[00:00.000 --> 00:05.800] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.800 --> 00:09.480] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.480 --> 00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.920 --> 00:14.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.880 --> 00:16.980] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.980 --> 00:18.580] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.580 --> 00:22.180] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.180 --> 00:26.940] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.940 --> 00:32.120] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.120 --> 00:33.120] Privacy. [00:33.120 --> 00:34.720] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.720 --> 00:39.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.000 --> 00:42.540] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.540 --> 00:44.960] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.960 --> 00:46.600] Spar. [00:46.600 --> 00:47.820] It's what fighters do. [00:47.820 --> 00:51.280] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.280 --> 00:54.480] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.480 --> 00:56.560] S-P-A-R with an extra P. [00:56.560 --> 01:02.920] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:02.920 --> 01:06.960] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:06.960 --> 01:08.520] assembly, and religion. [01:08.520 --> 01:10.880] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.880 --> 01:14.600] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.600 --> 01:18.120] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.120 --> 01:20.720] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.720 --> 01:22.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.720 --> 01:31.080] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.080 --> 01:34.760] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.760 --> 01:38.200] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.200 --> 01:39.680] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.680 --> 01:43.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.600 --> 01:46.720] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.720 --> 01:48.320] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.320 --> 01:51.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.920 --> 01:56.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.680 --> 02:01.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.840 --> 02:04.440] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.440 --> 02:08.740] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.740 --> 02:12.280] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.280 --> 02:14.400] Start over with StartPage. [02:14.400 --> 02:20.220] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.220 --> 02:22.280] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.280 --> 02:26.760] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.760 --> 02:30.640] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.640 --> 02:31.640] Get it? [02:31.640 --> 02:32.640] Two arms? [02:32.640 --> 02:33.640] Bear hug? [02:33.640 --> 02:34.640] Bear arms? [02:34.640 --> 02:37.680] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.680 --> 02:38.680] when he said, [02:38.680 --> 02:43.720] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.720 --> 02:48.800] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which historically [02:48.800 --> 02:50.560] has proved to always be possible. [02:50.560 --> 02:52.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.480 --> 03:21.320] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:22.860 --> 03:47.640] the right to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, one more safeguard [03:47.640 --> 03:49.040] against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which actually has proved [03:49.040 --> 03:50.040] to always be possible. [03:50.040 --> 03:51.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [03:51.040 --> 03:52.040] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:52.040 --> 04:02.800] He never tells me the year. [04:02.800 --> 04:09.360] Brett always tells me the date and day of the week, but he never tells me the year. [04:09.360 --> 04:11.880] Oh well. [04:11.880 --> 04:12.880] I got this. [04:12.880 --> 04:20.040] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the first day of September [04:20.040 --> 04:26.080] 2022, and I have an issue. [04:26.080 --> 04:36.320] We had about 30 people on this hearing that I had in Victoria County. [04:36.320 --> 04:44.080] It's kind of complex, but it turned into something that may be a first blush issue, [04:44.080 --> 04:49.760] because it created an unexpected conundrum. [04:49.760 --> 04:59.640] The judge in the case sent me a document through the clerk that said that he had filed a motion [04:59.640 --> 05:06.800] to recuse and granted it to his ponte, and recused himself. [05:06.800 --> 05:10.120] I said, is that a fact, Jack? [05:10.120 --> 05:14.800] I said, how in the heck did you do that? [05:14.800 --> 05:20.320] We get in front of this appointed judge, and he tries to start the hearing, and I objected. [05:20.320 --> 05:24.880] I said, I have something that needs to be heard before this subject matter jurisdiction [05:24.880 --> 05:27.880] challenge. [05:27.880 --> 05:38.800] My issue was that the trial judge claimed to have recused himself, claimed in his order [05:38.800 --> 05:46.480] that he filed a motion to recuse, and then granted the motion to his ponte. [05:46.480 --> 05:47.480] I objected. [05:47.480 --> 05:55.320] I didn't see any such motion, and I have a right to object to that motion under 18A paragraph [05:55.320 --> 05:56.320] C. [05:56.320 --> 06:01.280] Yeah, but he never did file a motion or serve it to you, anyway. [06:01.280 --> 06:02.880] I looked in the record. [06:02.880 --> 06:07.640] There's no evidence of a motion ever being filed. [06:07.640 --> 06:16.240] So this judge never recused himself, and the judge that was appointed by the head administrative [06:16.240 --> 06:20.000] judge of the district said, well, Mr. Kelton, do you want me to rule on that? [06:20.000 --> 06:26.040] Well, first he said, Mr. Kelton, do you object to my appointment? [06:26.040 --> 06:29.640] And I told him, we haven't got to that yet. [06:29.640 --> 06:39.080] First, we have this issue of the judge attempting to recuse himself improperly. [06:39.080 --> 06:41.600] I think this visiting judge liked it, actually. [06:41.600 --> 06:49.480] I think he enjoyed himself while he was being handed this really fine point. [06:49.480 --> 06:55.720] I got that impression, and I've gotten that impression from judges before. [06:55.720 --> 07:03.320] When you come in there and ask them a really hard question, I kind of bumped him around [07:03.320 --> 07:06.720] a little bit, and he took it really well. [07:06.720 --> 07:15.720] When the hearing started, he said there are a number of people listening on the Zoom call, [07:15.720 --> 07:19.640] and if no one has any objections, I'll bring them on. [07:19.640 --> 07:20.640] Yeah, 36. [07:20.640 --> 07:28.320] Yeah, 36 of them, opposing counsel said, well, no, Your Honor, I don't have any objection. [07:28.320 --> 07:34.160] And I said, no, Your Honor, I don't either, and if you don't bring them all on, I'll consider [07:34.160 --> 07:36.280] that a criminal act. [07:36.280 --> 07:41.800] Well, he just stepped right past that and went on and said, well, then I'll bring them [07:41.800 --> 07:42.800] all in. [07:42.800 --> 07:47.560] And he directed the clerk to bring them in, and I commented to the judge, it wasn't trying [07:47.560 --> 07:56.380] to be difficult, that's just what I do, and he smiled at me and just went on. [07:56.380 --> 08:02.400] And then he tried to start the hearing, and I objected because of the recusal of the judge [08:02.400 --> 08:07.500] without filing a motion, or he claimed he did, and it just occurred to me, I should [08:07.500 --> 08:14.880] charge the judge with tampering with the government document, because in his order, [08:14.880 --> 08:20.760] he claimed that he filed a recusal motion, but he did no such thing. [08:20.760 --> 08:28.360] Well, as far as you know, he filed it, but then when you went to ask for it, it got concealed. [08:28.360 --> 08:33.560] Well, that's the language of the offense, it's concealed. [08:33.560 --> 08:42.400] If I can't see it in the record, it's not in the record, as far as I'm concerned. [08:42.400 --> 08:48.800] If they've got some way of sealing a motion to recuse, I'd certainly like to see that, [08:48.800 --> 08:52.200] but never seen or heard of such a thing. [08:52.200 --> 08:56.280] I think this may be a first blush issue. [08:56.280 --> 08:59.960] And so the judge was kind of on the spot, well, Mr. Kelton, do you want me to rule on [08:59.960 --> 09:00.960] this? [09:00.960 --> 09:08.800] I said, well, I don't care what you do, I just don't want you in here at all yet, we [09:08.800 --> 09:10.920] haven't gotten to you. [09:10.920 --> 09:17.640] We have this issue of this motion before the court, objecting to the recusal. [09:17.640 --> 09:20.520] And he didn't seem to know how to handle it. [09:20.520 --> 09:30.560] So the other opposing side objected to my, well, I told him that I needed to find a way [09:30.560 --> 09:31.880] to get a ruling on this. [09:31.880 --> 09:33.760] Well, then you want me to make a ruling? [09:33.760 --> 09:36.560] No, I don't really want you to make a ruling. [09:36.560 --> 09:38.640] I need this handled. [09:38.640 --> 09:42.820] And the judge decided that he would go ahead and recuse himself. [09:42.820 --> 09:48.640] And opposing counsel objected and said that he didn't, by Mr. Kelton's own admission, [09:48.640 --> 09:53.120] he didn't file this within seven days before the hearing. [09:53.120 --> 09:54.680] And the judge told him, well, there's- [09:54.680 --> 09:55.680] What hearing? [09:55.680 --> 09:56.680] Yeah. [09:56.680 --> 09:59.880] Why do you repeat that? [09:59.880 --> 10:05.680] This case law that says that as long as he gets his motion in before any evidence has [10:05.680 --> 10:08.480] been presented to the court. [10:08.480 --> 10:11.600] And I'm going to grant his motion to recuse. [10:11.600 --> 10:17.040] And then that's when opposing counsel's boss just couldn't help himself. [10:17.040 --> 10:18.720] He'd be sitting over there. [10:18.720 --> 10:24.340] I'm jerking the judge around and I'm controlling the hearing. [10:24.340 --> 10:30.700] And he's big time learned in counsel and he's got his newbie lawyer there. [10:30.700 --> 10:38.960] And I'm kind of overshadowing his newbie lawyer and he felt like he had to establish their [10:38.960 --> 10:42.080] standing or posture or something. [10:42.080 --> 10:48.400] But he butted into the hearing to give me legal advice. [10:48.400 --> 10:55.440] And I was really appreciative of that unrequested legal advice. [10:55.440 --> 10:56.440] I'm sure you were. [10:56.440 --> 10:59.980] You probably had a bar grievance ready to go and just didn't know whose name to stick [10:59.980 --> 11:00.980] on it yet. [11:00.980 --> 11:05.080] Yes, I did. [11:05.080 --> 11:10.640] He gave me legal advice, but it was really bad legal advice. [11:10.640 --> 11:18.800] He warned me that I only had one strike and I could not do another one. [11:18.800 --> 11:21.560] That's not exactly true. [11:21.560 --> 11:25.300] I have one strike without cause. [11:25.300 --> 11:28.400] The first judge that's appointed, I can just object to him. [11:28.400 --> 11:34.520] And I told the judge that my concern with you is you're a retired judge. [11:34.520 --> 11:38.960] So you can be brought in here to rule against me out of hand at every turn and I'm screwed. [11:38.960 --> 11:44.600] I have no recourse as you're not answerable to the electorate. [11:44.600 --> 11:47.720] I could certainly file a judicial conduct complaint because that wouldn't do any good [11:47.720 --> 11:52.440] because you're not elected judge anymore so you wouldn't care. [11:52.440 --> 11:56.960] And he kind of smiled at that one. [11:56.960 --> 12:02.440] The other side told me that I only had one strike and I went, well, that's not true. [12:02.440 --> 12:05.720] I have one free strike. [12:05.720 --> 12:11.440] I have all the strikes I want for cause. [12:11.440 --> 12:16.120] And now they've appointed another judge and we're going to have a little back and forth [12:16.120 --> 12:21.880] when he gets on because the order from head administrative judge of the district, I should [12:21.880 --> 12:31.600] have got that in front of me, said that this guy was some kind of head administrative judge [12:31.600 --> 12:35.200] of the 156th judicial district. [12:35.200 --> 12:39.000] Now I don't know what that meant. [12:39.000 --> 12:45.860] I didn't know judicial districts had head administrative judge, but I looked him up [12:45.860 --> 12:48.040] anyway in the 156th district. [12:48.040 --> 12:54.520] Well, his name was listed there, but it was listed as a former judge. [12:54.520 --> 12:59.600] Well, that's interesting. [12:59.600 --> 13:06.600] So when I get before the court next time with this second judge that's been appointed, [13:06.600 --> 13:10.440] I'm going to have a question for him. [13:10.440 --> 13:24.520] So judge, are you currently an elected judge in the state of Texas answerable to the electorate? [13:24.520 --> 13:32.040] And if he says no, he's a retired judge, then who lied to me? [13:32.040 --> 13:35.600] Did you lie to the head administrative judge of the district and tell him that you were [13:35.600 --> 13:41.440] a head administrative judge of the 156th judicial district? [13:41.440 --> 13:46.800] Or did the head administrative judge of the district lie to me when he put that statement [13:46.800 --> 13:51.000] in his order? [13:51.000 --> 13:53.000] That shouldn't get interesting. [13:53.000 --> 13:59.360] Do you see some black robes squirming around? [13:59.360 --> 14:03.960] If you lied to the head administrative judge of the district, that's a criminal act. [14:03.960 --> 14:06.440] And that would be sufficient to disqualify you. [14:06.440 --> 14:10.400] If the head administrative judge of the district lied to me, that's tampering with the government [14:10.400 --> 14:12.720] document. [14:12.720 --> 14:19.760] And that'll make this document false and fraudulent, in which case you have no standing. [14:19.760 --> 14:26.800] Well, I still think that right now the only place that this belongs is going to the admin [14:26.800 --> 14:27.800] judge. [14:27.800 --> 14:32.800] The admin judge is the one that handles when everything's kind of in limbo. [14:32.800 --> 14:37.080] But we're still, I'm saying we're still in court. [14:37.080 --> 14:42.200] Yes, you are, and you need the admin judge to weigh in on that. [14:42.200 --> 14:46.760] The only one who has standing to make a ruling in this case, as far as I'm concerned, is [14:46.760 --> 14:48.080] the elected trial judge. [14:48.080 --> 14:50.240] Yes, but he's trying to step down. [14:50.240 --> 14:53.640] So you've got to get the admin judge in there to slap him around. [14:53.640 --> 14:55.520] There's a tattletale clause. [14:55.520 --> 14:59.080] Look in that 18A, there's a tattletale clause. [14:59.080 --> 15:05.000] You get to go, if he fails to comply with this rule, which obviously he did, then there's [15:05.000 --> 15:08.960] a subsection F, subsection three is your tattletale. [15:08.960 --> 15:15.120] You can go to that admin judge and go, well, well, well, this judge over here didn't follow [15:15.120 --> 15:18.200] the rule about recusal. [15:18.200 --> 