[00:00.000 --> 00:05.560] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.560 --> 00:09.560] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.560 --> 00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.000 --> 00:14.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.960 --> 00:17.080] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.080 --> 00:18.660] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.660 --> 00:22.280] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.280 --> 00:27.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.040 --> 00:32.120] You'll protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.120 --> 00:33.120] Privacy. [00:33.120 --> 00:34.800] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.800 --> 00:39.080] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.080 --> 00:42.640] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.640 --> 00:44.840] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.840 --> 00:46.680] Spar. [00:46.680 --> 00:47.920] It's what fighters do. [00:47.920 --> 00:51.360] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.360 --> 00:54.600] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.600 --> 01:01.720] Spar with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.720 --> 01:03.200] and R for religion. [01:03.200 --> 01:07.120] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.120 --> 01:08.640] assembly, and religion. [01:08.640 --> 01:11.000] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:11.000 --> 01:14.720] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.720 --> 01:18.240] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.240 --> 01:20.920] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.920 --> 01:31.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.200 --> 01:34.840] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.840 --> 01:38.280] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.280 --> 01:39.760] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.760 --> 01:43.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.680 --> 01:46.800] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.800 --> 01:48.400] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.400 --> 01:52.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.000 --> 01:56.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.800 --> 02:01.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.800 --> 02:04.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.560 --> 02:08.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.840 --> 02:12.360] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.360 --> 02:15.960] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.960 --> 02:20.300] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.300 --> 02:22.360] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.360 --> 02:26.880] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.880 --> 02:30.720] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.720 --> 02:31.720] Get it? [02:31.720 --> 02:34.040] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.040 --> 02:37.640] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.640 --> 02:43.400] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.400 --> 02:47.960] conduct, one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which [02:47.960 --> 02:50.720] historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.720 --> 02:52.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.560 --> 03:14.080] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:14.080 --> 03:25.920] I just received my remedy today, came in the rock just like the say, I accepted for value [03:25.920 --> 03:26.920] right away. [03:26.920 --> 03:36.460] It's not sooner, no later, we are originators, and the pathway seems to get straighter every [03:36.460 --> 03:37.460] day. [03:37.460 --> 03:45.460] every day, and I can take anything that belongs to me and good or too good a use. [03:45.460 --> 03:53.460] Well, I was good for the gander, going to work for the goose. [03:53.460 --> 04:04.460] I know some architects, I know some engineers, they've seen the evidence. [04:04.460 --> 04:12.460] Okay, howdy, howdy, Rand Kelton, Brett Fountainbrew, Law Radio. [04:12.460 --> 04:23.460] On this Friday, the 16th day of September, 2022, and we are going to Jane in Texas. [04:23.460 --> 04:27.460] Jane, what do you have for us today? [04:27.460 --> 04:30.460] Hi, Randy. Hi, Brett. [04:30.460 --> 04:33.460] Good evening. [04:33.460 --> 04:38.460] Oh, I missed a hearing. [04:38.460 --> 04:40.460] What? [04:40.460 --> 04:42.460] Yes, I did. [04:42.460 --> 04:44.460] Were you in a coma? [04:44.460 --> 04:56.460] That I was telling you about a couple weeks ago on the show about whenever I got the email saying something about the status of my cases. [04:56.460 --> 04:57.460] Yes. [04:57.460 --> 05:03.460] Even though my cases have already been convicted? [05:03.460 --> 05:05.460] Okay. [05:05.460 --> 05:16.460] Well, the hearing was scheduled for September 9th, and then when I replied to them and said that's not acceptable because I need to file my appeal, [05:16.460 --> 05:29.460] I replied back with whatever it was that was confusing to me because I thought that the hearing was changed to the 19th. [05:29.460 --> 05:32.460] Okay, then this is not hard. [05:32.460 --> 05:37.460] The courts frown on default judgments. [05:37.460 --> 05:43.460] They frown on rulings without the party there. [05:43.460 --> 05:52.460] If you file a motion for rehearing based on honest error and they don't give you one, [05:52.460 --> 06:00.460] you just petition the Court of Appeals for a writ of mandamus order and get them to reset the hearing. [06:00.460 --> 06:01.460] Okay. [06:01.460 --> 06:04.460] You missed the hearing by honest mistake. [06:04.460 --> 06:13.460] Okay, because I have already, after they did that, and so then I don't even know that I missed it, and so on that evening or that afternoon, [06:13.460 --> 06:22.460] they just sent an email saying that, you know, the court held the hearing and there was no response from me, [06:22.460 --> 06:28.460] and they determined that I was going to have to pay my appeal bond by next Friday. [06:28.460 --> 06:34.460] Okay, just file this motion for rehearing for honest mistake. [06:34.460 --> 06:36.460] Wait a second. [06:36.460 --> 06:42.460] This is about the, why were they having a hearing when it was your statement? [06:42.460 --> 06:51.460] Did the other side, the opposition, bring some admissible evidence to contradict what you said about your ability to afford? [06:51.460 --> 06:55.460] The opposition is the court, but they did not. [06:55.460 --> 06:58.460] No, the court can't be the opposition. [06:58.460 --> 06:59.460] Right. [06:59.460 --> 07:04.460] The court clerk can and the court reporter can, nobody else. [07:04.460 --> 07:05.460] Okay. [07:05.460 --> 07:07.460] And they need to bring some evidence. [07:07.460 --> 07:19.460] They did not file a motion and that's what the SAC, not SAC, but TRCP 145 said, that they would have had to file a motion and it can't just be allegation. [07:19.460 --> 07:20.460] Exactly. [07:20.460 --> 07:24.460] So why is there even a hearing being held? [07:24.460 --> 07:26.460] You've already sworn this. [07:26.460 --> 07:31.460] That's exactly what I'm doing in Victoria County. [07:31.460 --> 07:39.460] We had a judge recuse himself and in his recusal order, he said he filed a motion. [07:39.460 --> 07:40.460] Well, he didn't file any motion. [07:40.460 --> 07:42.460] I didn't find one. [07:42.460 --> 07:50.460] In order to recuse, there has to be a motion and the parties have to have an opportunity to oppose the motion. [07:50.460 --> 07:51.460] Yes, I agree. [07:51.460 --> 07:52.460] They needed a motion. [07:52.460 --> 07:55.460] The judge can't do anything without a motion. [07:55.460 --> 07:56.460] Okay. [07:56.460 --> 08:12.460] How he did it was because of the fact the last time after the judgment, one of the last things I filed before he set the hearing was, remember, we also talked about on the show that I should write a motion for clarification of findings and conclusions. [08:12.460 --> 08:14.460] And I did do that. [08:14.460 --> 08:30.460] At the same time, again, I also sent my informant, properist, and also another request, a second request for them to, you know, provide me with the record of the court and the written transcript. [08:30.460 --> 08:45.460] Well, so because the judge, he wanted to get me in open court to do the clarifications and the findings in open court so he wouldn't have had to respond with the elements that I asked him to respond with that would improve my convictions. [08:45.460 --> 08:47.460] And he didn't want to do that because they don't have them. [08:47.460 --> 08:50.460] No, he needs to respond in writing. [08:50.460 --> 08:55.460] Yeah, but he's not required to, right, Mindy? [08:55.460 --> 08:57.460] Did you file a motion? [08:57.460 --> 08:58.460] Most definitely. [08:58.460 --> 09:00.460] I filed first of all. [09:00.460 --> 09:05.460] Yeah, they have to respond in writing, not the judge, the opposing counsel. [09:05.460 --> 09:07.460] Well, there's no opposing counsel. [09:07.460 --> 09:10.460] Are you talking about the prosecutor? [09:10.460 --> 09:11.460] Yeah. [09:11.460 --> 09:18.460] Whoever the opposing side is, the judge can't get in there and adjudicate the case. [09:18.460 --> 09:19.460] No, not about that. [09:19.460 --> 09:29.460] She requested findings of fact and conclusions of law, and the judge wanted to just talk to her about his answer instead of put it in writing like he's supposed to. [09:29.460 --> 09:33.460] Oh, no, he can't do that. [09:33.460 --> 09:38.460] This is supposedly not a court of record. [09:38.460 --> 09:40.460] So he wanted to have no record. [09:40.460 --> 09:44.460] You need to bar greed, I mean, judicial conduct the crap out of this guy. [09:44.460 --> 09:53.460] And finally, judicial conduct complaints because he is ignoring the ruling of a higher court. [09:53.460 --> 09:57.460] That might get him sanctioned. [09:57.460 --> 10:00.460] He's messing with a higher level judge. [10:00.460 --> 10:03.460] Okay, okay. [10:03.460 --> 10:12.460] The judge has already ruled that you are in form of paupress, and this lower level judge is trying to overrule the higher level judge. [10:12.460 --> 10:14.460] They get sanctioned for that kind of stuff. [10:14.460 --> 10:15.460] Yeah. [10:15.460 --> 10:16.460] He doesn't want me to appeal. [10:16.460 --> 10:20.460] He didn't want me to get to the appeals court because they know they don't have the... [10:20.460 --> 10:21.460] Of course he doesn't. [10:21.460 --> 10:22.460] Yeah. [10:22.460 --> 10:25.460] They know they don't have them. [10:25.460 --> 10:28.460] You should get a petition for writ amandamus. [10:28.460 --> 10:36.460] And I'm working on that right now, but my goal of that was just to get the appeal and tell them that the court is blocking my appeal. [10:36.460 --> 10:38.460] Don't worry about the court. [10:38.460 --> 10:44.460] Worry about the writ amandamus. Worry about the appellate court. [10:44.460 --> 10:50.460] If it takes you more time, let it take you more time making back up anything they want to. [10:50.460 --> 10:54.460] Yeah, the amandamus and the judicial misconduct complaint. [10:54.460 --> 11:00.460] Yeah, just because this court says your time ran out, that don't mean squat. [11:00.460 --> 11:06.460] So I don't have to worry about getting arrested next Friday for not paying my fines or the appeal bond? [11:06.460 --> 11:10.460] No, no, no. They really don't do that. [11:10.460 --> 11:12.460] It'll take a long time. [11:12.460 --> 11:14.460] Okay. [11:14.460 --> 11:17.460] If they arrest you for that, then it gets really serious. [11:17.460 --> 11:20.460] Then your claims get a lot bigger. [11:20.460 --> 11:24.460] But it's unlikely they're out after you. [11:24.460 --> 11:27.460] They just want you out of their hair. [11:27.460 --> 11:31.460] Give them notice of filing. [11:31.460 --> 11:34.460] Get your amandamus done. [11:34.460 --> 11:36.460] Get that file, give them notice. [11:36.460 --> 11:39.460] Then everything has to stop. [11:39.460 --> 11:42.460] Well, they just gave me another ticket the other day. [11:42.460 --> 11:43.460] Sometimes I left my house. [11:43.460 --> 11:46.460] So they're out after me. [11:46.460 --> 11:48.460] So that's what I think. [11:48.460 --> 11:49.460] No, that's very funny. [11:49.460 --> 11:52.460] Look, these guys are busy. [11:52.460 --> 11:55.460] They don't care. [11:55.460 --> 11:57.460] You just had bad luck. [11:57.460 --> 12:01.460] They didn't like me challenging their authority. [12:01.460 --> 12:08.460] You know what's going to happen to this judge if he tells a police officer to go give you a ticket? [12:08.460 --> 12:12.460] That police officer is going to tell that judge to go scratch. [12:12.460 --> 12:14.460] You think so? [12:14.460 --> 12:16.460] I absolutely know so. [12:16.460 --> 12:17.460] Okay. [12:17.460 --> 12:22.460] These officers do not like those judges. [12:22.460 --> 12:23.460] Okay. [12:23.460 --> 12:28.460] They don't all have their snouts in the same trough. [12:28.460 --> 12:31.460] Are you kidding? [12:31.460 --> 12:33.460] You've got a policeman here? [12:33.460 --> 12:42.460] If it came out that he was acting after the test of a judge and singling someone out for prosecution, he could go to prison. [12:42.460 --> 12:44.460] Of course, yeah. [12:44.460 --> 12:50.460] You think a police officer is going to do that for some smart mouth JP? [12:50.460 --> 12:51.460] No, he's not JP. [12:51.460 --> 12:53.460] He's a municipal court judge. [12:53.460 --> 12:57.460] It doesn't make any difference. [12:57.460 --> 12:59.460] He's a superior court judge, okay? [12:59.460 --> 13:01.460] Yeah. [13:01.460 --> 13:09.460] I went in the JP in Mansfield, and you've heard my hearing aid story. [13:09.460 --> 13:17.460] And after that, the next week I was at a political rally, and the bailiff found me in the pavilion. [13:17.460 --> 13:19.460] I saw he was at the door when I came in. [13:19.460 --> 13:24.460] I'm walking around the pavilion, and he came to me and he said, Mr. Cutler, are you busy right now? [13:24.460 --> 13:28.460] Well, no, he said, I've got some people I want you to meet. [13:28.460 --> 13:33.460] He took me to this room, and he explained that these were all bailiffs from around the county, [13:33.460 --> 13:39.460] that they made extra money by doing security for these kinds of events. [13:39.460 --> 13:43.460] We walked in, and he said, hey, you know who this guy is? [13:43.460 --> 13:48.460] This is the guy that set up Judge Hayes. [13:48.460 --> 13:51.460] These bailiffs come over and shook my hand. [13:51.460 --> 13:53.460] Several of them I knew. [13:53.460 --> 13:57.460] And the literally came out of their mouths over those judges. [13:57.460 --> 13:59.460] They hated those judges. [13:59.460 --> 14:01.460] Oh, wow. [14:01.460 --> 14:08.460] They got to stand there in court and watch these judges screw one person after another after another. [14:08.460 --> 14:10.460] They hated them. [14:10.460 --> 14:11.460] They don't know they're getting screwed. [14:11.460 --> 14:14.460] Police don't know that they're screwing the people, do they? [14:14.460 --> 14:16.460] Yes, they absolutely know. [14:16.460 --> 14:18.460] Okay. [14:18.460 --> 14:24.460] They see these people in there that just don't know how to defend themselves, [14:24.460 --> 14:27.460] and the judge just screws one after the other. [14:27.460 --> 14:29.460] They hated it. [14:29.460 --> 14:41.460] And for a judge to ask a policeman to single somebody out, that is really, really deep water. [14:41.460 --> 14:44.460] Well, it sure feels