[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 --> 00:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.500 --> 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 --> 00:45.500] Start over with StartPage. [00:45.500 --> 00:47.500] Spar. It's what fighters do. [00:47.500 --> 00:51.000] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.000 --> 00:54.000] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.000 --> 00:56.500] Spar with an extra P. [00:56.500 --> 01:03.000] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:03.000 --> 01:08.500] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [01:08.500 --> 01:10.500] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.500 --> 01:14.500] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.500 --> 01:17.500] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, [01:17.500 --> 01:21.000] we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.000 --> 01:30.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:30.500 --> 01:34.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.500 --> 01:38.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.000 --> 01:39.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.500 --> 01:46.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.000 --> 01:48.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.000 --> 01:51.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.500 --> 01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.500 --> 02:01.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.500 --> 02:04.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.000 --> 02:07.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [02:07.500 --> 02:11.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:11.500 --> 02:15.500] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.500 --> 02:22.000] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.000 --> 02:26.000] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [02:26.000 --> 02:30.000] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.000 --> 02:33.500] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.500 --> 02:38.500] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well when he said, [02:38.500 --> 02:43.500] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.500 --> 02:47.500] and one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears remote in America. [02:47.500 --> 02:53.500] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kaufman, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio, on this. [02:53.500 --> 02:57.500] Looks like I'm still in the red, Brett. [02:57.500 --> 03:00.500] My clock shows red. [03:00.500 --> 03:03.500] Oh, I don't know, I've got gray. [03:03.500 --> 03:10.500] Oh, okay, then maybe it's just my clock is, well, it shows red, but it also shows 306 minutes, [03:10.500 --> 03:13.500] so maybe it just hasn't been refreshed. [03:13.500 --> 03:15.500] Okay. [03:15.500 --> 03:17.500] Go back to what day it was. [03:17.500 --> 03:24.500] Friday, the 26th day of August, 2022. [03:24.500 --> 03:26.500] I hope I got that right. [03:26.500 --> 03:28.500] I'm opening the phone lines. [03:28.500 --> 03:33.500] I call in number, 512-646-1984. [03:33.500 --> 03:37.500] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [03:37.500 --> 03:41.500] And it didn't much happen yesterday after that hearing we had, [03:41.500 --> 03:44.500] that Zoom hearing we had with Victoria County, [03:44.500 --> 03:51.500] but I'm getting ready to work them over pretty good. [03:51.500 --> 03:57.500] We'll be filing a couple of bar grievances, just enough to really get their attention. [03:57.500 --> 04:03.500] I'm hoping I'll get a letter soon saying that they're appointing a different head administrative judge, [04:03.500 --> 04:11.500] and as soon as I do, I will file a request to put this back on for hearing. [04:11.500 --> 04:17.500] Now, I know there were some people who were saying that they have a problem with these Zoom hearings, [04:17.500 --> 04:23.500] and I read in the Rules of Civil Procedure that in order to have an electronic hearing, [04:23.500 --> 04:29.500] you have to have written permission from both parties. [04:29.500 --> 04:33.500] But that's not something I'm going to argue at this point [04:33.500 --> 04:38.500] because I don't want to have to drive 400 miles down there. [04:38.500 --> 04:46.500] And besides, if I'm not in their clutches, they can't grab me up and throw me in the clinker. [04:46.500 --> 04:53.500] So I can afford to be a little bit more of a stinker to them on an electronic format. [04:53.500 --> 04:54.500] That's a good point. [04:54.500 --> 04:57.500] The worst they can do is mute you, and then they're in trouble for that. [04:57.500 --> 05:00.500] Yes, exactly. [05:00.500 --> 05:03.500] Okay, so we won't go too much into that today. [05:03.500 --> 05:06.500] We've got an almost full board already. [05:06.500 --> 05:08.500] So we'll go to our callers. [05:08.500 --> 05:17.500] It looks like we've got one first-time caller. [05:17.500 --> 05:25.500] Let's try if you are in Nevada, 316 Area Code, talk to us. [05:25.500 --> 05:28.500] Hello, Brett and Randy. [05:28.500 --> 05:31.500] It's Nicholas St. John from Nevada. [05:31.500 --> 05:33.500] Nicholas from Nevada. [05:33.500 --> 05:34.500] Okay. [05:34.500 --> 05:36.500] Thanks for calling. [05:36.500 --> 05:39.500] What do you have for us today? [05:39.500 --> 05:44.500] Well, I'm actually not a first-time caller, but I'm glad you took my call. [05:44.500 --> 05:51.500] I've been fighting against this illegal search using a metal detector [05:51.500 --> 05:56.500] and wandering and emptying our pockets and then rifling through purses and backpacks [05:56.500 --> 06:01.500] and that kind of thing since April. [06:01.500 --> 06:09.500] And my last showdown was last Tuesday, or a week ago Tuesday the 16th, [06:09.500 --> 06:13.500] where I sent them a notice of right to assemble, [06:13.500 --> 06:21.500] and I sent that off to the county commissioners, the county manager, the security administrator, [06:21.500 --> 06:26.500] the head of Allied Universal, and a sergeant over at the sheriff's office [06:26.500 --> 06:29.500] that I've been talking to, and the sheriff. [06:29.500 --> 06:33.500] And as a result, when I got there, it was apparently all of us. [06:33.500 --> 06:37.500] So when I walked around the corner, everyone kind of snapped to, [06:37.500 --> 06:41.500] and get ready because here we go, here's Nicholas again. [06:41.500 --> 06:49.500] And they had three sheriffs were there to help, quote, unquote, keep the peace. [06:49.500 --> 06:55.500] Did you have your criminal complaints already written when you got there? [06:55.500 --> 06:59.500] I did, and I had three copies of them. [06:59.500 --> 07:01.500] Oh, good. [07:01.500 --> 07:03.500] Excellent. [07:03.500 --> 07:07.500] So I went through the same thing I go through every time. [07:07.500 --> 07:10.500] Do you have a warrant? Do you have a probable cause? [07:10.500 --> 07:13.500] Am I a criminal? Have I threatened anybody? [07:13.500 --> 07:17.500] What gives you the right to force me to violate my Fourth Amendment [07:17.500 --> 07:27.500] and the Nevada Article 1 Section 18 by doing an unreasonable search when there is no cause? [07:27.500 --> 07:31.500] And they came back and said what they always say. [07:31.500 --> 07:33.500] So I always ask, do I have the right to go to this meeting? [07:33.500 --> 07:36.500] And they will not answer yes or no. [07:36.500 --> 07:39.500] They answer if you go through screening. [07:39.500 --> 07:41.500] I said, no, no, it's a yes or no question, guys. [07:41.500 --> 07:43.500] Do I have the right to go to this meeting? [07:43.500 --> 07:45.500] If you go through screening. [07:45.500 --> 07:47.500] I can't get them off of that. [07:47.500 --> 07:48.500] Well, it's just fine. [07:48.500 --> 07:50.500] That just shows their obstinacy. [07:50.500 --> 07:52.500] Okay, wasting your time. [07:52.500 --> 07:54.500] Bad idea. [07:54.500 --> 07:57.500] Never give fair warning. [07:57.500 --> 08:00.500] And what you're doing is giving them fair warning. [08:00.500 --> 08:08.500] All you do is you go down there and you try to go through there without the search. [08:08.500 --> 08:12.500] Well, and I've done that where I walked around the metal detector and stood at the door, [08:12.500 --> 08:14.500] because you can't go through the door. [08:14.500 --> 08:20.500] They have a badge, and so they have to, you know, they have to badge you through that door. [08:20.500 --> 08:28.500] But when they refused to do that, I asked for the search to come over, and they didn't. [08:28.500 --> 08:29.500] So that's when I went over. [08:29.500 --> 08:35.500] And by the way, I had two of my friends there with video, videoing the whole thing. [08:35.500 --> 08:42.500] So the whole episode is up on Rumble, on the Also Patriots channel. [08:42.500 --> 08:50.500] So I went over and talked to the sheriff, one of the sheriffs, and said, you know, I need you guys to help me here. [08:50.500 --> 08:55.500] These guys don't let me go through, which is my right to go into this meeting. [08:55.500 --> 08:58.500] They force me to go through something that I have a warrant for. [08:58.500 --> 09:05.500] So one of them, Deputy I think Harris, went over and asked, you know, what they had, [09:05.500 --> 09:09.500] and the head of security said he had a policy. [09:09.500 --> 09:12.500] And so I ran over and said, what did he say? [09:12.500 --> 09:13.500] He said he had a policy. [09:13.500 --> 09:19.500] He said, okay, I want you to go over and make him produce the policy. [09:19.500 --> 09:20.500] Well, you can't produce a policy. [09:20.500 --> 09:22.500] I've already done the public record request. [09:22.500 --> 09:23.500] There are no written policies. [09:23.500 --> 09:27.500] I have the head of security saying they have no written policy. [09:27.500 --> 09:32.500] And I said, he says, I'm not going to do that. [09:32.500 --> 09:35.500] He says, they have a policy. [09:35.500 --> 09:37.500] You have to do it because they have a policy. [09:37.500 --> 09:41.500] I said, can you override the Constitution with policy? [09:41.500 --> 09:43.500] This policy is better than your rights. [09:43.500 --> 09:46.500] Well, and so it gets better. [09:46.500 --> 09:52.500] That deputy walked away from me saying, I'm not going to argue with you. [09:52.500 --> 09:56.500] So then I approached all three of them again and said, what are you guys? [09:56.500 --> 09:58.500] They're policy enforcement officers. [09:58.500 --> 10:01.500] They're law enforcement officers. [10:01.500 --> 10:04.500] And again, they said, we're not going to argue with you. [10:04.500 --> 10:05.500] They walked away. [10:05.500 --> 10:06.500] I said, do you guys take a note? [10:06.500 --> 10:10.500] Again, we're not going to engage with you. [10:10.500 --> 10:15.500] Eventually I took place where I asked for their name and their badge number. [10:15.500 --> 10:18.500] They made me read their name off of their uniform, [10:18.500 --> 10:22.500] and then they proceeded to tell me they don't have a badge number. [10:22.500 --> 10:23.500] I said, that's interesting. [10:23.500 --> 10:28.500] The last guy I asked, it was 3-1-1-2. [10:28.500 --> 10:31.500] That's for you to identify. [10:31.500 --> 10:39.500] Well, that's all I had to get on camera, three places, two witnesses, and videos. [10:39.500 --> 10:41.500] I have a question. [10:41.500 --> 10:45.500] I have a question. [10:45.500 --> 10:55.500] In Nevada, what does the Nevada Code say concerning filing a complaint with a magistrate? [10:55.500 --> 11:01.500] What is the duty of the magistrate? [11:01.500 --> 11:04.500] I'm supposed to be able to see a magistrate. [11:04.500 --> 11:11.500] So back in June, I had filed, I had written a criminal complaint on the April 12th incident, [11:11.500 --> 11:16.500] and I had gone down to the Reno Justice Court and talked to the courts, [11:16.500 --> 11:18.500] and I wanted to see a magistrate. [11:18.500 --> 11:20.500] They would not let me see a magistrate. [11:20.500 --> 11:23.500] I said, fine, I want to file this complaint. [11:23.500 --> 11:27.500] They said, we don't take complaints from you. [11:27.500 --> 11:31.500] And then they got a supervisor. [11:31.500 --> 11:34.500] I said, I need to see a magistrate, and I need to file a criminal complaint. [11:34.500 --> 11:35.500] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [11:35.500 --> 11:36.500] Hold on. [11:36.500 --> 11:41.500] You know what the patriots do, they go down there and huff and puff and argue [11:41.500 --> 11:48.500] and tell them what your rights are and what the law is, blah, blah, blah, and they ignore you. [11:48.500 --> 11:52.500] Your only reason to go down there is to get them to step across the legal line [11:52.500 --> 11:57.500] so you can call 9-1-1 and get their party down there. [11:57.500 --> 12:03.500] Take a complaint from you that you already have written out. [12:03.500 --> 12:07.500] The way to get to a magistrate is to walk into his office. [12:07.500 --> 12:10.500] All judges are magistrates. [12:10.500 --> 12:12.500] All J. Cruz are magistrates. [12:12.500 --> 12:16.500] And in most states, mayor is a magistrate. [12:16.500 --> 12:18.500] They block you from going in. [12:18.500 --> 12:20.500] That's obstruction. [12:20.500 --> 12:25.500] Make up a complaint and send it to the magistrate necessary by then. [12:25.500 --> 12:28.500] Out of this bottom line. [12:28.500 --> 12:30.500] Does that make any sense, Nicholas? [12:30.500 --> 12:31.500] Is this clicking with you? [12:31.500 --> 12:35.500] Are you getting the difference there? [12:35.500 --> 12:38.500] Well, you know, I've tried every aspect. [12:38.500 --> 12:40.500] You know, we've been talking about... [12:40.500 --> 12:41.500] Don't, don't, don't. [12:41.500 --> 12:42.500] Everybody tells me that. [12:42.500 --> 12:44.500] You haven't given me criminal complaints. [12:44.500 --> 12:50.500] You're just trying to convince them to do what the law requires them to do [12:50.500 --> 12:59.500] instead of staining them as soon as they start to not do that. [12:59.500 --> 13:00.500] Does that make sense? [13:00.500 --> 13:05.500] And I want to see a magistrate. [13:05.500 --> 13:08.500] I don't know the procedure or have figured out how to... [13:08.500 --> 13:10.500] That's what I'm trying to tell you. [13:10.500 --> 13:14.500] That's what I'm trying to tell you what the procedure is. [13:14.500 --> 13:18.500] The procedure certainly is not arguing with police officers. [13:18.500 --> 13:21.500] They don't care. [13:21.500 --> 13:27.500] They are ordered to do certain things, and they really don't care what the law is, [13:27.500 --> 13:28.500] what your rights are. [13:28.500 --> 13:31.500] They just don't care. [13:31.500 --> 13:34.500] You're speaking to air. [13:34.500 --> 13:39.500] When I go to them, the only reason I ask them to do anything [13:39.500 --> 13:43.500] is so when they refuse, I can call 911. [13:43.500 --> 13:45.500] I'm done with them at that point. [13:45.500 --> 13:47.500] I don't give them legal advice. [13:47.500 --> 13:49.500] I don't tell them what the law is. [13:49.500 --> 13:51.500] I don't tell them what they're supposed to do. [13:51.500 --> 13:53.500] I tell them what I want them to do. [13:53.500 --> 13:58.500] When they don't do it, then I step back from them and call 911. [13:58.500 --> 14:01.500] If you were listening yesterday, I went to JP's office [14:01.500 --> 14:05.500] and handed him some criminal complaints. [14:05.500 --> 14:07.500] He said, are you a lawyer? [14:07.500 --> 14:08.500] No, no, no. [14:08.500 --> 14:10.500] I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. [14:10.500 --> 14:12.500] Thank you very much. [14:12.500 --> 14:13.500] Well, did you talk to the lawyer? [14:13.500 --> 14:14.500] No, no. [14:14.500 --> 14:16.500] I don't waste my time with those shasters. [14:16.500 --> 14:18.500] But if you didn't talk to a lawyer, I'm not going to read this. [14:18.500 --> 14:21.500] And he threw him down and walked out. [14:21.500 --> 14:25.500] Well, Bubba, we'll see how that works out for you. [14:25.500 --> 14:31.500] You know, Randy could have gone in there and just argued with them [14:31.500 --> 14:36.500] and tried to convince them that he still needs these things to be read. [14:36.500 --> 14:39.500] And he could just sit there and kind of push about it. [14:39.500 --> 14:41.500] But there's no need. [14:41.500 --> 14:43.500] That's not going to get him anywhere. [14:43.500 --> 14:48.500] All that will get is them accusing me of being agitated [14:48.500 --> 14:51.500] and being an agitator. [14:51.500 --> 14:54.500] Yeah, we know how that road ends. [14:54.500 --> 14:56.500] So we didn't get there. [14:56.500 --> 15:01.500] He came back out a few minutes later and this time he was not quite so arrogant [15:01.500 --> 15:05.500] and said, Mr. Kelter, have you talked to a lawyer? [15:05.500 --> 15:07.500] He said, stop, stop, stop. [15:07.500 --> 15:10.500] I can't be talking to you. [15:10.500 --> 15:15.500] I have called 911 and someone's coming and I will be filing criminal charges against you. [15:15.500 --> 15:18.500] But since I am filing criminally against you, [15:18.500 --> 15:24.500] it would be inappropriate for us to have any further communications. [15:24.500 --> 15:26.500] I set him up. [15:26.500 --> 15:28.500] And he knew I set him up. [15:28.500 --> 15:32.500] And once I got him set up, he was of no more use to me. [15:32.500 --> 15:35.500] This is how you handle them. [15:35.500 --> 15:39.500] You can go in there all day and read them all the law you want to [15:39.500 --> 15:44.500] and they will just blah, blah, blah, blow you off. [15:44.500 --> 15:46.500] They don't blow me off. [15:46.500 --> 15:52.500] So when the sheriff's deputies refuse to talk to me, then who do I call? [15:52.500 --> 15:54.500] 911. [15:54.500 --> 15:55.500] Again? [15:55.500 --> 15:59.500] Get a sheriff's deputy to file criminal charges against the sheriff. [15:59.500 --> 16:03.500] Have your criminal complaints already written up. [16:03.500 --> 16:06.500] Just fill the name in, sign it. [16:06.500 --> 16:08.500] There you go. [16:08.500 --> 16:11.500] Now, you get the 911 guy and he's not going to want to do that. [16:11.500 --> 16:18.500] But see, once you file 911, once you call 911, you change everything. [16:18.500 --> 16:21.500] Now you become the victim. [16:21.500 --> 16:27.500] And the officer is sent to answer your issue. [16:27.500 --> 16:33.500] Now if he doesn't act, then he shields from prosecution. [16:33.500 --> 16:34.500] Go ahead. [16:34.500 --> 16:37.500] That's my issue at that point? [16:37.500 --> 16:40.500] Shielding from prosecution. [16:40.500 --> 16:44.500] If the 911 officer decides to protect the sheriff [16:44.500 --> 16:48.500] from the natural consequences of his illegal behavior, [16:48.500 --> 16:51.500] he becomes equally complicit. [16:51.500 --> 16:52.500] Read the code. [16:52.500 --> 16:53.500] Hang on. [16:53.500 --> 16:56.