[00:00.000 --> 00:05.560] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.560 --> 00:09.600] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.600 --> 00:11.040] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.040 --> 00:15.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:15.000 --> 00:17.120] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.120 --> 00:18.720] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.720 --> 00:22.320] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.320 --> 00:27.080] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.080 --> 00:32.160] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.160 --> 00:33.160] Privacy. [00:33.160 --> 00:34.840] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.840 --> 00:39.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.120 --> 00:42.680] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.680 --> 00:44.680] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.680 --> 00:45.680] Spar. [00:45.680 --> 00:47.960] It's what fighters do. [00:47.960 --> 00:50.920] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.920 --> 00:54.640] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.640 --> 00:56.680] S-P-A-R with an extra P. [00:56.680 --> 01:03.040] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:03.040 --> 01:07.080] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.080 --> 01:08.680] assembly, and religion. [01:08.680 --> 01:11.040] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:11.040 --> 01:14.760] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.760 --> 01:18.280] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.280 --> 01:20.840] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.840 --> 01:22.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.880 --> 01:31.280] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.280 --> 01:34.920] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.920 --> 01:38.400] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.400 --> 01:39.840] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.840 --> 01:43.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.760 --> 01:46.900] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.900 --> 01:48.480] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.480 --> 01:52.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.080 --> 01:56.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.840 --> 02:01.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.840 --> 02:04.600] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [02:04.600 --> 02:08.880] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:08.880 --> 02:12.440] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.440 --> 02:16.000] Start over with StartPage. [02:16.000 --> 02:20.360] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.360 --> 02:22.440] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.440 --> 02:27.000] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:27.000 --> 02:30.800] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.800 --> 02:31.800] Get it? [02:31.800 --> 02:34.080] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.080 --> 02:37.680] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.680 --> 02:43.440] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.440 --> 02:47.560] government, one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears remote in America, [02:47.560 --> 02:50.600] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.600 --> 02:52.600] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.600 --> 03:22.240] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [04:53.440 --> 05:18.440] the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [05:18.440 --> 05:25.440] one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears remote in America, but which [05:25.440 --> 05:28.440] historically has proved to always be possible. [05:28.440 --> 05:33.440] The right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary government, [05:33.440 --> 05:38.440] one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears remote in America, but which [05:38.440 --> 06:02.440] historically has proved to always be possible. [06:09.440 --> 06:11.440] Much better. [06:11.440 --> 06:14.440] Okay, I pulled up that mic cable halfway out. [06:14.440 --> 06:16.440] Okay. [06:16.440 --> 06:18.440] All right. [06:18.440 --> 06:22.440] You had some fun at Federal Courts today. [06:22.440 --> 06:24.440] Oh. [06:24.440 --> 06:27.440] How do we have two callers on the board already? [06:27.440 --> 06:29.440] Did you read? [06:29.440 --> 06:31.440] I did not open it up. [06:31.440 --> 06:34.440] So this might have been left over. [06:34.440 --> 06:36.440] Oh, I thought. [06:36.440 --> 06:39.440] I thought we had to reset it. [06:39.440 --> 06:40.440] Okay. [06:40.440 --> 06:41.440] Well, sometimes it drops them. [06:41.440 --> 06:47.440] I don't know. [06:47.440 --> 06:48.440] Well, I thought. [06:48.440 --> 06:51.440] It's telling us that some people had called in in advance. [06:51.440 --> 06:56.440] Yeah, but I thought that when we changed over, it shows that we had to reset that thing. [06:56.440 --> 07:08.440] Okay, I guess. [07:08.440 --> 07:10.440] Okay. [07:10.440 --> 07:13.440] So we have people that are starting to stack up in the queue. [07:13.440 --> 07:17.440] Do you want to talk a little bit about the Federal Courthouse or not? [07:17.440 --> 07:19.440] Yes, I definitely do. [07:19.440 --> 07:21.440] Okay. [07:21.440 --> 07:27.440] Well, it's just happened, so we don't have really a whole lot to be excited about yet, [07:27.440 --> 07:35.440] except some of you might remember that a few months ago I went to file a federal lawsuit, [07:35.440 --> 07:44.440] and I got turned away because I'm not an attorney or a law enforcement officer. [07:44.440 --> 07:51.440] I had a cell phone with me, and they talked about no cell phones are allowed in here. [07:51.440 --> 07:58.440] And then it came out that if I were an attorney, they would let me in. [07:58.440 --> 07:59.440] No problem. [07:59.440 --> 08:00.440] I can have a cell phone in there. [08:00.440 --> 08:02.440] That's fine. [08:02.440 --> 08:04.440] And I said, wait a minute. [08:04.440 --> 08:09.440] So you're telling me that there are special privileges and special immunities and so forth [08:09.440 --> 08:15.440] for a certain class of people that are part of a certain club, and oh, it's not just attorneys. [08:15.440 --> 08:16.440] It's also law enforcement. [08:16.440 --> 08:23.440] If you'd be in law enforcement, you could have a cell phone, no problem. [08:23.440 --> 08:30.440] Well, today I left my cell phone in the car, and I figure, okay, I'm going to go ahead and go on in there. [08:30.440 --> 08:34.440] I just need to see the clerk for a few minutes, make sure that everything's right. [08:34.440 --> 08:36.440] I have another lawsuit to file. [08:36.440 --> 08:43.440] So I went to the guys there and took all my keys and everything out, [08:43.440 --> 08:49.440] and they wanted me to take off the belt and the shoes and everything else, and we went through the process. [08:49.440 --> 08:55.440] And then they noticed that I did not authorize them to search my papers, [08:55.440 --> 09:00.440] but they noticed that inside the folder as they were taking everything out to look through it, [09:00.440 --> 09:03.440] they noticed there was an iPad in there. [09:03.440 --> 09:05.440] So they said, oh, well, that's electronics. [09:05.440 --> 09:07.440] You can't have anything electronic. [09:07.440 --> 09:08.440] Are you kidding me? [09:08.440 --> 09:10.440] I already went through all the trouble. [09:10.440 --> 09:14.440] You know, I left my cell phone in the car just because I don't want to be hassled. [09:14.440 --> 09:18.440] I have a right to have a cell phone in here, but I don't want you all hassling me about that. [09:18.440 --> 09:20.440] Well, now it's anything electronic. [09:20.440 --> 09:23.440] It's not just cell phones. [09:23.440 --> 09:24.440] Let me guess. [09:24.440 --> 09:27.440] If I was an attorney or law enforcement, you would let me in just fine. [09:27.440 --> 09:31.440] Oh, yeah, yeah, but you're not, right? [09:31.440 --> 09:38.440] One other guy came up after a while, Randy, and I took a page out of your playbook. [09:38.440 --> 09:43.440] One of these fellows insisted that he needed to get his supervisor down there. [09:43.440 --> 09:46.440] I told him, I really don't see the point. [09:46.440 --> 09:50.440] I mean, you've already blocked me from access to the courthouse for long enough, [09:50.440 --> 09:54.440] but now the district court clerk is closed and I can't go in there and do it anyway. [09:54.440 --> 09:56.440] Might as well just go on home. [09:56.440 --> 09:58.440] There's nothing else to do. [09:58.440 --> 10:03.440] Well, I really want to get my supervisor down here to talk to you about that. [10:03.440 --> 10:07.440] Okay, so he went and got his supervisor and the guy came down [10:07.440 --> 10:11.440] and he wouldn't identify himself, Randy. [10:11.440 --> 10:16.440] If you can believe it, we have a public official who will come from upstairs somewhere [10:16.440 --> 10:22.440] and, you know, stand there and bluster and tell me about what I can and can't do [10:22.440 --> 10:27.440] and tell me how his policies trump my rights and my laws. [10:27.440 --> 10:29.440] So I'm going to have to whatever. [10:29.440 --> 10:32.440] And yet he won't even tell me his name. [10:32.440 --> 10:35.440] Can you believe it? [10:35.440 --> 10:41.440] So, yeah, I took a page from your playbook at one point [10:41.440 --> 10:46.440] and one of the guys, he asked me, are you an attorney? [10:46.440 --> 10:50.440] Because I told him, Turner v. Driver says I can record my, [10:50.440 --> 10:53.440] I'm not trying to record my public officials, but I have a right to. [10:53.440 --> 10:56.440] Turner v. Driver confirms that that's my right. [10:56.440 --> 10:58.440] He goes, oh, are you an attorney? [10:58.440 --> 11:01.440] And I said, sir, don't insult me. [11:01.440 --> 11:04.440] I've been nothing but nice to you. [11:04.440 --> 11:09.440] So, you know, they got a little laugh out of that, but they still wouldn't let me in. [11:09.440 --> 11:16.440] So now I'm going to have to charge this unidentified federal marshal [11:16.440 --> 11:24.440] with official oppression not allowing me to go in and see my district clerk. [11:24.440 --> 11:26.440] The federal district clerk was off limits to me [11:26.440 --> 11:31.440] because I'm not an attorney or a law enforcement officer. [11:31.440 --> 11:34.440] And I think I'm going to spin it that way instead of spinning it, [11:34.440 --> 11:37.440] like, because I had a cell phone or because I had a tablet. [11:37.440 --> 11:44.440] That's not really, I don't know, it doesn't sound as bad, right? [11:44.440 --> 11:48.440] If I'm not one of these classes of people, then I get kicked out. [11:48.440 --> 11:50.440] That just, I don't know, sounds worse. [11:50.440 --> 11:52.440] So I'm going to spin it like that. [11:52.440 --> 11:59.440] Let him bring that up later and you can always argue with him. [11:59.440 --> 12:01.440] So, yeah, that's just happened, [12:01.440 --> 12:09.440] and I'll be addressing that next day or two here. [12:09.440 --> 12:11.440] What's been going on with you? [12:11.440 --> 12:14.440] Have you done any research? [12:14.440 --> 12:21.440] This is a little too blatant with too many guys out there doing First Amendment audits. [12:21.440 --> 12:27.440] I haven't seen any lately on federal buildings. [12:27.440 --> 12:29.440] What do you mean it's too blatant? [12:29.440 --> 12:37.440] Yes, are there any new laws that allow a federal court building to be secret? [12:37.440 --> 12:43.440] Well, I don't know, but I do know that these guys were saying, [12:43.440 --> 12:46.440] what I mentioned to the federal marshal, hey, [12:46.440 --> 12:49.440] well, first I tried to get them to arrest each other. [12:49.440 --> 12:52.440] They were laughing about that. [12:52.440 --> 12:57.440] And then one of them came down and was saying, well, I said, well, ma'am, [12:57.440 --> 13:00.440] she didn't want to give you her name. [13:00.440 --> 13:02.440] She said, well, why should I give you my name? [13:02.440 --> 13:04.440] I said, because you're not letting me in. [13:04.440 --> 13:07.440] You're not arresting these guys over here that are blocking me. [13:07.440 --> 13:11.440] So I think I need to get your name too. [13:11.440 --> 13:13.440] At some point there were seven of them, [13:13.440 --> 13:20.440] which triggers in my mind a recollection of Texas penal code that defines a riot. [13:20.440 --> 13:23.440] A riot, yes. [13:23.440 --> 13:24.440] That's what I was thinking. [13:24.440 --> 13:31.440] All of these actors in the same, what do they call it, combination, combinations three. [13:31.440 --> 13:34.440] It also leans towards 7102. [13:34.440 --> 13:36.440] Yeah, exactly. [13:36.440 --> 13:39.440] A street gang. [13:39.440 --> 13:43.440] Well, they really want me to believe that the policy, [13:43.440 --> 13:47.440] which was put out by a federal judge, I said, wait a minute, [13:47.440 --> 13:49.440] are you saying he's a legislator? [13:49.440 --> 13:51.440] No, no, no, not law. [13:51.440 --> 13:52.440] It's a policy. [13:52.440 --> 13:53.440] But it applies. [13:53.440 --> 13:54.440] You're in the courthouse. [13:54.440 --> 13:55.440] It's courthouse policy. [13:55.440 --> 13:58.440] And if you come in here, it applies to you. [13:58.440 --> 14:01.440] I said, no, no, no, it applies to you. [14:01.440 --> 14:03.440] But, you know, I'm not going to train them, [14:03.440 --> 14:05.440] I'm not going to teach them anything like that. [14:05.440 --> 14:07.440] It'll be via paperwork. [14:07.440 --> 14:11.440] We need some criminal charges against the judge. [14:11.440 --> 14:14.440] Yep, Rodney Gilstrap. [14:14.440 --> 14:15.440] Good. [14:15.440 --> 14:17.440] That'll make him unhappy. [14:17.440 --> 14:19.440] Judicial conduct complaints, [14:19.440 --> 14:22.440] and maybe we can get some of our listeners to file a few, [14:22.440 --> 14:24.440] just because you heard about it and didn't like it. [14:24.440 --> 14:25.440] That's right. [14:25.440 --> 14:29.440] Now you have reason to believe, and you do believe. [14:29.440 --> 14:31.440] Yep. [14:31.440 --> 14:35.440] So, okay, every time you tell me about this stuff, [14:35.440 --> 14:38.440] I want to go down there and pick a fight with them. [14:38.440 --> 14:40.440] Well, let's do it. [14:40.440 --> 14:41.440] The problem is... [14:41.440 --> 14:42.440] I'm sure they'll cooperate. [14:42.440 --> 14:47.440] The problem is I've got too many fights going on already. [14:47.440 --> 14:50.440] And I can't keep up with all of them. [14:50.440 --> 14:55.440] We need some of our listeners out there to start picking fights. [14:55.440 --> 14:59.440] Carrie from Pennsylvania, he can pick a fight. [14:59.440 --> 15:00.440] Right, Carrie? [15:00.440 --> 15:04.440] So you bet. [15:04.440 --> 15:06.440] You bet, Seth. [15:06.440 --> 15:13.440] What do you have for us today? [15:13.440 --> 15:18.440] Well, first, I sent you an email, and just wondering if you received that. [15:18.440 --> 15:20.440] I've been too busy today. [15:20.440 --> 15:23.440] I didn't even get to my email. [15:23.440 --> 15:24.440] I figured. [15:24.440 --> 15:27.440] I sent it a couple days ago, but I'm sure you're swamped. [15:27.440 --> 15:29.440] You have your own things going on. [15:29.440 --> 15:34.440] And, of course, a lot of people are bending your ear for help, too. [15:34.440 --> 15:38.440] Yeah, and I've got the wife's been in the hospital for a couple of weeks, [15:38.440 --> 15:41.440] and that's really taken up my time. [15:41.440 --> 15:42.440] I'm sure. [15:42.440 --> 15:46.440] I hope she's recovering well. [15:46.440 --> 15:48.440] She had a back operation, and I told the doctors, [15:48.440 --> 15:54.440] make sure you do a good job, because I've got a lot of heavy work I want her to do. [15:54.440 --> 16:00.440] She did not find that as funny as I did. [16:00.440 --> 16:03.440] I will pray for her, definitely. [16:03.440 --> 16:07.440] So there's a quick update. [16:07.440 --> 16:14.440] We had talked before about possibly filing a mandamus action against my court [16:14.440 --> 16:18.440] because they had not issued an order, but they did. [16:18.440 --> 16:28.440] On Monday, on Halloween, they issued the order, and surprisingly, I was granted the record. [16:28.440 --> 16:39.440] The judge did find that the township failed to properly release the record disorder, [16:39.440 --> 16:42.440] but it's not a good win all in all. [16:42.440 --> 16:43.440] It's not good? [16:43.440 --> 16:45.440] Sounds good. [16:45.440 --> 16:51.440] When we come back on the other side, you're going to tell us the other part of the story, [16:51.440 --> 16:53.440] the rest of the story. [16:53.440 --> 16:57.