[00:00.000 --> 00:05.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.680 --> 00:09.360] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.360 --> 00:10.840] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.840 --> 00:14.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.760 --> 00:16.860] your First Amendment rights. [00:16.860 --> 00:18.460] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.460 --> 00:22.060] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.060 --> 00:26.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.840 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:33.000] Privacy. [00:33.000 --> 00:34.600] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.600 --> 00:38.880] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:38.880 --> 00:42.420] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.420 --> 00:44.760] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.760 --> 00:46.480] Spar. [00:46.480 --> 00:47.700] It's what fighters do. [00:47.700 --> 00:50.680] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.680 --> 00:54.400] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.400 --> 00:56.440] S-P-A-R with an extra P. [00:56.440 --> 01:02.840] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:02.840 --> 01:06.880] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:06.880 --> 01:08.400] assembly, and religion. [01:08.400 --> 01:10.760] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.760 --> 01:14.480] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.480 --> 01:18.000] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.000 --> 01:20.600] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.600 --> 01:22.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.600 --> 01:31.000] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.000 --> 01:34.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.680 --> 01:38.120] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.120 --> 01:39.560] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.560 --> 01:43.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.500 --> 01:46.640] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.640 --> 01:48.240] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.240 --> 01:51.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.840 --> 01:56.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.600 --> 02:01.640] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.640 --> 02:04.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.360 --> 02:08.640] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.640 --> 02:12.200] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.200 --> 02:15.760] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.760 --> 02:20.120] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.120 --> 02:22.200] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.200 --> 02:26.680] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.680 --> 02:30.520] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.520 --> 02:31.520] Get it? [02:31.520 --> 02:33.840] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.840 --> 02:37.440] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.440 --> 02:38.440] when he said, [02:38.440 --> 02:43.600] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.600 --> 02:48.720] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which historically [02:48.720 --> 02:50.440] has proved to always be possible. [02:50.440 --> 02:52.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.400 --> 03:22.320] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [04:22.400 --> 04:34.880] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelvin, Brett Fountain Radio on [04:34.880 --> 04:52.640] for 2022, our four hour info marathon, I'm going to go ahead and start off yesterday [04:52.640 --> 05:07.360] during the break, Brett was talking to these judges, can you say that again? [05:07.360 --> 05:15.760] So the date is October the 7th, this is Friday, October 7, 2022, that part cut out a little [05:15.760 --> 05:20.720] bit for me, but I don't know, maybe everybody else heard it okay. [05:20.720 --> 05:23.720] But what were you saying about yesterday during the break? [05:23.720 --> 05:27.000] I didn't get to hear the rest of that sentence. [05:27.000 --> 05:33.880] Brett was talking about some of the things that went on between him and the lawyers and [05:33.880 --> 05:37.600] the judge, and I thought everybody needed to hear that. [05:37.600 --> 05:42.640] We go to court and we think the judge is some kind of big deal, and we think the prosecutor [05:42.640 --> 05:49.800] has some kind of in power or influence over us, heck with that. [05:49.800 --> 06:00.760] The level of disrespect that you demonstrated was refreshing. [06:00.760 --> 06:09.800] When the prosecutors were bringing up all this stuff that was nonsense, will you talk [06:09.800 --> 06:17.040] about that, how that part of what went on went down, or the lawyers are saying that [06:17.040 --> 06:21.560] the judge can do this and do that when you know he can't? [06:21.560 --> 06:28.120] Well that was pretty much the whole thing, it went on for an unbelievable three hours. [06:28.120 --> 06:34.720] I had 61 items on my list, I made a little checklist. [06:34.720 --> 06:42.280] This is something I started doing when I'm preparing for a particular hearing, I lay [06:42.280 --> 06:47.560] out all of the motions and the pleadings and the objections and whatever it is that needs [06:47.560 --> 06:50.840] to get ruled on. [06:50.840 --> 06:55.160] I just make little numbered bullet lists, and then underneath each one of those I have [06:55.160 --> 07:00.500] quick little check boxes for myself, because I don't know, maybe other people are faster [07:00.500 --> 07:06.600] at writing things down during the proceedings, but I pretty much know what they're going [07:06.600 --> 07:07.600] to do. [07:07.600 --> 07:10.800] They're going to reject everything, deny everything, and they're not going to have any grounds, [07:10.800 --> 07:17.480] but it might be no grounds, or it might be insufficient grounds, and I need a check box [07:17.480 --> 07:18.480] for that. [07:18.480 --> 07:27.120] So it might be that the motion is, there might be some legislating from the bench, I have [07:27.120 --> 07:28.280] a check box. [07:28.280 --> 07:34.760] There might be some attorney trying to testify, I got a check box, or there might be no opposition. [07:34.760 --> 07:39.000] Maybe my motion was completely unopposed, so I make a check box for these things, and [07:39.000 --> 07:44.240] I'm prepared just to have a really quick way to take notes for myself. [07:44.240 --> 07:53.640] Anyway, that's just a little logistical thing, because you ask about their lawlessness, but [07:53.640 --> 07:57.360] really they filled up the entire three hours with that, Randy. [07:57.360 --> 08:04.000] I mean, I know it doesn't surprise you, but when you say that, I honestly don't know which [08:04.000 --> 08:06.120] moment you're talking about. [08:06.120 --> 08:08.160] You heard some of the audio, right? [08:08.160 --> 08:15.480] So you know there's some, let me think which audio, which parts of it that could be. [08:15.480 --> 08:27.880] We had one point I was highlighting to the court that there had been no primary pleadings, [08:27.880 --> 08:35.360] and that the attorney over here, and I keep motioning to him while I say, this guy, and [08:35.360 --> 08:41.480] I keep pointing over to him, you know, and he's got a lifeline, a buddy that he called [08:41.480 --> 08:42.480] in this time. [08:42.480 --> 08:49.400] Last time he was so woefully unprepared, you know, I kind of felt bad for him, because [08:49.400 --> 08:57.520] he's just, he's sitting there acting like he knows what he's doing, and he just realizes [08:57.520 --> 09:04.760] that, oh my goodness, this guy has read the code and I never have, and he's getting dragged [09:04.760 --> 09:06.720] all over the place. [09:06.720 --> 09:12.800] Last time, you know, the September 20 hearing, well, so this time he brought in a lifeline. [09:12.800 --> 09:20.880] He's got this buddy in there with him and it looks like a kid from, you know, he just [09:20.880 --> 09:23.400] popped out of law school. [09:23.400 --> 09:29.280] And it turns out that he did just actually three years ago, two, maybe two, three years [09:29.280 --> 09:30.280] ago. [09:30.280 --> 09:31.280] I forgot. [09:31.280 --> 09:38.880] Anyway, and the reason I know that is because I've already bargained him, but the lifeline [09:38.880 --> 09:47.600] guy is sitting over there acting really smug and arrogant and they both look a little itchy. [09:47.600 --> 09:57.080] But anyway, at one point I was highlighting to the court that the, if somebody wants to [09:57.080 --> 10:02.200] just pretend that we have a case here and there's something going on, there's some kind [10:02.200 --> 10:05.800] of controversy before the court, where is it? [10:05.800 --> 10:08.000] There are no pleadings before the court. [10:08.000 --> 10:14.760] The primary pleadings would be according to Texas code of criminal procedure, 27.01, an [10:14.760 --> 10:16.480] indictment or an information. [10:16.480 --> 10:19.440] Well, your honor, there's nothing. [10:19.440 --> 10:25.200] This man over here, him and his buddy, they haven't filed anything, nothing. [10:25.200 --> 10:31.040] And the office that he supposedly works for doesn't know who he is and can't seem to get [10:31.040 --> 10:33.000] anything served to him. [10:33.000 --> 10:36.440] So I don't know what he's doing here, but he didn't file anything. [10:36.440 --> 10:40.160] His office didn't file anything and they don't know who he is. [10:40.160 --> 10:42.000] And this other guy just now showed up today. [10:42.000 --> 10:43.000] He hadn't filed anything. [10:43.000 --> 10:45.600] I don't know what we're doing here. [10:45.600 --> 10:46.600] We got nothing. [10:46.600 --> 10:48.880] There's no controversy before the court. [10:48.880 --> 10:53.440] Not saying this court wouldn't have jurisdiction if somebody invoked it, but nobody invoked [10:53.440 --> 10:54.440] it. [10:54.440 --> 10:58.400] I said, your honor, talk about bringing a knife to a gunfight. [10:58.400 --> 11:03.520] He brought a cotton ball. [11:03.520 --> 11:09.200] I just imagine, you know, the judge sitting up there trying to not laugh and I imagine [11:09.200 --> 11:11.840] what must be going through her head. [11:11.840 --> 11:21.480] Anyway, yeah, that's, that's pretty much what it was like for three hours. [11:21.480 --> 11:26.040] Are you there, Randy? [11:26.040 --> 11:29.240] Somebody muted my mic when I wasn't looking. [11:29.240 --> 11:30.240] Okay. [11:30.240 --> 11:37.600] You were talking about how you were interacting with the judge and the prosecutor last night [11:37.600 --> 11:44.160] about kind of picking on the prosecutors when they're making statements to the court that [11:44.160 --> 11:45.760] were not accurate. [11:45.760 --> 11:50.720] Oh, like when I would say, your honor, he's just making that up. [11:50.720 --> 11:51.720] Exactly. [11:51.720 --> 12:00.800] You know, there was a lot of moments where he did that kind of thing. [12:00.800 --> 12:01.800] That's for sure. [12:01.800 --> 12:08.400] And at one point I said, your honor, do we really have to listen to him? [12:08.400 --> 12:16.400] He's bringing all this case law that's based on repealed statutes and not even recent, [12:16.400 --> 12:17.400] your honor. [12:17.400 --> 12:18.400] I mean, this is 23 years ago. [12:18.400 --> 12:27.080] Do we really have to sit here and listen to him? [12:27.080 --> 12:34.680] I think the point of this is when you go into court, especially as a pro se litigant, as [12:34.680 --> 12:44.720] a citizen of this Republic, you essentially have more power and leeway than anybody else [12:44.720 --> 12:48.320] in the court. [12:48.320 --> 12:51.040] They're bound to some very strict rules. [12:51.040 --> 12:56.160] And beyond that, they're bound to the good nature of the judge because the judge can [12:56.160 --> 13:00.400] sanction them with the drop of a hat. [13:00.400 --> 13:04.920] Can't do that with a pro se litigant. [13:04.920 --> 13:08.880] If he tries to sanction a pro se litigant, he's going to have to come up with some really, [13:08.880 --> 13:10.760] really good grounds. [13:10.760 --> 13:15.760] But with a lawyer, he's sanctioned them with his kaput. [13:15.760 --> 13:23.440] Well I did six different motions for sanctions before the court yesterday, and I could see [13:23.440 --> 13:27.640] them wiggling in their chairs over there. [13:27.640 --> 13:33.800] I didn't turn my attention to them, except for one time I turned to him, I couldn't help [13:33.800 --> 13:34.800] myself. [13:34.800 --> 13:43.080] I turned and faced him and I said, will you just stop talking, please? [13:43.080 --> 13:48.440] But for the most part, I didn't face him and I didn't talk directly to him, but I could [13:48.440 --> 13:53.560] notice that he got a little wiggly when they both did, when I started talking about all [13:53.560 --> 13:54.560] these sanctions. [13:54.560 --> 14:02.480] I moved the court to sanction for frivolous prosecution and for malicious prosecution, [14:02.480 --> 14:03.480] for felony baritory. [14:03.480 --> 14:06.360] Yeah, it was great fun. [14:06.360 --> 14:12.480] And failure to speak with candor to the court. [14:12.480 --> 14:17.480] That's one of my favorites to throw at them. [14:17.480 --> 14:23.000] But I didn't want everybody to hear, you don't have to bend over for these guys. [14:23.000 --> 14:30.440] You don't have to treat them with anything other than a moderate amount of civility and [14:30.440 --> 14:31.440] good manners. [14:31.440 --> 14:35.240] Beyond that, you can crawl down their throats. [14:35.240 --> 14:36.800] He didn't seem to like it very much. [14:36.800 --> 14:38.240] You should. [14:38.240 --> 14:46.600] I kept mentioning to the court how he was lying and he didn't like that very much. [14:46.600 --> 14:52.280] He made sure to call me disingenuous and things like that. [14:52.280 --> 14:56.160] Oh, that would have hurt my feelings. [14:56.160 --> 14:59.640] Yeah, I was crushed. [14:59.640 --> 15:07.400] Okay, I did want everybody to hear that part that when we go into the courtroom, we're [15:07.400 --> 15:10.640] the baddest motor scooter in the building. [15:10.640 --> 15:13.600] That out there, professional peril. [15:13.600 --> 15:21.480] Okay, let's see, we got a minute 42 in this section. [15:21.480 --> 15:22.480] Yeah. [15:22.480 --> 15:27.280] There was a couple of things you said to the judge and you said the judge is trying to [15:27.280 --> 15:28.760] keep from chuckling. [15:28.760 --> 15:30.880] Well, let's see. [15:30.880 --> 15:39.800] That might have been when I told the judge that the complaint that they brought, I said, [15:39.800 --> 15:43.240] your honor, it doesn't have any evidentiary facts in it. [15:43.240 --> 15:44.760] It's completely empty. [15:44.760 --> 15:50.240] They started at the beginning and they said, I have reason to believe and do believe. [15:50.240 --> 15:54.880] And then there's a big empty space here where they're supposed to put the facts, your honor. [15:54.880 --> 15:57.080] And they put it at the bottom. [15:57.080 --> 16:01.960] They put the exempt against the dignity of the state of Texas, but they didn't put anything [16:01.960 --> 16:03.680] in the middle, your honor. [16:03.680 --> 16:05.980] And what am I supposed to plead to? [16:05.980 --> 16:10.360] This is like one of those Easter egg shell things that I held up my hand in the shape [16:10.360 --> 16:11.360] of an Easter egg. [16:11.360 --> 16:24.360] And I, and I said, your honor, it's like one of those Easter eggs shells and it's empty. [16:24.360 --> 16:27.280] They need a lot more of that. [16:27.280 --> 16:28.280] Okay. [16:28.280 --> 16:31.560] We're, we're about out of time in this segment. [16:31.560 --> 16:34.120] When we come back, we have a full board of callers. [16:34.120 --> 16:40.720] When we come back, we'll go to our callers we've got, let's see, nobody from yesterday [16:40.720 --> 16:41.960] that I didn't get to. [16:41.960 --> 16:43.760] I was hoping some of them would call back. [16:43.760 --> 16:45.640] Got a first timer though. [16:45.640 --> 16:47.160] Yeah, yes we do. [16:47.160 --> 16:48.520] We have a first time caller. [16:48.520 --> 16:54.560] So we've got Chris, Jerry, Adam, and a first time caller out of California. [16:54.560 --> 17:00.200] So hang on, we'll pick this up on the other side, we'll be right back. [17:00.200 --> 17:05.