[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.840 --> 00:09.520] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.520 --> 00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.920 --> 00:14.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.920 --> 00:17.020] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.020 --> 00:18.600] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.600 --> 00:22.220] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.220 --> 00:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.000 --> 00:32.080] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.080 --> 00:34.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.760 --> 00:39.040] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.040 --> 00:42.600] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.600 --> 00:44.800] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.800 --> 00:47.880] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.880 --> 00:50.840] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.840 --> 00:54.560] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.560 --> 01:01.680] Spar with an extra P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.680 --> 01:03.040] and R for religion. [01:03.040 --> 01:07.160] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.160 --> 01:10.960] assembly, and religion, but petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.960 --> 01:14.680] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.680 --> 01:18.200] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.200 --> 01:20.880] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.880 --> 01:31.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.280 --> 01:34.960] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.960 --> 01:38.400] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.400 --> 01:39.880] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.880 --> 01:43.780] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.780 --> 01:46.920] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.920 --> 01:48.520] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.520 --> 01:52.120] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.120 --> 01:56.880] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.880 --> 02:02.040] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:02.040 --> 02:04.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.640 --> 02:08.940] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.940 --> 02:12.480] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.480 --> 02:16.040] Start over with StartPage. [02:16.040 --> 02:20.400] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.400 --> 02:22.480] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.480 --> 02:26.960] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.960 --> 02:30.800] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.800 --> 02:31.800] Get it? [02:31.800 --> 02:34.120] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.120 --> 02:37.720] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.720 --> 02:43.480] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.480 --> 02:48.040] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:48.040 --> 02:50.800] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.800 --> 02:52.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.640 --> 03:16.320] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:23.640 --> 03:42.840] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, [03:42.840 --> 03:50.240] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [03:50.240 --> 03:52.880] historically has proved to always be possible. [03:52.880 --> 03:58.880] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary conduct, [03:58.880 --> 04:06.880] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [04:06.880 --> 04:21.760] historically has proved to always be possible. [04:37.120 --> 04:47.040] This is the 17th day of February 2022 and we will be taking your calls all night. [04:47.040 --> 04:56.720] I'm going to turn on the call line, execute, okay, the lines are turned on. [04:56.720 --> 05:05.800] If you have a question or comment, give us a call, 512-646-1984. [05:05.800 --> 05:17.000] I can't mute Brett, Brett mute yourself, I'm getting a really pretty girl in the background. [05:17.000 --> 05:24.640] There we go, that's Brett's wife and she's five foot two and about 90 pounds of screaming [05:24.640 --> 05:31.360] terror so I have to be real nice to her, there's no telling what she'll do to me. [05:31.360 --> 05:33.880] Yeah, you kind of pretty much watch yourself there. [05:33.880 --> 05:43.000] Yeah dude, I'm married, I know these things, I'm married to 90 pounds of screaming terror. [05:43.000 --> 05:58.440] Okay, I have been kind of working the procedure on Victoria County, I'm helping someone who [05:58.440 --> 06:06.200] was improperly prosecuted in Victoria County and the court of criminal appeals ruled that [06:06.200 --> 06:14.600] the prosecution was fraudulent and that the court never had subject-rated jurisdiction [06:14.600 --> 06:17.600] from the get-go. [06:17.600 --> 06:27.520] So I'm in the process of trying to force all of these public officials under the bus. [06:27.520 --> 06:32.200] You know, we talk about filing criminal complaints, we talk about filing bar grievances and these [06:32.200 --> 06:36.480] other things to go after these guys. [06:36.480 --> 06:45.760] If you're not familiar with the process, you will think, you tend to think that you have [06:45.760 --> 06:56.000] to work to figure out how to get claims you can make against public officials. [06:56.000 --> 06:58.760] That is a misconception. [06:58.760 --> 07:05.560] You do not have to work at getting complaints to file against public officials. [07:05.560 --> 07:10.840] In this regard, they are extremely accommodating. [07:10.840 --> 07:16.440] They will not only give you complaints you can file against them, they will give you [07:16.440 --> 07:24.240] more complaints that you can file against them than you could ever get to. [07:24.240 --> 07:32.880] The trick is figuring out what it is you want to accomplish at the end of the day and then [07:32.880 --> 07:42.120] select those complaints to file that will lead you toward your intended outcome. [07:42.120 --> 07:48.800] In this case, I have put together a, I've talked about this on the show that I went [07:48.800 --> 07:55.280] to Victoria County to a Justice of the Peace and I gave the Justice of the Peace criminal [07:55.280 --> 08:00.760] complaints against a couple of guys who had stolen an airplane and he asked me if I was [08:00.760 --> 08:05.920] a lawyer and I gave him my standard response that, oh no, no, no, no. [08:05.920 --> 08:11.120] I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets, thank you very much. [08:11.120 --> 08:14.560] And then he said, well, have you talked to a lawyer about this? [08:14.560 --> 08:15.560] Nope. [08:15.560 --> 08:18.760] Then I'm not going to take these, threw them down and walked out. [08:18.760 --> 08:23.480] So I called 911, asked the police department to come out and arrest him. [08:23.480 --> 08:31.560] Well, they didn't arrest him, but I did file a criminal complaint with him. [08:31.560 --> 08:39.240] Today I put together a criminal complaint against the Justice of the Peace, accusing [08:39.240 --> 08:47.280] the Justice of the Peace of official misconduct because the Justice of the Peace refused to [08:47.280 --> 08:51.440] issue a warrant based on my criminal affidavit. [08:51.440 --> 09:01.760] You see, the JP thought he was a public official with all this power and authority. [09:01.760 --> 09:04.000] He forgot who I was. [09:04.000 --> 09:11.520] You mean when he stepped into that position, he didn't gain a whole bunch more control [09:11.520 --> 09:13.600] over people and things like that? [09:13.600 --> 09:14.600] Absolutely. [09:14.600 --> 09:17.000] He can't just do whatever he wants? [09:17.000 --> 09:18.320] Absolutely not. [09:18.320 --> 09:21.960] He became a servant. [09:21.960 --> 09:30.360] So what gave you the idea that he needed to just go and respond to this, he needed to [09:30.360 --> 09:31.360] go and do a warrant? [09:31.360 --> 09:35.920] I mean, he's a magistrate of all things. [09:35.920 --> 09:37.480] That's a powerful person, right? [09:37.480 --> 09:38.480] Don't you understand, Randy? [09:38.480 --> 09:41.600] I mean, what gives you the idea that you can tell him what to do? [09:41.600 --> 09:42.600] I don't know. [09:42.600 --> 09:50.080] There's some kind of an arrogant jerk who read 15.09 Texas Court of Criminal Procedure. [09:50.080 --> 09:59.120] And 15.09 said, when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate, the magistrate shall issue [09:59.120 --> 10:03.200] a warrant forthwith. [10:03.200 --> 10:08.080] And by shall, that means he gets to decide if he wants to do that, right? [10:08.080 --> 10:12.920] Shall does not mean may or can't if he wants to. [10:12.920 --> 10:15.920] Well, what if you didn't even talk to a lawyer yet? [10:15.920 --> 10:20.800] What if he thinks that it's a good idea for you to go talk to one of his bar buddies first? [10:20.800 --> 10:25.760] Why would I want to talk to one of those guys? [10:25.760 --> 10:28.760] They'll just lie to me. [10:28.760 --> 10:36.240] The lawyer does not want under any circumstances to annoy a judge. [10:36.240 --> 10:38.440] So what do I care if I annoy the judge? [10:38.440 --> 10:41.320] He's my servant. [10:41.320 --> 10:46.480] The judge has two duties, determine the facts in accordance with rules of evidence, apply [10:46.480 --> 10:48.760] the laws that come to him to the facts in the case. [10:48.760 --> 10:54.280] What does that have to do with whether he likes me or not? [10:54.280 --> 10:57.240] I can't find anything there. [10:57.240 --> 11:03.800] And in this case, I was filing criminal complaints against two guys who had stolen an airplane [11:03.800 --> 11:07.160] from a guy named Joe DiRusso. [11:07.160 --> 11:11.080] And this JP knew Joe DiRusso. [11:11.080 --> 11:16.440] He helped the County of Victoria prosecute Joe DiRusso. [11:16.440 --> 11:23.200] And the Court of Criminal Appeals threw it all out saying they never had subject matter [11:23.200 --> 11:26.000] jurisdiction to start with. [11:26.000 --> 11:34.480] Joe DiRusso was absolutely innocent and they persecuted him and ruined his life. [11:34.480 --> 11:39.000] So wouldn't that put that particular magistrate in a position of needing to recuse himself? [11:39.000 --> 11:40.000] Absolutely. [11:40.000 --> 11:43.080] No, he didn't need to recuse himself. [11:43.080 --> 11:52.880] He needed to do what the law absolutely commanded him to do, issue a warrant. [11:52.880 --> 11:55.880] It didn't say he could issue a warrant if he wanted to. [11:55.880 --> 12:02.680] It didn't say he could issue a warrant if the complaint filed with him was sufficient [12:02.680 --> 12:06.560] under law. [12:06.560 --> 12:15.320] The Code says that when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate, he shall issue a warrant [12:15.320 --> 12:16.320] forthwith. [12:16.320 --> 12:17.320] Absolutely. [12:17.320 --> 12:24.360] What part of that is hard to understand? [12:24.360 --> 12:30.440] I don't care what he thinks about the sufficiency of the allegation. [12:30.440 --> 12:35.600] The legislature instructed him that they didn't care what he thought. [12:35.600 --> 12:37.560] He issued a warrant. [12:37.560 --> 12:46.160] You will notice if you pull out a warrant against anybody, the warrant will say, arrest [12:46.160 --> 12:52.360] this person and bring him before me. [12:52.360 --> 13:01.120] The reason it always says that is because the magistrate is commanded to issue the warrant. [13:01.120 --> 13:09.700] It's necessarily issued ex parte, meaning that only one party is there. [13:09.700 --> 13:13.680] He's only heard one party's side of the story. [13:13.680 --> 13:20.440] So when he issues that warrant, he is the constable or whoever arrests the person is [13:20.440 --> 13:27.600] commanded to bring that person back before this magistrate, now he can hold a proper [13:27.600 --> 13:31.200] examining trial. [13:31.200 --> 13:36.120] The Code is really well structured. [13:36.120 --> 13:41.840] So what's the problem with following it, guys? [13:41.840 --> 13:51.080] Well, if it's against one of their buddies, they tend to slither up behind this thin blue [13:51.080 --> 13:52.080] line. [13:52.080 --> 13:58.640] Well, go ahead, we'll see how that works out for you. [13:58.640 --> 14:09.360] So I just filed criminal charges against this justice of the peace with the district judge [14:09.360 --> 14:13.400] in Victoria County. [14:13.400 --> 14:23.920] And I asked the district judge to issue a warrant under 15.09 because the justice of [14:23.920 --> 14:30.440] the peace refused to issue a warrant under 1509. [14:30.440 --> 14:36.200] I hope the irony is not lost on the judge. [14:36.200 --> 14:46.000] But you can be sure that this judge will not issue a warrant. [14:46.000 --> 14:52.000] He thinks he can do pretty much whatever he wants to do. [14:52.000 --> 14:58.120] And you know, if you listen to me a lot on the radio, you know I have a set of rules. [14:58.120 --> 15:05.260] And one of those rules is never ask a public official to do anything that you actually [15:05.260 --> 15:14.880] want them to do because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does [15:14.880 --> 15:18.080] not compel them to do. [15:18.080 --> 15:28.160] So while I'm asking this district judge to issue a warrant, I really hope he doesn't [15:28.160 --> 15:31.880] because then I get to land on him like a ton of bricks. [15:31.880 --> 15:39.360] I'm going to take a complaint against him for not issuing a warrant against the JP and [15:39.360 --> 15:44.760] I'm going to file it with another judge in Victoria County. [15:44.760 --> 15:48.380] And that judge will refuse to act. [15:48.380 --> 15:53.080] And then I'll file with the next judge and the next judge I will file with every district [15:53.080 --> 15:58.840] judge in Victoria County. [15:58.840 --> 16:07.000] And they will all slither up behind that thin blue line and try to protect their buddies. [16:07.000 --> 16:12.480] And like I did with the Justice of the Peace when I asked him to take these complaints [16:12.480 --> 16:21.360] against these two original perpetrators, when he didn't do it, I sent him a tort letter [16:21.360 --> 16:32.640] telling him that he violated the law relating to his office and harmed me in the process. [16:32.640 --> 16:39.360] And I told him that I had been offered $20,000 if I could recover this airplane. [16:39.360 --> 16:45.320] If he had done his job, I would have recovered this airplane so he cost me $20,000 and he [16:45.320 --> 16:52.800] did so by acting outside the limits of his authority and therefore it was criminal. [16:52.800 --> 16:54.640] Now he owes me $60,000. [16:54.640 --> 16:55.640] Make me hold a B suit. [16:55.640 --> 17:00.360] I'm going to take his passport and be right back. [17:00.360 --> 17:05.