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll move our radio. [16:57.440 --> 17:26.440] We'll be right back. [17:27.440 --> 17:50.440] We'll be right back. [17:50.440 --> 18:06.440] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [18:06.440 --> 18:12.440] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [18:12.440 --> 18:17.440] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:17.440 --> 18:22.440] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [18:22.440 --> 18:24.440] rightly dividing the word of truth. [18:24.440 --> 18:28.440] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [18:28.440 --> 18:32.440] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [18:32.440 --> 18:37.440] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.440 --> 18:39.440] and Christian character development. [18:39.440 --> 18:43.440] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:43.440 --> 18:47.440] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more [18:47.440 --> 18:50.440] into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [18:50.440 --> 18:56.440] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [18:56.440 --> 19:02.440] to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:02.440 --> 19:22.440] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:22.440 --> 19:32.440] Look what we got, who reacts to questions? Who knows what I had, we don't have the answer. [19:32.440 --> 19:42.440] Open up I, we ask the question. Look what we got, and we don't have the answer. [19:42.440 --> 19:48.440] Soap and slip and slide, I can't go to the shoes of the Lord, how they want to wait and it's easy. [19:48.440 --> 19:53.440] They might call me too politically and then get you not done hungry. [19:53.440 --> 19:57.440] Okay, we are back. [19:57.440 --> 20:02.440] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Carrie in Pennsylvania, [20:02.440 --> 20:08.440] and now she's going to tell us the rest of the story. [20:08.440 --> 20:11.440] So just a quick background again. [20:11.440 --> 20:15.440] My case is regarding a public records request in Pennsylvania, [20:15.440 --> 20:22.440] and we do have a special statute addressing public records called the Right to Know Law. [20:22.440 --> 20:28.440] So I was granted, after I requested the record, didn't get what I wanted, [20:28.440 --> 20:33.440] I appealed to the Office of Open Records and was granted the record in full, [20:33.440 --> 20:37.440] and they were for solicitor invoices. [20:37.440 --> 20:45.440] And there's a lot of bad faith involved in this, which I did argue. [20:45.440 --> 20:51.440] So the judge granted the records and said yes, the township did not turn them over, [20:51.440 --> 20:54.440] and he ordered them to turn them over. [20:54.440 --> 20:58.440] Unfortunately, he gave them 30 days to do that, [20:58.440 --> 21:06.440] so I don't really even get to look at them before I need to know whether or not I have to appeal. [21:06.440 --> 21:12.440] And he also granted me my court costs, which was incredible. [21:12.440 --> 21:17.440] And it's really incredible because under the Right to Know Law, [21:17.440 --> 21:27.440] you can only provide or order, the court can grant court costs and legal fees if you have an attorney, [21:27.440 --> 21:32.440] but it's only if you find the agency in bad faith. [21:32.440 --> 21:35.440] So this is the first in that... [21:35.440 --> 21:40.440] Essentially acts as a finding of bad faith. [21:40.440 --> 21:47.440] Well, except that they're not actually getting a finding of bad faith. [21:47.440 --> 21:57.440] And when there's a finding of bad faith, they can also put sanctions on the township. [21:57.440 --> 22:00.440] Did you ask for sanctions? [22:00.440 --> 22:03.440] Oh, yeah, absolutely. [22:03.440 --> 22:06.440] From the very beginning and during the hearing, [22:06.440 --> 22:11.440] the judge just did not want to talk about any of the sanctions. [22:11.440 --> 22:16.440] Every time I tried to bring up the bad faith or sanctions, he shot me down. [22:16.440 --> 22:25.440] At one point, he was literally yelling at me, and I was on the stand at that time as a witness. [22:25.440 --> 22:29.440] And so I'm just a few feet from him, and he's yelling. [22:29.440 --> 22:32.440] He does little tricks like this pretty often. [22:32.440 --> 22:36.440] Now, I have a real good solution for that one. [22:36.440 --> 22:38.440] You need to try this one. [22:38.440 --> 22:51.440] Just tell him, Your Honor, if you'll just bend over, I'll pull that wild hat out of your behind for you. [22:51.440 --> 22:59.440] Well, in order to get the fact that he was yelling at me, I said very clearly, [22:59.440 --> 23:02.440] I can hear you, Your Honor. [23:02.440 --> 23:08.440] That way, at least in the transcript, you could pick up that he was yelling at me. [23:08.440 --> 23:10.440] And he did not want to hear it. [23:10.440 --> 23:12.440] He didn't want to discuss bad faith. [23:12.440 --> 23:14.440] And so then this decision comes out. [23:14.440 --> 23:17.440] He's not going to find them in bad faith. [23:17.440 --> 23:25.440] And I also identified the supervisors in their individual capacity also. [23:25.440 --> 23:31.440] I warned them prior to filing this enforcement action that they were required by law to release it. [23:31.440 --> 23:33.440] They refused to do it. [23:33.440 --> 23:39.440] They have a fiduciary responsibility because this is the financial record of the township. [23:39.440 --> 23:45.440] And I think I at least had taken a pretty good stab at piercing immunity, [23:45.440 --> 23:50.440] and he just, you know, didn't want to hear it, didn't want to discuss it at all. [23:50.440 --> 23:55.440] Oh, did you? Okay, I take it you are going to appeal. [23:55.440 --> 24:00.440] This should get a petition for writ of mandamus. [24:00.440 --> 24:02.440] Well... [24:02.440 --> 24:03.440] He don't want to hear it? [24:03.440 --> 24:04.440] Get it out of his court. [24:04.440 --> 24:11.440] Get it to the Court of Appeals and ask them to order him to hear it. [24:11.440 --> 24:20.440] I think I actually get the mandamus action goes directly to the Supreme Court. [24:20.440 --> 24:22.440] That's even better. [24:22.440 --> 24:24.440] Yeah, it is even better. [24:24.440 --> 24:31.440] So even though he did grant it partially, you think I should just go ahead and file mandamus because he's not... [24:31.440 --> 24:34.440] and he's clearly not following the law. [24:34.440 --> 24:41.440] It would be the first of its kind where a judge is awarding fees but not finding them in bad state. [24:41.440 --> 24:44.440] And he's protecting the attorney. [24:44.440 --> 24:49.440] It's so clear that the prejudice here is just abominable. [24:49.440 --> 24:53.440] But here's the other thing that happened Monday. [24:53.440 --> 25:01.440] This is kind of going back to, you know, I think I probably have a pretty big federal case here. [25:01.440 --> 25:06.440] There is another decision that came out on Monday, on Halloween. [25:06.440 --> 25:18.440] I had filed an appeal with the PA Supreme Court on a really big case that I've had going on for years, also for the same township solicitors invoices. [25:18.440 --> 25:26.440] So it's the same parties, the same judges were involved at both levels in the court, and they completely dismissed it. [25:26.440 --> 25:35.440] It's just not a coincidence anymore that I'm getting two rulings coming out on the same day from two different courts. [25:35.440 --> 25:46.440] That is an orchestrated act against me for somebody who's looking for public record. [25:46.440 --> 25:51.440] Do you have an organized crime statute in Pennsylvania? [25:51.440 --> 25:57.440] We do. And they actually have a form. Pennsylvania loves forms. [25:57.440 --> 26:02.440] And it is called a private criminal complaint in Pennsylvania. [26:02.440 --> 26:06.440] So I have to fill out that form. [26:06.440 --> 26:19.440] And you'll like this part, too, because over the years, as all these things have been occurring in my township and blocking release of public records and I've been alleging criminal activity, [26:19.440 --> 26:24.440] I was filing complaints with the district attorney and sending him information. [26:24.440 --> 26:33.440] I have at least two letters back from him where he said he has a conflict of interest and that he couldn't help me. [26:33.440 --> 26:40.440] And he's required to refer those to the attorney general's office if he has a conflict of interest. [26:40.440 --> 26:48.440] But he didn't state what the conflict was, nor did he ever forward those complaints onto the attorney general's office. [26:48.440 --> 26:58.440] Okay. When I talk to people about Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania is unique in all of the states I've looked at. [26:58.440 --> 27:03.440] The prosecuting attorney has first blush on any criminal complaint. [27:03.440 --> 27:09.440] He gets to determine whether or not he believes it warrants prosecution. [27:09.440 --> 27:12.440] Now, on its surface, that kind of sucks. [27:12.440 --> 27:19.440] However, unlike other states, when you file a criminal complaint, you have standing. [27:19.440 --> 27:23.440] When I file a criminal complaint in Texas, I have no standing. [27:23.440 --> 27:25.440] I just have a duty to give notice. [27:25.440 --> 27:29.440] But once I give notice, prosecution is in somebody else's hands. [27:29.440 --> 27:32.440] I can complain about it if they don't do it right. [27:32.440 --> 27:45.440] But in Pennsylvania, where the prosecutor gets first blush, you get standing. You can appeal his denial all the way up to the Supreme. [27:45.440 --> 27:56.440] And what I suggest people do, because you have a good, powerful attorney general, is when you file with the local prosecutor and he refuses to prosecute, [27:56.440 --> 28:08.440] you file an appeal to the court of common pleas, and then you file criminal complaints against the local attorney, district attorney, with the attorney general, [28:08.440 --> 28:12.440] because the attorney general has prosecutorial powers. [28:12.440 --> 28:21.440] And then when the attorney general refuses to act, you appeal him to the court of common pleas and bump those all the way up to the Supreme. [28:21.440 --> 28:26.440] You wave it in everybody's faces. [28:26.440 --> 28:32.440] Yes, they're all going to be pointing fingers, you know, not my job, not my job. [28:32.440 --> 28:41.440] The other thing about the right to know law is that when you are in this appeals process in the courts, you're also supposed to copy the Office of Open Records. [28:41.440 --> 28:47.440] You're supposed to get a copy of every filing, and so is the attorney general. [28:47.440 --> 29:02.440] So nobody's really challenged this yet. Under the old right to know law, they specifically stated that any nefarious activity was supposed to be referred to the district attorney and investigated. [29:02.440 --> 29:12.440] Well, the new law, they took that out. So the assumption was that now they're leaving it to the court to deal with bad actors. [29:12.440 --> 29:20.440] Well, they're not doing that either. So the whole time, the Supreme Court just denied my case. [29:20.440 --> 29:28.440] They don't want to address all the bad faith and literally fraud on the court, fraud by the court. [29:28.440 --> 29:37.440] They don't want to touch it. Well, apparently the attorney general doesn't want to touch it either, because he never responds to any of my files. [29:37.440 --> 29:44.440] Okay, that's kind of the house we live in. And when we come back, we'll talk about how to take them on. [29:44.440 --> 29:52.440] Right now I'm taking on Victoria County, and I anticipate them not doing what I ask them to. [29:52.440 --> 30:00.440] I don't want them to do what I ask them to. And I'll explain that when we come back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, We Will Love Radio, we'll be right back. [30:00.440 --> 30:11.440] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information, and you may trust them to keep it safe. But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.440 --> 30:15.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with details. [30:15.440 --> 30:20.440] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.440 --> 30:25.440] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.440 --> 30:30.440] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.440 --> 30:40.440] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.440 --> 30:44.440] Start over with Startpage. [30:44.440 --> 30:51.440] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. [30:51.440 --> 30:55.440] But what happens if it escapes their control? It's not an idle question. [30:55.440 --> 31:03.440] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.440 --> 31:07.440] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [31:07.440 --> 31:11.440] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:11.440 --> 31:17.440] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.440 --> 31:21.440] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.440 --> 31:30.