[00:00.000 --> 00:05.520] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.520 --> 00:09.560] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.560 --> 00:11.040] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.040 --> 00:14.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [00:14.960 --> 00:17.060] your First Amendment rights. [00:17.060 --> 00:18.640] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.640 --> 00:22.260] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.260 --> 00:27.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.040 --> 00:32.120] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.120 --> 00:33.120] Privacy. [00:33.120 --> 00:34.800] It's worth hanging on to. [00:34.800 --> 00:39.080] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [00:39.080 --> 00:42.640] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.640 --> 00:44.640] Start over with Startpage. [00:44.640 --> 00:45.640] Spar. [00:45.640 --> 00:47.920] It's what fighters do. [00:47.920 --> 00:50.880] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:50.880 --> 00:54.600] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.600 --> 01:01.720] Spar with an extra P. S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, [01:01.720 --> 01:03.080] and R for religion. [01:03.080 --> 01:07.120] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:07.120 --> 01:08.680] assembly, and religion. [01:08.680 --> 01:10.640] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.640 --> 01:14.740] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.740 --> 01:18.240] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, we can spell out [01:18.240 --> 01:20.920] the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:20.920 --> 01:22.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:22.880 --> 01:31.240] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31.240 --> 01:34.880] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.880 --> 01:38.340] They guarantee a specific freedom Americans should know and protect. [01:38.340 --> 01:39.760] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.760 --> 01:43.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember [01:43.720 --> 01:46.840] one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.840 --> 01:48.440] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.440 --> 01:52.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.040 --> 01:56.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [01:56.800 --> 02:01.800] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.800 --> 02:04.560] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [02:04.560 --> 02:08.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search [02:08.840 --> 02:12.380] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.380 --> 02:15.960] Start over with Startpage. [02:15.960 --> 02:20.300] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around the Bill [02:20.300 --> 02:22.400] of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.400 --> 02:26.880] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, arms [02:26.880 --> 02:30.720] that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.720 --> 02:31.720] Get it? [02:31.720 --> 02:34.040] Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:34.040 --> 02:37.640] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.640 --> 02:43.400] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee against arbitrary [02:43.400 --> 02:47.480] government, one more safeguard against the tyranny, which now appears remote in America, [02:47.480 --> 02:50.560] but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.560 --> 02:52.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [02:52.560 --> 03:22.400] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:53.560 --> 04:00.320] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and I have a conundrum today. [04:00.320 --> 04:07.840] I brought the show in, but, you know, I'm old and in my dotage, and Brett didn't tell [04:07.840 --> 04:11.800] me what the date or the day was or even the year. [04:11.800 --> 04:20.960] Well, would you believe Monday, August 20th, 19th, on the, no, let's just go with, let's [04:20.960 --> 04:26.680] go with, this is the first time we've seen, yeah, 2022. [04:26.680 --> 04:31.720] Okay, I'm going to start out with some stuff. [04:31.720 --> 04:35.680] I found something I hope you all will find very interesting. [04:35.680 --> 04:42.480] We have had people like Ralph Winnerud, and I had a guy recently referred to me by art [04:42.480 --> 04:50.000] in North Carolina, and this guy's some kind of guru, and I talked to him, and he kind [04:50.000 --> 04:56.160] of made me a little bit crazy because he's talking a lot of the, what I considered [04:56.160 --> 04:59.800] Patriot mythology stuff, and he said the statutes didn't apply. [04:59.800 --> 05:04.000] I said, yeah, they do apply. [05:04.000 --> 05:09.200] Ralph Winnerud came on this show and said, oh, the statutes, they don't apply. [05:09.200 --> 05:11.240] I said, well, what applies then, Ralph? [05:11.240 --> 05:13.960] He said, oh, you have to go to the National Register. [05:13.960 --> 05:17.120] I said, okay, National Register. [05:17.120 --> 05:21.280] That's about 165,000 pages. [05:21.280 --> 05:23.320] You want to be a little more specific? [05:23.320 --> 05:30.400] Well, he wasn't more specific, and he was right in what he said. [05:30.400 --> 05:32.760] The statutes don't apply. [05:32.760 --> 05:42.560] Well, they don't apply if they do not accurately represent the underlying legislation that's [05:42.560 --> 05:45.560] in the public register. [05:45.560 --> 05:47.280] That makes sense. [05:47.280 --> 05:53.800] We've got our lawmakers that we elected, and they're over there making something, and if [05:53.800 --> 05:59.000] they don't get accurately represented, then yeah, that makes sense. [05:59.000 --> 06:04.240] The legislator, they pass laws, and the law goes into the public ledger. [06:04.240 --> 06:13.200] In Texas, it's called the public register, and the Fed is called the National Register. [06:13.200 --> 06:24.640] We had Vernon's publishing since, I think, the late 1800s, printing the codes for Texas. [06:24.640 --> 06:33.200] They asked Vernon's to go into the public ledger and organize all of these codes into [06:33.200 --> 06:40.720] categories and then print out a set of statutes so that someone doesn't have to look through [06:40.720 --> 06:46.480] all of these items in the public ledger register, because they go in the public register when [06:46.480 --> 06:51.680] they're passed, not based on what they are. [06:51.680 --> 06:58.080] The laws are scattered all over the place, so they had the publisher put them all together. [06:58.080 --> 07:05.640] I was having an issue with this thing that's called a magistration. [07:05.640 --> 07:11.640] If you listen to this show much, you've heard me talk about a magistration. [07:11.640 --> 07:17.960] If you type magistration into Microsoft Word, Microsoft Word will put a little red line [07:17.960 --> 07:20.480] under it. [07:20.480 --> 07:26.760] That means it doesn't recognize this as a term in the English language. [07:26.760 --> 07:29.560] I don't either. [07:29.560 --> 07:34.800] I went looking for where this is in law. [07:34.800 --> 07:41.400] The reason I did is because if you're arrested in the state of Texas, the law, as I read [07:41.400 --> 07:52.080] it, states that if you're arrested for an on-site offense, the officer is authorized [07:52.080 --> 07:59.040] to arrest you, in that instance, under 14.06 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [07:59.040 --> 08:06.640] It tells the officer that he's taking you directly to and near his magistrate. [08:06.640 --> 08:14.480] It had a subordinate clause in that statement that says in order to more expeditiously provide [08:14.480 --> 08:25.640] the warnings in Article 15.17, and that's just your Miranda warnings, the accused can [08:25.640 --> 08:35.960] be taken to any other county in Texas. [08:35.960 --> 08:40.560] Other key operative word. [08:40.560 --> 08:46.680] What the locals did was said, we don't have to bother with Chapter 16. [08:46.680 --> 08:57.000] Chapter 16 examining trial has been in law for 800 years since the passage of the Magna [08:57.000 --> 09:01.520] Carta Libertatum 1215 A.D. [09:01.520 --> 09:09.680] It was in the English law and adopted by America when it won its independence, and it was in [09:09.680 --> 09:12.000] American law. [09:12.000 --> 09:20.600] That if a policeman arrests you for any reason, he is to take you directly to the nearest [09:20.600 --> 09:24.280] magistrate and explain himself. [09:24.280 --> 09:31.480] You'll notice if you look at the maps, justices of the peace are spread around the county. [09:31.480 --> 09:37.480] If you do a little measuring, you'll find a justice of the peace within 15 miles of [09:37.480 --> 09:40.960] any point in the county. [09:40.960 --> 09:49.360] That's because 15 miles was considered as far as you could ride horseback in one day. [09:49.360 --> 09:59.200] So if a sheriff arrested you for any reason, he was within one day's ride of a magistrate, [09:59.200 --> 10:06.320] and he was to take you directly to that magistrate and explain himself. [10:06.320 --> 10:13.480] While the policeman or the sheriff had the authority to make the arrest, he did not hold [10:13.480 --> 10:16.560] the key to the jailhouse door. [10:16.560 --> 10:19.180] The magistrate held that key. [10:19.180 --> 10:24.120] So he had to explain himself to the magistrate and get authorization from the magistrate [10:24.120 --> 10:26.840] to put you in jail. [10:26.840 --> 10:40.280] Well somehow, our prosecutors read 15.16, I'm sorry, I did that backwards, read 14.06 [10:40.280 --> 10:50.600] arrest for an onsite offense and 15.16 arrest on an existing warrant. [10:50.600 --> 10:55.140] They read this subordinate clause to the sentence that ordered them to take you directly to [10:55.140 --> 10:57.760] the nearest magistrate. [10:57.760 --> 11:02.080] They read this part that said, well, in order to more expeditiously provide the warnings [11:02.080 --> 11:10.520] in 15.17, they can take you to a magistrate in any other county. [11:10.520 --> 11:15.320] Well, how does that work? [11:15.320 --> 11:23.680] If you arrest someone in the county, is it reasonable to think that, let's say you can't [11:23.680 --> 11:29.560] find a magistrate who can do an examining trial. [11:29.560 --> 11:34.440] So you can take them out of county to some other county and that magistrate can just [11:34.440 --> 11:35.440] issue warnings. [11:35.440 --> 11:41.560] They don't do the whole of the magistrate examining trial, they just issue warnings. [11:41.560 --> 11:44.200] Why would they not do an examining trial? [11:44.200 --> 11:46.880] Because they can't. [11:46.880 --> 11:53.480] Because everything happened in the county where the person was arrested for an onsite [11:53.480 --> 11:54.480] offense. [11:54.480 --> 11:58.840] Or, like you said, there's never been anything that limits a magistrate's jurisdiction to [11:58.840 --> 11:59.840] his own county. [11:59.840 --> 12:00.840] And that's true. [12:00.840 --> 12:08.160] They just, they act that way, but it's not codified such that they must be limited. [12:08.160 --> 12:13.120] So it seems to me that that still doesn't give them an out to say, oh, we're going to [12:13.120 --> 12:15.760] go to another county and so all he can do is issue warnings. [12:15.760 --> 12:17.320] They still need to do the examining trial. [12:17.320 --> 12:22.200] No, it doesn't because we have attorney general opinion H500. [12:22.200 --> 12:29.920] Attorney general opinion H500 says that anyone can be taken to, any magistrate can hear any [12:29.920 --> 12:37.040] complaint, state of felony from anywhere in the state of Texas, and hold an examining [12:37.040 --> 12:38.040] trial. [12:38.040 --> 12:45.080] Well, they could have done it, but somehow they screwed this around to say, oh, we don't [12:45.080 --> 12:46.760] have to bother with all that stuff. [12:46.760 --> 12:50.200] We can just throw you in jail, take you to a magistrate next morning, he'll read you [12:50.200 --> 12:52.200] your rights, and we're good. [12:52.200 --> 12:55.440] Well, that violates a whole bunch of laws. [12:55.440 --> 12:59.680] Yeah, for one, they've never been authorized to take anybody to jail. [12:59.680 --> 13:01.840] That's just a huge red flag. [13:01.840 --> 13:04.480] Everybody goes along with it because it's always been done, but it doesn't give them [13:04.480 --> 13:06.160] any authorization to do that. [13:06.160 --> 13:13.040] Yeah, I told the justice of the peace in the county, in the district where I was at several [13:13.040 --> 13:14.040] years ago. [13:14.040 --> 13:16.080] His name is Mark Autry. [13:16.080 --> 13:21.520] He was a 20-year sheriff's deputy and then a 12-year justice of the peace. [13:21.520 --> 13:28.040] I laid out the law to him and he said, Mr. Kelton, are you telling me that everything [13:28.040 --> 13:36.440] I did for the last 20 years as a sheriff's deputy and then the last 12 years as a justice [13:36.440 --> 13:39.440] of the peace was wrong? [13:39.440 --> 13:45.680] That everything everybody in Texas is doing is wrong, and you're right. [13:45.680 --> 13:48.640] I said, don't ask me, Mark. [13:48.640 --> 13:50.200] I didn't write the code. [13:50.200 --> 13:51.200] I just read it. [13:51.200 --> 13:52.200] Here it is. [13:52.200 --> 13:53.640] This is what it says. [13:53.640 --> 13:58.840] He read what the code said, but he did what they told him to anyway. [13:58.840 --> 14:03.160] My son-in-law got elected as a justice of the peace. [14:03.160 --> 14:08.600] I walked him through the code before he was arrested and then before he was elected, and [14:08.600 --> 14:13.880] then again after he was elected, and he agreed with me. [14:13.880 --> 14:23.000] That's what it appears to say, but he still does what they trained him to do, this magistration [14:23.000 --> 14:24.000] thing. [14:24.000 --> 14:30.480] So the key is this magistration thing, and the way they get there is this subordinate [14:30.480 --> 14:38.680] clause, or in order to more expeditiously provide the warnings in 1517. [14:38.680 --> 14:44.760] There's a comma in front of it, so it's just stuck on the end, so I wanted to know, [14:44.760 --> 14:48.120] how in the heck did that get there? [14:48.120 --> 14:53.240] Well, that is an interesting story. [14:53.240 --> 14:58.120] Bernans was the original publisher for Texas law. [14:58.120 --> 15:06.360] That subordinate clause was not in Bernan's edition of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [15:06.360 --> 15:15.760] In 1974, Wes Publishing took over publishing the Texas codes. [15:15.760 --> 15:21.360] It was in the 1974 edition. [15:21.360 --> 15:26.080] So I had Eddie Craig, who does the Monday night show, he knows the people at the state [15:26.080 --> 15:35.600] library, asked them to find the legislation that put that verbiage in the code. [15:35.600 --> 15:41.600] Well, Wes Publishing took over in 1974, it was in there. [15:41.600 --> 15:48.720] This was passed into law in 1987. [15:48.720 --> 15:51.640] How does that work? [15:51.640 --> 16:01.200] So they were doing this 13 years before this particular verbiage was ever actually passed [16:01.200 --> 16:02.200] into law. [16:02.200 --> 16:09.160] And nobody was actually looking at the scribbles directly from the legislature. [16:09.160 --> 16:12.920] They're depending on what comes out from these publishers. [16:12.920 --> 16:17.840] They're depending on it to match. [16:17.840 --> 16:22.120] They had to certify that to Wes Publishing. [16:22.120 --> 16:27.040] But Wes Publishing better figure out who it was, because I just found myself another set [16:27.040 --> 16:30.040] of deep pockets. [16:30.040 --> 16:34.600] Anyway, we'll go back to this when we come back on the other side. [16:34.600 --> 16:42.280] This is Randy Kelton, Fountain Rule of Law Radio, call in number 512-646-1984. [16:42.280 --> 16:50.200] Let's see, we have one empty slot on the board, and we'll try to get to every one. [16:50.200 --> 16:53.520] And we've got one first time caller, it looks like. [16:53.520 --> 16:58.080] Yes, we do, and it's out of the Austin area, it looks like. [16:58.080 --> 17:00.360] Hang on, we'll be right back. [17:00.360 --> 17:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:04.960 --> 17:09.160] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:09.160 --> 17:13.480] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [17:13.480 --> 17:14.480] can win two. [17:14.480 --> 17:19.440] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.440 --> 17:25.160] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [17:25.160 --> 17:29.720] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [17:29.720 --> 17:33.920] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.920 --> 17:39.040] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:39.040 --> 17:40.840] Additional consultation is available as well. [17:40.840 --> 17:46.800] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [17:46.800 --> 17:49.680] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:49.680 --> 17:58.680] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-f at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [17:58.680 --> 18:01.480] collectors now. [18:01.480 --> 18:05.840] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [18:05.840 --> 18:06.840] Word? [18:06.840 --> 18:12.000] Tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [18:12.000 --> 18:18.400] Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [18:18.400 --> 18:22.920] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [18:22.920 --> 18:25.320] dividing the word of truth. [18:25.320 --> 18:29.320] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse [18:29.320 --> 18:32.600] by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [18:32.600 --> 18:37.240] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [18:37.240 --> 18:39.640] and Christian character development. [18:39.640 --> 18:44.160] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [18:44.160 --> 18:48.520] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [18:48.520 --> 18:50.520] of our Lord and Savior, Jesus. [18:50.520 --> 18:57.400] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com, Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [18:57.400 --> 19:04.400] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [19:27.400 --> 19:57.320] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, RuVlo Radio, and the moral of this story is [19:57.320 --> 20:07.680] to check the national ledger or the national register or your local registry to see what [20:07.680 --> 20:15.640] the legislation actually says or to see if there really is even any legislation there. [20:15.640 --> 20:19.920] This was not something I expected to find. [20:19.920 --> 20:35.200] For 13 years to 87, we had verbiage in a code that was never passed into law by the legislature. [20:35.200 --> 20:41.360] When Ralph Winterwood come on my show and said the statute doesn't apply, he was right [20:41.360 --> 20:50.520] to that degree, where the verbiage of the statute does not accurately represent the [20:50.520 --> 20:57.920] intent of the legislature, the legislative intent applies. [20:57.920 --> 21:02.860] So what we're going to do, what I'm going to do, and I'm hoping I can get the Hill County [21:02.860 --> 21:08.520] District Attorney to do, I'm talking to him and I put in an information request and he [21:08.520 --> 21:17.920] gave me a call and we talked for an hour and a half and frankly, I was impressed. [21:17.920 --> 21:26.240] The guy was extremely knowledgeable, very professional, and made it a point to not speak [21:26.240 --> 21:27.240] too long. [21:27.240 --> 21:32.040] Sometimes I get these guys and they try to just bury you and bully you. [21:32.040 --> 21:36.320] This guy talked for a while and then stopped and let me speak and then I stopped and let [21:36.320 --> 21:37.320] him speak. [21:37.320 --> 21:46.040] He was a very professional interchange and in listening to him, I had this little warning [21:46.040 --> 21:53.600] buzzer go off in the back of my head that said, do not underestimate this guy. [21:53.600 --> 21:56.920] He is no chump. [21:56.920 --> 22:05.000] So I'm trying not to underestimate him and I'm hoping I can use him to help find a remedy [22:05.000 --> 22:08.040] and I have a remedy. [22:08.040 --> 22:16.520] I want him to take this to the legislature and say, look guys, we got a big time problem. [22:16.520 --> 22:26.080] The courts and local prosecutors have misread this section of the code because the code [22:26.080 --> 22:27.720] is poorly written. [22:27.720 --> 22:35.360] The reason it's poorly written is it was somehow slipped into the code in 74 but was never [22:35.360 --> 22:42.200] passed into law until 87 and because it had been in the code for 13 years when they passed [22:42.200 --> 22:49.440] it, they didn't dare change the verbiage and the verbiage is garbage. [22:49.440 --> 22:59.160] So we want you, the legislature, to issue a statement of legislative intent and address [22:59.160 --> 23:11.620] the key word in this subordinate clause that said the officer can take the accused to any [23:11.620 --> 23:15.560] other county in the state of Texas. [23:15.560 --> 23:21.960] The only time they could take them to some other county is after a due diligent effort [23:21.960 --> 23:29.080] to locate a magistrate in the county in which they are arrested or in a case where they [23:29.080 --> 23:35.880] were arrested out of county because they are required to take them directly to the nearest [23:35.880 --> 23:43.240] magistrate and that's a case called Heath Boyd out of Corpus Christi area. [23:43.240 --> 23:50.360] As arrested, the sheriff told him to follow him to his office 26 miles away in Corpus. [23:50.360 --> 23:56.120] There was a magistrate 5 miles away and he got sued because he didn't go to that magistrate. [23:56.120 --> 23:59.760] So they must take him to the nearest magistrate. [23:59.760 --> 24:04.800] If he happens to be out of the county, he still has to take him to the nearest magistrate [24:04.800 --> 24:11.740] but if the magistrate is out of county, then he doesn't have access to all of the information [24:11.740 --> 24:19.840] about the arrest, their witnesses, the statements, all of that's in the county jurisdiction. [24:19.840 --> 24:24.320] And that actually makes sense because in 1601 when it's guaranteeing that somebody gets [24:24.320 --> 24:34.280] to have an examining trial, it says if it's a felony, then he gets to have an examining [24:34.280 --> 24:36.280] trial in the county. [24:36.280 --> 24:38.160] In the county. [24:38.160 --> 24:43.600] Makes perfect sense that it lines up with that legislative intent. [24:43.600 --> 24:46.320] In the county before indictment. [24:46.320 --> 24:47.320] Before indictment. [24:47.320 --> 24:48.320] Right. [24:48.320 --> 24:53.040] So it's not saying nobody else has any rights at all, due process goes out the window, it's [24:53.040 --> 24:57.280] just clarifying that that lines up perfectly. [24:57.280 --> 25:04.480] Texas law is a couple hundred years