[00:00.000 --> 00:05.760] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.760 --> 00:09.240] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.240 --> 00:10.600] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.600 --> 00:14.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.600 --> 00:17.500] one of your constitutional rights. [00:17.500 --> 00:19.080] Privacy is under attack. [00:19.080 --> 00:22.700] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.700 --> 00:27.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.480 --> 00:28.480] So protect your rights. [00:28.480 --> 00:32.520] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.520 --> 00:33.520] Privacy. [00:33.520 --> 00:35.240] It's worth hanging on to. [00:35.240 --> 00:39.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.520 --> 00:43.080] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:43.080 --> 00:44.920] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.920 --> 00:50.400] Most of us know that taking the Fifth means you're choosing to remain silent about a criminal [00:50.400 --> 00:51.400] matter. [00:51.400 --> 00:55.200] It's a good way to remember that the Fifth Amendment spells out what can and can't happen [00:55.200 --> 00:57.760] to you when you're accused of a criminal offense. [00:57.760 --> 01:02.000] The Fifth guarantees due process, prohibits trying someone more than once for the same [01:02.000 --> 01:04.580] crime and lets you keep your mouth shut. [01:04.580 --> 01:09.680] The Founding Fathers inserted these constitutional provisions to protect citizens from torture. [01:09.680 --> 01:14.160] Back in the day, governments often used painful methods to extract confessions. [01:14.160 --> 01:18.080] The Fifth Amendment also prohibits the government from taking your house and land without paying [01:18.080 --> 01:19.080] you for it. [01:19.080 --> 01:20.080] That used to happen a lot too. [01:20.080 --> 01:21.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:21.080 --> 01:32.120] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:32.120 --> 01:35.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:35.840 --> 01:39.520] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:39.520 --> 01:41.000] Our liberty depends on it. [01:41.000 --> 01:44.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:44.880 --> 01:47.880] one of your constitutional rights. [01:47.880 --> 01:49.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:49.480 --> 01:53.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:53.080 --> 01:57.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:57.840 --> 02:02.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:02.840 --> 02:05.600] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:05.600 --> 02:09.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [02:09.920 --> 02:13.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:13.440 --> 02:16.400] Start over with Startpage. [02:16.400 --> 02:19.160] The number 666 reminds me of evil. [02:19.160 --> 02:23.840] I also associate it with the sick feeling one might get when falsely accused of a heinous [02:23.840 --> 02:28.160] crime, or when thinking about sickos who actually do commit acts of murder and mayhem. [02:28.160 --> 02:34.000] Either way, the number 666 can help you remember that the Sixth Amendment deals with the constitutionally [02:34.000 --> 02:37.280] guaranteed rights Americans have in a criminal trial. [02:37.280 --> 02:41.560] Those include the right to a speedy public trial, the right to an impartial jury, the [02:41.560 --> 02:45.560] right to full information about the charges, the right to an attorney, and the right to [02:45.560 --> 02:48.320] confront any witnesses face to face. [02:48.320 --> 02:52.480] 666, sick, sickos, and the Sixth Amendment, get it? [02:52.480 --> 02:54.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:54.080 --> 03:22.840] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:24.860 --> 03:29.860] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? [03:29.860 --> 03:32.680] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.680 --> 03:35.680] Bad boys, bad boys Whatcha gonna do? [03:35.680 --> 03:38.680] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.680 --> 03:43.680] When you were eight and you had bad traits You'll go to school and learn the golden rules [03:43.680 --> 03:46.680] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.680 --> 03:49.680] If you get hot, then you must get cool Bad boys, bad boys [03:49.680 --> 03:50.680] Whatcha gonna do? [03:50.680 --> 03:56.560] Bad boys bad boys, Whatcha gonna do Oh whatcha gonna do when they come for you [03:56.560 --> 04:00.580] Bad boys bad boys whatcha gonna do Oh whatcha gonna do when they come for you [04:00.580 --> 04:08.220] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one You chuck it on your mother and you [04:08.220 --> 04:16.220] chuck it on your father, You chuck it on your brother and you chuck [04:16.220 --> 04:18.280] Bad boys, bad boys [04:18.280 --> 04:19.380] Whatcha gonna do? [04:19.380 --> 04:21.760] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:21.760 --> 04:23.480] Bad boys, bad boys [04:23.480 --> 04:24.860] Whatcha gonna do? [04:24.860 --> 04:27.360] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:27.360 --> 04:29.000] Bad boys, bad boys [04:29.000 --> 04:30.440] Whatcha gonna do? [04:30.440 --> 04:32.920] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:32.920 --> 04:35.720] Nobody now give you no break [04:35.760 --> 04:37.860] Police now give you no break [04:38.040 --> 04:40.500] That old soldier man now give you no break [04:40.520 --> 04:43.040] The tears in your eyes now give you no break [04:43.040 --> 04:45.360] Bad boy, bad boy [04:45.360 --> 04:49.300] Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:49.300 --> 04:54.760] Bad boys' bad boys. Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:54.760 --> 05:00.280] Bad boys' bad boys. Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [05:00.280 --> 05:06.160] Bad boys' bad boys. Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [05:06.160 --> 05:13.360] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, on this the 16th day of [05:13.360 --> 05:21.760] June, on this Thursday, the 16th day of June, 2022. [05:21.760 --> 05:28.620] And excuse me if I do some hacking and coughing, I got bit by a spider, brown recluse spider [05:28.620 --> 05:31.160] the last time I was thrown in jail. [05:31.160 --> 05:39.720] It bit me on the head, and my whole head swelled up, my throat swelled up. [05:39.720 --> 05:48.160] My swelled head's gone away, at least, well, not according to my wife, but the throat is [05:48.160 --> 05:53.760] still giving me some issues, so if I sound kind of raspy and I haven't started having [05:53.760 --> 05:56.840] a little trouble coughing, I'll try to mute myself. [05:56.840 --> 06:01.240] So bear with me, I'm kind of struggling tonight. [06:01.240 --> 06:14.360] Okay, I have a meeting tomorrow with the head of a law firm that handles Legal Shield. [06:14.360 --> 06:19.160] Legal Shield is the largest legal insurance company in the nation. [06:19.160 --> 06:29.320] It has approximately 80% of the current business, and this law firm is in Texas, but it's one [06:29.320 --> 06:36.640] of the larger law firms that services Legal Shield's customers. [06:36.640 --> 06:47.280] And I will promote the Legal Earth project to him tomorrow as a tool he can use to streamline [06:47.280 --> 06:54.160] the business model for Legal Shield, Legal Shield does about 800 million a year. [06:54.160 --> 07:06.520] So if we can build them a product that improves their service to their clients, and create [07:06.520 --> 07:14.200] documents and pleadings for them, it may get our Legal Earth project launched, and we can [07:14.200 --> 07:17.440] do some really interesting things. [07:17.440 --> 07:20.280] Brett, did you have something to talk about? [07:20.280 --> 07:22.880] My voice is just about to fail here. [07:22.880 --> 07:27.960] No, I didn't have anything particular on my mind, but if you want, I could just... [07:27.960 --> 07:30.960] Say something intelligent and intuitive. [07:30.960 --> 07:37.600] ...tell you about those people in other countries who make clicking sounds. [07:37.600 --> 07:48.520] Well, I'll tell you what, a long time ago, you mentioned to me about DOT number and something [07:48.520 --> 07:52.600] called a private motor carrier, and you don't talk about it very often, but it's something [07:52.600 --> 08:04.040] that you had mentioned one time, and I believe you said that every time you, if you get pulled [08:04.040 --> 08:09.640] over and you didn't really want to have a ticket, you didn't really want to have a fight [08:09.640 --> 08:14.960] right then, then you just tell them, hey, didn't you run my DOT number, and they go [08:14.960 --> 08:18.120] back to their cruiser and come back and tell you have a nice day. [08:18.120 --> 08:27.800] Well, I think that's a potentially helpful thing for people to consider adding to their [08:27.800 --> 08:29.880] layers of defense, I guess you could say. [08:29.880 --> 08:35.640] I mean, obviously, people still need to know how to defend their rights versus privileges, [08:35.640 --> 08:45.160] of course, and it just is a potential benefit if we happen to run into a poorly trained [08:45.160 --> 08:52.120] cop who doesn't know the difference between rights and privileges, but he might be impressed [08:52.120 --> 08:57.000] by seeing something about the word federal and the word private popping up on his little [08:57.000 --> 08:59.000] screen. [08:59.000 --> 09:07.960] I had that, I had a DOT number, you just go to the Department of Transportation and sign [09:07.960 --> 09:13.520] up for a DOT number, then you fill in all your information, and at one point, it will [09:13.520 --> 09:20.440] ask you for the type of carrier, and you select private operator. [09:20.440 --> 09:28.720] Private operator is someone like a manufacturing company that manufactures products, sells [09:28.720 --> 09:33.320] them, and delivers them to their customers. [09:33.320 --> 09:40.520] Delivering the product to their customers is a cost of doing business for them. [09:40.520 --> 09:43.640] They're not being paid to deliver. [09:43.640 --> 09:51.040] You may add the amount of delivery to the purchase price, but you're not being paid [09:51.040 --> 09:58.120] as a carrier to transport that product to your customer. [09:58.120 --> 10:03.880] This is most prevalent with grain hoppers. [10:03.880 --> 10:11.360] These large farms out in Kansas and Illinois, out in the flat, where they raise massive [10:11.360 --> 10:18.400] amounts of grain on huge farms and they have their own truck fleet, and they use that truck [10:18.400 --> 10:27.000] fleet to capture the grain from the combines and then haul it to either their own silos [10:27.000 --> 10:28.480] or to a commercial silo. [10:28.480 --> 10:31.600] Well, they're not being paid to do that. [10:31.600 --> 10:34.800] That's a cost of doing business. [10:34.800 --> 10:38.000] In that instance, they are not in commerce. [10:38.000 --> 10:40.560] These trucks are not for hire. [10:40.560 --> 10:41.560] Yeah. [10:41.560 --> 10:47.640] It might look like a truck that otherwise could need to be under that regulatory scheme, [10:47.640 --> 10:50.840] but it's kind of like deadheading, right? [10:50.840 --> 10:55.000] Yeah, like an 18-wheeler tractor trailer. [10:55.000 --> 10:56.640] But yes, like deadheading. [10:56.640 --> 11:05.960] When I was in Chicago, they had special plates and we had a PM plate. [11:05.960 --> 11:12.160] A PM plate was... I was in the truck washing business and I had equipment mounted on my [11:12.160 --> 11:14.680] truck that I used for this purpose. [11:14.680 --> 11:21.600] Well, PM meant permanently mounted, like a crane or something of that nature. [11:21.600 --> 11:27.640] I was not hauling around anything for hire. [11:27.640 --> 11:33.720] Hauling my equipment around was a necessary cost and a necessary evil of being able to [11:33.720 --> 11:35.720] do my business. [11:35.720 --> 11:42.560] And there, you were required to have not only your DOT number on the side of your vehicle, [11:42.560 --> 11:48.720] you were also required to have a little sign at least three inches tall that said, not [11:48.720 --> 11:51.680] for hire. [11:51.680 --> 12:03.720] So if you go to the DOT and sign up as a private carrier, as a private operator, in this section, [12:03.720 --> 12:07.560] the type of carrier you select, private operator, then... [12:07.560 --> 12:10.320] It came up for me as a private motor carrier. [12:10.320 --> 12:11.320] Yeah. [12:11.320 --> 12:12.320] Okay. [12:12.320 --> 12:18.640] I don't know if that's a state versus federal thing, but I was looking at the fit. [12:18.640 --> 12:19.640] Okay. [12:19.640 --> 12:23.280] They may have changed it, but that doesn't look right because you can have... If you [12:23.280 --> 12:30.640] have a crane, a crane is a permanently mounted equipment. [12:30.640 --> 12:34.960] In Illinois, they had PM for permanently mounted. [12:34.960 --> 12:38.560] And then they had private carrier. [12:38.560 --> 12:46.120] So I guess difference... They may have changed it in the Fed, but there will always be an [12:46.120 --> 12:47.120] option... [12:47.120 --> 12:48.120] Something private. [12:48.120 --> 12:57.840] That you're not doing this for hire and that takes you outside the transportation code. [12:57.840 --> 13:05.360] The first thing a DOT officer wants to know from a truck driver, I want to see your log. [13:05.360 --> 13:09.720] Well if it's a private carrier, it doesn't have a log, it doesn't have to. [13:09.720 --> 13:13.000] They know that. [13:13.000 --> 13:20.640] If a truck, like out here where I live, we have a lot of rock trucks. [13:20.640 --> 13:28.280] If a guy has his own excavation business, and I have a friend that does that, I told [13:28.280 --> 13:33.480] him to put a private operator on the side of... Private operator not for hire on the [13:33.480 --> 13:35.640] side of his trucks. [13:35.640 --> 13:40.880] When he did that, the DPS stopped to point over his trucks. [13:40.880 --> 13:42.040] Nice. [13:42.040 --> 13:47.360] He had a couple do it, and they told him, I'm a private operator, I'm not in commerce. [13:47.360 --> 13:52.360] And these police knew exactly what that meant. [13:52.360 --> 13:55.840] So when you tell a policeman that you're a private operator, you're not in commerce, [13:55.840 --> 13:58.920] he knows exactly what you're talking about. [13:58.920 --> 13:59.920] Well they should, right? [13:59.920 --> 14:00.920] They have to deal with that all the time. [14:00.920 --> 14:07.040] Those city cops haven't been to the training, so they might be a little lacking in that. [14:07.040 --> 14:08.040] No. [14:08.040 --> 14:09.040] Bullcrap. [14:09.040 --> 14:10.040] They know full well. [14:10.040 --> 14:11.040] Okay. [14:11.040 --> 14:17.760] That if it's a private operator, they knew full well they do not fall under the transportation [14:17.760 --> 14:19.040] code. [14:19.040 --> 14:23.240] They just lie to you because they don't think you understand the difference. [14:23.240 --> 14:27.760] Well we didn't fall under the transportation code anyway, but this is a way that it shows [14:27.760 --> 14:30.560] up on their computer saying so. [14:30.560 --> 14:31.560] Exactly. [14:31.560 --> 14:36.280] And every time one would stop me, I would say, did you see that DOT number on the back [14:36.280 --> 14:38.360] of my car? [14:38.360 --> 14:39.960] And they would say, oh no, I didn't notice. [14:39.960 --> 14:43.720] Well you might want to go notice and then go look it up. [14:43.720 --> 14:47.640] And that's when they'd go back to their car and they would look it up and they would come [14:47.640 --> 14:52.120] back and say, have a nice day. [14:52.120 --> 14:59.800] Because they knew, they knew that I knew that I'm a private carrier and they're not going [14:59.800 --> 15:01.840] to get past me. [15:01.840 --> 15:07.880] And this is different than when you're just someone driving your vehicle for pleasure [15:07.880 --> 15:11.840] or back and forth to work. [15:11.840 --> 15:15.080] Back and forth to work, you're just like a truck