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.440 --> 31:35.440] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11, 2001. [31:35.440 --> 31:38.440] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.440 --> 31:43.440] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.440 --> 31:47.440] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:47.440 --> 31:53.440] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:53.440 --> 31:56.440] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:56.440 --> 32:01.440] Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.440 --> 32:05.440] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.440 --> 32:08.440] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:08.440 --> 32:13.440] If people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.440 --> 32:16.440] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:16.440 --> 32:20.440] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.440 --> 32:26.440] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:26.440 --> 32:29.440] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:29.440 --> 32:34.440] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [32:34.440 --> 32:36.440] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.440 --> 32:41.440] You can become a copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.440 --> 32:45.440] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.440 --> 32:51.440] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.440 --> 32:55.440] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.440 --> 33:07.440] Copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:25.440 --> 33:45.440] Okay, we are back. [33:45.440 --> 33:51.440] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Kerry in Pennsylvania. [33:51.440 --> 34:03.440] And, you know, when I file complaints, I don't want them to do what they're supposed to because I pick my complaints very carefully. [34:03.440 --> 34:15.440] I especially want to find complaints where I can, if the judge fails to rule on it, I can claim that it was an administrative issue. [34:15.440 --> 34:22.440] Like in Texas, when I file a criminal complaint, the code says the judge shall issue a warrant for a threat. [34:22.440 --> 34:25.440] It doesn't say he can examine into the sufficiency of my complaint. [34:25.440 --> 34:28.440] It says he shall issue a warrant for a threat. [34:28.440 --> 34:34.440] Then when the person's arrested, then they hold an examining trial and then he examines into sufficiency. [34:34.440 --> 34:39.440] So once that is, it's an administrative issue. [34:39.440 --> 34:42.440] He doesn't have any discretion. [34:42.440 --> 34:45.440] It tells him he must do this thing. [34:45.440 --> 34:47.440] He didn't do this thing. [34:47.440 --> 34:54.440] And when they don't do what they're commanded to do, they don't have any immunity. [34:54.440 --> 35:01.440] So I played him to get me an opportunity to get a shot at him personally. [35:01.440 --> 35:06.440] We always want to be ready for what they do. [35:06.440 --> 35:08.440] Okay. [35:08.440 --> 35:10.440] I hope that makes sense. [35:10.440 --> 35:12.440] It does, it does. [35:12.440 --> 35:16.440] And yeah, that is definitely something I'm going to pursue. [35:16.440 --> 35:24.440] As far as what I'm going to do now, I was going to file a petition to reconsider and see what he does. [35:24.440 --> 35:31.440] You know, I only have 10 days to do that and just see what happens. [35:31.440 --> 35:34.440] You almost need to do that before you appeal. [35:34.440 --> 35:36.440] Yeah, yeah, for sure. [35:36.440 --> 35:40.440] I want to exhaust every measure, so I thought I would do that. [35:40.440 --> 35:43.440] And so should I go ahead and appeal after that? [35:43.440 --> 35:45.440] Because I don't think he's going to give me any more. [35:45.440 --> 35:48.440] He's just a jerk. [35:48.440 --> 35:52.440] Have you filed any judicial contact complaints against him? [35:52.440 --> 35:53.440] I haven't. [35:53.440 --> 35:56.440] I need to do that too. [35:56.440 --> 35:59.440] Okay, I have a standard retort to that. [35:59.440 --> 36:01.440] Okay. [36:01.440 --> 36:05.440] You need to take the phone and beat yourself around the eyes and the ears. [36:05.440 --> 36:07.440] Okay. [36:07.440 --> 36:10.440] You're missing out on the fun part. [36:10.440 --> 36:12.440] All right. [36:12.440 --> 36:18.440] That's the stuff they can't do anything about, and it poisons their well. [36:18.440 --> 36:25.440] Oh, Your Honor, this judge only did that because I filed a judicial conduct complaint against him. [36:25.440 --> 36:28.440] He was just retaliating against me. [36:28.440 --> 36:30.440] Gotcha. [36:30.440 --> 36:36.440] It doesn't matter if he was or not, now the judge has to argue his position. [36:36.440 --> 36:44.440] And if a judge raises his voice to me in the court, he's definitely going to get a judicial conduct complaint. [36:44.440 --> 36:49.440] Depending on how loud he gets, I'll have to bail him to arrest him. [36:49.440 --> 36:52.440] He doesn't get to act like that. [36:52.440 --> 36:53.440] Oh, I'm sorry. [36:53.440 --> 36:59.440] Should I file an appeal and file a mandamus action at the same time? [36:59.440 --> 37:00.440] Yes. [37:00.440 --> 37:01.440] Okay. [37:01.440 --> 37:05.440] Well, you file a notice of appeal. [37:05.440 --> 37:09.440] Technically, when you file the mandamus, it stops the clock, [37:09.440 --> 37:15.440] but these lawyers always want to argue that it doesn't because you're a pro se, they figure you'll be ignorant. [37:15.440 --> 37:19.440] So just file the notice of intent to appeal. [37:19.440 --> 37:26.440] If you file the notice of intent to appeal and it's not ripe for appeal, [37:26.440 --> 37:32.440] for instance, you have a mandamus going on so you can't appeal while you've got the mandamus going on. [37:32.440 --> 37:36.440] It lays in the record until it's ripe. [37:36.440 --> 37:43.440] So you get it filed and they can never complain that you didn't file timely because it's already in there. [37:43.440 --> 37:44.440] Yes. [37:44.440 --> 37:45.440] That's what I'm thinking. [37:45.440 --> 37:50.440] I need to do it both so I don't lose one the other. [37:50.440 --> 37:51.440] Okay. [37:51.440 --> 37:52.440] Yes. [37:52.440 --> 37:53.440] Exactly. [37:53.440 --> 37:57.440] When you ask for findings of fact, make up your own findings of fact. [37:57.440 --> 38:06.440] Take your pleadings and address in the pleadings where the judge failed to properly apply the law to the facts [38:06.440 --> 38:13.440] and ask him to either accept your findings of fact and conclusions of law or provide you with his own. [38:13.440 --> 38:21.440] What this does is get your argument on his ruling on the record. [38:21.440 --> 38:26.440] You don't care what he does with it, but it's on the record when you get to appeal. [38:26.440 --> 38:29.440] Okay. [38:29.440 --> 38:30.440] All right. [38:30.440 --> 38:32.440] That's a great suggestion. [38:32.440 --> 38:41.440] And then this case, the denial of the Supreme Court, I mean, other than filing, you know, [38:41.440 --> 38:51.440] a larger federal case against the courts and just this incredible process that has gone on. [38:51.440 --> 38:54.440] What do you, where do you appeal to afterwards? [38:54.440 --> 38:56.440] I mean, does it go, does it have to go? [38:56.440 --> 38:58.440] After the state supreme? [38:58.440 --> 38:59.440] Yes. [38:59.440 --> 39:00.440] Okay. [39:00.440 --> 39:04.440] You always want to be prepared for the state supreme. [39:04.440 --> 39:15.440] You want to make assertions and allegations that can go to state issues or it can go to state law or federal law. [39:15.440 --> 39:16.440] Yeah. [39:16.440 --> 39:26.440] When I appealed to the Supreme Court, when I filed my petition, I specifically cited violations of due process. [39:26.440 --> 39:33.440] And that is a great term because due process rings equally in the Fed and the state. [39:33.440 --> 39:34.440] Yes. [39:34.440 --> 39:37.440] So that allows you to step up to the state. [39:37.440 --> 39:40.440] That's exactly what I'm doing in Victoria County. [39:40.440 --> 39:41.440] Okay. [39:41.440 --> 39:46.440] I'm setting up due process and that will step me right into the Fed's. [39:46.440 --> 39:52.440] So it's the next level is the district, federal district court then? [39:52.440 --> 39:53.440] Yes. [39:53.440 --> 39:59.440] Then you go to them with an original petition against the state itself. [39:59.440 --> 40:05.440] Actually, if I remember right, Brett, a suit against state always goes to the supreme. [40:05.440 --> 40:07.440] Isn't that correct? [40:07.440 --> 40:09.440] I think it does. [40:09.440 --> 40:14.440] I've gone back and forth over this and I kept thinking it was going to have to go through another step, [40:14.440 --> 40:22.440] but I actually think it goes right to the supreme and I think maybe I might have a problem then because they don't accept pro se. [40:22.440 --> 40:24.440] Well, this is different. [40:24.440 --> 40:27.440] This is not an appeal to the supreme. [40:27.440 --> 40:30.440] This is an original petition. [40:30.440 --> 40:33.440] They can't deny an original. [40:33.440 --> 40:37.440] They can't refuse to hear an original petition. [40:37.440 --> 40:42.440] They can refuse to hear a certiorari, but not an original position. [40:42.440 --> 40:45.440] If they do that, I'm sorry, position. [40:45.440 --> 40:47.440] My tongue is getting tangled. [40:47.440 --> 40:53.440] An original petition, if they refuse to hear that, then they denied you access to the court. [40:53.440 --> 40:59.440] Then you sue the judges personally. [40:59.440 --> 41:05.440] Of all people to deny you access, your right to petition the court for redress of grievance, [41:05.440 --> 41:09.440] I don't think you'll get to supreme doing that. [41:09.440 --> 41:10.440] Okay. [41:10.440 --> 41:15.440] I just thought they did not take any pro se cases whatsoever. [41:15.440 --> 41:17.440] That's not true. [41:17.440 --> 41:28.440] I had classed one a supreme court decision, pro se, on the right to carry in D.C. [41:28.440 --> 41:29.440] Okay. [41:29.440 --> 41:31.440] When was that? [41:31.440 --> 41:34.440] This was about four or five years ago. [41:34.440 --> 41:35.440] Okay. [41:35.440 --> 41:36.440] All right. [41:36.440 --> 41:44.440] We've got guys out there who write crappy pleadings and the court chucks them. [41:44.440 --> 41:49.440] I have not had a cert that I have filed. [41:49.440 --> 41:53.440] I filed three, and they refused to hear all of them. [41:53.440 --> 41:57.440] But that one, because it's pro se, they do that. [41:57.440 --> 42:03.440] They only pick up about 2% of the certs that are filed. [42:03.440 --> 42:05.440] This is not filing a cert. [42:05.440 --> 42:07.440] This is an original petition. [42:07.440 --> 42:08.440] Okay. [42:08.440 --> 42:10.440] Because it's against the state. [42:10.440 --> 42:11.440] Yes. [42:11.440 --> 42:13.440] Okay. [42:13.440 --> 42:18.440] But I'm saying that it's not something I've actually researched out. [42:18.440 --> 42:22.440] I probably need to, but I've got so many things I'm researching out. [42:22.440 --> 42:24.440] I haven't got to that one yet. [42:24.440 --> 42:26.440] That gives me some direction to go. [42:26.440 --> 42:29.440] I wasn't familiar with any of that, so it's a good start. [42:29.440 --> 42:32.440] So I really appreciate it, and thank you. [42:32.440 --> 42:36.440] You're really going to get their attention when you sue them in the supreme. [42:36.440 --> 42:39.440] Yeah. [42:39.440 --> 42:40.440] Yeah. [42:40.440 --> 42:44.440] Especially a two-bit municipality. [42:44.440 --> 42:46.440] They're going to get apoplexy. [42:46.440 --> 42:50.440] Well, they get apoplexy when you sue them for RICO as well. [42:50.440 --> 42:56.440] That's why I asked you about a street gang or an organized crime statute, [42:56.440 --> 42:59.440] because that's actually RICO. [42:59.440 --> 43:00.440] Yeah. [43:00.440 --> 43:04.440] And it's not the same in the state. [43:04.440 --> 43:08.440] They're not as afraid of it in the state, but in the Fed. [43:08.440 --> 43:12.440] In RICO, you get to do civil discovery, [43:12.440 --> 43:17.440] then use that civil discovery against them. [43:17.440 --> 43:19.440] That scares them. [43:19.440 --> 43:21.440] For the criminal, yeah. [43:21.440 --> 43:25.440] Yeah, you can take, you know, there's criminal discoveries, [43:25.440 --> 43:30.440] limits on criminal discovery, because Fourth Amendment, Fifth Amendment. [43:30.440 --> 43:35.440] In a RICO suit, you get to do civil discovery [43:35.440 --> 43:40.440] and have nearly as strong a Fifth Amendment protection, [43:40.440 --> 43:45.440] and then pull that back into the state, into a criminal case, [43:45.440 --> 43:48.440] and that's how we won the cigarette issue. [43:48.440 --> 43:51.