[00:00.000 --> 00:05.440] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.440 --> 00:09.440] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.440 --> 00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.920 --> 00:14.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.840 --> 00:16.920] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.920 --> 00:18.520] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.520 --> 00:22.120] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.120 --> 00:26.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.680 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.560 --> 00:38.960] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:38.960 --> 00:42.480] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.480 --> 00:44.480] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.480 --> 00:47.760] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.760 --> 00:50.760] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.760 --> 00:54.360] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.360 --> 01:01.600] S-P-A-R with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.600 --> 01:02.960] and R for religion. [01:02.960 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:10.480] assembly, and religion, but petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.480 --> 01:14.600] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.600 --> 01:18.120] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.120 --> 01:20.800] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.800 --> 01:31.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.200 --> 01:34.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.840 --> 01:38.320] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.320 --> 01:39.800] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.800 --> 01:43.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.680 --> 01:46.840] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.840 --> 01:48.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.400 --> 01:52.800] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [01:52.800 --> 01:56.800] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.800 --> 02:01.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.800 --> 02:04.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.560 --> 02:08.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.840 --> 02:12.380] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.380 --> 02:15.960] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.960 --> 02:20.320] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.320 --> 02:22.400] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.400 --> 02:26.880] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.880 --> 02:30.720] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.720 --> 02:31.720] Get it? [02:31.720 --> 02:34.040] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.040 --> 02:37.640] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.640 --> 02:43.400] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.400 --> 02:47.920] speech, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:47.920 --> 02:50.640] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.640 --> 02:52.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.520 --> 03:16.280] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:22.520 --> 03:50.040] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary speech, [03:50.040 --> 04:09.520] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [04:09.520 --> 04:25.160] now appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now [04:25.160 --> 04:42.000] appears remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now appears [04:42.000 --> 05:09.720] remote in America, but which now appears remote in America, but which now appears remote [05:09.720 --> 05:24.280] 1.16 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, going to examining trials as a prerequisite to jurisdiction. [05:24.280 --> 05:27.680] I'm taking a somewhat different approach. [05:27.680 --> 05:38.840] In Texas, the court said in Troy v. State back in 1970 that in the matter of a misdemeanor, [05:38.840 --> 05:44.040] a citizen doesn't have a right to an examining trial. [05:44.040 --> 05:48.880] And I'm saying that is not exactly true. [05:48.880 --> 05:55.800] Not only in the matter of a misdemeanor, but also in the matter of a felony, a citizen [05:55.800 --> 06:00.720] does not have a right to an examining trial. [06:00.720 --> 06:06.120] There are rights stipulated, protected in the Constitution, and there's all kind of [06:06.120 --> 06:14.440] rights, but you don't have a generic right to something that is a legal fiction. [06:14.440 --> 06:16.760] Examining trials don't exist in the real world. [06:16.760 --> 06:22.960] They're a statutory construction. [06:22.960 --> 06:32.040] And while nobody has a right to an examining trial, public officials are commanded, if they [06:32.040 --> 06:40.360] arrest you for an on-site offense without a warrant, or they arrest you on an existing [06:40.360 --> 06:47.120] warrant, they are commanded by statute to take you directly to the nearest magistrate. [06:47.120 --> 06:51.920] Yeah, that's the only way they can get a probable cause determination, and that's the only way [06:51.920 --> 06:53.400] they can get a case started. [06:53.400 --> 06:56.880] The only way to get jurisdiction right. [06:56.880 --> 07:04.040] So that in itself is not the right. [07:04.040 --> 07:12.080] I'm going somewhere here, and it's a place, it's a way of thinking about the law. [07:12.080 --> 07:21.240] While you don't specifically have a right to an examining trial, you do have a right [07:21.240 --> 07:24.580] to the due course of the laws. [07:24.580 --> 07:32.500] You have a right to a reasonable expectation that the laws will be followed as written. [07:32.500 --> 07:39.200] And the law commands public officials, if they arrest you for any reason, with or without [07:39.200 --> 07:42.840] a warrant, to take you directly to the nearest magistrate. [07:42.840 --> 07:49.840] That goes to procedural due process, and procedural due process is something you have a right [07:49.840 --> 07:50.840] to. [07:50.840 --> 07:54.760] Did I close that up okay, Brett? [07:54.760 --> 07:56.200] Well, sure. [07:56.200 --> 07:59.000] I have a right to an examining trial. [07:59.000 --> 08:03.560] I don't know if somebody else does, but rights belong to the belligerent litigant, right? [08:03.560 --> 08:05.960] And I have one. [08:05.960 --> 08:07.240] Somebody wants to tell me I don't? [08:07.240 --> 08:14.720] Well, take a look at Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 15.17, and where it tells the magistrate [08:14.720 --> 08:21.600] what he is required, the warnings that he is required to give, ever since Miranda v. [08:21.600 --> 08:26.680] Arizona, I think, is when they stuck this in there, but he is required, the magistrate [08:26.680 --> 08:32.320] must tell the accused, it doesn't say only if he's accused in a felony. [08:32.320 --> 08:38.240] He must tell the accused of his right, inform him of his right to an examining trial, along [08:38.240 --> 08:42.920] there with the same other stuff with your right to have counsel, if you can't afford [08:42.920 --> 08:44.920] it, one will be appointed to you. [08:44.920 --> 08:49.320] All of that stuff rolls right in there, but they skip it every time, because they don't [08:49.320 --> 08:52.720] want you to talk about your right to an examining trial. [08:52.720 --> 08:57.960] It is in their form, still has it, huh? [08:57.960 --> 08:58.960] They won't say it. [08:58.960 --> 09:00.440] Yeah, but they scratched it out. [09:00.440 --> 09:03.440] The last time they arrested me, they had that part scratched out. [09:03.440 --> 09:05.560] Well, that's how you get rid of rights, huh? [09:05.560 --> 09:08.200] You just draw a line through it, and the right disappears? [09:08.200 --> 09:09.200] No. [09:09.200 --> 09:17.400] The reason I argued it this way is we have some case law saying that in the matter of [09:17.400 --> 09:22.600] a misdemeanor, a citizen doesn't have a right to an examining trial. [09:22.600 --> 09:29.640] So I'm saying, okay, fair enough, I'll go for that, but I do have a right to procedural [09:29.640 --> 09:30.640] due process. [09:30.640 --> 09:33.920] Yeah, you can get that with another angle. [09:33.920 --> 09:37.000] You're commanded to do it regardless of my rights. [09:37.000 --> 09:38.000] Mm-hmm. [09:38.000 --> 09:47.080] So I'm trying to sidestep their BS rulings, but it's pretty definitive. [09:47.080 --> 09:50.280] This has been in law since 1215 AD. [09:50.280 --> 09:55.520] Yeah, and there's really no other way for them to get to the part where they're having [09:55.520 --> 09:58.120] arraignments or having whatever else they want to hold. [09:58.120 --> 10:00.520] There's no way to get there. [10:00.520 --> 10:07.680] Looking at the code, it doesn't provide a way for a case to commence without this first [10:07.680 --> 10:13.880] having this judicial determination of probable cause, but in no other way. [10:13.880 --> 10:21.240] Yes, and the way it works is if a police officer has it made known to him that a crime has [10:21.240 --> 10:33.720] been committed under 2.13 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure paragraph C, the officer must give [10:33.720 --> 10:36.680] notice to some magistrate. [10:36.680 --> 10:41.080] Wait, you don't want him to just take somebody to jail? [10:41.080 --> 10:44.040] That works out better, right? [10:44.040 --> 10:54.480] Under 14.06, let's start with the transportation code, 543.002. [10:54.480 --> 10:59.400] If a policeman arrests someone for a violation of the transportation code, he's to take him [10:59.400 --> 11:09.640] directly to his magistrate, or in the alternative, under 006, he can allow the person to sign [11:09.640 --> 11:16.360] a promise to appear and then release the person on their own recognizance, but they have to [11:16.360 --> 11:22.520] sign a promise to appear before some magistrate. [11:22.520 --> 11:32.920] 14.06, if an arrest for an on-site offense, if an officer personally sees or hears an [11:32.920 --> 11:40.080] offense being committed, he can arrest the person without a warrant, but then he is to [11:40.080 --> 11:50.440] take that person directly to the nearest magistrate, 15.16, arrest on existing warrant. [11:50.440 --> 11:56.480] He's to take him directly to some magistrate, to the nearest magistrate. [11:56.480 --> 12:04.840] There is nothing I know of in law that directs a criminal complaint to anyone other than [12:04.840 --> 12:10.040] some magistrate, nothing. [12:10.040 --> 12:18.160] Now it doesn't say that a prosecuting attorney cannot receive a criminal complaint, and if [12:18.160 --> 12:23.640] it's a misdemeanor, he's to forward the complaint to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction. [12:23.640 --> 12:32.400] If it's a felony, he is to give notice to some magistrate. [12:32.400 --> 12:37.000] All laws, police are required to give notice to a magistrate, prosecutors are required [12:37.000 --> 12:46.840] to give notice to a magistrate, and magistrates are there for one primary reason, not to hear [12:46.840 --> 12:49.960] any misdemeanor cases. [12:49.960 --> 12:58.760] They were originally put in place for the singular purpose of holding examining trials, [12:58.760 --> 13:04.240] making determinations of probable cause based on an on-site arrest. [13:04.240 --> 13:09.560] That was their original purpose, and that's why when you look at justices of the peace, [13:09.560 --> 13:13.600] you will find they're spread all around the county. [13:13.600 --> 13:21.520] And if you look closely and do a little measurement, you will find that there is no place in the [13:21.520 --> 13:31.800] county that's more than 15 miles from a magistrate, unless it's just impossible, because 15 miles [13:31.800 --> 13:37.880] is how long you can reasonably ride a horse in a day. [13:37.880 --> 13:49.200] If you travel up Highway 287 in Texas, from Fort Worth, it goes up to Amarillo and then [13:49.200 --> 13:51.640] on up into Colorado. [13:51.640 --> 13:53.920] That was a cattle trail. [13:53.920 --> 14:01.960] And you'll find a town every 10 to 12 miles. [14:01.960 --> 14:07.440] That's because that's how far you could drive a herd in a day. [14:07.440 --> 14:12.120] If you're on horseback without a herd, you can move a little faster. [14:12.120 --> 14:18.760] They intended that, and it originated in the Magna Carta, that if a sheriff arrested a [14:18.760 --> 14:29.520] freeman for any reason, he is to take that person directly to the nearest magistrate. [14:29.520 --> 14:36.080] And they wanted a magistrate within a day's ride from any point in the county. [14:36.080 --> 14:46.720] The reason we have this incarceration crisis now, this mass incarceration, is because they [14:46.720 --> 14:49.080] don't take them to a magistrate. [14:49.080 --> 14:53.360] Thirty years looking at the system. [14:53.360 --> 14:56.000] I'm an engineer. [14:56.000 --> 14:58.240] Bring me your car. [14:58.240 --> 15:00.400] Tell me what it's doing. [15:00.400 --> 15:04.840] I got this car in my head, and I'll crank it up, and then I'll start screwing with it [15:04.840 --> 15:10.000] until I can get it to do what yours is doing. [15:10.000 --> 15:15.880] It took me a long time to build one of those for law. [15:15.880 --> 15:18.400] Something is wrong with this system. [15:18.400 --> 15:22.720] It was clear from the beginning, something was really wrong here. [15:22.720 --> 15:27.080] And most people, they want to say, well, it's the police, it's the prosecutors, it's the [15:27.080 --> 15:28.080] judges. [15:28.080 --> 15:38.320] But none of those, when you have a system failing generally, at every place you go in [15:38.320 --> 15:44.800] the state, the criminal justice system is failing the same way. [15:44.800 --> 15:47.960] Yeah, they're going to tell us something. [15:47.960 --> 15:51.040] Yeah, there's a kernel down there. [15:51.040 --> 15:54.720] There's something wrong systemically. [15:54.720 --> 15:56.360] You can't blame the people. [15:56.360 --> 16:02.360] There's something wrong with the way the system is put together, or this wouldn't happen. [16:02.360 --> 16:06.920] And it turns out there's nothing wrong with the way the system is put together. [16:06.920 --> 16:09.080] It's put together just fine. [16:09.080 --> 16:21.160] The problem is, if you and me and Brett and everybody else out there, all of these sovereign [16:21.160 --> 16:28.560] citizens, the citizens of the republic, we didn't rail in righteous indignation the first [16:28.560 --> 16:33.960] time one of our public officials stepped across one of our legal lines. [16:33.960 --> 16:42.320] And to quote a little Shakespeare, and I, let's see, how does it go? [16:42.320 --> 16:53.680] For winking at your discords have lost a brace of kinsmen, and you and I for winking at their [16:53.680 --> 16:55.320] discords have lost liberty. [16:55.320 --> 17:00.400] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [17:00.400 --> 17:05.