15:25.160] And then the presiding regional judge will step in and do something about that. [15:25.160 --> 15:29.880] That's what I get for not reading the whole 18A thing. [15:29.880 --> 15:30.880] Okay. [15:30.880 --> 15:32.880] That's, that's my answer. [15:32.880 --> 15:33.880] Yeah. [15:33.880 --> 15:34.880] F3. [15:34.880 --> 15:36.640] I'll look at that. [15:36.640 --> 15:41.240] And that's what I took all the way to the Supreme with that one, because they weren't [15:41.240 --> 15:48.640] following the rules and they kept trying to fudge and I kept going and tattling. [15:48.640 --> 15:52.320] So yeah, it works. [15:52.320 --> 15:56.000] That should get interesting. [15:56.000 --> 15:59.120] I don't think anybody's ever raised this issue before. [15:59.120 --> 16:03.660] So this would be something I'll take all the way to the Supreme. [16:03.660 --> 16:13.000] And taking this minor issue to the Supreme, I'll do it on Judge Whitaker's dime. [16:13.000 --> 16:19.280] And they haven't even thought about merits yet. [16:19.280 --> 16:25.280] We didn't even get to the case yet. [16:25.280 --> 16:32.160] By the time we get there, I'll probably have a couple more, cause they just cannot do it [16:32.160 --> 16:33.160] right. [16:33.160 --> 16:34.160] Yeah. [16:34.160 --> 16:39.000] Anybody else want to come and stick your head in this vice? [16:39.000 --> 16:45.800] So I'm hoping they put pressure on these lawyers to make me a deal that I can't pass up and [16:45.800 --> 16:49.360] then I can go on to more interesting stuff. [16:49.360 --> 16:54.160] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, I'm turning the call lines on. [16:54.160 --> 17:00.280] So if you have a question or a comment, give us a call, 512-646-1984. [17:00.280 --> 17:05.600] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.600 --> 17:09.120] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.120 --> 17:13.400] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [17:13.400 --> 17:14.400] can win too. [17:14.400 --> 17:19.200] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.200 --> 17:25.080] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [17:25.080 --> 17:29.600] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.600 --> 17:33.800] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.800 --> 17:38.920] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.920 --> 17:41.080] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.080 --> 17:46.600] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.600 --> 17:49.520] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.520 --> 17:58.600] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.600 --> 18:01.480] collectors now. [18:01.480 --> 18:05.880] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:05.880 --> 18:06.880] Word? [18:06.880 --> 18:12.000] Tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [18:12.000 --> 18:18.400] Talk where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:18.400 --> 18:22.920] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [18:22.920 --> 18:25.320] dividing the word of truth. [18:25.320 --> 18:29.320] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we'll go verse [18:29.320 --> 18:32.640] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.640 --> 18:37.300] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.300 --> 18:39.680] and Christian character development. [18:39.680 --> 18:44.200] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.200 --> 18:48.520] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.520 --> 18:50.780] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.780 --> 18:57.440] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.440 --> 19:12.840] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:12.840 --> 19:36.120] Look what we've got, we asked the Christians, they don't have the answers, we asked the [19:36.120 --> 19:47.040] Christians, look what we've got, they don't have the answers, let's hope and slip inside. [19:47.040 --> 19:53.800] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Carlson, we're at Fountain Rouge Radio on this, the first [19:53.800 --> 20:01.040] day of September, 2022, and we're going to EJ in California. [20:01.040 --> 20:04.080] EJ, what are you up to today? [20:04.080 --> 20:10.040] Hi, okay, so I have a lot of things going on. [20:10.040 --> 20:21.720] The first thing is I thought my matter for the ticket that I got and also a refusal to [20:21.720 --> 20:29.240] ID was in the past, but it came back to haunt. [20:29.240 --> 20:39.400] The cop actually filed a complaint with the DMV saying that I refused to show the ID, [20:39.400 --> 20:45.960] proof of insurance, blah, blah, blah, but he never asked for my insurance, so he lied. [20:45.960 --> 20:52.000] And even the intersection where I was at is incorrect. [20:52.000 --> 21:06.280] So when he filed the complaint to the DMV, the DMV flagged my account and asked for a [21:06.280 --> 21:28.440] medical, what, psychological and physical medical review of me. [21:28.440 --> 21:33.320] The presumption is if you stand up for your rights, you must be insane. [21:33.320 --> 21:36.320] I love it. [21:36.320 --> 21:37.320] Join the club. [21:37.320 --> 21:38.320] Join the club. [21:38.320 --> 21:39.320] Yeah, I join. [21:39.320 --> 21:40.320] We all cray-cray. [21:40.320 --> 21:41.320] We all what? [21:41.320 --> 21:42.320] What did you do? [21:42.320 --> 21:56.240] So I'm in the club now, you know, my life is still suspended, so I went to, it's called [21:56.240 --> 21:57.240] driver safety. [21:57.240 --> 22:00.800] It's a different branch than the DMV. [22:00.800 --> 22:07.640] So I go in person, I say, okay, well, you suspended my license. [22:07.640 --> 22:08.640] Why? [22:08.640 --> 22:09.640] And then they give me all this paperwork. [22:09.640 --> 22:17.400] I finally got the police statement saying that I should be evaluated on a regular basis. [22:17.400 --> 22:20.920] Okay, on a regular basis. [22:20.920 --> 22:25.200] I have no accident for five years. [22:25.200 --> 22:28.800] I have no points on my record for five years. [22:28.800 --> 22:31.880] Wait, let's back up. [22:31.880 --> 22:38.240] AJ, you've got no order from a judge saying that you need one of these mental evaluations. [22:38.240 --> 22:41.080] You've got no kind of order. [22:41.080 --> 22:46.480] If there were an order, then you would maybe need to be concerned about opposing that, [22:46.480 --> 22:47.480] right? [22:47.480 --> 22:50.960] But there's not one. [22:50.960 --> 22:52.680] So don't worry about that. [22:52.680 --> 22:57.840] Instead, go to the place where somebody is saying that you failed to cooperate with it [22:57.840 --> 23:04.240] or whatever, DMV, somebody's lying about it, saying that you didn't do what you needed [23:04.240 --> 23:06.480] to about some psyche valve. [23:06.480 --> 23:11.920] Well, tackle that lie instead of trying to argue about whether or not you really needed [23:11.920 --> 23:12.920] one. [23:12.920 --> 23:13.920] You know what I mean? [23:13.920 --> 23:14.920] Oh, okay. [23:14.920 --> 23:15.920] Yeah. [23:15.920 --> 23:18.120] I mean, they did send me the paperwork. [23:18.120 --> 23:24.000] I think we had this conversation a long, long time ago, and I did have my doctor sign off [23:24.000 --> 23:25.880] saying that I'm cleared. [23:25.880 --> 23:28.500] I'm cleared to drive with no restrictions. [23:28.500 --> 23:31.080] That was the one letter that he sent. [23:31.080 --> 23:35.560] And I just checked off, no, no, no, no, didn't go into the eyesight, didn't go into the other [23:35.560 --> 23:36.560] paperwork. [23:36.560 --> 23:44.440] So I did fill out the front page and a doctor's note, but still that wasn't good enough for [23:44.440 --> 23:45.440] them. [23:45.440 --> 23:49.880] They said, I need the whole thing filled out. [23:49.880 --> 23:52.240] Wait, who's them? [23:52.240 --> 23:56.080] She told me there's no judicial order requiring anything. [23:56.080 --> 23:57.080] So who's them? [23:57.080 --> 24:00.080] What do you mean not good enough for them? [24:00.080 --> 24:03.440] DMV, the state. [24:03.440 --> 24:09.520] DMV doesn't get to say that require everybody have mental... [24:09.520 --> 24:15.080] What statute rule or regulation requires this and under what conditions? [24:15.080 --> 24:18.080] Oh, she's in California. [24:18.080 --> 24:20.520] I got it. [24:20.520 --> 24:24.440] You do make a point there. [24:24.440 --> 24:30.160] It's out of false accusations again, just because I heard his small ego. [24:30.160 --> 24:31.160] I won both... [24:31.160 --> 24:39.480] I beat the refusal, so I have that backing, but I did talk to another friend of mine and [24:39.480 --> 24:48.480] he said, usually those just go to DUI, an accident, but you haven't either. [24:48.480 --> 24:52.240] So have you heard of this writ of mandate? [24:52.240 --> 24:59.080] I have to go through a procedure writ of mandate to stay the proceeding, to stop the suspension. [24:59.080 --> 25:08.600] I found out from him, then I have to go through a proceeding in that direction, or what do [25:08.600 --> 25:09.600] you recommend? [25:09.600 --> 25:13.360] Do I need to attack it by writing to the DMV head? [25:13.360 --> 25:21.240] Wait a minute, we don't know what rules, regulations or practices or procedures they purport to [25:21.240 --> 25:27.880] be following, so we don't know what authority or import they can have. [25:27.880 --> 25:30.040] You don't know what you're fighting yet. [25:30.040 --> 25:32.960] Okay, got it. [25:32.960 --> 25:36.720] Where the heck did they come up with this? [25:36.720 --> 25:41.840] Under what circumstances can they require this? [25:41.840 --> 25:46.840] And under what authority are you required to respond to them? [25:46.840 --> 25:53.280] We don't know what we're talking about here. [25:53.280 --> 25:59.520] They're doing some stuff, but we don't know if they can do that or not. [25:59.520 --> 26:02.920] It could well have made this all up. [26:02.920 --> 26:04.560] Yeah. [26:04.560 --> 26:12.120] Unfortunately, I started to respond to them, you know. [26:12.120 --> 26:13.120] That's okay. [26:13.120 --> 26:14.120] You can stop anytime. [26:14.120 --> 26:15.120] Yeah. [26:15.120 --> 26:16.120] Okay, great. [26:16.120 --> 26:24.840] But you're right, Randy, I need to read up on the statutes and see what authority, you [26:24.840 --> 26:32.840] know, what authority do you have to get all my mental evaluation, physical evaluation, [26:32.840 --> 26:33.840] you know. [26:33.840 --> 26:36.200] So that they canceled my insurance. [26:36.200 --> 26:43.120] The insurance guy told me, well, those things are for people who failed their tests. [26:43.120 --> 26:48.280] I guess I don't need to go in that direction, but, you know, it's kind of serious affecting [26:48.280 --> 26:50.800] my life, you know, my livelihood. [26:50.800 --> 26:53.480] I can't really talk about that. [26:53.480 --> 27:01.320] Well, who's going to hire you if you're wacko? [27:01.320 --> 27:07.720] If the state thinks you're wacko, everybody else should believe that. [27:07.720 --> 27:11.240] That sure sounds like defamation to me. [27:11.240 --> 27:12.240] Defamation. [27:12.240 --> 27:13.240] Yeah. [27:13.240 --> 27:20.960] Do you think I should write up a claim, a claim letter against this? [27:20.960 --> 27:23.720] No, no, no, no, not yet. [27:23.720 --> 27:25.800] Oh, okay, not yet. [27:25.800 --> 27:26.800] Yeah. [27:26.800 --> 27:28.600] You don't know what to write yet. [27:28.600 --> 27:35.840] First, you need to drag their codes out and read them, study them, know their code better [27:35.840 --> 27:36.840] than they do. [27:36.840 --> 27:38.840] Then go in there and set them up. [27:38.840 --> 27:46.400] You know, I'm in a suit now where I went into JP's office and set him up, played him like [27:46.400 --> 27:48.920] a cheap fiddle. [27:48.920 --> 27:53.200] I asked him to do something I knew he wouldn't do and he knew that he didn't know the underlying [27:53.200 --> 27:54.440] law. [27:54.440 --> 27:59.640] That's the position you want to be in before you go in, you know, step in the front door. [27:59.640 --> 28:00.640] Okay. [28:00.640 --> 28:06.520] So read those codes. [28:06.520 --> 28:13.600] Find out from them what they're relying on and I can assure you they'll be wrong. [28:13.600 --> 28:15.680] They work at it. [28:15.680 --> 28:18.880] They go to great trouble to be wrong. [28:18.880 --> 28:21.800] I don't know why they do that. [28:21.800 --> 28:30.760] But there's something about following law seems to be absolutely repugnant to these guys. [28:30.760 --> 28:32.200] So set them up. [28:32.200 --> 28:35.840] Think in terms, how can I sue them? [28:35.840 --> 28:37.840] Okay. [28:37.840 --> 28:45.440] Look at how you want to sue them and what are the elements of the causes of action or [28:45.440 --> 28:54.360] torch that you want to bring and walk them through all the elements. [28:54.360 --> 28:59.920] When you get done and when you file a suit against them, just like this judge, this judge [28:59.920 --> 29:06.040] knows for certain that I set him up when I walked in the door. [29:06.040 --> 29:10.520] If we're going to get them to change their behavior, this is how we're going to do it. [29:10.520 --> 29:11.520] Okay. [29:11.520 --> 29:19.640] You're in a good position. [29:19.640 --> 29:23.680] So go read all the codes. [29:23.680 --> 29:26.920] Find out first what they're relying on and then read those and see if you can find some [29:26.920 --> 29:34.200] case law on it because I guarantee you they don't. [29:34.200 --> 29:43.280] This hearing I had last week or so, nobody knew what was going on. [29:43.280 --> 29:48.760] They had read their own codes and the judge absolutely knew I knew his codes better than [29:48.760 --> 29:52.920] he did and he wasn't getting into that. [29:52.920 --> 29:54.600] He ducked out of it quickly. [29:54.600 --> 29:55.920] This is what you want. [29:55.920 --> 29:56.920] Hang on. [29:56.920 --> 29:57.920] Go into our sponsors. [29:57.920 --> 30:01.960] We'll be right back. [30:01.960 --> 30:06.280] Companies ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, but [30:06.280 --> 30:11.200] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.200 --> 30:16.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.000 --> 30:17.600] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.600 --> 30:21.980] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:21.980 --> 30:25.960] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.960 --> 30:27.400] So protect your rights. [30:27.400 --> 30:31.560] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.560 --> 30:33.720] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.720 --> 30:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.000 --> 30:41.560] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.560 --> 30:45.240] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.240 --> 30:50.000] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.000 --> 30:54.440] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.440 --> 30:55.880] It's not an idle question. [30:55.880 --> 31:01.520] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security was breached [31:01.520 --> 31:03.560] by hackers in the last year. [31:03.560 --> 31:07.320] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.320 --> 31:12.040] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.040 --> 31:15.440] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.440 --> 31:16.440] to see. [31:16.440 --> 31:17.640] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.640 --> 31:21.000] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.000 --> 31:23.