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio. [43:51.440 --> 44:06.440] We'll be right back. [44:22.440 --> 44:24.440] Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:24.440 --> 44:27.440] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [44:27.440 --> 44:29.440] You can order your supplies or holiday gifts. [44:29.440 --> 44:31.440] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [44:31.440 --> 44:34.440] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [44:34.440 --> 44:37.440] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [44:37.440 --> 44:41.440] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, [44:41.440 --> 44:43.440] and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.440 --> 44:44.440] Do I pay extra? [44:44.440 --> 44:45.440] No. [44:45.440 --> 44:47.440] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [44:47.440 --> 44:48.440] No. [44:48.440 --> 44:49.440] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:49.440 --> 44:50.440] No. [44:50.440 --> 44:51.440] Thank you. [44:51.440 --> 44:54.440] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [44:54.440 --> 44:55.440] This is perfect. [44:55.440 --> 44:56.440] Thank you so much. [44:56.440 --> 44:58.440] We are welcome. [44:58.440 --> 45:01.440] Happy holidays, Logos. [45:01.440 --> 45:04.440] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.440 --> 45:07.440] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:07.440 --> 45:11.440] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course [45:11.440 --> 45:15.440] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.440 --> 45:19.440] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.440 --> 45:23.440] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.440 --> 45:28.440] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.440 --> 45:31.440] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:31.440 --> 45:34.440] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.440 --> 45:39.440] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.440 --> 45:43.440] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.440 --> 45:48.440] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:48.440 --> 45:52.440] notes for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.440 --> 45:56.440] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.440 --> 46:01.440] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:01.440 --> 46:28.440] Music playing. [46:28.440 --> 46:32.440] Warrior of love, scufflin' the keys to the peace [46:32.440 --> 46:35.440] All they're takin' is a misunderstanding [46:35.440 --> 46:37.440] Somebody calls the police [46:37.440 --> 47:01.440] Why don't the spots fly? [47:01.440 --> 47:03.440] Friction isn't addiction [47:03.440 --> 47:07.440] The hard work can leave you cold as nails [47:07.440 --> 47:10.440] There's the hot to the heat, joy, tranquility [47:10.440 --> 47:13.440] Heavy loads of safe and unscathed [47:13.440 --> 47:37.440] The time is coming with the callin' [47:43.440 --> 47:45.440] I know so many people want to talk to you, too, [47:45.440 --> 47:49.440] so I really appreciate everything you've shared with me tonight, [47:49.440 --> 47:51.440] and I'll keep you posted. [47:51.440 --> 47:55.440] Okay, and for everybody else, if I cut you short, [47:55.440 --> 47:56.440] call back in tomorrow night. [47:56.440 --> 47:59.440] I got a four-hour show tomorrow night, and I'll give you more time. [47:59.440 --> 48:03.440] And if I cut you short today, then I'll bring you up early tomorrow. [48:03.440 --> 48:05.440] Okay, we're going to Jay in Texas. [48:05.440 --> 48:08.440] Hello, Jay. [48:08.440 --> 48:10.440] How you doing, sir? [48:10.440 --> 48:14.440] Pretty good. What are you up to today? [48:14.440 --> 48:23.440] Last I checked, and I just went to the doctor, but about five foot six. [48:23.440 --> 48:28.440] Brett, can you mute him? [48:28.440 --> 48:33.440] Okay, okay, I got it. [48:33.440 --> 48:37.440] So what do you want? [48:37.440 --> 48:39.440] I want everything. [48:39.440 --> 48:42.440] This man's being hard on me today. [48:42.440 --> 48:43.440] Yes, sir. [48:43.440 --> 48:47.440] Okay, you have any questions for us? [48:47.440 --> 48:50.440] Yes, sir, I do. [48:50.440 --> 48:57.440] I am in the process of trying to get my daughter out of jail, [48:57.440 --> 49:05.440] and I need a good, strong writ of habeas corpus. [49:05.440 --> 49:12.440] Is there an order issued by a magistrate under 16.17 [49:12.440 --> 49:20.440] filed in the public record showing the final probable cause? [49:20.440 --> 49:22.440] That answer's probably a no. [49:22.440 --> 49:25.440] That took a lot too long to answer. [49:25.440 --> 49:28.440] Well, I don't know the answer to that. [49:28.440 --> 49:35.440] You know, I can tell you my daughter was arrested on circumstantial evidence only, [49:35.440 --> 49:41.440] and they are coming after her with injury to a child. [49:41.440 --> 49:45.440] Okay, now I know who you are and I know what it's about. [49:45.440 --> 49:47.440] Email me that case. [49:47.440 --> 49:51.440] The cost number, I want to look it up. [49:51.440 --> 49:54.440] It sounds kind of outrageous, [49:54.440 --> 49:57.440] but a 16.17 order should stop them in the tracks. [49:57.440 --> 50:01.440] That's a subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [50:01.440 --> 50:03.440] With that case number on there? [50:03.440 --> 50:06.440] Yeah, send me an email and ask for it, [50:06.440 --> 50:11.440] and I'll send you the one I'm currently working on. [50:11.440 --> 50:13.440] You'll have to change the facts and stuff, [50:13.440 --> 50:18.440] but the basic facts are she was arrested, charged with a crime, [50:18.440 --> 50:20.440] but never brought before a magistrate, [50:20.440 --> 50:23.440] and there is no finding of probable cause in the public record. [50:23.440 --> 50:27.440] And 16.17 says if an order is not filed within 48 hours, [50:27.440 --> 50:32.440] the accused shall be discharged. [50:32.440 --> 50:37.440] And I've got a whole argument on Troy v. State [50:37.440 --> 50:44.440] and this garbage about no right to an examining trial in a misdemeanor [50:44.440 --> 50:50.440] and how an examining trial is a matter of due process. [50:50.440 --> 50:53.440] I've got a real big argument on that. [50:53.440 --> 50:56.440] So I want a bunch of people to file it [50:56.440 --> 51:01.440] because we're going to be filing $400 million lawsuits on it. [51:01.440 --> 51:06.440] I just rewrote the suit [51:06.440 --> 51:10.440] so that I took out the petition for declaratory judgment, [51:10.440 --> 51:12.440] and that shortened the suit up quite a bit. [51:12.440 --> 51:16.440] Now it's only 95 pages. [51:16.440 --> 51:21.440] It is a relatively complete legal brief. [51:21.440 --> 51:25.440] They're going to have a tough time stepping around that one. [51:25.440 --> 51:32.440] So first we get a motion to dismiss relaxed subject matter jurisdiction [51:32.440 --> 51:36.440] and get them to deny that. [51:36.440 --> 51:39.440] Maybe they will, maybe they won't. [51:39.440 --> 51:47.440] We want to get them to dismiss it for some other reason other than the 16.17. [51:47.440 --> 51:50.440] That's the last thing they're going to want to happen [51:50.440 --> 51:55.440] because that will stain the whole system. [51:55.440 --> 51:59.440] So they do everything they can to avoid it. [51:59.440 --> 52:02.440] Does she have a lawyer? [52:02.440 --> 52:04.440] Yes, sir, she does. [52:04.440 --> 52:06.440] Court appointed? [52:06.440 --> 52:08.440] Yes, sir. [52:08.440 --> 52:10.440] Oh, good. Okay. [52:10.440 --> 52:17.440] Have you heard our treatment on how to grab a lawyer by the testicles? [52:17.440 --> 52:19.440] Not yet. [52:19.440 --> 52:21.440] Okay. [52:21.440 --> 52:25.440] Take this 16.17 order, have her give it to the lawyer, [52:25.440 --> 52:29.440] and order him to file that with the court. [52:29.440 --> 52:32.440] When he drags his feet, bargrieve him. [52:32.440 --> 52:34.440] When you bargrieve him, [52:34.440 --> 52:41.440] he's going to immediately prepare a motion to withdraw and file that with the court. [52:41.440 --> 52:47.440] And then you're to file an opposition to the motion to withdraw. [52:47.440 --> 52:51.440] He's your counsel of choice. [52:51.440 --> 52:54.440] He's under contract with her. [52:54.440 --> 52:59.440] Now, I did this to a judge they appointed for me in Austin. [52:59.440 --> 53:03.440] I didn't want one, but they wanted to appoint one, so I told them, go ahead. [53:03.440 --> 53:06.440] I appointed this lawyer, [53:06.440 --> 53:11.440] and the first thing he did was telling me, you know, this is how things are going to go. [53:11.440 --> 53:14.440] I let him run on a while, and I said, no, no, no, no, that's not how they're going to go. [53:14.440 --> 53:16.440] Well, how are they going to go then, Mr. Kelton? [53:16.440 --> 53:18.440] So this is how they're going to go. [53:18.440 --> 53:21.440] You're going to go to the judge and ask the judge to remove you from this case [53:21.440 --> 53:25.440] or to allow you to withdraw from this case. [53:25.440 --> 53:30.440] And the judge, and I'm going to object to it, [53:30.440 --> 53:32.440] and the judge is going to let you withdraw from the case. [53:32.440 --> 53:34.440] And he said, yes, he will. [53:34.440 --> 53:38.440] Then I get to sue the judge personally for interfering with a private contract. [53:38.440 --> 53:41.440] Well, Mr. Kelton, I'm not under contract with you. [53:41.440 --> 53:43.440] I'm under contract with the state. [53:43.440 --> 53:45.440] And this is what I was getting to. [53:45.440 --> 53:47.440] Yes, you are. [53:47.440 --> 53:50.440] But I'm the intended third-party beneficiary, [53:50.440 --> 53:53.440] and I have standing under the contract. [53:53.440 --> 53:56.440] And when the judge allows you to withdraw from the case, [53:56.440 --> 53:59.440] then I get to sue the judge for interfering with a private contract. [53:59.440 --> 54:04.440] And he gave me this look like, you're going to give me this board. [54:04.440 --> 54:06.440] Point is, he's got a lawyer. [54:06.440 --> 54:08.440] That lawyer's under contract. [54:08.440 --> 54:11.440] She's the third-party beneficiary of the contract. [54:11.440 --> 54:13.440] You give him this motion. [54:13.440 --> 54:15.440] When he doesn't file it, you bar-grieve him. [54:15.440 --> 54:17.440] He'll immediately ask to withdraw. [54:17.440 --> 54:20.440] You file an objection to the withdrawal. [54:20.440 --> 54:22.440] If they allow him to withdraw, [54:22.440 --> 54:30.440] then you file a motion to appoint her the most expensive lawyer in the jurisdiction. [54:30.440 --> 54:34.440] You have a right to counsel of your choice. [54:34.440 --> 54:36.440] You had counsel of your choice. [54:36.440 --> 54:38.440] The judge interfered with a private contract [54:38.440 --> 54:42.440] and allowed your lawyer to withdraw over your objection. [54:42.440 --> 54:46.440] Now he owes you counsel of choice. [54:46.440 --> 54:50.440] So appoint me the big guy. [54:50.440 --> 54:52.440] Okay. [54:52.440 --> 54:53.440] Would you word it like that, [54:53.440 --> 54:56.440] or would you go research somebody that's expensive and just name them? [54:56.440 --> 55:01.440] I would research one and name them personally. [55:01.440 --> 55:07.440] Name the head of a law, of a major law firm. [55:07.440 --> 55:08.440] Okay. [55:08.440 --> 55:11.440] But give me an email. [55:11.440 --> 55:12.440] Get this thing filed. [55:12.440 --> 55:18.440] I understand your son's under a claim over the same issue. [55:18.440 --> 55:22.440] No, my son is a separate issue. [55:22.440 --> 55:24.440] Oh, okay. [55:24.440 --> 55:26.440] Well, get this, get it filed. [55:26.440 --> 55:31.440] If your son is being prosecuted criminally, file the same thing it is. [55:31.440 --> 55:33.440] That's my son-in-law. [55:33.440 --> 55:35.440] You know, they're both in jail. [55:35.440 --> 55:39.440] My son... [55:39.440 --> 55:41.440] He's the one where they killed his dog? [55:41.440 --> 55:43.440] Yes, sir. [55:43.440 --> 55:45.440] His service dog? [55:45.440 --> 55:47.440] Vance County, yes, sir. [55:47.440 --> 55:50.440] That should get it real ugly. [55:50.440 --> 55:59.440] But the two that are being prosecuted, get the 1617 order filed for each one of them. [55:59.440 --> 56:03.440] Well, we don't have a 1617... [56:03.440 --> 56:05.440] We don't even have a... [56:05.440 --> 56:06.440] Send me an email. [56:06.440 --> 56:08.440] I'll send it to you. [56:08.440 --> 56:13.440] Okay. [56:13.440 --> 56:15.440] Get that in and then let us know what the lawyer does. [56:15.440 --> 56:18.440] The lawyer is really going to hiccup when you drop that on him. [56:18.440 --> 56:24.440] I'll send you the 1617 and speedy trial. [56:24.440 --> 56:25.440] I got a... [56:25.440 --> 56:26.440] Okay. [56:26.440 --> 56:30.440] I think it's a pretty decent brief worked up on speedy trial. [56:30.440 --> 56:35.440] What do you want me to put on the title or subject matter on the email? [56:35.440 --> 56:38.440] Yeah, just put 1617 order. [56:38.440 --> 56:44.440] I'll know what it is. [56:44.440 --> 56:46.440] Okay. [56:46.440 --> 56:48.440] Okay. [56:48.440 --> 56:51.440] Anything else for us? [56:51.440 --> 57:02.440] Well, what would you do with evidence against three counties on the Texas criminal code of procedures? [57:02.440 --> 57:13.440] Depends on what it is and first blush, first thing I'm thinking is pick your fights real careful. [57:13.440 --> 57:17.440] It sounds like you got three fights going on right now. [57:17.440 --> 57:19.440] I got more than three. [57:19.440 --> 57:32.440] Well, don't start any more if you can avoid it unless the one you're going to start adds to or supports one of your other fights. [57:32.440 --> 57:34.440] Go ahead and tell me what it is. [57:34.440 --> 57:48.440] All this kind of got thrown on me without any provocation whatsoever. [57:48.440 --> 57:49.440] Okay. [57:49.440 --> 57:50.440] Is it... [57:50.440 --> 58:01.440] CPS and my daughter and then my service dogs got killed and other issues. [58:01.440 --> 58:08.440] So if you got more issues coming, I'm going to suggest pick the ones that are most important and take those on first. [58:08.440 --> 58:10.440] Yeah, got to prioritize. [58:10.440 --> 58:15.440] We run out of bandwidth pretty easily. [58:15.440 --> 58:20.440] You are going to get more crap you could file against them than you can ever get to. [58:20.440 --> 58:22.440] They are very accommodating in that way. [58:22.440 --> 58:30.440] So pick the ones that will sting them the hardest or the ones that are most important to you and handle those first because it's going to take a lot of time. [58:30.440 --> 58:34.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton, we're at Fountain Rouge Law Radio. [58:34.440 --> 58:39.440] Still got a full board of callers so I'm not going to have to call that number. [58:39.440 --> 58:49.440] Hang on, go into our sponsors and we'll be right back. [58:49.440 --> 58:53.440] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [58:53.440 --> 58:57.440] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.440 --> 59:05.440] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:05.440 --> 59:08.440] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.440 --> 59:17.440] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.440 --> 59:21.440] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:21.440 --> 59:27.440] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.440 --> 59:32.440] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.440 --> 59:43.440] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.440 --> 59:47.440] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.440 --> 59:52.440] That's freestudybible.com. [59:52.440 --> 01:00:02.440] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.440 --> 01:00:06.440] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:06.440 --> 01:00:09.440] They guarantee a specific freedom Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.440 --> 01:00:11.440] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:11.440 --> 01:00:17.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:17.440 --> 01:00:19.440] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:19.440 --> 01:00:22.440] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.440 --> 01:00:27.440] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.440 --> 01:00:29.440] So protect your rights. [01:00:29.440 --> 01:00:32.440] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.440 --> 01:00:35.440] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.440 --> 01:00:38.440] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:00:38.440 --> 01:00:42.440] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.440 --> 01:00:45.440] Start over with startpage. [01:00:45.440 --> 01:00:48.440] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.440 --> 01:00:51.440] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.440 --> 01:00:54.440] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.440 --> 01:01:00.440] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.440 --> 01:01:04.440] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:04.440 --> 01:01:06.440] a common demand in the days of our Founding Fathers. [01:01:06.440 --> 01:01:09.440] Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.440 --> 01:01:13.440] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:13.440 --> 01:01:17.440] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and re-read the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.440 --> 01:01:31.