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ludovic La Radio, [16:56.500 --> 17:00.500] or call in number 512-646-99. [17:00.500 --> 17:02.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors [17:02.500 --> 17:05.500] with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.500 --> 17:09.500] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.500 --> 17:12.500] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [17:12.500 --> 17:14.500] and now you can win two. 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[17:49.500 --> 17:51.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com, [17:51.500 --> 17:57.500] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [17:57.500 --> 18:01.500] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:01.500 --> 18:04.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.500 --> 18:07.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [18:07.500 --> 18:09.500] but we the people are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.500 --> 18:12.500] and we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.500 --> 18:15.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:15.500 --> 18:17.500] the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:17.500 --> 18:19.500] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.500 --> 18:21.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [18:21.500 --> 18:25.500] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:25.500 --> 18:28.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy A. Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:28.500 --> 18:30.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:30.500 --> 18:33.500] that will help you understand what due process is [18:33.500 --> 18:35.500] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:35.500 --> 18:37.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [18:37.500 --> 18:40.500] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:40.500 --> 18:42.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [18:42.500 --> 18:45.500] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:45.500 --> 18:47.500] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [18:47.500 --> 18:50.500] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.500 --> 18:52.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [18:52.500 --> 18:54.500] from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.500 --> 18:55.500] Order your copy today, [18:55.500 --> 19:02.500] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:02.500 --> 19:05.500] If you are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [19:05.500 --> 19:30.500] logosradio.com. [19:30.500 --> 19:46.500] Okay. [19:46.500 --> 19:47.500] Howdy, howdy. [19:47.500 --> 19:49.500] Randy Kelton with Rule of Law Radio, [19:49.500 --> 19:53.500] and we're talking to Nicholas in Nevada. [19:53.500 --> 19:55.500] Okay. [19:55.500 --> 20:00.500] A lot of these guys go around doing First Amendment audits, [20:00.500 --> 20:03.500] and they kind of do what you do. [20:03.500 --> 20:06.500] They stir up the locals and then get the locals to do a little song [20:06.500 --> 20:11.500] and dance with them, and that's a bad idea [20:11.500 --> 20:14.500] because they wind up getting thrown in jail for criminal trespass [20:14.500 --> 20:17.500] and various other things. [20:17.500 --> 20:23.500] The original ones that I encounter are not the ones I want to talk to. [20:23.500 --> 20:26.500] I only talk to them long enough to get them to refuse to do [20:26.500 --> 20:29.500] what I want them to do. [20:29.500 --> 20:31.500] Then I go to someone else. [20:31.500 --> 20:37.500] I was in Austin at the district courthouse and went in, [20:37.500 --> 20:40.500] and I had been in the county courthouse, [20:40.500 --> 20:42.500] and I wouldn't go up without a mask, [20:42.500 --> 20:45.500] so they got the clerk to come down and talk to me, [20:45.500 --> 20:47.500] and the clerk told me she was the wrong person, [20:47.500 --> 20:49.500] that I had to talk to the one across the way [20:49.500 --> 20:53.500] in the district court building, [20:53.500 --> 20:56.500] but she told me who to ask for, so I did. [20:56.500 --> 20:59.500] I went in there, and I got up to this little guy [20:59.500 --> 21:02.500] standing behind the counter there and told him, [21:02.500 --> 21:04.500] he said, I had to have a mask. [21:04.500 --> 21:05.500] I said, no, I won't be wearing a mask. [21:05.500 --> 21:07.500] You're not coming in today. [21:07.500 --> 21:09.500] I said, that's okay with me. [21:09.500 --> 21:13.500] Call this clerk and tell her to come down and talk to me, [21:13.500 --> 21:18.500] and he looked up at me and he said, is that an order? [21:18.500 --> 21:21.500] That took a second to process. [21:21.500 --> 21:25.500] Then I looked down at him and said, yes, as a matter of fact, it is. [21:25.500 --> 21:29.500] He said, how's that worked out so far for you? [21:29.500 --> 21:30.500] Pretty good. [21:30.500 --> 21:32.500] Do you want to try it? [21:32.500 --> 21:34.500] He said, yes. [21:34.500 --> 21:35.500] Wait right there. [21:35.500 --> 21:36.500] Don't go anywhere. [21:36.500 --> 21:38.500] Somebody's going to want to talk to you, [21:38.500 --> 21:41.500] and I stepped back, took out my phone, started to dial, [21:41.500 --> 21:44.500] and he said, you can't use that phone in here. [21:44.500 --> 21:49.500] I said, are you going to interfere with the 911 call? [21:49.500 --> 21:53.500] Bailey from across the hall came over and got him and pulled him back. [21:53.500 --> 21:59.500] So I called 911, and I want him, this guy, arrested. [21:59.500 --> 22:00.500] I don't talk to these guys anymore. [22:00.500 --> 22:03.500] I'm done with them. [22:03.500 --> 22:05.500] I go up higher and talk to somebody else. [22:05.500 --> 22:09.500] Never argue with these guys on the bottom. [22:09.500 --> 22:12.500] You go in and they want you to go through the metal detector, [22:12.500 --> 22:14.500] and you tell them no, and they say yes, you have to. [22:14.500 --> 22:18.500] You take out your phone and call 911. [22:18.500 --> 22:20.500] You know they're violating the law. [22:20.500 --> 22:24.500] They know they're violating the law, so you don't need to tell them. [22:24.500 --> 22:28.500] Even if they don't know they're violating the law, it doesn't make any difference. [22:28.500 --> 22:30.500] They violated it anyway. [22:30.500 --> 22:34.500] You need to get someone down there to take your criminal complaint against them. [22:34.500 --> 22:38.500] That changes everything. [22:38.500 --> 22:45.500] Do you have justices of the peace in Nevada? [22:45.500 --> 22:47.500] We do. [22:47.500 --> 22:48.500] Good. [22:48.500 --> 22:51.500] Then call the justice of the peace office, tell them where you're at, [22:51.500 --> 22:54.500] and that you will be coming down to see the justice of the peace [22:54.500 --> 22:57.500] to file criminal charges against these peace officers with him. [22:57.500 --> 23:01.500] When will you be in the office? [23:01.500 --> 23:05.500] You make sure these officers hear you calling them. [23:05.500 --> 23:08.500] You tell these guys, see you later. [23:08.500 --> 23:12.500] I've got other business, and then you go to the JP, [23:12.500 --> 23:17.500] and you file criminal charges with the JP. [23:17.500 --> 23:22.500] And when you do this, you tend not to be reasonable, [23:22.500 --> 23:25.500] and you tend not to be understanding. [23:25.500 --> 23:30.500] You instruct the JP as to his duty. [23:30.500 --> 23:35.500] I went to this justice of the peace, handed him criminal complaints, [23:35.500 --> 23:41.500] and he had a duty under Article 15.09 to issue warrants. [23:41.500 --> 23:43.500] It did not matter who it was against. [23:43.500 --> 23:45.500] It did not matter what his opinion was. [23:45.500 --> 23:48.500] He had a duty to do this thing, and he didn't do this thing. [23:48.500 --> 23:50.500] But he didn't do this thing. [23:50.500 --> 23:52.500] I was done with him. [23:52.500 --> 23:54.500] I called 911 on him. [23:54.500 --> 23:55.500] Police showed up. [23:55.500 --> 23:58.500] I filed criminal charges against him. [23:58.500 --> 24:01.500] I sued him personally. [24:01.500 --> 24:03.500] Oh, that's been a hoot. [24:03.500 --> 24:05.500] If you listened yesterday, you heard, you know, [24:05.500 --> 24:08.500] I told about what went on when I went down there. [24:08.500 --> 24:14.500] After I sued him and made him let me observe a hearing that he was having [24:14.500 --> 24:17.500] where he was committing crimes, he knew he was committing crimes, [24:17.500 --> 24:22.500] and I knew he was committing crimes, and I was going to get to see him. [24:22.500 --> 24:25.500] And they had to let me watch it anyway. [24:25.500 --> 24:30.500] They were really doing some tippy-toeing around there. [24:30.500 --> 24:32.500] This is how we get it changed. [24:32.500 --> 24:36.500] We just went to a hearing yesterday on my suit against him, [24:36.500 --> 24:41.500] and I just got to hammer the trial judge. [24:41.500 --> 24:46.500] When you file against a public official, he will immediately recuse himself. [24:46.500 --> 24:49.500] And I'm saying, I don't think so. [24:49.500 --> 24:52.500] He doesn't have grounds to recuse himself. [24:52.500 --> 24:55.500] No running away allowed. [24:55.500 --> 24:57.500] Exactly. [24:57.500 --> 25:04.500] And the head administrative judge of the district appointed a retired judge [25:04.500 --> 25:06.500] to hear the case. [25:06.500 --> 25:09.500] And I accused the trial judge of being appointed [25:09.500 --> 25:12.500] so he could rule against me out of hand at every term. [25:12.500 --> 25:15.500] And that was problematic because since he was a retired judge, [25:15.500 --> 25:17.500] it left me with no remedy. [25:17.500 --> 25:21.500] I could bargain until I filed judicial conduct complaints [25:21.500 --> 25:23.500] against him wouldn't do any good. [25:23.500 --> 25:28.500] He kind of chuckled when I said that because he was right. [25:28.500 --> 25:31.500] No recourse against this judge. [25:31.500 --> 25:34.500] That judge's face said a lot. [25:34.500 --> 25:39.500] I argued that the trial judge had no grounds to recuse himself, [25:39.500 --> 25:42.500] and he did it improperly. [25:42.500 --> 25:44.500] He just filed a notice of recusal. [25:44.500 --> 25:47.500] Well, that's not what the rules call for. [25:47.500 --> 25:50.500] Rules call for filing a motion. [25:50.500 --> 25:53.500] He sat there and argued with them about it and said, [25:53.500 --> 25:57.500] I want to talk to that judge and sat there and argued back and forth with him, [25:57.500 --> 26:04.500] tried to explain and convince, and that wouldn't have done any good. [26:04.500 --> 26:14.500] I had a motion before the court to order the trial judge to preside over the case. [26:14.500 --> 26:22.500] To strike his sui sponte order to withdraw. [26:22.500 --> 26:25.500] He don't get to do that. [26:25.500 --> 26:31.500] So when you take these guys on, you need to do your homework first. [26:31.500 --> 26:35.500] You need to know what all the laws are regarding what you're doing [26:35.500 --> 26:40.500] and how to work them, and your only purpose when you deal with them [26:40.500 --> 26:43.500] is to get them to step across the legal line. [26:43.500 --> 26:46.500] If you ask an officer to identify himself and he doesn't, [26:46.500 --> 26:50.500] that gets a 911 call immediately. [26:50.500 --> 26:53.500] I got a guy with a gun, he claims to be a peace officer, [26:53.500 --> 26:55.500] and he refuses to identify himself. [26:55.500 --> 26:59.500] Get someone down here to take my criminal complaint against him. [26:59.500 --> 27:03.500] That's all the interaction we have with that guy. [27:03.500 --> 27:08.500] If he tries to say anything else, shoo, shoo, go away. [27:08.500 --> 27:13.500] Anything you say from this point will be considered harassment and witness tampering. [27:13.500 --> 27:15.500] Beat it. [27:15.500 --> 27:21.500] There's nothing worse than having them being neutralized. [27:21.500 --> 27:24.500] Does that make sense? [27:24.500 --> 27:26.500] To some degree, I've done a lot of that. [27:26.500 --> 27:27.500] I've called 911. [27:27.500 --> 27:35.500] We've had the sheriff, the last one I spoke to, refuse to engage. [27:35.500 --> 27:36.500] Wonderful, wonderful. [27:36.500 --> 27:39.500] Did you call 911 on him? [27:39.500 --> 27:41.500] No, I did not. [27:41.500 --> 27:42.500] Here's my question. [27:42.500 --> 27:48.500] I called 911, and I'm not sure. [27:48.500 --> 27:52.500] Apparently, I have a lot more homework to do. [27:52.500 --> 27:56.500] It seems like it's a never-ending deal with the homework. [27:56.500 --> 28:04.500] What is my criminal charge against a sheriff who has refused to engage, [28:04.500 --> 28:10.500] do what he's supposed to do, violated his oath, and has refused to identify himself? [28:10.500 --> 28:11.500] It depends on which one. [28:11.500 --> 28:14.500] You just hold me a whole stack. [28:14.500 --> 28:18.500] Failure to identify is a crime in and of itself. [28:18.500 --> 28:21.500] If you're doing this with a public official, [28:21.500 --> 28:26.500] public officials are generally required to identify themselves. [28:26.500 --> 28:33.500] There is one statute that is a catch-all, official misconduct. [28:33.500 --> 28:36.500] In most states, it's called official misconduct. [28:36.500 --> 28:39.500] In Texas, it's called official oppression. [28:39.500 --> 28:43.500] If a public official fails to perform a duty he is required to perform [28:43.500 --> 28:47.500] and in the process denies you the full and free access to or enjoyment of right, [28:47.500 --> 28:52.500] well, that's class A misdemeanor in every state. [28:52.500 --> 28:55.500] You are the master of the servant. [28:55.500 --> 28:59.500] He works for you. [28:59.500 --> 29:04.500] When he fails to identify himself to you, you charge him with official misconduct. [29:04.500 --> 29:07.500] You don't talk to him anymore. [29:07.500 --> 29:10.500] You call somebody else. [29:10.500 --> 29:18.500] So when I call 911 and there's a crime in progress because he's official misconduct, [29:18.500 --> 29:25.500] even though he's an officer, and what happens if they refuse to send somebody down? [29:25.500 --> 29:32.500] I call 911 again and ask for someone to arrest the 911 officer. [29:32.500 --> 29:36.500] I only call 911 twice. [29:36.500 --> 29:40.500] Then I ask, where is the nearest magistrate? [29:40.500 --> 29:43.500] Okay. [29:43.500 --> 29:45.500] And they require to tell you? [29:45.500 --> 29:51.500] If they block you access to the magistrate, read your code, read your penal code. [29:51.500 --> 29:53.500] It's got good stuff in there. [29:53.500 --> 30:02.500] We'll be right back. [30:02.500 --> 30:05.500] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, [30:05.500 --> 30:07.500] but have they negatively affected our health? [30:07.500 --> 30:10.