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:05.000 --> 17:09.240] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.240 --> 17:13.520] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [17:13.520 --> 17:14.520] can win two. [17:14.520 --> 17:19.360] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.360 --> 17:25.120] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [17:25.120 --> 17:29.760] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.760 --> 17:33.960] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.960 --> 17:39.080] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:39.080 --> 17:40.880] Full consultation is available as well. [17:40.880 --> 17:46.840] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [17:46.840 --> 17:49.720] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.720 --> 17:58.720] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.720 --> 17:59.720] collectors now. [17:59.720 --> 18:04.840] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.840 --> 18:08.640] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [18:08.640 --> 18:12.800] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.800 --> 18:15.840] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [18:15.840 --> 18:19.520] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.520 --> 18:23.720] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.720 --> 18:25.200] our rights through due process. [18:25.200 --> 18:28.680] Former Sheriff's Deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put [18:28.680 --> 18:32.240] together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what [18:32.240 --> 18:35.040] due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:35.040 --> 18:39.200] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:39.200 --> 18:40.560] ordering your copy today. [18:40.560 --> 18:43.920] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [18:43.920 --> 18:48.320] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [18:48.320 --> 18:50.640] documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.640 --> 18:54.600] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.600 --> 18:58.880] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:58.880 --> 19:08.640] If you are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [19:28.880 --> 19:39.400] Okay. [19:39.400 --> 19:40.400] We are back. [19:40.400 --> 19:45.320] Randy Kalten, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and our caller board is filling up. [19:45.320 --> 19:49.960] I am going to take Olivier in Florida. [19:49.960 --> 19:51.960] Olivier's been having some fun. [19:51.960 --> 19:55.760] Olivier, tell us what happened to you recently. [19:55.760 --> 20:00.440] Hello, can you hear me, brother? [20:00.440 --> 20:01.440] Hello. [20:01.440 --> 20:02.440] We can hear you. [20:02.440 --> 20:03.440] Yeah. [20:03.440 --> 20:04.440] Okay. [20:04.440 --> 20:05.440] Well, today was pretty interesting. [20:05.440 --> 20:14.440] Today, me and my friend Troy were driving with my son, MJ, in the back. [20:14.440 --> 20:23.920] We was sharing a dolly, a two-wheel dolly, had no lights on it, no car on it, so there's [20:23.920 --> 20:27.280] nowhere for us to plug our magnets to. [20:27.280 --> 20:34.320] We plug it on the trailer, it'll bounce around everywhere, fall all over the highway. [20:34.320 --> 20:43.680] And the trailer does not block our truck lights, the rear stop lights. [20:43.680 --> 20:45.560] So now, as we travel... [20:45.560 --> 20:46.560] Okay. [20:46.560 --> 20:47.560] Hold on just a second. [20:47.560 --> 20:53.440] For those that don't know who he's talking about, they've got this little two-wheel... It's [20:53.440 --> 20:55.040] not really a trailer. [20:55.040 --> 20:59.000] It's got a cradle that you drive the front wheels of your car up into it. [20:59.000 --> 21:05.680] You strap them down, and then you can tow the car with it. [21:05.680 --> 21:07.200] And it's called a dolly. [21:07.200 --> 21:11.920] It's not really a trailer because it doesn't really haul anything other than an automobile. [21:11.920 --> 21:14.400] It doesn't have a place for a plate. [21:14.400 --> 21:17.400] Plate wouldn't do any good because you've got a car on it. [21:17.400 --> 21:18.400] It disappears under the car. [21:18.400 --> 21:21.960] You couldn't see it anyway. [21:21.960 --> 21:25.200] And if you had lights on it, they wouldn't do any good because it would be buried under [21:25.200 --> 21:26.200] the car. [21:26.200 --> 21:34.480] And it's so small, the automobile lights can easily be seen past it. [21:34.480 --> 21:36.400] Everybody's probably seen these. [21:36.400 --> 21:38.480] So that's basically what he's talking about. [21:38.480 --> 21:39.480] Okay. [21:39.480 --> 21:40.480] Go ahead. [21:40.480 --> 21:41.480] All right. [21:41.480 --> 21:48.000] Well now, we're moving along, going to go pick up a vehicle. [21:48.000 --> 21:53.000] We come to a light that's going to lead us to a highway, onto the highway, merge onto [21:53.000 --> 21:54.000] the highway. [21:54.000 --> 22:00.200] And right next to us, there's an undercover cop, undercover deputy sheriff. [22:00.200 --> 22:07.880] So when we started moving along, Troy slowed down, allowed the deputy sheriff to merge [22:07.880 --> 22:11.640] in front of him because the lanes merge. [22:11.640 --> 22:18.720] So now what he does, the deputy sheriff, he slows way down to the point where he forces [22:18.720 --> 22:22.800] us to move in front of him. [22:22.800 --> 22:24.080] I hate when people do that. [22:24.080 --> 22:25.080] That's so unsafe. [22:25.080 --> 22:34.600] Then when he moved in front of us, when he moved behind us, he put the lights on us. [22:34.600 --> 22:36.400] Troy's like, he's about to... [22:36.400 --> 22:37.400] I'm like, for what? [22:37.400 --> 22:41.840] Because I've been driving around with his trailer forever and they had no problem. [22:41.840 --> 22:45.480] So he put the lights on us, we pull over. [22:45.480 --> 22:50.280] Well, you know, maybe he's from New York and it's not acceptable to be polite. [22:50.280 --> 22:59.840] I guess because we didn't want to go in front of him, he felt like there was a reason for [22:59.840 --> 23:02.480] us to pull us over. [23:02.480 --> 23:10.320] But as he pulls over, he comes to the car and he tells, asks Troy, does he have his [23:10.320 --> 23:11.320] license? [23:11.320 --> 23:12.320] Troy said, yeah, he does. [23:12.320 --> 23:13.320] He gives us the license. [23:13.320 --> 23:14.320] He's like, what's going on? [23:14.320 --> 23:22.120] He's like, well, you don't have any license on your trailer and there's no tag and obviously [23:22.120 --> 23:23.120] it's not registered. [23:23.120 --> 23:24.120] We're like, it has to be registered? [23:24.120 --> 23:29.120] He's like, yeah, state of Florida, it has to be registered. [23:29.120 --> 23:33.120] So we're like, what? [23:33.120 --> 23:34.120] Okay. [23:34.120 --> 23:41.880] He's like, well, he asked Troy about his license, his license says one state, but it has another [23:41.880 --> 23:42.880] state address on it. [23:42.880 --> 23:43.880] And we're like, is this a real license? [23:43.880 --> 23:44.880] Yeah, it's a real license. [23:44.880 --> 23:45.880] That's what they gave me. [23:45.880 --> 23:48.880] But instead of this state and it has another state address, it's a real ID. [23:48.880 --> 23:49.880] That's what they gave me. [23:49.880 --> 23:50.880] They're like, go look it up. [23:50.880 --> 23:51.880] You know, you sure this is real? [23:51.880 --> 23:59.640] I'm like, yeah, this isn't real, but he finally go back, go back there. [23:59.640 --> 24:08.320] It takes him 30 minutes to do whatever he's doing, it seems like 30 minutes, I gotta go [24:08.320 --> 24:09.320] look at the record. [24:09.320 --> 24:12.320] But it took him 30 minutes to sit there. [24:12.320 --> 24:18.280] He finally starts approaching because we start waving to him like, hey, we got a text with [24:18.280 --> 24:19.280] the insurance for the car. [24:19.280 --> 24:20.280] We didn't have the insurance with us. [24:20.280 --> 24:27.280] We have a insurance, come look at it, but we bought a lot of business, but this stuff [24:27.280 --> 24:28.280] is too long. [24:28.280 --> 24:34.960] So he finally come out there, we show him the insurance and they were like, well, you [24:34.960 --> 24:46.320] know, I'm being lenient and I'm only giving you a light ticket because we cannot get back [24:46.320 --> 24:50.800] on the roadway with this unregistered vehicle. [24:50.800 --> 24:58.000] I said unregistered vehicle, yeah, in Florida it's considered to be a unregistered motor [24:58.000 --> 24:59.000] vehicle. [24:59.000 --> 25:05.640] So you have to call a tow truck to come pick up the trailer. [25:05.640 --> 25:08.640] Unregistered motor vehicle? [25:08.640 --> 25:15.520] Yeah, unregistered vehicle, motor vehicle, whatever you go down, it's one of, they're [25:15.520 --> 25:16.520] like, what? [25:16.520 --> 25:22.840] And he was like, yeah, so he said, don't make me be a bad guy and take you to jail, this [25:22.840 --> 25:23.840] is a criminal offense. [25:23.840 --> 25:31.120] He said if you get back on the road, the unregistered vehicle is a criminal offense and I will take [25:31.120 --> 25:32.120] you to jail for that. [25:32.120 --> 25:38.880] So like don't make me be a bad guy today and you got to call the tow truck, get it towed [25:38.880 --> 25:45.080] off the road and it can't be back on the road until it's tagged and registered properly. [25:45.080 --> 25:54.160] I'm like, what, okay, so before he walks up to the vehicle, he comes up to the handle, [25:54.160 --> 25:57.640] the first thing he does is say my name. [25:57.640 --> 26:09.000] He says, he says my name like someone instructed him how it was supposed to be said and I never [26:09.000 --> 26:15.000] seen this guy and the car is registered in my brother's name. [26:15.000 --> 26:16.000] Wow. [26:16.000 --> 26:31.440] In the car, he comes up to me, he says, Marty, I looked at him, I'm like, hmm, yeah, and [26:31.440 --> 26:37.800] like, then he turned to Troy, it's like he didn't want no smoke, he turned to Troy and [26:37.800 --> 26:38.800] went to talking to Troy. [26:38.800 --> 26:43.560] I'm waiting for him to try to question me or ask me ID, but he never asked, wanted to [26:43.560 --> 26:49.920] ask for my ID, never tried to interrogate me or anything, I don't know what he's seen [26:49.920 --> 26:55.240] on that screen, but he came up and had my full name. [26:55.240 --> 27:01.680] So now we're on the side of the road, start waiting, we read into the statute, the statute [27:01.680 --> 27:09.240] talks about motor vehicles, trailers, toll trailers, and home trailers, things of that [27:09.240 --> 27:10.240] nature. [27:10.240 --> 27:14.920] I'm sitting here like, what's going on, this is not, this ain't right, you know, so now [27:14.920 --> 27:21.120] I break down, I start going through the second edition, I'm reading everything and the definitions [27:21.120 --> 27:27.720] of this is not nice enough, and I'm sitting here like, well, something's going on, so [27:27.720 --> 27:34.200] now we finally get up and call the DMV, DMV, so I'm like, too, I'm talking to the DMV, [27:34.200 --> 27:39.720] talking to her, we had to take the explain to what was going on, like what, they stopped [27:39.720 --> 27:40.720] me for what? [27:40.720 --> 27:43.720] I'm like, yeah, it's a trailer, she's like, is this a trailer or a dolly? [27:43.720 --> 27:48.360] I said, it's a dolly that you put the car on and it's in the two wheels on the ground, [27:48.360 --> 27:49.360] she said, yes. [27:49.360 --> 27:54.000] She said, well, that doesn't need to be registered or tagged, we're looking at it, me and Troy [27:54.000 --> 27:55.000] looking at each other like, wow. [27:55.000 --> 27:59.280] She's like, yeah, I got two books right here, and all the information is in there, she's [27:59.280 --> 28:04.280] like, give me one second, she started going through all the information, she signed everything, [28:04.280 --> 28:13.200] she sent me 13 pages of trailer law and everything that I needed, I'm sitting here like, wow, [28:13.200 --> 28:19.840] this is amazing, everything that I needed, I'm like, and she said, a trailer and a dolly [28:19.840 --> 28:24.120] are not the same thing, so I'm like, oh, that's what I thought that, now I go back to the [28:24.120 --> 28:29.160] statute and reread it the way that legislature meant it, the dolly was never mentioned in [28:29.160 --> 28:38.040] there, and on your document, you wrote car dolly, no light, so it doesn't matter if my [28:38.040 --> 28:47.080] car dolly ain't got no light, it was never mentioned or regulated in the statute, and [28:47.080 --> 28:52.120] even when I told her, yeah, the cop came up and as soon as he came up the window, he just [28:52.120 --> 28:58.040] said my name, she's like, what the hell, she started cursing, you know what I'm saying, [28:58.040 --> 29:02.360] she called herself a person, she's like, what the, they can't do that, what the, what's [29:02.360 --> 29:07.480] going on, I'm like, I don't know, but he walked up to the vehicle with my name, I never said [29:07.480 --> 29:13.320] the one word, she said, you didn't give me ID, I'm like, no, he said, okay, go outside [29:13.320 --> 29:19.760] and read me the plate number, I go outside and read her the plate number, and she says, [29:19.760 --> 29:26.480] your information don't pull up on this tag, so how did he know your name when he came [29:26.480 --> 29:31.160] up to the window, I said, I don't know, I don't know what's going on here, and she said, [29:31.160 --> 29:36.080] this ain't right, she said, they can't be doing this, and I was like, she was outraged, [29:36.080 --> 29:43.000] I mean, she went into like super mode then, started giving me all the information, a break [29:43.000 --> 29:44.960] is about to come up. [29:44.960 --> 29:56.680] It sounds like you have got their attention, but it also sounds like the setup, retaliation, [29:56.680 --> 30:02.640] you're taking them on, hang on, we'll be right back. [30:02.640 --> 30:06.240] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively [30:06.240 --> 30:07.240] affected our health? [30:07.240 --> 30:11.400] Hi, Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how [30:11.400 --> 30:15.720] cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.720 --> 30:17.300] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.300 --> 30:21.680] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [30:21.680 --> 30:25.680] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.680 --> 30:30.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.800 --> 30:33.440] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.440 --> 30:37.740] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:37.740 --> 30:41.280] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.280 --> 30:45.080] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.080 --> 30:49.320] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy, it's a fact, but whether it's dangerous to have [30:49.320 --> 30:52.640] a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [30:52.640 --> 30:57.120] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:57.120 --> 31:01.600] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones [31:01.600 --> 31:02.600] affect brain chemistry. [31:02.600 --> 31:08.220] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest [31:08.220 --> 31:11.920] to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.920 --> 31:15.840] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any [31:15.840 --> 31:16.840] chances. [31:16.840 --> 31:20.280] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:20.280 --> 31:30.