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.440 --> 01:01:35.440] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.440 --> 01:01:39.440] They guarantee you the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:39.440 --> 01:01:40.440] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.440 --> 01:01:47.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:47.440 --> 01:01:49.440] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:49.440 --> 01:01:52.440] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.440 --> 01:01:57.440] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.440 --> 01:02:02.440] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.440 --> 01:02:05.440] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:05.440 --> 01:02:08.440] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.440 --> 01:02:12.440] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.440 --> 01:02:16.440] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:16.440 --> 01:02:22.440] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:22.440 --> 01:02:28.440] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:28.440 --> 01:02:31.440] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:31.440 --> 01:02:35.440] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:35.440 --> 01:02:40.440] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:40.440 --> 01:02:44.440] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:44.440 --> 01:02:47.440] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:47.440 --> 01:02:50.440] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:50.440 --> 01:02:54.440] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:54.440 --> 01:03:02.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:02.440 --> 01:03:25.440] If you're ready let's get started. [01:03:32.440 --> 01:03:37.440] One by one, I'll have a chance for justice and a chance for respect [01:03:37.440 --> 01:03:41.440] A chance to prove it, a chance to prove it, a chance to prove it [01:03:41.440 --> 01:03:45.440] A chance for our words, a chance for our words [01:03:45.440 --> 01:03:48.440] One of them who will be charged will be free [01:03:48.440 --> 01:03:51.440] Say all men was created equally [01:03:51.440 --> 01:03:55.440] Charged on Babylon and do it daily [01:03:55.440 --> 01:03:58.440] And when night comes, you'll see everybody [01:03:58.440 --> 01:04:02.440] So one by one, we have to chant them on [01:04:02.440 --> 01:04:06.440] We charge on Babylon because Babylon is run [01:04:06.440 --> 01:04:09.440] The only right man, we say is the rest come on [01:04:09.440 --> 01:04:32.440] We take Michelin Monday morning [01:04:32.440 --> 01:04:36.440] The school district that my son graduated from [01:04:36.440 --> 01:04:42.440] I have evidence on them breaking the contract [01:04:42.440 --> 01:04:45.440] As well as ADA violations [01:04:45.440 --> 01:04:52.440] I also have the school's attorney lying to Ken Paxton [01:04:52.440 --> 01:04:54.440] On an opinion request [01:04:54.440 --> 01:05:00.440] And I have Ken Paxton's response ignoring the lie [01:05:00.440 --> 01:05:04.440] And the evidence that I sent to Ken Paxton [01:05:04.440 --> 01:05:09.440] Jay, your audio level just dropped down lower [01:05:09.440 --> 01:05:12.440] Your volume, did you just make a change? [01:05:12.440 --> 01:05:15.440] You can go back the way it was? [01:05:15.440 --> 01:05:17.440] Hold on one second [01:05:17.440 --> 01:05:19.440] Is that better? [01:05:19.440 --> 01:05:23.440] Yeah, it's a little higher [01:05:23.440 --> 01:05:26.440] My ears aren't sensitive enough for that [01:05:26.440 --> 01:05:29.440] Ken Paxton, what are you asking him to do? [01:05:29.440 --> 01:05:35.440] Because in Texas, we have a very weak attorney general [01:05:35.440 --> 01:05:39.440] He has no criminal prosecution powers [01:05:39.440 --> 01:05:44.440] Special case [01:05:44.440 --> 01:05:49.440] Well, basically what happened was the school attorney [01:05:49.440 --> 01:05:52.440] I did an open records request [01:05:52.440 --> 01:05:56.440] And the school's attorney got involved [01:05:56.440 --> 01:05:59.440] And did an opinion request [01:05:59.440 --> 01:06:02.440] And on that opinion request, they lied [01:06:02.440 --> 01:06:05.440] And my son was denied medical attention [01:06:05.440 --> 01:06:07.440] Back in 2020 [01:06:07.440 --> 01:06:11.440] While his body was attacking itself at a local clinic [01:06:11.440 --> 01:06:13.440] And he spent the night in the hospital [01:06:13.440 --> 01:06:15.440] As a result of that [01:06:15.440 --> 01:06:18.440] After I called down 101 [01:06:18.440 --> 01:06:22.440] And so I sent that evidence to Ken Paxton [01:06:22.440 --> 01:06:24.440] As well as [01:06:24.440 --> 01:06:27.440] Okay, hold on [01:06:27.440 --> 01:06:30.440] That's not his business [01:06:30.440 --> 01:06:36.440] You got to look at what he can do [01:06:36.440 --> 01:06:39.440] Unlike Pennsylvania, we were talking to Kerry [01:06:39.440 --> 01:06:44.440] In Pennsylvania, the attorney general has prosecutorial powers [01:06:44.440 --> 01:06:45.440] Not in Texas [01:06:45.440 --> 01:06:48.440] We have about the weakest attorney general [01:06:48.440 --> 01:06:51.440] That I've ever come across [01:06:51.440 --> 01:06:54.440] For the most part, he just represents the state [01:06:54.440 --> 01:06:59.440] Maybe that's why he's so gung-ho about jumping down somebody's throat [01:06:59.440 --> 01:07:02.440] About who doesn't answer records requests [01:07:02.440 --> 01:07:04.440] If you go to him about it [01:07:04.440 --> 01:07:06.440] He jumps on them about it [01:07:06.440 --> 01:07:07.440] Maybe that's why [01:07:07.440 --> 01:07:09.440] Because he can't really do much else [01:07:09.440 --> 01:07:15.440] Right, the only time an attorney general has original prosecutorial power [01:07:15.440 --> 01:07:22.440] Is in the matter of an information request to a prosecuting attorney [01:07:22.440 --> 01:07:26.440] That's it [01:07:26.440 --> 01:07:29.440] Otherwise, it's a waste of time going to him [01:07:29.440 --> 01:07:32.440] Okay [01:07:32.440 --> 01:07:35.440] I did not know that [01:07:35.440 --> 01:07:37.440] That's why we get the big bucks [01:07:37.440 --> 01:07:40.440] Yes sir, but I also have [01:07:40.440 --> 01:07:49.440] If Deborah's listening, because of that response, she's going to double my salary again [01:07:49.440 --> 01:07:56.440] But I also got the Texas Criminal Code 5, section 2205 [01:07:56.440 --> 01:07:58.440] I mean 2204 [01:07:58.440 --> 01:08:02.440] 2204 is aggravated kidnapping? [01:08:02.440 --> 01:08:07.440] Nope, injury to a disabled individual [01:08:07.440 --> 01:08:10.440] No, 22 [01:08:10.440 --> 01:08:15.440] 2202 is assault [01:08:15.440 --> 01:08:19.440] 2203 is kidnapping [01:08:19.440 --> 01:08:22.440] 2204 is aggravated kidnapping [01:08:22.440 --> 01:08:24.440] Unless I've got my numbers off [01:08:24.440 --> 01:08:27.440] That's in 20, you're right, but that's over in 20 [01:08:27.440 --> 01:08:29.440] Oops, oops, my bad [01:08:29.440 --> 01:08:32.440] I made a mistake, first time [01:08:32.440 --> 01:08:34.440] I'll shut up now [01:08:34.440 --> 01:08:35.440] Go ahead [01:08:35.440 --> 01:08:40.440] I know because that's what they're charging my daughter with as well [01:08:40.440 --> 01:08:52.440] And that carries 5 to 99 years in prison, state jail, felony [01:08:52.440 --> 01:08:54.440] Okay, it's a penalty [01:08:54.440 --> 01:08:57.440] What does 2204 say? [01:08:57.440 --> 01:09:05.440] That's injury to a child, disabled individual, or the elderly [01:09:05.440 --> 01:09:07.440] Wait, could you hear that? I couldn't understand all that, Brett [01:09:07.440 --> 01:09:13.440] Yeah, injury to a child, a disabled individual, or the elderly [01:09:13.440 --> 01:09:16.440] Oh, like me [01:09:16.440 --> 01:09:18.440] Yeah, I like you [01:09:18.440 --> 01:09:22.440] Does it matter if they hurt my feelings? [01:09:22.440 --> 01:09:25.440] Well, yes it does [01:09:25.440 --> 01:09:30.440] Okay, so your son is clearly disabled [01:09:30.440 --> 01:09:35.440] Yes sir, and he's autistic, he's on the autism spectrum [01:09:35.440 --> 01:09:42.440] And he happens to have autoimmune disease, which prevents his body from handling stress [01:09:42.440 --> 01:09:44.440] That's the injury [01:09:44.440 --> 01:09:49.440] Okay, so have you filed a tort letter? [01:09:49.440 --> 01:09:51.440] Not yet [01:09:51.440 --> 01:09:55.440] Okay, that'll take a civil suit, you probably got a pretty good one [01:09:55.440 --> 01:10:00.440] Oh, you want to go after them criminally [01:10:00.440 --> 01:10:07.440] Then set them up for the 1617 [01:10:07.440 --> 01:10:11.440] When you get that motion, read it [01:10:11.440 --> 01:10:18.440] Because it quotes the code on how when you give a complaint to a magistrate [01:10:18.440 --> 01:10:21.440] They're to issue a warrant for a threat [01:10:21.440 --> 01:10:24.440] They don't get to decide whether they want to act on it or not [01:10:24.440 --> 01:10:27.440] So take this complaint, file it with the magistrate [01:10:27.440 --> 01:10:35.440] When the magistrate refuses to take it, then you file criminal charges against the magistrate with a higher level magistrate [01:10:35.440 --> 01:10:40.440] Like I did the first one with a JP, then I went to the county, now I'm going to go to the district [01:10:40.440 --> 01:10:47.440] And from the district I'll go to the Court of Appeals, and then the Supreme [01:10:47.440 --> 01:10:53.440] And they'll show a pattern of abuse, and then you can come back and sue the whole state under RICO [01:10:53.440 --> 01:10:55.440] I've already got that [01:10:55.440 --> 01:11:07.440] I've gone up in person to talk to the DA, district attorney's office, the county attorney [01:11:07.440 --> 01:11:11.440] Okay, I stopped wasting my time with prosecutors [01:11:11.440 --> 01:11:18.440] Their job is to do as little work as possible and avoid any claims that they can [01:11:18.440 --> 01:11:25.440] So they won't be helpful, and besides, they're not in line of due process [01:11:25.440 --> 01:11:28.440] They're just a lawyer that represents the state [01:11:28.440 --> 01:11:34.440] Due process requires the complaints to be filed with magistrates [01:11:34.440 --> 01:11:43.440] It allows filing of complaints or giving notice of a complaint to a grand juror [01:11:43.440 --> 01:11:50.440] But all complaints are directed to some magistrate, not to some prosecutor [01:11:50.440 --> 01:11:55.440] Okay, and that 1617 order will... [01:11:55.440 --> 01:11:58.440] It'll open the door to all of that [01:11:58.440 --> 01:11:59.440] Cool [01:11:59.440 --> 01:12:05.440] You file that with the... Okay, you're filing a 2204 [01:12:05.440 --> 01:12:09.440] Just file that complaint with a magistrate instead of the 1617 [01:12:09.440 --> 01:12:13.440] 1617 is only for somebody who's been arrested [01:12:13.440 --> 01:12:19.440] And you try to get the prosecution dismissed for denial of due process [01:12:19.440 --> 01:12:22.440] Well, it connected to the experiment trial, didn't it? [01:12:22.440 --> 01:12:26.440] Yeah, well that's after the judge... [01:12:26.440 --> 01:12:32.440] See, you don't have standing if you're not the one being prosecuted [01:12:32.440 --> 01:12:42.440] So what 1509 tells the judge is if you file a criminal complaint, like under 2204, with a magistrate [01:12:42.440 --> 01:12:45.440] He is commanded to issue a warrant [01:12:45.440 --> 01:12:50.440] He doesn't have any discretion. When he doesn't, you get to sue the judge personally [01:12:50.440 --> 01:12:55.440] 1617 is when you've been arrested on a criminal offense [01:12:55.440 --> 01:12:58.440] They're commanded to take you directly to the nearest magistrate [01:12:58.440 --> 01:13:00.440] The magistrate is to issue an order [01:13:00.440 --> 01:13:06.440] Whether he finds probable cause or not, he's to issue an order and file it with the clerk of the court [01:13:06.440 --> 01:13:08.440] That's what they don't do [01:13:08.440 --> 01:13:10.440] Right [01:13:10.440 --> 01:13:15.440] And if he doesn't, then if an order is not filed with the court [01:13:15.440 --> 01:13:22.440] Within 48 hours, the accused shall be discharged [01:13:22.440 --> 01:13:27.440] It does not say may, might or can, it says shall [01:13:27.440 --> 01:13:31.440] It's 48 hours [01:13:31.440 --> 01:13:33.440] And they never do it [01:13:33.440 --> 01:13:39.440] So if you're accused of a criminal act, you have a right to discharge [01:13:39.440 --> 01:13:42.440] You have a statutory right to discharge [01:13:42.440 --> 01:13:44.440] Okay, cool [01:13:44.440 --> 01:13:50.440] So you file the complaint and they're not going to want to act on it [01:13:50.440 --> 01:13:54.440] Then when you sue the judge for not acting on the complaint, now you got their attention [01:13:54.440 --> 01:13:58.440] Then you take the complaint and file it with another judge and ask him to do it [01:13:58.440 --> 01:14:00.440] Now this is what I'm doing in Victoria [01:14:00.440 --> 01:14:08.440] Once I've walked through Victoria County, I can assure you that if you go in with a complaint [01:14:08.440 --> 01:14:14.440] As a pro se and not a lawyer, they're going to take your complaint [01:14:14.440 --> 01:14:17.440] They're not going to give you any BS [01:14:17.440 --> 01:14:24.440] But a jurisdiction, it takes one round to that [01:14:24.440 --> 01:14:28.440] Okay, do you have anything else for us? [01:14:28.440 --> 01:14:32.440] Not at this time, I'll have to call back later [01:14:32.440 --> 01:14:35.440] Call back tomorrow, we'll have more time [01:14:35.440 --> 01:14:37.440] Okay, sounds good, thank you [01:14:37.440 --> 01:14:39.440] Okay, thank you, Jay [01:14:39.440 --> 01:14:46.440] Okay, now we're going to Jason in California [01:14:46.440 --> 01:14:49.440] Okay, guys [01:14:49.440 --> 01:14:53.440] Hey, what do you have for us today? [01:14:53.440 --> 01:14:58.440] Well, I'll keep it [01:14:58.440 --> 01:15:02.440] I mean there's so much that's happened since we last spoke [01:15:02.440 --> 01:15:06.440] I had my hearing, multiple hearings [01:15:06.440 --> 01:15:09.440] A lot of things went down [01:15:09.440 --> 01:15:12.440] But the case got dismissed [01:15:12.440 --> 01:15:19.440] The Trader Joe's