[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 --> 00:39.060] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.060 --> 00:42.600] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.600 --> 00:44.600] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.600 --> 00:47.880] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.880 --> 00:51.360] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.360 --> 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 --> 01:02.680] and R for religion. [01:02.680 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:10.600] assembly, and religion, but petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.600 --> 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 --> 01:31.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.200 --> 01:34.880] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.880 --> 01:38.320] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.320 --> 01:39.760] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.760 --> 01:43.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.680 --> 01:46.840] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.840 --> 01:48.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.400 --> 01:52.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.040 --> 01:56.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.800 --> 02:01.920] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.920 --> 02:04.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.560 --> 02:08.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.840 --> 02:12.380] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.380 --> 02:15.960] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.960 --> 02:20.320] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.320 --> 02:22.360] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.360 --> 02:26.880] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.880 --> 02:30.720] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.720 --> 02:31.720] Get it? [02:31.720 --> 02:34.040] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.040 --> 02:37.640] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.640 --> 02:43.400] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.400 --> 02:47.960] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:47.960 --> 02:50.600] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.600 --> 02:52.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.560 --> 03:14.080] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:14.080 --> 03:23.560] Are you ready for the second amendment? [03:23.560 --> 03:32.080] Let the vote begin. [03:32.080 --> 03:36.460] Hello bangers. [03:36.460 --> 03:46.460] get straighter every day, and I could take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use. [03:46.460 --> 03:53.460] While I was good for the gander, I was going to work for the goose. [03:53.460 --> 04:04.460] I know some architects, I know some engineers, they've seen the evidence. [04:04.460 --> 04:08.460] Okay, we are back. [04:08.460 --> 04:17.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio on this Friday, the 27th day of May 2022, [04:17.460 --> 04:20.460] and we're talking to Jill in Oregon. [04:20.460 --> 04:23.460] Jill, how does that sound? [04:23.460 --> 04:26.460] Does it sound like we have a plan? [04:26.460 --> 04:29.460] I think so, Randy. [04:29.460 --> 04:35.460] And I'll be on the channel if you have questions, I'll ask Brett to answer all of them, [04:35.460 --> 04:43.460] so I can just sleep and be lazy. [04:43.460 --> 04:46.460] Okay, thank you, Jill. [04:46.460 --> 04:48.460] Thank you. [04:48.460 --> 04:53.460] Now we're going to go to another first-time caller. [04:53.460 --> 04:54.460] Ted, I see you up there. [04:54.460 --> 04:55.460] We're going to get to you. [04:55.460 --> 05:01.460] Shane in Ontario. Hello, Shane. [05:01.460 --> 05:03.460] Hey, how's it going, Randy? [05:03.460 --> 05:04.460] It's going good. [05:04.460 --> 05:08.460] What do you have for us today? [05:08.460 --> 05:15.460] Well, so I was the guy that got laid off at 3M there about a year ago. [05:15.460 --> 05:22.460] He actually responded to my Telegram message, I don't know, maybe about two days ago. [05:22.460 --> 05:25.460] Okay, hold on. [05:25.460 --> 05:30.460] Can you move away from your mic a little bit and talk just a little bit slower? [05:30.460 --> 05:38.460] Okay. [05:38.460 --> 05:42.460] Okay, just move the speaker a little bit away from your mouth and you'll be fine. [05:42.460 --> 05:44.460] Okay, is that better? [05:44.460 --> 05:46.460] Yes. [05:46.460 --> 05:49.460] Okay. [05:49.460 --> 05:58.460] So, yeah, basically what happened was, I'll kind of give you the gist of it, [05:58.460 --> 06:01.460] it was a mask issue before the vaccine. [06:01.460 --> 06:03.460] I worked at this company, 3M. [06:03.460 --> 06:08.460] Most people are probably familiar with that, with that company. [06:08.460 --> 06:10.460] They sell a lot of products. [06:10.460 --> 06:21.460] So I got let go there because I was not abiding to the mask mandate issue. [06:21.460 --> 06:30.460] And anyways, at the end of the day, they didn't let go of me for mask mandate issues. [06:30.460 --> 06:34.460] They let go of me for a restructuring issue. [06:34.460 --> 06:36.460] So they said, you are now restructured. [06:36.460 --> 06:44.460] Basically, your position has been terminated. [06:44.460 --> 06:48.460] So in Canada, so three, go ahead. [06:48.460 --> 06:57.460] If it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, you can sue them. [06:57.460 --> 06:58.460] Yeah. [06:58.460 --> 07:01.460] They can make up whatever, you know, anything they want to. [07:01.460 --> 07:05.460] But the thing about suing somebody is you can always sue them. [07:05.460 --> 07:11.460] Let them come to court and show how that restructuring was something other [07:11.460 --> 07:18.460] than a guise for improperly denying you of your right to make a living. [07:18.460 --> 07:19.460] Right. [07:19.460 --> 07:20.460] Okay. [07:20.460 --> 07:25.460] So I guess my question is, were you going to say something or? [07:25.460 --> 07:27.460] No, go ahead. [07:27.460 --> 07:28.460] Okay. [07:28.460 --> 07:37.460] So I guess my question is, so this is actually, 3M originated in the United States, [07:37.460 --> 07:41.460] and they took this restructuring from the United States. [07:41.460 --> 07:48.460] Should I be going after, like Canada also has a 3M corporation. [07:48.460 --> 07:54.460] Should I be going after the person that actually gave this restructuring? [07:54.460 --> 07:58.460] They actually announced we were going to restructure 3M at one point, [07:58.460 --> 08:00.460] and then I was restructured. [08:00.460 --> 08:05.460] But this was a mandate or a directive from the United States, [08:05.460 --> 08:09.460] 3M corporation, the headquarters. [08:09.460 --> 08:14.460] That is an interesting question. [08:14.460 --> 08:27.460] Is the corporation in Canada fully owned by 3M in the United States? [08:27.460 --> 08:29.460] I don't know. [08:29.460 --> 08:32.460] I'm not sure that works. [08:32.460 --> 08:37.460] I really don't think, you know, I'm in Texas, United States, [08:37.460 --> 08:47.460] and I can cross state lines, but I don't think you can cross an international boundary. [08:47.460 --> 08:48.460] Okay. [08:48.460 --> 08:49.460] With companies, you mean? [08:49.460 --> 08:50.460] Yeah. [08:50.460 --> 08:59.460] Whatever they did to you in Canada was in Canada, and it will adjudicate in Canada. [08:59.460 --> 09:10.460] If they have two separate entities, it would be a stretch to get to the United States-based portion of the company. [09:10.460 --> 09:16.460] Biggest companies don't think it would matter. [09:16.460 --> 09:17.460] Okay. [09:17.460 --> 09:21.460] Fair enough. [09:21.460 --> 09:30.460] Okay. So then I should go ask the president of the corporation, the CEO of the Canadian corporation, [09:30.460 --> 09:34.460] or do I go, do I keep it local? [09:34.460 --> 09:40.460] The point, generally, the one I would want to go after is the point of the spear. [09:40.460 --> 09:50.460] The person who is actually harmed you, you know, I keep saying that a corporation is a legal fiction. [09:50.460 --> 09:54.460] A corporation can't do anything. [09:54.460 --> 09:56.460] People do things. [09:56.460 --> 10:03.460] So you have to consider what do you actually know? [10:03.460 --> 10:16.460] Do you know that the president or CEO directly ordered this person to do what the person did? [10:16.460 --> 10:18.460] You have to have direct evidence. [10:18.460 --> 10:30.460] If you don't have direct evidence, the only one you know is the one who actually took some proactive action against you. [10:30.460 --> 10:31.460] Okay. [10:31.460 --> 10:32.460] That's the one you sue. [10:32.460 --> 10:39.460] Now, if the corporation wants to step in and take responsibility for this person, well, knock yourself out. [10:39.460 --> 10:53.460] But if you in the process have reason to believe that this particular person acted at the direction of someone else, [10:53.460 --> 10:58.460] then that one's responding at superior. [10:58.460 --> 10:59.460] Okay. [10:59.460 --> 11:06.460] Getting to the CEO of the corporation in a large corporation is going to be very difficult because there's a very good chance [11:06.460 --> 11:12.460] that he had absolutely zero idea of what was going on down below him. [11:12.460 --> 11:26.460] So you can claim respondeat superior, but you need to claim respondeat superior within reach so that you can show mens rea. [11:26.460 --> 11:35.460] If this guy was just a dock worker and he wouldn't let you in the building or say a dock foreman, [11:35.460 --> 11:45.460] someone got you restructured because you wouldn't wear a mask, then somebody had to tell him to do it. [11:45.460 --> 11:52.460] You go after him and get him to say, well, I was just following policy. [11:52.460 --> 11:54.460] Whose policy? [11:54.460 --> 12:03.460] And when they tell you whose policy, then you refile the suit and include that person. [12:03.460 --> 12:06.460] Then you can walk your way up to the top. [12:06.460 --> 12:16.460] But if you have a directive issued by the president of the company and this person's acting in concert with that directive, [12:16.460 --> 12:21.460] then you can go straight to the one who issued the directive. [12:21.460 --> 12:24.460] Does that make sense? [12:24.460 --> 12:25.460] It does make sense, yeah. [12:25.460 --> 12:35.460] And if their directive was from the United States CEO, then maybe I could go further. [12:35.460 --> 12:36.460] Absolutely. [12:36.460 --> 12:40.460] I would say you could sue him. [12:40.460 --> 12:46.460] Let him come up here and answer to you. [12:46.460 --> 12:48.460] But you have to have a graveman. [12:48.460 --> 12:49.460] I think graveman is the term. [12:49.460 --> 12:53.460] Is that right, Brett? [12:53.460 --> 12:55.460] I haven't heard that, graveman. [12:55.460 --> 13:02.460] Yeah, that's the term that connects, that shows that this person has a connection, [13:02.460 --> 13:11.460] an actual conscious connection to what's going on because any claim requires mens rea, intent. [13:11.460 --> 13:16.460] That would be like the underlying foundation for there to either be mens rea or not. [13:16.460 --> 13:17.460] Yes. [13:17.460 --> 13:21.460] Sort of like a nexus but for intent. [13:21.460 --> 13:23.460] Yes. [13:23.460 --> 13:25.460] It's an odd term. [13:25.460 --> 13:28.460] That's the only place I've ever come across it. [13:28.460 --> 13:37.460] But first, what is your intended ultimate outcome? [13:37.460 --> 13:44.460] What are you trying to achieve? [13:44.460 --> 13:47.460] That took way too long. [13:47.460 --> 13:55.460] Every time you take these guys on, the first thing you have to do is sit down and decide, [13:55.460 --> 14:02.460] at the end of the day, what for me would be a win? [14:02.460 --> 14:10.460] They offered me quite a bit of money, settlement, and I had to take my time [14:10.460 --> 14:16.460] because I didn't want to sign anything originally. [14:16.460 --> 14:20.460] Because when these things happen to you, you're pretty emotional. [14:20.460 --> 14:26.460] You're pretty upset with what's going on. [14:26.460 --> 14:31.460] I stood back and said, no, I don't want to sign with this dollar value. [14:31.460 --> 14:34.460] I just kept waiting. [14:34.460 --> 14:38.460] This was right in the midst of the pandemic. [14:38.460 --> 14:45.460] It seemed like all the judges were ruling against people or at least not even listening to them at that point. [14:45.460 --> 14:53.460] I found another job and said, I'm going to put this on pause for a minute. [14:53.460 --> 15:00.460] Let's see what's going on in the world because we all know crazy stuff is going on. [15:00.460 --> 15:09.460] Now, I'm at a point after listening to you guys for quite a while to say, okay, now it's time to do something. [15:09.460 --> 15:15.460] What that is is I'm like you. I want to make this world better. [15:15.460 --> 15:19.460] That's why I didn't put a mask on. That's why I didn't do this stuff for my kids. [15:19.460 --> 15:23.460] That's basically the bottom line. [15:23.460 --> 15:27.460] Okay. That's laudable. [15:27.460 --> 15:34.460] But in order to achieve an outcome, you have to have one. [15:34.460 --> 15:41.460] How do you know when you're winning and when you're losing if you don't have a focal point? [15:41.460 --> 15:49.460] How much, how big a check would it take to get you to sign and go away and leave them alone? [15:49.460 --> 15:56.460] What kind of changes would the company need to make that would satisfy you and you'd go away and leave them alone? [15:56.460 --> 16:05.460] You just know what it is you want at the end of the day and that gives you something to work from. [16:05.460 --> 16:10.460] If you don't know where you're going, there's a good chance you'll wind up somewhere else [16:10.460 --> 16:16.460] because they will do everything they can to lead you down one rabbit hole after another. [16:16.460 --> 16:26.460] But if you have a fixed intended outcome, then you can gauge your behavior against the outcome [16:26.460 --> 16:30.460] and it will save you lots of trouble. [16:30.460 --> 16:36.460] I have an outcome. It is my intent to put every judge in the country in a position such that [16:36.460 --> 16:41.460] when they step out behind the bench, look out across the bar at the gallery, I want them wondering which one, [16:41.460 --> 16:45.460] which one of those scoundrels out there are waiting for me to render a ruling [16:45.460 --> 16:50.460] and run down the grand jury and try to get me arrested and indicted. [16:50.460 --> 17:00.460] Everything I do is focused through that outcome. Hang on, we'll be right back. [17:00.460 --> 17:05.460] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [17:05.460 --> 17:09.460] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.460 --> 17:14.460] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [17:14.460 --> 17:20.460] You'll get step-by-step instructions in flaying English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [17:20.460 --> 17:24.460] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons. [17:24.460 --> 17:26.460] How to answer letters and phone calls. [17:26.460 --> 17:28.460] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports. [17:28.460 --> 17:33.460] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.460 --> 17:38.460] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.460 --> 17:40.460] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.460 --> 17:46.460] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner. [17:46.460 --> 17:49.460] Or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.460 --> 17:51.460] That's ruleoflawradio.com. [17:51.460 --> 18:00.460] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-f at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:00.460 --> 18:04.460] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.460 --> 18:07.460] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [18:07.460 --> 18:12.460] And if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.460 --> 18:15.460] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place. [18:15.460 --> 18:17.460] The right to act in our own private capacity. [18:17.460 --> 18:19.460] And most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.460 --> 18:25.460] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:25.460 --> 18:28.460] Former Sheriff's Deputy A. Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:28.460 --> 18:33.460] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [18:33.460 --> 18:35.460] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:35.460 --> 18:40.460] Get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:40.460 --> 18:44.460] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:44.460 --> 18:50.460] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.460 --> 18:54.460] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.460 --> 19:11.460] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:11.460 --> 19:24.460] Well, don't let none get to you. Only the Father can deliver you. So don't let back my people hurt you until they can get behind you. [19:24.460 --> 19:51.460] Come in, my friend. Come in. [19:51.460 --> 19:56.460] Hey, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Shane in Ontario. [19:56.460 --> 20:08.460] So, Shane, what do you want at the end of the day? Mark that down, then sit down and figure out what you want to do. [20:08.460 --> 20:14.460] I once had a bailiff shove me out the door of the courthouse, knock me down, break my elbow, or chip my elbow. [20:14.460 --> 20:23.460] And I looked at that and tried to figure out how I could use that to move me toward my intended outcome. [20:23.460 --> 20:34.460] And I could not find a way to frame that that would move me toward where I wanted to go, so I didn't go after the bailiff. [20:34.460 --> 20:39.460] Turned out to be one of the most powerful things I did. [20:39.460 --> 20:47.460] Because after that, they realized I was the real deal and I wasn't just there to try to harass and give them a hard time. [20:47.460 --> 20:54.460] That's when I began to have some influence. They will try to distract you in every direction they can. [20:54.460 --> 21:03.460] If you have a goal set in front of you, it will be of immense value. [21:03.460 --> 21:09.460] Okay, so what do you want to do? [21:09.460 --> 21:17.460] Well, obviously it's a dollar value that I'm looking for at the end of the day, to tell you the truth. [21:17.460 --> 21:24.460] At the end of the day, it is always about the money. [21:24.460 --> 21:28.460] Always. That's how they keep score. [21:28.460 --> 21:33.460] Yeah. [21:33.460 --> 21:35.460] So how much? [21:35.460 --> 21:43.460] You don't have to tell us. Just give a number and whatever number you think you would like to have, triple it. [21:43.460 --> 21:45.460] Triple it? Okay. [21:45.460 --> 21:46.460] Yeah, triple it. [21:46.460 --> 21:47.460] In my mind... [21:47.460 --> 21:53.460] You want to negotiate. Make a deal. [21:53.460 --> 22:02.460] Everything you do is to beat them up, cost them as much as possible, so that when you go to the court and ask the court to order mediation, [22:02.460 --> 22:12.460] and the court ordered mediation, finally, now we can write this guy a check and get him out of our hair. [22:12.460 --> 22:19.460] And if always a jury, anything you ask for, if you ask for $5, that's too much. [22:19.460 --> 22:23.460] They're going to rant and rave and rail and have righteous indignation. [22:23.460 --> 22:27.460] No matter what you ask for, it's going to be too much. [22:27.460 --> 22:29.460] So it doesn't matter what you ask for. [22:29.460 --> 22:43.460] But at the end of the day, a jury is only going to remember one number, and that's the number you walked in the door front with. [22:43.460 --> 22:48.460] Everything they do will be gauged off that number. [22:48.460 --> 22:53.460] So kick it on up there. Let them argue that it's too high. [22:53.460 --> 22:59.460] And then negotiate down to where you want it to be to start with. [22:59.460 --> 23:02.460] And how do you do that? What number do you come up with? [23:02.460 --> 23:07.460] I mean, I had probably another 15 years of working there. [23:07.460 --> 23:11.460] Let's say I made $100,000 a year, blah, blah, blah. [23:11.460 --> 23:14.460] How do you argue that number? [23:14.460 --> 23:32.460] That'd be $150,000, and since you maintain they acted fraudulently or improperly, you ask for treble damages, so ask for treble. [23:32.460 --> 23:35.460] It doesn't matter what number you come up with. [23:35.460 --> 23:44.460] The jury is just going to want you to be able to say, this is how I got to this number. [23:44.460 --> 23:56.460] I have a way to do that in foreclosure cases where I can get a claim against the lender generally two to three times the original principle. [23:56.460 --> 24:05.460] It doesn't matter how I got there just so long as I can explain how I got there. [24:05.460 --> 24:08.460] The other side is going to say, well, oh, that's not proper. [24:08.460 --> 24:10.460] You should have done it this way or that other way. [24:10.460 --> 24:11.460] Well, that don't make a difference. [24:11.460 --> 24:14.460] Let the jury determine what's proper. [24:14.460 --> 24:21.460] You don't want to go in there and say, well, I pulled this number out of the thin air. [24:21.460 --> 24:23.460] Just give them a way to get to that number. [24:23.460 --> 24:30.460] In another case similar to this one, the jury awarded this amount. [24:30.460 --> 24:41.460] We had a case in Kansas City, Missouri, where a debt collector came after a woman for $1,500, [24:41.460 --> 24:50.460] and they were so rotten and nasty that the jury awarded her $80 million. [24:50.460 --> 24:56.460] Now, they knew that the court would throw that out, but they were making a point. [24:56.460 --> 25:06.460] But what it did, now you can go to the court and say, the jury and say, this is similar to that case. [25:06.460 --> 25:12.460] And in that case, they felt $80 million was appropriate. [25:12.460 --> 25:17.460] Well, the lawyer is going to say, well, the court, they changed that judgment. [25:17.460 --> 25:20.460] Well, oh yeah, but they shouldn't have changed the judgment, should have left it, [25:20.460 --> 25:24.460] and you can argue back and forth. [25:24.460 --> 25:28.460] They'll only remember the number you walked in the door with. [25:28.460 --> 25:29.460] Just have a way. [25:29.460 --> 25:32.460] It doesn't matter if it's a nonsensical way of getting there. [25:32.460 --> 25:36.460] Just you got a way. [25:36.460 --> 25:40.460] I like how you think. [25:40.460 --> 25:46.460] This is the kind of crap all the lawyers do to you, so let's do it back. [25:46.460 --> 25:49.460] Yeah, I do like it. [25:49.460 --> 25:54.460] Anyways, I love listening to you guys, Brett and Randy. [25:54.460 --> 25:55.460] You guys are awesome. [25:55.460 --> 26:01.460] Thank you so much for taking my call, and I'll let you get your next caller on the line here. [26:01.460 --> 26:03.460] Have yourself a great night. [26:03.460 --> 26:04.460] Thank you. [26:04.460 --> 26:06.460] Okay. [26:06.460 --> 26:10.460] Okay, now we have another first-time caller. [26:10.460 --> 26:12.460] Oh man, Ted dropped off. [26:12.460 --> 26:14.460] Ted, call us back. [26:14.460 --> 26:17.460] We'll get to you, honest. [26:17.460 --> 26:19.460] Okay, Jason in California. [26:19.460 --> 26:21.460] Hello, Jason. [26:21.460 --> 26:24.460] What do you have for us today? [26:24.460 --> 26:26.460] Hi. [26:26.460 --> 26:36.460] Well, I apologize if you've already gone over this and if there's like repeat questions, [26:36.460 --> 26:44.460] we've got a few matters that are similar having to do with stores and the mass, [26:44.460 --> 26:55.460] and it's been a year of harassment, discrimination. [26:55.460 --> 26:58.460] It's evolved. [26:58.460 --> 27:00.460] Can you still hear me? [27:00.460 --> 27:01.460] Yes. [27:01.460 --> 27:03.460] Okay, good. [27:03.460 --> 27:06.460] I'm a newbie. [27:06.460 --> 27:14.460] I've been learning from Alphonse and you in the chat. [27:14.460 --> 27:26.460] I had, with one of the stores back in last year, I had sent affidavits of status, [27:26.460 --> 27:36.460] facts, a notice of claim to the CEO and a couple managers of one of the stores, [27:36.460 --> 27:41.460] and it is interesting what happened. [27:41.460 --> 27:50.460] I got called by their insurance company who basically told me, you know, [27:50.460 --> 27:53.460] the stores did nothing wrong. [27:53.460 --> 28:00.460] I sent a notice of default, and then when I didn't hear back, [28:00.460 --> 28:06.460] I decided, you know, let's go back in and see if these people changed their behavior. [28:06.460 --> 28:10.460] And I had like a few months of not being, they did. [28:10.460 --> 28:13.460] They did change their behavior. [28:13.460 --> 28:23.460] Then starting like, starting in November, there's a new round, like it just, [28:23.460 --> 28:27.460] it started over with like different people at the same stores. [28:27.460 --> 28:37.460] So it started with the mass, and then they basically, what they've done recently [28:37.460 --> 28:44.460] is kind of flipped the script on me as a guise for denying me service [28:44.460 --> 28:50.460] and kind of retaliating to claim that I'm harassing them [28:50.460 --> 28:56.460] as a means of trying to ban me from the store. [28:56.460 --> 29:04.460] So I tried, I've tried a couple times using, you know, your method of calling the police, [29:04.460 --> 29:09.460] and I've tried, you know, I called, I thought I had enough. [29:09.460 --> 29:11.460] Oh, mind you, I filmed everything. [29:11.460 --> 29:18.460] So I have all these incidences filmed, [29:18.460 --> 29:24.460] and I thought I could, you know, have them charged for harassment, [29:24.460 --> 29:27.460] that they did all the elements. [29:27.460 --> 29:30.460] And then, I mean, I have questions about everything, [29:30.460 --> 29:34.460] but anyway, the police didn't do anything, [29:34.460 --> 29:43.460] and I recently, I got a letter from Ralph's lawyer threatening to sue me [29:43.460 --> 29:52.460] for damages and for harassment of customers and employees, and... [29:52.460 --> 29:56.460] Hang on, back to one of our sponsors, and we'll be right back. [29:56.460 --> 30:00.460] Okay. [30:00.460 --> 30:03.460] Everyone knows that walking is a great exercise, [30:03.460 --> 30:08.460] but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:08.460 --> 30:10.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you more [30:10.460 --> 30:14.460] about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:14.460 --> 30:16.460] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.460 --> 30:19.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:19.460 --> 30:24.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.460 --> 30:29.460] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:29.460 --> 30:32.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.460 --> 30:35.460] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:35.460 --> 30:39.460] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:39.460 --> 30:43.460] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.460 --> 30:47.460] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.460 --> 30:51.460] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults [30:51.460 --> 30:55.460] who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.460 --> 31:00.460] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [31:00.460 --> 31:04.460] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy [31:04.460 --> 31:07.460] as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.460 --> 31:10.460] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.460 --> 31:12.460] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. [31:12.460 --> 31:16.460] It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:16.460 --> 31:21.460] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.460 --> 31:30.