old or 175 or 70s, what is it, eight now? [25:04.480 --> 25:07.120] Anyway, so we're 150 years old. [25:07.120 --> 25:10.040] I don't know, I wasn't there, I'll take your way for it. [25:10.040 --> 25:18.760] We've had, you got to, that's just wrong. [25:18.760 --> 25:25.440] Okay, anyway, it's been very well crafted over the years. [25:25.440 --> 25:30.960] We've had every kind of bad guy and every kind of shyster lawyer pool, every kind of [25:30.960 --> 25:38.480] shyster shenanigan you could think of, and the law has been very carefully crafted to [25:38.480 --> 25:40.920] avoid all these problems. [25:40.920 --> 25:49.920] Now we're having a problem that has pushed the incarceration rate to a point they call [25:49.920 --> 25:52.600] it mass incarceration. [25:52.600 --> 25:58.800] Up until night, if you look at the population rate and the incarceration rate, they tracked [25:58.800 --> 26:03.800] one another until one year. [26:03.800 --> 26:06.640] Guess what that year was, Brett? [26:06.640 --> 26:10.080] The same year this switched over? [26:10.080 --> 26:11.080] 1970. [26:11.080 --> 26:13.080] Slide of hand. [26:13.080 --> 26:14.080] Exactly. [26:14.080 --> 26:22.160] Then the incarceration rate crossed the population increase and now it's almost vertical. [26:22.160 --> 26:26.360] It's just completely, it's going to bankrupt the state. [26:26.360 --> 26:31.280] If the state gets sued by all these people that have been improperly arrested and incarcerated, [26:31.280 --> 26:34.120] it'll bankrupt the state. [26:34.120 --> 26:38.120] If they don't, if they keep doing it the way they're doing it, it's going to bankrupt [26:38.120 --> 26:40.560] the state. [26:40.560 --> 26:49.000] The vast majority of every county's tax base goes to pre-trial incarceration because of [26:49.000 --> 26:54.060] mass incarceration and it's increasing logarithmically. [26:54.060 --> 26:57.000] It's going to bankrupt us very soon. [26:57.000 --> 27:03.080] So we go to the legislature, fix it. [27:03.080 --> 27:09.720] If you get sued, figure out a way to deal with it and I'm sure they will because they're [27:09.720 --> 27:15.320] not going to let us bankrupt the state of Texas and frankly every other state is doing [27:15.320 --> 27:18.920] something similar and they're going to have a similar problem but I'm not concerned with [27:18.920 --> 27:23.680] every other state at this point, I'm concerned with Texas. [27:23.680 --> 27:31.840] And this all started from something that was snuck into the code, never passed by the legislature. [27:31.840 --> 27:37.840] It should be interesting to see how this shakes out. [27:37.840 --> 27:40.440] Sound like fun, Brett? [27:40.440 --> 27:42.680] I bet you're going to really enjoy it. [27:42.680 --> 27:44.360] Oh yeah. [27:44.360 --> 27:48.640] Okay, that's my story and I'm sticking to it. [27:48.640 --> 27:49.920] Now we're going to go to our callers. [27:49.920 --> 27:52.680] We have what appears to be a first time caller. [27:52.680 --> 28:00.640] If you are in the 512 area code, give us a first name and you don't bother to give us [28:00.640 --> 28:01.640] a state. [28:01.640 --> 28:04.640] We know where the state is. [28:04.640 --> 28:08.000] It says Carrie. [28:08.000 --> 28:09.000] Talk to me. [28:09.000 --> 28:11.000] Oh hey, can you hear me? [28:11.000 --> 28:12.000] Yes. [28:12.000 --> 28:13.000] Yes, I can hear you. [28:13.000 --> 28:14.000] Oh hey, guys. [28:14.000 --> 28:15.840] How are you all tonight? [28:15.840 --> 28:18.440] Give me a first name and a state and okay, we know. [28:18.440 --> 28:19.440] I'm Carrie. [28:19.440 --> 28:20.440] I'm in Austin. [28:20.440 --> 28:26.320] Okay, we won't hold that against you. [28:26.320 --> 28:28.320] So is our studio. [28:28.320 --> 28:31.800] Okay, and your first name, Carrie? [28:31.800 --> 28:34.120] I'm Carrie, yes sir. [28:34.120 --> 28:41.520] So I have a friend on here who sent me your, I've listened a few times, first time talking [28:41.520 --> 28:42.520] to y'all. [28:42.520 --> 28:48.160] So thanks for the service y'all do to help people educate people on things going on. [28:48.160 --> 28:50.760] So I don't have a question prepared. [28:50.760 --> 28:59.480] I'm actually in the middle of a pretty intense lawsuit myself and it's almost difficult to [28:59.480 --> 29:00.760] say where to begin with it. [29:00.760 --> 29:06.360] It was an unlawful eviction that I went through here in Travis County. [29:06.360 --> 29:08.360] An eviction? [29:08.360 --> 29:09.360] Correct. [29:09.360 --> 29:13.560] Oh, I can help you with that. [29:13.560 --> 29:16.080] Well, fantastic. [29:16.080 --> 29:17.080] That's kind of his specialty. [29:17.080 --> 29:24.360] Yeah, one of my specials helped over 700 people file federal lawsuits on eviction. [29:24.360 --> 29:30.280] So is this an apartment or a mortgage? [29:30.280 --> 29:33.280] It was a home rental. [29:33.280 --> 29:39.760] It was $3,500 a month for my rent and I was actually, I hear music, does that mean we're [29:39.760 --> 29:40.760] going on a break? [29:40.760 --> 29:41.760] Yes, we're going on a break. [29:41.760 --> 29:42.760] How did you do that? [29:42.760 --> 29:43.760] You're a new caller. [29:43.760 --> 29:47.400] Women, they know everything. [29:47.400 --> 29:52.000] I'm married to one, she knows everything. [29:52.000 --> 29:57.040] She even knows what I was going to think before I thought it, holds me responsible for it. [29:57.040 --> 30:02.040] Hang on, we'll be right back. [30:02.040 --> 30:06.200] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe. [30:06.200 --> 30:10.920] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [30:10.920 --> 30:11.920] secrets. [30:11.920 --> 30:16.160] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.160 --> 30:17.760] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.760 --> 30:21.360] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.360 --> 30:26.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.120 --> 30:31.160] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.160 --> 30:33.880] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.880 --> 30:38.180] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search [30:38.180 --> 30:41.720] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.720 --> 30:45.400] Start over with startpage. [30:45.400 --> 30:47.040] Data privacy is a big deal. [30:47.040 --> 30:51.520] So nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. [30:51.520 --> 30:54.600] But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.600 --> 30:56.280] It's not an idle question. [30:56.280 --> 31:01.400] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.400 --> 31:03.840] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.840 --> 31:07.480] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to startpage.com. [31:07.480 --> 31:12.240] Unlike other search engines, startpage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.240 --> 31:15.680] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.680 --> 31:16.680] to see. [31:16.680 --> 31:17.840] The cupboard would be bare. [31:17.840 --> 31:21.240] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.240 --> 31:23.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.240 --> 31:31.000] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.000 --> 31:32.000] I lost my son. [31:32.000 --> 31:33.000] My nephew. [31:33.000 --> 31:34.000] My uncle. [31:34.000 --> 31:35.000] My son. [31:35.000 --> 31:36.000] On September 11, 2001. [31:36.000 --> 31:39.280] People don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.280 --> 31:43.360] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.360 --> 31:49.240] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:49.240 --> 31:52.960] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.960 --> 31:54.480] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.480 --> 31:55.480] My uncle. [31:55.480 --> 31:56.480] My nephew. [31:56.480 --> 31:57.480] My son. [31:57.480 --> 31:58.480] Go to buildingwatt.org. [31:58.480 --> 32:01.520] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.520 --> 32:06.120] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:06.120 --> 32:09.240] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:09.240 --> 32:12.960] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.960 --> 32:16.400] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.400 --> 32:20.080] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.080 --> 32:24.280] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.280 --> 32:25.680] our rights through due process. [32:25.680 --> 32:29.640] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.640 --> 32:33.440] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.440 --> 32:35.520] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.520 --> 32:39.840] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.840 --> 32:40.840] ordering your copy today. [32:40.840 --> 32:44.440] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.440 --> 32:48.920] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.920 --> 32:50.840] documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.840 --> 32:54.400] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.400 --> 32:59.360] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [32:59.360 --> 33:00.360] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:00.360 --> 33:01.360] Yes, Mr. Officer, you're taking the life you had. [33:01.360 --> 33:02.360] I want you to follow the law of the land. [33:02.360 --> 33:03.360] I don't understand. [33:03.360 --> 33:04.360] Your job is to protect and preserve. [33:04.360 --> 33:31.360] Not to be an Arabese. [33:31.360 --> 33:59.360] Your job is to protect and preserve. [33:59.360 --> 34:03.360] Okay, we are back. [34:03.360 --> 34:09.360] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Kerry and Austin. [34:09.360 --> 34:14.240] Okay, Kerry, this was a rental apartment. [34:14.240 --> 34:15.240] Rental home. [34:15.240 --> 34:18.560] It was a $800,000 home. [34:18.560 --> 34:20.840] I was renting it for $3,300 a month. [34:20.840 --> 34:28.200] And I decided after studying law for about two years that I decided, hey, I'm shelling [34:28.200 --> 34:33.920] out fiat $3,300 a month to these guys, and I would like to see a true accounting after [34:33.920 --> 34:38.400] I learned that there is a common practice among some of these bigger property management [34:38.400 --> 34:47.640] companies to take your signature on the lease as a promissory note and put it into trust [34:47.640 --> 34:50.200] for up to 80% of the term of the lease. [34:50.200 --> 34:53.920] So once I learned that, I said, hey, I want to find out if they're doing that. [34:53.920 --> 34:55.320] So how do I do that? [34:55.320 --> 35:00.920] So I started this quote unquote administrative process that I had learned through some law [35:00.920 --> 35:07.840] guru to basically ask for it under the rules of accounting, get a true accounting of that [35:07.840 --> 35:12.400] trust account that they opened up with my $6,000 deposit. [35:12.400 --> 35:14.760] And they refused me, and then they started getting really ugly. [35:14.760 --> 35:19.600] And I said, okay, well, I'm just going to send the second notice, these lawful notices, [35:19.600 --> 35:20.600] tracking it. [35:20.600 --> 35:24.520] Then the second notice, third notice, they got even uglier. [35:24.520 --> 35:28.160] By that time, three months had passed, and I had already sent a notice of default and [35:28.160 --> 35:33.040] opportunity to cure, and my bill of particulars, like all these things that I had been learning [35:33.040 --> 35:34.840] along the way. [35:34.840 --> 