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.040 --> 31:25.760] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:25.760 --> 31:31.840] I lost my son. [31:31.840 --> 31:32.840] My nephew. [31:32.840 --> 31:33.840] My uncle. [31:33.840 --> 31:34.840] My son. [31:34.840 --> 31:35.840] On September 11th, 2001. [31:35.840 --> 31:39.160] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:39.160 --> 31:43.280] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.280 --> 31:49.120] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.120 --> 31:52.840] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.840 --> 31:54.360] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.360 --> 31:55.360] My uncle. [31:55.360 --> 31:56.360] My nephew. [31:56.360 --> 31:57.360] My son. [31:57.360 --> 31:58.360] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:58.360 --> 31:59.360] Why it fell. [31:59.360 --> 32:00.360] Why it matters. [32:00.360 --> 32:01.360] And what you can do. [32:01.360 --> 32:05.400] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.400 --> 32:09.240] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [32:09.240 --> 32:12.880] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.880 --> 32:16.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.400 --> 32:20.120] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.120 --> 32:24.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.280 --> 32:25.560] our rights through due process. [32:25.560 --> 32:29.640] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.640 --> 32:33.400] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.400 --> 32:35.800] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.800 --> 32:39.800] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.800 --> 32:41.120] ordering your copy today. [32:41.120 --> 32:44.480] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.480 --> 32:48.880] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.880 --> 32:51.200] documents and other useful resource material. [32:51.200 --> 32:54.480] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.480 --> 33:01.240] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:01.240 --> 33:06.480] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:06.480 --> 33:21.880] Yeah, Mr. Officer, you're taking the law in the hand, won't you follow the law of the [33:21.880 --> 33:22.880] land? [33:22.880 --> 33:23.880] I don't understand. [33:23.880 --> 33:24.880] Your job is to protect and preserve, not beat and abuse, officer? [33:24.880 --> 33:25.880] When you gonna stop abuse? [33:25.880 --> 33:50.880] Your power, when you gonna stop abuse, your power, when you gonna stop abuse, your power, [33:50.880 --> 33:56.880] when you gonna stop abuse, your power. [33:56.880 --> 34:01.880] So please Mr. McClan, teach officers not to abuse their power. [34:01.880 --> 34:07.880] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers. [34:07.880 --> 34:12.880] Tell them to uphold the law and please don't abuse their power. [34:12.880 --> 34:18.880] They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they lie every hour. [34:18.880 --> 34:23.880] Mr. Officer, please stop abusing your power. [34:23.880 --> 34:29.880] You pulled me over and tell me to be silent, sir. [34:29.880 --> 34:32.880] I need to speak to my lawyer. [34:32.880 --> 34:37.880] Mr. Officer, you're acting like you're no judge. [34:37.880 --> 34:40.880] You're finding me guilty, sir. [34:40.880 --> 34:43.880] Okay, we are back. [34:43.880 --> 34:48.880] We're back again to Kelton Brett Fountain Rouge Law Radio and we're finishing up with [34:48.880 --> 34:49.880] EJ. [34:49.880 --> 34:52.880] EJ, do you have anything else for us? [34:52.880 --> 34:54.880] Secondly, yes. [34:54.880 --> 35:01.880] One last thing is I have another hearing coming up for the Park Rangers and I called the clerk's [35:01.880 --> 35:07.880] office and they said that they couldn't find anything under my name nor my birthday. [35:07.880 --> 35:15.880] So they said keep checking to see if the DA or whatever, cuz it's supposed to be September [35:15.880 --> 35:21.880] the 12th, but it's still not on the docket or calendared. [35:21.880 --> 35:26.880] And the court clerk doesn't even have something with your name on it? [35:26.880 --> 35:29.880] No, I called them. [35:29.880 --> 35:36.880] I didn't go in person yet, but I'm thinking about going the day before the hearing date. [35:36.880 --> 35:39.880] I have the ticket in front of me. [35:39.880 --> 35:41.880] And you're not hallucinating or anything. [35:41.880 --> 35:44.880] You might need some mental checkup on that. [35:44.880 --> 35:47.880] I mean, just kidding. [35:47.880 --> 35:53.880] I'm like, no. [35:53.880 --> 36:00.880] That's weird that they gave you a date and then they don't even seem to know about it. [36:00.880 --> 36:04.880] Yeah, and there's several courthouses over there. [36:04.880 --> 36:06.880] It's a different county. [36:06.880 --> 36:13.880] So how about going the day before the hearing and just checking up on the calendar? [36:13.880 --> 36:16.880] If it's not calendared, do I just ask them? [36:16.880 --> 36:19.880] Can you just write down on it? [36:19.880 --> 36:24.880] Do you have some kind of notice to be there at that time? [36:24.880 --> 36:29.880] Yes, I have a ticket here, notice to appear ticket. [36:29.880 --> 36:36.880] And if you have something ordering you to be there at that time and you go there at that time [36:36.880 --> 36:42.880] and there's nobody there, you need to bill them for your time. [36:42.880 --> 36:44.880] Oh, wow. [36:44.880 --> 36:48.880] That is outside scope. [36:48.880 --> 36:54.880] They don't have authority to order you to appear at a non-existent hearing. [36:54.880 --> 36:59.880] And the judge has a duty to control his calendar. [36:59.880 --> 37:02.880] That was one thing in New York. [37:02.880 --> 37:10.880] We had a guy file a complaint against the judge for calling hearings and not being ready. [37:10.880 --> 37:15.880] And they actually sanctioned the judge when he filed a judicial complaint [37:15.880 --> 37:19.880] for failure to maintain his calendar. [37:19.880 --> 37:20.880] And this is what they do. [37:20.880 --> 37:21.880] They have you come in. [37:21.880 --> 37:22.880] They don't have a hearing. [37:22.880 --> 37:25.880] They have you come back, come back, come back, come back, come back. [37:25.880 --> 37:30.880] So I'm looking at how do we combat that? [37:30.880 --> 37:34.880] They tell us to come in to meet with the prosecutor. [37:34.880 --> 37:37.880] Well, they don't have any power to tell me to meet with the prosecutor. [37:37.880 --> 37:40.880] If the prosecutor wants to talk to me, he can call me and send an appointment. [37:40.880 --> 37:44.880] Yeah, out of scope is exactly the way I'm looking at it. [37:44.880 --> 37:49.880] Like if they called a handful of plumbers to come in there and they're waiting and sitting there [37:49.880 --> 37:52.880] and they're not going out on their jobs. [37:52.880 --> 37:54.880] They're just sitting there waiting. [37:54.880 --> 37:59.880] And then they talk to somebody and say, okay, well, the rest of y'all can go home now. [37:59.880 --> 38:02.880] What? Why did you bring us in here? [38:02.880 --> 38:03.880] It didn't have anything to do with the case. [38:03.880 --> 38:07.880] It didn't have anything to do with a lawful reason to command somebody to be there. [38:07.880 --> 38:11.880] They just dragged somebody in for no reason. [38:11.880 --> 38:19.880] It's in the case law that not just for hearings, but for a trial, if they call you for trial, [38:19.880 --> 38:22.880] they have to have the trial. [38:22.880 --> 38:27.880] They don't get to just decide not to have it. [38:27.880 --> 38:32.880] But they're doing this with motions and pleadings as if it's perfectly okay to harass people [38:32.880 --> 38:38.880] and cost all kinds of money and just at their whim. [38:38.880 --> 38:46.880] And so charge them with failing to maintain their calendar and send the judge a tort letter [38:46.880 --> 38:49.880] telling him you intend to sue him in his personal capacity. [38:49.880 --> 38:53.880] That's what I'm doing to Whitaker. [38:53.880 --> 38:57.880] And these guys aren't getting it. [38:57.880 --> 39:01.880] I sued Whitaker in his personal capacity and they're claiming official immunity. [39:01.880 --> 39:05.880] They're screwing up everything and just making it better for me. [39:05.880 --> 39:08.880] So you might consider that. [39:08.880 --> 39:12.880] Even though I don't know who the judge is, this does not even count. [39:12.880 --> 39:13.880] Who cares? [39:13.880 --> 39:15.880] Unknown judge. [39:15.880 --> 39:18.880] Unknown judge? [39:18.880 --> 39:23.880] Somebody had to sign the notice to appear. [39:23.880 --> 39:30.880] And if it was a clerk, the clerk had to be responsible to somebody with the power to do that. [39:30.880 --> 39:37.880] If the clerk has the power to issue the summons, then sue the clerk. [39:37.880 --> 39:41.880] Actually, you don't have to sue them, just bill them. [39:41.880 --> 39:43.880] Just bill them? Okay. [39:43.880 --> 39:50.880] And you use that to screw up their bond ratings. [39:50.880 --> 39:51.880] Okay. [39:51.880 --> 39:56.880] So a clerk at the county, there's several courthouses there. [39:56.880 --> 40:00.880] I'll get on Telegram, ask you these specific questions. [40:00.880 --> 40:10.880] Whatever case you're in, whatever your case is, it's going to be a certain level and there will be a clerk, a head clerk at that level. [40:10.880 --> 40:15.880] You are the master of the servant and you don't deal with the servants. [40:15.880 --> 40:20.880] You deal with the bosses. [40:20.880 --> 40:23.880] My only dilemma is I have two. [40:23.880 --> 40:26.880] I only deal with employees as long as they're nice. [40:26.880 --> 40:27.880] They stop being nice. [40:27.880 --> 40:34.880] I want to talk to the elected, whoever the head of the office is. [40:34.880 --> 40:36.880] Go ahead. I keep interrupting you. [40:36.880 --> 40:38.880] Sorry. [40:38.880 --> 40:44.880] The only issue with that specific day on the 12th is I have two hearings. [40:44.880 --> 40:51.880] One is for the summary case conference for the hospital. [40:51.880 --> 40:55.880] And it's at 12 and one, so I can't be at the same time. [40:55.880 --> 41:01.880] So if it's not calendared the day before, I'm going to go to the courthouse, the one in the different county. [41:01.880 --> 41:03.880] If it's not calendared, I'm just not going to show up. [41:03.880 --> 41:06.880] That would be a bad idea, right? [41:06.880 --> 41:08.880] It always is a bad idea. [41:08.880 --> 41:11.880] Don't just not show up. [41:11.880 --> 41:13.880] You need to talk to the clerks there. [41:13.880 --> 41:23.880] When you go down and check, have the clerk give you a written list of everything that's calendared for the next day. [41:23.880 --> 41:25.880] Now you've got a hard copy. [41:25.880 --> 41:27.880] Got a hard copy. Got it. [41:27.880 --> 41:33.880] And if they say no, we don't have a hard copy for the next day, and she asks why, then... [41:33.880 --> 41:36.880] Write one. [41:36.880 --> 41:37.880] Write one? [41:37.880 --> 41:39.880] Tell her to write you one. [41:39.880 --> 41:41.880] Okay. I'm going to have to take a friend with me. [41:41.880 --> 41:48.880] Tell her, I'm going to sue whoever tells me to come down here without, and there is no hearing. [41:48.880 --> 41:50.880] I'm going to sue that person. [41:50.880 --> 41:52.880] Then they'll tell me who ordered this. [41:52.880 --> 42:06.880] I just called Victoria County District Attorney's Office this morning and asked for the bar card number for the prosecutor and this Louis Morales. [42:06.880 --> 42:09.880] And she actually said, well, why do you want this? [42:09.880 --> 42:11.880] And she said, can I ask you why you want it? [42:11.880 --> 42:14.880] I said, no. [42:14.880 --> 42:16.880] She said, no? [42:16.880 --> 42:19.880] Yeah, no. [42:19.880 --> 42:22.880] I explained to her, you can't ask me those kind of questions. [42:22.880 --> 42:25.880] You can only ask who I am and what do I want. [42:25.880 --> 42:30.880] But you probably shouldn't know why I want this. [42:30.880 --> 42:51.880] Because if you know that I want this so that I can bar grieve the elected district attorney and this assistant district attorney into the Stone Age, and then I have trouble getting that bar card number, then I'll have reason to believe you deliberately secreted that from me. [42:51.880 --> 42:56.880] And she did. [42:56.880 --> 43:03.880] She said, well, I don't have that information, but someone will call you. [43:03.880 --> 43:07.880] Well, they didn't call me. [43:07.880 --> 43:09.880] Another bar grievance. [43:09.880 --> 43:11.880] Here's the problem. [43:11.880 --> 43:20.880] What if I do a search on the State Bar Association and I find more than one Louis Morales? [43:20.880 --> 43:27.880] Well, my goodness, which one is the right one? [43:27.880 --> 43:31.880] I just fought against all of them, let God sort it out. [43:31.880 --> 43:32.880] Got it. [43:32.880 --> 43:35.880] I did that in Fort Worth. [43:35.880 --> 43:38.880] And serendipity happened. [43:38.880 --> 43:43.880] I looked up a guy's bar number and got three guys with that bar number. [43:43.880 --> 43:47.880] The case I was working on was out of Decatur, Texas. [43:47.880 --> 43:50.880] And I had one out of Decatur, one out of Fort Worth, and one out of Dallas. [43:50.880 --> 43:57.880] And I said to myself, well, my goodness, I wonder which one it could be. [43:57.880 --> 43:59.880] Oh, it must be the guy from Fort Worth. [43:59.880 --> 44:00.880] I love Logos. [44:00.880 --> 44:04.880] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.880 --> 44:06.880] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:06.880 --> 44:07.880] I need my truth fixed. [44:07.880 --> 44:09.880] I'd be lost without Logos. [44:09.880 --> 44:12.880] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:12.880 --> 44:19.880] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [44:19.880 --> 44:21.880] How can I help Logos? [44:21.880 --> 44:23.880] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:23.880 --> 44:26.880] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [44:26.880 --> 44:28.880] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:28.880 --> 44:30.880] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:30.880 --> 44:34.880] Now, go to LogosRegionetwork.com. [44:34.880 --> 44:37.880] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.880 --> 44:42.880] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:42.880 --> 44:43.880] Do I pay extra? [44:43.880 --> 44:44.880] No. [44:44.880 --> 44:46.880] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [44:46.880 --> 44:47.880] No. [44:47.880 --> 44:48.880] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:48.880 --> 44:49.880] No. [44:49.880 --> 44:50.880] I mean, yes. [44:50.880 --> 44:53.880] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:53.880 --> 44:54.880] This is perfect. [44:54.880 --> 44:56.880] Thank you so much. [44:56.880 --> 44:57.880] You're welcome. [44:57.880 --> 45:07.880] Happy holidays, Logos. [45:27.880 --> 45:52.880] Thank you so much. [45:52.880 --> 46:20.880] Thank you so much. [46:20.880 --> 46:37.880] Thank you so much. [46:37.880 --> 46:59.880] Okay. [46:59.880 --> 47:00.880] We are back. [47:00.880 --> 47:08.880] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Blah Blah Radio on this Thursday, the first day of September, [47:08.880 --> 47:11.880] 2022. [47:11.880 --> 47:13.880] And we're talking to EJ. [47:13.880 --> 