[00:00.000 --> 00:06.000] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:06.000 --> 00:09.680] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.680 --> 00:11.120] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.120 --> 00:15.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:15.080 --> 00:17.180] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.180 --> 00:18.760] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.760 --> 00:22.360] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.360 --> 00:27.160] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [00:27.160 --> 00:32.240] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.240 --> 00:33.240] Privacy. [00:33.240 --> 00:34.880] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.880 --> 00:39.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.200 --> 00:42.720] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.720 --> 00:44.720] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.720 --> 00:45.720] Spar. [00:45.720 --> 00:48.000] It's what fighters do. [00:48.000 --> 00:50.960] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.960 --> 00:54.720] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.720 --> 01:01.760] Spar with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.760 --> 01:03.280] and R for religion. [01:03.280 --> 01:07.240] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.240 --> 01:08.720] assembly, and religion. [01:08.720 --> 01:11.080] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:11.080 --> 01:14.800] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.800 --> 01:18.320] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.320 --> 01:21.040] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.040 --> 01:31.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.280 --> 01:34.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.920 --> 01:38.400] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.400 --> 01:39.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.840 --> 01:43.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.760 --> 01:46.880] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.880 --> 01:48.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.480 --> 01:52.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.080 --> 01:56.880] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.880 --> 02:02.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:02.000 --> 02:04.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.640 --> 02:08.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.920 --> 02:12.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.440 --> 02:16.040] Start over with StartPage. [02:16.040 --> 02:20.380] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.380 --> 02:22.440] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.440 --> 02:26.960] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.960 --> 02:30.800] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.800 --> 02:31.800] Get it? [02:31.800 --> 02:34.120] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.120 --> 02:37.720] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.720 --> 02:43.480] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.480 --> 02:48.040] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:48.040 --> 02:50.680] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.680 --> 02:52.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.640 --> 03:16.400] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:23.640 --> 03:50.800] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, [03:50.800 --> 04:08.640] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [04:08.640 --> 04:22.160] historically has proved to always be possible. [04:22.160 --> 04:51.800] OK, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La La Radio on this, the 10th of July, [04:51.800 --> 04:57.320] the 10th day of February, 2022. [04:57.320 --> 04:58.600] Did I get that right, Brett? [04:58.600 --> 05:02.400] Hey, you guys, I didn't even have to tell him that. [05:02.400 --> 05:05.640] Oh yeah, I'm really getting there. [05:05.640 --> 05:12.520] OK, we're going to start out with something I come across. [05:12.520 --> 05:18.600] I was trying to recover a stolen airplane and we filed criminal complaints with the [05:18.600 --> 05:26.080] sheriff and they won't do anything in Victoria County and Corpus Christi and nobody wants [05:26.080 --> 05:27.080] to do anything. [05:27.080 --> 05:38.840] So I found Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 4701 and 4701A. [05:38.840 --> 05:48.320] It is a procedure if someone has something that's been stolen from you and there is no [05:48.320 --> 05:57.840] litigation ongoing, you can ask the court for an order to send the sheriff out to seize [05:57.840 --> 06:06.000] the item and then convene a prove-up hearing so that the owner can prove up their ownership [06:06.000 --> 06:12.800] and get the item back. [06:12.800 --> 06:18.640] We've run into this a lot of times across the year and I talked to two or three lawyers [06:18.640 --> 06:25.560] in Corpus Christi because I wanted a lawyer to give this to the J.P. instead of a pro [06:25.560 --> 06:26.560] se. [06:26.560 --> 06:30.960] But I didn't find a lawyer who had a clue as to what it was and where I came across [06:30.960 --> 06:44.920] it was I asked my chief of police how do they get to seize stolen property and he said you [06:44.920 --> 06:51.760] know if they catch somebody with stolen property then they file a motion with the judge authorizing [06:51.760 --> 06:57.680] them to seize it and then they can convene a hearing and get it back to the person who [06:57.680 --> 07:00.960] launched it. [07:00.960 --> 07:01.960] Does that sound cool Brett? [07:01.960 --> 07:05.360] Yeah it does, it sounds perfect. [07:05.360 --> 07:06.360] Very appropriate. [07:06.360 --> 07:22.760] Well what did I do, I muted and un-muted, my apologies, having a little issue. [07:22.760 --> 07:24.240] Okay sorry about that. [07:24.240 --> 07:28.400] Yeah no worries, as long as we get to keep you here a little longer. [07:28.400 --> 07:30.760] Did I blow out your ear drums? [07:30.760 --> 07:48.760] We're doing fine, so you were saying that this chapter 47 is the way that they get the [07:48.760 --> 07:54.640] authority to seize something that is allegedly stolen. [07:54.640 --> 07:55.640] Yes. [07:55.640 --> 08:01.800] And then what do they do, do they have to go to the magistrate? [08:01.800 --> 08:12.000] It makes up a motion and in the statutes it gives the justice of the peace exclusive jurisdiction. [08:12.000 --> 08:18.080] So nobody else can do this, kind of like eviction, when it comes to eviction the justice of the [08:18.080 --> 08:23.920] peace has exclusive jurisdiction and I've seen case law where they tried to get a district [08:23.920 --> 08:30.520] judge to intervene and the judge told the district judge to go scratch, I mean the JP [08:30.520 --> 08:34.640] told the justice of the peace, wait I'm going to get that backwards, the justice of the [08:34.640 --> 08:42.240] peace told the district judge to go scratch, that he didn't have any jurisdiction there [08:42.240 --> 08:46.880] and the JP was right. [08:46.880 --> 08:52.760] And that issue had been appealed all the way up to the Supreme Court and that's what the [08:52.760 --> 08:59.160] Supreme said, JP has exclusive jurisdiction nobody can touch it and that's what it was [08:59.160 --> 09:02.680] in this case, that's why I like the look of it. [09:02.680 --> 09:11.440] Because when it's not a matter between a public official and a private citizen, the JP's tend [09:11.440 --> 09:20.880] to be on the side of the citizen, we're accusing this guy of stealing the airplane and the [09:20.880 --> 09:28.320] justice will tend to be on our side, so it may be a way to get it back quickly without [09:28.320 --> 09:34.360] having to go through a whole bunch of gyrations in the courts. [09:34.360 --> 09:44.280] Oh, I am turning the phone lines on, if you have a question or a comment, give us a call, [09:44.280 --> 09:58.800] our call in number 512-646-1984, that's 512-646-1984, we'll be taking your calls all night. [09:58.800 --> 10:08.840] So let us know what you got, I do have some stuff going on, I've spoken before about, [10:08.840 --> 10:15.320] I think I've spoken on here about a project I'm working on for life extension, if anybody's [10:15.320 --> 10:20.920] interested in knowing more about that, send me an email, we're going to get it started [10:20.920 --> 10:29.280] up here pretty soon, we need about 10 people to participate with us, so if you have interest [10:29.280 --> 10:39.280] in living longer, send me an email to randy at rootoflawradio.com and we'll talk off [10:39.280 --> 10:40.280] there. [10:40.280 --> 10:48.080] Okay, we do have a caller, Isaac in Idaho, we've got a couple of callers. [10:48.080 --> 10:59.080] Hello Isaac, hello, what do you have for us today, good to talk to you guys, so my brother [10:59.080 --> 11:09.960] in law got a speeding ticket and it's for reckless driving and he doesn't know much [11:09.960 --> 11:10.960] about this. [11:10.960 --> 11:18.320] A speeding ticket, reckless driving, that means he was more than 15 over? [11:18.320 --> 11:20.920] Yes sir. [11:20.920 --> 11:28.600] And now that's a, this says Idaho, in Texas that would be a Class B misdemeanor, is that [11:28.600 --> 11:32.760] the case in Idaho? [11:32.760 --> 11:33.760] It is a misdemeanor. [11:33.760 --> 11:41.440] Well, they're all misdemeanors, a Class B misdemeanor in Texas is not heard in the municipal [11:41.440 --> 11:50.120] courts, heard in the county court, not municipal to JP, this one gets six months in jail, is [11:50.120 --> 11:53.840] it, does it have the same thing there? [11:53.840 --> 12:06.280] Six months and I can, it's Idaho code 49-1401, but it's six months in jail, $500 fine. [12:06.280 --> 12:18.200] Okay, this is Idaho and it's not a state I am up to speed on, on the traffic laws, right, [12:18.200 --> 12:26.360] or how the traffic code applies to the individual. [12:26.360 --> 12:35.920] With this much at stake, I would suggest first place you go is to subject matter jurisdiction. [12:35.920 --> 12:46.760] Who is authorized to enforce the transportation code, commercial transportation code in Idaho [12:46.760 --> 12:53.320] and was the arresting officer one of those individuals authorized? [12:53.320 --> 12:54.320] Right. [12:54.320 --> 13:02.120] I was considering asking the transportation department back for a list, but I haven't [13:02.120 --> 13:03.120] done that yet. [13:03.120 --> 13:05.840] I don't think they'll get back to me in time. [13:05.840 --> 13:11.960] The ticket falls for him to go in on Monday, Tuesday. [13:11.960 --> 13:15.560] That's not a problem, is this his first appearance? [13:15.560 --> 13:17.520] Yeah. [13:17.520 --> 13:19.960] That's going to be an arraignment. [13:19.960 --> 13:29.880] An arraignment is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused [13:29.880 --> 13:31.400] and taking a plea. [13:31.400 --> 13:32.400] Okay. [13:32.400 --> 13:39.480] But what it really is, is the prosecutor is going to come to him and say, let's make a [13:39.480 --> 13:40.480] deal. [13:40.480 --> 13:41.480] Right. [13:41.480 --> 13:59.080] And if you are outwardly guilty and you can't get a subject matter jurisdiction challenge, [13:59.080 --> 14:02.120] my advice is take a deal. [14:02.120 --> 14:03.120] Yeah. [14:03.120 --> 14:10.400] That's what I was going to say after the jurisdiction challenge because a judge might be a lot nicer [14:10.400 --> 14:14.600] to him fighting it. [14:14.600 --> 14:17.160] Has he had anything like this before? [14:17.160 --> 14:21.600] No, I don't think he has a record. [14:21.600 --> 14:29.160] I'll have to make sure, but- If he doesn't have a serious criminal record, [14:29.160 --> 14:35.480] if he just has a ticket or two and they're not too egregious, and you don't give them [14:35.480 --> 14:38.680] too hard a time- Right. [14:38.680 --> 14:40.640] This goes to the discretion of the court. [14:40.640 --> 14:46.280] The court doesn't want to spend a lot of time on your ticket. [14:46.280 --> 14:53.360] What's likely to happen at this arraignment hearing is that the judge will ask him to [14:53.360 --> 15:02.480] talk to the prosecutor and the prosecutor is likely to offer him a deal, but tell him [15:02.480 --> 15:03.480] this is poker. [15:03.480 --> 15:05.800] This is a negotiation here. [15:05.800 --> 15:06.800] Yeah. [15:06.800 --> 15:12.600] When the prosecutor offers him a deal, give the prosecutor a counteroffer and one thing [15:12.600 --> 15:22.600] you want to happen is have the charge downgraded from a Class B to a Class C misdemeanor and [15:22.600 --> 15:25.120] then charge you a fine or something. [15:25.120 --> 15:30.760] Or whatever the levels are of severity in Idaho, they might have them numbered or something [15:30.760 --> 15:31.760] different. [15:31.760 --> 15:32.760] Right. [15:32.760 --> 15:39.520] I was wondering if it was worth asking for a reduction to infraction and then community [15:39.520 --> 15:41.560] service or something. [15:41.560 --> 15:44.880] They almost always offer that. [15:44.880 --> 15:46.440] Right. [15:46.440 --> 15:53.840] The police officer always charges the highest thing he can so that he can give the prosecutor [15:53.840 --> 15:55.840] more to work with. [15:55.840 --> 15:56.840] Right. [15:56.840 --> 16:08.960] I'm looking here at what he cited and it looks like there might be room for him to negotiate, [16:08.960 --> 16:17.920] but because the 49-1401 that he's talking about, it says that the offender carelessly [16:17.920 --> 16:23.960] and heedlessly or without due caution and circumspectly and at a speed or in a manner [16:23.960 --> 16:27.360] as to endanger or be likely to endanger. [16:27.360 --> 16:32.800] It looks like if he can say, hey, I wasn't being careless or heedless, I was taking due [16:32.800 --> 16:37.840] caution and circumspecting, yeah, maybe it's faster than you wanted me to, but I didn't [16:37.840 --> 16:39.480] endanger and I was taking care. [16:39.480 --> 16:44.120] I was being cautious. [16:44.120 --> 16:47.520] What was the speed limit on the highway? [16:47.520 --> 16:51.960] 65, 103 going into 65. [16:51.960 --> 16:57.080] He can say I was outrageously speeding, but I was being really careful while I was outrageously [16:57.080 --> 17:00.480] speeding. [17:00.480 --> 17:05.