[00:00.000 --> 00:05.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.800 --> 00:09.480] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.480 --> 00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.920 --> 00:14.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.880 --> 00:16.980] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.980 --> 00:18.580] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.580 --> 00:22.180] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.180 --> 00:26.940] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.940 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.720] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.720 --> 00:39.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.000 --> 00:42.540] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.540 --> 00:44.640] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.640 --> 00:47.840] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.840 --> 00:50.880] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.880 --> 00:54.560] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.560 --> 01:01.560] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.560 --> 01:03.080] and R for religion. [01:03.080 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:10.480] assembly, and religion, but petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.480 --> 01:14.600] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.600 --> 01:18.120] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.120 --> 01:20.800] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.800 --> 01:31.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.120 --> 01:34.760] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.760 --> 01:38.200] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.200 --> 01:39.680] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.680 --> 01:43.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.600 --> 01:46.740] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.740 --> 01:48.320] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.320 --> 01:51.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.920 --> 01:56.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.680 --> 02:01.720] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.720 --> 02:04.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.460 --> 02:08.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.760 --> 02:12.280] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.280 --> 02:15.880] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.880 --> 02:20.200] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.200 --> 02:22.280] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.280 --> 02:26.840] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.840 --> 02:30.640] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.640 --> 02:31.640] Get it? [02:31.640 --> 02:33.920] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.920 --> 02:37.520] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.520 --> 02:43.280] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.280 --> 02:47.840] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:47.840 --> 02:50.480] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.480 --> 02:52.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.440 --> 03:13.960] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:13.960 --> 03:38.440] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, Dr. Hubert Humphrey. [03:38.440 --> 03:58.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [03:58.240 --> 04:23.360] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La La Radio, and this is, what day is [04:23.360 --> 04:24.360] it, Brett? [04:24.360 --> 04:25.360] It's Friday. [04:25.360 --> 04:32.880] The 11th day of February, 2022, and we have a couple slots open on the caller board. [04:32.880 --> 04:41.120] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call, 512-646-1984. [04:41.120 --> 04:45.240] And I was talking about how to write documents. [04:45.240 --> 04:53.960] And in Microsoft Word, we have a heading in the top menu called references. [04:53.960 --> 05:00.520] You click references, and then you go over, and all the way at the end, you've got a section [05:00.520 --> 05:02.920] for table of authorities. [05:02.920 --> 05:10.120] You click mark citation, go down, highlight the citation, and click on it, and it will [05:10.120 --> 05:17.560] pop a box up that you can tell it if it's a statute or if it's a case or a treatise, [05:17.560 --> 05:19.720] a bunch of different options. [05:19.720 --> 05:22.360] You go down through your document, you do all of that. [05:22.360 --> 05:29.880] Then you go up to the top, and you can click and tell it to create a table of citations, [05:29.880 --> 05:33.120] and it creates the whole thing for you. [05:33.120 --> 05:37.480] With everything hyperlinked, it does a great job. [05:37.480 --> 05:42.760] Building a table of authorities is a beast without it. [05:42.760 --> 05:49.760] And I've had no other tool that would do that. [05:49.760 --> 05:54.520] So that's all I'm going to talk about on how to write legal documents. [05:54.520 --> 05:59.080] If you want to know more, you can get my legal 101. [05:59.080 --> 06:01.840] It has a whole section on that. [06:01.840 --> 06:02.840] Okay. [06:02.840 --> 06:03.840] Ralph? [06:03.840 --> 06:12.720] Yeah, I have more, but I'll stick to one that's on our topic, okay? [06:12.720 --> 06:13.720] Yeah, okay. [06:13.720 --> 06:17.400] Right now, we only have two callers, so go ahead. [06:17.400 --> 06:18.400] Okay. [06:18.400 --> 06:20.920] This is jurisdiction. [06:20.920 --> 06:24.840] I think I've got it, but I want a little bit of help if you don't mind. [06:24.840 --> 06:30.960] So this is suing, like I said, not a public official, this is suing a private entity under [06:30.960 --> 06:38.040] contract, which is what we did this earlier, causes, right? [06:38.040 --> 06:39.040] So... [06:39.040 --> 06:47.080] Yeah, I have a special way of doing jurisdiction. [06:47.080 --> 06:55.440] I pull somebody else's suit and take it off of theirs. [06:55.440 --> 06:56.880] I don't dig out all that stuff. [06:56.880 --> 07:03.600] It's pretty straightforward, but they all want cases cited in there, so I just go find [07:03.600 --> 07:07.600] a really big lawsuit that's in... [07:07.600 --> 07:15.600] It doesn't matter, as long as it's in Texas, and just drop theirs in, and if the venue [07:15.600 --> 07:18.680] is somewhat different, I just change the venue. [07:18.680 --> 07:23.560] I don't spend much time with that, and in Texas, you do not have to plead jurisdiction. [07:23.560 --> 07:25.560] It's not necessary. [07:25.560 --> 07:31.720] Okay, and if you get it wrong, you have an opportunity because you've told the time, [07:31.720 --> 07:32.720] right? [07:32.720 --> 07:33.720] It don't mean... [07:33.720 --> 07:35.440] If it's in the wrong... [07:35.440 --> 07:36.440] Jurisdiction don't mean anything. [07:36.440 --> 07:41.400] As long as you have filed in the right jurisdiction, what you put on the document doesn't mean [07:41.400 --> 07:45.120] anything. [07:45.120 --> 07:50.840] If they claim that you didn't file in the right jurisdiction, you're still filed. [07:50.840 --> 07:54.640] You just move to change venue. [07:54.640 --> 07:58.440] Well, that's my hangup. [07:58.440 --> 08:05.040] This is not in Texas, and I'm already experienced at least a little bit in the federal courts, [08:05.040 --> 08:10.400] so I'm trying to keep this or trying to put this in the federal court, and I'm thinking... [08:10.400 --> 08:20.400] Oh, yeah, if you have diversity of citizenship or federal issue, just pull down any federal [08:20.400 --> 08:25.520] case and pull the jurisdiction section out of it. [08:25.520 --> 08:32.720] Every jurisdiction section I've seen in a federal case addressed both diversity and [08:32.720 --> 08:35.720] federal question. [08:35.720 --> 08:40.680] Okay. [08:40.680 --> 08:41.680] You somebody else's... [08:41.680 --> 08:42.680] Why... [08:42.680 --> 08:43.680] Right, right. [08:43.680 --> 08:47.960] All of them use about the same thing. [08:47.960 --> 08:53.480] You want the judge to look at it and recognize it and not even bother to have to read it. [08:53.480 --> 08:58.360] You're filing against a company that's out of state? [08:58.360 --> 08:59.360] Correct. [08:59.360 --> 09:03.440] Okay, here's the deal. [09:03.440 --> 09:12.920] Where you file at is a company like Wells Fargo has offices in Texas, but Wells Fargo [09:12.920 --> 09:15.080] is not in this state. [09:15.080 --> 09:21.240] Wells Fargo is in Minnesota, where their main corporate office is. [09:21.240 --> 09:27.800] All of these companies will designate a location where their company is. [09:27.800 --> 09:36.840] Then, like if you were in Minnesota and you were doing business with a Wells Fargo location [09:36.840 --> 09:46.480] in Texas and you wanted to sue, you'd sue in Minnesota. [09:46.480 --> 09:54.520] You wouldn't have diversity jurisdiction because the company is the same place you are. [09:54.520 --> 09:58.360] They go to a lot of trouble to always want to force you into the federal courts. [09:58.360 --> 10:01.920] I've had a lot of trouble with the banks over that. [10:01.920 --> 10:03.960] Anyway, okay. [10:03.960 --> 10:09.960] I'm not the federal court, but I'm kind of stuck because I'm going to be learning too [10:09.960 --> 10:11.920] many different state laws. [10:11.920 --> 10:12.920] I can't handle it. [10:12.920 --> 10:16.160] That's why you just go get somebody else's suit. [10:16.160 --> 10:22.600] You find a suit similar to yours, there's probably 10,000 of them out there. [10:22.600 --> 10:28.840] Put up that suit and just take out the stuff that don't apply to you, put in what applies [10:28.840 --> 10:34.400] to you, and you get 90% of it done. [10:34.400 --> 10:35.880] I don't write all these suits. [10:35.880 --> 10:36.880] Heck with that stuff. [10:36.880 --> 10:39.320] Some of the lawyers have already done it. [10:39.320 --> 10:40.320] Why should I bother? [10:40.320 --> 10:44.880] Especially if you can find suits that are winning suits that are pretty much on your [10:44.880 --> 10:45.880] issue. [10:45.880 --> 10:46.880] Right. [10:46.880 --> 10:48.360] That's on my list. [10:48.360 --> 10:55.960] I haven't done it yet, but it's on my list, I'm aware of that one. [10:55.960 --> 10:58.720] Do you have O'Connor's civil trials? [10:58.720 --> 11:01.960] Yes, I do. [11:01.960 --> 11:10.280] All the questions you have are right in there. [11:10.280 --> 11:14.480] If you want to look for jurisdiction, just go to jurisdiction in O'Connor's. [11:14.480 --> 11:21.280] They got a form, and you just put in, pick the paragraph that fits you. [11:21.280 --> 11:28.800] Do not write motions and pleadings if you can find a form in O'Connor's. [11:28.800 --> 11:34.800] Use O'Connor's forms, and O'Connor's has a federal civil trials. [11:34.800 --> 11:35.800] I have it. [11:35.800 --> 11:36.800] I have it. [11:36.800 --> 11:37.800] It's an older version. [11:37.800 --> 11:44.000] It's 2016, but it's O'Connor's federal civil forms, 2016 federal civil trials, 2017 [11:44.000 --> 11:45.000] civil trials. [11:45.000 --> 11:50.760] I pick them up here, there, and everywhere, and sometimes I'm forced to buy new ones. [11:50.760 --> 11:51.760] Okay. [11:51.760 --> 11:57.680] I can't say this on the air, so everybody else pretend like you don't hear this, but [11:57.680 --> 12:06.400] I happen to have a copy of O'Connor's forms on CD that I have taken them and named each [12:06.400 --> 12:09.000] one of the forms. [12:09.000 --> 12:14.040] If you send me an email, I won't send you that because O'Connor's might get unhappy [12:14.040 --> 12:20.680] about it, but it's 2008, so who really cares, but I can get you the forms in electronic [12:20.680 --> 12:21.680] format. [12:21.680 --> 12:22.680] Wow, that sounds interesting. [12:22.680 --> 12:23.680] It's a very good tease, isn't it? [12:23.680 --> 12:24.680] Yes, okay. [12:24.680 --> 12:25.680] I might take that as a tease. [12:25.680 --> 12:26.680] Yes, it is. [12:26.680 --> 12:38.640] It is O'Connor's forms in looking at the forms that gave me an idea for the part of the electronic [12:38.640 --> 12:41.080] lawyer. [12:41.080 --> 12:45.680] If you look in O'Connor's forms, they will have jurisdiction. [12:45.680 --> 12:54.200] They will have half a dozen different paragraphs that addresses jurisdiction in different ways [12:54.200 --> 12:58.800] and all the different circumstances they've come across, and you pick the one that fits [12:58.800 --> 12:59.800] you. [12:59.800 --> 13:07.280] What I'm doing is I build a set of questionnaires, and I ask some questions that say the top [13:07.280 --> 13:12.800] paragraph, I'll ask questions that a lawyer would ask to determine if you would use that [13:12.800 --> 13:19.200] top paragraph, and then the system will get that paragraph and drop it in your document. [13:19.200 --> 13:25.200] It will construct the document based on your answers to questions. [13:25.200 --> 13:29.400] Just the way O'Connor's forms, you get all of them printed in there, and you have to [13:29.400 --> 13:34.960] delete all of them but the one you want, pain in the neck. [13:34.960 --> 13:42.280] I'm building a tool to do that, but if you're writing your own documents and you're not [13:42.280 --> 13:47.960] just doing intros and outros to stuff you've plagiarized from somebody else, you're not [13:47.960 --> 13:51.800] doing enough research. [13:51.800 --> 