Obstruction in Texas is 3606, penal code, and I think it's a state jail felony. [01:41:59.500 --> 01:42:10.500] If he said anything that you could in any way take as a threat, that's a terroristic threat. [01:42:10.500 --> 01:42:14.500] And that's a terroristic threat while he's permanently displaying a deadly weapon. [01:42:14.500 --> 01:42:17.500] That's a first degree felony in Texas. [01:42:17.500 --> 01:42:18.500] I'm not sure what he would do. [01:42:18.500 --> 01:42:23.500] He threatened to put him in handcuffs and arrest form, but he didn't resist. [01:42:23.500 --> 01:42:26.500] He just laughed. [01:42:26.500 --> 01:42:30.500] Wait, say that again. I missed the first part. [01:42:30.500 --> 01:42:36.500] The officer would, who we called to help us, but instead he sided with the hospital. [01:42:36.500 --> 01:42:42.500] He said, if you don't leave right now, I will put you in handcuffs and throw you in jail. [01:42:42.500 --> 01:42:44.500] Nine, okay. [01:42:44.500 --> 01:42:47.500] That should have got a 911 call again. [01:42:47.500 --> 01:42:48.500] Another one. [01:42:48.500 --> 01:42:51.500] Another one. I see. Okay. [01:42:51.500 --> 01:42:55.500] Yeah, he needs aggravated assault charges. [01:42:55.500 --> 01:42:57.500] Okay, wow. All right. [01:42:57.500 --> 01:42:59.500] Now, you understand. [01:42:59.500 --> 01:43:02.500] You will never get him indicted, and that's not the point. [01:43:02.500 --> 01:43:04.500] I know. [01:43:04.500 --> 01:43:08.500] I think of my police officers like I do my grandkids. [01:43:08.500 --> 01:43:09.500] I know. [01:43:09.500 --> 01:43:18.500] You know, and I just want to get his attention, and you file aggravated assault charges against him, [01:43:18.500 --> 01:43:23.500] and you'll have obstruction and retaliation in every state. [01:43:23.500 --> 01:43:31.500] You file retaliation against him and aggravated assault because he made a threat against you. [01:43:31.500 --> 01:43:37.500] In Texas, if you threaten someone to deny them access to a public building [01:43:37.500 --> 01:43:43.500] or to interrupt their access to a public building, that's a terroristic threat. [01:43:43.500 --> 01:43:47.500] You do that while permanently displaying a deadly weapon. [01:43:47.500 --> 01:43:51.500] That's aggravated assault. [01:43:51.500 --> 01:43:56.500] Now, you don't want him indicted for that. [01:43:56.500 --> 01:44:00.500] You just want to get his attention. [01:44:00.500 --> 01:44:06.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.500 --> 01:44:11.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.500 --> 01:44:17.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.500 --> 01:44:22.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:22.500 --> 01:44:25.500] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.500 --> 01:44:31.500] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.500 --> 01:44:36.500] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor [01:44:36.500 --> 01:44:39.500] along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. 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[01:45:23.500 --> 01:45:28.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.500 --> 01:45:34.500] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.500 --> 01:45:43.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.500 --> 01:45:52.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.500 --> 01:46:05.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:05.500 --> 01:46:22.500] Thank you very much. [01:46:35.500 --> 01:46:53.500] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Rose in Louisiana. [01:46:53.500 --> 01:47:01.500] And what I'm suggesting doing sounds kind of radical, you know, trying to get the police officer arrested. [01:47:01.500 --> 01:47:05.500] But we're not really trying to get them arrested. [01:47:05.500 --> 01:47:07.500] The only thing that's going to get them is their attention. [01:47:07.500 --> 01:47:13.500] Get them to stop in their tracks and face what they're doing. [01:47:13.500 --> 01:47:18.500] Everybody will try to protect them, but they'll have to try to protect them. [01:47:18.500 --> 01:47:28.500] And then this officer will wind up having to explain his behavior to every, you know, to the legal department, to internal affairs, to everybody. [01:47:28.500 --> 01:47:38.500] And if he had himself a smug attitude, someone called 911 and you