47:15.880] We're going to finish up with you, EJ. [47:15.880 --> 47:18.880] Now, here's been another segment. [47:18.880 --> 47:19.880] Okay. [47:19.880 --> 47:21.880] So I'll let you go to your... [47:21.880 --> 47:22.880] So where were we? [47:22.880 --> 47:23.880] Oh, we were going to... [47:23.880 --> 47:26.880] We talked about this over the break, so I'm a little late coming in. [47:26.880 --> 47:30.880] When did you start billing them? [47:30.880 --> 47:31.880] Yeah. [47:31.880 --> 47:35.880] Oh, I was telling a great story. [47:35.880 --> 47:38.880] I don't forgot what it was because me and... [47:38.880 --> 47:42.880] You miss all the good stuff on the breaks. [47:42.880 --> 47:47.880] But Brett, what was I talking about when we went out? [47:47.880 --> 47:48.880] It was a great story. [47:48.880 --> 47:49.880] I was having... [47:49.880 --> 47:52.880] Wasn't that one about the wild hare? [47:52.880 --> 47:55.880] About the what? [47:55.880 --> 47:58.880] No, no, about the wild hare. [47:58.880 --> 48:01.880] That's my favorite one. [48:01.880 --> 48:02.880] Okay. [48:02.880 --> 48:06.880] Well, anyway, we should start billing them. [48:06.880 --> 48:08.880] We talked about that on the break. [48:08.880 --> 48:11.880] The judge has a duty to maintain his calendar. [48:11.880 --> 48:17.880] If he fails to properly maintain his calendar and he costs you money, that's an administrative [48:17.880 --> 48:18.880] function. [48:18.880 --> 48:20.880] That's not judicial. [48:20.880 --> 48:26.880] And for administrative, he doesn't have any immunity. [48:26.880 --> 48:30.880] So, every time they make you come back, this is what they do. [48:30.880 --> 48:34.880] They call you in, they call you in, they call you in, they call you in until you make a [48:34.880 --> 48:35.880] deal. [48:35.880 --> 48:40.880] Brett was just talking about a guy that took them four years to get him to make a deal. [48:40.880 --> 48:42.880] So, they call you in, you send them a bill. [48:42.880 --> 48:45.880] They call you in again, you send them another bill. [48:45.880 --> 48:52.880] The bills start stacking up and then after it gets well beyond statute limitations, then [48:52.880 --> 48:58.880] you file suit against the judge in his personal capacity. [48:58.880 --> 49:01.880] Try that on, Bubba. [49:01.880 --> 49:02.880] Okay. [49:02.880 --> 49:06.880] Do you have anything else for us, EJ? [49:06.880 --> 49:07.880] Okay. [49:07.880 --> 49:17.880] So, Bill, just if you were me, the day before, you go to the clerk's office, get a calendar [49:17.880 --> 49:21.880] of the whole calendar for that day on the 12th. [49:21.880 --> 49:25.880] So, if she gives it to you or if she decides not to give it to you... [49:25.880 --> 49:27.880] Oh, no, no, no, no. [49:27.880 --> 49:28.880] That they don't get to do. [49:28.880 --> 49:31.880] Call the bailiff over and ask them to arrest the clerk. [49:31.880 --> 49:32.880] Oh, okay. [49:32.880 --> 49:33.880] These are public documents. [49:33.880 --> 49:37.880] They have an appearance docket. [49:37.880 --> 49:43.880] They have to have an appearance docket far enough ahead of the hearing in order to be [49:43.880 --> 49:45.880] able to notice people to be there. [49:45.880 --> 49:48.880] So, she can't claim she doesn't have it. [49:48.880 --> 49:49.880] Okay. [49:49.880 --> 49:50.880] Okay. [49:50.880 --> 49:53.880] Who did you summon to be here tomorrow? [49:53.880 --> 49:56.880] Give me the list. [49:56.880 --> 49:57.880] Okay. [49:57.880 --> 49:59.880] That clarifies. [49:59.880 --> 50:01.880] I would do that. [50:01.880 --> 50:05.880] If my name's not on there, then I don't need to show up or do you... [50:05.880 --> 50:06.880] No, you don't. [50:06.880 --> 50:07.880] ...showing up. [50:07.880 --> 50:08.880] Okay, great. [50:08.880 --> 50:13.880] You have hard evidence to show that you didn't need to show up. [50:13.880 --> 50:14.880] Got it. [50:14.880 --> 50:19.880] And then I can start billing the judge of that court where it's written on my notice [50:19.880 --> 50:20.880] to appear. [50:20.880 --> 50:22.880] I send them a bill. [50:22.880 --> 50:25.880] Listen, you told me to come here, but I came. [50:25.880 --> 50:29.880] This is how much time I spent, my gas and so forth. [50:29.880 --> 50:30.880] Send them... [50:30.880 --> 50:33.880] Oh, and you're worth 200 bucks an hour. [50:33.880 --> 50:34.880] That's what their lawyers get. [50:34.880 --> 50:35.880] That's right. [50:35.880 --> 50:36.880] Okay. [50:36.880 --> 50:38.880] And there's only one judge at this courthouse. [50:38.880 --> 50:39.880] It's a small one. [50:39.880 --> 50:40.880] It's just for traffic. [50:40.880 --> 50:42.880] I already know his name. [50:42.880 --> 50:45.880] I looked him up. [50:45.880 --> 50:48.880] And okay, that's what I'll do. [50:48.880 --> 50:51.880] Hopefully, I don't... [50:51.880 --> 50:54.880] That's going to be fun. [50:54.880 --> 51:01.880] ...and then I get a, what do you call it, some kind of award for my rest. [51:01.880 --> 51:05.880] I shouldn't laugh about this, but thank you so much, you guys. [51:05.880 --> 51:08.880] I've got a suggestion for you about that. [51:08.880 --> 51:13.880] If you're going to add some late fees on there, don't make it too complicated for you to calculate. [51:13.880 --> 51:16.880] Make it something really simple and clean. [51:16.880 --> 51:18.880] 10% simple. [51:18.880 --> 51:20.880] 10% simple. [51:20.880 --> 51:23.880] 10% simple is kind of a standard. [51:23.880 --> 51:28.880] But when you say late fees, what do you mean by that? [51:28.880 --> 51:31.880] Like, they failed to send me the funds? [51:31.880 --> 51:39.880] Bill them, give them 30 days to pay, and notice them that anything not paid, you'll charge [51:39.880 --> 51:42.880] 10% simple per month. [51:42.880 --> 51:46.880] Or 10% simple annually. [51:46.880 --> 51:50.880] You'll charge it monthly. [51:50.880 --> 51:53.880] It just likes in other bills. [51:53.880 --> 52:00.880] They say, you don't pay it, we'll charge you this much annually at monthly charges. [52:00.880 --> 52:07.880] So it actually, when you compound it monthly, you get a lot more money. [52:07.880 --> 52:12.880] But it's just like other companies do. [52:12.880 --> 52:13.880] Okay. [52:13.880 --> 52:14.880] Yeah. [52:14.880 --> 52:19.880] I'm not too sure about that, but I'll start researching on telegram to see if there's [52:19.880 --> 52:20.880] any bills. [52:20.880 --> 52:26.880] I did a fee schedule for the hospital, so that's on the ROA. [52:26.880 --> 52:31.880] They opposed it, but anyway, I'm jumping into some other case. [52:31.880 --> 52:33.880] But this is clear to me. [52:33.880 --> 52:35.880] So I really appreciate it. [52:35.880 --> 52:36.880] Thank you so much. [52:36.880 --> 52:38.880] You have a wonderful Labor Day. [52:38.880 --> 52:40.880] Thank you guys so much. [52:40.880 --> 52:41.880] Okay. [52:41.880 --> 52:44.880] I have a complaint about Labor Day. [52:44.880 --> 52:47.880] All these places are going to be closed on Labor Day. [52:47.880 --> 52:50.880] What the heck are they doing closed on Labor Day? [52:50.880 --> 52:54.880] You're supposed to labor on Labor Day. [52:54.880 --> 52:56.880] Oh, well. [52:56.880 --> 52:57.880] Okay. [52:57.880 --> 52:58.880] Okay. [52:58.880 --> 53:00.880] Thank you, E.J. [53:00.880 --> 53:01.880] Thank you, Fred. [53:01.880 --> 53:02.880] Okay. [53:02.880 --> 53:05.880] Now we're going to go to a first-time caller. [53:05.880 --> 53:09.880] Mark, we think you're in Michigan. [53:09.880 --> 53:14.880] If you're in Michigan, talk to us. [53:14.880 --> 53:19.880] Oh, I can hear you better if I unmute you. [53:19.880 --> 53:20.880] Oh, okay. [53:20.880 --> 53:22.880] Now talk to us. [53:22.880 --> 53:23.880] Hello, sir. [53:23.880 --> 53:25.880] My name is Mark. [53:25.880 --> 53:28.880] Are you in Wisconsin? [53:28.880 --> 53:29.880] No. [53:29.880 --> 53:32.880] So I'm currently in Colorado. [53:32.880 --> 53:33.880] Colorado. [53:33.880 --> 53:34.880] Okay. [53:34.880 --> 53:35.880] Mark in Colorado. [53:35.880 --> 53:36.880] Okay. [53:36.880 --> 53:38.880] What do you have for us today? [53:38.880 --> 53:47.880] Well, let me start off by saying right now, me and my wife, I'm currently serving in the [53:47.880 --> 53:48.880] Army. [53:48.880 --> 53:49.880] I joined in 2019. [53:49.880 --> 53:55.880] That's the reason why I'm in Colorado right now, but me and my wife are from Michigan. [53:55.880 --> 53:56.880] So... [53:56.880 --> 54:02.880] That explains the extension or the area code. [54:02.880 --> 54:03.880] Yeah. [54:03.880 --> 54:04.880] Okay. [54:04.880 --> 54:14.880] So the situation is, me and my father, we had went into a business together when I was [54:14.880 --> 54:16.880] around the age of 19, I believe. [54:16.880 --> 54:17.880] No, I'm sorry, 20. [54:17.880 --> 54:19.880] I was 20 years old. [54:19.880 --> 54:22.880] I'm currently 25 now. [54:22.880 --> 54:32.120] So when we went to the business together, I obviously, as a 20-year-old kid, had no idea [54:32.120 --> 54:33.120] what I was doing. [54:33.120 --> 54:36.760] It's a trucking business. [54:36.760 --> 54:44.160] When I joined the Army in 2019, I told him I no longer want to do the business with him. [54:44.160 --> 54:47.680] I want to serve my country. [54:47.680 --> 54:50.520] And he told me that he'd take me off the business. [54:50.520 --> 54:52.720] So he gave me his word. [54:52.720 --> 54:54.720] I took it. [54:54.720 --> 54:57.600] I went to basic training. [54:57.600 --> 55:04.720] I believe it was the following years where I found out that I was still currently in [55:04.720 --> 55:11.040] the business with him because he was asking me to use my credit. [55:11.040 --> 55:19.680] So as his son, I let him, and I helped him out with the business. [55:19.680 --> 55:25.680] And that's where it started becoming more fraudulent. [55:25.680 --> 55:29.560] He would use my credit without my permission. [55:29.560 --> 55:33.920] And that's when we started having more of a confrontation. [55:33.920 --> 55:38.240] And I told him I don't want anything to do at all with the business. [55:38.240 --> 55:44.640] So at that point in time, I was being deployed to Iraq. [55:44.640 --> 55:48.240] So me and my unit, we deployed. [55:48.240 --> 55:55.200] During Iraq, we had a few that wasn't so pretty. [55:55.200 --> 56:02.400] So when I was in Iraq, I found out that he had opened a credit card in my name without [56:02.400 --> 56:06.480] my permission because it popped up in my credit that I have an inquiry. [56:06.480 --> 56:11.240] It was some sort of credit card that I had no idea about. [56:11.240 --> 56:21.880] But when that happened, I immediately put a stop to it and told him or asked him about [56:21.880 --> 56:22.880] it. [56:22.880 --> 56:26.240] And that's what he did. [56:26.240 --> 56:29.480] And I canceled it. [56:29.480 --> 56:38.000] I called the credit card place and I canceled it and had it disputed off of my credit. [56:38.000 --> 56:48.760] And now we're in a situation where if I had been on this business with him since I was [56:48.760 --> 56:57.720] 19 and he never took me off, as a person on the payroll, I had never received a paycheck. [56:57.720 --> 57:01.320] I'd never received or I'd never even paid in taxes. [57:01.320 --> 57:07.160] So I believe that would be my tax evasion, if I'm correct. [57:07.160 --> 57:16.320] I've never been told that I need to pay in taxes because he never gave me a W-2. [57:16.320 --> 57:22.040] So I'm sorry, there's a lot to... [57:22.040 --> 57:27.640] I'm trying to figure out where you're going. [57:27.640 --> 57:35.160] The current situation where I'm in now is since I did not let him use my credit anymore [57:35.160 --> 57:39.400] for the business, the business is going under. [57:39.400 --> 57:47.280] He can't pay for his equipment like the semi-truck and so on and so forth for the business. [57:47.280 --> 57:56.800] So he is telling me that he has to do a bankruptcy and that is going to affect... [57:56.800 --> 58:02.800] I'm trying to figure out how or if it would affect me if he filed bankruptcy if I'm still [58:02.800 --> 58:05.800] on the business. [58:05.800 --> 58:09.960] It will affect you greatly. [58:09.960 --> 58:12.080] Really? [58:12.080 --> 58:15.080] You would have to sue... [58:15.080 --> 58:23.360] No, this is something that should have been handled early on and this for me is very difficult [58:23.360 --> 58:27.760] because it's your father. [58:27.760 --> 58:32.320] All money things will go away. [58:32.320 --> 58:37.800] All these things will go in the past and be forgotten. [58:37.800 --> 58:41.320] They're not that important. [58:41.320 --> 58:44.600] How important is your relationship to your father? [58:44.600 --> 58:50.320] Well, me and my father don't really have a relationship. [58:50.320 --> 58:55.720] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.720 --> 58:58.540] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.540 --> 59:03.920] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.920 --> 59:07.180] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.180 --> 59:09.040] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.040 --> 59:14.880] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.880 --> 59:18.600] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.600 --> 59:23.600] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.600 --> 59:28.320] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.320 --> 59:33.480] Those from America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.480 --> 59:43.920] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.920 --> 59:47.960] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.960 --> 59:48.960] That's freestudybible.com. [59:48.960 --> 59:57.960] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:57.960 --> 01:00:06.120] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:06.120 --> 01:00:09.560] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.560 --> 01:00:11.040] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.040 --> 01:00:14.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:00:14.940 --> 01:00:17.800] one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.800 --> 01:00:19.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.400 --> 01:00:23.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:23.000 --> 01:00:27.780] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.780 --> 01:00:32.960] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.960 --> 01:00:35.540] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.540 --> 01:00:39.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [01:00:39.840 --> 01:00:43.360] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.360 --> 01:00:46.840] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.840 --> 01:00:49.160] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:49.160 --> 01:00:52.240] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:52.240 --> 01:00:55.440] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.440 --> 01:00:59.600] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment [01:00:59.600 --> 01:01:01.200] was designed to prevent. [01:01:01.200 --> 01:01:05.400] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in [01:01:05.400 --> 01:01:07.520] the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:07.520 --> 01:01:08.520] Third party? [01:01:08.520 --> 01:01:09.520] Third Amendment? [01:01:09.520 --> 01:01:10.520] Get it? [01:01:10.520 --> 01:01:13.680] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them [01:01:13.680 --> 01:01:17.200] to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and re-read the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.200 --> 01:01:32.