13:58.160] Whatever jurisdiction you're in, you want the local litigation guide. [13:58.160 --> 14:06.160] You want that judge to get a motion or pleading that looks just like every motion and pleading [14:06.160 --> 14:10.360] of that type that he gets. [14:10.360 --> 14:15.760] Friend of mine was being foreclosed on, he was my civil go-to guy, but he didn't know [14:15.760 --> 14:16.760] foreclosure. [14:16.760 --> 14:25.160] He wrote a motion for a restraining order, sent it to me, and he said, what do you think? [14:25.160 --> 14:28.400] I called him back and said, it's a piece of crap, Ken. [14:28.400 --> 14:29.560] He said, you think you can do better? [14:29.560 --> 14:30.920] Darn right I can. [14:30.920 --> 14:35.840] So I sent him one, he filed it, they went in, the lawyer showed up, they didn't expect [14:35.840 --> 14:41.800] the other lawyer to show up because generally they don't do that with process, but he did. [14:41.800 --> 14:44.720] They always give the young lawyers the process. [14:44.720 --> 14:51.080] They went into court, the judge gave him his restraining order, the lawyer came out and [14:51.080 --> 14:52.080] said, did you write this? [14:52.080 --> 14:56.280] He said, you're a lawyer, and he said, no, his brother is, did you write this? [14:56.280 --> 14:58.000] Well, I had some help. [14:58.000 --> 15:08.000] He said, that is very good, and Ken told me that, and I didn't tell him right away that [15:08.000 --> 15:15.440] I took that right out of O'Connor's forms and filled in the blanks, and I thought about [15:15.440 --> 15:18.160] it and thought, what the heck is going on? [15:18.160 --> 15:20.920] Why would that lawyer say that? [15:20.920 --> 15:27.280] Young lawyer, he gets this motion and he thought, heck, that looks exactly like the ones we [15:27.280 --> 15:28.280] file. [15:28.280 --> 15:35.040] The judge got it, and he's seen that a hundred times, so he just goes down the bottom, checks [15:35.040 --> 15:39.400] the one paragraph that matters, and grants it. [15:39.400 --> 15:44.760] You want that judge to not have to read your document. [15:44.760 --> 15:49.800] 90% of every document is the same. [15:49.800 --> 15:54.440] If it's a restraining order, all the requisite stuff, restraining orders, is all the same. [15:54.440 --> 15:59.920] You only want to put in what has your particular facts, so the judge doesn't have to waste [15:59.920 --> 16:05.560] any time reading it, then he's not even going to notice that you're not a lawyer. [16:05.560 --> 16:08.560] He'll just go down and sign it. [16:08.560 --> 16:10.680] That's my story, and I'm thick into it. [16:10.680 --> 16:17.960] I'm going to have to check on this litigation guide you're talking about that sounds... I'm [16:17.960 --> 16:23.960] looking at the book to have a legal guide, but I don't have a litigation. [16:23.960 --> 16:30.240] O'Connor's civil trials, that's what you want. [16:30.240 --> 16:35.880] O'Connor's of all the litigation guides I've ever seen is by far the best. [16:35.880 --> 16:40.440] They've got one for California, Texas, and Fed. [16:40.440 --> 16:46.200] They may have put some others in, in the interim, but they definitely have those. [16:46.200 --> 16:52.960] Hang on, going to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio. [16:52.960 --> 17:00.200] We'll be right back. [17:00.200 --> 17:04.880] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:04.880 --> 17:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.000 --> 17:13.300] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [17:13.300 --> 17:14.300] can win too. [17:14.300 --> 17:19.120] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.120 --> 17:24.880] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [17:24.880 --> 17:29.520] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.520 --> 17:33.720] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.720 --> 17:38.840] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.840 --> 17:40.800] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.800 --> 17:46.640] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [17:46.640 --> 17:49.480] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.480 --> 17:58.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.520 --> 18:01.840] collectors next. [18:01.840 --> 18:04.640] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.640 --> 18:08.440] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [18:08.440 --> 18:12.320] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.320 --> 18:15.600] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [18:15.600 --> 18:19.280] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.280 --> 18:23.480] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.480 --> 18:24.960] our rights through due process. [18:24.960 --> 18:28.840] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [18:28.840 --> 18:32.600] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [18:32.600 --> 18:34.760] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.760 --> 18:39.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:39.000 --> 18:40.360] ordering your copy today. [18:40.360 --> 18:43.600] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [18:43.600 --> 18:48.120] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [18:48.120 --> 18:50.440] documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.440 --> 18:54.400] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.400 --> 18:58.600] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:58.600 --> 19:06.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, www.logosradionetwork.com. [19:06.000 --> 19:18.320] Well don't let nothing get to you, only the father can't deliver you, don't let bad [19:18.320 --> 19:36.640] people hurt you, and tell states and get behind you, know what I mean, my friend, Nala Jachos. [19:36.640 --> 19:42.280] Okay we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Ralph [19:42.280 --> 19:43.280] in Texas. [19:43.280 --> 19:47.840] Okay Ralph, any more questions for us? [19:47.840 --> 19:52.560] I am good, and I did not want to take off without saying thank you. [19:52.560 --> 19:53.840] You are welcome. [19:53.840 --> 19:58.400] Okay, we're going to drop Ralph like a hot rock. [19:58.400 --> 20:00.400] Oops, he's on. [20:00.400 --> 20:02.400] See you Ralph. [20:02.400 --> 20:06.080] Okay, now we're going to Joel in Ohio. [20:06.080 --> 20:07.080] Hello Joel. [20:07.080 --> 20:08.080] Hello. [20:08.080 --> 20:16.200] Okay, did you find that last stuff in any way interesting or helpful? [20:16.200 --> 20:24.320] Everything I listen to helps me with something. [20:24.320 --> 20:34.360] You should listen to my wife, she will help you with a lot, she's in bed so I know she [20:34.360 --> 20:35.360] didn't hear me say that. [20:35.360 --> 20:42.320] I better watch out, she's going to find another bug to swat. [20:42.320 --> 20:52.280] Well she got a camera and put it up on a shelf where she could turn it on with her phone, [20:52.280 --> 20:58.640] and I told her that's creepy, and she was at work and turned the camera on, a little [20:58.640 --> 21:05.280] blue light comes on it when she turns it on, I saw she had turned it on and I mooned her. [21:05.280 --> 21:16.000] Well, she was there with somebody else and I mooned them both, that'll teach her to watch [21:16.000 --> 21:20.120] me when I don't know she's there. [21:20.120 --> 21:32.240] Okay and Joel, do you know what is the primary litigation guide in Ohio? [21:32.240 --> 21:35.240] I do not. [21:35.240 --> 21:42.720] Call a law firm and tell them that you're homeschooling your kids and you want to do [21:42.720 --> 21:56.000] a course in law and ask them what's the primary litigation guide used in Ohio, and they'll [21:56.000 --> 22:02.680] tell you what's there, and then ask them if they have any old copies, this is what lawyers [22:02.680 --> 22:03.680] do. [22:03.680 --> 22:08.000] They just want to cite the latest law. [22:08.000 --> 22:12.960] So every time the litigation guide renews, they buy new ones. [22:12.960 --> 22:24.440] Now California has one huge volume, it's a bunch of three ring binders, and they constantly [22:24.440 --> 22:33.000] upgrade, that one you can't really buy a used litigation guide from because you've only [22:33.000 --> 22:37.200] got one set and they change these pages out. [22:37.200 --> 22:45.440] But if they have published guides like Texas does, then every time a new volume comes out, [22:45.440 --> 22:49.120] which is every two years, they buy the newest ones. [22:49.120 --> 22:53.400] But they never get rid of the old ones, they just push them back in the closet somewhere. [22:53.400 --> 23:01.480] Eddie Craig called a couple law firms and one of them said he was getting rid of all [23:01.480 --> 23:04.320] of his old law books. [23:04.320 --> 23:11.120] He rented a 16-foot truck and filled it with law books. [23:11.120 --> 23:18.040] He used to go in these law offices and they had these shelves and shelves and shelves [23:18.040 --> 23:27.240] of Wes and all the different publishers of cases, and they don't have that anymore, they [23:27.240 --> 23:28.920] got rid of all of that. [23:28.920 --> 23:36.080] And now they do everything online and the litigation guides, they just pushed them back [23:36.080 --> 23:38.120] because they want to use the latest ones. [23:38.120 --> 23:45.160] Well, Ralph had one from 2016, 2016, we don't care, we don't care if it's two or three years [23:45.160 --> 23:51.600] old and we're not citing the most current case on a given subject, heck, it's all the [23:51.600 --> 23:54.600] same, very little of the law ever changes. [23:54.600 --> 24:01.400] So I told a woman in Amarillo, she did that and the second law firm she called said, do [24:01.400 --> 24:04.400] you have a station wagon or a pickup truck? [24:04.400 --> 24:09.280] And she went down and got more stuff than she could use. [24:09.280 --> 24:15.520] So try that, see if you can get some old litigation guides or look on eBay. [24:15.520 --> 24:22.640] I buy most of my O'Connor's books off eBay, 10, 15 bucks a book. [24:22.640 --> 24:29.880] I got one for $8, I don't know how they shipped it for $8. [24:29.880 --> 24:37.080] But anyway, that's how you get your litigation guides, do not write your own pleadings, find [24:37.080 --> 24:46.040] cases that match what your case is and you'll get 90% of your work already done for you [24:46.040 --> 24:50.880] and then just go in and adjust it to your case. [24:50.880 --> 24:54.680] What else, Brett? [24:54.680 --> 24:55.680] Besides O'Connor's? [24:55.680 --> 25:00.920] Yeah, I guess that's enough, that kind of covers it. [25:00.920 --> 25:06.560] Okay, what do you have for us today, Joel? [25:06.560 --> 25:13.000] Well I had contacted Brett about it to give him a little heads up. [25:13.000 --> 25:20.800] I know I can go after him with the typical stuff you guys talk about, but I came across [25:20.800 --> 25:30.440] something that I haven't heard anybody discuss and it sounds useful as a tactic to get them [25:30.440 --> 25:34.160] to really want to settle with me. [25:34.160 --> 25:40.560] And I'm not sure how to use it though because I've never heard anybody explain how you would [25:40.560 --> 25:45.760] even apply it because it's IRS related. [25:45.760 --> 25:53.520] It's not a fee that they would have to pay me, but if I can prove they did it, they would [25:53.520 --> 26:01.160] have to pay the IRS and a single violation is $50,000. [26:01.160 --> 26:15.040] Oh, I've heard of, technically that doesn't go to your lawsuit, but I've heard of this [26:15.040 --> 26:17.520] before and what I generally do. [26:17.520 --> 26:30.000] How can you address this issue in a way that would have relevance to your case? [26:30.000 --> 26:38.440] Like they did something where they hid some income and in the process harmed me and they [26:38.440 --> 26:45.840] harmed me doing this so that they wouldn't have to pay all of these IRS taxes. [26:45.840 --> 26:55.040] I just prepared a motion to try to recover an aircraft and so we're going to file this [26:55.040 --> 26:58.080] with the justice of the peace in Corpus Christi. [26:58.080 --> 27:05.000] And we're saying this guy stole this aircraft from us and he changed the tail numbers on [27:05.000 --> 27:11.840] it which is a federal violation and he changed those tail numbers so we're giving it relevance [27:11.840 --> 27:16.640] because we're saying he changed his tail numbers so he could fly the airplane and nobody would [27:16.640 --> 27:19.120] know he stole it. [27:19.120 --> 27:29.400] The tail numbers were November 8876 Victor and he changed them to November 8867 Victor [27:29.400 --> 27:32.680] and we thought he just juxtaposed numbers and that wasn't what it was. [27:32.680 --> 27:39.560] He found another Blanca aircraft in North Carolina that had been wrecked and completely [27:39.560 --> 27:44.920] destroyed and it had this 67 tail number on it. [27:44.920 --> 27:51.320] So we're saying that he changed his tail number to an aircraft that had been destroyed that [27:51.320 --> 27:56.760] he knew would never be flying so when he entered a flight plan it wouldn't conflict with one [27:56.760 --> 27:58.760] from this airplane. [27:58.760 --> 28:02.680] Now that had nothing to do with getting our airplane back. [28:02.680 --> 28:09.680] That was warning to the other guy, you tried to object to this and we'll throw you under [28:09.680 --> 28:14.040] the federal bus. [28:14.040 --> 28:21.800] So the way I would use that if you've got them cheating the tax guy you want to find [28:21.800 --> 28:31.440] a way to say they're cheating the tax guy was somehow relevant to them to the tort or [28:31.440 --> 28:34.760] cause of action you have against them where you had been harmed. [28:34.760 --> 28:37.560] Does that make sense Joel? [28:37.560 --> 28:51.200] Yeah and so to try to summarize it, this is a tax exempt hospital okay and not that long [28:51.200 --> 29:02.280] ago I believe 2012-2014 the IRS put out new rules for billing and collecting practices [29:02.280 --> 29:14.920] for hospitals that are tax exempt status and it says in there how they have to do it and [29:14.920 --> 29:23.920] I followed the rules unwittingly at the time and doing my research I came across this and [29:23.920 --> 29:32.160] it says in there that there's a 120 day window for me to request financial assistance. [29:32.160 --> 29:39.480] Well I had already requested it 30 days from getting their bill and I did it through email [29:39.480 --> 29:41.480] so I had it on record. [29:41.480 --> 29:48.000] They never replied, they required to reply in the IRS code. [29:48.000 --> 29:53.680] Okay hold on, hold on, about to go to our sponsors Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule [29:53.680 --> 30:01.320] of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [30:01.320 --> 30:05.720] Everyone knows that walking is a great exercise but you might not know that the way you walk [30:05.720 --> 30:07.800] could predict how long you're going to live. [30:07.800 --> 30:13.