[00:00.000 --> 00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.500 --> 00:09.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.500 --> 00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.000 --> 00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [00:16.500 --> 00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.500 --> 00:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.000 --> 00:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.000 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.500 --> 00:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [00:38.000 --> 00:42.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.000 --> 00:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [00:45.000 --> 00:50.500] Most of us know that taking the Fifth means you're choosing to remain silent about a criminal matter. [00:50.500 --> 00:55.000] It's a good way to remember that the Fifth Amendment spells out what can and can't happen to you [00:55.000 --> 00:57.000] when you're accused of a criminal offense. [00:57.000 --> 01:02.000] The Fifth guarantees due process, prohibits trying someone more than once for the same crime, [01:02.000 --> 01:04.000] and lets you keep your mouth shut. [01:04.000 --> 01:09.000] The Founding Fathers inserted these constitutional provisions to protect citizens from torture. [01:09.000 --> 01:13.500] Back in the day, governments often used painful methods to extract confessions. [01:13.500 --> 01:18.000] The Fifth Amendment also prohibits the government from taking your house and land without paying you for it. [01:18.000 --> 01:20.000] That used to happen a lot too. [01:20.000 --> 01:25.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.000 --> 01:35.000] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:35.000 --> 01:39.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:39.000 --> 01:41.000] Our liberty depends on it. [01:41.000 --> 01:47.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:47.000 --> 01:49.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:49.000 --> 01:52.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.000 --> 01:57.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:57.000 --> 02:02.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:02.000 --> 02:05.000] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [02:05.000 --> 02:08.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [02:08.000 --> 02:12.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.000 --> 02:15.000] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.000 --> 02:19.000] The number 666 reminds me of evil. [02:19.000 --> 02:24.000] I also associate it with the sick feeling one might get when falsely accused of a heinous crime [02:24.000 --> 02:28.000] or when thinking about sickos who actually do commit acts of murder and mayhem. [02:28.000 --> 02:32.000] Either way, the number 666 can help you remember that the Sixth Amendment [02:32.000 --> 02:37.000] deals with the constitutionally guaranteed rights Americans have in a criminal trial. [02:37.000 --> 02:41.000] Those include the right to a speedy public trial, the right to an impartial jury, [02:41.000 --> 02:45.000] the right to full information about the charges, the right to an attorney, [02:45.000 --> 02:48.000] and the right to confront any witnesses face to face. [02:48.000 --> 02:52.000] 666, sick, sickos, and the Sixth Amendment. Get it? [02:52.000 --> 03:12.000] I've got your Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:22.000 --> 03:27.000] Whatcha gonna do? [03:27.000 --> 03:30.000] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [03:30.000 --> 03:33.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:33.000 --> 03:35.000] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:35.000 --> 03:40.000] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fount, Little Love Radio. [03:40.000 --> 03:48.000] On this, the 25th day of August, Thursday, the 25th day of August, 2022, [03:48.000 --> 03:51.000] and I've just turned on the phone lines. [03:51.000 --> 03:54.000] You'll be taking your calls all night. [03:54.000 --> 03:59.000] So while the carnivore is filling up, we had a little hearing this morning, [03:59.000 --> 04:03.000] and you were on it, weren't you? [04:03.000 --> 04:06.000] I was. Yeah, I thought that was pretty interesting. [04:06.000 --> 04:09.000] It was short, but it was interesting. [04:09.000 --> 04:13.000] Well, it was an exercise in discipline. [04:13.000 --> 04:19.000] I had all this stuff that I wanted to throw at them, [04:19.000 --> 04:26.000] and I had to keep catching myself to stay on point [04:26.000 --> 04:28.000] and not let them lead me where I didn't want to go. [04:28.000 --> 04:32.000] We started out, the first thing before the court is the opposing side. [04:32.000 --> 04:37.000] This is the justice of the peace that I sued. [04:37.000 --> 04:46.000] His lawyers have filed what they call the subject matter jurisdiction challenge and answer, [04:46.000 --> 04:52.000] and I wanted to address that because they didn't challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [04:52.000 --> 04:57.000] Well, they made a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction based on official immunity, [04:57.000 --> 05:04.000] but that wasn't before the court, and I really wanted to beat them up for that. [05:04.000 --> 05:10.000] But first things first, the judge in the case, [05:10.000 --> 05:13.000] and this often happens when you sue a public official, [05:13.000 --> 05:18.000] the trial judge will immediately recuse himself, [05:18.000 --> 05:24.000] and then they'll appoint a retired judge. [05:24.000 --> 05:32.000] The head administrative judge of the district will appoint a retired judge to sit in the elected judge's place, [05:32.000 --> 05:35.000] and I wasn't going for that. [05:35.000 --> 05:37.000] I told the judge, absolutely not. [05:37.000 --> 05:43.000] I'm before this appointed judge. [05:43.000 --> 05:45.000] They were going to go to subject matter jurisdiction. [05:45.000 --> 05:49.000] I said, before you go there, I have something else we need to address. [05:49.000 --> 05:52.000] I have an objection to recusal. [05:52.000 --> 06:08.000] The judge filed an order in the court notifying the court that he filed a motion to recuse, [06:08.000 --> 06:12.000] and Sui Sponte granted his own motion to recuse [06:12.000 --> 06:20.000] and was asking the head administrative judge of the district to appoint a cutthroat judge to the case. [06:20.000 --> 06:26.000] And I said, absolutely not. [06:26.000 --> 06:28.000] That judge is under contract. [06:28.000 --> 06:32.000] He swore on his oath to a contract, and he took money in payment, [06:32.000 --> 06:38.000] and that puts him in a contract with the state and on the intended third-party beneficiary of that contract. [06:38.000 --> 06:41.000] I expect him to get in that courtroom and do his job. [06:41.000 --> 06:45.000] He doesn't get to recuse himself just because he doesn't want to. [06:45.000 --> 06:48.000] I thought that was really well put, by the way. [06:48.000 --> 06:56.000] The way you laid that out there, it didn't put the assigned judge, the hired thug, I guess, [06:56.000 --> 07:08.000] didn't put him in any kind of bad light just because he knows why that's not going to work out well for the people. [07:08.000 --> 07:14.000] You didn't paint him as the bad guy, even though you could have. [07:14.000 --> 07:19.000] I was going to get to him, and that was part of the discipline. [07:19.000 --> 07:30.000] I kind of lambasted him later, but here I wanted to keep it very clean and only one issue. [07:30.000 --> 07:36.000] This judge swore on his oath that he would do this job. [07:36.000 --> 07:38.000] He accepted money to do this job. [07:38.000 --> 07:44.000] Then when something comes wrong, it's a little onerous, he ducks and runs for cover. [07:44.000 --> 07:48.000] I said, no, no, no, you don't get to go there. [07:48.000 --> 07:51.000] This is a very important point. [07:51.000 --> 07:56.000] When you're in a civil suit, especially if you're against public officials, [07:56.000 --> 08:05.000] you want to always come up with issues they are not going to want to see before the Texas Supreme. [08:05.000 --> 08:09.000] This is a civil, so here we get to the Supreme. [08:09.000 --> 08:21.000] They don't want me asking the Texas Supreme Court to rule that a judge cannot arbitrarily and capriciously recuse himself. [08:21.000 --> 08:24.000] He's under contract, and he has a duty to do a job. [08:24.000 --> 08:30.000] He may only recuse himself for recusable grounds. [08:30.000 --> 08:37.000] And whether he had grounds or not, he did not demonstrate them, [08:37.000 --> 08:42.000] because he said in his letter that he filed a motion to recuse and then approved it. [08:42.000 --> 08:48.000] He said he would give you a chance to see the motion, let alone time and notice to respond to it. [08:48.000 --> 08:51.000] Exactly. I objected and said I didn't receive any motion. [08:51.000 --> 08:53.000] I don't think he filed one. [08:53.000 --> 09:01.000] If he did file one, it wasn't served on me, so I didn't get an opportunity to object to the recusal motion [09:01.000 --> 09:09.000] in accordance with my authority to do so under 18A paragraph C. [09:09.000 --> 09:14.000] I don't think I told the judge paragraph C. I just said it in 18A. [09:14.000 --> 09:23.000] But you have a right to object to a recusal by him not actually filing a motion, [09:23.000 --> 09:31.000] but simply approving the motion that was never filed, violated the rules of court. [09:31.000 --> 09:41.000] I don't think they can get past that, not just because of the recusal, but he didn't file the motion. [09:41.000 --> 09:44.000] The code specifically gives me the standing. [09:44.000 --> 09:52.000] So what I wanted them to do is look at that and think this guy's going to walk us to the Supreme on this one. [09:52.000 --> 09:54.000] And what if this gets to the Supreme? [09:54.000 --> 10:08.000] I suspect that that judge that he just recused himself because of 18A paragraph something or other, [10:08.000 --> 10:17.000] but somewhere down in there, deep down in paragraph A, you can object to a appointed judge, [10:17.000 --> 10:26.000] and they will dismiss the appointed judge on their first objection, [10:26.000 --> 10:33.000] where you can object without cause, you just don't like it, and the judge indicated that. [10:33.000 --> 10:41.000] Well, at this point, I didn't want to get to that. [10:41.000 --> 10:48.000] I wanted to get before the court what I wanted before the court before we moved to that part. [10:48.000 --> 10:52.000] Yeah, because your point wasn't just to get this judge to go away. [10:52.000 --> 10:58.000] You had a real issue to bring about that, an issue that they didn't want to address. [10:58.000 --> 11:03.000] So I'm putting it out there as for cause. [11:03.000 --> 11:05.000] I'm with the elected judge. [11:05.000 --> 11:13.000] He's got paid, and it's what I told this judge is when we got to him, [11:13.000 --> 11:20.000] I told him that it's been my experience that when you file a suit against a public official, [11:20.000 --> 11:26.000] the trial judge will immediately recuse himself and then appoint a retired judge like you. [11:26.000 --> 11:29.000] And if you were against me, I have no recourse. [11:29.000 --> 11:33.000] I have no remedy because I could file a bar agreement against you, [11:33.000 --> 11:39.000] but it won't do any good, and he kind of chuckled at that one because you're retired. [11:39.000 --> 11:41.000] You don't care. [11:41.000 --> 11:43.000] And so I have no remedy. [11:43.000 --> 11:45.000] I would object to that. [11:45.000 --> 11:59.000] First, I wanted them to look at how are you going to argue that a judge can grant a motion to recuse [11:59.000 --> 12:04.000] when there was never a motion filed? [12:04.000 --> 12:06.000] This will screw up everything. [12:06.000 --> 12:11.000] Judges do this garbage all the time, and lawyers never object to it. [12:11.000 --> 12:13.000] Right. [12:13.000 --> 12:15.000] But I'm not a lawyer. [12:15.000 --> 12:21.000] That's why when we first started, he asked if we had any objection to him, [12:21.000 --> 12:25.000] including all these 36 people that wanted to listen in, [12:25.000 --> 12:28.000] and I told him that if he didn't, I'd consider it a criminal act. [12:28.000 --> 12:33.000] I wanted him to know that I wasn't there dangling by my bar card, [12:33.000 --> 12:37.000] and I wasn't too concerned if he was upset at me or not. [12:37.000 --> 12:41.000] Oh, but those two lawyers on the other side, they were fawning all over. [12:41.000 --> 12:48.000] Oh, Your Honor, it's so nice to see you. [12:48.000 --> 12:56.000] I watched the judge, and I think the judge was having fun. [12:56.000 --> 12:59.000] I just got that impression from him. [12:59.000 --> 13:08.000] He was dueling with me, and I wasn't kissing his behind and trying to suck up to him. [13:08.000 --> 13:12.000] I was standing right in the middle of him, and I got the impression [13:12.000 --> 13:17.000] that he kind of enjoyed the interaction, the way he responded. [13:17.000 --> 13:20.000] He had to stop himself from grinning a couple of times. [13:20.000 --> 13:25.000] When I accused him of ruling against me out of hand at every turn, [13:25.000 --> 13:28.000] he kind of grinned at that one. [13:28.000 --> 13:32.000] I told him that we get appointed a retired judge, [13:32.000 --> 13:37.000] and then the retired judge will rule against me out of hand at every turn, [13:37.000 --> 13:43.000] and the judge said, well, I'll agree with half of that, that he's a retired judge, [13:43.000 --> 13:46.000] but he wouldn't go for the second ad. [13:46.000 --> 13:53.000] But the way he did it gave me the impression that I didn't hurt his feelings. [13:53.000 --> 13:54.000] No, he was laughing. [13:54.000 --> 13:57.000] He knew exactly what I was talking about. [13:57.000 --> 14:00.000] Oh, yeah, it was clear. [14:00.000 --> 14:07.000] And he also knew that I wasn't going to be frightened or intimidated by it. [14:07.000 --> 14:09.000] I like a good adversary. [14:09.000 --> 14:11.000] I like someone who's not afraid of me. [14:11.000 --> 14:21.000] The lawyers, especially the head of the law firm, he'd come across like a little weasel, [14:21.000 --> 14:25.000] and he screwed up real bad. [14:25.000 --> 14:34.000] He told after the judge, they objected to me accusing this judge [14:34.000 --> 14:42.000] because I didn't get my objection in seven days before the hearing. [14:42.000 --> 14:45.000] And the judge told him no. [14:45.000 --> 14:48.000] I