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.200 --> 01:01:35.880] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.880 --> 01:01:39.320] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.320 --> 01:01:40.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.840 --> 01:01:44.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:01:44.700 --> 01:01:47.680] one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.680 --> 01:01:49.280] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.280 --> 01:01:52.880] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.880 --> 01:01:57.640] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.640 --> 01:01:59.080] So protect your rights. [01:01:59.080 --> 01:02:02.800] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.800 --> 01:02:05.400] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.400 --> 01:02:09.700] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:02:09.700 --> 01:02:13.240] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.240 --> 01:02:16.920] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:16.920 --> 01:02:22.280] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.280 --> 01:02:26.760] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable [01:02:26.760 --> 01:02:28.240] search and seizure. [01:02:28.240 --> 01:02:30.600] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you? [01:02:30.600 --> 01:02:31.600] Get it? [01:02:31.600 --> 01:02:34.720] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of [01:02:34.720 --> 01:02:35.720] security. [01:02:35.720 --> 01:02:40.240] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.240 --> 01:02:44.280] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say [01:02:44.280 --> 01:02:47.120] it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.120 --> 01:02:51.400] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly [01:02:51.400 --> 01:02:53.600] eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.600 --> 01:02:55.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.440 --> 01:03:11.240] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:11.240 --> 01:03:39.840] Thank you. [01:03:41.240 --> 01:03:59.320] And we're talking to Mark in Colorado, and Mark, I will be glad to give you as much help [01:03:59.320 --> 01:04:04.720] as I can, but it comes at a price. [01:04:04.720 --> 01:04:09.600] I'm an old guy, I'm also a veteran. [01:04:09.600 --> 01:04:17.600] I got some kids that are grown, heck, I got grandkids that are grown. [01:04:17.600 --> 01:04:26.640] At my age, as we get older, we tend to look back at our lives mostly with regret. [01:04:26.640 --> 01:04:32.840] I have a friend who's a clinical psychologist, and he treats people in old folks' homes. [01:04:32.840 --> 01:04:38.600] And he says, getting old is about dealing with loss and regret. [01:04:38.600 --> 01:04:43.960] We lose our eyesight, we lose our hearing, we lose control of our bowels, we lose our [01:04:43.960 --> 01:04:49.840] job, we lose our driver's license, we constantly lose one thing after another. [01:04:49.840 --> 01:04:55.040] And we look back on our lives, and we don't tend to notice the good things or great things [01:04:55.040 --> 01:04:57.600] that we did. [01:04:57.600 --> 01:05:04.200] What we tend to do is notice all of the bad things that we did, and we regret what we [01:05:04.200 --> 01:05:09.000] didn't do, we regret what we did do. [01:05:09.000 --> 01:05:17.560] And his warning was, be very careful what you do, it will come back to haunt you. [01:05:17.560 --> 01:05:21.960] And I found that absolutely to be true. [01:05:21.960 --> 01:05:28.000] And I can't think of, there's only one thing I can think of more horrible than being estranged [01:05:28.000 --> 01:05:30.920] from my children. [01:05:30.920 --> 01:05:35.520] And that would be to outlive one of my children. [01:05:35.520 --> 01:05:44.680] And the wife and I have struggled greatly to keep good relations with our children. [01:05:44.680 --> 01:05:49.040] And I look back on my father. [01:05:49.040 --> 01:05:56.720] From this point down the road, I told my mother once, you know, when daddy died, he was about [01:05:56.720 --> 01:06:01.000] the most ignorant old SOB I ever knew. [01:06:01.000 --> 01:06:05.320] And she said, well, that's not very nice, I said, I don't know. [01:06:05.320 --> 01:06:12.000] He's been dead about 20 years now, and I'll be damned if you don't get smarter every year. [01:06:12.000 --> 01:06:16.320] Just, this is my two cents. [01:06:16.320 --> 01:06:24.840] It tears at me that money could come between you and your father. [01:06:24.840 --> 01:06:33.320] Okay, with that said, if he tries to, if he files bankruptcy and tries to name you in [01:06:33.320 --> 01:06:40.200] the bankruptcy, or if the bankruptcy tries to name you, is your name on any loans that [01:06:40.200 --> 01:06:47.960] you signed, or any indebtedness or responsibility that you signed, that's still? [01:06:47.960 --> 01:06:55.960] So here's the thing with that is, I had been away from that company, and, you know, doing [01:06:55.960 --> 01:06:58.400] my job in the army before- [01:06:58.400 --> 01:07:02.120] Wait, hold on, hold on, that's not going to matter. [01:07:02.120 --> 01:07:08.440] If you signed with him to purchase equipment or materials or anything, and you created [01:07:08.440 --> 01:07:10.360] a debt, you still owe that debt. [01:07:10.360 --> 01:07:12.360] Oh, okay, yeah. [01:07:12.360 --> 01:07:15.080] You can't get around that. [01:07:15.080 --> 01:07:16.080] Okay. [01:07:16.080 --> 01:07:18.600] I do, I didn't have a question. [01:07:18.600 --> 01:07:19.960] Yes, sir. [01:07:19.960 --> 01:07:26.120] Was your father trying to keep this business going just for himself or for you as well? [01:07:26.120 --> 01:07:28.840] No, it was for himself. [01:07:28.840 --> 01:07:32.560] I had been out of the house for a while, so it was just for him and, you know, my mom [01:07:32.560 --> 01:07:39.080] and my sisters, for them to progress, so it had no benefit to me at all. [01:07:39.080 --> 01:07:42.680] Maybe in the beginning, but when I told him I don't want to do the business anymore, it [01:07:42.680 --> 01:07:46.040] was strictly just for him to make more money. [01:07:46.040 --> 01:07:53.200] Was he able to remove you from this indebtedness? [01:07:53.200 --> 01:07:57.720] Would the banks have allowed him to? [01:07:57.720 --> 01:08:00.920] I'm not sure. [01:08:00.920 --> 01:08:04.440] Did you try to get removed from this indebtedness? [01:08:04.440 --> 01:08:11.600] So, he told me that he had removed me from the company, but I took his word for it, and [01:08:11.600 --> 01:08:17.160] I didn't know if I had to sign anything or go talk to anybody to get out of the business. [01:08:17.160 --> 01:08:18.880] I don't know how it would work. [01:08:18.880 --> 01:08:21.360] Absolutely, you had to. [01:08:21.360 --> 01:08:22.360] Okay. [01:08:22.360 --> 01:08:27.440] Legally, legally, technically, you're still going to be liable. [01:08:27.440 --> 01:08:29.480] Okay. [01:08:29.480 --> 01:08:33.320] But it's not that bad. [01:08:33.320 --> 01:08:38.600] You may have to bankrupt, but that's not as bad as it sounds. [01:08:38.600 --> 01:08:45.320] If you only bankrupt once, it's not too bad. [01:08:45.320 --> 01:08:51.600] If he does do the bankruptcy, is there any real property involved? [01:08:51.600 --> 01:08:57.520] As opposed to personal property, cars, trucks, is there land, homes? [01:08:57.520 --> 01:08:58.680] Did you put up a home? [01:08:58.680 --> 01:09:00.960] Did he put up a home? [01:09:00.960 --> 01:09:04.240] Is there any real property involved? [01:09:04.240 --> 01:09:09.480] There's no real property involved, but right now, currently, I'm transitioning out of the [01:09:09.480 --> 01:09:11.360] Army, so I'm trying to buy a house. [01:09:11.360 --> 01:09:16.360] So, if he does bankrupt, from my understanding, it'll ruin my chances of buying a house for [01:09:16.360 --> 01:09:21.520] me and my wife to transition out of the Army. [01:09:21.520 --> 01:09:26.440] Then, yes, it absolutely will screw that up. [01:09:26.440 --> 01:09:30.000] You need to get the house before the bankruptcy is filed. [01:09:30.000 --> 01:09:31.000] Okay. [01:09:31.000 --> 01:09:32.000] Okay. [01:09:32.000 --> 01:09:37.720] If you can get the house before the bankruptcy, then they can't do anything. [01:09:37.720 --> 01:09:38.720] Okay. [01:09:38.720 --> 01:09:42.800] So, ask him to hold off. [01:09:42.800 --> 01:09:48.200] If it's just debt collectors and stuff coming after him, he can do a little research on [01:09:48.200 --> 01:09:49.200] debt collectors. [01:09:49.200 --> 01:09:52.240] They screw up everything. [01:09:52.240 --> 01:09:55.560] When they do debt collecting, it's about money. [01:09:55.560 --> 01:10:02.040] If they violate the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act, they can get charged a thousand [01:10:02.040 --> 01:10:09.120] bucks per time, but it happens so seldom, they don't care. [01:10:09.120 --> 01:10:11.440] They just do anything they want to. [01:10:11.440 --> 01:10:13.440] Most people have no clue. [01:10:13.440 --> 01:10:19.440] If you have a clue, then you can land on them like a ton of bricks. [01:10:19.440 --> 01:10:29.440] So, right, we probably need to talk to my co-host who does... We used to have someone [01:10:29.440 --> 01:10:40.640] who did debt collection or anti-debt collection, but he has retired and the co-host is picking [01:10:40.640 --> 01:10:41.640] up that kind of thing. [01:10:41.640 --> 01:10:43.440] He can show you how to beat these guys up. [01:10:43.440 --> 01:10:44.440] Okay. [01:10:44.440 --> 01:10:54.320] He can show you how to make your credit cards go away and make debts too expensive to collect. [01:10:54.320 --> 01:10:58.680] They do everything wrong and that gives you claims against them. [01:10:58.680 --> 01:11:05.880] When you make the claim against them, the debt collection has to stop. [01:11:05.880 --> 01:11:14.800] Then if they know you're considering bankruptcy, they get real jittery. [01:11:14.800 --> 01:11:19.640] What do they have in the form of collateral? [01:11:19.640 --> 01:11:20.640] Okay. [01:11:20.640 --> 01:11:27.320] Now, that was a question. [01:11:27.320 --> 01:11:28.320] What is collateralized? [01:11:28.320 --> 01:11:37.560] Here's the thing with that is I don't know because I truly have no idea about... I've [01:11:37.560 --> 01:11:43.320] been away from the business so long, he doesn't tell me anything, so I have no idea what could [01:11:43.320 --> 01:11:45.400] be collateral or not. [01:11:45.400 --> 01:11:46.400] Okay. [01:11:46.400 --> 01:11:53.520] So, you need to go down to motor pool and you need to get you a truck and you need to [01:11:53.520 --> 01:11:58.000] use that truck to do what? [01:11:58.000 --> 01:12:00.960] To go train, go out to the field? [01:12:00.960 --> 01:12:01.960] Come on. [01:12:01.960 --> 01:12:02.960] You know this one. [01:12:02.960 --> 01:12:06.600] You need to use that truck to pull your head out of your behind. [01:12:06.600 --> 01:12:07.600] Okay. [01:12:07.600 --> 01:12:10.680] I haven't heard that one. [01:12:10.680 --> 01:12:11.680] You hadn't heard that one? [01:12:11.680 --> 01:12:16.240] It must be from just us old timers use that one. [01:12:16.240 --> 01:12:17.680] Okay. [01:12:17.680 --> 01:12:19.480] Study debt collection. [01:12:19.480 --> 01:12:20.480] Okay. [01:12:20.480 --> 01:12:29.360] Send me an email, I'll send it to my co-host or to my producer or co-host who's listening. [01:12:29.360 --> 01:12:31.360] I won't send him anything. [01:12:31.360 --> 01:12:36.040] I'll send it to my producer and she'll contact you and she'll tell you how to stop these [01:12:36.040 --> 01:12:42.480] guys, how to beat them up, how to file actions, the right letters. [01:12:42.480 --> 01:12:46.040] You need to file a debt validation letter. [01:12:46.040 --> 01:12:50.640] When you file a debt validation letter, they have to stop everything you're doing. [01:12:50.640 --> 01:12:56.600] She'll show you how to back them up and she can buy you lots of time, plenty of time to [01:12:56.600 --> 01:13:00.400] get your house purchased. [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:01.720] Okay. [01:13:01.720 --> 01:13:06.040] When you do a debt, there are things you can do when you stop them, they have to take all [01:13:06.040 --> 01:13:07.520] the marks off your credit. [01:13:07.520 --> 01:13:14.640] When you challenge a debt, the way to challenge the debt is you want to see every single bill [01:13:14.640 --> 01:13:23.040] they've given you, compare what you agreed to pay to what they actually charge you. [01:13:23.040 --> 01:13:28.160] They'll almost never get it right. [01:13:28.160 --> 01:13:37.520] If there are any added charges, they loan you X amount of money. [01:13:37.520 --> 01:13:44.080] In order to get that loan, you have to pay them certain monies in order to get the loan [01:13:44.080 --> 01:13:45.080] put together. [01:13:45.080 --> 01:13:54.200] Well, the Fair Debt Collections and Practices Act limits what they can charge you. [01:13:54.200 --> 01:14:02.320] If you can find a charge that was improper, a lot of the things, the costs of creating [01:14:02.320 --> 01:14:07.400] a loan are intended to come out of the interest that they charge. [01:14:07.400 --> 01:14:12.640] What they do is they tack it on the front as a fee and then charge you interest on it [01:14:12.640 --> 01:14:15.520] for the full term of the loan. [01:14:15.520 --> 01:14:25.440] Well, that gives you a big claim against them because if they charge extra on the front [01:14:25.440 --> 01:14:34.640] end, then all the fees they charge you, you do an amortization of the loan and take all [01:14:34.640 --> 01:14:41.180] the fees that they charge you and subtract them from the first payment as an overpayment [01:14:41.180 --> 01:14:46.040] and then run out the complete amortization. [01:14:46.040 --> 01:14:51.960] If you subtract that as an overpayment, see if they charge you extra, you pay off the [01:14:51.960 --> 01:14:56.000] loan first, you pay off the extra last. [01:14:56.000 --> 01:14:59.520] They will be trying to collect interest on that for the full term of the loan and you [01:14:59.520 --> 01:15:04.280] claim that's fraud. [01:15:04.280 --> 01:15:09.840] You run two amortizations, one the way they're telling you to pay it and one less all those [01:15:09.840 --> 01:15:17.360] fees and when you do that, you'll reach a point where you zero out before you're done [01:15:17.360 --> 01:15:23.680] paying and over the term of the loan, you pay out all this extra money. [01:15:23.680 --> 01:15:28.320] Well, here's how fraud works. [01:15:28.320 --> 01:15:35.760] Under fraud, you do not sue for how much you have been defrauded of. [01:15:35.760 --> 01:15:45.320] You sue for how much you would have been defrauded of had their plan ran to fruition. [01:15:45.320 --> 01:15:50.120] I do this with mortgages, everything on the HUD-1 settlement statement, all the fees and [01:15:50.120 --> 01:15:55.200] stuff they charge us, add it all up, subtract it from the first payment and I'll get you [01:15:55.200 --> 01:16:05.360] a claim against the lender two to three times the amount of the original mortgage because [01:16:05.360 --> 01:16:11.560] under fraud where they try to collect improper fees, you don't just claim what they would [01:16:11.560 --> 01:16:14.880] have defrauded you of, you claim triple. [01:16:14.880 --> 01:16:22.520] Now, you create this large claim against them and then file the claim against them, boom, [01:16:22.520 --> 01:16:24.320] they're stopped. [01:16:24.320 --> 01:16:26.600] All the marks come off your credit. [01:16:26.600 --> 01:16:30.520] Then when you get your house, then you beat them up a while. [01:16:30.520 --> 01:16:36.960] Every time they get a lawyer, every time the lawyer sends you a bill or a letter, bar grieve [01:16:36.960 --> 01:16:37.960] him. [01:16:37.960 --> 01:16:38.960] It'll make them nuts. [01:16:38.960 --> 01:16:39.960] Hang on. [01:16:39.960 --> 01:16:45.240] We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rudy Law Radio, and we're [01:16:45.240 --> 01:16:50.600] getting into some battle techniques that you may recognize some of them when we get to [01:16:50.600 --> 01:16:51.600] them. [01:16:51.600 --> 01:16:52.600] Hang on. [01:16:52.600 --> 01:16:53.600] We'll be right back. [01:16:53.600 --> 01:17:05.520] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his [01:17:05.520 --> 01:17:06.520] word? [01:17:06.520 --> 01:17:11.640] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from eight to 10 p.m. central time for scripture [01:17:11.640 --> 01:17:18.040] talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:18.040 --> 01:17:22.560] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [01:17:22.560 --> 01:17:24.960] dividing the word of truth. [01:17:24.960 --> 01:17:28.940] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the book of Mark where we'll go verse [01:17:28.940 --> 01:17:32.240] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [01:17:32.240 --> 01:17:36.880] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:17:36.880 --> 01:17:39.280] and Christian character development. [01:17:39.280 --> 01:17:43.800] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.800 --> 01:17:48.100] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [01:17:48.100 --> 01:17:50.380] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:50.380 --> 01:17:56.840] So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com Wednesdays from eight to 10 p.m. to inspire [01:17:56.840 --> 01:18:00.760] and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [01:18:00.760 --> 01:18:05.