driver who's deadheading. [15:15.080 --> 15:24.220] When a DOT pulls you over, he's going to ask to see your logbook. [15:24.220 --> 15:28.960] And he's going to want to see all the time you're driving on that logbook unless you're [15:28.960 --> 15:29.960] deadheading. [15:29.960 --> 15:35.360] You dropped off a load at this factory and you've got to go over to this other one to [15:35.360 --> 15:37.640] pick up another load. [15:37.640 --> 15:40.080] Well in that time, you're not being paid. [15:40.080 --> 15:42.040] That's cost. [15:42.040 --> 15:43.040] That's deadheading. [15:43.040 --> 15:45.540] It's not on the books. [15:45.540 --> 15:47.720] They know this. [15:47.720 --> 15:49.360] They fully understand this. [15:49.360 --> 15:53.120] This is not something complex or difficult for them to understand. [15:53.120 --> 15:59.120] But for the most part, they believe that the general public doesn't understand these distinctions [15:59.120 --> 16:02.320] and they go ahead and write these tickets. [16:02.320 --> 16:04.480] So that's the deal on the DOT. [16:04.480 --> 16:10.440] Get the numbers, stick them on there, put not for hire. [16:10.440 --> 16:12.680] When I was in Chicago, that had to be on there. [16:12.680 --> 16:22.800] You could be sighted if you didn't have not for hire on your vehicle and you were running [16:22.800 --> 16:24.520] as a private operator. [16:24.520 --> 16:25.720] So everybody up there has it. [16:25.720 --> 16:31.280] If you ever drive in through Chicago, you'll see these trucks, these grocery delivery trucks [16:31.280 --> 16:33.200] that you'll say not for hire on. [16:33.200 --> 16:45.640] And you get this at fmcsa.dot.gov, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the Department [16:45.640 --> 16:52.720] of Transportation, so fmcsa.dot.gov. [16:52.720 --> 16:57.960] But we're just about to go to our sponsors, so we'll finish this up on the other side. [16:57.960 --> 17:00.600] Be right back. [17:00.600 --> 17:05.200] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [17:05.200 --> 17:06.640] of nutrition. [17:06.640 --> 17:11.360] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [17:11.360 --> 17:16.960] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [17:16.960 --> 17:23.400] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, Young Jevity can [17:23.400 --> 17:25.520] provide the nutrients you need. [17:25.520 --> 17:30.720] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [17:30.720 --> 17:31.720] we reject. [17:31.720 --> 17:36.920] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [17:36.920 --> 17:39.760] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [17:39.760 --> 17:46.120] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [17:46.120 --> 17:47.120] quality radio. [17:47.120 --> 17:51.640] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us. [17:51.640 --> 17:57.240] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [17:57.240 --> 17:59.240] increase your income. [17:59.240 --> 18:01.360] Order now. [18:01.360 --> 18:05.760] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:05.760 --> 18:06.760] Word? [18:06.760 --> 18:11.480] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [18:11.480 --> 18:16.680] Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy [18:16.680 --> 18:22.640] 2.15, study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [18:22.640 --> 18:25.200] rightly dividing the word of truth. [18:25.200 --> 18:29.000] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we will go [18:29.000 --> 18:32.520] verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [18:32.520 --> 18:37.160] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.160 --> 18:39.520] and Christian character development. [18:39.520 --> 18:44.040] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.040 --> 18:48.400] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.400 --> 18:49.880] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:49.880 --> 18:57.280] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com, Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.280 --> 19:01.280] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:01.280 --> 19:14.800] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, Logosradionetwork.com. [19:14.800 --> 19:37.800] Look what we get, we ask the Christians, they don't have the answers, we ask the Christians, [19:37.800 --> 19:51.080] they don't have the answers, okay we are back, this is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, [19:51.080 --> 19:56.320] I'm Brent Fountain, and we're going to go ahead and go to our caller board here, we've [19:56.320 --> 20:02.040] got a caller from Nevada, but we've also got a lot of space on the board, so if you want [20:02.040 --> 20:08.280] to call in, the number is 512-646-1984. [20:08.280 --> 20:10.160] Good evening Nicholas, what's on your mind? [20:10.160 --> 20:17.280] Well good evening guys, I just thought I'd give you an update on the metal detector and [20:17.280 --> 20:24.960] file the criminal complaints here in Reno, so I ended up going back over again and obtaining [20:24.960 --> 20:32.000] the names of the two clerks and the two supervisors as well as the judge, they seem to be able [20:32.000 --> 20:36.440] to be a little ambivalent about which particular judge they talked to, but Shelby told me it [20:36.440 --> 20:43.000] was Judge Clifton and the second supervisor said it was the Chief Justice, which is Scott [20:43.000 --> 20:48.440] Pearson, but I'm going to stick with Clifton first. [20:48.440 --> 20:54.320] Well they're both in trouble right, obviously they both got told, so they both didn't do [20:54.320 --> 20:55.320] their job. [20:55.320 --> 21:00.720] Right, well I don't know how to confirm, Pearson did or not. [21:00.720 --> 21:08.640] You don't have to confirm, your public servants here are trustworthy right, they gave you [21:08.640 --> 21:12.520] their own testimony, they said that it was him and this other guy said well no it was [21:12.520 --> 21:17.880] him, so obviously it was both of them, they wouldn't lie right. [21:17.880 --> 21:26.280] Well yeah, I'll let the court sort that out right, so anyway I went up to the DA's office [21:26.280 --> 21:32.080] and did submit it, they did take it and then they sent it over to the quote unquote civil [21:32.080 --> 21:38.920] division even though I explained that it was a criminal complaint and a couple days later [21:38.920 --> 21:43.600] I get a call from the DA's office saying that we've reviewed it and we're not going to process [21:43.600 --> 21:44.600] it. [21:44.600 --> 21:50.720] So I went back up again and said I needed to know who it was that didn't, that made [21:50.720 --> 21:51.720] the decision. [21:51.720 --> 21:56.200] Wait Nicholas, did you tell them, did you tell them I need to get that in writing? [21:56.200 --> 22:01.680] I did, on the phone and then when I was up there again I said I wanted that in writing [22:01.680 --> 22:08.120] and so far they have not produced that, so they sent down two investigators who were [22:08.120 --> 22:11.960] supposed to be some kind of law enforcement officers, they both had badges, I get their [22:11.960 --> 22:20.640] names and then they called me really acting like they were trying to help, said that if [22:20.640 --> 22:26.480] I wanted to file civil I could go over to the or I needed to file it with the Reno Police [22:26.480 --> 22:32.560] Department because I had a sheriff was involved in it, so obviously that would be a conflict [22:32.560 --> 22:33.840] of interest. [22:33.840 --> 22:40.400] I think the whole thing is a conflict of interest to tell you the truth, but then the next morning [22:40.400 --> 22:46.760] I get a call back yet again to try to go through that a little bit more in detail and I recorded [22:46.760 --> 22:52.840] both of those calls, so I have those as well, but in the end it was that no matter what [22:52.840 --> 22:57.440] I did they were going to run this back through the DA's office and ultimately the DA's office [22:57.440 --> 23:03.520] was going to decide whether they were going to process this criminal complaint or not, [23:03.520 --> 23:11.680] which just isn't satisfactory, I have these guys really dead to write that they are absolutely [23:11.680 --> 23:21.400] breaking first, fourth, fifth amendments as well as the Nevada Article 1 Section 18 which [23:21.400 --> 23:28.440] is the illegal search and seizure and also two other NRS codes that directly show that [23:28.440 --> 23:34.520] they kept me out of a meeting that I had legal right to as well as intimidation threats and [23:34.520 --> 23:41.320] coercion to go through the detector in order to exercise my First Amendment rights which [23:41.320 --> 23:45.320] is not their right to force me to go through anything, if they want to do anything they [23:45.320 --> 23:49.680] should put their badge up for the door and let me in like any regular citizen without [23:49.680 --> 23:56.080] having to be screened, so anyway that's where that stands, I am starting to work on the [23:56.080 --> 24:02.720] criminal complaint, my next intent is to get that criminal complaint done, put that with [24:02.720 --> 24:09.960] my first one, put that in a package that goes to the DA addressed to the foreman and have [24:09.960 --> 24:15.040] that insured like Randy said, wait for them to not deliver it to the foreman and then [24:15.040 --> 24:23.800] get the Inspector General receive my insurance claim and then we will see where that goes. [24:23.800 --> 24:34.480] Wait, wait, first you need to get them a pleasant visit from the postal inspectors and get the [24:34.480 --> 24:40.520] postal inspectors to force them to admit that they got it but didn't give it to the grand [24:40.520 --> 24:41.520] jury. [24:41.520 --> 24:46.880] So do I do that when I certify my return receipt? [24:46.880 --> 24:52.440] That's why you insure it so that you can call the postal inspectors and say hey bub I want [24:52.440 --> 24:58.160] my 500 bucks, they are not going to want to give you 500 bucks, not because they care [24:58.160 --> 25:04.200] about 500 bucks but that kind of thing raises their bond rating, so they are going to send [25:04.200 --> 25:10.480] two guys down there in cheap suits with scars on their knuckles to grind on these guys and [25:10.480 --> 25:18.080] get them to admit that they got your document so that they don't have to pay you 500 bucks. [25:18.080 --> 25:24.480] Now you have a written admission, now your claim against them for tampering with the [25:24.480 --> 25:28.200] government documents is pretty well a done deal. [25:28.200 --> 25:35.280] So if I understand it right, I am going to put that, I am going to put it in an envelope [25:35.280 --> 25:40.520] like a regular manila envelope but there is going to be a package inside of it that is [25:40.520 --> 25:48.520] addressed to the foreman of the grand jury that in that package has an envelope and an [25:48.520 --> 25:53.120] acknowledgement receipt that they are going to put in sign, date and put it back in the [25:53.120 --> 25:59.480] self-addressed envelope and send that back to me, is that correct? [25:59.480 --> 26:04.800] Yes that is correct, I use a postcard instead of a self-addressed envelope but it is basically [26:04.800 --> 26:06.360] the same thing. [26:06.360 --> 26:11.560] Don't address your original document to the prosecuting attorney, address it to the foreman [26:11.560 --> 26:19.520] of the grand jury at the district attorney's address, you don't want the DA's name on it [26:19.520 --> 26:26.720] anywhere because the only address we ever get for a grand jury is the district attorney's [26:26.720 --> 26:33.720] office because they are trying to get everything to go through them and think about it, DA's [26:33.720 --> 26:40.480] feel like they are the ones who have to prosecute so they are the ones who should decide whether [26:40.480 --> 26:46.000] or not there is sufficient evidence to warn a prosecution. [26:46.000 --> 26:50.520] Well our legislators, our founders went to a lot of trouble to make sure that didn't [26:50.520 --> 26:51.520] happen. [26:51.520 --> 26:55.480] They sewed up to say that the magistrate is the one that does that. [26:55.480 --> 27:03.520] Yes, that is a really bad idea so they forbid them to do that but prosecutors they still [27:03.520 --> 27:07.840] think like they should do it and they are doing everything they can to circumvent the [27:07.840 --> 27:08.840] system. [27:08.840 --> 27:18.320] Question for you guys, there is a document stating that goes to the foreman kind of educating [27:18.320 --> 27:25.760] them that the DA does not run the grand jury, I have seen some somewhere, I may have downloaded [27:25.760 --> 27:30.200] one somewhere, should that be included in that document correct? [27:30.200 --> 27:37.320] No, I wouldn't because you don't want to alienate the grand jury, actually you don't expect [27:37.320 --> 27:41.160] this to ever get to the grand jury. [27:41.160 --> 27:47.120] But if you put that in there that would be double insurance to ensure that it doesn't [27:47.120 --> 27:50.880] get to the grand jury. [27:50.880 --> 27:54.920] The DA is going to see that and go no, no, no, we are not going to teach them the truth, [27:54.920 --> 27:56.920] hang on, no, no, no. [27:56.920 --> 27:57.920] Exactly. [27:57.920 --> 28:03.040] So now I am a little bit conflicted, should I put that in there or should I not put that [28:03.040 --> 28:04.040] in? [28:04.040 --> 28:06.840] Yes, go ahead and put it in. [28:06.840 --> 28:11.160] That way when the DA opens it there is no way he is going to let the grand jury see [28:11.160 --> 28:12.160] that. [28:12.160 --> 28:17.000] Well he has no business opening that document if it is not addressed to him and is addressed [28:17.000 --> 28:20.040] just to the foreman correct? [28:20.040 --> 28:25.840] The last one I took to Travis County, that is the seat of government in Texas, I gave [28:25.840 --> 28:32.960] it to an investigator for the DA and I told her this is for the grand jury, tell your [28:32.960 --> 28:41.440] boss whatever she does, do not open it. [28:41.440 --> 28:50.680] He opened it and there were complaints against him, I told you Bubba. [28:50.680 --> 28:58.160] But if you tell him that, you know if you are the DA what are you going to do? [28:58.160 --> 29:08.120] There is a thing in neuro linguistic programming, the mind does not do negatives, if your child [29:08.120 --> 29:14.600] is walking across the room with a glass of water balanced on his palm, then you look [29:14.600 --> 29:20.880] at that and say this is not a good idea, you are inclined to say do not drop that, well [29:20.880 --> 29:24.040] how is a child to understand that? [29:24.040 --> 29:28.440] Of course they have to create in their mind the act of dropping it and then negate that, [29:28.440 --> 29:33.600] by the time they get there they have already dropped it, so you give them a subliminal [29:33.600 --> 29:36.040] induction to drop it. [29:36.040 --> 29:44.000] Excuse me, so telling him not to open it, he just can't help himself. [29:44.000 --> 29:47.520] Yeah don't touch wet paint. [29:47.520 --> 29:54.400] Hey hang on, Brett will you take us out? [29:54.400 --> 29:55.400] Brett? [29:55.400 --> 30:01.760] Oh well, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we will be right back. [30:01.760 --> 30:06.320] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, but [30:06.320 --> 30:11.000] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.000 --> 30:15.920] I am Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I will be right back with details. [30:15.920 --> 30:20.040] Privacy is under attack, when you give up data about yourself, you will never get it [30:20.040 --> 30:24.600] back again and once your privacy is gone, you will find your freedoms will start to [30:24.600 --> 30:29.880] vanish too, so protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information [30:29.880 --> 30:30.880] to yourself. [30:30.880 --> 30:33.640] Privacy, it is worth hanging on to. [30:33.640 --> 30:37.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:37.920 --> 30:41.