35:39.880] And mind you, I'd also done Dr. Graves' course, Juris Fictionary, so I'm relatively- [35:39.880 --> 35:41.880] Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute. [35:41.880 --> 35:42.880] Whose course? [35:42.880 --> 35:43.880] Dr. Graves. [35:43.880 --> 35:44.880] Oh, Dr. Graves. [35:44.880 --> 35:45.880] Oh, the Dr. Graves. [35:45.880 --> 35:46.880] Okay, good. [35:46.880 --> 35:47.880] The Dr. Graves, yeah. [35:47.880 --> 35:55.680] We get to have a lot more sophisticated conversation then. [35:55.680 --> 35:56.680] Right on. [35:56.680 --> 36:01.200] So I guess my point is that I was taking all the things I've learned and putting into practice [36:01.200 --> 36:07.400] because I felt I was operating from an equitable... I'm operating under God's law, I'm doing [36:07.400 --> 36:08.400] the right things. [36:08.400 --> 36:13.720] I'm implementing all these things I've learned in this sovereign new earth that we find ourselves [36:13.720 --> 36:20.240] in, and all these impulses that are on the planet that are leading people to awaken to [36:20.240 --> 36:23.680] their true nature and what's actually kind of going on. [36:23.680 --> 36:28.400] Now also, I've got a couple of master's degrees. [36:28.400 --> 36:37.160] I'm sort of educated enough to have the confidence, but still ingrained enough in the patriarchal [36:37.160 --> 36:47.240] theme of things that have made me enough afraid of the legal system, quote unquote. [36:47.240 --> 36:48.240] Just a little bit about me. [36:48.240 --> 36:52.560] I would have family members be like, hey, you should be an attorney kind of thing. [36:52.560 --> 36:54.360] I always steered away from it. [36:54.360 --> 36:58.760] I supported general councils and Fortune 500 companies. [36:58.760 --> 37:03.640] I've worked in the realm of law for a really long time, been a notary for 20 years. [37:03.640 --> 37:06.760] So I felt relatively like, okay, I could do this, right? [37:06.760 --> 37:14.280] So confident and courageous, some of the key components of dealing with some of these issues. [37:14.280 --> 37:18.600] Anyway, so I'm like, okay, you're not going to give me a true accounting three months [37:18.600 --> 37:19.600] later. [37:19.600 --> 37:26.480] I'm going to send this notice of default, but now you want another $300 from me, but [37:26.480 --> 37:30.800] you're not acting in commerce ethically as far as all of these things are concerned. [37:30.800 --> 37:33.200] So I said, I'm not going to pay you that. [37:33.200 --> 37:38.920] Well, three days later, after I didn't pay the May 1st rent payment, I had a notice of [37:38.920 --> 37:39.920] eviction. [37:39.920 --> 37:40.920] Three days. [37:40.920 --> 37:44.560] They were like, it was so obvious that they were like, oh, what is this? [37:44.560 --> 37:48.560] What is what's happening with this woman's asking us for things that nobody else has [37:48.560 --> 37:49.560] ever asked for? [37:49.560 --> 37:52.360] You know, we're just going to get her out, like get rid of her. [37:52.360 --> 37:59.520] Well, I'm a single mother, I have two sons, teenage boys, and I was day in and day out [37:59.520 --> 38:06.160] working my brain off to just try to, you know, do all the things, send all the right notices, [38:06.160 --> 38:07.160] get everything done. [38:07.160 --> 38:08.160] I actually counter-sued. [38:08.160 --> 38:12.960] I won the first round because they didn't do proper service. [38:12.960 --> 38:16.600] And so I'm like, great, now I've got to, you know, I guess now I have to sue them. [38:16.600 --> 38:19.480] They've pushed the, you know, they've pushed me. [38:19.480 --> 38:28.480] So I sued them and then somehow they were able to finagle another eviction notice three [38:28.480 --> 38:35.120] days before my day in court and at the municipality level in Travis County. [38:35.120 --> 38:38.720] And the judge that they brought in was not the typical judge that I had been dealing [38:38.720 --> 38:39.720] with. [38:39.720 --> 38:44.960] It's like they just, I feel like it was very much a conspiracy against my rights kind of [38:44.960 --> 38:45.960] thing happening. [38:45.960 --> 38:47.880] So I already asked for bonds. [38:47.880 --> 38:49.880] I did things that made me a red flag. [38:49.880 --> 38:54.160] I told them I was a living woman who did all the sovereign things that probably in your [38:54.160 --> 38:57.400] world of, you know, teaching people you don't. [38:57.400 --> 39:02.120] When you start talking about those, I will get pretty excited. [39:02.120 --> 39:06.520] Well, well, what happened to me was not exciting. [39:06.520 --> 39:10.880] It was actually very, very awful. [39:10.880 --> 39:19.200] I had my day in court was on a Monday, Thursday before that I was pulled into eviction court. [39:19.200 --> 39:24.880] I did notice a special appearance and they, I can prove they didn't follow due process. [39:24.880 --> 39:32.760] God bless you and basically what happened was I did an appeal and it was sent to appeals [39:32.760 --> 39:38.880] court and the precinct, the municipalities sent the transcripts over to the appeals court. [39:38.880 --> 39:46.040] So I had an open new case number, transcripts sent all according to the law and even their [39:46.040 --> 39:48.240] code it was done properly. [39:48.240 --> 39:59.960] However, the judge that I pissed off apparently he, he made my bond for $19,000 and I did [39:59.960 --> 40:02.600] a non ability to pay it. [40:02.600 --> 40:06.920] So according to them, I didn't perfect the appeal, even though they sent it through the [40:06.920 --> 40:14.760] appeals court and did all the things on their end, lo and behold, I had, I felt I was in [40:14.760 --> 40:15.760] the clear for it. [40:15.760 --> 40:18.760] I had like, okay, now I'm going to prepare for my court date, I'm going to get everything [40:18.760 --> 40:19.760] in order. [40:19.760 --> 40:25.640] Laying in bed one morning, it was like 10 a.m., my boys had already gone off school, I was [40:25.640 --> 40:29.760] like, I'm going to chill out and hang out with my dog and do some work. [40:29.760 --> 40:35.440] I had banging on the door, the door was broken down. [40:35.440 --> 40:38.920] Mind you, I'm in like a million dollar home, like this is a neighborhood that this shit [40:38.920 --> 40:39.920] doesn't happen in. [40:39.920 --> 40:52.920] They, they busted down the door about 10 deputies held me at gunpoint, didn't like, I was like [40:52.920 --> 40:54.920] barely dressed. [40:54.920 --> 40:59.360] They forced me out of the home and I said, no, there's, this isn't a higher court, this [40:59.360 --> 41:02.880] has already been transferred, you're out of your jurisdiction, this can't be happening [41:02.880 --> 41:06.320] right now and I can prove it, like let me just show you. [41:06.320 --> 41:12.440] And so about four officers, one grabbed me, you know, it was awful, I'll spare you the [41:12.440 --> 41:13.440] details. [41:13.440 --> 41:23.520] Don't do it here, but do it to me on email and I'll show you how to institute a campaign [41:23.520 --> 41:26.040] of terror against them. [41:26.040 --> 41:27.040] Wow. [41:27.040 --> 41:34.120] Yeah, they are very deserving of it, well, I guess my point is that it was 100% chance [41:34.120 --> 41:39.920] of rain that day and I had, you know, it was over 3000 square foot home, all of my belongings, [41:39.920 --> 41:46.120] precious family heirlooms, my mother's, my grandmother's wedding ring, my family Bible, [41:46.120 --> 41:52.680] it rained, they threw everything out on the front lawn and I have this, I videoed it all [41:52.680 --> 41:55.520] and it poured rain on everything. [41:55.520 --> 42:00.280] Oh, I'm so sorry. [42:00.280 --> 42:09.240] Like to find someone to come help me, I have no one in the area, I just moved here, I finally [42:09.240 --> 42:14.400] got this moving company to come and it was awful, the guy, it was pouring rain, he's [42:14.400 --> 42:17.880] like, I've never, he's like, I've been doing this for 15 years, I've never seen anything [42:17.880 --> 42:19.200] like this. [42:19.200 --> 42:25.720] So I realized what I, the error in my ways was that I was calling myself out as an enemy [42:25.720 --> 42:32.920] of the state, I felt, you know, it was very traumatic, so that was in August and I'm still [42:32.920 --> 42:34.920] recovering. [42:34.920 --> 42:36.720] Wow. [42:36.720 --> 42:39.480] Okay. [42:39.480 --> 42:46.600] I need a timeline first, everything that happened in the order that it happened, you don't need [42:46.600 --> 42:50.640] much explanation, just this happened on this day, this happened on this day, just right [42:50.640 --> 42:52.000] out of timeline. [42:52.000 --> 42:58.080] Now it's easy for me to say, oh, just right out of timeline, but I'm very well aware of [42:58.080 --> 43:06.860] how difficult writing out a timeline is, in order to do that, you have to re-experience [43:06.860 --> 43:09.280] all this stuff and it can be pretty traumatic. [43:09.280 --> 43:16.520] I'm good now, but today I actually sent off a judicial complaint for the judge, that original [43:16.520 --> 43:25.680] judge and I have an audio, audio of the transcripts and I counted up how many times he asked me [43:25.680 --> 43:34.840] to say my, like get me to say my first, middle and last name, 17 times, 17 times, and I wondered [43:34.840 --> 43:39.440] when I asked him, I said, are you, yeah, anyways, it's crazy. [43:39.440 --> 43:46.240] Okay, hang on, about to go to one of our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, RootLawRadio, [43:46.240 --> 43:54.080] we get a lot of this kind of stuff and what we do is we show people how to bring public [43:54.080 --> 43:59.880] officials back in line, and we'll get to that on the other side, hang on, we'll be right [43:59.880 --> 44:00.880] back. [44:00.880 --> 44:04.560] I love Logos, without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [44:04.560 --> 44:08.840] I'm so addicted to the truth now, that there's no going back, I need my truth fix, I'd be [44:08.840 --> 44:13.680] lost without Logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air, and I'd love [44:13.680 --> 44:17.200] to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have [44:17.200 --> 44:21.800] any money to give, because I spent it all on supplements, how can I help Logos? [44:21.800 --> 44:26.880] Well, I'm glad you asked, whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos, [44:26.880 --> 44:31.480] in ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies, [44:31.480 --> 44:38.240] now go to LogosRadioNetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo, and bookmark it, now when [44:38.240 --> 44:43.520] you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and Logos gets a few pesos. [44:43.520 --> 44:44.520] Do I pay extra? [44:44.520 --> 44:45.520] No! [44:45.520 --> 44:46.520] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [44:46.520 --> 44:47.520] No! [44:47.520 --> 44:48.520] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [44:48.520 --> 44:49.520] No! [44:49.520 --> 44:50.520] I mean, yes! [44:50.520 --> 44:56.520] Wow, give me, without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect, thank you so much! [44:56.520 --> 44:58.520] I finally quit, wow! [44:58.520 --> 45:00.520] Happy Holidays Logos! [45:00.520 --> 45:04.520] That was intense, what in the world? [45:04.520 --> 45:07.520] Can you check to see what's going out online? [45:07.520 --> 45:13.520] Make sure that thing brought us out. [45:13.520 --> 45:28.520] I think that was under Sam Broadcaster. [45:28.520 --> 45:56.520] Yep, it looks like it's sending out the, yeah, it's sending out the