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.520 --> 01:18:09.560] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:18:09.560 --> 01:18:13.880] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:18:13.880 --> 01:18:15.200] can win too. [01:18:15.200 --> 01:18:19.680] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:18:19.680 --> 01:18:25.440] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:18:25.440 --> 01:18:30.080] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:18:30.080 --> 01:18:34.280] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:34.280 --> 01:18:39.400] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:39.400 --> 01:18:41.320] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.320 --> 01:18:47.080] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:18:47.080 --> 01:18:50.040] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:50.040 --> 01:18:59.040] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [01:18:59.040 --> 01:19:00.040] collectors now. [01:19:00.040 --> 01:19:17.320] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:17.320 --> 01:19:43.640] Okay, we are back. [01:19:43.640 --> 01:19:48.880] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Mark in Colorado. [01:19:48.880 --> 01:19:55.980] And Mark, most of what I'm doing here, I learned in combat. [01:19:55.980 --> 01:19:58.800] Consider these debt collectors as your enemy. [01:19:58.800 --> 01:20:07.680] First, the thing you have to know about your enemy, what's his weakness? [01:20:07.680 --> 01:20:10.160] Where is he the most vulnerable? [01:20:10.160 --> 01:20:15.040] Now, debt collectors are generally lawyers. [01:20:15.040 --> 01:20:16.960] Have you listened to our show before? [01:20:16.960 --> 01:20:19.280] No, I have not. [01:20:19.280 --> 01:20:20.840] Oh, okay. [01:20:20.840 --> 01:20:25.520] First thing I'd like you to do is take the phone and beat yourself around the eyes and [01:20:25.520 --> 01:20:28.520] the ears severely. [01:20:28.520 --> 01:20:30.000] Listen to this show. [01:20:30.000 --> 01:20:33.840] We go over these techniques all the time. [01:20:33.840 --> 01:20:39.680] Bargain with the lawyer on the other side, it'll make them nuts. [01:20:39.680 --> 01:20:43.720] If you bargrieve a lawyer, the state bar is going to get that grievance and they're going [01:20:43.720 --> 01:20:44.720] to throw it in the trash. [01:20:44.720 --> 01:20:45.880] And they're going to send you this letter. [01:20:45.880 --> 01:20:51.440] It said, we examine your accusation if it does not rise to the level of misconduct. [01:20:51.440 --> 01:20:52.440] And that's a good thing. [01:20:52.440 --> 01:20:53.440] Okay. [01:20:53.440 --> 01:21:00.200] The reason it's a good thing is their insurance carrier knows they'll do that. [01:21:00.200 --> 01:21:04.340] So how does their insurance carrier gauge their level of risk? [01:21:04.340 --> 01:21:05.340] By valid bar grievances? [01:21:05.340 --> 01:21:07.680] Heck, throw them all in the trash. [01:21:07.680 --> 01:21:15.280] By the numbers, there are nine primary underwriters for legal errors and admissions in the United [01:21:15.280 --> 01:21:16.280] States. [01:21:16.280 --> 01:21:18.200] All of those are underwritten by Lloyds of London. [01:21:18.200 --> 01:21:22.080] They all have the same requirements. [01:21:22.080 --> 01:21:26.600] One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. [01:21:26.600 --> 01:21:29.400] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, they cancel. [01:21:29.400 --> 01:21:34.120] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's practice insurance. [01:21:34.120 --> 01:21:37.560] Valid, invalid, they don't care. [01:21:37.560 --> 01:21:45.560] The guy's got an agent whose job it is to collect as much money from his client as possible [01:21:45.560 --> 01:21:48.920] and avoid any claims. [01:21:48.920 --> 01:21:51.880] That's their weak underbelly. [01:21:51.880 --> 01:21:55.880] Lawyers are low-hanging fruit. [01:21:55.880 --> 01:21:59.200] They got a million dollars error in admissions policy. [01:21:59.200 --> 01:22:04.160] If you sue them, they want their insurance company to get those guys paid off. [01:22:04.160 --> 01:22:09.040] Get this claim off my back so I can go back to making money. [01:22:09.040 --> 01:22:12.880] It's the weak side. [01:22:12.880 --> 01:22:13.880] Use it. [01:22:13.880 --> 01:22:15.480] Listen to our show. [01:22:15.480 --> 01:22:18.720] We go over how to take these guys on. [01:22:18.720 --> 01:22:19.720] Sue them. [01:22:19.720 --> 01:22:21.720] You ever sued anybody? [01:22:21.720 --> 01:22:23.720] No, no sir. [01:22:23.720 --> 01:22:26.000] It's easy. [01:22:26.000 --> 01:22:31.080] Whatever you do, do not let them sue you. [01:22:31.080 --> 01:22:33.360] Sue them first. [01:22:33.360 --> 01:22:35.600] If they threaten you, sue them. [01:22:35.600 --> 01:22:37.640] It doesn't matter how you do it. [01:22:37.640 --> 01:22:39.720] You don't have to be good at it. [01:22:39.720 --> 01:22:45.920] When the foreclosure issue first started in 2008, a fellow broadcaster came to me and [01:22:45.920 --> 01:22:48.280] said, �I got an eviction hearing in two days. [01:22:48.280 --> 01:22:54.480] I need a suit against the lender.� He knew I was researching the topic. [01:22:54.480 --> 01:22:56.280] I said, �Well, I don't have it done yet. [01:22:56.280 --> 01:22:58.800] I haven't done all my research.� He said, �I don't have time for research. [01:22:58.800 --> 01:23:03.280] I got two days.� I went on the internet, I pulled out a bunch of junk, and I stuck [01:23:03.280 --> 01:23:04.960] it together in a suit. [01:23:04.960 --> 01:23:14.720] I took somebody else's suit and put my stuff in it, and I filed it. [01:23:14.720 --> 01:23:22.920] Once he filed it, they went to the JP who was going to do the eviction, and he told [01:23:22.920 --> 01:23:30.360] the JP that, �I have filed a suit against the borrower in the district court.� The [01:23:30.360 --> 01:23:33.400] JP said, �What are you doing in my court? [01:23:33.400 --> 01:23:34.400] I don't have your jurisdiction. [01:23:34.400 --> 01:23:35.400] Get out of here.� He stopped the foreclosure. [01:23:35.400 --> 01:23:38.400] He stopped the eviction. [01:23:38.400 --> 01:23:41.360] The other side took 30 days, and they filed an answer. [01:23:41.360 --> 01:23:47.600] The judge took 90 days, and he came back and said, �This suit.� They filed an answer, [01:23:47.600 --> 01:23:52.280] and they said, �This suit's a piece of crap, Your Honor.� The judge took 90 days, and [01:23:52.280 --> 01:23:54.600] he came back and said, �Yeah, this suit's a piece of crap. [01:23:54.600 --> 01:23:57.600] Fix it.� So, it was 30 days. [01:23:57.600 --> 01:23:59.520] We filed another suit, and it was better. [01:23:59.520 --> 01:24:02.720] But the same routine. [01:24:02.720 --> 01:24:08.520] Now we're almost a year in, and the third suit stuck. [01:24:08.520 --> 01:24:15.280] Seven years later, he made a technical error, and they dumped on him. [01:24:15.280 --> 01:24:18.320] He lived in that house seven years without paying a dime. [01:24:18.320 --> 01:24:19.320] Wow. [01:24:19.320 --> 01:24:23.440] It's because he fought him. [01:24:23.440 --> 01:24:28.560] We'll teach you some guerrilla tactics. [01:24:28.560 --> 01:24:36.520] You sue that law firm, and you sue the lender, and they're all about collecting money. [01:24:36.520 --> 01:24:42.920] If it looks like it's going to cost them more money to collect the debt than they can get [01:24:42.920 --> 01:24:47.960] from it, it's all about a calculation. [01:24:47.960 --> 01:24:53.000] What you want to do is you want to find a reason to sue them, big reason, little reason. [01:24:53.000 --> 01:24:54.120] Who cares? [01:24:54.120 --> 01:24:55.680] You sue them, that stops them. [01:24:55.680 --> 01:24:58.160] Once you've sued them, they're going to do stupid stuff. [01:24:58.160 --> 01:25:04.000] Every time they do something stupid, you sue them, you file an amended complaint, and include [01:25:04.000 --> 01:25:08.080] that in there, and it just makes them crazy. [01:25:08.080 --> 01:25:14.480] If they come after you, it is very difficult. [01:25:14.480 --> 01:25:19.200] When they're coming after you, and you're trying to defend yourself, I've had them come [01:25:19.200 --> 01:25:27.000] after me, and it was a struggle to write a motion or plead, and I knew what I was doing. [01:25:27.000 --> 01:25:29.320] It was just hard when they're coming after you. [01:25:29.320 --> 01:25:34.440] Right now, I'm suing a judge in Victoria County, and we started out the show talking [01:25:34.440 --> 01:25:36.600] about that. [01:25:36.600 --> 01:25:44.000] I went into his office and played him like a cheap fiddle, asked him to do something [01:25:44.000 --> 01:25:49.040] I knew for certain he wouldn't want to do, and he was very accommodating. [01:25:49.040 --> 01:25:54.600] He refused to take my complaints, and I sued him personally. [01:25:54.600 --> 01:26:03.680] It took him a while to realize, that's S-O-B, set me up, yeah I did. [01:26:03.680 --> 01:26:11.520] Mark, I can't tell you how much fun that is, and you can readily stop all these guys [01:26:11.520 --> 01:26:21.320] for two or three years, and get a grade at legal education at the same time. [01:26:21.320 --> 01:26:29.480] I actually do have a question though, do you think that it would be a good idea to make [01:26:29.480 --> 01:26:34.120] a lawsuit towards my dad? [01:26:34.120 --> 01:26:35.120] Probably yes. [01:26:35.120 --> 01:26:44.800] It doesn't really have to be something difficult between the two of you. [01:26:44.800 --> 01:26:52.080] You're just trying to separate yourself from debts you don't owe. [01:26:52.080 --> 01:27:00.960] Do whatever you can to maintain a relationship with your dad, but it's okay to sue him. [01:27:00.960 --> 01:27:02.960] This is business, this is not personal. [01:27:02.960 --> 01:27:10.320] Tell your dad, I need to buy a house and I've got to protect my interests, so I'm going [01:27:10.320 --> 01:27:18.080] to sue the business, since you got out of the business and the business still technically [01:27:18.080 --> 01:27:19.080] owed you. [01:27:19.080 --> 01:27:30.080] You sue the business for the things your father did in running the business, and then you [01:27:30.080 --> 01:27:35.520] have standing on these debts they're trying to collect, you can go in there and stop these [01:27:35.520 --> 01:27:38.680] debt collectors in their tracks. [01:27:38.680 --> 01:27:46.480] There is one drawback, one thing you have to be careful about. [01:27:46.480 --> 01:27:55.680] Once you figure out how all this is done, it can get to be way too much fun. [01:27:55.680 --> 01:28:01.400] I had so much fun the other day with this judge in this hearing, just jerked him around [01:28:01.400 --> 01:28:02.400] big time. [01:28:02.400 --> 01:28:07.200] It was great fun. [01:28:07.200 --> 01:28:11.720] First thing you need to do is read the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act. [01:28:11.720 --> 01:28:14.120] It's not very big. [01:28:14.120 --> 01:28:16.640] Read it twice. [01:28:16.640 --> 01:28:19.680] Just open it up and read through it. [01:28:19.680 --> 01:28:22.760] Don't try to understand it, just read it. [01:28:22.760 --> 01:28:25.440] When you get done, go back to the front and read through it again. [01:28:25.440 --> 01:28:29.200] When you go through it the second time, you'll start making connections. [01:28:29.200 --> 01:28:33.280] You'll see something in the front that'll connect to something in the back and connect [01:28:33.280 --> 01:28:34.720] to something in the middle. [01:28:34.720 --> 01:28:37.080] You'll start stitching all these pieces together. [01:28:37.080 --> 01:28:41.600] Once you've read it twice, you'll know it better than they do, the lawyers do because [01:28:41.600 --> 01:28:44.120] they never read it. [01:28:44.120 --> 01:28:51.080] You'll know what to look for and you'll know how to lead them into doing stupid stuff, [01:28:51.080 --> 01:28:53.960] so you can sting them. [01:28:53.960 --> 01:29:00.960] You might get them to retire some of these debts just to get you off of them, but this [01:29:00.960 --> 01:29:03.200] is good to learn early on. [01:29:03.200 --> 01:29:05.560] It'll stay with you. [01:29:05.560 --> 01:29:11.280] So, read the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act. [01:29:11.280 --> 01:29:15.640] There's also one for telephone. [01:29:15.640 --> 01:29:20.040] Look at the different consumer protection laws for debt. [01:29:20.040 --> 01:29:21.040] Okay. [01:29:21.040 --> 01:29:23.080] And read through them. [01:29:23.080 --> 01:29:24.080] None of them are very big. [01:29:24.080 --> 01:29:30.320] When I was doing Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, it only took me about 45 minutes to read [01:29:30.320 --> 01:29:31.320] it. [01:29:31.320 --> 01:29:34.040] It just wasn't that big. [01:29:34.040 --> 01:29:39.760] It looks bigger, but they're outlines, so there's a lot of white space in there. [01:29:39.760 --> 01:29:40.760] It'll read pretty quickly. [01:29:40.760 --> 01:29:46.440] Once you get an overview, we'll show you some guerrilla tactics you'll be forced to be reckoned [01:29:46.440 --> 01:29:47.440] with. [01:29:47.440 --> 01:29:49.480] Sounds good. [01:29:49.480 --> 01:29:50.480] Okay. [01:29:50.480 --> 01:29:54.320] Call us next week and tell us where you're at. [01:29:54.320 --> 01:29:55.320] Okay. [01:29:55.320 --> 01:29:57.320] I will, sir. [01:29:57.320 --> 01:29:58.320] Okay. [01:29:58.320 --> 01:30:17.160] We have all our archives, go. [01:30:17.160 --> 01:30:18.880] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.880 --> 01:30:22.480] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.480 --> 01:30:27.