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [17:05.040 --> 17:09.320] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.320 --> 17:13.600] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [17:13.600 --> 17:14.600] can win too. [17:14.600 --> 17:19.520] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.520 --> 17:25.320] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer [17:25.320 --> 17:29.840] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.840 --> 17:34.040] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:34.040 --> 17:39.160] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:39.160 --> 17:41.320] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.320 --> 17:46.840] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.840 --> 17:49.840] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.840 --> 17:58.840] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-n at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.840 --> 18:01.720] collectors now. [18:01.720 --> 18:06.120] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:06.120 --> 18:07.120] Word? [18:07.120 --> 18:12.240] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. central time for scripture [18:12.240 --> 18:18.680] talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:18.680 --> 18:23.180] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [18:23.180 --> 18:25.600] dividing the word of truth. [18:25.600 --> 18:29.560] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse [18:29.560 --> 18:32.880] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.880 --> 18:37.520] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.520 --> 18:39.900] and Christian character development. [18:39.900 --> 18:44.440] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.440 --> 18:48.800] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.800 --> 18:50.520] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.520 --> 18:57.680] So tune in to scripture talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.680 --> 19:00.680] motivate your studies of the scriptures. [19:00.680 --> 19:10.680] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:30.680 --> 19:38.600] Okay, we are back. [19:38.600 --> 19:46.240] Randy Kelton with Mountain Wheel of Love Radio and we're talking to Isaac in Idaho whose [19:46.240 --> 19:49.360] brother has an issue. [19:49.360 --> 19:51.440] Yes sir. [19:51.440 --> 19:57.160] So, that's the only thing I can say, you know, we're here to, we fight the system, that's [19:57.160 --> 19:59.360] what we do. [19:59.360 --> 20:05.000] But first we take care of our liberty. [20:05.000 --> 20:10.800] And they are not going to want to put him in jail because it costs them too much. [20:10.800 --> 20:19.040] So if he's nice and doesn't give them a lot of grief, they're likely to bump it down to [20:19.040 --> 20:27.800] a Class C misdemeanor and charge him four or five hundred bucks or maybe more and give [20:27.800 --> 20:38.560] him something that won't cause him a lot of problems down the road. [20:38.560 --> 20:45.360] I can hear all those other listeners out there that are just cringing, saying, we should [20:45.360 --> 20:50.400] never make a deal with them, absolutely make a deal. [20:50.400 --> 20:54.720] For all of those out there who would fight to the bitter end, when you're sitting in [20:54.720 --> 21:00.680] jail, you are no help to the Patriot community. [21:00.680 --> 21:06.600] You can only be of help to us when you're out here doing really cool things. [21:06.600 --> 21:11.720] And think about being a help to your wife and your children at the same time. [21:11.720 --> 21:12.720] Yeah. [21:12.720 --> 21:17.160] Because you might be as right as you can be and you're still behind bars and it still [21:17.160 --> 21:21.400] affects your family in a big way. [21:21.400 --> 21:25.040] I spent some time there myself, I'm familiar with it. [21:25.040 --> 21:26.040] Okay. [21:26.040 --> 21:29.520] Do you have anything else for us, Isaac? [21:29.520 --> 21:41.360] I had a couple questions to your affirmative defense there, the element of cautious driving. [21:41.360 --> 21:46.480] So let's pretend I got the ticket and I'm not as nice as my brother-in-law and I want [21:46.480 --> 21:48.720] to fight these guys. [21:48.720 --> 21:55.360] If I claim I was being cautious, so the charges can't stick, what if the cop says, well, [21:55.360 --> 22:02.160] if you were cautious, you would have seen me and probably slowed down. [22:02.160 --> 22:06.880] If you were cautious, I could hear the judge, if you were cautious, you wouldn't be going [22:06.880 --> 22:11.280] 102 and a 65. [22:11.280 --> 22:15.200] So this will go to the discretion of the judge. [22:15.200 --> 22:16.200] Yeah. [22:16.200 --> 22:21.600] And if I were the judge, I would throw the book at your brother. [22:21.600 --> 22:22.600] Right. [22:22.600 --> 22:28.440] You're out here on the highway with my wife and my kids and you're driving a hundred miles [22:28.440 --> 22:35.360] an hour in a 65 mile an hour zone, that is just not acceptable behavior. [22:35.360 --> 22:43.200] They may throw the book at him anyway, but fighting them will make sure they throw the [22:43.200 --> 22:45.200] book at you. [22:45.200 --> 22:46.200] Absolutely. [22:46.200 --> 22:47.200] Yep. [22:47.200 --> 22:49.840] Well, I think that's all I've got. [22:49.840 --> 22:54.480] I just want to say a thank you to you guys and Deborah especially for all the work she [22:54.480 --> 22:55.480] does. [22:55.480 --> 22:57.680] So have a great night. [22:57.680 --> 22:58.680] Okay. [22:58.680 --> 23:00.040] She's in the background. [23:00.040 --> 23:01.040] She probably heard that. [23:01.040 --> 23:02.040] Thanks, Isaac. [23:02.040 --> 23:03.040] Okay. [23:03.040 --> 23:04.040] Thank you. [23:04.040 --> 23:18.480] Now we're going to go to Charles in Georgia. [23:18.480 --> 23:25.160] What do you have for us today? [23:25.160 --> 23:27.760] I wanted to, I have two things. [23:27.760 --> 23:34.800] First, I wanted to know that you guys hear about the civil asset forfeiture case that [23:34.800 --> 23:37.920] happened in Santa Monica, California. [23:37.920 --> 23:45.240] No, and that has my interest because we're preparing one. [23:45.240 --> 23:46.240] Tell me about it. [23:46.240 --> 23:49.240] So what is happening there? [23:49.240 --> 23:55.800] There's a couple of marijuana dispensaries there in the county. [23:55.800 --> 24:07.480] And what is happening is the sheriffs are intercepting the brinks trucks that is coming [24:07.480 --> 24:11.000] from the marijuana dispensaries. [24:11.000 --> 24:17.160] And I think the sheriffs has pulled over two brinks trucks, each truck had about a million [24:17.160 --> 24:18.960] bucks in it. [24:18.960 --> 24:25.080] And what they're doing is they're pulling people over saying things like, oh, well, [24:25.080 --> 24:26.880] you put your blinker on too soon. [24:26.880 --> 24:30.200] So we had to pull you over. [24:30.200 --> 24:33.040] And by the way, what have you got in here? [24:33.040 --> 24:34.040] Okay. [24:34.040 --> 24:35.040] Now it's a blinks truck. [24:35.040 --> 24:36.040] What do you think they got in there? [24:36.040 --> 24:37.560] They got money in there. [24:37.560 --> 24:42.840] And what they're doing is, since they know it's from the dispensary, from the marijuana [24:42.840 --> 24:47.540] dispensary, they are just seizing the money. [24:47.540 --> 24:52.200] And they're quickly handing it over to the feds. [24:52.200 --> 25:02.800] And what that does is that allows them to get a kickback of 80% and the feds keep 20. [25:02.800 --> 25:07.760] And they're making the dispensary fight to get their, yeah, they're making the dispensary [25:07.760 --> 25:11.200] fight to get the money back. [25:11.200 --> 25:18.720] And they're seizing the money based on the fact that it's still federal, against the [25:18.720 --> 25:24.600] federal law to produce marijuana. [25:24.600 --> 25:30.160] And not that they can prove anything, they just say, hey, this is a million bucks and [25:30.160 --> 25:32.280] we can take it. [25:32.280 --> 25:37.880] Are they seizing the, are they pulling over the blinks trucks in California? [25:37.880 --> 25:38.880] Yes. [25:38.880 --> 25:41.880] Santa Monica, California. [25:41.880 --> 25:47.720] Then we don't get to feds and yes, that's just, there's a big problem with asset forfeiture [25:47.720 --> 25:50.040] scam. [25:50.040 --> 25:56.160] Most of these guys will not go after the policeman criminally. [25:56.160 --> 26:04.240] We are preparing a rather large asset forfeiture scam case here in Texas. [26:04.240 --> 26:08.160] And we're going after them individually. [26:08.160 --> 26:11.240] I see. [26:11.240 --> 26:17.000] Otherwise you try to fight them civilly, they're going to keep you in court and just completely [26:17.000 --> 26:20.760] exhaust your ability to fight them. [26:20.760 --> 26:22.720] And then they get to swallow your money. [26:22.720 --> 26:33.440] It's in their financial best interest to do that. [26:33.440 --> 26:39.760] And yeah, I wanted to know, you know, what you guys thought about it. [26:39.760 --> 26:44.680] And I had another question, but of course I already know what you think about it. [26:44.680 --> 26:48.640] I just want, I definitely want to bring it up for all your listeners that listen to it, [26:48.640 --> 26:54.240] just in case they hadn't heard it either. [26:54.240 --> 27:03.280] It's certainly something that needs corrective legislation to allow public officials to seize [27:03.280 --> 27:11.520] assets, liquidate the assets and then profit from the liquidation is an absolute conflict [27:11.520 --> 27:12.520] of interest. [27:12.520 --> 27:17.200] That's a very kind way to put it, Randy. [27:17.200 --> 27:21.800] I understand you're on the radio and there's a whole bunch of four letter words that you [27:21.800 --> 27:24.040] keep put in there. [27:24.040 --> 27:32.160] I can put in highway robbery and that's one that ought to be charged against them criminally [27:32.160 --> 27:39.280] and let them explain themselves to a grand jury, a state grand jury, not a federal grand [27:39.280 --> 27:41.200] jury. [27:41.200 --> 27:48.680] This breaches the separation of powers and I thought Ashcroft already, Ashcroft already [27:48.680 --> 27:59.720] got his knuckles smacked over that back in the early days of legalized marijuana in California. [27:59.720 --> 28:06.400] They came in and shut down all of the marijuana shops and that went through the courts and [28:06.400 --> 28:11.360] they got shot down, so this has already been handled. [28:11.360 --> 28:14.760] I've got a lot of background noise. [28:14.760 --> 28:16.760] Sorry about that. [28:16.760 --> 28:20.400] Can you still hear me pretty good? [28:20.400 --> 28:21.400] Yes. [28:21.400 --> 28:22.400] Okay. [28:22.400 --> 28:32.000] The next thing I want to begin into is land patent and I wanted to know what do you think [28:32.000 --> 28:38.480] about a land patent and how do you go about doing it? [28:38.480 --> 28:40.920] Depends on where you're at. [28:40.920 --> 28:43.880] Texas is different from every other state. [28:43.880 --> 28:49.440] Land patents is a double edged sword. [28:49.440 --> 28:58.440] Most people are doing the land patents in order to get out of a property tax, but when [28:58.440 --> 29:07.680] you get out of property tax, then you don't have a right to profit or benefit from the [29:07.680 --> 29:12.960] services that are paid for with those property taxes. [29:12.960 --> 29:22.760] Police enforcement, fire departments and there are others, so you would have to contract [29:22.760 --> 29:28.600] for that individually with the departments and at the end of the day, it's likely to [29:28.600 --> 29:33.160] cost you about as much as if you just paid the taxes. [29:33.160 --> 29:39.760] There are other ways of doing it and it is pretty well state dependent. [29:39.760 --> 29:48.200] When we come back from our sponsors, I'll talk about Dwight Glass and the procedure [29:48.200 --> 29:50.920] he used. [29:50.920 --> 29:54.560] Usually it works, sometimes you have to wind up in a long court battle. [29:54.560 --> 29:58.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [29:58.440 --> 30:06.640] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, but [30:06.640 --> 30:11.400] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.400 --> 30:15.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:15.840 --> 30:17.800] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.800 --> 30:22.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:22.200 --> 30:26.200] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.200 --> 30:31.320] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.320 --> 30:33.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.960 --> 30:38.240] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.240 --> 30:41.760] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.760 --> 30:45.440] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.440 --> 30:50.200] Public privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.200 --> 30:54.680] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.680 --> 30:56.360] It's not an idle question. [30:56.360 --> 31:01.480] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.480 --> 31:03.880] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.880 --> 31:07.480] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.480 --> 31:12.400] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.400 --> 31:15.800] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.800 --> 31:16.800] to see. [31:16.800 --> 31:17.800] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.800 --> 31:21.400] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.400 --> 31:23.