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.520 --> 17:09.040] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.040 --> 17:13.320] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [17:13.320 --> 17:14.320] can win too. [17:14.320 --> 17:19.120] You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.120 --> 17:25.000] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [17:25.000 --> 17:29.520] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.520 --> 17:33.720] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.720 --> 17:38.840] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.840 --> 17:40.800] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.800 --> 17:46.520] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.520 --> 17:49.520] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.520 --> 17:58.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.520 --> 18:00.520] collectors now. [18:00.520 --> 18:04.640] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.640 --> 18:06.960] In today's America, we live in an us against them society. [18:06.960 --> 18:10.240] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [18:10.240 --> 18:12.360] stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.360 --> 18:15.560] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [18:15.560 --> 18:19.280] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.280 --> 18:23.440] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.440 --> 18:24.840] our rights through due process. [18:24.840 --> 18:28.800] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [18:28.800 --> 18:32.580] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [18:32.580 --> 18:34.960] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.960 --> 18:38.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:38.960 --> 18:40.320] ordering your copy today. [18:40.320 --> 18:43.560] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [18:43.560 --> 18:48.080] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [18:48.080 --> 18:50.400] documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.400 --> 18:54.360] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.360 --> 18:58.800] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:58.800 --> 19:10.800] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:28.800 --> 19:47.840] I'm always on the lookout for something to soothe my soul. [19:47.840 --> 20:06.240] So I sit back and I watch the evidence unfold and I see justice is the goal, yeah, justice [20:06.240 --> 20:10.320] is the goal. [20:10.320 --> 20:20.920] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio and we're going to our callers. [20:20.920 --> 20:23.480] We have a caller from the 913 area code. [20:23.480 --> 20:26.240] If you are, it looks like a first time caller. [20:26.240 --> 20:29.920] If you are in the 913 area code, talk to us. [20:29.920 --> 20:32.920] Give us a first name and a state. [20:32.920 --> 20:36.440] This is Chris from Missouri. [20:36.440 --> 20:37.440] Missouri. [20:37.440 --> 20:46.080] And we looked up the area code, so you're just across the road from Kansas. [20:46.080 --> 20:48.000] Yes, sir. [20:48.000 --> 20:50.240] Chris from Missouri. [20:50.240 --> 20:54.040] Okay, what do you have for us today? [20:54.040 --> 21:03.320] Okay, well, I mean, a short synopsis is here in Kansas City, I went to the post office, [21:03.320 --> 21:11.040] customer local post office to use their services and was prevented service, was discriminated [21:11.040 --> 21:14.600] against for not wearing a mask. [21:14.600 --> 21:19.360] They denied me service and called the police. [21:19.360 --> 21:25.960] And long story short, the police came, I recorded all this with my phone. [21:25.960 --> 21:30.080] And when the police came, I walked outside to greet the police. [21:30.080 --> 21:33.920] My plan was to make a complaint against the post office. [21:33.920 --> 21:38.440] And they basically arrested me and took me to jail. [21:38.440 --> 21:43.120] And I'm fighting that case now. [21:43.120 --> 21:45.200] Arrested you for what? [21:45.200 --> 21:50.760] They found you outside, you went out there to meet them and they arrested you? [21:50.760 --> 21:51.760] For what? [21:51.760 --> 21:54.240] Being on the premises at a post office? [21:54.240 --> 21:55.240] That's federal. [21:55.240 --> 21:56.240] Yeah. [21:56.240 --> 22:04.960] Well, I tried making those issues with the police, but the charge was for trespass. [22:04.960 --> 22:10.160] And basically what at the very end of it, they were very confrontational. [22:10.160 --> 22:13.740] At the very end, they said, they don't want you to be here. [22:13.740 --> 22:18.360] And I said, you know, sir, I never refused to leave. [22:18.360 --> 22:23.700] And at that particular point, they tackled me and took my phone because I was still recording [22:23.700 --> 22:26.040] at that point. [22:26.040 --> 22:31.240] Okay, that's first degree felony aggravated assault. [22:31.240 --> 22:35.920] And that needs to be charged if police just don't get to beat us up because they want [22:35.920 --> 22:36.920] to. [22:36.920 --> 22:37.920] Right. [22:37.920 --> 22:38.920] I hope you go after them. [22:38.920 --> 22:43.680] You really need to go for their throats. [22:43.680 --> 22:50.320] The police don't, you know, I've got three dislocated ribs, two broken collarbones, a [22:50.320 --> 22:55.560] chipped elbow and a tooth knocked out, but learned how to handle that. [22:55.560 --> 22:58.240] They don't try to beat me up anymore. [22:58.240 --> 23:00.800] You made one mistake. [23:00.800 --> 23:03.560] You let them call the police first. [23:03.560 --> 23:06.000] Yeah. [23:06.000 --> 23:08.320] You need to have the complaint in your hand. [23:08.320 --> 23:14.080] And when they tell you to put on a mask, you take out the phone, dial 911, puts a stop [23:14.080 --> 23:15.840] to that nonsense. [23:15.840 --> 23:21.080] You ask the police to arrest this guy for ordering you to put on a mask. [23:21.080 --> 23:28.680] Now the president can order members of the executive branch to wear masks, but you are [23:28.680 --> 23:32.360] not a member of the executive branch. [23:32.360 --> 23:34.480] The president can't talk to you. [23:34.480 --> 23:40.240] He can't impose any restrictions on you. [23:40.240 --> 23:43.240] They all need to wear red, white and blue pants. [23:43.240 --> 23:50.000] And they would have to because they're within the scope of whatever he declares, but you [23:50.000 --> 23:53.120] don't work in that corporation. [23:53.120 --> 23:56.520] You're out of scope. [23:56.520 --> 24:08.720] Our governor here in Texas, uh, that's the Hobart, you there, Randy kind of cut out. [24:08.720 --> 24:22.320] You said the governor here in Texas, I'm not sure what I'm not hearing me. [24:22.320 --> 24:23.320] There we are. [24:23.320 --> 24:24.320] You're back. [24:24.320 --> 24:25.320] Okay. [24:25.320 --> 24:26.320] My back now. [24:26.320 --> 24:27.320] Okay. [24:27.320 --> 24:32.120] Uh, well, I found 150 page criminal complaint against the governor for his orders because [24:32.120 --> 24:41.240] his orders purported to affect me and he didn't have authority to tell me anything. [24:41.240 --> 24:46.000] The week my complaints went before the grand jury, he rescinded all of them. [24:46.000 --> 24:51.440] We really need to go after the executive branch. [24:51.440 --> 24:55.880] And if you're going to go into a public building, you need to have criminal complaints already [24:55.880 --> 24:57.040] made up. [24:57.040 --> 24:59.040] You know what they're going to do. [24:59.040 --> 25:06.000] And as soon as they tell you that call 9-1-1, do not let them call the police first. [25:06.000 --> 25:11.340] So you get the police out based on your criminal complaints instead of theirs. [25:11.340 --> 25:18.760] But now since the police decided to tackle you and, and they were wearing pistols, that [25:18.760 --> 25:24.400] gets first degree felony aggravated assault against all of them. [25:24.400 --> 25:29.760] And then send them a tort letter, notice to them that you intend to sue them for a whole [25:29.760 --> 25:35.240] bunch of money and very likely the city, Kansas city will write you a check to get you to [25:35.240 --> 25:36.240] go away. [25:36.240 --> 25:37.240] Yeah. [25:37.240 --> 25:41.640] At the, at the end of the day, this is the only way we're going to beat them. [25:41.640 --> 25:47.040] You know, I'm, I'm suing a judge in, uh, Victoria County and the courts are going to rule against [25:47.040 --> 25:53.840] me out of hand at every turn, no matter what. [25:53.840 --> 25:55.720] I got that. [25:55.720 --> 26:02.520] I expect that when I go in, I never asked them to do anything I actually want them to [26:02.520 --> 26:03.520] do. [26:03.520 --> 26:10.480] Cause I know you losing me, Brett, it just cut out for a moment. [26:10.480 --> 26:11.480] You're back. [26:11.480 --> 26:12.480] I'm losing me. [26:12.480 --> 26:15.600] I'm losing me in my own headset. [26:15.600 --> 26:19.000] So I'm kind of tell, uh, but yeah, we do. [26:19.000 --> 26:23.480] We know to expect them the same way with me yesterday and three hours of it and I knew [26:23.480 --> 26:28.680] every box I checked, I knew which way that was going to go. [26:28.680 --> 26:33.080] And yet when I get down to the end of it, I'm going to act real surprised about like, [26:33.080 --> 26:38.680] oh my goodness, this, this is a pattern here showing bias and prejudice against me. [26:38.680 --> 26:46.440] I need to go ahead and move for judicial disqualification as if I didn't know the whole time. [26:46.440 --> 26:47.440] Yeah. [26:47.440 --> 26:58.440] Well, in my case, my issue was a judge recused himself and I said, absolutely not. [26:58.440 --> 27:08.080] I sued a magistrate, a justice of the peace and the county judge immediately recused himself. [27:08.080 --> 27:16.080] And I said, no, you don't, you're under contract and you owe a duty of good faith and fair [27:16.080 --> 27:18.200] dealing to me. [27:18.200 --> 27:22.200] You don't get to just decide that you're recused just because you want to. [27:22.200 --> 27:26.440] There are specific conditions for recusal. [27:26.440 --> 27:29.440] You didn't mean any of those. [27:29.440 --> 27:32.840] So taking on the judge, you need to understand what they're going to do. [27:32.840 --> 27:38.280] You got to know what the process is by this time. [27:38.280 --> 27:44.080] They tell you to get out and you don't want to, they call the police and charge you with [27:44.080 --> 27:45.080] the criminal trespass. [27:45.080 --> 27:49.840] Have you filled up the criminal trespass statute in Kansas? [27:49.840 --> 27:53.840] Are you there? [27:53.840 --> 27:57.080] Yes, sir. [27:57.080 --> 28:00.080] Have you read the criminal trespass statute in Kansas? [28:00.080 --> 28:02.040] Yeah, I have. [28:02.040 --> 28:04.240] It's a local city ordinance. [28:04.240 --> 28:05.240] Yeah, I have. [28:05.240 --> 28:06.240] No, no, no, no. [28:06.240 --> 28:08.560] You can't be arrested. [28:08.560 --> 28:09.560] It's not a city ordinance. [28:09.560 --> 28:10.560] That's good. [28:10.560 --> 28:13.640] Don't step on the grass kind of stuff. [28:13.640 --> 28:17.160] Yeah, this is not an ordinance. [28:17.160 --> 28:21.640] Criminal trespass is not something controlled by the city. [28:21.640 --> 28:24.000] That's a crime everywhere. [28:24.000 --> 28:30.600] They have to reach out to a state level where the legislature defines something as criminal [28:30.600 --> 28:31.600] activity. [28:31.600 --> 28:37.520] When you look that up, when you look at what are the essential elements of it, then it [28:37.520 --> 28:39.840] matches. [28:39.840 --> 28:50.840] So are they alleging to charge you with a violation of a city ordinance on federal property? [28:50.840 --> 28:55.760] Yes, that's what they're trying to do. [28:55.760 --> 28:56.760] Wowsers. [28:56.760 --> 29:01.880] I wonder how they got jurisdiction on federal property. [29:01.880 --> 29:04.400] Because they work for Walmart, of course. [29:04.400 --> 29:07.880] Oh, okay. [29:07.880 --> 29:10.480] Only the post office or federal enclaves. [29:10.480 --> 29:16.120] The only one who has jurisdiction there is the FBI. [29:16.120 --> 29:19.800] What are the post office property? [29:19.800 --> 29:21.800] Yeah. [29:21.800 --> 29:27.080] And what are they doing on the post office property enforcing city ordinance? [29:27.080 --> 29:31.800] They're committing state crimes. [29:31.800 --> 29:40.320] Okay, we'll speak to this when we come back about official misconduct. [29:40.320 --> 29:43.160] That's kind of a catch-all. [29:43.160 --> 29:48.240] It comes down from the Fed, 18 U.S. Code 242, and all the states have something representing [29:48.240 --> 29:49.240] it. [29:49.240 --> 29:50.240] We'll talk about that when we come back. [29:50.240 --> 30:02.560] Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [30:02.560 --> 30:06.160] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively [30:06.160 --> 30:07.160] affected our health? [30:07.160 --> 30:11.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how [30:11.320 --> 30:15.640] cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.640 --> 30:17.240] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.240 --> 30:20.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.840 --> 30:25.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:25.600 --> 30:30.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.760 --> 30:33.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.360 --> 30:37.660] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:37.660 --> 30:41.200] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.200 --> 30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.000 --> 30:47.120] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. [30:47.120 --> 30:48.120] That's a fact. [30:48.120 --> 30:51.640] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head [30:51.640 --> 30:52.640] has been disputed. [30:52.640 --> 30:57.160] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:57.160 --> 31:01.520] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones [31:01.520 --> 31:02.760] affect brain chemistry. [31:02.760 --> 31:08.160] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest [31:08.160 --> 31:11.840] to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.840 --> 31:15.840] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any [31:15.840 --> 31:16.840] chances. [31:16.840 --> 31:20.200] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:20.200 --> 31:22.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:22.200 --> 31:30.480] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.480 --> 31:31.480] I lost my son. [31:31.480 --> 31:32.480] My nephew. [31:32.480 --> 31:33.480] My uncle. [31:33.480 --> 31:34.480] My son. [31:34.480 --> 31:35.480] On September 11th, 2001. [31:35.480 --> 31:38.760] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [31:38.760 --> 31:42.840] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.840 --> 31:48.720] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:48.720 --> 31:52.480] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.480 --> 31:53.960] Bring justice to my son. [31:53.960 --> 31:54.960] My uncle. [31:54.960 --> 31:55.960] My nephew. [31:55.960 --> 31:56.960] My son. [31:56.960 --> 31:57.960] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:57.960 --> 32:01.680] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.680 --> 32:06.040] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [32:06.040 --> 32:07.040] Word? [32:07.040 --> 32:12.200] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [32:12.200 --> 32:18.600] Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [32:18.600 --> 32:23.120] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [32:23.120 --> 32:25.520] dividing the word of truth. [32:25.520 --> 32:29.160] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go [32:29.160 --> 32:32.800] verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [32:32.800 --> 32:37.440] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [32:37.440 --> 32:39.840] and Christian character development. [32:39.840 --> 32:44.360] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.360 --> 32:48.680] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [32:48.680 --> 32:50.960] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.960 --> 32:57.600] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [32:57.600 --> 33:00.160] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:00.160 --> 33:10.200] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:30.160 --> 33:50.880] We're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:50.880 --> 34:16.440] Okay. [34:16.440 --> 34:17.440] We are back. [34:17.440 --> 34:27.