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication [30:13.080 --> 30:14.760] in just a moment. [30:14.760 --> 30:16.360] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.360 --> 30:20.760] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:20.760 --> 30:24.720] is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.720 --> 30:30.280] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.280 --> 30:32.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.480 --> 30:36.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:36.760 --> 30:40.320] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:40.320 --> 30:43.560] Start over with Startpage. [30:43.560 --> 30:48.000] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:48.000 --> 30:52.580] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter [30:52.580 --> 30:55.800] per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.800 --> 31:00.200] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [31:00.200 --> 31:05.340] A senior's age, gender and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more [31:05.340 --> 31:07.280] traditional statistical measures. [31:07.280 --> 31:10.560] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.560 --> 31:13.080] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [31:13.080 --> 31:16.920] It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk and a few minutes. [31:16.920 --> 31:21.080] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.080 --> 31:22.980] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:22.980 --> 31:25.440] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:25.440 --> 31:31.400] I lost my son. [31:31.400 --> 31:32.400] My nephew. [31:32.400 --> 31:33.400] My uncle. [31:33.400 --> 31:34.400] My son. [31:34.400 --> 31:38.600] Almost in 2001, most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.600 --> 31:42.800] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [31:42.800 --> 31:48.880] Although the official explanation was that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:48.880 --> 31:52.320] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.320 --> 31:55.560] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.560 --> 31:56.600] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:56.600 --> 32:01.600] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.600 --> 32:06.720] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.720 --> 32:11.920] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [32:11.920 --> 32:17.680] Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2nd Timothy 2-15. [32:18.320 --> 32:22.880] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [32:22.880 --> 32:28.000] rightly dividing the Word of Truth. Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the [32:28.000 --> 32:33.520] Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. Our second-hour [32:33.520 --> 32:38.560] topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character [32:38.560 --> 32:44.240] development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.240 --> 32:48.800] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [32:48.800 --> 32:54.560] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:54.560 --> 32:59.760] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:24.560 --> 33:38.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, and we're talking to Joel [33:38.000 --> 33:45.840] in Ohio. And Joel, have you looked at any of the documents that I have posted on the Telegram site? [33:45.840 --> 33:56.720] I looked at some. There's a lot on there. Yeah, just I'm going to speak to form and style. [33:58.160 --> 34:06.160] One of the things I like to do, and this goes to mental flow, is when I cite a statute or case, [34:06.160 --> 34:16.000] I will put down, he did this in violation of this statute, which reads as follows. And then I copy [34:16.000 --> 34:25.440] the statute and I set it in quotes. I shrink it two points in font size. I italics it and shrink [34:25.440 --> 34:32.000] the borders in. So it stands out on the document, on the page. Whenever I have a quote, the quote [34:32.000 --> 34:37.760] stands out on the page. So if you know what it is, you don't bother to read it. And you know where [34:37.760 --> 34:44.720] my prose stops and the quote starts, and then my prose starts again. Well, if I'm referencing a [34:44.720 --> 34:50.960] statute, I'll drop that statute in there. And Brett and I were talking about this on the break. [34:52.960 --> 34:57.920] You have a statute that they're violating, but you really don't have standing in it. This is [34:57.920 --> 35:05.040] standing in it. This is between them and the IRS. But if you claim that this, because they did this [35:05.040 --> 35:11.040] wrong, it negatively affected you, then you'll want to cite that statute and stick the statute [35:11.040 --> 35:18.640] in there. And when I'm citing a statute, I generally say reads in pertinent part as follows. [35:18.640 --> 35:24.480] And I'll only copy the part that's pertinent to what I'm addressing. But if I want to give them [35:24.480 --> 35:30.160] fair warning, and there's other stuff in there that looks real ugly, I'll copy that in there, [35:30.160 --> 35:38.960] too. So if you take that IRS code and claim that they violated this code and harmed you in the [35:38.960 --> 35:45.520] process and dropped the whole code in there, you're not charging them with, you're not filing [35:45.520 --> 35:56.720] complaints to the IRS. You're just rattling your saber. They'll know you know and have to consider [35:56.720 --> 36:01.520] what if he files it. Is that what you were asking about earlier, about how to use this? [36:03.520 --> 36:07.680] Right. I wasn't sure if I should do that or not, or if I could. [36:08.480 --> 36:14.160] Oh, absolutely you can. You know, they may say, well, this doesn't affect you at all. [36:14.160 --> 36:18.240] Something in your business, you don't have any standing. You say, okay, okay. [36:21.440 --> 36:24.640] But they know you know. So now say, [36:29.040 --> 36:35.200] there's something actually a lot scarier in there for them. So they violated it once [36:35.200 --> 36:45.360] by not recognizing my request, and they send to collections. Once they say, I never reached out [36:45.360 --> 36:50.800] to them, and it goes to collections, it also says in there that they have two options. They can sell [36:50.800 --> 36:56.800] it to them, or they can have them try to collect on their behalf. If they're collecting it on their [36:56.800 --> 37:03.680] behalf, they have to have a contract with that collections company that they're using that [37:03.680 --> 37:13.840] if there's an error, that it got sent to them on accident, because of the error, that in that contract [37:13.840 --> 37:17.920] with them, they have to be, the hospital has to be able to pull it back to the hospital. [37:20.080 --> 37:28.080] I called them and told them about all this, and the collection agency told me that there [37:28.640 --> 37:32.240] had not been told to them that they're collecting it on the hospital's behalf. [37:32.240 --> 37:36.880] I called the hospital, explained it all to them, and they said, there's nothing we can do. You have [37:36.880 --> 37:47.840] to deal with the debt collector. So they violated it with intent at that point by saying. [37:47.840 --> 38:04.240] By saying. Ah, okay. You can make this claim for punitive damages, and that will give you foundation [38:04.240 --> 38:11.280] for bringing all of this in. They're going to say, that's not even your business. You don't have [38:11.280 --> 38:17.920] standing to raise this issue, and you're going to say, yeah, I do have standing to raise this issue, [38:17.920 --> 38:23.840] because you use it to defraud me, and I'm petitioning for travel damages. [38:25.600 --> 38:32.720] You can also check and see how many other people have you done this to. I need to see some records. [38:33.520 --> 38:39.520] Can you please produce some records? They're going to know that you're going to [38:39.520 --> 38:45.680] do a class action for myself and all others similarly situated, [38:47.280 --> 38:50.960] and you've just quoted that thing like Randy was saying. You've put that in there about [38:51.600 --> 38:54.560] you do this multiple times, and you lose your tax exemption. [38:55.920 --> 39:01.840] They're going to connect those dots pretty quick. Yeah, you can say, I have reason to believe [39:01.840 --> 39:11.840] that I have been subjected to an ongoing criminal enterprise, wherein the defendant has [39:12.400 --> 39:18.560] perpetrated multiple predicate acts toward an ongoing criminal conspiracy. [39:19.680 --> 39:24.400] You hear that? All of those bells and alarm bells going off. [39:24.400 --> 39:31.200] Do you know where I'm going, Joel? I'm pretty sure that, if I word that all correctly, [39:31.200 --> 39:38.320] that their boots will be filling with urine. Yes. For those who didn't catch it, that is the [39:38.320 --> 39:47.280] description of Rico's claim. Rico's claim doesn't just go to civil, it also goes to criminal. [39:47.280 --> 39:56.560] I like to lay plants like that. I never say Rico, but I pull the verbiage from the Rico statutes [39:58.480 --> 40:04.000] and drop that in there. If we're going to have a smart lawyer looking... Well, we're going to [40:04.000 --> 40:10.000] have someone smart, a non-necessary lawyer. I think smart and lawyer in the same sentence [40:10.000 --> 40:19.760] is a contradiction of terms. Anyway, you lay those plants in there. If I tell you I'm going to do [40:19.760 --> 40:28.480] something, you might not believe me, but if you think you figure out what I'm going to do, [40:29.040 --> 40:35.920] that's going to be compelling. I don't like direct threats. I play chess. I don't like to play. [40:35.920 --> 40:45.360] I don't play checkers. Chess is all about indirect threats. Do you play chess, Joel? [40:46.960 --> 40:57.040] I do. Somehow, I knew that. Okay. Does that answer your question? [40:57.040 --> 41:08.480] I think so. I can almost guarantee that this is a normal practice of theirs, that they're not even [41:08.480 --> 41:18.880] realizing violates their faculty exempt status, because they have errors in their policies on their [41:18.880 --> 41:24.080] website on how they handle this stuff. It doesn't matter how they handle this stuff. It doesn't [41:24.080 --> 41:28.560] on their website on how they handle this stuff. It doesn't match what the IRS code says, [41:29.600 --> 41:37.040] and they're clearly not even following it. The lady in the billing department in the hospital [41:38.000 --> 41:47.200] didn't even know what their own policy said. Wow. Good. This sounds like you have a good claim [41:47.200 --> 41:54.480] against them. Good chance they'll write you a big check just to get you to go away. [41:54.480 --> 42:01.920] That's my other conundrum is I don't know how big of a check I need the request from them. [42:03.040 --> 42:13.280] Very, very big. Here's the deal. No matter what you ask for, the other side is going to come in [42:13.280 --> 42:20.640] and say that is absolutely outrageous. No matter. If you ask for $10, that's outrageous. [42:21.440 --> 42:26.880] That's what they're going to do. They're going to argue that's too much. You're going to argue [42:26.880 --> 42:32.160] it's not too much, and the jury is going to sit there with their eyes glazing over. [42:33.680 --> 42:40.960] At the end of the day, they know it, and you know it. The only number the jury is going to [42:40.960 --> 42:48.320] remember is the one you walked in the door with. In their deliberations, they will make their [42:48.320 --> 42:54.880] determinations based on the number you walked in the door with. If you have reason to believe that [42:54.880 --> 43:04.160] they have done this to other people, you need to ask for enough that will give the hospital cause [43:04.160 --> 43:12.960] and send a signal to other hospitals to not be like this clown, don't get in his spot. [43:14.240 --> 43:25.360] How much money are they illegally collecting? How much can you project based on a sample [43:25.360 --> 43:35.360] statistical mean? Didn't triple that amount. It needs to be a big number. I just sued my county [43:35.360 --> 43:42.640] for arresting me and holding me in 26 hours. I sued them for $400 million, and I justified it [43:42.640 --> 43:47.760] because they're doing it to everybody else. 25 million people in Texas. How much does that add [43:47.760 --> 43:56.160] up to? Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rudolph Law Radio, we'll be right back. [44:00.400 --> 44:06.320] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.320 --> 44:11.200] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.200 --> 44:17.440] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.440 --> 44:22.160] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.160 --> 44:28.400] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse [44:28.400 --> 44:34.400] all sorts of products, most of which we reject. We have come to trust young Jevity so much we [44:34.400 --> 44:40.560] became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. When you order [44:40.560 --> 44:48.240] from logosradio.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. As you realize [44:48.240 --> 44:53.920] the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience [44:53.920 --> 45:01.440] improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. Are you the [45:01.440 --> 45:07.360] plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:07.360 --> 45:14.720] the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.360 --> 45:20.640] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, [45:20.640 --> 45:25.920] know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, [45:25.920 --> 45:33.040] and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning [45:33.040 --> 45:38.800] experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.800 --> 45:44.480] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio [45:44.480 --> 45:52.160] classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.160 --> 46:03.600] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.160 --> 46:37.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton. We're at Fountain Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking [46:37.200 --> 46:41.200] to Joel in Ohio. Joel, do we have any other questions? [46:43.440 --> 46:48.320] One more. And I'm pretty sure what you're going to say is, [46:48.320 --> 46:54.880] is if I can prove they violated it, then I need to put it in there. But [46:56.800 --> 47:02.880] I can hit them on a bunch of other stuff too with contract law, the Federal Debt [47:02.880 --> 47:10.000] Collection Practices Act. I got them documented violating all that stuff on both parties. [47:12.160 --> 47:16.240] So I need to put it all in there, right? And not just do the one IRS thing. [47:16.240 --> 47:22.240] I had a lawyer tell me once when he read my lawsuit against the sheriff, [47:23.440 --> 47:29.840] he said, you threw everything at them, but this pre-kitchen sink. And I said, [47:29.840 --> 47:36.960] yeah, I was following the horse dumpling rule. Horse dumplings tend to be a little dry and [47:36.960 --> 47:46.320] strawy. But if you throw enough of them up against the wall, odds are one of them is going to stick. [47:46.320 --> 47:53.760] So yeah, you have time to build this suit as complex as you want to. [47:55.280 --> 47:58.800] They got until the Monday after the 20th day to answer it. [47:58.800 --> 48:06.800] Good luck, guys. Throw all you can in there. Everything but the kitchen sink. [48:08.800 --> 48:16.800] And it's all about bringing them to the table. They've got to consider all I have to do [48:16.800 --> 48:24.400] is lose one of these arguments. And then wind up going to the Court of Appeals and they will [48:24.400 --> 48:28.800] wind up going to the Court of Appeals and they will never, ever want to go to the Court of Appeals. [48:29.840 --> 48:36.880] They're not ever going to, just this argument, the IRS issue, they are not going to want it to [48:37.920 --> 48:48.960] get to the courts. So give them something else they can cop to. Oh, yes, we made a mistake [48:48.960 --> 48:54.720] and we billed you incorrectly. We shouldn't have done that. We're sorry. Let's make this deal. [48:54.720 --> 49:00.240] Let's make this go away. So they don't have to admit that they violated the IRS issue. [49:01.120 --> 49:10.320] Never back a bulldog in a corner unless he's got a way out. So give them a way out. Add as much as [49:10.320 --> 49:19.520] you want to in there. Give them a reason. They can cop to the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act or [49:20.560 --> 49:26.160] any of the consumer protection laws. Make you a deal and hide this other one. [49:29.440 --> 49:29.940] Okay. [49:32.800 --> 49:34.640] Okay. Keep us up to speed. [49:34.640 --> 49:42.720] They, just like anybody else, I don't think they want the IRS knocking on their door asking [49:42.720 --> 49:49.120] a bunch of questions. They're worse than anybody else. They really don't want the IRS after them. [49:49.120 --> 49:56.400] The IRS don't care about you. You're chump. You got chump change. These guys got big money. [49:56.400 --> 50:02.320] They're low hanging fruit. So yeah, they're not going to want the IRS after them. [50:07.840 --> 50:09.760] Okay. Is that it, Joel? [50:11.600 --> 50:18.800] Yeah. I mean, I might call back next week if I have any more stuff, but I appreciate it again, [50:18.800 --> 50:23.280] you guys. You guys are awesome. And thanks for everything you guys are doing. [50:23.280 --> 50:30.400] Okay. Thank you, Joel. Now we're going to go to, looks like a new caller, David. [50:34.320 --> 50:34.880] Yes. [50:34.880 --> 50:35.680] Hello, David. [50:37.440 --> 50:38.160] You can hear me. [50:38.160 --> 50:40.240] I'm not sure. Yes, I can hear you. [50:41.360 --> 50:44.240] Okay. Hey, Randy. I am on- [50:44.240 --> 50:46.480] Are you a first time caller? [50:47.440 --> 50:48.960] I am a first time caller. Yes. [50:48.960 --> 50:53.520] Good. Okay. And Brett will get you in the computer. [50:54.800 --> 50:55.440] Okay. Great. [50:55.440 --> 50:56.960] Okay. What state? [50:58.160 --> 50:59.440] Okay. I'm in California. [51:00.640 --> 51:02.960] Okay. Okay. We're not going to hold that against you. [51:07.440 --> 51:12.160] Okay. What do you have for us? [51:12.160 --> 51:21.440] Okay. So I'm calling about, I am ready to file multiple lawsuits for the mask violations, [51:22.480 --> 51:27.040] not being allowed in public accommodations due to not wearing a mask. [51:28.240 --> 51:35.920] Okay. I've sent these parties six rounds of affidavit. So not just the normal first three [51:36.800 --> 51:41.280] that Alphonse preaches, which is the, you know, notice of claim and then notice of fault, [51:41.280 --> 51:47.360] then notice of default. I've actually gone three steps further with the true bill, [51:47.360 --> 51:52.080] true bill one and two and three, kind of a private administrative process kind of thing. [51:54.560 --> 51:58.160] They have not, no one has rebutted any of my claims. [51:59.360 --> 52:02.720] I have everything on evidence, evidence, video, witnesses. [52:02.720 --> 52:08.320] Now, you know, my friend, Ryan Manning from Boston, who filed against Whole Foods. [52:09.520 --> 52:11.520] You helped him with his memorandum. [52:11.520 --> 52:11.920] Rico? [52:11.920 --> 52:12.720] They did a- [52:12.720 --> 52:13.520] Yes. [52:13.520 --> 52:18.080] They did, yeah, they did a motion to dismiss and you put in this amazing memorandum. [52:19.040 --> 52:20.080] Do you remember that? [52:20.880 --> 52:21.680] Yes, I do. [52:22.560 --> 52:28.080] Okay. Well, Ryan and I are very close. We chat a lot and [52:28.080 --> 52:34.640] I was going to copy his loss, his complaint. Now I'm feeling a little like maybe I should [52:34.640 --> 52:40.400] do something different because the judge just threw this out. So my question is- [52:41.360 --> 52:44.560] Wait, wait, wait, wait. They threw out his suit? [52:46.000 --> 52:52.480] The judge, obviously a corrupt judge, threw out every count. And I thought he- [52:52.480 --> 52:53.040] Who cares? [52:53.040 --> 53:02.400] Okay. Look, who cares? Right? Yeah. [53:02.400 --> 53:05.200] Has he filed an appeal? [53:06.880 --> 53:09.920] I think he's working on it. He's just, he's overworked. [53:09.920 --> 53:14.400] Okay. Did he get the notice of appeal filed? [53:16.400 --> 53:17.760] Notice of intent to appeal? [53:17.760 --> 53:22.080] I'll remind him to do it if he hasn't done it already. He probably has. [53:23.440 --> 53:30.800] Yeah. You have to do that very quickly. And then you've got time. Your only purpose in [53:30.800 --> 53:35.600] the trial court is to set the record for appeal. You don't care what the trial court judge does. [53:37.360 --> 53:37.760] Okay. [53:38.400 --> 53:44.480] And he's got it set up very well. And most of these guys, when they got proceeds, [53:44.480 --> 53:52.080] they do not expect the pro se to appeal. Or if they do, they don't expect them to know [53:52.080 --> 53:57.840] how to appeal. So you need him to talk to me and I'll give him some [53:58.560 --> 54:01.120] pointers on how to prepare his appellate documents. [54:02.880 --> 54:09.920] Definitely. Definitely. And my questions, Randy, are just, you know, I'm feeling a little- [54:09.920 --> 54:17.600] I'm studying jurisdictionary, but it is a little intimidating filing that first complaint and [54:17.600 --> 54:20.800] knowing that it needs to be the strongest worded document. [54:22.400 --> 54:24.800] Okay. Have you filed anything yet? [54:26.560 --> 54:33.040] Besides the six unrebutted affidavits that, you know, no. [54:33.040 --> 54:36.240] Have you filed any criminal complaints against these guys? [54:36.240 --> 54:44.320] No, not yet. No, I've been wanting to do that, but I've gone through this process thinking that [54:45.200 --> 54:46.880] that essentially is a complaint. [54:46.880 --> 54:54.800] Okay. You are not ready to sue on two counts. One, you don't know squat, [54:56.080 --> 55:04.080] and the other, they haven't finished screwing up yet. So going after them criminally will [55:04.080 --> 55:11.520] settle both of these. Going after them criminally is simple. You don't need a lot of experience. [55:12.400 --> 55:16.960] You just make up the complaint and file it, and the jurisdiction is going to screw it up. [55:19.120 --> 55:26.400] The best fight to have is the one you picked. We're all used to the government coming and [55:26.400 --> 55:34.640] picking a fight with us, and now we have our liberty and our finances at risk. We got skin [55:34.640 --> 55:40.720] in the game. Let's go down there and pick a fight with them. Now I went down to the JP in Victoria. [55:41.840 --> 55:45.680] Here, I want to file these complaints. He threw them down and walked out. [55:45.680 --> 55:55.680] Oh, yeah. This is going to be fun. I get to dial 911. I get to work over the 911 operator. The [55:56.960 --> 56:02.720] policeman shows up, and Dr. Joe was there with me. He got to watch me work over the policeman. [56:02.720 --> 56:16.560] It was great fun, and you have no risk here. You get to walk them through the system. The JP [56:16.560 --> 56:23.280] wouldn't take the complaints, so I filed criminally against him. The chief of police wouldn't give it [56:24.480 --> 56:29.760] to some magistrate, so I filed criminal charges against him, and I'm just going to walk them up [56:29.760 --> 56:37.280] the ladder, just beat up all of them. There is not anything they can do. They'll do stuff, [56:37.280 --> 56:42.880] and they'll screw it up at every step. If you go in and pick one of these stores and pick one of [56:42.880 --> 56:48.640] these people and file against them criminally, you're not going to get them indicted. You're [56:48.640 --> 56:53.840] not going to get them prosecuted, or you're going to get a lot of really cool experience [56:53.840 --> 57:01.360] where you're not the target. You're going to get to see what we call this little chicken dance, [57:01.360 --> 57:06.400] where they shift one foot to another, trying to figure out how to handle you, [57:07.760 --> 57:14.800] and it will give you the confidence to take these guys on. They do not want you to know [57:14.800 --> 57:20.640] how vulnerable they are. When you come in- I feel like I have them up against the road. [57:20.640 --> 57:24.160] Go ahead. I'm sorry. I feel like I have them up against the road. [57:26.960 --> 57:30.880] It's just a matter of putting together- Alphonse keeps telling me, [57:31.760 --> 57:39.200] drop the hammer. File that complaint and summon. I just feel like I'm not fully versed yet. I [57:39.200 --> 57:43.680] haven't studied the rules of civil procedure and the rules of evidence in California yet fully, [57:43.680 --> 57:52.400] but I'm ready. I put $20 million claims on the men and women who were acting as agents for these [57:52.400 --> 58:00.480] corporations. I want to go get my money. Getting the money will be difficult. [58:02.480 --> 58:09.440] It's going to be time consuming. The hardest part is getting started, taking that first step. [58:09.440 --> 58:17.440] That's why I always suggest that people go down and pick a fight with them. I have Bob in California [58:18.480 --> 58:23.920] and he didn't have anything to fight about. I went down to Cedar River side and picked a fight with [58:23.920 --> 58:29.200] him. For a while there, he was calling in. He couldn't hardly tell us what he was doing for [58:29.200 --> 58:37.440] chuckling and laughing