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.460 --> 31:31.460] I lost my son. [31:31.460 --> 31:32.460] My nephew. [31:32.460 --> 31:33.460] My uncle. [31:33.460 --> 31:34.460] My son. [31:34.460 --> 31:35.460] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.460 --> 31:38.460] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.460 --> 31:42.460] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.460 --> 31:46.460] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.460 --> 31:50.460] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.460 --> 31:52.460] and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.460 --> 31:53.460] Bring justice to my son. [31:53.460 --> 31:54.460] My uncle. [31:54.460 --> 31:55.460] My nephew. [31:55.460 --> 31:56.460] My son. [31:56.460 --> 31:57.460] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:57.460 --> 32:01.460] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.460 --> 32:04.460] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [32:04.460 --> 32:06.460] and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.460 --> 32:12.460] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.460 --> 32:17.460] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:17.460 --> 32:22.460] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [32:22.460 --> 32:24.460] rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [32:24.460 --> 32:28.460] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.460 --> 32:32.460] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.460 --> 32:37.460] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [32:37.460 --> 32:39.460] and Christian character development. [32:39.460 --> 32:44.460] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.460 --> 32:47.460] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [32:47.460 --> 32:50.460] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.460 --> 32:54.460] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:54.460 --> 33:02.460] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:24.460 --> 33:47.460] Okay, we are back. [33:47.460 --> 33:50.460] Randy Shelton, Brett Fountain of Root of Law Radio, [33:50.460 --> 33:53.460] and we're talking to Jason in California. [33:53.460 --> 33:55.460] Okay, go ahead, Jason. [33:55.460 --> 33:56.460] Howdy. [33:56.460 --> 34:05.460] So, yeah, and there's, I got a letter from a Ralph Kroger lawyer threatening, [34:05.460 --> 34:14.460] and there's just, it's full of mistakes and issues. [34:14.460 --> 34:15.460] Good, okay. [34:15.460 --> 34:17.460] Did you bargain this lawyer? [34:17.460 --> 34:18.460] Not yet. [34:18.460 --> 34:22.460] I've just been researching. [34:22.460 --> 34:25.460] I read there, you know, the procedure, and I went through it [34:25.460 --> 34:32.460] and picked out things that I believe I can bargain for. [34:32.460 --> 34:38.460] And a question about that, so is it the process to, [34:38.460 --> 34:42.460] like one of them is to get the superiors, right, [34:42.460 --> 34:46.460] to bargain the superiors or the partners? [34:46.460 --> 34:48.460] Is that accurate? [34:48.460 --> 34:55.460] Yeah, probably rule 5.1 and model rules, yeah. [34:55.460 --> 35:06.460] So if a firm has like 50 partners, are they all getting one for that rule? [35:06.460 --> 35:08.460] Absolutely. [35:08.460 --> 35:10.460] Okay. [35:10.460 --> 35:15.460] Yeah, and we don't have another Friday the 13th coming for a little while, [35:15.460 --> 35:20.460] but that's my favorite day to send those kinds of things. [35:20.460 --> 35:28.460] Like everybody gets served with something that none of them actually did [35:28.460 --> 35:32.460] but they were all responsible for. [35:32.460 --> 35:35.460] So as long as they're a partner, they fit that rule? [35:35.460 --> 35:38.460] Yes, or a supervisor. [35:38.460 --> 35:43.460] So let's say he's two tiers down, the perpetrator has a boss, [35:43.460 --> 35:48.460] and then the boss's bosses, all of the partners, [35:48.460 --> 35:51.460] they would all fit that rule. [35:51.460 --> 35:54.460] Okay. [35:54.460 --> 35:56.460] And that's not enough. [35:56.460 --> 35:58.460] Sometimes the law firm, you say 50, [35:58.460 --> 36:04.460] but sometimes it's a small enough firm that you might not have a lot of partners. [36:04.460 --> 36:12.460] And so you need to extend the scope by making other lawyers aware, [36:12.460 --> 36:14.460] just letting them know what happened. [36:14.460 --> 36:16.460] Hey, this perp did this. [36:16.460 --> 36:17.460] And can you believe it? [36:17.460 --> 36:19.460] He violated this rule over here. [36:19.460 --> 36:22.460] He violated rule 3.9. [36:22.460 --> 36:25.460] And so then once you've made them aware, [36:25.460 --> 36:32.460] then you've triggered their duty under rule 8.3 to bargrieve him. [36:32.460 --> 36:38.460] If they don't, then they violated 8.3. [36:38.460 --> 36:44.460] That is so low down, conniving and unfair. [36:44.460 --> 36:50.460] Just letting other lawyers know. [36:50.460 --> 36:53.460] Well, I mean, this firm, I looked them up, [36:53.460 --> 36:58.460] they have locations in Seattle and locations in LA. [36:58.460 --> 37:05.460] And I just looked at the LA, and there's like 40 partners. [37:05.460 --> 37:12.460] I don't know if I should be looking at the other location or not for that one rule. [37:12.460 --> 37:14.460] Yes, the same firm. [37:14.460 --> 37:17.460] They've got partners that are responsible. [37:17.460 --> 37:21.460] They're not in the same physical office, but yeah. [37:21.460 --> 37:22.460] Okay. [37:22.460 --> 37:24.460] So does it matter? [37:24.460 --> 37:26.460] I don't have to do it at the same time. [37:26.460 --> 37:30.460] I can just pick and choose when to bargrieve the partners. [37:30.460 --> 37:31.460] Right. [37:31.460 --> 37:33.460] Okay. [37:33.460 --> 37:35.460] Yeah, one thing that I like to do, I don't know, [37:35.460 --> 37:41.460] if it's a psychological kind of a sadistic or something, [37:41.460 --> 37:47.460] but when they've done something that just seems so bad that they really need to, [37:47.460 --> 37:54.460] they need to get slapped for it, then I will let it trickle in. [37:54.460 --> 37:56.460] I'll write out my plan. [37:56.460 --> 38:00.460] I'll do a bill merge so that it comes out with, you know, everything's all the same. [38:00.460 --> 38:06.460] It's just got the insert name here, and then I'll let it trickle in, [38:06.460 --> 38:08.460] where they can see that their name is going. [38:08.460 --> 38:13.460] It's in alphabetical order, and they can see that tomorrow they're going to get bargrieved. [38:13.460 --> 38:18.460] Yesterday Bob got bargrieved, and now Charlie gets it. [38:18.460 --> 38:21.460] They can see that it's happening. [38:21.460 --> 38:27.460] I don't know how to do that, but that sounds awesome. [38:27.460 --> 38:32.460] But just put them in alphabetical order, that's not a bad idea. [38:32.460 --> 38:36.460] Okay, I mean, so that's step I understand. [38:36.460 --> 38:40.460] The big step, there's two steps that I'm like thoroughly confused, [38:40.460 --> 38:48.460] and that kind of stuck me up last year, and I kind of fell off for like many months, [38:48.460 --> 38:50.460] which is criminal complaints. [38:50.460 --> 39:00.460] And number one, should I be filing criminal complaints against these store employees and managers? [39:00.460 --> 39:03.460] Well, did they commit a crime? [39:03.460 --> 39:06.460] I believe they did, yeah. [39:06.460 --> 39:09.460] So here's how you go from belief to being sure. [39:09.460 --> 39:16.460] Pull up that crime where it's codified, and read through it, [39:16.460 --> 39:19.460] and look at all of its essential elements. [39:19.460 --> 39:21.460] There will be elements of the crime. [39:21.460 --> 39:23.460] You just kind of take the sentence apart, [39:23.460 --> 39:26.460] or you can go find the pattern jury charges for that crime. [39:26.460 --> 39:32.460] Pattern jury charges are a little list of things that, [39:32.460 --> 39:37.460] sort of like a little checklist that a judge will give to a jury [39:37.460 --> 39:40.460] when they're trying to figure out if somebody's guilty of something, [39:40.460 --> 39:42.460] here are the things that you need to be able to find. [39:42.460 --> 39:46.460] If you can't find all of these things, then this person's not guilty. [39:46.460 --> 39:50.460] So take that list, pattern jury charges, or you can't find that, [39:50.460 --> 39:53.460] just look carefully at the sentence. [39:53.460 --> 39:59.460] It will say, a person commits an offense if he does this and this and a, [39:59.460 --> 40:02.460] while this and that or that. [40:02.460 --> 40:05.460] So you've got to just kind of carefully traverse the sentence [40:05.460 --> 40:07.460] and find the pieces of it and figure out, [40:07.460 --> 40:13.460] does this challenged behavior match that crime? [40:13.460 --> 40:18.460] If it does, then insert a fact for every one of those, [40:18.460 --> 40:25.460] at least one fact, to support that this person did that crime. [40:25.460 --> 40:28.460] You can go down and get it notarized. [40:28.460 --> 40:37.460] Okay, so California, they make it really hard, apparently. [40:37.460 --> 40:43.460] They don't want citizens doing this. [40:43.460 --> 40:48.460] There's no guidelines on a person doing a criminal complaint. [40:48.460 --> 40:55.460] It has to come from a police officer or the DA or whatever. [40:55.460 --> 40:58.460] Yeah, I understand that they're accustomed to that. [40:58.460 --> 41:02.460] Same thing in Texas, they're accustomed to that. [41:02.460 --> 41:07.460] That's in the category of, well, this is how we do things around here. [41:07.460 --> 41:11.460] And that may or may not match up with what you'll find [41:11.460 --> 41:16.460] when you go read for yourself in the Code of Criminal Procedure. [41:16.460 --> 41:19.460] Go look in California's criminal procedure and see, [41:19.460 --> 41:22.460] does it say that it has to come from a DA [41:22.460 --> 41:29.460] or does it say that anybody can give a complaint to a magistrate? [41:29.460 --> 41:31.460] Okay. [41:31.460 --> 41:35.460] Go look and see because it's locally specific. [41:35.460 --> 41:38.460] I'm not sure about the magistrate issue. [41:38.460 --> 41:45.460] I'm fairly sure about California that all complaints are actually directed to magistrates. [41:45.460 --> 41:51.460] What I am certain about is the duties of grand juries. [41:51.460 --> 41:59.460] California's duties of grand juries reflects what the Fed's duties of grand juries says. [41:59.460 --> 42:05.460] It says, the grand jury shall investigate into all crimes subject to indictment [42:05.460 --> 42:12.460] that come to their knowledge by whatever means. [42:12.460 --> 42:16.460] You are a citizen in a republic. [42:16.460 --> 42:19.460] You're not a public official. [42:19.460 --> 42:27.460] A public official may only do what he or she is specifically authorized to do. [42:27.460 --> 42:32.460] A citizen, on the other hand, may do anything they want to [42:32.460 --> 42:36.460] unless the law specifically forbids them to. [42:36.460 --> 42:41.460] And as to the giving notice of crime, [42:41.460 --> 42:46.460] it is intended that citizens give notice of crime. [42:46.460 --> 42:51.460] I have never seen anything in any state that gives a policeman [42:51.460 --> 42:56.460] some special authority to give notice of crime. [42:56.460 --> 43:02.460] When a policeman gives notice of crime, he doesn't do it in his capacity as a policeman. [43:02.460 --> 43:09.460] He does it in his capacity as a credible person, same as you. [43:09.460 --> 43:10.460] That's crazy. [43:10.460 --> 43:11.460] Absolutely. [43:11.460 --> 43:14.460] You can file them. [43:14.460 --> 43:19.460] And then you look at the duty of the person receiving it. [43:19.460 --> 43:21.460] And this is what I've been doing in Texas. [43:21.460 --> 43:24.460] I went to a JP and filed some criminal complaints with him. [43:24.460 --> 43:30.460] He got a little huffy, threw him down, said he wasn't going to take him, stormed out. [43:30.460 --> 43:34.460] Well, I read the code that described his duty. [43:34.460 --> 43:37.460] The code said when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate, [43:37.460 --> 43:43.460] the magistrate shall issue a warrant for threat. [43:43.460 --> 43:47.460] If he disliked it, right? [43:47.460 --> 43:52.460] Well, actually, it did not say may, might, or can if he wants to. [43:52.460 --> 43:55.460] It said shall. [43:55.460 --> 44:00.460] So when a public official doesn't have a... [44:00.460 --> 44:04.460] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:04.460 --> 44:06.460] except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.460 --> 44:09.460] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [44:09.460 --> 44:11.460] and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.460 --> 44:17.460] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.460 --> 44:22.460] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.460 --> 44:25.460] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.460 --> 44:31.460] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.460 --> 44:34.460] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [44:34.460 --> 44:39.460] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.460 --> 44:43.460] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [44:43.460 --> 44:47.460] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.460 --> 44:51.460] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.460 --> 44:56.460] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, [44:56.460 --> 44:58.460] and increase your income. [44:58.460 --> 45:00.460] Order now. [45:00.460 --> 45:03.460] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.460 --> 45:07.460] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:07.460 --> 45:15.460] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.460 --> 45:19.460] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.460 --> 45:23.460] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.460 --> 45:28.460] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.460 --> 45:34.460] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.460 --> 45:38.460] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.460 --> 45:43.460] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.460 --> 45:49.460] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.460 --> 45:52.460] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.460 --> 46:04.460] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:23.460 --> 46:29.460] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:29.460 --> 46:34.460] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:34.460 --> 46:40.460] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:40.460 --> 46:46.460] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [46:46.460 --> 46:52.460] I get my message out to anyone in shouting distance. [46:52.460 --> 46:58.460] My hope for bravery and against slavery showing persistence. [46:58.460 --> 47:03.460] First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting. [47:03.460 --> 47:17.460] I'm just so glad to make my living pushing buttons. [47:17.460 --> 47:19.460] Okay, we are back. [47:19.460 --> 47:24.460] Randy Kelp at Fountain Wheel Law Radio, and we're talking to Jason in California. [47:24.460 --> 47:26.460] Where were we, Jason? [47:26.460 --> 47:30.460] Well, we're talking about the... [47:30.460 --> 47:31.460] Oh, criminal complaints. [47:31.460 --> 47:43.460] Criminal complaints and how a person can have every right to notify a grand jury of a crime. [47:43.460 --> 47:51.460] And filing criminal complaints against them will prevent them from being able to file against you, [47:51.460 --> 47:57.460] because if they try to file against you, then you charge them with retaliation. [47:57.460 --> 48:00.460] And the lawyers threaten to sue you. [48:00.460 --> 48:01.460] Yeah. [48:01.460 --> 48:04.460] You need to sue them. [48:04.460 --> 48:05.460] I need to what? [48:05.460 --> 48:09.460] You need to file a suit against them. [48:09.460 --> 48:11.460] It doesn't have to be a great suit. [48:11.460 --> 48:14.460] It just needs to be a suit. [48:14.460 --> 48:20.460] Get something filed, and they'll file a response and jump up and down, rail rights to indignation, [48:20.460 --> 48:24.460] and say how the suit's a bunch of crap, and you ought to throw it out. [48:24.460 --> 48:26.460] The judge will throw it out. [48:26.460 --> 48:28.460] And then you amend it. [48:28.460 --> 48:32.460] One of my favorites, when I first started foreclosure issues, [48:32.460 --> 48:37.460] I was researching when the foreclosure thing started in 2009, [48:37.460 --> 48:42.460] and one of my fellow broadcasters came to me. [48:42.460 --> 48:46.460] He was fighting an eviction hearing, and he said, I need a lawsuit. [48:46.460 --> 48:48.460] I said, well, I don't have one. [48:48.460 --> 48:49.460] I'm still doing my research. [48:49.460 --> 48:51.460] I don't have time for research. [48:51.460 --> 48:54.460] In two days, he had an eviction hearing. [48:54.460 --> 49:01.460] So I went on the Internet and pulled up some lawsuits and just copied out a bunch of claims from these lawsuits, [49:01.460 --> 49:05.460] dropped them in his, he filed it. [49:05.460 --> 49:09.460] And the lawyer had 30 days to respond. [49:09.460 --> 49:12.460] They responded. [49:12.460 --> 49:17.460] The lawyer said, Your Honor, this suit's a piece of crap. [49:17.460 --> 49:21.460] And the judge took 45 days or so. [49:21.460 --> 49:24.460] He came back and said, Yeah, you're right, it is. [49:24.460 --> 49:25.460] Fix it. [49:25.460 --> 49:34.460] He did that three times almost a year in before he finally got a lawsuit that stuck. [49:34.460 --> 49:36.460] Point is, don't have to be perfect. [49:36.460 --> 49:38.460] Get something in. [49:38.460 --> 49:41.460] And they'll complain about it. [49:41.460 --> 49:49.460] Pay attention to have what they complain about and adjust for their complaints and file it again. [49:49.460 --> 49:57.460] It just seems like if my ultimate goal is to file a suit against the store. [49:57.460 --> 50:00.460] Yes. [50:00.460 --> 50:04.460] The lawyer for the store threatened to sue you. [50:04.460 --> 50:07.460] Go ahead and sue them first. [50:07.460 --> 50:12.460] Plaintiff always has the upper hand. [50:12.460 --> 50:16.460] Name the lawyer too for harassment. [50:16.460 --> 50:17.460] Right. [50:17.460 --> 50:23.460] I did not have to hire another lawyer. [50:23.460 --> 50:24.460] Okay. [50:24.460 --> 50:28.460] So back to the criminal complaint. [50:28.460 --> 50:32.460] Who would I, who do I send it to? [50:32.460 --> 50:38.460] Criminal complaints are always addressed to some magistrate. [50:38.460 --> 50:44.460] It is the intention that police have the power to arrest but not imprison. [50:44.460 --> 50:49.460] They can arrest someone under certain circumstances, a warrant or on-site offense. [50:49.460 --> 50:54.460] But they are to take them directly to the nearest magistrate and explain themselves. [50:54.460 --> 50:58.460] The policeman will give the complaint to the magistrate. [50:58.460 --> 51:02.460] And the magistrate will make a determination to probable cause. [51:02.460 --> 51:07.460] So always complaints are addressed to some magistrate. [51:07.460 --> 51:11.460] All judges are magistrates. [51:11.460 --> 51:16.460] Municipal, JP, all the way up. [51:16.460 --> 51:19.460] So it doesn't matter which magistrate you send it to. [51:19.460 --> 51:22.460] I found out that wasn't exactly true in Idaho. [51:22.460 --> 51:27.460] They have a specific subset of judges that are magistrates. [51:27.460 --> 51:28.460] Okay. [51:28.460 --> 51:29.460] They're weird. [51:29.460 --> 51:30.460] Go ahead. [51:30.460 --> 51:33.460] And it's also not true in Pennsylvania. [51:33.460 --> 51:40.460] If you don't take it to a magistrate in Pennsylvania, you take it to a district attorney, a prosecuted attorney. [51:40.460 --> 51:41.460] Okay. [51:41.460 --> 51:45.460] So possibly the district attorney. [51:45.460 --> 51:48.460] I never want to take one to a district attorney. [51:48.460 --> 51:58.460] If I take a complaint to a district attorney's office, it will always be addressed to the grand jury. [51:58.460 --> 52:07.460] There's nothing authorizing a district attorney to take a criminal complaint. [52:07.460 --> 52:14.460] You're always directed to some magistrate or some judge, except in Pennsylvania. [52:14.460 --> 52:16.460] And how do we get it to them? [52:16.460 --> 52:20.460] Is this like a certified mail thing or you're talking? [52:20.460 --> 52:29.460] Certified mail and include a stamp self-addressed envelope and a cover letter or, like Brett says, a postcard. [52:29.460 --> 52:36.460] And send it to the former of the grand jury addressed at the district attorney's office. [52:36.460 --> 52:46.460] And the postcard or cover letter, you ask the foreman to initial it and return it so you'll know he actually got it. [52:46.460 --> 52:49.460] And you could insure it. [52:49.460 --> 52:53.460] I think it costs about 10 or 15 bucks to insure it for 500 bucks. [52:53.460 --> 52:55.460] So you insure it for 500 bucks. [52:55.460 --> 52:59.460] And when you don't get that card back or the cover letter, [52:59.460 --> 53:06.460] then you have reason to believe that the prosecuting attorney shielded your complaints from the grand jury. [53:06.460 --> 53:11.460] So you call the postal inspectors and you want your 500 bucks. [53:11.460 --> 53:14.460] Well, they're not going to want to give you your 500 bucks. [53:14.460 --> 53:23.460] So they'll go down there and give them a visit and get the prosecutor to promise that he got this document. [53:23.460 --> 53:32.460] And when that happens, you charge the prosecutor with tampering with the government document. [53:32.460 --> 53:39.460] Shielding from prosecution, obstruction of justice. [53:39.460 --> 53:46.460] You get all the high-level officials really PO'd at the guy at the bottom that started all this. [53:46.460 --> 53:52.460] The one you're filing against, he's going to be in big trouble. [53:52.460 --> 53:58.460] What do we do if we don't have the individual's full name? [53:58.460 --> 53:59.460] Doesn't matter. [53:59.460 --> 54:00.460] Give them what you got. [54:00.460 --> 54:03.460] Give them enough that they can find him. [54:03.460 --> 54:09.460] You can file against unknown sheriff's deputy. [54:09.460 --> 54:11.460] Give the facts of what happened. [54:11.460 --> 54:16.460] I went to the courthouse and unknown sheriff's deputy, [54:16.460 --> 54:21.460] while prominently displaying a deadly weapon, denied me in due process and described the deputy. [54:21.460 --> 54:26.460] Let them figure out who it is. [54:26.460 --> 54:27.460] Okay. [54:27.460 --> 54:32.460] You can ask for a lineup of deputies. [54:32.460 --> 54:33.460] Right. [54:33.460 --> 54:38.460] So the people on the other side, [54:38.460 --> 54:48.460] they can't claim that we are simulating legal process by submitting a criminal complaint or something. [54:48.460 --> 54:53.460] There's not anything simulated about that. [54:53.460 --> 55:01.460] Simulating a legal process was written primarily into law because of this Republic of Texas group. [55:01.460 --> 55:08.460] They were showing people how to file liens against judges all over the country. [55:08.460 --> 55:12.460] And issue warrants for judges. [55:12.460 --> 55:16.460] And that was a simulating legal process. [55:16.460 --> 55:20.460] Filing a criminal complaint is your duty. [55:20.460 --> 55:26.460] You cannot be charged with a crime for doing your duty. [55:26.460 --> 55:29.460] You can be charged with a crime for anything. [55:29.460 --> 55:35.460] But I think I had one person claim he was charged with a crime for filing criminal complaints. [55:35.460 --> 55:41.460] And actually, I was prosecuted for it once and got a year in prison. [55:41.460 --> 55:50.460] But when I filed 25 criminal complaints with the Court of Appeals, I was out of prison and out of jail in two days. [55:50.460 --> 55:53.460] You know, anything can happen. [55:53.460 --> 56:01.460] You know, if the jurisdiction is not insanely corrupt, it doesn't happen. [56:01.460 --> 56:02.460] Right. [56:02.460 --> 56:08.460] But life is inherently dangerous. [56:08.460 --> 56:13.460] A car could run through your house and kill you in your rocking chair watching TV. [56:13.460 --> 56:15.460] Life is dangerous. [56:15.460 --> 56:19.460] Deal with it. [56:19.460 --> 56:20.460] Okay. [56:20.460 --> 56:22.460] I got the advice. [56:22.460 --> 56:30.460] So this is a total newbie question because I'm still confused on some basics. [56:30.460 --> 56:41.460] So the Title 42, 1983, that is not for my purposes for a store discriminating? [56:41.460 --> 56:42.460] No. [56:42.460 --> 56:46.460] No, the store are not public officials. [56:46.460 --> 56:54.460] 42 years code 1983 is a special statute that allows you to sue public officials. [56:54.460 --> 56:58.460] It's not needed with someone who's not a public official. [56:58.460 --> 57:02.460] It does not grant you anything at all. [57:02.460 --> 57:06.460] It simply allows you to name a public official. [57:06.460 --> 57:11.460] Since you're not naming a public official, 42 years code 1983 does not apply. [57:11.460 --> 57:21.460] So it would be more like the 2000s, 42, 2000 AAP. [57:21.460 --> 57:25.460] That's my question, I guess. [57:25.460 --> 57:27.460] I don't recognize that one. [57:27.460 --> 57:31.460] I don't have the federal civil procedure memorized, [57:31.460 --> 57:36.460] but anybody can file a civil suit against anybody for anything. [57:36.460 --> 57:37.460] Okay. [57:37.460 --> 57:42.460] If I don't like the way you part your hair, I can sue you. [57:42.460 --> 57:50.460] If the other side doesn't answer, then I win. [57:50.460 --> 57:52.460] Doesn't matter. [57:52.460 --> 57:55.460] There's no restriction on what you can sue for. [57:55.460 --> 57:59.460] There are restrictions on what you can win your suit for, [57:59.460 --> 58:03.460] but nothing to prevent you from filing the suit. [58:03.460 --> 58:09.460] There's nothing to prevent them from filing this fake suit against me. [58:09.460 --> 58:10.460] Nothing. [58:10.460 --> 58:13.460] That's why you should sue first. [58:13.460 --> 58:16.460] I don't know enough to sue. [58:16.460 --> 58:17.460] Doesn't matter. [58:17.460 --> 58:22.460] Look on the internet, find a similar suit, craft one together, file it. [58:22.460 --> 58:25.460] They'll file a motion to dismiss no matter what you do. [58:25.460 --> 58:26.460] Right. [58:26.460 --> 58:28.460] You get your filing in first. [58:28.460 --> 58:31.460] They'll file a motion to dismiss, [58:31.460 --> 58:38.460] and you can request the judge permission to amend, [58:38.460 --> 58:40.460] but your first amendment you get for free. [58:40.460 --> 58:42.460] You don't have to ask permission. [58:42.460 --> 58:50.460] So you can say, counsel's criticisms are well taken. [58:50.460 --> 58:54.460] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.460 --> 58:57.460] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible [58:57.460 --> 59:01.460] and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.460 --> 59:04.460] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive [59:04.460 --> 59:06.460] study Bibles available today. [59:06.460 --> 59:09.460] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes [59:09.460 --> 59:13.460] that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.460 --> 59:16.460] The free books are a three-volume set called [59:16.460 --> 59:18.460] Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.460 --> 59:21.460] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:21.460 --> 59:24.460] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:24.460 --> 59:27.460] growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.460 --> 59:30.460] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version [59:30.460 --> 59:33.460] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.460 --> 59:40.460] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.460 --> 59:44.460] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.460 --> 59:49.460] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.460 --> 59:54.460] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [59:54.460 --> 59:59.460] at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.460 --> 01:00:05.460] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.460 --> 01:00:08.460] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.460 --> 01:00:10.460] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.460 --> 01:00:12.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back [01:00:12.460 --> 01:00:17.460] with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.460 --> 01:00:19.460] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.460 --> 01:00:22.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.460 --> 01:00:24.460] And once your privacy is gone, [01:00:24.460 --> 01:00:27.460] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.460 --> 01:00:30.460] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [01:00:30.460 --> 01:00:32.460] and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.460 --> 01:00:35.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.460 --> 01:00:38.460] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.460 --> 01:00:42.460] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.460 --> 01:00:45.460] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:45.460 --> 01:00:48.460] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.460 --> 01:00:51.460] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.460 --> 01:00:54.460] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.460 --> 01:00:57.460] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed [01:00:57.460 --> 01:01:00.460] reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.460 --> 01:01:03.460] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.460 --> 01:01:06.460] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.460 --> 01:01:09.460] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.460 --> 01:01:12.460] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.460 --> 01:01:15.460] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights [01:01:15.460 --> 01:01:17.460] and re-read the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.460 --> 01:01:21.