sponsor. [45:56.520 --> 46:02.520] Yeah, it's sending out the sponsors right now. [46:02.520 --> 46:06.520] Okay, I just want to make sure, are we going online? [46:06.520 --> 46:10.520] Call in because the deal is full. [46:10.520 --> 46:19.520] Yep, just about to. [46:19.520 --> 46:28.520] Okay. [46:28.520 --> 46:29.520] You ready? [46:29.520 --> 46:30.520] I'm ready. [46:30.520 --> 46:38.520] Go ahead. [46:38.520 --> 46:40.520] Okay, we are back. [46:40.520 --> 46:50.520] This is the Kelton Brett Fountain Rouvla Radio on this Thursday, the 17th day of November [46:50.520 --> 46:55.520] 2022 and we're talking to Kerry and Austin. [46:55.520 --> 47:04.520] First thing I need is a timeline, I need everything that's gone down and then I'll look it over [47:04.520 --> 47:13.520] and if these guys have made the slightest error you can land on them like a ton of bricks. [47:13.520 --> 47:22.520] He says that he needs a timeline but the reality is you need a timeline. [47:22.520 --> 47:27.520] It's really going to help you a lot as you lay everything down, chronological order, [47:27.520 --> 47:33.520] this happened, that happened, this happened and yes, it helps him a lot because you're [47:33.520 --> 47:37.520] going to be able to communicate to anybody who wants to help you efficiently and then [47:37.520 --> 47:42.520] they can kind of zoom in on, oh, they did this. [47:42.520 --> 47:44.520] Are you sure they didn't do this first? [47:44.520 --> 47:48.520] Oh, okay, good. [47:48.520 --> 47:51.520] And we're sticklers for detail. [47:51.520 --> 47:56.520] The beautiful thing is that I was a former CEO assistant. [47:56.520 --> 47:59.520] Organization is my forte. [47:59.520 --> 48:04.520] So fortunately I have backups upon backups, I have originals. [48:04.520 --> 48:10.520] A lot of things that were destroyed, some of it were purposeful, I could tell, [48:10.520 --> 48:14.520] like they poured water into the bags from my office documents. [48:14.520 --> 48:21.520] So it wasn't like the rain did it because they, yeah, destruction of evidence. [48:21.520 --> 48:23.520] Spoilation. [48:23.520 --> 48:26.520] Spoilation is a big deal. [48:26.520 --> 48:31.520] Do you have all this in electronic format? [48:31.520 --> 48:33.520] Yes. [48:33.520 --> 48:36.520] Good. [48:36.520 --> 48:37.520] Okay. [48:37.520 --> 48:38.520] Beautiful. [48:38.520 --> 48:43.520] I know when it was happening, I knew that God was there saying, okay, this might be, [48:43.520 --> 48:51.520] you're going through the worst thing ever and I had these, it was all men, you know, [48:51.520 --> 48:57.520] but they were all, you know, those are the officers of the peace there to protect me, [48:57.520 --> 49:00.520] watching, laughing as the rain's coming down. [49:00.520 --> 49:09.520] And I'm getting my 40-inch TV, lifting it by myself to put it into my neighbor's garage [49:09.520 --> 49:14.520] and hearing deputies telling me, you better get these computers and put them in your car [49:14.520 --> 49:17.520] because it's raining and they're all going to be, all your electric, [49:17.520 --> 49:22.520] I mean, millions of dollars in damage and irreparable, I mean, irreparable harm. [49:22.520 --> 49:28.520] My health, like I think I aged 10 years, my gray hair is tenfold, you know, [49:28.520 --> 49:36.520] but now I can laugh because I know that this is all helping, like this is going to help so many people. [49:36.520 --> 49:40.520] And I just, the whole time I was like, how can they be doing this to someone? [49:40.520 --> 49:44.520] They don't even know what they're, they don't know what they're doing. [49:44.520 --> 49:48.520] I felt like Jesus, like they don't know what they're doing. [49:48.520 --> 49:49.520] It was awful. [49:49.520 --> 49:53.520] They get, especially police officers, they get callous. [49:53.520 --> 49:55.520] Yeah, I don't give them that excuse. [49:55.520 --> 49:58.520] I mean, I can't find an excuse. [49:58.520 --> 50:05.520] Well, I got callous removers, lots of them. [50:05.520 --> 50:13.520] If they made one misstep, if they stepped across the legal line anywhere, [50:13.520 --> 50:18.520] first degree felony aggravated assault. [50:18.520 --> 50:22.520] You want to dance, guys? [50:22.520 --> 50:24.520] We can do this. [50:24.520 --> 50:33.520] I need to see all the details and then I'll be able to give you a better idea of what we can do. [50:33.520 --> 50:39.520] I'm hoping to get down to Austin next week. [50:39.520 --> 50:43.520] We just had Kara Bell. [50:43.520 --> 50:44.520] Kara should call in. [50:44.520 --> 50:47.520] She won one. [50:47.520 --> 50:53.520] She filed my subject matter jurisdiction challenge based on a 1617 order [50:53.520 --> 51:00.520] and speedy trial action and they just missed the case. [51:00.520 --> 51:02.520] Now there's time for the worm to turn. [51:02.520 --> 51:05.520] And in your case, they've done everything that they can do. [51:05.520 --> 51:07.520] Now it's your turn. [51:07.520 --> 51:10.520] Now you go back after them. [51:10.520 --> 51:18.520] All of these police officers think they're immune from any civil action. [51:18.520 --> 51:20.520] Good luck with that. [51:20.520 --> 51:26.520] And the judges, oh, do we have surprises for them? [51:26.520 --> 51:33.520] I'll show you how to set them up and play them like a cheap fiddle. [51:33.520 --> 51:38.520] There are some codes that these guys have not paid attention to. [51:38.520 --> 51:43.520] I'm in court with a justice of the peace in Victoria County right now [51:43.520 --> 51:51.520] because I went into him with some criminal complaints and he refused to issue warrants. [51:51.520 --> 51:54.520] So I sued him personally. [51:54.520 --> 51:55.520] Wow. [51:55.520 --> 51:59.520] Played him like a cheap fiddle and he danced for me. [51:59.520 --> 52:02.520] It's against the law to do an eviction in the rain. [52:02.520 --> 52:05.520] Found that out. [52:05.520 --> 52:08.520] Oh, that's a law I didn't know about. [52:08.520 --> 52:09.520] That's a good one. [52:09.520 --> 52:12.520] It's in their codes. [52:12.520 --> 52:14.520] Oh, send me that code. [52:14.520 --> 52:16.520] That's corruption. [52:16.520 --> 52:17.520] I couldn't believe it. [52:17.520 --> 52:21.520] That'll make them totally liable. [52:21.520 --> 52:25.520] Totally liable. [52:25.520 --> 52:32.520] And to boot, once a municipality sends the transcripts to a higher court, [52:32.520 --> 52:35.520] it's out of their jurisdiction. [52:35.520 --> 52:37.520] This is out of our jurisdiction. [52:37.520 --> 52:39.520] I'm like, oh, but yesterday it wasn't. [52:39.520 --> 52:40.520] How was that possible? [52:40.520 --> 52:43.520] Because I have the fact that I have the date. [52:43.520 --> 52:46.520] This is in the process of appeal. [52:46.520 --> 52:52.520] Yeah, when that went to the higher court, they lost jurisdiction completely. [52:52.520 --> 52:54.520] They couldn't do anything until it came back. [52:54.520 --> 52:57.520] These guys got serious problems. [52:57.520 --> 53:00.520] What they don't have is someone who knows how to go after them. [53:00.520 --> 53:05.520] You see, Brett and I, we go down there and set them up. [53:05.520 --> 53:07.520] So I have these rules. [53:07.520 --> 53:17.520] One of the rules is never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do [53:17.520 --> 53:25.520] because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him to do. [53:25.520 --> 53:29.520] So when he doesn't do it, boom, you get to land on him. [53:29.520 --> 53:35.520] If you go into any court in the Dallas, Fort Worth area and mention my name, [53:35.520 --> 53:40.520] you can hear every anal sphincter in the house clench shut [53:40.520 --> 53:45.520] because the word is, if that Kelton SOB comes into your court, watch out, [53:45.520 --> 53:51.520] he's trying to get you to do something so he can try to get you arrested. [53:51.520 --> 53:53.520] And that's true. [53:53.520 --> 53:55.520] I am. [53:55.520 --> 53:58.520] So don't screw with me. [53:58.520 --> 54:01.520] We'll show you how to do this. [54:01.520 --> 54:06.520] I went into this Justice of the Peace Court, handed him some criminal complaints, [54:06.520 --> 54:08.520] and he said, are you an attorney? [54:08.520 --> 54:10.520] Oh, no, no, no. [54:10.520 --> 54:13.520] I'll sleep well at night and keep my hands in my old pockets. [54:13.520 --> 54:14.520] Thank you very much. [54:14.520 --> 54:16.520] Well, have you talked to an attorney? [54:16.520 --> 54:17.520] No, no, no, no. [54:17.520 --> 54:19.520] I don't waste my time with those shysters. [54:19.520 --> 54:21.520] But if you're not an attorney, I'm not going to read Disney. [54:21.520 --> 54:25.520] I threw him down and stormed out. [54:25.520 --> 54:30.520] I watched him leave, and the clerks are all sitting there staring at me, [54:30.520 --> 54:35.520] and I said, well, Bubba, we'll see how that works out for you. [54:35.520 --> 54:38.520] And I picked up my phone and dialed 911, [54:38.520 --> 54:46.520] and asked for a police officer to come out and arrest the Justice of the Peace. [54:46.520 --> 54:51.520] And it went downhill for him from there. [54:51.520 --> 54:56.520] Never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him to do. [54:56.520 --> 55:01.520] And you will have a lot of things here that they have screwed up, [55:01.520 --> 55:07.520] especially if you're using some of the patriot stuff. [55:07.520 --> 55:10.520] And as soon as they see something that indicates patriot, [55:10.520 --> 55:15.520] they assume you don't know anything. [55:15.520 --> 55:18.520] And they go after you with everything they got. [55:18.520 --> 55:20.520] Obviously. [55:20.520 --> 55:24.520] So we got tools. [55:24.520 --> 55:29.520] The ones you were renting from, did you say they were lawyers? [55:29.520 --> 55:33.520] I have a letter that I sent them explaining what I was doing, [55:33.520 --> 55:35.520] because I had never spoke to them once. [55:35.520 --> 55:37.520] They are from India, [55:37.520 --> 55:42.520] but I think that that's part of something I'm learning about the Indian culture. [55:42.520 --> 55:45.520] I'm also a yoga teacher, so I very much adhere to Eastern philosophies, [55:45.520 --> 55:53.520] and I definitely consider myself spiritual and follow a lot of those traditions. [55:53.520 --> 55:58.520] However, I've never actually been in a situation where I've done business with them, [55:58.520 --> 56:01.520] and I felt like I never once spoke to them. [56:01.520 --> 56:06.520] They didn't know the harm that they were doing by putting that property manager, [56:06.520 --> 56:09.520] and I explained to them what the property management company was doing, [56:09.520 --> 56:11.520] yet they ignored it all. [56:11.520 --> 56:13.520] They never once responded to me. [56:13.520 --> 56:16.520] So I felt like I was acting in equity, coming with clean hands, [56:16.520 --> 56:20.520] explaining what was happening, and they just ignored, ignored, ignored. [56:20.520 --> 56:28.520] That's under the UCC, that's notice and opportunity to cure. [56:28.520 --> 56:30.520] I sent that as well. [56:30.520 --> 56:33.520] That's what you're required to do before you use the court, [56:33.520 --> 56:36.520] so you've already covered that step. [56:36.520 --> 56:38.520] Correct. [56:38.520 --> 56:42.520] When you mentioned the 9-1-1 thing, I just thought you'd find this interesting. [56:42.520 --> 56:46.520] I actually called 9-1-1 that day when it was happening, [56:46.520 --> 56:50.520] and my call wouldn't go through, and then I called again, [56:50.520 --> 56:52.520] and my call wouldn't go through. [56:52.520 --> 56:55.520] That's a suit you'll