[00:00.000 --> 00:05.540] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.540 --> 00:09.540] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.540 --> 00:10.920] Our liberty depends on it. [00:10.920 --> 00:14.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.940 --> 00:17.040] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.040 --> 00:18.640] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.640 --> 00:22.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.240 --> 00:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.000 --> 00:32.080] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.080 --> 00:33.080] Privacy. [00:33.080 --> 00:34.760] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.760 --> 00:39.040] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.040 --> 00:42.600] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.600 --> 00:44.600] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.600 --> 00:45.600] Spar. [00:45.600 --> 00:47.880] It's what fighters do. [00:47.880 --> 00:50.840] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.840 --> 00:54.560] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.560 --> 01:01.680] Spar with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.680 --> 01:03.200] and R for religion. [01:03.200 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:08.640] assembly, and religion. [01:08.640 --> 01:10.600] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.600 --> 01:14.680] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.680 --> 01:18.200] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.200 --> 01:20.880] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.880 --> 01:22.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.840 --> 01:31.200] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.200 --> 01:34.880] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.880 --> 01:38.320] They guarantee a specific freedom Americans should know and protect. [01:38.320 --> 01:39.800] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.800 --> 01:43.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.720 --> 01:46.840] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.840 --> 01:48.440] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.440 --> 01:52.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.040 --> 01:56.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.800 --> 02:01.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.840 --> 02:04.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [02:04.560 --> 02:08.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.840 --> 02:12.400] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.400 --> 02:15.960] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.960 --> 02:20.300] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.300 --> 02:22.360] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.360 --> 02:26.880] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.880 --> 02:30.720] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.720 --> 02:31.720] Get it? [02:31.720 --> 02:32.720] Two arms? [02:32.720 --> 02:33.720] Bear hug? [02:33.720 --> 02:34.720] Bear arms? [02:34.720 --> 02:37.760] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.760 --> 02:38.760] when he said, [02:38.760 --> 02:43.800] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [02:43.800 --> 02:48.880] one more safeguard against the tyranny which now appears remote in America, but which historically [02:48.880 --> 02:50.800] has proved to always be possible. [02:50.800 --> 02:52.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.560 --> 03:19.360] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:19.360 --> 03:40.280] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, Dr. Hubert Humphrey. [03:40.280 --> 04:07.520] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the ruler of our radio on this Thursday, the [04:07.520 --> 04:18.760] 27th day of October, is it still October? It's still October, 2022. I don't have Brett here, [04:18.760 --> 04:25.080] we're having trouble getting him on, so he always has to tell me what year it is. Okay, [04:25.080 --> 04:34.880] I'm going to start out by turning the phone lines on. Our call-in line, call-in number is 512-646-1984. [04:34.880 --> 04:41.480] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. I haven't had much going on here lately [04:41.480 --> 04:50.080] because my wife's been in the hospital. She had a back issue operated on and been down there taking [04:50.080 --> 04:58.640] care of her, so I don't have a whole lot going on. I am still working over Victoria County and [04:58.640 --> 05:09.160] getting prepared to file an amended $400 million lawsuit. I filed a $400 million lawsuit last year, [05:09.160 --> 05:18.800] but with everybody else's stuff, I wound up not getting my own taken care of, so I'm getting back [05:18.800 --> 05:30.280] to my own stuff. I'm going to sue and re-sue the county that I live in. My son-in-law is a justice [05:30.280 --> 05:36.800] of the peace. I was talking to him about the procedures they're trained to use, and they're [05:36.800 --> 05:46.280] just illegal, horribly illegal. I gave him a presentation on due process by code, and he read [05:46.280 --> 05:53.680] it. He said he agrees with it. That looks correct, but that's not how he was trained. He's doing it [05:53.680 --> 06:01.720] the way he was trained, which is horribly illegal, even though he knows what the law says. Explain [06:01.720 --> 06:08.520] that. It's frustrating how much control these guys have over them, but he gave me a good piece [06:08.520 --> 06:17.640] of information. I asked him who trained you, and he said Texas State University in San Marcos, [06:17.640 --> 06:32.440] Texas. Oh, wow. A state university. That means deep pockets, no immunity. I can blame the [06:32.440 --> 06:42.080] university for creating this whole mess, and sue them. I'm more likely to get a good ruling [06:42.080 --> 06:50.040] against them than I am taking on public officials directly. I'm going to write that amended [06:50.040 --> 06:56.480] pleading and name Texas Tech University, and see how much fun we can have. I got a couple [06:56.480 --> 07:02.280] of callers on. I'm going to go ahead and go to the call board. We've got what looks like [07:02.280 --> 07:12.840] a first-time caller. Carrie? I think Debra's here, and Debra has probably just pulled that [07:12.840 --> 07:19.880] caller to screen them. Wait a second. We've got Jason in Wisconsin. I'll go ahead with [07:19.880 --> 07:26.200] Jason waiting for a caller to come back. Hello, Jason. What do you have for us today? [07:26.200 --> 07:36.040] Hey, Randy. How's it going? Going pretty good for an old fat guy. I've been exercising. [07:36.040 --> 07:41.200] I've got this little thing. You hold the handles, and it's got wheels on it. You get on your [07:41.200 --> 07:48.880] knees, and you push that thing forward. That hurts. My son said, Dad, you're getting fat. [07:48.880 --> 07:53.880] You need exercise. Well, that exercise, I can tell you from experience, is for young [07:53.880 --> 08:01.640] skinny people. It's not for old fat guys. It hurts. Okay. I'll quit complaining now. [08:01.640 --> 08:08.320] Okay. What do you have for us? I got quite a bit for you, but first of all, [08:08.320 --> 08:12.520] I don't know how much you remember about my case. Do you need me to refresh your memory [08:12.520 --> 08:17.480] at all, or? Absolutely. I remember Jason in Wisconsin, [08:17.480 --> 08:25.120] the ticket? Yeah. I got a traffic ticket back in June, and they gave me a warning for speeding, [08:25.120 --> 08:30.520] and then the district attorney went to the state patrol and talked him into turning it [08:30.520 --> 08:40.480] into a citation. Oh, mitigation. Yeah, I remember that. Okay. Where are you at now? [08:40.480 --> 08:46.600] Okay. A lot has happened in the last couple of weeks here. I talked to Brett last week. [08:46.600 --> 08:53.160] So I ended up... Let's see. Where should I start? Last week, I ended up filing a writ [08:53.160 --> 09:00.680] of mandamus, or I did it earlier this week. I think it was on Monday, against the district [09:00.680 --> 09:12.320] attorney for him denying my open records request. So I ended up filing that in the appeals court, [09:12.320 --> 09:18.280] which turned out to be the wrong court. So I went last night and refiled it back in the [09:18.280 --> 09:23.120] circuit court, and I've been having issues with the e-filing system. But anyways, that's [09:23.120 --> 09:28.040] just one thing that's going on here. Okay, one thing. When you figure out those [09:28.040 --> 09:45.600] e-filing issues, call me and explain it to me. Yeah. Anyways, I'm kind of pressed for [09:45.600 --> 09:51.600] time here because my trial is on Tuesday, and then I just got a notice in the mail today [09:51.600 --> 09:57.280] that my trial for the speeding ticket, they also put that on Tuesday. So they basically [09:57.280 --> 10:01.960] gave me less than seven days notice of my trial day for that speeding ticket. So I'm [10:01.960 --> 10:06.400] wondering, first of all, if there's anything I can do about that. [10:06.400 --> 10:15.480] You can file an opposition for lack of proper service. That has to be heard before the hearing. [10:15.480 --> 10:21.320] That has to be heard what? That will have to get... Any motions before [10:21.320 --> 10:28.400] the court have to be heard before a trial can happen? Do you have any motions before [10:28.400 --> 10:35.600] the court that haven't been heard? Yes, I do have some motions. I filed a motion [10:35.600 --> 10:39.680] for adjournment a while ago. They denied that, so I filed a motion for reconsideration [10:39.680 --> 10:45.800] a week ago. That was just denied today. When I filed my writ of mandamus, I filed a motion [10:45.800 --> 10:51.120] to stay proceedings pending the outcome of the mandamus, and I got no response to that. [10:51.120 --> 10:56.960] But my mandamus was dismissed anyways from the appeals court, so I'm going to file another [10:56.960 --> 11:00.280] one of those along with the mandamus and the circuit court. [11:00.280 --> 11:08.520] What's the nature of the mandamus? It's for an open records request with the [11:08.520 --> 11:12.760] district attorney. That won't have any effect on the trial. [11:12.760 --> 11:16.040] I was making the assumption that... Have you filed a subject matter jurisdiction [11:16.040 --> 11:19.600] challenge? That was something I'm going to work on this [11:19.600 --> 11:26.320] week. I want to have time to sit down and do some research, and then I know I've been [11:26.320 --> 11:31.880] pretty busy. I got a lot going on. It's hard to keep up with this stuff, you know? [11:31.880 --> 11:36.120] Welcome to my world. Then I've been dealing with health issues. [11:36.120 --> 11:40.000] I'm finally starting to get better from that, and that's what I filed my motion for adjournment [11:40.000 --> 11:46.080] based on. They denied it, but anyways... Come in there and tell them to cough a couple [11:46.080 --> 11:51.920] times and tell them you think you've got tuberculosis. [11:51.920 --> 12:03.440] Okay. Yeah, anyways, another issue that came up [12:03.440 --> 12:12.200] is the first trial they had scheduled for me, that was coming up on Tuesday, that was [12:12.200 --> 12:17.800] scheduled with a court commissioner. The notice I got today, it says it's with the head circuit [12:17.800 --> 12:26.760] court judge who's been responding to my motions. That tells me it looks like he took over the [12:26.760 --> 12:33.240] case from the court commissioner. They see what I'm doing filing with the court or something. [12:33.240 --> 12:42.600] I've got a judge that actually answers. You can go ask him. So what do you have? [12:42.600 --> 12:50.560] I'm having a hard time hearing you here. What do you have before the court now? [12:50.560 --> 13:03.000] Just the stuff I just told you, the motions for adjournment, I don't really have all the [13:03.000 --> 13:08.360] stuff I wanted to get out because like I said, I've been pretty busy and plan on doing as [13:08.360 --> 13:18.360] much as I can this weekend here. I'm going to try to get some stuff filed tonight actually. [13:18.360 --> 13:28.200] So I don't know Wisconsin traffic code well enough to know what to throw at you. Do you [13:28.200 --> 13:32.840] have an attorney? I do not. [13:32.840 --> 13:40.320] File a motion for continuance to give you time to seek counsel. Don't seek counsel, [13:40.320 --> 13:46.160] just tell them you want to seek counsel. They'll always give you a continuous for that. [13:46.160 --> 13:52.080] Is there anything I can file with the appeals court? Because I could get into a whole story [13:52.080 --> 13:56.760] right now about how corrupt I know that judge is, how he railroaded my neighbor, put him [13:56.760 --> 14:01.160] in jail for six months, but I don't really have time to get into that right now. [14:01.160 --> 14:08.080] No, I don't have it. That's what I was trying to dig out to see if we had some claims, but [14:08.080 --> 14:15.480] I don't have anything yet. And I don't know Wisconsin traffic code well enough to be able [14:15.480 --> 14:26.040] to suggest claims to bring. You always want to claim that the complaint is insufficient [14:26.040 --> 14:33.440] because it does not include a necessary element of the crime, which is commercial. And that [14:33.440 --> 14:39.800] applies to most all states, but not necessarily. So I don't know. I don't know Wisconsin traffic [14:39.800 --> 14:45.160] code. If there's anybody there out there listening who knows Wisconsin traffic code, send me [14:45.160 --> 14:55.880] an email, Randy at ruleoflawradio.com. And Jason, if you will send me an email at the [14:55.880 --> 15:00.520] same place. If I get something, I'll forward it to you. [15:00.520 --> 15:07.320] Okay. Would you like me to send some of the documents related to my case so you can look [15:07.320 --> 15:08.320] them over? [15:08.320 --> 15:10.880] Yes. Yeah. Let me look them over. [15:10.880 --> 15:17.120] I guess the big one would be the mandamus if you could look that one over. I actually [15:17.120 --> 15:24.360] spent a lot of time last week on writing that one. I think it's pretty solid, but- [15:24.360 --> 15:35.400] Well, you claimed it under open records, but if Wisconsin is the same as other states, [15:35.400 --> 15:41.640] it doesn't matter what you claimed it under. If you have a right to discovery, you have [15:41.640 --> 15:44.840] a right to discovery. And the- [15:44.840 --> 15:51.240] That's the thing. Discovery is very limited in traffic cases. So I was basically trying [15:51.240 --> 15:57.960] to use open records as partially as my former discovery, but I was also trying to get some [15:57.960 --> 16:03.640] records from the district attorney's office proving that he committed crimes such as barritory. [16:03.640 --> 16:13.880] Okay. Send me the documents, and I will look at them. When is your hearing? [16:13.880 --> 16:19.400] Tuesday. I was actually going to try to keep it brief tonight and then call back tomorrow [16:19.400 --> 16:23.240] and talk to you about what to do in court because I'm kind of clueless on that. [16:23.240 --> 16:29.840] Send me some documents. Send me what you got and call back tomorrow. And I'll have a look [16:29.840 --> 16:36.080] at it and I'll be able to speak to it more intelligently, and I know Brett will take [16:36.080 --> 16:44.880] issue with that. But anyway, call back tomorrow night and maybe I'll have more for you after [16:44.880 --> 16:46.880] I've looked over your documents. [16:46.880 --> 16:48.880] All right. Thanks. [16:48.880 --> 16:53.760] Okay. Thank you, Jason. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. We'll be right [16:53.760 --> 17:00.480] back. [17:24.720 --> 17:30.800] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? How to turn the financial tables on [17:30.800 --> 17:36.780] them and make them pay you to go away? The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution [17:36.780 --> 17:41.440] for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more [17:41.440 --> 17:46.760] information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [17:46.760 --> 18:06.040] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:06.040 --> 18:07.040] Word? [18:07.040 --> 18:11.740] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [18:11.740 --> 18:17.320] Scripture Talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2 [18:17.320 --> 18:18.320] 15. [18:18.320 --> 18:22.720] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [18:22.720 --> 18:25.240] rightly dividing the word of truth. [18:25.240 --> 18:29.480] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark where we will go verse [18:29.480 --> 18:32.800] by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [18:32.800 --> 18:37.440] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.440 --> 18:39.800] and Christian character development. [18:39.800 --> 18:44.320] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.320 --> 18:48.720] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.720 --> 18:50.320] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.320 --> 18:57.560] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.560 --> 19:10.760] motivate your studies of the scriptures. [20:27.560 --> 20:31.480] Okay, we are back. [20:31.480 --> 20:36.200] Randy Kelvin, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to go to a first-time [20:36.200 --> 20:38.160] caller Carrie in Pennsylvania. [20:38.160 --> 20:41.960] Hello Carrie, what do you have for us today? [20:41.960 --> 20:49.720] Hi, wow, great, I'm so honored to be speaking with you. [20:49.720 --> 20:57.720] So my main issue, I have been involved in a series of public records requests under [20:57.720 --> 21:00.720] the Pennsylvania Right to Know law and I currently... [21:00.720 --> 21:02.840] Wait, wait, wait, I'm sorry, say that again. [21:02.840 --> 21:06.880] You were talking a little faster than I could listen. [21:06.880 --> 21:13.640] Records request with the Pennsylvania Right to Know, it's kind of like public information. [21:13.640 --> 21:21.600] On radio, when I listen to myself on the radio, I sound like I'm talking really slow. [21:21.600 --> 21:27.320] But I deliberately slow down the cadence because you can't see my lips moving, you can't see [21:27.320 --> 21:29.280] my body posture. [21:29.280 --> 21:34.520] All you have is what you hear and it takes a little bit longer to get that through your [21:34.520 --> 21:36.640] brain when you're as old as I am. [21:36.640 --> 21:37.640] Okay. [21:37.640 --> 21:38.640] Okay. [21:38.640 --> 21:46.600] Well, I'm a little excited so that will help me to just slow myself down. [21:46.600 --> 21:54.280] So I have a series of public records requests currently before the court. [21:54.280 --> 21:58.120] Pressing one at the moment is... [21:58.120 --> 22:00.960] It's currently before the trial court. [22:00.960 --> 22:04.760] We had a hearing and briefs were filed afterward. [22:04.760 --> 22:08.560] Okay, hold on, I have a question. [22:08.560 --> 22:17.720] A public records request as opposed to a request for discovery. [22:17.720 --> 22:22.520] How does a public records request in Pennsylvania get before the court? [22:22.520 --> 22:29.280] Or is your action about a failure to provide public records? [22:29.280 --> 22:32.040] It is a failure to provide public records. [22:32.040 --> 22:33.680] Oh, wonderful. [22:33.680 --> 22:36.880] So you're suing somebody. [22:36.880 --> 22:39.480] Yes, I am. [22:39.480 --> 22:42.480] Now you're my hero. [22:42.480 --> 22:45.920] Well, we'll see. [22:45.920 --> 22:54.000] Well, I requested from my township, I requested the solicitor's invoices and it was over an [22:54.000 --> 22:57.480] 18-month period. [22:57.480 --> 23:02.360] And this is not the first time I've requested, this is actually the fourth time over the [23:02.360 --> 23:08.320] last several years that I've requested various batches of his invoices. [23:08.320 --> 23:14.360] And I've been trying to investigate him without going into the backstory behind that. [23:14.360 --> 23:17.520] But so this is the fourth time I've requested invoices. [23:17.520 --> 23:19.560] Okay, hold on. [23:19.560 --> 23:30.160] Fourth time in Pennsylvania is the Open Records Act a civil statute or a criminal statute? [23:30.160 --> 23:45.880] So do you have an official misconduct statute? [23:45.880 --> 23:51.240] While you're thinking, official misconduct is a catch-all. [23:51.240 --> 23:57.440] Most every state has one and it's modeled after 18 U.S. Code 242 and it effectively [23:57.440 --> 24:05.040] says if a public official fails to perform a duty he is required to perform and in the [24:05.040 --> 24:10.560] process denies a citizen in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right, that is [24:10.560 --> 24:13.280] a criminal act. [24:13.280 --> 24:22.160] So if you have, now if your open records is just civil, then you can go to this civil [24:22.160 --> 24:25.880] statute commanded this public official to do this thing. [24:25.880 --> 24:31.600] This public official did not do that thing and thereby denied me in my right to open [24:31.600 --> 24:34.880] records and charged him with official oppression. [24:34.880 --> 24:35.880] Okay. [24:35.880 --> 24:39.840] Freeze the bar a little bit. [24:39.840 --> 24:40.840] Okay. [24:40.840 --> 24:48.680] I'll look into that as far as arguments to make. [24:48.680 --> 24:57.560] So Pennsylvania has this open records law appeals process and it's sort of a gray area [24:57.560 --> 25:05.520] right now in how to exactly to enforce these, but the process at the moment is that you're [25:05.520 --> 25:13.800] either filing a petition to enforce or mandamus action if it's in a law agency, it goes directly [25:13.800 --> 25:19.080] to the Commonwealth Court if it is a state agency that has denied you record. [25:19.080 --> 25:20.080] Okay. [25:20.080 --> 25:21.080] Hold on. [25:21.080 --> 25:22.080] Hold on. [25:22.080 --> 25:23.080] Commonwealth Court. [25:23.080 --> 25:25.480] Is that Court of Common Pleas? [25:25.480 --> 25:26.480] Yeah. [25:26.480 --> 25:27.480] No. [25:27.480 --> 25:28.480] It's the appellate court. [25:28.480 --> 25:29.480] Oh. [25:29.480 --> 25:30.480] Okay. [25:30.480 --> 25:31.480] I had never heard of that in Pennsylvania. [25:31.480 --> 25:34.480] That's why I asked. [25:34.480 --> 25:47.600] So anyways, there's a quasi-judicial step in this, so when the solicitor, when I submitted [25:47.600 --> 25:54.840] the request and the township sent me 18-months worth of records, they were just single page, [25:54.840 --> 25:59.680] un-itemized invoices that only had the date and the amount due on it. [25:59.680 --> 26:05.640] And as I was saying before, this is actually the fourth time I've requested them and every [26:05.640 --> 26:10.440] client request, I received itemized invoices. [26:10.440 --> 26:18.520] After the invoices in the same manner, just different state ranges and suddenly I'm getting [26:18.520 --> 26:22.760] this, you know, un-itemized billing summary. [26:22.760 --> 26:31.160] So I appealed that to our Pennsylvania Office of Open Records, the quasi-judicial agency, [26:31.160 --> 26:33.920] and they reviewed it. [26:33.920 --> 26:41.560] During the appeals process, the township realized that two of the invoices in the middle of [26:41.560 --> 26:47.100] dispatch had already been provided to another requester. [26:47.100 --> 26:51.600] And they knew that I knew this other requester as well. [26:51.600 --> 26:58.160] So they were caught because they gave him itemized invoices. [26:58.160 --> 27:00.640] They gave me billing summaries. [27:00.640 --> 27:04.760] Oh, hold on. [27:04.760 --> 27:06.880] That goes to another statute. [27:06.880 --> 27:11.440] Yep, you guys are going to love this. [27:11.440 --> 27:20.480] So before the appeals officer, the solicitor is, you know, representing the township and [27:20.480 --> 27:25.760] he turns over this other set of invoices and said, oh, you know, we found these also. [27:25.760 --> 27:32.360] Well, the appeals officer was wise to what was going on and she actually granted me all [27:32.360 --> 27:39.440] of the records and said, you know, you can't just provide billing summaries. [27:39.440 --> 27:41.360] You have to give itemized invoices. [27:41.360 --> 27:44.360] Okay, hold on, hold on. [27:44.360 --> 27:49.240] I tend to be pedantic. [27:49.240 --> 27:54.160] And what you're saying brings to mind a question. [27:54.160 --> 27:58.440] Where did they get these summaries? [27:58.440 --> 28:06.720] Did those summaries already exist or did they make them up and then give them to you in [28:06.720 --> 28:10.480] place of the actual documents? [28:10.480 --> 28:13.240] That's what I'm assuming. [28:13.240 --> 28:17.360] That's the way I read most codes is what Brett? [28:17.360 --> 28:22.200] Yeah, it is tampering with a government document. [28:22.200 --> 28:23.880] Yep, yep. [28:23.880 --> 28:24.880] We're getting there. [28:24.880 --> 28:25.880] You'll see. [28:25.880 --> 28:29.440] Okay, sounds like you're already ahead of me. [28:29.440 --> 28:32.440] I'll shut up now. [28:32.440 --> 28:34.320] You'll see. [28:34.320 --> 28:40.680] So Office of Open Record said, you know, no to this solicitor, you have to provide itemized [28:40.680 --> 28:41.680] invoices. [28:41.680 --> 28:48.800] He did not claim attorney-client privilege, so she made him, she said, you know, all these [28:48.800 --> 28:50.920] need to be released unredacted. [28:50.920 --> 28:53.760] So I was granted the record. [28:53.760 --> 28:58.600] The township did not appeal that decision. [28:58.600 --> 29:05.200] And for the next few months, I went to the township every month at a meeting and I said, [29:05.200 --> 29:06.720] I won these records. [29:06.720 --> 29:08.840] I have not been provided all the records. [29:08.840 --> 29:13.600] But the solicitor, so this is part of the game too, you're going to love this, he decided [29:13.600 --> 29:22.200] to misinterpret the decision and only gave me unredacted invoices for the two that he [29:22.200 --> 29:26.880] got caught giving me, you know, a different version. [29:26.880 --> 29:27.880] What? [29:27.880 --> 29:32.480] Yeah, you're going to love this. [29:32.480 --> 29:41.880] Okay, hold on, we're about to go to our sponsors. [29:41.880 --> 29:46.120] This guy is a lawyer in a municipal court. [29:46.120 --> 29:50.680] You can start out by figuring he's not the sharpest knife in the drawer or he would be [29:50.680 --> 29:53.040] out making the big bucks. [29:53.040 --> 29:54.920] So maybe you can smarten him up a little. [29:54.920 --> 29:59.520] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [29:59.520 --> 30:06.200] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:06.200 --> 30:10.920] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [30:10.920 --> 30:11.920] secrets. [30:11.920 --> 30:16.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.120 --> 30:17.720] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.720 --> 30:21.320] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.320 --> 30:26.080] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.080 --> 30:31.160] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.160 --> 30:33.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.840 --> 30:38.