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.460 --> 01:01:35.460] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.460 --> 01:01:38.460] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.460 --> 01:01:40.460] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.460 --> 01:01:43.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.460 --> 01:01:46.460] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.460 --> 01:01:48.460] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.460 --> 01:01:52.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.460 --> 01:01:56.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.460 --> 01:01:58.460] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.460 --> 01:02:02.460] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.460 --> 01:02:05.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.460 --> 01:02:08.460] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.460 --> 01:02:12.460] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.460 --> 01:02:16.460] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:16.460 --> 01:02:19.460] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, [01:02:19.460 --> 01:02:22.460] a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.460 --> 01:02:25.460] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans [01:02:25.460 --> 01:02:28.460] freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:28.460 --> 01:02:31.460] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:31.460 --> 01:02:34.460] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:34.460 --> 01:02:36.460] in the name of security. [01:02:36.460 --> 01:02:40.460] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.460 --> 01:02:44.460] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:44.460 --> 01:02:47.460] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.460 --> 01:02:50.460] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:50.460 --> 01:02:54.460] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:54.460 --> 01:03:01.460] I'm Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:01.460 --> 01:03:25.460] I'm Catherine Albrecht. [01:03:31.460 --> 01:03:56.460] Thank you. [01:03:56.460 --> 01:04:13.460] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:04:13.460 --> 01:04:21.460] on this Friday, the 27th day of May, 2022. [01:04:21.460 --> 01:04:26.460] And Daisy, I see you there. We will get to you. [01:04:26.460 --> 01:04:33.460] We have four border callers and two first-time callers. [01:04:33.460 --> 01:04:38.460] So we'll get the first-time callers first, and then we'll get to E.J. and John [01:04:38.460 --> 01:04:41.460] if we get to everybody. We'll try to. [01:04:41.460 --> 01:04:44.460] Okay, I'll shut up now so we can get back to business. [01:04:44.460 --> 01:04:47.460] We're talking to Jason in California. Hello, Jason. [01:04:47.460 --> 01:04:50.460] Hello. [01:04:50.460 --> 01:04:54.460] I ran off the cliff again. [01:04:54.460 --> 01:04:58.460] And Deborah was there and saw me. I'm in trouble. [01:04:58.460 --> 01:05:03.460] Okay, we're with you. We're filing criminal complaints. [01:05:03.460 --> 01:05:08.460] Do you have a jurisdictionary? [01:05:08.460 --> 01:05:12.460] I've just started it recently, yeah. [01:05:12.460 --> 01:05:20.460] Good. When you finish it, you might want to look at getting my e-book from [01:05:20.460 --> 01:05:22.460] Reviews Law Radio. [01:05:22.460 --> 01:05:31.460] Jurisdictionary tells you how to file suit motions and pleadings, how to litigate. [01:05:31.460 --> 01:05:38.460] The e-book tells you about how things really work in the world we live in. [01:05:38.460 --> 01:05:42.460] It doesn't work the way they told you in high school. [01:05:42.460 --> 01:05:48.460] It will help tremendously because it's not all just about laws, about politics. [01:05:48.460 --> 01:05:55.460] And the e-book has a lot in there on how to understand how things really work, [01:05:55.460 --> 01:06:00.460] and it has some sections in there on how to construct legal pleadings [01:06:00.460 --> 01:06:02.460] that will make your life much easier. [01:06:02.460 --> 01:06:07.460] Have you located any litigation guides for California? [01:06:07.460 --> 01:06:09.460] No. [01:06:09.460 --> 01:06:11.460] Do so. [01:06:11.460 --> 01:06:15.460] O'Connor's is now producing litigation guides for California. [01:06:15.460 --> 01:06:21.460] Do a search for O'Connor's Civil Trials California. [01:06:21.460 --> 01:06:22.460] Yeah. [01:06:22.460 --> 01:06:23.460] Hey, I've got them on. [01:06:23.460 --> 01:06:29.460] The last ones I got were on eBay, and I got one for $7 delivered. [01:06:29.460 --> 01:06:34.460] It probably costs more than that just to deliver it. [01:06:34.460 --> 01:06:41.460] I asked someone in the chat this question, but I'll ask you, does it matter how old they are? [01:06:41.460 --> 01:06:45.460] Well, if they're 10 or 15 years old, that's a little far back, [01:06:45.460 --> 01:06:48.460] but if they're 2 or 3 or 4 years old, it won't matter. [01:06:48.460 --> 01:06:49.460] Not too bad. [01:06:49.460 --> 01:06:50.460] Okay. [01:06:50.460 --> 01:06:56.460] Because I noticed the price difference is huge between different years. [01:06:56.460 --> 01:07:01.460] Actually, it probably doesn't matter initially. [01:07:01.460 --> 01:07:04.460] The law does not change very much, and if you miss something, [01:07:04.460 --> 01:07:08.460] the other side will gripe about it and let you know. [01:07:08.460 --> 01:07:10.460] So get a cheap one first. [01:07:10.460 --> 01:07:12.460] Yeah. [01:07:12.460 --> 01:07:15.460] All the procedures are the same. [01:07:15.460 --> 01:07:18.460] 99% of it is going to be exactly the same. [01:07:18.460 --> 01:07:20.460] Okay. [01:07:20.460 --> 01:07:26.460] You want O'Connor's Civil Trials and O'Connor's Causes of Action. [01:07:26.460 --> 01:07:28.460] Okay. [01:07:28.460 --> 01:07:32.460] That will pretty well give you what you need. [01:07:32.460 --> 01:07:42.460] I mean, I would think there's like a solid process by now for us dealing with the stores. [01:07:42.460 --> 01:07:48.460] Oh, well, the stores are relatively, this issue is relatively new. [01:07:48.460 --> 01:07:51.460] It's only a couple years old. [01:07:51.460 --> 01:07:56.460] In order to get any case law, if there is any on that, you would have to get some brand new ones, [01:07:56.460 --> 01:08:01.460] but I doubt that there's any in there yet. [01:08:01.460 --> 01:08:05.460] So you look through O'Connor's for causes of action, [01:08:05.460 --> 01:08:11.460] and you will find causes of action that go to what they do. [01:08:11.460 --> 01:08:16.460] You will find the litigation guides are extremely helpful. [01:08:16.460 --> 01:08:17.460] Okay. [01:08:17.460 --> 01:08:19.460] Do you have anything else for us? [01:08:19.460 --> 01:08:24.460] No, not at this time, but yeah, I'll definitely call you guys back. [01:08:24.460 --> 01:08:26.460] Okay, we'll be here. [01:08:26.460 --> 01:08:27.460] Okay. [01:08:27.460 --> 01:08:28.460] Thank you, Jason. [01:08:28.460 --> 01:08:30.460] Now we're going to Daisy in Ohio. [01:08:30.460 --> 01:08:31.460] Hello, Daisy. [01:08:31.460 --> 01:08:35.460] What do you have for us today? [01:08:35.460 --> 01:08:36.460] Hi, Randy. [01:08:36.460 --> 01:08:39.460] Hi, Brett. [01:08:39.460 --> 01:08:48.460] Yeah, I have some issues with the school board, my matters with my school district. [01:08:48.460 --> 01:08:56.460] And so I've kind of put together, it's kind of teared off into like three different situations [01:08:56.460 --> 01:09:02.460] or three different things I'm trying to figure out which ones to really tackle. [01:09:02.460 --> 01:09:11.460] And so just kind of a quick timeline, it started with the mask mandate this year. [01:09:11.460 --> 01:09:13.460] It was the first year my daughter's been in public school. [01:09:13.460 --> 01:09:18.460] She's in middle school, and so two weeks and a mandated mask. [01:09:18.460 --> 01:09:23.460] And then I started, you know, being a local at the school board, [01:09:23.460 --> 01:09:30.460] immediately sort of organized a community movement. [01:09:30.460 --> 01:09:34.460] And we, in the elections, the school board elections were up, [01:09:34.460 --> 01:09:43.460] so we focused on bringing in some candidates that were supposed to be pro-parents' choice and anti-CRT, [01:09:43.460 --> 01:09:45.460] all that kind of thing. [01:09:45.460 --> 01:09:51.460] So the elections came up, the one guy got in that I was sort of, I guess, helping to get elected. [01:09:51.460 --> 01:10:01.460] He actually then was the president of our local PTA, [01:10:01.460 --> 01:10:05.460] which is not actually a PTA because they don't pay the dues, [01:10:05.460 --> 01:10:09.460] but it's called a PAK, but that's basically what it is. [01:10:09.460 --> 01:10:17.460] He needed out of that, so he appointed me, I agree, appointed me as president. [01:10:17.460 --> 01:10:25.460] So that kind of then became a second thing that I was now president of the middle school PTA. [01:10:25.460 --> 01:10:32.460] During this time, to make it kind of short, I served the school board three separate times with, [01:10:32.460 --> 01:10:37.460] the first, actually, before I got involved in the telegram chats and stuff, [01:10:37.460 --> 01:10:46.460] I actually ran out, found a lawyer, had him come to the school board once, had him write a letter. [01:10:46.460 --> 01:10:55.460] And then the last time was I served him a notice, like a liability. [01:10:55.460 --> 01:10:58.460] It was kind of a bond insurance angle. [01:10:58.460 --> 01:11:03.460] They actually called the police on me at that time because I went over my minutes. [01:11:03.460 --> 01:11:07.460] So that happened. [01:11:07.460 --> 01:11:11.460] Wait, you went over your minutes and they called the police? [01:11:11.460 --> 01:11:12.460] They did, yeah. [01:11:12.460 --> 01:11:15.460] This was after I had been talking to them all the time. [01:11:15.460 --> 01:11:17.460] Yeah, they called the police. [01:11:17.460 --> 01:11:18.460] They cut my mic. [01:11:18.460 --> 01:11:25.460] Well, the interesting part was that I had done this so much and had seen everybody else go up there, [01:11:25.460 --> 01:11:30.460] that they have a system in our district of when you get to your five minutes, [01:11:30.460 --> 01:11:37.460] they may say, the president may say, I'll give you another minute, or if he likes you, [01:11:37.460 --> 01:11:44.460] like the woman that spoke in the meeting before me, who was in my group, but they infiltrated her, [01:11:44.460 --> 01:11:48.460] they let her speak for eight minutes without ever once interrupting her. [01:11:48.460 --> 01:11:50.460] She rambled on and on. [01:11:50.460 --> 01:11:52.460] So I actually got up there. [01:11:52.460 --> 01:12:02.460] Again, this was the third time that I was basically reciting the laws and things. [01:12:02.460 --> 01:12:05.460] And this was the third time I just had it. [01:12:05.460 --> 01:12:10.460] I told them I started it off, that I don't have to follow their policies, [01:12:10.460 --> 01:12:14.460] and I'm going to say what I need to say. [01:12:14.460 --> 01:12:18.460] They cut my mic at five minutes without saying, do you want another minute? [01:12:18.460 --> 01:12:22.460] And I just kept talking. [01:12:22.460 --> 01:12:30.460] And then they ran off stage, except two stayed up and heckled me and told me nobody cares and blah, blah, blah. [01:12:30.460 --> 01:12:32.460] I mean, it was ridiculous. [01:12:32.460 --> 01:12:35.460] I ended up – this is actually just a little story. [01:12:35.460 --> 01:12:38.460] It's not even what I was going to talk about, so maybe I should skip it. [01:12:38.460 --> 01:12:42.460] That happened two days later. [01:12:42.460 --> 01:12:49.460] So this whole time I've been working on this PTA thing, trying to figure out how this – now he's a school board president. [01:12:49.460 --> 01:12:50.460] He had left. [01:12:50.460 --> 01:12:51.460] It was just a mess. [01:12:51.460 --> 01:12:53.460] It was a total mess. [01:12:53.460 --> 01:13:00.460] And I'm like – and the principal is involved, and the treasurer is also an employee from the school district, [01:13:00.460 --> 01:13:02.460] and she was avoiding me. [01:13:02.460 --> 01:13:06.460] They wouldn't let me – I couldn't get my name on the bank account. [01:13:06.460 --> 01:13:17.460] I'd heard – actually, Brett, Trust had sent you over my criminal complaint with my affidavit of probable cause. [01:13:17.460 --> 01:13:21.460] You probably haven't time to read it, but it goes to the timeline of this. [01:13:21.460 --> 01:13:22.460] Yes, I did. [01:13:22.460 --> 01:13:24.460] Just get that like a couple minutes ago. [01:13:24.460 --> 01:13:28.460] I was looking on there and I saw that. [01:13:28.460 --> 01:13:29.460] Yes. [01:13:29.460 --> 01:13:31.460] I got it pulled up here. [01:13:31.460 --> 01:13:32.460] I made it through there. [01:13:32.460 --> 01:13:33.460] Okay. [01:13:33.460 --> 01:13:38.460] Yeah, and the probable cause is – I mean, it's a few pages because it's the timeline. [01:13:38.460 --> 01:13:45.460] But basically, there was some squirrely things going on in this PTA. [01:13:45.460 --> 01:13:55.460] Two days after the school board had the police incident, I got a call from the detective of our township, [01:13:55.460 --> 01:14:04.460] and he just calls me randomly and says, yeah, I want you to come down here because of the missing money at the PAC, the PTA. [01:14:04.460 --> 01:14:07.460] And I'm like, what are you talking about? [01:14:07.460 --> 01:14:11.460] And he's like, yeah, I have this video footage and I need you to come down here. [01:14:11.460 --> 01:14:14.460] And I'm like, well, who is making a claim against me? [01:14:14.460 --> 01:14:20.460] I knew who it was, and it was the treasurer because she was giving me so much pushback. [01:14:20.460 --> 01:14:28.460] And he said, oh, school officials, you have to come in here and you come down here and we can talk. [01:14:28.460 --> 01:14:29.460] And I'm like, okay. [01:14:29.460 --> 