at him. They're screwing up everything. It will give you that sense of [58:37.440 --> 58:44.160] empowerment that you need. When you go into the civil court, you need not to be concerned about [58:44.160 --> 58:51.440] the judge. The judge gets himself an attitude, just not yourself. Would you like to make more [58:51.440 --> 58:57.920] definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and [58:57.920 --> 59:03.040] a set of free Christian books that can really help. The New Testament recovery version is one of the [59:03.040 --> 59:08.560] most comprehensive study Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation and it contains [59:08.560 --> 59:13.280] thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.280 --> 59:18.960] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by [59:18.960 --> 59:24.240] chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:24.240 --> 59:30.720] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. To order your free New Testament recovery version [59:30.720 --> 59:40.400] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.400 --> 59:49.040] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.040 --> 01:00:06.400] The bill of rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. They guarantee [01:00:06.400 --> 01:00:11.360] a specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [01:00:11.360 --> 01:00:15.360] Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [01:00:15.360 --> 01:00:21.520] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never [01:00:21.520 --> 01:00:27.440] get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.440 --> 01:00:33.600] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:00:33.600 --> 01:00:38.800] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.800 --> 01:00:46.160] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.160 --> 01:00:51.040] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find a third [01:00:51.040 --> 01:00:56.000] party there. He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. That shocking image [01:00:56.000 --> 01:01:00.800] of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the third amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.800 --> 01:01:05.520] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days [01:01:05.520 --> 01:01:10.480] of our founding fathers. Third party, third amendment, get it? So if you answer a knock [01:01:10.480 --> 01:01:15.040] at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of [01:01:15.040 --> 01:01:19.920] Rights and reread the third amendment. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information [01:01:19.920 --> 01:01:34.560] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our [01:01:34.560 --> 01:01:38.960] constitution. They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.960 --> 01:01:43.040] Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an [01:01:43.040 --> 01:01:46.320] unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.960 --> 01:01:52.480] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.480 --> 01:01:57.280] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.280 --> 01:02:03.440] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:02:03.440 --> 01:02:08.640] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:02:08.640 --> 01:02:14.640] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:02:16.240 --> 01:02:20.720] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of [01:02:20.720 --> 01:02:25.360] X-ray goggles. That imagery reminds me that the fourth amendment guarantees Americans [01:02:25.360 --> 01:02:30.240] freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. Fourth amendment, four eyes staring at you, [01:02:30.240 --> 01:02:34.080] get it? Unfortunately, the government is trampling our fourth amendment rights in [01:02:34.080 --> 01:02:39.840] the name of security. Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.840 --> 01:02:43.760] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.760 --> 01:02:48.640] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. Join me in asking our representatives [01:02:48.640 --> 01:02:53.120] to dust off the bill of rights and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the fourth. [01:02:53.120 --> 01:03:00.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.120 --> 01:03:49.840] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Brutal Law Radio, and we're talking to David in, [01:03:49.840 --> 01:03:56.560] in where were you David? Northern California. Oh, California. That's right. Okay. [01:03:57.440 --> 01:03:59.680] We weren't going to hold that against you. Okay. Now I remember. [01:04:04.480 --> 01:04:11.200] Okay. Where were we? Well, you were saying I'm not ready to file a lawsuit, even though I've [01:04:11.200 --> 01:04:17.440] sent them six rounds of unrebutted affidavit and put a claim on them for violating multiple laws. [01:04:17.440 --> 01:04:24.800] And I've been studying a jurisdiction area and I've been on your telegram chat. You've definitely [01:04:24.800 --> 01:04:31.840] replied to me a few times. And the question I have, it sounds like you're telling me to file [01:04:31.840 --> 01:04:39.040] criminal complaints first. So I want to clarify that that is what you're saying. And before- [01:04:39.040 --> 01:04:42.720] Yeah. Yeah. I'm saying go down to the gym and work out a little bit. [01:04:42.720 --> 01:04:46.560] Work out a little bit. They're your gym. [01:04:49.760 --> 01:04:57.760] The criminal complaints are a great exercise up front. It's, it's easy. It is one and done. [01:04:58.800 --> 01:05:02.640] You're not getting any money out of the deal, but you're going to be able to use this same, [01:05:02.640 --> 01:05:06.080] what you do with this criminal complaint, you're going to be able to build your civil [01:05:06.080 --> 01:05:13.840] complaint later. Your lawsuit can have like these modules of facts that build up to these [01:05:13.840 --> 01:05:20.960] different counts that they're violating. And those facts that are an exercise for you, [01:05:21.840 --> 01:05:27.920] like right now you need to distinguish what's civil and what's criminal. And you need to- [01:05:27.920 --> 01:05:39.360] Yeah. More than that, you need to build yourself a set of behavioral tools. [01:05:40.720 --> 01:05:47.280] You're dealing with some people that are very, very good at manipulating you using their power [01:05:47.280 --> 01:05:56.240] and authority. And for the most part, we don't have much experience dealing with that. When a [01:05:56.240 --> 01:06:00.160] policeman, well, how many tickets have you had, traffic tickets? [01:06:02.320 --> 01:06:06.960] Maybe a couple. And I do remember one scenario going to that administrative court where the [01:06:06.960 --> 01:06:11.440] judge told everyone you're all guilty. And I was like, that doesn't seem right, but we all [01:06:11.440 --> 01:06:16.320] sucked it up and paid anyways, right? What you need is some experience. [01:06:17.120 --> 01:06:21.600] I go to a court and the judge say something like that. I'm going to ask the judge to drag [01:06:21.600 --> 01:06:28.800] him off the bench. And I'm going to do it with impunity in the bailiff. I'm sorry. Yeah, the [01:06:28.800 --> 01:06:37.760] bailiff. Because I've done this before. These people have a set of methodologies. They know [01:06:37.760 --> 01:06:42.080] how to manipulate you. They know how to push your buttons and get you to dance for them. [01:06:43.280 --> 01:06:50.080] You need to get immune to that. And the best way to do that isn't coming after them. [01:06:50.080 --> 01:06:58.240] You will develop a set of behaviors in a context that's not risky. [01:06:59.680 --> 01:07:04.000] You don't want to file that big suit and have them con you into screwing it up. [01:07:06.400 --> 01:07:16.000] Go start a couple of fights with them. Last time I was in court was in San Marcos. I asked [01:07:16.000 --> 01:07:23.120] to see some records. And they showed me some records. And then I found one missing. And [01:07:24.160 --> 01:07:29.920] the clerk gave me a hard time trying to get those records. So I just called 9-1-1. [01:07:31.920 --> 01:07:40.960] Asked for a policeman to arrest her. Oh, that was so much fun. And I wound up going upstairs [01:07:40.960 --> 01:07:46.080] to the district court and telling the bailiff that my name is Randall Kelton. Instruct the judge [01:07:46.080 --> 01:07:50.320] that I have business with the court. He said, may I tell them the nature of the business? No, [01:07:50.320 --> 01:07:54.880] you may not. I have business with the court and it's none of your business. Instruct the judge. [01:07:55.840 --> 01:08:03.360] And I started to go in the courtroom. He said, you can't go in there. Say what? Is this some [01:08:03.360 --> 01:08:09.280] kind of private meeting in there? He said, no, they're having a hearing. You are telling me [01:08:09.280 --> 01:08:16.480] I cannot go into a public court? He said, will you give me just a moment? And I said, [01:08:16.480 --> 01:08:22.400] sure. He goes inside. He come out. Mr. Kelton, you can go in there and sit and the judge will [01:08:22.400 --> 01:08:29.520] see. I'm sorry. This wasn't the one. I actually gave him the complaint. Generally, I tell him, [01:08:30.720 --> 01:08:36.160] what I want to jerk around the bailiff, I tell him that I have business. It's not his. But I [01:08:36.160 --> 01:08:41.360] have business. It's not his. But I said, give the judge this. I had written up a criminal complaint. [01:08:41.920 --> 01:08:48.640] So when the judge finally finished his hearings, halfway through his hearings, he called a recess [01:08:48.640 --> 01:08:55.040] and went out for about 15 minutes and then come back. I have no doubt he run a check on who I was. [01:08:56.320 --> 01:09:02.720] He come back and I got to watch the judge dance around on his tippy toes, a district judge. [01:09:02.720 --> 01:09:08.880] You got to do that. You got to go in there. And, you know, I told him I wanted him to arrest the [01:09:08.880 --> 01:09:16.320] clerk because she wouldn't show me some records. I wanted him to issue a warrant under 15.09. Oh, [01:09:16.320 --> 01:09:23.760] he was dancing around, tippy toeing. You get to do that once or twice. Then when you come into [01:09:23.760 --> 01:09:30.720] the civil court, these guys are not going to push you around. But you have internal responses [01:09:30.720 --> 01:09:38.240] programmed into you. And these policemen know just exactly how to come up and push your button and [01:09:38.240 --> 01:09:46.720] get you to dance for them. You need to do this in a court that doesn't matter. And you will find out [01:09:46.720 --> 01:09:55.680] where your soft spots are. You get those fixed. You need a little, you need more experience for [01:09:55.680 --> 01:10:03.920] when you go in. Besides, it's great entertainment. Oh, okay. So where can I find the process for [01:10:03.920 --> 01:10:12.320] filing? Do I only want to file state or federal? State. Yeah, you just, you definitely want to do [01:10:12.320 --> 01:10:23.360] state here for this. Okay. And the process for criminal is really easy. Look at, go to the [01:10:23.360 --> 01:10:30.720] county clerk and to the criminal clerk and ask to see the last 10 cases that were filed in this [01:10:30.720 --> 01:10:38.400] court. And they'll get, I generally don't have trouble from clerks, but sometimes I do. And if [01:10:38.400 --> 01:10:42.880] I do, I tell them, I'm just doing some research. Tell them you're with the rule of law radio [01:10:43.680 --> 01:10:51.360] and you're doing some research on court filings in the county. And they just, they just have to [01:10:51.360 --> 01:10:56.400] have a reason. You don't have to give them one, but they don't have to be easy to get along with [01:10:56.400 --> 01:11:04.160] either. But if you give them some BS reason, the clerks are generally very helpful. Get to some [01:11:04.160 --> 01:11:13.280] filings and look at the complaint documents and craft one that looks just like theirs. You give [01:11:13.280 --> 01:11:21.760] that document to a magistrate, you're in California. Yeah. Give them to a magistrate. And when the [01:11:21.760 --> 01:11:26.560] magistrate refuses to take it, then you make up a criminal complaint against the magistrate and go [01:11:26.560 --> 01:11:32.400] file it with another magistrate or go send it to the chief justice of the California Supreme. [01:11:34.720 --> 01:11:39.920] I sent a criminal complaint to the chief justice of the Supreme court in Texas against the governor. [01:11:39.920 --> 01:11:44.720] And he didn't issue a warrant. Now I've sued him for $30 million. [01:11:46.240 --> 01:11:51.840] Hey, you don't want to do your job, Bubba? We'll see how that works for you. You can do that. [01:11:54.240 --> 01:12:02.080] You can sue the governor, but you are above all of them. Go ahead. [01:12:02.080 --> 01:12:10.240] But you are above all of them. Go ahead. State criminal complaints are filed at my [01:12:10.880 --> 01:12:21.440] county courthouse? Yeah, any magistrate. The city municipal judge, justice of the peace, [01:12:21.440 --> 01:12:32.000] a county judge, every judge in California is a magistrate. And you, you're a citizen in a republic. [01:12:33.040 --> 01:12:40.080] None of those judges are as high as you are. You can take your complaint straight to the chief justice [01:12:40.080 --> 01:12:48.640] of the Supreme. You either act on it or you file against him. You might try that. It'd be great fun. [01:12:48.640 --> 01:12:56.240] It'd be great fun. And it would