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [17:05.040 --> 17:09.160] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.160 --> 17:13.480] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [17:13.480 --> 17:14.480] can win too. [17:14.480 --> 17:19.280] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.280 --> 17:25.120] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer [17:25.120 --> 17:29.680] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the [17:29.680 --> 17:33.880] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.880 --> 17:39.000] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:39.000 --> 17:41.120] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.120 --> 17:46.680] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.680 --> 17:49.560] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.560 --> 17:58.680] 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 [17:58.680 --> 18:01.560] collectors now. [18:01.560 --> 18:05.920] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:05.920 --> 18:06.920] Word? [18:06.920 --> 18:12.040] Tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central time for scripture [18:12.040 --> 18:18.440] talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2nd Timothy 2.15. [18:18.440 --> 18:22.960] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [18:22.960 --> 18:25.360] dividing the word of truth. [18:25.360 --> 18:29.360] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse [18:29.360 --> 18:32.660] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.660 --> 18:37.320] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.320 --> 18:39.720] and Christian character development. [18:39.720 --> 18:44.240] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.240 --> 18:48.560] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.560 --> 18:50.160] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.160 --> 18:57.480] So tune in to scripture talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.480 --> 19:04.480] motivate your studies of the scriptures. [19:27.480 --> 19:44.160] Okay, we are back. [19:44.160 --> 19:47.480] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ludelaw Radio. [19:47.480 --> 19:56.200] And the point of that is, you know, I'm just an ordinary citizen in the state of Texas. [19:56.200 --> 19:59.840] I'm essentially nobody. [19:59.840 --> 20:04.840] And that makes me the most powerful motor scooter in the building. [20:04.840 --> 20:11.080] Judge, you don't want to do your job as prescribed by law? [20:11.080 --> 20:13.480] We'll see how that works out for you. [20:13.480 --> 20:19.440] When I ask one judge to issue a warrant to have another judge arrested, he wants to slither [20:19.440 --> 20:24.040] up behind that thin blue line and protect his buddy. [20:24.040 --> 20:28.160] Well, I have this other rule. [20:28.160 --> 20:34.160] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do. [20:34.160 --> 20:36.920] I ask him to issue a warrant against this other judge. [20:36.920 --> 20:40.440] Well, I don't really want him to. [20:40.440 --> 20:48.320] I want him not to so that I can go to the next highest judge and ask him to issue a [20:48.320 --> 20:53.160] warrant against this one. [20:53.160 --> 20:59.120] Once the judge has taken his position, he can't back up. [20:59.120 --> 21:04.200] Once he's rung that bell, he can't unring it. [21:04.200 --> 21:12.400] And I'm proposing this as a methodology for taking control of our public officials. [21:12.400 --> 21:18.840] It is perfectly all right to play them like a cheap fiddle. [21:18.840 --> 21:22.080] And when you know what they're going to do, you know, I get a lot of people calling in [21:22.080 --> 21:27.320] the show of railing and righteous indignation because these public officials did these bad [21:27.320 --> 21:28.320] things. [21:28.320 --> 21:30.240] Oh, they're so corrupt. [21:30.240 --> 21:32.200] They don't even follow the law. [21:32.200 --> 21:33.200] Yeah. [21:33.200 --> 21:39.400] And I want to say, duh, is that a surprise to you? [21:39.400 --> 21:40.760] What were you born yesterday? [21:40.760 --> 21:47.480] Well, it is a surprise when you first encounter it because a lot of us, there was a point [21:47.480 --> 21:54.800] in our life when we assumed that, well, of course they follow the law, the public officials. [21:54.800 --> 21:59.760] We absolutely need them to follow the law. [21:59.760 --> 22:05.560] Because if they don't follow the law, what does that mean? [22:05.560 --> 22:08.800] Means we're not protected. [22:08.800 --> 22:11.800] Means we're vulnerable. [22:11.800 --> 22:13.000] And that's not acceptable. [22:13.000 --> 22:17.240] We can't accept the fact that we're vulnerable. [22:17.240 --> 22:19.560] So we just say, I don't see it. [22:19.560 --> 22:20.560] I don't see it. [22:20.560 --> 22:21.560] I don't see it. [22:21.560 --> 22:24.160] Well, it won't help you. [22:24.160 --> 22:28.080] And there's a point I'm trying to make. [22:28.080 --> 22:36.880] Then these public officials don't do what the law specifically prescribes them to do. [22:36.880 --> 22:44.360] If you are to have any liberty, you have to take them on. [22:44.360 --> 22:50.240] And I know that sounds like an onerous task, but it's not. [22:50.240 --> 22:57.520] The one thing I constantly warn people about when they start taking public officials on [22:57.520 --> 23:05.080] for violating their oaths of office and violating the underlying law that prescribes their behavior [23:05.080 --> 23:07.320] is I have to warn them. [23:07.320 --> 23:16.000] You have to be careful because this can get to be way too much fun. [23:16.000 --> 23:27.960] It's not some ominous task that you take on that could cause the sky to fall in on you. [23:27.960 --> 23:34.320] We have a large number of laws that protect us when we become the accuser. [23:34.320 --> 23:41.360] When we become the accuser, we become a protected class. [23:41.360 --> 23:45.860] And there are all kinds of laws and procedures to protect us. [23:45.860 --> 23:53.960] The police don't feel like they can effectively enforce law all by themselves. [23:53.960 --> 23:56.720] They need the assistance of the public. [23:56.720 --> 24:02.040] If you've ever seen any of these movies like the movie with Jack Nicholas where he's a [24:02.040 --> 24:07.200] private investigator and the movie's called Chinatown, well, he's going down into Chinese [24:07.200 --> 24:12.360] neighborhoods and they will not talk to the police because they don't trust him. [24:12.360 --> 24:17.480] And there are a number of movies like this and they all complain that the Chinese people [24:17.480 --> 24:24.920] don't trust the police, so they won't dare say anything to help them. [24:24.920 --> 24:32.480] If the police want to be effective, they need the assistance of the public. [24:32.480 --> 24:36.440] They need the public to report crime to them. [24:36.440 --> 24:46.120] So in order to encourage the public to enforce crime, they have to make sure that the person [24:46.120 --> 24:52.040] who reports the crime is absolutely protected. [24:52.040 --> 24:54.840] That's you. [24:54.840 --> 25:00.000] You accrue this absolute protection. [25:00.000 --> 25:05.760] When I go in and start asking bailiffs to arrest the judge and I get a bailiff tell [25:05.760 --> 25:09.040] me, oh, Mr. Carlson, you really need to be careful. [25:09.040 --> 25:13.840] You're getting a lot of trouble doing that, meh, 911. [25:13.840 --> 25:17.320] He's just threatening to witness. [25:17.320 --> 25:21.740] That's a felony in the state of Texas. [25:21.740 --> 25:29.880] We have multiple protections and all those protections interpret into criminal complaints [25:29.880 --> 25:39.520] against anyone who would give you any kind of hard time of any nature. [25:39.520 --> 25:48.400] It was intended by our founders that we be the gadfly, that you and I, the private citizen, [25:48.400 --> 25:54.360] be the one who keeps the system under control and we can do that. [25:54.360 --> 25:59.680] And I suggest to you, do not wait for the police to come after you. [25:59.680 --> 26:05.160] Do not wait for them to file criminal charges against you. [26:05.160 --> 26:11.120] The best fight to have is the one you picked. [26:11.120 --> 26:19.600] If you want to learn how the criminal justice system works and if you want to do it for [26:19.600 --> 26:26.520] you're not at threat or risk, go down and start the fight. [26:26.520 --> 26:35.760] I went into a traffic hearing with a friend of mine's truck driver and the prosecutor [26:35.760 --> 26:43.000] had 58 people come in and there was no judge there. [26:43.000 --> 26:44.520] Prosecutors can't hold a hearing. [26:44.520 --> 26:50.440] These were these hearings where the prosecutor tries to convince you to take a deal. [26:50.440 --> 26:51.840] But there's no judge there. [26:51.840 --> 26:57.040] So I asked the bailiff where the judge was and he said there's none here today. [26:57.040 --> 27:01.960] Well, in that case I need you to go in and arrest that prosecutor for impersonating a [27:01.960 --> 27:02.960] judicial officer. [27:02.960 --> 27:07.360] Well, as you might guess, he didn't want to do that. [27:07.360 --> 27:15.840] So I got the docket sheet, the appearance docket for that day and I filed 58 felony [27:15.840 --> 27:23.360] criminal violations against this brand new lawyer with the justice of the peace. [27:23.360 --> 27:32.800] Now I didn't get her prosecuted and I didn't want to. [27:32.800 --> 27:33.880] She's a young lawyer. [27:33.880 --> 27:41.000] This was her first day on the job and some jack leg comes in there and files 58 felony [27:41.000 --> 27:44.520] charges against her. [27:44.520 --> 27:49.720] You think I got her attention? [27:49.720 --> 27:51.120] This is how we fix it. [27:51.120 --> 27:57.440] Not by getting these people indicted, not by ruining their careers, but by reminding [27:57.440 --> 28:05.120] them of where the real political power lies. [28:05.120 --> 28:08.400] And it lies in your hand. [28:08.400 --> 28:17.040] I filed a criminal complaint against the governor for these executive orders that were horrendously [28:17.040 --> 28:21.600] illegal and everybody hated them and everybody was objecting to them. [28:21.600 --> 28:32.440] But in a state of 29 million people, only one person filed and the governor dropped [28:32.440 --> 28:33.440] them all immediately. [28:33.440 --> 28:34.440] Okay. [28:34.440 --> 28:43.480] I know I'm preaching here, but this is the gospel according to Randy. [28:43.480 --> 28:55.080] If we are to keep control of this Republic, if we are to do what Benjamin Franklin was [28:55.080 --> 29:01.040] concerned about and keep this Republic, when he was asked and coming out of the Continental [29:01.040 --> 29:04.280] Congress, Mr. Franklin, what have you given us? [29:04.280 --> 29:12.040] He said a Republic, if you can keep it and I'm suggesting you can keep it and this is [29:12.040 --> 29:15.180] how you keep it. [29:15.180 --> 29:23.960] Stand up, be counted, stick your sovereign boot up their public servant behinds. [29:23.960 --> 29:25.840] You don't want to get them thrown out of office. [29:25.840 --> 29:28.680] You don't want to get them in jail. [29:28.680 --> 29:33.600] Just like my grandkids, I love them dearly, but if they run out on the road and fix and [29:33.600 --> 29:42.200] put down their hide, you just want to get their attention and essentially in all my [29:42.200 --> 29:47.880] research, the only one who can do that is you. [29:47.880 --> 29:52.520] That's the gospel according to Randy and we're about to go to our sponsors. [29:52.520 --> 29:57.280] When we come back, we're going to go to Calder, we've got a bunch of them. [29:57.280 --> 29:58.280] Thank you all for tuning in. [29:58.280 --> 29:59.280] We'll be right back. [29:59.280 --> 30:06.600] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, but [30:06.600 --> 30:11.360] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.360 --> 30:16.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.160 --> 30:17.760] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.760 --> 30:22.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:22.160 --> 30:26.120] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.120 --> 30:31.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.200 --> 30:33.880] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.880 --> 30:38.160] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.160 --> 30:41.720] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and VIN. [30:41.720 --> 30:45.400] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.400 --> 30:50.160] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.160 --> 30:54.620] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.620 --> 30:56.300] It's not an idle question. [30:56.300 --> 31:01.880] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security was breached [31:01.880 --> 31:04.200] by hackers in the last year. [31:04.200 --> 31:07.440] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.440 --> 31:12.320] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.320 --> 31:15.740] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.740 --> 31:16.740] to see. [31:16.740 --> 31:18.240] The cupboard would be bare. [31:18.240 --> 31:21.280] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.280 --> 31:31.