like it. [14:44.460 --> 14:49.460] I can't imagine any policeman being that stupid. [14:49.460 --> 14:52.460] He don't work for that judge. [14:52.460 --> 14:55.460] And they'll tell the judge to go scratch. [14:55.460 --> 14:57.460] Okay. [14:57.460 --> 15:01.460] Now, if his boss tells him that, that might be different, but not the judge. [15:01.460 --> 15:11.460] And for the judge to go to the police and ask the police to single someone out, over classy misdemeanor, are you kidding? [15:11.460 --> 15:19.460] They're not going to risk their careers for that, especially with the heat that's on the police right now. [15:19.460 --> 15:22.460] Yeah. [15:22.460 --> 15:27.460] Just get all my traffic stuff and file it in there. [15:27.460 --> 15:39.460] I filed all kinds of stuff, but I have even after they denied, after they slapped me on the hand for not coming to the court and telling me that it's over with. [15:39.460 --> 15:43.460] And I did file a motion for them to take judicial notice. [15:43.460 --> 15:53.460] And also, I filed my inform response order again and said, you know, look, you know, this is rest due to caught up and, you know. [15:53.460 --> 15:54.460] Okay. [15:54.460 --> 15:57.460] For a mandamus, this should not take much. [15:57.460 --> 15:58.460] Okay. [15:58.460 --> 16:04.460] And then the court replied back saying, Ms. Lynch, you had a hearing on the night, but you didn't show up. [16:04.460 --> 16:06.460] So it's over, you know, pretty much. [16:06.460 --> 16:14.460] No, just send them a request for rehearing for honest error. [16:14.460 --> 16:15.460] Okay. [16:15.460 --> 16:16.460] I'll do that. [16:16.460 --> 16:19.460] And then at the same time, file a written mandamus, right? [16:19.460 --> 16:20.460] Yeah. [16:20.460 --> 16:31.460] Ask the appellate court to order the JP court to honor the ruling by the, what was it, county court gave you this ruling? [16:31.460 --> 16:34.460] Yeah. [16:34.460 --> 16:42.460] An inferior court overruling a county court, they are not going to like that one little bit. [16:42.460 --> 16:43.460] Well, I'm working on it. [16:43.460 --> 16:45.460] Make sure you do a judicial conduct complaint on that. [16:45.460 --> 16:48.460] They might sanction the judge over that. [16:48.460 --> 16:49.460] Okay. [16:49.460 --> 16:50.460] Will that do now? [16:50.460 --> 16:51.460] I wouldn't get the money, though. [16:51.460 --> 16:52.460] Okay. [16:52.460 --> 16:53.460] Hang on. [16:53.460 --> 16:54.460] We'll be right back. [16:54.460 --> 17:00.460] One more. [17:00.460 --> 17:04.460] You being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:04.460 --> 17:08.460] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:08.460 --> 17:14.460] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [17:14.460 --> 17:20.460] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [17:20.460 --> 17:26.460] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [17:26.460 --> 17:33.460] how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.460 --> 17:38.460] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.460 --> 17:40.460] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.460 --> 17:49.460] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.460 --> 18:01.460] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:01.460 --> 18:04.460] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic center. [18:04.460 --> 18:09.460] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.460 --> 18:12.460] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.460 --> 18:16.460] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:16.460 --> 18:19.460] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.460 --> 18:24.460] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:24.460 --> 18:27.460] Former Sheriff's Deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:27.460 --> 18:32.460] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [18:32.460 --> 18:34.460] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.460 --> 18:39.460] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:39.460 --> 18:44.460] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:44.460 --> 18:50.460] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [18:50.460 --> 18:54.460] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.460 --> 18:59.460] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:59.460 --> 19:14.460] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, www.logosradionetwork.com [19:14.460 --> 19:18.460] Well, don't let them get to you. Only the father can do it for you. [19:18.460 --> 19:24.460] Don't let bad-minded people hurt you until they get behind you. [19:24.460 --> 19:29.460] Jane, my friend, now I'll judge you. [19:36.460 --> 19:45.460] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Jane in Texas. [19:45.460 --> 19:55.460] Jane, when you get out of this lower court, you will find that the higher courts are much easier to deal with. [19:55.460 --> 20:10.460] I had a friend whose brother was a lawyer, and I guess he didn't like practicing law, so he became a judge, a municipal judge. [20:10.460 --> 20:24.460] And he complained that the State Commission on Judicial Conduct only sanctioned inferior court judges. [20:24.460 --> 20:29.460] The county judges and district judges, they never sanctioned them. [20:29.460 --> 20:36.460] They only sanctioned these lower court judges to make it look like they were actually doing something. [20:36.460 --> 20:42.460] And in studying the sanctions that's been put out, that's true. [20:42.460 --> 20:47.460] Yeah, but the higher you go up in court, the more they follow the law, I thought. [20:47.460 --> 20:52.460] That's exactly it. You get out of these lower courts into the higher courts. [20:52.460 --> 20:56.460] Do you think there could be a correlation, Jane? [20:56.460 --> 20:59.460] Yeah, that's exactly why they're getting sanctioned, because they're idiots, [20:59.460 --> 21:04.460] and they don't need to be in there breaking the law and running money laundering machines and stuff. [21:04.460 --> 21:09.460] Yeah, and I agree, and they need people like you not to take their crap. [21:09.460 --> 21:12.460] Well, you know what? I have a question, though. [21:12.460 --> 21:18.460] You're saying I should do a motion for honest mistake or whatever before the hearing, but why do I want to have that hearing? [21:18.460 --> 21:21.460] It's still an exotic old five. [21:21.460 --> 21:33.460] Jane, you're setting the record. Your only purpose in the trial court is what? [21:33.460 --> 21:35.460] It's to set the record for the appeal. [21:35.460 --> 21:41.460] Yes, you're just setting the record. That's why. You don't care what this judge rules. [21:41.460 --> 21:46.460] You'll get past him. He's trying to block you from getting past him. [21:46.460 --> 21:48.460] Exactly. [21:48.460 --> 21:55.460] So he's doing really exceptional stuff, stuff that can get him hammered. So get him hammered. [21:55.460 --> 21:59.460] Get a judicial conduct complaint in on it. How many of you filed on him so far? [21:59.460 --> 22:01.460] None. I don't have time. [22:01.460 --> 22:02.460] What? [22:02.460 --> 22:08.460] I don't say that crap. Oh, you got time. It takes 10 minutes to file a judicial conduct complaint. [22:08.460 --> 22:17.460] And you know what? I filed one with them before on the JP court, the lady, and they dismissed that. [22:17.460 --> 22:22.460] We got that. Haven't you heard us talk about this? [22:22.460 --> 22:25.460] They're going to do that every time. [22:25.460 --> 22:34.460] But it puts marks on their chart. It raises their bond rating. [22:34.460 --> 22:39.460] It worked. You had your effect. It succeeded. Don't worry. [22:39.460 --> 22:42.460] Yeah. Okay. [22:42.460 --> 22:56.460] I'm seeing them at every opportunity. I filed against the JP, against the municipal court judge in Rome, and I accused him of criminal acts. [22:56.460 --> 23:08.460] And the state commission said that taking all of my statements as true, the complaint would not rise to the level of misconduct. [23:08.460 --> 23:22.460] What I claimed was that I filed criminal charges against a public official with the judge, and the judge failed to issue a warrant in accordance with 15.09. [23:22.460 --> 23:29.460] So they told me I could file an appeal, and I did, or file an objection, and I did. [23:29.460 --> 23:39.460] And I included verified criminal complaints against the judge. And on the state commission and judicial conduct, there are four judges. [23:39.460 --> 23:45.460] I'm sorry, I think three judges and one prosecutor. [23:45.460 --> 23:54.460] Now I'm going to file criminally against them, because they had it made known to them by verified criminal affidavit that a crime had been committed. [23:54.460 --> 24:00.460] And just because they were on the commission didn't relieve them of their duty as a magistrate. So I'm going to file against them. [24:00.460 --> 24:02.460] That's right. I agree. [24:02.460 --> 24:04.460] Set them up. Nail them. [24:04.460 --> 24:05.460] I've done that. [24:05.460 --> 24:13.460] Okay. So then on the mandamus, the part about the rehearing, I can just moan in the court for that and just watch them flail around. [24:13.460 --> 24:17.460] But on the written mandamus, that's going to be about the appeal, right, about them blocking my appeal? [24:17.460 --> 24:22.460] Yeah. No, that's about in form of operas. [24:22.460 --> 24:29.460] Yeah, yeah. That's what I'm saying. They're using their excuse that they want to be proved, you know, to block my appeal. [24:29.460 --> 24:30.460] I mean, the whole point is... [24:30.460 --> 24:47.460] The only thing you need to get to your appeal is for the Court of Appeals to say the municipal court cannot overrule a county court's determination of in form of operas. [24:47.460 --> 24:48.460] They have to honor it. [24:48.460 --> 24:49.460] Okay. [24:49.460 --> 24:54.460] That's all you need. Once you've got that, then you go straight to appeal. [24:54.460 --> 25:04.460] But I still have to step forward the facts. I have to step forward the facts in the mandamus, and I can't just say, hey, this court is not taking this order, right? [25:04.460 --> 25:08.460] I can't be that simple like a one or two-page thing, right? It's got to be a long, drawn-out bunch of... [25:08.460 --> 25:20.460] No, no, no. Wait a minute. You're mixing things up again. We're talking about forcing the judge to honor your in form of operas order. [25:20.460 --> 25:23.460] Right. Exactly. But in a form of a written... [25:23.460 --> 25:32.460] All you have to do is that one issue, do not put anything else in there. This is not an appeal. [25:32.460 --> 25:37.460] No, I know. I'm not trying to put anything related to the merits... [25:37.460 --> 25:42.460] Then what are you talking about? You've got to argue all this other stuff. There's only one singular thing. [25:42.460 --> 25:54.460] Because you have to set up the fact. You have to set up a set forth of facts showing that I have the right to actually file for the decision of the written mandamus, and that... [25:54.460 --> 25:58.460] Yes. You can't put two words. You have to create... [25:58.460 --> 26:08.460] Give them enough information so they'll understand what's going on. You were in this court, and they determined that you were indigent. [26:08.460 --> 26:19.460] You came to a lower court and filed your order with the lower court. The lower court refused to honor the ruling of the higher court. How much more do you need? [26:19.460 --> 26:25.460] And then I'll have to say that there was another available remedy to me. [26:25.460 --> 26:28.460] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. What are you doing? [26:28.460 --> 26:30.460] I'm trying to figure out the things... [26:30.460 --> 26:35.460] No, no. What you're doing is you're tearing things apart in teensy tightsy little pieces. [26:35.460 --> 26:42.460] You do this all the time. You make people crazy trying to get something to you because no matter what we say, you say, [26:42.460 --> 26:56.460] Yeah, but this, and this, and this, and this, and this, and this, we can't get anywhere. All you have to do is argue one single issue. [26:56.460 --> 26:57.460] Okay. [26:57.460 --> 27:05.460] Yes. You have to give the judge enough so he understands the issue. But it's only one issue. [27:05.460 --> 27:07.460] Okay. Okay. [27:07.460 --> 27:12.460] You could have written that in the time you've been talking to us today. [27:12.460 --> 27:14.460] Are you serious? I... [27:14.460 --> 27:16.460] Yes. This is not hard. [27:16.460 --> 27:20.460] But Parliament, it's not as cut and dry. And have you ever seen a... [27:20.460 --> 27:22.460] It is cut and dry. [27:22.460 --> 27:23.460] Again? [27:23.460 --> 27:24.460] It is. [27:24.460 --> 27:25.460] Okay. [27:25.460 --> 27:30.460] A county court determined that you were indigent. [27:30.460 --> 27:31.460] Okay. [27:31.460 --> 27:37.460] The municipal court overruled the county court's ruling. It's that simple. [27:37.460 --> 27:42.460] All right. Then I'm going to write a one or two page written endowment stamp. And I just... [27:42.460 --> 27:45.460] Yeah. That's all it needs to be. And the smaller it is, the better. [27:45.460 --> 27:46.460] Awesome. [27:46.460 --> 27:49.460] The more focused it is, the better. [27:49.460 --> 27:54.460] You just took a lot of work off my plate. It's already like 10 or 15 pages already. [27:54.460 --> 27:58.460] Yeah. That's too much. They won't read all that. It'll give me a headache. [27:58.460 --> 27:59.460] Okay. [27:59.460 --> 28:03.460] Yeah. Just make it as short as you can. You know, make sure you cover everything. [28:03.460 --> 28:09.460] And you went to this court and you received this order, C, attached as Exhibit A. [28:09.460 --> 28:24.460] You attempted to file an appeal and the municipal court refused to honor your former populous ruling, C, Exhibit B. [28:24.460 --> 28:25.460] Okay. I'll do that. [28:25.460 --> 28:32.460] Move the court to order the municipal court to honor the county court's ruling. [28:32.460 --> 28:33.460] Okay. [28:33.460 --> 28:37.460] There's a little bit of details in between just so they make sense of what's going on. [28:37.460 --> 28:42.460] But you don't want to get a stray away from that. [28:42.460 --> 28:46.460] It's the little details that you mentioned that get me thrown off. [28:46.460 --> 28:52.460] Like if I have to tell them the filings that I've made since the trial. [28:52.460 --> 29:01.460] That's not relevant. When he's saying details, he's talking about just something like maybe the date that this was filed or something. [29:01.460 --> 29:06.460] Not going off into any other stuff, any other tangents. Leave it alone. [29:06.460 --> 29:10.460] All your other motions have nothing to do with Informer Populous. [29:10.460 --> 29:12.460] Okay. All right. [29:12.460 --> 29:27.460] I want to stay, just focus on one thing. Look at it and say, I'm going to put this in there. If they agree with what I'm about to put in there, would it have an effect on the ruling that I want? [29:27.460 --> 29:33.460] I filed this motion, this motion, this motion, this motion. They wouldn't accept these motions. [29:33.460 --> 29:37.460] What does that have to do with Informer Populous? [29:37.460 --> 29:38.460] Okay. [29:38.460 --> 29:41.460] Get it as tight as you can. [29:41.460 --> 29:46.460] Okay, I will. All right. Well, I'll let you go and see and talk to other people. [29:46.460 --> 29:48.460] Okay. Thank you. [29:48.460 --> 29:56.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, call in number 512-646-1984. [29:56.460 --> 30:00.460] I just said that to use up time because we've got a full board. We'll be right back. [30:00.460 --> 30:08.460] Everyone knows that walking is a great exercise, but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:08.460 --> 30:14.