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.440 --> 30:45.120] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.120 --> 30:49.880] Public privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:49.880 --> 30:54.360] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.360 --> 30:59.960] It's not an idle question, according to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies [30:59.960 --> 31:03.520] admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.520 --> 31:08.560] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com, unlike other search [31:08.560 --> 31:13.360] engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you, they have never been hacked but even [31:13.360 --> 31:17.680] if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see, the cupboard would be bare. [31:17.680 --> 31:21.160] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.160 --> 31:30.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.760 --> 31:35.480] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [31:35.480 --> 31:39.040] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.040 --> 31:43.160] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [31:43.160 --> 31:49.000] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.000 --> 31:52.760] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.760 --> 31:55.840] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.840 --> 31:58.120] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.120 --> 32:01.360] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.360 --> 32:05.320] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.320 --> 32:09.080] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:09.080 --> 32:12.960] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.960 --> 32:16.240] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.240 --> 32:19.920] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.920 --> 32:24.120] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.120 --> 32:25.560] our rights through due process. [32:25.560 --> 32:29.480] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.480 --> 32:33.280] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.280 --> 32:35.320] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.320 --> 32:39.640] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.640 --> 32:40.960] ordering your copy today. [32:40.960 --> 32:44.200] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.200 --> 32:48.720] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.720 --> 32:51.040] documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.040 --> 32:54.240] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.240 --> 33:11.480] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:11.480 --> 33:31.880] Yes, Mr. Officer, you're taking the law in your hand, I want you to follow the law of [33:31.880 --> 33:32.880] the land. [33:32.880 --> 33:33.880] I don't understand. [33:33.880 --> 33:53.440] Okay, we are back with the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain, and I see [33:53.440 --> 33:58.760] we have a first time caller, we'll get to you in just a moment, and right now we're [33:58.760 --> 34:01.120] talking with Nicholas in Nevada. [34:01.120 --> 34:03.480] Nicholas, go ahead. [34:03.480 --> 34:07.480] You were telling us about where you're at with these and you're about to go to some [34:07.480 --> 34:11.360] other criminal complaints, and what's next? [34:11.360 --> 34:18.640] Well, one of the things that Randy just said was that I'm probably never going to get to [34:18.640 --> 34:24.880] a grand jury, and so if you could enlighten me on where that's actually going to take [34:24.880 --> 34:27.720] me so I know kind of what to expect. [34:27.720 --> 34:32.120] If I turn this in, it's not going to get to the grand jury, we're going to call in the [34:32.120 --> 34:37.320] inspector general who's going to go down and press on the DA a little bit. [34:37.320 --> 34:39.080] It's pretty much the same thing. [34:39.080 --> 34:45.320] I've only had one time that a grand juror actually saw when I sent them these little [34:45.320 --> 34:50.920] postcards, only one time that somebody sent one back to me. [34:50.920 --> 34:57.080] I did get one time, they didn't send it back, but they sent me a letter that said that they [34:57.080 --> 35:01.880] decided they're not going to inquire into this issue. [35:01.880 --> 35:06.960] So it wasn't a true bill or a no bill, it's we're not going to look into it. [35:06.960 --> 35:11.920] So I ended up having to file criminal charges against that grand jury for me. [35:11.920 --> 35:16.480] But mostly, you're not going to hear anything. [35:16.480 --> 35:21.640] It's just going to be dead air. [35:21.640 --> 35:22.640] And then- [35:22.640 --> 35:23.640] Okay, so it's crickets. [35:23.640 --> 35:24.640] Yes. [35:24.640 --> 35:29.920] At that point, you have to assume that the DA did not give it to them, and you file criminal [35:29.920 --> 35:33.840] charges against the DA. [35:33.840 --> 35:41.360] If you've got the postal inspector piece involved there as well, then that's just another part [35:41.360 --> 35:43.040] of evidence that gives you something. [35:43.040 --> 35:46.920] When you're writing your criminal complaint, you're saying, I have reason to believe, and [35:46.920 --> 35:51.480] I do believe, that XYZ happened. [35:51.480 --> 35:56.160] And the fact that the postal inspector went over there and said it got delivered, well, [35:56.160 --> 36:00.160] there's another reason that you have to believe that the DA is guilty. [36:00.160 --> 36:01.760] Does that make sense? [36:01.760 --> 36:04.840] Okay, so I write a criminal complaint, who do I file that with? [36:04.840 --> 36:08.960] Is that a federal magistrate, or who does that go to next? [36:08.960 --> 36:12.000] Yeah, you can give it to anybody you want. [36:12.000 --> 36:13.000] There are options. [36:13.000 --> 36:15.720] You know, I like to think about the options. [36:15.720 --> 36:19.120] There's one way, Randy talks about just going up the chain. [36:19.120 --> 36:22.200] And sometimes I think about also spreading it out. [36:22.200 --> 36:29.080] If you've got, maybe in the county, you've got somebody who is a magistrate who didn't [36:29.080 --> 36:37.280] get the district judge job, and now he's over here in some other position, and it was a [36:37.280 --> 36:44.320] tight run, it was a tight close race, 51 to 49 percent, and now this guy's over here frowning. [36:44.320 --> 36:53.320] Well, maybe he would be very interested in making a difference, let's say. [36:53.320 --> 36:55.800] So you just think about some different options. [36:55.800 --> 36:59.680] Maybe there's a mayor in a small town that never really gets to do anything. [36:59.680 --> 37:02.360] And you tell him that he's a magistrate, and he says, really? [37:02.360 --> 37:04.640] You mean I can do something about this? [37:04.640 --> 37:07.760] So it just depends. [37:07.760 --> 37:08.760] Just check out some options. [37:08.760 --> 37:09.760] Who's a magistrate? [37:09.760 --> 37:20.280] And how do I, so far, going into the courthouse and requesting to see a magistrate I've been [37:20.280 --> 37:25.280] denied every single time I've been in, there are other, there are magistrates... [37:25.280 --> 37:31.160] Wait, wait, wait, wait, when you got, when you got denied, did you call 911? [37:31.160 --> 37:34.360] No, not that time. [37:34.360 --> 37:37.680] That's, that's a great time. [37:37.680 --> 37:40.560] Unless they tell you that there is no magistrate in the building. [37:40.560 --> 37:45.680] If there is a judge in the building, the judge is the magistrate. [37:45.680 --> 37:52.960] And if you go there, I suggest you not talk to anybody but the magistrate. [37:52.960 --> 37:57.360] You ask them, is there a judge in the building? [37:57.360 --> 38:01.360] And if they say yes, you ask them, which one, and where's his office? [38:01.360 --> 38:08.080] And then you go to the magistrate's office and you give the complaint to the magistrate's [38:08.080 --> 38:11.080] clerk. [38:11.080 --> 38:14.120] You call the clerk out and say, ma'am, I need to talk to you. [38:14.120 --> 38:18.360] And I said, here, I have this document I want to show to the magistrate. [38:18.360 --> 38:19.920] Here, look at this. [38:19.920 --> 38:23.440] Once he touches it, she's stuck to it. [38:23.440 --> 38:28.120] Whatever you do, do not take it back. [38:28.120 --> 38:33.320] You need to give that to the judge, give notice to the judge that a crime has been committed. [38:33.320 --> 38:36.360] I need him to perform his duty as a magistrate. [38:36.360 --> 38:38.640] Oh, man, we're not going to take this. [38:38.640 --> 38:39.640] You got it. [38:39.640 --> 38:40.880] I don't care what you do with it. [38:40.880 --> 38:50.760] In Graham, Texas, I gave, they wanted a, a, a voluntary statement. [38:50.760 --> 38:54.880] He wouldn't take anything from me but, but a voluntary statement. [38:54.880 --> 39:01.880] So I made up a voluntary statement and stuck the verified criminal complaint behind it. [39:01.880 --> 39:05.680] And I handed it to him and he's reading the voluntary statement. [39:05.680 --> 39:10.440] He realizes there's a page behind it and he pulls that out. [39:10.440 --> 39:11.440] What's this? [39:11.440 --> 39:12.840] I said, that's a verified criminal affidavit. [39:12.840 --> 39:15.360] Well, I'm not going to take this. [39:15.360 --> 39:17.160] Sorry, Bubba. [39:17.160 --> 39:18.280] You got it. [39:18.280 --> 39:21.080] You're stuck to it. [39:21.080 --> 39:26.000] He was so furious, he was shaking. [39:26.000 --> 39:32.480] But they work criminal complaints against the county attorney. [39:32.480 --> 39:36.360] Once they touch it, they're stuck to it. [39:36.360 --> 39:38.200] Don't care if it's a clerk, don't care who it is. [39:38.200 --> 39:48.400] If you go to the office, everybody in the office is, is, is a, a response to the, is [39:48.400 --> 39:53.160] a employee of the magistrate. [39:53.160 --> 39:59.800] They're under the, the control and custody of the magistrate. [39:59.800 --> 40:02.960] So they're acting in his name. [40:02.960 --> 40:06.240] So when they say, I'm going to do this, I'm going to do that, I really don't care what [40:06.240 --> 40:07.240] you do. [40:07.240 --> 40:11.160] I did this to a district judge in Waco. [40:11.160 --> 40:17.320] I told the clerk, I had a document that I needed the judge to look at and can you show [40:17.320 --> 40:18.320] this to him? [40:18.320 --> 40:19.320] He can use opinion on it. [40:19.320 --> 40:20.320] She said, well, certainly. [40:20.320 --> 40:26.280] She goes back and the judge came out with this challenge to subject matter jurisdiction [40:26.280 --> 40:28.960] in a case he'd already closed. [40:28.960 --> 40:30.280] He said, that case is closed. [40:30.280 --> 40:32.520] You can't file anything in it. [40:32.520 --> 40:33.520] Well I just have. [40:33.520 --> 40:35.080] Well, I'm not going to accept this. [40:35.080 --> 40:36.480] Sorry, judge. [40:36.480 --> 40:37.480] You touched it. [40:37.480 --> 40:38.480] You're stuck to it. [40:38.480 --> 40:40.760] Well, I'm not going to do anything with it. [40:40.760 --> 40:43.760] He threw it in the trash. [40:43.760 --> 40:45.440] Okay, that'll work. [40:45.440 --> 40:49.720] I went across the other side of the building. [40:49.720 --> 40:55.000] This is a, they had a big foyer and we're on the second floor and I walked around to [40:55.000 --> 41:02.240] the other side, the district attorney's office and got the coolest DA I'd ever come across. [41:02.240 --> 41:09.840] I gave my complaint to the ADA and he read it, ooh, this is against the district judge [41:09.840 --> 41:11.400] across the way. [41:11.400 --> 41:13.000] I need to show this to my boss. [41:13.000 --> 41:14.000] It's a good idea. [41:14.000 --> 41:23.000] Well, this real tall, slender, gray haired, distinguished looking gentleman came out. [41:23.000 --> 41:24.000] He's holding my complaint. [41:24.000 --> 41:25.000] He said, are you Randall Kelton? [41:25.000 --> 41:27.440] I said, yes, sir, I am. [41:27.440 --> 41:30.960] Did you give this criminal complaint to one of my assistants? [41:30.960 --> 41:33.960] He says, yes, I did. [41:33.960 --> 41:34.960] So who are you? [41:34.960 --> 41:38.200] He said, well, I'm the elected district attorney. [41:38.200 --> 41:41.100] So what are you going to do with that? [41:41.100 --> 41:47.680] He said, Mr. Kelton, I get the impression that you're a man on a mission and I make [41:47.680 --> 41:52.360] it a point never to interfere with a man on the mission. [41:52.360 --> 41:57.280] I'm going to give this to the grand jury and let them do whatever they want to with it. [41:57.280 --> 41:59.760] I said, thank you very much. [41:59.760 --> 42:09.240] Well, as far as I know, the judge didn't get indicted, but you got to know that every judge [42:09.240 --> 42:18.800] in the district knew what just happened, that this judge got presented to a grand jury. [42:18.800 --> 42:21.840] That's all I really want. [42:21.840 --> 42:28.440] I can assure you if I'd have went back down there with another similar document, I wouldn't [42:28.440 --> 42:32.200] have gotten any problem at all. [42:32.200 --> 42:41.760] Besides, I've got to tell this story so many times, it is so much fun, but that's kind [42:41.760 --> 42:42.760] of the point. [42:42.760 --> 42:48.520] Working on a few of my own here so I can join you. [42:48.520 --> 42:49.520] What's the... [42:49.520 --> 42:50.520] Oh, you're in Nevada. [42:50.520 --> 42:56.040] Oh, the last time I was in Nevada, I stood up in the courtroom, a client paid me to come [42:56.040 --> 42:57.040] out there. [42:57.040 --> 43:04.040] I was an actress, five foot two, petite little girl, and she had absolutely no fear. [43:04.040 --> 43:11.360] I stood up in the courtroom and shouted out that I have business, this court's superseding [43:11.360 --> 43:12.360] business now before the court. [43:12.360 --> 43:17.400] She asked who I was, and I told her I was a radio talk show host out of Austin. [43:17.400 --> 43:19.400] Well, what's your business? [43:19.400 --> 43:25.200] You don't have jurisdiction in this case, you need to stand down from that bench. [43:25.200 --> 43:32.280] It got real exciting, but I didn't get arrested. [43:32.280 --> 43:38.320] This little actress, five foot two, maybe a hundred pounds, she did not back up half [43:38.320 --> 43:39.320] an inch. [43:39.320 --> 43:44.840] I looked at her and thought, I do not want to cross this woman. [43:44.840 --> 43:48.320] Anyway, I'll shut up now. [43:48.320 --> 43:53.920] We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rudelvile Radio. [43:53.920 --> 44:00.080] Should give out the call-in number, but we've got a full board, so I won't until next time. [44:00.080 --> 44:01.080] I love Logos. [44:01.080 --> 44:04.360] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.360 --> 44:07.280] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:07.280 --> 44:08.280] I need my truth fix. [44:08.280 --> 44:13.160] I'd be lost without Logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.160 --> 44:16.680] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really [44:16.680 --> 44:20.280] don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:20.280 --> 44:21.640] How can I help Logos? [44:21.640 --> 44:23.640] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.640 --> 44:28.240] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos in ordering your supplies or [44:28.240 --> 44:29.240] holiday gifts. [44:29.240 --> 44:31.280] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.280 --> 44:37.480] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.480 --> 44:43.320] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.320 --> 44:44.320] Do I pay extra? [44:44.320 --> 44:45.320] No. [44:45.320 --> 44:46.920] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:46.920 --> 44:47.920] No. [44:47.920 --> 44:48.920] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:48.920 --> 44:49.920] No. [44:49.920 --> 44:50.920] I mean, yes. [44:50.920 --> 44:54.080] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:54.080 --> 44:55.080] This is perfect. [44:55.080 --> 44:56.080] Thank you so much. [44:56.080 --> 44:57.080] We are welcome. [44:57.080 --> 44:58.080] Happy holidays, Logos. [44:58.080 --> 45:04.280] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.280 --> 45:11.