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings [30:10.500 --> 30:15.500] about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.500 --> 30:17.500] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.500 --> 30:20.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.500 --> 30:25.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.500 --> 30:26.500] So protect your rights. [30:26.500 --> 30:30.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.500 --> 30:33.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [30:33.500 --> 30:36.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:36.500 --> 30:40.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.500 --> 30:44.500] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.500 --> 30:46.500] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. [30:46.500 --> 30:47.500] It's a fact. [30:47.500 --> 30:50.500] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation [30:50.500 --> 30:52.500] near your head has been disputed. [30:52.500 --> 30:54.500] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, [30:54.500 --> 30:56.500] while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:56.500 --> 30:59.500] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association [30:59.500 --> 31:02.500] is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [31:02.500 --> 31:06.500] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism [31:06.500 --> 31:09.500] in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna [31:09.500 --> 31:11.500] increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.500 --> 31:14.500] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, [31:14.500 --> 31:16.500] I'm not taking any chances. [31:16.500 --> 31:20.500] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:20.500 --> 31:21.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:21.500 --> 31:30.500] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.500 --> 31:31.500] I lost my son. [31:31.500 --> 31:32.500] My nephew. [31:32.500 --> 31:33.500] My uncle. [31:33.500 --> 31:34.500] My son. [31:34.500 --> 31:35.500] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.500 --> 31:38.500] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.500 --> 31:42.500] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.500 --> 31:46.500] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.500 --> 31:50.500] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.500 --> 31:52.500] and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.500 --> 31:55.500] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.500 --> 31:57.500] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:57.500 --> 32:01.500] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.500 --> 32:04.500] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [32:04.500 --> 32:06.500] and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.500 --> 32:09.500] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays [32:09.500 --> 32:12.500] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.500 --> 32:15.500] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures [32:15.500 --> 32:17.500] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:17.500 --> 32:20.500] Study to show thyself approved unto God, [32:20.500 --> 32:22.500] a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [32:22.500 --> 32:24.500] rightly dividing the word of truth. [32:24.500 --> 32:28.500] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.500 --> 32:32.500] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.500 --> 32:35.500] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week [32:35.500 --> 32:39.500] with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [32:39.500 --> 32:41.500] We wish to reflect God's light [32:41.500 --> 32:44.500] and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.500 --> 32:46.500] Our goal is to strengthen our faith [32:46.500 --> 32:48.500] and to transform ourselves more [32:48.500 --> 32:50.500] into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.500 --> 32:52.500] So tune in to Scripture Talk [32:52.500 --> 32:56.500] live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [32:56.500 --> 33:00.500] to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:00.500 --> 33:06.500] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [33:06.500 --> 33:34.500] at LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:36.500 --> 33:49.500] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, [33:49.500 --> 33:55.500] and Nicholas, you're doing exactly the kind of things that I like to do. [33:55.500 --> 34:00.500] And this metal detector thing is one thing that I've wanted to take on for a long time. [34:00.500 --> 34:03.500] It is clearly unconstitutional. [34:03.500 --> 34:09.500] And it kind of, with all of the terrorist stuff going on, [34:09.500 --> 34:12.500] it kind of got accepted and nobody's challenged it. [34:12.500 --> 34:15.500] I've just had so many other things going [34:15.500 --> 34:18.500] that it's one of the things I haven't got to. [34:18.500 --> 34:21.500] Here, you need to be a mechanic. [34:21.500 --> 34:26.500] You never, ever give them legal advice. [34:26.500 --> 34:30.500] Just go in and tell them, I don't want to go through this thing. [34:30.500 --> 34:33.500] I'm concerned with all that radiation and stuff, [34:33.500 --> 34:35.500] and I don't want to be searched. [34:35.500 --> 34:37.500] I don't want you guys looking through my stuff. [34:37.500 --> 34:39.500] Are they going to say, well, you have to? [34:39.500 --> 34:45.500] And you say, will you stop me from going in there if I don't go through this? [34:45.500 --> 34:48.500] And what I like to do is if they say yes, I say, [34:48.500 --> 34:52.500] now I see that you have a pistol on your hip. [34:52.500 --> 34:57.500] Are you prepared, if necessary, to keep me from going in there [34:57.500 --> 34:59.500] without going through your metal detector? [34:59.500 --> 35:01.500] Are you prepared to use that pistol? [35:01.500 --> 35:04.500] And they'll say, yes, they are. [35:04.500 --> 35:06.500] Tell me, is that pistol loaded? [35:06.500 --> 35:08.500] And I'll say, yes, it is. [35:08.500 --> 35:13.500] Generally, by then, they realize something's going on. [35:13.500 --> 35:17.500] But you want them to tell you that they are armed, [35:17.500 --> 35:21.500] they're armed with a loaded weapon, and they're prepared to use it. [35:21.500 --> 35:25.500] Now you step back and call 911. [35:25.500 --> 35:28.500] There's a guy here threatening to shoot me [35:28.500 --> 35:33.500] in order to deny me and my right to open access to this courthouse. [35:33.500 --> 35:35.500] Now I'm not sure what laws you have. [35:35.500 --> 35:37.500] You need to read your penal code. [35:37.500 --> 35:42.500] When was the last time you read the penal code for Nevada? [35:42.500 --> 35:44.500] Probably about three weeks ago. [35:44.500 --> 35:46.500] I read a bunch of it. [35:46.500 --> 35:50.500] No, no, no, read the whole thing. [35:50.500 --> 35:52.500] I probably read the whole thing. [35:52.500 --> 35:54.500] Okay, a bunch of it doesn't help. [35:54.500 --> 35:58.500] Probably the first half is enough. [35:58.500 --> 36:00.500] Because if you just research, [36:00.500 --> 36:04.500] this is what the police and prosecutors and lawyers do, [36:04.500 --> 36:07.500] they just research what they're looking for. [36:07.500 --> 36:09.500] They never read the whole thing. [36:09.500 --> 36:15.500] So they don't get a good feeling for how the pieces fit together. [36:15.500 --> 36:20.500] When I go down to a courthouse, well, I was at the courthouse, [36:20.500 --> 36:26.500] and I was in making a criminal accusation to the bailiff in the courthouse [36:26.500 --> 36:29.500] after I had jerked around the prosecutor, [36:29.500 --> 36:32.500] and the district judge ran into the courthouse, [36:32.500 --> 36:35.500] pointed his finger at me and said, [36:35.500 --> 36:37.500] you're causing a disturbance. [36:37.500 --> 36:40.500] You get out of this courthouse or I'll have you arrested. [36:40.500 --> 36:44.500] I said, oh, my goodness, Judge, I didn't have that. [36:44.500 --> 36:45.500] This turned on. [36:45.500 --> 36:48.500] I reached in and pulled a digital recorder out of my pocket. [36:48.500 --> 36:49.500] I didn't have this turned on. [36:49.500 --> 36:52.500] I reached up and poked a button, stuck it right in his face and said, [36:52.500 --> 36:55.500] will you say that again? [36:55.500 --> 36:58.500] He took about three deep breaths, [36:58.500 --> 37:01.500] whirled around, stormed out of the courtroom. [37:01.500 --> 37:08.500] So what would I charge him with? [37:08.500 --> 37:13.500] Making? Making? Making? [37:13.500 --> 37:19.500] No. Making a terroristic threat. [37:19.500 --> 37:24.500] And you're not going to get that one if you hadn't read the whole thing. [37:24.500 --> 37:26.500] Nobody ever uses that one. [37:26.500 --> 37:31.500] If you threaten someone for the purpose of denying them access to a public building [37:31.500 --> 37:33.500] or interrupting their access to a public building, [37:33.500 --> 37:35.500] that's a terroristic threat in Texas. [37:35.500 --> 37:41.500] You've probably got one in Nevada for the same thing. [37:41.500 --> 37:44.500] That's the guy that calls in a bomb threat. [37:44.500 --> 37:47.500] That's what they wrote it for. [37:47.500 --> 37:51.500] But if I go to enter a public building [37:51.500 --> 37:56.500] and someone threatens me to do potential bodily harm to me [37:56.500 --> 37:59.500] to keep me from entering that building, [37:59.500 --> 38:02.500] I call that a terroristic threat. [38:02.500 --> 38:06.500] And I filed it against him with the Texas Attorney General. [38:06.500 --> 38:09.500] More importantly, the code itself calls you that. [38:09.500 --> 38:11.500] You just read what it says. [38:11.500 --> 38:14.500] It might be a little different in Nevada, but look at what it says. [38:14.500 --> 38:19.500] And if the essential elements of it all line up with what that guy did, boom. [38:19.500 --> 38:22.500] But that's just one of them. [38:22.500 --> 38:25.500] Read the first half of your penal code. [38:25.500 --> 38:27.500] It doesn't take that long. [38:27.500 --> 38:29.500] And you read like a comic book. [38:29.500 --> 38:34.500] You see all the stuff you can do to hammer them with, [38:34.500 --> 38:37.500] stuff you never thought of. [38:37.500 --> 38:42.500] And the best thing to hammer them with is something they never thought of. [38:42.500 --> 38:44.500] I get a document from a court. [38:44.500 --> 38:53.500] I had a clerk file a notice with the Department of Public Safety that I failed to appear. [38:53.500 --> 38:57.500] When I actually did appear, it was a clerical error. [38:57.500 --> 39:01.500] So I charged him with tampering with a government document. [39:01.500 --> 39:03.500] It's a Class 8 misdemeanor. [39:03.500 --> 39:05.500] A year in jail. [39:05.500 --> 39:07.500] He said, boy, it's a clerical error. [39:07.500 --> 39:12.500] Yeah, it was a clerical error when I forgot to renew my license plate for six months. [39:12.500 --> 39:14.500] Deal with it. [39:14.500 --> 39:15.500] Read the code. [39:15.500 --> 39:16.500] Read it quickly. [39:16.500 --> 39:17.500] Just take it out. [39:17.500 --> 39:19.500] Read it front and back. [39:19.500 --> 39:24.500] Or you'll get to the point where they're talking about all kinds of obfuscious stuff you never deal with. [39:24.500 --> 39:26.500] All the good stuff's in the front half. [39:26.500 --> 39:29.500] And then go back and read it a second time. [39:29.500 --> 39:38.500] When you read it the second time, you'll start making connections between codes all over the code itself, [39:38.500 --> 39:40.500] in the front, in the back, in the middle. [39:40.500 --> 39:44.500] You'll start making links to how all of these fit together. [39:44.500 --> 39:49.500] Get your criminal procedure code and do the same thing. [39:49.500 --> 39:58.500] I'm taking them on right now for something that they're doing that renders every single prosecution in Texas [39:58.500 --> 40:01.500] illegal. [40:01.500 --> 40:03.500] Absolutely illegal. [40:03.500 --> 40:06.500] Cannot fix it. [40:06.500 --> 40:15.500] But it took reading the code four or five times and studying it for a long time to put all the pieces together. [40:15.500 --> 40:22.500] When you read it a couple of times, especially the criminal procedure code, it's even more important. [40:22.500 --> 40:25.500] That's where they screw everything up. [40:25.500 --> 40:30.500] You read it through, like I read through the criminal procedure code in Texas, [40:30.500 --> 40:38.500] and it talks about in the front in Article 2, section 2 is duties of officers. [40:38.500 --> 40:45.500] It says when a magistrate sits for the purpose of examining into a criminal accusation, [40:45.500 --> 40:49.500] that is an examining court. [40:49.500 --> 40:52.500] Mightn't make any sense to me when I first read it. [40:52.500 --> 41:00.500] But when I read it the second time, I said, oh, that's referring to Chapter 16. [41:00.500 --> 41:04.500] Now it makes perfect sense what that means. [41:04.500 --> 41:12.500] When 2.13 tells a officer under duties of officers when it's made known to him that crime has been committed, [41:12.500 --> 41:15.500] he shall give notice to some magistrate. [41:15.500 --> 41:26.500] That corresponds to 1406 and 1517, and 643.002. [41:26.500 --> 41:28.500] That was out of transportation code. [41:28.500 --> 41:31.500] You'll start stitching these codes together. [41:31.500 --> 41:37.500] And then you go in and just play them like a cheap fiddle. [41:37.500 --> 41:48.500] You ask them to do something that goes exactly to a specific code, and once they do it, then you 9-1-1 them. [41:48.500 --> 41:53.500] What you never do is give fair warning. [41:53.500 --> 42:00.500] If you give fair warning, they will construe you to be agitated. [42:00.500 --> 42:06.500] Any time you start telling a public official, you're supposed to do this, you're supposed to do that, [42:06.500 --> 42:09.500] they always construe you to be agitated. [42:09.500 --> 42:16.500] Once they call you agitated, then to the courts, that's something difficult to get over. [42:16.500 --> 42:19.500] Do you listen to this show much? [42:19.500 --> 42:21.500] When I can. [42:21.500 --> 42:22.500] Okay. [42:22.500 --> 42:29.500] Have you ever heard me use the term telling a public official to take his chicken suit off? [42:29.500 --> 42:31.500] I don't know what I would call it here on that, no. [42:31.500 --> 42:32.500] Okay. [42:32.500 --> 42:33.500] I tell them to do that all the time. [42:33.500 --> 42:41.500] When I ask a public official, one official to arrest another, Stephenville is one of my favorites. [42:41.500 --> 42:46.500] The Texas Rangers threw me out of the courthouse. [42:46.500 --> 42:53.500] I went across the city square to the city municipal police department and got a sergeant. [42:53.500 --> 42:55.500] He said, what can I do for you, Mr. Kelton? [42:55.500 --> 42:59.500] I need you to arrest Joe Hudson. [42:59.500 --> 43:00.500] Joe Hudson? [43:00.500 --> 43:01.500] The Texas Ranger? [43:01.500 --> 43:02.500] Yeah, that's the one. [43:02.500 --> 43:04.500] I'm not going to arrest Joe Hudson. [43:04.500 --> 43:05.500] Come on, Sarge. [43:05.500 --> 43:06.500] It'll be fine. [43:06.500 --> 43:08.500] Just go over there and throw the cuffs on him, drag him off to jail. [43:08.500 --> 43:10.500] Man, I am not arrested in the Texas Ranger. [43:10.500 --> 43:15.500] I said, Sargeant, you need to take your chicken suit off. [43:15.500 --> 43:18.500] He said, I'm not going to take my chicken suit off. [43:18.500 --> 43:21.500] Now, I did have a bailiff in Garland. [43:21.500 --> 43:25.500] When I said that to him, he said, are you calling me a coward? [43:25.500 --> 43:30.500] When I told him to go in and arrest the judge, he stopped, turned around real slow, [43:30.500 --> 43:36.500] and gave me a menacing posture and said, are you calling me a coward? [43:36.500 --> 43:39.500] And I leaned right in his face and said, yes. [43:39.500 --> 43:41.500] As a matter of fact, I am. [43:41.500 --> 43:46.500] I'm calling you a chicken shit, lily-livered coward. [43:46.500 --> 43:50.500] Now, get your behind in there and do your job. [43:50.500 --> 43:55.500] The reason I always tell them to take their chicken suit off [43:55.500 --> 44:00.500] is how is that going to play before a grand jury of my peers? [44:00.500 --> 44:04.