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.680 --> 31:31.680] I lost my son. [31:31.680 --> 31:32.680] My nephew. [31:32.680 --> 31:33.680] My uncle. [31:33.680 --> 31:34.680] My son. [31:34.680 --> 31:35.680] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.680 --> 31:38.960] People don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.960 --> 31:43.040] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [31:43.040 --> 31:48.920] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:48.920 --> 31:52.640] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.640 --> 31:54.120] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.120 --> 31:55.120] My uncle. [31:55.120 --> 31:56.120] My nephew. [31:56.120 --> 31:57.120] My son. [31:57.120 --> 31:58.120] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:58.120 --> 32:01.880] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.880 --> 32:06.280] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [32:06.280 --> 32:07.280] Word? [32:07.280 --> 32:11.960] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [32:11.960 --> 32:17.000] Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy [32:17.000 --> 32:18.000] 2.15. [32:18.000 --> 32:23.300] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needed not to be ashamed, rightly [32:23.300 --> 32:25.720] dividing the Word of Truth. [32:25.720 --> 32:29.680] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse [32:29.680 --> 32:33.000] by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:33.000 --> 32:37.640] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [32:37.640 --> 32:40.040] and Christian character development. [32:40.040 --> 32:44.560] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.560 --> 32:48.920] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [32:48.920 --> 32:50.400] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.400 --> 32:57.800] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com, Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [32:57.800 --> 33:01.240] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:01.240 --> 33:09.400] You're listening to the LogosRadioNetwork at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:09.400 --> 33:25.600] Yes, I got a warrant and I'm going to solve them, to the government them, prosecute them. [33:25.600 --> 33:41.480] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with LogosRadio and we're talking to, I always [33:41.480 --> 33:48.320] call him Olivier because Olivier is what I have in the database, but his name is really [33:48.320 --> 33:58.960] Marty Shea and this cop knew him, he must have recognized you. [33:58.960 --> 34:07.320] So why do you think he made it a point to speak your name? [34:07.320 --> 34:10.120] I have no idea. [34:10.120 --> 34:14.200] Well, I do. [34:14.200 --> 34:19.120] I think he wanted to make real sure that he didn't end up talking to you or pushing any [34:19.120 --> 34:23.920] buttons to come back on him. [34:23.920 --> 34:28.920] You don't know who I am, but I know where you live. [34:28.920 --> 34:33.560] That's what that sounded like to me. [34:33.560 --> 34:44.640] I would take that as an attempt at intimidation and retaliation for your taking on these public [34:44.640 --> 34:47.640] officials. [34:47.640 --> 34:54.960] I would charge him with it just for yucks. [34:54.960 --> 34:58.040] At least you'll find out how he knows your name. [34:58.040 --> 34:59.040] Right. [34:59.040 --> 35:13.200] Well, we're going to get, I'm going to request a copy of the records if they don't have recording, [35:13.200 --> 35:24.400] I'm going to sue them on a declaratory judgment to clarify if that's lawful and how that violates [35:24.400 --> 35:29.920] due process and puts my rights at jeopardy. [35:29.920 --> 35:37.880] And let them fiddle around with that through the three stages of the state and let them [35:37.880 --> 35:40.800] know that we're going to go dance in federal court too. [35:40.800 --> 35:44.720] So let them know they're going to be spending a lot of money every time they see me on a [35:44.720 --> 35:49.680] lot of issues than just what they wrote on the ticket. [35:49.680 --> 35:56.480] Is there any chance that this officer was an add on officer for one of your previous [35:56.480 --> 35:57.960] stops? [35:57.960 --> 36:07.600] No, the deputy sheriff around here have been pretty cool. [36:07.600 --> 36:11.880] So I really hate to go hammer him, hammer them. [36:11.880 --> 36:17.600] The only, the deputy sheriff was not the cause of the county getting sued. [36:17.600 --> 36:24.000] So this is going to be the first time a deputy sheriff is going to bring the county into [36:24.000 --> 36:25.000] account. [36:25.000 --> 36:33.760] But so far, every time I've encountered a deputy sheriff, they pushed their way in. [36:33.760 --> 36:40.000] I stood my ground, they backed up and went about their business. [36:40.000 --> 36:47.720] So they've been pretty much abiding by the law. [36:47.720 --> 36:56.880] But this one was just, I don't know what happened today, but that's not the end of the story. [36:56.880 --> 37:03.560] So now we're getting riled up because now we understand that this is a car, darling. [37:03.560 --> 37:07.120] The language is nowhere found in the statute. [37:07.120 --> 37:12.400] So we're smitten back and forth with lawsuits and things that we're going to challenge as [37:12.400 --> 37:18.480] far as boards for vagueness, because he's given us all the evidence. [37:18.480 --> 37:26.920] So it's like, wow, this is another way to make them spend money and fear us, like really [37:26.920 --> 37:27.920] fear us. [37:27.920 --> 37:35.120] So now what we do is we're like, wait a minute, we want his supervisor, we call up, they put [37:35.120 --> 37:40.960] us on hold, call us, they send us to the manager, the manager calls the supervisor, the supervisor [37:40.960 --> 37:46.240] calls us, but we're on the highway, we miss phone calls, Spice, we call again, mad, back [37:46.240 --> 37:47.240] mad, angry. [37:47.240 --> 37:55.440] And we're trying to realize that he had a block, if your phone is blocked, it automatically [37:55.440 --> 37:56.440] blocks your phone call. [37:56.440 --> 38:00.640] So he took that off, now his phone call comes through. [38:00.640 --> 38:05.040] First thing he said, he said, oh, you know, as soon as I heard, I went and researched [38:05.040 --> 38:12.840] and that's, you know what, is it, yeah, you right, that's not, you don't have to have [38:12.840 --> 38:13.840] that registered. [38:13.840 --> 38:16.840] We're like, what? [38:16.840 --> 38:22.120] So we like, so we sit in here like, you're saying this guy, threatened to arrest us and [38:22.120 --> 38:27.040] this, we're like, well, I don't know what he's, well, I had to go look and research [38:27.040 --> 38:34.160] it into it myself and I'm like, oh, I'm like, wow. [38:34.160 --> 38:40.120] So he, this is funny, like it usually takes so long for a cop to think, to find out that [38:40.120 --> 38:48.720] he's busted or he's messed up, but this one is like, before 10 hours, like before you [38:48.720 --> 38:59.120] get off your shit, you realize that you in deep, deep, deep, and you know who's in the [38:59.120 --> 39:00.120] car. [39:00.120 --> 39:03.120] You know who's in the car here. [39:03.120 --> 39:12.200] And when, when he came up to the car and he said my name, I looked at him, right? [39:12.200 --> 39:16.440] And like, I looked at him to see if he was going to press me to try to ask me for, for [39:16.440 --> 39:19.640] any information, but he just laughed it at that. [39:19.640 --> 39:25.280] Then he begins to speak to Troy, telling Troy about what he's charging him with and everything. [39:25.280 --> 39:31.200] So I put my hand on my nose, like on my nose and mouth, listening, like contemplating like [39:31.200 --> 39:32.200] what? [39:32.200 --> 39:37.200] And then the officer, he was like, well, do you, is there any questions you need, is there [39:37.200 --> 39:38.200] any, do you? [39:38.200 --> 39:39.200] No, no, no, keep on talking. [39:39.200 --> 39:43.600] I'm like, no, no, no, you, you, you were already stepped in the trap. [39:43.600 --> 39:51.680] Go ahead, keep on, I just want to make sure I get all of it in because I know, I'm not, [39:51.680 --> 39:57.320] I'm not 100% sure because I didn't go look at the numbers, but I know you messed up on [39:57.320 --> 39:58.320] the wrong one. [39:58.320 --> 40:00.320] And I'm like, I'm fine for it. [40:00.320 --> 40:03.840] Cause I'm fine waiting in mad. [40:03.840 --> 40:09.560] So he, he already did, he's a supervisor, he's like, yeah, well, yeah, he's, you know, [40:09.560 --> 40:10.560] we all make mistakes. [40:10.560 --> 40:11.560] You know, we're all humans. [40:11.560 --> 40:16.240] Uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, this is going to be savage. [40:16.240 --> 40:17.240] We all make mistakes. [40:17.240 --> 40:18.240] Okay. [40:18.240 --> 40:19.240] We'll see. [40:19.240 --> 40:24.280] You're like, yeah, you know, you, you got to take it to court now. [40:24.280 --> 40:25.280] Okay. [40:25.280 --> 40:26.280] Yeah. [40:26.280 --> 40:27.280] Yeah. [40:27.280 --> 40:28.280] Exactly. [40:28.280 --> 40:33.120] So, um, he's not going to arrest you, uh, the car dolly is, there's nowhere in there. [40:33.120 --> 40:35.320] There's, there's not, it's not a trailer. [40:35.320 --> 40:37.320] I don't know what he was thinking. [40:37.320 --> 40:45.600] I don't know what he was thinking either, but we're going to find out. [40:45.600 --> 40:48.920] Had the officer already written a citation? [40:48.920 --> 40:49.920] Yeah. [40:49.920 --> 40:55.800] He wrote it for three one six point two, two, two. [40:55.800 --> 40:58.080] It's ridiculous. [40:58.080 --> 41:01.080] So he'd already stepped in it. [41:01.080 --> 41:02.080] Yeah. [41:02.080 --> 41:03.080] Yeah. [41:03.080 --> 41:09.960] After you, after you sat in your car for 30 minutes, why did it take 30 minutes to, [41:09.960 --> 41:18.000] to, to, to write us a ticket for, for life? [41:18.000 --> 41:20.520] And then you come back and say my name. [41:20.520 --> 41:21.520] What were you reading? [41:21.520 --> 41:30.240] You said my name like, you said my name like you was instructive, you will, you took classes [41:30.240 --> 41:31.240] to pronunciate it correct. [41:31.240 --> 41:35.680] Cause you know, my name is not something to play with. [41:35.680 --> 41:36.680] I'm looking at him. [41:36.680 --> 41:37.680] How did you do that? [41:37.680 --> 41:43.000] The first time you met me and you just pronounced my name without me writing it down, without [41:43.000 --> 41:51.680] me giving you an ID, you didn't ask for an ID. [41:51.680 --> 41:55.800] You just imagined we came back. [41:55.800 --> 41:59.240] The DMV lady even ran my, I was, I was ecstatic. [41:59.240 --> 42:01.960] I was like, you want me to give you my plate number? [42:01.960 --> 42:02.960] Okay, sure. [42:02.960 --> 42:03.960] I'm like, she's having a ball. [42:03.960 --> 42:04.960] I said, she is mad. [42:04.960 --> 42:05.960] I said, yeah. [42:05.960 --> 42:06.960] Can you take that for me? [42:06.960 --> 42:07.960] She said, your information's not even on there. [42:07.960 --> 42:08.960] He said, how did they? [42:08.960 --> 42:13.960] We said, this is illegal, this is unlawful, they can't do that. [42:13.960 --> 42:16.960] I said, oh, thank you. [42:16.960 --> 42:28.920] So this is, I don't know, this is like the biggest birthday present I ever get in my [42:28.920 --> 42:29.920] life. [42:29.920 --> 42:40.120] So now you sounded like Scott Richardson before the motorcycle cop that gave him the ticket [42:40.120 --> 42:46.480] got off his shift, he got off the shift and was walking into the police department while [42:46.480 --> 42:52.120] Scott was walking out after giving, serving them a copy of the suit he just filed against [42:52.120 --> 42:53.120] him. [42:53.120 --> 43:00.120] Yeah, me and Troy was talking about that, I'm like, man, he's going to be miserable [43:00.120 --> 43:05.560] because we're going to fight, we're going to file a lawsuit against him before we even [43:05.560 --> 43:08.080] go to court on a ticket. [43:08.080 --> 43:12.920] And then, you know, me, I'm mischievous. [43:12.920 --> 43:17.560] We're going to file a lawsuit separately with both indigent on different issues. [43:17.560 --> 43:21.680] So, Payne, you got hit twice. [43:21.680 --> 43:27.240] This ought to be interesting. [43:27.240 --> 43:28.240] Miserable. [43:28.240 --> 43:31.080] I love it. [43:31.080 --> 43:36.280] Anything happening on your other cases? [43:36.280 --> 43:38.040] Not yet. [43:38.040 --> 43:43.720] We're waiting on a response from the court to tell me what's next, how they want to [43:43.720 --> 43:44.720] proceed. [43:44.720 --> 43:50.200] If they want my attorney to re-address my issues that I reported because she said that [43:50.200 --> 43:51.920] I'm a little bit down. [43:51.920 --> 43:52.920] Okay, hold on, hold on. [43:52.920 --> 43:57.160] About to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and Rue La La Radio. [43:57.160 --> 43:59.160] We'll be right back. [43:59.160 --> 44:05.560] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [44:05.560 --> 44:06.800] of nutrition. [44:06.800 --> 44:11.520] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.520 --> 44:17.120] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.120 --> 44:23.560] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [44:23.560 --> 44:25.760] provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.760 --> 44:30.760] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [44:30.760 --> 44:31.760] we reject. [44:31.760 --> 44:37.040] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [44:37.040 --> 44:39.800] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.800 --> 44:46.160] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [44:46.160 --> 44:47.160] quality radio. [44:47.160 --> 44:51.720] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.720 --> 44:57.400] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [44:57.400 --> 44:58.400] increase your income. [44:58.400 --> 44:59.400] Order now. [44:59.400 --> 45:04.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.480 --> 45:11.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.240 --> 45:14.880] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.880 --> 45:19.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.040 --> 45:23.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.240 --> 45:28.040] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.040 --> 45:34.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.840 --> 45:39.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.400 --> 45:43.680] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.680 --> 45:49.880] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.880 --> 45:52.400] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.400 --> 46:20.