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.040 --> 31:32.040] I lost my son. [31:32.040 --> 31:33.040] My nephew. [31:33.040 --> 31:34.040] My uncle. [31:34.040 --> 31:35.040] My son. [31:35.040 --> 31:36.040] On September 11th, 2001. [31:36.040 --> 31:39.320] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.320 --> 31:43.440] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.440 --> 31:49.280] Although the official explanation was that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.280 --> 31:53.000] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:53.000 --> 31:54.480] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.480 --> 31:55.480] My uncle. [31:55.480 --> 31:56.480] My nephew. [31:56.480 --> 31:57.480] My son. [31:57.480 --> 31:58.480] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:58.480 --> 32:01.440] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.440 --> 32:05.440] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:05.440 --> 32:09.320] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [32:09.320 --> 32:13.000] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.000 --> 32:16.480] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.480 --> 32:20.200] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.200 --> 32:24.360] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.360 --> 32:25.720] our rights through due process. [32:25.720 --> 32:29.720] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.720 --> 32:33.480] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.480 --> 32:35.880] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.880 --> 32:39.880] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.880 --> 32:41.200] ordering your copy today. [32:41.200 --> 32:44.560] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.560 --> 32:49.000] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:49.000 --> 32:51.320] documents and other useful resource material. [32:51.320 --> 32:55.280] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.280 --> 33:02.960] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.960 --> 33:06.560] Live Free Speech Radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:06.560 --> 33:25.560] Yes, Mr. Officer, you're taking the line ahead, but won't you follow the law of the land? [33:25.560 --> 33:50.560] Yes, Mr. Officer, you're taking the line ahead, but won't you follow the law of the land? [33:50.560 --> 34:03.480] Okay, we are back. [34:03.480 --> 34:08.360] Randy Carroll and Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [34:08.360 --> 34:10.160] We've got a full board of callers. [34:10.160 --> 34:13.960] We've got Austin, Florida, lĂ­nea, Tennessee, john, New York. [34:13.960 --> 34:23.000] But we also have what appears to be a first time caller from the 315 area code, it's [34:23.000 --> 34:31.260] not you John in New York, I know what you're thinking, but it came up on our, if you're [34:31.260 --> 34:40.760] not in our database, it appears as though this caller board tries to identify the caller. [34:40.760 --> 34:49.240] And I've got man dong, so if you're a man with a dong, and you're in the 315 area code, [34:49.240 --> 34:50.240] talk to us. [34:50.240 --> 34:53.240] No, no, no, that's Chris. [34:53.240 --> 34:54.240] Okay. [34:54.240 --> 34:59.520] I was just kidding, say that again. [34:59.520 --> 35:01.360] I'm sorry, what's your name? [35:01.360 --> 35:03.640] My name's Chris. [35:03.640 --> 35:05.240] Chris in New York? [35:05.240 --> 35:06.960] Yes, that's correct. [35:06.960 --> 35:07.960] Okay. [35:07.960 --> 35:09.960] I mean, you're not dong? [35:09.960 --> 35:11.760] No, no, no. [35:11.760 --> 35:12.760] Okay. [35:12.760 --> 35:17.560] We get, sometimes some weird things pop up on the caller board when it tries to use caller [35:17.560 --> 35:21.840] ID and it gives little clips of words and we don't really necessarily know where it [35:21.840 --> 35:22.840] came from. [35:22.840 --> 35:25.040] But okay, Chris in New York. [35:25.040 --> 35:26.040] Okay. [35:26.040 --> 35:31.160] When we see this on our board, that tells us that it's not in our database. [35:31.160 --> 35:36.080] So we get to have a lot of fun at our caller's expense. [35:36.080 --> 35:40.360] Okay, Chris, what do you have for us today? [35:40.360 --> 35:41.360] A question. [35:41.360 --> 35:44.560] Can I give you the scenario real quick? [35:44.560 --> 35:50.160] I went to do First Amendment Audit at the Vitality Building and they still are, I'm [35:50.160 --> 35:52.160] in upstate New York, obviously. [35:52.160 --> 35:53.160] Okay. [35:53.160 --> 35:55.160] Hold on, First Amendment Audit? [35:55.160 --> 35:58.120] Yeah, yeah, yeah, freedom, you know. [35:58.120 --> 36:01.640] I want to be in the building with a mask on. [36:01.640 --> 36:02.640] Okay. [36:02.640 --> 36:06.280] Okay, are we doing First Amendment Audit or mask? [36:06.280 --> 36:11.800] Well, it's a mask, but you know, I mean, I have a religion right now, so. [36:11.800 --> 36:12.800] Okay, okay. [36:12.800 --> 36:13.800] Hold on, hold on. [36:13.800 --> 36:16.160] It's something I probably need to explain. [36:16.160 --> 36:20.840] You're on a cell phone and you're, I expect you're on a cell phone from what it sounds [36:20.840 --> 36:24.440] like and you're on the air. [36:24.440 --> 36:32.480] We're online, so if you talk too fast, sometimes the system drops packets. [36:32.480 --> 36:36.440] So we lose sololables. [36:36.440 --> 36:39.440] Did I say that right, Brett? [36:39.440 --> 36:43.080] I think he just means he didn't hear you. [36:43.080 --> 36:46.720] Did I get the emphasis on the wrong sololable? [36:46.720 --> 36:47.840] No. [36:47.840 --> 36:53.000] Talk a little bit slower and the system will be able to keep up and we don't lose bits [36:53.000 --> 36:56.000] and pieces. [36:56.000 --> 36:57.000] So Chris, let me see. [36:57.000 --> 37:03.880] You were saying that you were doing a First Amendment Audit and you were going to a county [37:03.880 --> 37:13.200] building without a mask, you criminal, you, and then what happened? [37:13.200 --> 37:17.520] So anyways, the sheriff's office allowed me to come in without a mask. [37:17.520 --> 37:25.480] And then what happened is another sheriff that I was there a week earlier, that sheriff [37:25.480 --> 37:28.760] goes, are you Chris, or he goes, are you Chris Roberts? [37:28.760 --> 37:30.240] And I go, yeah, I'm Chris Roberts. [37:30.240 --> 37:37.000] And he goes, wait right there, I'm detaining you because I have a warrant for your arrest. [37:37.000 --> 37:41.600] He said there was a bench for that was issued. [37:41.600 --> 37:47.320] So they brought me inside the building and then I tried to explain to them that the bench [37:47.320 --> 37:54.400] warrant, when they finally got it in front of them, the bench warrant, I tried to explain [37:54.400 --> 38:03.440] to them that it was already taken care of, that I already had it steered for that matter. [38:03.440 --> 38:04.600] Okay, hold on. [38:04.600 --> 38:09.840] What did the bench warrant say? [38:09.840 --> 38:12.240] It was really issued at one time. [38:12.240 --> 38:17.200] No, no, no, listen, I'm going to something. [38:17.200 --> 38:27.100] Almost always when a magistrate issues a warrant, the warrant says, arrest this person and bring [38:27.100 --> 38:30.320] him before me. [38:30.320 --> 38:36.840] The officer who seemed to know that you had a warrant, did he arrest you and bring you [38:36.840 --> 38:40.640] directly to the magistrate who issued that warrant? [38:40.640 --> 38:41.640] No. [38:41.640 --> 38:45.320] What did he do? [38:45.320 --> 38:50.320] Well, what he did is he brought me to the county jail. [38:50.320 --> 38:58.880] And then three hours later at the county jail, they have their own court proceedings to arraign [38:58.880 --> 38:59.880] people. [38:59.880 --> 39:00.880] So... [39:00.880 --> 39:07.840] No, no, no, no, hold on, hold on, hold on, wrong word, wrong word, arraignment. [39:07.840 --> 39:18.840] An arraignment is a hearing held by a court that has jurisdiction for the purpose of, [39:18.840 --> 39:24.840] and the hearing is held for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and [39:24.840 --> 39:27.360] taking a plea. [39:27.360 --> 39:32.000] Is that what this hearing was for? [39:32.000 --> 39:35.200] That's what they did, Brandeis. [39:35.200 --> 39:37.200] That's what they said they did. [39:37.200 --> 39:39.560] It's just their excuse is what Brandeis is getting at. [39:39.560 --> 39:40.560] Yeah. [39:40.560 --> 39:41.560] You're in New York. [39:41.560 --> 39:42.560] Yeah. [39:42.560 --> 39:47.360] Have you ever heard of the program Night Court? [39:47.360 --> 39:50.280] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [39:50.280 --> 39:53.080] That was a comedy. [39:53.080 --> 39:57.000] It was set in New York City. [39:57.000 --> 40:05.960] Although it was a comedy, constitutionally, it was dead on. [40:05.960 --> 40:13.520] They would arrest someone, they would bring them to jail and appoint an attorney for the [40:13.520 --> 40:18.360] purpose of a preliminary hearing. [40:18.360 --> 40:24.840] The attorney, they would hold the person long enough for them to confer with their counsel. [40:24.840 --> 40:32.160] Then they would come before the court with the officer who made the arrest and the accused. [40:32.160 --> 40:35.760] And the judge would listen to both sides. [40:35.760 --> 40:40.440] Then he would determine if there was sufficient cause to hold the person. [40:40.440 --> 40:45.560] Man, it sounds like those script writers, they didn't know what they were doing. [40:45.560 --> 40:48.040] They just went and read the law and just did exactly that. [40:48.040 --> 40:51.960] They should have gone and talked to some lawyers who could tell them, here's the way we really [40:51.960 --> 40:52.960] do things. [40:52.960 --> 40:53.960] Yeah. [40:53.960 --> 40:54.960] Exactly. [40:54.960 --> 40:56.720] But that's how it should be done. [40:56.720 --> 41:01.520] So you were arrested and taken before a magistrate and the magistrate advised you as charges [41:01.520 --> 41:02.840] against you. [41:02.840 --> 41:07.480] He notified you of the bail that was set and he advised you of your rights. [41:07.480 --> 41:12.000] Did he advise you of your right to an, to a preliminary hearing? [41:12.000 --> 41:20.520] No, because he's not, all they did is they issued me a ticket to appear before the judge [41:20.520 --> 41:22.000] who issued the benchmark. [41:22.000 --> 41:28.120] But the point is, Randy, I was trying to tell him that the benchmark was already baked and [41:28.120 --> 41:29.120] I already talked. [41:29.120 --> 41:30.120] Okay. [41:30.120 --> 41:35.720] I got that part, but I was going somewhere. [41:35.720 --> 41:41.800] Even if the bench warrant was valid, what they did was wrong. [41:41.800 --> 41:50.440] When you gave them notice that the bench warrant was vacated, they had an absolute duty to [41:50.440 --> 41:56.840] ensure that the warrant on which they were arresting you was still valid. [41:56.840 --> 41:59.180] Have you, how long ago was this? [41:59.180 --> 42:00.180] Was it more than a year? [42:00.180 --> 42:01.180] No, no, this just happened. [42:01.180 --> 42:02.180] That's why I'm calling you. [42:02.180 --> 42:03.180] I want to do something about it. [42:03.180 --> 42:07.080] No, he's saying when was the warrant executed? [42:07.080 --> 42:11.360] The first time that the warrant came out and you said that they already dealt with it. [42:11.360 --> 42:13.440] Was that recent too? [42:13.440 --> 42:24.440] The warrant was issued in 2020, in March of 2020 and I was in court in October of 2020 [42:24.440 --> 42:28.440] and I flat on those charges and it was all cleared, you know what I'm saying? [42:28.440 --> 42:30.800] So it was a done deal. [42:30.800 --> 42:36.600] So how did a warrant get issued? [42:36.600 --> 42:41.320] The point is Randy, I contacted that judge, he says, I gave him a hard time, paid him [42:41.320 --> 42:42.320] a thousand dollars and stuff. [42:42.320 --> 42:43.920] I ran the guy for five years. [42:43.920 --> 42:47.120] It was a ton of charges that I got reduced to nothing. [42:47.120 --> 42:52.120] But the whole point is, and I even tried to vacate the order afterwards and he still hasn't [42:52.120 --> 42:55.000] ruled on that, but they never took my license. [42:55.000 --> 42:58.000] Wait, wait, wait, wait. [42:58.000 --> 43:05.640] I'm sticking too much information in too fast without enough details to make sense. [43:05.640 --> 43:15.440] What was the nature of the claim that wound up in a warrant that you were arrested for? [43:15.440 --> 43:21.480] It was a DWI and that's what I had pledged to and that's what I did. [43:21.480 --> 43:27.120] Did they issue the warrant for the DWI or for something else like failure to appear, [43:27.120 --> 43:30.000] attempted court, something else? [43:30.000 --> 43:39.840] The bench warrant was issued for failure to appear for the DWI card. [43:39.840 --> 43:45.960] What are the details of the failure to appear? [43:45.960 --> 43:54.000] I didn't appear, but I did appear much later and I've already resolved the issue. [43:54.000 --> 43:58.160] Let's pick this up on the other side of the break. [43:58.160 --> 44:00.360] We're going to go to a close-up. [44:00.360 --> 44:01.360] I love Logos. [44:01.360 --> 44:04.720] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.720 --> 44:07.520] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.520 --> 44:08.720] I need my truth pick. [44:08.720 --> 44:13.440] I'd be lost without Logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.440 --> 44:17.200] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:17.200 --> 44:20.560] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:20.560 --> 44:21.920] How can I help Logos? [44:21.920 --> 44:24.120] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:24.120 --> 44:28.440] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos with ordering your supplies [44:28.440 --> 44:29.440] or holiday gifts. [44:29.440 --> 44:31.600] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.600 --> 44:38.000] Now go to LogosRadioNetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:38.000 --> 44:43.640] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.640 --> 44:44.640] Do I pay extra? [44:44.640 --> 44:45.640] No. [44:45.640 --> 44:47.200] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.200 --> 44:48.200] No. [44:48.200 --> 44:49.200] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.200 --> 44:50.200] No. [44:50.200 --> 44:51.200] I mean, yes. [44:51.200 --> 44:52.200] Wow. [44:52.200 --> 44:54.480] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:54.480 --> 44:55.480] This is perfect. [44:55.480 --> 44:56.480] Thank you so much. [44:56.480 --> 44:57.480] We are welcome. [44:57.480 --> 44:58.480] Happy holidays, Logos. [44:58.480 --> 45:04.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.680 --> 45:11.440] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.440 --> 45:15.320] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.320 --> 45:19.160] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.160 --> 45:23.440] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.440 --> 45:29.160] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:29.160 --> 45:35.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:35.080 --> 45:39.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.680 --> 45:43.920] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.920 --> 45:50.