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:04.500 --> 44:06.500] except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.500 --> 44:09.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [44:09.500 --> 44:11.500] and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.500 --> 44:17.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.500 --> 44:22.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.500 --> 44:25.500] longevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.500 --> 44:31.500] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.500 --> 44:36.500] We have come to trust longevity so much we became a marketing distributor [44:36.500 --> 44:40.500] along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:40.500 --> 44:43.500] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [44:43.500 --> 44:47.500] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.500 --> 44:51.500] As you realize the benefits of longevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.500 --> 44:56.500] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, [44:56.500 --> 44:58.500] and increase your income. [44:58.500 --> 45:00.500] Order now. [45:00.500 --> 45:03.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.500 --> 45:07.500] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:07.500 --> 45:15.500] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.500 --> 45:19.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.500 --> 45:23.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.500 --> 45:28.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.500 --> 45:34.500] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.500 --> 45:39.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.500 --> 45:43.500] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.500 --> 45:48.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:48.500 --> 45:52.500] guides for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.500 --> 46:19.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:19.500 --> 46:22.500] Thank you very much. [46:49.500 --> 46:54.500] Okay, we are back. [46:54.500 --> 46:56.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [46:56.500 --> 47:01.500] and I'm spending a lot of time here because this is really important. [47:01.500 --> 47:05.500] Nicholas, we look for guys like you. [47:05.500 --> 47:10.500] We look for guys willing to go in there and take them on. [47:10.500 --> 47:14.500] But now it's time to take a step up. [47:14.500 --> 47:17.500] When you go in there to take these guys on, [47:17.500 --> 47:23.500] the only thing that you want from the person you're talking to [47:23.500 --> 47:29.500] is you want them to fail to do what you command them to do. [47:29.500 --> 47:31.500] I have a rule. [47:31.500 --> 47:37.500] Never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want them to do [47:37.500 --> 47:44.500] because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [47:44.500 --> 47:47.500] So when they don't do it, boom, got them. [47:47.500 --> 47:51.500] When Judge Whitaker said, if you're not a lawyer, I'm not even going to read these, [47:51.500 --> 47:53.500] threw them down, stormed out. [47:53.500 --> 47:56.500] Well, you know, I could have read him the right act. [47:56.500 --> 47:59.500] I could have told him what the code said. [47:59.500 --> 48:03.500] I could have read, I could have quoted the 15.09 that says, [48:03.500 --> 48:08.500] when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate in accordance with 1505, [48:08.500 --> 48:14.500] the magistrate shall issue a warrant forthwith. [48:14.500 --> 48:16.500] Yeah, I could have told him that. [48:16.500 --> 48:18.500] But I'm not his lawyer. [48:18.500 --> 48:20.500] You want a lawyer, Bubba? [48:20.500 --> 48:22.500] Hire one. [48:22.500 --> 48:25.500] I'm not going to give you legal advice. [48:25.500 --> 48:27.500] So he stormed out. [48:27.500 --> 48:28.500] Okay. [48:28.500 --> 48:31.500] I take out my phone dial 9-1-1. [48:31.500 --> 48:35.500] And the clerks are sitting there listening to me arguing with the dispatcher. [48:35.500 --> 48:38.500] Asking me what happened. [48:38.500 --> 48:39.500] Said he violated my rights. [48:39.500 --> 48:41.500] Well, what right did he violate? [48:41.500 --> 48:42.500] How do you know? [48:42.500 --> 48:44.500] Are you a prosecutor? [48:44.500 --> 48:45.500] No, I'm a dispatcher. [48:45.500 --> 48:47.500] Well, then dispatch. [48:47.500 --> 48:51.500] I'll make a full statement to the responding officer. [48:51.500 --> 48:53.500] Okay, so they dispatch. [48:53.500 --> 48:55.500] This is how you do it. [48:55.500 --> 48:59.500] Your only purpose is to set them up. [48:59.500 --> 49:02.500] It won't take them long to figure that out. [49:02.500 --> 49:07.500] In my courthouse, when I was going in, I wasn't going to wear a mask. [49:07.500 --> 49:15.500] And what they didn't know is I'd just filed a 150-page criminal complaint against the governor for issuing those mask orders. [49:15.500 --> 49:22.500] And Officer Stokes, he knew me personally, known him for 20 years. [49:22.500 --> 49:24.500] You're going to have to wear a mask. [49:24.500 --> 49:25.500] No, I'm not going to wear a mask. [49:25.500 --> 49:27.500] Well, you're not coming into his courthouse. [49:27.500 --> 49:34.500] So Officer Stokes, if I try to come into this courthouse without a mask, are you prepared to use physical force to prevent me from entering the courthouse? [49:34.500 --> 49:36.500] He said, yes, I am. [49:36.500 --> 49:38.500] Officer Stokes, I see you're wearing a pistol. [49:38.500 --> 49:40.500] Yes, I am. [49:40.500 --> 49:42.500] Tell me, Officer Stokes, is that pistol loaded? [49:42.500 --> 49:44.500] Yes, it is. [49:44.500 --> 49:49.500] Are you prepared to use that pistol if that's what's necessary to prevent me from entering this courthouse without a mask? [49:49.500 --> 49:51.500] Yes, I am. [49:51.500 --> 49:52.500] That'll do. [49:52.500 --> 49:54.500] Thank you. [49:54.500 --> 49:57.500] I step back. [49:57.500 --> 49:59.500] I call 911. [49:59.500 --> 50:02.500] Our conversation is over. [50:02.500 --> 50:10.500] The next conversation I have is with the officer they send out to arrest Stokes or to take my criminal charge against Stokes. [50:10.500 --> 50:17.500] And when he gives me half ounce of crapola, I call 911 on him. [50:17.500 --> 50:25.500] Now, I did do that a third time in Fort Worth, but I made a minor mistake. [50:25.500 --> 50:29.500] First they sent out a sergeant, and then they sent out a lieutenant a second time. [50:29.500 --> 50:34.500] And when I called the third time and told them, what are you doing sending these morons out? [50:34.500 --> 50:41.500] You sent out this stupid sergeant, and then you sent out a lieutenant that didn't have more sense than the sergeant did. [50:41.500 --> 50:48.500] And they grabbed me, one on each arm, and lifted me off the ground, carried me out of the courthouse, [50:48.500 --> 50:55.500] and threw me down so that my face was the first part of my anatomy to touch the pavement. [50:55.500 --> 50:59.500] I pushed that one a little bit over the edge. [50:59.500 --> 51:03.500] But it wasn't my intent to push him over the edge. [51:03.500 --> 51:07.500] I was just on a roll that day. [51:07.500 --> 51:11.500] And I didn't want to ruin their careers because I pushed him over the edge. [51:11.500 --> 51:14.500] I backed off a couple of times for that. [51:14.500 --> 51:17.500] But everything you do should be a setup. [51:17.500 --> 51:21.500] Never give a fair warning. [51:21.500 --> 51:25.500] And when they don't do what you tell them to do, you get your... [51:25.500 --> 51:30.500] When they refuse the first time, that's all they get. [51:30.500 --> 51:33.500] They don't get an opportunity to fix it. [51:33.500 --> 51:34.500] Then I step away from them. [51:34.500 --> 51:38.500] I call 911, or I ask for a supervisor. [51:38.500 --> 51:41.500] If they give me any problem with a supervisor, 911. [51:41.500 --> 51:43.500] 911 is where I want to go. [51:43.500 --> 51:47.500] 911 is recorded, something they can't get rid of. [51:47.500 --> 51:49.500] The 911 officer comes out. [51:49.500 --> 51:51.500] You're the victim. [51:51.500 --> 51:53.500] He's there to handle your problem. [51:53.500 --> 51:56.500] It changes everything. [51:56.500 --> 51:58.500] You don't get arrested. [51:58.500 --> 52:00.500] You don't get pushed around. [52:00.500 --> 52:03.500] If the 911 officer doesn't respond the way you want him to, [52:03.500 --> 52:04.500] you've got a couple options. [52:04.500 --> 52:09.500] You can call 911 again, or you can ask for the nearest magistrate. [52:09.500 --> 52:11.500] Call the magistrate's office. [52:11.500 --> 52:12.500] Tell him you're here. [52:12.500 --> 52:13.500] You call 911. [52:13.500 --> 52:21.500] 911 officer is protecting the accused and shielding him from prosecution. [52:21.500 --> 52:26.500] I need an interview with you to file criminal accusations against him. [52:26.500 --> 52:31.500] And you need to have those criminal complaints already written out. [52:31.500 --> 52:37.500] Just blanks for names, times, and dates. [52:37.500 --> 52:40.500] I have a folder I take with me. [52:40.500 --> 52:42.500] I've got all kind of blanks in there. [52:42.500 --> 52:46.500] Whatever comes up, I pull out the blank, fill their name in. [52:46.500 --> 52:52.500] I ask the district clerk in Victoria County for all records collected, [52:52.500 --> 52:54.500] symbol maintained by the department. [52:54.500 --> 52:58.500] They are referenced by 17.30 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [52:58.500 --> 53:02.500] Well, Mr. Kelton, if you want those records, you'll have to submit a written request. [53:02.500 --> 53:04.500] I open my case, pull one out. [53:04.500 --> 53:07.500] It's three pages, but it's already written up. [53:07.500 --> 53:12.500] It's got a blank for the office that I'm filing with. [53:12.500 --> 53:16.500] I put in the Victoria County District Attorney's Office, [53:16.500 --> 53:18.500] and I say, you, Bubba, what's your name? [53:18.500 --> 53:19.500] He told me I wrote it in. [53:19.500 --> 53:20.500] I signed it at the bottom. [53:20.500 --> 53:25.500] I put in I want records from this date to this date and handed it to him. [53:25.500 --> 53:27.500] He's standing there reading it. [53:27.500 --> 53:29.500] It reads a little while. [53:29.500 --> 53:30.500] He looked down at me. [53:30.500 --> 53:33.500] He looked back up, read some more, looked down at me again. [53:33.500 --> 53:41.500] The third time he looked down at me, I said, and you thought this was my first rodeo? [53:41.500 --> 53:43.500] No, Mr. Kelton. [53:43.500 --> 53:47.500] Somehow I get the impression this is not your first rodeo. [53:47.500 --> 53:50.500] That's what you want them to think. [53:50.500 --> 53:56.500] When you call 911 and the 911 officer refuses to issue a complaint, [53:56.500 --> 54:01.500] and you take out your second complaint, the complaint against the 911 officer, [54:01.500 --> 54:04.500] and start filling it out, and they're going to look at that, [54:04.500 --> 54:10.500] and they're going to say, this is not this boy's first time around the block. [54:10.500 --> 54:12.500] I think he just got set up. [54:12.500 --> 54:16.500] You pull that thing out, and it's ready to go, and just has to have their name on it. [54:16.500 --> 54:21.500] They're like, oh, my goodness, he was ready for exactly what we're doing. [54:21.500 --> 54:25.500] Then you stop getting so much crap. [54:25.500 --> 54:27.500] And you especially don't get argument. [54:27.500 --> 54:31.500] Do not let these guys argue with you, ever. [54:31.500 --> 54:37.500] The Justice of the Peace, they don't argue with me. [54:37.500 --> 54:39.500] Here's what I'm asking you to do. [54:39.500 --> 54:42.500] Are you doing this or are you not doing this? [54:42.500 --> 54:46.500] Well, Mr. Kelton, blah, blah, blah, blah, I don't hear all that. [54:46.500 --> 54:49.500] Are you going to act on this criminal complaint or not? [54:49.500 --> 54:50.500] That is all I want to hear. [54:50.500 --> 54:55.500] I just filed criminal charges against a municipal judge in Rome, Texas, [54:55.500 --> 54:59.500] next town over from me, with my local JP. [54:59.500 --> 55:03.500] And I'm going to go back to her, and she wanted to meet with me. [55:03.500 --> 55:08.500] I'm going to say, here's what the meeting is going to be composed of. [55:08.500 --> 55:14.500] You will tell me the date on which you issued warrants based on my complaint. [55:14.500 --> 55:18.500] I don't want to hear anything else. [55:18.500 --> 55:23.500] Well, Mr. Kelton, I have this issue, I have that issue. [55:23.500 --> 55:26.500] Not my problem. [55:26.500 --> 55:28.500] You have this duty. [55:28.500 --> 55:32.500] The only thing I want to hear from you is that you have performed this duty. [55:32.500 --> 55:36.500] If you haven't, we're finished here. [55:36.500 --> 55:40.500] Do not let them engage you. [55:40.500 --> 55:43.500] They're really good at engaging you. [55:43.500 --> 55:46.500] They do this all day, every day. [55:46.500 --> 55:49.500] I think you're going to out-engage them. [55:49.500 --> 55:52.500] So what you have to do is kind of an end run around them. [55:52.500 --> 55:55.500] Does that make sense? [55:55.500 --> 55:59.500] Yes, and the last time I – so they had the three sheriffs there, [55:59.500 --> 56:04.500] and they did just what you're talking about. [56:04.500 --> 56:08.500] It ended up being basically scattering [56:08.500 --> 56:14.500] and refusing to even give me any information or answer any questions. [56:14.500 --> 56:19.500] Everything I said, even if I asked them a simple yes or no question, [56:19.500 --> 56:25.500] I asked them, are you a policy enforcement officer or a law enforcement officer? [56:25.500 --> 56:31.500] They refused even to answer that when I requested yes or no answers. [56:31.500 --> 56:34.500] I mean, I asked them, did you guys take an oath? [56:34.500 --> 56:41.500] First question they don't answer, and primarily the first question is, who are you? [56:41.500 --> 56:43.500] Identify yourself. [56:43.500 --> 56:51.500] If they object, tell them – ask them, do you have a state identification card? [56:51.500 --> 56:57.500] Every public official is given a state identification card. [56:57.500 --> 57:02.500] They say no, then you're done with them. [57:02.500 --> 57:06.500] You know they have one, they refuse to produce it, they're required to produce it. [57:06.500 --> 57:11.500] Look in Nevada law about public officials identifying themselves. [57:11.500 --> 57:16.500] Find a code, get them to step across the code. [57:16.500 --> 57:22.500] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do [57:22.500 --> 57:29.500] because you've never asked a public official to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [57:29.500 --> 57:34.500] And when he doesn't do it, boom, pull out your complaint, fill it out. [57:34.500 --> 57:39.500] You should have a failure to identify complaint. [57:39.500 --> 57:40.500] Okay. [57:40.500 --> 57:43.500] You just describe him. [57:43.500 --> 57:45.500] Bell County, Texas. [57:45.500 --> 57:47.500] I call 911. [57:47.500 --> 57:52.500] I need you to come out here and arrest an investigator for the district attorney's office. [57:52.500 --> 57:53.500] Well, what's his name? [57:53.500 --> 57:54.500] I don't know his name. [57:54.500 --> 57:55.500] You won't tell me his name. [57:55.500 --> 57:57.500] And he's standing right in front of me. [57:57.500 --> 57:58.500] Well, what does he look like? [57:58.500 --> 57:59.500] And I looked him up and down. [57:59.500 --> 58:03.500] Big old fat guy, big belly hanging out over his belt. [58:03.500 --> 58:08.500] But if you bend over and look down real good, you can see it's a big cowboy belt. [58:08.500 --> 58:10.500] You don't know this big fat guy. Everybody knows it. [58:10.500 --> 58:18.500] And he's standing there looking right at me, wanting to shoot me. [58:18.500 --> 58:21.500] So take no crap from him. [58:21.500 --> 58:25.500] Set him up, walk him into your trap, and then nail him. [58:25.500 --> 58:32.500] When you get the first guy to step across the legal line, you forget him and go to the next guy. [58:32.500 --> 58:35.500] And always tell him if you ask him to do something they don't want to, [58:35.500 --> 58:38.500] tell him to take your chicken suit off. [58:38.500 --> 58:41.500] Well, which I said in the last one, I said, you guys are a bunch of chickens. [58:41.500 --> 58:45.500] And one guy said, well, if you're going to call us names, I said, what names? [58:45.500 --> 58:48.500] He says, you call us chickens. I said, well, if then. [58:48.500 --> 58:49.500] Hold on. [58:49.500 --> 58:53.500] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.500 --> 59:00.500] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.500 --> 59:05.500] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.500 --> 59:09.500] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes [59:09.500 --> 59:12.500] that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.500 --> 59:17.500] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.500 --> 59:23.500] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.500 --> 59:27.500] growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.500 --> 59:33.500] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.500 --> 59:40.500] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.500 --> 59:44.500] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.500 --> 59:59.500] Or visit us online at BFA.org. [59:59.500 --> 01:00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.500 --> 01:00:08.