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Life Radio, and we're talking to Missouri, Kansas. [34:27.360 --> 34:31.040] This Kansas City or Kansas City, Missouri? [34:31.040 --> 34:34.040] Kansas City, Missouri. [34:34.040 --> 34:35.040] Okay. [34:35.040 --> 34:44.680] I've been to Kansas City, and it is one of my least favorite cities on the planet. [34:44.680 --> 34:46.800] There was something really depressing. [34:46.800 --> 34:54.040] I was driving around in Kansas City, and I see all these women, and they all got these [34:54.040 --> 35:04.560] radar sets on their heads, and curlers in their hair, and big, frumpy, dark, ugly coats. [35:04.560 --> 35:07.880] Everybody looks P.O.ed at everybody. [35:07.880 --> 35:10.240] I got in the truck. [35:10.240 --> 35:15.960] We were delivering a... I had a company that built floor scrubbers, and we were delivering [35:15.960 --> 35:22.920] a floor scrubber to one of the salt mines out there, and they've got these huge warehouses [35:22.920 --> 35:26.840] that are in old salt mines. [35:26.840 --> 35:32.640] I got in the truck, and we came home, and I was asleep, and I woke up, and I looked down, [35:32.640 --> 35:37.920] and this car passed us, and had two or three good-looking women in it, and they passed [35:37.920 --> 35:45.800] us, and I thought, you know, those women were not so much better looking than those in Kansas [35:45.800 --> 35:47.940] City. [35:47.940 --> 35:53.120] They just went to a lot of trouble to make themselves look better. [35:53.120 --> 36:01.840] The ones in Kansas City just looked so dark, and pressed, and seemed to have no concern [36:01.840 --> 36:05.000] about how they looked. [36:05.000 --> 36:08.960] I said right then, I don't ever want to go back to Kansas City, and I wound up going [36:08.960 --> 36:11.280] back there one time. [36:11.280 --> 36:15.080] After that, a few years later, just two or three years ago. [36:15.080 --> 36:19.640] It was worse than I remembered, so I don't like Kansas City. [36:19.640 --> 36:27.880] Kansas City, Missouri is a different town, but you've got a municipality trying to enforce [36:27.880 --> 36:37.360] their ordinances on federal property, but before we go there, Chris, what do you want [36:37.360 --> 36:39.360] to do? [36:39.360 --> 36:50.600] Well, I have a court hearing coming up this next week, and basically, I plan on doing [36:50.600 --> 36:52.680] a motion to dismiss. [36:52.680 --> 36:55.960] They actually, okay, here's part of the story. [36:55.960 --> 37:03.000] My last court hearing last month, I showed up to court on time, and they tried to force [37:03.000 --> 37:09.200] me to wear a mask, to which I refused, and so they kicked me out of the building. [37:09.200 --> 37:16.600] They wouldn't let me attend court, so I went straight home, and I called the court clerk, [37:16.600 --> 37:20.720] and I told her that I was there, and that I intended on going to the hearing, but I [37:20.720 --> 37:28.160] was denied access to the court, to which she replied that that was my choice, that it was [37:28.160 --> 37:34.000] my fault, and the judge issued a warrant out for my arrest, a bench warrant. [37:34.000 --> 37:41.680] Okay, you need to get out your criminal procedure code. [37:41.680 --> 37:48.400] What does the code say about criminal complaints and how they are to be prepared and filed [37:48.400 --> 37:53.440] and processed? [37:53.440 --> 37:55.400] You need to look that up. [37:55.400 --> 38:03.320] In Texas, and this pretty well follows the Fed, a complaint's filed with a magistrate, [38:03.320 --> 38:07.720] the magistrate issues a warrant, and then the police go out and arrest the guy and bring [38:07.720 --> 38:15.240] him before a magistrate, and the magistrate performs an examining trial and makes a determination [38:15.240 --> 38:17.000] of probable cause. [38:17.000 --> 38:19.560] Were you brought before a magistrate? [38:19.560 --> 38:21.920] No, sir. [38:21.920 --> 38:32.080] Well, that is a federal requirement under Gerstein Pugh, but are you familiar with our [38:32.080 --> 38:34.160] telegram channels? [38:34.160 --> 38:35.600] Yes. [38:35.600 --> 38:43.760] Have you been on the Masked Law Society channel? [38:43.760 --> 38:50.120] Not much, but I'm a member there, and I tend to stick with the power of the pen. [38:50.120 --> 38:54.480] And then there's, I'll give a shout out to John from Kansas is in your group also, and [38:54.480 --> 38:56.360] he's helped me out quite a bit. [38:56.360 --> 39:01.440] Okay, go to that Masked Law Society channel. [39:01.440 --> 39:03.960] That's what that's all about. [39:03.960 --> 39:10.160] We could try to give you lots of things you can do here, but they will do it better there. [39:10.160 --> 39:17.000] They'll have pleadings and lawsuits, but they don't do so much as criminal complaints. [39:17.000 --> 39:23.000] And I suggest criminal complaints because you have a constitutional right to access [39:23.000 --> 39:30.400] to the courts, and a state has no power to limit a constitutional right. [39:30.400 --> 39:34.200] The reason I ask you, what do you want to do? [39:34.200 --> 39:38.760] Do you want to take on these issues and change things, or do you just want to make these [39:38.760 --> 39:42.000] complaints go away? [39:42.000 --> 39:45.840] I want to take them on, and I want to change things. [39:45.840 --> 39:50.000] Okay, then that changes everything. [39:50.000 --> 39:53.660] We take a whole different approach in that case. [39:53.660 --> 40:01.040] You need to get the name of every bailiff who spoke to you, and the first thing you [40:01.040 --> 40:09.160] do is find out who trains police officers, and it's probably post-police officer certification [40:09.160 --> 40:10.160] and training. [40:10.160 --> 40:12.760] Standards and training, yeah. [40:12.760 --> 40:15.400] That's what it's called in most states. [40:15.400 --> 40:16.960] You got a little bit of recon to do. [40:16.960 --> 40:23.240] If you're going to take them on and really take them to task, a little bit of recon upfront. [40:23.240 --> 40:30.400] Take a step back and figure out what you're going to do. [40:30.400 --> 40:37.360] One of my favorite excursions was in Victoria County several years ago. [40:37.360 --> 40:41.400] I was there trying to help a woman on her third DUI. [40:41.400 --> 40:46.760] She was at a party and felt like she had too much to drink, so she just went to sleep in [40:46.760 --> 40:57.800] a car in a parking lot, and the police arrested her for DUI because she was sleeping off. [40:57.800 --> 41:01.600] Her drinking didn't want to drive, so they arrested her for DUI, and it was her third [41:01.600 --> 41:02.600] DUI. [41:02.600 --> 41:08.120] I was down there trying to help get this thrown out, and I gave an information request to [41:08.120 --> 41:13.700] the prosecuting attorney asking for all documents collected, assembled, maintained by the department [41:13.700 --> 41:19.760] that are referenced by 17.30 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, and the prosecutor, I [41:19.760 --> 41:20.760] told him I wanted those. [41:20.760 --> 41:24.680] He said, well, if you want those, you'll have to give us a written request. [41:24.680 --> 41:31.000] One moment, I went through my folders, and I say, here it is, and I pull one out, put [41:31.000 --> 41:37.920] in the name, put in the dates, signed it, and said, here you go. [41:37.920 --> 41:40.720] You didn't ask him, what's your bar number? [41:40.720 --> 41:42.720] No, not yet. [41:42.720 --> 41:49.840] So, I'm sitting down, I never want to stand up and look aggressive, so if any time when [41:49.840 --> 41:54.280] I'm talking to these guys, if there's a place, I'll sit down. [41:54.280 --> 41:57.600] So I'm sitting down, he's reading this thing, and he reads a little bit, and he looked down [41:57.600 --> 42:01.560] at me, and he looked back, and he read some more, and he looked down. [42:01.560 --> 42:06.920] Third time he looked down at me, I looked up and said, and you thought this was my first [42:06.920 --> 42:08.920] rodeo? [42:08.920 --> 42:17.120] And he said, no, Mr. Kelton, somehow I get the idea this is not your first rodeo. [42:17.120 --> 42:21.480] That's what you want them to think. [42:21.480 --> 42:25.920] You go down there and ask them to do something, and when they don't do it, you pull out the [42:25.920 --> 42:30.600] criminal complaint and ask them for their name and badge number, and put it in the criminal [42:30.600 --> 42:38.360] complaint and sign it, and then call another bailiff over and say, here, arrest that guy. [42:38.360 --> 42:42.160] It badges everything. [42:42.160 --> 42:45.600] You do not ever want to be the defendant. [42:45.600 --> 42:49.000] You want to be the plaintiff. [42:49.000 --> 42:54.200] If it's criminal, you want to be the one filing the complaint. [42:54.200 --> 43:00.520] They give me, I'm going to ask them things that I want them not to do, so that I can [43:00.520 --> 43:05.720] call 911 and ask somebody to come out and arrest him. [43:05.720 --> 43:12.200] Once you've done that, all this nonsense about arresting you, that goes away really fast. [43:12.200 --> 43:19.720] Once you've done 911, they don't mess with you at all. [43:19.720 --> 43:27.120] They run into obstruction, witness tampering, shielding from prosecution, all kinds of stuff, [43:27.120 --> 43:30.560] official oppression or official misconduct. [43:30.560 --> 43:35.960] So you want to go back down there and ask for all these names. [43:35.960 --> 43:41.960] If they tell you to put on a mask, you dial 911 immediately. [43:41.960 --> 43:43.640] Go to the post office. [43:43.640 --> 43:49.720] You want the postmaster, the assistant postmaster, and everybody involved in your particular [43:49.720 --> 43:52.120] situation. [43:52.120 --> 43:56.040] Give you two words you don't like, 911, and don't tell them you're going to do it. [43:56.040 --> 43:57.040] Just do it. [43:57.040 --> 43:58.040] Hang on. [43:58.040 --> 43:59.040] We'll be right back. [43:59.040 --> 44:06.640] Through advances in technology our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.640 --> 44:11.360] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.360 --> 44:17.000] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.000 --> 44:23.400] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [44:23.400 --> 44:25.680] provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.680 --> 44:30.520] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [44:30.520 --> 44:31.640] we reject. [44:31.640 --> 44:36.880] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [44:36.880 --> 44:40.080] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:40.080 --> 44:46.000] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [44:46.000 --> 44:47.640] quality radio. [44:47.640 --> 44:51.960] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.960 --> 44:57.200] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [44:57.200 --> 44:59.160] increase your income. [44:59.160 --> 45:00.160] Order now. [45:00.160 --> 45:04.320] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.320 --> 45:11.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [45:11.080 --> 45:14.920] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.920 --> 45:18.760] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.760 --> 45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.080 --> 45:28.800] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.800 --> 45:34.720] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.720 --> 45:39.160] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.160 --> 45:43.560] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.560 --> 45:49.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.760 --> 45:52.560] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.560 --> 45:59.920] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [45:59.920 --> 46:20.840] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, yeah. [46:20.840 --> 46:33.120] Always, I must be careful, what I'm wishing for, when I'm hungry, I like to know just [46:33.120 --> 46:40.480] what I'm fishing for, I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:40.480 --> 46:48.880] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and Chris, if you intend [46:48.880 --> 47:03.920] to be a force, the first thing you need to do is pull out the penal code, read it twice. [47:03.920 --> 47:08.400] Say that again, tell him what you want him to read, that part kind of cut out. [47:08.400 --> 47:15.580] Penal code and code of criminal procedure or criminal procedure code, they switch those [47:15.580 --> 47:19.200] around sometimes, but everybody, every state has them. [47:19.200 --> 47:23.040] I got another suggestion, the rules of evidence. [47:23.040 --> 47:30.000] Get to that too, but first you need to know what the issues are, what the procedures are. [47:30.000 --> 47:31.000] Yes. [47:31.000 --> 47:34.280] When you get to a case, then you read the rules of evidence. [47:34.280 --> 47:41.000] Now you look at those and they look really big and complex, but they're not. [47:41.000 --> 47:46.240] All of these codes are outlined, so there's lots of white space in them. [47:46.240 --> 47:54.360] When you start reading these codes, it's really difficult to put them all together, and that's [47:54.360 --> 47:59.100] because of the way the codes are created. [47:59.100 --> 48:07.040] They pass laws whenever an issue points to the need of the law, so they just pass it [48:07.040 --> 48:09.640] and put it in the Federal Register. [48:09.640 --> 48:16.440] Then we have publishing companies that they hire to go through the public register, pull [48:16.440 --> 48:26.120] out all the laws that fit together, and publish them in a set of statutes. [48:26.120 --> 48:30.760] Because of that, these things are not self-explanatory. [48:30.760 --> 48:34.400] The first time you look through them, they're horribly confusing, so don't even try to [48:34.400 --> 48:36.240] understand them. [48:36.240 --> 48:38.240] Just read them. [48:38.240 --> 48:39.500] Read through it. [48:39.500 --> 48:43.840] When you get to the end, go back and read it again. [48:43.840 --> 48:50.120] When you read it the second time, all of a sudden your brain will start making connections. [48:50.120 --> 48:55.220] You'll read a statute up front and you'll say, whoa, wait a minute, I remember one from [48:55.220 --> 49:01.400] way in the back that goes to that, and you'll start piecing these together. [49:01.400 --> 49:08.760] Brett and I, we go into court and wipe the floor with them, and that's because they don't [49:08.760 --> 49:11.880] read the codes. [49:11.880 --> 49:17.160] I had the county judge in Wyons County, we've been friends for 20 years. [49:17.160 --> 49:22.600] He was the county attorney, and then he became the district attorney, and we've had a really [49:22.600 --> 49:23.600] good relationship. [49:23.600 --> 49:28.840] I was in his office one day when he was county attorney, and he warned me, he said, Mr. Kelton, [49:28.840 --> 49:32.640] you have to be careful, you could be prosecuted for legal practice of law. [49:32.640 --> 49:35.520] No, no problem with that. [49:35.520 --> 49:43.800] 38.123 says that it is a crime to hold yourself out as an attorney and represent someone in [49:43.800 --> 49:50.480] court in a personal injury or property damage case. [49:50.480 --> 