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:50.120 --> 45:52.640] pro se tactics and much more. [45:52.640 --> 46:22.400] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.400 --> 46:51.920] Thank you. [46:51.920 --> 47:01.920] What's in this white plan? [47:01.920 --> 47:03.920] The friction isn't the section [47:03.920 --> 47:06.920] The hard work can leave you cold as nails [47:06.920 --> 47:09.920] There's a possibility, choice, tranquility [47:09.920 --> 47:12.920] A heavy load that's safe and unscathed [47:12.920 --> 47:15.920] The time is colliding with the compass [47:15.920 --> 47:18.920] You're flying down after a while [47:18.920 --> 47:21.920] It's not your moral standard [47:21.920 --> 47:24.920] It's your patience that's on trial [47:24.920 --> 47:33.920] What's in this white plan? [47:33.920 --> 47:37.920] Okay, we are back. Randy Kell and Brett Fountain with our radio. [47:37.920 --> 47:43.920] And we're talking to the man with the dong. [47:43.920 --> 47:45.920] I couldn't help myself. [47:45.920 --> 47:47.920] It's how you come up on our database. [47:47.920 --> 47:50.920] Man underscore dong. [47:50.920 --> 47:53.920] So I'm talking to a man with a dong. [47:53.920 --> 47:55.920] I wonder what that means. [47:55.920 --> 47:58.920] Never mind. Forget I asked that. [47:58.920 --> 48:00.920] No, Deborah is going to get you for that. [48:00.920 --> 48:03.920] Yes, she is. [48:03.920 --> 48:11.920] Okay, you were arrested in the courthouse. [48:11.920 --> 48:19.920] When you were arrested, was the judge you were there to see in the building? [48:19.920 --> 48:25.920] No, no. I was at the county office building where I was arrested. [48:25.920 --> 48:28.920] What is the county office building? [48:28.920 --> 48:35.920] It's where the first office is that I need to go to. [48:35.920 --> 48:42.920] Are you saying it's a different building, the magistrates, the judges are not in that same building? [48:42.920 --> 48:47.920] No, no. They would be in the county courthouse. [48:47.920 --> 48:49.920] Oh, okay. That's what I was trying to get to. [48:49.920 --> 48:54.920] So this wasn't the place where the magistrate would be? [48:54.920 --> 48:56.920] No. [48:56.920 --> 49:02.920] So when they arrested you in this, I guess more of an administrative building? [49:02.920 --> 49:04.920] That's absolutely correct. [49:04.920 --> 49:14.920] To your knowledge, did the arresting officer make a due diligent attempt to locate the magistrate who had issued the warrant? [49:14.920 --> 49:20.920] I asked them to call them because I tried to explain that the warrant was not good. [49:20.920 --> 49:24.920] And they refused to do that? [49:24.920 --> 49:34.920] They said they don't have to and that they called the issuing police department because it was issued through New York police department. [49:34.920 --> 49:40.920] And they came and picked me up and they wouldn't listen to me. [49:40.920 --> 49:52.920] Okay. So have you filed a notice of tort with the department these officers worked for? [49:52.920 --> 50:02.920] I have. I have both the sheriff of Ladder and the county executive and the assistant district attorney because he did something really shady too. [50:02.920 --> 50:09.920] He deceived the judge. He looked in the file and knew that the fine wasn't paid. [50:09.920 --> 50:17.920] He would have known that he would have also seen the vacated warrant and then he would have also seen the fact that I was in court. [50:17.920 --> 50:26.920] And that right there, any time you appear and the bench warrant is prior to that, that's what vacates bench warrants. [50:26.920 --> 50:31.920] Wait, wait, wait. Too many words, not enough content. [50:31.920 --> 50:35.920] They saw the warrant and they saw that you were in court. [50:35.920 --> 50:43.920] What happened when they saw that you were in court and they saw the warrant? [50:43.920 --> 50:54.920] No. What I'm saying is in order to see that by looking in the court record, he would have to see that I had a fine. [50:54.920 --> 50:58.920] He would have also seen that the bench warrant wasn't vacated. [50:58.920 --> 51:10.920] And instead of telling the judge the bench warrant is no good, he said he actually asked the judge because in New York there's no bail stuff or misdemeanor stuff. [51:10.920 --> 51:20.920] So he asked the judge to remand for $200 bail instead of like... [51:20.920 --> 51:35.920] I mean, he had a perfect opportunity to tell the judge that the bench warrant was no good and he allowed the judge to arraign me and, you know, I just... [51:35.920 --> 51:42.920] Have you filed a judicial conduct complaint against the lawyer? [51:42.920 --> 51:44.920] No. See, the problem is that it was only... [51:44.920 --> 51:50.920] I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I said judicial conduct. I meant bar grievance. [51:50.920 --> 51:59.920] I'm really thinking that I know that's what I need to do, but I'm waiting for the transcript so I can get exactly every word. [51:59.920 --> 52:08.920] I've already submitted a request for the recording to be sent to my transcriptionist and as soon as it comes back, that was the intention. [52:08.920 --> 52:18.920] I've already been working on a criminal complaint against the ABA because there's laws in New York State for like, you know... [52:18.920 --> 52:21.920] Okay. ABA, you're in New York. [52:21.920 --> 52:31.920] You would be better off going to the New York State Bar Association because from what I can tell, New York may have the best bar association of any state. [52:31.920 --> 52:40.920] Yeah, they seem to be responsive and actually consider disciplinary action where it's needed. It's unusual. [52:40.920 --> 52:46.920] But you need to follow the code precisely. [52:46.920 --> 52:54.920] So he's saying instead of the ABA, ABA is a great reference point, but it's not what any of them swore to uphold specifically. [52:54.920 --> 53:00.920] They swore to uphold the ones that were specifically adopted by their state bar. [53:00.920 --> 53:07.920] So they signed up with that state, New York bar, and they've got pretty much those same rules that they've adopted, [53:07.920 --> 53:11.920] maybe slightly different numbering or slightly different wording in some of them. [53:11.920 --> 53:21.920] It'll be mostly the same, but you need to quote those, cite those and quote, find a rule that he violated in the New York State Bar Rules of Professional Conduct. [53:21.920 --> 53:25.920] That's what he's saying to go with, like instead of ABA. [53:25.920 --> 53:29.920] I was just going to say that. [53:29.920 --> 53:32.920] Go for it, Randy. Don't let me steal your thunder. [53:32.920 --> 53:34.920] No, you already said it. [53:34.920 --> 53:35.920] Oh, okay. [53:35.920 --> 53:39.920] Stole my thunder. [53:39.920 --> 53:42.920] I'm just waiting for the transcript to get back. [53:42.920 --> 53:43.920] That's all. [53:43.920 --> 53:47.920] And I had a berberian text and I got it back. [53:47.920 --> 53:59.920] The trick to this methodology is every time you can perceive one of these officials to be stepping outside a legal line, [53:59.920 --> 54:07.920] you either call 911 or you prepare a criminal complaint against them. [54:07.920 --> 54:09.920] Now you're threatening their careers. [54:09.920 --> 54:14.920] Now all of a sudden you've got their attention. [54:14.920 --> 54:21.920] They have no more authority to violate law than you do. [54:21.920 --> 54:28.920] When you violate law, they'll prepare a criminal complaint against you. [54:28.920 --> 54:35.920] I suggest that you pretty well know what's going to happen in these court proceedings. [54:35.920 --> 54:44.920] So look at what they're doing, compare it to this standing law, and write up criminal complaints for each one of them. [54:44.920 --> 54:51.920] So when they do what you expect them to do, which is a violation of law, [54:51.920 --> 54:59.920] then you ask for a higher level officer to take your complaint against these. [54:59.920 --> 55:02.920] Am I making sense? [55:02.920 --> 55:05.920] Yes, it is. [55:05.920 --> 55:11.920] This issue isn't going any farther because the judge that originally issued that benchmark [55:11.920 --> 55:14.920] has sent me a letter telling me not to come to his court. [55:14.920 --> 55:18.920] It's already been cleared off. [55:18.920 --> 55:21.920] Then he sent me a copy of the vacancy. [55:21.920 --> 55:22.920] Hold on. [55:22.920 --> 55:25.920] What does cleared off mean? [55:25.920 --> 55:32.920] What I'm saying is he said that the charges have already been dealt with, [55:32.920 --> 55:35.920] and that you've already pleaded to him. [55:35.920 --> 55:37.920] Here's the vacated bench warrant. [55:37.920 --> 55:38.920] Don't come to the court. [55:38.920 --> 55:40.920] There's no need for it. [55:40.920 --> 55:48.920] Do you have an order from the court dismissing the claims against you? [55:48.920 --> 55:51.920] No. [55:51.920 --> 55:56.920] You need to ask for one because they will lie to you. [55:56.920 --> 56:02.920] It was part of the plea agreement, and then I signed for the deal. [56:02.920 --> 56:07.920] That was on the record, and I had the transcripts for that. [56:07.920 --> 56:15.920] They're saying that after this agreement, you trespassed. [56:15.920 --> 56:21.920] No, they just arrested me with the benchmark. [56:21.920 --> 56:24.920] They didn't do anything. [56:24.920 --> 56:29.920] After the agreement, it's all been signed, it's all handled, and then after that, [56:29.920 --> 56:37.920] they brought you in on a warrant that was actually a warrant from before the issue had been addressed? [56:37.920 --> 56:39.920] Exactly, and it's vacated. [56:39.920 --> 56:42.920] It's got a big vacated on it. [56:42.920 --> 56:48.920] I got a copy of the original, and it's vacated, and that's what I'm saying. [56:48.920 --> 56:58.920] It was vacated in 3-2020, and then I went to court and settled these matters in 8-2020 with a plea agreement. [56:58.920 --> 57:05.920] I got the transcript, and it says all those issues, and it says this is what this is for, [57:05.920 --> 57:09.920] and this is the agreement, and I signed for it. [57:09.920 --> 57:11.920] It's a done deal. [57:11.920 --> 57:16.920] I got the judge to tell me, I don't want to come to court, and if you had to pay bail, [57:16.920 --> 57:21.920] let me know so I can get your money back, and here's a copy of the vacated order. [57:21.920 --> 57:24.920] It was vacated way back. [57:24.920 --> 57:28.920] You know that these issues have already been taken care of. [57:28.920 --> 57:31.920] I'm not throwing the court on that. [57:31.920 --> 57:34.920] I want to get this guy that was an asshole. [57:34.920 --> 57:35.920] I'm sorry. [57:35.920 --> 57:42.920] The guy that should have spoke up and a court officer, the ADA, he should have said, [57:42.920 --> 57:46.920] this is a bad arrest. [57:46.920 --> 57:52.920] The defense court's already been taken care of instead of trying to get the judge's issues back. [57:52.920 --> 57:57.920] And then on top of it, he wasn't giving his name. [57:57.920 --> 58:03.920] The attorney wouldn't, or are you talking about the cop wouldn't, the officer? [58:03.920 --> 58:09.920] The ADA wasn't giving his name, and I've been calling the office all week. [58:09.920 --> 58:10.920] No, no, no. [58:10.920 --> 58:12.920] Don't waste your time calling. [58:12.920 --> 58:16.920] Even if you call, you can't hold them to anything. [58:16.920 --> 58:22.920] Instead, do a records request, put it in writing, and go to the top dog. [58:22.920 --> 58:27.920] Whoever's the one in charge of all of the A, A is the assistant. [58:27.920 --> 58:30.920] So the DA is the one that they all work for. [58:30.920 --> 58:34.920] The DA has a responsibility, the DA got hired, I mean, elected. [58:34.920 --> 58:35.920] Pretty easy. [58:35.920 --> 58:37.920] I mean, it's one of them. [58:37.920 --> 58:41.920] Every person in that office got an email stating, I want his name. [58:41.920 --> 58:43.920] Okay. [58:43.920 --> 58:48.920] So we'll talk some more about how you can wind their clock just after we come back from the sponsors. [58:48.920 --> 58:49.920] Thank you. [58:49.920 --> 58:55.920] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.920 --> 58:57.920] because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.920 --> 59:01.920] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.920 --> 59:05.920] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:05.920 --> 59:08.920] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.920 --> 59:12.920] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:12.920 --> 59:17.920] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.920 --> 59:21.920] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:21.920 --> 59:27.920] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.920 --> 59:32.920] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.920 --> 59:43.920] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.920 --> 59:47.920] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.920 --> 59:50.920] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.920 --> 59:59.920] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.920 --> 01:00:05.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.920 --> 01:00:08.920] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.920 --> 01:00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.920 --> 01:00:13.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:13.920 --> 01:00:16.920] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.920 --> 01:00:18.920] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.920 --> 01:00:22.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.920 --> 01:00:27.920] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.920 --> 01:00:28.920] So protect your rights. [01:00:28.920 --> 01:00:32.920] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.920 --> 01:00:34.920] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:34.920 --> 01:00:38.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:00:38.920 --> 01:00:42.920] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.920 --> 01:00:45.920] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.920 --> 01:00:48.920] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.920 --> 01:00:51.920] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.920 --> 01:00:54.920] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.920 --> 01:00:57.920] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me [01:00:57.920 --> 01:01:00.920] what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.920 --> 01:01:03.920] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.920 --> 01:01:06.920] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.920 --> 01:01:09.920] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:09.920 --> 01:01:12.920] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.920 --> 01:01:16.920] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:16.920 --> 01:01:21.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.920 --> 01:01:35.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.920 --> 01:01:38.920] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.920 --> 01:01:40.920] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.920 --> 01:01:43.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.920 --> 01:01:46.920] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.920 --> 01:01:48.920] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.920 --> 01:01:52.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.920 --> 01:01:56.920] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.920 --> 01:01:58.920] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.920 --> 01:02:02.920] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.920 --> 01:02:04.920] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.920 --> 01:02:08.