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [30:38.120 --> 30:41.680] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.680 --> 30:45.360] Start over with Startpage. [30:45.360 --> 30:47.000] Data privacy is a big deal. [30:47.000 --> 30:51.920] So nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. [30:51.920 --> 30:54.560] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.560 --> 30:56.280] It's not an idle question. [30:56.280 --> 31:01.400] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.400 --> 31:03.800] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.800 --> 31:07.440] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.440 --> 31:12.320] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.320 --> 31:15.720] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.720 --> 31:16.720] to see. [31:16.720 --> 31:17.720] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.720 --> 31:21.280] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.280 --> 31:23.280] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.280 --> 31:25.840] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:53.280 --> 32:14.280] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. [32:14.280 --> 32:39.020] Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. Albrecht, Dr. [32:39.020 --> 32:43.020] and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:43.020 --> 32:47.020] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. The Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 [32:47.020 --> 32:51.020] seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how [32:51.020 --> 32:55.020] to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order [32:55.020 --> 32:59.020] your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [32:59.020 --> 33:04.020] Live, free speech radio, [33:04.020 --> 33:09.020] logosradionetwork.com [33:34.020 --> 33:39.020] When you're gonna stop abuse, [33:39.020 --> 33:44.020] your power. [33:44.020 --> 33:49.020] When you're gonna stop abuse, [33:49.020 --> 33:54.020] your power. [33:54.020 --> 33:59.020] Your power. [33:59.020 --> 34:04.020] Your power. [34:04.020 --> 34:09.020] Your power. [34:09.020 --> 34:14.020] Your power. [34:14.020 --> 34:19.020] Your power. [34:19.020 --> 34:22.020] Your power. [34:22.020 --> 34:45.940] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Kerry [34:45.940 --> 34:46.940] in Pennsylvania. [34:46.940 --> 34:52.460] Kerry, it sounds like you pretty well know what you're doing. [34:52.460 --> 35:03.060] Well, I've started to figure out how the process works, at least in this judiciary or the statutory [35:03.060 --> 35:11.500] appeals process under the right to know law, but this, what's been happening over several [35:11.500 --> 35:18.580] years in several of these appeals is that it's moving to a much bigger level where I [35:18.580 --> 35:24.820] probably need to file a federal case in 1983. [35:24.820 --> 35:29.180] To be honest, I think there's actually some recode here going on, but that's a whole other [35:29.180 --> 35:30.180] conversation. [35:30.180 --> 35:31.520] Okay, hold on. [35:31.520 --> 35:34.660] Have you looked in Pennsylvania law? [35:34.660 --> 35:39.060] Does Pennsylvania have an organized crime statute? [35:39.060 --> 35:40.060] Yes. [35:40.060 --> 35:43.460] You might look at that first. [35:43.460 --> 35:49.960] What I'm doing in Texas is I'm asking the courts to do things I know they're not going [35:49.960 --> 35:54.420] to do, but the law commands them to do it. [35:54.420 --> 35:55.900] I've started out with a JP. [35:55.900 --> 36:00.900] I asked him to issue some warrants on some complaints, and he refused. [36:00.900 --> 36:07.380] So I sued him personally and went to the county court, and I gave criminal complaints to the [36:07.380 --> 36:13.180] county court judge and asked him to do the same thing, and he refused. [36:13.180 --> 36:18.020] And then he ruled against everything I had before the court. [36:18.020 --> 36:25.060] And now I'll go to the district court, give them the same criminal complaints, and get [36:25.060 --> 36:27.860] them to rule against everything. [36:27.860 --> 36:36.860] Then I'll file against them on the state level under the state organized crime statute, and [36:36.860 --> 36:39.780] actually I've already done that. [36:39.780 --> 36:44.140] The second set of complaints had an organized crimes claim in it, so that when I get to [36:44.140 --> 36:54.340] the feds, I can go to the feds and say, the whole state is acting in concert and collusion [36:54.340 --> 36:57.660] with one another to deny the public due process. [36:57.660 --> 37:00.220] And they're going to say, well, the whole state? [37:00.220 --> 37:01.220] What did you do? [37:01.220 --> 37:05.220] Well, I tried the justice court, I tried the county court, I tried the district court. [37:05.220 --> 37:10.340] I challenged for organized crime. [37:10.340 --> 37:16.180] The courts ignored and denied everything out of hand. [37:16.180 --> 37:22.260] Now you have good standing to step up to the feds under RICO. [37:22.260 --> 37:23.260] Yes. [37:23.260 --> 37:24.260] Yep. [37:24.260 --> 37:25.260] Okay. [37:25.260 --> 37:32.900] So I guess I'm moving in that direction, but getting back to this present case and the [37:32.900 --> 37:37.340] present matter before me. [37:37.340 --> 37:45.860] So the township solicitor decided to only release two of the 18 invoices. [37:45.860 --> 37:52.980] And then I kept warning the township supervisors that he's misinterpreting the decision. [37:52.980 --> 37:55.580] You need to turn all those records over to me. [37:55.580 --> 37:57.780] You have to fiduciary responsibility. [37:57.780 --> 37:58.780] It's all recorded. [37:58.780 --> 37:59.780] Okay. [37:59.780 --> 38:00.780] Hold on. [38:00.780 --> 38:01.780] Hold on. [38:01.780 --> 38:04.220] I have a question. [38:04.220 --> 38:08.900] In presenting this information, we do, we have a bunch of rules that we've developed [38:08.900 --> 38:11.220] over the years. [38:11.220 --> 38:17.180] One of them is never give fair warning. [38:17.180 --> 38:19.300] Don't. [38:19.300 --> 38:25.180] Don't tell them that, oh, you know, you're doing this wrong, you should do it this other [38:25.180 --> 38:26.180] way. [38:26.180 --> 38:33.740] The only way you tell them that is with criminal charges or a civil claim against them for [38:33.740 --> 38:36.700] not doing what they were supposed to do. [38:36.700 --> 38:43.140] Well, and the reason that I was doing that, I guess from the civil side, because I was [38:43.140 --> 38:51.460] trying to pierce immunity, because they're required by law to release these records. [38:51.460 --> 38:58.700] And if I warned them that I could possibly pierce immunity. [38:58.700 --> 39:02.700] I'm going to suggest you just make a claim. [39:02.700 --> 39:08.300] I went before this JP and I asked him to issue some warrants on some complaints. [39:08.300 --> 39:13.220] Well, he knew one of the names in there and he refused. [39:13.220 --> 39:19.100] Well, the code says he must do this thing. [39:19.100 --> 39:22.820] And I didn't tell him what the law said. [39:22.820 --> 39:27.060] I didn't tell him what he should do and what he was supposed to do. [39:27.060 --> 39:34.500] I just dial 9-1-1 and ask for a policeman to come out and arrest him and told that policeman [39:34.500 --> 39:37.360] what he did. [39:37.360 --> 39:41.940] I assure you that is far more powerful. [39:41.940 --> 39:52.980] I didn't expect a policeman to arrest a judge, but it was about getting his attention. [39:52.980 --> 39:58.740] If they make a mistake, for me, the more minor, the better. [39:58.740 --> 40:05.820] I get a clerk to say, I ask them for records and I try to craft my records requests so [40:05.820 --> 40:11.060] they don't understand why I'm doing what I'm doing because I want them to say, well, why [40:11.060 --> 40:13.060] do you want to see that? [40:13.060 --> 40:14.060] 9-1-1. [40:14.060 --> 40:19.060] He's just trying to trip them up. [40:19.060 --> 40:20.060] Yeah. [40:20.060 --> 40:23.500] He wants them to do something wrong so he can just go get them. [40:23.500 --> 40:25.940] Well, I don't want to get them prosecuted. [40:25.940 --> 40:28.500] I want to get their attention. [40:28.500 --> 40:35.780] And when I get to a higher court, I want to be able to say, I gave them fair warning. [40:35.780 --> 40:38.580] They did this wrong and I filed against them immediately. [40:38.580 --> 40:42.740] They should have got the message, a reasonable person of ordinary prudence would get the [40:42.740 --> 40:43.740] message. [40:43.740 --> 40:44.740] Mm-hmm. [40:44.740 --> 40:45.740] Okay. [40:45.740 --> 40:53.060] And what you would think is when you do that, the next time you deal with them, they'll [40:53.060 --> 40:56.060] do it right. [40:56.060 --> 41:05.020] Unfortunately, that has not been the case, but what does happen is you have a much stronger [41:05.020 --> 41:08.860] case when you step forward. [41:08.860 --> 41:09.860] Okay. [41:09.860 --> 41:10.860] All right. [41:10.860 --> 41:11.860] Good. [41:11.860 --> 41:12.860] Well, I don't know. [41:12.860 --> 41:13.860] Sometimes they get real helpful. [41:13.860 --> 41:16.540] Like after they got slapped real good, then maybe you come back. [41:16.540 --> 41:22.620] Sometimes they just totally, they change directions and now, like Tina had that experience, right? [41:22.620 --> 41:23.620] Oh, yeah. [41:23.620 --> 41:24.620] Well, yeah. [41:24.620 --> 41:27.060] No, but Tina did something different. [41:27.060 --> 41:34.020] She filed a complaint against this clerk and then the clerk did everything, you know, tried [41:34.020 --> 41:40.020] to satisfy Tina and then she filed a commendation letter for this clerk. [41:40.020 --> 41:41.020] Yeah. [41:41.020 --> 41:47.660] It's a bit of psychology. [41:47.660 --> 41:54.620] One of the things I like to do is when someone acts appropriately, they're professional, [41:54.620 --> 42:00.660] polite, do what they're supposed to, I go out of my way to compliment them, let their [42:00.660 --> 42:05.180] bosses know how much I appreciate their professionalism. [42:05.180 --> 42:11.660] That way the next time the bosses want them to do something stupid, it embarrasses them. [42:11.660 --> 42:18.900] And I get, if you're never cross with them, never ever let them know that they've angered [42:18.900 --> 42:21.420] or annoyed you. [42:21.420 --> 42:25.460] Then you got these people in there saying, well, I talked to this guy, he's a really [42:25.460 --> 42:26.460] nice guy. [42:26.460 --> 42:28.460] I didn't have any problem with him. [42:28.460 --> 42:31.620] I don't know what your problem is. [42:31.620 --> 42:37.260] I've got a bailiff in Victoria County who's going to talk to these other bailiffs and [42:37.260 --> 42:39.020] they're going to say, well, we talk to him all the time. [42:39.020 --> 42:40.020] He's a really nice guy. [42:40.020 --> 42:41.020] What's your problem with him? [42:41.020 --> 42:44.020] Well, he asked me to arrest the judge in the courtroom. [42:44.020 --> 42:50.340] Well, was the judge being a criminal? [42:50.340 --> 42:54.660] I didn't ask him to take his chicken suit off, which I generally do. [42:54.660 --> 43:01.220] The point is you're always polite and professional and when they do it right, you make sure the [43:01.220 --> 43:07.380] bosses know they do it right because you're down there beating them up on the one hand. [43:07.380 --> 43:12.060] And on the other hand, you're being polite and professional and helpful. [43:12.060 --> 43:15.940] It makes it real hard for them to demonize you. [43:15.940 --> 43:17.940] Oh, definitely. [43:17.940 --> 43:23.860] And I really, honestly, I appreciate you and, you know, I just discovered this jurisdictionary [43:23.860 --> 43:29.780] how to win a court and these groups in Telegram just in the last couple of weeks. [43:29.780 --> 43:34.700] I was earlier today, I was trying to get a hold of Dr. Graves to get him the call-in [43:34.700 --> 43:39.660] bridge number, to get him to come on the air today, but I wasn't able to reach him. [43:39.660 --> 43:43.140] So I'm hoping to have him calling into this show pretty soon. [43:43.140 --> 43:45.180] He's the guy who wrote jurisdictionary. [43:45.180 --> 43:46.180] Right, right. [43:46.180 --> 43:47.180] Yeah. [43:47.180 --> 43:53.940] Well, I just appreciate that it's helping me get to another, you know, place and try [43:53.940 --> 43:54.940] to use that psychology. [43:54.940 --> 43:55.940] So I appreciate it. [43:55.940 --> 43:56.940] Okay. [43:56.940 --> 43:57.940] Hang on. [43:57.940 --> 43:58.940] We'll be right back. [43:58.940 --> 43:59.940] I love logos. [43:59.940 --> 44:00.940] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:00.940 --> 44:01.940] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [44:01.940 --> 44:02.940] I need my truth pick. [44:02.940 --> 44:03.940] I'd be lost without logos. [44:03.940 --> 44:04.940] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [44:04.940 --> 44:05.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:05.940 --> 44:06.940] know how to do that. [44:06.940 --> 44:07.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:07.940 --> 44:08.940] know how to do that. [44:08.940 --> 44:29.260] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [44:29.260 --> 44:39.580] know how to do that. [44:39.580 --> 45:06.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [45:06.940 --> 45:13.940] know how to do that. [45:13.940 --> 45:34.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [45:34.940 --> 46:00.660] know how to do that. [46:04.940 --> 46:32.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [46:32.940 --> 46:51.940] know how to do that. [46:51.940 --> 47:19.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [47:19.940 --> 47:24.940] know how to do that. [47:24.940 --> 47:53.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [47:53.940 --> 47:56.940] know how to do that. [47:56.940 --> 48:21.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [48:21.940 --> 48:29.940] know how to do that. [48:29.940 --> 48:54.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [48:54.940 --> 49:06.940] know how to do that. [49:06.940 --> 49:35.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [49:35.940 --> 49:40.940] know how to do that. [49:40.940 --> 50:08.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [50:08.940 --> 50:13.940] know how to do that. [50:13.940 --> 50:42.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [50:42.940 --> 50:47.940] know how to do that. [50:47.940 --> 51:15.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [51:15.940 --> 51:20.940] know how to do that. [51:20.940 --> 51:45.940] Exactly. [51:45.940 --> 52:13.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [52:13.940 --> 52:16.940] know how to do that. [52:16.940 --> 52:28.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [52:28.940 --> 52:31.940] know how to do that. [52:31.940 --> 52:56.