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.500 --> 01:00:10.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.500 --> 01:00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.500 --> 01:00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.500 --> 01:00:22.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.500 --> 01:00:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:26.500 --> 01:00:28.500] So protect your rights. [01:00:28.500 --> 01:00:32.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.500 --> 01:00:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:34.500 --> 01:00:38.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.500 --> 01:00:42.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.500 --> 01:00:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:45.500 --> 01:00:48.500] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.500 --> 01:00:51.500] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.500 --> 01:00:54.500] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.500 --> 01:01:00.500] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.500 --> 01:01:06.500] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.500 --> 01:01:09.500] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.500 --> 01:01:12.500] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.500 --> 01:01:17.500] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.500 --> 01:01:21.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.500 --> 01:01:35.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.500 --> 01:01:38.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.500 --> 01:01:40.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.500 --> 01:01:46.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.500 --> 01:01:48.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.500 --> 01:01:52.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.500 --> 01:01:57.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.500 --> 01:02:02.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.500 --> 01:02:05.500] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.500 --> 01:02:08.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:02:08.500 --> 01:02:12.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:15.500] Start over with Startpage. [01:02:15.500 --> 01:02:21.500] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.500 --> 01:02:27.500] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.500 --> 01:02:30.500] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.500 --> 01:02:34.500] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.500 --> 01:02:39.500] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.500 --> 01:02:43.500] When government employees demand a peep of your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.500 --> 01:02:46.500] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.500 --> 01:02:49.500] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.500 --> 01:02:53.500] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.500 --> 01:03:00.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.500 --> 01:03:43.500] Okay, howdy, howdy. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Love Radio on this Friday, the 26th day of August, 2022. [01:03:43.500 --> 01:03:45.500] And we're talking to Nicholas in Nevada. [01:03:45.500 --> 01:03:50.500] Nicholas, I hope what I'm talking about is making sense. [01:03:50.500 --> 01:03:54.500] We can't go in there and fight with them. [01:03:54.500 --> 01:03:59.500] They're used to that. They do that all the time. [01:03:59.500 --> 01:04:04.500] The best thing we can do is set them up and then bypass them. [01:04:04.500 --> 01:04:07.500] They will figure out we're setting them up. [01:04:07.500 --> 01:04:15.500] And when they realize that you've set them up, then you've really got their attention. [01:04:15.500 --> 01:04:22.500] I never argue with them. My favorite set up for a public official was a judge in Mansfield, Texas. [01:04:22.500 --> 01:04:27.500] He was a real stinker, real bad attitude, angry person. [01:04:27.500 --> 01:04:31.500] And they started hearing we were helping people stop foreclosures. [01:04:31.500 --> 01:04:34.500] And I was with another guy and they called him up first. [01:04:34.500 --> 01:04:37.500] And I stood at the bar when everybody else sat down. [01:04:37.500 --> 01:04:39.500] Finally, the judge looked up and said, can I help you? [01:04:39.500 --> 01:04:44.500] I said, yes, Your Honor, I'm a combat veteran and I have a hearing deficiency. [01:04:44.500 --> 01:04:46.500] What's wrong with your hearing? [01:04:46.500 --> 01:04:52.500] So I was down in Mexico the other day and I drank too much of that cheap tequila and I lost my hearing aid. [01:04:52.500 --> 01:04:54.500] Why are you telling me this? [01:04:54.500 --> 01:04:56.500] I said, do you have accommodation for the hearing impaired? [01:04:56.500 --> 01:04:58.500] Generally, they have these wireless headsets. [01:04:58.500 --> 01:05:00.500] No, I do not. [01:05:00.500 --> 01:05:02.500] We have a sound system here. Will you turn it up? [01:05:02.500 --> 01:05:03.500] No, I will not. [01:05:03.500 --> 01:05:06.500] Well, then will you speak up? [01:05:06.500 --> 01:05:11.500] And he did. He told me to sit down and shut up or he'd have me thrown out of the courtroom. [01:05:11.500 --> 01:05:13.500] So I sat down and shut up, came to my hearing. [01:05:13.500 --> 01:05:15.500] He started the hearing. I objected. [01:05:15.500 --> 01:05:17.500] I'm here at arms length to the court. [01:05:17.500 --> 01:05:19.500] I have a challenge of subject matter of jurisdiction before the court. [01:05:19.500 --> 01:05:21.500] Yes, Mr. Kelley, you just filed that 20 minutes ago. [01:05:21.500 --> 01:05:23.500] Yes, Your Honor, as a matter of fact, I did. [01:05:23.500 --> 01:05:24.500] Well, I'm going to deny that. [01:05:24.500 --> 01:05:27.500] You're going to deny a subject matter of jurisdiction challenge without reading it? [01:05:27.500 --> 01:05:28.500] You have my ruling. [01:05:28.500 --> 01:05:29.500] Yes, I do. [01:05:29.500 --> 01:05:32.500] And I slammed my folder shut, stood up, we're done here. [01:05:32.500 --> 01:05:35.500] And I pointed to the bailiff, you, come with me. [01:05:35.500 --> 01:05:37.500] And I stormed out of the courtroom. [01:05:37.500 --> 01:05:39.500] Oh, that was fun. [01:05:39.500 --> 01:05:40.500] We get out of the courtroom. [01:05:40.500 --> 01:05:41.500] This big old bailiff comes out. [01:05:41.500 --> 01:05:45.500] It's about six foot six, 350 pounds, just a bear of a man. [01:05:45.500 --> 01:05:47.500] He said, what can I do for you, Mr. Kelley? [01:05:47.500 --> 01:05:50.500] I need you to arrest the judge. [01:05:50.500 --> 01:05:51.500] Well, why would I arrest the judge? [01:05:51.500 --> 01:05:56.500] Class A misdemeanor, official oppression, criminal violation 3903, penal code. [01:05:56.500 --> 01:06:05.500] In that he failed to perform a duty he was required to perform and in the process denied me in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right. [01:06:05.500 --> 01:06:07.500] Well, what right did he deny you in? [01:06:07.500 --> 01:06:12.500] Well, he denied me an accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [01:06:12.500 --> 01:06:17.500] The bailiff said, well, Mr. Kelley, why didn't you tell him about the Americans with Disabilities Act? [01:06:17.500 --> 01:06:22.500] Well, heck, if I'd have done that, he might have turned the sound up. [01:06:22.500 --> 01:06:27.500] The bailiff stood there a minute and this grin came across his face. [01:06:27.500 --> 01:06:28.500] Well, you set him up. [01:06:28.500 --> 01:06:29.500] I said, yeah, I did. [01:06:29.500 --> 01:06:30.500] He was a sucker for that one. [01:06:30.500 --> 01:06:32.500] Now go in there and arrest him. [01:06:32.500 --> 01:06:33.500] I can't arrest a judge. [01:06:33.500 --> 01:06:37.500] Look at you, big strappling officer, got that pistol on your hip. [01:06:37.500 --> 01:06:39.500] You need to take your chicken shoot off. [01:06:39.500 --> 01:06:42.500] I'm not going to take my chicken shoot off. [01:06:42.500 --> 01:06:51.500] That got around the county and was the most powerful thing I did in Tarrant, Dallas County. [01:06:51.500 --> 01:06:52.500] Set him up. [01:06:52.500 --> 01:06:56.500] Know what you're doing when you walk in the door. [01:06:56.500 --> 01:06:57.500] Lead them to it. [01:06:57.500 --> 01:06:59.500] Don't give them legal advice. [01:06:59.500 --> 01:07:02.500] Tell them what you want them to do when they don't do it. [01:07:02.500 --> 01:07:04.500] Call 9-1-1 on them. [01:07:04.500 --> 01:07:09.500] When 9-1-1 doesn't respond properly, call the magistrate. [01:07:09.500 --> 01:07:12.500] You want the 9-1-1 operator arrested. [01:07:12.500 --> 01:07:14.500] You guys don't want to do your job? [01:07:14.500 --> 01:07:16.500] We'll see how that works out for you. [01:07:16.500 --> 01:07:20.500] Does that make sense? [01:07:20.500 --> 01:07:22.500] Yes, I have one last question. [01:07:22.500 --> 01:07:28.500] I've been doing this now since April 12th, so I have accumulated, because I video everything. [01:07:28.500 --> 01:07:33.500] I have somebody else typically video it and record everything as well. [01:07:33.500 --> 01:07:40.500] We have them violating, really, these things dozens and dozens and dozens of times. [01:07:40.500 --> 01:07:48.500] At what point do I say, I've got enough of the video showing them they're violating, [01:07:48.500 --> 01:07:55.500] they're not doing their job, they're not doing their oath, they're not living out their election duty, all that stuff. [01:07:55.500 --> 01:07:59.500] Do I file something in court or the jury? [01:07:59.500 --> 01:08:03.500] First time. [01:08:03.500 --> 01:08:08.500] First time they step out of line, you land on like a ton of bricks. [01:08:08.500 --> 01:08:10.500] You are not reasonable. [01:08:10.500 --> 01:08:11.500] You are not understanding. [01:08:11.500 --> 01:08:13.500] They are to do their job. [01:08:13.500 --> 01:08:17.500] You are not interested in whether they want to or don't want to. [01:08:17.500 --> 01:08:20.500] They swore on their oath they would do this job. [01:08:20.500 --> 01:08:26.500] Based on them swearing on that oath, they received payment, they cashed the checks on that payment, [01:08:26.500 --> 01:08:31.500] that consummated the contract, and you are the third-party beneficiary of that contract. [01:08:31.500 --> 01:08:34.500] You have standing to challenge them under it. [01:08:34.500 --> 01:08:40.500] No slack, no quarter. [01:08:40.500 --> 01:08:46.500] Take all this information you have and start filing lawsuits against them now. [01:08:46.500 --> 01:08:49.500] Here's how you want to file the lawsuit. [01:08:49.500 --> 01:08:55.500] Look at the law where the law says you must do this thing. [01:08:55.500 --> 01:09:04.500] In Texas, 2.13, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says that when a peace officer has it made known to him [01:09:04.500 --> 01:09:14.500] that a crime has been committed under 2.13 paragraph C, he shall give notice to some magistrate. [01:09:14.500 --> 01:09:22.500] Now, what about that is hard to understand, and where is he given discretion? [01:09:22.500 --> 01:09:26.500] It doesn't say he may, might, or can if he wants to. [01:09:26.500 --> 01:09:29.500] It says he shall. [01:09:29.500 --> 01:09:36.500] And when he is presented with a criminal accusation from the master of the servants, [01:09:36.500 --> 01:09:39.500] he's a public servant and you are the master of that servant, [01:09:39.500 --> 01:09:44.500] and the master notices the servant that a crime has been committed, [01:09:44.500 --> 01:09:49.500] where does he have authority to usurp the master? [01:09:49.500 --> 01:09:54.500] When I give a verified criminal affidavit to a public official, [01:09:54.500 --> 01:09:59.500] in this case when I set up the magistrate and called the police, [01:09:59.500 --> 01:10:04.500] the police came and the policeman said, I need to talk to the justice of the peace. [01:10:04.500 --> 01:10:06.500] I said, no, you don't. You need to take my complaint. [01:10:06.500 --> 01:10:10.500] Well, I need to make sure a crime has been committed. No, you don't. [01:10:10.500 --> 01:10:16.500] You are a public servant. I am the master of you as a servant. [01:10:16.500 --> 01:10:22.500] You have no power to negate my determination. [01:10:22.500 --> 01:10:28.500] You are to give notice to some magistrate the way Article 2.13 commands you to do. [01:10:28.500 --> 01:10:31.500] And he did that. [01:10:31.500 --> 01:10:34.500] You are the master of the servant. [01:10:34.500 --> 01:10:38.500] They are to act on the law that's before you or you're going to kick them, [01:10:38.500 --> 01:10:43.500] not once they've done it 10 or 15 times, first time. [01:10:43.500 --> 01:10:48.500] First time they step half inch across a legal line, boom, you hammer them. [01:10:48.500 --> 01:10:52.500] Judge Whitaker had never seen me before. [01:10:52.500 --> 01:10:56.500] I walk into his office, hand him these complaints, [01:10:56.500 --> 01:11:00.500] and since I wasn't a lawyer he wasn't going to take them through and then walked out. [01:11:00.500 --> 01:11:04.500] The sky is falling in on him. [01:11:04.500 --> 01:11:10.500] What do you think he's going to do the next time a citizen brings complaints to him? [01:11:10.500 --> 01:11:15.500] Think he's going to throw those down on the counter and storm out? [01:11:15.500 --> 01:11:20.500] Well, how did you bring the sky down on him? [01:11:20.500 --> 01:11:22.500] Wait, say that again. [01:11:22.500 --> 01:11:26.500] How did you bring the sky down? The sky was falling in on him. [01:11:26.500 --> 01:11:29.500] What did you do to cause that to happen? [01:11:29.500 --> 01:11:36.500] He was in a civil suit, claiming that he failed to perform a duty he is required to perform. [01:11:36.500 --> 01:11:43.500] And when a public official fails to perform an administrative duty, [01:11:43.500 --> 01:11:50.500] that is a duty over which he has no discretion, [01:11:50.500 --> 01:11:55.500] 15.09 commanded him to issue a warrant for threat. [01:11:55.500 --> 01:11:59.500] It did not say he may, might, or can if he wants to. It commanded him to. [01:11:59.500 --> 01:12:02.500] And he didn't do what he was commanded to do. [01:12:02.500 --> 01:12:06.500] That is not within the scope of his authority. [01:12:06.500 --> 01:12:10.500] And for that he has no immunity. [01:12:10.500 --> 01:12:14.500] So you want to ask them to do something they're not going to want to do, [01:12:14.500 --> 01:12:16.500] but the law commands them to do. [01:12:16.500 --> 01:12:23.500] The police officer, for instance, he shall give notice to some magistrate. [01:12:23.500 --> 01:12:28.500] But when I filed with the chief of police against the JP, [01:12:28.500 --> 01:12:31.500] he didn't give notice to some magistrate. [01:12:31.500 --> 01:12:36.500] I don't care why he didn't give notice to some magistrate. [01:12:36.500 --> 01:12:39.500] He may have all these great and wonderful reasons. [01:12:39.500 --> 01:12:45.500] I'm sure the grand jury will be understanding when this is presented to the grand jury, [01:12:45.500 --> 01:12:48.500] because that's failure to perform a duty he is required to perform [01:12:48.500 --> 01:12:54.500] in order to process tonight a full free access to enjoyment of right violation of 3903 Penal Code. [01:12:54.500 --> 01:12:58.500] It's also shielding from prosecution, 3805 Penal Code. [01:12:58.500 --> 01:13:00.500] See, I read the whole thing. [01:13:00.500 --> 01:13:04.500] I know how all these stick together. [01:13:04.500 --> 01:13:06.500] So explain it to a grand jury. [01:13:06.500 --> 01:13:11.500] I'm sure they will be understanding. [01:13:11.500 --> 01:13:13.500] Does that make sense? [01:13:13.500 --> 01:13:19.500] I've done the