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.920 --> 01:02:12.920] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.920 --> 01:02:15.920] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.920 --> 01:02:19.920] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:19.920 --> 01:02:21.920] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.920 --> 01:02:25.920] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.920 --> 01:02:27.920] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.920 --> 01:02:30.920] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:30.920 --> 01:02:33.920] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:33.920 --> 01:02:35.920] in the name of security. [01:02:35.920 --> 01:02:39.920] In case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.920 --> 01:02:43.920] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.920 --> 01:02:46.920] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.920 --> 01:02:49.920] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.920 --> 01:02:53.920] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.920 --> 01:03:05.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.920 --> 01:03:28.920] Okay, we are back. [01:03:28.920 --> 01:03:31.920] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:03:31.920 --> 01:03:33.920] I'm Brett Fountain. [01:03:33.920 --> 01:03:38.920] And we are, this is the 17th of February, 2022. [01:03:38.920 --> 01:03:41.920] We're talking with Chris in New York. [01:03:41.920 --> 01:03:47.920] And Chris, when we went out, we were confronting a situation [01:03:47.920 --> 01:03:54.920] where you've got assistant district attorneys unwilling to identify themselves [01:03:54.920 --> 01:03:58.920] when they figured out that you knew they were doing something wrong [01:03:58.920 --> 01:04:01.920] and they don't want to tell you their name. [01:04:01.920 --> 01:04:03.920] Could it be that they just don't want to be held accountable? [01:04:03.920 --> 01:04:05.920] Oh, my goodness. [01:04:05.920 --> 01:04:11.920] So these are the guys, the assistant district attorneys are the ones that I like to, [01:04:11.920 --> 01:04:18.920] in writing, I put it down as capital D, capital A, and then ASS period, [01:04:18.920 --> 01:04:20.920] you know, for assistant, of course. [01:04:20.920 --> 01:04:27.920] And I will ask the district attorney, you can just, it's very simple. [01:04:27.920 --> 01:04:29.920] You don't have to have a special form for this. [01:04:29.920 --> 01:04:36.920] You just go to the district attorney and you say, I want, in whatever records you want, [01:04:36.920 --> 01:04:41.920] I want records that show the full names of all the people that work in your office. [01:04:41.920 --> 01:04:44.920] I want to know their bar numbers. [01:04:44.920 --> 01:04:46.920] I want to know their hire dates. [01:04:46.920 --> 01:04:50.920] I want to know how much money you pay them [01:04:50.920 --> 01:04:54.920] and every other kind of compensation you give them besides just the paycheck. [01:04:54.920 --> 01:04:57.920] I want to know what you put in their pension plan. [01:04:57.920 --> 01:05:00.920] I want to know their surety bonds that you've got on these people. [01:05:00.920 --> 01:05:03.920] And, oh, yeah, by the way, what's your surety bond that you've got on you? [01:05:03.920 --> 01:05:07.920] If you ask them whatever questions are going to make them super uncomfortable, [01:05:07.920 --> 01:05:10.920] they're not going to want to answer any of your questions. [01:05:10.920 --> 01:05:13.920] And that's fine because right behind that you've got a criminal complaint [01:05:13.920 --> 01:05:21.920] that is for the DA not responding to your records request. [01:05:21.920 --> 01:05:29.920] Did the DA request an opinion from the state attorney general? [01:05:29.920 --> 01:05:34.920] Can you repeat that one more time, please? [01:05:34.920 --> 01:05:36.920] Did you get that, Brett? [01:05:36.920 --> 01:05:37.920] Yeah. [01:05:37.920 --> 01:05:42.920] Chris, he was asking, did the DA, [01:05:42.920 --> 01:05:47.920] when the DA is refusing to answer your emails about this [01:05:47.920 --> 01:05:49.920] and everybody else refusing, [01:05:49.920 --> 01:05:55.920] did you get a copy of the DA's office trying to reach out to the attorney general? [01:05:55.920 --> 01:05:57.920] Hey, is it okay if we withhold this information? [01:05:57.920 --> 01:06:00.920] This guy's asking for information we think we should withhold. [01:06:00.920 --> 01:06:04.920] Did you get any kind of copy of something like that? [01:06:04.920 --> 01:06:06.920] I've got nothing. [01:06:06.920 --> 01:06:08.920] I just voyaged it. [01:06:08.920 --> 01:06:14.920] Like I said, I just voyaged it like two or three days ago for the surety bonding, [01:06:14.920 --> 01:06:18.920] for all their names, the registration numbers, [01:06:18.920 --> 01:06:20.920] for a list of all the employees in the office. [01:06:20.920 --> 01:06:23.920] I listed all their names for the people that I wanted. [01:06:23.920 --> 01:06:24.920] There you go. [01:06:24.920 --> 01:06:27.920] I hope you didn't say foya in there, [01:06:27.920 --> 01:06:30.920] or else they'll just wait for a long time and then... [01:06:30.920 --> 01:06:32.920] I'm sorry? [01:06:32.920 --> 01:06:35.920] I just asked foya out. [01:06:35.920 --> 01:06:37.920] Okay, yeah. [01:06:37.920 --> 01:06:43.920] That's what they have in New York is foil, slightly different, but yeah. [01:06:43.920 --> 01:06:45.920] Good. [01:06:45.920 --> 01:06:48.920] Just for our listeners, I was saying... [01:06:48.920 --> 01:06:52.920] Is it just me, Brett, or is he breaking up? [01:06:52.920 --> 01:06:55.920] Yeah, his audio is kind of distant and broken. [01:06:55.920 --> 01:06:58.920] I'm not sure what's the cause of it, but yeah. [01:06:58.920 --> 01:07:02.920] It's a little difficult to understand at some points. [01:07:02.920 --> 01:07:06.920] I thought it was just me. [01:07:06.920 --> 01:07:15.920] Well, no comment. [01:07:15.920 --> 01:07:19.920] The foya, just for our listeners, Chris, you did it right, [01:07:19.920 --> 01:07:22.920] but just so that everybody knows why I was saying that, [01:07:22.920 --> 01:07:25.920] if you reach out to your state people and you say, [01:07:25.920 --> 01:07:28.920] hey, I've got this foya request, [01:07:28.920 --> 01:07:30.920] if your state has a different acronym for that, [01:07:30.920 --> 01:07:34.920] then they're going to love that there's an opportunity for them to ignore you [01:07:34.920 --> 01:07:37.920] with what they're going to consider as a legitimate excuse. [01:07:37.920 --> 01:07:39.920] Oh, he thinks this is federal. [01:07:39.920 --> 01:07:42.920] This is not the Freedom of Information Act. [01:07:42.920 --> 01:07:43.920] It doesn't apply to us. [01:07:43.920 --> 01:07:44.920] We're in the state. [01:07:44.920 --> 01:07:46.920] We don't have to do anything about this. [01:07:46.920 --> 01:07:50.920] And then whatever is their timeframe that they consider [01:07:50.920 --> 01:07:56.920] is the maximum timeframe before they're absolutely classified by law as a criminal. [01:07:56.920 --> 01:07:59.920] They'll answer you five minutes before that [01:07:59.920 --> 01:08:05.920] and tell you that your request doesn't conform or comply. [01:08:05.920 --> 01:08:09.920] It doesn't apply to them or whatever because they're not federal. [01:08:09.920 --> 01:08:12.920] So you don't necessarily want to mention foya [01:08:12.920 --> 01:08:17.920] or really even put it into any law. [01:08:17.920 --> 01:08:20.920] You are one of the masters. [01:08:20.920 --> 01:08:24.920] So when you reach out to your public servants, [01:08:24.920 --> 01:08:28.920] you're part of We the People, the masters of those servants, [01:08:28.920 --> 01:08:31.920] and you don't have to cite any particular law. [01:08:31.920 --> 01:08:34.920] You can if you know for sure that you've got it right, [01:08:34.920 --> 01:08:38.920] but you don't have to. [01:08:38.920 --> 01:08:41.920] And sometimes it helps to not mention [01:08:41.920 --> 01:08:47.920] because just in case what you're asking for falls under a different requirement, [01:08:47.920 --> 01:08:50.920] they have to be transparent for some slightly other reason, [01:08:50.920 --> 01:08:54.920] some nuance that's codified as this or that other category, [01:08:54.920 --> 01:08:56.920] but they still have to be transparent. [01:08:56.920 --> 01:09:00.920] And if you've mentioned which law you think your request goes under [01:09:00.920 --> 01:09:04.920] and it happens to be over the line into some other category, [01:09:04.920 --> 01:09:07.920] it's better to just not even mention it, right? [01:09:07.920 --> 01:09:10.920] Because then they have to respond to you. [01:09:10.920 --> 01:09:12.920] Anyway, so you did fine, Chris. [01:09:12.920 --> 01:09:17.920] You asked for the information, and that was, you said two days ago? [01:09:17.920 --> 01:09:21.920] The portfolio request is two days ago, correct. [01:09:21.920 --> 01:09:26.920] All right, so are you familiar with, in New York, how long do they have? [01:09:26.920 --> 01:09:29.920] Does it say that they have to respond promptly? [01:09:29.920 --> 01:09:32.920] And does it say a certain number of days, [01:09:32.920 --> 01:09:36.920] which is the absolute maximum and they're a criminal if they don't? [01:09:36.920 --> 01:09:41.920] So five days, five business days, they have to acknowledge it. [01:09:41.920 --> 01:09:44.920] And if they don't, then you can appeal it, okay? [01:09:44.920 --> 01:09:47.920] And then once they give you your acknowledgment, [01:09:47.920 --> 01:09:52.920] they have 20 more business days to give you your answer. [01:09:52.920 --> 01:09:58.920] And then obviously if they stall, you're going to have to appeal it. [01:09:58.920 --> 01:10:03.920] The appeal officer is somebody that's higher up in the county. [01:10:03.920 --> 01:10:08.920] And then he has 10 business days, and then they usually don't answer yet. [01:10:08.920 --> 01:10:13.920] And then you've got to do an Article 78 proceeding, you know, [01:10:13.920 --> 01:10:16.920] with a mandamus to compel. [01:10:16.920 --> 01:10:18.920] Oh, my goodness. [01:10:18.920 --> 01:10:21.920] And those are long timeframes, too. [01:10:21.920 --> 01:10:25.920] I understand. [01:10:25.920 --> 01:10:27.920] I'm not going to stop. [01:10:27.920 --> 01:10:30.920] I kind of stopped. [01:10:30.920 --> 01:10:36.920] They did break my chop because I already handed them a mock lawsuit [01:10:36.920 --> 01:10:40.920] for them refusing me service because I refused to wear a mask. [01:10:40.920 --> 01:10:43.920] And I filled out criminal complaints of coercion [01:10:43.920 --> 01:10:49.920] and already giving them to the DA on other issues [01:10:49.920 --> 01:10:51.920] because they're always trying to get me to wear a mask. [01:10:51.920 --> 01:10:55.920] And they said, oh, that's the only way you can come in here is put a mask on. [01:10:55.920 --> 01:10:56.920] Well, that's coercion. [01:10:56.920 --> 01:11:01.920] Okay. So something you said stood out to me just now. [01:11:01.920 --> 01:11:05.920] I think that's wonderful that you've already got to the level [01:11:05.920 --> 01:11:08.920] of putting your criminal complaints together. [01:11:08.920 --> 01:11:12.920] And I'm curious, why did you give those to the DA? [01:11:12.920 --> 01:11:16.920] Those criminal complaints, wouldn't you in New York? [01:11:16.920 --> 01:11:20.920] I'm not familiar with the particulars of New York criminal procedure, [01:11:20.920 --> 01:11:25.920] but typically those would go to a magistrate, not to the DA, right? [01:11:25.920 --> 01:11:30.920] Okay. So tell me what I should do then. [01:11:30.920 --> 01:11:34.920] Should I direct them? [01:11:34.920 --> 01:11:36.920] Well, without looking at the criminal procedure, [01:11:36.920 --> 01:11:40.920] I think you might want to take a look at your local criminal procedure just to make sure. [01:11:40.920 --> 01:11:45.920] But man, I'm thinking that those need to go to a magistrate. [01:11:45.920 --> 01:11:50.920] Do you happen to know, Randy, in New York where to see that in their criminal procedure [01:11:50.920 --> 01:11:54.920] or if they call it penal procedure or whatever? [01:11:54.920 --> 01:11:59.920] Yeah, it's penal law. [01:11:59.920 --> 01:12:02.920] Well, the penal law will define the crimes, [01:12:02.920 --> 01:12:07.920] but there's also some procedure that's set up that will tell you, [01:12:07.920 --> 01:12:09.920] how does this case get commenced? [01:12:09.920 --> 01:12:11.920] Well, it starts with a criminal complaint. [01:12:11.920 --> 01:12:13.920] And then what happens to the criminal complaint? [01:12:13.920 --> 01:12:15.920] Oh, well, it gets given to this person. [01:12:15.920 --> 01:12:19.920] If this person gets it, then they have a responsibility to do ABC. [01:12:19.920 --> 01:12:26.920] And so that procedure is laid out for us in... [01:12:26.920 --> 01:12:29.920] Let me see if I can find what it's called in New York. [01:12:29.920 --> 01:12:39.920] Unless you know, Randy, I'll just speak up. [01:12:39.920 --> 01:12:42.920] Ready? Okay. [01:12:42.920 --> 01:12:50.920] My mic was muted. [01:12:50.920 --> 01:12:54.920] So if you know what the procedure is in New York, [01:12:54.920 --> 01:12:58.920] he just gave his criminal complaints to the DA, [01:12:58.920 --> 01:13:03.920] and the DA is the one who these punks are working for. [01:13:03.920 --> 01:13:11.920] New York has one of the best grand jury systems. [01:13:11.920 --> 01:13:15.920] Just about 10 years ago, they reworked the grand jury system. [01:13:15.920 --> 01:13:20.920] You have the grand jury system available. [01:13:20.920 --> 01:13:21.920] You can go to them yourself. [01:13:21.920 --> 01:13:24.920] You don't have to depend on the grand jury to do it. [01:13:24.920 --> 01:13:29.920] I mean, on the district attorney to do that. [01:13:29.920 --> 01:13:33.920] Can you explain further, please? [01:13:33.920 --> 01:13:36.920] Say that again. [01:13:36.920 --> 01:13:41.920] Can you please explain the process when you say going to the grand jury? [01:13:41.920 --> 01:13:42.920] Okay. [01:13:42.920 --> 01:13:45.920] In New York, what it says is the grand jury shall investigate [01:13:45.920 --> 01:13:51.920] into all crimes that come to their knowledge by whatever means. [01:13:51.920 --> 01:13:58.920] So you don't care what the police, the prosecutors, the judges, [01:13:58.920 --> 01:14:00.920] what they say about what you should do. [01:14:00.920 --> 01:14:03.920] You only care what the law says. [01:14:03.920 --> 01:14:08.920] The law says that a grand jury shall investigate into all crimes [01:14:08.920 --> 01:14:12.920] that come to their knowledge by whatever means. [01:14:12.920 --> 01:14:17.920] So clearly there are no restrictions [01:14:17.920 --> 01:14:20.920] restricting you from going to the grand jury. [01:14:20.920 --> 01:14:26.920] If you're a good little citizen, you're used to doing what you're allowed to do. [01:14:26.920 --> 01:14:31.920] If you went to public schools, you're used to doing what these teachers [01:14:31.920 --> 01:14:36.920] and supervisors and principals told you you could do. [01:14:36.920 --> 01:14:44.920] While they were trying to teach you, supposedly, that you can do anything you want to. [01:14:44.920 --> 01:14:54.920] Unlike public officials who may only do what the law specifically authorizes them to do, [01:14:54.920 --> 01:15:01.920] you can do anything that the law has not specifically forbidden you