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [52:56.940 --> 53:00.940] know how to do that. [53:00.940 --> 53:25.940] And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [53:25.940 --> 53:28.940] know how to do that. [53:28.940 --> 53:32.940] You just need to file enough to say, I've got this motion before the court, it's been [53:32.940 --> 53:39.940] before the court this amount of time, and the court apparently is not keeping track [53:39.940 --> 53:42.940] of its calendar. [53:42.940 --> 53:50.940] We got a judge sanctioned in New York over delay of this kind because he failed to maintain [53:50.940 --> 53:52.940] his calendar. [53:52.940 --> 53:58.940] Accused him of that and asked the court to order him to issue an order on this. [53:58.940 --> 54:03.940] And there'll be more to add to this because even under the right to know law, there is [54:03.940 --> 54:10.940] a provision about the courts need to do this in an expeditious manner. [54:10.940 --> 54:13.940] We should get the public records quickly. [54:13.940 --> 54:20.940] So when I first filed, my hearing was scheduled nine months out and I got the same judge that [54:20.940 --> 54:25.940] I continue to get every single time they give me the same judge. [54:25.940 --> 54:32.940] So I started to complain to the court administrator and then they ended up moving up the hearing [54:32.940 --> 54:37.940] three months, but still six months is way too long and they would never release the [54:37.940 --> 54:39.940] court calendar to me. [54:39.940 --> 54:45.940] I said, how can this court be so busy that you can't do a public records request? [54:45.940 --> 54:51.940] Did you do a public records request for the court calendar? [54:51.940 --> 54:55.940] I don't think I can in Pennsylvania. [54:55.940 --> 55:03.940] There's not much in the judicial part that I can request. [55:03.940 --> 55:05.940] These are not judicial records? [55:05.940 --> 55:07.940] Yes, it's outside of... [55:07.940 --> 55:09.940] That's just something administrative. [55:09.940 --> 55:11.940] These are all administrative. [55:11.940 --> 55:13.940] They don't fall under judicial. [55:13.940 --> 55:15.940] Okay. [55:15.940 --> 55:23.940] You could ask the building, the director of facilities to give you all the key fob dates [55:23.940 --> 55:24.940] and times. [55:24.940 --> 55:27.940] You want to see when people were coming and going, all the employees and everybody on [55:27.940 --> 55:28.940] the payroll. [55:28.940 --> 55:30.940] You want to see when they came and went. [55:30.940 --> 55:33.940] It's unreasonable to hide the court calendar. [55:33.940 --> 55:39.940] They certainly don't hide it from lawyers because lawyers need to set hearings and they [55:39.940 --> 55:45.940] need to know when the judge is going to be sitting for certain kinds of things. [55:45.940 --> 55:49.940] This calendar has to be open. [55:49.940 --> 55:54.940] You don't have star chamber courts in the United States. [55:54.940 --> 55:57.940] These have to be public. [55:57.940 --> 56:01.940] There's a lot of problems in my court and government building. [56:01.940 --> 56:07.940] Just so you know, I have a public records case I appealed to the Supreme Court because [56:07.940 --> 56:13.940] the administration board won't release the meeting minutes in the format I requested, [56:13.940 --> 56:19.940] let alone they still haven't released all of them to me, which they had previously in [56:19.940 --> 56:21.940] a PDF format. [56:21.940 --> 56:27.940] I asked for the original electronic file in which it was created. [56:27.940 --> 56:30.940] That's a whole other case. [56:30.940 --> 56:35.940] Every single avenue, every time we try to get anything out of the courts or government [56:35.940 --> 56:38.940] building, it's a huge battle. [56:38.940 --> 56:44.940] You need to look at official misconduct or official oppression. [56:44.940 --> 56:45.940] Yes, definitely. [56:45.940 --> 56:46.940] That's harming you. [56:46.940 --> 56:49.940] That's something you can sue them for. [56:49.940 --> 56:50.940] Yes. [56:50.940 --> 56:51.940] You won't have to do that a lot. [56:51.940 --> 56:55.940] You just do it a little bit and they'll change their tune. [56:55.940 --> 56:56.940] Yes. [56:56.940 --> 57:03.940] Well, it's definitely gotten to that level and now with the judge not issuing an order. [57:03.940 --> 57:05.940] I think he could also be waiting. [57:05.940 --> 57:10.940] There is another case that I have that's still in front of the Commonwealth Court against [57:10.940 --> 57:18.940] the same township, same solicitor, an appeal from the same judge where I argued the crime [57:18.940 --> 57:23.940] fraud provision under Pennsylvania law. [57:23.940 --> 57:30.940] Again, tampering with records, falsifying things, it's just horrible. [57:30.940 --> 57:34.940] The Commonwealth Court actually asked for all the in-camera records this time, so I [57:34.940 --> 57:37.940] think this case might get somewhere. [57:37.940 --> 57:38.940] We'll see. [57:38.940 --> 57:43.940] I sort of think the local judge is waiting for that decision to come down and that's [57:43.940 --> 57:46.940] why there's delay, but I don't care. [57:46.940 --> 57:48.940] This is ridiculous. [57:48.940 --> 57:53.940] I should not have to be fighting so hard just to get public records. [57:53.940 --> 57:54.940] Yes. [57:54.940 --> 57:57.940] I'm going to file a mandate against them. [57:57.940 --> 58:01.940] Good, and look into filing criminally against them. [58:01.940 --> 58:02.940] Okay. [58:02.940 --> 58:04.940] That really gets their attention. [58:04.940 --> 58:06.940] In Pennsylvania, you file criminally against them. [58:06.940 --> 58:08.940] The prosecutor has first blush. [58:08.940 --> 58:13.940] He can determine whether or not he believes there's sufficient evidence and he's going [58:13.940 --> 58:15.940] to say no. [58:15.940 --> 58:20.940] Then you can appeal his decision to the Court of Common Pleas and then all the way up to [58:20.940 --> 58:22.940] the Supreme. [58:22.940 --> 58:28.940] You can file against the prosecutor with the Pennsylvania State Attorney General and really [58:28.940 --> 58:30.940] create some politics. [58:30.940 --> 58:31.940] Okay. [58:31.940 --> 58:35.940] When you say criminal, are you talking about for the judge or the solicitor? [58:35.940 --> 58:37.940] Both of them, official misconduct. [58:37.940 --> 58:38.940] Both of them. [58:38.940 --> 58:39.940] Okay. [58:39.940 --> 58:40.940] Hang on. [58:40.940 --> 58:45.940] Go into our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Rhett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [58:45.940 --> 58:49.940] We'll be right back. [58:49.940 --> 58:55.940] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.940 --> 58:57.940] because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.940 --> 59:03.940] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.940 --> 59:06.940] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:06.940 --> 59:08.940] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.940 --> 59:14.940] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.940 --> 59:17.940] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.940 --> 59:22.940] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:22.940 --> 59:27.940] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.940 --> 59:32.940] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.940 --> 59:42.940] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:42.940 --> 59:47.940] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.940 --> 59:52.940] That's freestudybible.com. [59:52.940 --> 01:00:01.940] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:01.940 --> 01:00:05.940] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.940 --> 01:00:08.940] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:08.940 --> 01:00:10.940] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.940 --> 01:00:14.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:00:14.940 --> 01:00:16.940] one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.940 --> 01:00:18.940] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.940 --> 01:00:22.940] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.940 --> 01:00:26.940] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:26.940 --> 01:00:28.940] So protect your rights. [01:00:28.940 --> 01:00:32.940] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.940 --> 01:00:34.940] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:34.940 --> 01:00:38.940] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:00:38.940 --> 01:00:42.940] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.940 --> 01:00:45.940] Start over with startpage. [01:00:45.940 --> 01:00:48.940] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.940 --> 01:00:51.940] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.940 --> 01:00:54.940] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.940 --> 01:00:58.940] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the [01:00:58.940 --> 01:01:00.940] Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.940 --> 01:01:03.940] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.940 --> 01:01:06.940] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.940 --> 01:01:08.940] Third party, Third Amendment? [01:01:08.940 --> 01:01:09.940] Get it? [01:01:09.940 --> 01:01:12.940] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.940 --> 01:01:16.940] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:16.940 --> 01:01:18.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:01:18.940 --> 01:01:31.940] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.940 --> 01:01:35.940] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.940 --> 01:01:38.940] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.940 --> 01:01:40.940] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.940 --> 01:01:43.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.940 --> 01:01:46.940] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.940 --> 01:01:48.940] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.940 --> 01:01:52.940] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.940 --> 01:01:56.940] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.940 --> 01:01:58.940] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.940 --> 01:02:02.940] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.940 --> 01:02:04.940] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.940 --> 01:02:08.940] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.940 --> 01:02:12.940] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.940 --> 01:02:15.940] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.940 --> 01:02:19.940] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:19.940 --> 01:02:21.940] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.940 --> 01:02:25.940] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.940 --> 01:02:27.940] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.940 --> 01:02:30.940] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? [01:02:30.940 --> 01:02:34.940] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.940 --> 01:02:39.940] Keys in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.940 --> 01:02:43.940] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.940 --> 01:02:46.940] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.940 --> 01:02:49.940] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.940 --> 01:02:53.940] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.940 --> 01:03:00.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Ulbricht. More news and information at CatherineUlbricht.com. [01:03:24.940 --> 01:03:26.940] Thank you. [01:03:26.940 --> 01:03:54.940] Thank you. [01:03:56.940 --> 01:03:58.940] Thank you. [01:04:26.940 --> 01:04:31.940] Okay. [01:04:31.940 --> 01:04:38.940] Brett accuses me of being old, but he just told me it was November the 5th. [01:04:38.940 --> 01:04:39.940] Did you buy it? [01:04:39.940 --> 01:04:40.940] No, I didn't buy it. [01:04:40.940 --> 01:04:51.940] Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, rule of our radio on this, the 27th day of October, 2022. [01:04:51.940 --> 01:04:54.940] I know that because I pulled up the calendar. [01:04:54.940 --> 01:04:57.940] And we need to finish up with Kerry. [01:04:57.940 --> 01:05:00.940] Guys, we've got full board of callers. [01:05:00.940 --> 01:05:03.940] And I know you guys have been waiting since just about the beginning of the show. [01:05:03.940 --> 01:05:12.940] But when we get a really good caller, I use a good caller, especially with Kerry, [01:05:12.940 --> 01:05:14.940] to demonstrate how things should be done. [01:05:14.940 --> 01:05:19.940] And I really appreciate it when I get somebody that actually knows what they're doing [01:05:19.940 --> 01:05:23.940] and we can have a nice complex conversation. [01:05:23.940 --> 01:05:24.940] Okay. [01:05:24.940 --> 01:05:26.940] Go ahead, Kerry. [01:05:26.940 --> 01:05:27.940] Well, I appreciate that. [01:05:27.940 --> 01:05:29.940] Thank you so much. [01:05:29.940 --> 01:05:34.940] You guys have really motivated me to take another step. [01:05:34.940 --> 01:05:40.940] So I've kind of been leaving breadcrumbs for these guys, you know, [01:05:40.940 --> 01:05:43.940] giving them more rope to hang themselves. [01:05:43.940 --> 01:05:48.940] So this has been going on for a long time. [01:05:48.940 --> 01:05:52.940] Well, in that regard, you know, we do pick on these guys a lot. [01:05:52.940 --> 01:05:58.940] But you do have to admit, when it comes to getting them to do stupid stuff, [01:05:58.940 --> 01:06:00.940] they are very accommodating. [01:06:00.940 --> 01:06:01.940] Yes, they are. [01:06:01.940 --> 01:06:03.940] They really are. [01:06:03.940 --> 01:06:05.940] You just need to give them a little rope, and they do. [01:06:05.940 --> 01:06:07.940] And, you know, I've tried to be polite. [01:06:07.940 --> 01:06:11.940] I've tried to, you know, follow all their rules. [01:06:11.940 --> 01:06:14.940] They just don't, they don't follow them themselves. [01:06:14.940 --> 01:06:19.940] So, you know, now I'm getting really fierce about this and fighting back. [01:06:19.940 --> 01:06:24.940] So I know you need to go. [01:06:24.940 --> 01:06:29.940] And again, I appreciate all your time because there's a lot of people who want to talk to you also. [01:06:29.940 --> 01:06:35.940] But the criminal complaint, this is, so I would be filing a private criminal complaint? [01:06:35.940 --> 01:06:39.940] No, there is no such thing as a private criminal complaint. [01:06:39.940 --> 01:06:43.940] There was before 1863. [01:06:43.940 --> 01:06:50.940] Before 1863, if you had a criminal claim against someone, you needed to hire an attorney, [01:06:50.940 --> 01:06:54.940] and you would take him on in court just like you would for a civil