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.360 --> 31:31.080] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.080 --> 31:32.080] I lost my son. [31:32.080 --> 31:33.080] My nephew. [31:33.080 --> 31:34.080] My uncle. [31:34.080 --> 31:35.080] My son. [31:35.080 --> 31:36.080] On September 11th, 2001. [31:36.080 --> 31:39.360] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.360 --> 31:43.520] Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.520 --> 31:49.280] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.280 --> 31:53.040] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:53.040 --> 31:54.520] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.520 --> 31:55.520] My uncle. [31:55.520 --> 31:56.520] My nephew. [31:56.520 --> 31:57.520] My son. [31:57.520 --> 31:58.520] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.520 --> 32:01.160] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.160 --> 32:05.440] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.440 --> 32:07.840] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:07.840 --> 32:11.160] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [32:11.160 --> 32:13.040] stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.040 --> 32:16.480] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.480 --> 32:20.120] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.120 --> 32:24.360] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.360 --> 32:25.840] our rights through due process. [32:25.840 --> 32:29.720] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.720 --> 32:33.520] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.520 --> 32:35.600] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.600 --> 32:39.880] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.880 --> 32:41.200] ordering your copy today. [32:41.200 --> 32:44.440] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.440 --> 32:48.960] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.960 --> 32:51.280] documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.280 --> 32:55.240] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.240 --> 33:01.320] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:01.320 --> 33:06.320] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:31.320 --> 33:48.920] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to, who [33:48.920 --> 33:49.920] am I talking to? [33:49.920 --> 33:50.920] I lost my page. [33:50.920 --> 33:51.920] Charles and Georgia. [33:51.920 --> 33:58.480] Charles and Georgia, I actually remembered that. [33:58.480 --> 33:59.480] I'm getting better. [33:59.480 --> 34:00.480] Okay. [34:00.480 --> 34:12.920] Charles and Georgia, Charles, Georgia and Charles, okay, I did a Google, I did a Google [34:12.920 --> 34:23.760] of Land Patents Georgia, and I got a hit on, no it didn't. [34:23.760 --> 34:29.480] It showed something 42, but when I clicked on it, it didn't show me what that was, Georgia [34:29.480 --> 34:30.480] Land Patents. [34:30.480 --> 34:43.720] I got a site, thelandpatents.com, so just do a search for Georgia Land Patents, and it [34:43.720 --> 34:49.440] shows that there are 42, is there are 42 of them. [34:49.440 --> 34:59.320] Georgia is an agency, a SINOR based in, Georgia bracket state, is an agency, a SINOR based [34:59.320 --> 35:02.800] in Georgia for 42 patents. [35:02.800 --> 35:10.480] I have no idea what that means, but just look it up, research out land patents for Georgia, [35:10.480 --> 35:15.120] and then call us back next week and tell us how to do a land patent there. [35:15.120 --> 35:20.120] But more than that, tell us what the consequences are. [35:20.120 --> 35:24.640] Okay, no problem. [35:24.640 --> 35:33.560] I did have one more thing that I wanted to run by you to see what you thought about it. [35:33.560 --> 35:44.400] In Michigan, man, my mom had gotten the COVID stimulus money from the unemployment agency [35:44.400 --> 35:51.960] last year, and now it seems that they are sending letters out, they sent the letter [35:51.960 --> 35:59.080] out to my mom saying, hey, we believe you committed fraud, we gave you the money, we [35:59.080 --> 36:04.240] approved it, but we believe you committed fraud, so what we want you to do is we want [36:04.240 --> 36:07.800] you to pay us back all of the money, we'll put you on a payment program if you don't [36:07.800 --> 36:11.400] have all of the money right now, and you can just start paying us now, and we're going [36:11.400 --> 36:17.920] to take your taxes if you don't. [36:17.920 --> 36:28.560] My first thought was don't pay him a dime, tell him to prove it, and prove the fraud, [36:28.560 --> 36:29.560] and then go from there. [36:29.560 --> 36:33.040] Well, what they're doing is, just go ahead. [36:33.040 --> 36:41.320] Are you sure that this is the state coming after them and not a scam? [36:41.320 --> 36:51.480] Nope, because there is an actual lawsuit against the state for doing this in a blanket. [36:51.480 --> 36:56.320] I think they've gone after something like 50,000 people. [36:56.320 --> 37:08.600] Oh, she needs to contact whoever is prosecuting the suit and ask to be added as a litigant, [37:08.600 --> 37:11.800] and that will put a stop on the collections. [37:11.800 --> 37:20.720] Well, yeah, the class action lawsuit is going on now, but the problem is there's not a [37:20.720 --> 37:24.960] direct suit, there's a class action going on, and you know how long those take, but [37:24.960 --> 37:28.320] what they're doing now, they're still- Well, that's what I mean, call and get herself [37:28.320 --> 37:34.360] added to the class, and that will abate any collection actions against her. [37:34.360 --> 37:42.160] Well, that's what she would think, but that's not happening. [37:42.160 --> 37:48.800] Even with the, she's already doing an appeal, or they're actually looking into it, doing [37:48.800 --> 37:55.760] an appeal, but they're still telling her, keep making the payments while we do the appeal. [37:55.760 --> 38:01.560] Okay, hold on, this is not the beginning of this issue. [38:01.560 --> 38:08.400] So she has already, okay, let me understand this. [38:08.400 --> 38:16.800] I got the idea that when the state came after her, they claimed that they had already made [38:16.800 --> 38:22.280] a judicial determination that she had committed fraud, is that correct? [38:22.280 --> 38:23.760] Yes. [38:23.760 --> 38:29.960] So how has that judicial determination made? [38:29.960 --> 38:38.960] It was an administrative determination, not judicial outside of the Michigan unemployment [38:38.960 --> 38:39.960] agent. [38:39.960 --> 38:45.960] Okay, so have you looked at the administrative act for, was this Michigan? [38:45.960 --> 38:48.760] For Michigan, that's correct. [38:48.760 --> 38:55.560] Michigan, it's close to California and being one of the most corrupt states. [38:55.560 --> 39:02.480] This draws a question, who gave, who paid out the money, was it the state or the Fed? [39:02.480 --> 39:13.120] And is Michigan attempting to collect the money for the state or the Fed? [39:13.120 --> 39:20.080] That last part, I'm not sure about that last part, but it's definitely the Fed gave the [39:20.080 --> 39:26.800] money to the state and the state gave the money out through unemployment. [39:26.800 --> 39:30.840] So this is the Fed's money, it's not the state's money? [39:30.840 --> 39:34.760] No, no. [39:34.760 --> 39:37.120] So the state's trying to collect it? [39:37.120 --> 39:38.120] Yes. [39:38.120 --> 39:41.240] What are they going to do with it when they collect it? [39:41.240 --> 39:48.480] Are they going to spend it or are they going to put it back in the fund? [39:48.480 --> 39:53.480] This is important to give them standing. [39:53.480 --> 39:59.680] I'm not sure what they're going to do with it. [39:59.680 --> 40:04.320] Whichever, it is way out of my scope. [40:04.320 --> 40:07.880] Your scope and, is this your sister? [40:07.880 --> 40:12.480] No, actually it's my mom and my auntie. [40:12.480 --> 40:13.480] Oh, okay. [40:13.480 --> 40:21.440] Yeah, it's actually two different people and there's other people that we know that they [40:21.440 --> 40:29.480] sent these letters of redetermination and they sent it a year later after the fact. [40:29.480 --> 40:35.840] So they got a couple of issues there. [40:35.840 --> 40:41.280] Year is not enough for statute of limitations, but it is enough to show negligence on their [40:41.280 --> 40:43.880] part. [40:43.880 --> 40:53.520] They created, they approved the application and then later on when the claim would be [40:53.520 --> 41:02.080] so outrageous that nobody could pay it, they came back and claimed that these people committed [41:02.080 --> 41:03.080] fraud. [41:03.080 --> 41:07.800] How are they claiming fraud? [41:07.800 --> 41:11.160] And that's the thing that my mom asked. [41:11.160 --> 41:16.960] They asked her to send the documents again, the same exact documents that she sent in [41:16.960 --> 41:17.960] before. [41:17.960 --> 41:18.960] Okay, okay. [41:18.960 --> 41:24.840] When she requested the documents, did she request them under open records or did she [41:24.840 --> 41:26.840] request them through the courts? [41:26.840 --> 41:28.840] No, no, no. [41:28.840 --> 41:38.400] The unemployment agency requested to see the W-2s for which she worked, not through the [41:38.400 --> 41:39.400] courts. [41:39.400 --> 41:43.840] We haven't taken any court action yet. [41:43.840 --> 41:53.680] Everything has been administrative through the unemployment insurance agency so far. [41:53.680 --> 41:54.680] This sounds problematic. [41:54.680 --> 42:04.120] This sounds like something that's going to go to legislation. [42:04.120 --> 42:11.680] It's too complex for me to address here, but it does sound like if these people stand up [42:11.680 --> 42:17.480] against them, their state will have a very difficult time. [42:17.480 --> 42:25.440] Are they claiming that the income statements were fraudulent? [42:25.440 --> 42:32.640] Yes, they're claiming that... [42:32.640 --> 42:35.680] Did they provide evidence in support of the claim? [42:35.680 --> 42:36.680] No. [42:36.680 --> 42:44.080] As a matter of fact, what they're doing is they're sending out a letter saying, we believe [42:44.080 --> 42:54.320] you have committed fraud and upon this re-determination, you owe us this and that's it. [42:54.320 --> 42:55.320] We believe. [42:55.320 --> 42:59.920] Tell your mother to file a counterclaim. [42:59.920 --> 43:05.520] That sounds like they're imposing their religious beliefs on somebody else. [43:05.520 --> 43:11.040] That's all they've got to go on is a belief. [43:11.040 --> 43:23.000] My first reaction when my mom first told me what happened is to immediately go to one [43:23.000 --> 43:29.680] of the state courts and ask for injunctive relief or file an injunction to stop, to not [43:29.680 --> 43:34.520] have her taxes taken because they're threatening to take her taxes. [43:34.520 --> 43:42.280] Return to file for a prove-up hearing, emergency restraining order to stop the collections [43:42.280 --> 43:46.320] and then a prove-up hearing to show cause to collect the funds. [43:46.320 --> 43:47.320] Hang on. [43:47.320 --> 43:52.640] About to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Little Law Radio. [43:52.640 --> 44:00.200] We'll be right back. [44:00.200 --> 44:01.200] I love logos. [44:01.200 --> 44:04.760] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.760 --> 44:07.400] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.400 --> 44:08.400] I need my truth fix. [44:08.400 --> 44:13.280] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.280 --> 44:17.040] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:17.040 --> 44:20.440] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:20.440 --> 44:21.800] How can I help logos? [44:21.800 --> 44:23.800] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.800 --> 44:26.800] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [44:26.800 --> 44:29.520] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:29.520 --> 44:31.520] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.520 --> 44:32.520] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [44:32.520 --> 44:37.520] Pick on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.520 --> 44:43.520] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.520 --> 44:44.520] Do I pay extra? [44:44.520 --> 44:45.520] No. [44:45.520 --> 44:47.120] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.120 --> 44:48.120] No. [44:48.120 --> 44:49.120] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.120 --> 44:50.120] No. [44:50.120 --> 44:51.120] I mean, yes. [44:51.120 --> 44:52.120] Wow. [44:52.120 --> 44:55.960] Giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [44:55.960 --> 44:56.960] Thank you so much. [44:56.960 --> 44:57.960] You're welcome. [44:57.960 --> 44:59.960] Happy holidays, logos. [44:59.960 --> 45:04.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.520 --> 45:11.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.240 --> 45:14.920] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.920 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.320] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.320 --> 45:28.160] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [45:28.160 --> 45:34.920] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.920 --> 45:39.560] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.560 --> 45:43.760] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.760 --> 45:49.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.960 --> 45:56.400] process tactics, and much more, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.400 --> 45:59.400] or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [45:59.400 --> 46:20.840] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? [46:20.840 --> 46:46.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Keltenbrecht, Fountain Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Charles [46:46.080 --> 46:47.080] in Georgia. [46:47.080 --> 46:51.200] Yes, we were talking on the break about Michigan. [46:51.200 --> 46:56.440] Michigan has no grand juries and it's one of the more corrupt states. [46:56.440 --> 47:02.960] This administrative agency can force collect all these funds, put it in an account, and [47:02.960 --> 47:05.960] collect interest on the account. [47:05.960 --> 47:11.200] And then if you want that money back, even if you win, the court will order them to return [47:11.200 --> 47:13.200] the money and they just won't do it. [47:13.200 --> 47:18.800] But then you've got to go back and bring them back into court to force them to give you [47:18.800 --> 47:19.800] the money. [47:19.800 --> 47:24.200] And all this time they're collecting interest on the funds. [47:24.200 --> 47:27.200] So it's in their best interest to screw you around. [47:27.200 --> 47:37.760] And most people just simply don't have the funds to take on the state unless they use [47:37.760 --> 47:45.200] some of our techniques and file criminally against the director of the agency. [47:45.200 --> 47:57.400] You know, they had this same problem maybe 10 years back and the director of the agency [47:57.400 --> 48:03.920] was under some extreme scrutiny to the tune of criminal charges, if I'm not mistaken. [48:03.920 --> 48:08.920] If every one of those people files criminal charges against the director because he didn't [48:08.920 --> 48:21.920] do his due diligence before he paid this out and just accused him of fraud and embezzlement [48:21.920 --> 48:26.600] and let him prove he didn't. [48:26.600 --> 48:30.040] We don't use the criminal card. [48:30.040 --> 48:34.400] That's the most powerful tool we have. [48:34.400 --> 48:43.320] This director, if he gets 5,000 criminal complaints filed against him, that's going to eliminate [48:43.320 --> 48:48.720] any bonding he may have. [48:48.720 --> 48:54.980] It will almost certainly make him unemployable. [48:54.980 --> 48:59.920] So everybody fights the agency, fight the individuals. [48:59.920 --> 49:07.440] We're preparing an asset forfeiture case here in Texas, and we're saying the state of Texas [49:07.440 --> 49:13.240] didn't steal this, the state of Texas didn't commit all these crimes, the state can't commit [49:13.240 --> 49:14.240] crimes. [49:14.240 --> 49:21.840] It's like corporations, corporations can't commit crimes, people commit crimes, directors [49:21.840 --> 49:31.960] of agencies, the president of a corporation or the chairman of the board of a corporation, [49:31.960 --> 49:37.720] they commit crimes, so go after them criminally. [49:37.720 --> 49:44.360] The government sued the tobacco companies three times, the first two times they lost [49:44.360 --> 49:48.520] because the tobacco companies had endless funds. [49:48.520 --> 49:56.840] The third time they filed a RICO suit, and the director said, whoa, hold on here, this [49:56.840 --> 50:02.920] can get us put in jail, then they came to