01:14:35.460] So I get off the phone and I'm like, well, that's interesting. [01:14:35.460 --> 01:14:40.460] So totally bogus, but very intimidating. [01:14:40.460 --> 01:14:43.460] And so I ended up – it was good, though. [01:14:43.460 --> 01:14:48.460] All of this is good because it got me motivated to actually put my first affidavit, like, of facts together. [01:14:48.460 --> 01:14:52.460] So I decided I wasn't going to go in there and actually talk to them. [01:14:52.460 --> 01:15:05.460] Another layer on this is the woman who's put – the woman who I believe made – called the detective to intimidate me, [01:15:05.460 --> 01:15:07.460] she used to work at that police station. [01:15:07.460 --> 01:15:09.460] So I think they're just friends. [01:15:09.460 --> 01:15:13.460] And he was doing her a favor to get me to back off of this. [01:15:13.460 --> 01:15:14.460] Yeah, yeah. [01:15:14.460 --> 01:15:15.460] Whatever's going on. [01:15:15.460 --> 01:15:16.460] That makes sense. [01:15:16.460 --> 01:15:18.460] Yeah. [01:15:18.460 --> 01:15:21.460] So he called me a second time. [01:15:21.460 --> 01:15:24.460] I said, I'm going to come in with the affidavit of facts. [01:15:24.460 --> 01:15:28.460] And I gave that to him, notarized, and he called me one more time two days later. [01:15:28.460 --> 01:15:33.460] So I have to just clean up a few details, acting really nice. [01:15:33.460 --> 01:15:36.460] And I'm so new to this. [01:15:36.460 --> 01:15:38.460] I wasn't sure should I talk to him at all, whatever. [01:15:38.460 --> 01:15:40.460] I gave him a few answers. [01:15:40.460 --> 01:15:43.460] And then he's like, well, I'm going to go put this at the prosecutors. [01:15:43.460 --> 01:15:47.460] You know, I don't know if there's anything to do with it, but I'm going to put this in front of the prosecutor, [01:15:47.460 --> 01:15:49.460] just leaving it very like threatening. [01:15:49.460 --> 01:15:57.460] And I told him when I was talking to him, I said, I'm really glad you're investigating this because I've been very concerned. [01:15:57.460 --> 01:15:58.460] Here's the reasons why. [01:15:58.460 --> 01:16:00.460] They're on my affidavit as well. [01:16:00.460 --> 01:16:03.460] So then that was the last time I heard from him. [01:16:03.460 --> 01:16:11.460] Well, instead of going away, I called a meeting after that because I think they wanted me just to disappear. [01:16:11.460 --> 01:16:15.460] So I called a meeting with the principal, and I had talked. [01:16:15.460 --> 01:16:20.460] I ended up talking to somebody, the previous president who was there for six years, [01:16:20.460 --> 01:16:26.460] and she told me they did audits twice a year, and it's just super, super clean records, all this stuff. [01:16:26.460 --> 01:16:29.460] Well, there's an entire record book missing. [01:16:29.460 --> 01:16:32.460] There's no audit. [01:16:32.460 --> 01:16:34.460] The whole thing is squirrely. [01:16:34.460 --> 01:16:44.460] What I ended up doing was making criminal complaints against the treasurer, the school principal, [01:16:44.460 --> 01:16:54.460] and the incoming school board member that gave me the president office because my email copied the principal. [01:16:54.460 --> 01:16:55.460] Daisy, I'm sorry. [01:16:55.460 --> 01:16:56.460] We're going to have to go to sponsors. [01:16:56.460 --> 01:16:57.460] We'll be right back. [01:16:57.460 --> 01:17:00.460] Hold that thought. 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[01:17:38.460 --> 01:17:40.460] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.460 --> 01:17:46.460] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [01:17:46.460 --> 01:17:49.460] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.460 --> 01:17:57.460] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.460 --> 01:18:00.460] Learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.460 --> 01:18:01.460] I love logos. [01:18:01.460 --> 01:18:04.460] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.460 --> 01:18:07.460] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.460 --> 01:18:08.460] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.460 --> 01:18:13.460] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.460 --> 01:18:16.460] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.460 --> 01:18:20.460] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.460 --> 01:18:22.460] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.460 --> 01:18:24.460] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.460 --> 01:18:27.460] When you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.460 --> 01:18:29.460] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, [01:18:29.460 --> 01:18:31.460] the first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.460 --> 01:18:34.460] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:18:34.460 --> 01:18:37.460] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.460 --> 01:18:43.460] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.460 --> 01:18:44.460] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.460 --> 01:18:45.460] No. [01:18:45.460 --> 01:18:47.460] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.460 --> 01:18:48.460] No. [01:18:48.460 --> 01:18:49.460] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.460 --> 01:18:50.460] No. [01:18:50.460 --> 01:18:51.460] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.460 --> 01:18:54.460] No giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.460 --> 01:18:55.460] This is perfect. [01:18:55.460 --> 01:18:57.460] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.460 --> 01:18:58.460] We are welcome. [01:18:58.460 --> 01:19:00.460] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.460 --> 01:19:07.460] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:07.460 --> 01:19:35.460] Oh, come on. [01:19:35.460 --> 01:19:42.460] Okay, we are back. [01:19:42.460 --> 01:19:45.460] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:19:45.460 --> 01:19:49.460] I'm Brat Fountain, and we're talking with Daisy in Ohio. [01:19:49.460 --> 01:19:58.460] And Daisy, without you, we're telling us this very exciting story of squirrely things going on. [01:19:58.460 --> 01:20:01.460] Go ahead, continue. [01:20:01.460 --> 01:20:02.460] Sure. [01:20:02.460 --> 01:20:10.460] So the last thing I've done with this PAC issue, because it's all kind of tied together, [01:20:10.460 --> 01:20:17.460] especially because there's a school board member who I'm trying to rope in, or is roped in. [01:20:17.460 --> 01:20:25.460] So I sent an email out, like a last email after talking to the previous president, and said, [01:20:25.460 --> 01:20:31.460] you know, I have been informed that we should be having an audit done twice a year [01:20:31.460 --> 01:20:38.460] that records should be kept meticulously, that a second person should be on this bank account. [01:20:38.460 --> 01:20:40.460] I'm calling for an audit. [01:20:40.460 --> 01:20:43.460] I'm calling for the principal or the president, somebody to call an audit. [01:20:43.460 --> 01:20:48.460] This woman, Karen, the treasurer, you know, has done all of these things according to her statement [01:20:48.460 --> 01:20:54.460] and according to this month, you know, there's money that's either missing or misaccounted for. [01:20:54.460 --> 01:21:02.460] I never heard a single response from the principal or the school board member. [01:21:02.460 --> 01:21:06.460] And the treasurer, who had spent the previous five months avoiding me, [01:21:06.460 --> 01:21:12.460] called me within minutes of that email and spent 45 minutes on the phone with me [01:21:12.460 --> 01:21:18.460] trying to tell me why they just need to close this organization. [01:21:18.460 --> 01:21:24.460] And so she gave me a lot of good, you know, fodder for my complaint to really tie it up, [01:21:24.460 --> 01:21:26.460] to see the mismatch statement. [01:21:26.460 --> 01:21:34.460] So I guess my question with the complaint thing is I did send out the, I sent out three, [01:21:34.460 --> 01:21:43.460] one complaint that listed each of the three people there that I think are tied into this on one complaint. [01:21:43.460 --> 01:21:51.460] And I gave it to, I sent it certified mail to the mayor, the mayor, the DA, [01:21:51.460 --> 01:21:55.460] and then the detective that originally had called me. [01:21:55.460 --> 01:22:01.460] And, you know, the reason, I had gotten a couple different advice. [01:22:01.460 --> 01:22:04.460] I know Randy's saying, you know, give it to the magistrate. [01:22:04.460 --> 01:22:09.460] And I think that's probably what I actually need to do to make it move, or I don't know if it will move, [01:22:09.460 --> 01:22:13.460] but to at least get some traction. [01:22:13.460 --> 01:22:18.460] But I wanted to give it to the detective because I really want to loop him in somehow [01:22:18.460 --> 01:22:22.460] because I feel that he, I've heard from other people in the town that he, [01:22:22.460 --> 01:22:27.460] other things he's done and the way that he, I really feel like harassed me, [01:22:27.460 --> 01:22:32.460] never actually did a pool, never did a real investigation because nobody's gotten an audit. [01:22:32.460 --> 01:22:36.460] So it was really just a tactic that harassed me not to find out what was going on. [01:22:36.460 --> 01:22:40.460] So, you know, but I don't really know how to, [01:22:40.460 --> 01:22:44.460] I don't think that's enough to make a complaint on him just for that [01:22:44.460 --> 01:22:49.460] because I have a suspicion that he was harassing me. [01:22:49.460 --> 01:22:56.460] So my question is, should I just go ahead and go straight to the magistrate now? [01:22:56.460 --> 01:22:58.460] The detective called me. [01:22:58.460 --> 01:22:59.460] He left me a message. [01:22:59.460 --> 01:23:02.460] He said, hey, I don't really know what to do with this packet. [01:23:02.460 --> 01:23:09.460] If you want it to be put in front of a judge, if you're, [01:23:09.460 --> 01:23:12.460] if something about, if you don't want a full investigation [01:23:12.460 --> 01:23:17.460] and you want me to put this in front of the judge, you just have to do that yourself. [01:23:17.460 --> 01:23:22.460] And I'm thinking, well, you never did the full investigation. [01:23:22.460 --> 01:23:28.460] I mean, I asked you to do that when you were calling me to interrogate me. [01:23:28.460 --> 01:23:32.460] So I wasn't really sure how to tie that up with him. [01:23:32.460 --> 01:23:37.460] And then the mayor that I sent it to, we're in a village in a township. [01:23:37.460 --> 01:23:39.460] So the school is technically township. [01:23:39.460 --> 01:23:43.460] So the mayor, I just got a letter back from their lawyer, [01:23:43.460 --> 01:23:46.460] the village's lawyer that it's like not their jurisdiction. [01:23:46.460 --> 01:23:52.460] So I was a little bit curious about that because I had thought that the mayor is a magistrate. [01:23:52.460 --> 01:23:57.460] So I'm not sure if he, if there's a jurisdiction thing there. [01:23:57.460 --> 01:24:02.460] Well, you'll have to check in your local, in Ohio, [01:24:02.460 --> 01:24:07.460] I don't know if mayors are listed as a magistrate or not. [01:24:07.460 --> 01:24:12.460] It's in Texas they are, some places they are, some places they're not. [01:24:12.460 --> 01:24:16.460] You have to check and see in your criminal procedure. [01:24:16.460 --> 01:24:20.460] And if they are a magistrate, then he would have a duty on that? [01:24:20.460 --> 01:24:21.460] Yes. [01:24:21.460 --> 01:24:22.460] Or? [01:24:22.460 --> 01:24:23.460] Yes. [01:24:23.460 --> 01:24:28.460] Okay. [01:24:28.460 --> 01:24:30.460] They won't necessarily know. [01:24:30.460 --> 01:24:33.460] The mayors often, even though they are magistrates, [01:24:33.460 --> 01:24:35.460] they don't necessarily know that they're magistrates. [01:24:35.460 --> 01:24:38.460] They don't think of that as part of their job or their duty. [01:24:38.460 --> 01:24:45.460] Nobody calls on them to do that because back to, oh, this is how we do things around here. [01:24:45.460 --> 01:24:51.460] They're not accustomed to somebody invoking that duty of theirs or even knowing that they have it. [01:24:51.460 --> 01:24:54.460] So just be aware. [01:24:54.460 --> 01:25:00.460] You might have to put a cover letter on there or introduce it to them. [01:25:00.460 --> 01:25:04.460] Strategically, my main strategy for not going straight to a magistrate, [01:25:04.460 --> 01:25:09.460] like the magistrate myself was mostly to, one, I wanted, [01:25:09.460 --> 01:25:14.460] I gave it to the mayor because I wanted, I want the town to know what's going on. [01:25:14.460 --> 01:25:16.460] And I thought that would go to the village. [01:25:16.460 --> 01:25:22.460] Like it just maybe it would start to get, you know, just kind of some stuff going, [01:25:22.460 --> 01:25:27.460] just some people being aware of some of this corruption. [01:25:27.460 --> 01:25:35.460] But the detective was the one I wanted to hit with, like not a breach of duty if he doesn't send it in. [01:25:35.460 --> 01:25:39.460] But the problem is, which I guess the only way I can really do that is I haven't been able to, [01:25:39.460 --> 01:25:49.460] the Ohio law just seems to be very ambiguous as far as it's not very clear that he has that duty to bring my criminal complaint. [01:25:49.460 --> 01:25:57.460] It seems like in Ohio, it just says I have, you know, I can take a complaint straight to the court or to the magistrate. [01:25:57.460 --> 01:26:04.460] So I guess what I'm saying, what I want to know is should I just, should I just quit, [01:26:04.460 --> 01:26:13.460] just go and take it to the magistrate and quit trying to maybe take these other people in, get them for not doing their duty? [01:26:13.460 --> 01:26:21.460] Do you have an opinion on that or am I, I don't want to waste energy on this detective [01:26:21.460 --> 01:26:26.460] and that sort of thing if it's not really, I don't want to get distracted. [01:26:26.460 --> 01:26:34.460] Because the other thing, and my end goal is the 1983 suit, which I'm pretty far from being ready, [01:26:34.460 --> 01:26:40.460] but every other thing I'm doing is stopping me from, you know, getting my timeline done and stuff like that. [01:26:40.460 --> 01:26:48.460] Because then I also have a kind of a mountain of record requests that I also have to make some complaints on [01:26:48.460 --> 01:26:53.460] or follow up or get something going there too. [01:26:53.460 --> 01:26:59.460] So yeah, I'm not sure