get against Austin. [56:55.520 --> 57:03.520] I was in the courthouse, and I told the guy at the little metal detector thing [57:03.520 --> 57:06.520] to go up and get this clerk and have her come down and talk to me, [57:06.520 --> 57:10.520] because I wasn't going to put on a mask and go into this courthouse, [57:10.520 --> 57:14.520] and he said, was that an order? [57:14.520 --> 57:19.520] I thought a minute, and I said, yeah, as a matter of fact, it was. [57:19.520 --> 57:23.520] He said, how's that worked out for you so far? [57:23.520 --> 57:25.520] I said, pretty good. You want to test it? [57:25.520 --> 57:29.520] He said, yes. Way right there. Don't go anywhere. [57:29.520 --> 57:31.520] Somebody's going to want to talk to you. [57:31.520 --> 57:36.520] I took out my cell phone, and he said, you can't use a cell phone in here. [57:36.520 --> 57:39.520] I said, are you going to interfere with a 9-1-1 call? [57:39.520 --> 57:42.520] And another bailiff came over and got him and pulled him away. [57:42.520 --> 57:45.520] It turned out that bailiff knew who I was. [57:45.520 --> 57:49.520] I called 9-1-1, and they wouldn't dispatch. [57:49.520 --> 57:58.520] Since the Austin PD got cut back in funding, they don't dispatch on 9-1-1, [57:58.520 --> 58:02.520] and that will give you a suit against Austin or the Sheriff's Department, [58:02.520 --> 58:04.520] whichever one it is. [58:04.520 --> 58:08.520] There's something that doesn't work in their favor. [58:08.520 --> 58:14.520] It was blatantly a blocked call, and I have proof of that, my phone record. [58:14.520 --> 58:18.520] And so all of these will work in your favor. [58:18.520 --> 58:21.520] Everything you'll get to take back against them. [58:21.520 --> 58:25.520] But it will be too complex to do here on this show. [58:25.520 --> 58:28.520] We're going to run out of time. We've only got two hours tonight. [58:28.520 --> 58:34.520] Can you send me an email with a synopsis of the case? [58:34.520 --> 58:39.520] That will motivate me to put that timeline properly together. [58:39.520 --> 58:40.520] Good. Thank you. [58:40.520 --> 58:45.520] Do that. Then maybe we can talk tomorrow night because we have four hours. [58:45.520 --> 58:47.520] Hang on. We'll be right back. [58:47.520 --> 58:49.520] We'll be right back. [59:18.520 --> 59:22.520] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:22.520 --> 59:25.520] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word [59:25.520 --> 59:28.520] beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.520 --> 59:33.520] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.520 --> 59:39.520] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free [59:39.520 --> 59:47.520] at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.520 --> 59:50.520] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.520 --> 01:00:00.520] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.520 --> 01:00:05.520] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.520 --> 01:00:09.520] They guarantee you the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:00:09.520 --> 01:00:10.520] Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.520 --> 01:00:14.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:00:14.520 --> 01:00:16.520] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.520 --> 01:00:18.520] Privacy is under attack. [01:00:18.520 --> 01:00:22.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.520 --> 01:00:27.520] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.520 --> 01:00:28.520] So protect your rights. [01:00:28.520 --> 01:00:32.520] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.520 --> 01:00:35.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.520 --> 01:00:38.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:00:38.520 --> 01:00:42.520] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.520 --> 01:00:46.520] Start over with Startpage. [01:00:46.520 --> 01:00:48.520] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. [01:00:48.520 --> 01:00:51.520] They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.520 --> 01:00:54.520] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.520 --> 01:00:58.520] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me [01:00:58.520 --> 01:01:00.520] what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.520 --> 01:01:03.520] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [01:01:03.520 --> 01:01:06.520] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.520 --> 01:01:09.520] Third party? Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.520 --> 01:01:12.520] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.520 --> 01:01:17.520] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:17.520 --> 01:01:31.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.520 --> 01:01:35.520] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.520 --> 01:01:38.520] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:01:38.520 --> 01:01:40.520] Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.520 --> 01:01:43.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:01:43.520 --> 01:01:46.520] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:46.520 --> 01:01:48.520] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:48.520 --> 01:01:52.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:52.520 --> 01:01:57.520] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:57.520 --> 01:01:58.520] So protect your rights. [01:01:58.520 --> 01:02:02.520] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:02.520 --> 01:02:04.520] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.520 --> 01:02:08.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:08.520 --> 01:02:12.520] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:12.520 --> 01:02:15.520] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.520 --> 01:02:19.520] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass, [01:02:19.520 --> 01:02:21.520] or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.520 --> 01:02:25.520] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom [01:02:25.520 --> 01:02:27.520] from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.520 --> 01:02:30.520] Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.520 --> 01:02:33.520] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights [01:02:33.520 --> 01:02:35.520] in the name of security. [01:02:35.520 --> 01:02:39.520] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.520 --> 01:02:43.520] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, [01:02:43.520 --> 01:02:46.520] I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.520 --> 01:02:49.520] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights [01:02:49.520 --> 01:02:53.520] and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.520 --> 01:03:21.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.520 --> 01:03:25.520] Thank you. [01:03:53.520 --> 01:03:55.520] Thank you. [01:04:23.520 --> 01:04:41.520] Okay, we are back. [01:04:41.520 --> 01:04:46.520] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio, and we're talking to Carey. [01:04:46.520 --> 01:04:48.520] Let's see, this is top of the hour. [01:04:48.520 --> 01:04:52.520] So this is, I generally give the date and time top of the hour for the archives. [01:04:52.520 --> 01:05:00.520] This is November 17th, 2022. [01:05:00.520 --> 01:05:03.520] I remember using 19 longer than I do. [01:05:03.520 --> 01:05:09.520] I have used 19 longer than I used 20. [01:05:09.520 --> 01:05:12.520] I almost said 18, but not that bad. [01:05:12.520 --> 01:05:21.520] Anyway, November 17th, 2022, and we're talking to Carey in Austin. [01:05:21.520 --> 01:05:27.520] Carey, send me everything you've got, if you can, [01:05:27.520 --> 01:05:34.520] if you have it in a way you can box it up and zip it. [01:05:34.520 --> 01:05:44.520] Email it to me at Randy, R-E-N-D-Y, at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:05:44.520 --> 01:05:45.520] Let me look it over. [01:05:45.520 --> 01:05:50.520] Sometimes if you've got big things, you can use filetransfer.io. [01:05:50.520 --> 01:05:52.520] That's an easy way to get it sampled. [01:05:52.520 --> 01:05:56.520] It's not enough money at all, but I know that there's a hefty, hefty, [01:05:56.520 --> 01:05:58.520] like what does my life worth? [01:05:58.520 --> 01:06:01.520] What are my family heirlooms worth that they put out in the rain [01:06:01.520 --> 01:06:06.520] and they just drug out onto the things stolen from me? [01:06:06.520 --> 01:06:11.520] Here's a rule, or I don't know if you'd call it a rule, [01:06:11.520 --> 01:06:13.520] a kind of a rule of thumb. [01:06:13.520 --> 01:06:16.520] When you go into court, no matter what you ask for, [01:06:16.520 --> 01:06:19.520] the other side is going to give its about it. [01:06:19.520 --> 01:06:22.520] Oh, blah, blah, blah, that's way too much. [01:06:22.520 --> 01:06:25.520] This should only be charging two cents. [01:06:25.520 --> 01:06:30.520] And during the trial, you argue back and forth about how much. [01:06:30.520 --> 01:06:33.520] But at the end of the day, [01:06:33.520 --> 01:06:38.520] there's only one number the jury's going to remember, [01:06:38.520 --> 01:06:42.520] and that's the number you walked in the door with. [01:06:42.520 --> 01:06:44.520] So you want to jack it up as high as possible, [01:06:44.520 --> 01:06:48.520] and we've got lots of ways of doing that. [01:06:48.520 --> 01:06:53.520] Every single officer, if they're forbidden to evict in the rain, [01:06:53.520 --> 01:06:58.520] every single officer is personally liable. [01:06:58.520 --> 01:07:00.520] Wow. [01:07:00.520 --> 01:07:04.520] And they did it with guns on their hips. [01:07:04.520 --> 01:07:08.520] In Texas, unlike every other state I've looked at, [01:07:08.520 --> 01:07:15.520] when Texas put pistols on policemen's hips, [01:07:15.520 --> 01:07:20.520] it placed on them a very serious responsibility. [01:07:20.520 --> 01:07:23.520] What the code says, if you commit simple assault, [01:07:23.520 --> 01:07:25.520] and breaking into your house [01:07:25.520 --> 01:07:30.520] and stealing everything in your house is simple assault at least, [01:07:30.520 --> 01:07:33.520] and you are prominently displaying a deadly weapon, [01:07:33.520 --> 01:07:36.520] that's a felony of the second degree, [01:07:36.520 --> 01:07:43.520] unless you are a public official acting under the color [01:07:43.520 --> 01:07:46.520] or pretense of an official capacity, [01:07:46.520 --> 01:07:52.520] in which case it is a felony of the first degree. [01:07:52.520 --> 01:07:56.520] Each one gets first degree felony aggravated assault. [01:07:56.520 --> 01:07:57.520] Wow. [01:07:57.520 --> 01:07:59.520] There was a lot of men there that day, [01:07:59.520 --> 01:08:02.520] and a lot of criminals lined up ready to put on my... [01:08:02.520 --> 01:08:04.520] You want to play hardball, guys? [01:08:04.520 --> 01:08:08.520] And each one of them gets a T-Cold complaint. [01:08:08.520 --> 01:08:15.520] You had your two boys in there too, right? [01:08:15.520 --> 01:08:17.520] Yeah, and animals. [01:08:17.520 --> 01:08:24.520] So a crime against somebody of younger age, [01:08:24.520 --> 01:08:27.520] different ones, like it's 14 years or something, [01:08:27.520 --> 01:08:34.520] then that crime becomes ratcheted up to the next higher level of severity. [01:08:34.520 --> 01:08:37.520] You don't get any higher than first degree felony. [01:08:37.520 --> 01:08:42.520] Well, it can go to capital. [01:08:42.520 --> 01:08:45.520] But he didn't kill them, they'd have to kill them for it. [01:08:45.520 --> 01:08:49.520] Well, my 16-year-old had been saving