the table to make a deal. [50:02.920 --> 50:13.440] So are there any groups in Michigan gathering to address this issue, to your knowledge? [50:13.440 --> 50:22.600] So to my knowledge, the only group that's gathering is the, like I said, the lawsuit [50:22.600 --> 50:30.000] that they're putting before the courts now with the ballots. [50:30.000 --> 50:36.560] Well, let's see if you can get a copy of that lawsuit. [50:36.560 --> 50:44.920] It will have the names and addresses of every single member of the suit, send a letter to [50:44.920 --> 50:48.880] each one of them, craft a criminal complaint. [50:48.880 --> 50:53.280] You'd have to do some research on the agencies, see what the agency's rules are. [50:53.280 --> 51:01.080] You have to find them violating a rule or not directly violating a rule, something where [51:01.080 --> 51:04.680] you can make it look like they're doing something improper. [51:04.680 --> 51:10.600] Turn it into a criminal complaint and send it to every one of these people that are in [51:10.600 --> 51:17.400] the suit and encourage them to file criminally against the agency. [51:17.400 --> 51:29.960] Now, see, that sounds like something that can be done, something that ought to be done. [51:29.960 --> 51:35.240] And those people in the agencies, they send you these documents and they don't have anybody's [51:35.240 --> 51:37.760] name on it. [51:37.760 --> 51:44.960] Any time you get a document without a name on it, you go to respond yet superior. [51:44.960 --> 51:49.640] That's the director of the agency, so you file against him. [51:49.640 --> 51:57.120] If someone puts their name on it, you file against whoever puts their name on the document. [51:57.120 --> 52:00.760] Okay. [52:00.760 --> 52:01.760] You got to get mean. [52:01.760 --> 52:02.760] Get down and dirty. [52:02.760 --> 52:10.920] Well, you see, if not me, because if it was me, I never would have paid them a dime in [52:10.920 --> 52:15.720] the first place and made them prove fraud, because fraud is a criminal allegation that [52:15.720 --> 52:17.800] could actually get me put in jail. [52:17.800 --> 52:21.240] So you're not going to come get my money. [52:21.240 --> 52:31.200] There is nothing preventing you from giving notice of crime, even if it's in another state, [52:31.200 --> 52:33.200] makes no difference. [52:33.200 --> 52:38.600] You don't have to have it happen to you. [52:38.600 --> 52:44.000] You don't need standing to file a criminal complaint. [52:44.000 --> 52:46.720] Gotcha. [52:46.720 --> 52:54.360] So find anybody that's up to fighting them and prepare the complaints for them and give [52:54.360 --> 52:55.360] them to them. [52:55.360 --> 53:02.040] All they have to do is sign them before an order and file them. [53:02.040 --> 53:11.240] And when you file a complaint against the agency, also send a complaint to the legislators. [53:11.240 --> 53:18.680] Enter their houses, their state refuse, send a letter to the complaint to him. [53:18.680 --> 53:30.880] On this issue of teaching in the schools, the what, race theory, lost the first question. [53:30.880 --> 53:34.440] Oh yeah, CRT, critical race theory. [53:34.440 --> 53:41.360] I was listening to a program on public radio and these two individuals were just whining [53:41.360 --> 53:44.680] and complaining, oh, it's awful. [53:44.680 --> 53:52.480] All of these no good rotten red states are passing laws forbidding teachers to teach [53:52.480 --> 53:53.480] critical race theory. [53:53.480 --> 53:59.160] Oh, they're denying them in their first amendment right and blah, blah, blah. [53:59.160 --> 54:09.040] I listened to that and that told me that all of this hubblu about critical race theory, [54:09.040 --> 54:12.200] our legislators were listening. [54:12.200 --> 54:18.560] They were paying attention and they started coming back with all kinds of laws to put [54:18.560 --> 54:20.600] a stop to this stuff. [54:20.600 --> 54:25.920] Make noise, Charles, make noise. [54:25.920 --> 54:33.600] Send all these people to make up a letter for them, here, send this to your legislator. [54:33.600 --> 54:39.000] And send this federal money as well to state and federal legislators. [54:39.000 --> 54:41.280] Nobody talks to them for the most part. [54:41.280 --> 54:48.120] I go to these subcommittee hearings in Texas in a state of 29 million people and there [54:48.120 --> 54:50.440] are 120 people there. [54:50.440 --> 55:00.080] A hundred of them are special interests, guys who are lobbyists for certain legislation [55:00.080 --> 55:04.800] and companies, 20 people were citizens. [55:04.800 --> 55:10.840] And when a citizen got up in front of that committee and listened, everybody spoke, everybody [55:10.840 --> 55:14.440] sat up and listened. [55:14.440 --> 55:17.760] All you have to do is participate. [55:17.760 --> 55:23.240] You're the most powerful guy in the room and that legislator knows it. [55:23.240 --> 55:27.600] For every face he sees, he sees at least 15 votes. [55:27.600 --> 55:33.720] And for every person that guy can turn, it's 15 more votes. [55:33.720 --> 55:36.520] Their sphere of influence. [55:36.520 --> 55:40.760] Your legislators will pay close attention to the public. [55:40.760 --> 55:44.960] Give you ideas, Charles? [55:44.960 --> 55:47.960] Sure did, sure did. [55:47.960 --> 55:53.160] So I'm going to pontificate a little bit over the weekend and see what I can come up with. [55:53.160 --> 55:54.160] I might give you a call back tomorrow. [55:54.160 --> 55:55.160] I know you probably got other callers tonight. [55:55.160 --> 55:56.160] Got one more issue, but we'll talk about that tomorrow. [55:56.160 --> 55:57.160] I'll call you tomorrow. [55:57.160 --> 55:58.160] Okay, thank you. [55:58.160 --> 55:59.160] Now we're going to go to Joel in Ohio. [55:59.160 --> 56:00.160] Joel, I understand you are a first-time caller. [56:00.160 --> 56:01.160] Yes, sir. [56:01.160 --> 56:02.160] What do you have for us today? [56:02.160 --> 56:25.160] I have an incident with a hospital, can you hear me? [56:25.160 --> 56:29.800] Okay, what was the incident? [56:29.800 --> 56:39.880] I had to go into the emergency room and I got the bill after the fact. [56:39.880 --> 56:52.000] I did the right thing, everything I was supposed to do, and this hospital has done wrong to [56:52.000 --> 56:57.400] me before and gotten me to pay a bill I wasn't responsible for. [56:57.400 --> 57:03.360] So this time I learned and made a record of it. [57:03.360 --> 57:10.040] So I tried to do a payment plan with them through their email service. [57:10.040 --> 57:18.000] They never responded to the email and I kept waiting, knowing I had the window to wait, [57:18.000 --> 57:21.880] and they ended up sending it to their collections agency. [57:21.880 --> 57:25.640] Oh, good. [57:25.640 --> 57:28.920] Collection agencies are a low-hanging fruit. [57:28.920 --> 57:31.760] Have you filed a dispute letter? [57:31.760 --> 57:32.760] I did. [57:32.760 --> 57:37.640] I sent a certified mail with receipt. [57:37.640 --> 57:44.680] Did you check to see if they had pulled this from your credit reports? [57:44.680 --> 57:48.880] Well, that's where it gets more interesting. [57:48.880 --> 57:55.400] They are a tax-exempt non-profit hospital, I don't know if you're aware of this yet. [57:55.400 --> 58:00.400] Maybe they are, but the collection agency is not. [58:00.400 --> 58:01.400] Right. [58:01.400 --> 58:02.400] Wait. [58:02.400 --> 58:06.840] Go ahead. [58:06.840 --> 58:16.240] My point with that is their policy structure is based off the tax-exempt rules from the [58:16.240 --> 58:17.740] IRS. [58:17.740 --> 58:20.840] They haven't sold it. [58:20.840 --> 58:26.480] The collection agency said they haven't sold it to them yet, but this is a long story, [58:26.480 --> 58:30.640] and I hope I have enough time to explain it all. [58:30.640 --> 58:34.640] You're not going to on this show, this is just to our show. [58:34.640 --> 58:39.240] What I suggest you do is construct a timeline, and when we come back on the other side I'll [58:39.240 --> 58:40.640] explain what that is. [58:40.640 --> 58:44.320] It'll be the most important tool you can have. [58:44.320 --> 58:50.480] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [58:50.480 --> 58:55.920] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.920 --> 58:58.720] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.720 --> 59:04.120] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:04.120 --> 59:07.360] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.360 --> 59:09.120] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.120 --> 59:15.060] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:15.060 --> 59:18.800] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.800 --> 59:24.000] Open profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into [59:24.000 --> 59:28.480] the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.480 --> 59:33.640] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.640 --> 59:44.080] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:44.080 --> 59:48.160] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.160 --> 01:00:02.600] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.600 --> 01:00:06.280] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:06.280 --> 01:00:09.720] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.720 --> 01:00:11.160] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.160 --> 01:00:15.100] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:00:15.100 --> 01:00:17.960] one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.960 --> 01:00:19.560] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.560 --> 01:00:23.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [01:00:23.960 --> 01:00:27.960] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:00:27.960 --> 01:00:32.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.960 --> 01:00:35.720] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.720 --> 01:00:40.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search [01:00:40.000 --> 01:00:43.540] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.540 --> 01:00:47.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:47.000 --> 01:00:50.920] When your mom and dad are getting ready for bed, they pull back the covers and find a [01:00:50.920 --> 01:00:52.400] third party there. [01:00:52.400 --> 01:00:55.600] He announces, I went to military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.600 --> 01:00:59.760] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment [01:00:59.760 --> 01:01:01.360] was designed to prevent. [01:01:01.360 --> 01:01:05.560] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in [01:01:05.560 --> 01:01:07.680] the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:07.680 --> 01:01:09.680] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:09.680 --> 01:01:13.840] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them [01:01:13.840 --> 01:01:17.480] to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.480 --> 01:01:19.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:01:19.160 --> 01:01:32.360] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.360 --> 01:01:36.040] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:36.040 --> 01:01:39.480] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.480 --> 01:01:40.920] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.920 --> 01:01:44.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:01:44.840 --> 01:01:47.800] one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.800 --> 01:01:49.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.400 --> 01:01:53.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:53.000 --> 01:01:57.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:01:57.760 --> 01:02:02.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.800 --> 01:02:05.540] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.540 --> 01:02:09.820] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:02:09.820 --> 01:02:13.360] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.360 --> 01:02:17.040] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:17.040 --> 01:02:22.000] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.000 --> 01:02:26.900] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable [01:02:26.900 --> 01:02:28.400] search and seizure. [01:02:28.400 --> 01:02:30.760] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you? [01:02:30.760 --> 01:02:31.760] Get it? [01:02:31.760 --> 01:02:35.360] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of [01:02:35.360 --> 01:02:40.400] privacy, case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.400 --> 01:02:44.440] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say [01:02:44.440 --> 01:02:46.960] it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.960 --> 01:02:51.520] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly [01:02:51.520 --> 01:02:53.760] eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.760 --> 01:02:55.