think the judge at this point didn't want to sit in this case. [14:48.000 --> 14:57.000] He told him, no, there's case law that says as long as they get an objection in before any evidence is given. [14:57.000 --> 15:03.000] Well, that is actually in 18A, that in order to recuse the judge, [15:03.000 --> 15:10.000] you have to file a recusal motion before any evidence is entered in the court, [15:10.000 --> 15:15.000] either seven days or before there's any evidence entered in the court. [15:15.000 --> 15:22.000] And there may actually be case law that says either one of those. [15:22.000 --> 15:24.000] Yeah, I'm curious what case law. [15:24.000 --> 15:28.000] I was hoping that you would ask him right then while it was going on. [15:28.000 --> 15:30.000] No, I didn't want to. [15:30.000 --> 15:36.000] I was concerned that he was just paraphrasing something, [15:36.000 --> 15:39.000] paraphrasing the code and called it case law. [15:39.000 --> 15:44.000] And I didn't want to get into that kind of issue [15:44.000 --> 15:47.000] because this was going exactly where I wanted it to. [15:47.000 --> 15:49.000] Yeah, that makes sense. [15:49.000 --> 15:52.000] Yeah, he's ruling in my favor, so I'm going to leave that alone. [15:52.000 --> 15:57.000] The other side raised the objection, and he went ahead and ruled anyway. [15:57.000 --> 16:07.000] And then they had a young lawyer that was the lead attorney. [16:07.000 --> 16:14.000] And the head of the law firm was kind of sitting behind him out of camera. [16:14.000 --> 16:20.000] And when I got what I wanted, this little lawyer just couldn't help himself. [16:20.000 --> 16:23.000] He had to lean over and stick his head in front of the camera [16:23.000 --> 16:29.000] and give me this free, sage legal advice and let me know. [16:29.000 --> 16:33.000] Now, you know you only get to do this once. [16:33.000 --> 16:36.000] If you're a second judge, you can't object to it. [16:36.000 --> 16:42.000] Well, I kept my mouth shut because it was irrelevant. [16:42.000 --> 16:46.000] I didn't want him to get a chance to fix it. [16:46.000 --> 16:51.000] Plus, you have 36 people who are probably going to send a bar grievance to him for that. [16:51.000 --> 16:53.000] Yeah, I hope so. [16:53.000 --> 16:56.000] So I'm going to grieve him for lying under the judge. [16:56.000 --> 16:58.000] I only get one free strike. [16:58.000 --> 17:00.000] Hang on, we'll be right back. [17:00.000 --> 17:04.000] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved [17:04.000 --> 17:06.000] except in the area of nutrition. [17:06.000 --> 17:09.000] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [17:09.000 --> 17:11.000] and it's time we changed all that. [17:11.000 --> 17:17.000] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [17:17.000 --> 17:22.000] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [17:22.000 --> 17:25.000] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [17:25.000 --> 17:29.000] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [17:29.000 --> 17:31.000] most of which we reject. [17:31.000 --> 17:34.000] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [17:34.000 --> 17:40.000] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [17:40.000 --> 17:43.000] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, [17:43.000 --> 17:47.000] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [17:47.000 --> 17:52.000] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [17:52.000 --> 17:55.000] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [17:55.000 --> 17:59.000] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [17:59.000 --> 18:01.000] Join us now. [18:01.000 --> 18:04.000] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [18:04.000 --> 18:06.000] and a better understanding of His Word? [18:06.000 --> 18:11.000] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [18:11.000 --> 18:15.000] for Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures [18:15.000 --> 18:18.000] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:18.000 --> 18:22.000] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [18:22.000 --> 18:25.000] rightly dividing the word of truth. [18:25.000 --> 18:28.000] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [18:28.000 --> 18:32.000] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [18:32.000 --> 18:35.000] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week [18:35.000 --> 18:39.000] with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [18:39.000 --> 18:44.000] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.000 --> 18:47.000] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [18:47.000 --> 18:50.000] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.000 --> 18:54.000] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [18:54.000 --> 19:00.000] on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:24.000 --> 19:27.000] We ask the Christians [19:27.000 --> 19:29.000] Don't know what to hide [19:29.000 --> 19:32.000] They don't have answers [19:32.000 --> 19:34.000] Open up your eyes [19:34.000 --> 19:37.000] We ask the Christians [19:37.000 --> 19:39.000] Look what we've got [19:39.000 --> 19:42.000] They don't have answers [19:42.000 --> 19:44.000] So can sleep inside [19:44.000 --> 19:46.000] They talk about issues of the Lord [19:46.000 --> 19:48.000] How they want we to make it easy [19:48.000 --> 19:50.000] They talk way too politically [19:50.000 --> 19:53.000] And they're getting mad and angry [19:53.000 --> 19:58.000] Get them up standing up and fight and fight for their freedom and be free [19:58.000 --> 20:01.000] And the Lord them Lord say we can get free [20:01.000 --> 20:02.000] Okay, we are back. [20:02.000 --> 20:05.000] Randy Copeland, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [20:05.000 --> 20:09.000] And we were talking about the judge not doing his job. [20:09.000 --> 20:13.000] And Brett and I over the break were talking about [20:13.000 --> 20:16.000] can the judge come back? [20:16.000 --> 20:19.000] Because I've raised an issue [20:19.000 --> 20:25.000] that this is something these judges do all the time. [20:25.000 --> 20:30.000] And no bar card carrying attorney would dare to raise an objection. [20:30.000 --> 20:34.000] Because the last thing they want to do is get the judge upset at them. [20:34.000 --> 20:39.000] But it was clear to this judge that I wasn't there dangling by my bar card. [20:39.000 --> 20:42.000] And I didn't care if they were upset or not. [20:42.000 --> 20:49.000] Yeah, you don't want to choose not susceptible to some kind of discipline for misconduct. [20:49.000 --> 20:51.000] Exactly. [20:51.000 --> 20:57.000] And we have two county judges in there in the county who are duly elected. [20:57.000 --> 21:03.000] And we have county judges from the surrounding counties who can be assigned to hear this case. [21:03.000 --> 21:10.000] So I could have been assigned a judge for against whom I had recourse. [21:10.000 --> 21:12.000] But they didn't do that. [21:12.000 --> 21:14.000] Well, we didn't even get to that. [21:14.000 --> 21:19.000] Well, even an admin judge would be able to hear this. [21:19.000 --> 21:23.000] They can assign somebody else to do it or they can hear it themselves. [21:23.000 --> 21:25.000] Yeah, that would work. [21:25.000 --> 21:28.000] And him, I could hammer. [21:28.000 --> 21:35.000] But in this case, I'm going to his duty under Constitution, [21:35.000 --> 21:39.000] under his constitutional contract. [21:39.000 --> 21:43.000] He signed a contract, swore on his oath. [21:43.000 --> 21:50.000] And then he took money in compensation for acting in accordance with that contract. [21:50.000 --> 21:55.000] A contract is not a contract until something of value changes hands. [21:55.000 --> 22:02.000] Once something of value changes hands, the contract is consummated. [22:02.000 --> 22:04.000] He accepted his first paycheck. [22:04.000 --> 22:07.000] He's bound to the contract. [22:07.000 --> 22:12.000] And I don't care if he doesn't like it or not. [22:12.000 --> 22:15.000] I don't care if he's happy with me or not. [22:15.000 --> 22:17.000] I could care less. [22:17.000 --> 22:22.000] I want to be able to hammer him when he doesn't do his job. [22:22.000 --> 22:26.000] And I want that to have some type of purchase. [22:26.000 --> 22:29.000] With a retired judge, it would have no purpose. [22:29.000 --> 22:31.000] He wouldn't care. [22:31.000 --> 22:41.000] I want to put that in front of them with the impression that I'm ready to take this all the way to the Supreme. [22:41.000 --> 22:48.000] We're going to go to the next hearing, and we'll see how this works out. [22:48.000 --> 22:56.000] If they get to an actual ruling on any of the motions, then I get to go for them. [22:56.000 --> 23:03.000] I'm going to hammer these lawyers and accuse the lawyers of barritory, or not exactly barritory. [23:03.000 --> 23:08.000] This is churning the case. [23:08.000 --> 23:13.000] I'm going to tell the judge, you know, I'm going to appeal this as far as I can get it. [23:13.000 --> 23:16.000] This will go all the way to the federal supreme. [23:16.000 --> 23:20.000] And each time they step out of line, I'm going to do that to them. [23:20.000 --> 23:24.000] I didn't file this case for a lot of money. [23:24.000 --> 23:28.000] I filed this case to right a civil wrong. [23:28.000 --> 23:35.000] So as I'm doing all the motions and pleadings myself, I'm not paying a lawyer an arm and a leg. [23:35.000 --> 23:37.000] I can afford to do this. [23:37.000 --> 23:40.000] But I didn't sue this judge so I could bankrupt it. [23:40.000 --> 23:42.000] That was not my purpose. [23:42.000 --> 23:51.000] I sued this judge, and he hired these lawyers, and they filed these absolutely incompetent pleadings. [23:51.000 --> 23:58.000] They claimed it was a subject matter jurisdiction challenge, but included answer with it in the title. [23:58.000 --> 24:00.000] Well, if it's an answer, it has to be verified. [24:00.000 --> 24:03.000] It wasn't verified. [24:03.000 --> 24:08.000] And the clock ran out. [24:08.000 --> 24:11.000] This is not hard, guys. [24:11.000 --> 24:15.000] Here is the first rule in civil pleadings. [24:15.000 --> 24:22.000] The plaintiff files you got until the Monday after the 21st day or the 20th day to file an answer. [24:22.000 --> 24:24.000] And the answer must be verified. [24:24.000 --> 24:28.000] This is right there in the front of the book, guys. [24:28.000 --> 24:30.000] You missed that. [24:30.000 --> 24:38.000] See, the problem is a subject matter jurisdiction challenge doesn't have to be verified. [24:38.000 --> 24:41.000] But an answer does. [24:41.000 --> 24:43.000] And he put answer in there and didn't verify it. [24:43.000 --> 24:48.000] I think that's just a young lawyer hadn't been bumped around enough. [24:48.000 --> 24:52.000] But he has to get to do that. [24:52.000 --> 24:54.000] Now, he made a mistake. [24:54.000 --> 24:59.000] Is he really going to come into court and adjudicate that mistake and not charge his client for it? [24:59.000 --> 25:02.000] Of course he's going to charge his client. [25:02.000 --> 25:04.000] That's turning the case. [25:04.000 --> 25:13.000] He files an incompetent pleading and then has to file motions and pleadings and go to hearings to fix his error. [25:13.000 --> 25:16.000] And your charges fly at a couple hundred bucks an hour. [25:16.000 --> 25:20.000] So my purpose is not to bankrupt a judge. [25:20.000 --> 25:24.000] And it appears as though that's exactly what these lawyers are going to do. [25:24.000 --> 25:28.000] So I want you to order mediation. [25:28.000 --> 25:30.000] Come on, guys. [25:30.000 --> 25:33.000] Make me an offer. [25:33.000 --> 25:36.000] Would I sell out my morals? [25:36.000 --> 25:37.000] Oh, yeah. [25:37.000 --> 25:38.000] Oh, yeah. [25:38.000 --> 25:39.000] Just put enough zeros on it on the check. [25:39.000 --> 25:40.000] You got it. [25:40.000 --> 25:42.000] I'll sign it. [25:42.000 --> 25:44.000] And we'll let this one go away. [25:44.000 --> 25:53.000] I got three more judges on the hook and about to include a fourth one. [25:53.000 --> 25:54.000] So you sign the check. [25:54.000 --> 25:55.000] You give me a check. [25:55.000 --> 25:56.000] I sign it. [25:56.000 --> 25:58.000] I drop this case. [25:58.000 --> 26:04.000] I immediately file one against the next judge. [26:04.000 --> 26:09.000] And we'll walk them through the system until they do it right. [26:09.000 --> 26:11.000] Well, that's my story and I'm sticking to it. [26:11.000 --> 26:12.000] We got another hearing coming. [26:12.000 --> 26:15.000] They haven't set the date for it yet. [26:15.000 --> 26:24.000] But on that one, I hope to get to petition for default judgment. [26:24.000 --> 26:29.000] And getting this reprieve gives me more time to construct my documents. [26:29.000 --> 26:30.000] Okay. [26:30.000 --> 26:33.000] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [26:33.000 --> 26:37.000] And I want to thank everybody who was listening on the Zoom call. [26:37.000 --> 26:48.000] The judge sitting there looking at 36 people on a Zoom call listening to what was going on had to have a lot to do with his professionalism. [26:48.000 --> 26:53.000] He did not cop himself an attitude with all these people listening. [26:53.000 --> 26:59.000] Plus the fact that I mentioned judicial conduct complaint that that should have warned the lawyers. [26:59.000 --> 27:01.000] Be careful. [27:01.000 --> 27:05.000] I didn't tell what I was going to bargrieve the lawyers for. [27:05.000 --> 27:16.000] The head of the law firm told the judge that I only had, and he was giving me advice, that I only had one strike. [27:16.000 --> 27:20.000] And after that, the second judge, I couldn't object to it. [27:20.000 --> 27:24.000] Well, that wasn't exactly true. [27:24.000 --> 27:29.000] I had one strike that I could make without cause. [27:29.000 --> 27:33.000] I can make a hundred strikes if I have cause. [27:33.000 --> 27:39.000] Are you saying that he spoke without having candor? [27:39.000 --> 27:42.000] He didn't speak with candor before the tribunal? [27:42.000 --> 27:46.000] That's exactly what I'm saying. [27:46.000 --> 27:55.000] And right there in the bar standards, failure to speak with candor to the court. [27:55.000 --> 27:58.000] So I'm going to bargrieve him for that. [27:58.000 --> 28:09.000] And the young lawyer who sat there and kept his mouth shut, I'm going to bargrieve him for not telling his boss that he was screwing up. [28:09.000 --> 28:17.000] Well, he had knowledge, so yeah, rule 8.03A. [28:17.000 --> 28:19.000] He either knew or should have known. [28:19.000 --> 28:24.000] So that's going to upset him because his boss popped off where he should have kept his mouth shut. [28:24.000 --> 28:30.000] I mean, he actually barged into the case so he could give me legal advice. [28:30.000 --> 28:32.000] What the heck is that crap? [28:32.000 --> 28:36.000] He wanted some screen time. [28:36.000 --> 28:39.000] That's exactly what I thought. [28:39.000 --> 28:46.000] He wanted to show everybody that, yeah, I'm letting this young lawyer sit up here, but I'm really the whiz back here in the background. [28:46.000 --> 28:50.000] Well, we'll see how that works out for you, Bubba. [28:50.000 --> 28:59.000] When you're explaining to your underling why he's getting a bar grievance because you opened your mouth. [28:59.000 --> 29:03.000] Oh, I love it when these guys are accommodating. [29:03.000 --> 29:06.000] Okay, we're going to go to our callers. [29:06.000 --> 29:09.000] We've got two first-time callers. [29:09.000 --> 29:19.000] If you are in the 602 area code, it looks like your name is William. [29:19.000 --> 29:21.000] Talk to me. [29:21.000 --> 29:25.000] What do you have for us today? [29:25.000 --> 29:26.000] Hi. [29:26.000 --> 29:27.000] If not William, it's Denise. [29:27.000 --> 29:28.000] I'm widowed. [29:28.000 --> 29:30.000] Can you hear me? [29:30.000 --> 29:31.000] Yes, ma'am, I can. [29:31.000 --> 29:33.000] Okay, it's Denise. [29:33.000 --> 29:34.000] What state? [29:34.000 --> 29:38.000] C-E-N-I-S-E. [29:38.000 --> 29:40.000] Hang on. [29:40.000 --> 29:43.000] Oh, you've got 20 seconds left, and then we're done. [29:43.000 --> 29:44.000] Okay. [29:44.000 --> 29:49.000] We didn't understand which state you're in. [29:49.000 --> 29:50.000] Well, hang on. [29:50.000 --> 29:51.000] We're about to go to our sponsors. [29:51.000 --> 29:52.000] We'll pick this up on the other side. [29:52.000 --> 30:01.000] We'll be right back. [30:01.000 --> 30:05.000] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information, and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:05.000 --> 30:11.000] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.000 --> 30:15.