49:52.920] He said, are you sure? [49:52.920 --> 49:54.540] I'm sure, Greg. [49:54.540 --> 49:59.440] He took out his code of criminal procedure and looked it up, and I said, Greg, you ought [49:59.440 --> 50:03.600] to be ashamed of yourself, having looked that up, you're the prosecuting attorney, y'all [50:03.600 --> 50:05.600] know what that is. [50:05.600 --> 50:08.840] I said, when was the last time you read that thing? [50:08.840 --> 50:12.480] He said, well, I've never read the whole thing. [50:12.480 --> 50:13.480] That's pitiful. [50:13.480 --> 50:18.840] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, I don't know a single lawyer who's read the whole thing. [50:18.840 --> 50:24.360] Yeah, but it's true. [50:24.360 --> 50:26.640] They haven't read it. [50:26.640 --> 50:30.360] They think it's really, really complicated. [50:30.360 --> 50:37.760] That's because they tried to read a statute and understand that statute in isolation. [50:37.760 --> 50:50.200] It's hard to understand Chapter 16 if you hadn't read Chapter 2, 14, 15, and 17. [50:50.200 --> 50:55.120] Once you've read all of those, you read 16, it makes perfect sense. [50:55.120 --> 50:56.960] Read the whole thing through. [50:56.960 --> 51:00.440] Don't waste time trying to understand it, and generally, you only have to read about [51:00.440 --> 51:05.920] the first half because the second half gets into really arcane stuff that you never have [51:05.920 --> 51:06.920] anything to do with. [51:06.920 --> 51:09.000] Then go back and read it a second time. [51:09.000 --> 51:13.480] You'll know it better than they do. [51:13.480 --> 51:19.400] If you listened to Brett yesterday, he was ripping them a new one because he's read [51:19.400 --> 51:20.400] their code. [51:20.400 --> 51:22.400] He knows it better than they do. [51:22.400 --> 51:24.600] Not in a mean way. [51:24.600 --> 51:27.840] Somebody said it might have been a little bit acerbic. [51:27.840 --> 51:30.800] I like acerbic. [51:30.800 --> 51:32.800] Pouring acid in their eyes. [51:32.800 --> 51:33.800] That's what I hear. [51:33.800 --> 51:34.800] I hear acerbic. [51:34.800 --> 51:35.800] That's what I hear. [51:35.800 --> 51:39.680] You're pouring acid in their eyes. [51:39.680 --> 51:43.400] But yeah, you don't have to be nice to them. [51:43.400 --> 51:58.120] Brett has a particular penchant for really stinging them and doing so in a civil manner. [51:58.120 --> 52:01.880] But the point is, read that code. [52:01.880 --> 52:05.840] Don't even waste your time trying to mess with these guys until you read the code. [52:05.840 --> 52:08.600] Read the penal code twice. [52:08.600 --> 52:12.660] Once you've read the penal code twice, you'll understand how. [52:12.660 --> 52:16.600] When you start saying what's happening, I start shooting codes at you. [52:16.600 --> 52:20.160] Oh, they violated this code and this code and this code and this code. [52:20.160 --> 52:22.800] That's because I read them all. [52:22.800 --> 52:26.440] And they really fit together. [52:26.440 --> 52:33.240] And when you sit and think about them, and I think about the code, I can't quote the [52:33.240 --> 52:34.240] code. [52:34.240 --> 52:37.720] I've got a daughter who can read a book and you can tell her something out of the book [52:37.720 --> 52:41.000] and she'll tell you what page and paragraph it came from. [52:41.000 --> 52:43.520] I can't do that. [52:43.520 --> 52:45.960] But your daughter can do that. [52:45.960 --> 52:46.960] That's amazing. [52:46.960 --> 52:49.120] Yeah, she can do that. [52:49.120 --> 52:51.320] She's really mean to her dad too. [52:51.320 --> 52:53.880] That's a different story. [52:53.880 --> 52:56.080] But I can't do that. [52:56.080 --> 53:03.680] But what I have is what in neuro-linguistic programming they call referential index. [53:03.680 --> 53:06.440] I've read these codes. [53:06.440 --> 53:12.840] So when you tell me that a judge issued an order that they didn't have authority to [53:12.840 --> 53:29.400] issue, I say that is a 38 point, what is it, 46 simulating legal process. [53:29.400 --> 53:33.400] Oh, I think that's in 32. [53:33.400 --> 53:34.400] Yeah. [53:34.400 --> 53:35.400] 32.46. [53:35.400 --> 53:37.840] It's 46, seven and eight. [53:37.840 --> 53:39.240] Yeah, 48. [53:39.240 --> 53:40.240] Yeah. [53:40.240 --> 53:45.400] A prosecutor would never come up with that because they hadn't read the whole code. [53:45.400 --> 53:50.360] I can say that's official oppression, that's kind of general or tampering with a government [53:50.360 --> 53:54.960] document because he put some BS in a government document, but he'd have never come up with [53:54.960 --> 53:56.960] a simulating legal process. [53:56.960 --> 54:00.840] That's because he read the whole code. [54:00.840 --> 54:06.560] And then when you start hearing these facts, your brain will start going to those codes [54:06.560 --> 54:08.440] that are stuck in there. [54:08.440 --> 54:14.960] You can't go find them until you have some reference to them and they'll just start popping [54:14.960 --> 54:15.960] out. [54:15.960 --> 54:16.960] Yeah. [54:16.960 --> 54:18.360] You'll just go really close to it. [54:18.360 --> 54:25.360] You might not land right on it, but you'll be right next to it and you'll go, oh, it's [54:25.360 --> 54:26.360] right over here somewhere. [54:26.360 --> 54:27.360] Yep. [54:27.360 --> 54:28.360] There it is. [54:28.360 --> 54:29.360] Boom. [54:29.360 --> 54:30.360] You're on it. [54:30.360 --> 54:41.160] I can tell you, there is nothing more fun than cramming their codes down their throats. [54:41.160 --> 54:47.960] I was in court the last time and the judge did not do what the law commanded him to do, [54:47.960 --> 54:49.960] and I read them. [54:49.960 --> 54:53.320] This one I have memorized and everybody should. [54:53.320 --> 54:55.760] It's the official misconduct statute. [54:55.760 --> 55:01.040] In Texas, they call it official oppression, but most states call it official misconduct. [55:01.040 --> 55:10.120] And it follows from 18 U.S. Code 242, the federal code for the Ku Klux Klan Act. [55:10.120 --> 55:18.320] And it essentially says, this is not an exact word, that if a public official exerts or [55:18.320 --> 55:25.760] purports to exert an authority he does not specifically have and in the process denies [55:25.760 --> 55:31.280] a citizen in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right, that's a crime in the [55:31.280 --> 55:34.720] Fed and it's a crime in every state. [55:34.720 --> 55:41.680] So if this policeman tackled you and knocked you down and arrested you, you know, I heard [55:41.680 --> 55:42.680] that. [55:42.680 --> 55:45.320] First thing I thought, first degree felony aggravated assault. [55:45.320 --> 55:48.040] Okay, Chris, how'd I get there? [55:48.040 --> 55:52.200] How did you get there? [55:52.200 --> 55:53.200] They had no ground. [55:53.200 --> 55:54.200] Yeah. [55:54.200 --> 55:55.200] How'd I get there? [55:55.200 --> 55:56.720] They had no jurisdiction? [55:56.720 --> 55:59.120] To first degree felony. [55:59.120 --> 56:03.120] They, they assaulted you. [56:03.120 --> 56:07.320] Assault is offensive touching. [56:07.320 --> 56:11.040] If they assaulted you without cause, crime. [56:11.040 --> 56:17.000] Now a policeman can arrest you and he can use force to arrest you, but he has to have [56:17.000 --> 56:18.000] grounds. [56:18.000 --> 56:26.600] There's a policeman who is a municipal police officer attempting to enforce a federal code. [56:26.600 --> 56:29.320] They don't get to do that. [56:29.320 --> 56:32.600] Only the feds can do that. [56:32.600 --> 56:41.080] And I've two or three times sent in the town I live in, sent a police officer packing from [56:41.080 --> 56:42.680] the post office. [56:42.680 --> 56:47.360] I was out there changing a flat once and the policeman come out and told me, you're going [56:47.360 --> 56:48.680] to have to get this car out of here. [56:48.680 --> 56:52.600] And I said, no, you're going to have to get your car out of here and you're behind out [56:52.600 --> 56:53.600] of here. [56:53.600 --> 56:54.600] Beat it. [56:54.600 --> 57:02.840] He called the chief and the chief told him, get out the out of there and leave him alone. [57:02.840 --> 57:07.600] But he didn't have any jurisdiction on that post office. [57:07.600 --> 57:09.720] Only the feds have jurisdiction there. [57:09.720 --> 57:23.920] Now there are some circumstances where jurisdictions can create a extra territorial jurisdiction, [57:23.920 --> 57:32.680] but I don't know of anything that allows them to exercise jurisdiction on federal property [57:32.680 --> 57:37.640] other than violations of the penal code. [57:37.640 --> 57:45.640] And that does not include a violation of a municipal code, only the penal code. [57:45.640 --> 57:51.680] If someone's killed in a federal courthouse, then the state has jurisdiction because the [57:51.680 --> 57:58.400] courthouse is not a federal enclave, but I think post offices are. [57:58.400 --> 58:03.880] They're federal enclaves and the police can't go on there. [58:03.880 --> 58:08.360] So I got all these codes in my head and I listened to the facts and they start stitching [58:08.360 --> 58:12.920] all these codes together and it makes the police crazy because they don't, they haven't [58:12.920 --> 58:14.520] read the codes. [58:14.520 --> 58:19.680] They just use the codes that they come across and they're not able to do that. [58:19.680 --> 58:22.920] You need to do that first. [58:22.920 --> 58:23.920] Hang on. [58:23.920 --> 58:30.240] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio and Brett, I started the outro 22nd South, [58:30.240 --> 58:40.040] so you need to bail me out here and fill up some 20 seconds to the breaks, 50 to the 11th. [58:40.040 --> 58:46.880] Would you like for me to tell people, uh, let's see, phone number? [58:46.880 --> 58:50.320] Well we had a, ah, I can't really get it. [58:50.320 --> 58:54.480] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.480 --> 58:59.640] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.640 --> 59:01.000] can really help. [59:01.000 --> 59:05.440] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.440 --> 59:06.440] today. [59:06.440 --> 59:10.360] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.360 --> 59:13.440] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.440 --> 59:18.720] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.720 --> 59:22.960] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:22.960 --> 59:27.920] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.920 --> 59:32.920] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.920 --> 59:45.700] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [59:45.700 --> 59:49.000] us online at bfa.org. [59:49.000 --> 01:00:02.240] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.240 --> 01:00:05.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. [01:00:05.920 --> 01:00:09.360] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.360 --> 01:00:10.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.840 --> 01:00:14.740] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:00:14.740 --> 01:00:17.600] one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.600 --> 01:00:19.200] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.200 --> 01:00:22.800] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.800 --> 01:00:27.560] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.560 --> 01:00:32.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.760 --> 01:00:35.320] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.320 --> 01:00:39.600] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [01:00:39.600 --> 01:00:43.160] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:43.160 --> 01:00:46.600] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.600 --> 01:00:50.560] When your mom and dad are getting ready for bed, they pull back the covers and find a [01:00:50.560 --> 01:00:52.040] third party there. [01:00:52.040 --> 01:00:55.240] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:55.240 --> 01:00:59.360] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment [01:00:59.360 --> 01:01:00.960] was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.960 --> 01:01:05.160] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in [01:01:05.160 --> 01:01:07.280] the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:07.280 --> 01:01:09.600] Third party, Third Amendment, get it? [01:01:09.600 --> 01:01:13.440] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them [01:01:13.440 --> 01:01:17.000] to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and re-read the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.000 --> 01:01:32.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.000 --> 01:01:35.680] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.680 --> 01:01:39.120] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.120 --> 01:01:40.600] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.600 --> 01:01:44.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:01:44.520 --> 01:01:47.520] one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.520 --> 01:01:49.120] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.120 --> 01:01:52.720] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.720 --> 01:01:57.480] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.480 --> 01:02:02.680] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.680 --> 01:02:05.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.240 --> 01:02:09.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [01:02:09.520 --> 01:02:13.080] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:02:13.080 --> 01:02:16.760] Start over with Startpage. [01:02:16.760 --> 01:02:22.120] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.120 --> 01:02:26.600] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable [01:02:26.600 --> 01:02:28.080] search and seizure. [01:02:28.080 --> 01:02:31.240] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:31.240 --> 01:02:34.560] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of [01:02:34.560 --> 01:02:35.560] security. [01:02:35.560 --> 01:02:40.080] That's in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.080 --> 01:02:44.120] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say [01:02:44.120 --> 01:02:46.920] it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.920 --> 01:02:51.200] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly [01:02:51.200 --> 01:02:53.480] eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.480 --> 01:02:55.