chronological, all the events, all the violations, everything, [01:13:19.500 --> 01:13:26.500] and now I need to do an affidavit of fact, and then I need to present that to the grand jury. [01:13:26.500 --> 01:13:29.500] You need to file a criminal complaint. [01:13:29.500 --> 01:13:32.500] You can attach the affidavit of fact to it [01:13:32.500 --> 01:13:39.500] or include the statement of fact inside the complaint. [01:13:39.500 --> 01:13:43.500] The complaint itself must be verified, so it will act as an affidavit. [01:13:43.500 --> 01:13:54.500] Go to the court and pull a criminal case and look in the files for an information. [01:13:54.500 --> 01:13:57.500] When a prosecutor is presented with a complaint, [01:13:57.500 --> 01:14:01.500] the complaint is intended to come from a private citizen. [01:14:01.500 --> 01:14:07.500] A policeman, when he gives a complaint to the prosecutor, [01:14:07.500 --> 01:14:13.500] is doing so in his private capacity as a citizen in the state of Texas or the state of Nevada. [01:14:13.500 --> 01:14:20.500] The prosecutor is to take that complaint and convert it into an information. [01:14:20.500 --> 01:14:25.500] An information is a complaint in proper form. [01:14:25.500 --> 01:14:35.500] So take the form the prosecutor uses in crafting the information and turn it into a complaint. [01:14:35.500 --> 01:14:40.500] And look in the records and see what the complaints from the police officers look like. [01:14:40.500 --> 01:14:44.500] In Texas, we have a special form for complaint. [01:14:44.500 --> 01:14:46.500] It must run in the name of the state of Texas, [01:14:46.500 --> 01:14:53.500] and the complaint must state that you have reason to believe and do believe. [01:14:53.500 --> 01:14:56.500] These words are mandatory. [01:14:56.500 --> 01:14:59.500] So all my complaints start with a heading at the top. [01:14:59.500 --> 01:15:03.500] It says, in the name and by the authority of the state of Texas, [01:15:03.500 --> 01:15:09.500] I, my name, have reason to believe and do believe [01:15:09.500 --> 01:15:13.500] that so-and-so violated such-and-such a law based on the following. [01:15:13.500 --> 01:15:16.500] And then I put in the statement of facts. [01:15:16.500 --> 01:15:21.500] And at the end, therefore, I charge that order before the filing of this document, [01:15:21.500 --> 01:15:27.500] so-and-so violated this statute against peace and dignity of the state of Texas. [01:15:27.500 --> 01:15:28.500] That's my complaint. [01:15:28.500 --> 01:15:33.500] All right, look in Nevada law, look in the criminal court records. [01:15:33.500 --> 01:15:37.500] You'll find complaints in there, and you'll see how they're structured. [01:15:37.500 --> 01:15:41.500] Make you a bunch of blanks. [01:15:41.500 --> 01:15:44.500] If you're going down there, you know what they're going to do. [01:15:44.500 --> 01:15:47.500] It's having made up. [01:15:47.500 --> 01:15:52.500] Just filling the blanks. [01:15:52.500 --> 01:15:55.500] Excuse that throat. [01:15:55.500 --> 01:15:56.500] Watch out for... [01:15:56.500 --> 01:15:58.500] I just filed one with the Reno Police Department, [01:15:58.500 --> 01:16:01.500] and they came back and said we don't have jurisdiction. [01:16:01.500 --> 01:16:04.500] They filed it as being complete. [01:16:04.500 --> 01:16:07.500] Yeah, don't file it with the police department. [01:16:07.500 --> 01:16:10.500] The police department is just like you. [01:16:10.500 --> 01:16:14.500] When a policeman goes to the magistrate and files a complaint, [01:16:14.500 --> 01:16:20.500] he does so in his individual capacity as a credible citizen. [01:16:20.500 --> 01:16:24.500] He has no more power to file a complaint than you do. [01:16:24.500 --> 01:16:29.500] So whatever you do, don't file a complaint against the police with the police. [01:16:29.500 --> 01:16:32.500] You might as well flush it down the toilet. [01:16:32.500 --> 01:16:36.500] File it always with the magistrate. [01:16:36.500 --> 01:16:39.500] First, let me get to... [01:16:39.500 --> 01:16:45.500] First, get out your criminal code and your criminal procedure code and read them twice. [01:16:45.500 --> 01:16:49.500] Then we'll have a whole different conversation, and this will start... [01:16:49.500 --> 01:16:52.500] The only problem is it starts to get way too much fun. [01:16:52.500 --> 01:16:55.500] Hang on, we need to finish this on the other side. [01:16:55.500 --> 01:16:59.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:16:59.500 --> 01:17:04.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.500 --> 01:17:08.500] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:17:08.500 --> 01:17:14.500] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:17:14.500 --> 01:17:20.500] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [01:17:20.500 --> 01:17:24.500] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:17:24.500 --> 01:17:26.500] How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:17:26.500 --> 01:17:28.500] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:17:28.500 --> 01:17:33.500] How to turn your financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.500 --> 01:17:38.500] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.500 --> 01:17:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.500 --> 01:17:46.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner. [01:17:46.500 --> 01:17:49.500] Or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.500 --> 01:17:51.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com. [01:17:51.500 --> 01:17:57.500] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.500 --> 01:18:00.500] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.500 --> 01:18:01.500] I love logos. [01:18:01.500 --> 01:18:04.500] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.500 --> 01:18:07.500] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.500 --> 01:18:08.500] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.500 --> 01:18:10.500] I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:10.500 --> 01:18:13.500] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.500 --> 01:18:16.500] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite. [01:18:16.500 --> 01:18:20.500] I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.500 --> 01:18:22.500] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.500 --> 01:18:24.500] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.500 --> 01:18:27.500] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.500 --> 01:18:29.500] By ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.500 --> 01:18:31.500] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.500 --> 01:18:34.500] Now, go to logosradio.com. [01:18:34.500 --> 01:18:37.500] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.500 --> 01:18:43.500] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.500 --> 01:18:44.500] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.500 --> 01:18:45.500] No. [01:18:45.500 --> 01:18:47.500] Do I have anything different when I order? [01:18:47.500 --> 01:18:48.500] No. [01:18:48.500 --> 01:18:49.500] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.500 --> 01:18:50.500] No. [01:18:50.500 --> 01:18:51.500] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.500 --> 01:18:52.500] Wow. [01:18:52.500 --> 01:18:54.500] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.500 --> 01:18:55.500] This is perfect. [01:18:55.500 --> 01:18:56.500] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.500 --> 01:18:58.500] We are welcome. [01:18:58.500 --> 01:19:00.500] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.500 --> 01:19:15.500] This is the Logos Radio Net. [01:19:15.500 --> 01:19:27.500] Ain't gonna blame me, don't blame me. [01:19:27.500 --> 01:19:36.500] Well, ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.500 --> 01:19:42.500] I was blindsided, but now I can see you. [01:19:42.500 --> 01:19:43.500] Okay. [01:19:43.500 --> 01:19:44.500] We are back. [01:19:44.500 --> 01:19:46.500] Randy Kelton, Brat Fountain, Wheelbarrow Radio. [01:19:46.500 --> 01:19:50.500] And we're talking to Nicholas in Nevada. [01:19:50.500 --> 01:19:54.500] Nicholas, we need to close this out. [01:19:54.500 --> 01:19:57.500] Are you familiar with our Telegram channel? [01:19:57.500 --> 01:19:59.500] Yes, I am. [01:19:59.500 --> 01:20:00.500] Okay. [01:20:00.500 --> 01:20:03.500] Stay on that and listen to some of our archives. [01:20:03.500 --> 01:20:10.500] We go over this pretty regular about how to set these guys up and blow them away. [01:20:10.500 --> 01:20:15.500] But if you already have a number of encounters, I suggest you start suing them. [01:20:15.500 --> 01:20:32.500] But look at the circumstances and craft your statement of facts in such a way that you can claim that the official failed to perform a statutory duty that he was required to perform. [01:20:32.500 --> 01:20:33.500] Okay. [01:20:33.500 --> 01:20:41.500] And claim, because of that, you are suing him in his personal capacity. [01:20:41.500 --> 01:20:46.500] That gets around this official immunity. [01:20:46.500 --> 01:20:52.500] It's not what you can prove that wins the day that keeps you in court. [01:20:52.500 --> 01:20:56.500] It is the nature of your claim. [01:20:56.500 --> 01:21:06.500] In my suit against the JP, I maintained that the justice of the peace had no discretion, that he was required to issue the warrant. [01:21:06.500 --> 01:21:19.500] I failed to perform that statutory duty and by so doing denied me full and free access to or enjoyment of my right to the equal protections of the laws and to the procedural due course of the laws. [01:21:19.500 --> 01:21:23.500] Their lawyer argued official immunity. [01:21:23.500 --> 01:21:27.500] So I'm going to ask for a declaratory judgment. [01:21:27.500 --> 01:21:32.500] It doesn't matter whether he has official immunity or not. [01:21:32.500 --> 01:21:38.500] The problem he has is I claimed personal capacity. [01:21:38.500 --> 01:21:46.500] And he's got to argue that the judge in this case based on these facts can't be sued in his personal capacity. [01:21:46.500 --> 01:21:49.500] But he didn't argue that. [01:21:49.500 --> 01:21:53.500] He argued an issue that was not before the court. [01:21:53.500 --> 01:21:55.500] This they're not accustomed to. [01:21:55.500 --> 01:21:58.500] This is harder for them to fight. [01:21:58.500 --> 01:22:06.500] So you want to get the official to refuse to perform a duty he's required to perform. [01:22:06.500 --> 01:22:14.500] Then you can claim personal capacity and you make that lawsuit stick. [01:22:14.500 --> 01:22:17.500] Okay. Okay. Okay. I need to move on. [01:22:17.500 --> 01:22:21.500] This has been an hour and a half. [01:22:21.500 --> 01:22:24.500] Yeah, well, 15 minutes, but it was worth it. [01:22:24.500 --> 01:22:26.500] This is where we need to address this on occasion. [01:22:26.500 --> 01:22:31.500] Okay. Keep up to speed and let us know how this goes. [01:22:31.500 --> 01:22:33.500] Okay. Thank you, Randy. Thank you, Brett. [01:22:33.500 --> 01:22:35.500] Okay. Thank you, Nicholas. [01:22:35.500 --> 01:22:38.500] Okay. Now we're going to a first-time caller. [01:22:38.500 --> 01:22:40.500] Now Brett and I were arguing. [01:22:40.500 --> 01:22:47.500] We were debating on how this is pronounced, E-J-E-M-E. [01:22:47.500 --> 01:22:49.500] How do you pronounce that? [01:22:49.500 --> 01:22:54.500] That's A-J-M-E, but I go by first name Joey. [01:22:54.500 --> 01:22:58.500] E-J-M-E, you mean the J is not silent? [01:22:58.500 --> 01:23:03.500] I don't know about silence. I know silence. I go by Joey. [01:23:03.500 --> 01:23:05.500] I lose. I lose. [01:23:05.500 --> 01:23:07.500] But you said you go by Joy. [01:23:07.500 --> 01:23:09.500] Yeah, Joy. [01:23:09.500 --> 01:23:10.500] Joy. [01:23:10.500 --> 01:23:11.500] Okay. [01:23:11.500 --> 01:23:12.500] Joy. [01:23:12.500 --> 01:23:14.500] What state? [01:23:14.500 --> 01:23:17.500] I'm in California, Los Angeles. [01:23:17.500 --> 01:23:19.500] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:23:19.500 --> 01:23:23.500] Yeah, we won't hold that against you. [01:23:23.500 --> 01:23:27.500] We don't hold it against Tina. [01:23:27.500 --> 01:23:31.500] Okay, that's fine. [01:23:31.500 --> 01:23:34.500] That's Tina Churlish. [01:23:34.500 --> 01:23:36.500] Okay. [01:23:36.500 --> 01:23:38.500] Okay. What do you have for us today? [01:23:38.500 --> 01:23:40.500] To all of you, yes, good evening. [01:23:40.500 --> 01:23:43.500] First time here. [01:23:43.500 --> 01:23:45.500] I learned a lot from the previous caller. [01:23:45.500 --> 01:23:50.500] So I've just been taking some notes. [01:23:50.500 --> 01:23:53.500] I have fraud here. [01:23:53.500 --> 01:23:57.500] I will say fraud and conspiracy. [01:23:57.500 --> 01:24:04.500] So I will try as much as possible to go as brief as I can on my case. [01:24:04.500 --> 01:24:11.500] I was married to a multimillionaire attorney. [01:24:11.500 --> 01:24:16.500] And in a nutshell, we went through a divorce. [01:24:16.500 --> 01:24:23.500] I believe my attorney was working with opposing parties. [01:24:23.500 --> 01:24:30.500] As such, I was deforted of everything I have, all my marital benefits, [01:24:30.500 --> 01:24:33.500] and I was left destitute. [01:24:33.500 --> 01:24:34.500] I was left destitute. [01:24:34.500 --> 01:24:41.500] I was kicked out of my home, which I have lived for 20 years in the middle of a pandemic. [01:24:41.500 --> 01:24:50.500] I was kicked out of my house in September 16, and with nowhere to go, with no money, just to start all over again. [01:24:50.500 --> 01:24:55.500] I moved over from London here, and I have never walked. [01:24:55.500 --> 01:24:57.500] I was raising two kids. [01:24:57.500 --> 01:25:03.500] One was special needs, and so I was a full-time mom. [01:25:03.500 --> 01:25:14.500] We went through a divorce in 2007, and during that period, the judge made an order. [01:25:14.500 --> 01:25:21.500] I mean, the judge made an order for my ex, to pay my attorney fees, [01:25:21.500 --> 01:25:28.500] and also requested that she would like to get a forensic accountant, [01:25:28.500 --> 01:25:36.500] because based on what we told her in the court hearing, it didn't really tally up with the expenses. [01:25:36.500 --> 01:25:45.500] So what she said was, what I can see here is this is somebody moving money from one business to another. [01:25:45.500 --> 01:25:50.500] So she also demanded for a forensic accountant to look into his business. [01:25:50.500 --> 01:25:54.500] And that was all the way back in 2007. [01:25:54.500 --> 01:25:59.500] We also had CPS on our case. [01:25:59.500 --> 01:26:01.500] Our child protective services on our case. [01:26:01.500 --> 01:26:03.500] Our children were involved. [01:26:03.500 --> 01:26:04.500] Okay, okay. [01:26:04.500 --> 01:26:05.500] Hold on, hold on. [01:26:05.500 --> 01:26:08.500] This is going to be way too complex for this show. [01:26:08.500 --> 01:26:09.500] Okay, okay. [01:26:09.500 --> 01:26:15.500] Can you write all of this out and email it to me? [01:26:15.500 --> 01:26:17.500] Oh, yeah, I will do that. [01:26:17.500 --> 01:26:18.500] Yes, I will do that. [01:26:18.500 --> 01:26:20.500] Okay, sounds good. [01:26:20.500 --> 01:26:24.500] Write it out in the form of a timeline. [01:26:24.500 --> 01:26:28.500] Put on this date this happened, and on this date this happened, [01:26:28.500 --> 01:26:32.500] and put in all of the things you can recall. [01:26:32.500 --> 01:26:34.500] Okay. [01:26:34.500 --> 01:26:37.500] That timeline is the most valuable tool you can have, [01:26:37.500 --> 01:26:44.500] but it will also allow me to organize the case and make sense of it. [01:26:44.500 --> 01:26:51.500] And also tell him what your outcome, the kind of outcome that you're trying to, [01:26:51.500 --> 01:26:53.500] where are you aiming with this? [01:26:53.500 --> 01:26:55.500] What do you want to see happen? [01:26:55.500 --> 01:27:00.500] And that will help him to kind of tailor the response. [01:27:00.500 --> 01:27:01.500] Sorry. [01:27:01.500 --> 01:27:04.500] Yeah, based on everything I know from my little understanding right now, [01:27:04.500 --> 01:27:08.500] I mean, I know it's hard, when you see what I'm aiming at, [01:27:08.500 --> 01:27:13.500] I'm aiming at getting some of my assets back and to seek justice. [01:27:13.500 --> 01:27:22.500] Because my ex has, I mean, it's not just my ex, it's the fact that the court supported him. [01:27:22.500 --> 01:27:27.500] In order not to give you the whole story, but I'll just give you one fraud on the court, [01:27:27.500 --> 01:27:32.500] was when what was happening during my trial became so obvious, [01:27:32.500 --> 01:27:40.500] I actually told the judge during the trial that I no longer want to use my attorney again, [01:27:40.500 --> 01:27:42.500] that he's