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with details. [30:15.000 --> 30:17.000] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.000 --> 30:20.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.000 --> 30:25.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:25.000 --> 30:30.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.000 --> 30:33.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.000 --> 30:36.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:36.000 --> 30:40.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.000 --> 30:44.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.000 --> 30:46.000] Data privacy is a big deal, [30:46.000 --> 30:51.000] so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. [30:51.000 --> 30:54.000] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.000 --> 30:55.000] It's not an idle question. [30:55.000 --> 30:57.000] According to a recent survey, [30:57.000 --> 31:03.000] a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.000 --> 31:07.000] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com. [31:07.000 --> 31:11.000] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [31:11.000 --> 31:15.000] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. [31:15.000 --> 31:17.000] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.000 --> 31:21.000] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.000 --> 31:30.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.000 --> 31:31.000] I lost my son. [31:31.000 --> 31:32.000] My nephew. [31:32.000 --> 31:33.000] My uncle. [31:33.000 --> 31:34.000] My son. [31:34.000 --> 31:35.000] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.000 --> 31:38.000] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.000 --> 31:43.000] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.000 --> 31:47.000] So the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [31:47.000 --> 31:51.000] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:51.000 --> 31:53.000] and believe there is more to the story. [31:53.000 --> 31:56.000] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:56.000 --> 31:58.000] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.000 --> 32:02.000] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:02.000 --> 32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.000 --> 32:08.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:08.000 --> 32:10.000] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.000 --> 32:13.000] we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.000 --> 32:15.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:15.000 --> 32:17.000] the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.000 --> 32:20.000] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.000 --> 32:22.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [32:22.000 --> 32:25.000] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.000 --> 32:28.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:28.000 --> 32:31.000] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.000 --> 32:33.000] that will help you understand what due process is [32:33.000 --> 32:35.000] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.000 --> 32:37.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [32:37.000 --> 32:40.000] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.000 --> 32:42.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:42.000 --> 32:45.000] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.000 --> 32:47.000] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.000 --> 32:50.000] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.000 --> 32:54.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.000 --> 33:11.000] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:11.000 --> 33:25.000] Yeah, Mr. Officer, you're taking the law in your hand. Won't you follow the law of the land? I don't understand. [33:25.000 --> 33:31.000] Your job is to protect and serve, not beat and abuse. [33:31.000 --> 33:56.000] When you're going to stop abuse, you're power. [33:56.000 --> 34:06.000] Okay, Denise, Brett and I were debating on the spelling of your first name. [34:06.000 --> 34:11.000] I got D-U-N-E-S-E. Was that correct or did I miss that? [34:11.000 --> 34:15.000] N-I-S-E. [34:15.000 --> 34:18.000] Is it D-E or D-U? [34:18.000 --> 34:20.000] D-E. E as in Edward. [34:20.000 --> 34:27.000] D-E. Okay, good. He heard it right and I thought I heard it wrong, which I did. [34:27.000 --> 34:30.000] And then what state are you in? [34:30.000 --> 34:32.000] Pardon me? [34:32.000 --> 34:34.000] What state are you in? [34:34.000 --> 34:36.000] Arizona. [34:36.000 --> 34:38.000] All right. [34:38.000 --> 34:42.000] Okay. What do you have for us today? [34:42.000 --> 34:49.000] What I have is I recently widowed. My husband obviously passed away and I was unable to make my house payment, [34:49.000 --> 34:53.000] so I went into default and then foreclosure. [34:53.000 --> 35:04.000] Currently, I am in foreclosure and the law office is taking bids on the house and it closes on September 20th. [35:04.000 --> 35:11.000] Okay, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. You had insurance on the house? [35:11.000 --> 35:14.000] If you had a mortgage, you almost had to. [35:14.000 --> 35:16.000] Yes, I did. [35:16.000 --> 35:21.000] Did that mortgage include a death benefit for one of the spouses? [35:21.000 --> 35:22.000] No. [35:22.000 --> 35:23.000] Did you only do? [35:23.000 --> 35:25.000] Not to my knowledge. [35:25.000 --> 35:29.000] Okay. Okay. Well, go ahead. I'm kind of the mortgage guy. [35:29.000 --> 35:33.000] When you're done, I'll have a lot of stuff you can do to beam up with. [35:33.000 --> 35:38.000] Okay. Well, as I say, Kirby recommended that I call in and talk to you guys. [35:38.000 --> 35:41.000] He said very lovely things about you. [35:41.000 --> 35:55.000] He also gave me a complaint and demand for a jury trial for the FCPA and the FCRA so that I could solve for time. [35:55.000 --> 36:02.000] I do have funds that will come to me sometime in the future, so I just need time. [36:02.000 --> 36:13.000] And right now I'm overwhelmed, old, and disabled, so I'm trying to do the best I can. [36:13.000 --> 36:22.000] I would like to plagiarize this complaint that I have, but I have a few questions. [36:22.000 --> 36:24.000] Is that all right? [36:24.000 --> 36:25.000] Yes, go ahead. [36:25.000 --> 36:34.000] Okay. How much time after I initially file the complaint will I have? [36:34.000 --> 36:46.000] Okay. When you file a petition, the opposing party, are you filing it in Arizona or in the Fed? [36:46.000 --> 36:49.000] They're filing it in the United States. [36:49.000 --> 36:57.000] Okay. Okay. Fed court. Okay. They have until the Monday after the 20th day. [36:57.000 --> 37:09.000] So here's the deal. You always want to file your pleading your case on a Monday. [37:09.000 --> 37:10.000] Oh, okay. [37:10.000 --> 37:14.000] Because three weeks down the road is the 21st day. [37:14.000 --> 37:15.000] Okay. [37:15.000 --> 37:20.000] The Monday after the 20th day. The 20th day will be Sunday. [37:20.000 --> 37:21.000] Okay. [37:21.000 --> 37:24.000] The next day is Monday. That's when it's due. [37:24.000 --> 37:35.000] If the 20th day is Tuesday or if the 20th day is Monday, then they have until the next Monday to file. [37:35.000 --> 37:36.000] Okay. [37:36.000 --> 37:41.000] So you want to file it on Monday, and it goes to the mailbox rule. [37:41.000 --> 37:49.000] When you put it in the mailbox, it's filed, or in this case, if it's a federal case, you'll have to file it in person. [37:49.000 --> 37:52.000] So you go down there on a Monday. [37:52.000 --> 37:53.000] Huh? [37:53.000 --> 37:57.000] Make sure you have your civil cover sheet. [37:57.000 --> 38:00.000] Oh, I don't know anything about that. [38:00.000 --> 38:03.000] That's why I brought it up. Most proceeds don't know about that. [38:03.000 --> 38:16.000] You can go on the court website, the federal court website, and they will have the federal cover sheet that you have to file. [38:16.000 --> 38:21.000] It's uscourts.gov. [38:21.000 --> 38:28.000] I do have the website. I've been trying to crawl all over it and get myself familiar. It's intimidating. [38:28.000 --> 38:35.000] Just take a note, cover sheet, that you've got to have. Are you writing this suit yourself? [38:35.000 --> 38:46.000] I am. I'm also filing the, what do you call it, proper papers because I don't have the filing fee. [38:46.000 --> 38:50.000] Okay. I have a lawyer. [38:50.000 --> 38:53.000] All these years I hadn't had a lawyer I could recommend, but I have one. [38:53.000 --> 39:03.000] It's actually in the county I'm in that does this kind of action, and I'm going to bring him on the website. [39:03.000 --> 39:17.000] If you will send me an email, I will send this to him and tell him that if he does a good job with you, I'll send him more business. [39:17.000 --> 39:23.000] If he doesn't, I will bar-grieve you into the Stone Age. [39:23.000 --> 39:33.000] I will send you an email. I have 25 days before I have to file this before the gavel falls on the bids on my house. [39:33.000 --> 39:38.000] Oh, you don't have 25 days. Bids on your house. [39:38.000 --> 39:43.000] Okay. Let's get a good feel for where you're at. [39:43.000 --> 39:44.000] Huh? [39:44.000 --> 39:49.000] Have they filed a notice of intent to foreclose? [39:49.000 --> 39:52.000] Oh, absolutely. [39:52.000 --> 39:55.000] Okay. They went through all the steps. [39:55.000 --> 39:57.000] Absolutely. [39:57.000 --> 40:03.000] Is Arizona a mortgage state or deed of trust? [40:03.000 --> 40:06.000] I think it's a deed to trust. [40:06.000 --> 40:08.000] I have no idea. [40:08.000 --> 40:19.000] Okay. Here's the difference. In a mortgage state, in order to foreclose, they have to file suit in the district court. [40:19.000 --> 40:31.000] In a deed of trust state, you include in the deed of trust a confessed judgment. [40:31.000 --> 40:40.000] So in a mortgage state, they have to go to court and get a judgment, but in a deed of trust state, they have a confessed judgment, [40:40.000 --> 40:46.000] so they don't have to go to court. They can just move straight to foreclosure. [40:46.000 --> 40:51.000] There's probably about 100 things we could do to put a stop to this. [40:51.000 --> 40:59.000] Generally, when someone's trying to foreclose, any kind of opposition to the foreclosure will put a stop to it. [40:59.000 --> 41:07.000] If you're just filing credit issues, that's not exactly an opposition to the foreclosure. [41:07.000 --> 41:18.000] Have you filed a qualified written request? [41:18.000 --> 41:25.000] No, I've not filed anything. The only thing I filed was in January. I filed Chapter 13, which was dismissed yesterday. [41:25.000 --> 41:36.000] Okay. Send me an email, Randy at ruleoftheloanradio.com, and I will send you a copy of a really obnoxious one that I have. [41:36.000 --> 41:47.000] But if you have some time, if you have a few days, do you have all the paperwork from the loan? [41:47.000 --> 41:53.000] No. That's why I'm going to do one where they have to prove it. [41:53.000 --> 41:56.000] How old is the loan? [41:56.000 --> 42:04.000] It was gotten in 2000, probably 15 to 18 years old. [42:04.000 --> 42:13.000] Okay. So it should be almost paid. Okay. It's probably a mess, and that's good. It's in that timeframe. [42:13.000 --> 42:20.000] Okay. Do you know who the title company was? [42:20.000 --> 42:24.000] Probably FATCO, First American Title Company. [42:24.000 --> 42:33.000] Okay. Good. Go to the title company. They will have the records of the closing. [42:33.000 --> 42:36.000] You want all the records of the closing. [42:36.000 --> 42:46.000] And in those records, you're going to find a HUD-1 settlement statement, a truth and lending statement, a note and deed of trust. [42:46.000 --> 42:50.000] It goes out. [42:50.000 --> 42:55.000] Then you want to send me an email and ask for my spreadsheet. [42:55.000 --> 43:05.000] I've got a spreadsheet, and on one page of it, it has a place where you can put in the mortgage principal and interest, [43:05.000 --> 43:13.000] I mean the note principal and interest, and then all of the information off the HUD-1 settlement statement. [43:13.000 --> 43:18.000] And the values off the truth and lending statement. [43:18.000 --> 43:27.000] And when you put those in there, then you can go to a different page, and it will do an analysis of the mortgage. [43:27.000 --> 43:35.000] And it will give you a claim against the lender between two and three times the original principal. [43:35.000 --> 43:37.000] Oh, my God. [43:37.000 --> 43:42.000] Let's dance, guys. You want to fight? We'll give you a good one. [43:42.000 --> 43:49.000] My first case I did, a fellow broadcaster came to me. He had two days to an eviction hearing. [43:49.000 --> 43:51.000] He said, I need a suit. [43:51.000 --> 43:53.000] He said, I don't have one. [43:53.000 --> 43:55.000] Well, I need one. I don't have time. Make me one. [43:55.000 --> 43:59.000] I'll tell you about this on the other side. We'll be right back. [43:59.000 --> 44:04.000] I love Logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.000 --> 44:08.000] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fixed. [44:08.000 --> 44:13.000] I'd be lost without Logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:13.000 --> 44:16.000] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [44:16.000 --> 44:20.000] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:20.000 --> 44:22.000] How can I help Logos? [44:22.000 --> 44:27.000] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [44:27.000 --> 44:29.000] You can order new supplies or holiday gifts. [44:29.000 --> 44:31.000] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.000 --> 44:34.000] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [44:34.000 --> 44:37.000] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.000 --> 44:43.000] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.000 --> 44:44.000] Do I pay extra? [44:44.000 --> 44:45.000] No. [44:45.000 --> 44:47.000] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.000 --> 44:48.000] No. [44:48.000 --> 44:49.000] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.000 --> 44:50.000] No. [44:50.000 --> 44:51.000] I mean, yes. [44:51.000 --> 44:57.000] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [44:57.000 --> 44:58.000] We are welcome. [44:58.000 --> 45:00.000] Happy holidays, Logos. [45:00.