up all of his money in his shoebox [01:08:49.520 --> 01:08:55.520] for just these little things that are on my inventory list, [01:08:55.520 --> 01:08:58.520] and his cash was around $600, [01:08:58.520 --> 01:09:02.520] but that's a lot for a 16-year-old over the course of his life. [01:09:02.520 --> 01:09:04.520] He's like, Mom, his cash is stolen. [01:09:04.520 --> 01:09:07.520] You know, everything was taken from these kids. [01:09:07.520 --> 01:09:09.520] Whoa, that's theft directly. [01:09:09.520 --> 01:09:11.520] Oh, wonderful. [01:09:11.520 --> 01:09:13.520] And everybody gets charged. [01:09:13.520 --> 01:09:15.520] They hire criminals to do this stuff. [01:09:15.520 --> 01:09:22.520] They're probably out on good behavior or something to do that job. [01:09:22.520 --> 01:09:24.520] They must hire... [01:09:24.520 --> 01:09:25.520] Yeah. [01:09:25.520 --> 01:09:28.520] That adds more crime to it. [01:09:28.520 --> 01:09:30.520] So we need all this down. [01:09:30.520 --> 01:09:33.520] Did you get it all written down, lined out? [01:09:33.520 --> 01:09:39.520] We will find more criminal charges to bring against them than we can get to. [01:09:39.520 --> 01:09:42.520] That's always the case. [01:09:42.520 --> 01:09:46.520] You'll find more things you can claim than you can get to. [01:09:46.520 --> 01:09:52.520] So what we do is we create a story. [01:09:52.520 --> 01:09:55.520] We write ourselves a novel. [01:09:55.520 --> 01:10:03.520] We turn this into a real tearjerker story of horrible abuse by rich foreigners [01:10:03.520 --> 01:10:12.520] coming in to rape the country and mistreat a single mother and on and on and on [01:10:12.520 --> 01:10:16.520] and list out all these criminal charges. [01:10:16.520 --> 01:10:25.520] List out the criminal charges that lead into our story. [01:10:25.520 --> 01:10:27.520] We don't just pick them. [01:10:27.520 --> 01:10:35.520] Which ones support the story of an organized criminal activity? [01:10:35.520 --> 01:10:36.520] I'll show you. [01:10:36.520 --> 01:10:39.520] We'll have a whole method of building cases. [01:10:39.520 --> 01:10:42.520] So the first thing we do is get the timeline, [01:10:42.520 --> 01:10:46.520] and then we build a novel based on the timeline. [01:10:46.520 --> 01:10:52.520] And then from the novel, we pull out all of our claims and causes of action. [01:10:52.520 --> 01:10:58.520] And once we have all those lined out, then we build a statement of facts. [01:10:58.520 --> 01:11:00.520] See, you don't put in all the facts. [01:11:00.520 --> 01:11:06.520] You put in those facts that would lead a reasonable person of ordinary prudence [01:11:06.520 --> 01:11:11.520] to come to the conclusions you want them to come to. [01:11:11.520 --> 01:11:15.520] So first we build a story. [01:11:15.520 --> 01:11:17.520] Then we build the claims we're going to make. [01:11:17.520 --> 01:11:23.520] Then we build an argument in support, a statement of cause. [01:11:23.520 --> 01:11:28.520] And we argue all the issues based on the claims we're going to make. [01:11:28.520 --> 01:11:36.520] And then we build a statement of facts so that we can construct the facts [01:11:36.520 --> 01:11:41.520] in a way that the reader, when he reads the facts and stitches them together, [01:11:41.520 --> 01:11:45.520] a reasonable person of ordinary prudence would tend to come to the conclusion [01:11:45.520 --> 01:11:47.520] you want them to come to. [01:11:47.520 --> 01:11:51.520] And then we build an introduction. [01:11:51.520 --> 01:11:56.520] And we tell the reader, this is what we will prove. [01:11:56.520 --> 01:12:02.520] So we tell them the context from which to read the statement of facts. [01:12:02.520 --> 01:12:06.520] Then they read the statement of facts, and they say, well, this fact, this fact, this fact. [01:12:06.520 --> 01:12:09.520] Yeah, well, that kind of goes to this claim they're going to make. [01:12:09.520 --> 01:12:11.520] And then read these others. [01:12:11.520 --> 01:12:17.520] And then when you go down to the argument in support, you argue the law and the fact. [01:12:17.520 --> 01:12:20.520] You add the law to the facts and argue the law and the facts [01:12:20.520 --> 01:12:22.520] and show them what conclusion you came to. [01:12:22.520 --> 01:12:27.520] If you came to the same conclusion, I'm sorry, yeah, in your argument, [01:12:27.520 --> 01:12:34.520] if you came to the same conclusion that you got them to come to when they read the statement of facts, [01:12:34.520 --> 01:12:40.520] they're going to think you're really smart. [01:12:40.520 --> 01:12:48.520] They're going to think, whether they agree with you or not, that what you've done makes sense. [01:12:48.520 --> 01:12:50.520] Give you a much better claim. [01:12:50.520 --> 01:12:52.520] This is an art form. [01:12:52.520 --> 01:12:55.520] We don't just stick stuff together. [01:12:55.520 --> 01:12:58.520] Does that make sense, Kerry? [01:12:58.520 --> 01:13:01.520] Yes, I'm learning that, and that's my biggest question, [01:13:01.520 --> 01:13:09.520] is how do I truly get relief when the ones doing the harm are protected? [01:13:09.520 --> 01:13:13.520] They think they're protected. [01:13:13.520 --> 01:13:16.520] We got tools for that. [01:13:16.520 --> 01:13:19.520] You know, I told you about going to this Justice of the Peace [01:13:19.520 --> 01:13:24.520] and asking him to issue some warrants. [01:13:24.520 --> 01:13:27.520] I played him like a cheap fiddle. [01:13:27.520 --> 01:13:34.520] 15.09 says that when a complaint is forwarded to a magistrate complete in accordance with 1505, [01:13:34.520 --> 01:13:39.520] and 1505 lists the requisites of a complaint, [01:13:39.520 --> 01:13:45.520] the magistrate shall issue a warrant forthwith. [01:13:45.520 --> 01:13:48.520] I think they took out forthwith in the last one I read. [01:13:48.520 --> 01:13:51.520] But the magistrate is ordered to issue a warrant. [01:13:51.520 --> 01:13:58.520] That's important because it says the magistrate shall issue a warrant. [01:13:58.520 --> 01:14:05.520] Some states say that the magistrate can examine into the sufficiency of the complaint [01:14:05.520 --> 01:14:08.520] and determine whether or not the complaint is sufficient. [01:14:08.520 --> 01:14:11.520] Texas does not say that. [01:14:11.520 --> 01:14:14.520] Texas orders the magistrate to issue a warrant. [01:14:14.520 --> 01:14:19.520] And when a statute orders an official to do a certain thing, [01:14:19.520 --> 01:14:24.520] that is construed as an administrative act, [01:14:24.520 --> 01:14:31.520] as it does not involve any discretion on the part of the officer. [01:14:31.520 --> 01:14:38.520] If the officer has discretion, the officer has immunity. [01:14:38.520 --> 01:14:44.520] If he does not have discretion, he does not have immunity. [01:14:44.520 --> 01:14:47.520] So I sued the judge in his personal capacity. [01:14:47.520 --> 01:14:51.520] How'd that work for you, brother? [01:14:51.520 --> 01:14:53.520] He had to hire his own lawyer. [01:14:53.520 --> 01:15:00.520] So we craft our complaints alleging that in each case [01:15:00.520 --> 01:15:05.520] they acted outside the scope of their authority. [01:15:05.520 --> 01:15:11.520] What keeps you in court is not what you can prove. [01:15:11.520 --> 01:15:17.520] What keeps you in court is the nature of your claim. [01:15:17.520 --> 01:15:21.520] If the nature of your claim is such that [01:15:21.520 --> 01:15:27.520] if all of the facts that you allege are taken as true, [01:15:27.520 --> 01:15:31.520] would you have a claim? [01:15:31.520 --> 01:15:33.520] That's easy enough to do. [01:15:33.520 --> 01:15:37.520] Lawyers forget to do that all the time. [01:15:37.520 --> 01:15:45.520] So when I sued this judge, I alleged personal capacity. [01:15:45.520 --> 01:15:53.520] And the other side, they're used to claiming absolute immunity for judges. [01:15:53.520 --> 01:15:59.520] And they argued immunity, that the judge was immune. [01:15:59.520 --> 01:16:03.520] And I didn't sue the judge in his judicial capacity. [01:16:03.520 --> 01:16:06.520] I sued him in his personal capacity. [01:16:06.520 --> 01:16:10.520] They didn't argue personal capacity. [01:16:10.520 --> 01:16:12.520] So they waived it. [01:16:12.520 --> 01:16:15.520] They didn't want to get the hit on their insurance. [01:16:15.520 --> 01:16:17.520] Right. [01:16:17.520 --> 01:16:22.520] The judge did hire his own lawyer, so he knew. [01:16:22.520 --> 01:16:25.520] But his own lawyers didn't know enough to argue [01:16:25.520 --> 01:16:29.520] that he was not liable in his personal capacity. [01:16:29.520 --> 01:16:31.520] He was, but they could have argued that he wasn't. [01:16:31.520 --> 01:16:34.520] They didn't, so they waived it. [01:16:34.520 --> 01:16:36.520] Okay. [01:16:36.520 --> 01:16:38.520] It's not our first rodeo. [01:16:38.520 --> 01:16:40.520] So give me an e-mail. [01:16:40.520 --> 01:16:42.520] Give me as much back as you can. [01:16:42.520 --> 01:16:44.520] I'll look it over. [01:16:44.520 --> 01:16:46.520] And, oh, this is live. [01:16:46.520 --> 01:16:48.520] There's so much you can do. [01:16:48.520 --> 01:16:50.520] You won't believe it. [01:16:50.520 --> 01:16:52.520] Okay. [01:16:52.520 --> 01:16:54.520] Then get that to me, and I'll look at it, [01:16:54.520 --> 01:16:56.520] and we'll get back in contact. [01:16:56.520 --> 01:16:58.520] Randy Kelton, Red Fountain. [01:16:58.520 --> 01:17:00.520] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.520 --> 01:17:03.520] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [01:17:03.520 --> 01:17:05.520] and a better understanding of His Word? [01:17:05.520 --> 01:17:08.520] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays [01:17:08.520 --> 01:17:11.520] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [01:17:11.520 --> 01:17:14.520] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures [01:17:14.520 --> 01:17:17.520] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:17:17.520 --> 01:17:19.520] Study to show thyself approved unto God, [01:17:19.520 --> 01:17:21.520] a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [01:17:21.520 --> 01:17:24.520] rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [01:17:24.520 --> 01:17:26.520] Starting in January, our first-hour studies [01:17:26.520 --> 01:17:29.520] are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse [01:17:29.520 --> 01:17:31.520] and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:17:31.520 --> 01:17:34.520] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week [01:17:34.520 --> 01:17:36.520] with discussions on sound doctrine [01:17:36.520 --> 01:17:38.520] and Christian character development. [01:17:38.520 --> 01:17:40.520] We wish to reflect God's light [01:17:40.520 --> 01:17:43.520] and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:43.520 --> 01:17:45.520] Our goal is to strengthen our faith [01:17:45.520 --> 01:17:47.520] and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [01:17:47.520 --> 01:17:49.520] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:17:49.520 --> 01:17:51.520] So tune in to Scripture Talk [01:17:51.520 --> 01:17:53.520] live on logosradionetwork.com [01:17:53.520 --> 01:17:55.520] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [01:17:55.520 --> 01:17:59.520] to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [01:17:59.520 --> 01:18:02.