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course [45:11.080 --> 45:14.280] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.280 --> 45:18.840] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.840 --> 45:23.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.120 --> 45:28.800] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.800 --> 45:34.720] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.720 --> 45:39.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.360 --> 45:43.560] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.560 --> 45:49.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.720 --> 45:52.000] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.000 --> 46:14.440] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.440 --> 46:32.640] Thank you. [46:32.640 --> 47:02.560] Okay, we are back. [47:02.560 --> 47:09.600] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain, and thank you for calling [47:09.600 --> 47:10.600] Nicholas in Nevada. [47:10.600 --> 47:16.960] Next, we're going to go to a first time caller in Arizona, hello Rachel, what's on your mind [47:16.960 --> 47:19.960] this evening? [47:19.960 --> 47:28.280] I had a friend that told me about you guys, and I immediately sent in an email, and Randy [47:28.280 --> 47:33.760] told me to go ahead and call in, so I have kind of a long story, I'm going to try and [47:33.760 --> 47:35.760] make it as quick as possible. [47:35.760 --> 47:41.240] I had started off watching TikTok videos, and the video gave a bunch of U.S. codes, [47:41.240 --> 47:46.280] and it was talking about taxes and how they're unlawful, and how you don't need a down payment [47:46.280 --> 47:51.360] and stuff about being a U.S. citizen, and it just kind of sent me on this trail that [47:51.360 --> 47:56.920] I was interested in, and I ended up finding out a lot. [47:56.920 --> 48:02.680] But then I ended up in a place where this guy was talking about looking up your Q sub [48:02.680 --> 48:09.240] number, and then I went to his website, and he was advertising that he can help you cancel [48:09.240 --> 48:20.080] your mortgage, so I talked with the gentleman a little bit, and I felt like he was trustworthy, [48:20.080 --> 48:29.120] he said all the right things, you know, but anyway, he had a four letter process to, registered [48:29.120 --> 48:33.120] mail to contact your mortgage company, or whatever the creditor was, and- [48:33.120 --> 48:35.120] A four letter process? [48:35.120 --> 48:36.120] Yeah. [48:36.120 --> 48:37.120] One was- [48:37.120 --> 48:38.120] Like this, H-I- [48:38.120 --> 48:47.320] Like, one was a conditional acceptance, and then you also break down your bill with a [48:47.320 --> 48:53.560] forensic audit analysis, and then you're asking for them to correct different things, [48:53.560 --> 48:57.320] and then on the second letter, you give them an opportunity to cure, which obviously, they'll [48:57.320 --> 49:02.320] give you a bunch of information that you asked for in your loan, but they can't correct the [49:02.320 --> 49:10.480] forensic audit that you did, and then you pay $1,000 to send this code that he had, [49:10.480 --> 49:15.240] and then they still don't send what you're asking for, so then you send a pending lawsuit. [49:15.240 --> 49:21.040] So after that, he said that you go to the small claims court, and you're suing them [49:21.040 --> 49:26.360] for the $1,000 that you signed him for, I don't know, some, whatever the code was, that [49:26.360 --> 49:32.160] they were pursuing me through the mail, and couldn't provide me with all of my documentation [49:32.160 --> 49:34.480] that I'd asked for to verify my debt. [49:34.480 --> 49:35.480] Okay. [49:35.480 --> 49:36.480] So with- [49:36.480 --> 49:41.480] Was this FDCPA? [49:41.480 --> 49:43.480] I'm not sure. [49:43.480 --> 49:45.920] Fair Debt Collections Practices Act? [49:45.920 --> 49:46.920] Yes. [49:46.920 --> 49:48.920] Yes, it was. [49:48.920 --> 49:49.920] Okay. [49:49.920 --> 49:54.920] You know, most of the time when I hear this kind of stuff, I start hollering, Patriot [49:54.920 --> 50:01.400] Mythology Crapola, but nothing I've heard here goes to Patriot Mythology stuff. [50:01.400 --> 50:04.360] It just is dancing around the edge of it, it sounds like. [50:04.360 --> 50:07.600] Well, he's actually giving notice and opportunity. [50:07.600 --> 50:10.360] Yeah, that part sounded solid. [50:10.360 --> 50:15.960] You're asking for them, the letter you sent, asking them to validate the debt, that's a [50:15.960 --> 50:24.240] qualified written request, and that's in the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. [50:24.240 --> 50:30.720] But suing in a small claims court is kind of missing something important. [50:30.720 --> 50:38.440] If you take the HUD-1 settlement statement, look at this HUD-1 settlement statement and [50:38.440 --> 50:49.040] ask the person, when you sat down at the closing table, did the lender provide evidence to [50:49.040 --> 50:55.360] show that the fees charged on the HUD-1 settlement statement were not otherwise forbidden to [50:55.360 --> 51:05.080] be charged by law, because the normal costs of creating a note are construed to be a normal [51:05.080 --> 51:12.000] part of doing business, and it is the intent that those charges be taken out of the interest [51:12.000 --> 51:14.000] that's paid. [51:14.000 --> 51:18.720] So you want to be sure that these charges are extraordinary and not part of the normal [51:18.720 --> 51:21.400] part of doing business. [51:21.400 --> 51:31.160] So you ask the lender to provide you with evidence to show that these fees are not the [51:31.160 --> 51:38.280] normal part of doing business, that the amounts charged were reasonable, I'm sorry, that the [51:38.280 --> 51:42.840] amounts charged were not otherwise forbidden to be charged by law, that the amounts charged [51:42.840 --> 51:48.000] were reasonable, and that the lender did not take an undisclosed markup on the amounts [51:48.000 --> 51:49.000] charged. [51:49.000 --> 51:53.120] That's all from the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. [51:53.120 --> 52:00.560] And since they didn't give you any billings when you sat at the closing table, then you [52:00.560 --> 52:06.680] assumed that all of these fees on the HUD-1 are bogus. [52:06.680 --> 52:08.680] Now they're not. [52:08.680 --> 52:11.720] Some of them are valid. [52:11.720 --> 52:18.600] And when I was helping people do foreclosures, I helped over 750 people do foreclosures, [52:18.600 --> 52:26.600] and we asked this question, and not one time did the lender ever prove up a single fee. [52:26.600 --> 52:29.120] Not once. [52:29.120 --> 52:38.400] In being, while some of the fees charged were valid, always some of them were not. [52:38.400 --> 52:48.160] So if they prove up one fee and not another, it creates the adverse inference that the [52:48.160 --> 52:53.800] fee not proved up was exactly what we said it was, bogus. [52:53.800 --> 52:55.840] So they don't prove up any of them. [52:55.840 --> 53:01.120] So based on that, you take your full amount on the HUD-1 settlement statement in item [53:01.120 --> 53:09.600] 14B, very bottom right-hand corner of the HUD-1 settlement statement, take that amount [53:09.600 --> 53:16.360] and subtract it from the original principal as an overpayment, and then amortize the note. [53:16.360 --> 53:23.160] So I always amortize the note the way they have it first, and then I take all the fees [53:23.160 --> 53:28.200] from the HUD-1 settlement statement, subtract it from the original principal as an overpayment [53:28.200 --> 53:33.000] on the first payment, and then run the note out again. [53:33.000 --> 53:39.200] You'll generally get an amount between two and three times the original principal. [53:39.200 --> 53:46.760] So you claim that all of these fees that were charged on the HUD-1 were fraudulent. [53:46.760 --> 53:53.360] And in the matter of fraud, you do not sue for the amount you were actually defrauded [53:53.360 --> 53:54.360] of. [53:54.360 --> 53:59.160] Yeah, so it would be like $11,000, no, you do the whole thing. [53:59.160 --> 54:06.800] You sue for the amount you would have been defrauded of had their plan ran to fruition, [54:06.800 --> 54:13.800] and generally that'll get you one to two times the amount of the original principal. [54:13.800 --> 54:21.360] And you make that claim in triplicate for fraud. [54:21.360 --> 54:22.360] You sue them for that. [54:22.360 --> 54:35.480] So let's dance, guys, and then you send them a request for the, if it's out of state, an [54:35.480 --> 54:42.240] apostille for every notary. [54:42.240 --> 54:49.400] In every state, we have the secretary of state who oversees notaries. [54:49.400 --> 54:56.560] But if I'm in California and I get a notary stamp out of Texas, I don't know if that's [54:56.560 --> 54:59.820] really a notary or not. [54:59.820 --> 55:09.280] So I would ask the lender or whoever used that notary to request from the secretary [55:09.280 --> 55:11.720] of state an apostille. [55:11.720 --> 55:18.160] An apostille is a warranty from the state that the notary is, in fact, a valid notary. [55:18.160 --> 55:26.600] It's generally used for foreign notaries, like another state or another country, where [55:26.600 --> 55:30.920] the other country doesn't have a way to verify that this is a proper notary. [55:30.920 --> 55:33.840] The secretary of state will do that for them. [55:33.840 --> 55:36.200] So ask for an apostille. [55:36.200 --> 55:37.700] You don't get one. [55:37.700 --> 55:43.720] For a document that notary has notarized, you move the court to extract it from the [55:43.720 --> 55:45.560] record. [55:45.560 --> 55:54.200] You file a request for power of attorney for anyone who signs any document that's filed [55:54.200 --> 55:57.200] with the county recorder's office. [55:57.200 --> 56:02.240] If you don't get a response to your request for power of attorney, you move the court [56:02.240 --> 56:08.280] to strike the document from the record because you have reason to believe and do believe [56:08.280 --> 56:14.560] that the signer lacked power of authority to file the document. [56:14.560 --> 56:22.360] You get one decent document, like a deed of trust or an assignment, stricken. [56:22.360 --> 56:30.200] Now you have interrupted chain of title. [56:30.200 --> 56:36.720] And for every notary, you request the ledger, the notary ledger for a day before and a day [56:36.720 --> 56:40.360] after, three-day period. [56:40.360 --> 56:48.000] You want to see the ledger, the date surrounding the date that a document was notarized. [56:48.000 --> 56:53.160] Tina Coldbrook filed criminal charges against the ex-secretary of the U.S. Treasury, who [56:53.160 --> 56:59.060] was, at the time of the incident, president of One West Bank because she didn't get the [56:59.060 --> 57:01.240] notary logs. [57:01.240 --> 57:07.000] We filed criminally with the district attorney, but we're not done with him yet. [57:07.000 --> 57:14.800] That's a few of the things you do when you're in a mortgage situation. [57:14.800 --> 57:16.200] Okay. [57:16.200 --> 57:21.960] Did he do any of those things? [57:21.960 --> 57:27.040] No, he didn't do any of those. [57:27.040 --> 57:34.480] It was mostly just, you know, not verifying the debt and then wanting me to sue in small [57:34.480 --> 57:35.480] claims court. [57:35.480 --> 57:42.040] Because I had $1,000, then I would request that the judge set my account to zero because [57:42.040 --> 57:46.880] I've made so many attempts to verify my debt and they're just not responding. [57:46.880 --> 57:51.040] So no, it wasn't anything along the lines that you were suggesting. [57:51.040 --> 57:57.440] Oh, so in effect you won your case. [57:57.440 --> 57:58.440] Right. [57:58.440 --> 58:03.760] I filed for small claim court and had it sent to summon. [58:03.760 --> 58:08.040] I didn't proceed because I asked him, I was like, what do I say in court? [58:08.040 --> 58:12.760] And then he told me to stop paying my mortgage and I just wasn't comfortable with that. [58:12.760 --> 58:14.140] You're very good. [58:14.140 --> 58:18.160] That is not something to be comfortable with. [58:18.160 --> 58:20.760] That never stop paying your mortgage. [58:20.760 --> 58:24.120] This way you, when you come after them, you come after them with clean hands. [58:24.120 --> 58:26.720] They have no leverage. [58:26.720 --> 58:27.720] Hang on. [58:27.720 --> 58:33.200] I'm about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, our call [58:33.200 --> 58:38.640] in number 512-646-1984. [58:38.640 --> 58:39.640] Hang on. [58:39.640 --> 58:50.220] We'll be right back. [58:50.220 --> 58:55.640] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.640 --> 58:58.440] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.440 --> 59:03.840] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.840 --> 59:07.080] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.080 --> 59:08.840] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.840 --> 59:14.780] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.780 --> 59:18.520] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.520 --> 59:23.560] Beautiful and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.560 --> 59:28.280] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.280 --> 59:33.440] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.440 --> 59:43.840] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.840 --> 59:47.920] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.920 --> 01:00:01.800] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:01.800 --> 01:00:05.560] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.560 --> 01:00:09.240] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.240 --> 01:00:10.640] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.640 --> 01:00:14.580] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:00:14.580 --> 01:00:17.760] one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.760 --> 01:00:19.360] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.360 --> 01:00:23.760] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [01:00:23.760 --> 01:00:27.760] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.760 --> 01:00:32.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.760 --> 01:00:35.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.520 --> 01:00:39.800] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:00:39.800 --> 01:00:43.340] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.340 --> 01:00:45.160] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.160 --> 01:00:49.560] Most people think of seven as the more civilized number than six. [01:00:49.560 --> 01:00:54.840] Think about the number six as implicated in evil, as in the biblical 666. [01:00:54.840 --> 01:00:59.000] So it would fit right in that the Seventh Amendment would be about civil trials. [01:00:59.000 --> 01:01:01.400] Civil seven, civil trials, get it? [01:01:01.400 --> 01:01:05.600] Civil trials are ones where people sue instead of beating each other up over a dispute, like [01:01:05.600 --> 01:01:07.320] the dividing line between properties. [01:01:07.320 --> 01:01:12.240] They take their dispute to a courthouse and settle matters civilly without the fisticuffs. [01:01:12.240 --> 01:01:16.320] The Seventh Amendment guarantees that Americans have the right to a jury in certain civil [01:01:16.320 --> 01:01:19.720] matters instead of having a lone judge rule on the case. [01:01:19.720 --> 01:01:32.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.280 --> 01:01:36.040] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:36.040 --> 01:01:40.640] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect, our liberty depends [01:01:40.640 --> 01:01:41.640] on it. [01:01:41.640 --> 01:01:45.040] I'm Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:01:45.040 --> 01:01:48.160] one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:48.160 --> 01:01:49.760] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.760 --> 01:01:53.360] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:53.360 --> 01:01:58.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:58.120 --> 01:02:03.