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:20.960 --> 46:37.400] Okay. [46:37.400 --> 46:38.400] We are back. [46:38.400 --> 46:45.160] Randy Kelton, Brett Fowler, Rule of Law Radio, and Marge, keep us up to speed on all of your [46:45.160 --> 46:46.160] happenings. [46:46.160 --> 46:48.160] We always enjoy this. [46:48.160 --> 46:54.000] Okay, thank you. [46:54.000 --> 47:02.160] Now we're going to go to... Looks like we have another first-time caller, Nicholas in [47:02.160 --> 47:03.160] Nevada. [47:03.160 --> 47:04.160] Oh, wait. [47:04.160 --> 47:05.160] Hold on. [47:05.160 --> 47:08.160] Let me unmute you. [47:08.160 --> 47:09.160] Okay. [47:09.160 --> 47:10.160] Nicholas in Nevada. [47:10.160 --> 47:11.160] Are you there? [47:11.160 --> 47:12.160] I'm here. [47:12.160 --> 47:15.160] Are you a first-time caller? [47:15.160 --> 47:18.160] Actually, I'm not a first-time caller. [47:18.160 --> 47:19.160] Oh, okay. [47:19.160 --> 47:22.160] Well, you were on the top anyway. [47:22.160 --> 47:23.160] Okay. [47:23.160 --> 47:25.160] What do you have for us today? [47:25.160 --> 47:32.160] Well, as you know, it's one of your favorite topics, and that is these illegal, unreasonable [47:32.160 --> 47:35.160] search metal detectors. [47:35.160 --> 47:42.160] And so I've been videoing them, saying that they have a policy which they can't produce. [47:42.160 --> 47:48.160] I called the sheriff one time, and I allowed them to be a policy enforcement officer instead [47:48.160 --> 47:52.160] of a law enforcement officer, as well as my dad. [47:52.160 --> 48:01.160] But I have now served them with a notice of the right to assemble based on the Nevada [48:01.160 --> 48:07.160] Constitution and the U.S. Constitution, and I've given them three days to respond. [48:07.160 --> 48:09.160] Wait, wait, wait. [48:09.160 --> 48:12.160] You're talking about metal detectors and right to assemble. [48:12.160 --> 48:14.160] I don't understand the connection. [48:14.160 --> 48:15.160] Okay. [48:15.160 --> 48:16.160] All right. [48:16.160 --> 48:17.160] Let me go back. [48:17.160 --> 48:21.160] So I go to this kind of commission meeting here in Reno, Washoe County. [48:21.160 --> 48:24.160] So I go to commission meetings a lot. [48:24.160 --> 48:28.160] In that building, there are not metal detectors at all. [48:28.160 --> 48:34.160] The doors for everyone coming into that building, they only put them up for us to go into the [48:34.160 --> 48:39.160] chambers, and they used to just set them up for people going into the chambers during [48:39.160 --> 48:42.160] a Washoe County commissioners meeting. [48:42.160 --> 48:48.160] Now they've started adding them to other meetings in the same chambers. [48:48.160 --> 48:54.160] And so I've challenged them with a, do they have a warrant, do they have probable cause, [48:54.160 --> 49:01.160] am I a criminal, have I threatened anybody, all that stuff, and they say no to every single [49:01.160 --> 49:02.160] one of those. [49:02.160 --> 49:07.160] And so I've challenged them over and over and over to produce, they said, well, I said, [49:07.160 --> 49:08.160] what gives you the authority? [49:08.160 --> 49:10.160] And they said they have a policy. [49:10.160 --> 49:15.160] So I demanded that they produce a policy, and they can't. [49:15.160 --> 49:16.160] It doesn't exist. [49:16.160 --> 49:22.160] It's a policy that someone has basically verbally said to somebody else, and therefore we have [49:22.160 --> 49:28.160] a metal detector up there violating our 4th Amendment and our Article 1, 18th Amendment [49:28.160 --> 49:33.160] rights to our secure persons. [49:33.160 --> 49:38.160] You also have a 4th Amendment, free from unreasonable search and seizure. [49:38.160 --> 49:44.160] When they first put these in, they called them voluntary. [49:44.160 --> 49:54.160] But it was, you know, metal detectors in courts started in Fort Worth. [49:54.160 --> 50:00.160] There was a lawyer who was in a divorce suit, and at the time it was common practice for [50:00.160 --> 50:05.160] the wives to always accuse the husbands of molesting the children. [50:05.160 --> 50:09.160] And they did that to this guy and just ruined his life. [50:09.160 --> 50:15.160] And he walked in the courtroom one day and pulled out a pistol and shot the judge, shot [50:15.160 --> 50:19.160] the prosecutor, put the pistol down, let him arrest him. [50:19.160 --> 50:20.160] He was convicted. [50:20.160 --> 50:28.160] He didn't defend himself, and he refused to allow an appeal. [50:28.160 --> 50:36.160] The guy kind of committed suicide by cop, but they just destroyed his life, and he walked [50:36.160 --> 50:37.160] in and shot the shooter. [50:37.160 --> 50:42.160] After that, they started putting metal detectors at the door in the courthouses. [50:42.160 --> 50:44.160] In courtrooms, right, courthouses. [50:44.160 --> 50:45.160] Yep. [50:45.160 --> 50:47.160] Well, this is not a courthouse. [50:47.160 --> 50:54.160] This is just a regular county facility that has the chambers in it that they use for meetings. [50:54.160 --> 50:55.160] Okay. [50:55.160 --> 51:06.160] It was my understanding that this is an unreasonable search, and they can only do that if you consent [51:06.160 --> 51:07.160] to it. [51:07.160 --> 51:12.160] Of course, they have a warrant. [51:12.160 --> 51:14.160] What happens if you refuse to consent? [51:14.160 --> 51:17.160] Well, I've done that, and they have... [51:17.160 --> 51:23.160] So I've asked them, do I have the right to assemble in these county commission meetings? [51:23.160 --> 51:24.160] And they talk in circles. [51:24.160 --> 51:28.160] They're driving me crazy, but I'm learning their patterns. [51:28.160 --> 51:29.160] They tell me... [51:29.160 --> 51:33.160] So they won't say yes or no, even though I demand an answer, yes or no. [51:33.160 --> 51:39.160] They say, if you allow us to screen you. [51:39.160 --> 51:44.160] I say, I'm not allowing you to screen you, you don't have a warrant. [51:44.160 --> 51:46.160] So we go back and round around that. [51:46.160 --> 51:50.160] And so I have not gone in. [51:50.160 --> 51:57.160] One time I called the sheriff's department, I called 911, and they sent five sheriffs out to speak with me. [51:57.160 --> 52:06.160] And unfortunately, I wasn't hip to their circular speech, their deflection, all that stuff. [52:06.160 --> 52:12.160] And I let them essentially become policy enforcement officers instead of law enforcement officers. [52:12.160 --> 52:23.160] So this Tuesday, I've already given them a notice that I have every right to go in that chambers without being searched. [52:23.160 --> 52:28.160] So we'll see what kind of fireworks there are on Tuesday. [52:28.160 --> 52:37.160] And one of the demands or compensations for them not allowing me to go in, we gave... [52:37.160 --> 52:44.160] So they have three days to respond with the article and the section from the Nevada Constitution, which they can't do. [52:44.160 --> 52:45.160] There isn't one. [52:45.160 --> 52:50.160] And if they don't, then they acquiesce to our demands. [52:50.160 --> 52:59.160] And the demand is that for every minute you keep me out of the meeting, I will be charging you $1,000 a minute. [52:59.160 --> 53:01.160] $1,000 a minute? [53:01.160 --> 53:07.160] Oh, wait, how much was Trez event, Brett? [53:07.160 --> 53:11.160] Yeah, it was just a little over $1,000, but that was in 1984 dollars. [53:11.160 --> 53:17.160] So if you look at the inflation, it's a little over $3,000 a minute now. [53:17.160 --> 53:21.160] So I'm being reasonable and by any stretch of the imagination. [53:21.160 --> 53:33.160] So I will call the sheriff again, and I will allow the sheriff to appoint the sheriff and make sure we go through all of the ARS codes, [53:33.160 --> 53:40.160] the Nevada Constitution, that I have the Article 10 and Article 18 stuff written out, [53:40.160 --> 53:48.160] as well as the First and the Fourth Amendment and a default letter to be served on... [53:48.160 --> 53:51.160] I actually wrote this to nine different people. [53:51.160 --> 53:55.160] So we'll have default letters that will get served on all of these guys. [53:55.160 --> 53:59.160] Wait, wait, what's the default letter? [53:59.160 --> 54:09.160] They did not respond in the three days, showing they have the authority to force me to be screened. [54:09.160 --> 54:14.160] So what's causing them to have to answer you within a certain X number of days? [54:14.160 --> 54:20.160] Is there a records request you put in there, and that's what the statute requires of them, or are you just making it up? [54:20.160 --> 54:25.160] In our letter, we gave them three days to respond, which is ample time. [54:25.160 --> 54:29.160] If they said they've got a policy or they believe they've got their right, [54:29.160 --> 54:45.160] in three days there's plenty of time to come up with the Nevada article and section showing that they have that right. [54:45.160 --> 54:51.160] Okay, so how much are you going to sue them for? [54:51.160 --> 54:54.160] It will depend on how many minutes they let me sit there. [54:54.160 --> 55:01.160] So let me sit there for two hours, it will be $120,000. [55:01.160 --> 55:06.160] Okay, that's a good number. [55:06.160 --> 55:14.160] Well, I really don't care how long they sit there, and either the sheriff can escort me in like everything that we show them [55:14.160 --> 55:20.160] they have not just the right to do, but their duty to do, [55:20.160 --> 55:27.160] or they will end up being on the wrong side of the law yet again. [55:27.160 --> 55:33.160] And I sent this to the sheriff and I sent it to the sergeant that I've been working with from the sheriff's office. [55:33.160 --> 55:40.160] So it's not like they don't know, they've all been notified. [55:40.160 --> 55:46.160] So do you have any questions for us? It seems like you've got this all together. [55:46.160 --> 55:52.160] Well, that's part of the reason I'm calling in to make sure I do have it all covered, because we think we do. [55:52.160 --> 55:58.160] And then, you know, so I'll call in and let you know about that. [55:58.160 --> 56:05.160] The only other thing that we've come up against, which I think you guys alluded to before the last caller, [56:05.160 --> 56:12.160] and that was that there's a systemic problem, and that is when we go into chambers they limit us to three minutes. [56:12.160 --> 56:19.160] And while I have demanded that they answer questions in the public comment, the questions are easy. [56:19.160 --> 56:22.160] They're yes and no questions. [56:22.160 --> 56:27.160] I sat there one time for 58 seconds, they refused to answer me. [56:27.160 --> 56:33.160] Immediately after my condo was up, he turned to the assistant DA and the guy said, [56:33.160 --> 56:38.160] we recommend you don't because it could lead to a deliberation, which is just nonsense. [56:38.160 --> 56:49.160] It's a way out of making sure that they do not end up with a dialogue with us to really learn what we want and how to remedy it. [56:49.160 --> 56:53.160] So that's what redress of grievances means, is they come up with a remedy. [56:53.160 --> 56:55.160] We come to a solution. [56:55.160 --> 57:06.160] And so I was in a meeting presenting the provisional voting anomaly errors and irregularities on the 2020 election with the manager. [57:06.160 --> 57:12.160] And again, I asked him several questions and he flat refused to answer even in this. [57:12.160 --> 57:14.160] Now, I record everything. [57:14.160 --> 57:18.160] So that's up on our Wall Show Patriots channel, up on Rumble. [57:18.160 --> 57:21.160] If anyone wants to see that, we recorded it. [57:21.160 --> 57:23.160] I went through all of that. [57:23.160 --> 57:25.160] This stuff is irrefutable. [57:25.160 --> 57:28.160] And we've demanded that they open up a thing. [57:28.160 --> 57:43.160] Back to the question is, how do we force these guys in these open meetings to answer us when we ask them questions? [57:43.160 --> 57:44.160] Well, I don't know about Randy. [57:44.160 --> 57:46.160] I'd say file a criminal complaint. [57:46.160 --> 57:48.160] That's official misconduct. [57:48.160 --> 57:49.160] They have a job to do. [57:49.160 --> 57:51.160] They have a duty to do. [57:51.160 --> 57:56.160] I don't think we have official oppression in Nevada, but these people are hired for a purpose. [57:56.160 --> 57:57.160] They have a job. [57:57.160 --> 57:59.160] They have duties that are imposed on them by law. [57:59.160 --> 58:08.160] And when they decide they don't want to do it, well, they're lying in the face of the law and they need to feel the weight of it. [58:08.160 --> 58:10.160] Criminal complaint. [58:10.160 --> 58:11.160] Okay. [58:11.160 --> 58:17.160] Have you looked, have you been through the criminal procedure code for Nevada? [58:17.160 --> 58:21.160] Yes. [58:21.160 --> 58:27.160] What, okay, I had a question and I'm trying to bring it back. [58:27.160 --> 58:41.160] You're dealing with a board, not a court or a, not the judiciary, but you're just dealing with the executive branch. [58:41.160 --> 58:43.160] Oh, pre-ligation discovery. [58:43.160 --> 58:48.160] When we come back, we'll talk about the potential for pre-ligation discovery. [58:48.160 --> 58:50.160] We'll be right back. [58:50.160 --> 58:54.160] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.160 --> 59:01.160] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.160 --> 59:06.160] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.160 --> 59:13.160] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.160 --> 59:18.160] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.160 --> 59:27.160] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.160 --> 59:40.160] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.160 --> 59:44.160] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.160 --> 59:49.160] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.160 --> 59:59.160] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.160 --> 01:00:05.160] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.160 --> 01:00:09.160] They guarantee you the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.160 --> 01:00:11.160] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.160 --> 01:00:17.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.160 --> 01:00:19.160] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.160 --> 01:00:22.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.160 --> 01:00:27.160] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.160 --> 01:00:29.160] So protect your rights. [01:00:29.160 --> 01:00:32.160] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.160 --> 01:00:35.160] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.160 --> 01:00:43.160] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.160 --> 01:00:46.160] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.160 --> 01:00:49.160] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:49.160 --> 01:00:52.160] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:52.160 --> 01:00:55.160] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.160 --> 01:01:01.160] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:01.160 --> 01:01:07.160] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:07.160 --> 01:01:09.160] Third party? Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.160 --> 01:01:17.160] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.160 --> 01:01:32.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.160 --> 01:01:35.160] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.160 --> 01:01:39.160] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.160 --> 01:01:41.160] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:41.160 --> 01:01:47.