restraining order case got dismissed [01:15:19.440 --> 01:15:23.440] Ah, we came, we saw, we kicked their behinds [01:15:23.440 --> 01:15:26.440] Good for you [01:15:26.440 --> 01:15:30.440] Give us, I saw some on the Telegram channel about what happened [01:15:30.440 --> 01:15:34.440] Give us a kind of synopsis of what went on [01:15:34.440 --> 01:15:41.440] Synopsis, you know, I had this commissioner acting as a temporary judge [01:15:41.440 --> 01:15:46.440] She's been a problem the whole time [01:15:46.440 --> 01:15:51.440] She did one good thing, which is why I didn't go after her [01:15:51.440 --> 01:16:00.440] I had, I was just trying to root for her that she was going to keep doing better, but she didn't [01:16:00.440 --> 01:16:06.440] I had multiple motions on the plate [01:16:06.440 --> 01:16:12.440] And we had a hearing that was set for the 17th for a show cause motion [01:16:12.440 --> 01:16:15.440] So she denied everything [01:16:15.440 --> 01:16:23.440] And then she, on her own motion, addressed the November 17th [01:16:23.440 --> 01:16:33.440] They, the lawyer and the commission, they turned my show cause motion into a [01:16:33.440 --> 01:16:37.440] Into a motion to compel discovery [01:16:37.440 --> 01:16:39.440] Which is very strange [01:16:39.440 --> 01:16:42.440] Okay, hang on [01:16:42.440 --> 01:16:46.440] We're about to go to sponsors, we'll pick this up on the other side [01:16:46.440 --> 01:16:52.440] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we have one empty slot on the board [01:16:52.440 --> 01:16:56.440] But we don't have enough time, so don't bother to call in [01:16:56.440 --> 01:16:58.440] We'll only get to two more if we're lucky [01:16:58.440 --> 01:17:00.440] We'll be right back [01:17:00.440 --> 01:17:05.440] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:05.440 --> 01:17:12.440] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk [01:17:12.440 --> 01:17:17.440] Where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15 [01:17:17.440 --> 01:17:24.440] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the Word of Truth [01:17:24.440 --> 01:17:31.440] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message [01:17:31.440 --> 01:17:38.440] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development [01:17:38.440 --> 01:17:43.440] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear [01:17:43.440 --> 01:17:49.440] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus [01:17:49.440 --> 01:17:59.440] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures [01:17:59.440 --> 01:18:05.440] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.440 --> 01:18:09.440] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method [01:18:09.440 --> 01:18:14.440] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too [01:18:14.440 --> 01:18:20.440] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes [01:18:20.440 --> 01:18:24.440] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons [01:18:24.440 --> 01:18:26.440] How to answer letters and phone calls [01:18:26.440 --> 01:18:29.440] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report [01:18:29.440 --> 01:18:33.440] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [01:18:33.440 --> 01:18:38.440] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [01:18:38.440 --> 01:18:41.440] Personal consultation is available as well [01:18:41.440 --> 01:18:46.440] For more information please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:18:46.440 --> 01:18:49.440] Or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com [01:18:49.440 --> 01:18:51.440] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com [01:18:51.440 --> 01:18:57.440] Or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:18:57.440 --> 01:19:00.440] To learn how to stop debt collectors now [01:19:00.440 --> 01:19:11.440] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network [01:19:11.440 --> 01:19:32.440] This is the Logos Radio Network [01:19:32.440 --> 01:19:34.540] This is the State Logos Law piled up on the Pecker [01:19:40.640 --> 01:19:44.160] Okay. We are back [01:19:44.160 --> 01:19:46.960] Randy Kelton Brett-Fountain RuleOfLawRadio [01:19:46.960 --> 01:19:49.660] And we have Carrie White still on the line [01:19:49.660 --> 01:19:52.660] Carrie, will you drop off so you open a slot on our callerboard? [01:19:52.660 --> 01:19:54.480] We can only hold four at a time [01:19:54.480 --> 01:19:59.460] You can go to a RuleofLawRadio.com and click on the listen Live line [01:19:59.460 --> 01:20:04.460] Okay, we're talking to Jason in California. [01:20:04.460 --> 01:20:07.460] Okay, I think my... [01:20:07.460 --> 01:20:09.460] Someone's calling you? [01:20:09.460 --> 01:20:13.460] Yes, my wife. My apologies. Let me shut that off. [01:20:13.460 --> 01:20:17.460] She asked me the other day, [01:20:17.460 --> 01:20:21.460] what day do you do your show? [01:20:21.460 --> 01:20:24.460] What? [01:20:24.460 --> 01:20:29.460] I told her, you're married to a famous radio star [01:20:29.460 --> 01:20:35.460] who's been doing a radio show for 15 years. [01:20:35.460 --> 01:20:38.460] And you don't know what day I do a show. [01:20:38.460 --> 01:20:41.460] She's never listened to one of my shows. [01:20:41.460 --> 01:20:44.460] I get no respect. [01:20:44.460 --> 01:20:48.460] Okay, sorry about that. Where were we? [01:20:48.460 --> 01:20:54.460] We were just updating on the last couple of days [01:20:54.460 --> 01:20:59.460] with my restraining order issue. [01:20:59.460 --> 01:21:02.460] So let's see here. [01:21:02.460 --> 01:21:04.460] So the commission denied everything. [01:21:04.460 --> 01:21:06.460] It was about an hour. [01:21:06.460 --> 01:21:12.460] And not knowing exactly what I was doing, [01:21:12.460 --> 01:21:19.460] I orally moved for a 170.1 motion, [01:21:19.460 --> 01:21:26.460] which was to disqualify for bias. [01:21:26.460 --> 01:21:28.460] So there I don't... [01:21:28.460 --> 01:21:31.460] She's being biased multiple times, [01:21:31.460 --> 01:21:36.460] and I don't feel I can get a fair hearing. [01:21:36.460 --> 01:21:40.460] And she said that she set a recess. [01:21:40.460 --> 01:21:43.460] So we had a recess for like 15 minutes. [01:21:43.460 --> 01:21:49.460] And we came back, and she said she's denying that motion. [01:21:49.460 --> 01:21:55.460] However, she doesn't have enough time to do this hearing today. [01:21:55.460 --> 01:21:57.460] So she's transferring it. [01:21:57.460 --> 01:22:01.460] I'm being transferred to another courtroom with a judge. [01:22:01.460 --> 01:22:07.460] And that was initially a very scary thing. [01:22:07.460 --> 01:22:11.460] Wait, she said she was denying your motion, [01:22:11.460 --> 01:22:15.460] but she transferred it to another judge anyway. [01:22:15.460 --> 01:22:16.460] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [01:22:16.460 --> 01:22:21.460] So it must have been something that like it looks better for her. [01:22:21.460 --> 01:22:23.460] So she didn't get disqualified. [01:22:23.460 --> 01:22:27.460] And well, I mean, yeah. [01:22:27.460 --> 01:22:30.460] So I ultimately got what I've been wanting this whole time, [01:22:30.460 --> 01:22:34.460] which was a judge. [01:22:34.460 --> 01:22:39.460] And there's some miracles happen, [01:22:39.460 --> 01:22:42.460] because at first it seemed like I was going to get railroaded [01:22:42.460 --> 01:22:47.460] with no court reporter, and that's why she transferred me. [01:22:47.460 --> 01:22:52.460] But it turned out that there was a court reporter, [01:22:52.460 --> 01:22:57.460] and this judge, he was legit. [01:22:57.460 --> 01:23:09.460] I think I really think he was trying to cover this other judges behind. [01:23:09.460 --> 01:23:15.460] Well, he was an adult, and this woman was like a cheerleader in high school. [01:23:15.460 --> 01:23:18.460] She sounded like a cheerleader. [01:23:18.460 --> 01:23:24.460] And so what ultimately happened is we shut the court down [01:23:24.460 --> 01:23:29.460] after one witness testimony, [01:23:29.460 --> 01:23:33.460] and had to come back the next day, which was yesterday, [01:23:33.460 --> 01:23:35.460] and they had two more witnesses. [01:23:35.460 --> 01:23:39.460] So let me tell you what happened with this judge. [01:23:39.460 --> 01:23:40.460] So this is the miracle. [01:23:40.460 --> 01:23:46.460] He pulled out of the hat without me asking. [01:23:46.460 --> 01:23:51.460] He pulled a case, a case law from like a few months ago [01:23:51.460 --> 01:23:54.460] regarding workplace violence restraining orders, [01:23:54.460 --> 01:24:01.460] and how a lot needed, like it was very specific [01:24:01.460 --> 01:24:07.460] on what a credible threat of violence was. [01:24:07.460 --> 01:24:15.460] And the first witness that testified, this woman, she's horrible. [01:24:15.460 --> 01:24:17.460] I've never experienced a liar like this, [01:24:17.460 --> 01:24:21.460] and I don't know if she was coached or what, [01:24:21.460 --> 01:24:25.460] but she was saying how she's having nightmares [01:24:25.460 --> 01:24:28.460] about me coming to the store and shooting her, [01:24:28.460 --> 01:24:31.460] and just the worst things. [01:24:31.460 --> 01:24:33.460] Objection or eloquence. [01:24:33.460 --> 01:24:35.460] People have nightmares. [01:24:35.460 --> 01:24:37.460] That doesn't mean you're guilty. [01:24:37.460 --> 01:24:40.460] Well, maybe I could have, no, yeah. [01:24:40.460 --> 01:24:41.460] I mean, I don't know. [01:24:41.460 --> 01:24:42.460] That was the thing. [01:24:42.460 --> 01:24:49.460] I wasn't planning on having the actual, quote, unquote, trial. [01:24:49.460 --> 01:24:53.460] I wasn't prepared, you know, to deal with the witnesses [01:24:53.460 --> 01:24:57.460] and cross-examine, but I did the best I could. [01:24:57.460 --> 01:25:00.460] You know, it'll be a big, it can be a big learning thing [01:25:00.460 --> 01:25:05.460] for others and me to all post it, post the audios. [01:25:05.460 --> 01:25:12.460] I was able to get audio on the down low. [01:25:12.460 --> 01:25:17.460] But so this judge mentioned, after all this testimony, [01:25:17.460 --> 01:25:21.460] he's like, you know, it sounds like she's, you know, [01:25:21.460 --> 01:25:26.460] based off of her testimony, he can grant this restraining order. [01:25:26.460 --> 01:25:30.460] However, he still hasn't described a credible threat of violence, [01:25:30.460 --> 01:25:31.460] which he couldn't. [01:25:31.460 --> 01:25:35.460] There was not, ever. [01:25:35.460 --> 01:25:38.460] So that was the first good sign, but I still didn't know. [01:25:38.460 --> 01:25:41.460] And then the next day, oh, yeah, and he brought it up to the liar. [01:25:41.460 --> 01:25:44.460] He's like, look, if these other witnesses, [01:25:44.460 --> 01:25:52.460] if they're going to be kind of the same realm, then, you know, he needs to know. [01:25:52.460 --> 01:25:56.460] And she said, oh, no, the other witnesses are definitely going to show [01:25:56.460 --> 01:25:57.460] a threat of violence. [01:25:57.460 --> 01:26:02.460] And they tried. [01:26:02.460 --> 01:26:06.460] They pulled the same thing, how they're so terrified of me, [01:26:06.460 --> 01:26:12.460] and they can barely do their function at their job, yet, you know, [01:26:12.460 --> 01:26:18.460] I have video of them coming up to me, asking me how I'm doing, [01:26:18.460 --> 01:26:23.460] offering to check me out, you know, while telling me I'm not allowed to shop there. [01:26:23.460 --> 01:26:27.460] And one of the witnesses is a huge, the guy's a huge man. [01:26:27.460 --> 01:26:28.460] He's like a giant. [01:26:28.460 --> 01:26:31.460] I'm not very, not a very large man. [01:26:31.460 --> 01:26:36.460] I'm a very, I don't stand very high off the ground. [01:26:36.460 --> 01:26:37.460] And this guy's huge. [01:26:37.460 --> 01:26:41.460] And the first question I asked him was like how tall he was and how much he weighed. [01:26:41.460 --> 01:26:44.460] And it was just laughable. [01:26:44.460 --> 01:26:49.460] But so at the very end, the court closes at 430. [01:26:49.460 --> 01:27:00.460] And I don't know for sure, but it was about 428 when the judge, you know, [01:27:00.460 --> 01:27:04.460] dismissed this. [01:27:04.460 --> 01:27:05.460] And it was amazing. [01:27:05.460 --> 01:27:08.460] So I was in shock. [01:27:08.460 --> 01:27:12.460] Everyone was in shock because he has like, he made one sentence on the first half [01:27:12.460 --> 01:27:16.460] of this sentence seemed like he was going to grant it. [01:27:16.460 --> 01:27:21.460] And then the second half was he dismissed it. [01:27:21.460 --> 01:27:30.460] The liar pulled one of those maneuvers where they, like he brought up the case again. [01:27:30.460 --> 01:27:37.460] I don't have it in front of me, but it was recent. [01:27:37.460 --> 01:27:46.460] Some technical institute college versus some dude, Rafat. [01:27:46.460 --> 01:27:53.460] And she said that, you know, that case law referenced another case where, you know, [01:27:53.460 --> 01:27:58.460] someone was like flailing their hands and getting close to another and yelling at them. [01:27:58.460 --> 01:28:02.460] And that was enough to grant the restraining order. [01:28:02.460 --> 01:28:10.460] Then he, again, just an incredible man, read, somehow read that. [01:28:10.460 --> 01:28:17.460] And he's like, well, if you keep reading, that person was an inch from the other person's face [01:28:17.460 --> 01:28:22.460] and their hand was in the shape of a gun pointed at their face. [01:28:22.460 --> 01:28:24.460] And they were screaming at them. [01:28:24.460 --> 01:28:29.460] And so it was just, it all worked out. [01:28:29.460 --> 01:28:31.460] Yeah, totally different. [01:28:31.460 --> 01:28:34.460] Yeah. [01:28:34.460 --> 01:28:39.460] You might consider suing these guys for malicious prosecution. [01:28:39.460 --> 01:28:40.460] Well, yeah. [01:28:40.460 --> 01:28:41.460] So it brings my next question. [01:28:41.460 --> 01:28:45.460] The very first thing is I was, I didn't mention it. [01:28:45.460 --> 01:28:49.460] I didn't ask, and I don't know how to do this or if I can. [01:28:49.460 --> 01:28:53.460] I want to be compensated for my expenses. [01:28:53.460 --> 01:28:54.460] How do I do it? [01:28:54.460 --> 01:28:55.460] What do I do? [01:28:55.460 --> 01:28:58.460] It has to be in your pleading. [01:28:58.460 --> 01:29:01.460] You have to countersue. [01:29:01.460 --> 01:29:08.460] The only way you can get it at this point is you'll have to sue them for malicious prosecution. [01:29:08.460 --> 01:29:13.460] Well, I was going to sue them for the original incidences. [01:29:13.460 --> 01:29:14.460] You've got grounds for that. [01:29:14.460 --> 01:29:18.460] They drug you into court on a frivolous pleading. [01:29:18.460 --> 01:29:23.460] And you've got grounds to go after them since you won. [01:29:23.460 --> 01:29:26.460] So would this be a separate or that would just be one of the counts? [01:29:26.460 --> 01:29:28.460] This would be a separate suit. [01:29:28.460 --> 01:29:31.460] You will be the plaintiff. [01:29:31.460 --> 01:29:32.460] No, no, no. [01:29:32.460 --> 01:29:33.460] I'm sorry. [01:29:33.460 --> 01:29:34.460] Let me be more specific. [01:29:34.460 --> 01:29:40.460] Separate from civil rights violations from last year. [01:29:40.460 --> 01:29:41.460] Oh, no, no, no. [01:29:41.460 --> 01:29:43.460] You can claim everything in the suit. [01:29:43.460 --> 01:29:44.460] Yeah. [01:29:44.460 --> 01:29:45.460] Okay. [01:29:45.460 --> 01:29:47.460] You can also claim their bad behavior. [01:29:47.460 --> 01:29:48.460] Hang on. [01:29:48.460 --> 01:30:03.