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:02:55.280 --> 01:03:19.680] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:25.280 --> 01:03:48.600] Okay. [01:03:48.600 --> 01:03:49.600] We are back. [01:03:49.600 --> 01:03:50.600] Randy Kelton. [01:03:50.600 --> 01:04:00.480] Friday, the 7th day of October, 2022. [01:04:00.480 --> 01:04:02.880] And we're talking to Chris in. [01:04:02.880 --> 01:04:03.880] Missouri. [01:04:03.880 --> 01:04:04.880] Chris in Missouri. [01:04:04.880 --> 01:04:05.880] There we go. [01:04:05.880 --> 01:04:06.880] And we were talking about. [01:04:06.880 --> 01:04:07.880] Your mic was cutting out again. [01:04:07.880 --> 01:04:10.880] Is it, uh, has it turned up too loud there and your ears may be bleeding through? [01:04:10.880 --> 01:04:11.880] Hello. [01:04:11.880 --> 01:04:28.320] Just, I'm having trouble with this mic, it's been on and off and I'm not sure what is going [01:04:28.320 --> 01:04:31.320] to replace the mic for next week. [01:04:31.320 --> 01:04:38.920] Chris, there's not much we can help you with until you can advise us as to what the code [01:04:38.920 --> 01:04:41.720] says in Missouri. [01:04:41.720 --> 01:04:46.240] Because what we're going to hear are not general principles. [01:04:46.240 --> 01:04:50.840] We're going to very specific code related issues. [01:04:50.840 --> 01:04:57.440] So before next week, read, get your criminal procedure code and penal code and read the [01:04:57.440 --> 01:05:00.880] first half of them twice. [01:05:00.880 --> 01:05:05.000] Then we will have a whole different conversation. [01:05:05.000 --> 01:05:06.000] Okay. [01:05:06.000 --> 01:05:12.960] Um, I have an arraignment hearing coming up next week and I wanted to ask you, um, because [01:05:12.960 --> 01:05:18.200] they have, it says here, an arraignment shall consist of reading the indictment or information [01:05:18.200 --> 01:05:23.640] to the defendant and stating him the charge and calling on the defendant to plead there [01:05:23.640 --> 01:05:24.640] too. [01:05:24.640 --> 01:05:28.480] Um, no information has been produced to me. [01:05:28.480 --> 01:05:35.520] Um, it says information shall be supported by a statement of probable cause, no statement [01:05:35.520 --> 01:05:38.960] of probable cause has been produced to me either. [01:05:38.960 --> 01:05:44.120] Um, the defendant shall be given a copy of the indictment or information before being [01:05:44.120 --> 01:05:47.520] called upon to plead. [01:05:47.520 --> 01:05:54.040] And so my question is, should I plea when I know the statement of probable cause and [01:05:54.040 --> 01:05:56.280] information doesn't exist? [01:05:56.280 --> 01:06:00.280] No, bring the code that says that. [01:06:00.280 --> 01:06:08.480] So you'd never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth, say your honor [01:06:08.480 --> 01:06:16.440] under such and such to code, the prosecution is required to serve me with such and such [01:06:16.440 --> 01:06:17.440] documents. [01:06:17.440 --> 01:06:23.320] I don't have the, uh, the indictment or information that they have not been served to me. [01:06:23.320 --> 01:06:29.120] So I can't plead to anything in this court until I've been properly served. [01:06:29.120 --> 01:06:30.480] Right. [01:06:30.480 --> 01:06:33.960] Yes, sir. [01:06:33.960 --> 01:06:35.400] They're going to ask you to play anyway. [01:06:35.400 --> 01:06:38.480] Don't know. [01:06:38.480 --> 01:06:42.600] Do they do zoom hearings in Missouri? [01:06:42.600 --> 01:06:49.040] They were doing zoom hearings, but this is an in-person hearing, um, mostly because of [01:06:49.040 --> 01:06:54.280] the fact that they're still trying to force mass on people and they know that I'm anti-mask. [01:06:54.280 --> 01:06:56.160] I'm not going to wear an anti-mask. [01:06:56.160 --> 01:06:57.160] Okay. [01:06:57.160 --> 01:06:58.680] You need to address that. [01:06:58.680 --> 01:07:02.400] They blocked you from going to the court and issued a warrant. [01:07:02.400 --> 01:07:07.320] That needs to get criminal charges against the judge and a petition for writ of mandamus [01:07:07.320 --> 01:07:11.400] to the court of appeals. [01:07:11.400 --> 01:07:17.480] Ask the court of appeals to order the court to allow you into the courtroom that you, [01:07:17.480 --> 01:07:24.560] you need to go to our mass law society site and look, look into ADA, Americans Disabilities [01:07:24.560 --> 01:07:25.560] Act. [01:07:25.560 --> 01:07:32.040] They're treating you as if you have a disability and because of that, they fall under the Americans [01:07:32.040 --> 01:07:39.960] with Disabilities Act and they're required to, to provide accommodation, right? [01:07:39.960 --> 01:07:45.320] You don't have much time, so go on the mass site and tell them what your situation is [01:07:45.320 --> 01:07:50.200] and they'll get you some documents to file with the court and file criminally against [01:07:50.200 --> 01:07:59.360] one who blocked, if anyone tries to block you, it seems out again. [01:07:59.360 --> 01:08:03.880] Can you say that again, file criminally what? [01:08:03.880 --> 01:08:10.920] File criminally against anyone who tries to block, if it's the clerk, call 911. [01:08:10.920 --> 01:08:18.760] If it's the bailiff out front, call 911 and ask them to take your criminal complaint for [01:08:18.760 --> 01:08:22.520] official misconduct. [01:08:22.520 --> 01:08:30.000] And the cop's not going to give you a little dance back and forth, but have a complaint [01:08:30.000 --> 01:08:34.920] already written up and ask these officers for their names and write their names in. [01:08:34.920 --> 01:08:39.160] Have a bunch of copies so you got one for each officer. [01:08:39.160 --> 01:08:45.200] And then you ask the responding officer to verify your signature on these in accordance [01:08:45.200 --> 01:08:47.000] with code. [01:08:47.000 --> 01:08:49.600] Okay. [01:08:49.600 --> 01:08:56.920] But need to read that part of the code that, that goes to duties of officers. [01:08:56.920 --> 01:09:06.540] In Texas, we have 2.133 and it's that when a peace officer is made known that a crime [01:09:06.540 --> 01:09:12.560] has been committed, he shall give notice to some magistrate. [01:09:12.560 --> 01:09:19.680] You're going to have something similar in Missouri. [01:09:19.680 --> 01:09:26.720] When you give notice, you are a citizen in a Republic. [01:09:26.720 --> 01:09:32.040] Policeman has no power to overrule your determination. [01:09:32.040 --> 01:09:40.600] When you give him a criminal affidavit and sign in front of him, he has overruled. [01:09:40.600 --> 01:09:49.160] If he tries to call 9-1-1 on the 9-1-1 guy, I didn't catch it that part. [01:09:49.160 --> 01:09:51.960] Wait, did I break up? [01:09:51.960 --> 01:09:53.880] He said, yeah, it broke up a little bit. [01:09:53.880 --> 01:09:59.960] I think you said, um, call 9-1-1 on the 9-1-1 guy. [01:09:59.960 --> 01:10:04.800] So I think you mean the guy that came out as a response to your first 9-1-1 call. [01:10:04.800 --> 01:10:05.800] Yes, exactly. [01:10:05.800 --> 01:10:09.600] Am I, can you hear me? [01:10:09.600 --> 01:10:10.600] Yes. [01:10:10.600 --> 01:10:11.600] I can. [01:10:11.600 --> 01:10:12.600] Okay. [01:10:12.600 --> 01:10:18.480] When the 9-1-1 guy refuses to perform a duty he's required to perform, you call 9-1-1 [01:10:18.480 --> 01:10:21.820] on him. [01:10:21.820 --> 01:10:23.520] It really gets him excited. [01:10:23.520 --> 01:10:33.400] And if anybody says that you can be arrested for a false 9-1-1 call, that is obstruction [01:10:33.400 --> 01:10:38.040] and witness tampering. [01:10:38.040 --> 01:10:39.040] Be ready. [01:10:39.040 --> 01:10:40.040] Okay. [01:10:40.040 --> 01:10:46.040] I wanted to squeeze this in real quick because I thought you might enjoy this, but they issued [01:10:46.040 --> 01:10:48.680] a bench warrant out for my arrest. [01:10:48.680 --> 01:10:54.880] And how I was able to deal with that is I sent in a motion to strike the bench warrant [01:10:54.880 --> 01:10:56.480] and they actually honored that. [01:10:56.480 --> 01:10:58.480] They did strike it and reset my case. [01:10:58.480 --> 01:11:00.920] So I thought you might enjoy that. [01:11:00.920 --> 01:11:01.920] Good. [01:11:01.920 --> 01:11:02.920] Good. [01:11:02.920 --> 01:11:08.960] I think they knew arresting you for that would have been a real problem. [01:11:08.960 --> 01:11:09.960] Yeah. [01:11:09.960 --> 01:11:14.760] That's kind of what I thought too. [01:11:14.760 --> 01:11:17.200] You have a constitutional right to a public court. [01:11:17.200 --> 01:11:24.600] The state or the county or municipality has no power to restrict rights that are granted [01:11:24.600 --> 01:11:26.880] by the constitution. [01:11:26.880 --> 01:11:30.880] They can grant you more rights, but they can't restrict the rights that you have. [01:11:30.880 --> 01:11:33.880] And that's what they're trying to do. [01:11:33.880 --> 01:11:35.880] Yeah. [01:11:35.880 --> 01:11:37.560] Okay. [01:11:37.560 --> 01:11:43.280] Read the codes, call us back next week. [01:11:43.280 --> 01:11:45.360] Okay. [01:11:45.360 --> 01:11:46.360] Thank you very much. [01:11:46.360 --> 01:11:47.360] Okay. [01:11:47.360 --> 01:11:49.600] Thank you, Chris. [01:11:49.600 --> 01:11:51.080] Now we're going to go to Chris. [01:11:51.080 --> 01:11:53.720] We talked to Chris, got done with Chris. [01:11:53.720 --> 01:11:57.120] Now we're going to talk to another Chris, Chris in Colorado. [01:11:57.120 --> 01:11:58.560] Hello, Chris. [01:11:58.560 --> 01:12:00.520] What do you have for us today? [01:12:00.520 --> 01:12:01.520] Hey, Randy. [01:12:01.520 --> 01:12:07.800] You're also going to get talked about trespass again. [01:12:07.800 --> 01:12:09.800] Good. [01:12:09.800 --> 01:12:14.280] I am calling mainly to find out if I can speed up this process. [01:12:14.280 --> 01:12:21.240] I got arrested for trespass two weeks ago myself, not trying to push anything or make [01:12:21.240 --> 01:12:22.240] a stand. [01:12:22.240 --> 01:12:29.200] I was just sleeping in my car and woke up to the police trying to lighten my face, using [01:12:29.200 --> 01:12:32.880] some excuse about trash and breaking chains or whatever. [01:12:32.880 --> 01:12:34.360] It was next to a Walmart parking lot. [01:12:34.360 --> 01:12:35.360] They were just lying. [01:12:35.360 --> 01:12:36.360] Oh yeah. [01:12:36.360 --> 01:12:41.000] You were in that giant parking lot with a Walmart and Home Depot and Ross and everything. [01:12:41.000 --> 01:12:42.000] Yeah. [01:12:42.000 --> 01:12:46.600] So Brett gave me some tips on what to do to start gathering things and keeping evidence. [01:12:46.600 --> 01:12:52.240] But I got two months before I do the hearing, the first hearing, and I'd like to get ahead [01:12:52.240 --> 01:12:54.400] of it and just get it knocked out. [01:12:54.400 --> 01:12:58.600] It's such a ridiculous charge that I don't think it's going to stick, but I might find [01:12:58.600 --> 01:13:00.400] a bunch of jerks who try to keep it. [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:03.280] But when I show them, I'd like to just get it done and gone. [01:13:03.280 --> 01:13:04.280] Yeah. [01:13:04.280 --> 01:13:05.280] It has happened. [01:13:05.280 --> 01:13:06.280] Yeah. [01:13:06.280 --> 01:13:08.760] You never know what kind of bunch you're going to run into. [01:13:08.760 --> 01:13:10.720] Are you doing criminal complaints already? [01:13:10.720 --> 01:13:11.720] No. [01:13:11.720 --> 01:13:14.120] I haven't been able to keep up. [01:13:14.120 --> 01:13:16.840] Right after that happened, it took me a week to come through. [01:13:16.840 --> 01:13:23.160] My nervous system just went into override and I finally calmed it down a few days ago. [01:13:23.160 --> 01:13:24.160] I'm sorry. [01:13:24.160 --> 01:13:30.080] Yeah, I mean, I tried to warn them when they were pulling me out, you know, don't do this. [01:13:30.080 --> 01:13:32.360] I got a head injury and they didn't give me any fair warning. [01:13:32.360 --> 01:13:37.840] But anyway, I've got the request in for all the body cams and all that kind of stuff. [01:13:37.840 --> 01:13:40.440] I went down to the court and there was nothing there. [01:13:40.440 --> 01:13:41.440] It wasn't there. [01:13:41.440 --> 01:13:47.420] There still wasn't anything there about a week later, so they didn't even put it in. [01:13:47.420 --> 01:13:55.320] But I talked to the sergeant and got them to admit to some stuff that's, you know, it's [01:13:55.320 --> 01:13:58.400] hard to believe these people operate this way, but they admitted there was no signs. [01:13:58.400 --> 01:14:02.840] They admitted that the signs had been taken down and then it had inconsistencies. [01:14:02.840 --> 01:14:03.840] And so- [01:14:03.840 --> 01:14:04.840] Wow. [01:14:04.840 --> 01:14:06.840] So they already knew. [01:14:06.840 --> 01:14:08.560] Yeah, they knew. [01:14:08.560 --> 01:14:11.000] They were just being bullied. [01:14:11.000 --> 01:14:21.400] But anyway, I looked up the law and it's pretty vague. [01:14:21.400 --> 01:14:24.000] And so I'm trying to find case law and I can't find it. [01:14:24.000 --> 01:14:25.160] I haven't found anything yet. [01:14:25.160 --> 01:14:31.680] But the law for Colorado for trespass, it simply says that a person commits third degree [01:14:31.680 --> 01:14:40.920] trespass if that person unlawfully enters or remains in or upon the premises of another. [01:14:40.920 --> 01:14:44.760] It's one sentence, that's it. [01:14:44.760 --> 01:14:47.000] And so I'm trying to find the other parts. [01:14:47.000 --> 01:14:49.680] I found some lawyers talking about there has to be a knowingly. [01:14:49.680 --> 01:14:56.040] So they talk about what knowingly means under the Colorado law. [01:14:56.040 --> 01:14:57.040] And I found some other stuff. [01:14:57.040 --> 01:15:02.600] They said they would have had to ask me to leave, which none of that happened. [01:15:02.600 --> 01:15:06.520] So there's a good chance I can get this knocked out, but I'm just trying to get it done sooner [01:15:06.520 --> 01:15:07.520] than later. [01:15:07.520 --> 01:15:09.400] I don't want to go month after month and wait. [01:15:09.400 --> 01:15:12.840] I've got stuff I've got to do in February and March, I won't be around. [01:15:12.840 --> 01:15:16.480] So I've got criminal stuff hanging over my head. [01:15:16.480 --> 01:15:21.720] Is there a way, when we first go to court, to just tell the judge, I'd like to put a [01:15:21.720 --> 01:15:24.800] motion in to have this dismissed, this is frivolous, blah, blah, blah. [01:15:24.800 --> 01:15:27.440] I don't even know how to couch it. [01:15:27.440 --> 01:15:28.440] Absolutely. [01:15:28.440 --> 01:15:30.760] File a motion to dismiss. [01:15:30.760 --> 01:15:31.760] Okay. [01:15:31.760 --> 01:15:36.320] That's easy enough for lack of evidence. [01:15:36.320 --> 01:15:42.960] That's true, but do I, what was I going to say? [01:15:42.960 --> 01:15:47.680] Motion to dismiss. [01:15:47.680 --> 01:15:48.680] Do I plead though? [01:15:48.680 --> 01:15:53.080] Cause they're going to try to make me plead. [01:15:53.080 --> 01:15:54.080] Is there a- [01:15:54.080 --> 01:15:59.440] Pleading don't, filing a pleading doesn't make any difference. [01:15:59.440 --> 01:16:00.440] Maybe. [01:16:00.440 --> 01:16:03.160] Depends on the criminal procedure there. [01:16:03.160 --> 01:16:07.080] You don't give them jurisdiction by pleading. [01:16:07.080 --> 01:16:14.000] But you might skip over an issue that you want to give them a hard time about. [01:16:14.000 --> 01:16:16.640] Yeah, you're right. [01:16:16.640 --> 01:16:23.440] If you file a motion to dismiss, then that should preempt any pleading. [01:16:23.440 --> 01:16:31.720] And if they, if you don't plead, they'll just write in a pleading for you if not guilty. [01:16:31.720 --> 01:16:35.600] Okay. [01:16:35.600 --> 01:16:39.760] So just when they keep saying, I need you to plead, I'm just going to say, I mean, [01:16:39.760 --> 01:16:42.080] I've never had to do this before. [01:16:42.080 --> 01:16:44.320] Just tell the judge, you want to enter a pleading, go ahead. [01:16:44.320 --> 01:16:45.640] I'm not going to do it. [01:16:45.640 --> 01:16:52.680] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La La Radio, we'll be right back in about [01:16:52.680 --> 01:16:53.680] eight seconds. [01:16:53.680 --> 01:16:54.680] Okay. [01:16:54.680 --> 01:17:00.240] I went out too soon. [01:17:00.240 --> 01:17:04.840] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.840 --> 01:17:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [01:17:09.000 --> 01:17:13.320] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [01:17:13.320 --> 01:17:14.680] can win too. [01:17:14.680 --> 01:17:19.160] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:17:19.160 --> 01:17:24.920] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:17:24.920 --> 01:17:29.560] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:17:29.560 --> 01:17:33.800] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.800 --> 01:17:38.920] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.920 --> 01:17:40.840] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.840 --> 01:17:46.600] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:17:46.600 --> 01:17:49.600] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.600 --> 01:17:57.280] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.280 --> 01:18:00.280] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.280 --> 01:18:01.280] I love Logos. [01:18:01.280 --> 01:18:04.560] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.560 --> 01:18:07.440] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.440 --> 01:18:08.560] I need my truth fixed. [01:18:08.560 --> 01:18:13.400] I'd be lost without Logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.400 --> 01:18:17.120] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't [01:18:17.120 --> 