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.000] You can win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:07.000 --> 45:15.000] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.000 --> 45:39.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.000 --> 45:43.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.000 --> 45:49.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.000 --> 45:52.000] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.000 --> 46:01.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.000 --> 46:41.000] Okay, we are back. [46:41.000 --> 46:47.000] Randy Kelton, wet fat, out in the rule of law radio, and we're going to talk about mortgages. [46:47.000 --> 46:49.000] Here's the deal. [46:49.000 --> 46:55.000] If your mortgage has any age on it at all, they have screwed up everything. [46:55.000 --> 47:03.000] And in the last mortgage crisis, we had a lot of guys going out there saying show me the note [47:03.000 --> 47:11.000] and arguing securitizations, and the courts really kind of shot that down big time. [47:11.000 --> 47:13.000] I don't go there. [47:13.000 --> 47:17.000] The mortgage contract is a contract. [47:17.000 --> 47:21.000] Let's go to the contract. [47:21.000 --> 47:26.000] First thing you want to do is look at the HUD-1 settlement statement. [47:26.000 --> 47:29.000] The HUD-1 settlement statement is generally a legal sized document, [47:29.000 --> 47:33.000] the only one in your closing documents. [47:33.000 --> 47:42.000] And it lists all of the costs assigned to you for creating the mortgage. [47:42.000 --> 47:47.000] And it has all these different things that the bank charges you for. [47:47.000 --> 47:53.000] So my first question to someone always is when you sit down at the closing table [47:53.000 --> 47:58.000] and they put that HUD-1 settlement statement in front of you and say, [47:58.000 --> 48:01.000] this is how much your mortgage is going to cost you. [48:01.000 --> 48:04.000] They had all these charges in there. [48:04.000 --> 48:14.000] Did they give you notice that the charges were not otherwise forbidden to be charged by law [48:14.000 --> 48:22.000] because those costs of creating a mortgage that are the normal costs of doing business [48:22.000 --> 48:25.000] cannot be charged to you? [48:25.000 --> 48:29.000] It's intended that those amounts be taken out of the interest. [48:29.000 --> 48:34.000] But what the banks normally do is they charge it to you anyway and then charge your interest on it for 20 years. [48:34.000 --> 48:40.000] So were these fees that were otherwise forbidden to be charged by law, [48:40.000 --> 48:45.000] were the amounts charged that were charged reasonable, [48:45.000 --> 48:49.000] were they for services that were actually rendered, [48:49.000 --> 48:55.000] and did the lender take an undisclosed markup on the amounts charged? [48:55.000 --> 49:00.000] Now that comes right out of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. [49:00.000 --> 49:04.000] Did you get any of that verification? [49:04.000 --> 49:06.000] Did they give you receipts? [49:06.000 --> 49:17.000] Did they give you ledgers of accounting or showing what all they did to warrant charging this money? [49:17.000 --> 49:19.000] Not that I'm aware of. [49:19.000 --> 49:21.000] Yeah, I never had anybody. [49:21.000 --> 49:24.000] No, they just put it on the HUD-1. [49:24.000 --> 49:31.000] Well, in that case, as far as I'm concerned, every one of those charges are bogus. [49:31.000 --> 49:35.000] So I'm going to take a spreadsheet. [49:35.000 --> 49:38.000] I've got a HUD-1 settlement statement built into this spreadsheet. [49:38.000 --> 49:41.000] You just go in there and fill in all the amounts. [49:41.000 --> 49:43.000] And then you go in. [49:43.000 --> 49:48.000] It has a place to put in the principal and interest on your note [49:48.000 --> 49:54.000] and the principal and interest on your HUD-1 settlement statement. [49:54.000 --> 49:58.000] And then it will run a set of calculations. [49:58.000 --> 50:02.000] You go to another page, and you'll have about five spreadsheets on there. [50:02.000 --> 50:09.000] One of them will be a calculation based on the Truth in Lending Statement. [50:09.000 --> 50:13.000] The Truth in Lending Statement is always screwed up. [50:13.000 --> 50:22.000] And I never could find anyone who could explain to me how they calculated a Truth in Lending Statement. [50:22.000 --> 50:28.000] The numbers on a Truth in Lending Statement never match your note, ever. [50:28.000 --> 50:30.000] And they can't explain it. [50:30.000 --> 50:34.000] They just, well, we found these numbers, and we decided to stick them in. [50:34.000 --> 50:36.000] Yeah, absolutely. [50:36.000 --> 50:39.000] So we challenge those as bogus. [50:39.000 --> 50:44.000] And then we challenge all the amounts on the HUD-1 settlement statement. [50:44.000 --> 50:50.000] We say they didn't give us any receipts or any accounting to show that these charges were actually valid. [50:50.000 --> 50:57.000] So we claim all of them are bogus and demand that they prove them up. [50:57.000 --> 51:01.000] So what you do is you take an amortization of your mortgage. [51:01.000 --> 51:10.000] On the first payment, you add to that payment all the amounts from the HUD-1 settlement statement. [51:10.000 --> 51:14.000] And you claim that as an overpayment. [51:14.000 --> 51:16.000] And then run the mortgage out. [51:16.000 --> 51:28.000] That will generally give you between one and two times, sometimes three times, the original principal as a claim against the lender. [51:28.000 --> 51:30.000] Here's how it works. [51:30.000 --> 51:41.000] If they charge you an illegal fee on the front end, that illegal fee is the last thing you pay off. [51:41.000 --> 51:48.000] So you will be paying interest on that illegal fee for 30 years, and it'll generally triple it. [51:48.000 --> 51:50.000] So you get this large number. [51:50.000 --> 51:57.000] When you go to court, you're going to put an amount that you want to sue them for. [51:57.000 --> 52:05.000] And the other side is going to jump up and down and write you an indignation, want to know just where exactly you get that number. [52:05.000 --> 52:08.000] And you're going to say, I got it from this spreadsheet. [52:08.000 --> 52:11.000] Here are the calculations. [52:11.000 --> 52:14.000] If you disagree with it, let me know. [52:14.000 --> 52:20.000] If any of these fees are actually valid, well, just prove them up. [52:20.000 --> 52:23.000] And we'll subtract that from the calculation. [52:23.000 --> 52:27.000] So riddle me this. [52:27.000 --> 52:40.000] In helping over 700 people file federal lawsuits on mortgages and asking these questions, how many fees were actually proved up by the banks? [52:40.000 --> 52:45.000] And as a hint, it's a really easy number. [52:45.000 --> 52:47.000] Okay. [52:47.000 --> 52:49.000] Zero. [52:49.000 --> 52:54.000] The reason it was zero is because they're all bogus. [52:54.000 --> 52:55.000] Not all of them. [52:55.000 --> 53:00.000] There's always at least one or two in there that's bogus. [53:00.000 --> 53:07.000] Document preparation fee, a warehousing fee. [53:07.000 --> 53:08.000] This is crap. [53:08.000 --> 53:09.000] They made up. [53:09.000 --> 53:11.000] Just tuck it in there. [53:11.000 --> 53:22.000] Show me some accounting, some ledgers, some receipts, something to prove up that you actually paid these amounts. [53:22.000 --> 53:27.000] And there's always at least one bogus fee on there. [53:27.000 --> 53:32.000] And if there is one bogus fee, they're screwed. [53:32.000 --> 53:40.000] My favorite fee to put on there is in Texas, and it's a $1 tax. [53:40.000 --> 53:45.000] They all paid that tax, but nobody ever proved it up. [53:45.000 --> 53:47.000] Reason? [53:47.000 --> 53:56.000] If they prove up one fee and don't prove up another, that creates in law what's called an adverse inference. [53:56.000 --> 54:07.000] It adversely infers that the one they did not prove up is exactly what we said it was, fraud on its face. [54:07.000 --> 54:16.000] So you get them in a spot on the numbers, and here's how it works before courts, before juries. [54:16.000 --> 54:23.000] When you bring a number in before the jury, the opposing party is going to jump up and down and rail in rights to indignation [54:23.000 --> 54:27.000] and just rail about how outrageous that is. [54:27.000 --> 54:29.000] And you're going to back and forth about the numbers. [54:29.000 --> 54:34.000] Well, the jury's going to be sitting there, and their eyes are going to glaze over. [54:34.000 --> 54:42.000] At the end of the day, when they go into the jury room, there's only one number they're going to remember, [54:42.000 --> 54:46.000] and that's the number you walked in the door with. [54:46.000 --> 54:54.000] If you can show how you got that number, doesn't matter how bogus it may be, [54:54.000 --> 54:59.000] if you can just give an excuse of how you got it, that's enough. [54:59.000 --> 55:02.000] Let them argue against it. [55:02.000 --> 55:06.000] Okay, we can do that. That's one of the things you do. [55:06.000 --> 55:15.000] Then the first thing you want to do is go down to the county registrar of deeds. [55:15.000 --> 55:20.000] In most states, it's county clerk, but some states have their own registrar of deeds. [55:20.000 --> 55:25.000] And you get all of the documents that have been filed in the county record [55:25.000 --> 55:31.000] from the date you received a warranty deed on the property to the current date. [55:31.000 --> 55:40.000] You look at all those documents, the main things you're looking for are assignments and appointments, [55:40.000 --> 55:46.000] assignments of the mortgage from one lender to another, [55:46.000 --> 55:51.000] and appointments of trustees, substitute trustees. [55:51.000 --> 55:54.000] You'll look at those documents, compare the dates. [55:54.000 --> 56:10.000] I don't know how many cases I had where an assigned lender had filed to foreclose [56:10.000 --> 56:14.000] before they were assigned as the lender. [56:14.000 --> 56:18.000] You do that all the time. They just screwed up all the paperwork. [56:18.000 --> 56:26.000] So when you get all those documents, the first thing you do is look at the name that's signed on the document. [56:26.000 --> 56:31.000] So who the heck is that person? [56:31.000 --> 56:34.000] That person claims to be an executive vice president of MERS, [56:34.000 --> 56:42.000] but I'm looking in the record and I don't see a power of attorney assigned to this person by MERS. [56:42.000 --> 56:46.000] So you send a request for power of attorney. [56:46.000 --> 56:53.000] Then you look at the verification, the notary seal. [56:53.000 --> 56:55.000] Who's this notary? [56:55.000 --> 57:05.000] You send a request to the notary for a copy of the notary ledger that has this particular verification on it. [57:05.000 --> 57:10.000] You never get those back because they screwed all that up. [57:10.000 --> 57:18.000] So if you don't get back a power of attorney, then you go to the county registrar and say, [57:18.000 --> 57:23.000] this document was filed in the county record by this person, [57:23.000 --> 57:31.000] but this person doesn't have any evidence in the county record that they have power of attorney to file this document, [57:31.000 --> 57:38.000] so I want you to strike it because it doesn't meet the rules for filing. [57:38.000 --> 57:46.000] You get one of those filed, interrupts the chain of the title, they're screwed. [57:46.000 --> 57:52.000] The assignments and appointments, appointments of substitute trustee, who the heck are you? [57:52.000 --> 57:57.000] We have to file a suit in San Diego, California. [57:57.000 --> 58:02.000] Wells Fargo was the lender, Wells Fargo was the servicer, Wells Fargo was doing the foreclosure. [58:02.000 --> 58:05.000] We said, who the heck are you? [58:05.000 --> 58:11.000] I don't know who you are, never entered into a contract with you, never entered into a contract with your alleged principal. [58:11.000 --> 58:13.000] Prove it up. [58:13.000 --> 58:16.000] You don't have to admit to anything. [58:16.000 --> 58:19.000] They're making the claim, prove it up. [58:19.000 --> 58:28.000] Seven years later, the California Supreme refused to hear our cert to them. [58:28.000 --> 58:31.000] Seven years he lived in that property, didn't pay a dime. [58:31.000 --> 58:38.000] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the rule of our radio, our call in, I won't give out the call in number, we've got a full board. [58:38.000 --> 58:42.000] As soon as someone drops off, then I'll give out the call in number. [58:42.000 --> 58:50.000] I'll give it out anyway, 512-646-1984, and we'll be right back. [58:50.000 --> 58:58.000] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.000 --> 59:06.000] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:06.000 --> 59:09.000] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.000 --> 59:18.000] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.000 --> 59:27.000] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.000 --> 59:32.000] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.000 --> 59:47.