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio, we'll be right back. [01:30:03.460 --> 01:30:10.460] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:10.460 --> 01:30:13.460] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.460 --> 01:30:14.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:14.460 --> 01:30:16.460] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.460 --> 01:30:18.460] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.460 --> 01:30:22.460] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.460 --> 01:30:27.460] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.460 --> 01:30:28.460] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.460 --> 01:30:32.460] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.460 --> 01:30:34.460] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.460 --> 01:30:42.460] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.460 --> 01:30:45.460] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.460 --> 01:30:48.460] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.460 --> 01:30:52.460] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.460 --> 01:30:56.460] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.460 --> 01:31:00.460] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.460 --> 01:31:04.460] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.460 --> 01:31:10.460] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.460 --> 01:31:15.460] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.460 --> 01:31:18.460] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.460 --> 01:31:21.460] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.460 --> 01:31:26.460] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.460 --> 01:31:36.460] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.460 --> 01:31:38.460] The government says that fire brought it down. 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[01:33:56.460 --> 01:33:59.460] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:59.460 --> 01:34:02.460] And we're talking to Jason in California. [01:34:02.460 --> 01:34:07.460] And Jason, I'll have to tell you, when you first started calling in, [01:34:07.460 --> 01:34:16.460] I thought you were about the least likely guy to even take this on. [01:34:16.460 --> 01:34:21.460] And you took him on and wiped the floor with him. [01:34:21.460 --> 01:34:24.460] Now it's your turn. [01:34:24.460 --> 01:34:28.460] This is where the worm turns. You got your dismissal. [01:34:28.460 --> 01:34:35.460] Now you can go back and sue them for malicious prosecution for anything they did to you. [01:34:35.460 --> 01:34:41.460] They didn't actually file a civil action against you, like for any harm or anything. [01:34:41.460 --> 01:34:46.460] If they had done that, you would have had to make any counter-complain you had at the time. [01:34:46.460 --> 01:34:49.460] But they were just asking for a restraining order. [01:34:49.460 --> 01:34:55.460] So you won't be required to counter-sue them. [01:34:55.460 --> 01:35:01.460] And you didn't. You just fought their suit and won it. [01:35:01.460 --> 01:35:05.460] Now you can go back and file an original petition. [01:35:05.460 --> 01:35:10.460] And I tell you, you've been on the defensive side. [01:35:10.460 --> 01:35:15.460] It's a whole different animal when you're the plaintiff. [01:35:15.460 --> 01:35:18.460] It gets a lot more fun. [01:35:18.460 --> 01:35:22.460] Now you've got them dancing for you. [01:35:22.460 --> 01:35:27.460] Yeah, and this traumatized you. [01:35:27.460 --> 01:35:30.460] Yeah, it actually did. [01:35:30.460 --> 01:35:37.460] And you had to fight this yourself and put you in this position where you had to take on this big company. [01:35:37.460 --> 01:35:44.460] And then their people got on there and lied like dogs, and you have the videotapes to prove it. [01:35:44.460 --> 01:35:47.460] Yeah. [01:35:47.460 --> 01:35:53.460] You got good claims. They'll probably write you a big check just to get you to go away and leave them alone. [01:35:53.460 --> 01:36:03.460] You need to write a really nasty complaint to the Better Business Bureau. [01:36:03.460 --> 01:36:08.460] Oh, they hate that. [01:36:08.460 --> 01:36:10.460] Great luck with Better Business Bureau. [01:36:10.460 --> 01:36:16.460] Just had one of our callers, I suggested she write a complaint to the Better Business Bureau. [01:36:16.460 --> 01:36:19.460] And it got her results almost immediately. [01:36:19.460 --> 01:36:28.460] So do that, then sue them, and sue them first and then file the Better Business Bureau complaint. [01:36:28.460 --> 01:36:37.460] And then if there's any other place you can file complaints against them, where is Trader Joe's corporate office? [01:36:37.460 --> 01:36:43.460] I believe it's in California, Monrovia, California. [01:36:43.460 --> 01:36:47.460] Go to the Better Business Bureau in Monrovia and put one in there. [01:36:47.460 --> 01:36:52.460] Put one in wherever they have stores at. [01:36:52.460 --> 01:36:57.460] It will be a publicity nightmare for them. [01:36:57.460 --> 01:36:59.460] Interesting. [01:36:59.460 --> 01:37:05.460] Tell people you sued them and that they improperly sued you and lied in the court and got it off. [01:37:05.460 --> 01:37:15.460] And the court threw it all out because they were no good liars and just laid on thick. [01:37:15.460 --> 01:37:22.460] I really want to pursue perjury with at least one of them. [01:37:22.460 --> 01:37:24.460] Oh, file it. [01:37:24.460 --> 01:37:25.460] Make up the complaints. [01:37:25.460 --> 01:37:36.460] You've got the court testimony and you've got your videotapes rebutting there that shows that they lied. [01:37:36.460 --> 01:37:38.460] Run the routine on it. [01:37:38.460 --> 01:37:39.460] Take it to a magistrate. [01:37:39.460 --> 01:37:44.460] The magistrate doesn't want to take it and file against the magistrate and take it to the next one. [01:37:44.460 --> 01:37:53.460] When you're working your way up the magistrates from the justice of the peace to the county to the district to the court of appeals, [01:37:53.460 --> 01:38:01.460] when you start filing criminal charges against the court of appeals for shielding these people from prosecution, [01:38:01.460 --> 01:38:04.460] they are not going to be happy campers. [01:38:04.460 --> 01:38:10.460] Now, they're not worried about getting prosecuted for it, but this puts a mark on their chart. [01:38:10.460 --> 01:38:14.460] And they are not going to be happy. [01:38:14.460 --> 01:38:17.460] That unhappiness is going to roll downhill. [01:38:17.460 --> 01:38:27.460] The military had a term for that, and it had to do with a ball of poop, and we've all heard that story. [01:38:27.460 --> 01:38:31.460] These guys are going to be on the bottom. [01:38:31.460 --> 01:38:34.460] How do you get in front of a magistrate? [01:38:34.460 --> 01:38:42.460] You just walk into their office or you send a complaint by a verified, take it to a magistrate, [01:38:42.460 --> 01:38:49.460] and have them not verified, but put a jurat on it, sworn testimony. [01:38:49.460 --> 01:38:57.460] Send it to the magistrate, registered return receipt, and add a letter to it, [01:38:57.460 --> 01:39:07.460] a cover letter asking the magistrate to initial this letter and return it in the included stamp chef dress envelope so you know he actually got it. [01:39:07.460 --> 01:39:13.460] When you don't hear anything back, then you call the post office. [01:39:13.460 --> 01:39:20.460] Registered mail has got a $50 insurance on it anyway, [01:39:20.460 --> 01:39:28.460] but if you add another $10 or $15, they'll bump it up to $500. [01:39:28.460 --> 01:39:33.460] You want your $500, because I didn't get that letter back. [01:39:33.460 --> 01:39:35.460] I don't think the judge got this. [01:39:35.460 --> 01:39:37.460] Send it to the post inspectors. [01:39:37.460 --> 01:39:41.460] They're not going to want to pay you $500, because they've raised the bond rate. [01:39:41.460 --> 01:39:45.460] So they'll get a call from the postal inspector. [01:39:45.460 --> 01:39:46.460] Right. [01:39:46.460 --> 01:39:48.460] Yes. [01:39:48.460 --> 01:39:50.460] We've got lots of tools. [01:39:50.460 --> 01:39:56.460] Your judicial conduct complaint, the judge, the lawyers in this case, have you bargrieved them? [01:39:56.460 --> 01:39:57.460] Oh, yeah. [01:39:57.460 --> 01:39:58.460] Oh, good. [01:39:58.460 --> 01:39:59.460] Oh, yeah. [01:39:59.460 --> 01:40:06.460] You need to bargrieve them again for what they did in this last hearing. [01:40:06.460 --> 01:40:07.460] Yeah. [01:40:07.460 --> 01:40:11.460] I'm just waiting to hear back on the last ones. [01:40:11.460 --> 01:40:16.460] I don't want them to overlap and combine. [01:40:16.460 --> 01:40:17.460] Good, good, good. [01:40:17.460 --> 01:40:18.460] Yeah. [01:40:18.460 --> 01:40:21.460] Lawyer number four showed up. [01:40:21.460 --> 01:40:22.460] Four? [01:40:22.460 --> 01:40:26.460] Yeah, four lawyers in this thing. [01:40:26.460 --> 01:40:28.460] Two of them are gone. [01:40:28.460 --> 01:40:31.460] I don't know what happened to number three. [01:40:31.460 --> 01:40:34.460] She was a partner, so she's probably still there. [01:40:34.460 --> 01:40:36.460] This lawyer just came on. [01:40:36.460 --> 01:40:41.460] Like, he's brand new to the company. [01:40:41.460 --> 01:40:46.460] So they threw him to the wolves. [01:40:46.460 --> 01:40:51.460] They welcomed him to the deep end of the pool. [01:40:51.460 --> 01:40:55.460] First case, pro se, and he loses the case. [01:40:55.460 --> 01:40:56.460] Yeah. [01:40:56.460 --> 01:40:57.460] Awesome. [01:40:57.460 --> 01:41:00.460] And has he gotten a bar grievance yet? [01:41:00.460 --> 01:41:01.460] Yeah. [01:41:01.460 --> 01:41:02.460] There is a woman. [01:41:02.460 --> 01:41:03.460] They're all women. [01:41:03.460 --> 01:41:04.460] Oh, that's not true. [01:41:04.460 --> 01:41:09.460] One of them was a man, a alleged man. [01:41:09.460 --> 01:41:11.460] You've got to be careful with that. [01:41:11.460 --> 01:41:14.460] You can get sued. [01:41:14.460 --> 01:41:16.460] There's about 102 variations there. [01:41:16.460 --> 01:41:19.460] You've got to make sure you get the right one. [01:41:19.460 --> 01:41:20.460] Okay. [01:41:20.460 --> 01:41:21.460] Good. [01:41:21.460 --> 01:41:22.460] Question about the magistrate. [01:41:22.460 --> 01:41:27.460] Does it matter what court they reside in, what court they work in? [01:41:27.460 --> 01:41:28.460] No. [01:41:28.460 --> 01:41:29.460] If they're in a criminal. [01:41:29.460 --> 01:41:30.460] Okay. [01:41:30.460 --> 01:41:35.460] In every state I've looked at, all judges are magistrates. [01:41:35.460 --> 01:41:36.460] Okay. [01:41:36.460 --> 01:41:44.460] I filed a complaint against the governor, and I filed a complaint against the governor with a magistrate. [01:41:44.460 --> 01:41:49.460] The magistrate was the Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme. [01:41:49.460 --> 01:41:55.460] He was a magistrate in 2.09, titled Who Are Magistrates? [01:41:55.460 --> 01:41:57.460] First one. [01:41:57.460 --> 01:42:01.460] Justices of the Supreme Court. [01:42:01.460 --> 01:42:04.460] So they're all magistrates. [01:42:04.460 --> 01:42:06.460] In that capacity, they're all equal. [01:42:06.460 --> 01:42:13.460] Bushwhacked a district judge in Travis County with criminal complaints against all the highest judges in Texas in 2008. [01:42:13.460 --> 01:42:20.460] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, I'm a district judge, and district judges don't take criminal complaints in Travis County. [01:42:20.460 --> 01:42:22.460] I said, well, that's okay, Judge. [01:42:22.460 --> 01:42:25.460] I'm not here to invoke your duty as a district judge. [01:42:25.460 --> 01:42:32.460] I'm here to invoke your duty as a magistrate, and that's a duty from which you may not shield yourself. [01:42:32.460 --> 01:42:38.460] He sat there, and he looked at me, and he looked over at his bailiff and looked back at me, and I know what he's thinking. [01:42:38.460 --> 01:42:45.460] If I have my bailiff shoot this guy, can I get away with it? [01:42:45.460 --> 01:42:56.460] But that got them before, got all nine of the judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals in front of a grand jury for really nitpicking stuff. [01:42:56.460 --> 01:43:02.460] They demanded a motion for leave to file a writ of habeas corpus. [01:43:02.460 --> 01:43:04.460] Say what? [01:43:04.460 --> 01:43:07.460] That's the great writ, the writ of right. [01:43:07.460 --> 01:43:10.460] There shall never be suspended. [01:43:10.460 --> 01:43:13.460] Yes! [01:43:13.460 --> 01:43:15.460] So I filed criminal charges against them. [01:43:15.460 --> 01:43:17.460] It took a year, but I got them in front of a grand jury. [01:43:17.460 --> 01:43:20.460] They don't do that anymore. [01:43:20.460 --> 01:43:23.460] You have that same kind of power. [01:43:23.460 --> 01:43:28.460] You run roughshod over all of them because you're the baddest motor scooter in the building. [01:43:28.460 --> 01:43:30.460] You're the civilian. [01:43:30.460 --> 01:43:33.460] The citizen. [01:43:33.460 --> 01:43:38.460] Okay, keep us up to date on how this is going to go. [01:43:38.460 --> 01:43:41.460] Do you have any other questions for the other side? [01:43:41.460 --> 01:43:50.460] No, I just want to give credit to that 170 motion, because he was the inspiration, and I want to thank you. [01:43:50.460 --> 01:43:51.460] Where am I? [01:43:51.460 --> 01:43:53.460] Chopped liver? [01:43:53.460 --> 01:43:56.460] I got the 170 motion. [01:43:56.460 --> 01:44:00.460] Okay, hold on, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.460 --> 01:44:01.460] Dang, Cookie. [01:44:01.460 --> 01:44:02.460] Cookie? [01:44:02.460 --> 01:44:03.460] Do you love cookies? [01:44:03.460 --> 01:44:04.460] Oh, hi, Cookie Muncher. [01:44:04.460 --> 01:44:06.460] No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:06.460 --> 01:44:07.460] Cookies? [01:44:07.460 --> 01:44:08.460] Yucky? [01:44:08.460 --> 01:44:09.460] No, no bad cookies. [01:44:09.460 --> 01:44:11.460] You can't even eat these cookies. [01:44:11.460 --> 01:44:12.460] These are cyber cookies. [01:44:12.460 --> 01:44:13.460] No, can't eat? [01:44:13.460 --> 01:44:16.460] No, they are cyber cookies, and they