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:14.460 --> 30:19.460] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:19.460 --> 30:24.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.460 --> 30:29.460] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:29.460 --> 30:32.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.460 --> 30:39.460] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:39.460 --> 30:43.460] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.460 --> 30:47.460] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.460 --> 30:55.460] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.460 --> 31:00.460] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [31:00.460 --> 31:07.460] Seniors age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:07.460 --> 31:10.460] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.460 --> 31:16.460] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:16.460 --> 31:21.460] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.460 --> 31:30.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.460 --> 31:34.460] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [31:34.460 --> 31:38.460] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.460 --> 31:42.460] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.460 --> 31:46.460] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.460 --> 31:52.460] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.460 --> 31:55.460] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.460 --> 32:00.460] Go to buildingwatch.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.460 --> 32:06.460] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.460 --> 32:12.460] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.460 --> 32:17.460] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:17.460 --> 32:24.460] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [32:24.460 --> 32:28.460] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.460 --> 32:32.460] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.460 --> 32:39.460] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [32:39.460 --> 32:44.460] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.460 --> 32:50.460] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.460 --> 32:56.460] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com, Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [32:56.460 --> 33:10.460] to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:26.460 --> 33:41.460] I want what I want [33:41.460 --> 33:49.460] I won't let you pull the wool over my eyes [33:49.460 --> 33:57.460] We must refuse your news, also fervent lies [33:57.460 --> 34:04.460] It seems you like the facts, but please take some words to the wise [34:04.460 --> 34:07.460] Please stop trying to pull the wool over my eyes [34:07.460 --> 34:09.460] Okay, we are back. [34:09.460 --> 34:14.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to E.J. in California. [34:14.460 --> 34:15.460] Hello, E.J. [34:15.460 --> 34:21.460] What do you have for us today? [34:21.460 --> 34:26.460] Good evening, Randy and Brett. [34:26.460 --> 34:31.460] Who have you been beating up this week? [34:31.460 --> 34:36.460] I wish I was beating up the retired judge. [34:36.460 --> 34:40.460] They're all on our backs. [34:40.460 --> 34:48.460] So I put in a motion timely, but I forgot to stress that. [34:48.460 --> 34:51.460] I did it timely, five days prior. [34:51.460 --> 34:53.460] I didn't say that. [34:53.460 --> 35:00.460] I just said, again, you are not answerable to the electorate, [35:00.460 --> 35:06.460] and you're not answerable to any judicial misconduct complaint. [35:06.460 --> 35:12.460] I should have questioned her, but I just stated that there was a court reporter. [35:12.460 --> 35:22.460] She's giving me a court reporter every hearing, so this is all recorded now. [35:22.460 --> 35:30.460] And she said, no, I am an elected, I'm sorry, I am an active judge. [35:30.460 --> 35:36.460] But I said, no, I want an elected judge who originally was assigned to my case, Linda Mark. [35:36.460 --> 35:39.460] But she's assigned to a federal case. [35:39.460 --> 35:47.460] Okay, how did the original elected judge get off your case? [35:47.460 --> 35:53.460] She was, she's overseeing a federal case right now. [35:53.460 --> 35:55.460] She's on the federal level. [35:55.460 --> 35:59.460] So they took her up there temporarily, I guess. [35:59.460 --> 36:07.460] So since she's hearing those cases, the retired judges are filling in for her. [36:07.460 --> 36:14.460] So move first for a, file a petition in abatement. [36:14.460 --> 36:15.460] Okay. [36:15.460 --> 36:21.460] Ask the court to abate the proceedings until the trial judge can hear your case. [36:21.460 --> 36:24.460] The trial judge is under contract. [36:24.460 --> 36:31.460] You have a right to this judge hearing your case and you're willing to wait. [36:31.460 --> 36:32.460] Wonderful. [36:32.460 --> 36:35.460] Thank you so much. [36:35.460 --> 36:37.460] Okay, I think I got it. [36:37.460 --> 36:44.460] And secondly, I wanted to update you on my Ranger case on Monday. [36:44.460 --> 36:47.460] There was no case filed. [36:47.460 --> 36:54.460] I was like, okay, I got a little note from the clerk saying that there's no case filed under the citation number. [36:54.460 --> 36:58.460] And she said, well, no, they can always file it within a year. [36:58.460 --> 37:03.460] So I guess until next year, I got to wait. [37:03.460 --> 37:08.460] What is the nature of the charge? [37:08.460 --> 37:24.460] So I was hiking with my dogs on Mother's Day on a state park and one of the Rangers cited me for off leash for the dog. [37:24.460 --> 37:28.460] But, and he said that, what's the word? [37:28.460 --> 37:31.460] I was an obstacle or obstruction. [37:31.460 --> 37:36.460] So I got a misdemeanor as well. [37:36.460 --> 37:39.460] You were an obstruction? To what? [37:39.460 --> 37:40.460] Yeah. [37:40.460 --> 37:43.460] He said I tried to flee. [37:43.460 --> 37:46.460] But he was in his car, like running, coming after us. [37:46.460 --> 37:50.460] I'm like, what the heck, you know? [37:50.460 --> 37:54.460] So then, I mean, I got arrested twice that day. [37:54.460 --> 37:56.460] I waited for four and a half hours. [37:56.460 --> 37:57.460] This is a long time. [37:57.460 --> 38:04.460] I posted pictures of my arms being all reddened up from handcuffs. [38:04.460 --> 38:06.460] That was really scary. [38:06.460 --> 38:08.460] It's very scary, these people. [38:08.460 --> 38:11.460] I mean, they don't care. [38:11.460 --> 38:15.460] I'm just a lady on Mother's Day, biking. [38:15.460 --> 38:17.460] I guess they don't know who I am. [38:17.460 --> 38:21.460] Have you filed professional conduct complaints against them? [38:21.460 --> 38:25.460] I haven't, just because I know. [38:25.460 --> 38:28.460] I've been dragging my feet because I have these two. [38:28.460 --> 38:30.460] That's no excuse. [38:30.460 --> 38:38.460] I have not, but I did contact a lawyer, and he said he would take the case, what, contingency? [38:38.460 --> 38:40.460] He said he would take it. [38:40.460 --> 38:44.460] But I asked him, should I do anything? [38:44.460 --> 38:45.460] He said, no, just wait. [38:45.460 --> 38:54.460] We don't want them to come after you and have a misdemeanor charge and try to fight it. [38:54.460 --> 38:57.460] Just wait, he said. [38:57.460 --> 39:01.460] What is the statute of limitations on your case? [39:01.460 --> 39:03.460] One year, one year. [39:03.460 --> 39:06.460] But the misdemeanor, I think it's two years. [39:06.460 --> 39:09.460] I've got to look at the misdemeanor. [39:09.460 --> 39:11.460] The dog off leash is one year. [39:11.460 --> 39:16.460] But the misdemeanor, I think they can come after you within the two years. [39:16.460 --> 39:19.460] That's what I have to look. [39:19.460 --> 39:22.460] Wait a minute, did they cite you? [39:22.460 --> 39:25.460] They did cite me, yes, three counts. [39:25.460 --> 39:31.460] No, then the clock is running. [39:31.460 --> 39:33.460] You have a right to speed trial. [39:33.460 --> 39:37.460] What's the Speed Trial Act say in California? [39:37.460 --> 39:38.460] 30 days. [39:38.460 --> 39:40.460] Is it 30 or 45 in a minute? [39:40.460 --> 39:42.460] I think it's 45. [39:42.460 --> 39:45.460] Has it been over 45 days? [39:45.460 --> 39:47.460] Yes, it has, Randy. [39:47.460 --> 39:50.460] Final motion to dismiss. [39:50.460 --> 39:55.460] Oh, even though the DA hasn't put it on the... [39:55.460 --> 39:58.460] His problem, not your problem. [39:58.460 --> 40:01.460] If you were arrested, the clock started that day. [40:01.460 --> 40:05.460] Oh, my God. [40:05.460 --> 40:08.460] Holy to Molly. [40:08.460 --> 40:09.460] You know what? [40:09.460 --> 40:17.460] I think we should, Randy, you should be in the jury and get your services because it's amazing. [40:17.460 --> 40:21.460] I mean, how would we know this, really, even by reading the code? [40:21.460 --> 40:23.460] How would we know that? [40:23.460 --> 40:33.460] Because essentially we think that since they haven't put it on the docket, right, we're not in the court facing the judge. [40:33.460 --> 40:37.460] When they put the cuffs on you, the clock started. [40:37.460 --> 40:38.460] Oh, okay, got it. [40:38.460 --> 40:40.460] Okay, 45 days. [40:40.460 --> 40:43.460] So just a motion to dismiss to the DA. [40:43.460 --> 40:51.460] Yeah, motion to dismiss, too old to prosecute, and if he hasn't put it on the docket, he doesn't want to mess with it. [40:51.460 --> 41:00.460] So you file that motion to dismiss, and very likely he will go to the court and ask the court to dismiss in the interest of justice. [41:00.460 --> 41:01.460] Okay, great. [41:01.460 --> 41:02.460] I will do that. [41:02.460 --> 41:18.460] And when they dismiss, then you sue them. The Supreme just said recently that if the court dismisses, what they used to say is if the court dismisses the case, you can't sue them. [41:18.460 --> 41:23.460] And recently the Supreme said, oh, yes, you can. [41:23.460 --> 41:30.460] This is fairly new, so they won't see that coming. [41:30.460 --> 41:37.460] Can you look that up on the Supreme about suing for dismissed cases? [41:37.460 --> 41:38.460] Okay. [41:38.460 --> 41:43.460] I don't have that one in front of me, but that was a pretty substantial ruling. [41:43.460 --> 41:46.460] I just read part of it the other day. [41:46.460 --> 41:49.460] I just don't have it in my head. [41:49.460 --> 41:57.460] My head is so full of stuff, I just don't have any more room. [41:57.460 --> 42:02.460] That's a good excuse, isn't it, Brett? [42:02.460 --> 42:03.460] Wow. [42:03.460 --> 42:04.460] DJ, you buy that one. [42:04.460 --> 42:05.460] Unbelievable. [42:05.460 --> 42:06.460] Well, thank you very much. [42:06.460 --> 42:07.460] Okay. [42:07.460 --> 42:09.460] I appreciate it. [42:09.460 --> 42:12.460] This is, you know, the prosecutor is looking at that. [42:12.460 --> 42:13.460] This is nonsense. [42:13.460 --> 42:15.460] You don't want to waste any time with it. [42:15.460 --> 42:18.460] That's why I didn't put it on the docket. [42:18.460 --> 42:23.460] You give him an excuse to dismiss it, and very likely he will. [42:23.460 --> 42:28.460] Okay. Do I direct it to the county of the DA? [42:28.460 --> 42:30.460] I already have his website up. [42:30.460 --> 42:39.460] No, you file it with whatever court would hear this case. [42:39.460 --> 42:44.460] So just to any judge or just to that Superior Court that hears the case? [42:44.460 --> 42:46.460] Yeah, just file it with a court clerk. [42:46.460 --> 42:47.460] Court clerk? [42:47.460 --> 42:48.460] Okay. [42:48.460 --> 42:49.460] Got it. [42:49.460 --> 42:53.460] They're going to ask for a cause number and say you don't have one yet. [42:53.460 --> 42:54.460] They didn't give you one. [42:54.460 --> 42:55.460] Just go look it up. [42:55.460 --> 42:58.460] Did they give you a ticket or something? [42:58.460 --> 43:00.460] Did they give you anything? [43:00.460 --> 43:01.460] I got a yellow ticket. [43:01.460 --> 43:02.460] Yes, I have it. [43:02.460 --> 43:03.460] Okay. [43:03.460 --> 43:06.460] Give me the yellow ticket here on this. [43:06.460 --> 43:07.460] All right. [43:07.460 --> 43:08.460] What's the cause number? [43:08.460 --> 43:09.460] Go look it up. [43:09.460 --> 43:10.460] I don't know. [43:10.460 --> 43:11.460] You guys make those. [43:11.460 --> 43:13.460] You figure out what it is. [43:13.460 --> 43:16.460] And what they're likely to do is take you to the prosecutor and say, [43:16.460 --> 43:19.460] I got this, the case has never been filed, what do I do with it? [43:19.460 --> 43:23.460] And he'll take it most likely and say, here, we'll just file a motion to dismiss, [43:23.460 --> 43:26.460] get rid of this. [43:26.460 --> 43:27.460] Okay. [43:27.460 --> 43:28.460] Step by step. [43:28.460 --> 43:35.460] I'll make the motion to dismiss because the cause is what? [43:35.460 --> 43:37.460] Over 45 days for a speedy trial? [43:37.460 --> 43:38.460] Yeah. [43:38.460 --> 43:41.460] Motion to dismiss, too old to prosecute. [43:41.460 --> 43:42.460] Too old to prosecute. [43:42.460 --> 43:43.460] Okay. [43:43.460 --> 43:48.460] I'll give him an excuse and he'll probably just say, get this off my desk. [43:48.460 --> 43:49.460] Okay. [43:49.460 --> 43:50.460] Hang on. [43:50.460 --> 43:52.460] Did you have anything else for us? [43:52.460 --> 43:53.460] No, thank you so much. [43:53.460 --> 43:54.460] You have a wonderful one. [43:54.460 --> 43:55.460] Okay. [43:55.460 --> 43:56.460] Okay. [43:56.460 --> 43:57.460] Hang on. [43:57.460 --> 44:00.460] We'll be right back. [44:00.460 --> 44:04.460] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:04.460 --> 44:06.460] except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.460 --> 44:09.460] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [44:09.460 --> 44:11.460] And it's time we changed all that. [44:11.460 --> 44:15.460] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment [44:15.460 --> 44:17.460] is good nutrition. [44:17.460 --> 44:20.460] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, [44:20.460 --> 44:25.460] and mutilated, Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.460 --> 44:29.460] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [44:29.460 --> 44:31.460] most of which we reject. [44:31.460 --> 44:34.460] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, [44:34.460 --> 44:38.460] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, [44:38.460 --> 44:39.460] and many others. [44:39.460 --> 44:42.460] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, [44:42.460 --> 44:47.460] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.460 --> 44:51.460] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.460 --> 44:54.460] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:54.460 --> 44:58.460] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.460 --> 45:00.460] Order now. [45:00.460 --> 45:03.460] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.460 --> 45:07.460] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [45:07.460 --> 45:12.460] The affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how [45:12.460 --> 45:15.460] in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.460 --> 45:19.460] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.460 --> 45:23.460] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.460 --> 45:28.460] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.460 --> 45:31.460] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:31.460 --> 45:34.460] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.460 --> 45:38.460] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.460 --> 45:43.460] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.460 --> 45:47.460] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:47.460 --> 45:52.460] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.460 --> 45:56.460] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner [45:56.460 --> 46:01.460] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:01.460 --> 46:04.460] I'm sorry. [46:04.460 --> 46:10.460] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. [46:11.460 --> 46:13.460] Yeah. [46:13.460 --> 46:18.460] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:18.460 --> 46:24.460] When I'm hungry, I'm hungry. [46:24.460 --> 46:26.460] I'm hungry. [46:26.460 --> 46:28.460] I'm hungry. [46:28.460 --> 46:31.460] What am I fishing for? [46:31.460 --> 46:36.460] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:36.460 --> 46:39.460] I ain't asking for much. [46:39.460 --> 46:42.460] I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:42.460 --> 46:48.460] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [46:48.460 --> 46:54.460] I get my message out to anyone in shouting distance. [46:54.460 --> 46:58.460] Friends against slavery, showing resistance. [46:58.460 --> 47:03.460] First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting. [47:03.460 --> 47:05.460] I'm just so glad to make my living. [47:05.460 --> 47:07.460] Okay, we are back. [47:07.460 --> 47:10.