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.160 --> 01:01:49.160] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.160 --> 01:01:53.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:53.160 --> 01:01:57.160] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.160 --> 01:01:59.160] So protect your rights. [01:01:59.160 --> 01:02:03.160] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:03.160 --> 01:02:05.160] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.160 --> 01:02:09.160] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com. [01:02:09.160 --> 01:02:13.160] It's a private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.160 --> 01:02:16.160] Start over with Startpage. [01:02:16.160 --> 01:02:22.160] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.160 --> 01:02:28.160] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:28.160 --> 01:02:31.160] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:31.160 --> 01:02:35.160] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:35.160 --> 01:02:40.160] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.160 --> 01:02:47.160] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.160 --> 01:02:54.160] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:54.160 --> 01:03:06.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:24.160 --> 01:03:35.160] I won't pay for the war with my body. Ain't gonna pay for the car with my money. [01:03:35.160 --> 01:03:38.160] I won't pay for the fun with my body. [01:03:38.160 --> 01:03:42.160] That brand's wicked and their logic's shoddy. [01:03:42.160 --> 01:03:45.160] Ain't gonna pay for the war with my body. [01:03:45.160 --> 01:03:51.160] Okay, we are back. Brandy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio. We're talking to Nicholas of Nevada. [01:03:51.160 --> 01:03:59.160] Okay, Nicholas, you're taking on the guys with the metal detectors. [01:03:59.160 --> 01:04:05.160] So who are you taking on? You take on the police or you're taking on the council itself? [01:04:05.160 --> 01:04:07.160] Well, it's a whole group of them. [01:04:07.160 --> 01:04:16.160] So we serve the chairman of the Washoe County Commissioners who was the chairman when they put that in. [01:04:16.160 --> 01:04:21.160] I also served the current chair, but during the meetings I've demanded I remove it. [01:04:21.160 --> 01:04:27.160] The guy that's the head of Allied Universal Security, I've filed it against him. [01:04:27.160 --> 01:04:32.160] Ben West, who is the administrator of the security for Washoe County, [01:04:32.160 --> 01:04:46.160] I sent a notice to the sheriff, the sergeant, and my local Nevada representative. [01:04:46.160 --> 01:04:50.160] So it looks like you're going after everyone. [01:04:50.160 --> 01:04:52.160] Yep. [01:04:52.160 --> 01:04:59.160] What was mentioned when we left out was pre-litigation discovery. [01:04:59.160 --> 01:05:04.160] I'm looking that up in Nevada. [01:05:04.160 --> 01:05:09.160] In Texas, I think it's 202. [01:05:09.160 --> 01:05:18.160] So if you see something in Nevada that looks parallel to that, it would be pre-litigation discovery. [01:05:18.160 --> 01:05:25.160] There's nothing like Texas pre-litigation discovery anywhere. [01:05:25.160 --> 01:05:32.160] Pretty well in pre-litigation discovery, you can get anything you can get in trial discovery. [01:05:32.160 --> 01:05:33.160] Right. [01:05:33.160 --> 01:05:39.160] So you go to the court and say, I think I have a case, but I'm not sure. [01:05:39.160 --> 01:05:47.160] And before I institute a civil action, I need information that only the defendant will have [01:05:47.160 --> 01:05:55.160] so you can ask for pre-litigation discovery in the interest of judicial economy. [01:05:55.160 --> 01:06:00.160] So look in Nevada law for what you can do with pre-litigation discovery. [01:06:00.160 --> 01:06:04.160] One of the things you can do in every state that I've looked at so far [01:06:04.160 --> 01:06:11.160] is most states in pre-litigation discovery, almost all except Texas [01:06:11.160 --> 01:06:19.160] or maybe a couple others I don't know about, they allow you to do depositions. [01:06:19.160 --> 01:06:23.160] That's wonderful. [01:06:23.160 --> 01:06:29.160] You can depose every member of the board. [01:06:29.160 --> 01:06:35.160] You can depose the chief of police or the sheriff. [01:06:35.160 --> 01:06:37.160] So you definitely want to look into that. [01:06:37.160 --> 01:06:42.160] And where do I depose them? How do I put that in motion? [01:06:42.160 --> 01:06:49.160] Okay, I'm looking at a business search for pre-litigation discovery. [01:06:49.160 --> 01:06:56.160] Normally the court will only approve the request for discovery prior to a filing of a complaint [01:06:56.160 --> 01:07:00.160] where there is a substantial danger of evidence being lost or destroyed. [01:07:00.160 --> 01:07:03.160] This is a high burden to overcome. [01:07:03.160 --> 01:07:12.160] Even if the burden is overcome, the rule may limit the pre-complaint discovery to a deposition. [01:07:12.160 --> 01:07:15.160] That's what most do. [01:07:15.160 --> 01:07:21.160] But it's not so much getting pre-litigation discovery. [01:07:21.160 --> 01:07:26.160] It's asking for it and forcing them to get in a big fight with you [01:07:26.160 --> 01:07:32.160] to keep from having to respond to discovery. [01:07:32.160 --> 01:07:38.160] If you like beating them up, this is another tool you can beat them up with. [01:07:38.160 --> 01:07:42.160] Well, that sounds like something we should certainly look at [01:07:42.160 --> 01:07:51.160] because in September, the 22 months expires where the Registrar of Voters can [01:07:51.160 --> 01:07:58.160] basically destroy all of the voter data from the 2020 election. [01:07:58.160 --> 01:08:06.160] I just presented a Previsional Voting Anomalies Report to the county manager. [01:08:06.160 --> 01:08:12.160] I demanded that he get a state put on the destruction of all that data. [01:08:12.160 --> 01:08:14.160] Of course, he danced around that. [01:08:14.160 --> 01:08:20.160] We have to be everything according to the NRS code, which is not true. [01:08:20.160 --> 01:08:22.160] He said they did. [01:08:22.160 --> 01:08:25.160] We challenged him on what the NRS code was. [01:08:25.160 --> 01:08:30.160] And he couldn't even come close to listening to any of them. [01:08:30.160 --> 01:08:34.160] So we need to make sure that they don't destroy all that data [01:08:34.160 --> 01:08:38.160] because I have found fraud at a pretty significant level [01:08:38.160 --> 01:08:41.160] and have a report that proves that. [01:08:41.160 --> 01:08:46.160] So we need to use that pre-court discovery to stop that. [01:08:46.160 --> 01:08:53.160] They probably have a law similar to Texas. [01:08:53.160 --> 01:09:00.160] If you, where a jurisdiction is allowed to destroy their tapes [01:09:00.160 --> 01:09:06.160] after a certain amount of time, if there is litigation [01:09:06.160 --> 01:09:15.160] or if they anticipated litigation or if anything has been filed [01:09:15.160 --> 01:09:20.160] relating to the records, like if you're making a request for records, [01:09:20.160 --> 01:09:27.160] if you're asking a, if you raise a question that makes the records [01:09:27.160 --> 01:09:36.160] potentially evidence in a court, in a trial, then they can't destroy it at all. [01:09:36.160 --> 01:09:41.160] They have to keep it until the trial is expired. [01:09:41.160 --> 01:09:43.160] So you might look at that in Nevada law. [01:09:43.160 --> 01:09:48.160] Public record request on all of that, and they're already 45 days behind. [01:09:48.160 --> 01:09:52.160] I have one in now demanding that they give me, [01:09:52.160 --> 01:09:56.160] everyone who voted in the 2020 election was homeless [01:09:56.160 --> 01:09:58.160] because they have a page on there that you just, [01:09:58.160 --> 01:10:05.160] you say what four streets you live in or by, and that violates the NRS code. [01:10:05.160 --> 01:10:08.160] And so I've already got a public record request for that. [01:10:08.160 --> 01:10:13.160] And while they say, oh, we're understaffed, it's not my problem. [01:10:13.160 --> 01:10:15.160] We still need that data. [01:10:15.160 --> 01:10:17.160] And so they are so far behind. [01:10:17.160 --> 01:10:22.160] So I'll make sure that we keep putting those public records requests in. [01:10:22.160 --> 01:10:28.160] And that puts them over the date that they would destroy them. [01:10:28.160 --> 01:10:30.160] So that's a pretty good ploy. [01:10:30.160 --> 01:10:31.160] Thank you. [01:10:31.160 --> 01:10:32.160] Okay. [01:10:32.160 --> 01:10:34.160] Do you have anything else for us? [01:10:34.160 --> 01:10:35.160] No. [01:10:35.160 --> 01:10:38.160] I'll let the next car and solve the world's problems. [01:10:38.160 --> 01:10:40.160] I appreciate you solving mine here for a little bit. [01:10:40.160 --> 01:10:41.160] Okay. [01:10:41.160 --> 01:10:43.160] Thank you, Nicholas. [01:10:43.160 --> 01:10:48.160] Now we're going to go to Tina in California. [01:10:48.160 --> 01:10:52.160] Hello, Ms. Tina. [01:10:52.160 --> 01:10:55.160] Hello, Wendy and Brett and everyone. [01:10:55.160 --> 01:10:57.160] How are you? [01:10:57.160 --> 01:11:03.160] Wendy, it kind of depends with me, I guess. [01:11:03.160 --> 01:11:08.160] Did you hear that crack I made about Tina Churlish yesterday? [01:11:08.160 --> 01:11:10.160] I certainly did. [01:11:10.160 --> 01:11:16.160] I was going to say that Brett did it. [01:11:16.160 --> 01:11:17.160] Yes. [01:11:17.160 --> 01:11:18.160] I know. [01:11:18.160 --> 01:11:19.160] I heard it all. [01:11:19.160 --> 01:11:21.160] You're the one in trouble. [01:11:21.160 --> 01:11:28.160] They sent you an email and said you owe me now and you need to get me on first tonight before I have dinner. [01:11:28.160 --> 01:11:29.160] Okay. [01:11:29.160 --> 01:11:31.160] We got you on early. [01:11:31.160 --> 01:11:34.160] What do you have for us today? [01:11:34.160 --> 01:11:43.160] Two things. One, I wanted to ask you how the suit against the Texas governor's going for refusing to prosecute Mnuchin. [01:11:43.160 --> 01:11:44.160] Has that gone anywhere? [01:11:44.160 --> 01:11:46.160] Is it going anywhere? [01:11:46.160 --> 01:11:48.160] I just haven't had time to get back to him. [01:11:48.160 --> 01:11:51.160] I've got so many irons in the fire. [01:11:51.160 --> 01:11:58.160] I need to file criminal charges against all of the district judges in Travis County. [01:11:58.160 --> 01:12:01.160] I have the lawsuit made up. [01:12:01.160 --> 01:12:06.160] I just need to adjust it from Victoria to Travis County. [01:12:06.160 --> 01:12:07.160] Okay. [01:12:07.160 --> 01:12:10.160] Is there a timeframe that it has to happen in? [01:12:10.160 --> 01:12:12.160] I'm not sure. [01:12:12.160 --> 01:12:20.160] This kind of looks like fraud, but most things are two years. [01:12:20.160 --> 01:12:29.160] It hasn't been that long since I sent them the notice of crime. [01:12:29.160 --> 01:12:31.160] I've got quite a bit of time. [01:12:31.160 --> 01:12:34.160] I've got so much stuff going. [01:12:34.160 --> 01:12:42.160] It was one of my least immediate options, but now I'm starting to fight with Victoria County. [01:12:42.160 --> 01:12:51.160] I'm going to want to bring the officials from Victoria County back to Austin, back to Travis County. [01:12:51.160 --> 01:12:58.160] I expect to be working in that area anyway, and I'll have my documents put together. [01:12:58.160 --> 01:13:08.160] I've got the complaint and the lawsuit already prepared for the judges who refuse to issue a warrant, [01:13:08.160 --> 01:13:14.160] but I don't even know if I can get at the district attorney. [01:13:14.160 --> 01:13:15.160] Okay. [01:13:15.160 --> 01:13:20.160] Does that mean there's anything still I can do? [01:13:20.160 --> 01:13:22.160] Well, not from California. [01:13:22.160 --> 01:13:26.160] I can do this from Texas. [01:13:26.160 --> 01:13:36.160] They'll pretty well know who I am when I come after them, so it may facilitate things. [01:13:36.160 --> 01:13:41.160] I have one other question. [01:13:41.160 --> 01:13:44.160] Findings and facts and conclusions of law. [01:13:44.160 --> 01:13:49.160] I wrote and submitted to the court that I'm requesting that from the judge [01:13:49.160 --> 01:13:59.160] while refusing to overturn the reconsideration in a notice, [01:13:59.160 --> 01:14:04.160] and then I'm wondering, I've seen people suggest, and you included, [01:14:04.160 --> 01:14:08.160] you put in your own findings and facts and conclusions of law. [01:14:08.160 --> 01:14:10.160] Do I do that? [01:14:10.160 --> 01:14:13.160] I'm also submitting a notice of intent to appeal. [01:14:13.160 --> 01:14:17.160] Does it match timing-wise whether I do mine? [01:14:17.160 --> 01:14:31.160] The reason you do that is you put the brief inside a request that the prosecutor released. [01:14:31.160 --> 01:14:34.160] I lost my place. [01:14:34.160 --> 01:14:40.160] I filed a complaint against the judges, so we want the judges to issue warrants or refuse, [01:14:40.160 --> 01:14:46.160] and then we get to sue the judges personally. [01:14:46.160 --> 01:14:53.160] Time-consuming, but they're not going to get a statute of limitations here because it hasn't been very long, [01:14:53.160 --> 01:14:56.160] and we can actually tie that into an ongoing criminal conspiracy [01:14:56.160 --> 01:14:59.160] because the same things are being done everywhere, [01:14:59.160 --> 01:15:06.160] and it's unreasonable to think that with the same thing going on everywhere, [01:15:06.160 --> 01:15:16.160] it has the appearance of an ongoing criminal conspiracy, RICO. [01:15:16.160 --> 01:15:19.160] Racketeering. [01:15:19.160 --> 01:15:22.160] Do I put it in before I file my notice of appeal, [01:15:22.160 --> 01:15:29.160] or can I file a notice of intent to appeal and then submit my own findings and facts? [01:15:29.160 --> 01:15:31.160] No, no, hold on. [01:15:31.160 --> 01:15:34.160] That's not how findings and facts are done. [01:15:34.160 --> 01:15:38.160] You ask the judge for findings of facts and conclusions at law, [01:15:38.160 --> 01:15:48.160] or accept the findings of facts and conclusions I included as attachment A to this document. [01:15:48.160 --> 01:15:50.160] I'm too late to do that. [01:15:50.160 --> 01:15:53.160] She's going to come back with some excuses. [01:15:53.160 --> 01:15:57.160] Can I rebut her findings of facts and conclusions at law in any way? [01:15:57.160 --> 01:15:59.160] We don't care about that. [01:15:59.160 --> 01:16:08.160] This allows you to get your arguments on the record, all of your issues on the record. [01:16:08.160 --> 01:16:14.160] Everything is about the appellate court, so you don't care what this judge does. [01:16:14.160 --> 01:16:17.160] The more unscrupulous they are, the better. [01:16:17.160 --> 01:16:20.160] We have Ted down here on the bottom of our board. [01:16:20.160 --> 01:16:27.160] We'll be getting to him, and he's had them for a long time doing the wrong thing, [01:16:27.160 --> 01:16:30.160] and he's ready to go to the feds. [01:16:30.160 --> 01:16:32.160] I think so, too. [01:16:32.160 --> 01:16:35.160] Okay, well, that's pretty much it for right now. [01:16:35.160 --> 01:16:37.160] I'll ask the other questions. [01:16:37.160 --> 01:16:39.160] I'll come back on next week. [01:16:39.160 --> 01:16:41.160] Okay, thank you, Tina. [01:16:41.160 --> 01:16:43.160] Thank you very much. [01:16:43.160 --> 01:16:48.160] Now we're going to go to our sponsors, [01:16:48.160 --> 01:17:00.160] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rudy Varadio. Hang on, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.160 --> 01:17:05.160] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.160 --> 01:17:09.160] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. 