demonstrate to you who you are relative to these public servants. [01:12:57.840 --> 01:13:00.800] You need that experience. You need it in your insights. [01:13:02.240 --> 01:13:05.600] You need to go in and set up a judge so you can hammer him. [01:13:08.080 --> 01:13:13.840] It was so much fun telling that judge that I doubted Mexico and drink too much that cheap [01:13:13.840 --> 01:13:20.800] tequila lost my hearing aid. The judge knew I was screwing with him. There wasn't anything he could [01:13:20.800 --> 01:13:32.640] do about it. You need to do that a time or two. Okay. Besides you, I find this fun. You're in [01:13:32.640 --> 01:13:40.000] Northern California? Correct. Yes. And I'm trying to figure out how to go after our county health [01:13:40.000 --> 01:13:46.960] officer because I have records requests from her saying they have no proof that any virus exists. [01:13:48.080 --> 01:13:53.360] So I, I, I'm, I'm wanting to file against her. I've sent her six rounds of affidavits [01:13:54.560 --> 01:13:58.160] saying everything you're doing is fraud. Here's all the laws you're violating of your oath. [01:13:58.960 --> 01:14:06.480] And I want- Okay. Instead of taking on everybody all at once, take, take on the health officer. [01:14:06.480 --> 01:14:10.240] She's a public official. They're going to throw everything they can find at you. [01:14:12.720 --> 01:14:17.360] Take her on just to get ready for the real deal. [01:14:18.880 --> 01:14:20.880] The corporations that denied me service. [01:14:24.000 --> 01:14:28.880] Wait a minute. I missed that. The corporation denied you service? [01:14:28.880 --> 01:14:35.680] Yeah. Yeah. So what I was saying was the, the, the five cases that I have sent affidavits to [01:14:36.320 --> 01:14:43.520] are places that didn't let me in due to not wearing a mask. Very similar to Ryan in Boston. [01:14:43.520 --> 01:14:54.240] Yeah. Yeah. But I, what I was saying was my sixth, my sixth defendant is the county health officer [01:14:54.240 --> 01:15:02.800] who I have these records requests from that prove that she has no evidence that any virus is causing [01:15:02.800 --> 01:15:08.960] any disease or even exists. And she's in vaccines and I want to, I want to go after her now too, [01:15:08.960 --> 01:15:13.680] you know, because I, I already have a hundred butted affidavits from her too. She's just, [01:15:13.680 --> 01:15:17.920] I have all these people on the ropes and I just want to finish them. [01:15:17.920 --> 01:15:22.640] Yeah, I know you want, you want to go after them. You need to be prepared. They're more prepared [01:15:22.640 --> 01:15:30.480] than you are. You're dealing, you're dealing with seasoned professionals here. So sue, sue one of [01:15:30.480 --> 01:15:43.760] them and let them demonstrate to you all the crap they're going to pull. Just use one of them as a [01:15:43.760 --> 01:15:52.960] crash dummy. Okay. So when you sue the other ones, so you sue the other ones, when you sue the second [01:15:52.960 --> 01:15:58.720] one, then you're ready. But the time you get through the second one, the third one's going [01:15:58.720 --> 01:16:05.920] to be toast. If you sue them all at once, you'll wind up them throwing out everything all together. [01:16:07.360 --> 01:16:11.360] So you're saying start with state criminal complaints on just one of them [01:16:11.360 --> 01:16:15.920] and, and, and get yourself familiar with, with that process first. [01:16:16.720 --> 01:16:23.200] Exactly. Get yourself familiar with dealing with annoyed public officials [01:16:24.880 --> 01:16:33.280] and you'll turn it from being frightened and intimidated to entertainment. [01:16:34.480 --> 01:16:36.320] Yeah. You're going to start to feel really powerful. [01:16:36.320 --> 01:16:41.600] I can't wait. I just, where, where do I find those templates to file those state criminal complaints? [01:16:41.600 --> 01:16:47.840] Send me an email, randyatwilloflawradio.com and I will get you some California templates [01:16:47.840 --> 01:17:07.360] and talk to Tina on a telegram. Hang on, go into our sponsors. We will be right back. [01:17:18.400 --> 01:17:24.320] using federal civil rights statutes. What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:17:24.320 --> 01:17:28.960] How to answer letters and phone calls. How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:17:28.960 --> 01:17:34.080] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael [01:17:34.080 --> 01:17:39.600] Miras proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation [01:17:39.600 --> 01:17:44.800] is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on [01:17:44.800 --> 01:17:51.600] the blue Michael Miras banner or email michaelmiras.yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com [01:17:51.600 --> 01:18:00.000] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.000 --> 01:18:04.880] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so [01:18:04.880 --> 01:18:09.520] addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fixed. I'd be lost without [01:18:09.520 --> 01:18:14.400] logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show [01:18:14.400 --> 01:18:19.040] producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it [01:18:19.040 --> 01:18:24.800] all on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything [01:18:24.800 --> 01:18:29.680] from Amazon, you can help logos. When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you [01:18:29.680 --> 01:18:36.480] do is clear your cookies. Now, go to logosradio.network.com. Click on the Amazon logo [01:18:36.480 --> 01:18:42.080] and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets [01:18:42.080 --> 01:18:48.000] a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do I have to do anything different when I order? No. Can I use [01:18:48.000 --> 01:18:54.080] my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.080 --> 01:19:12.880] This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are welcome. Happy holidays, logos. This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:12.880 --> 01:19:27.680] Oh, come on. [01:19:42.880 --> 01:19:56.320] Okay. We are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue of Love Radio and we're talking to David [01:19:56.320 --> 01:20:03.600] in California. Okay, David, a duty to move along. We've got two more first-time callers [01:20:03.600 --> 01:20:13.600] and only three segments. Are you ready? Thank you. I'm ready. I will be on your telegram chat [01:20:13.600 --> 01:20:18.240] and I will keep you posted. And you said to email you because you're going to send me California [01:20:18.240 --> 01:20:25.840] criminal template. Is that right? I'm going to send your email to Ted in California and to Tina. [01:20:25.840 --> 01:20:34.160] Okay. Get them in contact with you. They've been doing this and Ted will be a real good [01:20:34.160 --> 01:20:39.440] contact for you. They've been after him in criminal court for seven years and he is kicking their [01:20:39.440 --> 01:20:48.560] behinds. Okay, great. We'll get you some good resources. Okay. Randy at RueofLoveRadio.com. [01:20:49.840 --> 01:20:52.800] Sounds good. Thank you, Randy. I appreciate everything you guys are doing. Thanks, Brett. [01:20:52.800 --> 01:21:00.880] You bet. Good night. Okay. Now we're going to go to Stacy [01:21:03.440 --> 01:21:12.960] 716 Area Code. Hi. How are you? I am wonderful. What state are you in? [01:21:14.720 --> 01:21:20.000] I'm in New York State. Okay. What do you have for us today? [01:21:20.000 --> 01:21:26.080] Well, you just happened to be talking about setting up a judge so you can hammer him, [01:21:26.080 --> 01:21:34.640] I think were your words. And that is my issue. My situation is kind of a Debbie Downer situation [01:21:34.640 --> 01:21:42.880] for the night here. And my ex-husband is an attorney and he's a former attorney for Child [01:21:42.880 --> 01:21:49.120] Protective Services. And the reason I filed for divorce is because our own children disclosed [01:21:49.120 --> 01:21:56.960] abuse. And the same agency that he worked for maintained his investigations and covered him up. [01:21:57.600 --> 01:22:01.760] But it wasn't just the problem with that agency, it's the problem with the judiciary too. [01:22:03.520 --> 01:22:09.840] And yeah, it's a really bad judge. And he did a lot of really bad things from the bench. [01:22:11.680 --> 01:22:16.240] Like he called my children's counselor, Zach Parquet, and told them to ignore any past or [01:22:16.240 --> 01:22:22.800] present ongoing abuse. He would hold off the record hearings to the point that I [01:22:22.800 --> 01:22:31.520] recorded them myself and transcribed them. And ultimately, you know, I filed affidavits, [01:22:31.520 --> 01:22:35.920] you know, telling him to please stop holding hearings off the record. So after I recorded [01:22:35.920 --> 01:22:42.240] and transcribed it, I filed for his recusal for depraved indifference for my children's well-being. [01:22:42.240 --> 01:22:50.560] Okay. Okay. Hold on. Hold on. Have you filed any judicial conduct complaints against him? [01:22:52.080 --> 01:22:58.960] Multiple. And they keep unfounding everything. They say that the judge has powers they can't [01:22:58.960 --> 01:23:07.360] care. We don't care. It doesn't matter. If you file a judicial conduct complaint against him [01:23:07.360 --> 01:23:13.920] because he parts his hair on the left, they're going to toss it. And it's going to put a mark [01:23:13.920 --> 01:23:22.080] on his chart that won't ever go away. And his bond rating will increase. Your ex-husband, the lawyer? [01:23:24.240 --> 01:23:28.960] He is low-hanging fruit. Have you bar-grieved him? [01:23:28.960 --> 01:23:35.600] My ex-husband. He asked and they ignored it. [01:23:38.560 --> 01:23:39.040] That's okay. [01:23:40.880 --> 01:23:41.920] Wait. Say that again. [01:23:42.640 --> 01:23:45.840] She said, yes, she has, and they've ignored it. [01:23:46.480 --> 01:23:54.080] That's okay. That's a good thing. Hold on. You have to understand. That is a good thing. [01:23:54.080 --> 01:24:01.920] Okay. The reason that's a good thing is the insurance carrier knows they will ignore your [01:24:01.920 --> 01:24:09.520] complaints. So how does the insurance carrier gauge his level of risk? By valid bar grievances? [01:24:09.520 --> 01:24:15.920] Heck, you throw them all in the trash. By the numbers. One bar grievance your first year of [01:24:15.920 --> 01:24:21.040] practice. They cancel immediately. Two bar grievances any one year of practice. If you've [01:24:21.040 --> 01:24:28.320] been practicing 20 years, they cancel. Valid, invalid, they don't care. Three, they'll cancel [01:24:28.320 --> 01:24:34.400] your law firm's malpractice insurance. Brett, tell her how much fun that is. [01:24:35.840 --> 01:24:40.800] I did have success in getting the attorney for children admonished. [01:24:43.200 --> 01:24:46.320] That's incredible. That almost never happens. [01:24:46.320 --> 01:24:52.960] I was going to say New York is the one place where I have seen them actually do things. [01:24:54.080 --> 01:25:02.080] I was helping someone years ago and it had been almost a year since he had been able to get before [01:25:02.080 --> 01:25:09.440] the court and he filed a judicial conduct complaint. The commission landed on this judge like a ton of [01:25:09.440 --> 01:25:20.560] bricks, sanctioned him for not properly maintaining his calendar. I was astounded. So New York [01:25:21.600 --> 01:25:29.920] tends to police their officials more than any other state I've been to. But lawyers, [01:25:30.960 --> 01:25:34.640] you bar grieve your husband is going to double his malpractice insurance. [01:25:34.640 --> 01:25:40.640] You give him two, they're going to cancel. If he gets three bar grievances against him, [01:25:41.200 --> 01:25:50.880] no law firm in the country will hire him. If they hire him and he takes on a case and he doesn't win [01:25:50.880 --> 01:25:55.600] as much for the client as the client expected and the client runs a check on him and he's going to [01:25:55.600 --> 01:25:59.680] say, what are you doing to me? This child's got all these bar grievances. No wonder he lost. [01:25:59.680 --> 01:26:07.680] It will seriously damage his career. Give him a reason to back off and act like he's supposed to. [01:26:09.200 --> 01:26:14.560] The attorney for children used to hire my ex to do independent contract work for him for like a [01:26:14.560 --> 01:26:20.480] decade and they hid this at the onset of the case. And I didn't find out until four years in. [01:26:21.920 --> 01:26:24.720] So did you file criminal charges against him? [01:26:24.720 --> 01:26:32.640] So did you file criminal charges against him? Against who? My ex, the attorney for children or both? [01:26:34.080 --> 01:26:40.080] Both and the judge? Not. That's where I'm at and that's what I want to do. [01:26:41.920 --> 01:26:47.680] Okay, we can definitely help you with that. We're going to run out of time on this show, but [01:26:47.680 --> 01:26:55.280] are you familiar with our telegram sites? I'm pretty sure I can find them. [01:26:56.640 --> 01:27:03.920] Okay, send an email to randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:27:05.920 --> 01:27:13.600] That's randy at rule of law, L-A-W, radio.com. [01:27:13.600 --> 01:27:22.320] Okay. And I will get you some documentation. One thing would be good if you got the Juris Dictionary [01:27:22.880 --> 01:27:29.840] and it's a $250 course. Go through that course. Juris Dictionary will teach you all the stuff they [01:27:29.840 --> 01:27:36.080] don't teach lawyers in law school. How to file motions, how to get them set for hearing, what kind [01:27:36.080 --> 01:27:44.080] of motions to file, when and how. When I get someone on this show who's been through [01:27:44.080 --> 01:27:52.240] Juris Dictionary, I can tell very quickly. We get to have a whole different conversation at a whole [01:27:52.240 --> 01:28:02.240] different level. It's a 24-hour set of CDs. It is absolutely essential. Once you've got that, you've [01:28:02.240 --> 01:28:11.600] got all the basics. Then we'll show you some stuff that Dr. Graves doesn't teach. He's a lawyer, [01:28:12.400 --> 01:28:19.760] so he still stays within a certain set of bounds. We're not lawyers. We don't stay within those [01:28:19.760 --> 01:28:26.640] bounds. We've spent a lot of years figuring out how to beat these guys up. They've spent a lot of [01:28:26.640 --> 01:28:34.160] time getting the system set so they can pretty well use it any way they want to. We've spent a [01:28:34.160 --> 01:28:44.160] lot of time figuring out how to screw that up for them. There's a lot to tell you, but we won't have [01:28:44.160 --> 01:28:53.440] time today to get through all that. Send me an email and then go to our archives. Listen to our [01:28:53.440 --> 01:29:01.040] archives. We have about 1,300 of them. Listen to a few of those archives, and you'll begin to get [01:29:01.040 --> 01:29:10.720] the idea of how to go after these guys. I'm in Texas. If you walk into just about any courthouse [01:29:10.720 --> 01:29:18.720] in Texas and mention my name, everybody gets real excited. We'll show you how to do that. [01:29:18.720 --> 01:29:25.840] How to become their worst nightmare. They'll tend to give you what you want to keep you from [01:29:25.840 --> 01:29:36.640] beating them up some more. We're about to go to our sponsors. Give me that email. Oh, write up a [01:29:36.640 --> 01:29:44.080] timeline of what all has occurred, and we'll help you sort that out. About to go to our sponsors, [01:29:44.080 --> 01:29:49.280] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. I'm not going to give out the call-in numbers. [01:29:49.280 --> 01:29:55.520] We've only got two segments left, and we've still got another caller. So hang on. [01:29:56.800 --> 01:30:02.720] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, [01:30:02.720 --> 01:30:08.320] the hackers will come, and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:30:08.320 --> 01:30:14.240] back with the shocking details in a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data [01:30:14.240 --> 01:30:19.200] about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your [01:30:19.200 --> 01:30:25.280] freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your [01:30:25.280 --> 01:30:31.200] information to yourself. Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by [01:30:31.200 --> 01:30:38.320] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:40.320 --> 01:30:45.440] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too [01:30:45.440 --> 01:30:50.880] with a smart grid. So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor [01:30:50.880 --> 01:30:56.800] electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. But cybersecurity expert Dr. Albrecht has [01:30:56.800 --> 01:31:01.200] said not so fast. If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:01.200 --> 01:31:07.200] hackers will have a field day. Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [01:31:07.200 --> 01:31:12.800] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health [01:31:12.800 --> 01:31:18.080] reasons. The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:18.080 --> 01:31:27.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:27.600 --> 01:31:34.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. The [01:31:34.000 --> 01:31:39.040] government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [01:31:39.040 --> 01:31:43.600] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives [01:31:43.600 --> 01:31:48.160] and thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a [01:31:48.160 --> 01:31:52.080] structural engineer. I'm a New York City correctional officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father [01:31:52.080 --> 01:31:58.160] who lost his son. We're Americans and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.160 --> 01:32:04.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, [01:32:04.000 --> 01:32:07.680] we live in an us-against-them society. If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:07.680 --> 01:32:12.160] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. We're going to have to stand [01:32:12.160 --> 01:32:16.160] and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.160 --> 01:32:20.480] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.480 --> 01:32:24.720] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.720 --> 01:32:28.800] our rights through due process. 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Order your copy today, [01:32:56.320 --> 01:32:59.360] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:59.360 --> 01:33:08.640] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:59.360 --> 01:34:06.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Stacey [01:34:06.640 --> 01:34:17.200] in New York. Stacey, timeline, first thing. Whenever you're in a contentious battle like this, [01:34:18.240 --> 01:34:25.520] if you're not careful, it stops being about an outcome and starts being about the fight. [01:34:25.520 --> 01:34:33.680] So, and when you're in these circumstances, you tend to move from one emotional high point to the [01:34:33.680 --> 01:34:42.160] next. And when you tell people about what's going on, it kind of causes you to get your timing all [01:34:42.160 --> 01:34:52.640] mixed up. The most important thing you can have is a timeline. Not a statement of facts and not [01:34:52.640 --> 01:34:57.200] arguments and support, but on this day, this happened, this day, this happened, this day, [01:34:57.200 --> 01:35:04.960] this happened. Just make a set of events from the time this started to the present. [01:35:07.200 --> 01:35:14.800] When Brett and I looked at a circumstance, we tend to look for things that you don't know to [01:35:14.800 --> 01:35:23.040] pay attention to. You tend to pay attention to what you responded emotionally to, and you move [01:35:23.040 --> 01:35:29.040] from one high point to the next. With a timeline, we could look at it and say, wait a minute, wait [01:35:29.040 --> 01:35:36.720] a minute, something had to occur in between here, and we start filling these pieces in. In a case [01:35:36.720 --> 01:35:45.120] like this, the timeline is the most important tool you can have. It gets everything in order, [01:35:45.680 --> 01:35:53.680] and it keeps you focused on how everything comes together. From the timeline, we'll start building [01:35:53.680 --> 01:36:01.200] other tools that you can use to help adjudicate your case. So, don't worry about getting everything [01:36:01.200 --> 01:36:10.160] in there the first time. Just put down what comes to mind. The main thing is to have it by date, [01:36:11.360 --> 01:36:16.560] so you get everything in order, because once you go through it and put a bunch down, [01:36:17.120 --> 01:36:26.160] you will find it is very difficult. It takes a serious mental discipline to be able to do this, [01:36:26.160 --> 01:36:34.080] because you essentially have to go back and re-experience all of the difficult issues, [01:36:35.120 --> 01:36:42.640] and it's hard. It's a struggle. Put a timeline together. Don't worry about whether it's complete [01:36:42.640 --> 01:36:50.080] or not, but just give us something to work from, and then call us next week, and I have the timeline [01:36:50.080 --> 01:36:57.040] in front of me, then I can start asking you some pretty sophisticated questions, and we can get a [01:36:57.040 --> 01:37:02.000] plan sorted out for how to go after them. We talk about filing bar grievances and judicial [01:37:02.000 --> 01:37:09.440] conduct complaints, but we really don't do that haphazardly. That's a tool in our arsenal, [01:37:09.440 --> 01:37:16.880] a very, very powerful tool in our arsenal, and we try to use them carefully. So, we need to [01:37:16.880 --> 01:37:22.640] use them carefully, so we need to have a good understanding of what the whole situation is [01:37:23.200 --> 01:37:25.840] before we start using those tools. Does that make sense? [01:37:27.520 --> 01:37:36.080] Yep. One question I have, though, because I don't want to not do what you're directing me to do, [01:37:36.080 --> 01:37:41.840] but I basically have quite the timeline in my orders to cause for him to recuse, [01:37:41.840 --> 01:37:48.960] or do you want this specifically written out as a timeline? No, send what you have. Let me look at [01:37:48.960 --> 01:37:55.920] it. Okay. That'll get us a start, and then I'll tell you what I need added to it. [01:37:57.200 --> 01:38:02.960] Awesome. Love it. Get that and call us next week. Do you have my email? [01:38:02.960 --> 01:38:12.800] I do now. Get that to me. One thing you can do that'll give a good timeline [01:38:12.800 --> 01:38:18.560] is look at your court cases and get the docket sheet, a list of everything that's been filed. [01:38:19.760 --> 01:38:25.840] Okay. That kind of acts as a timeline. Then we can go in there and add the things that come [01:38:25.840 --> 01:38:34.320] in between. Get that and call us back next week. Awesome. Love it. Okay. Thank you very much. [01:38:36.240 --> 01:38:41.920] Now we're going to go to someone in Bridgeport, Illinois. [01:38:43.200 --> 01:38:47.600] First-time caller, if you're in Bridgeport, talk to us. [01:38:47.600 --> 01:38:58.640] Hello, Rampy? There you go. Give me a first name, and I got to state. [01:39:00.960 --> 01:39:05.120] Gary in Pennsylvania. Wait, say that again. [01:39:07.040 --> 01:39:16.640] Oh, Gary in Pennsylvania. Oh. What are you doing coming up on our board as being in Bridgeport, [01:39:16.640 --> 01:39:27.760] Illinois? I don't know. I get around. Oh, okay. All right, Jerry. Go ahead. What do you have for us? [01:39:28.320 --> 01:39:34.640] You know, I have this thing from the circuit. I sent it in two or three times, and it kept [01:39:34.640 --> 01:39:40.960] sending it back the same problem. I was wondering if you could probably help me out with it. [01:39:40.960 --> 01:39:49.440] It says here that the petition for rehearing in banks are set forth in federal appeals [01:39:52.160 --> 01:40:06.880] on the 32G, 35D, and 40D, and third circuit, LAR 35.1 and 35.2. Your document does not comply [01:40:06.880 --> 01:40:12.400] with the following requirements, and they give me two paragraphs here with some of these [01:40:12.400 --> 01:40:17.760] requirements that are roughly about the same number. Okay. Let me tell you about that. [01:40:18.800 --> 01:40:26.160] I get that all the time. They send it back, and the clerks in the federal courts [01:40:27.520 --> 01:40:35.360] are required to assist process. So don't get frustrated with them. This is generally not [01:40:35.360 --> 01:40:40.640] the judges doing this. This is the clerks making sure they're just helping you to get everything [01:40:40.640 --> 01:40:49.040] correct. Yeah, poor science. If you call them and talk to them, they are very congenial, very helpful. [01:40:52.560 --> 01:40:59.280] But I read all these. I pulled out the rules, like 35, 40. I got them all here. I read them [01:40:59.280 --> 01:41:06.080] two or three or 40 second time, and I keep sending it in. But the one thing is that I [01:41:06.080 --> 01:41:11.360] started it out the first time with like six paragraphs, and now I've got them down to these [01:41:11.360 --> 01:41:16.640] last two paragraphs. So I think they're getting annoyed with me or they're getting tired of me. [01:41:17.280 --> 01:41:24.880] So if I just keep sending these in, do you think they'll finally send the case up to the judges? [01:41:24.880 --> 01:41:32.400] Well, if you address their issues, the last time I filed a federal case, [01:41:33.200 --> 01:41:37.440] it took me six or seven times before they finally took it and filed it. [01:41:40.880 --> 01:41:46.000] But it's okay. The judge doesn't know about this. This is just the clerks [01:41:46.000 --> 01:41:49.040] making sure you got everything right. These guys are not your enemies. [01:41:49.040 --> 01:41:54.160] Oh, no, the clerk is the same one. They keep filing. I tell us the name all the time. [01:41:54.160 --> 01:41:59.760] You know what I'm saying? But I was going to pack all these things together, [01:41:59.760 --> 01:42:08.720] get as much paperwork that I could find up, write down a whole big baloney full of briefs, [01:42:09.280 --> 01:42:12.880] and let them lease through that. You think that would discourage them a little? [01:42:12.880 --> 01:42:20.000] Well, it shouldn't be trying to discourage the county clerks. I mean, the federal clerks, [01:42:21.200 --> 01:42:23.040] you need to give them what they're asking you for. [01:42:23.040 --> 01:42:26.960] Well, ask them enough to where they get tired of me. You know what I'm saying? [01:42:27.920 --> 01:42:32.240] They won't get tired of you. They're not going to give that to the judge until it's right. [01:42:33.520 --> 01:42:35.040] How about if I go down there? [01:42:36.320 --> 01:42:39.760] That will probably be great. But when you go down there, [01:42:39.760 --> 01:42:45.120] remember, these clerks are on your side, and they want you to get this right. [01:42:46.880 --> 01:42:53.120] To make them look good in front of the judges, the federal clerks are absolutely your ally. [01:42:55.120 --> 01:43:05.360] Well, I read all this stuff inside out, upside down, and when I read the rule and it tells you [01:43:05.360 --> 01:43:14.400] all the rules, I even file extra motions, like it wanted for extra paper, motions to file extra [01:43:14.400 --> 01:43:24.240] lengthy pages. You know, everything I'm interested in. You think that was too much for them? Were [01:43:24.240 --> 01:43:29.440] they overwhelmed or something, or what's your opinion? Okay, there are filing limits. [01:43:29.440 --> 01:43:38.560] Well, okay, there are filing limits. There's limits on pages, there's limits on how much [01:43:38.560 --> 01:43:44.640] you can put in exhibits. Yeah, but they weren't asking for limits. I threw that in there anyway, [01:43:45.360 --> 01:43:49.680] just to annoy them or whatever I got to do to get your attention and all that thing. [01:43:49.680 --> 01:43:55.600] Well, okay, then what is it they're coming, hold on, we're about to go to our sponsors, [01:43:55.600 --> 01:44:02.800] Randy Felt and Brett Fountain. We'll be right back. Through advances in technology, our lives [01:44:02.800 --> 01:44:07.920] have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than [01:44:07.920 --> 01:44:13.520] they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and [01:44:13.520 --> 01:44:20.240] disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. 