suppressing my evidence. [01:27:42.500 --> 01:27:45.500] And I gave her multiple examples. [01:27:45.500 --> 01:27:52.500] So she denied it and told me she's going to allow me to do a 10-minute conferring [01:27:52.500 --> 01:27:55.500] and do a rebuttal eventually at the end. [01:27:55.500 --> 01:27:58.500] So I did a motion for a new trial. [01:27:58.500 --> 01:28:00.500] It was denied without a hearing. [01:28:00.500 --> 01:28:01.500] I got a lawyer. [01:28:01.500 --> 01:28:04.500] But the first thing I did, because on the last motion I did, [01:28:04.500 --> 01:28:08.500] she was now trying to act as though she pitted my case and said, [01:28:08.500 --> 01:28:12.500] wow, if you're saying all these evidence were not presented, [01:28:12.500 --> 01:28:14.500] well, this is the senior in your attorney. [01:28:14.500 --> 01:28:19.500] So I went for that transcript from that day, which is November 13th, [01:28:19.500 --> 01:28:22.500] where I said I don't want to use my attorney anymore. [01:28:22.500 --> 01:28:23.500] And guess what? [01:28:23.500 --> 01:28:28.500] The transcript was fabricated. [01:28:28.500 --> 01:28:32.500] I'm sure you can see I have an accent and people tell me I speak fast. [01:28:32.500 --> 01:28:35.500] I'm trying as much to speak slowly today. [01:28:35.500 --> 01:28:40.500] So I have never seen 100% accuracy in a transcript. [01:28:40.500 --> 01:28:42.500] This is not that case. [01:28:42.500 --> 01:28:46.500] It was all hard, all the examples I gave. [01:28:46.500 --> 01:28:51.500] So obviously, the judge or who else is obviously involved. [01:28:51.500 --> 01:28:56.500] And based on my little understanding, from what I said that day, [01:28:56.500 --> 01:28:59.500] I think the judge should have discredited in his trial [01:28:59.500 --> 01:29:02.500] because my attorney could not even defend himself. [01:29:02.500 --> 01:29:05.500] He just said he was going to slow down. [01:29:05.500 --> 01:29:06.500] But she kept him there. [01:29:06.500 --> 01:29:08.500] And she kept him there, [01:29:08.500 --> 01:29:14.500] preventing me to speak out in direct contact and question my ex. [01:29:14.500 --> 01:29:15.500] Okay. [01:29:15.500 --> 01:29:20.500] There would probably be grounds for ineffective assistance of counsel. [01:29:20.500 --> 01:29:24.500] The problem is that it was so long ago. [01:29:24.500 --> 01:29:30.500] Give me a timeline and I can better tell what you could possibly do. [01:29:30.500 --> 01:29:32.500] Yeah. [01:29:32.500 --> 01:29:34.500] Long ago, it just happened in 2020. [01:29:34.500 --> 01:29:36.500] It stopped out in 2020. [01:29:36.500 --> 01:29:39.500] So I already have, because of statute of limitations, [01:29:39.500 --> 01:29:43.500] I've already filed a legal malpractice case against him, [01:29:43.500 --> 01:29:45.500] not to miss the statute. [01:29:45.500 --> 01:29:46.500] Okay, good. [01:29:46.500 --> 01:29:47.500] I'm going to want to see that case as well. [01:29:47.500 --> 01:29:48.500] Hang on. [01:29:48.500 --> 01:29:50.500] We're about to go to our sponsors, [01:29:50.500 --> 01:29:55.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the rule of our radio, our call-in number. [01:29:55.500 --> 01:29:57.500] I've got a full board, so I won't give that out. [01:29:57.500 --> 01:29:58.500] Hang on. [01:29:58.500 --> 01:30:01.500] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.500 --> 01:30:02.500] Sorry, soft drink lovers. [01:30:02.500 --> 01:30:05.500] Even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.500 --> 01:30:08.500] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight [01:30:08.500 --> 01:30:10.500] than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:10.500 --> 01:30:11.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:11.500 --> 01:30:16.500] I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.500 --> 01:30:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.500 --> 01:30:21.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.500 --> 01:30:23.500] And once your privacy is gone, [01:30:23.500 --> 01:30:26.500] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.500 --> 01:30:29.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [01:30:29.500 --> 01:30:32.500] and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.500 --> 01:30:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.500 --> 01:30:38.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.500 --> 01:30:42.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.500 --> 01:30:45.500] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.500 --> 01:30:49.500] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:49.500 --> 01:30:50.500] Wrong. [01:30:50.500 --> 01:30:54.500] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers [01:30:54.500 --> 01:30:55.500] for nearly a decade. [01:30:55.500 --> 01:30:59.500] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines [01:30:59.500 --> 01:31:02.500] five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:02.500 --> 01:31:05.500] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:31:05.500 --> 01:31:09.500] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.500 --> 01:31:12.500] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, [01:31:12.500 --> 01:31:15.500] which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:15.500 --> 01:31:18.500] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:31:18.500 --> 01:31:21.500] and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether [01:31:21.500 --> 01:31:23.500] and drink water instead. [01:31:23.500 --> 01:31:25.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:25.500 --> 01:31:29.500] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.500 --> 01:31:35.500] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.500 --> 01:31:37.500] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.500 --> 01:31:42.500] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.500 --> 01:31:45.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, [01:31:45.500 --> 01:31:48.500] and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.500 --> 01:31:49.500] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.500 --> 01:31:50.500] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.500 --> 01:31:52.500] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.500 --> 01:31:53.500] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.500 --> 01:31:54.500] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.500 --> 01:31:57.500] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.500 --> 01:32:01.500] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.500 --> 01:32:04.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [01:32:04.500 --> 01:32:07.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:07.500 --> 01:32:09.500] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:09.500 --> 01:32:12.500] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:12.500 --> 01:32:15.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:15.500 --> 01:32:17.500] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:17.500 --> 01:32:19.500] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:19.500 --> 01:32:22.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn [01:32:22.500 --> 01:32:25.500] how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:25.500 --> 01:32:28.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:28.500 --> 01:32:31.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.500 --> 01:32:33.500] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:33.500 --> 01:32:35.500] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.500 --> 01:32:37.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:37.500 --> 01:32:40.500] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.500 --> 01:32:42.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:42.500 --> 01:32:45.500] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.500 --> 01:32:47.500] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:47.500 --> 01:32:50.500] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.500 --> 01:32:52.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:52.500 --> 01:32:55.500] from ruleoflawradio.com, order your copy today, [01:32:55.500 --> 01:32:59.500] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:59.500 --> 01:33:21.500] Looking for some truth? You found it. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.500 --> 01:33:42.500] The wicked come with temptation. [01:33:42.500 --> 01:33:47.500] They're trying to buy the whole place. [01:33:47.500 --> 01:33:53.500] They want to force imagination [01:33:53.500 --> 01:33:59.500] because they've fallen from grace. [01:33:59.500 --> 01:34:03.500] Okay. Howdy, howdy. Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:34:03.500 --> 01:34:07.500] And we're talking to Joyce in California. [01:34:07.500 --> 01:34:10.500] Okay. Give me a timeline. [01:34:10.500 --> 01:34:15.500] Your situation is way too complex for this radio show. [01:34:15.500 --> 01:34:19.500] And timeline. Let's talk about timeline. [01:34:19.500 --> 01:34:24.500] Timeline is not telling your story. [01:34:24.500 --> 01:34:29.500] The problem we have is when someone has been in the fight too long, [01:34:29.500 --> 01:34:36.500] that the fight becomes about one emotional high point, [01:34:36.500 --> 01:34:40.500] I'm sorry, the story becomes about one emotional high point [01:34:40.500 --> 01:34:43.500] to the next, to the next, to the next. [01:34:43.500 --> 01:34:48.500] And sometimes over time you'll get those events out of sequence [01:34:48.500 --> 01:34:51.500] depending on how you're telling them to someone. [01:34:51.500 --> 01:34:54.500] So the story becomes all jumbled up. [01:34:54.500 --> 01:35:00.500] And what I'm hearing is not so much what happened, [01:35:00.500 --> 01:35:05.500] but your interpretation of what you feel about what happened. [01:35:05.500 --> 01:35:08.500] Those things get jumbled up over time. [01:35:08.500 --> 01:35:12.500] So if you sit down, the first thing you should do [01:35:12.500 --> 01:35:20.500] is pull the docket sheets from all your cases and list. [01:35:20.500 --> 01:35:24.500] The docket sheet is already listed in the form of a timeline. [01:35:24.500 --> 01:35:26.500] It says on this date this document was filed, [01:35:26.500 --> 01:35:29.500] on this date this hearing was held. [01:35:29.500 --> 01:35:33.500] And you take all of those and you combine them in potentially [01:35:33.500 --> 01:35:39.500] to one spreadsheet, spreadsheet's nice, or in a Word document. [01:35:39.500 --> 01:35:46.500] And then on those dates you put in some notes about what occurred on this date. [01:35:46.500 --> 01:35:53.500] What that does is help to focus your mind and not mix up these different issues. [01:35:53.500 --> 01:35:58.500] And then when I look at it, or anyone else who doesn't know the story, [01:35:58.500 --> 01:36:03.500] I'm going to see these big gaps. [01:36:03.500 --> 01:36:05.500] I'm going to see you going through an issue [01:36:05.500 --> 01:36:08.500] and I'll be scratching my head wondering how you got there. [01:36:08.500 --> 01:36:10.500] And then I'll go back and ask for information, [01:36:10.500 --> 01:36:15.500] and that will trigger your memory in between the mental high points. [01:36:15.500 --> 01:36:19.500] And we'll begin to fill in those blanks. [01:36:19.500 --> 01:36:29.500] And oft times really, really important stuff begins to come out of the documentation. [01:36:29.500 --> 01:36:34.500] Stuff that at the time you were so emotionally engaged [01:36:34.500 --> 01:36:39.500] in what was happening that you missed it. [01:36:39.500 --> 01:36:44.500] And besides, I will be looking at it from a different perspective. [01:36:44.500 --> 01:36:50.500] I will be looking at it from the outside and from how does the law apply [01:36:50.500 --> 01:36:53.500] to these particular facts. [01:36:53.500 --> 01:36:55.500] And since I don't have a dog in this hunt, [01:36:55.500 --> 01:36:59.500] since I wasn't subjected to all of this emotional turmoil, [01:36:59.500 --> 01:37:02.500] I won't be emotionally affected by it. [01:37:02.500 --> 01:37:04.500] I can look at it more clinically. [01:37:04.500 --> 01:37:07.500] Now, Josh, does that make sense? [01:37:07.500 --> 01:37:08.500] Oh, absolutely. [01:37:08.500 --> 01:37:11.500] I've already got that from Tina. [01:37:11.500 --> 01:37:14.500] She's been looking at my... [01:37:14.500 --> 01:37:16.500] The first time she had a glance, [01:37:16.500 --> 01:37:20.500] I mean, she just told me to go start all over this again. [01:37:20.500 --> 01:37:24.500] It wasn't making sense to her, but it was making sense to me. [01:37:24.500 --> 01:37:27.500] So she did a lot of correction there that, you know, [01:37:27.500 --> 01:37:32.500] I should make a timeline in the sense that somebody else, you know, [01:37:32.500 --> 01:37:34.500] can understand what I'm writing. [01:37:34.500 --> 01:37:37.500] And that's exactly the purpose. [01:37:37.500 --> 01:37:38.500] Yeah. [01:37:38.500 --> 01:37:41.500] With that timeline, you need someone else to look at that. [01:37:41.500 --> 01:37:45.500] And the one thing you want to keep in mind when you put something in there, [01:37:45.500 --> 01:37:52.500] when I put this in there, is the reader who doesn't know anything about this, [01:37:52.500 --> 01:37:56.500] is that reader going to have a question? [01:37:56.500 --> 01:38:01.500] Because the worst thing we can do is create a question in the mind of our reader [01:38:01.500 --> 01:38:04.500] and not answer that question. [01:38:04.500 --> 01:38:07.500] Because if we do that, they're lost. [01:38:07.500 --> 01:38:09.500] We lose the reader altogether. [01:38:09.500 --> 01:38:10.500] Have you ever been to a seminar? [01:38:10.500 --> 01:38:15.500] You're sitting in the seminar and the speaker says something you don't understand. [01:38:15.500 --> 01:38:20.500] So you have to back up and go inside and try to figure out what was that he was referring to. [01:38:20.500 --> 01:38:23.500] By the time you get that figured out, [01:38:23.500 --> 01:38:28.500] the speaker's done gone on to other stuff and you've lost your place. [01:38:28.500 --> 01:38:36.500] This, when we craft this document, we don't want our reader to ever lose their place. [01:38:36.500 --> 01:38:44.500] We want to anticipate the questions we're going to create in the mind of our reader. [01:38:44.500 --> 01:38:48.500] And the best way to do that is to have somebody else read it [01:38:48.500 --> 01:38:55.500] because you are so engaged in the subject matter, you will never get these questions. [01:38:55.500 --> 01:39:04.500] Take a third party like Tina. [01:39:04.500 --> 01:39:10.500] Have her rip it apart for you. [01:39:10.500 --> 01:39:16.500] And we don't call her Tina, Tina Charlies for nothing. [01:39:16.500 --> 01:39:20.500] Actually, Tina's a sweetheart. [01:39:20.500 --> 01:39:26.500] And I would not want Tina after me. [01:39:26.500 --> 01:39:31.500] She's listened to us and she's done what we've said [01:39:31.500 --> 01:39:37.500] and she's become so much better at it that now the student becomes the master. [01:39:37.500 --> 01:39:40.500] Plus she's got that tenacity. [01:39:40.500 --> 01:39:50.500] She's got the persistence gene where, like a bulldog, does not let go. [01:39:50.500 --> 01:39:53.500] A lot of people will give up when they're told, you know, [01:39:53.500 --> 01:39:58.500] some public official will say, oh, well, you can't this and that and there's nothing I can do. [01:39:58.500 --> 01:40:00.500] My hands are tied. [01:40:00.500 --> 01:40:05.500] And a lot of people just kind of buckle at that and throw their hands up and say it didn't work. [01:40:05.500 --> 01:40:07.500] Not Tina. [01:40:07.500 --> 01:40:16.500] A lot of professional conduct complains against them and miraculously unties their hands. [01:40:16.500 --> 01:40:21.500] So yes, you've got a good assistant there, a good friend that can be of great help. [01:40:21.500 --> 01:40:23.500] So give me a timeline. [01:40:23.500 --> 01:40:30.500] Send that to my email, Randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:40:30.500 --> 01:40:33.500] You can just look up Rule of Law Radio at our website. [01:40:33.500 --> 01:40:35.500] You'll find a link to my address. [01:40:35.500 --> 01:40:36.500] Send that to me. [01:40:36.500 --> 01:40:41.500] I'll go through it, and you have to understand that when I go through it, [01:40:41.500 --> 01:40:47.500] I will have no mercy because I'm on your side. [01:40:47.500 --> 01:40:50.500] Doctor, what I'm looking for, I need the exposure. [01:40:50.500 --> 01:40:54.500] I need the exposure when you ask me a question. [01:40:54.500 --> 01:41:03.500] I will especially look for when does she say something that my brain says, now, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:41:03.500 --> 01:41:05.500] Then