if you have an opinion on. [01:26:59.460 --> 01:27:08.460] Well, what comes to my mind is that you probably, I wouldn't expect to get remedy out of the internal processes [01:27:08.460 --> 01:27:12.460] of the we've investigated ourselves kind of a thing. [01:27:12.460 --> 01:27:27.460] And if you go ahead and get those criminal complaints in play, then the records requests might dry up and be a lot more of a fight for you. [01:27:27.460 --> 01:27:34.460] So what I would think that I might do in your shoes, go ahead and write the criminal complaints and get them notarized [01:27:34.460 --> 01:27:39.460] and they've got a date spent on there, but don't give it to the magistrate just yet. [01:27:39.460 --> 01:27:52.460] Go ahead and continue to collect info with your records requests to kind of help yourself to paint the picture of who's doing what. [01:27:52.460 --> 01:27:59.460] And then if it comes to it, then you've got those records request, I'm sorry, [01:27:59.460 --> 01:28:09.460] the criminal complaints that are already notarized and they've got the date stamp on there, so it's not like you've done them later on. [01:28:09.460 --> 01:28:22.460] And you're just going to start handing those to magistrates, whoever you find that's responsible with a lawfully imposed duty to act on them. [01:28:22.460 --> 01:28:34.460] So the one records request that I think will either show that there's something going on or maybe not is the principal's account [01:28:34.460 --> 01:28:44.460] because she had said that the TREASURE had said the PAC and the principal's account were like mixed in with each other and it didn't sound right. [01:28:44.460 --> 01:28:55.460] And so I've made that records request, but it's one of two just specifically that are basically, they're just blowing me off. [01:28:55.460 --> 01:29:05.460] So I should switch gears and focus on these records requests and the process there of putting in the mandamus. [01:29:05.460 --> 01:29:10.460] I think it was mandamus, was that right? I wrote it down. [01:29:10.460 --> 01:29:20.460] Oh yeah, a mandamus is a higher court telling a lower court to follow the law, but I think you're not really in a court situation. [01:29:20.460 --> 01:29:29.460] I don't know if that really fits, if there's a mandamus that goes to that internal processes there, not sure. [01:29:29.460 --> 01:29:36.460] But yeah, I think that makes sense. Do criminal complaints and records requests [01:29:36.460 --> 01:29:45.460] and don't worry too much about trying to keep pushing on the internal investigating ourselves kind of thing. [01:29:45.460 --> 01:29:56.460] We're just about to go to our sponsors once more and so hold that thought and we will check right back after these sponsors. [01:29:56.460 --> 01:30:04.460] A top cyber security expert has a warning for America. [01:30:04.460 --> 01:30:11.460] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.460 --> 01:30:15.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.460 --> 01:30:21.460] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.460 --> 01:30:26.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.460 --> 01:30:31.460] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.460 --> 01:30:34.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.460 --> 01:30:41.460] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:41.460 --> 01:30:45.460] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:45.460 --> 01:30:52.460] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.460 --> 01:30:59.460] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.460 --> 01:31:03.460] But cyber security expert David Chalk says not so fast. [01:31:03.460 --> 01:31:08.460] If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.460 --> 01:31:14.460] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:14.460 --> 01:31:18.460] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.460 --> 01:31:23.460] But catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.460 --> 01:31:31.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.460 --> 01:31:36.460] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.460 --> 01:31:43.460] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.460 --> 01:31:46.460] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.460 --> 01:31:49.460] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.460 --> 01:31:50.460] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.460 --> 01:31:51.460] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.460 --> 01:31:52.460] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.460 --> 01:31:53.460] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.460 --> 01:31:55.460] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.460 --> 01:31:58.460] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.460 --> 01:32:01.460] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.460 --> 01:32:05.460] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.460 --> 01:32:08.460] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.460 --> 01:32:13.460] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.460 --> 01:32:20.460] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.460 --> 01:32:26.460] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.460 --> 01:32:36.460] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.460 --> 01:32:41.460] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.460 --> 01:32:51.460] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, A Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.460 --> 01:32:55.460] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.460 --> 01:33:02.460] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.460 --> 01:33:12.460] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:34:02.460 --> 01:34:07.460] Okay, we are back. [01:34:07.460 --> 01:34:10.460] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:34:10.460 --> 01:34:14.460] I'm Brent Fountain, and we are talking with Daisy in Ohio. [01:34:14.460 --> 01:34:19.460] And let's see, it gets you unmuted. [01:34:19.460 --> 01:34:21.460] All right. [01:34:21.460 --> 01:34:38.460] Daisy, we were saying you're going to look at criminal complaints and records requests and not worry so much about their internal self-check kind of things because they're pretty much failing on all of that, right? [01:34:38.460 --> 01:34:45.460] Yeah, I think the town's pretty connected, and they're all covering for each other. [01:34:45.460 --> 01:34:50.460] I do get that sense for sure. [01:34:50.460 --> 01:35:04.460] One thing that came to my mind is you were talking about you weren't really sure that you could accuse this officer of a crime of harassing. [01:35:04.460 --> 01:35:10.460] But one thing that occurred to me is he said that he was doing this investigation. [01:35:10.460 --> 01:35:25.460] So if you were to just mention in the process of this, in your criminal complaint, mention that, hey, this officer over here, apparently he said he was doing some investigation. [01:35:25.460 --> 01:35:29.460] You might need to check with him to see what investigation he did. [01:35:29.460 --> 01:35:40.460] Don't tell me. That would bring to the limelight whatever it was he did or didn't do. [01:35:40.460 --> 01:35:48.460] Yeah, and there is a bullet point, a paragraph that says a little bit about that. [01:35:48.460 --> 01:36:02.460] Maybe I actually said that I'm not sure what's going on because I think there might be a conflict of interest considering that he didn't do a full investigation from what I understand. [01:36:02.460 --> 01:36:05.460] So there is that in that complaint. [01:36:05.460 --> 01:36:06.460] There you go. [01:36:06.460 --> 01:36:11.460] But I actually sent it to him. [01:36:11.460 --> 01:36:14.460] So yeah, I don't know. [01:36:14.460 --> 01:36:18.460] I have a question. [01:36:18.460 --> 01:36:27.460] When a policeman in Ohio does an investigation, what records must they keep? [01:36:27.460 --> 01:36:29.460] I'm not sure. [01:36:29.460 --> 01:36:32.460] You need to find out and request those records. [01:36:32.460 --> 01:36:34.460] You want to see what the results of his. [01:36:34.460 --> 01:36:49.460] If his investigation did not culminate in any charges against anyone, then it should not be restricted. You want to see how much time he allotted to it and what he did in that time. [01:36:49.460 --> 01:36:50.460] Okay. [01:36:50.460 --> 01:36:58.460] Because he did the last conversation he had with me, he said he was going to put this on the prosecutor's desk. [01:36:58.460 --> 01:37:04.460] Yeah, see how many people he called and emailed and what was the content of all of that. [01:37:04.460 --> 01:37:07.460] When did he put it on the prosecutor's desk? [01:37:07.460 --> 01:37:08.460] I want to see a copy of it. [01:37:08.460 --> 01:37:16.460] Well, and apparently he was sat there and went through the video evidence because he said, I'm watching this video and I'm seeing you handle this cash. [01:37:16.460 --> 01:37:20.460] Well, no, I'm working the concession. [01:37:20.460 --> 01:37:36.460] Yeah, you know, so he's apparently sat there and looked at this video, but interestingly enough, one of the last statements I was got, I've done the investigation because the secretary, when I was saying, hey, because the logbook is missing. [01:37:36.460 --> 01:37:41.460] We're missing all records since 2016. [01:37:41.460 --> 01:37:54.460] And the day I was going to turn these affidavits in or these criminal complaints in, I stopped back into the school and just said, hey, did that because she had told me that she brought it to the school office and that the book would be in the office. [01:37:54.460 --> 01:38:00.460] Well, I went straight to the office and the secretary can't find the book anywhere and that was a couple weeks ago. [01:38:00.460 --> 01:38:05.460] So before I turned in these complaints, I just was like, hey, by the chance, did you guys find the book? [01:38:05.460 --> 01:38:12.460] And she's like, the secretary says, no, she says it's in a cream colored bag and I can't find it anywhere. [01:38:12.460 --> 01:38:15.460] And I know my gut is that's a lie. [01:38:15.460 --> 01:38:17.460] She doesn't have it. [01:38:17.460 --> 01:38:24.460] She doesn't, she just, I don't know who's saying what, but I'm thinking, well, okay, let's go through the video. [01:38:24.460 --> 01:38:27.460] You guys went through it on me. [01:38:27.460 --> 01:38:31.460] Why don't we see when she brought in this cream colored bag with this book supposedly? [01:38:31.460 --> 01:38:37.460] Who is required to maintain this record? [01:38:37.460 --> 01:38:41.460] So this is not actually a school organization. [01:38:41.460 --> 01:38:43.460] It's like a PTA. [01:38:43.460 --> 01:38:51.460] So I can't do a, from my understanding, I can't do a records request for the records of this PTA. [01:38:51.460 --> 01:38:52.460] That's why I've asked. [01:38:52.460 --> 01:39:00.460] I was president, but they, the secretary, when all this was going on, she wanted to get rid of me. [01:39:00.460 --> 01:39:06.460] She sent an email out saying you're not actually president because we didn't follow the bylaws and vote you in. [01:39:06.460 --> 01:39:10.460] Even though she wouldn't, I didn't even see the bylaws for four months. [01:39:10.460 --> 01:39:14.460] It was ran super, super, that's how the whole district is. [01:39:14.460 --> 01:39:15.460] Very fraudulent. [01:39:15.460 --> 01:39:16.460] There's a lot of money issues. [01:39:16.460 --> 01:39:22.460] So it was ran as they haven't had a meeting from my understanding for three years and they're blaming COVID. [01:39:22.460 --> 01:39:26.460] And I know that one parent for sure made a $5,000 donation. [01:39:26.460 --> 01:39:32.460] And she, and the woman, when she finally called me, the treasurer, she told me there's no money in the account at all [01:39:32.460 --> 01:39:34.460] and it should just go into the principal's account. [01:39:34.460 --> 01:39:37.460] And it's just all these misstatements. [01:39:37.460 --> 01:39:49.460] But I can't get, I don't believe I can get, do a records request on the PTA account because it's not actually a part of the school. [01:39:49.460 --> 01:39:54.460] The books and stuff are supposed to be left at the school, but it's supposedly a separate thing. [01:39:54.460 --> 01:40:01.460] So I've done a records request for the principal's account because first of all, I don't trust this principal anyway. [01:40:01.460 --> 01:40:05.460] I'm curious to see where, how this account is being sent. [01:40:05.460 --> 01:40:13.460] But also the woman told me that she, she gives, the accounts are basically intermingling. [01:40:13.460 --> 01:40:22.460] So I just thought that would be the first thing to see, you know, the first kind of evidence of an account of any sort. [01:40:22.460 --> 01:40:28.460] Because the four or five months I was president, she would never meet, have a meeting with me and she never showed me books [01:40:28.460 --> 01:40:32.460] and she never showed me a bank receipt and she refused to put me on the bank. [01:40:32.460 --> 01:40:36.460] So I have no idea. I've never seen my own eyes, any sort of accounting. [01:40:36.460 --> 01:40:44.460] I just know that I gave her $730 cash deposit. [01:40:44.460 --> 01:40:49.460] And when she was on the phone with me, she told me there's less than $500 in the bank. [01:40:49.460 --> 01:40:52.460] So that's the most concrete evidence I have. [01:40:52.460 --> 01:40:58.460] At least we're off by $230, but alone that $5,000. [01:40:58.460 --> 01:41:01.460] So there's something going on. [01:41:01.460 --> 01:41:12.460] And then the way they called, you know, they've called the school district has gotten the police involved in my matters like three times now, three to four times. [01:41:12.460 --> 01:41:24.460] So, but I don't want to get so distracted with this. The one reason I'm holding on to this is because I want to expose the district for corruption. [01:41:24.460 --> 01:41:33.460] And this is tied to a school board member, it's tied to the principal who I know is morally corrupt [01:41:33.460 --> 01:41:41.460] because he was demoted from the high school last year for having a public extramarital affair with the guidance counselor apparently. [01:41:41.460 --> 01:41:44.460] So now he's at the middle school. [01:41:44.460 --> 01:42:00.460] So that's kind of why I want to like get to the bottom of this because I feel like it may start exposing a lot more of the money corruption that I think is going on in the district. [01:42:00.460 --> 01:42:10.460] But it's not really what my end goal is, which is my 1983 lawsuit for the mask. [01:42:10.460 --> 01:42:14.460] Okay, wait, we need to get somewhere. We're going to run out of time today. [01:42:14.460 --> 01:42:20.460] Yes, I'm sorry. So I can call back. [01:42:20.460 --> 01:42:34.460] The other questions I have that are more broadly about the 1983 suit, and I know you have other callers, so maybe I'll call back a different time to just discuss the suit itself. [01:42:34.460 --> 01:42:42.460] But I think that the records request for the detective and for his investigation, I really like that. [01:42:42.460 --> 01:42:53.460] So I think I'll work on that and work on just work on the complaints against actually getting the records requests that have been outstanding for five months. [01:42:53.460 --> 01:43:06.460] If you don't find records of his investigation, then you have reason to believe and do believe that he was simply harassing you and wasn't doing an investigation at all. [01:43:06.460 --> 01:43:07.460] Right. [01:43:07.460 --> 01:43:08.460] Okay, I like that. [01:43:08.460 --> 01:43:14.460] And five months is way too long. There should be look for some local transparency laws. [01:43:14.460 --> 01:43:29.460] I understand that Ohio has the remedy for somebody who doesn't respond to a records request. In Ohio, they have to pay you. [01:43:29.460 --> 01:43:37.460] Yeah, it's a maximum of $1,000. It's like 10 days. [01:43:37.460 --> 01:43:40.460] We're just about to go to our sponsors again. [01:43:40.460 --> 01:43:45.460] Okay. Is there anything else for the other side? [01:43:45.460 --> 01:43:49.460] I'm good. I appreciate you guys' time. [01:43:49.460 --> 01:43:55.460] Okay. Well, thank you for calling, Daisy. Good talking with you. We'll look forward to talking with you some more. [01:43:55.460 --> 01:44:00.460] Okay, so then we're going to go to sponsors and we'll be right back. [01:44:00.460 --> 01:44:11.460] All right. [01:44:11.460 --> 01:44:31.460] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.460 --> 01:44:47.460] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.460 --> 01:45:02.460] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. 