case. [01:06:54.940 --> 01:07:00.940] But in 1863, they created public prosecutors. [01:07:00.940 --> 01:07:06.940] Terry, Terry wasn't around for all that. [01:07:06.940 --> 01:07:12.940] So will this be filing this in the Pennsylvania courts, or is this the federal? [01:07:12.940 --> 01:07:21.940] No, no, you're, when you file a criminal complaint, you are giving notice to the court of crime. [01:07:21.940 --> 01:07:27.940] And when you give notice to the court of crime, you are a citizen in a republic. [01:07:27.940 --> 01:07:32.940] You have the same standing a policeman does to give notice of crime. [01:07:32.940 --> 01:07:41.940] And when you give notice of crime, public officials have specific statutory duties when given notice of crime. [01:07:41.940 --> 01:07:48.940] If they don't perform those duties, then they have denied you an equal protection of the laws, [01:07:48.940 --> 01:07:51.940] and you have a claim to go back after them for it. [01:07:51.940 --> 01:07:56.940] But as to the crime itself, you don't have anything to do with the punishment. [01:07:56.940 --> 01:07:59.940] You can only give notice. [01:07:59.940 --> 01:08:05.940] And then when the public officials, like the prosecutor, decides not to prosecute, then you go after him, [01:08:05.940 --> 01:08:11.940] interrogate him, accuse him of shielding from prosecution, appeal to the court of common pleas. [01:08:11.940 --> 01:08:17.940] You accuse him of the crimes with the state attorney general. [01:08:17.940 --> 01:08:24.940] At the end of the day, it's not about law, it's about politics. [01:08:24.940 --> 01:08:32.940] When you start asking the state attorney general to prosecute a local prosecutor, he is not going to be at the camper. [01:08:32.940 --> 01:08:38.940] Those people that got this brought to him, they're going to have a problem with him. [01:08:38.940 --> 01:08:41.940] It's all politics. [01:08:41.940 --> 01:08:42.940] Yes. [01:08:42.940 --> 01:08:43.940] Okay. [01:08:43.940 --> 01:08:44.940] Well, thank you again. [01:08:44.940 --> 01:08:47.940] It's been incredibly enlightening for me. [01:08:47.940 --> 01:08:49.940] So I really appreciate your help. [01:08:49.940 --> 01:08:53.940] And I continue to listen because I learned so much through all your conversations. [01:08:53.940 --> 01:08:55.940] So thank you. [01:08:55.940 --> 01:08:56.940] Well, thank you. [01:08:56.940 --> 01:08:58.940] And don't be a stranger. [01:08:58.940 --> 01:09:00.940] I'd love to take care of you. [01:09:00.940 --> 01:09:01.940] Keep us up to date. [01:09:01.940 --> 01:09:02.940] Okay. [01:09:02.940 --> 01:09:05.940] Now we're going to go to Jason in California. [01:09:05.940 --> 01:09:06.940] Hello, Jason. [01:09:06.940 --> 01:09:10.940] What do you have for us today? [01:09:10.940 --> 01:09:11.940] Hello, Randy. [01:09:11.940 --> 01:09:14.940] I'm Brett. [01:09:14.940 --> 01:09:15.940] Can you hear me? [01:09:15.940 --> 01:09:16.940] We can hear you. [01:09:16.940 --> 01:09:17.940] Yeah. [01:09:17.940 --> 01:09:18.940] Good evening. [01:09:18.940 --> 01:09:19.940] Okay, great. [01:09:19.940 --> 01:09:21.940] Like I didn't hear a response. [01:09:21.940 --> 01:09:23.940] Well, okay. [01:09:23.940 --> 01:09:30.940] I am the guy who's dealing with Trader Joe's. [01:09:30.940 --> 01:09:34.940] Oh, how is that going? [01:09:34.940 --> 01:09:37.940] It's okay to say this. [01:09:37.940 --> 01:09:41.940] It's been a shit show. [01:09:41.940 --> 01:09:44.940] No, no, you can't say shit show on my show. [01:09:44.940 --> 01:09:47.940] You can say fecal show. [01:09:47.940 --> 01:09:50.940] It's been a duty circus. [01:09:50.940 --> 01:09:52.940] Okay. [01:09:52.940 --> 01:10:01.940] I have my fourth hearing set for November 1st. [01:10:01.940 --> 01:10:06.940] Now this is regarding a fraudulent restraining order, [01:10:06.940 --> 01:10:14.940] workplace violence restraining order that they are trying to get against me. [01:10:14.940 --> 01:10:23.940] So I have some, again, like just basic questions of not, [01:10:23.940 --> 01:10:27.940] just not knowing the process of certain things. [01:10:27.940 --> 01:10:31.940] The main, like here's a simple question. [01:10:31.940 --> 01:10:39.940] I filed, like for example, I filed two motions, a motion to dismiss [01:10:39.940 --> 01:10:45.940] and there's actually an opposition to remote appearances. [01:10:45.940 --> 01:10:55.940] Now the liars filed opposition and then I filed a reply. [01:10:55.940 --> 01:11:03.940] So what I don't comprehend is what exactly happens at the hearing? [01:11:03.940 --> 01:11:11.940] Like what happens with my reply? [01:11:11.940 --> 01:11:14.940] Does the judge have any duty to look at these papers? [01:11:14.940 --> 01:11:21.940] Like am I going to orally just restate within my reply and my motion? [01:11:21.940 --> 01:11:29.940] Like how does that, how does it work? [01:11:29.940 --> 01:11:32.940] I'm not really sure what you're asking. [01:11:32.940 --> 01:11:38.940] You're complaining about the Zoom hearings. [01:11:38.940 --> 01:11:42.940] When you asked that... [01:11:42.940 --> 01:11:43.940] Go ahead. [01:11:43.940 --> 01:11:44.940] I'm sorry. [01:11:44.940 --> 01:11:49.940] I'm asking about the motion process. [01:11:49.940 --> 01:11:55.940] I make a motion, they make an opposition and then I reply to their opposition. [01:11:55.940 --> 01:12:01.940] What's the next, what happens at the hearing when there's an opposition and a reply? [01:12:01.940 --> 01:12:09.940] Well, at the hearing the court may or may not ask you to orally present your motion [01:12:09.940 --> 01:12:13.940] and I always say absolutely not. [01:12:13.940 --> 01:12:17.940] Move the court to rule on the pleadings. [01:12:17.940 --> 01:12:19.940] Rule on the pleadings. [01:12:19.940 --> 01:12:24.940] You have the law and the facts before you, rule on what you have before you. [01:12:24.940 --> 01:12:27.940] I'm not here to add anything else at this late date [01:12:27.940 --> 01:12:33.940] and I object to the other side adding anything at this late date. [01:12:33.940 --> 01:12:35.940] Okay. [01:12:35.940 --> 01:12:45.940] Now, they want to give that lawyer opportunity to use his expertise and skill to roll over you. [01:12:45.940 --> 01:12:56.940] You get this objection in front of them and that kind of queers the deal for them. [01:12:56.940 --> 01:13:04.940] Your pro se, it's patently unfair to pit a pro se lawyer, I'm sorry, [01:13:04.940 --> 01:13:10.940] a pro se litigant against a professional lawyer in open court. [01:13:10.940 --> 01:13:17.940] It gives the lawyer unfair advantage so move the court to rule on the pleadings. [01:13:17.940 --> 01:13:20.940] And that's an appealable issue. [01:13:20.940 --> 01:13:30.940] If the court denies it and then if the lawyer tries to speak you object to everything. [01:13:30.940 --> 01:13:41.940] Let me answer you this because two months ago I did a motion to dismiss and it got denied. [01:13:41.940 --> 01:13:43.940] I objected. [01:13:43.940 --> 01:13:44.940] Hold on, hold on. [01:13:44.940 --> 01:13:48.940] Did you file an interlocutory appeal? [01:13:48.940 --> 01:13:50.940] No. [01:13:50.940 --> 01:13:53.940] That's a dispositive motion. [01:13:53.940 --> 01:13:58.940] Dismiss would dispose of the case. [01:13:58.940 --> 01:14:05.940] Give a notice of interlocutory appeal and file an appeal with the court of appeals. [01:14:05.940 --> 01:14:12.940] These trial courts, they get to screw you around all they want to, especially if you're a pro se. [01:14:12.940 --> 01:14:18.940] And they really don't like it when you jerk it out of their court and take it up to the court of appeals. [01:14:18.940 --> 01:14:24.940] Court of appeals, when they render a ruling, it becomes law. [01:14:24.940 --> 01:14:33.940] If they try to screw you, then they risk damaging the corpus juris, the body of law. [01:14:33.940 --> 01:14:41.940] And the trial court does not like you waving their bad behavior in front of the appellate court judges. [01:14:41.940 --> 01:14:50.940] So look for every opportunity you can find to jerk it out of their court and take it to the appellate court. [01:14:50.940 --> 01:14:53.940] What they're likely to have is a lawyer who doesn't do appeals. [01:14:53.940 --> 01:15:01.940] So they have to fire another lawyer to address the appellate, the interlocutory appeal. [01:15:01.940 --> 01:15:03.940] Crank the cost up. [01:15:03.940 --> 01:15:10.940] Is there like a time frame, time limit to doing that? [01:15:10.940 --> 01:15:13.940] Generally, yes. [01:15:13.940 --> 01:15:19.940] You'd have to check California law, but generally you've got like 15 to 30 days. [01:15:19.940 --> 01:15:20.940] But it doesn't matter. [01:15:20.940 --> 01:15:24.940] Time limits are not bars. [01:15:24.940 --> 01:15:29.940] Time limits are affirmative defenses. [01:15:29.940 --> 01:15:31.940] That's like statute of limitations. [01:15:31.940 --> 01:15:36.940] Oh, you sued me and you're supposed to sue me in two years and you sued me in four years. [01:15:36.940 --> 01:15:39.940] Well, I can sue you in four years. [01:15:39.940 --> 01:15:47.940] If you don't like it, then you have to oppose it as an affirmative defense. [01:15:47.940 --> 01:15:53.940] If you don't raise that affirmative defense, then you waive it. [01:15:53.940 --> 01:15:57.940] So don't worry about the limitation. [01:15:57.940 --> 01:16:00.940] The other side has to oppose it. [01:16:00.940 --> 01:16:04.940] File it anyway. [01:16:04.940 --> 01:16:07.940] It'd be great practice. [01:16:07.940 --> 01:16:09.940] Sure. [01:16:09.940 --> 01:16:11.940] I mean, I'm learning all sorts of stuff doing what I'm doing. [01:16:11.940 --> 01:16:20.940] Well, can we speak more to different options of objecting? [01:16:20.940 --> 01:16:28.940] I made a list here and my understanding is in court orally we object. [01:16:28.940 --> 01:16:35.940] And then it can also be recommended to do a written objection, right? [01:16:35.940 --> 01:16:37.940] You have to ask for it. [01:16:37.940 --> 01:16:38.940] Hang on. [01:16:38.940 --> 01:16:40.940] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:16:40.940 --> 01:16:42.940] Okay, I've got 20 seconds. [01:16:42.940 --> 01:16:47.940] In open court, the only way to object is orally. [01:16:47.940 --> 01:16:51.940] If the court wants it in writing, you tell them, well, I'll get you one in writing, [01:16:51.940 --> 01:16:55.940] but right now I want it on the record that I object. [01:16:55.940 --> 01:16:56.940] Hang on. [01:16:56.940 --> 01:17:00.940] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.940 --> 01:17:05.940] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:05.940 --> 01:17:10.940] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central time [01:17:10.940 --> 01:17:14.940] for scripture talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [01:17:14.940 --> 01:17:17.940] in accord with 2nd Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.940 --> 01:17:21.940] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [01:17:21.940 --> 01:17:24.940] rightly dividing the word of truth. [01:17:24.940 --> 01:17:27.940] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark [01:17:27.940 --> 01:17:31.940] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:31.940 --> 01:17:34.940] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week [01:17:34.940 --> 01:17:38.940] with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [01:17:38.940 --> 01:17:43.940] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.940 --> 01:17:46.940] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [01:17:46.940 --> 01:17:49.940] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:49.940 --> 01:17:53.940] So tune in to scripture talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:17:53.940 --> 01:18:00.940] on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [01:18:00.940 --> 01:18:05.940] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.940 --> 01:18:09.940] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:18:09.940 --> 01:18:14.940] Michael Mears has won 6 cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win 2. [01:18:14.940 --> 01:18:18.940] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court [01:18:18.940 --> 01:18:20.940] using federal civil rights statutes. [01:18:20.940 --> 01:18:24.940] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:18:24.940 --> 01:18:26.940] How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:18:26.940 --> 01:18:28.940] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:18:28.940 --> 01:18:33.940] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:33.940 --> 01:18:38.940] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.940 --> 01:18:40.940] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.940 --> 01:18:44.940] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:18:44.940 --> 01:18:49.940] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.940 --> 01:18:57.940] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com [01:18:57.940 --> 01:19:00.940] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:00.940 --> 01:19:10.940] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:10.940 --> 01:19:35.940] Okay, we are back. [01:19:35.940 --> 01:19:41.940] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we are talking to Jason in California. [01:19:41.940 --> 01:19:47.940] And we were talking about how to annoy lawyers. [01:19:47.940 --> 01:19:53.940] You really need to go on the Internet and pull something down on objections. [01:19:53.940 --> 01:19:59.940] Lawyers cannot offer any facts to the court that are not already before the court. [01:19:59.940 --> 01:20:02.940] But they sure try it all the time. They will. [01:20:02.940 --> 01:20:06.940] And they are very surprised if you catch them. [01:20:06.940 --> 01:20:11.940] You ask the judge, if the lawyer wants to testify, [01:20:11.940 --> 01:20:20.940] I would like you to put him on the stand and swear him in. [01:20:20.940 --> 01:20:28.940] You go online, and there's a bunch of stuff out there on how to handle objections. [01:20:28.940 --> 01:20:33.940] You need to really be helpful. And you have a lot of fun with them. Just jerk them around. [01:20:33.940 --> 01:20:37.940] Yeah, and it's tied closely to your local rules of evidence. [01:20:37.940 --> 01:20:42.940] So if you're, was it California, you said? [01:20:42.940 --> 01:20:44.940] Yeah, yeah. [01:20:44.940 --> 01:20:51.940] So get familiar with the California rules of evidence, and you'll be able to object. [01:20:51.940 --> 01:20:59.940] And the way you read the rules of evidence, you read it for, how can I stick it to the lawyer? [01:20:59.940 --> 01:21:02.940] How can I sting him and him not see it coming? [01:21:02.940 --> 01:21:09.940] Because lawyers, for the most part, they're pretty lenient with other lawyers. [01:21:09.940 --> 01:21:14.940] They're not picky-picky. So they let lawyers get away with stuff. [01:21:14.940 --> 01:21:18.940] So you don't care if the lawyer likes you or not. [01:21:18.940 --> 01:21:22.940] And you're not worried about him doing it to you in another case. [01:21:22.940 --> 01:21:34.940] So you get to use how to handle objections as a way to really drive him crazy and keep him off his game. [01:21:34.940 --> 01:21:41.940] They do that to you. They object to nonsense stuff. [01:21:41.940 --> 01:21:47.940] That's just to keep you from being able to present something coherent. [01:21:47.940 --> 01:21:52.940] And if they do that, then you stop and start back at the beginning. [01:21:52.940 --> 01:21:55.940] And if the judge objects, you say, I know, Your Honor, [01:21:55.940 --> 01:22:01.940] but this lawyer keeps bringing up these frivolous objections just to break my continuity. [01:22:01.940 --> 01:22:04.940] So I needed to go back over this so it all makes sense. [01:22:04.940 --> 01:22:08.940] And he'll finally get annoyed at the other lawyer. [01:22:08.940 --> 01:22:12.940] But they've got a bunch of good treatments on how to handle objections. [01:22:12.940 --> 01:22:17.940] Just read one or two of them, and you shouldn't have any problem. [01:22:17.940 --> 01:22:26.940] So there's another in my list that I wrote of basically dealing with a motion that gets denied. [01:22:26.940 --> 01:22:35.940] Because I've heard, Brett, you've done a process of raising an exception to judicial error. [01:22:35.940 --> 01:22:42.940] And you've done it orally, and then you've also sent written version. [01:22:42.940 --> 01:22:51.940] Can you just explain what exactly is that and when is it good to use that? [01:22:51.940 --> 01:22:57.940] Well, an exception is similar to an objection. [01:22:57.940 --> 01:23:05.940] An objection is you're asking the judge to rule on something that's inappropriate that the opposite, [01:23:05.940 --> 01:23:08.940] the adverse party did something, and they're not supposed to. [01:23:08.940 --> 01:23:10.940] And you want the judge to fix it right now. [01:23:10.940 --> 01:23:14.940] You want it to be addressed. [01:23:14.940 --> 01:23:21.940] But then there's other things that the judge may do, like, well, I'm pretty sure I have jurisdiction. [01:23:21.940 --> 01:23:24.940] We're just going to go ahead and pretend like I do. [01:23:24.940 --> 01:23:32.940] Well, you can't really ask the judge to rule on whether or not that was appropriate because the judge did it. [01:23:32.940 --> 01:23:42.940] So you need the appeals court to look at that, not the judge himself. [01:23:42.940 --> 01:23:49.940] So when you raise an exception, you're kind of like throwing a flag on the field for somebody to review it. [01:23:49.940 --> 01:23:51.940] Okay. [01:23:51.940 --> 01:23:55.940] You have to let the judge, you have to put on the record. [01:23:55.940 --> 01:24:03.940] If the judge does something and you don't raise an exception, then the court presumes that you agree with it. [01:24:03.940 --> 01:24:10.940] Anything the judge does you don't agree with, just notify the courts you take exception to the ruling, [01:24:10.940 --> 01:24:14.940] and that preserves your objection for appeal. [01:24:14.940 --> 01:24:24.940] And then submitting a written version of an exception, that just makes it easy to locate in the record. [01:24:24.940 --> 01:24:28.940] There's no benefit to doing a written one. [01:24:28.940 --> 01:24:29.940] No. [01:24:29.940 --> 01:24:34.940] If you've done it, if you verbally said it, that's fine. [01:24:34.940 --> 01:24:40.940] The written one is useful if something happens that wasn't in open court. [01:24:40.940 --> 01:24:50.940] You figured out on the way home from court, oh my goodness, the judge is operating without authority. [01:24:50.940 --> 01:24:55.940] Well, I need to raise exceptions, so you file it in written form. [01:24:55.940 --> 01:25:03.940] Yeah, and sometimes the judge will get PO'd at you if he's in the middle of saying something and you raise an objection. [01:25:03.940 --> 01:25:08.940] Now lawyers do that to you all the time, but judges don't like it when you do it to them. [01:25:08.940 --> 01:25:14.940] So you can wait till the end, and a lot of times when they say a lot of stuff, things get lost. [01:25:14.940 --> 01:25:17.940] Keep notes. [01:25:17.940 --> 01:25:20.940] Always have a pen in your hand. [01:25:20.940 --> 01:25:22.940] Well, so far... [01:25:22.940 --> 01:25:29.940] Because you're a pro se, so this is like the first time you've ever ridden a bicycle. [01:25:29.940 --> 01:25:35.940] You can't keep track of all of it, so you can ask the judge to hold on for a minute. [01:25:35.940 --> 01:25:38.940] I'm taking notes and I can't keep up. [01:25:38.940 --> 01:25:42.940] Can you hang on just a second? Let me take some notes here. [01:25:42.940 --> 01:25:47.940] You can do these kinds of things. This is kind of like a business meeting. [01:25:47.940 --> 01:25:52.940] People go into court and they think there's this hard and fast script. [01:25:52.940 --> 01:25:55.940] No, there's not. [01:25:55.940 --> 01:26:01.940] These are two sides trying to find a solution. [01:26:01.940 --> 01:26:06.940] And if things are going too quickly, you can ask them to slow down. [01:26:06.940 --> 01:26:11.940] If you're trying to take notes, you say, Your Honor, I need to take a note here. [01:26:11.940 --> 01:26:16.940] Give me just a second so that I don't lose track of what you're saying. [01:26:16.940 --> 01:26:23.940] It doesn't matter what they say. If they say no and they keep going, then you put down an objection. [01:26:23.940 --> 01:26:29.940] You're telling the judge that everything you're doing, I'm going to bring to the Court of Appeals. [01:26:29.940 --> 01:26:35.940] Hire a court that can tell you what to do, and they hate that. [01:26:35.940 --> 01:26:39.940] They hate somebody else messing in their business. [01:26:39.940 --> 01:26:44.940] It's just like if you're in a business meeting and you have a question, [01:26:44.940 --> 01:26:51.940] but you don't want to interrupt the whole thing, so you ask them to give you a second and then keep going. [01:26:51.940 --> 01:26:56.940] As long as what you're doing sounds reasonable. [01:26:56.940 --> 01:27:12.940] So just to update on where the case is at, I sent discovery requests in like mid-August, [01:27:12.940 --> 01:27:20.940] interrogatory and request for production. [01:27:20.940 --> 01:27:29.940] And at the hearing in September, I informed the commissioner, the temporary judge, [01:27:29.940 --> 01:27:36.940] and the liar on the other side, she said that she received them, [01:27:36.940 --> 01:27:43.940] and the commissioner asked what's the status, and they said they're drafting responses, [01:27:43.940 --> 01:27:50.940] and they're going to get back at the statutory timeframe. [01:27:50.940 --> 01:28:01.940] So a month later, what happened, on the very last day, they mail a letter to me [01:28:01.940 --> 01:28:05.940] that basically says they don't have to respond. [01:28:05.940 --> 01:28:08.940] Ask for sanctions. [01:28:08.940 --> 01:28:13.940] Well, I'll tell you what I did. [01:28:13.940 --> 01:28:22.940] So, and seeing what the options were, I went with a show cause [01:28:22.940 --> 01:28:26.940] why they shouldn't be held in contempt. [01:28:26.940 --> 01:28:28.940] That's what I was going to ask you about. [01:28:28.940 --> 01:28:34.940] So I'm not totally familiar with it, and I don't know what to... [01:28:34.940 --> 01:28:44.940] The first issue is that show cause got, the hearing got scheduled for the 17th of November. [01:28:44.940 --> 01:28:50.940] So the hearing on everything is November 1st. [01:28:50.940 --> 01:28:53.940] I don't see how we can even have a hearing, [01:28:53.940 --> 01:28:57.940] like we can't proceed without addressing this show cause [01:28:57.940 --> 01:29:03.940] and the failure to provide discovery, right? [01:29:03.940 --> 01:29:07.940] I certainly object to the hearing for that reason. [01:29:07.940 --> 01:29:11.940] Is there a way to bring the show cause into the hearing, [01:29:11.940 --> 01:29:17.940] even though it's scheduled for three weeks out? [01:29:17.940 --> 01:29:18.940] Wait a minute. [01:29:18.940 --> 01:29:20.940] Brett, did you get that? [01:29:20.940 --> 01:29:22.940] Does that make sense? [01:29:22.940 --> 01:29:24.940] Scheduled three weeks out. [01:29:24.940 --> 01:29:26.940] What's three weeks out? [01:29:26.940 --> 01:29:30.940] The show cause hearing. [01:29:30.940 --> 01:29:34.940] And do they have some kind of hearing before that? [01:29:34.940 --> 01:29:43.940] Yeah, the hearing on the restraint order and the other motions that I did. [01:29:43.940 --> 01:29:48.940] Okay, this is getting too confusing and we're about to go to our sponsors. [01:29:48.940 --> 01:29:50.940] We've got a whole board of callers. [01:29:50.940 --> 01:29:54.940] Can you call in tomorrow night and we can spend more time with this? [01:29:54.940 --> 01:29:55.940] Yeah. [01:29:55.940 --> 01:30:02.940] If we could do that, then we can handle our other callers tonight. [01:30:02.940 --> 01:30:06.940] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, [01:30:06.940 --> 01:30:09.940] the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.940 --> 01:30:12.940] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.940 --> 01:30:16.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.940 --> 01:30:18.940] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.940 --> 01:30:21.940] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.940 --> 01:30:26.940] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.940 --> 01:30:28.940] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.940 --> 01:30:32.940] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.940 --> 01:30:34.940] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.940 --> 01:30:37.940] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.940 --> 01:30:41.940] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.940 --> 01:30:45.940] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.940 --> 01:30:48.940] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.940 --> 01:30:52.940] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.940 --> 01:30:56.940] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.940 --> 01:31:00.940] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.940 --> 01:31:04.940] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.940 --> 01:31:07.940] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people [01:31:07.940 --> 01:31:10.940] have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.940 --> 01:31:13.940] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas [01:31:13.940 --> 01:31:15.940] and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.940 --> 01:31:17.940] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:17.940 --> 01:31:20.940] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:20.940 --> 01:31:23.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, [01:31:23.940 --> 01:31:30.940] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.940 --> 01:31:36.940] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.940 --> 01:31:38.940] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.940 --> 01:31:43.940] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.940 --> 01:31:48.940] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:48.940 --> 01:31:50.940] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.940 --> 01:31:51.940] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.940 --> 01:31:52.940] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.940 --> 01:31:53.940] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.940 --> 01:31:55.940] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.940 --> 01:31:57.940] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.940 --> 01:32:02.940] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.940 --> 01:32:05.940] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:32:05.940 --> 01:32:07.940] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:07.940 --> 01:32:09.940] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:09.940 --> 01:32:12.940] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:12.940 --> 01:32:15.940] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:15.940 --> 01:32:17.940] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:17.940 --> 01:32:19.940] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:19.940 --> 01:32:22.940] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:32:22.940 --> 01:32:25.940] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:25.940 --> 01:32:28.940] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:28.940 --> 01:32:31.940] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.940 --> 01:32:33.940] that will help you understand what due process is [01:32:33.940 --> 01:32:35.940] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.940 --> 01:32:37.940] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:37.940 --> 01:32:40.940] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.940 --> 01:32:42.940] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:42.940 --> 01:32:45.940] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.940 --> 01:32:47.940] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:47.940 --> 01:32:50.940] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.940 --> 01:32:54.940] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:54.940 --> 01:33:01.940] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.940 --> 01:33:11.940] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:31.940 --> 01:33:41.940] Thank you for listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:34:01.940 --> 01:34:11.940] Thank you for listening. [01:34:31.940 --> 01:34:42.940] Okay, we are back. [01:34:42.940 --> 