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [47:10.460 --> 47:14.460] and we're going to Ariel in New York. [47:14.460 --> 47:15.460] Hello, Ariel. [47:15.460 --> 47:18.460] What do you have for us today? [47:18.460 --> 47:20.460] Hello, Randy. Hello, Brian. [47:20.460 --> 47:22.460] How you doing? [47:22.460 --> 47:25.460] Wait a minute, you don't sound like an Ariel. [47:25.460 --> 47:27.460] Is the name right? [47:27.460 --> 47:32.460] Yeah, we talked to Ariel about, was it a week ago? [47:32.460 --> 47:33.460] Oh, okay. [47:33.460 --> 47:35.460] Last Friday. [47:35.460 --> 47:39.460] Oh, okay. [47:39.460 --> 47:40.460] Yeah, yeah. [47:40.460 --> 47:41.460] My bad, my bad. [47:41.460 --> 47:42.460] Go ahead. [47:42.460 --> 47:44.460] I actually, I sent you the timeline. [47:44.460 --> 47:50.460] You confirmed that you got it, so I hope you're still working on it. [47:50.460 --> 47:58.460] But so far while I wait, like last advice you gave me was to ask, [47:58.460 --> 48:04.460] they offered me a deal, and you told me to ask for any writing. [48:04.460 --> 48:06.460] So that's what I did. [48:06.460 --> 48:12.460] I told my lawyer to tell the DA to put in writing. [48:12.460 --> 48:18.460] But it is obvious at this point, and this is what I want to focus to call, [48:18.460 --> 48:21.460] that my lawyer is not going to help me. [48:21.460 --> 48:24.460] She has become a messenger. [48:24.460 --> 48:25.460] Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait. [48:25.460 --> 48:26.460] Oh, good, good. [48:26.460 --> 48:28.460] This is what we expect from lawyers. [48:28.460 --> 48:29.460] This is good. [48:29.460 --> 48:30.460] This is good. [48:30.460 --> 48:32.460] Have you bar grieved your lawyer yet? [48:32.460 --> 48:34.460] I haven't. [48:34.460 --> 48:40.460] I'm waiting to get that plea in writing so I can have something on my side, [48:40.460 --> 48:42.460] and then I'm going to... [48:42.460 --> 48:43.460] Oh, you don't need anything. [48:43.460 --> 48:47.460] Just bar grieve the prosecutor. [48:47.460 --> 48:48.460] Just straight with her? [48:48.460 --> 48:52.460] Just like contact her and... [48:52.460 --> 48:54.460] No, you don't want to talk to the prosecutor. [48:54.460 --> 48:56.460] You just bar grieve them. [48:56.460 --> 49:02.460] Oh, wait, wait, wait until the prosecutor makes an offer. [49:02.460 --> 49:03.460] Right, right, and then get... [49:03.460 --> 49:13.460] The way to handle your lawyer is to let her know that you know how to kick her behind. [49:13.460 --> 49:18.460] But you only bar grieve her if you have to. [49:18.460 --> 49:22.460] First, you want to let her know you know how to do it. [49:22.460 --> 49:23.460] Okay. [49:23.460 --> 49:27.460] So you bar grieve the lawyer on the other side. [49:27.460 --> 49:28.460] Okay. [49:28.460 --> 49:30.460] You don't care about the lawyer on the other side, [49:30.460 --> 49:33.460] but your lawyer is going to look at that and say, [49:33.460 --> 49:40.460] holy crap, he's likely to do that to me. [49:40.460 --> 49:45.460] And if she doesn't get off the dime, you got to understand what... [49:45.460 --> 49:50.460] In a criminal case, the lawyer's only purpose... [49:50.460 --> 49:54.460] And we had a lawyer tell one of our callers this. [49:54.460 --> 49:56.460] He had been hammering this guy pretty good. [49:56.460 --> 49:59.460] And the guy finally told him, he said, look, you don't understand. [49:59.460 --> 50:06.460] My only purpose is to make sure you don't have grounds for appeal. [50:06.460 --> 50:07.460] He actually said that. [50:07.460 --> 50:08.460] Look at that. [50:08.460 --> 50:09.460] Yeah. [50:09.460 --> 50:13.460] These lawyers are terrified of the judges. [50:13.460 --> 50:18.460] They don't want to give the judges any extra work. [50:18.460 --> 50:21.460] They do not want to annoy the judge in any way [50:21.460 --> 50:28.460] because they are afraid that the judge can sanction them at the drop of a hat. [50:28.460 --> 50:32.460] And they are right, the judges can. [50:32.460 --> 50:36.460] But in fact, for the most part, they don't. [50:36.460 --> 50:38.460] It's just the lawyers are terrified of that. [50:38.460 --> 50:44.460] And if the lawyer gets a criminal case and does nothing, [50:44.460 --> 50:49.460] the prosecutor will eventually get you to take a deal. [50:49.460 --> 50:54.460] So he gets his money and don't have to do anything. [50:54.460 --> 50:56.460] You got to fix that. [50:56.460 --> 51:02.460] So if you barguer the prosecutor, that's warning to your lawyer that he's next. [51:02.460 --> 51:05.460] Or she's next, whichever you have. [51:05.460 --> 51:11.460] And then if your lawyer doesn't get off the dime, bargrieve him. [51:11.460 --> 51:16.460] And if he says anything about it, bargrieve him again. [51:16.460 --> 51:25.460] And when you bargrieve him, what he's going to do is file a motion with the court to withdraw. [51:25.460 --> 51:28.460] They have a problem with that. [51:28.460 --> 51:32.460] Is this a court-appointed lawyer or did you pay this lawyer? [51:32.460 --> 51:34.460] Yeah, I paid this one. [51:34.460 --> 51:39.460] Oh, you got this lawyer. [51:39.460 --> 51:42.460] Lawyers are low-hanging fruit. [51:42.460 --> 51:44.460] You paid the lawyer. [51:44.460 --> 51:52.460] If you bargrieve your lawyer, the first thing he's going to do is go to the court and file a motion to withdraw. [51:52.460 --> 51:57.460] And you go to the court and tell the judge, don't you dare let him withdraw. [51:57.460 --> 52:04.460] He is my counsel of choice and he is under contract. [52:04.460 --> 52:08.460] The judge will know exactly what you're telling him. [52:08.460 --> 52:17.460] The government is forbidden under the Sixth Amendment to interfere with the obligations of contracts. [52:17.460 --> 52:23.460] If the judge interferes with your contract with your lawyer, you get to sue the judge. [52:23.460 --> 52:26.460] And they know that. [52:26.460 --> 52:34.460] The last time one of my people I was helping did that, the judge, he didn't even have to tell the judge. [52:34.460 --> 52:41.460] The judge said, Mr. Durand, do you agree with your lawyer withdrawing? [52:41.460 --> 52:44.460] He said, heck no. [52:44.460 --> 52:45.460] I paid him. [52:45.460 --> 52:47.460] He's under contract. [52:47.460 --> 52:49.460] And the judge said, well, but you two can't get along. [52:49.460 --> 52:51.460] His problem, not my problem. [52:51.460 --> 52:53.460] I paid him to do a job and I expect him to do it. [52:53.460 --> 52:57.460] He hasn't done anything yet. He don't get to withdraw. [52:57.460 --> 53:05.460] And the judge told the lawyer counselor, you're going to have to work this out with your client. [53:05.460 --> 53:08.460] So, Ariel, think about it. [53:08.460 --> 53:16.460] You get your lawyer to file a motion to withdraw and you go in there and object to it. [53:16.460 --> 53:22.460] All of a sudden you have your lawyer by the testicles. [53:22.460 --> 53:24.460] You got him. [53:24.460 --> 53:28.460] Now, Bubba, do your job. [53:28.460 --> 53:35.460] And what this does is it gives the lawyer plausible deniability. [53:35.460 --> 53:36.460] Okay. [53:36.460 --> 53:41.460] Going to court is like sitting down at a four-sided chessboard. [53:41.460 --> 53:45.460] You sit down at the defense table. [53:45.460 --> 53:50.460] Your lawyer is to your right, opposing counsel to your left. [53:50.460 --> 53:52.460] The judge is across from you. [53:52.460 --> 53:56.460] You have a relationship with your lawyer. [53:56.460 --> 54:00.460] Your lawyer has a relationship with opposing counsel. [54:00.460 --> 54:04.460] Both of them have a relationship with the judge. [54:04.460 --> 54:07.460] You're the odd man out. [54:07.460 --> 54:13.460] If you want to win your case, you have to get inside these relationships. [54:13.460 --> 54:20.460] So what you want to do is put your lawyer in a position so that he goes to the judge [54:20.460 --> 54:25.460] and the opposing counsel and say, guys, you got to help me out here. [54:25.460 --> 54:28.460] I have an unruly client. [54:28.460 --> 54:30.460] He's going to ruin my career. [54:30.460 --> 54:34.460] You help me out here and I'll pay you back on the next one. [54:34.460 --> 54:38.460] You got to get inside the politics. [54:38.460 --> 54:45.460] Once you hammer your lawyer, you won't believe how terrified they are. [54:45.460 --> 54:50.460] Then you tell him what he needs to do, and if he doesn't do it, bargrieve him. [54:50.460 --> 54:52.460] You tell him to do it again. [54:52.460 --> 54:55.460] If he doesn't do it again, you bargrieve him again. [54:55.460 --> 54:59.460] We had this one in San Marcos, Texas. [54:59.460 --> 55:02.460] He never actually bargrieved the lawyer. [55:02.460 --> 55:09.460] He told the lawyer what he wanted him to do, and the lawyer refused and went to the judge [55:09.460 --> 55:11.460] and asked to be removed. [55:11.460 --> 55:15.460] Dan went in there and objected to it. [55:15.460 --> 55:21.460] Then the lawyer filed a second motion to withdraw. [55:21.460 --> 55:28.460] He went into court and he bargrieved the lawyer. [55:28.460 --> 55:30.460] Then they filed a second motion to withdraw. [55:30.460 --> 55:33.460] He went into court. The original lawyer wasn't there anymore. [55:33.460 --> 55:35.460] There was another lawyer. [55:35.460 --> 55:37.460] He said, this lawyer is no longer doing criminal. [55:37.460 --> 55:38.460] He's just doing civil. [55:38.460 --> 55:40.460] I'm your lawyer now. [55:40.460 --> 55:43.460] He talked to me about it, and I said, no, he's not. [55:43.460 --> 55:46.460] That lawyer is still your lawyer. [55:46.460 --> 55:49.460] He doesn't get to go anywhere. [55:49.460 --> 55:51.460] This is his case. [55:51.460 --> 55:54.460] He has to handle it. [55:54.460 --> 56:00.460] He hired another attorney. [56:00.460 --> 56:02.460] He had him. [56:02.460 --> 56:05.460] He had him cold. [56:05.460 --> 56:13.460] The second lawyer, he should have bargrieved him and give him a notice of intent to sue [56:13.460 --> 56:19.460] because the judge had already told his first lawyer, you can't withdraw. [56:19.460 --> 56:20.460] What did they think they were doing? [56:20.460 --> 56:24.460] They were desperate. [56:24.460 --> 56:25.460] What happens? [56:25.460 --> 56:30.460] One bar grievance your first year of practice, they cancel your malpractice insurance. [56:30.460 --> 56:34.460] Two bar grievances any one year of practice, they cancel. [56:34.460 --> 56:37.460] Three, they cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [56:37.460 --> 56:39.460] These guys were terrified. [56:39.460 --> 56:42.460] They were going to get their malpractice insurance canceled, [56:42.460 --> 56:44.460] and they'd have to shut down the law firm and open another one. [56:44.460 --> 56:50.460] So they fired the lawyer because he got a bar grievance. [56:50.460 --> 56:53.460] Was that wonderful or what? [56:53.460 --> 56:55.460] It is. [56:55.460 --> 56:59.460] You have a lot of power over these guys. [56:59.460 --> 57:07.460] Just let your lawyer know, you either do this or I'll bargrieve you until you do. [57:07.460 --> 57:11.460] Immediately, he's going to run to the judge and try to be removed. [57:11.460 --> 57:13.460] You go in and object to that. [57:13.460 --> 57:19.460] If the judge does allow him to withdraw, then you sue the judge [57:19.460 --> 57:25.460] and you order the judge to appoint you counsel of your choice. [57:25.460 --> 57:27.460] You've already paid your lawyer. [57:27.460 --> 57:29.460] The judge took him away from you. [57:29.460 --> 57:32.460] So now they've got to give you counsel of your choice. [57:32.460 --> 57:41.460] You pick the most expensive law firm in town and demand that the judge appoint that lawyer. [57:41.460 --> 57:45.460] You get to do all this stuff and then make them nuts. [57:45.460 --> 57:47.460] All right. [57:47.460 --> 57:49.460] Yes. [57:49.460 --> 57:51.460] Okay. [57:51.460 --> 57:53.460] Hang on, about to go to our sponsor. [57:53.460 --> 57:55.460] Do you have anything else for us? [57:55.460 --> 57:56.460] Did that answer everything? [57:56.460 --> 57:58.460] Yeah, he's the answer. [57:58.460 --> 58:01.460] I will follow with you next week and see how we go. [58:01.460 --> 58:03.460] Okay. [58:03.460 --> 58:06.460] But remember, you're the most powerful person in the courtroom. [58:06.460 --> 58:11.460] At the end of the day, everybody answers to you. [58:11.460 --> 58:15.460] And once you realize that and they know that you know that, [58:15.460 --> 58:18.460] then you have a real good chance. [58:18.460 --> 58:24.460] My last case, they dismissed the case to protect my lawyer from me. [58:24.460 --> 58:27.460] You have a lot of power. [58:27.460 --> 58:28.460] Okay. [58:28.460 --> 58:29.460] Thank you, Ariel. [58:29.460 --> 58:32.460] Call us next week and let us know how it goes. [58:32.460 --> 58:36.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [58:36.460 --> 58:40.460] Call in number 512-646-1984. [58:40.460 --> 58:42.460] We're about to have a space open up. [58:42.460 --> 58:49.460] We'll be right back. [58:49.460 --> 58:53.460] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.460 --> 58:56.460] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible [58:56.460 --> 59:00.460] and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.460 --> 59:03.460] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive [59:03.460 --> 59:05.460] study Bibles available today. [59:05.460 --> 59:09.460] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes [59:09.460 --> 59:12.460] that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.460 --> 59:15.460] The free books are a three-volume set called [59:15.460 --> 59:17.460] Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.460 --> 59:20.460] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:20.460 --> 59:23.460] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.460 --> 59:27.460] growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.460 --> 59:30.460] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version [59:30.460 --> 59:33.460] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.460 --> 59:40.460] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.460 --> 59:44.460] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.460 --> 59:49.460] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.460 --> 59:59.460] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.460 --> 01:00:05.460] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.460 --> 01:00:08.460] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.460 --> 01:00:10.460] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.460 --> 01:00:12.