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102, or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.000 --> 59:50.000] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.000 --> 01:00:00.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.000 --> 01:00:05.000] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.000 --> 01:00:10.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.000 --> 01:00:16.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.000 --> 01:00:22.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.000 --> 01:00:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.000 --> 01:00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.000 --> 01:00:35.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.000 --> 01:00:42.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.000 --> 01:00:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.000 --> 01:00:49.000] Most people think of seven as a more civilized number than six. [01:00:49.000 --> 01:00:54.000] Think of how the number six is implicated in evil, as in the biblical 666. [01:00:54.000 --> 01:00:58.000] So it would fit right in that the Seventh Amendment would be about civil trials. [01:00:58.000 --> 01:01:00.000] Civil seven, civil trials, get it? [01:01:00.000 --> 01:01:07.000] Civil trials are ones where people sue instead of beating each other up over a dispute, like the dividing line between properties. [01:01:07.000 --> 01:01:11.000] They take their dispute to a courthouse and settle matters civilly without the fisticuffs. [01:01:11.000 --> 01:01:19.000] The Seventh Amendment guarantees that Americans have the right to a jury in certain civil matters instead of having a lone judge rule on the case. [01:01:19.000 --> 01:01:31.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.000 --> 01:01:35.000] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.000 --> 01:01:41.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:41.000 --> 01:01:47.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.000 --> 01:01:53.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:53.000 --> 01:01:58.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:58.000 --> 01:02:03.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:03.000 --> 01:02:05.000] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.000 --> 01:02:13.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.000 --> 01:02:16.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:16.000 --> 01:02:22.000] Remember the scene in George Orwell's novel, 1984, when Winston is threatened with his worst fear? [01:02:22.000 --> 01:02:26.000] That fear was having a cage of hungry rats unleashed on his face. [01:02:26.000 --> 01:02:30.000] But what if his worst fear was spiders? Eight-legged spiders, to be exact. [01:02:30.000 --> 01:02:33.000] Getting a face full of spiders would be pretty cruel and unusual. [01:02:33.000 --> 01:02:37.000] That image of eight-legged spiders will help you remember the Eighth Amendment. [01:02:37.000 --> 01:02:44.000] Our founding fathers added the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to protect us from creepy-crawly eight-legged punishments [01:02:44.000 --> 01:02:48.000] and other cruel and unusual prison practices that were common in their day. [01:02:48.000 --> 01:02:54.000] The Eighth Amendment also prohibits the government from requiring excessive bail and charging excessive fines. [01:02:54.000 --> 01:03:00.000] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:25.000 --> 01:03:27.000] What did we say? [01:03:29.000 --> 01:03:31.000] Let me tell them. [01:03:32.000 --> 01:03:34.000] One day you will. [01:03:36.000 --> 01:03:38.000] For this man. [01:03:39.000 --> 01:03:41.000] I won't say anything. [01:03:41.000 --> 01:03:51.000] Stand for our word. Stand for our word. [01:03:59.000 --> 01:04:03.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue of La Radio. [01:04:03.000 --> 01:04:09.000] And I've only got two hours today, so I don't have time to go over all of this. [01:04:09.000 --> 01:04:13.000] I could probably do eight hours on it. [01:04:13.000 --> 01:04:19.000] But the point is, Denise, you have remedy. [01:04:19.000 --> 01:04:23.000] You can kick their behinds every way from Sunday. [01:04:23.000 --> 01:04:30.000] The particular one I was talking about when we went out, while we were fighting this, [01:04:30.000 --> 01:04:35.000] his parents passed away and he inherited a million dollars. [01:04:35.000 --> 01:04:42.000] So seven years in, when the California Supreme refused to hear our cert, [01:04:42.000 --> 01:04:46.000] I went to him and I said, okay, that was my BS suit. [01:04:46.000 --> 01:04:50.000] That was my two-page who the heck are you suit. [01:04:50.000 --> 01:04:53.000] Now we go to the real deal. [01:04:53.000 --> 01:04:55.000] He said, no, I'm really tired of this. [01:04:55.000 --> 01:05:02.000] He purchased the house for $350,000, lived in it for eight or nine years without paying for it, [01:05:02.000 --> 01:05:09.000] and then sold it for $850,000, paid the bank $500,000, went to Phoenix, [01:05:09.000 --> 01:05:14.000] bought a better house, paid cash for it, and left all the way to the bank. [01:05:14.000 --> 01:05:17.000] There you go. [01:05:17.000 --> 01:05:22.000] If someone, if you get someone helping you with your mortgage, [01:05:22.000 --> 01:05:30.000] put half the amount of the mortgage in the bank every month without fail. [01:05:30.000 --> 01:05:35.000] If you don't do that, you will not be able to keep your house. [01:05:35.000 --> 01:05:37.000] I've had people tell me they couldn't do that. [01:05:37.000 --> 01:05:43.000] Now tell me, if you can't do that, you can't pay the taxes on this house. [01:05:43.000 --> 01:05:46.000] I will not help you. [01:05:46.000 --> 01:05:47.000] Put half of it in the bank. [01:05:47.000 --> 01:05:51.000] We install them until they get old. [01:05:51.000 --> 01:05:56.000] I had someone call me in out of Houston that had been in litigation [01:05:56.000 --> 01:06:02.000] with the lender for 18 years. [01:06:02.000 --> 01:06:06.000] The point of this is you got lots of remedies. [01:06:06.000 --> 01:06:08.000] Don't be too concerned. [01:06:08.000 --> 01:06:14.000] The first guy, that first one I did, Steve Skidmore come to me. [01:06:14.000 --> 01:06:16.000] I got two days to an eviction hearing. [01:06:16.000 --> 01:06:17.000] I need a suit. [01:06:17.000 --> 01:06:19.000] I said, I'm still doing my research. [01:06:19.000 --> 01:06:20.000] I don't have one yet. [01:06:20.000 --> 01:06:21.000] Well, get me one. [01:06:21.000 --> 01:06:25.000] So I went on the Internet and pulled down a bunch of junk, threw it together. [01:06:25.000 --> 01:06:27.000] He filed it. [01:06:27.000 --> 01:06:33.000] Went to the JP for the eviction, and he showed him the lawsuit. [01:06:33.000 --> 01:06:35.000] The JP said, what are you doing in my court? [01:06:35.000 --> 01:06:36.000] I don't have any jurisdiction. [01:06:36.000 --> 01:06:38.000] Get out. [01:06:38.000 --> 01:06:48.000] So went to the district court, and the opposing party filed a response saying, [01:06:48.000 --> 01:06:51.000] Your Honor, this suit's a piece of crap. [01:06:51.000 --> 01:06:53.000] I need you to dismiss it. [01:06:53.000 --> 01:06:58.000] The judge took about 90 days, and then he looked at it, and he said, [01:06:58.000 --> 01:06:59.000] Yeah, you're right. [01:06:59.000 --> 01:07:00.000] It is a piece of crap. [01:07:00.000 --> 01:07:02.000] Fix it. [01:07:02.000 --> 01:07:04.000] Give us 60 days to fix it. [01:07:04.000 --> 01:07:08.000] Then I did some more research and gave him a better one. [01:07:08.000 --> 01:07:12.000] After that one, 30 days, the other side came back. [01:07:12.000 --> 01:07:14.000] Your Honor, this one's a piece of crap, too. [01:07:14.000 --> 01:07:16.000] The judge looked at it 90 days later. [01:07:16.000 --> 01:07:17.000] Yeah, it is a piece of crap. [01:07:17.000 --> 01:07:18.000] Fix it. [01:07:18.000 --> 01:07:21.000] The second one stuck. [01:07:21.000 --> 01:07:26.000] Seven years later, he was still in the house. [01:07:26.000 --> 01:07:31.000] It is really hard for the banks to foreclose if you fight them. [01:07:31.000 --> 01:07:35.000] And you've got lots of tools. [01:07:35.000 --> 01:07:38.000] If you will send me an email, I'll get you, you know, Brett's on here. [01:07:38.000 --> 01:07:46.000] We'll get together with Brett and see what we can do. [01:07:46.000 --> 01:07:52.000] Thank you so very much, and I will email you as soon as I can. [01:07:52.000 --> 01:07:53.000] Okay. [01:07:53.000 --> 01:07:59.000] Just know there are so many dirty-wattin' things you can do to them, [01:07:59.000 --> 01:08:03.000] they will not believe it. [01:08:03.000 --> 01:08:07.000] We have spent years collecting all the stinking-wattin', [01:08:07.000 --> 01:08:10.000] low-down dirty tricks that lawyers use, [01:08:10.000 --> 01:08:15.000] and a few they can't use and turned it back on them. [01:08:15.000 --> 01:08:16.000] Thank you, thank you. [01:08:16.000 --> 01:08:20.000] Are you now, are you Randy at.net or.com? [01:08:20.000 --> 01:08:24.000] .com, Randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:08:24.000 --> 01:08:26.000] Thank you so very much. [01:08:26.000 --> 01:08:29.000] Yeah, just do a search for Rule of Law Radio. [01:08:29.000 --> 01:08:30.000] You'll find me on there. [01:08:30.000 --> 01:08:33.000] There will be a link to my email. [01:08:33.000 --> 01:08:39.000] Do you want a short email tomorrow and then all the backing up information? [01:08:39.000 --> 01:08:44.000] Yes, just give me an email basically who you are so I remember. [01:08:44.000 --> 01:08:45.000] I get lots of emails. [01:08:45.000 --> 01:08:49.000] And then I'll give you a list of what I need. [01:08:49.000 --> 01:08:50.000] Okay. [01:08:50.000 --> 01:08:54.000] I will send you a short email tomorrow and then we'll go from there. [01:08:54.000 --> 01:08:56.000] Okay. [01:08:56.000 --> 01:08:57.000] Thank you for your time. [01:08:57.000 --> 01:08:59.000] Okay, thank you, Denise. [01:08:59.000 --> 01:09:04.000] Now we're going to go to another first-time caller. [01:09:04.000 --> 01:09:09.000] The deal is all of these say Williams on it, and they're not Williams. [01:09:09.000 --> 01:09:14.000] This is what I think the phone ID does. [01:09:14.000 --> 01:09:20.000] If you're in the 972 area code, that must be DFW area. [01:09:20.000 --> 01:09:23.000] That's where I live. [01:09:23.000 --> 01:09:29.000] If you're in the 972 area code, talk to us. [01:09:29.000 --> 01:09:31.000] Hi, Mr. Randy. [01:09:31.000 --> 01:09:32.000] Hello. [01:09:32.000 --> 01:09:37.000] Give me your first name and I already know the state is Texas. [01:09:37.000 --> 01:09:40.000] Jay and I'm in Texas. [01:09:40.000 --> 01:09:42.000] Okay. [01:09:42.000 --> 01:09:48.000] Jay in Texas, are you a redneck? [01:09:48.000 --> 01:09:50.000] I've been called worse. [01:09:50.000 --> 01:09:51.000] Okay. [01:09:51.000 --> 01:09:54.000] Well, we don't discriminate against rednecks here. [01:09:54.000 --> 01:09:55.000] Okay. [01:09:55.000 --> 01:09:59.000] What do you have for us today? [01:09:59.000 --> 01:10:12.000] I am having several legal issues, and I've tried filing a A091 complaint this morning. [01:10:12.000 --> 01:10:14.000] Whoa, whoa, whoa. [01:10:14.000 --> 01:10:18.000] First, I hate acronyms. [01:10:18.000 --> 01:10:20.000] That's just the code. [01:10:20.000 --> 01:10:23.000] It's a federal criminal complaint, and that's the code for it. [01:10:23.000 --> 01:10:26.000] That's what the feds call that form. [01:10:26.000 --> 01:10:29.000] It's a criminal complaint form. [01:10:29.000 --> 01:10:32.000] Who did you file it with? [01:10:32.000 --> 01:10:43.000] I tried to file it with the federal court district clerk that has jurisdiction over the county where I'm at. [01:10:43.000 --> 01:10:44.000] Okay, okay. [01:10:44.000 --> 01:10:46.000] That's not how you do it. [01:10:46.000 --> 01:10:59.000] You take that complaint and you put it in an envelope and you put a cover letter over it and address it to the special agent in charge of the FBI. [01:10:59.000 --> 01:11:05.000] That's the only FBI agent whose name you can get now. [01:11:05.000 --> 01:11:11.000] The FBI in Texas are now officially secret police. [01:11:11.000 --> 01:11:16.000] They no longer identify themselves so you don't know who they are. [01:11:16.000 --> 01:11:21.000] So the only name you can get is the special agent in charge. [01:11:21.000 --> 01:11:23.000] He's listed on their local website. [01:11:23.000 --> 01:11:34.000] So you send it to him, make sure it's verified, with a cover letter asking him to initial this cover letter [01:11:34.000 --> 01:11:43.000] and put it in the included stamp self-addressed envelope and return it to you so that you can be sure he actually received it. [01:11:43.000 --> 01:11:53.000] And then you send a certified mail and I suggest that you add an extra 15 bucks or so and insure it for like 500 bucks. [01:11:53.000 --> 01:12:05.000] And then in two weeks when you don't get that back, then you call the postal inspectors and you want your 500 bucks. [01:12:05.000 --> 01:12:10.000] And the postal inspectors are not going to want to give you 500 bucks. [01:12:10.000 --> 01:12:19.000] So they're going to go down to the Fed's building and the FBI treats postal inspectors like errand stepchildren. [01:12:19.000 --> 01:12:29.000] When you give the postal inspectors an opportunity to step on the Fed's, they are likely to send you a Christmas card. [01:12:29.000 --> 01:12:39.000] They'll go down there and jerk around the Fed's and force the special agent in charge to confirm that he actually received your filing. [01:12:39.000 --> 01:12:53.000] And in your filing, when you file the complaint, you request that the special agent in charge forward your complaint to the foreman of the grand jury. [01:12:53.000 --> 01:13:15.000] In the Fed, under duties of grand jurors, it says the grand jury shall investigate into all crimes subject to indictment that come to their knowledge by whatever means. [01:13:15.000 --> 