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:03.200 --> 01:02:05.880] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.880 --> 01:02:10.180] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:02:10.180 --> 01:02:13.720] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.720 --> 01:02:15.720] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.720 --> 01:02:21.560] Remember the scene in George Orwell's novel, 1984, when Winston is threatened with his [01:02:21.560 --> 01:02:22.560] worst fear? [01:02:22.560 --> 01:02:26.360] That fear was having a cage of hungry rats unleashed on his face. [01:02:26.360 --> 01:02:30.440] But one of his worst fear was spiders, eight-legged spiders to be exact. [01:02:30.440 --> 01:02:34.200] Getting a face full of spiders would be pretty cruel and unusual. [01:02:34.200 --> 01:02:37.920] That image of eight-legged spiders will help you remember the Eighth Amendment. [01:02:37.920 --> 01:02:42.240] Our founding fathers added the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to protect us from [01:02:42.240 --> 01:02:46.880] creepy-crawly eight-legged punishments and other cruel and unusual prison practices that [01:02:46.880 --> 01:02:48.480] were common in their day. [01:02:48.480 --> 01:02:52.800] The Eighth Amendment also prohibits the government from requiring excessive bail and charging [01:02:52.800 --> 01:02:53.800] excessive fines. [01:02:53.800 --> 01:02:55.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.840 --> 01:03:08.720] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:25.840 --> 01:03:42.200] All right. [01:03:42.200 --> 01:03:43.200] We are back. [01:03:43.200 --> 01:03:46.000] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:03:46.000 --> 01:03:50.720] I'm Brat Fountain, and we are talking with Rachel in Arizona. [01:03:50.720 --> 01:03:54.720] Let's see, Rachel, where did we leave off? [01:03:54.720 --> 01:03:58.880] Randy was talking about the approaches that you can take. [01:03:58.880 --> 01:04:01.480] Yeah, I was talking about foreclosure. [01:04:01.480 --> 01:04:08.200] Rachel, were you actually doing foreclosure, or were you doing debt collection? [01:04:08.200 --> 01:04:10.480] I was doing debt collection. [01:04:10.480 --> 01:04:12.480] I'm not in foreclosure. [01:04:12.480 --> 01:04:16.880] Okay, so this was just a debt collection issue. [01:04:16.880 --> 01:04:17.880] Yes. [01:04:17.880 --> 01:04:24.920] So, all that stuff I said about foreclosure was essentially irrelevant. [01:04:24.920 --> 01:04:28.600] Oh, no, no, this guy, okay. [01:04:28.600 --> 01:04:31.320] This guy is advising you not to pay your mortgage. [01:04:31.320 --> 01:04:35.160] It's a good thing you didn't pay attention to him. [01:04:35.160 --> 01:04:36.160] Yeah. [01:04:36.160 --> 01:04:43.720] So, this is debt collector against your mortgage holder. [01:04:43.720 --> 01:04:52.800] The best time to go after them is when you're current, and then they have no claim against [01:04:52.800 --> 01:04:53.800] you. [01:04:53.800 --> 01:04:59.280] Okay, so tell us where you're at in that process. [01:04:59.280 --> 01:05:06.280] I had just left it at the court summons for the $1,000 just because I didn't know what [01:05:06.280 --> 01:05:07.280] I was going to say in court. [01:05:07.280 --> 01:05:12.520] I thought he was going to coach me on that, and he didn't really give me an answer. [01:05:12.520 --> 01:05:16.200] He was just like, oh, what's working for my other people is you stop making your mortgage [01:05:16.200 --> 01:05:19.720] payment and make them pursue you in court, because it's easier to defend yourself than [01:05:19.720 --> 01:05:24.680] being the other party. [01:05:24.680 --> 01:05:29.400] No, you always want to be the plaintiff. [01:05:29.400 --> 01:05:30.400] Okay. [01:05:30.400 --> 01:05:37.160] So, you go after them, don't let them come after you. [01:05:37.160 --> 01:05:41.920] So, I guess I just didn't really know where to take it from here. [01:05:41.920 --> 01:05:49.840] I'm done sulking and licking my wounds over it, but I still would like to take action. [01:05:49.840 --> 01:05:54.880] Send this to me in an email so I can look it over and study it, and I can give you a [01:05:54.880 --> 01:05:57.280] better response to it. [01:05:57.280 --> 01:05:58.280] Okay. [01:05:58.280 --> 01:05:59.280] Absolutely. [01:05:59.280 --> 01:06:02.520] Well, thank you so much for your time and having me on. [01:06:02.520 --> 01:06:03.520] I appreciate it. [01:06:03.520 --> 01:06:04.520] Okay. [01:06:04.520 --> 01:06:05.520] Thanks for calling. [01:06:05.520 --> 01:06:06.520] All right. [01:06:06.520 --> 01:06:10.880] Well, next, we're going to go to... Yeah, let's go to Marty Shea. [01:06:10.880 --> 01:06:13.320] You called me earlier today. [01:06:13.320 --> 01:06:14.320] Yes. [01:06:14.320 --> 01:06:17.320] You're on, Olivier. [01:06:17.320 --> 01:06:18.320] Hello? [01:06:18.320 --> 01:06:19.320] Good evening. [01:06:19.320 --> 01:06:20.320] Good evening, Olivier. [01:06:20.320 --> 01:06:21.320] Yes, sir. [01:06:21.320 --> 01:06:22.320] I hear you're trained, too. [01:06:22.320 --> 01:06:23.320] Yeah. [01:06:23.320 --> 01:06:24.320] Okay. [01:06:24.320 --> 01:06:25.320] All right. [01:06:25.320 --> 01:06:26.320] I think the train passed now. [01:06:26.320 --> 01:06:27.320] Can you hear me now? [01:06:27.320 --> 01:06:41.320] Yes. [01:06:41.320 --> 01:06:42.320] Okay. [01:06:42.320 --> 01:06:43.320] How y'all doing? [01:06:43.320 --> 01:06:44.320] Doing well. [01:06:44.320 --> 01:06:45.320] My scenario. [01:06:45.320 --> 01:06:46.320] Okay. [01:06:46.320 --> 01:06:55.400] I'm going to give you a... I want to talk about the little update on the case where [01:06:55.400 --> 01:07:03.600] I sued the two judges, the prosecutor, the state attorney general, and the county on [01:07:03.600 --> 01:07:10.280] the need to declare a Tori suit, the Decretory Act. [01:07:10.280 --> 01:07:18.280] Now what I've done was I got... They dismissed the case saying that I failed to state a claim [01:07:18.280 --> 01:07:24.080] that a cause of action. [01:07:24.080 --> 01:07:27.760] What happened was that, thank you, the attorney... [01:07:27.760 --> 01:07:28.760] You're welcome. [01:07:28.760 --> 01:07:34.320] The judge never ruled on my indigency. [01:07:34.320 --> 01:07:37.320] I filed it. [01:07:37.320 --> 01:07:41.600] They tried not to rule on my indigency. [01:07:41.600 --> 01:07:44.600] Yeah, but they're required to. [01:07:44.600 --> 01:07:47.760] They're required to, yeah. [01:07:47.760 --> 01:07:55.480] They're required to... What they did was because the application is funny. [01:07:55.480 --> 01:08:04.520] The application makes you put your income statements and all of that, and then the clerk [01:08:04.520 --> 01:08:08.600] is supposed to assess it to see if you're indigent or not. [01:08:08.600 --> 01:08:12.680] On my application, there's no income, there's nothing, so there's zero, zero, zero, there's [01:08:12.680 --> 01:08:17.280] nothing in the bank account, there's no... Everything's zero, right? [01:08:17.280 --> 01:08:21.840] The clerk says, well, they can't assess if I'm indigent. [01:08:21.840 --> 01:08:22.840] What? [01:08:22.840 --> 01:08:23.840] What? [01:08:23.840 --> 01:08:24.840] Wait a minute. [01:08:24.840 --> 01:08:32.360] You can put me in jail as many times as you want and assess that I'm indigent within, [01:08:32.360 --> 01:08:36.240] as you're saying, 10 minutes. [01:08:36.240 --> 01:08:42.440] But now that I'm filing suits in the same circuit and I'm in the same court, you can [01:08:42.440 --> 01:08:46.480] look over in my other files and see I've been indigent, and you can't determine if I'm indigent [01:08:46.480 --> 01:08:50.280] for a civil suit? [01:08:50.280 --> 01:08:55.040] Those zeros need to be a different size or something, so that they can figure that out. [01:08:55.040 --> 01:08:58.640] I mean, what don't you understand about energy? [01:08:58.640 --> 01:08:59.640] I don't have enough. [01:08:59.640 --> 01:09:00.640] There's nothing there. [01:09:00.640 --> 01:09:01.640] There's nothing coming in. [01:09:01.640 --> 01:09:10.240] I mean, I can't use my automobile to go serve its customers, so you're blocking my right [01:09:10.240 --> 01:09:16.400] to livelihood, and then now you're telling me that, oh, you can't assess if I'm indigent. [01:09:16.400 --> 01:09:24.400] Because there's no numbers to calculate, so they have to send it to the judge. [01:09:24.400 --> 01:09:25.400] I think that's a first. [01:09:25.400 --> 01:09:33.120] That doesn't make no sense at all, so that whole process that they had, I guess they [01:09:33.120 --> 01:09:40.360] use that as a hurdle to try to block me from processing the case. [01:09:40.360 --> 01:09:45.840] Now you're going to understand this has been almost four and a half months, so I guess [01:09:45.840 --> 01:09:53.920] they're thinking that, hey, we got over on this guy, because when you do a case, four [01:09:53.920 --> 01:09:56.480] and a half months, the appeal is already up. [01:09:56.480 --> 01:10:01.280] The appeal, they already made their decision and everything, so I guess they're thinking [01:10:01.280 --> 01:10:03.160] that the case is dead or whatever. [01:10:03.160 --> 01:10:14.840] But what happened was, I already filed an appeal, so the appeal process started going [01:10:14.840 --> 01:10:20.800] without the proper paperwork in order. [01:10:20.800 --> 01:10:23.240] So at this whole time, I'm trying to contact them. [01:10:23.240 --> 01:10:27.720] When I finally got talked to the clerk, the clerk says, well, they have this little loophole [01:10:27.720 --> 01:10:28.720] here. [01:10:28.720 --> 01:10:31.240] It says that you didn't sign the bottom of that form. [01:10:31.240 --> 01:10:38.400] So I signed the bottom of the form, resubmitted, and they still dragged their feet. [01:10:38.400 --> 01:10:45.280] So what I did was I called the office and I said, hey, you got to call the clerks for [01:10:45.280 --> 01:10:46.280] the judges. [01:10:46.280 --> 01:10:47.280] I called her. [01:10:47.280 --> 01:10:48.280] I said, hey, what's going on? [01:10:48.280 --> 01:10:49.280] Where's Monica? [01:10:49.280 --> 01:10:50.280] I need to speak to her. [01:10:50.280 --> 01:10:51.280] Oh, she's out. [01:10:51.280 --> 01:10:52.280] I'm like, Monica's always out. [01:10:52.280 --> 01:10:53.280] Every time I call you, she's out. [01:10:53.280 --> 01:10:54.280] What's the problem? [01:10:54.280 --> 01:10:55.280] Is that why my paperwork can't get processed? [01:10:55.280 --> 01:10:56.280] I'm like, what's the issue? [01:10:56.280 --> 01:10:57.280] I'm like, well, here's the case number. [01:10:57.280 --> 01:11:05.280] I need you to look up this document and tell me, have they ruled on my energy or not? [01:11:05.280 --> 01:11:09.840] And then she's like, no, I still see it here, I said, okay, give me the date that it was [01:11:09.840 --> 01:11:10.840] resubmitted. [01:11:10.840 --> 01:11:14.120] And then she gave me the date that it was resubmitted. [01:11:14.120 --> 01:11:16.200] I said, now, tell me how long has that been? [01:11:16.200 --> 01:11:22.800] She said, oh, that's almost four months, I said, your office is trash. [01:11:22.800 --> 01:11:25.440] I said, this is trash, four months. [01:11:25.440 --> 01:11:32.320] I said, if my document is not ruled upon negative, positive, I don't care what they put on it. [01:11:32.320 --> 01:11:36.600] If it's not ruled upon, I'm going to sue the judge and the assistant. [01:11:36.600 --> 01:11:42.120] I'm going to sue them in the federal court and we're going to have a conversation on [01:11:42.120 --> 01:11:48.320] why they think they are allowed to take four months to reply to an indigency. [01:11:48.320 --> 01:11:51.000] Yeah, it's covered with zeros. [01:11:51.000 --> 01:11:53.800] Covered with zeros. [01:11:53.800 --> 01:11:59.240] It's not even like you've got to investigate all these guys' stocks and bonds and you've [01:11:59.240 --> 01:12:04.280] got to check out these properties and see if the valuations are correct. [01:12:04.280 --> 01:12:05.280] It's zeros, people. [01:12:05.280 --> 01:12:06.280] It's zeros. [01:12:06.280 --> 01:12:13.640] And then if you go look at every case that I have in your system, indigent, indigent, [01:12:13.640 --> 01:12:18.600] indigent, every time you arrested me, indigent, when did it change? [01:12:18.600 --> 01:12:21.040] When did I have time to change that? [01:12:21.040 --> 01:12:28.400] Well, in Texas, there's a rule in the civil rules that if you're already indigent, then [01:12:28.400 --> 01:12:30.440] you go ahead and you go to the appeals court. [01:12:30.440 --> 01:12:31.440] You do whatever you want. [01:12:31.440 --> 01:12:36.240] You start up a new thing over there and it just continues on as indigent. [01:12:36.240 --> 01:12:37.240] Right. [01:12:37.240 --> 01:12:42.400] Now, if somebody wants to oppose that, let's say opposing counsel wants to pop in there [01:12:42.400 --> 01:12:47.240] and say, hey, I have reason to believe that this guy owns 11 yachts. [01:12:47.240 --> 01:12:48.240] Well, okay. [01:12:48.240 --> 01:12:49.880] Well, then let's talk about that. [01:12:49.880 --> 01:12:55.280] But if nobody pipes up to say anything, it just keeps on as indigent. [01:12:55.280 --> 01:13:00.120] Well, that's how it's supposed to be. [01:13:00.120 --> 01:13:05.040] So now I sent that message, she's like, oh, well, she's going to be back on the 7th. [01:13:05.040 --> 01:13:06.040] I'm like, miss, I ain't got no problem. [01:13:06.040 --> 01:13:09.040] I ain't got nothing to do with that. [01:13:09.040 --> 01:13:13.240] Make sure my documents, make sure that I've clearly given you a warning. [01:13:13.240 --> 01:13:18.840] So when the judge is sitting in federal court, don't say I didn't give you a warning. [01:13:18.840 --> 01:13:22.720] So now we hung up the phone with her. [01:13:22.720 --> 01:13:28.000] Two days later, mail come in, two days later, some mail come in. [01:13:28.000 --> 01:13:32.760] I look at the mail, it's two separate pieces of mail from the appeals court. [01:13:32.760 --> 01:13:34.360] So I'm thinking it's my criminal suit. [01:13:34.360 --> 01:13:35.360] Okay. [01:13:35.360 --> 01:13:36.360] I'm like, okay. [01:13:36.360 --> 01:13:37.360] I'll get inside and see if they respond. [01:13:37.360 --> 01:13:41.440] I thought it was just a docket telling me that they docketed my information, my brief. [01:13:41.440 --> 01:13:48.480] But when I looked at it, it was one request stating that they don't have my, they don't [01:13:48.480 --> 01:13:55.920] have the order dismissing the case, saying that I have a certain amount of days to submit [01:13:55.920 --> 01:14:00.880] them, to submit to them the order that is in the lower court's records. [01:14:00.880 --> 01:14:10.600] Then it says, the other, the other paper said that my explanation about my indigency, which [01:14:10.600 --> 01:14:17.280] they named it a different name, whatever official name that they have in their circuit, it said [01:14:17.280 --> 01:14:19.960] that this document is missing. [01:14:19.960 --> 01:14:28.520] And in order for me to continue process this case without any fees, this document needed [01:14:28.520 --> 01:14:34.400] to be submitted from the lower court, which is the indigency document, but they called [01:14:34.400 --> 01:14:35.400] it something else. [01:14:35.400 --> 01:14:37.280] So I said, oh, okay. [01:14:37.280 --> 01:14:43.000] But the way that they wrote, they worded it, to me it signified that, hey, this is an important [01:14:43.000 --> 01:14:48.120] document and people in the know, when you say this language, they know exactly what [01:14:48.120 --> 01:14:49.120] you mean. [01:14:49.120 --> 01:14:50.120] So I said, you know what? [01:14:50.120 --> 01:14:57.040] I'm going to send her, I'm going to send Monica an email stating that the appeals court [01:14:57.040 --> 01:15:04.720] is waiting for this document, so-and-so document on this case to move, to proceed forward. [01:15:04.720 --> 01:15:12.400] So now I'm putting you on notice that I am waiting on this document from you to produce [01:15:12.400 --> 01:15:19.880] it to the appeal court, and I put the date that they requested it. [01:15:19.880 --> 01:15:25.520] So I set that up because I figured if they kept on going, I'll come back and sue them [01:15:25.520 --> 01:15:31.240] later and just muck it up real bad because I got dates and everything. [01:15:31.240 --> 01:15:36.240] So I put that in the email. [01:15:36.240 --> 01:15:41.240] So today, this morning, I went so I could go get the other document that I needed, which [01:15:41.240 --> 01:15:42.560] is the order. [01:15:42.560 --> 01:15:43.560] So I went up to the clerk. [01:15:43.560 --> 01:15:47.240] I asked the clerk for the order in that case, that means it's a specific state appeals [01:15:47.240 --> 01:15:48.240] court. [01:15:48.240 --> 01:15:49.240] He gave me the order. [01:15:49.240 --> 01:15:52.240] Then, you know, I just asked for a reference. [01:15:52.240 --> 01:15:55.240] I'm like, hey, what has happened with my indigency? [01:15:55.240 --> 01:15:59.240] I filed an indigency, and it hasn't been ruled on. [01:15:59.240 --> 01:16:00.240] I said, indigency? [01:16:00.240 --> 01:16:01.240] Okay. [01:16:01.240 --> 01:16:04.240] And then the next thing I hear, I hear something frantic. [01:16:04.240 --> 01:16:05.240] I'm like, what's that? [01:16:05.240 --> 01:16:06.240] He said, your indigency order. [01:16:06.240 --> 01:16:07.240] I said, what? [01:16:07.240 --> 01:16:08.240] They ruled on my order? [01:16:08.240 --> 01:16:09.240] He said, yeah. [01:16:09.240 --> 01:16:12.240] They ruled, they ruled that you were indigent. [01:16:12.240 --> 01:16:13.240] Surprise, surprise. [01:16:13.240 --> 01:16:14.240] He said everything's free. [01:16:14.240 --> 01:16:33.240] And then when I was going through this, Randy, I always hear Randy talk about filing a injunction [01:16:33.240 --> 01:16:39.240] in the Supreme Court, appeals court, and the law court. [01:16:39.240 --> 01:16:43.240] I was thinking about that the whole time, but I was like, let me just give it away and [01:16:43.240 --> 01:16:46.240] throw these politics at them and see what happens. [01:16:46.240 --> 01:16:49.240] And man, they pulled it. [01:16:49.240 --> 01:16:50.240] Wow. [01:16:50.240 --> 01:16:53.240] Well, I'm looking forward to hearing the rest of that. [01:16:53.240 --> 01:16:59.240] After we get back from our sponsors, we will be right back. [01:16:59.240 --> 01:17:05.240] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [01:17:05.240 --> 01:17:06.240] Word? [01:17:06.240 --> 01:17:11.240] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [01:17:11.240 --> 01:17:17.240] Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.240 --> 01:17:22.240] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [01:17:22.240 --> 01:17:24.240] dividing the word of truth. [01:17:24.240 --> 01:17:28.240] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse [01:17:28.240 --> 01:17:31.240] by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:31.240 --> 01:17:36.240] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:17:36.240 --> 01:17:38.240] and Christian character development. 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[01:18:40.240 --> 01:18:46.240] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:18:46.240 --> 01:18:47.240] quality radio. [01:18:47.240 --> 01:18:52.240] As you realize the benefits of Jungevity, you may want to join us. [01:18:52.240 --> 01:18:57.240] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [01:18:57.240 --> 01:18:59.240] increase your income. [01:18:59.240 --> 01:19:22.240] Order now. [01:19:29.240 --> 01:19:42.240] All right, we are back. [01:19:42.240 --> 01:19:45.240] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:19:45.240 --> 01:19:46.240] I'm Brett Fountain. [01:19:46.240 --> 01:19:49.240] And we are talking right now with Olivier. [01:19:49.240 --> 01:19:50.240] Did you see? [01:19:50.240 --> 01:19:54.240] It says Tennessee, but I think you're in Florida, right? [01:19:54.240 --> 01:19:56.240] Yes, I'm in Florida. [01:19:56.240 --> 01:19:57.240] All right. [01:19:57.240 --> 01:19:58.240] Yes, sir. [01:19:58.240 --> 01:20:03.240] You already tore up Tennessee, scooted on down southeast a little bit. [01:20:03.240 --> 01:20:07.240] All right. [01:20:07.240 --> 01:20:14.240] So you were telling us that you had to go through all that. [01:20:14.240 --> 01:20:18.240] Finally, they decided, hey, he's into Junge. [01:20:18.240 --> 01:20:21.240] Right. [01:20:21.240 --> 01:20:23.240] So now what are they going to do? [01:20:23.240 --> 01:20:30.240] I'm not sure if it was the, you know, calling the office and telling them that they're trash, [01:20:30.240 --> 01:20:38.240] or if it was the email stating that the Supreme, that the appellate court is waiting on this [01:20:38.240 --> 01:20:39.240] occupant. [01:20:39.240 --> 01:20:40.240] I don't know. [01:20:40.240 --> 01:20:41.240] And, you know. [01:20:41.240 --> 01:20:50.240] It could have had something to do with that bit about the judge having to sit there and [01:20:50.240 --> 01:20:51.240] defend himself. [01:20:51.240 --> 01:20:54.240] That could have had something to do with it too. [01:20:54.240 --> 01:20:55.240] Right. [01:20:55.240 --> 01:20:56.240] Exactly. [01:20:56.240 --> 01:20:59.240] So I did several things at the time. [01:20:59.240 --> 01:21:05.240] I can't really gauge which one it was, but one of those really, and then plus, you know, [01:21:05.240 --> 01:21:10.240] I'm suing other judges and the state attorney on a declaratory suit. [01:21:10.240 --> 01:21:13.240] So you know I'm not playing. [01:21:13.240 --> 01:21:20.240] I'm telling you, like, hey, I just drugged them through the mug, and it's on your table. [01:21:20.240 --> 01:21:23.240] So you want your name added on a federal suit? [01:21:23.240 --> 01:21:24.240] You do your job. [01:21:24.240 --> 01:21:25.240] Yep. [01:21:25.240 --> 01:21:28.240] And all your dirty laundry. [01:21:28.240 --> 01:21:40.240] So now after, so I talked to them, and we got that, but the thing is is that we're supposed [01:21:40.240 --> 01:21:46.240] to be already done, so I think that they thought that they snuffed it underneath the book, [01:21:46.240 --> 01:21:53.240] because I called one of the city attorneys, that's on the case, and I was asking for his [01:21:53.240 --> 01:22:01.240] email, because the court wanted me to resubmit to them the notice of appeal, because they [01:22:01.240 --> 01:22:03.240] don't see it in the record properly. [01:22:03.240 --> 01:22:05.240] So they wanted to give me the opportunity. [01:22:05.240 --> 01:22:07.240] So I called him, and I'm like, yeah, I need those appeals. [01:22:07.240 --> 01:22:11.240] I said, do you want one, or do you want six? [01:22:11.240 --> 01:22:13.240] Because we got six defendants. [01:22:13.240 --> 01:22:16.240] Oh, but Mr. Livia, I thought they gave you an attorney. [01:22:16.240 --> 01:22:19.240] I'm like, what? [01:22:19.240 --> 01:22:21.240] They gave me an attorney? [01:22:21.240 --> 01:22:23.240] I'm like, what are you talking about? [01:22:23.240 --> 01:22:25.240] I'm like, no, they didn't give me an attorney. [01:22:25.240 --> 01:22:27.240] What are you talking about? [01:22:27.240 --> 01:22:37.240] Oh, I'm like, they gave me an attorney on the criminal case that I have, but he's going [01:22:37.240 --> 01:22:43.240] to get fired by the time we get the trial. [01:22:43.240 --> 01:22:46.240] I said, Livia, I said, no, this is a civil case. [01:22:46.240 --> 01:22:51.240] The appeals court told me that I had to resubmit all the applications to see if I'm asking [01:22:51.240 --> 01:22:54.240] if you need one, or do you need six? [01:22:54.240 --> 01:22:58.240] They're like, oh, all right, I'll just take one. [01:22:58.240 --> 01:22:59.240] I said, OK. [01:22:59.240 --> 01:23:05.240] He said, our email is on the spike. [01:23:05.240 --> 01:23:07.240] I said, well, I can't. [01:23:07.240 --> 01:23:08.240] I said, I get on the spike. [01:23:08.240 --> 01:23:12.240] I could get to my other cases, but for some reason, I can't pull up this case. [01:23:12.240 --> 01:23:14.240] There's always a problem. [01:23:14.240 --> 01:23:15.240] So I just need your email. [01:23:15.240 --> 01:23:17.240] So he gave me the email. [01:23:17.240 --> 01:23:18.240] And then I'm like, OK. [01:23:18.240 --> 01:23:19.240] I said, you know what? [01:23:19.240 --> 01:23:21.240] I'm going to figure out that e-filing. [01:23:21.240 --> 01:23:26.240] I said, but is the e-filing the same in the federal court? [01:23:26.240 --> 01:23:29.240] Is this going to be the same for the federal circuit? [01:23:29.240 --> 01:23:32.240] You should have heard how depressed he got. [01:23:32.240 --> 01:23:35.240] Oh, no, Mr. Olivier. [01:23:35.240 --> 01:23:36.240] Oh, no, it's not. [01:23:36.240 --> 01:23:38.240] It's different. [01:23:38.240 --> 01:23:40.240] Yeah, it's different. [01:23:40.240 --> 01:23:41.240] OK, great, great. [01:23:41.240 --> 01:23:46.240] So I'm going to go ahead and research on that so I can be prepared for that. [01:23:46.240 --> 01:23:48.240] And he was like, oh. [01:23:48.240 --> 01:23:50.240] Oh, no. [01:23:50.240 --> 01:23:53.240] He was so depressed. [01:23:53.240 --> 01:23:55.240] He was so depressed. [01:23:55.240 --> 01:24:05.240] So now he's going to notice that, you know, I'm serious and the federal is coming. [01:24:05.240 --> 01:24:06.240] I already made it. [01:24:06.240 --> 01:24:10.240] And he thought that this case was gone because, you know what I'm saying? [01:24:10.240 --> 01:24:14.240] There hasn't been no response to nothing, you know, the way that they normally have it. [01:24:14.240 --> 01:24:15.240] So he thought the case was gone. [01:24:15.240 --> 01:24:18.240] Now I called four months after the fact. [01:24:18.240 --> 01:24:21.240] And like, yeah, I'm going to see you in a couple of weeks in court. [01:24:21.240 --> 01:24:23.240] He was like, oh, my God. [01:24:23.240 --> 01:24:26.240] So he's stressed out right now. [01:24:26.240 --> 01:24:33.240] But there's a mayor here in Palm Bay that I called before I wrote the lawsuit. [01:24:33.240 --> 01:24:36.240] I called everybody and I put them on notice. [01:24:36.240 --> 01:24:39.240] Call me back or it's going to be trouble. [01:24:39.240 --> 01:24:41.240] There was one man who called me back. [01:24:41.240 --> 01:24:43.240] He called me back. [01:24:43.240 --> 01:24:45.240] And I was talking to the mayor. [01:24:45.240 --> 01:24:46.240] I said, you know what? [01:24:46.240 --> 01:24:47.240] I really appreciate that. [01:24:47.240 --> 01:24:55.240] Now I know that there's at least one person willing to reach out and communicate back to the community. [01:24:55.240 --> 01:24:56.240] I said, you know what? [01:24:56.240 --> 01:24:57.240] Thank you for calling. [01:24:57.240 --> 01:25:02.240] And because you called me, I'm going to leave your name off this lawsuit. [01:25:02.240 --> 01:25:13.240] But I'm going to go ahead and tell you what it is about right now so you can have a very clear insight on the issues that are at hand. [01:25:13.240 --> 01:25:22.240] And because you won't be receiving one, you know, so you can understand why your colleagues are getting sued. [01:25:22.240 --> 01:25:24.240] So we sat there. [01:25:24.240 --> 01:25:26.240] I talked to him for 30 minutes. [01:25:26.240 --> 01:25:27.240] I mean, I'm surprised. [01:25:27.240 --> 01:25:29.240] I mean, I would have hung up. [01:25:29.240 --> 01:25:31.240] I would have hung up. [01:25:31.240 --> 01:25:32.240] But he stood there. [01:25:32.240 --> 01:25:33.240] He took it. [01:25:33.240 --> 01:25:37.240] And then now I'm wondering, like, what is he thinking? [01:25:37.240 --> 01:25:40.240] Because I know their colleagues, they know. [01:25:40.240 --> 01:25:43.240] He's talking about it because I called and warned him. [01:25:43.240 --> 01:25:44.240] And I called and warned him. [01:25:44.240 --> 01:25:45.240] He called me. [01:25:45.240 --> 01:25:46.240] He talked. [01:25:46.240 --> 01:25:48.240] I told him I'm going to bury him. [01:25:48.240 --> 01:25:49.240] And now I'm doing it. [01:25:49.240 --> 01:25:55.240] And now he's sitting there like, man, my name was going to be on the list. [01:25:55.240 --> 01:25:58.240] But I made that phone call. [01:25:58.240 --> 01:25:59.240] You know what I'm saying? [01:25:59.240 --> 01:26:01.240] So I can understand. [01:26:01.240 --> 01:26:04.240] I wanted the conversation that he's having with his colleagues. [01:26:04.240 --> 01:26:05.240] He's like, yo, this is Mr. Libya. [01:26:05.240 --> 01:26:06.240] He called me advance. [01:26:06.240 --> 01:26:07.240] I should have called him. [01:26:07.240 --> 01:26:09.240] I should have called him back. [01:26:09.240 --> 01:26:14.240] Your name wouldn't have been on there. [01:26:14.240 --> 01:26:15.240] Wow. [01:26:15.240 --> 01:26:17.240] I'm just wondering, what is he thinking right now? [01:26:17.240 --> 01:26:18.240] Like, this politics? [01:26:18.240 --> 01:26:21.240] Oh, he's thinking he dodged a bullet. [01:26:21.240 --> 01:26:27.240] He's really thankful that he called your phone number because he dodged a bullet. [01:26:27.240 --> 01:26:29.240] You know? [01:26:29.240 --> 01:26:30.240] I mean, I got everybody. [01:26:30.240 --> 01:26:34.240] The county, everybody is sitting in the pot together. [01:26:34.240 --> 01:26:36.240] And he's left out. [01:26:36.240 --> 01:26:40.240] I bet you they mad. [01:26:40.240 --> 01:26:42.240] They're so mad. [01:26:42.240 --> 01:26:45.240] I wonder if any of the rest of them are getting ideas about calling you now. [01:26:45.240 --> 01:26:46.240] No. [01:26:46.240 --> 01:26:49.240] Oh, hey, I just now noticed that you called me. [01:26:49.240 --> 01:26:53.240] What did you want to talk about? [01:26:53.240 --> 01:26:57.240] I'll see you in turn. [01:26:57.240 --> 01:26:59.240] Thanks, man. [01:26:59.240 --> 01:27:03.240] That's why I just want to put you on notice on what I'm doing with the courts right now [01:27:03.240 --> 01:27:04.240] and how things are working out. [01:27:04.240 --> 01:27:08.240] So there's a lot of ways you can put pressure on them, you know what I'm saying, [01:27:08.240 --> 01:27:10.240] to get what you want done. [01:27:10.240 --> 01:27:11.240] Yeah, man. [01:27:11.240 --> 01:27:12.240] That's really cool. [01:27:12.240 --> 01:27:14.240] Always glad to hear from you. [01:27:14.240 --> 01:27:21.240] It's always so encouraging to hear the way that you're taking them to task. [01:27:21.240 --> 01:27:22.240] Thanks for sharing, man. [01:27:22.240 --> 01:27:25.240] Thanks for calling and letting us know. [01:27:25.240 --> 01:27:26.240] Thanks. [01:27:26.240 --> 01:27:29.240] I'm really excited because the time has passed. [01:27:29.240 --> 01:27:31.240] And it's like there's a chance. [01:27:31.240 --> 01:27:35.240] I didn't even pay attention to it because I was setting them up in other ways, [01:27:35.240 --> 01:27:40.240] but then not a court addresses me like, hey, we want to talk to you about this. [01:27:40.240 --> 01:27:41.240] Turn this in. [01:27:41.240 --> 01:27:43.240] It's like four months late. [01:27:43.240 --> 01:27:45.240] I'm like, I love Florida. [01:27:45.240 --> 01:27:48.240] Take care. [01:27:48.240 --> 01:27:57.240] It's like giving them an offer again, you know, like the offer went away on my back. [01:27:57.240 --> 01:28:00.240] Absolutely. [01:28:00.240 --> 01:28:01.240] Thanks. [01:28:01.240 --> 01:28:05.240] I'm going to let you get on there. [01:28:05.240 --> 01:28:06.240] Thank you. [01:28:06.240 --> 01:28:07.240] All right, man. [01:28:07.240 --> 01:28:08.240] Have a good night. [01:28:08.240 --> 01:28:09.240] Yes, sir. [01:28:09.240 --> 01:28:10.240] Okay. [01:28:10.240 --> 01:28:13.240] And next we're going to go to Jack in Texas. [01:28:13.240 --> 01:28:17.240] We've got about a minute and a half before the next sponsor break. [01:28:17.240 --> 01:28:20.240] Jack, why don't you tell us, get started anyway. [01:28:20.240 --> 01:28:24.240] Tell us what's on your mind. [01:28:24.240 --> 01:28:25.240] All right. [01:28:25.240 --> 01:28:29.240] Well, this is about the two traffic tickets, expired license, expired sticker. [01:28:29.240 --> 01:28:30.240] Okay. [01:28:30.240 --> 01:28:31.240] Okay. [01:28:31.240 --> 01:28:44.240] So I went to the first court date and everybody in there, they wanted a plea, guilty or not [01:28:44.240 --> 01:28:45.240] guilty. [01:28:45.240 --> 01:28:46.240] Me. [01:28:46.240 --> 01:28:49.240] They didn't ask me. [01:28:49.240 --> 01:28:58.240] He held up a big envelope of all the paperwork I had turned in that I got from Randy. [01:28:58.240 --> 01:29:04.240] And he said, well, we'll get to you at another date. [01:29:04.240 --> 01:29:09.240] So we'll just schedule you, you know, reschedule you. [01:29:09.240 --> 01:29:11.240] Another date? [01:29:11.240 --> 01:29:12.240] Yeah. [01:29:12.240 --> 01:29:15.240] So why did they drag you into the court that day? [01:29:15.240 --> 01:29:18.240] What did they expect to do? [01:29:18.240 --> 01:29:19.240] I have no idea. [01:29:19.240 --> 01:29:20.240] They wanted... [01:29:20.240 --> 01:29:22.240] Simply to tell you that they wanted you to come back? [01:29:22.240 --> 01:29:23.240] I guess so. [01:29:23.240 --> 01:29:27.240] They wanted a guilty or not guilty, but they didn't ask me. [01:29:27.240 --> 01:29:28.240] They asked everybody else. [01:29:28.240 --> 01:29:32.240] Everybody else either had to say, plead guilty or not guilty. [01:29:32.240 --> 01:29:35.240] They didn't ask for a plea from me. [01:29:35.240 --> 01:29:37.240] So I don't know why I was in there. [01:29:37.240 --> 01:29:43.240] But I do have a serious obstacle and we can get to it after the break. [01:29:43.240 --> 01:29:44.240] All right. [01:29:44.240 --> 01:29:45.240] That sounds good. [01:29:45.240 --> 01:29:46.240] All right. [01:29:46.240 --> 01:29:53.240] Well, our call in number is 512-646-1984. [01:29:53.240 --> 01:29:56.240] 512-646-1984. [01:29:56.240 --> 01:29:59.240] And we'll go to our sponsors and be right back. [01:29:59.240 --> 01:30:06.240] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, [01:30:06.240 --> 01:30:09.240] the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.240 --> 01:30:12.240] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.240 --> 01:30:14.