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back [01:00:12.460 --> 01:00:16.460] with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.460 --> 01:00:18.460] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.460 --> 01:00:22.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.460 --> 01:00:27.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:00:27.460 --> 01:00:32.460] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.460 --> 01:00:34.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:00:34.460 --> 01:00:38.460] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:00:38.460 --> 01:00:42.460] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.460 --> 01:00:45.460] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.460 --> 01:00:48.460] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.460 --> 01:00:51.460] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.460 --> 01:00:54.460] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.460 --> 01:00:57.460] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me [01:00:57.460 --> 01:01:00.460] what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.460 --> 01:01:03.460] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.460 --> 01:01:06.460] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.460 --> 01:01:09.460] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:09.460 --> 01:01:12.460] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.460 --> 01:01:16.460] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:16.460 --> 01:01:21.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.460 --> 01:01:35.460] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.460 --> 01:01:38.460] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.460 --> 01:01:40.460] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.460 --> 01:01:43.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.460 --> 01:01:46.460] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.460 --> 01:01:48.460] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.460 --> 01:01:52.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.460 --> 01:01:57.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.460 --> 01:01:58.460] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.460 --> 01:02:02.460] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.460 --> 01:02:04.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.460 --> 01:02:08.460] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.460 --> 01:02:12.460] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.460 --> 01:02:15.460] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.460 --> 01:02:19.460] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:19.460 --> 01:02:21.460] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.460 --> 01:02:25.460] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.460 --> 01:02:27.460] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.460 --> 01:02:30.460] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:30.460 --> 01:02:33.460] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:33.460 --> 01:02:35.460] in the name of security. [01:02:35.460 --> 01:02:40.460] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.460 --> 01:02:44.460] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:44.460 --> 01:02:47.460] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.460 --> 01:02:50.460] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:50.460 --> 01:02:54.460] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:54.460 --> 01:02:55.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.460 --> 01:03:23.460] For more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.460 --> 01:03:25.460] Thank you very much. [01:03:54.460 --> 01:03:56.460] Okay. [01:03:56.460 --> 01:03:57.460] We are back. [01:03:57.460 --> 01:04:01.460] Randy Kelvin and Brett Fountainwood of our radio on this Friday, [01:04:01.460 --> 01:04:06.460] the 16th day of September, 2022. [01:04:06.460 --> 01:04:09.460] And we have a first-time caller. [01:04:09.460 --> 01:04:19.460] If you are from Massachusetts, give us a shout, give us a first name. [01:04:19.460 --> 01:04:21.460] And I think we already know this day. [01:04:21.460 --> 01:04:24.460] Lift up 781 so we know the state. [01:04:24.460 --> 01:04:29.460] Talk to us. [01:04:29.460 --> 01:04:31.460] Hmm. [01:04:31.460 --> 01:04:33.460] Well. [01:04:33.460 --> 01:04:38.460] Come in, 781. [01:04:38.460 --> 01:04:42.460] If you're talking, we're not hearing. [01:04:42.460 --> 01:04:44.460] Okay. [01:04:44.460 --> 01:04:50.460] You might, if you can hear us, you might try hanging up and calling back. [01:04:50.460 --> 01:04:53.460] They might have themselves muted. [01:04:53.460 --> 01:04:58.460] When I do that with my cheeks, sometimes I'll hit the mute. [01:04:58.460 --> 01:04:59.460] Okay. [01:04:59.460 --> 01:05:06.460] We're not getting a response, so I will, we're going to go to Jack in Texas. [01:05:06.460 --> 01:05:07.460] Hello, Jack. [01:05:07.460 --> 01:05:11.460] What do you have for us today? [01:05:11.460 --> 01:05:12.460] Hi, guys. [01:05:12.460 --> 01:05:17.460] I have a couple of questions. [01:05:17.460 --> 01:05:24.460] So my little trial is coming up on the two traffic citations. [01:05:24.460 --> 01:05:34.460] And you mentioned tonight to someone about having the police officer read a section of the code. [01:05:34.460 --> 01:05:49.460] How do I get the pertinent transportation code to the jury to get the jury to look at it? [01:05:49.460 --> 01:05:53.460] Well, if you're just talking about, that's all the way at the end. [01:05:53.460 --> 01:05:58.460] If you get to the merits and you're cross-examining the cop, that's way down at the end. [01:05:58.460 --> 01:06:00.460] Ideally, you don't even want to go that far. [01:06:00.460 --> 01:06:06.460] You want to knock it out before it even ends up at trial. [01:06:06.460 --> 01:06:14.460] Well, I've been trying, but they're not, you know, obviously they're not cooperating. [01:06:14.460 --> 01:06:20.460] You know, I filed the subject matter challenge and all that kind of stuff. [01:06:20.460 --> 01:06:22.460] They just ignored it. [01:06:22.460 --> 01:06:28.460] And this is the judge that insulted, you know, said everything was BS. [01:06:28.460 --> 01:06:32.460] Did you file criminal charges against the judge? [01:06:32.460 --> 01:06:38.460] I have one ready, but I want to get criminal charges against, [01:06:38.460 --> 01:06:47.460] I'm thinking of doing criminal charges against the whole dang city council, mayor's city council, everybody. [01:06:47.460 --> 01:06:52.460] Now that is real politics. [01:06:52.460 --> 01:06:55.460] Aren't they in charge of the police? [01:06:55.460 --> 01:06:58.460] Yeah. [01:06:58.460 --> 01:07:05.460] So if I file against the police and I file against the judge, [01:07:05.460 --> 01:07:10.460] they're all under the control of the city council, the city manager, the mayor. [01:07:10.460 --> 01:07:12.460] Yes or no? [01:07:12.460 --> 01:07:14.460] Yes. [01:07:14.460 --> 01:07:18.460] So I'm thinking of filing criminal charges against all of them. [01:07:18.460 --> 01:07:24.460] That is going to make the city council unhappy. [01:07:24.460 --> 01:07:30.460] Well, I'm just worried I might get swat themed like just what's going on. [01:07:30.460 --> 01:07:37.460] Not when you start, when you start filing criminal charges, that gets real serious, real fast. [01:07:37.460 --> 01:07:41.460] When I call, I call 911, get an officer out. [01:07:41.460 --> 01:07:46.460] Man, when I do that, they are on their tippy toes. [01:07:46.460 --> 01:07:56.460] Yeah, if you would be doing things like these false liens, you know, filing fraudulent lien against one of the judge's many properties, [01:07:56.460 --> 01:08:04.460] and then it just comes up that, yeah, that's where these swat teams, they start getting involved. [01:08:04.460 --> 01:08:11.460] When you're doing actual criminal complaints, they can't come after you for that. [01:08:11.460 --> 01:08:19.460] Well, I don't think they would, you know, I just crossed my mind. [01:08:19.460 --> 01:08:30.460] One thing I was wondering, it just went out of my mind because I was listening. [01:08:30.460 --> 01:08:40.460] You know, I was taking care of my mom, she was 98, and she told me that's not going to get any better. [01:08:40.460 --> 01:08:45.460] No, it's not going to get any better. [01:08:45.460 --> 01:08:46.460] Oh, here it is. [01:08:46.460 --> 01:08:47.460] Okay. [01:08:47.460 --> 01:08:52.460] So there are three, I mean, that's for court, of course, because it's traffic. [01:08:52.460 --> 01:09:03.460] So I was thinking of filing all these criminal charges against all these people with three county courts at the same time. [01:09:03.460 --> 01:09:06.460] What do you think about that? [01:09:06.460 --> 01:09:10.460] Three county courts at the same time. [01:09:10.460 --> 01:09:12.460] I'm not sure what that means. [01:09:12.460 --> 01:09:18.460] Do you have three county courts in your county or are you talking about three different counties? [01:09:18.460 --> 01:09:24.460] No, no, no, three different courts, court one, court two, court three in the same county. [01:09:24.460 --> 01:09:34.460] And the reason is I was thinking is if just filed just one court, they might just ignore it or whatever. [01:09:34.460 --> 01:09:39.460] But if I file all three courts, there's going to be some checks and balances going on. [01:09:39.460 --> 01:09:44.460] Yes, I like that idea. [01:09:44.460 --> 01:09:50.460] Because are you familiar with 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure? [01:09:50.460 --> 01:09:55.460] Yes, I've heard it and I haven't read it, but I don't remember exactly what it says. [01:09:55.460 --> 01:10:05.460] What it says is that when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate that is in compliance with 15.05, [01:10:05.460 --> 01:10:17.460] and 15.05 just goes to what the requisites of a complaint are, the magistrate shall issue a warrant forthwith. [01:10:17.460 --> 01:10:22.460] It doesn't say he can examine into the sufficiency of the complaint. [01:10:22.460 --> 01:10:27.460] It says he's to issue a warrant, no discretion. [01:10:27.460 --> 01:10:33.460] I just sued a judge in Victoria County for precisely that. [01:10:33.460 --> 01:10:42.460] So if you file with all three of them, and most likely none of them are going to issue warrants, [01:10:42.460 --> 01:10:51.460] then you send all three a tort letter, not to them as a judge, but to them personally. [01:10:51.460 --> 01:10:56.460] And notify them of your intent to sue. [01:10:56.460 --> 01:11:02.460] That's not going to make them happy, and I got the suit already. [01:11:02.460 --> 01:11:06.460] Just send me an email, I'll send it to you. [01:11:06.460 --> 01:11:08.460] All right. [01:11:08.460 --> 01:11:11.460] All right, so you think that's the way to go? [01:11:11.460 --> 01:11:23.460] Yes, I sued this judge, and his lawyers immediately filed a challenge subject matter jurisdiction claiming qualified immunity. [01:11:23.460 --> 01:11:29.460] But I didn't sue him in his judicial capacity, I sued him in his personal capacity, [01:11:29.460 --> 01:11:40.460] because I maintained that the requirement of 15.09 was a statutory requirement, it was not discretionary. [01:11:40.460 --> 01:11:45.460] The judge was commanded to do a certain thing, he did not do that certain thing, [01:11:45.460 --> 01:11:50.460] and that is an administrative act for which he has no immunity. [01:11:50.460 --> 01:11:54.460] Therefore, I sued him in his personal capacity. [01:11:54.460 --> 01:12:02.460] The lawyers responded and argued the wrong issue, and I bet yours would do the same. [01:12:02.460 --> 01:12:07.460] They argued qualified immunity, but I didn't sue him in his judicial capacity. [01:12:07.460 --> 01:12:15.460] I sued him in his personal, they should have argued that the judge can't be sued in his personal capacity. [01:12:15.460 --> 01:12:19.460] But they didn't. [01:12:19.460 --> 01:12:22.460] All right, sounds good. [01:12:22.460 --> 01:12:26.460] Send me an email, I'll send it to you. [01:12:26.460 --> 01:12:31.460] Okay, I have one more question. [01:12:31.460 --> 01:12:35.460] So I'm doing the writ of mandamus. [01:12:35.460 --> 01:12:41.460] I'm the one that got in trouble for recording the proceedings, the hearing. [01:12:41.460 --> 01:12:45.460] Oh, are you familiar with Turner Driver? [01:12:45.460 --> 01:12:50.460] I did read Turner Driver, but it has to do with the police. [01:12:50.460 --> 01:12:54.460] It didn't matter, that's not what they said. [01:12:54.460 --> 01:13:05.460] What they said was it is axiomatic that a citizen may record his public officials while in the performance of their duty. [01:13:05.460 --> 01:13:10.460] It didn't restrict it to judges, to police officers. [01:13:10.460 --> 01:13:13.460] It said public officials. [01:13:13.460 --> 01:13:15.460] All right, so I'll stick that in there. [01:13:15.460 --> 01:13:25.460] And I was thinking of doing the mandamus to all three of the county courts as well. [01:13:25.460 --> 01:13:26.460] Oh, that would be great. [01:13:26.460 --> 01:13:33.460] Go after all three of them at once for shielding from prosecution, 3805 penal code. [01:13:33.460 --> 01:13:36.460] That'll jerk a knot in their shorts. [01:13:36.460 --> 01:13:44.460] Well, what I figure is if I create enough chaos, something's going to happen. [01:13:44.460 --> 01:13:49.460] Politics? [01:13:49.460 --> 01:13:51.460] Nothing like a little local politics. [01:13:51.460 --> 01:13:58.460] Everybody's going to be PO'd at this municipal court judge. [01:13:58.460 --> 01:14:02.460] All right, well, that's what I'll do then. [01:14:02.460 --> 01:14:07.460] I think that's all I had for now. [01:14:07.460 --> 01:14:09.460] All right, well, I appreciate it, guys. [01:14:09.460 --> 01:14:10.460] Keep up the great work. [01:14:10.460 --> 01:14:15.460] Okay, thank you, Jack, and keep us up to speed on how this goes. [01:14:15.460 --> 01:14:16.460] I sure will. [01:14:16.460 --> 01:14:22.460] You know, I'll put it in my will just in case something happens to let you know that I'm gone. [01:14:22.460 --> 01:14:24.460] Okay. [01:14:24.460 --> 01:14:25.460] Okay, thank you, Jack. [01:14:25.460 --> 01:14:34.460] Now we're going to go to – let me try our first-time caller again. [01:14:34.460 --> 01:14:36.460] This says McDonald. [01:14:36.460 --> 01:14:46.460] If you are from the 781 area code, talk to us. [01:14:46.460 --> 01:14:51.460] I got a sound there for a second. [01:14:51.460 --> 01:14:53.460] How are you doing? [01:14:53.460 --> 01:14:55.460] There we go. [01:14:55.460 --> 01:14:58.460] Give us a first name and state. [01:14:58.460 --> 01:15:01.460] Well, I've been just listening the whole time. [01:15:01.460 --> 01:15:06.460] I didn't call with any specific issue I wanted to talk about. [01:15:06.460 --> 01:15:07.460] Oh, no, no. [01:15:07.460 --> 01:15:09.460] This is not the listener line. [01:15:09.460 --> 01:15:10.460] Oh. [01:15:10.460 --> 01:15:15.460] Yeah, this cost us – when you're listening on this line, nobody can call in. [01:15:15.460 --> 01:15:16.460] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:15:16.460 --> 01:15:17.460] I didn't know that. [01:15:17.460 --> 01:15:20.460] I was on the telegram. [01:15:20.460 --> 01:15:27.460] Okay, well, what you need to do is take the phone and beat yourself around the eyes and ears. [01:15:27.460 --> 01:15:33.460] I heard you mentioned Massachusetts a few minutes ago. [01:15:33.460 --> 01:15:36.460] I'm thinking, oh, someone's from Massachusetts calling. [01:15:36.460 --> 01:15:39.460] Where do I go? [01:15:39.460 --> 01:15:40.460] It's me. [01:15:40.460 --> 01:15:41.460] All right. [01:15:41.460 --> 01:15:42.460] Yeah, okay. [01:15:42.460 --> 01:15:43.460] Yeah, drop off. [01:15:43.460 --> 01:15:48.460] So you can go to logosradionetwork.com, and there's a play button at the top. [01:15:48.460 --> 01:15:51.460] You can just listen to it like that. [01:15:51.460 --> 01:15:52.460] Okay. [01:15:52.460 --> 01:15:53.460] All right. [01:15:53.460 --> 01:15:54.460] Thanks, guys. [01:15:54.460 --> 01:15:55.460] Have a good one. [01:15:55.460 --> 01:15:56.460] All right. [01:15:56.460 --> 01:16:01.460] Now we're going to go to John in New York. [01:16:01.460 --> 01:16:02.460] Hello, John. [01:16:02.460 --> 01:16:04.460] Hello, John in New York. [01:16:04.460 --> 01:16:05.460] Yes. [01:16:05.460 --> 01:16:06.460] How are you? [01:16:06.460 --> 01:16:07.460] I am good. [01:16:07.460 --> 01:16:10.460] What do you have for us today? [01:16:10.460 --> 01:16:11.460] Well, is this clear? [01:16:11.460 --> 01:16:13.460] Because I'm not on the talk screen. [01:16:13.460 --> 01:16:14.460] I'm on the – [01:16:14.460 --> 01:16:15.460] Yeah, you sound good. [01:16:15.460 --> 01:16:16.460] You sound good. [01:16:16.460 --> 01:16:17.460] Okay, great. [01:16:17.460 --> 01:16:25.460] Well, as I told you last time, I'm very sad because I thought maybe they weren't going [01:16:25.460 --> 01:16:32.460] to extend my Discover account to collection, but I find out now that that could be different. [01:16:32.460 --> 01:16:35.460] They – oh, I hear the music. [01:16:35.460 --> 01:16:37.460] I'll continue as long as I can. [01:16:37.460 --> 01:16:38.460] Yeah. [01:16:38.460 --> 01:16:39.460] Your time's up. [01:16:39.460 --> 01:16:40.460] Sorry. [01:16:40.460 --> 01:16:43.460] You didn't get it in in time. [01:16:43.460 --> 01:16:44.460] Okay. [01:16:44.460 --> 01:16:45.460] Hang on. [01:16:45.460 --> 01:16:50.