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.600 --> 01:03:05.920] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:05.920 --> 01:03:33.920] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La La Radio, and we're talking to Joel [01:03:33.920 --> 01:03:34.920] in Ohio. [01:03:34.920 --> 01:03:41.160] Okay, Joel, what knowledge or background do you have in debt collection? [01:03:41.160 --> 01:03:46.000] Well, that's what I wish I would have started with. [01:03:46.000 --> 01:03:47.800] I wish I would have started with thanking you guys. [01:03:47.800 --> 01:03:54.680] I'm very rookie level with all this. [01:03:54.680 --> 01:03:57.560] I have only been listening to you guys for maybe a year. [01:03:57.560 --> 01:04:01.120] I got jurisdictionary less than a year ago. [01:04:01.120 --> 01:04:02.680] I wish I would have found you a long time ago. [01:04:02.680 --> 01:04:05.840] You would have saved me a lot of headaches, and I thank you guys so much for what you're [01:04:05.840 --> 01:04:06.840] doing. [01:04:06.840 --> 01:04:17.240] Well, the trick is to not getting headaches is you need to become a carrier. [01:04:17.240 --> 01:04:18.240] Okay. [01:04:18.240 --> 01:04:19.240] Ta-da. [01:04:19.240 --> 01:04:20.240] Oh, well. [01:04:20.240 --> 01:04:28.440] Sometimes it works, sometimes it don't, but okay. [01:04:28.440 --> 01:04:39.680] So they have a collection agency, and the collection agency, is it employed by the hospital [01:04:39.680 --> 01:04:43.880] or have they sold the debt to the collection agency? [01:04:43.880 --> 01:04:50.800] That's a great question, and they're in the gray area, I guess is the best way to explain [01:04:50.800 --> 01:04:51.800] it. [01:04:51.800 --> 01:05:00.680] They're a separate collection agency working through a building that the hospital owns, [01:05:00.680 --> 01:05:04.120] and they're claiming that they're two separate entities. [01:05:04.120 --> 01:05:10.200] Let me explain to everybody else why I ask that question that way. [01:05:10.200 --> 01:05:18.720] If someone owes me a debt, I can try to collect that myself, or I can hire someone to try [01:05:18.720 --> 01:05:25.280] to collect that for me, or I can sell the debt to someone else. [01:05:25.280 --> 01:05:30.120] So they buy it from me, and then I don't have anything else to do with it. [01:05:30.120 --> 01:05:38.080] The consumer protection laws for debt collectors will not apply if I have hired a company to [01:05:38.080 --> 01:05:40.800] collect for me. [01:05:40.800 --> 01:05:46.560] They only apply to a company that has purchased the debt. [01:05:46.560 --> 01:05:49.560] That's why that's an important question. [01:05:49.560 --> 01:05:54.440] But even so, collecting the debt is extremely difficult. [01:05:54.440 --> 01:05:57.880] I got a curveball for you. [01:05:57.880 --> 01:05:58.880] Go ahead. [01:05:58.880 --> 01:06:01.880] It's not delinquent. [01:06:01.880 --> 01:06:10.760] Okay, hold on, wait a minute, that's your cursor. [01:06:10.760 --> 01:06:13.800] How is it not delinquent? [01:06:13.800 --> 01:06:22.240] They have an option, I tried to settle a payment plan with them. [01:06:22.240 --> 01:06:28.160] I had all intentions to pay the bill through a payment plan, and they gave the option in [01:06:28.160 --> 01:06:32.200] their policy to either call them or email them. [01:06:32.200 --> 01:06:38.400] I emailed them and said, I can't pay it in full, I need to set up a payment plan. [01:06:38.400 --> 01:06:39.400] They never responded. [01:06:39.400 --> 01:06:43.920] Are they required to offer a payment plan? [01:06:43.920 --> 01:06:45.400] Yes. [01:06:45.400 --> 01:06:51.680] Then great opportunity to file suit. [01:06:51.680 --> 01:06:55.400] I have them on so many different things, I don't know where to start. [01:06:55.400 --> 01:07:04.480] I got them on the contract, I got them on- Okay, hold on, hold on, I know where to start. [01:07:04.480 --> 01:07:11.680] Go back to the beginning, go back to when you first sought out their services and create [01:07:11.680 --> 01:07:12.680] a timeline. [01:07:12.680 --> 01:07:17.480] The timeline is not a statement of facts. [01:07:17.480 --> 01:07:19.720] On this day, I went to the hospital. [01:07:19.720 --> 01:07:24.160] On this day, they did this thing, this thing, this thing. [01:07:24.160 --> 01:07:32.840] Just what happened when it happened, very briefly, this is a mnemonic tool. [01:07:32.840 --> 01:07:38.480] It's designed to put everything that happened in chronological order. [01:07:38.480 --> 01:07:40.600] You go down through this timeline and fill it out. [01:07:40.600 --> 01:07:45.720] You won't get everything in there because of the way memory works. [01:07:45.720 --> 01:07:48.600] We tend to move our memory around. [01:07:48.600 --> 01:07:57.420] We used to think that the way we did memories, we went in the mine and read memory and then [01:07:57.420 --> 01:07:58.420] spoke it out. [01:07:58.420 --> 01:08:03.560] That's not the way it works, turns out, that we actually go in and take the memory out. [01:08:03.560 --> 01:08:07.240] We experience the memory and the telling and put back the re-experience. [01:08:07.240 --> 01:08:13.240] That explains why people get things out of context and out of place chronologically. [01:08:13.240 --> 01:08:18.680] Things get all mixed up, so build a timeline. [01:08:18.680 --> 01:08:23.720] Don't worry about getting everything, just start from the front and go to the back. [01:08:23.720 --> 01:08:26.520] Once you get to the end, come back and go down it again. [01:08:26.520 --> 01:08:30.240] You'll read this happened and this happened, you'll say, wait a minute, wait a minute, [01:08:30.240 --> 01:08:31.240] wait a minute. [01:08:31.240 --> 01:08:33.280] Something else happened in between there. [01:08:33.280 --> 01:08:41.200] When I get people's cases and they tell me what happened, they always leave out stuff. [01:08:41.200 --> 01:08:46.480] The major reason they leave out stuff is they don't know it's important. [01:08:46.480 --> 01:08:53.320] I look at it and I'm generally looking for things that they don't know to look for. [01:08:53.320 --> 01:08:55.520] They don't know matters. [01:08:55.520 --> 01:08:59.280] They'll only tell you what they think matters. [01:08:59.280 --> 01:09:04.040] You will only tell yourself what you think matters, so build a timeline. [01:09:04.040 --> 01:09:10.960] Once you have that built, then everything else will flow from that timeline and you [01:09:10.960 --> 01:09:16.120] will find more claims against them than you can get to. [01:09:16.120 --> 01:09:23.160] The difficulty is not finding claims, but sorting out the claims that you want to take [01:09:23.160 --> 01:09:33.200] on and what we do is we go through the whole timeline and then we look down at it and list [01:09:33.200 --> 01:09:42.560] out all of the claims that can be extracted from this timeline, then we build a story. [01:09:42.560 --> 01:09:46.600] It's not enough just to throw facts at a jury. [01:09:46.600 --> 01:09:50.120] You need to throw a story at them. [01:09:50.120 --> 01:09:54.480] They didn't just haphazardly do all these wrong things. [01:09:54.480 --> 01:09:57.080] They did this on purpose. [01:09:57.080 --> 01:10:01.920] They had this plan, this strategy, and they were running this strategy on me to steal [01:10:01.920 --> 01:10:03.600] all my money. [01:10:03.600 --> 01:10:04.600] Evil intent. [01:10:04.600 --> 01:10:05.600] Yeah. [01:10:05.600 --> 01:10:06.600] Mids raya. [01:10:06.600 --> 01:10:07.600] Mm-hmm. [01:10:07.600 --> 01:10:17.160] Then we go back and pull out those claims that fit our story. [01:10:17.160 --> 01:10:22.920] Now once we have those, now we turn them into causes of action. [01:10:22.920 --> 01:10:29.320] Each step we take grows from the one before it. [01:10:29.320 --> 01:10:38.400] Once we have all of the claims in place, then we turn that into causes of action and then [01:10:38.400 --> 01:10:42.960] the last thing we do is a statement of facts. [01:10:42.960 --> 01:10:46.780] Statement of facts is an art form. [01:10:46.780 --> 01:10:53.560] What you want to do is figure out the story you're going to tell that makes all of these [01:10:53.560 --> 01:10:56.160] pieces fit together. [01:10:56.160 --> 01:11:02.360] Then you go in and pull facts out that goes to each step in the story. [01:11:02.360 --> 01:11:07.040] You build a statement of facts that way. [01:11:07.040 --> 01:11:11.240] Then you build an introduction. [01:11:11.240 --> 01:11:14.640] This is what I'm going to prove. [01:11:14.640 --> 01:11:17.760] You tell the reader that. [01:11:17.760 --> 01:11:22.440] Then you go to the statement of facts and the reader, you've told them what you're [01:11:22.440 --> 01:11:25.520] going to try to prove. [01:11:25.520 --> 01:11:31.920] Then when they start reading these facts, the reader will try to put those facts together [01:11:31.920 --> 01:11:39.560] in a way that leads to the claims that you're making. [01:11:39.560 --> 01:11:43.440] Do the facts fit what he's going to try to prove? [01:11:43.440 --> 01:11:51.520] You've calmed your reader into considering the facts from the perspective that you want [01:11:51.520 --> 01:11:54.400] them to. [01:11:54.400 --> 01:12:00.720] Then when they go through your points and authorities, after the facts, you put together [01:12:00.720 --> 01:12:03.040] a statement of fact and law. [01:12:03.040 --> 01:12:05.840] You add law to the facts. [01:12:05.840 --> 01:12:06.840] Here's the fact. [01:12:06.840 --> 01:12:11.200] Here's the law that shows why this fact matters. [01:12:11.200 --> 01:12:15.360] They've read the facts and they've made their own determinations. [01:12:15.360 --> 01:12:21.160] When they read your arguments in support, where you add the law in support of your claims, [01:12:21.160 --> 01:12:27.680] then you will tend to have rapport with them. [01:12:27.680 --> 01:12:40.840] If you give them facts and law to confirm the determinations they came to, then they're [01:12:40.840 --> 01:12:45.480] much more likely to accept what you're doing. [01:12:45.480 --> 01:12:53.560] What's hard to see from the outside is each step you make adds to the next step that comes. [01:12:53.560 --> 01:12:59.600] You take the next step and you just add a little more on top of the one before. [01:12:59.600 --> 01:13:08.200] The timeline, you put your story you're going to write on top of the timeline. [01:13:08.200 --> 01:13:12.800] You use the timeline, I'm sorry, before you do that, you sort out your timeline. [01:13:12.800 --> 01:13:20.960] Once you get it all sorted out, you build your story on top of that and then you take [01:13:20.960 --> 01:13:26.920] your story and turn it into an argument in support. [01:13:26.920 --> 01:13:33.320] Name the facts, find the law that supports the facts, and as you find the law, sometimes [01:13:33.320 --> 01:13:37.400] it will negate one of your facts, so you have to go back and adjust it. [01:13:37.400 --> 01:13:41.560] Then once you have that, then you build a set of facts from what you got before it. [01:13:41.560 --> 01:13:48.640] Then when you file it and the court rules against you, you take that and you ask for [01:13:48.640 --> 01:13:53.320] findings of fact and conclusions of law, they give you that. [01:13:53.320 --> 01:14:00.000] Then you take their findings of fact and conclusions of law and your argument in support, you combine [01:14:00.000 --> 01:14:05.360] the two together, that takes you to the next step to appeal. [01:14:05.360 --> 01:14:10.080] Makes every step much easier, and when you do this to the lawyers on the other side, [01:14:10.080 --> 01:14:12.560] it will make them nuts. [01:14:12.560 --> 01:14:20.400] So I haven't found a lawyer yet who has the ability to organize his suit well, and we'll [01:14:20.400 --> 01:14:29.880] show you some other tricks to make your documents much easier to craft and to read. [01:14:29.880 --> 01:14:34.800] The whole point of this is not to win in the end, Joel. [01:14:34.800 --> 01:14:38.480] You've probably heard us say you'll never win your case simply because you have the [01:14:38.480 --> 01:14:41.880] facts and the law on your side. [01:14:41.880 --> 01:14:46.480] You win your case if you have the politics on your side, so what you want to do is cost [01:14:46.480 --> 01:14:55.840] the lawyers on the other side as much money as possible till the calculation becomes unsupportable. [01:14:55.840 --> 01:14:59.680] This guy's going to cost us more than we can save. [01:14:59.680 --> 01:15:06.760] We'd be better off just making a deal and dropping all this and go home and leave him [01:15:06.760 --> 01:15:07.760] alone. [01:15:07.760 --> 01:15:10.280] Does that make sense, Joel? [01:15:10.280 --> 01:15:17.120] Everything you said is exactly what I hoped you would say and what I thought you would [01:15:17.120 --> 01:15:18.120] say. [01:15:18.120 --> 01:15:20.320] I'm a quick learner. [01:15:20.320 --> 01:15:21.760] I already have the timeline. [01:15:21.760 --> 01:15:26.320] I already documented everything they've been doing from the get-go. [01:15:26.320 --> 01:15:32.200] I even have... I know I can't use it in court, but I recorded all the conversations I had. [01:15:32.200 --> 01:15:33.880] I called the collection agency. [01:15:33.880 --> 01:15:36.880] I got them to admit to what they did wrong. [01:15:36.880 --> 01:15:42.520] I even have the hospital admitting that they did get my email and never seen it, never [01:15:42.520 --> 01:15:47.780] responded to it, and went ahead and sent it to collections anyway. [01:15:47.780 --> 01:15:53.440] They called me back and said that there's nothing they can do. [01:15:53.440 --> 01:15:59.640] I'm just screwed and I just have to deal with the collection agency now. [01:15:59.640 --> 01:16:00.960] I've done everything right. [01:16:00.960 --> 01:16:02.400] I've documented all of it. [01:16:02.400 --> 01:16:09.440] I've let them paint themselves into a corner and take as much rope as they wanted to take. [01:16:09.440 --> 01:16:15.680] All I'm trying to figure out now is I have too many things to hit them on, and I don't [01:16:15.680 --> 01:16:19.640] know what the best ones are, and I don't want to get greedy. [01:16:19.640 --> 01:16:20.640] Get greedy. [01:16:20.640 --> 01:16:21.640] Get greedy. [01:16:21.640 --> 01:16:22.640] That's the point. [01:16:22.640 --> 01:16:23.640] Yeah. [01:16:23.640 --> 01:16:33.640] Throw everything you can at them, but you need to make up a story that makes it all [01:16:33.640 --> 01:16:36.200] make sense. [01:16:36.200 --> 01:16:41.400] Make up a story that fits everything together, and then write your facts and law in a way [01:16:41.400 --> 01:16:48.800] that'll cause the reader to create that story in the background, but at the end of the day, [01:16:48.800 --> 01:16:53.120] you just want to cost them a lot of money, get them to come to the table, and the collection [01:16:53.120 --> 01:16:55.560] agency is a low-hanging fruit. [01:16:55.560 --> 01:17:01.200] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:17:01.200 --> 01:17:05.600] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [01:17:05.600 --> 01:17:06.600] Word? [01:17:06.600 --> 01:17:11.720] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [01:17:11.720 --> 01:17:17.000] Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.000 --> 01:17:22.640] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needed not to be ashamed, rightly [01:17:22.640 --> 01:17:25.080] dividing the word of truth. [01:17:25.080 --> 01:17:29.040] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse [01:17:29.040 --> 01:17:32.360] by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:32.360 --> 01:17:37.000] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:17:37.000 --> 01:17:39.360] and Christian character development. [01:17:39.360 --> 01:17:43.880] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.880 --> 01:17:48.240] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [01:17:48.240 --> 01:17:49.920] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:49.920 --> 01:17:57.120] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com, Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [01:17:57.120 --> 01:18:00.840] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [01:18:00.840 --> 01:18:05.440] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.440 --> 01:18:09.680] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:18:09.680 --> 01:18:14.