01:13:18.000] We'll get to that a little bit more in a minute. [01:13:18.000 --> 01:13:28.000] So you do that to the special agent in charge, and when the Fed's, when the postal inspectors force him to confirm that he received it, [01:13:28.000 --> 01:13:39.000] and you haven't been contacted by, you haven't received your return letter or you haven't been contacted by the grand jury, [01:13:39.000 --> 01:13:46.000] then you have to come to the adverse inference that he did not give that to the grand jury. [01:13:46.000 --> 01:14:00.000] So you prepare a criminal complaint against the chief justice, I'm sorry, you prepare a criminal complaint against the special agent in charge of the local FBI, [01:14:00.000 --> 01:14:16.000] and you file that with the federal prosecutor attorney, the U.S. attorney, with a cover letter, requesting that he present your complaints to the grand jury [01:14:16.000 --> 01:14:23.000] and initial this document and send it back to me in the snap-self-aggressive envelope, so you know you got it. [01:14:23.000 --> 01:14:36.000] And in the, you use two envelopes, you put an envelope in an envelope, and the internal envelope you address it to the former grand jury, [01:14:36.000 --> 01:14:49.000] and you ask the U.S. attorney to give this envelope to the former grand jury, and he's not going to do it, he's going to open it up to see what's in it. [01:14:49.000 --> 01:14:58.000] And what he's going to find is a cover letter there written to the foreman of the grand jury asking the foreman to initial this document [01:14:58.000 --> 01:15:05.000] and send it back to you in the included stamp-self-aggressive envelope, so that you'll know he actually got it. [01:15:05.000 --> 01:15:16.000] In the letter you'll claim that we sometimes have problems with U.S. attorneys secreting criminal complaints from the grand jury. [01:15:16.000 --> 01:15:29.000] We don't want you to sign this because the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it that he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments. [01:15:29.000 --> 01:15:37.000] Well, what do you think the likelihood of that getting to the foreman of the grand jury is going to be? [01:15:37.000 --> 01:15:52.000] So you send the postal inspectors after the U.S. attorney, then you file a complaint addressed to the U.S. attorney's physical address, [01:15:52.000 --> 01:16:00.000] but the name is foreman of the grand jury, and he'll open that one. [01:16:00.000 --> 01:16:10.000] And inside that one he will see a cover letter asking the foreman to initial it and send it back to you and explaining why. [01:16:10.000 --> 01:16:15.000] And when he looks at the complaints, the complaints will be against the foreman of the grand jury. [01:16:15.000 --> 01:16:16.000] I'm sorry. [01:16:16.000 --> 01:16:27.000] The complaints will be against the district attorney accusing him of secreting criminal complaints against the special agent in charge of the FBI from the grand jury. [01:16:27.000 --> 01:16:31.000] You see where I'm going here, Jay? [01:16:31.000 --> 01:16:33.000] Yes, sir. [01:16:33.000 --> 01:16:37.000] At the end of the day, it's all political. [01:16:37.000 --> 01:16:40.000] And you are creating a lot of politics. [01:16:40.000 --> 01:16:46.000] And when they get to the guy who started all this, they're going to rip him a new one. [01:16:46.000 --> 01:16:48.000] This is how we make this happen. [01:16:48.000 --> 01:16:52.000] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Ruval Radio. [01:16:52.000 --> 01:17:00.000] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.000 --> 01:17:05.000] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? 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[01:18:31.000 --> 01:18:40.000] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:18:40.000 --> 01:18:48.000] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:18:48.000 --> 01:18:52.000] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:18:52.000 --> 01:18:59.000] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:18:59.000 --> 01:19:01.000] Order now. [01:19:01.000 --> 01:19:11.000] This is the Logosradionetwork. [01:19:31.000 --> 01:19:44.000] Okay, we are back. [01:19:44.000 --> 01:19:56.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we are live on our radio on this Thursday, the 25th day of August 2022, and we're talking to Jay in Texas. [01:19:56.000 --> 01:20:01.000] And I'm having trouble reaching him to unmute. [01:20:01.000 --> 01:20:02.000] There we go, okay. [01:20:02.000 --> 01:20:08.000] Okay, Jay, I kind of bushwhacked you, but you gave me the opportunity to do a second synopsis today. [01:20:08.000 --> 01:20:11.000] I need to do those every once in a while. [01:20:11.000 --> 01:20:15.000] I haven't done for mortgage in a long time. [01:20:15.000 --> 01:20:20.000] Okay, what is it that you have for us? [01:20:20.000 --> 01:20:23.000] I kind of bushwhacked you. [01:20:23.000 --> 01:20:25.000] That's okay. [01:20:25.000 --> 01:20:29.000] I have another situation. [01:20:29.000 --> 01:20:36.000] My son's service dog, which was in training, has come up missing. [01:20:36.000 --> 01:20:44.000] Animal control removed several service animals. [01:20:44.000 --> 01:20:53.000] We went to the animal control almost immediately after it happened, within, you know, one or two days. [01:20:53.000 --> 01:20:56.000] I asked to get the animal back. [01:20:56.000 --> 01:20:58.000] They refused to give it to me. [01:20:58.000 --> 01:21:02.000] They refused to allow me to even look at the animal. [01:21:02.000 --> 01:21:09.000] File a notice of intent to sue. [01:21:09.000 --> 01:21:13.000] Get that to them. [01:21:13.000 --> 01:21:17.000] Have you looked at the paperwork where they took the animals? [01:21:17.000 --> 01:21:18.000] Yes, sir. [01:21:18.000 --> 01:21:23.000] They've got the affidavit and the search warrant. [01:21:23.000 --> 01:21:39.000] Okay, have you looked at the laws concerning their authority to take personal property in the form of animals? [01:21:39.000 --> 01:21:41.000] That I have not done. [01:21:41.000 --> 01:21:52.000] What I have done was I went to court today and listened against the case, against the trainer. [01:21:52.000 --> 01:22:16.000] And the animal control supervisor had previously contacted me stating that I could come to the shelter where they were keeping the dogs to verify whether or not the dog was there. [01:22:16.000 --> 01:22:23.000] I confirmed it today that the service dog was not there. [01:22:23.000 --> 01:22:46.000] The trainer and her lawyer confirmed it in court, you know, at the hearing that my son's service dog picture was in evident as one of the dogs that they removed. [01:22:46.000 --> 01:22:47.000] Okay. [01:22:47.000 --> 01:22:50.000] The reason for removal? [01:22:50.000 --> 01:22:54.000] Cruelty to handle. [01:22:54.000 --> 01:22:58.000] Okay, can you have evidence that you own the dog? [01:22:58.000 --> 01:23:00.000] Yes, sir. [01:23:00.000 --> 01:23:07.000] Then file a motion with the court to release the dog to you. [01:23:07.000 --> 01:23:10.000] Okay. [01:23:10.000 --> 01:23:20.000] And file it as an emergency motion because the dog is your son's service dog. [01:23:20.000 --> 01:23:23.000] This is, okay, you're on the telegram side. [01:23:23.000 --> 01:23:25.000] Now I know who you are. [01:23:25.000 --> 01:23:28.000] Everything is not a fight. [01:23:28.000 --> 01:23:35.000] And animal control is not necessary to the bad guys. [01:23:35.000 --> 01:23:48.000] If you just go to them and talk to them, you go to the judge and explain to the judge, you know, this is your son's service dog and you sent it to be trained and whatever was going on there that they're complaining about, you weren't aware of it. [01:23:48.000 --> 01:23:53.000] But this dog is important to your son and you want the dog back and ask them to release it. [01:23:53.000 --> 01:23:59.000] And they will very likely be very accommodating. [01:23:59.000 --> 01:24:03.000] If you go down there and try to start a fight with them, they'll fight you back. [01:24:03.000 --> 01:24:07.000] No, I'm not fighting. [01:24:07.000 --> 01:24:10.000] Assume that animal control are really the good guys here. [01:24:10.000 --> 01:24:13.000] They're not trying to be a problem. [01:24:13.000 --> 01:24:15.000] They're just trying to protect these animals. [01:24:15.000 --> 01:24:16.000] Right, right. [01:24:16.000 --> 01:24:19.000] And I have no problem with that. [01:24:19.000 --> 01:24:27.000] My issue is they are telling me they don't have my son's service dog. [01:24:27.000 --> 01:24:37.000] And I have confirmed with them that they do not have my son's service dog. [01:24:37.000 --> 01:24:40.000] Then, okay, they won't. [01:24:40.000 --> 01:24:43.000] Ooh, Brett? [01:24:43.000 --> 01:24:46.000] They said they don't have it. [01:24:46.000 --> 01:24:48.000] And the curator says they do have it. [01:24:48.000 --> 01:24:51.000] Why not? [01:24:51.000 --> 01:24:52.000] Don't know. [01:24:52.000 --> 01:24:58.000] That was an assumption. [01:24:58.000 --> 01:25:01.000] Do you have actual evidence that they took it other than the word of the trainer? [01:25:01.000 --> 01:25:04.000] They have an inventory list. [01:25:04.000 --> 01:25:07.000] Okay, so then you can just... [01:25:07.000 --> 01:25:28.000] The fact that the Sheriff's Department deputy was there, and I know that their recordings are automatically backed up as soon as they get on site, you know, back to their headquarters. [01:25:28.000 --> 01:25:29.000] Who is... [01:25:29.000 --> 01:25:36.000] Have you found out who the director of this particular animal control office is? [01:25:36.000 --> 01:25:37.000] Not yet. [01:25:37.000 --> 01:25:38.000] I have not. [01:25:38.000 --> 01:25:41.000] Like I said, this just happened. [01:25:41.000 --> 01:25:46.000] Okay, understand that you are the citizen. [01:25:46.000 --> 01:25:49.000] You are the citizen in the Republic. [01:25:49.000 --> 01:25:51.000] All these guys are the servants. [01:25:51.000 --> 01:25:53.000] They all work for you. [01:25:53.000 --> 01:26:05.000] Most people who have worked for someone else their whole life, they get in this mindset that they have to follow all of these protocols and procedures. [01:26:05.000 --> 01:26:07.000] Now you don't have to do any of that. [01:26:07.000 --> 01:26:12.000] You are the master of the servants. [01:26:12.000 --> 01:26:14.000] You don't deal with the servants. [01:26:14.000 --> 01:26:19.000] Unless if the servants give you any kind of hard problem, you don't discipline the servants. [01:26:19.000 --> 01:26:25.000] You discipline the guy that you authorized to hire those servants. [01:26:25.000 --> 01:26:31.000] So you go to the top, and you crawl down his throat. [01:26:31.000 --> 01:26:33.000] You put him on the dime. [01:26:33.000 --> 01:26:35.000] What is going on here? [01:26:35.000 --> 01:26:37.000] This is some service dog. [01:26:37.000 --> 01:26:40.000] It's important to his health. [01:26:40.000 --> 01:26:42.000] You folks seem to have lost it. [01:26:42.000 --> 01:26:44.000] Will you find it? [01:26:44.000 --> 01:26:46.000] But don't do it as a fight. [01:26:46.000 --> 01:26:49.000] Just tell them, you know, this is what I need. [01:26:49.000 --> 01:26:50.000] I've talked to your people. [01:26:50.000 --> 01:26:51.000] I'm getting nowhere. [01:26:51.000 --> 01:26:53.000] Can you help me facilitate this? [01:26:53.000 --> 01:26:56.000] And they most likely will. [01:26:56.000 --> 01:26:57.000] But go to the top. [01:26:57.000 --> 01:27:02.000] Don't screw with the guys at the bottom. [01:27:02.000 --> 01:27:08.000] What will happen is the guy at the top will say, well, you need to talk to this person here. [01:27:08.000 --> 01:27:10.000] And you say, well, thank you very much. [01:27:10.000 --> 01:27:11.000] I appreciate that. [01:27:11.000 --> 01:27:21.000] And then you go to this person and say, I just talked to the boss over here, and he said, I should come to you and you could fix this problem. [01:27:21.000 --> 01:27:26.000] It's all politics. [01:27:26.000 --> 01:27:30.000] You come to him referred by the head of the agency. [01:27:30.000 --> 01:27:36.000] He's going to get it fixed. [01:27:36.000 --> 01:27:38.000] Does that make sense? [01:27:38.000 --> 01:27:41.000] Yes, sir. [01:27:41.000 --> 01:27:51.000] Well, try that out, but try not to start a fight if you can help it because this may be just some honest clerical errors and stuff. [01:27:51.000 --> 01:27:55.000] If they give you a really hard time, then you get difficult. [01:27:55.000 --> 01:28:02.000] You know, I talked when I started about going into court today, it was real amenable. [01:28:02.000 --> 01:28:03.000] Nobody got out of line. [01:28:03.000 --> 01:28:04.000] Nobody got out of hand. [01:28:04.000 --> 01:28:06.000] We did not have a fight. [01:28:06.000 --> 01:28:09.000] It went really well. [01:28:09.000 --> 01:28:18.000] If they had started a fight, I would give them one, but I'm not going to give them a fight unless I have to. [01:28:18.000 --> 01:28:22.000] Be good at it when you do, but only use it when it's needed. [01:28:22.000 --> 01:28:26.000] And this sounds like a situation that's just these guys are busy. [01:28:26.000 --> 01:28:28.000] There's a lot of stuff going on. [01:28:28.000 --> 01:28:31.000] Your dog got lost in the shuffle. [01:28:31.000 --> 01:28:38.000] But go straight to the boss, straight to the top of the agency. [01:28:38.000 --> 01:28:45.000] He's not going to like you wasting his time, and he's going to tell these guys, make sure this guy doesn't waste any more of my time. [01:28:45.000 --> 01:28:52.000] If I hear from him again, you're going to hear from me, and then they're motivated to fix it. [01:28:52.000 --> 01:28:54.000] Okay, I'll try that. [01:28:54.000 --> 01:28:55.000] Okay. [01:28:55.000 --> 01:28:58.000] Do you have anything else for us? [01:28:58.000 --> 01:29:01.000] Not that I'm willing to discuss on there. [01:29:01.000 --> 01:29:02.000] Oh, okay. [01:29:02.000 --> 01:29:04.000] We can do this on telegram. [01:29:04.000 --> 01:29:05.000] Okay. [01:29:05.000 --> 01:29:06.000] Thank you. [01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:07.000] Thank you, Jay. [01:29:07.000 --> 01:29:08.000] Thank you, sir. [01:29:08.000 --> 01:29:18.000] We're going to go to Tina and E.J. They both want to do a duet. [01:29:18.000 --> 01:29:19.000] Hello. [01:29:19.000 --> 01:29:27.000] But we only got about 40 seconds, so give us a quick intro, and then we'll go back in after the break. [01:29:27.000 --> 01:29:31.000] Well, E.J.'s got a little crowing to do. [01:29:31.000 --> 01:29:38.000] He's had a success story, and we want to talk about it because he's had a difficult time. [01:29:38.000 --> 01:29:41.000] That's good to carry us through the break. [01:29:41.000 --> 01:29:44.000] We've got good news going through the break. [01:29:44.000 --> 01:29:45.000] Wonderful. [01:29:45.000 --> 01:29:49.000] E.J.'s been on this for quite a while, and she's hung in there. [01:29:49.000 --> 01:29:53.000] This is a testament to perseverance. [01:29:53.000 --> 01:29:57.000] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the Rule of Law Radio. [01:29:57.000 --> 01:30:02.000] We'll be right back. [01:30:02.000 --> 01:30:09.000] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.000 --> 01:30:12.000] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.000 --> 01:30:14.