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:14.240 --> 01:30:16.240] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.240 --> 01:30:18.240] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.240 --> 01:30:22.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.240 --> 01:30:27.240] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.240 --> 01:30:28.240] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.240 --> 01:30:32.240] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.240 --> 01:30:35.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.240 --> 01:30:38.240] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:38.240 --> 01:30:42.240] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.240 --> 01:30:45.240] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:45.240 --> 01:30:49.240] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:49.240 --> 01:30:52.240] So you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, [01:30:52.240 --> 01:30:56.240] but think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.240 --> 01:31:00.240] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.240 --> 01:31:04.240] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.240 --> 01:31:07.240] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people [01:31:07.240 --> 01:31:10.240] have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.240 --> 01:31:13.240] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas [01:31:13.240 --> 01:31:16.240] and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.240 --> 01:31:18.240] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.240 --> 01:31:21.240] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.240 --> 01:31:24.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, [01:31:24.240 --> 01:31:31.240] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.240 --> 01:31:36.240] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.240 --> 01:31:38.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.240 --> 01:31:43.240] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.240 --> 01:31:46.240] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.240 --> 01:31:49.240] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.240 --> 01:31:50.240] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.240 --> 01:31:51.240] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.240 --> 01:31:53.240] I'm a New York City correction office. [01:31:53.240 --> 01:31:54.240] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.240 --> 01:31:55.240] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.240 --> 01:31:58.240] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.240 --> 01:32:02.240] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.240 --> 01:32:05.240] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.240 --> 01:32:08.240] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.240 --> 01:32:10.240] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.240 --> 01:32:13.240] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.240 --> 01:32:16.240] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.240 --> 01:32:18.240] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.240 --> 01:32:20.240] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.240 --> 01:32:23.240] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn [01:32:23.240 --> 01:32:26.240] how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.240 --> 01:32:29.240] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:29.240 --> 01:32:32.240] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.240 --> 01:32:34.240] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:34.240 --> 01:32:36.240] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.240 --> 01:32:38.240] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:38.240 --> 01:32:41.240] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.240 --> 01:32:43.240] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.240 --> 01:32:45.240] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.240 --> 01:32:48.240] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.240 --> 01:32:51.240] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource materials. [01:32:51.240 --> 01:32:53.240] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:53.240 --> 01:32:55.240] from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.240 --> 01:33:01.240] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.240 --> 01:33:11.240] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:31.240 --> 01:33:38.240] Okay, we're back. [01:33:38.240 --> 01:33:40.240] The Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:40.240 --> 01:33:41.240] Randy Kelton. [01:33:41.240 --> 01:33:42.240] I'm Brett Fountain. [01:33:42.240 --> 01:33:47.240] This is Thursday, the 16th of June, 2022. [01:33:47.240 --> 01:33:50.240] And we're talking with Jack in Texas. [01:33:50.240 --> 01:33:53.240] Jack, you were telling us about those traffic tickets. [01:33:53.240 --> 01:33:55.240] Go right on ahead. [01:33:55.240 --> 01:34:04.240] Yeah, well, I've got a challenge about verifying all these documents. [01:34:04.240 --> 01:34:08.240] Because you're supposed to get it notarized, right? [01:34:08.240 --> 01:34:15.240] Which documents are you concerned about verifying? [01:34:15.240 --> 01:34:20.240] Well, the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [01:34:20.240 --> 01:34:22.240] Okay. [01:34:22.240 --> 01:34:27.240] Any time that you have something that you're bringing up some facts [01:34:27.240 --> 01:34:30.240] and you're swearing this is the truth, [01:34:30.240 --> 01:34:35.240] well, then that's when you need to have your signature in front of a notary. [01:34:35.240 --> 01:34:37.240] And it's actually a jurat. [01:34:37.240 --> 01:34:40.240] What you're doing there when you're swearing to the truth of something, [01:34:40.240 --> 01:34:47.240] it's, you know, the notary has something called verification or acknowledgement [01:34:47.240 --> 01:34:53.240] when all they do is they just check to see, either they look at your ID [01:34:53.240 --> 01:34:57.240] if they don't know you or they recognize you and they say, yep, that's him. [01:34:57.240 --> 01:35:02.240] And all they're doing is they're confirming that that signature at the bottom [01:35:02.240 --> 01:35:05.240] is from who it says it is. [01:35:05.240 --> 01:35:08.240] But they don't care what's in the document. [01:35:08.240 --> 01:35:14.240] And the jurat is acknowledgement plus. [01:35:14.240 --> 01:35:19.240] They're going to check your signature, but they're also, you're supposed to tell them [01:35:19.240 --> 01:35:24.240] that I swear or affirm this is the truth. [01:35:24.240 --> 01:35:30.240] And then when they sign or stamp their little seal of a notary public, [01:35:30.240 --> 01:35:37.240] it's on a jurat instead of just saying verification or acknowledgement. [01:35:37.240 --> 01:35:42.240] That's a little stronger. [01:35:42.240 --> 01:35:44.240] Anyway, yes, what's the concern about that? [01:35:44.240 --> 01:35:48.240] Are you having trouble finding the notary or what's the thing? [01:35:48.240 --> 01:35:52.240] No, not a notary. I don't have an ID. [01:35:52.240 --> 01:36:00.240] Oh, okay. Well, how about is there somebody that's a notary that knows you? [01:36:00.240 --> 01:36:07.240] Maybe one of your friends or extended family or somebody that's a notary? [01:36:07.240 --> 01:36:08.240] No, not really. [01:36:08.240 --> 01:36:13.240] I mean, I thought I had someone, but she is, I thought she was a notary, [01:36:13.240 --> 01:36:18.240] but when I called her, she said, no, she's not the actual notary. [01:36:18.240 --> 01:36:21.240] She uses a different notary. [01:36:21.240 --> 01:36:23.240] Okay. Well, how about your bank? [01:36:23.240 --> 01:36:26.240] Do you have a bank? [01:36:26.240 --> 01:36:29.240] In Dallas. [01:36:29.240 --> 01:36:30.240] Okay. [01:36:30.240 --> 01:36:32.240] But I don't live in Dallas. [01:36:32.240 --> 01:36:36.240] I'm down here at Bell County. [01:36:36.240 --> 01:36:38.240] Well, let's see. [01:36:38.240 --> 01:36:42.240] If you've got access to your bank account, [01:36:42.240 --> 01:36:49.240] then you may be able to get the bank personnel to notarize for you, [01:36:49.240 --> 01:36:53.240] because you can sign and they can look at your signature card, [01:36:53.240 --> 01:36:56.240] they can see that you're typing in your PIN, [01:36:56.240 --> 01:37:00.240] and they may be willing to do that for you. [01:37:00.240 --> 01:37:04.240] Otherwise, you're going to be looking at doing an unsworn declaration. [01:37:04.240 --> 01:37:05.240] You've got two other options. [01:37:05.240 --> 01:37:08.240] One is called an unsworn declaration. [01:37:08.240 --> 01:37:14.240] In Texas is the Civil Practices and Remedies Code 132, [01:37:14.240 --> 01:37:20.240] and it describes that anytime when you need to swear to something, [01:37:20.240 --> 01:37:25.240] you can substitute this unsworn declaration, [01:37:25.240 --> 01:37:30.240] and there are a couple of exceptions that you can't use it for, [01:37:30.240 --> 01:37:31.240] but this isn't one. [01:37:31.240 --> 01:37:34.240] You can use it for this. [01:37:34.240 --> 01:37:40.240] And you have to go look at this Civil Practices and Remedies Code, [01:37:40.240 --> 01:37:45.240] because there's a certain little chunk of text that you should use that it says, [01:37:45.240 --> 01:37:50.240] my name is, my date of birth, my address, [01:37:50.240 --> 01:37:51.240] and you have to put that on there, [01:37:51.240 --> 01:37:55.240] and that's going to become a part of the public record. [01:37:55.240 --> 01:37:59.240] So I don't like to do that because of that. [01:37:59.240 --> 01:38:01.240] I'm sorry. [01:38:01.240 --> 01:38:02.240] Go ahead. [01:38:02.240 --> 01:38:05.240] What was the code number you said? [01:38:05.240 --> 01:38:10.240] 132.001. [01:38:10.240 --> 01:38:12.240] It's a short little piece there. [01:38:12.240 --> 01:38:18.240] It's the Civil, Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code. [01:38:18.240 --> 01:38:20.240] There is a third option. [01:38:20.240 --> 01:38:25.240] You can go and get a couple of witnesses, at least two, two or three witnesses. [01:38:25.240 --> 01:38:28.240] By the mouth of two or three, everything should be established, right? [01:38:28.240 --> 01:38:32.240] So you go and get yourself a couple of people who know you, [01:38:32.240 --> 01:38:37.240] and they will sign that with their signature after yours, [01:38:37.240 --> 01:38:43.240] saying that they know you and you're the one that actually signed and swore to this. [01:38:43.240 --> 01:38:48.240] So then you've got your signature and their signatures after it, [01:38:48.240 --> 01:38:55.240] and having two or three will take the place of a notary in most situations. [01:38:55.240 --> 01:39:06.240] I have actually used, even when I'm supposed to swear to something and do that, [01:39:06.240 --> 01:39:09.240] I will stick my jurat in there. [01:39:09.240 --> 01:39:10.240] Not always. [01:39:10.240 --> 01:39:13.240] If it's a criminal complaint, I'll go ahead and just go find a notary. [01:39:13.240 --> 01:39:20.240] But sometimes on some things like, let's say, a motion to show cause, [01:39:20.240 --> 01:39:26.240] because I don't think the attorney has any business bringing this issue to the court. [01:39:26.240 --> 01:39:27.240] He's not allowed to. [01:39:27.240 --> 01:39:32.240] He doesn't have authority to pursue this case that he's trying to litigate. [01:39:32.240 --> 01:39:35.240] And we have in Texas a Rule 12 that says, [01:39:35.240 --> 01:39:40.240] all you have to do is swear that you don't believe he has the authority, [01:39:40.240 --> 01:39:42.240] and now the onus is on him. [01:39:42.240 --> 01:39:46.240] Well, I'd do that, but I'd do it with an electronic signature. [01:39:46.240 --> 01:39:50.240] And I send it in on a PDF, and they get all huffy about it, [01:39:50.240 --> 01:39:52.240] but they never complain about the signature. [01:39:52.240 --> 01:39:56.240] They never, you know, I would have an opportunity if they wanted to argue about it [01:39:56.240 --> 01:39:58.240] and say, well, this isn't valid. [01:39:58.240 --> 01:40:00.240] It's not even sworn. [01:40:00.240 --> 01:40:03.240] I would have an opportunity, if they would say that, [01:40:03.240 --> 01:40:06.240] to turn around and go to a notary public, and I could do that. [01:40:06.240 --> 01:40:09.240] But on some things, I just kind of take a chance, [01:40:09.240 --> 01:40:11.240] and I'll throw it in there and I'll say, you know what, [01:40:11.240 --> 01:40:14.240] if they want to argue about it, I've got time. [01:40:14.240 --> 01:40:16.240] I'll go and deal with it then. [01:40:16.240 --> 01:40:18.240] But I've got bigger fish to fry. [01:40:18.240 --> 01:40:23.240] So I'll go ahead and punch out a PDF, and I'll send it off. [01:40:23.240 --> 01:40:26.240] And they never have complained about that. [01:40:26.240 --> 01:40:30.240] I'll do the little slash S slash, and I'll put my name down there, [01:40:30.240 --> 01:40:32.240] just like all the lawyers do. [01:40:32.240 --> 01:40:38.240] It looks very normal to them, and nobody's ever had an issue with that. [01:40:38.240 --> 01:40:41.240] But I also realize that if they do, [01:40:41.240 --> 01:40:45.240] I'll be having a little extra loop of work to go and notarize something. [01:40:45.240 --> 01:40:48.240] I have to take into account that if there is any deadline, [01:40:48.240 --> 01:40:52.240] I might be running into a time constraint there as well. [01:40:52.240 --> 01:40:54.240] So just keep that in mind. [01:40:54.240 --> 01:40:57.240] How's that for four options there? [01:40:57.240 --> 01:40:58.240] That's pretty good. [01:40:58.240 --> 01:41:01.240] What was that Rule 12? [01:41:01.240 --> 01:41:04.240] Oh, in the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, [01:41:04.240 --> 01:41:11.240] Rule 12 says that if you don't believe that the attorney has authority [01:41:11.240 --> 01:41:18.240] to pursue the case he seems like he's trying to pursue, then you just say so. [01:41:18.240 --> 01:41:20.240] And boom, the onus is on him. [01:41:20.240 --> 01:41:22.240] It's kind of like a challenge to jurisdiction, [01:41:22.240 --> 01:41:27.240] except instead of for our court, it's for the opposing counsel. [01:41:27.240 --> 01:41:30.240] Oh, would that work on the judge? [01:41:30.240 --> 01:41:36.240] Because I haven't seen an opposing counsel yet, and there was only a judge there. [01:41:36.240 --> 01:41:39.240] Yeah, so if you don't believe that the judge