01:34:45.940] We're in the Fountainbreath Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:34:45.940 --> 01:34:47.940] We're talking to Jason in California. [01:34:47.940 --> 01:34:52.940] Jason, can you call us back tomorrow night, and we can spend more time with you? [01:34:52.940 --> 01:34:54.940] Will do. Love it. Thank you. [01:34:54.940 --> 01:34:56.940] Thank you, Jason. [01:34:56.940 --> 01:34:59.940] Okay, now we're going to go to Scott in Georgia. [01:34:59.940 --> 01:35:03.940] Scott, where have you been? [01:35:03.940 --> 01:35:14.940] Oh, I've been caught up in a suit with a landlord. [01:35:14.940 --> 01:35:21.940] You know, with the American economy taking a crash, the landlord's getting greedy. [01:35:21.940 --> 01:35:27.940] Well, you can fight with the landlords, but you've got to consider their position. [01:35:27.940 --> 01:35:34.940] When I was looking at all this going on, they're preventing landlords from evicting people who can't pay the rent. [01:35:34.940 --> 01:35:42.940] But the landlord has a mortgage he has to pay, and nobody's cutting him any slack. [01:35:42.940 --> 01:35:46.940] Yeah, well, that wasn't really the problem. [01:35:46.940 --> 01:35:50.940] You know, we were paying the rent on time. [01:35:50.940 --> 01:35:53.940] Wait a minute, Scott. [01:35:53.940 --> 01:35:54.940] Yeah. [01:35:54.940 --> 01:36:03.940] I've been taking these stem cells, and they caused something to happen that used to happen to me when I was young. [01:36:03.940 --> 01:36:10.940] When I was younger, somebody's name that I hadn't talked to in a long time would come into my head. [01:36:10.940 --> 01:36:14.940] And then the next day or two, I would talk to them. [01:36:14.940 --> 01:36:19.940] Yesterday, I called Scott Richardson. [01:36:19.940 --> 01:36:25.940] And while I was calling him, I thought, Scott in Georgia, what the heck happened to him? [01:36:25.940 --> 01:36:29.940] I hadn't talked to him in forever. [01:36:29.940 --> 01:36:33.940] And here you are. [01:36:33.940 --> 01:36:34.940] Yeah. [01:36:34.940 --> 01:36:36.940] Do, do, do, do, do, do, do. [01:36:36.940 --> 01:36:39.940] This is not the Twilight Zone. [01:36:39.940 --> 01:36:40.940] Yeah. [01:36:40.940 --> 01:36:41.940] Well, I know. [01:36:41.940 --> 01:36:44.940] I've experienced that myself, what you're talking about. [01:36:44.940 --> 01:36:50.940] There is a beyond this realm connection that people have. [01:36:50.940 --> 01:36:52.940] Yes, sir. [01:36:52.940 --> 01:36:54.940] I wrote a book about that once. [01:36:54.940 --> 01:36:57.940] A two-story house and all that. [01:36:57.940 --> 01:36:58.940] Okay. [01:36:58.940 --> 01:36:59.940] I interrupted you. [01:36:59.940 --> 01:37:01.940] Go ahead. [01:37:01.940 --> 01:37:03.940] No, that's all right. [01:37:03.940 --> 01:37:13.940] But what I called in for was I'm in a very interesting position in this lawsuit. [01:37:13.940 --> 01:37:23.940] I'm a petitioner in it, but I'm also attorney in fact at that position. [01:37:23.940 --> 01:37:33.940] And Georgia has a statute, 9-11-17, that a writ, you can bring a suit, [01:37:33.940 --> 01:37:39.940] somebody can bring a suit, like a personal representative can bring a suit in somebody's, [01:37:39.940 --> 01:37:44.940] in the party, in the real name, the party's real name. [01:37:44.940 --> 01:37:50.940] So I'm in a very interesting position, but I'm not attorney at law with a license. [01:37:50.940 --> 01:37:51.940] So they've been... [01:37:51.940 --> 01:37:54.940] Well, you don't have to be in any state. [01:37:54.940 --> 01:37:59.940] You have a constitutional right to represent yourself. [01:37:59.940 --> 01:38:00.940] Well, yeah. [01:38:00.940 --> 01:38:08.940] Actually, what it says is, is you have a right to counsel of your choice. [01:38:08.940 --> 01:38:16.940] It really doesn't say you have a right to represent yourself, but that's not how rights work. [01:38:16.940 --> 01:38:17.940] Yes. [01:38:17.940 --> 01:38:29.940] Nowhere in law, anywhere, does it stipulate that you must have a certain type of legal counsel [01:38:29.940 --> 01:38:32.940] unless you are in a corporation. [01:38:32.940 --> 01:38:34.940] Exactly. [01:38:34.940 --> 01:38:40.940] Only a corporation has to have a lawyer represent them because they're a legal fiction. [01:38:40.940 --> 01:38:44.940] They're not a living, breathing human being. [01:38:44.940 --> 01:38:52.940] So as a living, breathing human being, you can do this because nothing prevents you from it. [01:38:52.940 --> 01:38:54.940] Yes. [01:38:54.940 --> 01:39:01.940] The catch is, is there's another individual, another petitioner. [01:39:01.940 --> 01:39:08.940] And they think, you know, this petitioner, the other individual is the tenant on the contract. [01:39:08.940 --> 01:39:12.940] I wasn't on the contract, the lease agreement. [01:39:12.940 --> 01:39:13.940] Okay. [01:39:13.940 --> 01:39:15.940] How do you have standing? [01:39:15.940 --> 01:39:22.940] I lived at the property several years, and the landlord never took interest to come by. [01:39:22.940 --> 01:39:27.940] And so he never learned about me. [01:39:27.940 --> 01:39:37.940] But living there, they put us in danger because a house pretty much can be blighted property, [01:39:37.940 --> 01:39:40.940] just considered blighted property. [01:39:40.940 --> 01:39:45.940] And that's what the individual on the contract is suing for. [01:39:45.940 --> 01:39:46.940] Okay. Hold on. [01:39:46.940 --> 01:39:51.940] In Georgia, is this property in Georgia? [01:39:51.940 --> 01:39:53.940] Yes, sir. [01:39:53.940 --> 01:39:59.940] What are the adverse possession laws in Georgia? [01:39:59.940 --> 01:40:07.940] Adverse possession would, there's a statute that speaks that the possessor of the house, [01:40:07.940 --> 01:40:20.940] I guess, you know, the contract holder, if the possessor is an adverse to the person that claims to be the landlord, [01:40:20.940 --> 01:40:27.940] you know, there's no, it talks about rent. [01:40:27.940 --> 01:40:31.940] The landlord has to prove itself, be the landlord. [01:40:31.940 --> 01:40:33.940] No, wait, wait. [01:40:33.940 --> 01:40:37.940] Every state has adverse possession laws. [01:40:37.940 --> 01:40:48.940] So you're in this house, but you don't have a contract with the owner of the house authorizing you to be in the house. [01:40:48.940 --> 01:40:50.940] Yes. [01:40:50.940 --> 01:40:51.940] That's adverse possession. [01:40:51.940 --> 01:40:53.940] No, I'm with Doug. [01:40:53.940 --> 01:40:58.940] And if you've been there several years, you gain certain rights. [01:40:58.940 --> 01:41:07.940] If the owner of the property did not want you in there, they had a duty to take action to remove you from the property. [01:41:07.940 --> 01:41:13.940] If they didn't, over time, you gain adverse possession rights. [01:41:13.940 --> 01:41:19.940] Yes. Okay. See, I haven't studied the adverse possession rights in depth. [01:41:19.940 --> 01:41:30.940] I just came across one talking about rent because part of the dispute, the last month's rent is in controversy. [01:41:30.940 --> 01:41:39.940] That's one of the controversies because we're bringing fraud upon contracts because he never took interest in the property. [01:41:39.940 --> 01:41:43.940] Are they trying to collect rent from you? [01:41:43.940 --> 01:41:50.940] Well, they moved for a dispositary proceeding. [01:41:50.940 --> 01:42:06.940] All that could have been avoided if their attorney would have just been, you know, would have done the job and contacted us and been friendly in litigation. [01:42:06.940 --> 01:42:10.940] But he was adverse to us. [01:42:10.940 --> 01:42:14.940] So did you bargrieve him into the Stone Age? [01:42:14.940 --> 01:42:25.940] No, I haven't bargrieved him, but the judge, the Superior Court judge, he's claiming that I have bombarded the court with useless paper. [01:42:25.940 --> 01:42:29.940] That's not the case. [01:42:29.940 --> 01:42:36.940] Okay, wait a minute. What does that mean, legally? [01:42:36.940 --> 01:42:40.940] They're trying to get me out of the way. [01:42:40.940 --> 01:42:45.940] What does useless paper mean? [01:42:45.940 --> 01:42:52.940] They think, now I guess they're trying to suggest that what I have filed is worthless. [01:42:52.940 --> 01:42:55.940] But it's not what you can say. [01:42:55.940 --> 01:43:00.940] Are they saying that your filings are frivolous? [01:43:00.940 --> 01:43:05.940] They didn't say frivolous. They just said I bombarded the court. [01:43:05.940 --> 01:43:11.940] And they're wanting me out of the way is what it is because I'm bringing the hammered out off. [01:43:11.940 --> 01:43:20.940] Okay, that's why I mentioned adverse possession because adverse possession can give you legal standing. [01:43:20.940 --> 01:43:27.940] And they can't brush you out of the way. So make sure you check adverse possession for Georgia. [01:43:27.940 --> 01:43:32.940] I've helped people use that in the past, and it can be very powerful. [01:43:32.940 --> 01:43:36.940] But we are about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fowler. [01:43:36.940 --> 01:43:40.940] I've got about 23 seconds. I have Scott from Georgia and Chris from Colorado. [01:43:40.940 --> 01:43:46.940] Chris, I don't think we're going to be able to get to you in time. [01:43:46.940 --> 01:43:54.940] No, we're on Scott. Maybe we can. I'll blow off Scott from Georgia pretty quick on the next segment. [01:43:54.940 --> 01:43:59.940] Hang on. Just kidding, Scott. We'll be right back. [01:43:59.940 --> 01:44:00.940] Dang, cookies. [01:44:00.940 --> 01:44:02.940] Cookies? Me love cookies. [01:44:02.940 --> 01:44:05.940] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:05.940 --> 01:44:08.940] Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:44:08.940 --> 01:44:11.940] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:44:11.940 --> 01:44:13.940] No, can't eat? [01:44:13.940 --> 01:44:16.940] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:16.940 --> 01:44:17.940] Me have apple. [01:44:17.940 --> 01:44:20.940] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.940 --> 01:44:22.940] Yummy apple. [01:44:22.940 --> 01:44:26.940] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.940 --> 01:44:32.940] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:32.940 --> 01:44:34.940] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.940 --> 01:44:40.940] Now I go to logosradio.network.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, [01:44:40.940 --> 01:44:46.940] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:46.940 --> 01:44:48.940] New cookies? For me? [01:44:48.940 --> 01:44:50.940] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:50.940 --> 01:44:56.940] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:44:56.940 --> 01:44:57.940] C is for cookie. [01:44:57.940 --> 01:45:00.940] C is for classified. [01:45:00.940 --> 01:45:03.940] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.940 --> 01:45:06.940] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:06.940 --> 01:45:14.940] the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.940 --> 01:45:18.940] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.940 --> 01:45:22.940] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.940 --> 01:45:27.940] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:27.940 --> 01:45:33.940] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.940 --> 01:45:38.940] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.940 --> 01:45:42.940] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.940 --> 01:45:48.940] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:48.940 --> 01:45:51.940] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.940 --> 01:46:04.940] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:04.940 --> 01:46:22.940] Hello. Oh, man. He in jail. He got busted. Oh, man, I'm broke, dude. [01:46:22.940 --> 01:46:26.940] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:46:26.940 --> 01:46:30.940] Some things I realize foolish. [01:46:30.940 --> 01:46:34.940] Somebody's gonna police that policeman. [01:46:34.940 --> 01:46:38.940] Somebody's gonna police the police. [01:46:38.940 --> 01:46:43.940] There's always a room at the top of the hill. [01:46:43.940 --> 01:46:48.940] I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely left, too. [01:46:48.940 --> 01:46:52.940] They're wishing it was more than opposition to bill. [01:46:52.940 --> 01:46:54.940] They know that if they don't do it... [01:46:54.940 --> 01:47:00.940] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:47:00.940 --> 01:47:05.940] I think we kind of blew off Jeff here. [01:47:05.940 --> 01:47:08.940] No, Scott. Scott, are you still there? [01:47:08.940 --> 01:47:11.940] Yeah, sir. I'm here. [01:47:11.940 --> 01:47:14.940] Okay, call us back tomorrow night. We'll have more time. [01:47:14.940 --> 01:47:16.940] Okay. [01:47:16.940 --> 01:47:22.940] And look up, in the meantime, look up adverse possession laws in Georgia [01:47:22.940 --> 01:47:25.940] and see what kind of standing you can get. [01:47:25.940 --> 01:47:29.940] You know, in Texas, if you see a house that looks like it's not lived in, [01:47:29.940 --> 01:47:31.940] you can just move into it. [01:47:31.940 --> 01:47:34.940] Mow the lawn, pay the taxes on it. [01:47:34.940 --> 01:47:39.940] If nobody orders you out of that house within seven years, it's yours. [01:47:39.940 --> 01:47:42.940] You can go down and claim it. [01:47:42.940 --> 01:47:46.940] Yeah, yeah. Yeah, we've moved out of the house and all. [01:47:46.940 --> 01:47:48.940] We're just on a contract with Broad [01:47:48.940 --> 01:47:53.940] because the individual on the contract has invested a lot of money into it. [01:47:53.940 --> 01:47:56.940] They never get the house in prepared. [01:47:56.940 --> 01:47:59.940] And it's had habitable issues and safety issues. [01:47:59.940 --> 01:48:04.940] Okay, have you read the property code for Georgia? [01:48:04.940 --> 01:48:07.940] Yeah, yeah. We're deep in it. [01:48:07.940 --> 01:48:10.940] But my main question was the attorney in fact. [01:48:10.940 --> 01:48:14.940] Do you all have something like that out there? [01:48:14.940 --> 01:48:22.940] Attorney in fact, as far as I know, is not really a legal term. [01:48:22.940 --> 01:48:26.940] It's more a descriptive term. [01:48:26.940 --> 