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:14.000 --> 01:30:16.000] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.000 --> 01:30:18.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.000 --> 01:30:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.000 --> 01:30:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.000 --> 01:30:28.000] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.000 --> 01:30:32.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.000 --> 01:30:34.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:34.000 --> 01:30:42.000] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.000 --> 01:30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.000 --> 01:30:48.000] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.000 --> 01:30:52.000] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.000 --> 01:30:56.000] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.000 --> 01:31:00.000] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.000 --> 01:31:04.000] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.000 --> 01:31:10.000] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.000 --> 01:31:15.000] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.000 --> 01:31:18.000] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.000 --> 01:31:21.000] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.000 --> 01:31:26.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.000 --> 01:31:36.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.000 --> 01:31:38.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.000 --> 01:31:43.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:46.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.000 --> 01:31:49.000] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.000 --> 01:31:50.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.000 --> 01:31:51.000] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.000 --> 01:31:52.000] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.000 --> 01:31:53.000] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.000 --> 01:31:55.000] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.000 --> 01:31:58.000] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.000 --> 01:32:01.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.000 --> 01:32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.000 --> 01:32:08.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.000 --> 01:32:10.000] And if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.000 --> 01:32:13.000] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.000 --> 01:32:16.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.000 --> 01:32:20.000] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. 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[01:32:51.000 --> 01:32:55.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.000 --> 01:33:00.000] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.000 --> 01:33:05.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:05.000 --> 01:33:08.000] Logosradionetwork.com [01:33:35.000 --> 01:34:03.000] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:34:03.000 --> 01:34:16.000] On this Thursday, the 25th day of August 2022, and we're talking to our little duet of EJ and Tina. [01:34:16.000 --> 01:34:21.000] Is that Tina and EJ? [01:34:21.000 --> 01:34:26.000] One of those. [01:34:26.000 --> 01:34:32.000] Okay, I have heard about some crowing. [01:34:32.000 --> 01:34:42.000] Yes, I called Tina yesterday after I had two hearings, the hearing at the hospital. [01:34:42.000 --> 01:34:50.000] I had a court reporter free waiver, and I'm waiting for my court reporter. [01:34:50.000 --> 01:34:53.000] So it was, they didn't have one. [01:34:53.000 --> 01:34:57.000] So then onto my second hearing, it was the phone Zoom hearing. [01:34:57.000 --> 01:35:03.000] And yeah, so I was, I guess it's a victory. [01:35:03.000 --> 01:35:06.000] We're getting victory after victory. [01:35:06.000 --> 01:35:08.000] It's really wonderful. [01:35:08.000 --> 01:35:18.000] And hearing you today, Randy, it's like, it gives us hope, you know, watching you and all these people, like 36 people. [01:35:18.000 --> 01:35:20.000] I mean, this is awesome. [01:35:20.000 --> 01:35:31.000] The good thing about COVID is that we can see, we can get all these people, you know, watching, be court watchers. [01:35:31.000 --> 01:35:34.000] Were you one of the listeners? [01:35:34.000 --> 01:35:35.000] Yes. [01:35:35.000 --> 01:35:37.000] Yes, I recorded it. [01:35:37.000 --> 01:35:38.000] I need to send it to Tina. [01:35:38.000 --> 01:35:46.000] Did you notice, did you notice how the judge was on his tippy toes? [01:35:46.000 --> 01:35:55.000] When I told the judge, when he first said that he was going to, oh, you might not have heard that because you weren't in yet. [01:35:55.000 --> 01:35:59.000] He said, there are a lot of people on the listener, a lot of listeners. [01:35:59.000 --> 01:36:07.000] He was considering letting them in and asked if we had any objection. [01:36:07.000 --> 01:36:11.000] And the attorney for the other side said, no, you didn't have any objection. [01:36:11.000 --> 01:36:15.000] And I said, Your Honor, if you don't let all those in, [01:36:15.000 --> 01:36:20.000] I would consider that a criminal act. [01:36:20.000 --> 01:36:24.000] And he just dodged it. [01:36:24.000 --> 01:36:27.000] He said, well, I'm going to let all them in. [01:36:27.000 --> 01:36:35.000] And then I said a little bit later, he said a little bit about, you know, getting everything, you know, everybody being muted and stuff. [01:36:35.000 --> 01:36:43.000] And then I said, well, I didn't mean to sound combative there, judge, but it's what I do. [01:36:43.000 --> 01:36:57.000] And he didn't, if I annoyed him, if I angered him, he did not let the slightest little thing leak. [01:36:57.000 --> 01:37:01.000] And you saw him, you know, and I'm kind of stepping on him and pressing him. [01:37:01.000 --> 01:37:08.000] And generally, judges really don't like it when somebody steps on them. [01:37:08.000 --> 01:37:13.000] You saw how careful he was. [01:37:13.000 --> 01:37:16.000] That's because you were watching. [01:37:16.000 --> 01:37:18.000] Oh, my goodness. [01:37:18.000 --> 01:37:21.000] That's what I have to say about my hearing. [01:37:21.000 --> 01:37:23.000] I had the court watchers from Telegram. [01:37:23.000 --> 01:37:25.000] I don't know how many there were. [01:37:25.000 --> 01:37:28.000] And the judge was on her tippy toes. [01:37:28.000 --> 01:37:30.000] Exactly. [01:37:30.000 --> 01:37:38.000] So seeing yesterday at my hearing and yours today, it makes a big difference. [01:37:38.000 --> 01:37:41.000] The watchers, it keeps them accountable. [01:37:41.000 --> 01:37:44.000] There is no way she would have been that nice. [01:37:44.000 --> 01:37:46.000] You know what the judge says? [01:37:46.000 --> 01:37:56.000] She is entitled to a court report after the shyster said, objection, you know. [01:37:56.000 --> 01:38:03.000] And she starts saying that there's fatal mistakes in the summary judgment and so forth. [01:38:03.000 --> 01:38:04.000] There are some mistakes. [01:38:04.000 --> 01:38:08.000] I do have to go back, make the adjustments. [01:38:08.000 --> 01:38:09.000] So I have this time. [01:38:09.000 --> 01:38:10.000] They rescheduled it. [01:38:10.000 --> 01:38:13.000] So it's just so awesome. [01:38:13.000 --> 01:38:20.000] You give us ammunition. [01:38:20.000 --> 01:38:21.000] So I really appreciate it. [01:38:21.000 --> 01:38:26.000] I want to see as much as possible everyone's court hearings. [01:38:26.000 --> 01:38:34.000] Because you don't know if you're, for me, you know, being background where obedience, you know, [01:38:34.000 --> 01:38:39.000] you have to obey to your public officials and so forth. [01:38:39.000 --> 01:38:41.000] But that backfires on me. [01:38:41.000 --> 01:38:42.000] Oh, no. [01:38:42.000 --> 01:38:43.000] Wait, wait. [01:38:43.000 --> 01:38:44.000] That's not how it is. [01:38:44.000 --> 01:38:48.000] You only have to obey your husband. [01:38:48.000 --> 01:38:58.000] Yeah, so my wife got mad at me on our wedding night because I read the Bible to her. [01:38:58.000 --> 01:39:03.000] Well, I did read that part that said that a woman's desire will be unto her husband. [01:39:03.000 --> 01:39:08.000] Did you read it to her or did you paraphrase your interpretation to her? [01:39:08.000 --> 01:39:11.000] No, I read it to her. [01:39:11.000 --> 01:39:18.000] A woman's desire shall be unto her husband and he shall have dominion over thee. [01:39:18.000 --> 01:39:19.000] But she didn't go over that. [01:39:19.000 --> 01:39:29.000] The second one I paraphrased is where it said that a woman will keep her head covered and her mouth shut. [01:39:29.000 --> 01:39:32.000] It went downhill from there. [01:39:32.000 --> 01:39:33.000] Okay, okay. [01:39:33.000 --> 01:39:36.000] I'll stop interrupting. [01:39:36.000 --> 01:39:42.000] E.J., tell them about your work place one you just won. [01:39:42.000 --> 01:39:54.000] Okay, so I was let go from my job beginning of the year in January and I won the insurance claim. [01:39:54.000 --> 01:39:57.000] So I did a – because they let me go, but they lied. [01:39:57.000 --> 01:40:05.000] And then Tina – I mean all these people come into – everyone, all your friends, are you supporters? [01:40:05.000 --> 01:40:07.000] All your – you know, everyone supporting each other. [01:40:07.000 --> 01:40:13.000] So she said, go ahead, just put the claim in through the California Labor Department, [01:40:13.000 --> 01:40:18.000] saying that they didn't pay me the extra hours that I worked on the last day. [01:40:18.000 --> 01:40:22.000] They told me to stay extra and they fired me. [01:40:22.000 --> 01:40:26.000] So I put it in the claim and I won yesterday. [01:40:26.000 --> 01:40:30.000] There was a lawyer on the other – I'm just laughing right now because it was a few hundred dollars. [01:40:30.000 --> 01:40:36.000] So that claim because of Tina, reward time. [01:40:36.000 --> 01:40:43.000] So I just want to say even little things like that, it is a victory and it uplifts people because they can't – [01:40:43.000 --> 01:40:49.000] you know, they think they can lie and cheat and do things against you. [01:40:49.000 --> 01:40:56.000] But in all scheme of things, if you do fight them, it's – you know, they're going to be – [01:40:56.000 --> 01:41:01.000] they probably won't do what they did to you, to someone else. [01:41:01.000 --> 01:41:02.000] That's it. [01:41:02.000 --> 01:41:04.000] So it went for about four, five years. [01:41:04.000 --> 01:41:06.000] That's certainly what we hope. [01:41:06.000 --> 01:41:08.000] Did – I have a question. [01:41:08.000 --> 01:41:13.000] Did Tina show you how to be churlish? [01:41:13.000 --> 01:41:18.000] Yes, 100 percent. [01:41:18.000 --> 01:41:20.000] I am learning so well. [01:41:20.000 --> 01:41:23.000] That's how I got through the hearing with the court reporter. [01:41:23.000 --> 01:41:26.000] I said I cannot proceed without a court reporter. [01:41:26.000 --> 01:41:29.000] That's exactly what Tina told me to say. [01:41:29.000 --> 01:41:32.000] So these little things – not little things. [01:41:32.000 --> 01:41:34.000] There really are details. [01:41:34.000 --> 01:41:38.000] I think it does matter and it's notorious. [01:41:38.000 --> 01:41:43.000] You know, they can't get – they can't do this to people. [01:41:43.000 --> 01:41:46.000] You're getting over the biggest hump. [01:41:46.000 --> 01:41:47.000] Yes. [01:41:47.000 --> 01:41:56.000] People look at the law as something they don't know anything about and they think it's so horribly complicated [01:41:56.000 --> 01:42:01.000] that it's like putting a child on the bicycle the first time. [01:42:01.000 --> 01:42:04.000] They have absolutely no idea what to do. [01:42:04.000 --> 01:42:10.000] You're reaching that point to where you're beginning to get your legs under you [01:42:10.000 --> 01:42:18.000] and beginning to realize that these – at the end of the day, everything is not precisely scripted. [01:42:18.000 --> 01:42:20.000] That you can speak. [01:42:20.000 --> 01:42:22.000] You can raise issues. [01:42:22.000 --> 01:42:24.000] You can talk to them. [01:42:24.000 --> 01:42:28.000] You can even crawl down their throats on occasion. [01:42:28.000 --> 01:42:34.000] And I can tell you from experience, that is so much fun. [01:42:34.000 --> 01:42:37.000] Okay, I'll quit interrupting. [01:42:37.000 --> 01:42:42.000] Let's see, we've got one minute in this segment, so we've got to move on. [01:42:42.000 --> 01:42:45.000] Okay, what else did you have for us? [01:42:45.000 --> 01:42:47.000] Yes. [01:42:47.000 --> 01:42:49.000] I think that's it. [01:42:49.000 --> 01:42:58.000] The Labor Department gave us the victory, even though the shyster lied again over the phone. [01:42:58.000 --> 01:43:01.000] Did you bargain with the shyster? [01:43:01.000 --> 01:43:06.000] No, I will do that over the weekend. [01:43:06.000 --> 01:43:10.000] Barb Grievam on what ground? [01:43:10.000 --> 01:43:12.000] Like for lying? [01:43:12.000 --> 01:43:13.000] Yes, for lying. [01:43:13.000 --> 01:43:15.000] Not first-hand witness? [01:43:15.000 --> 01:43:20.000] Yes, look at the Bar Association Standards for California. [01:43:20.000 --> 01:43:23.000] They're taken from the American Bar Association Standards. [01:43:23.000 --> 01:43:30.000] So there's a section in there that goes to failure to speak with candor to the court. [01:43:30.000 --> 01:43:32.000] Okay, will do. [01:43:32.000 --> 01:43:34.000] One more question before you go. [01:43:34.000 --> 01:43:37.000] Okay, hold on, only got 25 seconds. [01:43:37.000 --> 01:43:39.000] We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:43:39.000 --> 01:43:42.