01:18:20.480] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.480 --> 01:18:21.840] How can I help Logos? [01:18:21.840 --> 01:18:24.040] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.040 --> 01:18:28.480] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos by ordering your supplies or [01:18:28.480 --> 01:18:29.480] holiday gifts. [01:18:29.480 --> 01:18:31.520] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.520 --> 01:18:37.920] Now go to LogosradioNetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.920 --> 01:18:43.560] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.560 --> 01:18:44.560] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.560 --> 01:18:45.560] No. [01:18:45.560 --> 01:18:47.200] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.200 --> 01:18:48.200] No. [01:18:48.200 --> 01:18:49.200] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.200 --> 01:18:50.200] No. [01:18:50.200 --> 01:18:51.200] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.200 --> 01:18:56.000] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:18:56.000 --> 01:18:57.000] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.000 --> 01:18:58.000] You're welcome. [01:18:58.000 --> 01:18:59.000] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:18:59.000 --> 01:19:00.000] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:00.000 --> 01:19:29.800] Ain't gonna blame me, don't blame me, well, don't blame me, don't blame me, don't blame [01:19:29.800 --> 01:19:36.800] me, don't blame me, don't blame me, don't blame me, don't blame me, don't blame me, [01:19:36.800 --> 01:19:37.800] don't blame me. [01:19:37.800 --> 01:19:38.800] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:38.800 --> 01:19:39.800] I was blindsided but now I can see your plan. [01:19:39.800 --> 01:19:40.800] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my hand. [01:19:40.800 --> 01:19:41.800] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:41.800 --> 01:20:03.800] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:20:03.800 --> 01:20:10.000] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Chris [01:20:10.000 --> 01:20:16.200] in Colorado, and Chris, tell me a little bit more about this head injury. [01:20:16.200 --> 01:20:22.600] Well, I think I'm dealing with PTSD, it's just this weird phenomenon. [01:20:22.600 --> 01:20:28.480] When I get over stressed, my nervous system just overreacts, and I've been getting it [01:20:28.480 --> 01:20:29.480] under control. [01:20:29.480 --> 01:20:35.040] I just rest more or just get away from stress, but these guys had a light in my face and [01:20:35.040 --> 01:20:39.600] it takes me a while to get moving in the morning anyway, but I was halfway asleep, halfway [01:20:39.600 --> 01:20:44.880] awake, I'm still laying down, and they're accusing me of crimes just to get my ID. [01:20:44.880 --> 01:20:50.040] Well, there was no crime because I didn't do it, but they wanted to make sure I hadn't [01:20:50.040 --> 01:20:53.080] been there doing it before, that was their excuse. [01:20:53.080 --> 01:21:00.440] So we're having this discussion, I call 911, one of the guys backs off, but on the second [01:21:00.440 --> 01:21:04.520] 911 call, when they wouldn't take the light out of my face, because I had to get out of [01:21:04.520 --> 01:21:10.880] the car to get my ID, it was in the front seat, and the door starts opening slowly and [01:21:10.880 --> 01:21:12.680] I'm thinking, why is the door opening, right? [01:21:12.680 --> 01:21:15.680] And then, because I'd never been through anything like this before, and then it hit me, oh, [01:21:15.680 --> 01:21:17.280] they're just checking to see if the door is open. [01:21:17.280 --> 01:21:22.640] Well, then two seconds later, I'm on the ground face down, and I'm being handcuffed, and the [01:21:22.640 --> 01:21:29.040] stress set me into this vertigo thing, and I started to black out, and I told them, stop, [01:21:29.040 --> 01:21:34.440] stop, and then they throw me back in the car, and I'm spinning, I'm halfway seeing, halfway [01:21:34.440 --> 01:21:40.040] not, and trying to keep consciousness, and then I said, you guys got to call the paramedics, [01:21:40.040 --> 01:21:43.560] and they were making fun of me, they were like, oh, you weren't saying that a minute [01:21:43.560 --> 01:21:47.880] ago, and all that kind of stuff, but it was real, it started shaking after about 30 minutes, [01:21:47.880 --> 01:21:52.640] and I didn't stop shaking for four hours, I had to go to the emergency room. [01:21:52.640 --> 01:21:54.400] So it's just something- [01:21:54.400 --> 01:21:59.080] That is serious, serious business. [01:21:59.080 --> 01:22:03.380] That's aggravated assault, first degree felony. [01:22:03.380 --> 01:22:05.120] They put your life at risk. [01:22:05.120 --> 01:22:06.120] Yeah. [01:22:06.120 --> 01:22:07.120] And once you notify- [01:22:07.120 --> 01:22:09.120] With no regard. [01:22:09.120 --> 01:22:14.160] Yeah, that's depraved heart. [01:22:14.160 --> 01:22:18.040] But the sergeant is arguing, well, they couldn't have known you had a head injury, I said, [01:22:18.040 --> 01:22:20.760] well, I was saying it when they were pulling me out, and they never gave me fair warning, [01:22:20.760 --> 01:22:23.480] I never had the opportunity to tell them that. [01:22:23.480 --> 01:22:25.680] Yeah, you were asleep. [01:22:25.680 --> 01:22:30.940] And under law, they take you the way they find you. [01:22:30.940 --> 01:22:34.880] If you have a really bad heart, and they do something that causes you to have heart attack, [01:22:34.880 --> 01:22:39.200] they can say, well, we didn't know, but what the courts have said is you take the person [01:22:39.200 --> 01:22:41.660] the way you find them. [01:22:41.660 --> 01:22:46.200] So they had to take you the way they found you, and once you told them you had a head [01:22:46.200 --> 01:22:51.580] injury, that put the onus on them. [01:22:51.580 --> 01:22:59.600] So they're ridiculing you for being injured, oh, this is not going to look good in front [01:22:59.600 --> 01:23:03.440] of a jury. [01:23:03.440 --> 01:23:07.200] This needs to get a really, really large lawsuit. [01:23:07.200 --> 01:23:09.840] They put your life at risk. [01:23:09.840 --> 01:23:16.600] Well, yes and no, they put my health at risk, but I was concerned I might've been having [01:23:16.600 --> 01:23:20.960] a stroke or I might've been having a seizure, you know, but it turned out it was just the [01:23:20.960 --> 01:23:25.920] nervous system going into overdrive, like super overdrive, like I was just in the accident [01:23:25.920 --> 01:23:27.880] from last year. [01:23:27.880 --> 01:23:31.840] And so I didn't know what I was going through, you know, it scared the shit out of me for [01:23:31.840 --> 01:23:32.840] a minute there. [01:23:32.840 --> 01:23:38.440] Sorry, scared the heck out of me for a minute there. [01:23:38.440 --> 01:23:42.600] And then, you know, I got it documented and whatever, but they're trying to backplay it. [01:23:42.600 --> 01:23:46.280] Now I got a sergeant saying, why don't you come down and we'll look over the video because [01:23:46.280 --> 01:23:48.120] I don't think you quite remember it the way it was. [01:23:48.120 --> 01:23:52.320] I said, I remember it very clearly up until you guys ripped me out of the car. [01:23:52.320 --> 01:23:53.760] And after that, yeah, it's a little vague. [01:23:53.760 --> 01:23:57.600] I remember you guys searching through my stuff, even though I said I do not consent. [01:23:57.600 --> 01:24:05.200] And I remember you guys, you know, just being unkind and unconcerned, but I mean, they didn't [01:24:05.200 --> 01:24:09.360] beat me up, but they, my knee was bleeding, my shoulder was, I mean, I got hurt. [01:24:09.360 --> 01:24:14.200] I was limping around for almost a week and a half or whatever they did to my hip. [01:24:14.200 --> 01:24:15.920] So yeah, it's not going to look good. [01:24:15.920 --> 01:24:23.720] I agree, Randy, but it's, I can't believe they have the, not only do they have the, [01:24:23.720 --> 01:24:28.240] just the gall to do it like two dumb cops, but the, I was trying to get a supervisor [01:24:28.240 --> 01:24:29.240] out there. [01:24:29.240 --> 01:24:30.240] I told them I'm not giving my ID to you. [01:24:30.240 --> 01:24:33.440] I'm giving it to a supervisor when they get here, it turns out the supervisor was already [01:24:33.440 --> 01:24:37.640] there because I called nine one previously and she watched them pull me out. [01:24:37.640 --> 01:24:40.640] She was a corporal. [01:24:40.640 --> 01:24:41.960] So they're all on the same page. [01:24:41.960 --> 01:24:48.280] They're all fine with this type of behavior and, and they had, they had no reason to pull [01:24:48.280 --> 01:24:49.280] me out. [01:24:49.280 --> 01:24:51.280] They say, well, we never know who, who's dangerous or not. [01:24:51.280 --> 01:24:55.000] I'm like, when did I ever pose a threat laying down in a sleeping bag? [01:24:55.000 --> 01:24:56.000] Well, we never know. [01:24:56.000 --> 01:25:02.120] And it's just like, if they can do this to anybody and everybody, this is, it's just [01:25:02.120 --> 01:25:03.120] mind boggling. [01:25:03.120 --> 01:25:05.600] You know, I, I still don't know quite how to land on this. [01:25:05.600 --> 01:25:09.160] I'm still a little bit in shock from it, but you need to file, you need to file criminally [01:25:09.160 --> 01:25:11.680] against them. [01:25:11.680 --> 01:25:12.680] That's aggravated assault. [01:25:12.680 --> 01:25:13.680] Yeah. [01:25:13.680 --> 01:25:17.280] You go after them and you go after them hard. [01:25:17.280 --> 01:25:19.080] That's how you handle it. [01:25:19.080 --> 01:25:22.480] You don't, there's no other way. [01:25:22.480 --> 01:25:25.600] There's not any soft approach to this. [01:25:25.600 --> 01:25:29.600] It is a horrible crime. [01:25:29.600 --> 01:25:35.000] And now you're in a position finally, after some recovery time, now you're in a position [01:25:35.000 --> 01:25:41.800] where you can take it to them at the in the moment you weren't able to, but right now [01:25:41.800 --> 01:25:42.800] is your moment. [01:25:42.800 --> 01:25:44.500] This is now it's your turn. [01:25:44.500 --> 01:25:45.960] They want you to come in. [01:25:45.960 --> 01:25:48.140] They want you to come into court. [01:25:48.140 --> 01:25:53.480] Come into court with criminal affidavits against the officers and present them to the judge [01:25:53.480 --> 01:25:57.920] in his capacity as a magistrate. [01:25:57.920 --> 01:26:00.000] Here you go, Bubba, do your job. [01:26:00.000 --> 01:26:05.240] And when he doesn't do his job, you get to sue him personally. [01:26:05.240 --> 01:26:12.800] Read the code in, in Colorado that instructs a judge on his duty when he's made known that [01:26:12.800 --> 01:26:15.440] a crime has been committed. [01:26:15.440 --> 01:26:22.840] His duty as a magistrate and invoke that duty. [01:26:22.840 --> 01:26:31.360] Then you, then you, then you get to tie up the judge. [01:26:31.360 --> 01:26:38.600] The more trouble you bring them, the more likely they're going to want this to go away. [01:26:38.600 --> 01:26:43.880] Is there a way for me, like in civil, you can, when you have a motion you want to bring [01:26:43.880 --> 01:26:48.400] before the court, you just find out the next day that the judge is hearing motions. [01:26:48.400 --> 01:26:49.880] You go in and you present it. [01:26:49.880 --> 01:26:52.720] Does it work that way with criminals as well or no? [01:26:52.720 --> 01:26:57.840] No, generally you have to file the motions ahead of time so that opposing counsel has [01:26:57.840 --> 01:27:01.480] time to review the motion and prepare an opposition. [01:27:01.480 --> 01:27:06.640] So generally it's seven days, I think. [01:27:06.640 --> 01:27:11.640] So prepare all your motions, file them with the court. [01:27:11.640 --> 01:27:16.560] I'm not sure if you have to file it with the prosecutor because the prosecutor is the lawyer [01:27:16.560 --> 01:27:18.040] for the court. [01:27:18.040 --> 01:27:24.780] Brett, you were saying that the prosecutor complained that you didn't serve your papers [01:27:24.780 --> 01:27:25.780] on him. [01:27:25.780 --> 01:27:28.640] You served him on the court. [01:27:28.640 --> 01:27:30.840] He works for the court. [01:27:30.840 --> 01:27:37.160] He's trying to apply civil procedure to criminal procedure. [01:27:37.160 --> 01:27:39.240] So you're only dealing with the court. [01:27:39.240 --> 01:27:42.920] It's just a lawyer who works for the court, if he wants his documents, he can get them [01:27:42.920 --> 01:27:43.920] from the court. [01:27:43.920 --> 01:27:46.840] The court is the party, not him. [01:27:46.840 --> 01:27:49.800] So file your motions with the court. [01:27:49.800 --> 01:27:54.320] You can file them with the prosecutor if you want to, if you don't want to have that argument. [01:27:54.320 --> 01:27:55.600] But get them to ahead of time. [01:27:55.600 --> 01:28:01.280] It's been my experience with prosecutors that they ignore anything approach they file, so [01:28:01.280 --> 01:28:06.520] they just ignore it because they know the judge is going to rule in their favor no matter [01:28:06.520 --> 01:28:10.000] what. [01:28:10.000 --> 01:28:16.560] And expect the judge to rule in their favor no matter what and be ready to file a petition [01:28:16.560 --> 01:28:19.000] for writ of mandamus. [01:28:19.000 --> 01:28:21.720] That'll get their attention. [01:28:21.720 --> 01:28:26.680] Ask the court of appeals to order the court to do what he was supposed to in the first [01:28:26.680 --> 01:28:32.800] place. [01:28:32.800 --> 01:28:36.000] So two months is what they've told me I've got to be. [01:28:36.000 --> 01:28:39.880] I can file something as soon as they get that case actually in the court. [01:28:39.880 --> 01:28:41.480] No, no, no. [01:28:41.480 --> 01:28:44.000] You can file something right now. [01:28:44.000 --> 01:28:45.000] Okay. [01:28:45.000 --> 01:28:49.320] Two months because they can't get their paperwork together. [01:28:49.320 --> 01:28:51.360] Their problem, not your problem. [01:28:51.360 --> 01:28:52.360] Exactly. [01:28:52.360 --> 01:28:55.160] You can go ahead and file now. [01:28:55.160 --> 01:28:56.160] Okay. [01:28:56.160 --> 01:29:04.120] Two months in a class A misdemeanor, a class C, they're already past statute of limitations. [01:29:04.120 --> 01:29:13.960] Well, no, the very idea of you not reporting a felony, multiple felonies, conspiracy to [01:29:13.960 --> 01:29:17.160] commit felonies, you just, you can't sit on that. [01:29:17.160 --> 01:29:22.040] That has to be reported or else you're committing a felony. [01:29:22.040 --> 01:29:25.640] Okay. [01:29:25.640 --> 01:29:27.600] That's not a crime in all states. [01:29:27.600 --> 01:29:29.240] It might be in Colorado. [01:29:29.240 --> 01:29:32.000] It certainly is in the Fed. [01:29:32.000 --> 01:29:35.640] To be in a crime to not report a felony? [01:29:35.640 --> 01:29:36.640] Yeah. [01:29:36.640 --> 01:29:37.640] Yeah. [01:29:37.640 --> 01:29:41.360] It is in Texas, but I know it was in Tennessee and it wasn't. [01:29:41.360 --> 01:29:43.280] So it's going to be state specific. [01:29:43.280 --> 01:29:44.280] Okay. [01:29:44.280 --> 01:29:45.760] Well, take a look at that. [01:29:45.760 --> 01:29:50.400] But you certainly can't get in trouble for reporting a felony or you certainly don't [01:29:50.400 --> 01:29:54.400] have to wait two months before you're allowed to. [01:29:54.400 --> 01:29:55.400] Go for it. [01:29:55.400 --> 01:29:56.400] We're about to talk to our sponsors. [01:29:56.400 --> 01:29:57.400] Be right back. [01:29:57.400 --> 01:30:05.640] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.640 --> 01:30:10.280] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid [01:30:10.280 --> 01:30:11.280] the stuff. [01:30:11.280 --> 01:30:15.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny [01:30:15.520 --> 01:30:17.320] sodas. [01:30:17.320 --> 01:30:18.920] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.920 --> 01:30:22.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.520 --> 01:30:27.280] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.280 --> 01:30:32.560] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.560 --> 01:30:35.