to do. [01:15:01.920 --> 01:15:07.920] Can you find anything that forbids you to file criminal complaints [01:15:07.920 --> 01:15:12.920] and send them to each of the grand jury members? [01:15:12.920 --> 01:15:15.920] I'll have to look. [01:15:15.920 --> 01:15:18.920] You don't have to. You won't find anything. [01:15:18.920 --> 01:15:21.920] There won't be anything like that. [01:15:21.920 --> 01:15:29.920] What I'm seeing so far is it's called in New York, they call it criminal procedure law, CPL. [01:15:29.920 --> 01:15:32.920] So as you're looking, you might check that out. [01:15:32.920 --> 01:15:35.920] Yeah, and there will be a section on grand jurors. [01:15:35.920 --> 01:15:40.920] Grand jurors were the genius of our founders. [01:15:40.920 --> 01:15:48.920] We get to step right around everybody and take our complaint to a jury of our peers. [01:15:48.920 --> 01:15:51.920] How do you get it to the grand jury though, Randy? [01:15:51.920 --> 01:15:53.920] You send it to them by mail. [01:15:53.920 --> 01:15:55.920] I'm glad you asked that question. [01:15:55.920 --> 01:15:58.920] We have a whole procedure for that. [01:15:58.920 --> 01:16:06.920] You send it to the foreman of the grand jury at the district attorney's address. [01:16:06.920 --> 01:16:11.920] The district attorney tends to always hold the address for the grand jury [01:16:11.920 --> 01:16:19.920] and make criminal complaints against the district attorney. [01:16:19.920 --> 01:16:25.920] When you send a complaint to the grand jury foreman by way of the prosecuting attorney's office, [01:16:25.920 --> 01:16:30.920] on the front of the envelope, you put a cover letter. [01:16:30.920 --> 01:16:40.920] In that cover letter, you notice the underlying individual that you know what she looks like. [01:16:40.920 --> 01:16:44.920] You're all pretty much in the same boat. [01:16:44.920 --> 01:16:53.920] And that you have reason to believe and do believe that a crime has been committed. [01:16:53.920 --> 01:16:55.920] So when you send it to the district attorney, [01:16:55.920 --> 01:17:00.920] the only address you have for the grand jury is the district attorney's office. [01:17:00.920 --> 01:17:05.920] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:05.920 --> 01:17:10.920] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [01:17:10.920 --> 01:17:14.920] for scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [01:17:14.920 --> 01:17:17.920] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.920 --> 01:17:21.920] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [01:17:21.920 --> 01:17:24.920] rightly dividing the word of truth. [01:17:24.920 --> 01:17:27.920] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the book of Mark, [01:17:27.920 --> 01:17:31.920] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [01:17:31.920 --> 01:17:36.920] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:17:36.920 --> 01:17:38.920] and Christian character development. [01:17:38.920 --> 01:17:43.920] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.920 --> 01:17:46.920] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more [01:17:46.920 --> 01:17:49.920] into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:49.920 --> 01:17:53.920] So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com [01:17:53.920 --> 01:18:00.920] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [01:18:00.920 --> 01:18:05.920] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.920 --> 01:18:09.920] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:18:09.920 --> 01:18:13.920] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [01:18:13.920 --> 01:18:15.920] and now you can win too. 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[01:18:57.920 --> 01:19:00.920] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:27.920 --> 01:19:36.920] Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.920 --> 01:19:41.920] I was blindsided, but now I can see your face. [01:19:41.920 --> 01:19:46.920] Okay, we are back, Randy Felton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [01:19:46.920 --> 01:19:50.920] and we're talking about how to get to grand juries. [01:19:50.920 --> 01:19:55.920] Doesn't always matter if you get to the grand jury or not. [01:19:55.920 --> 01:20:00.920] What matters is that you make grand jury noises, [01:20:00.920 --> 01:20:04.920] and that scares the bejesus out of all of them. [01:20:04.920 --> 01:20:10.920] So if you send a complaint to the grand jury by way of the district attorney's office, [01:20:10.920 --> 01:20:17.920] always put a cover letter on it with a stamped self-addressed return envelope, [01:20:17.920 --> 01:20:24.920] and ask the foreman to initial this document and send it back to you. [01:20:24.920 --> 01:20:28.920] You never expect to get this document back. [01:20:28.920 --> 01:20:34.920] But if you don't get this document back within seven, say, ten days, [01:20:34.920 --> 01:20:39.920] then you can have reason to believe, and do believe, [01:20:39.920 --> 01:20:45.920] that the prosecuting attorney secreted this government document from the grand jury. [01:20:45.920 --> 01:20:50.920] That he intercepted it because it came to his office. [01:20:50.920 --> 01:20:57.920] He opened it up, and it looked like a standard drunk driving or weaving [01:20:57.920 --> 01:21:04.920] or some of these other nonsense complaints the sheriff's department files, [01:21:04.920 --> 01:21:09.920] and he didn't give it to the grand jury. [01:21:09.920 --> 01:21:15.920] If you don't get that letter back within ten days, [01:21:15.920 --> 01:21:20.920] then you can have reason to believe, and do believe, [01:21:20.920 --> 01:21:26.920] that they shielded the individual from prosecution. [01:21:26.920 --> 01:21:29.920] Then you get to file against the prosecuting attorney, [01:21:29.920 --> 01:21:33.920] because you sent it to the prosecuting attorney's office. [01:21:33.920 --> 01:21:38.920] If the foreman had gotten it, he would have sent you this letter back. [01:21:38.920 --> 01:21:42.920] At least that's a presumption you get to have. [01:21:42.920 --> 01:21:46.920] Since you didn't get it back, you have reason to believe, and do believe, [01:21:46.920 --> 01:21:49.920] that the prosecuting attorney secreted this from the grand jury. [01:21:49.920 --> 01:21:53.920] You can be absolutely certain that he did. [01:21:53.920 --> 01:21:58.920] Then you file criminal charges against the district attorney [01:21:58.920 --> 01:22:06.920] for shielding from prosecution, and you file that with the foreman. [01:22:06.920 --> 01:22:10.920] Now the prosecuting attorney is in a quandary. [01:22:10.920 --> 01:22:20.920] Am I going to secret criminal complaints against myself from the grand jury? [01:22:20.920 --> 01:22:23.920] Now, I understand this is hard to get done, [01:22:23.920 --> 01:22:26.920] and I understand that when you try to do this, [01:22:26.920 --> 01:22:32.920] you're not going to have good feedback on the effects that it has. [01:22:32.920 --> 01:22:39.920] But you have an advantage if you're in a smaller area or if you're in a focused area. [01:22:39.920 --> 01:22:43.920] You can watch what they do. [01:22:43.920 --> 01:22:47.920] You will see that their demeanor changes, [01:22:47.920 --> 01:22:51.920] especially when you don't get that letter back, [01:22:51.920 --> 01:22:57.920] and you send a subsequent letter or complaint accusing the district attorney [01:22:57.920 --> 01:23:04.920] of secreting criminal complaints against himself from the grand jury. [01:23:04.920 --> 01:23:12.920] At the end of the day, most of the times our complaints don't get in front of the grand jury. [01:23:12.920 --> 01:23:15.920] It is the specter of them going in front of the grand jury [01:23:15.920 --> 01:23:18.920] that gets our public officials to change their behavior. [01:23:18.920 --> 01:23:21.920] Does that make sense? [01:23:21.920 --> 01:23:24.920] Yes. [01:23:24.920 --> 01:23:35.920] So when what you're doing doesn't appear to have any outcome, any result, [01:23:35.920 --> 01:23:43.920] don't expect them to tell you that they had powerful results. [01:23:43.920 --> 01:23:45.920] It's like you and I are going to get in a fight, [01:23:45.920 --> 01:23:47.920] and I point at my left shoulder and I say, [01:23:47.920 --> 01:23:54.920] you see this spot right here? Don't hit that spot because it really hurts. [01:23:54.920 --> 01:23:56.920] If it does really hurt, I'm not going to tell you that. [01:23:56.920 --> 01:24:02.920] I'm going to put that in front of you to get you to swing somewhere else. [01:24:02.920 --> 01:24:05.920] And that's what these public officials do. [01:24:05.920 --> 01:24:10.920] They are not going to tell you when you've done them good. [01:24:10.920 --> 01:24:15.920] It's enough to know that when you start filing criminal charges with grand juries, [01:24:15.920 --> 01:24:20.920] you terrify everybody. [01:24:20.920 --> 01:24:23.920] Okay. [01:24:23.920 --> 01:24:27.920] I think we're going to run out of time on this show [01:24:27.920 --> 01:24:30.920] because I've got a whole board full of callers. [01:24:30.920 --> 01:24:33.920] Does this make sense? [01:24:33.920 --> 01:24:37.920] Yes, I'll give my criminal complaint to the court. [01:24:37.920 --> 01:24:41.920] Yeah, don't worry if the grand jury gets it or not. [01:24:41.920 --> 01:24:48.920] The best fight is against the prosecutor from secreting from the grand jury. [01:24:48.920 --> 01:24:53.920] And at the end of the day, we want them to change their behavior. [01:24:53.920 --> 01:24:58.920] And when you're doing things that causes that prosecutor to look at the possibility [01:24:58.920 --> 01:25:03.920] of losing his position and getting prosecuted and thrown under the bus, [01:25:03.920 --> 01:25:06.920] they tend to change their behavior. [01:25:06.920 --> 01:25:09.920] And that's the best way we can have. [01:25:09.920 --> 01:25:12.920] Don't I have a civil suit too? [01:25:12.920 --> 01:25:15.920] Oh, that depends. [01:25:15.920 --> 01:25:21.920] That's a little more iffy because we're dealing with public officials who have immunity. [01:25:21.920 --> 01:25:32.920] You have to get the official acting outside of scope. [01:25:32.920 --> 01:25:37.920] That's the only way you're going to get them outside of their immunity. [01:25:37.920 --> 01:25:39.920] Exactly. [01:25:39.920 --> 01:25:43.920] Prosecutors and judges have absolute immunity. [01:25:43.920 --> 01:25:46.920] So long as they are operating within scope, [01:25:46.920 --> 01:25:54.920] the one thing that interferes with scope most effectively is criminal complaints, [01:25:54.920 --> 01:25:57.920] is criminal allegations. [01:25:57.920 --> 01:26:01.920] If you say that this prosecutor acted in concert inclusion with this police officer [01:26:01.920 --> 01:26:07.920] and this judge to deny me in due process. [01:26:07.920 --> 01:26:13.920] A denial of due process is not within the scope of a public official [01:26:13.920 --> 01:26:19.920] because a denial of due process is harm per se on its face. [01:26:19.920 --> 01:26:22.920] You don't have to prove harm. [01:26:22.920 --> 01:26:26.920] You just have to prove that they denied you due process. [01:26:26.920 --> 01:26:27.920] They did. [01:26:27.920 --> 01:26:30.920] And harm attaches. [01:26:30.920 --> 01:26:39.920] You can sue them in federal courts under 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:26:39.920 --> 01:26:42.920] I'm sorry, 18 U.S. Code. [01:26:42.920 --> 01:26:44.920] Now I'm mixing up the two. [01:26:44.920 --> 01:26:48.920] 18 U.S. Code 242 is a Ku Klux Klan Act. [01:26:48.920 --> 01:26:50.920] That's the criminal side. [01:26:50.920 --> 01:26:57.920] You can sue them under 42 U.S. Code 1983. [01:26:57.920 --> 01:27:02.920] And again, it's not about winning your suit. [01:27:02.920 --> 01:27:09.920] It's about forcing them to have to stand and answer, [01:27:09.920 --> 01:27:19.920] putting them in a position to where they see that you can compel their behavior. [01:27:19.920 --> 01:27:21.920] Then they lose some of this arrogance [01:27:21.920 --> 01:27:27.920] and we can likely get them back to somewhat close to following law. [01:27:27.920 --> 01:27:33.920] Does that make sense? [01:27:33.920 --> 01:27:35.920] I didn't think so. [01:27:35.920 --> 01:27:40.920] It wasn't making sense to me for some reason. [01:27:40.920 --> 01:27:42.920] That happens sometimes. [01:27:42.920 --> 01:27:47.920] But have you ever flown an airplane? [01:27:47.920 --> 01:27:49.920] No. [01:27:49.920 --> 01:27:53.920] When you fly an airplane, if you want to take off, you point it down the runway [01:27:53.920 --> 01:27:55.920] and you get wall-bound up. [01:27:55.920 --> 01:27:59.920] And unlike a car where you turn the wheel and the car turns, [01:27:59.920 --> 01:28:01.920] an airplane doesn't do that. [01:28:01.920 --> 01:28:04.920] You put pressure on the controls. [01:28:04.920 --> 01:28:08.920] And you can count, depending on the airplane, one, two, three, [01:28:08.920 --> 01:28:12.920] and then the airplane responds. [01:28:12.920 --> 01:28:17.920] You don't respond, you don't control an airplane by pushing it around. [01:28:17.920 --> 01:28:21.920] You control an airplane by applying pressure [01:28:21.920 --> 01:28:26.920] and letting the airplane respond to you. [01:28:26.920 --> 01:28:30.920] It's similar to what we do to these public officials. [01:28:30.920 --> 01:28:32.920] We put pressure on them, they're going to jump up and down, [01:28:32.920 --> 01:28:35.920] rail in righteous indignation, [01:28:35.920 --> 01:28:39.920] but gradually they're going to adjust their behavior. [01:28:39.920 --> 01:28:41.920] And you'll get them to follow law. [01:28:41.920 --> 01:28:46.920] We need more people doing that. [01:28:46.920 --> 01:28:50.920] So we've been around in circles. [01:28:50.920 --> 01:28:56.920] What is it at the end of the day that you want to accomplish? [01:28:56.920 --> 01:28:59.920] I want to get all the masks off the kids. [01:28:59.920 --> 01:29:00.920] Okay. [01:29:00.920 --> 01:29:05.920] Who initially issued the mask orders? [01:29:05.920 --> 01:29:07.920] What's that? [01:29:07.920 --> 01:29:08.920] Oh, you're in New York. [01:29:08.920 --> 01:29:09.920] Okay. [01:29:09.920 --> 01:29:10.920] Okay. [01:29:10.920 --> 01:29:11.920] We know who did that. [01:29:11.920 --> 01:29:12.920] Yeah. [01:29:12.920 --> 01:29:16.920] I'm just saying, I don't want to have to put a mask on anywhere, [01:29:16.920 --> 01:29:19.920] and they're holding on to this county thing, [01:29:19.920 --> 01:29:23.920] even though there's no statewide thing. [01:29:23.920 --> 01:29:26.920] And the reason the schools have the mask [01:29:26.920 --> 01:29:29.920] are because of the Board of Education, they're claiming. [01:29:29.920 --> 01:29:30.920] Okay. [01:29:30.920 --> 01:29:34.920] If a public official orders you to wear a mask and you don't want to, [01:29:34.920 --> 01:29:39.920] what law is he violating? [01:29:39.920 --> 01:29:42.920] Oh, okay. [01:29:42.920 --> 01:29:43.920] Hang on. [01:29:43.920 --> 01:29:45.920] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:29:45.920 --> 01:29:48.920] Think about that over the break. [01:29:48.920 --> 01:29:50.920] That's the most important thing to understand. [01:29:50.920 --> 01:29:52.920] I know what it is. [01:29:52.920 --> 01:29:55.920] Let's see if you get it when we come back on the other side. [01:29:55.920 --> 01:29:59.920] We'll be right back. [01:29:59.920 --> 01:30:04.920] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, [01:30:04.920 --> 01:30:08.920] the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:08.920 --> 01:30:11.920] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:11.920 --> 01:30:13.