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[01:17:49.160 --> 01:18:00.160] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.160 --> 01:18:04.160] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.160 --> 01:18:07.160] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.160 --> 01:18:13.160] I need my truth pick. I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.160 --> 01:18:16.160] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.160 --> 01:18:20.160] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.160 --> 01:18:22.160] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.160 --> 01:18:24.160] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.160 --> 01:18:27.160] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.160 --> 01:18:31.160] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, the first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.160 --> 01:18:37.160] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. Pick on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.160 --> 01:18:43.160] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.160 --> 01:18:44.160] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.160 --> 01:18:45.160] No. [01:18:45.160 --> 01:18:47.160] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.160 --> 01:18:48.160] No. [01:18:48.160 --> 01:18:49.160] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.160 --> 01:18:51.160] No. I mean, yes. [01:18:51.160 --> 01:18:57.160] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:18:57.160 --> 01:18:58.160] We are welcome. [01:18:58.160 --> 01:19:01.160] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:28.160 --> 01:19:30.160] Thank you. [01:19:58.160 --> 01:20:04.160] Okay, we are back. This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Felton. I'm Brett Fountain. [01:20:04.160 --> 01:20:07.160] And we're going to go to what looks like a new caller. [01:20:07.160 --> 01:20:11.160] We've got it in the 903 area code. [01:20:11.160 --> 01:20:17.160] If you're in the 903 area code, give us a first name and a state where you are. [01:20:17.160 --> 01:20:22.160] Hello, 903. [01:20:22.160 --> 01:20:28.160] Hello. [01:20:28.160 --> 01:20:33.160] Good evening. Please give us a first name and a state. [01:20:33.160 --> 01:20:38.160] Jaquita Fargo, and I'm in Sherman, Texas. [01:20:38.160 --> 01:20:42.160] All right. [01:20:42.160 --> 01:20:46.160] And what's on your mind this evening? [01:20:46.160 --> 01:20:52.160] What's on your mind this evening? [01:20:52.160 --> 01:20:58.160] I purchased a thing through CarShield for my car. [01:20:58.160 --> 01:21:04.160] And my car broke down, and I put it in the shop, and they've had it in the shop now for a month and a week. [01:21:04.160 --> 01:21:08.160] And CarShield has refused to fix it. [01:21:08.160 --> 01:21:10.160] They're saying because my car is too old. [01:21:10.160 --> 01:21:16.160] Well, they knew when I purchased the thing that my car was a 2010 PT Cruiser. [01:21:16.160 --> 01:21:24.160] And my motor broke down, and they don't want to fix the rings in my car and fix my motor. [01:21:24.160 --> 01:21:31.160] So they've got a contract with you, and they've been taking the money for it all this time. [01:21:31.160 --> 01:21:38.160] And now that it's their turn to pay up and do their end of the bargain, they're not wanting to do it, right? [01:21:38.160 --> 01:21:42.160] That's it. [01:21:42.160 --> 01:21:45.160] Well, what are you going to do about that? [01:21:45.160 --> 01:21:47.160] I don't know what to do. [01:21:47.160 --> 01:21:57.160] I've talked to them, and they're telling me that my rings are not broke and that it's not anything pertaining to the motor. [01:21:57.160 --> 01:21:59.160] Wait, wait. Who's them? [01:21:59.160 --> 01:22:02.160] Are you talking about the people that are working on it? [01:22:02.160 --> 01:22:04.160] No, at CarShield. [01:22:04.160 --> 01:22:05.160] Okay. [01:22:05.160 --> 01:22:13.160] I told the guy who's working on my car, first they told him that they didn't cover them, didn't cover the motor. [01:22:13.160 --> 01:22:16.160] And I said, well, that's not what their contract says, and it ain't. [01:22:16.160 --> 01:22:18.160] There you go. [01:22:18.160 --> 01:22:19.160] That's what you've got to stick with. [01:22:19.160 --> 01:22:22.160] What does the contract say? [01:22:22.160 --> 01:22:25.160] Well, I'm fixing to tell you what it says. [01:22:25.160 --> 01:22:26.160] No, no, I'm not asking. [01:22:26.160 --> 01:22:32.160] I'm telling you that you're doing exactly the right thing is to hold them to the contract, not just because what you think is right, [01:22:32.160 --> 01:22:34.160] but hold them to what it says. [01:22:34.160 --> 01:22:36.160] Because that's the agreement that counts. [01:22:36.160 --> 01:22:43.160] Well, they're saying it's not caused, that it's got to be caused by failure of an internal lubricant part from the engine. [01:22:43.160 --> 01:22:46.160] Well, the rings is part of the engine. [01:22:46.160 --> 01:22:52.160] And when I tried to talk to the girl about it, she said, oh, no, they're not part of it. [01:22:52.160 --> 01:22:58.160] It's the wear and tear on the car and all this kind of stuff. [01:22:58.160 --> 01:23:02.160] And I said, look, you knew what my car was when I did the contract. [01:23:02.160 --> 01:23:04.160] I did what they call a silver. [01:23:04.160 --> 01:23:07.160] I pay $129.99 a month. [01:23:07.160 --> 01:23:08.160] And I said, y'all have it. [01:23:08.160 --> 01:23:12.160] My car breaks down, and you don't want to pay for it. [01:23:12.160 --> 01:23:15.160] And I said, it's like this. [01:23:15.160 --> 01:23:16.160] I said, I'm not paying you another dime. [01:23:16.160 --> 01:23:19.160] It's just that simple. [01:23:19.160 --> 01:23:23.160] I'm not going to pay for them to not, you know, that's a waste of money. [01:23:23.160 --> 01:23:25.160] I'm on the fixed income. [01:23:25.160 --> 01:23:27.160] I'm an elderly person. [01:23:27.160 --> 01:23:28.160] And it's a struggle. [01:23:28.160 --> 01:23:33.160] I'm just a struggle every month to pay that, but I pay it faithfully. [01:23:33.160 --> 01:23:36.160] But they're not taking care of me. [01:23:36.160 --> 01:23:37.160] Yeah. [01:23:37.160 --> 01:23:39.160] So have you decided? [01:23:39.160 --> 01:23:45.160] So it sounds to me, if it would be me in your shoes, I'd be looking for the name of the CEO, [01:23:45.160 --> 01:23:51.160] find out who's the top dog in that car shield bunch. [01:23:51.160 --> 01:23:58.160] And this CEO is the one who's responsible for whatever all of his underlings do. [01:23:58.160 --> 01:24:02.160] So you're going to reach out to the CEO, woman, man. [01:24:02.160 --> 01:24:06.160] You're going to find out who it is and send them a tort letter. [01:24:06.160 --> 01:24:10.160] The tort letter says, here's what you've done wrong. [01:24:10.160 --> 01:24:17.160] Here's what I expect you to do to resolve it and make me whole or be sued. [01:24:17.160 --> 01:24:18.160] Yep. [01:24:18.160 --> 01:24:26.160] At that point, you're either going to get their attention and somebody's going to, you know, [01:24:26.160 --> 01:24:30.160] what do they say, the feces rolls downhill. [01:24:30.160 --> 01:24:35.160] So then somebody's going to get in trouble for not doing their job and helping you out. [01:24:35.160 --> 01:24:39.160] Or they're going to sit there and ignore it and hope you go away and maybe try to call your bluff, [01:24:39.160 --> 01:24:42.160] and then you've got to sue them. [01:24:42.160 --> 01:24:45.160] Well, see, they have a market seller, which is car shield. [01:24:45.160 --> 01:24:50.160] The administrator who handles the complaints and stuff, you know, [01:24:50.160 --> 01:24:56.160] to go out and check on the car and all that stuff is called American Auto Shield LTD. [01:24:56.160 --> 01:24:59.160] Well, I talked to them, too, and I got the runaround. [01:24:59.160 --> 01:25:02.160] Yeah. [01:25:02.160 --> 01:25:04.160] Yep. [01:25:04.160 --> 01:25:05.160] I've talked to them. [01:25:05.160 --> 01:25:07.160] I've talked to car shields. [01:25:07.160 --> 01:25:10.160] I mean, I've talked to everybody I know to talk to. [01:25:10.160 --> 01:25:13.160] I've tried to find a lawyer that would take my case. [01:25:13.160 --> 01:25:16.160] I can't find anybody to do that either. [01:25:16.160 --> 01:25:21.160] Yeah, that's not very likely because they're looking at such a small amount of money to recover [01:25:21.160 --> 01:25:28.160] that, you know, you're going to end up paying the lawyer 10 times what the recovery amount would be. [01:25:28.160 --> 01:25:31.160] And, you know, they know nobody wants to do that. [01:25:31.160 --> 01:25:37.160] They don't even want to return the money that I paid them. [01:25:37.160 --> 01:25:41.160] They told me they didn't have to. [01:25:41.160 --> 01:25:45.160] Well, what they do have to do is hold up their end of the agreement. [01:25:45.160 --> 01:25:46.160] It's written on contract. [01:25:46.160 --> 01:25:49.160] That's what a contract is for. [01:25:49.160 --> 01:25:52.160] They've got their part of the bargain to hold up. [01:25:52.160 --> 01:25:55.160] If they don't do it, then they get sued. [01:25:55.160 --> 01:25:56.160] That's it. [01:25:56.160 --> 01:25:59.160] So it's a suit for specific performance. [01:25:59.160 --> 01:26:08.160] You can ask for them to perform their duty because the cause of action you'll be looking for is a breach of duty, [01:26:08.160 --> 01:26:12.160] I believe is what you'll find there. [01:26:12.160 --> 01:26:14.160] Randy, what's that one that you found? [01:26:14.160 --> 01:26:15.160] It's in O'Connor's. [01:26:15.160 --> 01:26:18.160] You've got O'Connor's causes of action. [01:26:18.160 --> 01:26:23.160] I think you said that you've got one that's a few years old and you still use that one. [01:26:23.160 --> 01:26:25.160] You can get those off of eBay real easy. [01:26:25.160 --> 01:26:30.160] Just do a search for O'Connor's causes of action. [01:26:30.160 --> 01:26:34.160] We really don't care how old they are. [01:26:34.160 --> 01:26:41.160] Lawyers, they have a need to quote the most relevant and most current case law. [01:26:41.160 --> 01:26:45.160] So every time a new copy of the litigation guide comes out, [01:26:45.160 --> 01:26:50.160] they set all the stuff they've been using aside and they buy all the new ones [01:26:50.160 --> 01:26:54.160] because they want all their lawyers quoting the most recent law. [01:26:54.160 --> 01:27:02.160] So just call down to a law firm and tell them that you're homeschooling your kids and you want to do a course on law. [01:27:02.160 --> 01:27:06.160] Do you have any old litigation guides hanging around? [01:27:06.160 --> 01:27:09.160] Had someone do that in Amarillo. [01:27:09.160 --> 01:27:12.160] The second law firm she called said, [01:27:12.160 --> 01:27:16.160] do you have a station wagon or a pickup truck? [01:27:16.160 --> 01:27:19.160] And they filled him up. [01:27:19.160 --> 01:27:26.160] So there's some good ways to get these that aren't very expensive. [01:27:26.160 --> 01:27:29.160] Would the library have them? [01:27:29.160 --> 01:27:36.160] Probably not. These are books for sale. [01:27:36.160 --> 01:27:42.160] I'm just so tired of people taking advantage of elderly people. [01:27:42.160 --> 01:27:45.160] If it had been a man, I bet they wouldn't have done him that way. [01:27:45.160 --> 01:27:47.160] But being a woman, yeah. [01:27:47.160 --> 01:27:52.160] So you mess with them and they'll come up with a saying that says, [01:27:52.160 --> 01:27:59.160] be careful of this guy, he's the old buzzard from hell. [01:27:59.160 --> 01:28:04.160] They've been saying that about me for years. [01:28:04.160 --> 01:28:11.160] So I need to do a letter to the Ed people, [01:28:11.160 --> 01:28:20.160] which is not Car Shield but the other people that does the American Auto Shield LTD. [01:28:20.160 --> 01:28:23.160] That's the one I need to do the letter to, right? [01:28:23.160 --> 01:28:27.160] Yes, and you might consider writing a really scathing letter [01:28:27.160 --> 01:28:34.160] to the Better Business Bureau. [01:28:34.160 --> 01:28:40.160] I did that one time over a $6,000 leather handmade couch that you couldn't sit on [01:28:40.160 --> 01:28:44.160] because pillows were tipped forward and they're real hard. [01:28:44.160 --> 01:28:48.160] So if you moved in, you just gradually slid off the couch. [01:28:48.160 --> 01:28:51.160] The next time they come by to fix it, [01:28:51.160 --> 01:28:58.160] I wrote a really nasty letter to the Better Business Bureau [01:28:58.160 --> 01:29:02.160] and my wife told them to come and get it [01:29:02.160 --> 01:29:06.160] and they were going to charge her a 40% restocking fee. [01:29:06.160 --> 01:29:12.160] When that letter went online on the Better Business Bureau's website, [01:29:12.160 --> 01:29:19.160] the guys couldn't get us our money back fast enough. [01:29:19.160 --> 01:29:27.160] Put them up there and also look at the licensing commission for your state. [01:29:27.160 --> 01:29:32.160] You're in Nevada, right? [01:29:32.160 --> 01:29:34.160] What state are you in? [01:29:34.160 --> 01:29:36.160] I'm in Texas. [01:29:36.160 --> 01:29:38.160] Okay, 903, I should know that. [01:29:38.160 --> 01:29:43.160] She's there north of DLW. [01:29:43.160 --> 01:29:50.160] You're over there near where Jesus is from. [01:29:50.160 --> 01:29:55.160] Most people don't know Jesus is from East Texas. [01:29:55.160 --> 01:29:57.160] Palestine, right south of Tyler. [01:29:57.160 --> 01:30:02.160] Hang on, Randy Carlton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:30:02.160 --> 01:30:06.160] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:06.160 --> 01:30:09.160] New study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight [01:30:09.160 --> 01:30:11.160] than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:11.160 --> 01:30:12.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:30:12.160 --> 01:30:17.160] and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:17.160 --> 01:30:19.160] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.160 --> 01:30:22.