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, and we are busy annoying John. [01:16:50.460 --> 01:16:53.460] It's one of our favorite pastimes. [01:16:53.460 --> 01:16:54.460] Hang on. [01:16:54.460 --> 01:16:56.460] We'll be right back. [01:17:24.460 --> 01:17:31.460] We'll be right back. [01:17:54.460 --> 01:18:06.460] We'll be right back. [01:18:06.460 --> 01:18:28.460] We'll be right back. [01:18:28.460 --> 01:18:43.460] We'll be right back. [01:18:43.460 --> 01:18:59.460] We'll be right back. [01:18:59.460 --> 01:19:14.460] We'll be right back. [01:19:14.460 --> 01:19:29.460] We'll be right back. [01:19:29.460 --> 01:19:44.460] We'll be right back. [01:19:44.460 --> 01:19:59.460] We'll be right back. [01:19:59.460 --> 01:20:00.460] All right. [01:20:00.460 --> 01:20:01.460] We are back. [01:20:01.460 --> 01:20:02.460] This is the Wheel of Law Radio. [01:20:02.460 --> 01:20:03.460] Randy Kelton. [01:20:03.460 --> 01:20:08.460] I'm Brett Fountain, and we are going to John in New York. [01:20:08.460 --> 01:20:11.460] All right, John. [01:20:11.460 --> 01:20:16.460] You were just about to begin laying it on us. [01:20:16.460 --> 01:20:17.460] Okay. [01:20:17.460 --> 01:20:25.460] So they told me, the law firm told me, they can sell your account to a debt collector [01:20:25.460 --> 01:20:29.460] as we were unable to get a debt waiver on your case. [01:20:29.460 --> 01:20:36.460] Also, because you still owe the debt, they can pull your credit report via hard or soft [01:20:36.460 --> 01:20:41.460] pull as you have a business relationship with them. [01:20:41.460 --> 01:20:49.460] So I wrote back, so it's not a violation for Discover to do any kind of a pull on my credit file? [01:20:49.460 --> 01:20:50.460] That is correct. [01:20:50.460 --> 01:20:56.460] They are authorized to pull your credit because they have a business relationship with you. [01:20:56.460 --> 01:20:58.460] Now, can you comment on that? [01:20:58.460 --> 01:21:05.460] Because that's not what you said. [01:21:05.460 --> 01:21:11.460] What are they characterizing as a business relationship? [01:21:11.460 --> 01:21:13.460] I don't know, but one... [01:21:13.460 --> 01:21:14.460] Okay, hold on. [01:21:14.460 --> 01:21:16.460] Maybe I understand what it is. [01:21:16.460 --> 01:21:28.460] If they sell the debt to someone else, someone else can't do a hard pull. [01:21:28.460 --> 01:21:34.460] If they are the original lender, they can do a hard pull. [01:21:34.460 --> 01:21:39.460] Not a debt collector. [01:21:39.460 --> 01:21:49.460] If I have a bank that I get a loan from, they don't fall under the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act [01:21:49.460 --> 01:21:52.460] because they are the original lender. [01:21:52.460 --> 01:21:59.460] If they sell the debt to someone else, they are a debt collector and they fall under. [01:21:59.460 --> 01:22:02.460] So who can do what now? [01:22:02.460 --> 01:22:09.460] So at this point, they can do a hard or soft pull according to the law firm? [01:22:09.460 --> 01:22:16.460] Well, debt collection is not my area of expertise. [01:22:16.460 --> 01:22:27.460] But as I understand, if you are the one who loaned the money to someone, you are not a debt collector [01:22:27.460 --> 01:22:31.460] and you do not fall under the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act. [01:22:31.460 --> 01:22:39.460] If you have sold the debt to someone else, that someone else is a debt collector and they do fall under. [01:22:39.460 --> 01:22:46.460] So is this entity you're speaking to the original lender? [01:22:46.460 --> 01:22:53.460] Is it the credit card that you were using, is this the holder of the credit? [01:22:53.460 --> 01:22:54.460] Yes. [01:22:54.460 --> 01:22:56.460] The original holder? [01:22:56.460 --> 01:22:59.460] The original holder, that's correct, yes. [01:22:59.460 --> 01:23:02.460] Then they can do that. [01:23:02.460 --> 01:23:05.460] They don't fall under the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act. [01:23:05.460 --> 01:23:12.460] You may have some state laws that affect them, but the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act does not. [01:23:12.460 --> 01:23:19.460] Now how about the debt collector, just like what you told me about them, [01:23:19.460 --> 01:23:29.460] and that is the debt collector cannot do a hard pull. Can they do a soft pull? [01:23:29.460 --> 01:23:36.460] I don't know. That's a little more sophisticated than my knowledge goes to. [01:23:36.460 --> 01:23:44.460] Now back in 1991, we were instructed, I worked for a debt collection agency that was very particular [01:23:44.460 --> 01:23:50.460] about teaching their staff every single rule and they hammered it. [01:23:50.460 --> 01:23:53.460] They didn't want any violations. [01:23:53.460 --> 01:24:00.460] They were horrified if there was a complaint on the desk from the state attorney general's office. [01:24:00.460 --> 01:24:06.460] The letter sat there and everybody stood around it and just stared at it for about an hour and then they opened it. [01:24:06.460 --> 01:24:16.460] I mean they would go into connections and they taught the staff very carefully to observe all the laws. [01:24:16.460 --> 01:24:20.460] And they told us that we could do pull. [01:24:20.460 --> 01:24:27.460] Now I don't remember if it was a soft pull that I used to do. I used to do pull all the time. [01:24:27.460 --> 01:24:33.460] What is the difference between a soft pull and a hard pull? [01:24:33.460 --> 01:24:37.460] It's been so long, I don't remember. [01:24:37.460 --> 01:24:43.460] Now a hard pull, maybe it involves more things. [01:24:43.460 --> 01:24:55.460] A soft pull is just what might be on your, what we used to call derogatory comments, derogatory statements, bad debts. [01:24:55.460 --> 01:25:03.460] Maybe we, because I just used to pull the bad debt and the reason why we were taught to pull the bad debt [01:25:03.460 --> 01:25:12.460] and to see what the bad debts were is to get an idea of who was standing in line ahead of us so that if we, [01:25:12.460 --> 01:25:20.460] if I sent a request to the legal department, which was A25, that was a code A25, [01:25:20.460 --> 01:25:33.460] then that legal department would see if they could sue on behalf of the client by the debt collection agency. [01:25:33.460 --> 01:25:42.460] So the whole idea was you do a, I guess you did a soft pull, meaning I'm just guessing now that a soft pull [01:25:42.460 --> 01:25:54.460] was just to get the bad debt that were already incurred, that they weren't paying for, to see how many people were standing ahead of us in line. [01:25:54.460 --> 01:26:02.460] So if there were 20 people with $5,000 and $10,000 debt, then you would just AEX it. [01:26:02.460 --> 01:26:13.460] All efforts expired and that meant that, gee, you know, you can sue all you want, but you're going to, [01:26:13.460 --> 01:26:17.460] it's going to be 20 years by the time you get any money, not worth it. [01:26:17.460 --> 01:26:20.460] You're dealing with a turnip. [01:26:20.460 --> 01:26:26.460] Yeah. You're not going to get any. [01:26:26.460 --> 01:26:32.460] The IRS term for that is CNC, currently not collectible. [01:26:32.460 --> 01:26:36.460] Yeah. Yep. So that's why we did pull. [01:26:36.460 --> 01:26:42.460] And I would imagine maybe a soft pull is just all the Dorad. [01:26:42.460 --> 01:26:48.460] Now a hard pull, when they do a hard pull, wouldn't that include things like your asset [01:26:48.460 --> 01:26:54.460] and, you know, maybe how much you got in the bank and so on and so forth? [01:26:54.460 --> 01:27:00.460] I really don't know. I can't speak to that. Brett, can you speak to that? [01:27:00.460 --> 01:27:03.460] Nope, not at all. [01:27:03.460 --> 01:27:09.460] I'm an old guy. I don't have any debt and I haven't for a very long time. [01:27:09.460 --> 01:27:16.460] So I'm not up to speed. If Deborah was around and she happens to be in the studio or listening, [01:27:16.460 --> 01:27:22.460] she could certainly step in and speak to that area because she has taken these guys on [01:27:22.460 --> 01:27:26.460] and wiped the floor with them. [01:27:26.460 --> 01:27:28.460] Well, anyway, that's the way it is. [01:27:28.460 --> 01:27:36.460] I'm going to get my chance to go into that briar patch with the debt collector again. [01:27:36.460 --> 01:27:40.460] And I can use the money, frankly. [01:27:40.460 --> 01:27:49.460] Good. Then work them over and keep us up to speed on how much fun you're having with them. [01:27:49.460 --> 01:27:55.460] Oh, I love it. I love that briar patch. [01:27:55.460 --> 01:27:58.460] I have fun with them anyway. [01:27:58.460 --> 01:28:05.460] Okay. And you said, and the last time you said, chances are, I think you said this, [01:28:05.460 --> 01:28:11.460] chances are they're going to send a letter first before they call. [01:28:11.460 --> 01:28:13.460] That's the way it was with us. [01:28:13.460 --> 01:28:23.460] We were instructed to send a letter, wait about a week, and then make the call. [01:28:23.460 --> 01:28:28.460] I don't know. I can't speak to that. It's just not my area of knowledge. [01:28:28.460 --> 01:28:31.460] Okay. That's all right. It's my understanding. [01:28:31.460 --> 01:28:33.460] I don't think anything has changed. [01:28:33.460 --> 01:28:39.460] They'll send a letter trying to done me first and then they'll make the calls [01:28:39.460 --> 01:28:43.460] as they establish the contact by letter. [01:28:43.460 --> 01:28:45.460] All righty. Let's see. [01:28:45.460 --> 01:28:52.460] One thing you should do when they call is say, how do they say it? [01:28:52.460 --> 01:28:57.460] This call is being recorded for training purposes. [01:28:57.460 --> 01:28:59.460] For quality assurance. [01:28:59.460 --> 01:29:01.460] For quality assurance. [01:29:01.460 --> 01:29:09.460] Right. Okay. Say that again. [01:29:09.460 --> 01:29:14.460] This call is being recorded for quality assurance. [01:29:14.460 --> 01:29:18.460] Now why did you bring that up? What is it that made you bring that up? [01:29:18.460 --> 01:29:22.460] Well, when they call you, let them know you're recording it. [01:29:22.460 --> 01:29:25.460] That's what they put every time you call them. [01:29:25.460 --> 01:29:29.460] They're always saying something like that, quality assurance and training purposes. [01:29:29.460 --> 01:29:33.460] Yeah, and you just let them know that you might be wanting to assure some quality [01:29:33.460 --> 01:29:36.460] and you might be wanting to make sure they get some better training. [01:29:36.460 --> 01:29:40.460] So you just might need to record it too. [01:29:40.460 --> 01:29:43.460] Go ahead and do something stupid. [01:29:43.460 --> 01:29:47.460] I'm in New York and New York is one of those states where you don't have to tell them [01:29:47.460 --> 01:29:51.460] you're recording as long as you're a party to the conversation. [01:29:51.460 --> 01:29:53.460] Yeah. Texas is the same way. [01:29:53.460 --> 01:30:00.460] The only state I know of that you can't record is your conversation. [01:30:00.460 --> 01:30:04.460] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:04.460 --> 01:30:08.460] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come [01:30:08.460 --> 01:30:11.460] and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.460 --> 01:30:15.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.460 --> 01:30:17.460] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.460 --> 01:30:21.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.460 --> 01:30:26.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.460 --> 01:30:28.460] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.460 --> 01:30:32.460] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.460 --> 01:30:34.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.460 --> 01:30:37.460] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:37.460 --> 01:30:41.460] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:41.460 --> 01:30:45.460] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:45.460 --> 01:30:49.460] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power [01:30:49.460 --> 01:30:52.460] going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.460 --> 01:30:56.460] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor [01:30:56.460 --> 01:30:59.460] electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.460 --> 01:31:03.460] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast. [01:31:03.460 --> 01:31:06.460] If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [01:31:06.460 --> 01:31:08.460] hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.460 --> 01:31:12.460] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [01:31:12.460 --> 01:31:15.460] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:15.460 --> 01:31:18.460] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.460 --> 01:31:21.460] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? [01:31:21.460 --> 01:31:23.460] There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.460 --> 01:31:31.