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:18:14.000 --> 01:18:15.000] can win too. [01:18:15.000 --> 01:18:19.800] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:18:19.800 --> 01:18:25.560] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:18:25.560 --> 01:18:30.240] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn your [01:18:30.240 --> 01:18:34.400] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:34.400 --> 01:18:39.520] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:39.520 --> 01:18:41.440] Financial consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.440 --> 01:18:47.200] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:18:47.200 --> 01:18:50.160] or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [01:18:50.160 --> 01:18:59.160] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [01:18:59.160 --> 01:19:02.160] collectors now. [01:19:02.160 --> 01:19:10.160] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:20:02.160 --> 01:20:30.880] Okay, we are back. [01:20:30.880 --> 01:20:39.240] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, RuleOfLawRadio, and Joel, you're the reason we do this show. [01:20:39.240 --> 01:20:45.120] Everything about this show is to bring people to your position. [01:20:45.120 --> 01:20:49.120] We get people calling in that are absolutely devastating. [01:20:49.120 --> 01:20:50.520] The sky is falling in on them. [01:20:50.520 --> 01:20:53.040] They have no idea what to do. [01:20:53.040 --> 01:20:58.600] Charles from Georgia before you, he's no chump. [01:20:58.600 --> 01:21:01.960] He's been calling in for years. [01:21:01.960 --> 01:21:06.600] Georgia was going after him over something and he fought him like a tiger and finally [01:21:06.600 --> 01:21:09.600] beat him. [01:21:09.600 --> 01:21:10.600] He was a trucker. [01:21:10.600 --> 01:21:16.960] They gave him some kind of major traffic ticket and he fought him for several years and finally [01:21:16.960 --> 01:21:18.920] beat him. [01:21:18.920 --> 01:21:19.920] This is why we do this show. [01:21:19.920 --> 01:21:28.080] We want to take the guy that doesn't know anything and give him some underlying tools, [01:21:28.080 --> 01:21:31.480] the most basic underlying tools. [01:21:31.480 --> 01:21:35.440] What you said, you got jurisdiction here and you went through that. [01:21:35.440 --> 01:21:40.280] That tells us a whole lot. [01:21:40.280 --> 01:21:43.400] Everything I asked you, you had already done it. [01:21:43.400 --> 01:21:47.480] That's what I get from people who've been through jurisdiction here. [01:21:47.480 --> 01:21:54.920] If you're out there and you have issues that you don't know how to handle, first thing [01:21:54.920 --> 01:21:57.520] get jurisdiction here. [01:21:57.520 --> 01:22:02.800] Lawyers go to law school and they teach lawyers how to argue legal issues. [01:22:02.800 --> 01:22:07.200] What they don't teach them is how to practice law. [01:22:07.200 --> 01:22:11.840] Lawyers don't learn that until they get out in the field. [01:22:11.840 --> 01:22:18.520] They don't learn how to file motions with the court, how to get them put on for hearing, [01:22:18.520 --> 01:22:23.520] how to deal with this particular judge and what he'll put up with, what he won't put [01:22:23.520 --> 01:22:26.240] up with. [01:22:26.240 --> 01:22:33.520] There's just a whole mass of information they don't get in law school. [01:22:33.520 --> 01:22:37.720] It's all in jurisdictionary. [01:22:37.720 --> 01:22:40.560] Jurisdictionary is not the theory of law. [01:22:40.560 --> 01:22:42.920] This is how you get it done. [01:22:42.920 --> 01:22:50.440] When I get someone that's been through jurisdictionary, we get to have a whole different conversation. [01:22:50.440 --> 01:22:55.640] I've spoken to this just recently about someone in Michigan the same way. [01:22:55.640 --> 01:22:59.280] I'm sorry, someone in Wisconsin the same way. [01:22:59.280 --> 01:23:00.280] He told me what was going on. [01:23:00.280 --> 01:23:03.600] I said, well, you need to file a petition for real mandamus. [01:23:03.600 --> 01:23:04.600] He said, I did that. [01:23:04.600 --> 01:23:05.600] I had another point. [01:23:05.600 --> 01:23:06.600] I said, well, you ought to file a habeas corpus. [01:23:06.600 --> 01:23:07.600] I did that. [01:23:07.600 --> 01:23:10.920] I said, have you been through a jurisdictionary? [01:23:10.920 --> 01:23:15.680] Oh, yeah, I've been through a jurisdictionary. [01:23:15.680 --> 01:23:18.320] To better understand what we're doing, that's the first thing to do. [01:23:18.320 --> 01:23:19.320] It's like 250 bucks. [01:23:19.320 --> 01:23:26.040] You can go on either Logos Radio Network or Root of Law Radio Network and you'll find [01:23:26.040 --> 01:23:28.440] a link to it. [01:23:28.440 --> 01:23:33.720] It is absolutely the best thing you can do. [01:23:33.720 --> 01:23:42.360] You go through that and you will have an internal understanding of how this system works. [01:23:42.360 --> 01:23:45.280] It doesn't matter what your case is. [01:23:45.280 --> 01:23:52.800] Underlying your case, there are structures in the legal system that you will always use. [01:23:52.800 --> 01:23:57.240] Once you've got that down, now you've got the hard part. [01:23:57.240 --> 01:24:02.440] Then you can go on to the more sophisticated issues like here. [01:24:02.440 --> 01:24:08.040] Joel, you'll never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side [01:24:08.040 --> 01:24:12.200] to think so is naive. [01:24:12.200 --> 01:24:17.440] That really don't make sense to anybody until they've been through the system, see how it [01:24:17.440 --> 01:24:21.840] works and kind of understands the structure. [01:24:21.840 --> 01:24:27.680] While we do everything we can to win the case, we don't expect to in the end. [01:24:27.680 --> 01:24:31.360] That's not how it's done in the real world. [01:24:31.360 --> 01:24:37.040] You don't win your case at the U.S. Supreme. [01:24:37.040 --> 01:24:39.600] You win your case at the negotiating table. [01:24:39.600 --> 01:24:44.320] What Joel's doing now is playing poker. [01:24:44.320 --> 01:24:47.360] Joel's laying out his best hand. [01:24:47.360 --> 01:24:53.440] Actually, you're still setting up your best hand. [01:24:53.440 --> 01:24:57.000] Here we give them opportunities to screw up. [01:24:57.000 --> 01:25:05.080] Joel, what are you doing to give them opportunities to screw up besides recording every one of [01:25:05.080 --> 01:25:06.080] their conversations? [01:25:06.080 --> 01:25:08.920] Oh, and you said you couldn't use that? [01:25:08.920 --> 01:25:10.480] Yes, you can. [01:25:10.480 --> 01:25:11.480] I can. [01:25:11.480 --> 01:25:12.480] Oh, yeah. [01:25:12.480 --> 01:25:16.240] This is how you use a recording. [01:25:16.240 --> 01:25:20.280] You play it directly, but you can. [01:25:20.280 --> 01:25:27.640] Play it into your phone as a message and your phone will convert it to text and then turn [01:25:27.640 --> 01:25:36.520] it into a transcript, turn it into an affidavit and sign it before a notary. [01:25:36.520 --> 01:25:40.160] I sat in court one day and they're asking me questions about something that happened [01:25:40.160 --> 01:25:46.880] ten years earlier and I'm telling them it was about a negotiation between me and someone [01:25:46.880 --> 01:25:48.600] I bought a business from. [01:25:48.600 --> 01:25:55.000] I'm telling them exactly what he said, but he's dead, so he can't testify to that. [01:25:55.000 --> 01:25:58.440] I'm telling them exactly what happened ten years ago. [01:25:58.440 --> 01:26:03.520] The lawyer finally got frustrated and said, Mr. Kelton, you must have a very good memory. [01:26:03.520 --> 01:26:04.520] Oh, no, no. [01:26:04.520 --> 01:26:06.520] I have a horrible memory. [01:26:06.520 --> 01:26:09.480] The judge ducked his head, put his head in his hand. [01:26:09.480 --> 01:26:10.640] I could see him up there. [01:26:10.640 --> 01:26:13.680] I'm on the witness stand shaking his head. [01:26:13.680 --> 01:26:15.880] No, no, counselor, stop. [01:26:15.880 --> 01:26:18.440] Don't go any further. [01:26:18.440 --> 01:26:20.280] The counselor was on a roll. [01:26:20.280 --> 01:26:24.920] Well, Mr. Kelton, if you have such a horrible memory, how do you remember that's exactly [01:26:24.920 --> 01:26:25.920] what happened? [01:26:25.920 --> 01:26:29.640] Oh, well, I took it from the transcript. [01:26:29.640 --> 01:26:30.640] What transcript? [01:26:30.640 --> 01:26:33.680] Oh, the transcript of the recording I made. [01:26:33.680 --> 01:26:35.160] Objection, objection. [01:26:35.160 --> 01:26:40.400] No, counselor, you opened the door. [01:26:40.400 --> 01:26:45.840] Mr. Kelton gets to walk through it, sucker. [01:26:45.840 --> 01:26:50.760] That's how you use your recordings. [01:26:50.760 --> 01:26:57.320] They're never going to want to hear that recording, so you turn it into an affidavit and file [01:26:57.320 --> 01:27:00.320] it in the record. [01:27:00.320 --> 01:27:04.760] Does that make sense? [01:27:04.760 --> 01:27:06.400] I've listened to a bunch of... [01:27:06.400 --> 01:27:08.480] I've been trying to catch up with you guys. [01:27:08.480 --> 01:27:09.960] You guys put so much stuff out there. [01:27:09.960 --> 01:27:16.040] I've been listening to all your old stuff, and I'm trying to catch up on everything and [01:27:16.040 --> 01:27:18.840] teach myself. [01:27:18.840 --> 01:27:29.600] I wasn't aware that I could do that, but now that I know that, they have zero response [01:27:29.600 --> 01:27:35.320] to any of this then, because I got them to admit to everything on a recording multiple [01:27:35.320 --> 01:27:40.640] times and... [01:27:40.640 --> 01:27:41.920] That's great. [01:27:41.920 --> 01:27:49.880] You turn each one of those into an affidavit, and they are screwed. [01:27:49.880 --> 01:27:58.720] But you have to, in order to introduce the affidavit, you have to establish foundation, [01:27:58.720 --> 01:28:01.100] and that's easy enough. [01:28:01.100 --> 01:28:09.280] You can testify, on this day, I made a call for this reason and talked to this person, [01:28:09.280 --> 01:28:17.880] and this is what was said, and then you see affidavit or attachment A, and you put everything [01:28:17.880 --> 01:28:21.320] that was said in that affidavit. [01:28:21.320 --> 01:28:27.720] Now you've established foundation for it. [01:28:27.720 --> 01:28:31.080] That really wasn't for you, because if you've been through jurisdiction here and all that, [01:28:31.080 --> 01:28:33.080] you already know that. [01:28:33.080 --> 01:28:40.320] I'm talking to everybody else, but that'll get you everything on the record, and then [01:28:40.320 --> 01:28:46.840] every time the lawyer tries to talk to you, Brett, this is Brett's stroke of genius, and [01:28:46.840 --> 01:28:49.640] I have to chuckle every time I think of it. [01:28:49.640 --> 01:28:56.600] Brett, if you're not represented by counsel, and they are, how do you handle counsel? [01:28:56.600 --> 01:29:01.480] Counsel comes to me trying to act like they belong in the middle of it, and I just tell [01:29:01.480 --> 01:29:03.000] them, I don't recognize you. [01:29:03.000 --> 01:29:04.000] Who are you? [01:29:04.000 --> 01:29:05.000] Never mind. [01:29:05.000 --> 01:29:06.000] Don't tell me. [01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:07.000] I don't care. [01:29:07.000 --> 01:29:08.000] Go away. [01:29:08.000 --> 01:29:09.000] Shoo. [01:29:09.000 --> 01:29:13.520] And they want to do this huffy-puffy that you can't talk to the client. [01:29:13.520 --> 01:29:16.520] I've got Mary Krennic in Austin. [01:29:16.520 --> 01:29:22.080] She sued a company she worked for, and the lawyer told her that if she tried to talk [01:29:22.080 --> 01:29:27.280] to the client again, he would move the judge to issue sanctions against her. [01:29:27.280 --> 01:29:39.400] Well, I'm not in a contract, the lawyer's in a contract with the defendant or the opposing [01:29:39.400 --> 01:29:47.320] party, and generally both sides have lawyers, and both of them have a contract with their [01:29:47.320 --> 01:29:52.800] lawyer, and there's a covenant in the contract wherein they agree not to talk to the other [01:29:52.800 --> 01:29:53.800] litigant. [01:29:53.800 --> 01:30:03.480] But Mary didn't sign one of those agreements. [01:30:03.480 --> 01:30:09.040] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps [01:30:09.040 --> 01:30:13.080] on growing, but now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.080 --> 01:30:14.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:14.480 --> 01:30:17.240] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:17.240 --> 01:30:19.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.000 --> 01:30:22.600] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.600 --> 01:30:27.560] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:30:27.560 --> 01:30:32.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.680 --> 01:30:35.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.360 --> 01:30:40.920] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:40.920 --> 01:30:42.680] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.680 --> 01:30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.000 --> 01:30:48.920] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.920 --> 01:30:53.880] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, but think again. [01:30:53.880 --> 01:30:56.440] All that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.440 --> 01:31:01.420] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:31:01.420 --> 01:31:05.000] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:05.000 --> 01:31:08.920] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter [01:31:08.920 --> 01:31:11.240] in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:11.240 --> 01:31:16.360] It's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.360 --> 01:31:18.360] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.360 --> 01:31:21.760] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.760 --> 01:31:31.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.560 --> 01:31:36.920] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.920 --> 01:31:39.160] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.160 --> 01:31:44.000] Over 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.000 --> 01:31:46.680] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.680 --> 01:31:49.440] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.440 --> 01:31:50.920] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.920 --> 01:31:51.920] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.920 --> 01:31:53.280] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.280 --> 01:31:54.280] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.280 --> 01:31:55.920] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:55.920 --> 01:31:58.560] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.560 --> 01:32:00.520] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.520 --> 01:32:06.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:06.000 --> 01:32:09.800] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [01:32:09.800 --> 01:32:13.760] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.760 --> 01:32:16.