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.480 --> 01:30:32.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.800 --> 01:30:35.260] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.260 --> 01:30:40.920] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:40.920 --> 01:30:42.600] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.600 --> 01:30:44.520] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.520 --> 01:30:49.160] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:49.160 --> 01:30:53.760] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart, but think again. [01:30:53.760 --> 01:30:56.720] All that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.720 --> 01:31:01.320] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:31:01.320 --> 01:31:04.880] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.880 --> 01:31:08.820] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter [01:31:08.820 --> 01:31:11.120] in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:11.120 --> 01:31:16.280] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.280 --> 01:31:18.520] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.520 --> 01:31:21.280] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.280 --> 01:31:31.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.440 --> 01:31:36.800] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.800 --> 01:31:39.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.000 --> 01:31:43.840] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.840 --> 01:31:46.600] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.600 --> 01:31:49.320] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.320 --> 01:31:50.680] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.680 --> 01:31:51.680] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.680 --> 01:31:53.120] I'm a New York City correction office. [01:31:53.120 --> 01:31:54.120] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.120 --> 01:31:55.120] I'm a father. [01:31:55.120 --> 01:31:56.120] Who lost his son. [01:31:56.120 --> 01:31:58.400] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.400 --> 01:32:00.800] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.800 --> 01:32:05.840] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.840 --> 01:32:09.680] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [01:32:09.680 --> 01:32:13.600] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.600 --> 01:32:16.840] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:16.840 --> 01:32:20.880] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.880 --> 01:32:24.720] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.720 --> 01:32:26.080] our rights through due process. 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[01:32:55.600 --> 01:33:00.680] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:00.680 --> 01:33:07.360] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:07.360 --> 01:33:14.840] Yeah, who you want to chip? [01:33:14.840 --> 01:33:17.720] Who you take me for? [01:33:17.720 --> 01:33:18.720] Free to leave. [01:33:18.720 --> 01:33:19.720] Who you want to chip? [01:33:19.720 --> 01:33:20.720] Me no free to leave. [01:33:20.720 --> 01:33:21.720] You can't chip me. [01:33:21.720 --> 01:33:25.380] All I'm saying don't let them chip you in the morning, chip you in the evening, put a [01:33:25.380 --> 01:33:26.620] chip in a your body. [01:33:26.620 --> 01:33:31.000] And any way you go computer reading, you can't hide me say from nobody. [01:33:31.000 --> 01:33:32.000] What me say? [01:33:32.000 --> 01:33:34.020] Chip in a your mom, chip in a your daddy. [01:33:34.020 --> 01:33:35.980] Chip in a your grandpa and the grammy. [01:33:35.980 --> 01:33:37.120] Chip in a your grandma and the grammy. [01:33:37.120 --> 01:33:42.120] Chippin' on me, Chippin' on your BAB, Chippin' on your family, whole family, Chippin' on [01:33:42.120 --> 01:33:46.120] your dog and the cat around we, Chippin' on the beef and you still go eat it. [01:33:46.120 --> 01:33:50.240] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, we're at Fountain Rouge Law Radio, and we're going [01:33:50.240 --> 01:33:54.120] to Jerry in Pennsylvania, where in the heck have you been? [01:33:54.120 --> 01:33:59.680] Oh, I was here in the highway, I can't get out of the way. [01:33:59.680 --> 01:34:08.320] I need you to re-send me that ruling you got over the weed police. [01:34:08.320 --> 01:34:15.600] I had somebody wanting it and I couldn't find you, I can't find your email, so send me another [01:34:15.600 --> 01:34:19.960] email so I can locate you, and I want to get that to this guy. [01:34:19.960 --> 01:34:25.200] Yeah, I've sent it over two or three times. [01:34:25.200 --> 01:34:31.040] Oh no, send me another one, I don't want to ask your email on the air, but send it to [01:34:31.040 --> 01:34:35.800] me again and I will make sure I get that marked down so I won't lose it. [01:34:35.800 --> 01:34:38.840] I get so many emails, there's hundreds to look through. [01:34:38.840 --> 01:34:41.880] Why don't you have him email me? [01:34:41.880 --> 01:34:45.760] Why, gay email, you don't know what your email is. [01:34:45.760 --> 01:34:52.480] Okay, I'll send an email and then if you don't get a chance to send it over, tell him, just [01:34:52.480 --> 01:34:55.520] email me and I'll send it directly to him. [01:34:55.520 --> 01:35:00.400] Okay, good, good, good, good, yeah, yeah, I couldn't find your email, that was the problem. [01:35:00.400 --> 01:35:07.920] I went through over 500 trying to find, I probably looked at yours and didn't know what [01:35:07.920 --> 01:35:08.920] it was. [01:35:08.920 --> 01:35:13.840] Can't you find it on your book, pal? [01:35:13.840 --> 01:35:17.600] I could if I knew what it was, but I don't want you to say it over the air, send me a [01:35:17.600 --> 01:35:21.680] new one and I will put a bookmark on it to make sure I can find it. [01:35:21.680 --> 01:35:27.840] Oh, okay, well I was going to try to attach the book sale to it or something, that way [01:35:27.840 --> 01:35:35.320] you could find it, I normally would go through, you know, there should be a record of that. [01:35:35.320 --> 01:35:38.040] Okay, what do you have for us today? [01:35:38.040 --> 01:35:48.120] Well, the 5th Circuit sent me back the thing for the petition, I petitioned them for a [01:35:48.120 --> 01:35:57.520] rehearing over at the Circuit and they sent back the motion that said that the rehearing [01:35:57.520 --> 01:36:08.040] was out of time, so what I was going to file was a mandamus for it, so I thought, well, [01:36:08.040 --> 01:36:15.320] do I send a mandamus to the Circuit or do I send it to the U.S. District Court? [01:36:15.320 --> 01:36:23.400] A mandamus generally goes to the appellate court and you're asking the appellate court [01:36:23.400 --> 01:36:25.960] to order the trial court to do something. [01:36:25.960 --> 01:36:33.880] We were in Texas over a municipal ordinance issue and municipal is about as low as it [01:36:33.880 --> 01:36:40.920] gets, we did a mandamus and did the mandamus to the Texas Court of Appeals, so we jumped [01:36:40.920 --> 01:36:48.280] over everybody and generally that's where they go, a mandamus when they issue it, it's [01:36:48.280 --> 01:36:54.640] hard to get them to give you a mandamus because you're asking for the mandamus based on a [01:36:54.640 --> 01:37:02.840] point of law and when the Court of Appeals renders the ruling, it becomes law, so it's [01:37:02.840 --> 01:37:11.160] hard to get them and that's why because it goes to such a high court. [01:37:11.160 --> 01:37:22.520] Yeah I have that thing here, yeah, but I figured, well, if it was out of time they may not pick [01:37:22.520 --> 01:37:30.240] it up, but I have it all written up, so I'll just send it over to the Circuit then, huh? [01:37:30.240 --> 01:37:38.800] Yeah, and I'm not exactly sure of the rules in the federal court, but if there's a problem [01:37:38.800 --> 01:37:43.080] there, the federal court's real good about letting you know what's wrong and how to fix [01:37:43.080 --> 01:37:44.080] it. [01:37:44.080 --> 01:37:53.000] Oh yeah, they always tell me what the problem is, in fact, I sent over a declaratory filing [01:37:53.000 --> 01:38:02.000] for a declaratory judgment on this problem I had with the Post Office, see what that [01:38:02.000 --> 01:38:03.000] judge did? [01:38:03.000 --> 01:38:08.400] He sent it over to the Attorney General's office, the U.S. Attorney General, and the [01:38:08.400 --> 01:38:16.080] U.S. Attorney General wrote me up a response on it and said he'd give me back my money [01:38:16.080 --> 01:38:23.960] and sign a release on it and he also wanted me to report it to the IRS. [01:38:23.960 --> 01:38:31.040] I wrote him back and told him I ain't going to do anything like that, this here is a declaratory. [01:38:31.040 --> 01:38:38.000] So what he's done is he sent it back over to the judge and the U.S. judge over there [01:38:38.000 --> 01:38:41.760] at the district, he dismissed it. [01:38:41.760 --> 01:38:49.240] So I thought, well, why can't I sue the judge over to the U.S. district court and then why [01:38:49.240 --> 01:38:53.760] can't I refile this in the circuit, is that a good idea? [01:38:53.760 --> 01:39:02.440] I don't know enough about the details to be sure, but when you can sue a judge, you can [01:39:02.440 --> 01:39:10.680] sue a judge when a judge does something that's not judicial. [01:39:10.680 --> 01:39:16.160] Like we were talking earlier about maintaining his calendar. [01:39:16.160 --> 01:39:20.120] That's not judicial, that's administrative. [01:39:20.120 --> 01:39:27.800] This judge sent your petition for declaratory judgment over to the Attorney General. [01:39:27.800 --> 01:39:32.800] Where in law is he authorized to do that? [01:39:32.800 --> 01:39:42.680] What I was thinking is it sounds like the judge told the Attorney General, fix this, [01:39:42.680 --> 01:39:45.880] make this go away. [01:39:45.880 --> 01:39:51.680] But he offered you something and you weren't happy with it and he didn't get that done. [01:39:51.680 --> 01:39:55.880] So it sounded like the judge was trying to just get this thing to go away, it wasn't [01:39:55.880 --> 01:40:01.300] that he was being difficult or anything. [01:40:01.300 --> 01:40:06.160] But it also sounds like it was an administrative act and not judicial. [01:40:06.160 --> 01:40:19.000] Well, I saw a declaratory judgment when it was to be ruled on the point of law. [01:40:19.000 --> 01:40:26.600] When he seen that, he probably, because I sent all the evidence in, you know, and when [01:40:26.600 --> 01:40:30.600] he looked at that, he knew I had him dead to rights. [01:40:30.600 --> 01:40:31.600] Exactly. [01:40:31.600 --> 01:40:34.120] He wanted to make it go away. [01:40:34.120 --> 01:40:39.080] That's what they did to us when we filed the petition for declaratory judgment. [01:40:39.080 --> 01:40:49.840] The Court of Appeals in Texas only accepts 12% of the petitions filed, a petition for [01:40:49.840 --> 01:40:56.600] writ of mandamus, and they rule in favor of the filer in 2% of the cases. [01:40:56.600 --> 01:41:02.560] So we sent him a question they didn't want appealed up to the Supreme. [01:41:02.560 --> 01:41:08.240] So they found a different reason to dismiss the case, and that sounds like what the judge [01:41:08.240 --> 01:41:10.080] was doing in your case. [01:41:10.080 --> 01:41:15.280] He's trying to make this go away so they don't have to answer this question. [01:41:15.280 --> 01:41:16.280] Okay. [01:41:16.280 --> 01:41:27.120] So I can either file back at him, he's sitting at the U.S. District Court, for rehearing [01:41:27.120 --> 01:41:29.280] on it, or what would you do? [01:41:29.280 --> 01:41:35.060] Well, if he didn't render a ruling, then you might want to do a mandamus to the Court of [01:41:35.060 --> 01:41:42.320] Appeals and ask them to order him to give you a ruling on your declaratory judgment. [01:41:42.320 --> 01:41:48.000] It's been my experience with the feds that the federal judges don't really know what [01:41:48.000 --> 01:41:50.480] those are. [01:41:50.480 --> 01:42:00.200] I hammered a judge in Fort Worth for dismissing a declaratory judgment claim I filed for failure [01:42:00.200 --> 01:42:04.760] to state a claim in which COVID could be had, and I immediately filed criminal charges against [01:42:04.760 --> 01:42:09.720] him with the special agent in charge, the local FBI. [01:42:09.720 --> 01:42:15.920] I had several people file that same suit that I filed, and he didn't dismiss the same declaratory [01:42:15.920 --> 01:42:16.920] judgment. [01:42:16.920 --> 01:42:18.920] He didn't dismiss one of those. [01:42:18.920 --> 01:42:20.600] So it really got his attention. [01:42:20.600 --> 01:42:23.320] He just didn't know what it was. [01:42:23.320 --> 01:42:24.320] Yeah. [01:42:24.320 --> 01:42:25.320] So... [01:42:25.320 --> 01:42:32.920] Yeah, that's what I was under the impression that if I took this declaratory, put the whole [01:42:32.920 --> 01:42:39.000] thing together, write a mandamus on it, and send it over to the circuit and see what they [01:42:39.000 --> 01:42:40.000] said. [01:42:40.000 --> 01:42:47.520] I had a funny feeling that they might send it back over to him. [01:42:47.520 --> 01:42:50.520] They might want to find a way to make it go away. [01:42:50.520 --> 01:42:52.000] Oh, really? [01:42:52.000 --> 01:42:59.960] Yeah, they might want to find a different reason to dismiss, oh, if it's just declaratory [01:42:59.960 --> 01:43:00.960] judgment. [01:43:00.960 --> 01:43:04.560] Yeah, they're kind of stuck. [01:43:04.560 --> 01:43:08.560] This would be interesting to see how this happens, to see how this plays out. [01:43:08.560 --> 01:43:17.360] In our case, we were asking for mandamus and not declaratory judgment. [01:43:17.360 --> 01:43:20.680] So they could give us a dismissal. [01:43:20.680 --> 01:43:23.840] We did a subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:43:23.840 --> 01:43:29.400] They dismissed it for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, but not for the reason we claimed. [01:43:29.400 --> 01:43:34.240] We claimed that city ordinances could not apply to private citizens. [01:43:34.240 --> 01:43:40.640] They could only apply to employees of the city or people in contractual privity with [01:43:40.640 --> 01:43:41.640] them. [01:43:41.640 --> 01:43:47.300] And they looked at this and said, holy crap, if they get a ruling in their favor, all the [01:43:47.300 --> 01:43:51.280] municipal ordinances in the state will go in the toilet. [01:43:51.280 --> 01:43:58.600] So they looked in the record and found a different reason to dismiss the case. [01:43:58.600 --> 01:43:59.600] We couldn't complain. [01:43:59.600 --> 01:44:00.600] Dang, Cookie. [01:44:00.600 --> 01:44:01.600] Cookie? [01:44:01.600 --> 01:44:02.600] Me love Cookie. [01:44:02.600 --> 01:44:06.560] Oh, hi, Cookie Muncher, no, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:06.560 --> 01:44:07.560] Cookies? [01:44:07.560 --> 01:44:08.560] Yucky? [01:44:08.560 --> 01:44:09.560] No, no bad cookies. [01:44:09.560 --> 01:44:11.160] You can't even eat these cookies. [01:44:11.160 --> 01:44:12.160] These are cyber cookies. [01:44:12.160 --> 01:44:13.160] No, can't eat? [01:44:13.160 --> 01:44:16.840] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:16.840 --> 01:44:17.840] These have apple. [01:44:17.840 --> 01:44:18.840] Really? [01:44:18.840 --> 01:44:20.840] Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.840 --> 01:44:22.840] Yummy apple. [01:44:22.840 --> 01:44:26.800] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.800 --> 01:44:33.040] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:33.040 --> 01:44:34.560] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.560 --> 01:44:40.200] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand [01:44:40.200 --> 01:44:46.240] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [01:44:46.240 --> 01:44:47.240] new cookies. [01:44:47.240 --> 01:44:48.240] New cookies? [01:44:48.240 --> 01:44:49.240] For me? [01:44:49.240 --> 01:44:51.040] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:51.040 --> 01:44:55.840] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [01:44:55.840 --> 01:44:56.840] radio network, too. [01:44:56.840 --> 01:44:57.840] P is for cookie. [01:44:57.840 --> 01:44:58.840] P is for classified. [01:44:58.840 --> 01:45:04.320] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.320 --> 01:45:11.