that has to be fixed. [01:41:05.500 --> 01:41:09.500] Anything that causes a question in my mind, that I'm going to point out. [01:41:09.500 --> 01:41:17.500] And I may sound like I'm being over picky and picking on every minor little thing, but I really don't do that. [01:41:17.500 --> 01:41:21.500] The things I pick on are the things that matter. [01:41:21.500 --> 01:41:28.500] There can be errors in there that I won't care about that at the end of the day won't make any difference. [01:41:28.500 --> 01:41:34.500] Just the ones that matter that make it hard for me to lead to the outcome that I want. [01:41:34.500 --> 01:41:39.500] And those I'll ask about. [01:41:39.500 --> 01:41:44.500] And then I'll send it to Tina, and you heard her really tear it up. [01:41:44.500 --> 01:41:51.500] And when we're done, we'll have some really nice documentation. [01:41:51.500 --> 01:41:53.500] Okay. [01:41:53.500 --> 01:41:54.500] Give me a timeline. [01:41:54.500 --> 01:41:57.500] Call in next week. [01:41:57.500 --> 01:41:58.500] I will, though. [01:41:58.500 --> 01:42:01.500] Okay. [01:42:01.500 --> 01:42:03.500] Thank you very much, Joyce. [01:42:03.500 --> 01:42:04.500] Thank you so much. [01:42:04.500 --> 01:42:05.500] Thanks, Andy. [01:42:05.500 --> 01:42:06.500] Okay. [01:42:06.500 --> 01:42:09.500] Now we're going to go to Wayne in Texas. [01:42:09.500 --> 01:42:11.500] Hello, Wayne. [01:42:11.500 --> 01:42:14.500] What do you have for us today? [01:42:14.500 --> 01:42:15.500] Hello. [01:42:15.500 --> 01:42:17.500] Can you hear me? [01:42:17.500 --> 01:42:20.500] Wayne, you have such a sweet sounding voice. [01:42:20.500 --> 01:42:23.500] Exactly, Grace. [01:42:23.500 --> 01:42:25.500] Grace. [01:42:25.500 --> 01:42:26.500] Okay. [01:42:26.500 --> 01:42:29.500] That sounds more like it. [01:42:29.500 --> 01:42:36.500] I called a few weeks ago, I was the woman who got beat up by her husband. [01:42:36.500 --> 01:42:40.500] I think it was about three weeks ago. [01:42:40.500 --> 01:42:41.500] Okay. [01:42:41.500 --> 01:42:44.500] I do remember that, yes. [01:42:44.500 --> 01:42:46.500] And you have kids. [01:42:46.500 --> 01:42:48.500] Yes. [01:42:48.500 --> 01:42:50.500] The CPS issue is going well. [01:42:50.500 --> 01:42:51.500] They're leaving me alone. [01:42:51.500 --> 01:42:58.500] I did get a lawyer for that one, a really good lawyer and a really good consultant. [01:42:58.500 --> 01:43:10.500] So yesterday I had my hearing for my protective orders and temporary custody. [01:43:10.500 --> 01:43:19.500] I was told, I did it pro se, I'm told lawyers struggled to get what I got. [01:43:19.500 --> 01:43:23.500] I got temporary primary. [01:43:23.500 --> 01:43:29.500] He got supervised visits by his mom, six hours every Saturday. [01:43:29.500 --> 01:43:32.500] I did not get the protective order. [01:43:32.500 --> 01:43:36.500] I got disinjunctioned. [01:43:36.500 --> 01:43:41.500] He can't come. [01:43:41.500 --> 01:43:42.500] Okay, hang on. [01:43:42.500 --> 01:43:43.500] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:43:43.500 --> 01:43:44.500] Okay. [01:43:44.500 --> 01:43:52.500] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio, a call-in number, 512-646-1984. [01:43:52.500 --> 01:44:00.500] Hang on, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.500 --> 01:44:06.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.500 --> 01:44:11.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.500 --> 01:44:17.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.500 --> 01:44:22.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:22.500 --> 01:44:25.500] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.500 --> 01:44:31.500] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.500 --> 01:44:39.500] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.500 --> 01:44:47.500] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.500 --> 01:44:51.500] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. 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[01:46:21.500 --> 01:46:38.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:46:38.500 --> 01:46:53.500] From so many groups, the words get put on hold as we read [01:46:53.500 --> 01:47:06.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:47:06.500 --> 01:47:16.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:47:16.500 --> 01:47:26.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:47:26.500 --> 01:47:36.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:47:36.500 --> 01:47:46.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:47:46.500 --> 01:47:56.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:47:56.500 --> 01:48:06.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:48:06.500 --> 01:48:16.500] As we so, so shall we read [01:48:36.500 --> 01:48:41.500] We're talking to Grace in Texas. [01:48:41.500 --> 01:48:46.500] Okay, so, so far so good. [01:48:46.500 --> 01:48:49.500] You've got a restraining order. [01:48:49.500 --> 01:48:52.500] Well, I got injunction. [01:48:52.500 --> 01:48:55.500] So we're going to go 500 feet of me. [01:48:55.500 --> 01:48:59.500] It is, it has the effect of a restraining order. [01:48:59.500 --> 01:49:05.500] Yes, so it's basically here's a chance if you break it, then we'll get a protective order. [01:49:05.500 --> 01:49:07.500] And we'll give you one. [01:49:07.500 --> 01:49:08.500] But thank you guys so much. [01:49:08.500 --> 01:49:09.500] Y'all really encouraged me. [01:49:09.500 --> 01:49:10.500] Y'all gave me good advice. [01:49:10.500 --> 01:49:15.500] It was the right move to get a lawyer for CCS. [01:49:15.500 --> 01:49:20.500] Because I'm pretty much I'm fighting against three fronts here. [01:49:20.500 --> 01:49:23.500] Keep us appraised of what your lawyer does. [01:49:23.500 --> 01:49:26.500] Sometimes your lawyers get lazy. [01:49:26.500 --> 01:49:31.500] And if your lawyer works out really good, I'm going to want to talk to him. [01:49:31.500 --> 01:49:36.500] Okay, so tell him tell him that I do a radio show and legal reform. [01:49:36.500 --> 01:49:45.500] And that I have for a long time been looking for a lawyer that we can refer people to who do good work for for people. [01:49:45.500 --> 01:49:48.500] And I want to get the lawyer on there on the on the show. [01:49:48.500 --> 01:49:52.500] And I want him to help him build me some questionnaire tools. [01:49:52.500 --> 01:49:55.500] So if I can find a good lawyer, it would be wonderful. [01:49:55.500 --> 01:49:57.500] I know they're out there somewhere. [01:49:57.500 --> 01:50:05.500] His secret weapon is his consultant who started doing this on her own, fighting CCS on her own and got really good at it. [01:50:05.500 --> 01:50:08.500] And she does all the work. [01:50:08.500 --> 01:50:10.500] And he does. [01:50:10.500 --> 01:50:11.500] He uses her. [01:50:11.500 --> 01:50:14.500] He fills in when she needs him to. [01:50:14.500 --> 01:50:18.500] So yes. [01:50:18.500 --> 01:50:21.500] Ask her to talk to me. [01:50:21.500 --> 01:50:26.500] They've never lost the CCS case together. [01:50:26.500 --> 01:50:28.500] Wonderful. Wonderful. [01:50:28.500 --> 01:50:30.500] That's cool. [01:50:30.500 --> 01:50:31.500] How many people can say that? [01:50:31.500 --> 01:50:37.500] You know, I've been doing this show for 15 years and people come in and say, oh, do you have a lawyer? [01:50:37.500 --> 01:50:39.500] You know, you came in. Do you have a lawyer? [01:50:39.500 --> 01:50:42.500] And I had to say, no, I don't. [01:50:42.500 --> 01:50:48.500] And that's disturbing that I can't find a lawyer I can recommend and be comfortable with. [01:50:48.500 --> 01:50:55.500] If you have a lawyer I can recommend to be comfortable with, I would be more than pleased to send everybody to her. [01:50:55.500 --> 01:50:57.500] I'll send the email. [01:50:57.500 --> 01:50:59.500] Wonderful. [01:50:59.500 --> 01:51:10.500] He's the lawyer in the reviews that said the whole DA's team, you know, comes and watches him when he does criminal cases. [01:51:10.500 --> 01:51:13.500] Wait, say that again. [01:51:13.500 --> 01:51:21.500] When he does criminal cases, the DA's team, they all go and watch. [01:51:21.500 --> 01:51:23.500] Oh, I definitely want to talk to him. [01:51:23.500 --> 01:51:30.500] He's a really good one, expensive. [01:51:30.500 --> 01:51:33.500] But a lot of the other ones say they're good at it. [01:51:33.500 --> 01:51:36.500] And then they, I spoke to one. [01:51:36.500 --> 01:51:41.500] I just felt really uncomfortable, but it felt like a bait and switch. [01:51:41.500 --> 01:51:46.500] Because they told me that if it went to court, it would be 20 grand. [01:51:46.500 --> 01:51:48.500] And I don't want to go to court. [01:51:48.500 --> 01:51:53.500] I want to keep it out of court. [01:51:53.500 --> 01:51:56.500] We'll help you with that. [01:51:56.500 --> 01:52:01.500] Yeah, I think I'm in a good place right now. [01:52:01.500 --> 01:52:04.500] They're not even bothering me. [01:52:04.500 --> 01:52:15.500] The consultant, she's reached out to CPS and my caseworker hasn't even got back to her. [01:52:15.500 --> 01:52:20.500] She sent them the photos and documents she needed. [01:52:20.500 --> 01:52:23.500] So they just kind of put me on a back burner. [01:52:23.500 --> 01:52:30.500] And she said eventually it's going to pop back up when the supervisor reviews their cases. [01:52:30.500 --> 01:52:34.500] All right, so I'll move on. [01:52:34.500 --> 01:52:44.500] So I'm fighting on three fronts, criminal against my husband, juvenile, the CPS, and family court, the divorce and custody. [01:52:44.500 --> 01:52:48.500] So I guess kind of new with this. [01:52:48.500 --> 01:52:51.500] I realize that's good hearing. [01:52:51.500 --> 01:52:57.500] The judge decided to do completely different orders than what I brought. [01:52:57.500 --> 01:53:02.500] So I have to rewrite the temporary court orders. [01:53:02.500 --> 01:53:09.500] How long does one typically have to get those turned in? [01:53:09.500 --> 01:53:18.500] 30 days is kind of a rule of thumb, but if you're writing temporary orders for the judge to sign, [01:53:18.500 --> 01:53:25.500] there's no real set time that I know of, better sooner than later. [01:53:25.500 --> 01:53:32.500] And if you go on the Internet and look up this kind of order, you'll find it all over the Internet. [01:53:32.500 --> 01:53:44.500] And you can, I find better law using Google than I do using Google Scholar or Lexis or Westlaw or any of those. [01:53:44.500 --> 01:53:52.500] The reason being, lawyers get 50% of their business by referral. [01:53:52.500 --> 01:54:02.500] This lawyer has a probate issue, and someone's passed away and have this estate, [01:54:02.500 --> 01:54:08.500] and part of the people who are subject to the estate are in a divorce. [01:54:08.500 --> 01:54:11.500] So, oh my goodness, I don't do divorce. [01:54:11.500 --> 01:54:16.500] So he looks for a lawyer who does divorce that he can bring into the case. [01:54:16.500 --> 01:54:23.500] So when lawyers address new issues and get new case law, [01:54:23.500 --> 01:54:33.500] they put that case law and the story on their website in the form of a treatise on a specific subject [01:54:33.500 --> 01:54:39.500] so that other lawyers will, when they need this kind of knowledge, they'll find this lawyer. [01:54:39.500 --> 01:54:44.500] Now, he puts all these documents up there, and they don't use his documents. [01:54:44.500 --> 01:54:47.500] They look at his documents to see if he knows what he's doing, [01:54:47.500 --> 01:54:54.500] and then they call this lawyer and have him come in and address that part of the case. [01:54:54.500 --> 01:54:57.500] So that's how lawyers spread themselves around. [01:54:57.500 --> 01:55:03.500] Well, you go on the Internet and search for these issues, you'll find these lawyers' treatments. [01:55:03.500 --> 01:55:10.500] They don't just give you a case law. What they give you is a treatise. [01:55:10.500 --> 01:55:15.500] I just put into one of the motions I filed in Victoria County, [01:55:15.500 --> 01:55:25.500] I put in about 10 pages of a treatise on what it takes to get a summary judgment. [01:55:25.500 --> 01:55:32.500] All the case law, not just the case law, but the whole story of this is how it's done [01:55:32.500 --> 01:55:39.500] and these are the cases that define how it's done, he did all the work for me. [01:55:39.500 --> 01:55:44.500] I just find his website, and he's got all this stuff for me. [01:55:44.500 --> 01:55:53.500] Now I look up the cases, and the hardest part to do with legal research is finding the first case on point. [01:55:53.500 --> 01:56:00.500] I don't even do that anymore. I just search on the point. [01:56:00.500 --> 01:56:06.500] I put on there the issue, and I find all these lawyer sites that address that issue, [01:56:06.500 --> 01:56:09.500] and they give me all the case law. [01:56:09.500 --> 01:56:16.500] So case law research with the Internet is not anywhere near as difficult as it seems. [01:56:16.500 --> 01:56:22.500] About anything you need to address, you can find it just by Google search. [01:56:22.500 --> 01:56:25.500] Okay. All right. [01:56:25.500 --> 01:56:33.500] I did learn about Westlaw resources at the local law library, [01:56:33.500 --> 01:56:37.500] and I started familiarizing myself with that. [01:56:37.500 --> 01:56:43.500] The problem I have with Westlaw and Lexis is they all do keyword search. [01:56:43.500 --> 01:56:51.500] Keyword search, they look for keywords or key phrases in a document. [01:56:51.500 --> 01:56:56.500] Well, they will give you thousands of hits. [01:56:56.500 --> 01:56:59.500] Well, that's not helpful. [01:56:59.500 --> 01:57:03.500] Westlaw ruined the practice of law. [01:57:03.500 --> 01:57:09.500] Westlaw first came about in the late 70s, and they told all these lawyers, [01:57:09.500 --> 01:57:13.500] you don't have to waste your time digging through all of these legal encyclopedias, [01:57:13.500 --> 01:57:16.500] looking up these keywords in these encyclopedias. [01:57:16.500 --> 01:57:21.500] You can use our online tool, and instead of finding one or two cases on point, [01:57:21.500 --> 01:57:25.500] you can use our tool and find 10,000. [01:57:25.500 --> 01:57:32.500] So it used to be that all the lawyers used pretty much a set group of cases. [01:57:32.500 --> 01:57:40.500] For any one issue, the encyclopedias would have 10 or 15 cases that everybody used. [01:57:40.500 --> 01:57:44.500] But when Westlaw came out, when you could put a keyword in [01:57:44.500 --> 01:57:52.500] and search the entire database for that keyword, you wound up getting 10,000 cases. [01:57:52.500 --> 01:57:56.500] Some of them were on point, some of them were not. [01:57:56.500 --> 01:58:03.500] So before that, when they used the encyclopedias, everybody used pretty much the same cases. [01:58:03.500 --> 01:58:10.500] I talked to a second-in-command North Carolina state bar about this issue [01:58:10.500 --> 01:58:15.500] and asked her, generally, how many cases do you have to go through as a rule [01:58:15.500 --> 01:58:17.500] to find the first case on point? [01:58:17.500 --> 01:58:21.500] She said what every other lawyer did, 50 to 100. [01:58:21.500 --> 01:58:28.500] Now, they don't have to read the whole case, just the key points to see if they find a point that fits theirs. [01:58:28.500 --> 01:58:36.500] I said, have you ever filed a motion or pleading, no matter how much research you have done on it, [01:58:36.500 --> 01:58:42.500] that you were comfortable that that jacked leg on the other side didn't find some case law you missed [01:58:42.500 --> 01:58:45.500] and is going to wipe the floor with you? [01:58:45.500 --> 01:58:50.500] And she said the same thing every other lawyer did, never. [01:58:50.500 --> 01:58:53.500] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:58:53.500 --> 01:58:58.500] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.500 --> 01:59:01.500] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:01.500 --> 01:59:06.500] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [01:59:06.500 --> 01:59:09.500] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:09.500 --> 01:59:13.500] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:13.500 --> 01:59:18.500] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.500 --> 01:59:22.500] The heartfelt and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [01:59:22.500 --> 01:59:28.500] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.500 --> 01:59:33.500] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.500 --> 01:59:43.500] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:43.500 --> 01:59:47.500] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.500 --> 01:59:50.500] That's freestudybible.com. [01:59:50.500 --> 02:00:18.500] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com.