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.160 --> 01:30:24.160] And once your privacy is gone, [01:30:24.160 --> 01:30:27.160] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.160 --> 01:30:30.160] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [01:30:30.160 --> 01:30:32.160] and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.160 --> 01:30:35.160] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.160 --> 01:30:38.160] Our public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.160 --> 01:30:42.160] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.160 --> 01:30:45.160] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.160 --> 01:30:49.160] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:49.160 --> 01:30:51.160] Wrong. [01:30:51.160 --> 01:30:54.160] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers [01:30:54.160 --> 01:30:56.160] for nearly a decade. [01:30:56.160 --> 01:30:58.160] They found that regularly drinking diet soda [01:30:58.160 --> 01:31:02.160] expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:02.160 --> 01:31:06.160] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:31:06.160 --> 01:31:09.160] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.160 --> 01:31:12.160] Weighting up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, [01:31:12.160 --> 01:31:15.160] which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:15.160 --> 01:31:18.160] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:31:18.160 --> 01:31:20.160] and if you need to shed some pounds, [01:31:20.160 --> 01:31:24.160] avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:24.160 --> 01:31:25.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:25.160 --> 01:31:30.160] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.160 --> 01:31:33.160] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [01:31:33.160 --> 01:31:36.160] that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.160 --> 01:31:38.160] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.160 --> 01:31:41.160] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded [01:31:41.160 --> 01:31:43.160] it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.160 --> 01:31:46.160] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, [01:31:46.160 --> 01:31:48.160] and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.160 --> 01:31:50.160] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.160 --> 01:31:51.160] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.160 --> 01:31:52.160] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.160 --> 01:31:53.160] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.160 --> 01:31:55.160] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.160 --> 01:31:57.160] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.160 --> 01:32:00.160] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.160 --> 01:32:29.160] In conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together [01:32:29.160 --> 01:32:31.160] the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.160 --> 01:32:33.160] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:33.160 --> 01:32:35.160] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.160 --> 01:32:37.160] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:37.160 --> 01:32:40.160] by going to RuleOfLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.160 --> 01:32:42.160] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:42.160 --> 01:32:45.160] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.160 --> 01:32:47.160] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:47.160 --> 01:32:50.160] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.160 --> 01:32:52.160] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:52.160 --> 01:32:54.160] from RuleOfLawRadio.com. [01:32:54.160 --> 01:32:57.160] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society [01:32:57.160 --> 01:32:59.160] we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.160 --> 01:33:04.160] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.160 --> 01:33:05.160] You found it. [01:33:05.160 --> 01:33:33.160] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:35.160 --> 01:33:36.160] Okay, we are back. [01:33:36.160 --> 01:33:38.160] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:33:38.160 --> 01:33:39.160] I'm Brent Fountain. [01:33:39.160 --> 01:33:41.160] And we're talking with Jay Quida in Texas. [01:33:41.160 --> 01:33:44.160] So, Jay Quida, I think you've got your plan lined up. [01:33:44.160 --> 01:33:46.160] Do you know what to do next? [01:33:46.160 --> 01:33:49.160] Yeah, I'm going to write a letter to the main place [01:33:49.160 --> 01:33:52.160] that we're going to be writing the letter to. [01:33:52.160 --> 01:33:54.160] I'm going to write a letter to the main place [01:33:54.160 --> 01:33:56.160] that we're going to be writing the letter to. [01:33:56.160 --> 01:33:58.160] I'm going to write a letter to the main place [01:33:58.160 --> 01:34:00.160] that we're going to be writing the letter to. [01:34:00.160 --> 01:34:05.160] Yeah, I'm going to write a letter to the main place [01:34:05.160 --> 01:34:08.160] that either says yes or no on fixing my car, [01:34:08.160 --> 01:34:10.160] and then I'm going to send another letter [01:34:10.160 --> 01:34:12.160] to the Better Business Bureau, [01:34:12.160 --> 01:34:16.160] and something about the legislation law. [01:34:16.160 --> 01:34:18.160] Need to find that. [01:34:18.160 --> 01:34:25.160] The first one that you're writing there needs to go to the CEO. [01:34:25.160 --> 01:34:28.160] In other words, the principal of all of those agents, [01:34:28.160 --> 01:34:32.160] the CEOs, whoever it is that you signed this contract with, [01:34:32.160 --> 01:34:35.160] you don't care so much about who was their salespeople. [01:34:35.160 --> 01:34:40.160] You want to see who's the bunch that's at the top of your contract. [01:34:40.160 --> 01:34:42.160] What name does it say up there? [01:34:42.160 --> 01:34:45.160] That's the ones that you want to find the CEO [01:34:45.160 --> 01:34:49.160] and hold that man or woman accountable to fix your car, [01:34:49.160 --> 01:34:52.160] because they'll have plenty of agents, you know. [01:34:52.160 --> 01:34:54.160] Yeah, I know that. [01:34:54.160 --> 01:34:58.160] The thing is, everything they do is over the phone. [01:34:58.160 --> 01:35:04.160] I never got a written contract. [01:35:04.160 --> 01:35:08.160] Did you give them any money? [01:35:08.160 --> 01:35:11.160] Yeah, they took money out of my checking account every month. [01:35:11.160 --> 01:35:15.160] Do you have a contract? [01:35:15.160 --> 01:35:16.160] It doesn't matter. [01:35:16.160 --> 01:35:19.160] There is a contract somewhere. [01:35:19.160 --> 01:35:25.160] So it's not in writing in terms of a signature, [01:35:25.160 --> 01:35:30.160] or do you have no wording that you can even look at? [01:35:30.160 --> 01:35:33.160] Yeah, on the book that they sent me, [01:35:33.160 --> 01:35:39.160] they never sent me anything, so I finally asked for a contract. [01:35:39.160 --> 01:35:44.160] But what they sent me was inside a page of the book, [01:35:44.160 --> 01:35:50.160] which has got my name and says, Obligator, American Auto Shield LCD, [01:35:50.160 --> 01:35:53.160] the one I told you that I had talked to today, [01:35:53.160 --> 01:35:55.160] and it's got the vendor information. [01:35:55.160 --> 01:36:02.160] They have all my information on my car, you know, what year it was, mileage, all that. [01:36:02.160 --> 01:36:07.160] But as far as me signing anything, I never got anything to sign. [01:36:07.160 --> 01:36:08.160] That's okay. [01:36:08.160 --> 01:36:12.160] Once some value exchanges hands, it's like a handshake. [01:36:12.160 --> 01:36:15.160] Now it's happened. It's a done deal. [01:36:15.160 --> 01:36:16.160] Right. [01:36:16.160 --> 01:36:19.160] But it's good that you've got something in writing that shows from them [01:36:19.160 --> 01:36:23.160] that they knew what model of a car and age and all of that, [01:36:23.160 --> 01:36:30.160] so now they can't complain and say, oh, we only insure cars that are one year old. [01:36:30.160 --> 01:36:32.160] They already know about that. [01:36:32.160 --> 01:36:33.160] Yeah. [01:36:33.160 --> 01:36:34.160] It's on their own writing. [01:36:34.160 --> 01:36:39.160] When they put my mileage on here, he put a lot more mileage than what's on my car. [01:36:39.160 --> 01:36:47.160] He put 162,744, and my mileage ain't even close to that. [01:36:47.160 --> 01:36:52.160] If they've ever done it, they've done what they wanted. [01:36:52.160 --> 01:36:54.160] I'm just so aggravated by these people on TV. [01:36:54.160 --> 01:36:56.160] Sounds like you're all set. [01:36:56.160 --> 01:36:59.160] Yep. I'm going to do whatever I've got to do. [01:36:59.160 --> 01:37:04.160] And I thought about calling the news too and getting them to get on their tail ends [01:37:04.160 --> 01:37:09.160] because they advertise on the TV. [01:37:09.160 --> 01:37:13.160] What's that you say, Randy, about politics? [01:37:13.160 --> 01:37:16.160] Make it political for them? [01:37:16.160 --> 01:37:17.160] Yeah. [01:37:17.160 --> 01:37:18.160] Everything is political. [01:37:18.160 --> 01:37:21.160] If you don't make it political, you lose. [01:37:21.160 --> 01:37:26.160] But then again, there's lots of politics out there. [01:37:26.160 --> 01:37:28.160] Yeah, I know it. [01:37:28.160 --> 01:37:32.160] You start filing complaints against them and increase their bond rating [01:37:32.160 --> 01:37:43.160] and get them in a position where their bond holder is threatening to withdraw the bond. [01:37:43.160 --> 01:37:44.160] Most likely. [01:37:44.160 --> 01:37:45.160] Oh, go ahead. [01:37:45.160 --> 01:37:50.160] Your car will be chump change. [01:37:50.160 --> 01:37:55.160] It would be cheaper for them to buy a brand new one than to defend with the lawyers and all, [01:37:55.160 --> 01:38:00.160] especially if after you send them a tort letter. [01:38:00.160 --> 01:38:07.160] If some lawyer writes back to you trying to give you some kind of song and dance [01:38:07.160 --> 01:38:16.160] and you bar-grieve that lawyer, their cost just went up dramatically. [01:38:16.160 --> 01:38:21.160] Their interest in getting you to be happy and go away [01:38:21.160 --> 01:38:26.160] is you just got farther down the road on where you need to be. [01:38:26.160 --> 01:38:31.160] Yeah, so they got a deal in here where they want you to do a litigation with them. [01:38:31.160 --> 01:38:34.160] I don't want to mess with them because I know doing a litigation with them, [01:38:34.160 --> 01:38:40.160] I'm going to lose because they're going to have their little lawyers there to do their thing. [01:38:40.160 --> 01:38:42.160] I don't want to mess with their lawyers if I can help it. [01:38:42.160 --> 01:38:44.160] I just want to go after them. [01:38:44.160 --> 01:38:48.160] Yeah. [01:38:48.160 --> 01:38:52.160] Well, like you said, you never did sign anything to agree that you're not going to sue them. [01:38:52.160 --> 01:38:54.160] That's right. [01:38:54.160 --> 01:38:58.160] That wasn't part of your phone agreement or anything. [01:38:58.160 --> 01:39:00.160] Right. [01:39:00.160 --> 01:39:05.160] So how do I bar-grieve an attorney if they do send me a letter? [01:39:05.160 --> 01:39:07.160] Okay, it's pretty easy. [01:39:07.160 --> 01:39:10.160] You go to texasbar.com because it's a state thing, [01:39:10.160 --> 01:39:14.160] so every person in a different state will have to go to somewhere else, [01:39:14.160 --> 01:39:16.160] Florida or Wisconsin or wherever. [01:39:16.160 --> 01:39:19.160] So you're going to go to texasbar.com. [01:39:19.160 --> 01:39:20.160] Okay. [01:39:20.160 --> 01:39:24.160] And you will click on the top there. [01:39:24.160 --> 01:39:27.160] It has Find a Lawyer. [01:39:27.160 --> 01:39:31.160] And depending on your viewport size, they've got this CSS messed up [01:39:31.160 --> 01:39:34.160] where I think they like it messed up this way. [01:39:34.160 --> 01:39:37.160] It's hard to see the button that says Find a Lawyer. [01:39:37.160 --> 01:39:43.160] It might be barely faded in right up in the top right of a big hero image, [01:39:43.160 --> 01:39:46.160] and you have to look around for it. [01:39:46.160 --> 01:39:49.160] The text is barely visible. [01:39:49.160 --> 01:39:50.160] But it says Find a Lawyer. [01:39:50.160 --> 01:39:53.160] You click on that and it will pop up a little form [01:39:53.160 --> 01:39:57.160] where you look for the first name, last name of the lawyer, [01:39:57.160 --> 01:40:01.160] and then that will tell you their bar card number. [01:40:01.160 --> 01:40:06.160] Also on the texasbar.com, you will find their form. [01:40:06.160 --> 01:40:11.160] You can download the PDF of their complaint form. [01:40:11.160 --> 01:40:12.160] You can do it online. [01:40:12.160 --> 01:40:14.160] Some people like to fill it out online. [01:40:14.160 --> 01:40:18.160] They've got a web form for that, but I don't like that because who knows? [01:40:18.160 --> 01:40:23.160] It doesn't work out and you don't get a copy of some error message [01:40:23.160 --> 01:40:26.160] and you don't know if it really went through or not. [01:40:26.160 --> 01:40:34.160] I'd rather just, me, have a file on my machine and when I send it, [01:40:34.160 --> 01:40:41.160] I know that it's sent and I see the success from a fax machine and so forth. [01:40:41.160 --> 01:40:43.160] But you can do it in either way. [01:40:43.160 --> 01:40:47.160] And the whole point, the content of this bar grievance is really simple. [01:40:47.160 --> 01:40:54.160] All you're going to do is find a rule that they violated, which is real easy to do. [01:40:54.160 --> 01:41:00.160] You pull up the Texas Rules of Professional Conduct [01:41:00.160 --> 01:41:04.160] and these lawyers are required to follow these rules. [01:41:04.160 --> 01:41:06.160] You look at the rules and you say, wow, he didn't do that. [01:41:06.160 --> 01:41:08.160] Oh, he messed up that one too. [01:41:08.160 --> 01:41:10.160] Oh my goodness, he should have done that, really? [01:41:10.160 --> 01:41:12.160] He didn't do this either. [01:41:12.160 --> 01:41:14.160] It's pretty easy to find a rule. [01:41:14.160 --> 01:41:20.160] You just pick one that he violated and you just point out what he did and say, [01:41:20.160 --> 01:41:26.160] hey, he did this, this and that in violation of that rule and you send it in. [01:41:26.160 --> 01:41:28.160] How do you point it out? [01:41:28.160 --> 01:41:32.160] Oh, you make statements of fact. [01:41:32.160 --> 01:41:39.160] And a criminal accusation. [01:41:39.160 --> 01:41:41.160] Well, this is not a criminal complaint. [01:41:41.160 --> 01:41:45.160] It's the bar grievance, but yes, same thing. [01:41:45.160 --> 01:41:47.160] Oh, I lost my place. [01:41:47.160 --> 01:41:49.160] I'll shut up now. [01:41:49.160 --> 01:41:53.160] It is very much like a criminal complaint, except with criminal complaint, [01:41:53.160 --> 01:41:58.160] you're going to be pointing at some reference in the Texas Penal Code. [01:41:58.160 --> 01:42:06.160] And again, you're going to say the criminal actor did X, he did Y, he did Z, [01:42:06.160 --> 01:42:09.160] and that lines up with all the essential elements of this crime over here. [01:42:09.160 --> 01:42:11.160] It's the same thing you're doing with the bar grievance. [01:42:11.160 --> 01:42:13.160] You find the rule he violated. [01:42:13.160 --> 01:42:17.160] You look at what the rule says, says if he does this, this and that. [01:42:17.160 --> 01:42:23.160] So you make a statement of fact for each one of those points and say he did it. [01:42:23.160 --> 01:42:25.160] And now there's your bar grievance. [01:42:25.160 --> 01:42:26.160] You're done. [01:42:26.160 --> 01:42:27.160] It's really easy. [01:42:27.160 --> 01:42:31.160] You can usually put it into one page, you know, which is an additional sheet. [01:42:31.160 --> 01:42:34.160] They've got a six-page form, so it's really silly. [01:42:34.160 --> 01:42:36.160] I just put it in there, see a attached sheet, [01:42:36.160 --> 01:42:39.160] and I make my bar grievance one extra sheet at the end. [01:42:39.160 --> 01:42:41.160] Yes. [01:42:41.160 --> 01:42:44.160] Well, no plans. [01:42:44.160 --> 01:42:49.160] But yes, pretty straightforward. [01:42:49.160 --> 01:42:59.160] You'll be pleased to notice what happens when the lawyer gets your bar grievance. [01:42:59.160 --> 01:43:02.160] They change directions right away. [01:43:02.160 --> 01:43:04.160] You know, they start out maybe kind of arrogant and huffy [01:43:04.160 --> 01:43:07.160] and trying to tell you how important they are and so forth. [01:43:07.160 --> 01:43:10.160] And then next thing you know, they're running for the hills. [01:43:10.160 --> 01:43:14.160] Yep. [01:43:14.160 --> 01:43:16.160] Yeah, I met one like that. [01:43:16.160 --> 01:43:19.160] And he ended up to be the best, sweetest thing you ever met. [01:43:19.160 --> 01:43:22.160] He was, I'm kind of that way too. [01:43:22.160 --> 01:43:23.160] I'm forward. [01:43:23.160 --> 01:43:24.160] I say what I think. [01:43:24.160 --> 01:43:27.160] I like people like that because you know where you're standing with them. [01:43:27.160 --> 01:43:28.160] You know what I'm saying? [01:43:28.160 --> 01:43:29.160] Yep, you're right. [01:43:29.160 --> 01:43:35.160] A lot of times you meet some people you can be friends with, [01:43:35.160 --> 01:43:41.160] but if you don't watch them and they're not forward to you, you can't trust them. [01:43:41.160 --> 01:43:42.160] Yep, you're right. [01:43:42.160 --> 01:43:47.160] Well, Jaquita, is there anything else on your mind this evening? [01:43:47.160 --> 01:43:49.160] No, that was my main concern. [01:43:49.160 --> 01:43:53.160] That thing's driving me crazy because I've done everything I need to do. [01:43:53.160 --> 01:43:54.160] All right. [01:43:54.160 --> 01:43:56.160] Well, thanks so much for calling. [01:43:56.160 --> 01:44:00.160] Next I'm going to go to our sponsors and we will be right back. [01:44:26.160 --> 01:44:30.160] The Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [01:44:30.160 --> 01:44:32.160] most of which we reject. 