threatened to arrest them, they're going to tell him, what were you thinking? [01:47:38.500 --> 01:47:41.500] You don't get to do that, Bubba. [01:47:41.500 --> 01:47:44.500] Go ahead, Rose. [01:47:44.500 --> 01:47:45.500] I have it all on video. [01:47:45.500 --> 01:47:54.500] I have it from my perspective, him telling us that he did not care about the law and that he threatened the arrest station if he didn't leave. [01:47:54.500 --> 01:48:12.500] And I needed Jason's assistance at the time, and as a result of him not being there, as a paraplegic in the position I was in, needing care from someone who understands my condition, I did suffer harm, loss, and injury as a result. [01:48:12.500 --> 01:48:20.500] You absolutely need to send him a court letter with a lot of numbers on it. [01:48:20.500 --> 01:48:26.500] I can't pick up any more zeros. [01:48:26.500 --> 01:48:27.500] You need to do that. [01:48:27.500 --> 01:48:30.500] It's not because of the money. [01:48:30.500 --> 01:48:35.500] It's because of the next person to come behind you. [01:48:35.500 --> 01:48:38.500] You don't want them treated that way. [01:48:38.500 --> 01:48:40.500] And at the end of the day, it's all about the money. [01:48:40.500 --> 01:48:44.500] The only thing they pay attention to is the money. [01:48:44.500 --> 01:48:50.500] And they're doing all this because they get money from the government to do it. [01:48:50.500 --> 01:48:55.500] So make it cost them more to do it than not to do it. [01:48:55.500 --> 01:49:01.500] It's called plausible deniability. [01:49:01.500 --> 01:49:02.500] Okay, go ahead. [01:49:02.500 --> 01:49:06.500] Does the Sergeant know about it? [01:49:06.500 --> 01:49:08.500] Wait, say that again. [01:49:08.500 --> 01:49:16.500] Okay, so when I file this complaint, should I let the Sergeant know who we talked to, who said that we should also get the body cam footage? [01:49:16.500 --> 01:49:23.500] Since I already have my own footage, do I need to just go ahead and do it without letting him know? [01:49:23.500 --> 01:49:27.500] Two issues I'm concerned about. [01:49:27.500 --> 01:49:31.500] These guys will lie to you. [01:49:31.500 --> 01:49:33.500] Very good chance he's setting you up. [01:49:33.500 --> 01:49:39.500] If he's not, then you owe it to him to give him plausible deniability. [01:49:39.500 --> 01:49:43.500] Don't set him against his own officers. [01:49:43.500 --> 01:49:46.500] Not likely to happen. [01:49:46.500 --> 01:49:59.500] But even if he may have had a family member die of COVID, knowing they're giving him the wrong medicine, so he may be really pissed, you could cost him his job. [01:49:59.500 --> 01:50:03.500] Don't let the Sergeant get in the middle of it. [01:50:03.500 --> 01:50:05.500] That would be my suggestion. [01:50:05.500 --> 01:50:14.500] I've had this a number of times where I've had policemen come to me and ask me if I could do something. [01:50:14.500 --> 01:50:21.500] And I would tell them, you know, I'll do what I can, but you need to stay the hell away from this. [01:50:21.500 --> 01:50:24.500] Nobody gets to know you called me. [01:50:24.500 --> 01:50:27.500] Well, I don't care, blah, blah, blah, no, no, no, no. [01:50:27.500 --> 01:50:30.500] You don't need to lose your job over this. [01:50:30.500 --> 01:50:36.500] If we have a good policeman with a conscience, I don't want to cost him his job. [01:50:36.500 --> 01:50:37.500] Besides, I don't need you. [01:50:37.500 --> 01:50:40.500] You won't be any help. [01:50:40.500 --> 01:50:41.500] I'll handle it. [01:50:41.500 --> 01:50:42.500] And that's what I suggest here. [01:50:42.500 --> 01:50:49.500] If you've got a good cop that's trying to do the right thing, respect that and protect him. [01:50:49.500 --> 01:50:54.500] If you've got a good lawyer that's trying to do the right thing, do everything you can to protect that lawyer. [01:50:54.500 --> 01:51:02.500] And, you know, one of the things I suggest with lawyers is bargrieve him or bargrieve the lawyer on the other side. [01:51:02.500 --> 01:51:05.500] So now the lawyer is terrified of getting bargrieved himself. [01:51:05.500 --> 01:51:10.500] Now, he doesn't like that, but that gives him protection. [01:51:10.500 --> 01:51:14.500] Now he can go to the court and say, yeah, I know, Judge, you don't want me to file this kind of stuff, [01:51:14.500 --> 01:51:17.500] but I got a difficult client here. [01:51:17.500 --> 01:51:19.500] She just bargrieved that guy on the other side. [01:51:19.500 --> 01:51:22.500] I'm afraid she's going to do it to me. [01:51:22.500 --> 01:51:25.500] It's plausible deniability. [01:51:25.500 --> 01:51:26.500] Yeah. [01:51:26.500 --> 01:51:28.500] We really want to help our public officials. [01:51:28.500 --> 01:51:31.500] You know, I don't want to get cops in trouble. [01:51:31.500 --> 01:51:34.500] I want them retrained. [01:51:34.500 --> 01:51:39.500] And you're in a position to retrain them. [01:51:39.500 --> 01:51:41.500] Yeah, exactly. [01:51:41.500 --> 01:51:51.500] I just want people, I want the cops to understand, like, who they're working for and they're not working for corporate policy. [01:51:51.500 --> 01:51:56.500] And they need to understand who the baddest motor scooter in the building is. [01:51:56.500 --> 01:51:59.500] And it's you. [01:51:59.500 --> 01:52:01.500] Who's the biggest threat to them in the building? [01:52:01.500 --> 01:52:03.500] That's you. [01:52:03.500 --> 01:52:09.500] And when you start filing professional conduct complaints against them, [01:52:09.500 --> 01:52:15.500] you send a tort letter to the department giving them notice of your intent to sue. [01:52:15.500 --> 01:52:16.500] Now you've got their attention. [01:52:16.500 --> 01:52:23.500] But first, before you get to any of that, file criminally against that officer for aggravated assault. [01:52:23.500 --> 01:52:31.500] Let him explain to a grand jury or to a district attorney why he shouldn't be indicted. [01:52:31.500 --> 01:52:37.500] He is not going to be happy called on the carpet for something like this. [01:52:37.500 --> 01:52:44.500] And this will tend to temper his arrogance in the future. [01:52:44.500 --> 01:52:48.500] Okay, do I need to be present there when he has to explain himself? [01:52:48.500 --> 01:52:50.500] Because I would kind of... [01:52:50.500 --> 01:52:53.500] No, you don't get to watch. [01:52:53.500 --> 01:52:55.500] That's one of the hard parts. [01:52:55.500 --> 01:53:01.500] You just have to sit back and if it doesn't look like he got hammered enough, [01:53:01.500 --> 01:53:04.500] file a professional conduct complaint against him. [01:53:04.500 --> 01:53:05.500] Well, do that first anyway. [01:53:05.500 --> 01:53:11.500] I think in Louisiana it's called POST, police officer certification and training. [01:53:11.500 --> 01:53:17.500] If you file a complaint with him claiming he is improperly trained, [01:53:17.500 --> 01:53:21.500] that will go against his bond rating. [01:53:21.500 --> 01:53:27.500] That will hurt him more than a criminal complaint. [01:53:27.500 --> 01:53:34.500] And when you file criminal complaints against him and the department doesn't do anything, [01:53:34.500 --> 01:53:37.500] the department becomes liable. [01:53:37.500 --> 01:53:41.500] The chief of police or the sheriff, they become liable. [01:53:41.500 --> 01:53:44.500] And then you file criminal complaints against the sheriff. [01:53:44.500 --> 01:53:47.500] Now, none of these are going to get prosecuted. [01:53:47.500 --> 01:53:52.500] But it's going to put a negative mark on their charts. [01:53:52.500 --> 01:53:57.500] It's going to force them to answer questions they don't want to answer. [01:53:57.500 --> 01:54:00.500] This is how we discipline them. [01:54:00.500 --> 01:54:04.500] The hospital, you really need to hammer them. [01:54:04.500 --> 01:54:09.500] You really need to go for the money to the hospital. [01:54:09.500 --> 01:54:18.500] Because what they're doing, they're doing because they're being paid to do it by Biden. [01:54:18.500 --> 01:54:23.500] So cost them more than they're making. [01:54:23.500 --> 01:54:31.500] At the end of the day, it's all about the money. [01:54:31.500 --> 01:54:32.500] All right. [01:54:32.500 --> 01:54:33.500] Sounds great. [01:54:33.500 --> 01:54:34.500] Thank you so much, both of you. [01:54:34.500 --> 01:54:36.500] I really appreciate it. [01:54:36.500 --> 01:54:37.500] Okay. [01:54:37.500 --> 01:54:39.500] If you have questions, call me. [01:54:39.500 --> 01:54:40.500] You have my email. [01:54:40.500 --> 01:54:43.500] Email me any time you want. [01:54:43.500 --> 01:54:44.500] All right. [01:54:44.500 --> 01:54:45.500] Thank you so much. [01:54:45.500 --> 01:54:46.500] Have a great night. [01:54:46.500 --> 01:54:47.500] Bye. [01:54:47.500 --> 01:54:48.500] Okay. [01:54:48.500 --> 01:54:49.500] Thanks, Rose. [01:54:49.500 --> 01:54:50.500] Okay. [01:54:50.500 --> 01:54:52.500] Now we're going to go to Ted in California. [01:54:52.500 --> 01:54:53.500] Hello, Ted. [01:54:53.500 --> 01:54:58.500] What are you up to today? [01:54:58.500 --> 01:55:04.500] Good evening, Dr. Kelton and Brett. [01:55:04.500 --> 01:55:09.500] My mind is a little bit jumbled because I've been listening to all these other cases. [01:55:09.500 --> 01:55:11.500] So let's keep it real simple. [01:55:11.500 --> 01:55:15.500] One, I want to get ahold of Olivier. [01:55:15.500 --> 01:55:23.500] And two, I want to get this latest court-appointed lawyer off of me. [01:55:23.500 --> 01:55:34.500] And I'm thinking the way to do that is a file for de-collectory judgment in federal court. [01:55:34.500 --> 01:55:37.500] I think that's a great idea. [01:55:37.500 --> 01:55:41.500] You have a right to counsel of your choice. [01:55:41.500 --> 01:55:44.500] And that's a federal right. [01:55:44.500 --> 01:55:47.500] So you'd have standing in the federal court. [01:55:47.500 --> 01:55:50.500] And boy, that'll make them real unhappy. [01:55:50.500 --> 01:56:03.500] If you go in there with a declaratory judgment suit that would block them being able to do this at all in the future, [01:56:03.500 --> 01:56:10.500] that's going to make you a serious problem for them. [01:56:10.500 --> 01:56:17.500] So I need a little assistance on writing this up. [01:56:17.500 --> 01:56:24.500] And keep in mind, my next court appearance is February 14, Valentine's Day. [01:56:24.500 --> 01:56:27.500] Isn't that your birthday, Randy? [01:56:27.500 --> 01:56:31.500] No, I don't have birthdays anymore. [01:56:31.500 --> 01:56:33.500] I canceled them for lack of interest. [01:56:33.500 --> 01:56:37.500] I had too darn many of them. [01:56:37.500 --> 01:56:39.500] Okay. [01:56:39.500 --> 01:56:46.500] My birthday is in July. [01:56:46.500 --> 01:56:58.500] Well, like I said, now we have gone up to the federal court once before on this case, this criminal case. [01:56:58.500 --> 01:57:08.500] And Lucy Koh, the Fed judge, said she wrote a nine-page thoughtful opinion [01:57:08.500 --> 01:57:13.500] and actually cited a couple of causes of action that I may have. [01:57:13.500 --> 01:57:26.500] But she would not interfere or intervene jurisdiction and wanted me to come back after the case is resolved. [01:57:26.500 --> 01:57:31.500] Rooker Feldman, this is different. [01:57:31.500 --> 01:57:36.500] A petition for declaratory judgment is separate. [01:57:36.500 --> 01:57:41.500] You're just asking for a ruling on point of federal law. [01:57:41.500 --> 01:57:49.500] This does not in any way interfere with the criminal prosecution. [01:57:49.500 --> 01:57:57.500] She can tell the state that you have a right to counsel of your choice and they're not to interfere with it. [01:57:57.500 --> 01:58:02.500] That won't interfere with prosecution against you. [01:58:02.500 --> 01:58:05.500] So that wouldn't fall under Rooker Feldman. [01:58:05.500 --> 01:58:11.500] What we went up there with before was that they don't have an arrest warrant. [01:58:11.500 --> 01:58:15.500] That went to the prosecution. [01:58:15.500 --> 01:58:17.500] This doesn't. [01:58:17.500 --> 01:58:19.500] Okay. [01:58:19.500 --> 01:58:21.500] This just goes to your right to counsel. [01:58:21.500 --> 01:58:25.500] It doesn't interfere with the state's ability to prosecute. [01:58:25.500 --> 01:58:30.500] And what the Fed was saying is this is something that needs to be handled in the state. [01:58:30.500 --> 01:58:33.500] It's an appealable issue. [01:58:33.500 --> 01:58:41.500] And once you've got a ruling in the case, a final ruling, [01:58:41.500 --> 01:58:48.500] now the Fed doesn't have to worry about interfering with a state case. [01:58:48.500 --> 01:58:50.500] Now they can come in. [01:58:50.500 --> 01:58:53.500] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [01:58:53.500 --> 01:58:58.500] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.500 --> 01:59:06.500] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:06.500 --> 01:59:09.500] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:09.500 --> 01:59:13.500] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:13.500 --> 01:59:18.500] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. 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