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:43:42.000 --> 01:43:44.000] And we've got 15 seconds. [01:43:44.000 --> 01:43:48.000] Brett, say something really insightful and intuitive. [01:43:48.000 --> 01:43:51.000] Well, how about we get some room on the caller board. [01:43:51.000 --> 01:43:57.000] If anybody would like to call in, it's 512-646-1984. [01:43:57.000 --> 01:43:59.000] How eloquent. [01:43:59.000 --> 01:44:04.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:44:04.000 --> 01:44:08.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:44:08.000 --> 01:44:14.000] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:44:14.000 --> 01:44:20.000] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:44:20.000 --> 01:44:26.000] what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:44:26.000 --> 01:44:33.000] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.000 --> 01:44:38.000] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:38.000 --> 01:44:40.000] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:40.000 --> 01:44:49.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:44:49.000 --> 01:45:00.000] 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 next. [01:45:00.000 --> 01:45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.000 --> 01:45:15.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.000 --> 01:45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.000 --> 01:45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.000 --> 01:45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.000 --> 01:45:34.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.000 --> 01:45:43.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.000 --> 01:45:52.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.000 --> 01:46:16.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.000 --> 01:46:26.000] Something in this world I will never understand. [01:46:26.000 --> 01:46:30.000] Something I realize fully. [01:46:30.000 --> 01:46:35.000] Somebody's gonna police that policeman. [01:46:35.000 --> 01:46:39.000] Somebody's gonna bully, bully. [01:46:39.000 --> 01:46:44.000] There's always a room at the top of the hill. [01:46:44.000 --> 01:46:52.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Tina and EJ. [01:46:52.000 --> 01:46:56.000] Okay, EJ, you had one more question. [01:46:56.000 --> 01:47:04.000] Yeah, so the last two judges for the hospital case were retired judges. [01:47:04.000 --> 01:47:06.000] The first one left. [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:09.000] I did a recusal on him. [01:47:09.000 --> 01:47:15.000] I motioned for a recusal, and now there's another retired judge. [01:47:15.000 --> 01:47:27.000] Is there any way I can motion to the court to have my case moved to another judge who's been appointed? [01:47:27.000 --> 01:47:38.000] You might look at his record, pull up some of the cases that have his name on it, and see if you can find something that looks like a pattern. [01:47:38.000 --> 01:47:42.000] See if you can find a case. [01:47:42.000 --> 01:47:48.000] These guys are generally appointed for pro se litigants, and see if you can find where he's appointed for pro se litigants, [01:47:48.000 --> 01:47:56.000] and then he consistently rules against the pro se litigants, and then that would make a good motion to recuse. [01:47:56.000 --> 01:47:58.000] Okay, got it. [01:47:58.000 --> 01:47:59.000] All right, I got it. [01:47:59.000 --> 01:48:03.000] I think that's my question, and I'd like to amend my summary judgment. [01:48:03.000 --> 01:48:10.000] I did an early summary judgment. [01:48:10.000 --> 01:48:14.000] Has the other side responded to your summary judgment? [01:48:14.000 --> 01:48:16.000] Yes, they have. [01:48:16.000 --> 01:48:18.000] It was like 10 days before the... [01:48:18.000 --> 01:48:29.000] Okay, then prepare your summary judgment motion, and file a request for permission to file an amended summary judgment, [01:48:29.000 --> 01:48:38.000] and include your summary judgment motion with it to show the judge what you want to file and ask him for permission to file it. [01:48:38.000 --> 01:48:39.000] Wonderful. [01:48:39.000 --> 01:48:40.000] Okay. [01:48:40.000 --> 01:48:41.000] I think that's it. [01:48:41.000 --> 01:48:42.000] Thank you so much. [01:48:42.000 --> 01:48:43.000] Yeah. [01:48:43.000 --> 01:48:44.000] You are welcome. [01:48:44.000 --> 01:48:45.000] Okay. [01:48:45.000 --> 01:48:46.000] Thank you. [01:48:46.000 --> 01:48:50.000] Now we're going to go to Ted in California. [01:48:50.000 --> 01:48:51.000] Hello, Ted. [01:48:51.000 --> 01:48:55.000] What do you have for us today? [01:48:55.000 --> 01:48:58.000] Good evening, gentlemen, and Brett. [01:48:58.000 --> 01:48:59.000] Good evening. [01:48:59.000 --> 01:49:07.000] I understand you've fired up your appeal. [01:49:07.000 --> 01:49:20.000] Well, that appeal is a civil appeal, but what I've actually been doing while I've been listening to the show tonight is writing a bar complaint. [01:49:20.000 --> 01:49:21.000] Wait a minute, Ted. [01:49:21.000 --> 01:49:23.000] You're going to file a bar complaint? [01:49:23.000 --> 01:49:29.000] You know what that's going to do to that poor unsuspecting lawyer? [01:49:29.000 --> 01:49:34.000] He's not unsuspecting because I've been warning him since December of last year. [01:49:34.000 --> 01:49:40.000] Okay, Ted, did that sound sincere? [01:49:40.000 --> 01:49:41.000] Okay, go ahead. [01:49:41.000 --> 01:49:43.000] You gave it your best shot. [01:49:43.000 --> 01:49:49.000] That's all I can say. [01:49:49.000 --> 01:49:53.000] Okay, who did you bargrieve? [01:49:53.000 --> 01:50:03.000] I'm bargrieving the current independent defender who won't get off my case. [01:50:03.000 --> 01:50:06.000] Have you considered suing him? [01:50:06.000 --> 01:50:12.000] Yeah, I'm going to sue him, and I don't want to talk about it right now on the radio. [01:50:12.000 --> 01:50:17.000] Once I do it, I'm going to tell you what I did and where I did it. [01:50:17.000 --> 01:50:24.000] It's going to be something that you probably haven't heard before, but I've got to hold off on that. [01:50:24.000 --> 01:50:30.000] Basically, you know what this lawyer has done now? [01:50:30.000 --> 01:50:44.000] He came to court back on December 13th of last year when my current public defender pumped up and said, I have a conflict. [01:50:44.000 --> 01:50:50.000] Then this guy, Patrick Coughlin, jumps up and says, I'm here to take over. [01:50:50.000 --> 01:50:56.000] One of the things about sitting down and writing things, you start to realize things like, wait a minute. [01:50:56.000 --> 01:51:01.000] The judge didn't skip a beat and immediately appointed him. [01:51:01.000 --> 01:51:03.000] I said, wait a minute. [01:51:03.000 --> 01:51:05.000] This was all orchestrated. [01:51:05.000 --> 01:51:09.000] These people have been talking behind my back. [01:51:09.000 --> 01:51:13.000] Oh, yeah. [01:51:13.000 --> 01:51:22.000] That's what's in this write-up of the bar complaint that I wrote yesterday. [01:51:22.000 --> 01:51:26.000] He pops up, Patrick Coughlin, and says, I'll take this case. [01:51:26.000 --> 01:51:28.000] I said, the hell you will. [01:51:28.000 --> 01:51:30.000] I told the judge, I don't know you. [01:51:30.000 --> 01:51:31.000] I don't know him. [01:51:31.000 --> 01:51:32.000] We've never talked. [01:51:32.000 --> 01:51:34.000] He doesn't represent me. [01:51:34.000 --> 01:51:47.000] Oh, by the way, I have my one-page contract here, and any lawyer that's going to represent me has to sign my contract. [01:51:47.000 --> 01:51:59.000] They won't sign it because it says they will fiercely defend all my constitutional rights, and they won't sign that. [01:51:59.000 --> 01:52:01.000] It's that simple. [01:52:01.000 --> 01:52:04.000] It's one paragraph. They won't sign it. [01:52:04.000 --> 01:52:08.000] But what if that's the same rights they are trying to violate? [01:52:08.000 --> 01:52:13.000] Well, that's the problem. [01:52:13.000 --> 01:52:22.000] But, you know, where I'm at right now is I'm looking for how to get this latest lawyer off my back. [01:52:22.000 --> 01:52:36.000] He actually sent me a letter after I sent him a letter, which I read previously on the show, telling him he's got to miss the – I forget the word I used. [01:52:36.000 --> 01:52:40.000] But basically he was confused and that he doesn't represent me. [01:52:40.000 --> 01:52:50.000] And he wrote back to me and said that I could accept his representation or I could tell the court that I'm representing myself or there was a third thing. [01:52:50.000 --> 01:52:55.000] But what I'm going to pen on and write another bar complaint about is the fact that he wrote me a letter. [01:52:55.000 --> 01:53:04.000] And what he's trying to do, the court's trying to use him to get me to say on the record that I represent myself. [01:53:04.000 --> 01:53:07.000] And I will never say that. [01:53:07.000 --> 01:53:11.000] I'm there as myself, but I'm not representing myself. [01:53:11.000 --> 01:53:20.000] And they can't move – one of the things is they cannot move forward until you fool – what is that? [01:53:20.000 --> 01:53:25.000] You know, you've got to fool for a client, you know, somebody that represents themselves. [01:53:25.000 --> 01:53:31.000] And so that's where we're at. [01:53:31.000 --> 01:53:40.000] And so I'm at this point where how can they force this lawyer on me? [01:53:40.000 --> 01:53:43.000] And to this, I will never talk to him. [01:53:43.000 --> 01:53:45.000] I will never talk to him. [01:53:45.000 --> 01:53:46.000] Okay. [01:53:46.000 --> 01:53:53.000] Now, after we left the courtroom in December out in the hallway, he tried to induce me. [01:53:53.000 --> 01:54:07.000] He told me he knew the deputy DA and that, you know, this was a silly case and could he get my permission to accept a dismissal? [01:54:07.000 --> 01:54:11.000] And I said right away, sounds like you're asking me to make a legal determination. [01:54:11.000 --> 01:54:13.000] I'm not going to do that. [01:54:13.000 --> 01:54:14.000] And yes, it's a silly case. [01:54:14.000 --> 01:54:15.000] They don't have a case. [01:54:15.000 --> 01:54:17.000] This is not a crime. [01:54:17.000 --> 01:54:26.000] And while you're at it, tell them to get their checkbook out and put about $60 million down on it. [01:54:26.000 --> 01:54:32.000] And I said, but you don't represent me. [01:54:32.000 --> 01:54:46.000] I want to be clear, you don't represent me and they don't need my okay to dismiss this silly case. [01:54:46.000 --> 01:54:47.000] Yeah. [01:54:47.000 --> 01:54:51.000] The key word for you is unrepresented. [01:54:51.000 --> 01:54:53.000] Right. [01:54:53.000 --> 01:55:00.000] If you don't feel comfortable saying I'm representing myself because you know there's some word trickery behind that, [01:55:00.000 --> 01:55:05.000] just say I'm unrepresented. [01:55:05.000 --> 01:55:06.000] Okay. [01:55:06.000 --> 01:55:10.000] That's a word that you find all throughout their literature. [01:55:10.000 --> 01:55:12.000] So you can just stick with that. [01:55:12.000 --> 01:55:15.000] Okay. [01:55:15.000 --> 01:55:22.000] So where we're at is on September 26th, they're set to do a trial on me. [01:55:22.000 --> 01:55:26.000] I have a lawyer forced on me against my will. [01:55:26.000 --> 01:55:33.000] And yes, I'm going to be filing a suit against him and I'm not going to take the phone and beat myself up by the head [01:55:33.000 --> 01:55:39.000] because I haven't filed my federal lawsuit yet because I've been... [01:55:39.000 --> 01:55:47.000] Another thing I'm working on right now is what's called a Merguea motion, Merguea being the case. [01:55:47.000 --> 01:55:52.000] And basically, it's a strict discovery motion. [01:55:52.000 --> 01:55:58.000] And in it, they have to tell you how many other people they've prosecuted for this crime, [01:55:58.000 --> 01:56:05.000] which dovetails into how this show started tonight because that's where all this started over my house. [01:56:05.000 --> 01:56:18.000] And how many documents do you think are recorded down in the county recorder's office here in Santa Clara County that are actually a crime? [01:56:18.000 --> 01:56:27.000] My alleged recording cannot be a crime, according to 30 defense lawyers and experts, [01:56:27.000 --> 01:56:37.000] one with 40 years as a lawyer in real estate law who published a paper on this. [01:56:37.000 --> 01:56:48.000] His name is Dale Albertstone and he says that anybody can record a quick claim deed on anybody's house. [01:56:48.000 --> 01:56:54.000] And he goes on further to explain that you can give a grant deed to someone, [01:56:54.000 --> 01:57:01.000] which is even the bigger surprise as long as you haven't given one to anyone else. [01:57:01.000 --> 01:57:09.000] And so he's explaining how most lawyers don't understand what these documents are. [01:57:09.000 --> 01:57:24.000] And so, however, what it goes back to this Merguea motion is it's going to force them into a position that it shows that they're targeting me [01:57:24.000 --> 01:57:34.000] and that they actually have let these trustees and their foreclosure companies record all kinds of false documents. [01:57:34.000 --> 01:57:40.000] Another thing I got a hold of, the county back in 2014 ordered an audit. [01:57:40.000 --> 01:57:44.000] And, you know, they spent a lot of money to do these audits. [01:57:44.000 --> 01:57:53.000] And it was an audit about foreclosures and what if the process was being done right in the county recorder's office. [01:57:53.000 --> 01:58:02.000] So that's another person, that auditor is another person I would want as a witness. [01:58:02.000 --> 01:58:06.000] So I know we're running out of minutes here. [01:58:06.000 --> 01:58:11.000] I'm still needing help on the federal lawsuit and who I'm going to sue. [01:58:11.000 --> 01:58:19.000] Am I going to name the judges that have been involved in my proceedings in this case? [01:58:19.000 --> 01:58:23.000] Absolutely. I can't say absolutely. I have to look closer at your case. [01:58:23.000 --> 01:58:26.000] We need to talk about this off the air. [01:58:26.000 --> 01:58:28.000] Okay. [01:58:28.000 --> 01:58:30.000] Send me an email. [01:58:30.000 --> 01:58:32.000] Will do. [01:58:32.000 --> 01:58:35.000] Okay. Thank you, Ted. [01:58:35.000 --> 01:58:39.000] And beat yourself with the phone anyway just for general principles. [01:58:39.000 --> 01:58:43.000] Randy Fountain, Real Law Radio. Thank you all for listening. [01:58:43.000 --> 01:58:46.000] We'll be back next week and good night. [01:58:46.000 --> 01:58:49.000] We'll see you then. [01:59:16.000 --> 01:59:19.000] We'll see you then. [01:59:46.000 --> 01:59:56.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.