clog up your computer. [01:44:16.460 --> 01:44:17.460] These have apples. [01:44:17.460 --> 01:44:18.460] Really? [01:44:18.460 --> 01:44:20.460] Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.460 --> 01:44:22.460] Yummy apple. [01:44:22.460 --> 01:44:26.460] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:26.460 --> 01:44:32.460] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:32.460 --> 01:44:34.460] Bye-bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.460 --> 01:44:40.460] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com, and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, [01:44:40.460 --> 01:44:46.460] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [01:44:46.460 --> 01:44:48.460] New cookies for me? [01:44:48.460 --> 01:44:50.460] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:50.460 --> 01:44:57.460] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [01:44:57.460 --> 01:44:58.460] C is for cookie. [01:44:58.460 --> 01:45:00.460] C is for classified. [01:45:00.460 --> 01:45:03.460] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.460 --> 01:45:09.460] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, [01:45:09.460 --> 01:45:14.460] 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.460 --> 01:45:18.460] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.460 --> 01:45:22.460] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.460 --> 01:45:27.460] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. [01:45:27.460 --> 01:45:33.460] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.460 --> 01:45:38.460] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.460 --> 01:45:42.460] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.460 --> 01:45:49.460] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.460 --> 01:45:52.460] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.460 --> 01:46:01.460] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.460 --> 01:46:16.460] Hello. Oh, man. Get jailed. You got busted, man. Oh, man, I'm broke, dude. [01:46:16.460 --> 01:46:31.460] Some things in this world I will never understand. Some things I realize foolish. [01:46:31.460 --> 01:46:39.460] Somebody's gonna police that policeman. Somebody's gonna police the bully. [01:46:39.460 --> 01:46:48.460] There's always a room at the top of the hill. I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely left too. [01:46:48.460 --> 01:46:52.460] They're wishing it with more than I position the bill. [01:46:52.460 --> 01:46:56.460] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. [01:46:56.460 --> 01:47:01.460] Randy, I think your mic cut out a little bit. [01:47:01.460 --> 01:47:06.460] Well, our fine listeners, if you couldn't understand what Randy was buzzing about, [01:47:06.460 --> 01:47:09.460] he was probably trying to tell us we're back. [01:47:09.460 --> 01:47:17.460] This is the Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and we're on our last segment this evening. [01:47:17.460 --> 01:47:22.460] Randy, you might try adjusting something there. [01:47:22.460 --> 01:47:32.460] Randy, I'm hearing a little buzzing. [01:47:32.460 --> 01:47:40.460] I'm going to the live, Randy. [01:47:40.460 --> 01:47:49.460] I'm hearing a little bit of clicking and buzzing over there. [01:47:49.460 --> 01:48:02.460] Randy, whatever change you made earlier, try to do that again. [01:48:02.460 --> 01:48:07.460] Well, I don't know. I'm not hearing anything but a little bit of buzzing. [01:48:07.460 --> 01:48:11.460] Do you make an adjustment there? There it is. [01:48:11.460 --> 01:48:14.460] Okay, I don't know what's... Okay, am I back? [01:48:14.460 --> 01:48:16.460] You are, yes. [01:48:16.460 --> 01:48:22.460] Jason in California. We've got Stephen lined up right behind that. [01:48:22.460 --> 01:48:25.460] Jason, what else did you have? We do need to move quickly. [01:48:25.460 --> 01:48:27.460] I have just one quick question. [01:48:27.460 --> 01:48:34.460] Can it hurt at all if I submit a motion to cover my expenses? [01:48:34.460 --> 01:48:36.460] No, you can't. There's nothing to it. [01:48:36.460 --> 01:48:44.460] This case has been closed. You've got a dismissal on the case. It's over. [01:48:44.460 --> 01:48:48.460] That had to be in the pleading. [01:48:48.460 --> 01:48:53.460] So you can try to file it, but they'll just toss it. [01:48:53.460 --> 01:49:01.460] Oh, okay. All right. Well, thank you guys very much. We'll talk soon. [01:49:01.460 --> 01:49:04.460] Okay. Thank you, Jason. [01:49:04.460 --> 01:49:12.460] Now we're going to Steve in Texas. Hello, Steve. What do you have for us today? [01:49:12.460 --> 01:49:20.460] Quick question in regard to what we were talking about last Friday on my issues here in Hillsboro. [01:49:20.460 --> 01:49:24.460] So, crap. [01:49:24.460 --> 01:49:34.460] Well, number one, it dawned on me that when I was out trying to clean up some of the debris that they left when they demoed my property, [01:49:34.460 --> 01:49:42.460] why was I cleaning that up? That should have been covered under the subcontractor that they hired to come out there and tear the dang thing down. [01:49:42.460 --> 01:49:49.460] So am I not a third party to the contract that they made on my property doing that or am I benefit? [01:49:49.460 --> 01:49:53.460] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You kind of started in the middle. [01:49:53.460 --> 01:50:04.460] The one where they claimed that his house was condemned, probably because it didn't have water service. [01:50:04.460 --> 01:50:13.460] And so they said, well, it's condemned. It's not livable and uninhabitable. And they decided they wanted to own it. [01:50:13.460 --> 01:50:20.460] So they brought bulldozers in and took it over and smashed everything and gave stuff away to passersby. [01:50:20.460 --> 01:50:27.460] Did they follow all the condemnation rules? [01:50:27.460 --> 01:50:34.460] They gave us, again, they didn't have a public notice out. [01:50:34.460 --> 01:50:39.460] I knew there might be a meeting, but it came under the heading of a department, again, [01:50:39.460 --> 01:50:43.460] that didn't exist from a guy who's never told me the truth whatsoever. [01:50:43.460 --> 01:50:51.460] And we never had anything show up in the paper or online with the city that there was actually going to be a hearing. [01:50:51.460 --> 01:50:56.460] So we weren't there. I had my daughter do an appointment. I couldn't be there. [01:50:56.460 --> 01:51:08.460] You need to read the Texas Code and read the, this is 254. You're in Waco? [01:51:08.460 --> 01:51:10.460] Yeah, Elzebrook, sir. [01:51:10.460 --> 01:51:17.460] Okay. Read the city ordinances concerning eminent domain. [01:51:17.460 --> 01:51:22.460] This is condemnation. This is condemnation under eminent domain. [01:51:22.460 --> 01:51:28.460] And make sure they followed every step. If they didn't follow every single step, then you sue them. [01:51:28.460 --> 01:51:33.460] They told them that the police are not under eminent domain. However. [01:51:33.460 --> 01:51:40.460] No, no, no. This is the only way they can take your property. Eminent domain is what gives them the standing, [01:51:40.460 --> 01:51:48.460] the authority to do that. And then there are, in order to exercise eminent domain, they have to do a condemnation. [01:51:48.460 --> 01:51:59.460] Okay. Well, I've got one better. I found through the Texas Public Policy Foundation had a great write-up [01:51:59.460 --> 01:52:09.460] on a guy who sued, on a lady whose property had this happen in Dallas, city of Dallas, back in 2000, 2009, 2010. [01:52:09.460 --> 01:52:15.460] Anyways, they took it all the way to the Supreme and they had, they determined in that Supreme Court case, [01:52:15.460 --> 01:52:24.460] which there's a lot of write-ups on it that was determined in 2011, the prevailing opinion was that something is substantial. [01:52:24.460 --> 01:52:33.460] They were not, that these are not applying the actual intent of the law by just merely finding something substandard, number one. [01:52:33.460 --> 01:52:41.460] And number two, that any determination such as this cannot be left up to an administrative body alone. [01:52:41.460 --> 01:52:53.460] They have to have a judicial hearing. And so that was another part of my claim to the city on due process was the part of that ruling right there. [01:52:53.460 --> 01:53:01.460] Okay. Well, spin, write the lawsuit, spend your time getting the lawsuit down, make it ugly. [01:53:01.460 --> 01:53:11.460] Throw in everything you can. I once sued a sheriff and a lawyer who had just run for state rep, looked at my suit and he said, [01:53:11.460 --> 01:53:21.460] boy, you threw everything but the kitchen sink at him. I said, yeah, I did. He said, you know, this kind of goes to the horse dumping rule. [01:53:21.460 --> 01:53:27.460] I said, what's the horse dumping rule? He said, well, horse dumplings, they get kind of dry and crunchy. [01:53:27.460 --> 01:53:34.460] But if you throw enough of them up against the wall, one of them is likely to stick. [01:53:34.460 --> 01:53:41.460] So do your homework, find every claim you can make against them, include every official. [01:53:41.460 --> 01:53:49.460] If you find anything where they exerted or purported to exert an authority, they do not expressly have charged them criminally. [01:53:49.460 --> 01:53:57.460] Yes, sir. And then give the complaint to a municipal court judge. [01:53:57.460 --> 01:54:07.460] And when he does an issue a warrant, then you sue the judge himself, send me an email and I'll send you the lawsuit. [01:54:07.460 --> 01:54:12.460] Sue him personally. And then you file complaints with the next higher judge. [01:54:12.460 --> 01:54:22.460] And when he does an act, sue him personally. Eventually, they'll come across and write you a check. [01:54:22.460 --> 01:54:31.460] Gotcha. But I know you got like a minute or something until we cut off here, but does it not? [01:54:31.460 --> 01:54:42.460] Am I not either A, a third party to the contract that it was performed upon my property, whether it was a policing action or not? [01:54:42.460 --> 01:54:50.460] Or B, am I not under fiduciary duty? They were doing it on my property and I guess I'm a member of the public also. [01:54:50.460 --> 01:54:55.460] How am I not? So how am I not a beneficiary? [01:54:55.460 --> 01:54:59.460] I'm not sure what the benefit of the contract would be. [01:54:59.460 --> 01:55:02.460] Well, it's a contract in fact. [01:55:02.460 --> 01:55:12.460] Well, yeah, but so what is your claim? Did they breach a covenant of the contract? [01:55:12.460 --> 01:55:20.460] Are you looking, Stephen, are you looking for an answer to the question of who has to clean up all that mess? [01:55:20.460 --> 01:55:24.460] That's number one. Yeah, number one. And number two, it's a breach of... [01:55:24.460 --> 01:55:34.460] Yes. Okay. Yeah. And the destruction of the utilities that I had stuffed up around there and they destroyed the electrical that I already had in there. [01:55:34.460 --> 01:55:39.460] Anyway, so I'm down the list. I mean, I got a hundred things going here. [01:55:39.460 --> 01:55:52.460] Well, you have a lawsuit against them. As far as I know, you would not be a third party beneficiary to the contract because this was done adverse to you. [01:55:52.460 --> 01:56:00.460] Even though it's done on my property, they don't own the property, regardless of any nonsense. How am I not? [01:56:00.460 --> 01:56:04.460] That's what I don't understand. They did this action on my property. [01:56:04.460 --> 01:56:09.460] This was a contract between the city and the contractor. [01:56:09.460 --> 01:56:13.460] Then it goes to the beneficiary, then it goes to the fiduciary, did it? [01:56:13.460 --> 01:56:15.460] That's the separation. [01:56:15.460 --> 01:56:24.460] Antonio and Vic come over and pay you a visit. They shoot all your dogs. They still got paid from whoever they got paid. [01:56:24.460 --> 01:56:30.460] And whose job is it to clean up all that mess? You're not involved. [01:56:30.460 --> 01:56:38.460] You go after the ones that did the wrong thing. It doesn't matter about their contractor, what kind of hitman they used. [01:56:38.460 --> 01:56:46.460] You don't have standing in that contract. You challenge the whole contract as false and improper and name both parties. [01:56:46.460 --> 01:56:53.460] You name the contractor who did the work and you name the city. You don't care who has the deep pockets. You don't care. [01:56:53.460 --> 01:57:02.460] You just want who's got money to pay. The contractor is going to say, well, we had a contractor in the city. [01:57:02.460 --> 01:57:10.460] Get your money from the city. You damaged my property. So you owe me. [01:57:10.460 --> 01:57:13.460] You charge him jointly and separately. [01:57:13.460 --> 01:57:17.460] Yeah, you do not want to be a party to that contract. [01:57:17.460 --> 01:57:19.460] I do not want to be. Okay. All right. [01:57:19.460 --> 01:57:29.460] Absolutely not. You're going to say that was a crap contract. It was illegal and they conspired together to harm me. [01:57:29.460 --> 01:57:34.460] Okay. I'm sorry. My other angle was we never consented to it, but okay. [01:57:34.460 --> 01:57:40.460] Yeah. That's what gives you the tort claim against them. [01:57:40.460 --> 01:57:48.460] If you had consented to it, you wouldn't have had a claim, but you didn't consent. So it's adverse to you. [01:57:48.460 --> 01:57:59.460] Yeah, none of this is to go against this answer to anybody acting under four or a law, which I got three of them to act under four or a law. That's part of the truth for them. [01:57:59.460 --> 01:58:04.460] I'm sorry, John. I'm just one of the big people in that. I appreciate you. [01:58:04.460 --> 01:58:10.460] Okay. But go get a copy of O'Connor's civil trials. [01:58:10.460 --> 01:58:21.460] You go online, go on eBay. You can get them for 10, 15 bucks. Don't care how old it is. Read the front part of it. It'll tell you exactly what you need to do. [01:58:21.460 --> 01:58:26.460] Step by step. Okay. Thank you all for listening. [01:58:26.460 --> 01:58:33.460] We'll be back tomorrow night at our four hour info marathon. [01:58:33.460 --> 01:58:44.460] Thank you all for listening. And Brett's going to say something insightful for these last 10 seconds. Go ahead, Brett. [01:58:44.460 --> 01:58:50.460] Hey, there, Brett. Where are you? Oh, somebody needed you. [01:58:50.460 --> 01:58:57.460] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.460 --> 01:59:08.460] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.460 --> 01:59:20.460] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.460 --> 01:59:30.460] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.460 --> 01:59:41.460] This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.460 --> 01:59:51.460] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:51.460 --> 02:00:13.460] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com.