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:13.920 --> 01:30:15.920] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:15.920 --> 01:30:17.920] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.920 --> 01:30:21.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.920 --> 01:30:23.920] And once your privacy is gone, [01:30:23.920 --> 01:30:26.920] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.920 --> 01:30:29.920] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [01:30:29.920 --> 01:30:31.920] and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.920 --> 01:30:34.920] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.920 --> 01:30:37.920] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.920 --> 01:30:41.920] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.920 --> 01:30:45.920] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.920 --> 01:30:48.920] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.920 --> 01:30:52.920] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.920 --> 01:30:56.920] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.920 --> 01:31:00.920] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.920 --> 01:31:04.920] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.920 --> 01:31:07.920] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people [01:31:07.920 --> 01:31:10.920] have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.920 --> 01:31:13.920] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas [01:31:13.920 --> 01:31:15.920] and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.920 --> 01:31:18.920] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.920 --> 01:31:21.920] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.920 --> 01:31:24.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, [01:31:24.920 --> 01:31:31.920] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.920 --> 01:31:36.920] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.920 --> 01:31:38.920] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.920 --> 01:31:43.920] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.920 --> 01:31:46.920] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.920 --> 01:31:49.920] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.920 --> 01:31:51.920] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.920 --> 01:31:54.920] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.920 --> 01:31:58.920] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.920 --> 01:32:02.920] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.920 --> 01:32:06.920] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:06.920 --> 01:32:08.920] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.920 --> 01:32:10.920] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.920 --> 01:32:13.920] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.920 --> 01:32:16.920] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.920 --> 01:32:18.920] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [01:32:18.920 --> 01:32:20.920] the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.920 --> 01:32:24.920] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce [01:32:24.920 --> 01:32:26.920] and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.920 --> 01:32:29.920] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:29.920 --> 01:32:32.920] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.920 --> 01:32:34.920] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:34.920 --> 01:32:36.920] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.920 --> 01:32:38.920] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:38.920 --> 01:32:41.920] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.920 --> 01:32:43.920] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.920 --> 01:32:46.920] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:46.920 --> 01:32:48.920] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.920 --> 01:32:51.920] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource materials. [01:32:51.920 --> 01:32:55.920] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.920 --> 01:33:02.920] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.920 --> 01:33:05.920] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [01:33:05.920 --> 01:33:13.920] logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:13.920 --> 01:33:26.920] Yeah, who you want to chip? Who you take me from? Free Tolley? [01:33:26.920 --> 01:33:32.920] I know that when you go computer reading, you can't hide me from nobody when I say, [01:33:32.920 --> 01:33:37.920] chip in your mom, chip in your daddy, chip in your grandpa and the granny, [01:33:37.920 --> 01:33:41.920] chip in your baby, chip in your family, whole family, [01:33:41.920 --> 01:33:46.920] Chippin' on your dog and the church around me Chippin' on the beef and you still go eat it [01:33:46.920 --> 01:33:51.920] Chippin' on the fish, them all in the sea Chippin' on the shark and the whale around me [01:33:51.920 --> 01:33:56.920] You know, see mankind, they ain't chip crazy They fixin' the team and they want to read it [01:33:56.920 --> 01:34:01.920] Social security, them go tell me Number when them give me, them repeat up you see [01:34:01.920 --> 01:34:05.920] Chippin' you in the morning, Chippin' you in the evening, Chippin' you all the dinnertime [01:34:05.920 --> 01:34:12.920] Experiment on mankind, but man, you know, say them lie Well, we don't want no chip, man, you have your body [01:34:12.920 --> 01:34:17.920] Freedom or something, man, you fight for it You should tell them, them free read it [01:34:17.920 --> 01:34:22.920] Constitution set us free Don't let them put no chip in your body [01:34:22.920 --> 01:34:27.920] Put no chip in you dog or church, you see Put no chip in your cow and go eat it [01:34:27.920 --> 01:34:32.920] Put no chip in the fish and go eat it All in the whale and the shark in the sea [01:34:32.920 --> 01:34:43.920] Okay, we are back. Chris, are you familiar with the channel site that Brett and I have for this mask issue? [01:34:43.920 --> 01:34:46.920] I run it all the time [01:34:46.920 --> 01:34:50.920] Oh, okay, then you really know how to go after these guys [01:34:50.920 --> 01:35:01.920] Okay, so the thing is is now how to manipulate the public officials when you're going for the grand jury [01:35:01.920 --> 01:35:07.920] It never matters if you get to the grand jury or not [01:35:07.920 --> 01:35:13.920] It's about making grand jury noises that terrifies these guys [01:35:13.920 --> 01:35:16.920] So we do need to move on [01:35:16.920 --> 01:35:19.920] Call us back tomorrow night when we've got more time [01:35:19.920 --> 01:35:23.920] I've spent more time on this than I should have, but it was a really good subject [01:35:23.920 --> 01:35:28.920] And I know sometimes people who are on the phone trying to get in [01:35:28.920 --> 01:35:36.920] They get frustrated at me, but when we get good subjects, this is a show about teaching [01:35:36.920 --> 01:35:40.920] So we like to address them in more detail [01:35:40.920 --> 01:35:44.920] But can you call back tomorrow night? [01:35:44.920 --> 01:35:50.920] I will, and I'll send a criminal complaint to the Mass Law Society telegram group [01:35:50.920 --> 01:35:53.920] Maybe you can check it out before we go [01:35:53.920 --> 01:35:56.920] Good, okay. Thank you, Chris [01:35:56.920 --> 01:35:57.920] Thank you [01:35:57.920 --> 01:36:03.920] Okay, Danny, John, I see you both there, but I don't know if we'll get to you [01:36:03.920 --> 01:36:08.920] If you'll call back tomorrow night, we'll take you up front [01:36:08.920 --> 01:36:11.920] Now we're going to go to Austin in Florida [01:36:11.920 --> 01:36:14.920] Hello, Austin [01:36:14.920 --> 01:36:16.920] How we going? [01:36:16.920 --> 01:36:21.920] Okay, where are you at now on your issue? [01:36:21.920 --> 01:36:30.920] Well, I'm working on a declaratory judgment, and I just have a few questions to help clarify with that [01:36:30.920 --> 01:36:38.920] Like, I do want to put pretty much everything, like, challenging the constitutionality [01:36:38.920 --> 01:36:44.920] Of the First Amendment regulation in the single declaratory judgment [01:36:44.920 --> 01:36:50.920] Like, basically, you put everything you want them to acknowledge in there [01:36:50.920 --> 01:36:55.920] Okay, suggestion on declaratory judgment [01:36:55.920 --> 01:36:59.920] Don't throw the kitchen sink at them [01:36:59.920 --> 01:37:18.920] What ruling do you need from the court, the appellate court, that would undermine your opponent's position? [01:37:18.920 --> 01:37:24.920] I just said the regulation is spatially invalid for numerous reasons [01:37:24.920 --> 01:37:34.920] It's overly broad, but no one's ever even challenged the designation of certain areas to be free speech areas [01:37:34.920 --> 01:37:38.920] So I feel that one is also a layup [01:37:38.920 --> 01:37:42.920] Okay, wait a minute, free speech areas [01:37:42.920 --> 01:37:46.920] How can there be anything else? [01:37:46.920 --> 01:37:51.920] What is a non-free speech area? Communist China? [01:37:51.920 --> 01:37:59.920] That's actually what I said typically say to officers is that Nazi Germany over there wears the line [01:37:59.920 --> 01:38:08.920] But it comes down to they say that the free speech areas are designated public forum [01:38:08.920 --> 01:38:19.920] Basically amounting to an argument that national parks are non-public forum unless they give an exception to a certain area [01:38:19.920 --> 01:38:24.920] Is that specifically in the statutes? [01:38:24.920 --> 01:38:39.920] Yes, it doesn't specifically say that actually, of course, it just says the superintendent has a discretion to attribute certain areas as designated certain areas as First Amendment areas [01:38:39.920 --> 01:38:48.920] And any type of expressive activity outside of that that could attract onlookers is prohibited [01:38:48.920 --> 01:39:00.920] Were there markers indicating specific First Amendment areas? [01:39:00.920 --> 01:39:11.920] Never saw any such thing at Yellowstone, at Rushmore when you walk in it says this area is protected by First Amendment activities right when you walk in [01:39:11.920 --> 01:39:20.920] Do you just see the sign? So it actually leads you under the impression that it's saying you can use your First Amendment everywhere in Mount Rushmore [01:39:20.920 --> 01:39:23.920] But apparently there's certain areas [01:39:23.920 --> 01:39:29.920] Yeah, Waukunda Park, but maybe they are only talking about the four inches around the sign [01:39:29.920 --> 01:39:41.920] If they've referenced First Amendment and a reasonable person of ordinary prudence were to read the statute [01:39:41.920 --> 01:39:54.920] Would they get the impression that this was an area that was open for free speech? [01:39:54.920 --> 01:39:59.920] So I'm not sure that I follow you [01:39:59.920 --> 01:40:11.920] Well, in order for them to charge you with abusing free speech, you go up to the gate and it says this is a free speech area [01:40:11.920 --> 01:40:15.920] What did it actually say? [01:40:15.920 --> 01:40:22.920] I have a video somewhere, but it says something to the effect of this area is protected for First Amendment activity [01:40:22.920 --> 01:40:26.920] Okay [01:40:26.920 --> 01:40:35.920] My question is what does that mean? Protected for First Amendment activities [01:40:35.920 --> 01:40:40.920] What he's getting at is can people read that and come to a different conclusion? [01:40:40.920 --> 01:40:48.920] Is it vague? Is it something that everybody looks at it and it's really clear what that means or what do people think when they see that? [01:40:48.920 --> 01:40:54.920] That's what he's going to [01:40:54.920 --> 01:41:02.920] Ambiguous, do not cross on red [01:41:02.920 --> 01:41:05.920] That's not ambiguous [01:41:05.920 --> 01:41:11.920] This is a protected free speech area [01:41:11.920 --> 01:41:21.920] And when I read the English language that says to me in this area, my free speech is protected [01:41:21.920 --> 01:41:29.920] Yeah, I would see that and I would think, well, of course it is. I'm in America. What else kind of area could there be? [01:41:29.920 --> 01:41:35.920] Right. That actually made a joke of that nature to the guy I was with because rarely do you even see that [01:41:35.920 --> 01:41:44.920] They just try to intimidate you from speaking, but the way it's set up is the free speech areas are always where no one can hear you [01:41:44.920 --> 01:41:51.920] I traveled the whole US going to national parks. They're literally set up in areas that no one are [01:41:51.920 --> 01:41:57.920] So you're forced to either not speak to anyone or leave [01:41:57.920 --> 01:42:11.920] So if you were to breach their ordinances and speak some speak that was essentially forbidden [01:42:11.920 --> 01:42:16.920] And there's no one there to hear the speech [01:42:16.920 --> 01:42:23.920] Can you hear a tree fall in the woods if nobody's there? I'm sorry. Does the tree make any noise? [01:42:23.920 --> 01:42:27.920] I thought it was a bear farting [01:42:27.920 --> 01:42:32.920] I wasn't going to flatulence [01:42:32.920 --> 01:42:36.920] Oh, flatulence. We're on the radio [01:42:36.920 --> 01:42:45.920] Yeah, I'm not a flatulence sort of guy. But the point here is that is absolutely ambiguous [01:42:45.920 --> 01:42:51.920] That sounds like this is a place where I can exercise my First Amendment right with no interference [01:42:51.920 --> 01:43:00.920] With the implication that there were other places that I could not. So what the heck does that mean? [01:43:00.920 --> 01:43:04.920] But then if I have to ask that question, what does it mean? [01:43:04.920 --> 01:43:09.920] It's unconstitutionally ambiguous [01:43:09.920 --> 01:43:15.920] And that might be a great thing to take on [01:43:15.920 --> 01:43:24.920] Yeah, I didn't even think about that. I'm very appreciative that you mentioned that. What it boils down to reading all the Supreme Court cases is that they just run [01:43:24.920 --> 01:43:29.920] Instead of doing it the right way where they say this is a nonpublic forum where we don't allow demonstration [01:43:29.920 --> 01:43:34.920] They just put little stars on maps and everywhere else is assumed to be nonpublic forum [01:43:34.920 --> 01:43:38.920] And so the Supreme Court ruling said unfortunately this guy didn't challenge that [01:43:38.920 --> 01:43:43.920] Fortunately