has authority, [01:41:39.240 --> 01:41:42.240] then you're actually not believing that the court has authority. [01:41:42.240 --> 01:41:46.240] So that's a challenge to the jurisdiction of the court. [01:41:46.240 --> 01:41:48.240] Okay, I already did that. [01:41:48.240 --> 01:41:54.240] Okay, so now what is this? [01:41:54.240 --> 01:42:01.240] I didn't understand the part about the get a PDF and a flash, a flash, a flash. [01:42:01.240 --> 01:42:02.240] What is that? [01:42:02.240 --> 01:42:06.240] Oh, a flash, I mean a slash, like on your keyboard. [01:42:06.240 --> 01:42:11.240] It's over there with right underneath the question mark. [01:42:11.240 --> 01:42:13.240] Oh, a flash, a flash. [01:42:13.240 --> 01:42:15.240] Yes, all right. [01:42:15.240 --> 01:42:19.240] So a flash, you'll see this in all the attorneys, [01:42:19.240 --> 01:42:23.240] the way that they sign their documents on their documents that they'll write. [01:42:23.240 --> 01:42:29.240] We'll often have in there, slash, S, slash, like S for signature, [01:42:29.240 --> 01:42:32.240] and then it'll have their name, and then they'll have a line, [01:42:32.240 --> 01:42:35.240] and right under that they'll put their name again. [01:42:35.240 --> 01:42:45.240] Well, it's kind of a common way for them to do a really minimal, lame sort of electronic signature. [01:42:45.240 --> 01:42:48.240] I personally have a lot cooler electronic signature than they do, [01:42:48.240 --> 01:42:53.240] but this is a very simple way to do it. [01:42:53.240 --> 01:42:59.240] You're just typing in a word processor, you're typing, slash, S, slash, and type your name, [01:42:59.240 --> 01:43:05.240] and it looks just like what an attorney would typically write. [01:43:05.240 --> 01:43:12.240] So they may let you get away with that, or they may fuss about, hey, this wasn't even sworn, [01:43:12.240 --> 01:43:16.240] in which case you can say, oh, my goodness, I'm a pro se, [01:43:16.240 --> 01:43:23.240] and you can go over there and get your thing notarized or do the unsworn declaration. [01:43:23.240 --> 01:43:27.240] Now, there's a lady I was working with recently that she didn't mind a bit, [01:43:27.240 --> 01:43:32.240] if everybody knows her birth date and her address, and she didn't mind. [01:43:32.240 --> 01:43:34.240] You know, I'm a little more private than that. [01:43:34.240 --> 01:43:38.240] I don't want those things being out in the public record like that, [01:43:38.240 --> 01:43:44.240] so I would rather do some of these other options. [01:43:44.240 --> 01:43:48.240] Well, let's talk some more about that when we wrap it up on the other side. [01:43:48.240 --> 01:43:56.240] We're just about to go to our sponsors, and the calling number is 512-646-1984. [01:43:56.240 --> 01:44:25.240] Oh, actually, we've just got one segment. Be right back. [01:44:26.240 --> 01:44:28.240] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:44:28.240 --> 01:44:33.240] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.240 --> 01:44:38.240] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:38.240 --> 01:44:40.240] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:40.240 --> 01:44:44.240] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:44:44.240 --> 01:44:49.240] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:44:49.240 --> 01:44:57.240] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:44:57.240 --> 01:45:01.240] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:45:01.240 --> 01:45:04.240] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.240 --> 01:45:07.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.240 --> 01:45:12.240] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how [01:45:12.240 --> 01:45:15.240] in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.240 --> 01:45:19.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.240 --> 01:45:23.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.240 --> 01:45:28.240] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.240 --> 01:45:34.240] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.240 --> 01:45:39.240] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.240 --> 01:45:43.240] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.240 --> 01:45:49.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.240 --> 01:45:52.240] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.240 --> 01:46:01.240] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.240 --> 01:46:16.240] Hello. Oh, man, you're jailed. You got busted, man. Oh, man, I'm broke, dude. [01:46:16.240 --> 01:46:42.240] Okay, we are back. This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [01:46:42.240 --> 01:46:50.240] Hey, Ann. We are finishing up our show this evening. We're still talking with Jack in Texas. [01:46:50.240 --> 01:46:53.240] Jack, did you have anything else you wanted to talk about? [01:46:53.240 --> 01:46:58.240] No, I guess that's about it. The four options you gave me. [01:46:58.240 --> 01:47:03.240] I'll look into them, check up on them, and see if I can't do one of those. [01:47:03.240 --> 01:47:06.240] It should be not too much of a problem. [01:47:06.240 --> 01:47:08.240] Wonderful. [01:47:08.240 --> 01:47:09.240] All right. [01:47:09.240 --> 01:47:09.240] All right. [01:47:09.240 --> 01:47:10.240] Thank you very much. [01:47:10.240 --> 01:47:12.240] Well, thanks for calling. [01:47:12.240 --> 01:47:14.240] You bet. Good night. [01:47:14.240 --> 01:47:25.240] Good night. Okay, and now we also have EJ in California. Good evening, EJ. [01:47:25.240 --> 01:47:30.240] Good evening. Thank you for coming to talk tonight. Hi. [01:47:30.240 --> 01:47:37.240] Yes, of course. Good to hear your voice. What's happening with you? [01:47:37.240 --> 01:47:48.240] I was busy this whole week. Sorry, I was on telegram. Didn't answer your question regarding the hearing that's coming up. [01:47:48.240 --> 01:47:52.240] So that would be in July 1st. [01:47:52.240 --> 01:47:54.240] Okay. [01:47:54.240 --> 01:48:04.240] Yeah. That's the failure to present ID, I guess. ID to Peace Officer. [01:48:04.240 --> 01:48:06.240] Okay. [01:48:06.240 --> 01:48:18.240] Yeah, and you asked me what the charges were, and it was right away at intersection. [01:48:18.240 --> 01:48:21.240] It was at intersection? [01:48:21.240 --> 01:48:41.240] Yeah, the right away at intersection. He was far away. He wasn't even close to my car. I stopped and made a right coming the other way of the road. [01:48:41.240 --> 01:48:44.240] So what you're saying is he's making up stuff. [01:48:44.240 --> 01:48:55.240] He's making up stuff, yeah. I stopped. There was no car. Made a right. He saw me just making a right. He was coming on the other side. [01:48:55.240 --> 01:49:05.240] So on the right-hand lane, there's a light. I stopped. No cars coming. I make a right. [01:49:05.240 --> 01:49:19.240] So I'm going straight down, and then I see the cop car. So we're going opposite direction on that road. So he passes me. [01:49:19.240 --> 01:49:31.240] So I see him on my left side, and then he makes a U-turn. I'm like, oh, and then he follows me and puts his light on. [01:49:31.240 --> 01:49:40.240] So I stop. So that's what he did, but the traffic hearings just kind of disappeared. [01:49:40.240 --> 01:49:51.240] So I thought the whole thing disappeared, but I get a letter from the DA in April. [01:49:51.240 --> 01:50:07.240] So and then now there's like a misdemeanor charge. But can they really pursue this? Because what do you call it? There's no probable cause. The ticket's gone. [01:50:07.240 --> 01:50:18.240] The ticket's gone. So he accused you of right-of-way at intersection. That doesn't sound like a crime. [01:50:18.240 --> 01:50:31.240] I mean, is that something you can look up? I know California is a little weird, but that doesn't sound to me like any kind of crime I've never heard of. [01:50:31.240 --> 01:50:37.240] Right-of-way, even on the ticket, I have the ticket in front of me. It says right-of-way. [01:50:37.240 --> 01:50:44.240] I can't really read the numbers on there, and I did a public request asking them to send me another copy. [01:50:44.240 --> 01:50:58.240] And they said, no, you have to go to the front desk. Yeah, I think I can sue them, right, for not even giving me a copy of the ticket. [01:50:58.240 --> 01:51:08.240] Yeah. So in California, you've got, I believe it's called CPRC. I might not have the acronym right. [01:51:08.240 --> 01:51:18.240] But they have transparency statutes that they have to abide by, and they don't get to tell you where you have to come to get your records. [01:51:18.240 --> 01:51:26.240] You can get your records. You can ask for remote electronic access to remotely inspect the records if you want to. [01:51:26.240 --> 01:51:40.240] You can ask for, you can ask the IT director, I want to see all the training certificates of you and everybody in your office that shows that you know how to answer these records requests. [01:51:40.240 --> 01:51:48.240] You can say, I want to see all the emails that have gone back and forth between people about anything about records requests. [01:51:48.240 --> 01:51:56.240] Oh, my goodness. You can stir up all kinds of excitement over there. [01:51:56.240 --> 01:52:03.240] Okay. Yeah, they have rules that they must follow. They must be transparent. [01:52:03.240 --> 01:52:13.240] You're the servant. I mean, you're the master. They're the servants. And when the master comes calling, looking for records, they don't get to decide whether they want to open it up or not. [01:52:13.240 --> 01:52:19.240] They don't get to decide where you're going to have to come if we're going to give you the records. [01:52:19.240 --> 01:52:25.240] They need to jump. They need to say, would you like me to email that to you? How do you want this? [01:52:25.240 --> 01:52:29.240] You get to choose if you're going to be inspecting or if you're going to be wanting copies. [01:52:29.240 --> 01:52:34.240] That's kind of one big fork in the road because if you're inspecting, it's free. [01:52:34.240 --> 01:52:44.240] And if you're asking for copies, then they get to charge you per page for copying costs. [01:52:44.240 --> 01:52:45.240] That's one big fork. [01:52:45.240 --> 01:52:50.240] It's very strange that they try to see if they can get away with that. [01:52:50.240 --> 01:52:57.240] But I'm going to ask a second time, can I send another records request for this particular citation? [01:52:57.240 --> 01:53:02.240] And it's gone out of their system. You know, I never went to court. [01:53:02.240 --> 01:53:06.240] So now how could they be? [01:53:06.240 --> 01:53:13.240] What do you mean it's out of their system? It's just not showing up on some website? [01:53:13.240 --> 01:53:19.240] Oh, there was a hearing date on the ticket. [01:53:19.240 --> 01:53:31.240] And yesterday, I mean, I'm sorry, last year I looked it up to see, double check the hearing date, but totally it's gone. [01:53:31.240 --> 01:53:33.240] They didn't even pursue it. [01:53:33.240 --> 01:53:43.240] But they're pursuing this misdemeanor charge, failure to show ID to peace officer. [01:53:43.240 --> 01:53:49.240] Did you look at the crime? Because failure to show ID does sound like a crime. [01:53:49.240 --> 01:53:53.240] You have to be arrested before it's in Texas anyway. [01:53:53.240 --> 01:54:03.240] It's not a crime unless you've been arrested and then you're either refusing to show ID or you're giving false ID. [01:54:03.240 --> 01:54:07.240] Then it's a crime. But if you're not arrested, then it's not a crime. [01:54:07.240 --> 01:54:11.240] No reason for you to have to show an ID. [01:54:11.240 --> 01:54:18.240] Go and read that in California. Take a look at what it specifically says. [01:54:18.240 --> 01:54:25.240] It specifically says, I think it's one of the three elements. [01:54:25.240 --> 01:54:27.240] It's pretty simple. [01:54:27.240 --> 01:54:41.240] It says if an officer asks you for your ID during a traffic stop and any kind of stop and you don't, then it is a crime. [01:54:41.240 --> 01:54:49.240] I mean, it's not a crime. What's the word? [01:54:49.240 --> 01:54:57.240] I have the elements. I just had it up for you to show ID to peace officer. [01:54:57.240 --> 01:55:02.240] It's very simple. Three elements that they have to prove. [01:55:02.240 --> 01:55:14.240] But the thing is, why would they even ask me when the tickets disappear? That I don't understand. [01:55:14.240 --> 01:55:18.240] Well, they might not have wanted to pursue one, but they did want to pursue the other. [01:55:18.240 --> 01:55:23.240] I don't know. That would be technically fine. They could do that. [01:55:23.240 --> 01:55:26.240] They could say, we're going to drop charges on this one. [01:55:26.240 --> 01:55:32.240] I mean, they should have told you, but yeah. [01:55:32.240 --> 01:55:38.240] If they had commenced a case and then the prosecutor decided they wanted to drop charges, they could do that. [01:55:38.240 --> 01:55:47.240] And the judge will say, OK, I'm going to take your motion to dismiss and grant it and then it'll go away. [01:55:47.240 --> 01:55:56.240] Whereas they would want to pursue this other one because maybe it's a little more severe. [01:55:56.240 --> 01:55:59.240] OK. [01:55:59.240 --> 01:56:11.240] But you were saying you looked at those elements and does it look like that any one of those elements you could dispute and negate the crime? [01:56:11.240 --> 01:56:18.240] The elements are very, just three simple things that you need to show. [01:56:18.240 --> 01:56:22.240] This is right here. [01:56:22.240 --> 01:56:32.240] Other offenses against, what is this, every person who willfully resists, delays, or obstructs any peace officer. [01:56:32.240 --> 01:56:41.240] I had it up there. I guess I wasn't pretty prepared here. [01:56:41.240 --> 01:56:45.240] So it's only three elements. They just have to be. [01:56:45.240 --> 01:56:50.240] Well, don't worry about it. It's fine. You don't have to fight it right now. It's not a big deal. [01:56:50.240 --> 01:57:00.240] The point is that if all three of those elements are something that you feel like that they are going to be able to produce evidence to show that you did those, [01:57:00.240 --> 01:57:08.240] well then they've got you. So try not to go to the merits. Try to deal with the other things that they did wrong. [01:57:08.240 --> 01:57:11.240] Like maybe they didn't commence the case properly. [01:57:11.240 --> 01:57:21.240] It's super common in Texas that they will pretend like the citation is the charging instrument. [01:57:21.240 --> 01:57:26.240] And I'm sorry, but our Code of Criminal Procedure says it's not. [01:57:26.240 --> 01:57:32.240] So they're going to pretend, and if they can get you to enter a plea based on the citation, [01:57:32.240 --> 01:57:40.240] then we've got Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 27.14 subsection D gives them a little bitty loophole [01:57:40.240 --> 01:57:53.240] that if they can get you to agree to answer charges that were just scribbled on any old napkin that they call a citation, [01:57:53.240 --> 01:58:03.240] well then they don't have to produce a lawfully, they don't have to jump through the hoops they normally would with a complaint, [01:58:03.240 --> 01:58:12.240] a sworn complaint, affidavit, and information and go through all these steps. [01:58:12.240 --> 01:58:16.240] They can skip a lot of steps. So you might take a look at that in California. [01:58:16.240 --> 01:58:26.240] See what does a charging instrument consist of and get it thrown out that way instead of dealing with the merits. [01:58:26.240 --> 01:58:35.240] Okay, got it. Yeah, they do have body cams, and it's under protective order or something they put to it. [01:58:35.240 --> 01:58:41.240] Well, unfortunately, E.J., we have run out of time for this evening. [01:58:41.240 --> 01:58:50.240] I'm sorry we're going to have to wrap up this show, but thanks for calling. Good night. [01:58:50.240 --> 01:58:57.240] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.240 --> 01:59:04.240] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.240 --> 01:59:08.240] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.240 --> 01:59:20.240] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. 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