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Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:52.240 --> 01:47:09.280] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [01:47:09.840 --> 01:47:17.200] and we're talking to Jerry in Pennsylvania. Jerry, in your last communication with the clerk, [01:47:17.200 --> 01:47:25.680] what did they say the issue was? Well, the respondent got down to this, [01:47:26.400 --> 01:47:31.520] and it says, after I read all that, the next paragraph down, the middle one says, [01:47:31.520 --> 01:47:39.200] any additional documents attached to the petition must be accompanied by a motion to, [01:47:39.200 --> 01:47:46.320] and they put this in parentheses this time, I mean highlighted it, you know, motion to file the [01:47:46.320 --> 01:47:58.080] exhibit attached to the petition for rehearing to 3rd Circuit LAR 35.2A. Then, on the next [01:47:58.080 --> 01:48:12.400] paragraph there, the last one, pursuant to 3rd Circuit LAR miscellaneous 107 and 113. If the [01:48:12.400 --> 01:48:18.240] court finds that a party continues not to be compliant with the rules and all this stuff, [01:48:18.240 --> 01:48:22.080] they're going to dismiss the case. But they said that two or three times before, [01:48:23.840 --> 01:48:30.880] which I never make anyway. Wait a minute, I still don't know what their concern is. [01:48:32.480 --> 01:48:39.120] Well, let's take for instance one electronic filing. It says, if you electronic file, you know, [01:48:39.120 --> 01:48:46.960] but I got enough time filing paper. Then another one says, you must have a green sheet of paper [01:48:46.960 --> 01:48:53.680] in between whatever here, and then you want a white sheet of paper, a red sheet of paper [01:48:53.680 --> 01:48:58.800] in between something else, you know, and then they give you a size of the paper and all that [01:48:58.800 --> 01:49:09.520] other gap. You must have read all that stuff. Can you send that to me? Let me look at it. [01:49:11.280 --> 01:49:15.680] All it is, it's on the top. It's just a United States Court of Appeals, [01:49:15.680 --> 01:49:21.600] got the case number, and it's just an order in my name. And then it puts all this, [01:49:21.600 --> 01:49:33.440] it's, you know, 323540. I just get them off the internet. I get them off their website, you know. [01:49:34.800 --> 01:49:42.000] So, I mean, to me, it sounds like they're just trying to stonewall me, you know. So, but I thought, [01:49:42.000 --> 01:49:46.480] well, I got a little extra time. I'll give you a call. Maybe you can enlighten me a little more. [01:49:46.480 --> 01:49:56.320] Yeah. Wait a minute. Do you have email? Yeah, AIX. I'm in your database. [01:49:57.360 --> 01:50:02.560] Okay. Send me the, can you scan these, Doc? Did you have them electronic? [01:50:04.080 --> 01:50:11.120] Can you forward them to me? Yeah, you just need the order. You don't need all this, the rule. [01:50:11.120 --> 01:50:16.800] Well, they're trying to get you to, yeah, just send me what they're asking you to do. [01:50:18.000 --> 01:50:24.320] Right. Send that to me. You can clarify it here on the radio, you know. [01:50:25.440 --> 01:50:29.520] Yeah. Send it to me. Let me look at it and then call in next week. [01:50:31.040 --> 01:50:35.600] Oh, okay. I'll do that. Okay. Thank you, Jerry. [01:50:35.600 --> 01:50:40.400] One more thing. Could I ask you on this declaratory judgment? [01:50:41.840 --> 01:50:49.520] You sent that whole brief in and then mine is asking for money and then you wait for [01:50:50.160 --> 01:50:55.600] them to send it back. Then what do you do? Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Hold on. Hold on. [01:50:56.320 --> 01:50:59.760] You said declaratory judgment and asking for money? [01:50:59.760 --> 01:51:04.720] Yeah. You sent them right up your brief for declaratory judgment when you do a lawsuit, [01:51:05.360 --> 01:51:08.720] but don't ask for money. When is the time that you ask for the money? [01:51:10.720 --> 01:51:17.520] Once you get your declaratory judgment ruled in your favor, then you file and ask for the money. [01:51:17.520 --> 01:51:23.120] Then it's res judicata. Okay. You don't have to file it. You take [01:51:23.120 --> 01:51:30.320] all the documents and send them back in again, but add the sheet for relief. [01:51:31.600 --> 01:51:35.280] Right. This time you're not asking for declaratory judgment. You already got that. [01:51:35.840 --> 01:51:39.120] Now you're asking for money. [01:51:39.120 --> 01:51:44.080] The money. Oh, okay. I'll do it that way. Okay, Randy. [01:51:44.080 --> 01:51:44.800] Okay. Thanks. [01:51:44.800 --> 01:51:54.560] Thank you. Okay. Now we're going to go to Shane in New York. Hello, Shane. What do you have for us [01:51:54.560 --> 01:52:02.080] today? I'm going to make it short and to the point. I filed a small claims issue about three [01:52:02.080 --> 01:52:07.680] years ago against two officers operating outside their scope of office. I just got my order [01:52:07.680 --> 01:52:17.200] yesterday. They dismissed it at small claims. The appellate court at the county court basically [01:52:17.200 --> 01:52:25.440] dismissed it because they said I failed to pay the filing fee, which is crazy because they accepted [01:52:25.440 --> 01:52:29.840] the appeal and I filed it. Apparently you're supposed to pay the filing fee to lower court. [01:52:29.840 --> 01:52:35.680] I think it's like $5 and I filed it to the county clerk's office and they never sent me a default [01:52:35.680 --> 01:52:38.800] letter, notice the cure, nothing. They just accepted it. [01:52:38.800 --> 01:52:43.920] Wait, wait a minute. Wait, wait, wait. Have you been declared indigent? [01:52:47.120 --> 01:52:51.120] Didn't you get an inability to pay in the bankruptcy court? [01:52:52.640 --> 01:52:59.200] Yes, you're right. And also the New York state. I forgot about that. Yes, I was. [01:52:59.200 --> 01:53:07.680] You don't owe them anything. File an appeal, notice them that you already have a declaration [01:53:07.680 --> 01:53:16.560] of inability to pay. They can't charge you. Brilliant. Okay. All right. Yeah, that's true. [01:53:16.560 --> 01:53:22.880] When they don't have anything else, they try to get you on procedure. [01:53:22.880 --> 01:53:29.280] Yes. And that's the thing. The court said that the court lacks jurisdiction because the filing [01:53:30.240 --> 01:53:35.520] was not properly filed. And they also said there was no evidence to support my claim that they [01:53:35.520 --> 01:53:41.200] operated outside their scope of office to make them personally liable, which is absolutely insane. [01:53:42.320 --> 01:53:48.080] They never even let me the brief. And this is in small claims? [01:53:48.080 --> 01:53:59.280] Yes, for what I did. Okay. This is simple enough. When you appeal out of a small claims court, [01:54:00.480 --> 01:54:07.040] a small claims court is an inferior court. And an appeal out of an inferior court [01:54:07.600 --> 01:54:13.680] appeals to the county court trial de novo. Start all over again. [01:54:13.680 --> 01:54:19.520] And you know what an amazing thing is, they also use one more excuse. I'm going to tell you this. [01:54:19.520 --> 01:54:25.840] One more thing that will be done is they said, I failed to stipulate to the record before I filed [01:54:25.840 --> 01:54:31.120] my brief. I failed to stipulate, which there is no requirement from small claims to the county [01:54:31.120 --> 01:54:37.440] court. There's no requirements to stipulate to the record. There's nothing. Wait a minute. Who said [01:54:37.440 --> 01:54:46.000] that? The judge, Judge Egan from Buffalo, New York. Oh, you really need to hammer him. [01:54:47.680 --> 01:54:54.720] It's a girl. This is a court of her. This is a court of no record. She's reading the appellate [01:54:54.720 --> 01:55:03.280] rules for an appeal from a superior court and is applying it to an inferior court. [01:55:03.280 --> 01:55:10.160] Right. So I have this notice to appeal all written up, the affidavit of the service. [01:55:11.600 --> 01:55:18.000] Do you think I should do a rehearing on it too? You have 30 days to do it. [01:55:20.800 --> 01:55:21.600] I'm thinking. [01:55:23.600 --> 01:55:27.280] To point out her mistakes in her order, because her order is so one-sided, it's incredible. [01:55:27.280 --> 01:55:35.920] A petition for writ of mandamus or no, that's a final appeal. [01:55:37.440 --> 01:55:43.360] Well, you have 30 days to file a rehearing based on stuff that the court failed to recognize or [01:55:43.360 --> 01:55:54.880] misapplied it. It depends on what you want to do. Yes. If you want this adjudicated, [01:55:54.880 --> 01:55:59.920] this judge is obviously not the sharpest knife in the door. You might want to move it to the [01:55:59.920 --> 01:56:06.800] county court. Now I'm getting confused. You file small claims and she's county court? [01:56:08.000 --> 01:56:12.880] Yeah. Small claims, I'm appealing it and she was the one that was assigned to it. [01:56:14.240 --> 01:56:17.440] Wait a minute. You appealed out of small claims? [01:56:17.440 --> 01:56:18.480] Oh, appealed. [01:56:18.480 --> 01:56:19.040] Yes. [01:56:19.040 --> 01:56:25.840] I appealed it. Okay. So now you're in the county court. Now you're in a court of record. [01:56:25.840 --> 01:56:26.640] Yes. [01:56:26.640 --> 01:56:29.600] Yes. Absolutely. Ask for a rehearing. [01:56:31.040 --> 01:56:32.240] A rehearing. Okay. [01:56:32.240 --> 01:56:34.000] Yeah. And show- [01:56:34.000 --> 01:56:35.040] And we have- [01:56:35.040 --> 01:56:43.200] Or reconsideration and show how she failed to apply the law to the facts and how you maintain [01:56:43.200 --> 01:56:51.040] and show how she failed to apply the law to the facts and how you maintain she should apply the law. [01:56:53.760 --> 01:56:58.560] Do you have a requirement in New York for the judge to produce findings, [01:56:58.560 --> 01:57:00.480] effect and conclusions of law? [01:57:00.480 --> 01:57:01.760] Yes. Yes. [01:57:02.880 --> 01:57:04.000] Have you requested it? [01:57:05.760 --> 01:57:09.920] Yes. I put it in the brief and in fact she did. It was a six page order. [01:57:09.920 --> 01:57:17.760] Oh, did she- did you read the order? Did she properly apply the law to the facts? [01:57:18.960 --> 01:57:20.000] No, she twisted them. [01:57:22.160 --> 01:57:29.120] Okay. Then write your own brief and file a motion for reconsideration. [01:57:30.720 --> 01:57:31.220] Okay. [01:57:31.220 --> 01:57:39.860] And that'll stop everything and then you'll be set- you'll have the record set for appeal. [01:57:41.140 --> 01:57:45.060] And the reason why the lower court dismissed my small claims, they said you can't have two [01:57:45.060 --> 01:57:49.860] actions going on at the same time. And I said that's wrong because these are not two actions [01:57:49.860 --> 01:57:54.420] going on at the same time. I sued the towns and villages and the police I'm suing in their [01:57:54.420 --> 01:57:59.860] private capacity in small claims as individuals because they arrested me with no authority. [01:57:59.860 --> 01:58:01.940] Okay. I heard music, Randy. [01:58:03.620 --> 01:58:09.940] Okay. We are out of time. Thank you for calling. Thank everybody for listening. [01:58:09.940 --> 01:58:17.300] We'll be back next week at eight o'clock central Thursday for a two hour show, [01:58:18.260 --> 01:58:25.460] Friday for our four hour info marathon. And I have to tell you, I appreciate all you. [01:58:25.460 --> 01:58:34.900] We've really been getting good callers lately. Yeah. And we've had some really good shows. [01:58:34.900 --> 01:58:40.660] We're getting really sophisticated questions. So thank all of you for making this show [01:58:41.460 --> 01:58:47.780] what it is. And we all hope to talk to you all next week. Thank you and good night. [01:58:47.780 --> 01:58:53.620] Okay. Bibles for America is offering absolutely free. [01:58:53.620 --> 01:58:58.900] A unique study Bible called the new Testament recovery version. 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