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.460 --> 01:31:36.460] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.460 --> 01:31:38.460] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.460 --> 01:31:43.460] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.460 --> 01:31:46.460] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.460 --> 01:31:49.460] But thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:49.460 --> 01:31:50.460] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.460 --> 01:31:51.460] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.460 --> 01:31:53.460] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.460 --> 01:31:54.460] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.460 --> 01:31:55.460] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.460 --> 01:31:58.460] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.460 --> 01:32:02.460] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.460 --> 01:32:05.460] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.460 --> 01:32:08.460] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:08.460 --> 01:32:10.460] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.460 --> 01:32:13.460] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.460 --> 01:32:16.460] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.460 --> 01:32:18.460] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.460 --> 01:32:20.460] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.460 --> 01:32:23.460] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn [01:32:23.460 --> 01:32:26.460] how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.460 --> 01:32:29.460] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:29.460 --> 01:32:32.460] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.460 --> 01:32:34.460] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:34.460 --> 01:32:36.460] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.460 --> 01:32:38.460] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:38.460 --> 01:32:41.460] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.460 --> 01:32:43.460] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.460 --> 01:32:45.460] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.460 --> 01:32:48.460] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.460 --> 01:32:51.460] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.460 --> 01:32:53.460] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:53.460 --> 01:32:55.460] from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.460 --> 01:32:56.460] Order your copy today, [01:32:56.460 --> 01:33:01.460] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.460 --> 01:33:11.460] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradio.com. [01:34:01.460 --> 01:34:15.460] Go ahead, Brett. [01:34:15.460 --> 01:34:16.460] All right. [01:34:16.460 --> 01:34:19.460] Well, this is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton. [01:34:19.460 --> 01:34:24.460] I'm Brett Femmes, and we're talking with John in New York. [01:34:24.460 --> 01:34:26.460] Get you unmuted there. [01:34:26.460 --> 01:34:27.460] Thank you. [01:34:27.460 --> 01:34:28.460] Yep, I'm here. [01:34:28.460 --> 01:34:33.460] Did we push Randy off the cliff? [01:34:33.460 --> 01:34:36.460] No, he did that just great all by himself. [01:34:36.460 --> 01:34:38.460] No, no, no, it was all your fault, John. [01:34:38.460 --> 01:34:42.460] The only state. [01:34:42.460 --> 01:34:48.460] It was in a state of free fall, okay? [01:34:48.460 --> 01:34:53.460] If you had any class, you wouldn't have brought that up. [01:34:53.460 --> 01:34:56.460] Well, you always did, so I thought it was a good idea. [01:34:56.460 --> 01:35:01.460] It was because I don't have any class. [01:35:01.460 --> 01:35:04.460] You already graduated then. [01:35:04.460 --> 01:35:10.460] Actually, I've got a lot of class, all of it low. [01:35:10.460 --> 01:35:15.460] Well, I know a lot of friends in the low places. [01:35:15.460 --> 01:35:18.460] Brett, you know that song? [01:35:18.460 --> 01:35:22.460] Okay, what else do you have for us, John? [01:35:22.460 --> 01:35:24.460] Well, I think that's pretty much it. [01:35:24.460 --> 01:35:26.460] Can you comment? [01:35:26.460 --> 01:35:29.460] Can you comment once again on the Second Amendment, [01:35:29.460 --> 01:35:32.460] and Kathy Hochul, in the state of New York, [01:35:32.460 --> 01:35:35.460] decided that she and the legislature were going to get together [01:35:35.460 --> 01:35:40.460] and pass a law through the legislature that bulletproof vests, [01:35:40.460 --> 01:35:42.460] the little people can't own them for protection [01:35:42.460 --> 01:35:44.460] since they let all the criminals out of jail [01:35:44.460 --> 01:35:47.460] so that they can shoot every one of us. [01:35:47.460 --> 01:35:50.460] And you know, you can't have a bulletproof vest now [01:35:50.460 --> 01:35:53.460] to protect yourself while you're shopping [01:35:53.460 --> 01:35:56.460] and get killed while you're carjacked. [01:35:56.460 --> 01:35:57.460] What? [01:35:57.460 --> 01:35:59.460] Can you comment? [01:35:59.460 --> 01:36:03.460] That doesn't make sense. [01:36:03.460 --> 01:36:10.460] What would be the reason for not being able to have a bulletproof vest? [01:36:10.460 --> 01:36:18.460] Well, the idea was Ovalde, Texas, and Buffalo, New York. [01:36:18.460 --> 01:36:25.460] So, you know, those two government-staged shootings, int, int, int, wink, wink, [01:36:25.460 --> 01:36:29.460] those two staged government shootings, [01:36:29.460 --> 01:36:33.460] the excuse is that the shooter, one of the shooters or both of them, [01:36:33.460 --> 01:36:35.460] had bulletproof vests. [01:36:35.460 --> 01:36:40.460] Oh, and by the way, one of the shooters, I can't remember which, [01:36:40.460 --> 01:36:44.460] had a part-time job in a Wendy's, I think it was, [01:36:44.460 --> 01:36:51.460] a part-time job and he had five, I think it was $6,000, [01:36:51.460 --> 01:36:58.460] just about $6,000 in shoot-em-ups, in guns and ammunition. [01:36:58.460 --> 01:37:03.460] Where does a part-time worker at Wendy's get $6,000 [01:37:03.460 --> 01:37:10.460] to put together an assault team, you know, guns and ammunition? [01:37:10.460 --> 01:37:16.460] That wasn't a set-up. I don't know what was. [01:37:16.460 --> 01:37:19.460] I'll eat my hat. [01:37:19.460 --> 01:37:21.460] I still don't see the reasoning. [01:37:21.460 --> 01:37:28.460] If somebody's saying that a bad guy might have a bulletproof vest, [01:37:28.460 --> 01:37:32.460] there are other places you can shoot him. [01:37:32.460 --> 01:37:40.460] Well, the whole idea is Democrats don't need a reason to do what they do. [01:37:40.460 --> 01:37:45.460] Democrats like to put the good people in jeopardy. [01:37:45.460 --> 01:37:52.460] Democrats like to blame the good people for what the criminals do, [01:37:52.460 --> 01:37:56.460] and all they've got to do is stage a shooting, which they've been doing a good job. [01:37:56.460 --> 01:38:00.460] I can't remember where I saw the document. [01:38:00.460 --> 01:38:05.460] In fact, I read it either yesterday or today, and I should have saved it, [01:38:05.460 --> 01:38:12.460] where I believe it was the government writing about this. [01:38:12.460 --> 01:38:19.460] They were going to, they were planning on doing a lot of shootings, school shootings. [01:38:19.460 --> 01:38:27.460] This was years ago in the plans so that they could yank the guns from the little people. [01:38:27.460 --> 01:38:32.460] And that was in government plans, and I think it was in documents. [01:38:32.460 --> 01:38:38.460] If I can go back, maybe I can retrace my steps and find it, I'll send it to you. [01:38:38.460 --> 01:38:44.460] Well, if that was a plan, it was not a good plan because it certainly backfired on them. [01:38:44.460 --> 01:38:48.460] Well, let's put it this way. [01:38:48.460 --> 01:38:55.460] What was it, in Uvalde, Texas, or Buffalo, where the police took over an hour to go in? [01:38:55.460 --> 01:38:56.460] Uvalde. [01:38:56.460 --> 01:39:04.460] There was a good guy with a gun who did more than the police. [01:39:04.460 --> 01:39:06.460] The police were told to stop everybody. [01:39:06.460 --> 01:39:13.460] No, the one who got them to go in was an off-duty border patrol agent. [01:39:13.460 --> 01:39:19.460] And he told them all, screw you, I'm going in, so they followed him. [01:39:19.460 --> 01:39:20.460] Yeah. [01:39:20.460 --> 01:39:24.460] Otherwise, they may still be out there. [01:39:24.460 --> 01:39:26.460] Oh, I'm sure they would still have been out there. [01:39:26.460 --> 01:39:29.460] And they'd have been still out there next week. [01:39:29.460 --> 01:39:31.460] Well, anyway. [01:39:31.460 --> 01:39:38.460] Uvalde, for those who don't know, is a suburb of San Antonio. [01:39:38.460 --> 01:39:40.460] Oh, okay. [01:39:40.460 --> 01:39:41.460] All right. [01:39:41.460 --> 01:39:45.460] I didn't know it was near San Antonio. [01:39:45.460 --> 01:39:52.460] I was once across the street from the Alamo, but I was literally like across the street [01:39:52.460 --> 01:39:54.460] about the distance. [01:39:54.460 --> 01:39:57.460] What, out there on the Riverwalk? [01:39:57.460 --> 01:39:58.460] I don't know. [01:39:58.460 --> 01:40:05.460] When I was in San Antonio, it smelled like sweat. [01:40:05.460 --> 01:40:06.460] Sweat? [01:40:06.460 --> 01:40:09.460] Well, let me tell you, it's hot enough. [01:40:09.460 --> 01:40:13.460] But if you think it's hot in San Antonio, go to Corpus Christi, where the humidity [01:40:13.460 --> 01:40:17.460] and the heat will kill you. [01:40:17.460 --> 01:40:23.460] I'm taking on someone in Victoria, and Victoria's just north of Corpus Christi. [01:40:23.460 --> 01:40:25.460] Corpus Christi is a tough place. [01:40:25.460 --> 01:40:28.460] It's a lot of drug. [01:40:28.460 --> 01:40:34.460] A lot of the guys who fly out of Mexico, they fly into the Corpus Christi area with drugs. [01:40:34.460 --> 01:40:38.460] That's a tough place to be in. [01:40:38.460 --> 01:40:40.460] That's like Buffalo, New York. [01:40:40.460 --> 01:40:44.460] Buffalo, New York is right on the border between Canada and the U.S. [01:40:44.460 --> 01:40:49.460] So naturally, if the authorities are chasing someone, they're going to head to Buffalo [01:40:49.460 --> 01:40:54.460] to get the heck out of the Dodge and run into Canada. [01:40:54.460 --> 01:40:58.460] Buffalo can be a tough place. [01:40:58.460 --> 01:41:00.460] Well, there are a lot of them. [01:41:00.460 --> 01:41:04.460] Matter of fact, we have another caller from New York. [01:41:04.460 --> 01:41:07.460] Okay. [01:41:07.460 --> 01:41:12.460] If you're done, John, we're going to go on to Shane in New York. [01:41:12.460 --> 01:41:14.460] Shane in New York. [01:41:14.460 --> 01:41:15.460] Okay. [01:41:15.460 --> 01:41:16.460] Thank you. [01:41:16.460 --> 01:41:17.460] Okay. [01:41:17.460 --> 01:41:18.460] Thank you, John. [01:41:18.460 --> 01:41:19.460] Okay. [01:41:19.460 --> 01:41:23.460] Shane, what do you have for us today? [01:41:23.460 --> 01:41:24.460] Well, I want to make a comment. [01:41:24.460 --> 01:41:26.460] Hey, how are you guys doing tonight? [01:41:26.460 --> 01:41:30.460] Doing pretty good for an old fat guy. [01:41:30.460 --> 01:41:35.460] Well, I know you're not fat, so you might be old, but you're not fat. [01:41:35.460 --> 01:41:36.460] How about that? [01:41:36.460 --> 01:41:37.460] So, hey, John, how are you? [01:41:37.460 --> 01:41:39.460] He hasn't seen me lately. [01:41:39.460 --> 01:41:41.460] He's gone. [01:41:41.460 --> 01:41:45.460] I recently saw myself naked in the mirror. [01:41:45.460 --> 01:41:51.460] It was a traumatic experience. [01:41:51.460 --> 01:41:52.460] Okay. [01:41:52.460 --> 01:41:54.460] What do you have for us, Shane? [01:41:54.460 --> 01:41:59.460] I'm going to have to take you to the Russian sauna where it's 220 degrees, [01:41:59.460 --> 01:42:01.460] and you jump in that cold water. [01:42:01.460 --> 01:42:02.460] That's around 35. [01:42:02.460 --> 01:42:07.460] That will get rid of whatever fat you have left. [01:42:07.460 --> 01:42:17.460] There was a commercial years ago where a guy walks out of a sauna [01:42:17.460 --> 01:42:20.460] with a towel around him and walks up to a hole in the ice [01:42:20.460 --> 01:42:24.460] and drops through the hole in the ice. [01:42:24.460 --> 01:42:25.460] That's right. [01:42:25.460 --> 01:42:26.460] Tough. [01:42:26.460 --> 01:42:27.460] Okay. [01:42:27.460 --> 01:42:29.460] What do you have for us, Shane? [01:42:29.460 --> 01:42:30.460] Okay. [01:42:30.460 --> 01:42:32.460] This is what I have for you today. [01:42:32.460 --> 01:42:35.460] Actually, I just want to mention on the credit repair, [01:42:35.460 --> 01:42:37.460] I used to sell that back when I was a youngster. [01:42:37.460 --> 01:42:40.460] I was just basically right out of college. [01:42:40.460 --> 01:42:43.460] A soft pull basically doesn't really affect your score too much. [01:42:43.460 --> 01:42:44.460] It's the hard pull. [01:42:44.460 --> 01:42:52.460] A hard pull would be auto loans, mortgages, major credit cards, [01:42:52.460 --> 01:42:56.460] like an American gold card or something like that. [01:42:56.460 --> 01:42:58.460] I don't even think today that would be considered a hard pull, [01:42:58.460 --> 01:43:00.460] but back then it was. [01:43:00.460 --> 01:43:06.460] The main thing is real loans secured by asset, like a house or a car. [01:43:06.460 --> 01:43:07.460] Those are called hard pulls, [01:43:07.460 --> 01:43:13.460] and I do think it does take some credit points off your FICA score. [01:43:13.460 --> 01:43:15.460] I do want to comment on that. [01:43:15.460 --> 01:43:22.460] Number two, I have a fair debt collection practices lawsuit in federal court, [01:43:22.460 --> 01:43:24.460] and I got that extension granted for 60 days [01:43:24.460 --> 01:43:28.460] to respond to the motion of dismiss for failure to state a claim. [01:43:28.460 --> 01:43:30.460] That's sometime in late October, [01:43:30.460 --> 01:43:35.460] and I'm suing the officers for keeping. [01:43:35.460 --> 01:43:38.460] We got a music playing in the background, Randy. [01:43:38.460 --> 01:43:39.460] Okay, hang on. [01:43:39.460 --> 01:43:43.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:43:43.460 --> 01:43:45.460] I'm not going to give out the call-in numbers. [01:43:45.460 --> 01:43:48.460] We only have one segment left. [01:43:48.460 --> 01:43:50.460] So hang on. [01:43:50.460 --> 01:44:00.460] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.460 --> 01:44:04.460] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [01:44:04.460 --> 01:44:06.460] except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.460 --> 01:44:09.460] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, [01:44:09.460 --> 01:44:11.460] and it's time we changed all that. 