for us he didn't challenge it so we don't have to deal with it [01:43:43.920 --> 01:43:46.920] You got to ask the right question [01:43:46.920 --> 01:43:50.920] I wonder if you're going to be the one that challenges it [01:43:50.920 --> 01:43:51.920] Cool [01:43:51.920 --> 01:43:53.920] It may be an opportunity for you [01:43:53.920 --> 01:44:21.920] Okay, we're about to go to our sponsors. We do need to move on. We're out of time. Call us back tomorrow night. We'll be right back. [01:44:23.920 --> 01:44:26.920] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash [01:44:26.920 --> 01:44:32.920] I click control shift delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them [01:44:32.920 --> 01:44:34.920] Bye bye yucky cookies [01:44:34.920 --> 01:44:40.920] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side [01:44:40.920 --> 01:44:46.920] Bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies [01:44:46.920 --> 01:44:48.920] New cookies for me? [01:44:48.920 --> 01:44:57.920] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too [01:44:57.920 --> 01:44:58.920] C is for cookie [01:44:58.920 --> 01:45:00.920] C is for classified [01:45:00.920 --> 01:45:03.920] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.920 --> 01:45:15.920] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step [01:45:15.920 --> 01:45:22.920] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself [01:45:22.920 --> 01:45:27.920] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too [01:45:27.920 --> 01:45:33.920] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience [01:45:33.920 --> 01:45:42.920] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts [01:45:42.920 --> 01:45:51.920] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more [01:45:51.920 --> 01:46:13.920] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ [01:46:22.920 --> 01:46:26.920] Something in this world I'll never understand [01:46:26.920 --> 01:46:30.920] Something I realize fully [01:46:30.920 --> 01:46:35.920] Somebody's gonna police that policeman [01:46:35.920 --> 01:46:39.920] Somebody's gonna police the bully [01:46:39.920 --> 01:46:43.920] There's always a room at the top of the hill [01:46:43.920 --> 01:46:47.920] Here through the grapevine and it's lonely [01:46:47.920 --> 01:46:52.920] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio [01:46:52.920 --> 01:46:57.920] And we're gonna go to Danny in Tennessee. Where the heck have you been, Danny? [01:46:57.920 --> 01:47:01.920] Well, I've been around. I just haven't been calling [01:47:01.920 --> 01:47:05.920] Well, why not? [01:47:05.920 --> 01:47:14.920] Well, usually by this time of night I'm down to the point I don't feel like I can talk well enough to risk talking [01:47:14.920 --> 01:47:19.920] Oh, okay. Well, you've got five whole minutes [01:47:19.920 --> 01:47:25.920] Yeah, well, I sent you an email back, I think it was January 22nd [01:47:25.920 --> 01:47:35.920] About this guy Roger Sales and process that he has about your citizenship status [01:47:35.920 --> 01:47:41.920] And to me it makes a lot of things that didn't quite fit together make a lot of sense now [01:47:41.920 --> 01:47:45.920] And you might want to get him on the program sometime [01:47:45.920 --> 01:47:49.920] I don't think so [01:47:49.920 --> 01:47:54.920] I've spent 30 years dealing with this citizenship status [01:47:54.920 --> 01:47:58.920] Primarily we deal with criminal law [01:47:58.920 --> 01:48:09.920] And if you are inside the physical jurisdiction, your citizen status means nothing [01:48:09.920 --> 01:48:16.920] Well, that's not been the experience of lots of people that have been getting the documents he has [01:48:16.920 --> 01:48:20.920] Yeah, I've heard them talk about that stuff [01:48:20.920 --> 01:48:28.920] But when I ask them for those documents and ask them for the cases that the references, I get nothing [01:48:28.920 --> 01:48:31.920] For 30 years I've been getting nothing [01:48:31.920 --> 01:48:35.920] But talk about how the citizen status makes a difference [01:48:35.920 --> 01:48:40.920] I've never gotten anything from them of any substance and it's a frustration [01:48:40.920 --> 01:48:50.920] I'm not saying that it's not important, that it's not effective, but I just can't get any support [01:48:50.920 --> 01:48:56.920] Well, I think he has, he talks about court cases [01:48:56.920 --> 01:49:04.920] Yeah, and when I started looking up the court cases, two-thirds of them don't have anything to do with what they're talking about [01:49:04.920 --> 01:49:08.920] And the ones that they do are almost always misconstrued [01:49:08.920 --> 01:49:12.920] What is the importance of citizenship? [01:49:12.920 --> 01:49:24.920] Well, the 14th Amendment basically installed a system of, what was it in the Middle Ages? [01:49:24.920 --> 01:49:26.920] The feudal system [01:49:26.920 --> 01:49:30.920] And so basically in the status of serfs [01:49:30.920 --> 01:49:39.920] Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute, see what you've just done is you've made a really gross overgeneralization [01:49:39.920 --> 01:49:50.920] If I accept that, then you're going to make other distinctions based on that presumption [01:49:50.920 --> 01:49:56.920] And then other distinctions based on the distinctions you made based on that assumption [01:49:56.920 --> 01:50:04.920] Okay, how did the 14th Amendment reduce us to slaves? [01:50:04.920 --> 01:50:13.920] Because it made your citizenship based on place of birth rather than your parents [01:50:13.920 --> 01:50:14.920] What does that mean? [01:50:14.920 --> 01:50:21.920] Because you were born in the United States rather than being born of American citizens [01:50:21.920 --> 01:50:28.920] Okay, as to your protections under law, what difference does it make? [01:50:28.920 --> 01:50:34.920] Well, you're in a position of property, so you got no property rights, you got no other rights [01:50:34.920 --> 01:50:37.920] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, how do you get there? [01:50:37.920 --> 01:50:41.920] Well, that's just what he comes up with, he has come up with [01:50:41.920 --> 01:50:52.920] Yeah, I know, this is what I get, they make these blanket statements, but we have a right to property [01:50:52.920 --> 01:50:58.920] And you're saying, oh, just wave of the hand and all that's gone, how is it gone? [01:50:58.920 --> 01:51:06.920] Well, if you look in statutes and the way they address you, pretty often you're referred to as the legal owner [01:51:06.920 --> 01:51:13.920] If you look up in Black's Law definition of legal owner, it's basically nothing but a trustee [01:51:13.920 --> 01:51:16.920] So you're in charge of property [01:51:16.920 --> 01:51:19.920] See, that's another one, how do we get there? [01:51:19.920 --> 01:51:21.920] Black's Law Dictionary [01:51:21.920 --> 01:51:25.920] No, no, Black's Law Dictionary is worthless [01:51:25.920 --> 01:51:33.920] It references some cases where judges have expressed opinions about something [01:51:33.920 --> 01:51:43.920] So it's not useful as its own definition, but it does point you to where you can see that being talked about [01:51:43.920 --> 01:51:46.920] Yeah, what's the underlying case law? [01:51:46.920 --> 01:51:55.920] Black's is not citable on its own, Black's points you to case law [01:51:55.920 --> 01:51:59.920] Yeah, well, they don't recite much case law anymore in Black's Law [01:51:59.920 --> 01:52:03.920] Then it's worthless, Black's is absolutely worthless [01:52:03.920 --> 01:52:07.920] Well, you go back several generations, I have a lot of court cases they cite [01:52:07.920 --> 01:52:14.920] Do you know what Black's was generally created as? [01:52:14.920 --> 01:52:18.920] It was a spoof [01:52:18.920 --> 01:52:23.920] A guy created this Black's Law Dictionary and it was a spoof [01:52:23.920 --> 01:52:33.920] It was just a joke, but all these lawyers looked at it and said, wow, we really need a dictionary of all these legal terms [01:52:33.920 --> 01:52:36.920] It grew from a spoof [01:52:36.920 --> 01:52:44.920] So Black's on its own is of no value, the case law that it references you to is the only thing of value [01:52:44.920 --> 01:52:49.920] So to quote Black's without the underlying case law is worthless [01:52:49.920 --> 01:52:56.920] And any one of those cases has to be on point and controlling [01:52:56.920 --> 01:53:05.920] Well, I can find looking at documents today where he cites quite a few cases so I can send those to you as well [01:53:05.920 --> 01:53:10.920] Wait, who is this? Don't tell me this is Keating [01:53:10.920 --> 01:53:12.920] No, Roger Sales [01:53:12.920 --> 01:53:17.920] Roger Sales, have you looked up his case law? [01:53:17.920 --> 01:53:23.920] I sent you an email on January 22nd with links to where he was [01:53:23.920 --> 01:53:28.920] I've probably got 2,000 emails since then [01:53:28.920 --> 01:53:34.920] Well, yeah, but he's got a day to look it up [01:53:34.920 --> 01:53:41.920] I can go back and look it up, I've got 30 years of getting this kind of stuff [01:53:41.920 --> 01:53:52.920] And every time, so far, every single time when I go back and start pulling out the case law it turns out to be absolute garbage [01:53:52.920 --> 01:53:56.920] It is incredibly frustrating [01:53:56.920 --> 01:54:03.920] This whole thing about citizenship, if I am in a jurisdiction [01:54:03.920 --> 01:54:10.920] I don't know of any laws that affect me differently if I am or am not a citizen [01:54:10.920 --> 01:54:16.920] There's just none, there's no difference [01:54:16.920 --> 01:54:24.920] What does this citizenship mean? [01:54:24.920 --> 01:54:29.920] It means your political rights and things like that [01:54:29.920 --> 01:54:38.920] What political rights could I have as a non-citizen or that a non-citizen would not have? [01:54:38.920 --> 01:54:48.920] Well, the U.S. citizen has civil rights given by Congress [01:54:48.920 --> 01:54:58.920] And the U.S. national has the original God-given rights protected by the Constitution [01:54:58.920 --> 01:55:04.920] That was a distinction that didn't make any sense [01:55:04.920 --> 01:55:08.920] How is it not making sense? [01:55:08.920 --> 01:55:15.920] Well, a citizen as opposed to a national [01:55:15.920 --> 01:55:19.920] I've never found that distinction at law [01:55:19.920 --> 01:55:22.920] Well, it's in the passport itself [01:55:22.920 --> 01:55:29.920] They talk about the person described therein as a U.S. citizen slash national [01:55:29.920 --> 01:55:32.920] So they make that provision there [01:55:32.920 --> 01:55:35.920] Yeah, but what does that mean? [01:55:35.920 --> 01:55:39.920] What's the difference between a U.S. citizen slash national? [01:55:39.920 --> 01:55:42.920] Does that mean that they're both exactly the same? [01:55:42.920 --> 01:55:49.920] Or does the passport make some distinction between one and the other? [01:55:49.920 --> 01:55:52.920] Well, I don't think you can tell from just the passport [01:55:52.920 --> 01:55:57.920] Okay, then that's an inappropriate reference [01:55:57.920 --> 01:56:05.920] Well, that doesn't tell you what the difference is, it just shows that they acknowledge a difference [01:56:05.920 --> 01:56:13.920] Do they acknowledge it as a difference or do they just acknowledge that there are the two terms [01:56:13.920 --> 01:56:15.920] and treat them as if they're the same? [01:56:15.920 --> 01:56:19.920] Well, I don't think you can tell in the passport [01:56:19.920 --> 01:56:21.920] That's a long place to go [01:56:21.920 --> 01:56:27.920] Where is there a difference between the two? [01:56:27.920 --> 01:56:29.920] Well... [01:56:29.920 --> 01:56:37.920] I'm not being difficult, Danny, but what we get is a lot of assertions and implications [01:56:37.920 --> 01:56:40.920] that aren't backed up by anything [01:56:40.920 --> 01:56:45.920] And then when I go digging into them, I find out there's no substance to it [01:56:45.920 --> 01:56:49.920] It gives the impression that what they're talking about is valid [01:56:49.920 --> 01:56:54.920] but when you take a closer look, I find no substance [01:56:54.920 --> 01:57:01.920] And anybody who's been listening to my show for any amount of time has heard my frustration [01:57:01.920 --> 01:57:05.920] in trying to get good information [01:57:05.920 --> 01:57:11.920] Good information I could use in court, and I get nothing [01:57:11.920 --> 01:57:20.920] I get these assertions that you're making, but nothing to support them [01:57:20.920 --> 01:57:24.920] For me, it's really frustrating [01:57:24.920 --> 01:57:30.920] Danny, what's this fella's name? You said Roger Sale? Like S-A-L-E? [01:57:30.920 --> 01:57:33.920] S-A-Y-L-E-S [01:57:33.920 --> 01:57:35.920] Okay [01:57:35.920 --> 01:57:43.920] Might take a look at that since we're just wrapping up the show here, but take a look and see what we see [01:57:43.920 --> 01:57:48.920] John, let's see how much time we got [01:57:48.920 --> 01:57:50.920] I can't see my clock [01:57:50.920 --> 01:57:51.920] Oh, there it is [01:57:51.920 --> 01:57:56.920] John, we got 58 seconds [01:57:56.920 --> 01:58:00.920] I can ask a question, here we go [01:58:00.920 --> 01:58:01.920] Go ahead, quickly [01:58:01.920 --> 01:58:07.920] Summarize which law enforcement officials have the real authority in any state [01:58:07.920 --> 01:58:09.920] I know the sheriff has real authority [01:58:09.920 --> 01:58:17.920] How about local police, which I think are municipal security guards, and state police? How do they fit in? [01:58:17.920 --> 01:58:20.920] Wait a minute, I didn't understand that. Sheriff has real authority [01:58:20.920 --> 01:58:30.920] Municipal police officers have been granted peace officer status by the legislature [01:58:30.920 --> 01:58:35.920] You got more out of that than I got lost in that sentence [01:58:35.920 --> 01:58:38.920] I just made up something [01:58:38.920 --> 01:58:43.920] Anyway, we're out of time, John. Call us back tomorrow night, we'll pull you up early [01:58:43.920 --> 01:58:49.920] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, thank you all for listening, and good night [01:58:49.920 --> 01:58:57.920] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version [01:58:57.920 --> 01:59:04.920] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse [01:59:04.920 --> 01:59:08.920] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life [01:59:08.920 --> 01:59:11.920] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America [01:59:11.920 --> 01:59:20.920] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org [01:59:20.920 --> 01:59:25.920] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references [01:59:25.920 --> 01:59:29.920] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible [01:59:29.920 --> 01:59:32.920] This is truly a Bible you can understand [01:59:32.920 --> 01:59:40.920] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102 [01:59:40.920 --> 01:59:49.920] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org [01:59:49.920 --> 01:59:58.920] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com