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:35.040 --> 01:30:39.320] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search [01:30:39.320 --> 01:30:42.880] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:42.880 --> 01:30:46.400] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.400 --> 01:30:50.400] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:50.400 --> 01:30:51.400] Wrong. [01:30:51.400 --> 01:30:56.080] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:56.080 --> 01:31:01.040] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more [01:31:01.040 --> 01:31:02.800] than no soda at all. [01:31:02.800 --> 01:31:07.560] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, but unlike regular sugars, [01:31:07.560 --> 01:31:09.760] don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.760 --> 01:31:14.240] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger [01:31:14.240 --> 01:31:16.080] overall calorie intake. [01:31:16.080 --> 01:31:20.480] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight and if you need to shed some pounds, [01:31:20.480 --> 01:31:23.720] avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:23.720 --> 01:31:30.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.600 --> 01:31:35.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:35.960 --> 01:31:41.400] The government says that fire brought it down, however, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [01:31:41.400 --> 01:31:43.000] it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:45.760] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.760 --> 01:31:48.480] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.480 --> 01:31:49.920] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.920 --> 01:31:50.920] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.920 --> 01:31:52.320] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.320 --> 01:31:53.320] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.320 --> 01:31:54.320] I'm a father. [01:31:54.320 --> 01:31:55.320] We lost his son. [01:31:55.320 --> 01:31:57.600] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.600 --> 01:31:59.600] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:31:59.600 --> 01:32:04.960] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [01:32:04.960 --> 01:32:08.800] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society and if we, the people, are ever going [01:32:08.800 --> 01:32:12.920] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:12.920 --> 01:32:15.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:15.960 --> 01:32:20.000] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.000 --> 01:32:24.320] The courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights [01:32:24.320 --> 01:32:25.320] through due process. [01:32:25.320 --> 01:32:29.200] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:29.200 --> 01:32:32.960] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:32.960 --> 01:32:35.360] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.360 --> 01:32:39.360] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [01:32:39.360 --> 01:32:40.680] ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.680 --> 01:32:43.880] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:43.880 --> 01:32:48.440] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [01:32:48.440 --> 01:32:50.760] documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.760 --> 01:32:54.720] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:54.720 --> 01:33:03.040] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:03.040 --> 01:33:04.040] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.040 --> 01:33:07.040] You found it. [01:33:07.040 --> 01:33:30.160] Visit ruleoflawradio.com. [01:33:37.040 --> 01:34:05.400] Okay, we are back. [01:34:05.400 --> 01:34:16.680] Randy Kelton, Wet Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 7th day of October, 2022. [01:34:16.680 --> 01:34:18.920] And we're talking to Chris in Colorado. [01:34:18.920 --> 01:34:22.160] Chris, you may have a good moneymaker here. [01:34:22.160 --> 01:34:29.360] The only way we're going to beat them is make them pay. [01:34:29.360 --> 01:34:33.120] It doesn't matter whether you're going to win at the end of the day or not, if you make [01:34:33.120 --> 01:34:35.560] it really look bad. [01:34:35.560 --> 01:34:38.920] Are you there, Chris? [01:34:38.920 --> 01:34:40.960] Yeah, I'm here. [01:34:40.960 --> 01:34:41.960] Okay. [01:34:41.960 --> 01:34:47.040] So next time you might be sleeping in your helicopter and your armed guard will be hanging [01:34:47.040 --> 01:34:50.040] out with you. [01:34:50.040 --> 01:34:58.360] Well, I called around trying to find civil, I called one criminal attorney just to see [01:34:58.360 --> 01:34:59.360] what they said. [01:34:59.360 --> 01:35:01.120] And of course they all want to charge $3,000. [01:35:01.120 --> 01:35:06.880] Yeah, we'll get that dismissed and like, well, what about the fact that I got roughed up? [01:35:06.880 --> 01:35:08.800] And a couple of them said, well, I can't do anything about that. [01:35:08.800 --> 01:35:13.720] One guy says, you actually have a civil rights claim, I would look for civil rights attorney. [01:35:13.720 --> 01:35:16.240] So I got a couple feelers out there. [01:35:16.240 --> 01:35:20.400] One of them I talked to actually this morning and they're curious. [01:35:20.400 --> 01:35:26.180] They said, if everything you said is true, then that's not good at all. [01:35:26.180 --> 01:35:27.180] So they're interested. [01:35:27.180 --> 01:35:29.640] I mean, I got no more steam, guys. [01:35:29.640 --> 01:35:30.720] I've been through enough this year. [01:35:30.720 --> 01:35:32.640] I can't, I can't keep fighting and learning. [01:35:32.640 --> 01:35:36.960] I got to get some people to help, you know, so good, good. [01:35:36.960 --> 01:35:41.840] This is something a lawyer will do because he'll make money at it. [01:35:41.840 --> 01:35:43.620] Yeah. [01:35:43.620 --> 01:35:47.080] And I would like to make an example I've read, since this happened, I've seen so many videos [01:35:47.080 --> 01:35:49.400] that guy that does audit the audit online. [01:35:49.400 --> 01:35:54.740] It's pretty interesting how often this happens and they just assert their authority over [01:35:54.740 --> 01:35:55.740] nothing. [01:35:55.740 --> 01:35:58.040] And from what I understand, they had no right to do any of this. [01:35:58.040 --> 01:35:59.740] They had no right to ask me for my ID. [01:35:59.740 --> 01:36:03.520] They had only one job and that, and that's if the job was true, which is to say, you [01:36:03.520 --> 01:36:06.600] know, I know there's no signs, but could you please leave? [01:36:06.600 --> 01:36:08.360] You really shouldn't be on this property. [01:36:08.360 --> 01:36:09.360] Oh, absolutely. [01:36:09.360 --> 01:36:11.960] But they wouldn't let me leave. [01:36:11.960 --> 01:36:14.100] They were lying about what they were trying to do. [01:36:14.100 --> 01:36:17.360] And then I called nine one one, they interfered with that. [01:36:17.360 --> 01:36:21.280] The phone was still on with nine one one when they ripped me out of the car and so instead [01:36:21.280 --> 01:36:26.120] of, so there's a recording of four minutes of just that space. [01:36:26.120 --> 01:36:30.400] So you were, wait a minute, you were still talking to the nine one one operator? [01:36:30.400 --> 01:36:31.400] Yeah. [01:36:31.400 --> 01:36:32.400] Wow. [01:36:32.400 --> 01:36:35.040] One crime they committed. [01:36:35.040 --> 01:36:38.560] In Texas, it's a felony to interfere with a nine one one call. [01:36:38.560 --> 01:36:40.720] It's only, I looked it up. [01:36:40.720 --> 01:36:41.720] It's only in certain States. [01:36:41.720 --> 01:36:45.000] There's like 12 or 13 States where that works that way in Colorado. [01:36:45.000 --> 01:36:51.200] There is an interference law with communication, but not with a nine one one, but yeah, they, [01:36:51.200 --> 01:36:53.600] I was giving my name to dispatch. [01:36:53.600 --> 01:36:58.120] I only got my name, only got Christopher out and I didn't even get my last name out. [01:36:58.120 --> 01:37:04.080] And I'm out, I'm outside of my face on the floor, on the, on the, on the asphalt. [01:37:04.080 --> 01:37:07.560] And you would think, you know, we'd think they would realize nine one one means I don't [01:37:07.560 --> 01:37:11.600] feel safe and I want a supervisor, they didn't care. [01:37:11.600 --> 01:37:14.000] That goes to obstruction. [01:37:14.000 --> 01:37:15.560] Okay. [01:37:15.560 --> 01:37:23.760] So read the codes, interfere in the nine one one call if it's not a specific statute, it [01:37:23.760 --> 01:37:27.520] goes to obstruction of justice. [01:37:27.520 --> 01:37:32.600] That almost has to be in the code. [01:37:32.600 --> 01:37:38.840] You know, if, if someone is threatening you and you try to call nine one one and they [01:37:38.840 --> 01:37:45.040] interfere with your call in nine one one to get protection, that's gotta be a crime in [01:37:45.040 --> 01:37:46.840] every state. [01:37:46.840 --> 01:37:47.840] I would agree. [01:37:47.840 --> 01:37:49.720] I just haven't found it yet. [01:37:49.720 --> 01:37:54.260] Boy, you know, we know lawyers, lawyers are very calculated. [01:37:54.260 --> 01:37:56.000] They only do things they know they can do. [01:37:56.000 --> 01:37:57.000] And that's what sucks. [01:37:57.000 --> 01:38:00.040] It's finding somebody with some courage to say, yeah, all the things that you guys talk [01:38:00.040 --> 01:38:01.040] about. [01:38:01.040 --> 01:38:04.440] But yeah, it'd be hard to find one. [01:38:04.440 --> 01:38:05.440] Yeah. [01:38:05.440 --> 01:38:11.920] They're terrified of the courts and if they find out, you know what you're doing, then [01:38:11.920 --> 01:38:18.560] they're terrified of you. [01:38:18.560 --> 01:38:22.280] I couldn't imagine being a lawyer because you've got to be afraid of everybody. [01:38:22.280 --> 01:38:23.280] Yeah. [01:38:23.280 --> 01:38:26.720] Well, that's why they do it. [01:38:26.720 --> 01:38:30.440] They like that little safety net of fear and being told what to do and telling everybody [01:38:30.440 --> 01:38:33.280] else what to do. [01:38:33.280 --> 01:38:38.560] So if you're up to it, take it back to them. [01:38:38.560 --> 01:38:43.840] And try to sharp shoot them from a distance. [01:38:43.840 --> 01:38:46.200] It's easier when you're taking them on. [01:38:46.200 --> 01:38:52.400] You've been through a civil suit and I think you kind of get that. [01:38:52.400 --> 01:38:56.360] How is your towing suit going, by the way? [01:38:56.360 --> 01:38:59.400] Well, still alive. [01:38:59.400 --> 01:39:01.560] I got conversion to stick. [01:39:01.560 --> 01:39:03.440] I got trespass to shadows to stick. [01:39:03.440 --> 01:39:07.200] It looks like I'm going to get consumer fraud to stick. [01:39:07.200 --> 01:39:09.080] Just the fraud issue is the last one. [01:39:09.080 --> 01:39:11.240] I might need to amend it, but yeah, it's moving along. [01:39:11.240 --> 01:39:15.920] We're costing them a lot of money. [01:39:15.920 --> 01:39:24.200] At some point, ask the court to order mediation and then that gives the lawyers plausible [01:39:24.200 --> 01:39:30.160] deniability so they can come to you and make you an offer. [01:39:30.160 --> 01:39:31.920] Okay. [01:39:31.920 --> 01:39:33.640] They're all already talking about settlement. [01:39:33.640 --> 01:39:35.760] The court wants this settled so bad. [01:39:35.760 --> 01:39:37.840] They don't want this in their court. [01:39:37.840 --> 01:39:40.160] And so they keep telling everybody we want this settled. [01:39:40.160 --> 01:39:45.080] The judges literally ordered us to go to settlement before we even got to the final counts that [01:39:45.080 --> 01:39:46.080] were going to stick. [01:39:46.080 --> 01:39:49.360] So we're in the middle of discovery. [01:39:49.360 --> 01:39:51.440] It's kind of funny. [01:39:51.440 --> 01:39:54.000] So have they made you an offer? [01:39:54.000 --> 01:39:57.080] No, no. [01:39:57.080 --> 01:40:02.120] They're fighting hard to get a, this is the second wave of motions to dismiss because [01:40:02.120 --> 01:40:07.200] I did a third amended complaint or technically a second amended complaint. [01:40:07.200 --> 01:40:10.600] And they made some really weak arguments on the consumer fraud. [01:40:10.600 --> 01:40:12.600] So if that sticks, that means that's it. [01:40:12.600 --> 01:40:14.600] I got punitive and everything going forward. [01:40:14.600 --> 01:40:17.200] So they know they're going to have to pay after that. [01:40:17.200 --> 01:40:18.200] Good. [01:40:18.200 --> 01:40:22.640] But we'll see, we'll see what they're going to offer. [01:40:22.640 --> 01:40:27.540] My damages have been whittled down because I didn't have some of the legitimate conversion [01:40:27.540 --> 01:40:28.540] amounts. [01:40:28.540 --> 01:40:33.240] I'm getting thrown around saying I can't claim all my investigative work and all my expenses [01:40:33.240 --> 01:40:37.320] to come back and blah, blah, blah, to take pictures and file a complaint. [01:40:37.320 --> 01:40:41.320] They're basically saying all I can claim is the amount for the car that got damaged. [01:40:41.320 --> 01:40:46.840] Well, I mean, why did it cost me another 10, 15,000 to go travel all those years? [01:40:46.840 --> 01:40:50.320] You know, it's almost five years, four years now. [01:40:50.320 --> 01:40:54.080] Who's saying that the lawyers on the other side? [01:40:54.080 --> 01:41:01.240] No, the, so I get help from the Hibbler, they have a, they have a pro se federal attorney [01:41:01.240 --> 01:41:02.240] that gives you help. [01:41:02.240 --> 01:41:06.760] And so I get about 45 minutes to an hour every month to talk to an attorney. [01:41:06.760 --> 01:41:08.560] And there's some debate going back. [01:41:08.560 --> 01:41:10.480] Some of them are really good guys, really good people. [01:41:10.480 --> 01:41:16.880] They've helped me a lot, but because they're lawyers, they don't want to justify people's [01:41:16.880 --> 01:41:17.880] tenuous or tentative. [01:41:17.880 --> 01:41:23.600] I don't know what the word is, expenses, but I mean, I had to travel back three times a [01:41:23.600 --> 01:41:26.840] year for two years just to get this all taken care of. [01:41:26.840 --> 01:41:27.840] And that's not free. [01:41:27.840 --> 01:41:34.520] That's a $1,500 trip every time, you know, ask for it, you know, you can't, that can't [01:41:34.520 --> 01:41:38.800] hurt the judge will either grant it or not. [01:41:38.800 --> 01:41:40.640] Okay. [01:41:40.640 --> 01:41:45.640] But make sure you ask, he can't give it to you if you don't ask for it. [01:41:45.640 --> 01:41:51.960] I will, I'll, I'll plead to the common sense, you know, um, but anyway, yeah, that's going [01:41:51.960 --> 01:41:52.960] okay. [01:41:52.960 --> 01:41:54.560] But that's, that's taxing too. [01:41:54.560 --> 01:41:58.400] So you know, having to start this and then now on a criminal side and just, it's been [01:41:58.400 --> 01:41:59.400] too much. [01:41:59.400 --> 01:42:03.640] So I definitely need a real attorney to show up. [01:42:03.640 --> 01:42:12.040] Well, good luck on the criminal side because attorneys do not want to take these guys on. [01:42:12.040 --> 01:42:13.440] They're terrified of them. [01:42:13.440 --> 01:42:17.360] They're terrified of the courts. [01:42:17.360 --> 01:42:19.400] They beat them up in your case. [01:42:19.400 --> 01:42:24.280] The courts will beat them up in the next case, pay them back. [01:42:24.280 --> 01:42:28.040] So they don't like, you know, they're terrified of the courts. [01:42:28.040 --> 01:42:29.040] Okay. [01:42:29.040 --> 01:42:30.040] All right. [01:42:30.040 --> 01:42:31.040] I'll, I'll start reading. [01:42:31.040 --> 01:42:36.240] I got a little bit of time, but yeah, I wanted to see if I could get ahead of this, if I [01:42:36.240 --> 01:42:40.720] can get a motion in the next couple of weeks or the next month, a month before the actual [01:42:40.720 --> 01:42:45.600] court date and then, and, and see if the judge just dismisses it. [01:42:45.600 --> 01:42:48.120] Cause they can't, they've got, they don't have all the