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [01:45:11.080 --> 01:45:14.880] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.880 --> 01:45:19.280] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.280 --> 01:45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.080 --> 01:45:27.920] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:27.920 --> 01:45:34.720] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.720 --> 01:45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.280 --> 01:45:43.560] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.560 --> 01:45:49.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.720 --> 01:45:56.400] process tactics, and much more, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:56.400 --> 01:45:59.400] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:45:59.400 --> 01:46:00.400] Hello. [01:46:00.400 --> 01:46:01.400] Oh, man. [01:46:01.400 --> 01:46:02.400] You're in jail. [01:46:02.400 --> 01:46:03.400] You got busted, man. [01:46:03.400 --> 01:46:04.400] Oh, man. [01:46:04.400 --> 01:46:05.400] I'm broke, dude. [01:46:05.400 --> 01:46:31.640] Some things in this world I will never understand, some things I realize fully. [01:46:31.640 --> 01:46:38.640] Somebody's gonna police a policeman, somebody's gonna police a bully. [01:46:38.640 --> 01:46:47.040] There's always a room at the top of the hill, a hear through the grapevine and it's lonely [01:46:47.040 --> 01:46:48.040] left too. [01:46:48.040 --> 01:46:55.040] They're wishing it was more than opposition to bill, they know that if they don't do it, [01:46:55.040 --> 01:46:56.040] somebody will. [01:46:56.040 --> 01:47:03.040] Some things in this world I will never understand, some things I realize fully. [01:47:03.040 --> 01:47:12.040] Somebody's gonna police, that's police might, somebody's gonna pull the police. [01:47:12.040 --> 01:47:18.680] I know they will, yeah, they're gonna put the bill. [01:47:18.680 --> 01:47:19.680] Okay. [01:47:19.680 --> 01:47:20.680] We are back. [01:47:20.680 --> 01:47:24.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Jerry in Pennsylvania. [01:47:24.360 --> 01:47:25.560] Okay, Jerry. [01:47:25.560 --> 01:47:34.200] So mandamus to the Court of Appeals on a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:47:34.200 --> 01:47:35.200] Interesting. [01:47:35.200 --> 01:47:41.000] Yeah, have you ever heard of that before or not? [01:47:41.000 --> 01:47:49.160] No, I haven't heard of it directly, but that sounds like exactly the right thing to do. [01:47:49.160 --> 01:47:55.520] Petition for declaratory judgment is relatively, it is a relatively new remedy. [01:47:55.520 --> 01:48:03.040] It is a new remedy, but it hasn't been around for but about 10 years, and for the most part [01:48:03.040 --> 01:48:04.920] these guys don't know what the heck it is. [01:48:04.920 --> 01:48:08.640] Yeah, I know what you were saying about that. [01:48:08.640 --> 01:48:13.720] So you don't take good on that last mandamus I sent in here? [01:48:13.720 --> 01:48:18.440] About a month ago I guess it's been now. [01:48:18.440 --> 01:48:28.680] I have sent in the former Papas to the Circuit, okay, and then they told me that all my filings [01:48:28.680 --> 01:48:35.720] had to be copied and sent down to the U.S. District Court, too. [01:48:35.720 --> 01:48:45.680] So I was like, there's big copies of it, and I sent the former Papas to the Third Circuit [01:48:45.680 --> 01:48:50.600] by itself, because I had already been filed in there, okay, then I turned around and sent [01:48:50.600 --> 01:49:01.960] a copy of my filings down to the U.S. District Court, and I sent Papas, former Papas, with [01:49:01.960 --> 01:49:02.960] that. [01:49:02.960 --> 01:49:13.960] Don't they email me back and said that they dismissed my former Papas down at the U.S. [01:49:13.960 --> 01:49:14.960] District Court? [01:49:14.960 --> 01:49:18.600] But I never heard nothing back from the Circuit. [01:49:18.600 --> 01:49:26.480] Wait a minute, wait a minute, did you already have, has a court already determined that [01:49:26.480 --> 01:49:28.600] you were indigent? [01:49:28.600 --> 01:49:34.200] Oh yeah, I've been indigent for years. [01:49:34.200 --> 01:49:42.160] Okay, well, this court can't, what does he mean, dismissed your former Papas? [01:49:42.160 --> 01:49:48.120] Oh, I got it right here, I got the email right here. [01:49:48.120 --> 01:49:55.440] The reason I'm asking that is, this sounds like, this is a matter of res judicata, okay, [01:49:55.440 --> 01:49:56.440] go ahead. [01:49:56.440 --> 01:50:07.920] Well here is what, now bear in mind that after I sent the filing in for the writ of mandamus, [01:50:07.920 --> 01:50:14.080] they said that they needed the forms for the former Papas, so I put that in a separate [01:50:14.080 --> 01:50:16.600] envelope and sent that in. [01:50:16.600 --> 01:50:22.760] They also said that you have to send a copy of the writ of mandamus that I sent to them [01:50:22.760 --> 01:50:29.720] for them to look at, it doesn't run on, I had to send a copy down to the U.S. District [01:50:29.720 --> 01:50:38.880] Court and I sent along the copy and I also sent along, I filled out an informant Papas [01:50:38.880 --> 01:50:44.400] anyway and stuck that in the mail and put it through. [01:50:44.400 --> 01:50:53.200] Then I got this email back and it says, docket text, okay, order, deny motion for leave [01:50:53.200 --> 01:51:01.600] to proceed in form of Papas signed by the honorable judge and the entry, entries and [01:51:01.600 --> 01:51:04.600] copies email. [01:51:04.600 --> 01:51:13.960] What is this judge saying to me at this District Court, that she's denying me the motion for [01:51:13.960 --> 01:51:14.960] leave? [01:51:14.960 --> 01:51:20.800] No, he's denying you in form of Papas, so now you need to notice, I think you made a [01:51:20.800 --> 01:51:31.040] mistake, you filed a request for a determination of in form of Papas and you should have filed [01:51:31.040 --> 01:51:38.480] notice that you had already been adjudicated in form of Papas. [01:51:38.480 --> 01:51:54.240] So you might file a deus esticum, deus esticum means oops, that you inadvertently filed a [01:51:54.240 --> 01:51:59.160] request for a determination of in form of Papas when in fact you should have filed notice [01:51:59.160 --> 01:52:05.800] with the court that you had already been determined to be in form of Papas. [01:52:05.800 --> 01:52:12.720] Deus esticum, that's not the same as the subpoena, bring it with us, bring it with you? [01:52:12.720 --> 01:52:19.440] Deus esticum means something's done in error. [01:52:19.440 --> 01:52:22.120] Is that the nuns protunk? [01:52:22.120 --> 01:52:28.760] You're right, it's not deus esticum, my bad, I made a mistake, first time, yes, it's nuns [01:52:28.760 --> 01:52:33.320] protunk, sorry about that. [01:52:33.320 --> 01:52:34.320] What's deus esticum? [01:52:34.320 --> 01:52:36.080] That's what deus esticum is. [01:52:36.080 --> 01:52:39.640] Let's bring it with you, subpoena. [01:52:39.640 --> 01:52:50.080] Bring document, okay, I'm sorry, yeah, nuns protunk, that what you're filing is not substantive, [01:52:50.080 --> 01:52:56.760] that it's the correct and relatively minor errors and you send it with an apology to [01:52:56.760 --> 01:52:58.960] the court for your error. [01:52:58.960 --> 01:53:06.920] Oh, so that would go under nuns protunk then? [01:53:06.920 --> 01:53:07.920] Yes. [01:53:07.920 --> 01:53:10.900] Yeah, I'm familiar with that. [01:53:10.900 --> 01:53:17.840] And send them notice that you have already been determined to be a pauper so this court [01:53:17.840 --> 01:53:25.880] can't overrule the prior determination as your financial circumstances have not changed. [01:53:25.880 --> 01:53:32.080] Okay, because this judge at the U.S. district don't like me either. [01:53:32.080 --> 01:53:39.480] Oh, that's okay, a lot of times you get better rulings if they don't like you. [01:53:39.480 --> 01:53:42.600] Oh, yeah, I don't want to... [01:53:42.600 --> 01:53:47.280] If they know you, I got a really good ruling in a hearing the other day because the judge [01:53:47.280 --> 01:53:52.440] was pretty sure that I wasn't there dangling by my bar card and I was more than prepared [01:53:52.440 --> 01:53:56.080] to stick my professional boot up his professional behind. [01:53:56.080 --> 01:54:03.640] Oh, I filed so many of those. [01:54:03.640 --> 01:54:08.840] The attorney, I even bar grieved her husband. [01:54:08.840 --> 01:54:14.520] Her husband got a job down the street that would have something to take a lot of her. [01:54:14.520 --> 01:54:18.800] I told them they're in conspiracy against me. [01:54:18.800 --> 01:54:26.600] Given all the judicial conduct, I mean, I got a stack over there now that is sticking [01:54:26.600 --> 01:54:34.440] out of an envelope that I got to get a bigger envelope or a box. [01:54:34.440 --> 01:54:39.680] You're not going to get any Christmas cards from these guys. [01:54:39.680 --> 01:54:44.120] You can forget that. [01:54:44.120 --> 01:54:48.680] These things you're doing has consequences, you know. [01:54:48.680 --> 01:54:52.320] Do you think they'll lock me up if I get down the courthouse again? [01:54:52.320 --> 01:54:55.560] I'm a dad at home. [01:54:55.560 --> 01:54:56.560] Let me get... [01:54:56.560 --> 01:54:58.560] We're about to run out of time. [01:54:58.560 --> 01:55:04.560] Ted, Jason, if you all will call back tomorrow night, we'll take you at the top. [01:55:04.560 --> 01:55:10.680] If you call in later, we will take you absolutely next in line because you waited so long. [01:55:10.680 --> 01:55:13.600] I apologize, but it's only two hours tonight. [01:55:13.600 --> 01:55:18.160] I didn't expect Jerry to call, I'm glad he did. [01:55:18.160 --> 01:55:20.600] He's always a lot of fun. [01:55:20.600 --> 01:55:23.560] Okay, go ahead, Jerry. [01:55:23.560 --> 01:55:24.960] We've got three minutes left. [01:55:24.960 --> 01:55:25.960] Oh, okay. [01:55:25.960 --> 01:55:26.960] All right. [01:55:26.960 --> 01:55:30.760] I'll email you that over. [01:55:30.760 --> 01:55:32.160] I'll look it up here. [01:55:32.160 --> 01:55:34.760] I don't have it at the top of my head right now. [01:55:34.760 --> 01:55:42.920] Yeah, if you want, have him email me and then I got a whole lot of stuff here. [01:55:42.920 --> 01:55:48.000] You know, anything he wants, the cases, the paperwork. [01:55:48.000 --> 01:55:49.920] I can just email it over. [01:55:49.920 --> 01:55:51.800] I may be wanting that soon. [01:55:51.800 --> 01:55:58.320] I have a tentative meeting early next week with a large law firm that may help me launch [01:55:58.320 --> 01:56:02.280] my electronic lawyer program. [01:56:02.280 --> 01:56:07.640] When I get that launched, I'm going to be wanting a lot of technical information on [01:56:07.640 --> 01:56:09.600] really specific issues. [01:56:09.600 --> 01:56:17.340] We will start memorializing all of this and getting all of this case law and all these [01:56:17.340 --> 01:56:23.920] legal arguments in a place where they're easy to access and we'll streamline this whole [01:56:23.920 --> 01:56:31.280] process so that proceeds can kick professional behind. [01:56:31.280 --> 01:56:34.760] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:56:34.760 --> 01:56:39.800] Yeah, that's our ruling, right? [01:56:39.800 --> 01:56:41.760] Yes. [01:56:41.760 --> 01:56:47.720] This is my grass police ruling where they trespass. [01:56:47.720 --> 01:56:54.880] Okay, so all right, I'll get that out to you tomorrow. [01:56:54.880 --> 01:57:00.440] I'll start looking at it up first thing tomorrow morning. [01:57:00.440 --> 01:57:02.720] Okay, thank you, Jerry. [01:57:02.720 --> 01:57:04.320] Thanks, Jerry. [01:57:04.320 --> 01:57:07.520] Okay, we got just a couple minutes. [01:57:07.520 --> 01:57:11.960] Jason, quickly, what do you got for us? [01:57:11.960 --> 01:57:15.120] Hey, can you hear me? [01:57:15.120 --> 01:57:16.120] Go ahead. [01:57:16.120 --> 01:57:25.040] Yeah, I got quite a bit of stuff for you, but quickly, I have a few questions about [01:57:25.040 --> 01:57:29.960] a motion to dismiss. [01:57:29.960 --> 01:57:34.720] So do you remember the circumstances of my case from the last time I called or? [01:57:34.720 --> 01:57:39.240] No, me and Brett were trying to remember what your case was about. [01:57:39.240 --> 01:57:43.760] I said it was about traffic and... Yeah, it was a traffic case. [01:57:43.760 --> 01:57:45.320] There you go, Brett. [01:57:45.320 --> 01:57:46.320] I told you. [01:57:46.320 --> 01:57:50.720] I told him he gets to laugh at me if I'm wrong. [01:57:50.720 --> 01:57:53.080] Okay, we're not going to have time to get in it. [01:57:53.080 --> 01:57:55.600] We've only got about a minute left. [01:57:55.600 --> 01:57:58.360] So call us back tomorrow and we'll bump you up to the top. [01:57:58.360 --> 01:58:01.120] All right, sounds good. [01:58:01.120 --> 01:58:03.720] Okay, thank you. [01:58:03.720 --> 01:58:10.520] Okay, this went pretty well and I'm looking for some fun. [01:58:10.520 --> 01:58:16.600] The next two days, I have schedule for filing bar grievances and judicial conduct complaints [01:58:16.600 --> 01:58:22.520] and just generally making a nuisance of myself in the courts and I'm having way too much [01:58:22.520 --> 01:58:23.520] fun. [01:58:23.520 --> 01:58:24.520] Yeah, same here. [01:58:24.520 --> 01:58:32.120] I'm having a lot of fun too right now with a speeding ticket and turning it into a fun [01:58:32.120 --> 01:58:38.440] learning experience with documenting things and I think it's going to turn out fun. [01:58:38.440 --> 01:58:42.160] We'll be back tomorrow night on our four hour info marathon. [01:58:42.160 --> 01:58:50.640] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:50.640 --> 01:58:56.720] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.720 --> 01:58:57.920] Recovery Version. [01:58:57.920 --> 01:59:02.880] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.880 --> 01:59:08.560] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.560 --> 01:59:11.840] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.840 --> 01:59:20.820] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.820 --> 01:59:26.340] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references plus [01:59:26.340 --> 01:59:30.360] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.360 --> 01:59:32.920] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.920 --> 01:59:41.280] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.280 --> 01:59:48.800] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:48.800 --> 01:59:59.600] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.