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[01:46:45.460 --> 01:47:05.460] The people come down from the hill Into the city they will shuffle [01:47:05.460 --> 01:47:15.460] Many long nights, many strong thrills [01:47:36.460 --> 01:47:42.460] I'm updating the situation with my credit card [01:47:42.460 --> 01:47:45.460] I wanted to sue the credit card because of harassment [01:47:45.460 --> 01:47:48.460] Like five and six calls a day Monday through Friday [01:47:48.460 --> 01:47:53.460] And then three or four calls a day on Saturday and Sunday [01:47:53.460 --> 01:47:57.460] That's 30 to 36 calls per week for three or four months [01:47:57.460 --> 01:48:05.460] And I was told by the attorney that this type of thing is in a gray area [01:48:05.460 --> 01:48:09.460] But I maintain that all these calls per week is way too much [01:48:09.460 --> 01:48:11.460] And it's over the borderline for harassment [01:48:11.460 --> 01:48:16.460] Well, anyway, so the reason why I'm calling is to tell you about [01:48:16.460 --> 01:48:20.460] That's a gray area, that seems pretty clear to me [01:48:20.460 --> 01:48:23.460] Well anyway, I thought so too [01:48:23.460 --> 01:48:28.460] Now, we didn't go to court, I guess it was mediation [01:48:28.460 --> 01:48:31.460] Is that what we did? [01:48:31.460 --> 01:48:33.460] Don't know [01:48:33.460 --> 01:48:37.460] Okay, so we didn't go to actual court [01:48:37.460 --> 01:48:40.460] I guess it was something out of court [01:48:40.460 --> 01:48:42.460] Anyhow, I don't know if it was another court [01:48:42.460 --> 01:48:43.460] It wasn't another court settlement [01:48:43.460 --> 01:48:47.460] I think what they said was it was something like mediation [01:48:47.460 --> 01:48:49.460] Or whatever they called it [01:48:49.460 --> 01:48:50.460] And I don't remember what they called it [01:48:50.460 --> 01:48:55.460] Anyway, I want to help others with my experience with this [01:48:55.460 --> 01:49:01.460] Because people think that they can let corporations get away with anything they want [01:49:01.460 --> 01:49:06.460] And my question is they're going to send me a settlement check [01:49:06.460 --> 01:49:09.460] But they're not going to erase the debt [01:49:09.460 --> 01:49:11.460] And of course they're going to send that to [01:49:11.460 --> 01:49:17.460] The lawyer said that they'll more than likely sell the debt outright to a debt collector [01:49:17.460 --> 01:49:21.460] And that's making me happy because I was born in that briar patch [01:49:21.460 --> 01:49:24.460] So this has a pretty good outcome [01:49:24.460 --> 01:49:28.460] But do I owe the IRS taxes on the settlement check [01:49:28.460 --> 01:49:35.460] Or the unpaid debt that goes to a collection agent? [01:49:35.460 --> 01:49:39.460] Wait a minute, IRS taxes on the [01:49:39.460 --> 01:49:44.460] Say that again, I didn't understand the way that you said that [01:49:44.460 --> 01:49:53.460] Do I owe taxes on the amount of money that they're going to send me as a settlement check for the harassment [01:49:53.460 --> 01:49:55.460] And do I owe taxes [01:49:55.460 --> 01:49:57.460] No, you don't pay taxes on that [01:49:57.460 --> 01:49:59.460] That's damages [01:49:59.460 --> 01:50:01.460] That's making you whole [01:50:01.460 --> 01:50:02.460] It's something in the court of law [01:50:02.460 --> 01:50:03.460] That's what I thought [01:50:03.460 --> 01:50:08.460] I've always thought that you don't pay taxes on a debt settlement [01:50:08.460 --> 01:50:18.460] They're not a debt settlement on insurance money or an award from a judge or anything like that [01:50:18.460 --> 01:50:20.460] So I was right on that? [01:50:20.460 --> 01:50:23.460] Yes, that's not profit that's making you whole [01:50:23.460 --> 01:50:26.460] You've been harmed and that's just making you whole [01:50:26.460 --> 01:50:28.460] So no, you don't pay tax on that [01:50:28.460 --> 01:50:29.460] That's what I thought [01:50:29.460 --> 01:50:36.460] How about the amount that goes to the collection agency that I'm not going to pay? [01:50:36.460 --> 01:50:38.460] I'm not sure what you're asking [01:50:38.460 --> 01:50:43.460] How about do you pay tax on the amount that goes to the collection agency that you're not going to pay? [01:50:43.460 --> 01:50:48.460] Right, in other words, I didn't pay the rest of the debt [01:50:48.460 --> 01:50:53.460] So now I owe taxes on the amount that went to collection [01:50:53.460 --> 01:51:01.460] Wait, so are you saying that not paying something that you didn't owe is going to be deemed as a tax? [01:51:01.460 --> 01:51:03.460] I can't see how [01:51:03.460 --> 01:51:14.460] No, John, when you receive the money, if you weren't taxed on it then, they can't tax you for not paying something back [01:51:14.460 --> 01:51:18.460] You don't get taxed on what you have to pay out [01:51:18.460 --> 01:51:31.460] Okay, because the lawyer said the credit card company is going to send me some type of 99 form or something or other? [01:51:31.460 --> 01:51:33.460] 1099? [01:51:33.460 --> 01:51:38.460] I don't know what it was, I can't remember now, but that's not helpful at all [01:51:38.460 --> 01:51:45.460] I don't know, tax is not my area, so I can't speak to it [01:51:45.460 --> 01:51:50.460] Brett knows everything, Brett can't [01:51:50.460 --> 01:51:51.460] Well, no, I sure don't [01:51:51.460 --> 01:52:04.460] But I did have one year, the IRS invented a debt for me and it turned out after such a difficult time trying to get into their records [01:52:04.460 --> 01:52:14.460] It turned out that they had imagined a windfall of income for that year [01:52:14.460 --> 01:52:22.460] And their report didn't have anything that it was based on, it just said debt forgiveness [01:52:22.460 --> 01:52:27.460] And I didn't have any debt, there was no debt, there was nothing to be forgiven [01:52:27.460 --> 01:52:35.460] But apparently there is something where their machine can consider the forgiveness of a debt as income [01:52:35.460 --> 01:52:42.460] So I don't have the answer for you, but you probably should keep looking in that direction [01:52:42.460 --> 01:52:52.460] Okay, that makes sense, you receive money, you don't get taxed on that because you have to pay it back [01:52:52.460 --> 01:52:58.460] But if you don't have to pay it back, then that money becomes income [01:52:58.460 --> 01:53:00.460] Say that again [01:53:00.460 --> 01:53:10.460] If you receive money, but you have to pay it back, then you haven't received anything of true value [01:53:10.460 --> 01:53:18.460] But if they forgive the debt, then the portion they forgave becomes value that you accrue [01:53:18.460 --> 01:53:20.460] Thank you [01:53:20.460 --> 01:53:27.460] All right, one of the big reasons why I called is to alert other people [01:53:27.460 --> 01:53:35.460] Because in these days with COVID and everything else and the jobs disappeared and they did this and they did that [01:53:35.460 --> 01:53:43.460] People are out of work, they may have accrued debts with collection agent fees or with their original creditor [01:53:43.460 --> 01:53:50.460] And when they call up once an hour someday, that's a bit much [01:53:50.460 --> 01:54:01.460] That's in the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act, I think it's went up to $5,800 a call, it used to be $1,000 [01:54:01.460 --> 01:54:14.460] Yeah, that's right, and so I ended up with $1,000, I ended up with $1,000, that's not very much considering all the calls [01:54:14.460 --> 01:54:23.460] So anyway, I don't trust anybody, I don't trust the lawyers, I don't trust the police, I don't trust anybody [01:54:23.460 --> 01:54:26.460] And with good reason as you know [01:54:26.460 --> 01:54:31.460] So that's basically it, I just want to let everybody know, don't let a creditor get away with that [01:54:31.460 --> 01:54:38.460] Because they think they can do anything they want, they're surrounded by their big corporate wall and powerful attorneys [01:54:38.460 --> 01:54:42.460] And they think they're invincible and you let them have it [01:54:42.460 --> 01:54:50.460] Because if people had done that a long time ago, especially in traffic court, we wouldn't be being faced with Democrats [01:54:50.460 --> 01:54:56.460] And what they're doing and deadly vaccines and the whole nine yards [01:54:56.460 --> 01:55:03.460] And Mr. Ted Gross of the World Health Organization is now going to take over the sovereignty of the United States [01:55:03.460 --> 01:55:07.460] And we wouldn't be here if people [01:55:07.460 --> 01:55:12.460] Wait, you're getting off point, you can use up the rest of the show with this [01:55:12.460 --> 01:55:15.460] I'd like to get in one more caller [01:55:15.460 --> 01:55:22.460] No, no, no, I'm just saying that we wouldn't be here, that's it, I was done, I was actually done [01:55:22.460 --> 01:55:29.460] We wouldn't be here having our sovereign rights taken away from us and everything else [01:55:29.460 --> 01:55:35.460] So you know what I'm saying, okay, thank you very much, I just want to alert everybody, don't let them do that to you [01:55:35.460 --> 01:55:38.460] Okay, thank you, John [01:55:38.460 --> 01:55:47.460] Okay, we got time for one more caller, Olivier, what do you have for us today? [01:55:47.460 --> 01:55:49.460] How you doing, Randy? [01:55:49.460 --> 01:55:51.460] Good, good [01:55:51.460 --> 01:55:59.460] Just doing a little research and found some, I got a broader understanding of liberty and what it means [01:55:59.460 --> 01:56:05.460] But before I start, I remembered one of your other guests [01:56:05.460 --> 01:56:09.460] You only have two and a half minutes [01:56:09.460 --> 01:56:17.460] Oh, okay, well she had a problem with the custody of a child with some kind of court, I forgot what state it was [01:56:17.460 --> 01:56:22.460] And you were actually trying to find out how to use the declaratory judgment [01:56:22.460 --> 01:56:28.460] But I found another way, it still could be underneath, you could use a declaratory judgment [01:56:28.460 --> 01:56:32.460] But she would be bringing up her liberty interest [01:56:32.460 --> 01:56:40.460] When I found that liberty interest is not only just the restriction of your freedom of movement [01:56:40.460 --> 01:56:47.460] But your liberty interest, your children, choices that you can possibly make [01:56:47.460 --> 01:56:52.460] So that liberty is not just the confinement of your physical body [01:56:52.460 --> 01:57:09.460] It also goes to your mental assessment or ability to think and want to, you know, the freedom of expression can be liberty [01:57:09.460 --> 01:57:16.460] So raising your children or bearing your children is a liberty interest also [01:57:16.460 --> 01:57:26.460] And it says that in that they can, you have the right to decide what school, what type of information, how they're raised [01:57:26.460 --> 01:57:33.460] So this is an issue that I'm coming across where I hear that people call and talk about their children [01:57:33.460 --> 01:57:40.460] And I'm starting to realize that this liberty interest, this could be a vehicle to attack those problems [01:57:40.460 --> 01:57:49.460] Interesting. That'll be something they're not accustomed to dealing with [01:57:49.460 --> 01:57:53.460] Because generally they don't consider the liberty interest to the parents [01:57:53.460 --> 01:58:00.460] They only care about the children and sometimes they really hammer the parents and wind up hurting the children at the same time [01:58:00.460 --> 01:58:04.460] Can you send me a link to some of your research on that? [01:58:04.460 --> 01:58:09.460] Yeah, I'm going to get it all done and then call back next week [01:58:09.460 --> 01:58:12.460] Okay, wonderful. Thank you very much [01:58:12.460 --> 01:58:16.460] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio [01:58:16.460 --> 01:58:22.460] We'll be back next week, 8 o'clock Central, Thursday and Friday [01:58:22.460 --> 01:58:25.460] And make sure you check out Eddie Craig [01:58:25.460 --> 01:58:28.460] He does our traffic show on Mondays [01:58:28.460 --> 01:58:33.460] And Brett, I have 20 seconds that you need to fill up [01:58:33.460 --> 01:58:38.460] Well, why don't you tell them about the time that you... [01:58:38.460 --> 01:58:43.460] I almost got time for a story [01:58:43.460 --> 01:58:49.460] Thank you for listening. 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