elements. [01:42:48.120 --> 01:42:52.400] They can't charge me, you know, from what I can understand, they can't charge me with [01:42:52.400 --> 01:42:55.160] this, this charge because they don't have the elements. [01:42:55.160 --> 01:42:56.160] Good. [01:42:56.160 --> 01:42:57.160] Absolutely. [01:42:57.160 --> 01:43:03.440] Get that in and get criminal charges in to the same judge against the officers. [01:43:03.440 --> 01:43:07.160] And that gives you some, some leverage to negotiate with. [01:43:07.160 --> 01:43:08.160] Okay. [01:43:08.160 --> 01:43:11.040] Should I do that all in one bang? [01:43:11.040 --> 01:43:14.240] Just show up with criminal charges and the motion? [01:43:14.240 --> 01:43:15.240] Yes. [01:43:15.240 --> 01:43:16.240] Okay. [01:43:16.240 --> 01:43:17.240] All right. [01:43:17.240 --> 01:43:19.920] I'll work on that. [01:43:19.920 --> 01:43:20.920] Okay. [01:43:20.920 --> 01:43:21.920] Good luck. [01:43:21.920 --> 01:43:22.920] Okay. [01:43:22.920 --> 01:43:23.920] Thanks. [01:43:23.920 --> 01:43:29.240] Now we're going to go to Jerry in Pennsylvania. [01:43:29.240 --> 01:43:30.600] Hello, Jerry. [01:43:30.600 --> 01:43:32.600] What have you been up to? [01:43:32.600 --> 01:43:33.600] Yeah. [01:43:33.600 --> 01:43:34.600] Randy. [01:43:34.600 --> 01:43:43.320] I'm sorry, Jerry, your time is up for today. [01:43:43.320 --> 01:43:47.120] We gave you time, but you just didn't get it done. [01:43:47.120 --> 01:43:49.800] And you never sent me those documents either. [01:43:49.800 --> 01:43:50.800] Okay. [01:43:50.800 --> 01:43:51.800] Okay. [01:43:51.800 --> 01:43:52.800] Hang on. [01:43:52.800 --> 01:43:55.800] Maybe you want Randy to check his email. [01:43:55.800 --> 01:44:00.680] We'll pick it up on the other side. [01:44:00.680 --> 01:44:05.280] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [01:44:05.280 --> 01:44:06.680] of nutrition. [01:44:06.680 --> 01:44:11.400] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.400 --> 01:44:17.280] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.280 --> 01:44:23.440] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, Young Jevity can [01:44:23.440 --> 01:44:25.640] provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.640 --> 01:44:30.560] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [01:44:30.560 --> 01:44:31.680] we reject. [01:44:31.680 --> 01:44:36.920] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [01:44:36.920 --> 01:44:40.120] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:40.120 --> 01:44:46.040] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:44:46.040 --> 01:44:47.680] quality radio. [01:44:47.680 --> 01:44:52.040] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:52.040 --> 01:44:57.360] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [01:44:57.360 --> 01:44:59.240] increase your income. [01:44:59.240 --> 01:45:00.240] Order now. [01:45:00.240 --> 01:45:04.400] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.400 --> 01:45:10.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, force [01:45:10.080 --> 01:45:14.360] CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.360 --> 01:45:18.920] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.920 --> 01:45:23.160] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.160 --> 01:45:28.040] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.040 --> 01:45:34.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.800 --> 01:45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [01:45:39.280 --> 01:45:43.640] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.640 --> 01:45:49.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.800 --> 01:45:52.600] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.600 --> 01:46:20.360] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.600 --> 01:46:42.560] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law, fix the mic problem. [01:46:42.560 --> 01:46:49.680] I tell you that if I'm talking and you speak, we have a suppressor that will push your voice [01:46:49.680 --> 01:46:51.160] down below mine. [01:46:51.160 --> 01:46:58.360] Well, I think because I have hearing loss, I had the headsets up too high and they were [01:46:58.360 --> 01:47:06.280] leaking out into the mic, and that blanking out was actually... So I think maybe we've [01:47:06.280 --> 01:47:07.920] got that fixed. [01:47:07.920 --> 01:47:11.920] Okay, we are talking to Jerry in Pennsylvania. [01:47:11.920 --> 01:47:17.600] Hello, Jerry, what do you have for us today? [01:47:17.600 --> 01:47:21.440] Yeah, just declaratory judgment. [01:47:21.440 --> 01:47:30.200] Yeah, well, the judge sent it over to the attorney general's office and the lawyer, [01:47:30.200 --> 01:47:38.960] they sent me back, it says here that a memorandum of law in support of the United States motion [01:47:38.960 --> 01:47:48.040] to substitute defendant and dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. [01:47:48.040 --> 01:47:59.360] The e-hugin is 12-B-1 stating that they don't... At the attorney general's office, the [01:47:59.360 --> 01:48:13.240] attorney over there is stating that the 12-B-6 is applied here, he's telling them to judge [01:48:13.240 --> 01:48:14.240] that. [01:48:14.240 --> 01:48:27.160] So he sent it over, he sent quite a few other things here he added under US Code 2672, administration [01:48:27.160 --> 01:48:31.920] adjustment of claim, something like that. [01:48:31.920 --> 01:48:41.200] The one that I had that I think the judge got that he's... How he got this over to [01:48:41.200 --> 01:48:51.440] the attorney general's office was 282679, excessive of remedy. [01:48:51.440 --> 01:48:53.640] Are you familiar with that one? [01:48:53.640 --> 01:48:56.520] No, can you read the code to me? [01:48:56.520 --> 01:48:57.520] Excessive? [01:48:57.520 --> 01:48:58.520] Did you say excessive? [01:48:58.520 --> 01:48:59.520] Use of memory. [01:48:59.520 --> 01:49:00.520] Now, this is federal, okay? [01:49:00.520 --> 01:49:13.280] Yeah, it says here, the remedy against the United States provided by Section 1346. [01:49:13.280 --> 01:49:17.680] Now that's another 28 US Code. [01:49:17.680 --> 01:49:19.680] That will come into play. [01:49:19.680 --> 01:49:28.040] Section 2672 is entitled for jury or loss of property or personal injury or death arising [01:49:28.040 --> 01:49:35.360] as a result from negligence or wrongful act of omission of any employee of the government [01:49:35.360 --> 01:49:44.000] while acting within scope of his office or employment is excessive or any other action [01:49:44.000 --> 01:49:52.600] or achieving for money damages for reason of same subject matter against the employee [01:49:52.600 --> 01:49:59.920] whose act or omission give rise to a claim or against the estate of such employee. [01:49:59.920 --> 01:50:05.040] Any other civil accident of receiving for money damage is arising out of relation to [01:50:05.040 --> 01:50:13.280] the same subject matter against the employee to estate his pursuit without regard to the [01:50:13.280 --> 01:50:15.120] act of omission. [01:50:15.120 --> 01:50:24.680] Now, the one little paragraph here, it does say something about, in one of these, is called [01:50:24.680 --> 01:50:32.200] negligence or miscarriage. [01:50:32.200 --> 01:50:40.640] They're trying to say that this was a negligence or a miscarriage when I stood there to counter [01:50:40.640 --> 01:50:47.240] with the delivery order asking three times for my five packages. [01:50:47.240 --> 01:50:49.280] That was criminal what they did. [01:50:49.280 --> 01:50:55.800] That is not under 1346. [01:50:55.800 --> 01:51:01.760] That's what the two words are in 1346. [01:51:01.760 --> 01:51:02.760] That is— [01:51:02.760 --> 01:51:03.760] Wait, wait. [01:51:03.760 --> 01:51:04.760] —regulation. [01:51:04.760 --> 01:51:08.760] Wouldn't that be miscarriage of justice? [01:51:08.760 --> 01:51:27.240] No, 1346 says—it does say in 1346 that that's all that is, is a miscarriage or negligence. [01:51:27.240 --> 01:51:30.240] That's all the post office did. [01:51:30.240 --> 01:51:32.880] Yeah, but that's a client. [01:51:32.880 --> 01:51:37.320] Both of those are causes of action. [01:51:37.320 --> 01:51:43.120] On the post office part? [01:51:43.120 --> 01:51:44.120] Yeah. [01:51:44.120 --> 01:51:46.720] Negligence is cause of action. [01:51:46.720 --> 01:51:50.200] Oh, it is a cause of action. [01:51:50.200 --> 01:51:51.200] That's serious. [01:51:51.200 --> 01:51:52.200] Yeah. [01:51:52.200 --> 01:51:55.560] Yeah, they're saying all it is is negligence. [01:51:55.560 --> 01:51:56.560] Well, yeah. [01:51:56.560 --> 01:51:58.800] Negligence is a cause of action. [01:51:58.800 --> 01:52:04.600] I wrote this on top, and I just put a note there for myself. [01:52:04.600 --> 01:52:08.520] It says, here's a reason why the judge gave it over to the attorney. [01:52:08.520 --> 01:52:20.280] I mean, he didn't have any law that gave him authority to send it over to the attorney [01:52:20.280 --> 01:52:21.280] general's office. [01:52:21.280 --> 01:52:23.960] I mean, I understand that. [01:52:23.960 --> 01:52:30.600] But I called you, and I was trying to claim this to you, what the attorney general sent [01:52:30.600 --> 01:52:32.800] to me. [01:52:32.800 --> 01:52:36.280] Wait, let me get focused here. [01:52:36.280 --> 01:52:41.440] Are you suing a federal agency, or are you suing a state agency in the Fed? [01:52:41.440 --> 01:52:45.800] No, I'm suing the post office themselves. [01:52:45.800 --> 01:52:47.840] Oh, okay. [01:52:47.840 --> 01:52:57.280] Under United States... I'll get it out of here. [01:52:57.280 --> 01:52:59.280] I believe it. [01:52:59.280 --> 01:53:00.280] Okay. [01:53:00.280 --> 01:53:03.280] I've figured out what it was now. [01:53:03.280 --> 01:53:06.880] Maybe it's in the notes here. [01:53:06.880 --> 01:53:19.440] No, whatever it was, I'm suing them under... There is a 28 U.S. code, I don't have [01:53:19.440 --> 01:53:27.040] which one of these numbers is, but I can sue under that. [01:53:27.040 --> 01:53:37.360] When you sue them, you have to sue the United States as the United States, as long as you [01:53:37.360 --> 01:53:43.240] meet the criteria. [01:53:43.240 --> 01:53:47.280] Like you'd notified the post office, I notified them four, five, six times. [01:53:47.280 --> 01:53:52.680] I had the emails, I printed them out, I sent that in to the pleading, and I filled out [01:53:52.680 --> 01:54:03.360] a Form 95, which simply states what was the problem, what did you lose, and all that. [01:54:03.360 --> 01:54:06.000] I sent all that in. [01:54:06.000 --> 01:54:10.120] I sent that in to the judge. [01:54:10.120 --> 01:54:21.520] I did send a response back to the attorney, though, to see how they were going to handle [01:54:21.520 --> 01:54:22.520] it. [01:54:22.520 --> 01:54:30.280] I put down a response to memorandum in support of motion to submit the defendant's lack [01:54:30.280 --> 01:54:34.080] of subject matter jurisdiction. [01:54:34.080 --> 01:54:48.200] I did pretty much the five or six, the four or five codes under the 28 U.S. code that [01:54:48.200 --> 01:54:49.840] I have here. [01:54:49.840 --> 01:55:02.080] I could pretty much destroy his theory on how they apply, you know what I'm saying? [01:55:02.080 --> 01:55:16.560] Then finally towards the end, I put it in that there is no, there's no claim under, [01:55:16.560 --> 01:55:28.000] because that's what the 12 is, it's 12b6, the other one is personal jurisdiction and [01:55:28.000 --> 01:55:29.560] subject matter jurisdiction. [01:55:29.560 --> 01:55:41.160] Well, 12b6, 12b6 only applies if all of the facts were treated as true, then you still [01:55:41.160 --> 01:55:44.400] would not have a claim. [01:55:44.400 --> 01:55:50.040] But it sounds like they essentially admitted that you had a claim of negligence. [01:55:50.040 --> 01:55:58.040] It doesn't matter how minor the claim is, you just have to have a claim, and you stick. [01:55:58.040 --> 01:56:06.800] No, I pulled up some cases, too, to make sure, because you and even Eddie is always harping [01:56:06.800 --> 01:56:08.120] about this 12b6. [01:56:08.120 --> 01:56:14.880] So when I started on this, I spent a couple of days on it, but I couldn't find one that [01:56:14.880 --> 01:56:16.920] was a firearm. [01:56:16.920 --> 01:56:21.960] And I tried to call Eddie, but he's never in the office down there. [01:56:21.960 --> 01:56:29.120] Here it says here, all right, now this is case law, even if the court were to assume [01:56:29.120 --> 01:56:38.240] the plaintiff had stated a claim for 12b6 negligence, opposed to general purpose liability, [01:56:38.240 --> 01:56:46.080] the claim would still fail because it presents no general use of material facts. [01:56:46.080 --> 01:56:52.760] For the purpose of any liability of the United States will be determined by the law of the [01:56:52.760 --> 01:56:56.120] place where the act of omission occurred. [01:56:56.120 --> 01:57:04.280] Now, they put this 28 code 1346B in here. [01:57:04.280 --> 01:57:13.520] But it says here, number one, what you have to have to put into your pleadings to get [01:57:13.520 --> 01:57:16.400] past the 12b6, I think. [01:57:16.400 --> 01:57:23.560] It says here, number one, whether the contract was a cause, in fact, of the harm. [01:57:23.560 --> 01:57:29.080] Number two, the respective duties owed by the party. [01:57:29.080 --> 01:57:34.240] Number three, whether they request duties were branched. [01:57:34.240 --> 01:57:41.540] And then they have the number four, whether the risk and harm cause was in scope of protection [01:57:41.540 --> 01:57:43.600] afforded by the duty branch. [01:57:43.600 --> 01:57:47.520] I have two or three cases like that. [01:57:47.520 --> 01:57:52.480] They pretty much sound the same. [01:57:52.480 --> 01:57:56.120] Now, I have the 12b6 here if you want me to read that. [01:57:56.120 --> 01:57:57.120] Okay. [01:57:57.120 --> 01:57:58.120] Yeah. [01:57:58.120 --> 01:57:59.120] Hang on. [01:57:59.120 --> 01:58:00.120] Here. [01:58:00.120 --> 01:58:03.320] We don't have time before the break. [01:58:03.320 --> 01:58:06.320] How long is the 12b6? [01:58:06.320 --> 01:58:07.320] Not long. [01:58:07.320 --> 01:58:08.320] There's only seven. [01:58:08.320 --> 01:58:09.320] Okay. [01:58:09.320 --> 01:58:15.040] Lack of jurisdiction, lack of personal jurisdiction, improper venue, intervention process, intervention [01:58:15.040 --> 01:58:19.320] service, failed to state a claim, failed to join a party. [01:58:19.320 --> 01:58:20.320] Yeah. [01:58:20.320 --> 01:58:25.440] But they always, you know, the primary thing is failure to state a claim. [01:58:25.440 --> 01:58:27.000] That's how they always go for 12b6. [01:58:27.000 --> 01:58:29.880] You guys kept trying, but- [01:58:29.880 --> 01:58:31.360] Okay, but hang on. [01:58:31.360 --> 01:58:32.360] Hang on. [01:58:32.360 --> 01:58:35.960] We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [01:58:35.960 --> 01:58:42.280] We're at the top of the hour, so this will be about three minutes to break. [01:58:42.280 --> 01:58:43.280] Hang on. [01:58:43.280 --> 01:58:47.000] I'll try not to fall asleep during the break. [01:58:47.000 --> 01:58:50.360] We'll be right back. [01:58:50.360 --> 01:58:55.760] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [01:58:55.760 --> 01:58:58.560] because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.560 --> 01:59:03.960] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [01:59:03.960 --> 01:59:07.200] the profound meaning of the scripture. [01:59:07.200 --> 01:59:09.040] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:09.040 --> 01:59:14.900] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [01:59:14.900 --> 01:59:18.640] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.640 --> 01:59:23.640] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [01:59:23.640 --> 01:59:28.360] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.360 --> 01:59:33.480] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.480 --> 01:59:43.920] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:43.920 --> 01:59:47.920] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.920 --> 01:59:49.920] That's freestudybible.com. [01:59:49.920 --> 02:00:16.920] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com.