01:48:29.940] You're calling yourself an attorney in fact. [01:48:29.940 --> 01:48:33.940] You're really just an interested party. [01:48:33.940 --> 01:48:41.940] Yeah, well, the Georgia Code states that if attorney in fact has a power of attorney, [01:48:41.940 --> 01:48:48.940] a principal's power of attorney, that they can bring claims and litigation into a court. [01:48:48.940 --> 01:48:51.940] Okay, well, anybody with power, that goes to power of attorney. [01:48:51.940 --> 01:48:59.940] Do you have power of attorney for the, no, no, you can't be the lawyer. [01:48:59.940 --> 01:49:06.940] You can bring an original issue in certain circumstances. [01:49:06.940 --> 01:49:08.940] Okay, so that's what I'm trying to figure out there. [01:49:08.940 --> 01:49:12.940] Okay, do you have someone who is disabling? [01:49:12.940 --> 01:49:13.940] Huh? [01:49:13.940 --> 01:49:17.940] Is the principal disabled? [01:49:17.940 --> 01:49:20.940] No, they're not disabled. [01:49:20.940 --> 01:49:25.940] Do you have durable power of attorney for the principal? [01:49:25.940 --> 01:49:27.940] Yeah, yeah. [01:49:27.940 --> 01:49:30.940] They're giving me authority to do it. [01:49:30.940 --> 01:49:38.940] The way the Georgia statute's language suggests is I can bring a claim and maintain a claim. [01:49:38.940 --> 01:49:40.940] Attorney in fact. [01:49:40.940 --> 01:49:45.940] Okay, if you have durable power of attorney, then depending on the laws in Georgia, [01:49:45.940 --> 01:49:49.940] good chance you can, you know, they can gripe all they want to. [01:49:49.940 --> 01:49:52.940] Have you been bargaining with them every time they open their mouth? [01:49:52.940 --> 01:49:54.940] Well, this is what's happened. [01:49:54.940 --> 01:49:57.940] They silenced me and threatened me for jail. [01:49:57.940 --> 01:50:01.940] So basically it matters science because I have the principal. [01:50:01.940 --> 01:50:03.940] Wait, they, they, they, who is they? [01:50:03.940 --> 01:50:09.940] The principal, or they is the government, like the chief judge that I'm dealing with. [01:50:09.940 --> 01:50:14.940] Have you filed against the judge? [01:50:14.940 --> 01:50:21.940] No, but I'm trying to set up the record in way to attack him with the public court. [01:50:21.940 --> 01:50:25.940] Okay, I have too many questions. [01:50:25.940 --> 01:50:30.940] I don't know how to speak intelligently to your issue yet because I got too many questions. [01:50:30.940 --> 01:50:37.940] Call back tomorrow night and I'll start out by sorting out all the actors. [01:50:37.940 --> 01:50:42.940] So we'll kind of know who has standing to do what. [01:50:42.940 --> 01:50:44.940] Okay, okay. [01:50:44.940 --> 01:50:46.940] Okay, I'll talk to you tomorrow night. [01:50:46.940 --> 01:50:48.940] All right, yes, sir. [01:50:48.940 --> 01:50:49.940] Okay, thank you, Scott. [01:50:49.940 --> 01:50:51.940] Now we're going to go to Chris in Colorado. [01:50:51.940 --> 01:50:56.940] Chris, what are you up to today? [01:50:56.940 --> 01:50:57.940] Hey, Randy. [01:50:57.940 --> 01:50:59.940] I just have a couple quick ones. [01:50:59.940 --> 01:51:01.940] I'd like to call back in another night. [01:51:01.940 --> 01:51:05.940] I do need some help, but I made a boo-boo this week. [01:51:05.940 --> 01:51:07.940] I'm having a hard time keeping up with everything. [01:51:07.940 --> 01:51:11.940] I think you guys told you why, but I missed a... [01:51:11.940 --> 01:51:12.940] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:51:12.940 --> 01:51:14.940] You have a head injury. [01:51:14.940 --> 01:51:15.940] Yeah. [01:51:15.940 --> 01:51:19.940] Have you read the Americans with Disabilities Act? [01:51:19.940 --> 01:51:21.940] I'm a little bit familiar with it. [01:51:21.940 --> 01:51:23.940] Yeah, but I don't know how to apply. [01:51:23.940 --> 01:51:25.940] What were you thinking about? [01:51:25.940 --> 01:51:32.940] Well, if you're having difficulty and you have a disability, [01:51:32.940 --> 01:51:38.940] the court has a duty to accommodate your disability. [01:51:38.940 --> 01:51:42.940] If you need more time, you can't keep up with this, [01:51:42.940 --> 01:51:46.940] and you have a disability, you can jerk them into federal courts [01:51:46.940 --> 01:51:50.940] or just notify them that you have a disability [01:51:50.940 --> 01:51:53.940] and you need accommodation. [01:51:53.940 --> 01:51:54.940] Okay. [01:51:54.940 --> 01:51:56.940] Well, I was thinking about using the COVID vaccine, [01:51:56.940 --> 01:51:58.940] even though I haven't had it. [01:51:58.940 --> 01:52:04.940] Have you heard my hearing aid story? [01:52:04.940 --> 01:52:07.940] Yeah. [01:52:07.940 --> 01:52:11.940] See, that goes to Americans with Disabilities Act. [01:52:11.940 --> 01:52:15.940] They have to accommodate you. [01:52:15.940 --> 01:52:19.940] You have a head injury that causes difficulty [01:52:19.940 --> 01:52:21.940] in keeping up with these dates [01:52:21.940 --> 01:52:24.940] and organizing all this information, [01:52:24.940 --> 01:52:26.940] so they have to accommodate you. [01:52:26.940 --> 01:52:30.940] Maybe they'll give me an attorney. [01:52:30.940 --> 01:52:32.940] Yeah, and then you can beat the crap out of the attorney. [01:52:32.940 --> 01:52:38.940] It's great to have an attorney now that we know how to handle them, [01:52:38.940 --> 01:52:40.940] because you're going to beat up the attorney, [01:52:40.940 --> 01:52:45.940] and he's going to run to the judge and ask to withdraw, [01:52:45.940 --> 01:52:47.940] and you're going to go and object to it, [01:52:47.940 --> 01:52:50.940] and the judge is going to not let him withdraw [01:52:50.940 --> 01:52:53.940] because the judge doesn't want to be sued. [01:52:53.940 --> 01:52:55.940] Now the attorney can go to the court and say, [01:52:55.940 --> 01:52:58.940] you guys have got to help me out here. [01:52:58.940 --> 01:53:00.940] You put me in this spot. [01:53:00.940 --> 01:53:02.940] This guy is going to ruin my career, [01:53:02.940 --> 01:53:09.940] and you're going to get pretty close to what you want. [01:53:09.940 --> 01:53:10.940] Okay. [01:53:10.940 --> 01:53:13.940] But you won't get a Christmas card next year. [01:53:13.940 --> 01:53:16.940] Oh, man. [01:53:16.940 --> 01:53:20.940] I know, it's tough. [01:53:20.940 --> 01:53:22.940] I'm probably going to pull a lot of those cards, Randy, [01:53:22.940 --> 01:53:24.940] for the criminal side of this stupid thing. [01:53:24.940 --> 01:53:26.940] We'll see where it goes. [01:53:26.940 --> 01:53:29.940] I'm calling in tonight because I messed up on my federal case. [01:53:29.940 --> 01:53:33.940] I didn't mess up bad, but it's a little bit of a mess up. [01:53:33.940 --> 01:53:36.940] I missed a status hearing for not the main case, [01:53:36.940 --> 01:53:41.940] but for a settlement conference. [01:53:41.940 --> 01:53:46.940] Okay, that's generally not fatal. [01:53:46.940 --> 01:53:48.940] You notify them that you have a head injury, [01:53:48.940 --> 01:53:50.940] and you sometimes have difficulty in this regard, [01:53:50.940 --> 01:53:53.940] apologize to the court, and ask them to reset, [01:53:53.940 --> 01:53:56.940] and they almost always will. [01:53:56.940 --> 01:53:59.940] They already reset it, but I didn't even see. [01:53:59.940 --> 01:54:02.940] I got notified from the opposing counsel that this happened. [01:54:02.940 --> 01:54:04.940] I'm like, oh, my God, I totally flaked on this. [01:54:04.940 --> 01:54:09.940] And so I got admonished, which I looked it up as being scolded. [01:54:09.940 --> 01:54:12.940] I'm assuming it's not that big of a deal, but that was my problem. [01:54:12.940 --> 01:54:15.940] How do I apologize to the court? [01:54:15.940 --> 01:54:18.940] You just write them a letter telling them that you have a head injury, [01:54:18.940 --> 01:54:21.940] and sometimes you have difficulty in this regard. [01:54:21.940 --> 01:54:24.940] You apologize for missing. [01:54:24.940 --> 01:54:32.940] Just let the court know that you are still intent on prosecuting your client. [01:54:32.940 --> 01:54:41.940] That you did not miss this hearing for frivolous reasons. [01:54:41.940 --> 01:54:43.940] Who do I send that letter to? [01:54:43.940 --> 01:54:48.940] The trial judge and opposing counsel. [01:54:48.940 --> 01:54:51.940] Okay, we have a trial judge, and then we have a magistrate judge [01:54:51.940 --> 01:54:54.940] who's in charge of settlement conferences, essentially. [01:54:54.940 --> 01:54:59.940] If this is in federal, generally the federal will bend over backwards [01:54:59.940 --> 01:55:04.940] to make sure you have opportunity. [01:55:04.940 --> 01:55:10.940] If you tell them you have a disability, that's going to really get their attention. [01:55:10.940 --> 01:55:14.940] And generally, these aren't traffic courts. [01:55:14.940 --> 01:55:16.940] Traffic courts, they don't care what the law is. [01:55:16.940 --> 01:55:26.940] The federal courts do, and they genuinely want you to get a fair hearing. [01:55:26.940 --> 01:55:29.940] So just send them a letter. [01:55:29.940 --> 01:55:39.940] If you are professional and polite, they will be very accommodating as a rule. [01:55:39.940 --> 01:55:40.940] Okay, I'll do that. [01:55:40.940 --> 01:55:44.940] I'll send it to both clerks of the magistrate and the trial judge, [01:55:44.940 --> 01:55:48.940] and then I'll send it to opposing counsel as well. [01:55:48.940 --> 01:55:53.940] You kind of treat these guys the same way you would people in business. [01:55:53.940 --> 01:55:57.940] If you miss a business meeting, what do you do? [01:55:57.940 --> 01:56:01.940] Contact the guys and say, hey, man, I'm sorry I screwed this up. [01:56:01.940 --> 01:56:04.940] I got a legitimate reason. [01:56:04.940 --> 01:56:10.940] I'm handicapped and got this issue, and I didn't do this frivolously. [01:56:10.940 --> 01:56:14.940] I really want to adjudicate the case. [01:56:14.940 --> 01:56:19.940] People have been over backwards to help you as long as you're professional and polite. [01:56:19.940 --> 01:56:21.940] Okay, I'll do that. [01:56:21.940 --> 01:56:23.940] I'll do that, thank you. [01:56:23.940 --> 01:56:26.940] Then bar-grieving lawyers in this stone age. [01:56:26.940 --> 01:56:29.940] Yeah, speaking about bar-grieving lawyers. [01:56:29.940 --> 01:56:32.940] So opposing counsel, there's this girl named Haley. [01:56:32.940 --> 01:56:35.940] She's the attorney that apparently this got shuffled off to. [01:56:35.940 --> 01:56:43.940] She sends me this real yippity email, and she says, just letting me know that whatever. [01:56:43.940 --> 01:56:45.940] You missed the meeting. [01:56:45.940 --> 01:56:47.940] Well, obviously I missed it, thanks. [01:56:47.940 --> 01:56:54.940] And that the judge is asked basically to move forward with settlement negotiation. [01:56:54.940 --> 01:56:58.940] We're willing to discuss this before the next hearing, [01:56:58.940 --> 01:57:03.940] but we'd also like to wait to see the judgment on the next motion to dismiss. [01:57:03.940 --> 01:57:04.940] And here's what she said. [01:57:04.940 --> 01:57:08.940] She said, if all that is granted and they dismiss everything, [01:57:08.940 --> 01:57:12.940] we would only be acknowledging property damage in this case. [01:57:12.940 --> 01:57:17.940] So they've now admitted that they're going to pay for the property damage. [01:57:17.940 --> 01:57:20.940] Okay, that's just basically admitted in the email. [01:57:20.940 --> 01:57:24.940] But doesn't that also admit, if they're willing to pay for the property damage now, [01:57:24.940 --> 01:57:28.940] then they've also admitted they've defrauded me this whole time, [01:57:28.940 --> 01:57:32.940] because that's what this whole issue was about, and plus, plus, plus. [01:57:32.940 --> 01:57:38.940] So I'm spinning a little bit about that, that they've already spent probably $30,000, [01:57:38.940 --> 01:57:40.940] $40,000 defending their case. [01:57:40.940 --> 01:57:46.940] No, as a rule, when you're in negotiations, [01:57:46.940 --> 01:57:52.940] you can't treat your negotiations as admissions. [01:57:52.940 --> 01:57:53.940] Okay. [01:57:53.940 --> 01:57:57.940] They say, okay, I will do this if you'll do that. [01:57:57.940 --> 01:58:01.940] You can't call that an admission. [01:58:01.940 --> 01:58:06.940] Otherwise, they couldn't negotiate with you. [01:58:06.940 --> 01:58:07.940] Does that make sense? [01:58:07.940 --> 01:58:10.940] It does now, yeah, that makes sense. [01:58:10.940 --> 01:58:12.940] So then do I just call their bluff and say, look, you know, [01:58:12.940 --> 01:58:16.940] that would have been reasonable four years ago, but we're four years down the road? [01:58:16.940 --> 01:58:18.940] Yeah, this is poker. [01:58:18.940 --> 01:58:20.940] Call their bluff. [01:58:20.940 --> 01:58:22.940] Okay. [01:58:22.940 --> 01:58:24.940] They'll give you a better deal. [01:58:24.940 --> 01:58:26.940] All right, I've already spent much more than that. [01:58:26.940 --> 01:58:27.940] But anyway, okay, that's cool. [01:58:27.940 --> 01:58:28.940] I'll call their bluff. [01:58:28.940 --> 01:58:30.940] I'll apologize to the court. [01:58:30.940 --> 01:58:32.940] And then I'll see how busy you guys are tomorrow. [01:58:32.940 --> 01:58:34.940] I do need some help with this criminal side. [01:58:34.940 --> 01:58:38.940] I figured this all out, you don't mind, but thank you so much. [01:58:38.940 --> 01:58:39.940] Okay, we're out of time. [01:58:39.940 --> 01:58:40.940] We're out of time. [01:58:40.940 --> 01:58:41.940] Call in tomorrow night. [01:58:41.940 --> 01:58:44.940] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:58:44.940 --> 01:58:46.940] We'll be back tomorrow night, 8 o'clock. [01:58:46.940 --> 01:58:49.940] Thank you for listening and good night. [01:58:49.940 --> 01:58:54.940] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible [01:58:54.940 --> 01:58:57.940] called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.940 --> 01:59:01.940] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain [01:59:01.940 --> 01:59:05.940] what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God [01:59:05.940 --> 01:59:07.940] and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:07.940 --> 01:59:10.940] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. 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