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[01:46:28.460 --> 01:46:53.460] The people come down from the hill [01:46:53.460 --> 01:47:00.460] Into the city they walk [01:47:00.460 --> 01:47:05.460] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this, [01:47:05.460 --> 01:47:13.460] the 16th day of September 2022, and we have Shane from New York. [01:47:13.460 --> 01:47:17.460] Okay, Shane, what all do you have for us today? [01:47:17.460 --> 01:47:21.460] Okay, so I just want to let you know about the Fair Debt Collection. [01:47:21.460 --> 01:47:24.460] This is a lawsuit that I have against KeyBank and all the officers [01:47:24.460 --> 01:47:27.460] and all the attorneys, and I was listening to you earlier, [01:47:27.460 --> 01:47:33.460] and from all the research, you are correct on that, the original lender. [01:47:33.460 --> 01:47:39.460] But that's a pretty huge case I got going on, [01:47:39.460 --> 01:47:42.460] because I don't even have a loan with KeyBank, [01:47:42.460 --> 01:47:47.460] nor the fine-touching craze, a big law from Rochester [01:47:47.460 --> 01:47:51.460] that had been known for stealing thousands and thousands of homes all through western New York [01:47:51.460 --> 01:47:54.460] and all through the state of New York. [01:47:54.460 --> 01:48:01.460] It's a very corrupt organization run by David P. Case. [01:48:01.460 --> 01:48:03.460] The story is way too long because we don't have much time, [01:48:03.460 --> 01:48:08.460] but the biggest story I want to tell you is my mom still has her pending lawsuit [01:48:08.460 --> 01:48:11.460] in the federal courthouse here in Buffalo. [01:48:11.460 --> 01:48:14.460] We started back in 2016. [01:48:14.460 --> 01:48:20.460] Here we are, seven years later, we finally have our evidentiary or discovery hearing, [01:48:20.460 --> 01:48:24.460] because the attorney representing Nation Star, which is right there in Dallas, [01:48:24.460 --> 01:48:27.460] and he's an attorney from New Jersey, [01:48:27.460 --> 01:48:32.460] and we requested to see the blue wet ink signature and the bond. [01:48:32.460 --> 01:48:36.460] If the note is lost, we're required to see the bond pursuant to UCC 3804, [01:48:36.460 --> 01:48:40.460] and I'm glad to report back to you that the judge told the attorney [01:48:40.460 --> 01:48:46.460] that you must have until September 19th to find the blue wet ink signature note [01:48:46.460 --> 01:48:49.460] and the bond pursuant to UCC 3804, [01:48:49.460 --> 01:48:53.460] and I thought that was absolutely the first time in my entire life I've ever heard [01:48:53.460 --> 01:48:56.460] a federal magistrate ever say that, [01:48:56.460 --> 01:49:00.460] and he stayed in the courtroom until everybody left because we showed up with like 15 people, [01:49:00.460 --> 01:49:03.460] and we were outside waiting 15 minutes for him to come out. [01:49:03.460 --> 01:49:06.460] He wouldn't come out, so we just decided to leave because he wouldn't leave the courtroom, [01:49:06.460 --> 01:49:10.460] and I thought that was a very interesting hearing because it's very rare. [01:49:10.460 --> 01:49:16.460] We put the magistrate on notice on discovery, and they would not answer it, [01:49:16.460 --> 01:49:19.460] so we had a hearing for that, and so I thought that was pretty... [01:49:19.460 --> 01:49:21.460] Yeah, wow, way to go. [01:49:21.460 --> 01:49:23.460] I mean, I don't know about you, Randy, but that's pretty awesome. [01:49:23.460 --> 01:49:26.460] Yeah, he said that, but I just want to let everybody out there, [01:49:26.460 --> 01:49:29.460] it takes years to get to this point, years. [01:49:29.460 --> 01:49:33.460] We started this back in 2016, and we've been battling out in the court, [01:49:33.460 --> 01:49:36.460] and courts would sit on motions and amend the complaints, [01:49:36.460 --> 01:49:39.460] and that's another long story, Randy, [01:49:39.460 --> 01:49:43.460] but I just want to report that we're trying to order the transcripts, [01:49:43.460 --> 01:49:47.460] and the court reporter still has not called us back from July 19th, [01:49:47.460 --> 01:49:49.460] but we're working on it. We'll eventually get them, [01:49:49.460 --> 01:49:52.460] but I thought that it was the most amazing hearing I've ever seen [01:49:52.460 --> 01:49:55.460] out of all my years ago in the court, and I've been in court many times, [01:49:55.460 --> 01:50:00.460] but this is not me, it's only my mom, and it's the first lien holder, [01:50:00.460 --> 01:50:03.460] and we sued them on the Fair Debt Collection Practices Lawsuit, [01:50:03.460 --> 01:50:06.460] and we did it within one year under the statute of limitations, [01:50:06.460 --> 01:50:09.460] that's why we're at this stage, so we're right there, [01:50:09.460 --> 01:50:13.460] we're literally right at the end before trial, [01:50:13.460 --> 01:50:18.460] and we filed a motion for extension of time to have... [01:50:18.460 --> 01:50:21.460] there's that one last stage where you depose them, [01:50:21.460 --> 01:50:23.460] but we can't depose them because we still don't have discovery yet, [01:50:23.460 --> 01:50:27.460] so we filed a motion for extension of time to have that opportunity to depose them, [01:50:27.460 --> 01:50:32.460] but we can't do that because we don't have no discovery, so I want to... [01:50:32.460 --> 01:50:37.460] So have they ordered discovery? I mean, has the judge ordered discovery? [01:50:37.460 --> 01:50:40.460] Yes. Well, yeah, he did. Yes, he did. Yes, he... [01:50:40.460 --> 01:50:44.460] But when you look at the docket sheet, it doesn't clearly state that. [01:50:44.460 --> 01:50:48.460] It says, based on the hearing, the attorney has until September 19th [01:50:48.460 --> 01:50:52.460] to produce what was required from in the hearing. That's all he said. [01:50:52.460 --> 01:50:56.460] That's enough. That seems all-inclusive. [01:50:56.460 --> 01:51:01.460] I want to let you know that that was pretty amazing. [01:51:01.460 --> 01:51:05.460] It's exciting, and I don't know where they're going to go now [01:51:05.460 --> 01:51:08.460] because they already met it in the bankruptcy court. [01:51:08.460 --> 01:51:10.460] My mom's bankruptcy court, they lost the note. [01:51:10.460 --> 01:51:13.460] It's been missing for years, and that's when the bankruptcy judge said, [01:51:13.460 --> 01:51:16.460] well, wait a second, how are you going to sell this property? [01:51:16.460 --> 01:51:18.460] You can't get your title, you can't get insurance, you don't even have a bond. [01:51:18.460 --> 01:51:20.460] UCC 3804. [01:51:20.460 --> 01:51:24.460] And the attorney representing nation star Michael Chatwin in Rochester, [01:51:24.460 --> 01:51:26.460] he says, oh, well, Your Honor, that's discretionary. [01:51:26.460 --> 01:51:28.460] He says, well, that might be discretionary in state court, [01:51:28.460 --> 01:51:31.460] but out here in bankruptcy court, you got to have that. [01:51:31.460 --> 01:51:33.460] So I thought that was interesting. [01:51:33.460 --> 01:51:37.460] So I think all these judges communicate and talk to each other, [01:51:37.460 --> 01:51:42.460] and I believe so, and based on my history and everything I've been through, [01:51:42.460 --> 01:51:46.460] I think they get to a point where they get sick of seeing all these cases [01:51:46.460 --> 01:51:53.460] because I filed at least 15, maybe 20 cases on this property over the last eight years. [01:51:53.460 --> 01:51:57.460] So you just don't file one lawsuit expected way, and you got to fight like hell. [01:51:57.460 --> 01:52:00.460] But I just thought that was something worth telling you tonight. [01:52:00.460 --> 01:52:02.460] That was exciting. [01:52:02.460 --> 01:52:04.460] When I get the transcripts, I'll share them with you, [01:52:04.460 --> 01:52:06.460] but it's to get a federal magistrate to say, [01:52:06.460 --> 01:52:09.460] you need to produce that original blue ink signature, [01:52:09.460 --> 01:52:13.460] and we kept on stating that in the motion to compel. [01:52:13.460 --> 01:52:16.460] So I don't know about you, Randy, but I thought that was... [01:52:16.460 --> 01:52:19.460] This sounds like you're cruising toward a wind. [01:52:19.460 --> 01:52:21.460] Yeah, that's great. [01:52:21.460 --> 01:52:25.460] I got the feeling... Yeah, yes. [01:52:25.460 --> 01:52:27.460] You may beat them all together. [01:52:27.460 --> 01:52:29.460] That'll be incredible. [01:52:29.460 --> 01:52:31.460] That almost never happens. [01:52:31.460 --> 01:52:34.460] And the thing is, and I want to tell you one more thing. [01:52:34.460 --> 01:52:37.460] The second lien holder, I'm the one who filed the lawsuit against KeyBank, [01:52:37.460 --> 01:52:41.460] which was the KeyLock, and that big hearing is on until late October, [01:52:41.460 --> 01:52:45.460] and that issue is they filed a proof of claim with no contract. [01:52:45.460 --> 01:52:50.460] They never loaned me any money, and they never produced the original note. [01:52:50.460 --> 01:52:52.460] I think we got them locked in, and I don't really... [01:52:52.460 --> 01:52:55.460] The statute of limitations have already ran out. [01:52:55.460 --> 01:52:58.460] You know, the six years in New York, I'm not sure what it's like in Texas, [01:52:58.460 --> 01:53:00.460] but in New York law, it's six years, [01:53:00.460 --> 01:53:04.460] but I forgot the minus the 18 months from the COVID when we had that lockdown. [01:53:04.460 --> 01:53:09.460] So I have to subtract that, but I think we're really close to that six years. [01:53:09.460 --> 01:53:15.460] Wait a minute, how does the lockdown change things? [01:53:15.460 --> 01:53:18.460] Oh, I was under the impression, and there's no rulings on it, [01:53:18.460 --> 01:53:22.460] there's no case law on it, and I believe that based on COVID in New York, [01:53:22.460 --> 01:53:29.460] they had a moratorium for no foreclosures for like, what, 30 months. [01:53:29.460 --> 01:53:33.460] Yeah, but you were already in foreclosure. [01:53:33.460 --> 01:53:34.460] That's right. [01:53:34.460 --> 01:53:36.460] So that shouldn't have applied to you. [01:53:36.460 --> 01:53:38.460] COVID-19. [01:53:38.460 --> 01:53:41.460] Okay, well, then if that's the case, then I got to do more research on it, [01:53:41.460 --> 01:53:44.460] then their time's probably expired, [01:53:44.460 --> 01:53:49.460] because you only have six years to complete the process of the sale of the property. [01:53:49.460 --> 01:53:52.460] So, Randy, I don't know everything, but we're getting close. [01:53:52.460 --> 01:53:53.460] That's what I want to tell you. [01:53:53.460 --> 01:53:58.460] That is wonderful, because you have really hung in there. [01:53:58.460 --> 01:54:00.460] Yeah, it's hard, man. [01:54:00.460 --> 01:54:04.460] You know, back in the olden days, I'd say, I accept that for value. [01:54:04.460 --> 01:54:06.460] Here's the note, take it, here you go. [01:54:06.460 --> 01:54:07.460] It's all paid, prepaid. [01:54:07.460 --> 01:54:08.460] Yeah, that sounds great. [01:54:08.460 --> 01:54:10.460] I'm going to 1099A it, Randy. [01:54:10.460 --> 01:54:14.460] Did he pull that OID off of me? [01:54:14.460 --> 01:54:16.460] Yeah, I remember those. [01:54:16.460 --> 01:54:17.460] Yeah. [01:54:17.460 --> 01:54:23.460] I mean, poor Tim Turner's sitting there for another, what, 15, 20 more years for that. [01:54:23.460 --> 01:54:24.460] Good for him. [01:54:24.460 --> 01:54:26.460] Buying SOB. [01:54:26.460 --> 01:54:30.460] Come on my show and said he was an attorney. [01:54:30.460 --> 01:54:31.460] He was no such thing. [01:54:31.460 --> 01:54:36.460] And then he invited me to a seminar he was doing. [01:54:36.460 --> 01:54:39.460] And he charged a whole bunch of money, but he invited me for free. [01:54:39.460 --> 01:54:42.460] So I'm there the second day, sitting in the front. [01:54:42.460 --> 01:54:44.460] He's got cameras on me. [01:54:44.460 --> 01:54:51.460] And right in the middle of a presentation, he stops and tells us that he's got two generals that's coming with him. [01:54:51.460 --> 01:54:59.460] They're going to take over the legislature and trial these legislators and hang them. [01:54:59.460 --> 01:55:06.460] Oh, man, I'm sitting here in the front, cameras on me, and he's talking high treason. [01:55:06.460 --> 01:55:09.460] I got up and walked out. [01:55:09.460 --> 01:55:10.460] Where you going? [01:55:10.460 --> 01:55:12.460] I am out of here. [01:55:12.460 --> 01:55:14.460] You guys are nuts. [01:55:14.460 --> 01:55:16.460] And then he wound up in prison. [01:55:16.460 --> 01:55:23.460] There's a lot of people, a lot of people, Randy, they said there's probably at least a good chunk. [01:55:23.460 --> 01:55:26.460] I don't know the exact number, but there's a good chunk of people in there. [01:55:26.460 --> 01:55:27.460] And people meant well. [01:55:27.460 --> 01:55:32.460] You know, they just, you get suckered in, you do it, and then they hang you, you know? [01:55:32.460 --> 01:55:35.460] But it's, you got to do it the old fashioned way. [01:55:35.460 --> 01:55:37.460] You got to use their rules. [01:55:37.460 --> 01:55:40.460] You don't show up with a hockey stick at a tennis match. [01:55:40.460 --> 01:55:41.460] Exactly. [01:55:41.460 --> 01:55:49.460] And this, you know, Brett and I, we deal with this all the time on our telegram channels. [01:55:49.460 --> 01:55:56.460] We're constantly dealing with people coming in there pushing this patriot mythology crapola. [01:55:56.460 --> 01:56:04.460] And it really gets frustrating because I've been called all over the country to try to help people get out of jail [01:56:04.460 --> 01:56:07.460] from following this nonsense. [01:56:07.460 --> 01:56:12.460] So it's not just harmless garbage. [01:56:12.460 --> 01:56:21.460] It's getting people put in prison and costing people their homes and their estates. [01:56:21.460 --> 01:56:30.460] And these guys who are doing it, you know, we've got one out there now, Strait, was it David Strait? [01:56:30.460 --> 01:56:31.460] Yeah. [01:56:31.460 --> 01:56:32.460] He's telling people to do all this stuff. [01:56:32.460 --> 01:56:38.460] I was at a meeting, and they brought him in, and he did a 30-minute presentation. [01:56:38.460 --> 01:56:45.460] I got through about 10 minutes of it, and I had to get him to walk out because there had been a fight. [01:56:45.460 --> 01:56:50.460] He's telling people this nonsense, and he's charging them several hundred bucks to go to his seminars, [01:56:50.460 --> 01:56:54.460] and he's pushing this patriot mythology nonsense. [01:56:54.460 --> 01:56:59.460] And, you know, people don't know any better. [01:56:59.460 --> 01:57:03.460] They listen to this stuff, and it sounds good. [01:57:03.460 --> 01:57:10.460] But when I start pressing them for underlying law, all I get is a bunch of crapola. [01:57:10.460 --> 01:57:20.460] We had a guy who was an expert on corporations, and he said the states are all corporations. [01:57:20.460 --> 01:57:26.460] And I asked him, well, if the states are corporations, where do I find the articles in corporations? [01:57:26.460 --> 01:57:28.460] Oh, you don't understand. [01:57:28.460 --> 01:57:29.460] It's not that kind of corporation. [01:57:29.460 --> 01:57:31.460] Yeah, I do understand. [01:57:31.460 --> 01:57:34.460] Corporation is a term of art. [01:57:34.460 --> 01:57:35.460] It has a very specific meaning. [01:57:35.460 --> 01:57:39.460] In order to have a corporation, you have to have articles in corporations. [01:57:39.460 --> 01:57:41.460] Where do I find them? [01:57:41.460 --> 01:57:47.460] And the guy got really upset at me and told me how ignorant I was, and I really pressed him. [01:57:47.460 --> 01:57:52.460] And finally, Deborah pulled the plug. [01:57:52.460 --> 01:58:00.460] She told me later, I've never seen you go after somebody the way you did that day. [01:58:00.460 --> 01:58:07.460] I said, oh, yeah, I was pretty drunk that day. [01:58:07.460 --> 01:58:09.460] But I was right. [01:58:09.460 --> 01:58:12.460] There were no articles in corporations. [01:58:12.460 --> 01:58:15.460] The federal government is not incorporated. [01:58:15.460 --> 01:58:22.460] They incorporated DC, but they just incorporated a bunch of municipalities all into one. [01:58:22.460 --> 01:58:30.460] And these guys took the fact that they did this incorporation of several entities into one to mean they filed articles of incorporation. [01:58:30.460 --> 01:58:35.460] It was just absolute nonsense. [01:58:35.460 --> 01:58:38.460] OK, we are out of time. [01:58:38.460 --> 01:58:40.460] Thank you, Chris. [01:58:40.460 --> 01:58:43.460] This is Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rue of Law Radio. [01:58:43.460 --> 01:58:44.460] We'll be back next week. [01:58:44.460 --> 01:58:47.460] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:47.460 --> 01:59:16.460] Good night. [01:59:17.460 --> 01:59:29.460] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.460 --> 01:59:32.460] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.460 --> 01:59:40.460] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.460 --> 01:59:50.460] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:50.460 --> 01:59:52.460] Looking for some truth? [01:59:52.460 --> 01:59:54.460] You found it. [01:59:54.460 --> 02:00:13.460] Go to grossradionetwork.com.