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:16.960 --> 01:32:21.000] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:21.000 --> 01:32:24.840] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.840 --> 01:32:26.240] our rights through due process. [01:32:26.240 --> 01:32:30.200] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:30.200 --> 01:32:33.960] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:33.960 --> 01:32:36.320] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.320 --> 01:32:40.320] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:32:40.320 --> 01:32:41.680] ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.680 --> 01:32:45.040] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:45.040 --> 01:32:49.440] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [01:32:49.440 --> 01:32:51.360] documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.360 --> 01:32:55.720] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.720 --> 01:33:01.120] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.120 --> 01:33:08.120] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:31.120 --> 01:33:43.560] Okay, we were back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we were having a real [01:33:43.560 --> 01:33:50.680] chuckle over the break, talking about how Brett handles lawyers. [01:33:50.680 --> 01:33:59.720] Brett, you explained, I mentioned Hugh, but you explained Hugh and why I think that's [01:33:59.720 --> 01:34:01.640] so funny. [01:34:01.640 --> 01:34:07.080] Yeah, you said that that's just something that's really irreverent. [01:34:07.080 --> 01:34:15.240] I don't know why you think that that's a special ability of mine to be irreverent in that way. [01:34:15.240 --> 01:34:18.480] I only do that for lawyers that really deserve it. [01:34:18.480 --> 01:34:23.520] I don't treat everybody that way, but they have a special place. [01:34:23.520 --> 01:34:28.720] They come button in where they don't belong, and they offer their... I tell them, if that's [01:34:28.720 --> 01:34:33.840] the client, I hired you to give them your bad legal advice. [01:34:33.840 --> 01:34:34.840] Go give it to them. [01:34:34.840 --> 01:34:49.600] I don't want it, and it sets them up for responding back to me, I don't want... I tell them, [01:34:49.600 --> 01:34:50.600] leave me alone. [01:34:50.600 --> 01:34:54.440] Stop bothering me, and they feel the need. [01:34:54.440 --> 01:34:55.920] They can't help themselves. [01:34:55.920 --> 01:35:03.520] They've got to hit reply, and then they explain to me how important they are, and they've [01:35:03.520 --> 01:35:10.520] been hired to represent something, something, blah, blah, and what they don't realize is [01:35:10.520 --> 01:35:15.920] that by hitting reply, they just stepped in it, because I told them to stop bothering [01:35:15.920 --> 01:35:16.920] me. [01:35:16.920 --> 01:35:17.920] I told them, leave me alone. [01:35:17.920 --> 01:35:25.040] I don't want to hear from you, and now by contacting me again, they're actually committing [01:35:25.040 --> 01:35:28.280] a crime of harassment. [01:35:28.280 --> 01:35:36.040] That's Texas Penal Code 4207, and they're harassing, they're annoying, irritating me, [01:35:36.040 --> 01:35:39.400] and so I'll tell them, hey, you just made my phone ring again for no good reason. [01:35:39.400 --> 01:35:40.400] You're just annoying me. [01:35:40.400 --> 01:35:43.680] I told you, leave me alone. [01:35:43.680 --> 01:35:46.440] They'll find out about it from the criminal complaint. [01:35:46.440 --> 01:35:53.800] Okay, Joel, did that give you any good ideas? [01:35:53.800 --> 01:35:57.520] It gave me more good ideas, but hey, like I said, I'm a quick learner. [01:35:57.520 --> 01:36:03.960] I listen to everything you guys do and use my imagination, and I want to apologize. [01:36:03.960 --> 01:36:05.960] Did I just run you off the cliff? [01:36:05.960 --> 01:36:14.840] Yes, you did, and we blamed you for it, too, but Debra doesn't buy that story. [01:36:14.840 --> 01:36:17.760] She always blames me. [01:36:17.760 --> 01:36:21.640] I take full credit. [01:36:21.640 --> 01:36:24.400] That's because you hadn't had Debra after you yet. [01:36:24.400 --> 01:36:25.400] Yeah. [01:36:25.400 --> 01:36:28.720] I don't want to let other people on. [01:36:28.720 --> 01:36:33.640] Can I just ask you a couple more things, and then I'll get off here? [01:36:33.640 --> 01:36:34.640] Yeah. [01:36:34.640 --> 01:36:35.640] Okay. [01:36:35.640 --> 01:36:39.560] Well, first of all, I can't say thanks enough. [01:36:39.560 --> 01:36:44.600] Any new listeners listening to this, these guys are no joke. [01:36:44.600 --> 01:36:48.640] I'm on you guys' Telegram channels, too. [01:36:48.640 --> 01:36:53.120] If I didn't find you guys, I wouldn't know how to handle any of this stuff. [01:36:53.120 --> 01:36:56.280] I wouldn't even know about it. [01:36:56.280 --> 01:37:02.560] It's really life-changing, and then aside from that, I haven't even told you all the [01:37:02.560 --> 01:37:07.000] details of this deal I'm setting up. [01:37:07.000 --> 01:37:12.760] You guys don't have enough hours on your show for me to explain all the intricacies of how [01:37:12.760 --> 01:37:14.440] many times they screwed themselves. [01:37:14.440 --> 01:37:19.200] If I can say that, I'm sorry if I can't. [01:37:19.200 --> 01:37:30.440] You can say screw, or if you're uncomfortable with that, you could say intercourse themselves. [01:37:30.440 --> 01:37:34.440] I was trying to be the good guy, the nice guy. [01:37:34.440 --> 01:37:37.760] I told them that they were breaking the law, and gave them an out. [01:37:37.760 --> 01:37:41.680] They said, no, we're going to keep breaking the law, and we don't care. [01:37:41.680 --> 01:37:45.040] Well, shame on you. [01:37:45.040 --> 01:37:49.280] Never give fair warning. [01:37:49.280 --> 01:37:52.080] Bushwack is so much better. [01:37:52.080 --> 01:37:53.880] All right. [01:37:53.880 --> 01:38:01.960] So I've got a couple other things that we don't have time for, if you would let me. [01:38:01.960 --> 01:38:03.440] Can you call back tomorrow night? [01:38:03.440 --> 01:38:05.240] We've got four hours. [01:38:05.240 --> 01:38:06.240] I can. [01:38:06.240 --> 01:38:07.240] Good. [01:38:07.240 --> 01:38:08.240] Let's do that. [01:38:08.240 --> 01:38:10.840] I've got a caller who's been waiting for the beginning of the show. [01:38:10.840 --> 01:38:17.280] We skipped over him to go to you because you were a first-time caller, and he's in Texas, [01:38:17.280 --> 01:38:21.640] so he'll know how to find me and make me pay. [01:38:21.640 --> 01:38:22.640] I don't want that to happen to you. [01:38:22.640 --> 01:38:25.640] I need you to stick around a little longer. [01:38:25.640 --> 01:38:26.640] Okay. [01:38:26.640 --> 01:38:28.640] So call us back tomorrow night. [01:38:28.640 --> 01:38:30.400] I will do. [01:38:30.400 --> 01:38:31.400] Thank you very much. [01:38:31.400 --> 01:38:32.400] Thanks, Joel. [01:38:32.400 --> 01:38:33.400] All right. [01:38:33.400 --> 01:38:34.400] Thanks, guys. [01:38:34.400 --> 01:38:35.400] Okay. [01:38:35.400 --> 01:38:36.400] That was a good caller. [01:38:36.400 --> 01:38:37.400] Hello, Richard. [01:38:37.400 --> 01:38:38.400] Howdy. [01:38:38.400 --> 01:38:41.080] Totally rude, that's what you are. [01:38:41.080 --> 01:38:43.080] Wait, say that again? [01:38:43.080 --> 01:38:44.080] Hello. [01:38:44.080 --> 01:38:45.080] I said, totally rude. [01:38:45.080 --> 01:38:46.080] Kipping off me. [01:38:46.080 --> 01:38:47.080] Yeah, I know. [01:38:47.080 --> 01:38:48.080] That's the kind of guy... [01:38:48.080 --> 01:38:49.080] Brett told me to do it. [01:38:49.080 --> 01:38:50.080] Right. [01:38:50.080 --> 01:38:51.080] I'll get to Brett. [01:38:51.080 --> 01:39:05.800] Hey, I contacted the county sheriff's office or the clerk's office about the chief deputy [01:39:05.800 --> 01:39:08.800] being a... [01:39:08.800 --> 01:39:10.920] Oh, what the hell is it? [01:39:10.920 --> 01:39:14.040] I don't know if you can say that word on the air. [01:39:14.040 --> 01:39:16.400] A traffic control officer. [01:39:16.400 --> 01:39:18.680] A traffic control officer. [01:39:18.680 --> 01:39:22.680] Do you remember talking to me about it? [01:39:22.680 --> 01:39:23.680] 701.001. [01:39:23.680 --> 01:39:30.320] Yes, I do remember talking to you about it. [01:39:30.320 --> 01:39:36.840] Did you check with the county commissioner's court to see if they had appointed him as [01:39:36.840 --> 01:39:38.640] a county control officer? [01:39:38.640 --> 01:39:42.320] I did, and they have not. [01:39:42.320 --> 01:39:43.800] Boom. [01:39:43.800 --> 01:39:45.400] Yeah. [01:39:45.400 --> 01:39:51.400] So, have you charged him with first degree felony aggravated assault? [01:39:51.400 --> 01:39:52.880] Yes, sir. [01:39:52.880 --> 01:39:56.080] Oh, you're a good man. [01:39:56.080 --> 01:40:02.200] Well, you know, somebody's got to stand up and stop all this crap. [01:40:02.200 --> 01:40:09.000] They're not doing anything respectable, and it's time we fix it. [01:40:09.000 --> 01:40:11.240] That is our job. [01:40:11.240 --> 01:40:16.960] We are a citizen and a republic, and pretty much we're the only ones who can do that. [01:40:16.960 --> 01:40:19.200] Yes, sir. [01:40:19.200 --> 01:40:24.760] These guys are stuck inside a system they didn't create, and they can't change. [01:40:24.760 --> 01:40:30.960] Unless we give them plausible deniability, I'm in the process of helping a woman prepare [01:40:30.960 --> 01:40:42.380] depraved heart murder charges against a doctor for not allowing them to give her mother medicines [01:40:42.380 --> 01:40:44.920] that might have saved her. [01:40:44.920 --> 01:40:48.200] How many doctors do you think we're going to have to put before a grand jury before [01:40:48.200 --> 01:40:53.480] the doctors can now take control of their own practice and take it away from the insurance [01:40:53.480 --> 01:40:55.040] companies? [01:40:55.040 --> 01:40:56.440] Thousands. [01:40:56.440 --> 01:41:00.280] Well, I bet they'd only take one. [01:41:00.280 --> 01:41:07.440] Well, that might be true, and I'm fixing to go to the local hospital here if I can ever [01:41:07.440 --> 01:41:13.960] get enough time, and I want to take the CEO of the hospital corporation that's here, [01:41:13.960 --> 01:41:20.960] only hospital in town, and they've got the mask mandate on, and I'm having some heart [01:41:20.960 --> 01:41:26.160] pains, and I'm not going to go in there if they're not going to let me go without a mask. [01:41:26.160 --> 01:41:30.360] Are you familiar with our telegram site on that issue? [01:41:30.360 --> 01:41:31.360] No, I'm not. [01:41:31.360 --> 01:41:37.040] Well, I have seen it, but I have a really hard time navigating telegram. [01:41:37.040 --> 01:41:38.240] I don't know why. [01:41:38.240 --> 01:41:40.480] I don't know how to pull you all up. [01:41:40.480 --> 01:41:42.840] I just stumbled across you one time. [01:41:42.840 --> 01:41:51.000] Okay, just to go out into the street, flag down the first 10-year-olds you see, and have [01:41:51.000 --> 01:41:54.040] him explain to you this is the 21st century. [01:41:54.040 --> 01:41:57.440] That's what I had to do. [01:41:57.440 --> 01:42:00.280] I know. [01:42:00.280 --> 01:42:07.320] I've got so much on my mind, and at my age, it doesn't stay there but about 15 minutes, [01:42:07.320 --> 01:42:10.600] and then I have to start over. [01:42:10.600 --> 01:42:15.200] I've got a lot on my mind, and it's an empty lot. [01:42:15.200 --> 01:42:21.840] Okay, if you can get to it, we have 1,300 people on the mask site. [01:42:21.840 --> 01:42:22.840] Brett? [01:42:22.840 --> 01:42:23.840] Yeah, I don't know. [01:42:23.840 --> 01:42:24.840] I haven't looked recently. [01:42:24.840 --> 01:42:33.120] I think last time I looked, it was 1,366 people, and we get lots of good stuff, everything [01:42:33.120 --> 01:42:38.520] you want to know you can find on there, and you find a lot of people there to help you. [01:42:38.520 --> 01:42:44.880] What I've found is when I go to Telegram, and I put something in, and I don't see any [01:42:44.880 --> 01:42:46.880] place to search. [01:42:46.880 --> 01:42:53.480] Oh, you'll have to look for the little magnifying glass up in the corner. [01:42:53.480 --> 01:42:58.080] If you're on a phone that doesn't have enough pixels on the viewport width, then you'll [01:42:58.080 --> 01:43:06.520] have to click on the title up at the very top where it says Mask Law Society, and then [01:43:06.520 --> 01:43:14.920] you'll get four little icons, and one of them is going to be that magnifying glass. [01:43:14.920 --> 01:43:19.240] Send me an email, and I will send you a link to it. [01:43:19.240 --> 01:43:22.520] Okay, I'll do that. [01:43:22.520 --> 01:43:27.160] Well, Richard, there's one other thing I wanted to bring up before we get too far away from [01:43:27.160 --> 01:43:29.720] this traffic control officer. [01:43:29.720 --> 01:43:31.720] Right. [01:43:31.720 --> 01:43:42.440] It looks to me like you could also charge him with the felony of Texas Penal Code 37.11, [01:43:42.440 --> 01:43:45.360] impersonating a public servant. [01:43:45.360 --> 01:43:51.120] If he's acting like a traffic control officer, but the commissioner court said he's not a [01:43:51.120 --> 01:43:55.360] traffic control officer, he's got a problem. [01:43:55.360 --> 01:43:58.360] We can talk some more about that after we come back from our sponsors, okay? [01:43:58.360 --> 01:43:59.360] We'll be right back. [01:43:59.360 --> 01:44:00.360] Okay. [01:44:00.360 --> 01:44:03.360] Let's do it, Mr. Promotor. [01:44:03.360 --> 01:44:06.460] Oh, hi, Cookie Muncher. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:06.460 --> 01:44:09.560] Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:44:09.560 --> 01:44:12.660] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:44:12.660 --> 01:44:13.860] No, can't eat? [01:44:13.860 --> 01:44:17.160] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:17.160 --> 01:44:18.060] These have apples. [01:44:18.060 --> 01:44:20.760] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.760 --> 01:44:22.360] Mmm, yummy apple. [01:44:23.560 --> 01:44:26.960] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.960 --> 01:44:33.060] I click Control, Shift, Delete, and then scroll down to Cookies and clear them. [01:44:33.060 --> 01:44:34.560] Bye-bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.560 --> 01:44:42.160] Now, I go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, bookmark the link, [01:44:42.160 --> 01:44:47.260] and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:47.260 --> 01:44:49.060] New cookies? For me? [01:44:49.060 --> 01:44:50.960] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:50.960 --> 01:44:57.560] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:44:57.560 --> 01:44:58.560] C is for Cookie. [01:44:58.560 --> 01:44:59.860] C is for Classified. [01:44:59.860 --> 01:45:03.760] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.760 --> 01:45:15.060] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.060 --> 01:45:19.060] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.060 --> 01:45:22.560] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.560 --> 01:45:27.760] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can, too. [01:45:27.760 --> 01:45:34.260] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.260 --> 01:45:43.260] 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. [01:45:43.260 --> 01:45:52.260] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.260 --> 01:46:01.260] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:23.260 --> 01:46:27.260] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:46:27.260 --> 01:46:31.260] Some things I realize foolish. [01:46:31.260 --> 01:46:35.260] Somebody's gonna police that policeman. [01:46:35.260 --> 01:46:39.260] Somebody's gonna police the bully. [01:46:39.260 --> 01:46:44.260] There's always a room out the top of the hill. [01:46:44.260 --> 01:46:49.260] I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely left too. [01:46:49.260 --> 01:46:54.260] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:46:54.260 --> 01:47:05.260] On this Thursday, the 10th day of February, 2022, and we're talking to Richard in Texas. [01:47:05.260 --> 01:47:07.260] Okay, go ahead, Richard. [01:47:07.260 --> 01:47:16.260] Okay. I called the county court's office and asked them for the name of the... [01:47:16.260 --> 01:47:24.260] Oh, crap. The foreman is a grand jury and they wouldn't give it to me. [01:47:24.260 --> 01:47:27.260] Aren't they supposed to share that? [01:47:27.260 --> 01:47:33.260] Yes, that is open. So that should get a criminal complaint. [01:47:33.260 --> 01:47:35.260] Okay. [01:47:35.260 --> 01:47:43.260] You can get the name of the foreman by going down and looking at some current indictments. [01:47:43.260 --> 01:47:45.260] Okay. [01:47:45.260 --> 01:47:49.260] Actually, you should be able to get the entire jury pool. [01:47:49.260 --> 01:47:52.260] They're not secret. [01:47:52.260 --> 01:47:59.260] So send her an information request for names of the entire jury pool. [01:47:59.260 --> 01:48:01.260] Okay. [01:48:01.260 --> 01:48:07.260] Do you know how often they impanel a grand jury in your jurisdiction? [01:48:07.260 --> 01:48:11.260] I think it's once every six months. [01:48:11.260 --> 01:48:32.260] Well, before they impanel next time, you want to issue or put in a notice to the district judge who is going to impanel the grand jury that you intend to challenge the grand jury pool. [01:48:32.260 --> 01:48:42.260] It used to be in Chapter 19, I believe, of the Code of Criminal Procedure, but do a search for Texas challenged grand jury pool. [01:48:42.260 --> 01:48:46.260] They renumbered all those, so I don't remember which one it is. [01:48:46.260 --> 01:48:54.260] But you have a right. You can challenge the grand jury pool before it's impaneled and not thereafter. [01:48:54.260 --> 01:48:55.260] Right. [01:48:55.260 --> 01:49:06.260] I did that once, and the district judge got real excited and had a bailiff put his hand on me, told the bailiff to arrest me, and the bailiff put his hand on my arm. [01:49:06.260 --> 01:49:10.260] And I looked down and said, I see you're wearing a pistol there, Sergeant Simmons. [01:49:10.260 --> 01:49:11.260] He said, yes, I am. [01:49:11.260 --> 01:49:13.260] I said, tell me, is that pistol loaded? [01:49:13.260 --> 01:49:14.260] He said, yes, it is. [01:49:14.260 --> 01:49:21.260] And the judge got at what I was doing and told him, that's okay, Mr. Simmons, you can stand down. [01:49:21.260 --> 01:49:23.260] Sorry, Bubba, too late. [01:49:23.260 --> 01:49:25.260] He doesn't touch me. [01:49:25.260 --> 01:49:29.260] I charged the judge with first degree felony aggravated assault. [01:49:29.260 --> 01:49:39.260] You can challenge the grand jury pool, and they have to give you names of all of them, and you can sit in there while they impanel the grand jury. [01:49:39.260 --> 01:49:41.260] Their names are not secret. [01:49:41.260 --> 01:49:43.260] Okay. [01:49:43.260 --> 01:49:47.260] Well, can I testify to the grand jury? [01:49:47.260 --> 01:49:48.260] Can I request that? [01:49:48.260 --> 01:49:54.260] Yes, but you can only do that if they allow you to. [01:49:54.260 --> 01:50:01.260] Now, you can talk to the grand jury when you challenge them. [01:50:01.260 --> 01:50:06.260] This is our complaints I'll be bringing before the grand jury. [01:50:06.260 --> 01:50:12.260] Is there any one of you who would be unable to do whatever you want them to do? [01:50:12.260 --> 01:50:15.260] You can do that. [01:50:15.260 --> 01:50:19.260] You can use, that's what I intended to do. [01:50:19.260 --> 01:50:25.260] I was going to tell them that I will be filing criminal charges against this judge here. [01:50:25.260 --> 01:50:30.260] And I know you look at this judge and you think he's important and all that, blah, blah, blah. [01:50:30.260 --> 01:50:42.260] If I give you reason to believe that he is sufficient evidence to give you cause to believe he's committed a crime, would you be able to indict him? [01:50:42.260 --> 01:50:45.260] Would you be willing to indict him? [01:50:45.260 --> 01:50:47.260] You can ask them that. [01:50:47.260 --> 01:50:49.260] Okay. [01:50:49.260 --> 01:50:56.260] How do you get it arranged so you can appear before the grand jury to challenge the pool? [01:50:56.260 --> 01:50:58.260] You give notice to the judge. [01:50:58.260 --> 01:51:02.260] I gave notice to the prosecutor and the judge, just written notice. [01:51:02.260 --> 01:51:06.260] You can do it with an email. [01:51:06.260 --> 01:51:10.260] And when they don't let you, then you go after them criminally. [01:51:10.260 --> 01:51:15.260] Then you move to have the grand jury disbanded. [01:51:15.260 --> 01:51:18.260] That's what I did to the judge when he came off the bench. [01:51:18.260 --> 01:51:20.260] He didn't give me opportunity to challenge him. [01:51:20.260 --> 01:51:24.260] He just impaneled the grand jury and he came off the bench and says, [01:51:24.260 --> 01:51:36.260] Judge, you need to bring that pool back in here, disband the grand jury, and give me my opportunity to challenge the grand jury pool. [01:51:36.260 --> 01:51:38.260] Okay. [01:51:38.260 --> 01:51:46.260] That gives you the chance to get in front of them so that when they get complaints from you, [01:51:46.260 --> 01:51:50.260] then they've looked at you and they know you're a human being. [01:51:50.260 --> 01:51:52.260] Right. [01:51:52.260 --> 01:51:58.260] And the judge and prosecutor are not going to like that one little bit, but good. [01:51:58.260 --> 01:52:04.260] Well, I've got all kinds of stuff to go to the grand jury with. [01:52:04.260 --> 01:52:10.260] Is it on the court by a justice of the peace and the county judge? [01:52:10.260 --> 01:52:12.260] Wait, wait, wait, wait. [01:52:12.260 --> 01:52:13.260] One other thing. [01:52:13.260 --> 01:52:25.260] When the grand jury brings in its true bills, do they do that in open court? [01:52:25.260 --> 01:52:26.260] I don't know. [01:52:26.260 --> 01:52:27.260] Okay. [01:52:27.260 --> 01:52:28.260] Here's what the code says. [01:52:28.260 --> 01:52:42.260] After the grand jury has deliberated and voted, the foreman along with a quorum of the grand jury [01:52:42.260 --> 01:52:51.260] shall come before the clerk or the court and give notice of the true bills. [01:52:51.260 --> 01:52:54.260] In Johnson County, they gave notice to the court. [01:52:54.260 --> 01:52:58.260] They convened a hearing. [01:52:58.260 --> 01:53:02.260] And I went and sat in the room when they convened a hearing. [01:53:02.260 --> 01:53:09.260] And everybody's looking at me wondering, who the heck is that except the prosecutor and assistant prosecutor? [01:53:09.260 --> 01:53:12.260] They knew exactly why I was there, and they were not happy. [01:53:12.260 --> 01:53:14.260] But what do you think you do about it? [01:53:14.260 --> 01:53:20.260] They read in all of the indictment, the true bills, and the judge said, [01:53:20.260 --> 01:53:23.260] does the grand jury have any further business? [01:53:23.260 --> 01:53:25.260] And the foreman said, no, Your Honor, we do not. [01:53:25.260 --> 01:53:30.260] And I stood up in the courtroom and said, yes, you do. [01:53:30.260 --> 01:53:33.260] And the judge said, and who are you? [01:53:33.260 --> 01:53:35.260] My name's Randy Kelton. [01:53:35.260 --> 01:53:39.260] What business do you have with this grand jury? [01:53:39.260 --> 01:53:42.260] I said, well, Judge, I've got some criminal complaints. [01:53:42.260 --> 01:53:46.260] I could have told him I have business with the grand jury, and it's none of yours. [01:53:46.260 --> 01:53:48.260] But I had plans for it. [01:53:48.260 --> 01:53:51.260] I said, well, I have criminal complaints against some public officials. [01:53:51.260 --> 01:53:53.260] And what officials are those? [01:53:53.260 --> 01:53:58.260] And the prosecutor and assistant prosecutor is sitting there squirming. [01:53:58.260 --> 01:54:00.260] I said, well, there's a district attorney here. [01:54:00.260 --> 01:54:02.260] And I pointed down at his head. [01:54:02.260 --> 01:54:09.260] And there's an assistant district attorney, and I pointed at the judge, and you, Judge. [01:54:09.260 --> 01:54:12.260] And he looked like I hit him with a brick. [01:54:12.260 --> 01:54:17.260] He's got this look that said, you just bushwhacked me in front of my own grand jury. [01:54:17.260 --> 01:54:19.260] I said, yeah, I did. [01:54:19.260 --> 01:54:24.260] And that's what got me to be able to present the district attorney [01:54:24.260 --> 01:54:28.260] and the assistant district attorney to the grand jury. [01:54:28.260 --> 01:54:31.260] They called me in to present. [01:54:31.260 --> 01:54:34.260] That was a hoax. [01:54:34.260 --> 01:54:36.260] Look at your county. [01:54:36.260 --> 01:54:39.260] Figure out how they do it. [01:54:39.260 --> 01:54:41.260] Okay. [01:54:41.260 --> 01:54:45.260] How do you file a criminal complaint to the grand jury? [01:54:45.260 --> 01:54:50.260] Do you just use an affidavit, quote the laws and what they did? [01:54:50.260 --> 01:54:54.260] You use the standard Texas criminal complaint form, [01:54:54.260 --> 01:55:01.260] and you send it to the grand jury at the address of the district attorney. [01:55:01.260 --> 01:55:07.260] And you put a cover letter on it and ask the foreman to initial this cover letter, [01:55:07.260 --> 01:55:13.260] return it in the stamp self-addressed envelope so that you'll know he actually received it [01:55:13.260 --> 01:55:15.260] because we have trouble with prosecuting attorneys [01:55:15.260 --> 01:55:18.260] secreting criminal complaints from grand juries. [01:55:18.260 --> 01:55:21.260] Well, you're not going to get that letter back. [01:55:21.260 --> 01:55:28.260] And when you don't, after, say, a week or you find out when the grand jury next meets [01:55:28.260 --> 01:55:32.260] and after they meet, if you don't get that letter back, [01:55:32.260 --> 01:55:40.260] then you call the postal inspectors first because obviously the grand jury didn't get your letter, [01:55:40.260 --> 01:55:43.260] so you want to collect the insurance on it, [01:55:43.260 --> 01:55:47.260] and you file criminal charges against the district attorney [01:55:47.260 --> 01:55:54.260] accusing him of shielding, secreting public documents from the grand jury. [01:55:54.260 --> 01:55:57.260] And you do the same thing you did the first time, and when they don't get it, [01:55:57.260 --> 01:56:01.260] now you come back and accuse him of secreting criminal complaints [01:56:01.260 --> 01:56:03.260] against himself from the grand jury. [01:56:03.260 --> 01:56:05.260] It just keeps getting uglier. [01:56:05.260 --> 01:56:12.260] Then you file a criminal complaint with every district judge in the district, in the jurisdiction, [01:56:12.260 --> 01:56:18.260] and order them to issue a warrant under 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:56:18.260 --> 01:56:24.260] That one says that when a magistrate is forwarded a complaint, [01:56:24.260 --> 01:56:30.260] the magistrate shall issue a warrant forthwith. [01:56:30.260 --> 01:56:35.260] So the judge is commanded to issue a warrant for the arrest of the prosecutor. [01:56:35.260 --> 01:56:40.260] And when he doesn't, you file criminal charges against the district judge. [01:56:40.260 --> 01:56:42.260] Okay. [01:56:42.260 --> 01:56:47.260] Look up 15.09. It is a gem. [01:56:47.260 --> 01:56:48.260] Okay. [01:56:48.260 --> 01:56:54.260] Isn't that also, didn't the district attorney, by not giving it to the grand jurors, [01:56:54.260 --> 01:57:00.260] isn't that also a federal crime of theft or receipt of a stolen mail? [01:57:00.260 --> 01:57:02.260] No, not exactly. [01:57:02.260 --> 01:57:04.260] Oh, yeah, that's a... [01:57:04.260 --> 01:57:06.260] Tampering with the mail. [01:57:06.260 --> 01:57:10.260] Tampering with the mail, yes. [01:57:10.260 --> 01:57:14.260] So if you want to go there, that would just file mail. [01:57:14.260 --> 01:57:19.260] If you filed in with the Feds, you filed with a special agent in charge of the local FBI, [01:57:19.260 --> 01:57:24.260] because that's the only agent's name you can get and hold responsible. [01:57:24.260 --> 01:57:27.260] And you do the cover letter the same way. [01:57:27.260 --> 01:57:30.260] And he won't give it to the U.S. attorney, [01:57:30.260 --> 01:57:35.260] so you file against him with the grand jury, [01:57:35.260 --> 01:57:39.260] and you send that to the U.S. attorney, to his office. [01:57:39.260 --> 01:57:42.260] State and federal, they do the same thing. [01:57:42.260 --> 01:57:45.260] The prosecutors get the complaints, and they secret them from the grand jury. [01:57:45.260 --> 01:57:50.260] So you work the U.S. attorney over the same way. [01:57:50.260 --> 01:57:53.260] Okay. [01:57:53.260 --> 01:57:59.260] Because I contact you some other time where we can talk by ourselves. [01:57:59.260 --> 01:58:01.260] Yes, email me. [01:58:01.260 --> 01:58:07.260] I'm remembering and writing all of this down, and it's going to go away by tomorrow. [01:58:07.260 --> 01:58:09.260] Yeah, email me. [01:58:09.260 --> 01:58:10.260] Record it. [01:58:10.260 --> 01:58:12.260] Okay. [01:58:12.260 --> 01:58:15.260] Email me, and we'll talk off the air. [01:58:15.260 --> 01:58:19.260] Okay, we are out of time. [01:58:19.260 --> 01:58:21.260] Thank you, Richard. [01:58:21.260 --> 01:58:24.260] You've been a good caller for quite a while. [01:58:24.260 --> 01:58:29.260] Tomorrow night, we'll do our four-hour info marathon. [01:58:29.260 --> 01:58:34.260] So if you have a question or comment you didn't get it on tonight, [01:58:34.260 --> 01:58:36.260] tune in tomorrow. [01:58:36.260 --> 01:58:38.260] We'll be taking calls all night. [01:58:38.260 --> 01:58:40.260] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:58:40.260 --> 01:58:50.260] Thanks for listening, and good night. [01:58:50.260 --> 01:58:55.260] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible [01:58:55.260 --> 01:58:58.260] called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.260 --> 01:59:02.260] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain [01:59:02.260 --> 01:59:06.260] what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God [01:59:06.260 --> 01:59:08.260] and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.260 --> 01:59:11.260] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.260 --> 01:59:20.260] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102, or visit us online at bfa.org. 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