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[01:45:04.160 --> 01:45:07.160] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.160 --> 01:45:12.160] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how [01:45:12.160 --> 01:45:15.160] in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.160 --> 01:45:19.160] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.160 --> 01:45:23.160] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.160 --> 01:45:28.160] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.160 --> 01:45:31.160] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:31.160 --> 01:45:34.160] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.160 --> 01:45:39.160] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.160 --> 01:45:43.160] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.160 --> 01:45:48.160] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:48.160 --> 01:45:52.160] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.160 --> 01:45:56.160] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:56.160 --> 01:46:01.160] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.160 --> 01:46:29.160] Thank you. [01:46:29.160 --> 01:46:36.160] Okay, we are back. [01:46:36.160 --> 01:46:38.160] Rule of Law Radio. [01:46:38.160 --> 01:46:39.160] Randy Kelton. [01:46:39.160 --> 01:46:40.160] I'm Brent Fountain. [01:46:40.160 --> 01:46:43.160] And we're going to go to what looks like a first-time caller [01:46:43.160 --> 01:46:47.160] in the 940 area code. [01:46:47.160 --> 01:46:51.160] If you are in the 940 area code, speak up. [01:46:51.160 --> 01:46:56.160] Give us a first name and a state. [01:46:56.160 --> 01:47:01.160] Yes, hello, this is David, and I'm in Texas. [01:47:01.160 --> 01:47:06.160] Wow, I'm having a hard time hearing you. [01:47:06.160 --> 01:47:11.160] Are you on some kind of a wireless headset or something? [01:47:11.160 --> 01:47:17.160] No, unfortunately, this is the best reception I get on this cell phone of mine. [01:47:17.160 --> 01:47:19.160] Okay, well, I heard you better that time. [01:47:19.160 --> 01:47:21.160] What was your first name? [01:47:21.160 --> 01:47:24.160] This is David, and I'm from Texas. [01:47:24.160 --> 01:47:27.160] David in Texas, all right. [01:47:27.160 --> 01:47:31.160] Okay, so what's on your mind this evening? [01:47:31.160 --> 01:47:36.160] Well, I just wanted to say that I am a former pupil of Randy Kelton [01:47:36.160 --> 01:47:42.160] from back in 2006, somewhere in that year. [01:47:42.160 --> 01:47:52.160] And I just want to thank him for all that he did for me back then, [01:47:52.160 --> 01:47:54.160] for all the things and all. [01:47:54.160 --> 01:48:02.160] I've been doing really great since then, until as of just late. [01:48:02.160 --> 01:48:10.160] I've got a situation where I was wondering if maybe you could recommend to me, [01:48:10.160 --> 01:48:18.160] I need to file a 1983 against some rogue officials here in my county. [01:48:18.160 --> 01:48:20.160] That's great. [01:48:20.160 --> 01:48:22.160] I've never done that. [01:48:22.160 --> 01:48:27.160] In the past, I've been able to stop things before they transgressed me, [01:48:27.160 --> 01:48:37.160] but here not too long ago, they made a move and transgressed me big time. [01:48:37.160 --> 01:48:43.160] They've just been operating outside of the scope of their office. [01:48:43.160 --> 01:48:44.160] Yeah. [01:48:44.160 --> 01:48:47.160] It's running wild. [01:48:47.160 --> 01:48:54.160] Which of the federal rights are you going to claim, [01:48:54.160 --> 01:48:59.160] which of the constitutionally protected rights are you going to claim they violated? [01:48:59.160 --> 01:49:13.160] Well, they have violated the federal constitution bill of rights, I believe it's 13th. [01:49:13.160 --> 01:49:15.160] The 13th Amendment? [01:49:15.160 --> 01:49:16.160] Yes, the 13th Amendment. [01:49:16.160 --> 01:49:18.160] Slavery and servitude? [01:49:18.160 --> 01:49:21.160] Involuntary servitude, yes. [01:49:21.160 --> 01:49:24.160] Okay. [01:49:24.160 --> 01:49:29.160] How are you going to say, is this some state actors? [01:49:29.160 --> 01:49:34.160] Correct. [01:49:34.160 --> 01:49:38.160] Well, there's one state and there's one county. [01:49:38.160 --> 01:49:39.160] Okay. [01:49:39.160 --> 01:49:42.160] Well, the county would still be a state actor. [01:49:42.160 --> 01:49:43.160] Sure. [01:49:43.160 --> 01:49:46.160] Okay. [01:49:46.160 --> 01:49:59.160] Now, have you identified some state law that they violated in order to deprive you of your 13th Amendment rights? [01:49:59.160 --> 01:50:00.160] Yes. [01:50:00.160 --> 01:50:11.160] They've actually violated the Texas Constitution Article 1, Section 19 and Section 4. [01:50:11.160 --> 01:50:13.160] All right. [01:50:13.160 --> 01:50:14.160] Well, good. [01:50:14.160 --> 01:50:15.160] Sounds like you're on track. [01:50:15.160 --> 01:50:21.160] What's the particular, you've got a question? [01:50:21.160 --> 01:50:31.160] Well, my question was, if you knew of someone who would or could do a 1983, like I said, I've never done one. [01:50:31.160 --> 01:50:38.160] I haven't had to get to that point yet. [01:50:38.160 --> 01:50:40.160] Oh, you're looking for somebody to do it for you. [01:50:40.160 --> 01:50:41.160] I didn't understand. [01:50:41.160 --> 01:50:43.160] Okay. [01:50:43.160 --> 01:50:51.160] Well, it sounds like you're on top of it and you are probably the best person to, you know, stand up for your own rights, [01:50:51.160 --> 01:50:58.160] but I don't know who might be able to do that for you. [01:50:58.160 --> 01:51:02.160] Randy stepped away for just a minute, so I'll ask him. [01:51:02.160 --> 01:51:11.160] When he steps back, I'll ask him, but I'm not sure. [01:51:11.160 --> 01:51:24.160] Also, I'm wondering if there would be any way of making a more personal communication [01:51:24.160 --> 01:51:33.160] where maybe I can show somebody, maybe Randy, my stuff, what I've got in place, what's happened, what's taken place, [01:51:33.160 --> 01:51:45.160] and maybe, you know, two heads, you know, are usually better than one, and maybe we can hammer something out, you know. [01:51:45.160 --> 01:51:48.160] So would you like to email Randy? [01:51:48.160 --> 01:51:57.160] I've been setting this up for about two years, and they finally took the bait here a couple of weeks ago. [01:51:57.160 --> 01:51:59.160] They took the bait? [01:51:59.160 --> 01:52:04.160] They took the bait. [01:52:04.160 --> 01:52:05.160] What do you mean? [01:52:05.160 --> 01:52:07.160] How's that? [01:52:07.160 --> 01:52:22.160] Well, I've been working on this for about two years and getting my paperwork in place that, you know, [01:52:22.160 --> 01:52:30.160] basically putting my ducks in a row, and I've noticed them plenty of times. [01:52:30.160 --> 01:52:37.160] I mean, I've noticed them numerous of times, you know, their transgressions. [01:52:37.160 --> 01:52:50.160] I've also got lawful paperwork filed in particular cause numbers that I basically have utilized the Texas Constitution, [01:52:50.160 --> 01:53:02.160] Article 1, Section 29, because you most likely know that most of their codes you can prove are contrary to law. [01:53:02.160 --> 01:53:13.160] And so I've got paperwork in place that has, you know, negated their codes of what they're forcing me to do [01:53:13.160 --> 01:53:24.160] because it's totally contrary, as the law states, and if it is, it shall be void. [01:53:24.160 --> 01:53:26.160] I've proven the facts. [01:53:26.160 --> 01:53:34.160] I've laid the facts before them, and they just refuse to recognize it. [01:53:34.160 --> 01:53:38.160] And the funny thing is, of course, as you know, they've got an oath of office, [01:53:38.160 --> 01:53:47.160] which is a lawful document to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution and laws. [01:53:47.160 --> 01:53:52.160] So when you say you've already put the facts before them, who's them? [01:53:52.160 --> 01:53:56.160] How did you put the facts to them? [01:53:56.160 --> 01:53:59.160] I presented them with notices. [01:53:59.160 --> 01:54:09.160] I also have mailed them copies, certified mailed copies of my lawful paperwork that has been filed in, again, [01:54:09.160 --> 01:54:22.160] a particular cause number, and all they can say is, you have no, that stuff, you don't have, it's no standing. [01:54:22.160 --> 01:54:25.160] You don't have any standing. [01:54:25.160 --> 01:54:30.160] It doesn't go by any law or anything, end quote. [01:54:30.160 --> 01:54:40.160] Well, have you taken a look yet at winning Title 42 USC 1983 suits? [01:54:40.160 --> 01:54:44.160] Have you read some of those web episodes of suits? [01:54:44.160 --> 01:54:45.160] Yes. [01:54:45.160 --> 01:54:46.160] I mean... [01:54:46.160 --> 01:54:52.160] That would probably be a good place to start to get familiar with the pieces that you need to put [01:54:52.160 --> 01:54:58.160] because if you're saying that you've already been able to lay out the facts in some other way before, [01:54:58.160 --> 01:55:07.160] then you might be in a situation to just copy and paste those same facts into your 1983 suit. [01:55:07.160 --> 01:55:09.160] Oh, most definitely, yeah. [01:55:09.160 --> 01:55:13.160] I've been studying and working on it. [01:55:13.160 --> 01:55:26.160] Unfortunately, I didn't start that study, I should have started 1983 studying probably much sooner, [01:55:26.160 --> 01:55:37.160] or I should have started it a long time ago, but I have been doing that within the last several months. [01:55:37.160 --> 01:55:48.160] But I'm just not up on their paperwork and processes and these filings, [01:55:48.160 --> 01:55:55.160] and then of course they usually will have some kind of rebuttal later down the line. [01:55:55.160 --> 01:56:04.160] I'm not familiar with all of that process, and I was hoping to get with somebody who might be able to help or whatnot. [01:56:04.160 --> 01:56:09.160] I'm not totally stupid, but I am ignorant to some things. [01:56:09.160 --> 01:56:10.160] Sure. [01:56:10.160 --> 01:56:11.160] Yeah, we've all got our strong points. [01:56:11.160 --> 01:56:18.160] And yeah, I'm sorry, I don't know anybody that does that kind of a thing that could just step in [01:56:18.160 --> 01:56:25.160] and kind of take the reins and make it happen. [01:56:25.160 --> 01:56:27.160] Yeah, that's one of the reasons. [01:56:27.160 --> 01:56:34.160] I mean, I've looked and I've researched and of course it's real funny. [01:56:34.160 --> 01:56:44.160] Of course, you know how lawyers and attorneys are, but I don't know why too that I had one, [01:56:44.160 --> 01:56:48.160] actually I had two that said they would take the case, [01:56:48.160 --> 01:56:54.160] but then when they found out I don't have a social security number, [01:56:54.160 --> 01:56:57.160] they told me that they couldn't take the case. [01:56:57.160 --> 01:57:02.160] And that spoke big to me. [01:57:02.160 --> 01:57:07.160] No social security number means they can't take the case? [01:57:07.160 --> 01:57:09.160] That told me a lot. [01:57:09.160 --> 01:57:11.160] Wow. [01:57:11.160 --> 01:57:21.160] And their excuse was that they would be afraid because I'm asking for monetary compensation, [01:57:21.160 --> 01:57:28.160] that it would open me up to prosecution because I haven't paid my taxes. [01:57:28.160 --> 01:57:34.160] Well, why are they assuming that I'm a taxpayer? [01:57:34.160 --> 01:57:36.160] You know? [01:57:36.160 --> 01:57:38.160] That sounds like quite a reach. [01:57:38.160 --> 01:57:47.160] It sounds to me more like they are going to associate the concept of somebody not having a social security number. [01:57:47.160 --> 01:57:52.160] They're going to associate that automatically with, uh-oh, this is one of those sovereign citizen kind of people. [01:57:52.160 --> 01:57:58.160] This is the people that give us a lot of trouble and, you know, make everything really difficult [01:57:58.160 --> 01:58:03.160] and they want us to follow the law and we can't just do our normal little shuffle. [01:58:03.160 --> 01:58:09.160] They're going to make us, you know, do everything that the law says and this is going to be way too much trouble. [01:58:09.160 --> 01:58:14.160] I'd rather come up with some excuse to just get them to go away. [01:58:14.160 --> 01:58:18.160] That's what I tend to think of when I hear that. [01:58:18.160 --> 01:58:25.160] Yeah, but I don't know how you can find somebody that would be willing to do that. [01:58:25.160 --> 01:58:31.160] If I were looking for a lawyer, and I'm not, I tend to think I'm going to find a way to do it myself. [01:58:31.160 --> 01:58:36.160] But if I were looking for a lawyer, I'd probably just start searching online. [01:58:36.160 --> 01:58:44.160] Abvo.com is maybe a good one to get an idea of whose specialties are what. [01:58:44.160 --> 01:58:50.160] Hold on, we're going to go to our sponsors and we will be back after that. [01:58:50.160 --> 01:58:54.160] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [01:58:54.160 --> 01:58:58.160] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.160 --> 01:59:02.160] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:02.160 --> 01:59:07.160] but even the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. 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