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors [01:18:02.520 --> 01:18:05.520] with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.520 --> 01:18:07.520] Stop debt collectors now [01:18:07.520 --> 01:18:09.520] with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:18:09.520 --> 01:18:11.520] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court [01:18:11.520 --> 01:18:14.520] against debt collectors, and now you can win, too. [01:18:14.520 --> 01:18:17.520] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [01:18:17.520 --> 01:18:20.520] on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:18:20.520 --> 01:18:24.520] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, [01:18:24.520 --> 01:18:26.520] how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:18:26.520 --> 01:18:29.520] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:18:29.520 --> 01:18:31.520] how to turn the financial tables on them [01:18:31.520 --> 01:18:34.520] and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:34.520 --> 01:18:37.520] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution [01:18:37.520 --> 01:18:39.520] for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:39.520 --> 01:18:41.520] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.520 --> 01:18:44.520] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:18:44.520 --> 01:18:47.520] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [01:18:47.520 --> 01:18:49.520] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.520 --> 01:18:52.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com [01:18:52.520 --> 01:18:57.520] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:18:57.520 --> 01:19:00.520] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:00.520 --> 01:19:23.520] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:30.520 --> 01:19:35.520] Okay, we are back. [01:19:35.520 --> 01:19:37.520] Randy Kelton, Fountain Wheel Law Radio. [01:19:37.520 --> 01:19:40.520] We've got three more segments and three callers. [01:19:40.520 --> 01:19:44.520] Let's go with Ted in California. [01:19:44.520 --> 01:19:53.520] Ted, how is your federal case going? [01:19:53.520 --> 01:19:55.520] Oh, Ted, are you snoring? [01:19:55.520 --> 01:19:59.520] Be with us, Ted. [01:19:59.520 --> 01:20:01.520] Hello, Ted. [01:20:01.520 --> 01:20:07.520] I think he's snoring in the phone. [01:20:07.520 --> 01:20:10.520] He wouldn't go to sleep when he's talking, would he? [01:20:10.520 --> 01:20:13.520] No, I'm crushed. [01:20:13.520 --> 01:20:15.520] He has hurt my feelings. [01:20:15.520 --> 01:20:18.520] If I hadn't one. [01:20:18.520 --> 01:20:21.520] Wake up, Ted. [01:20:21.520 --> 01:20:23.520] Oh, well. [01:20:23.520 --> 01:20:26.520] I'm going to leave him unmuted for the moment. [01:20:26.520 --> 01:20:27.520] No, I better not. [01:20:27.520 --> 01:20:29.520] He's snoring too loud. [01:20:29.520 --> 01:20:32.520] Okay, let's go to Greg in California. [01:20:32.520 --> 01:20:34.520] Hello, Greg. [01:20:34.520 --> 01:20:36.520] What do you have for us today? [01:20:36.520 --> 01:20:39.520] You're not snoring, are you? [01:20:39.520 --> 01:20:43.520] No, but you are quite the... [01:20:43.520 --> 01:20:48.520] What's the term for something that puts you to sleep? [01:20:48.520 --> 01:20:52.520] It's the term mute. [01:20:52.520 --> 01:20:55.520] It's mute the caller. [01:20:55.520 --> 01:21:00.520] Tonight, you have a nice voice to fall asleep to, right? [01:21:00.520 --> 01:21:03.520] It's a very peaceful... [01:21:03.520 --> 01:21:07.520] Greg, am I being insulted? [01:21:07.520 --> 01:21:10.520] He's talking about your dulcet tones. [01:21:10.520 --> 01:21:14.520] Dulcet tones, yes. [01:21:14.520 --> 01:21:17.520] I have two questions. [01:21:17.520 --> 01:21:23.520] The first question revolves around code of federal regulations. [01:21:23.520 --> 01:21:28.520] The last time we spoke, you mentioned that there was a court case [01:21:28.520 --> 01:21:34.520] that determined that code of federal regulations are not laws. [01:21:34.520 --> 01:21:37.520] Let me speak to that. [01:21:37.520 --> 01:21:40.520] What the courts used to say. [01:21:40.520 --> 01:21:45.520] This particular case had to do with EPA. [01:21:45.520 --> 01:21:54.520] The case that went to this was a case about the filter in smokestacks [01:21:54.520 --> 01:21:57.520] from a cement plant. [01:21:57.520 --> 01:22:02.520] Cement plants are notorious about belching out all kinds of garbage in the air. [01:22:02.520 --> 01:22:09.520] The EPA required a certain kind of filter in the smokestack. [01:22:09.520 --> 01:22:18.520] The manufacturer sued and went before a federal district court. [01:22:18.520 --> 01:22:24.520] The federal district court disagreed with the EPA. [01:22:24.520 --> 01:22:26.520] This went to the Supreme. [01:22:26.520 --> 01:22:32.520] The Supreme said that in the case of code of federal regulations, [01:22:32.520 --> 01:22:43.520] the EPA was given specific authority to regulate this type of industry, [01:22:43.520 --> 01:22:49.520] and the EPA was much more knowledgeable about these kinds of issues [01:22:49.520 --> 01:22:51.520] than the federal court was, [01:22:51.520 --> 01:22:59.520] so that they ruled that the federal judge could not overrule the EPA's determination. [01:22:59.520 --> 01:23:01.520] That's an older case. [01:23:01.520 --> 01:23:09.520] The latest case said that the code of federal regulations are not laws, [01:23:09.520 --> 01:23:12.520] and they technically did not apply. [01:23:12.520 --> 01:23:16.520] I haven't read the case yet, but I need to find it and read it, [01:23:16.520 --> 01:23:21.520] because I'll be taking on some issues that go to code of federal regulations. [01:23:21.520 --> 01:23:24.520] You can look that up easy enough and say, [01:23:24.520 --> 01:23:33.520] EPA, code of federal regulations, not law, and you should get a hit right on this case. [01:23:33.520 --> 01:23:35.520] Okay. [01:23:35.520 --> 01:23:38.520] Well, what this applies to specifically, [01:23:38.520 --> 01:23:43.520] and this goes back to the research that I've done in the Belmont report, [01:23:43.520 --> 01:23:48.520] which I mentioned the last time I called or a couple of times ago, [01:23:48.520 --> 01:23:55.520] and the right to inform consent, and in the Belmont report [01:23:55.520 --> 01:23:57.520] and in the code of federal regulations, [01:23:57.520 --> 01:24:01.520] which is this would all be under a certain title, right, [01:24:01.520 --> 01:24:10.520] so it's Title 21 U.S. Code 312.7, [01:24:10.520 --> 01:24:16.520] and there's another one, another code 45 CFR 46. [01:24:16.520 --> 01:24:20.520] These regulate what we're seeing happening today. [01:24:20.520 --> 01:24:23.520] They regulate drug companies. [01:24:23.520 --> 01:24:26.520] Drug companies, when a drug company, this is my understanding, [01:24:26.520 --> 01:24:29.520] so I'm going to lay out the groundwork. [01:24:29.520 --> 01:24:34.520] When a drug company creates a drug, it has to be tested, [01:24:34.520 --> 01:24:39.520] and that drug would then have to qualify for some classification, right, [01:24:39.520 --> 01:24:42.520] so in order for it to actually move forward in the process, [01:24:42.520 --> 01:24:46.520] this is all regulated by codes of federal regulations. [01:24:46.520 --> 01:24:50.520] You can't just make a drug and advertise it because it's against the law. [01:24:50.520 --> 01:24:58.520] It's like a total violation of all federal regulations set up to protect consumers. [01:24:58.520 --> 01:25:03.520] That's really what it's about, and humans, right? [01:25:03.520 --> 01:25:18.520] So the 21 U.S. Code 312.7 prohibits manufacturers or their agents [01:25:18.520 --> 01:25:25.520] from advertising as safe and effective something that is an IND, [01:25:25.520 --> 01:25:27.520] which is an investigational new drug. [01:25:27.520 --> 01:25:29.520] That's a federal regulation. [01:25:29.520 --> 01:25:34.520] Those pharmaceutical companies, every one of them, [01:25:34.520 --> 01:25:37.520] that introduces something in the United States, [01:25:37.520 --> 01:25:41.520] whether they're manufactured elsewhere or manufactured here, [01:25:41.520 --> 01:25:44.520] when they're introduced here, then that code of federal regulations [01:25:44.520 --> 01:25:47.520] applies to their product because they are... [01:25:47.520 --> 01:25:49.520] Wait a minute. [01:25:49.520 --> 01:25:51.520] Maybe I missed something. [01:25:51.520 --> 01:25:57.520] You started out quoting 21 U.S.C. [01:25:57.520 --> 01:25:58.520] Correct. [01:25:58.520 --> 01:26:03.520] And then you went to speaking to code of federal regulations. [01:26:03.520 --> 01:26:05.520] Are you mixing these two together? [01:26:05.520 --> 01:26:10.520] 21 U.S.C. is federal code, and that does apply. [01:26:10.520 --> 01:26:14.520] This recent ruling didn't affect that. [01:26:14.520 --> 01:26:23.520] My mistake, 21 CFR 312.7 is the code of federal regulation. [01:26:23.520 --> 01:26:24.520] Oh, okay. [01:26:24.520 --> 01:26:32.520] My mistake, if the Food and Drug Administration is under cosmetic, [01:26:32.520 --> 01:26:35.520] then that's where medicines and drugs fall, right? [01:26:35.520 --> 01:26:38.520] That's in that 21. [01:26:38.520 --> 01:26:45.520] Are there any U.S. codes that correspond to the code of federal regulations [01:26:45.520 --> 01:26:50.520] or that the code of federal regulations rely on? [01:26:50.520 --> 01:26:52.520] I don't know how to find that. [01:26:52.520 --> 01:26:54.520] I don't know how to research that. [01:26:54.520 --> 01:26:56.520] And I'll tell you the application. [01:26:56.520 --> 01:26:59.520] I'll tell you why I'm interested in this. [01:26:59.520 --> 01:27:01.520] If you have... [01:27:01.520 --> 01:27:04.520] Right now, what's happening right now, today in the last three years, [01:27:04.520 --> 01:27:06.520] is you had... [01:27:06.520 --> 01:27:14.520] We literally watched these companies create an investigational new drug, [01:27:14.520 --> 01:27:18.520] and they were rubber-stamped by the FDA. [01:27:18.520 --> 01:27:21.520] The FDA is a captured agency. [01:27:21.520 --> 01:27:24.520] Those drugs permeated the market. [01:27:24.520 --> 01:27:27.520] They were given free to the people, but they were purchased by the government. [01:27:27.520 --> 01:27:30.520] So they were the property of the U.S. government. [01:27:30.520 --> 01:27:35.520] However, they must abide by those codes of federal regulations. [01:27:35.520 --> 01:27:40.520] And one of the stipulations is that they cannot advertise it as safe and effective [01:27:40.520 --> 01:27:42.520] if it's an investigational new drug. [01:27:42.520 --> 01:27:48.520] The only way it can be advertised or the only way that it can be marketed [01:27:48.520 --> 01:27:53.520] is with full disclosure, including informed consent. [01:27:53.520 --> 01:27:58.520] And where this leads me, and there's more around that, [01:27:58.520 --> 01:28:01.520] but where this leads me is we see these... [01:28:01.520 --> 01:28:09.520] There was a webinar two days ago in my county where a doctor from a hospital, [01:28:09.520 --> 01:28:11.520] two doctors, actually our health director, who's a doctor, [01:28:11.520 --> 01:28:13.520] and a doctor from... [01:28:13.520 --> 01:28:19.520] I believe it was an epidemiologist from Sutter Health both got on the webinar [01:28:19.520 --> 01:28:22.520] where you could not make any comment. [01:28:22.520 --> 01:28:24.520] There wasn't any question and answer. [01:28:24.520 --> 01:28:26.520] You had to submit those ahead of time. [01:28:26.520 --> 01:28:29.520] And they made statements that it's safe and effective. [01:28:29.520 --> 01:28:32.520] Everybody should get mRNA. [01:28:32.520 --> 01:28:33.520] These are experimental. [01:28:33.520 --> 01:28:37.520] There is no approved version in this country. [01:28:37.520 --> 01:28:40.520] Commernity is the only approved version, and it's not here, [01:28:40.520 --> 01:28:44.520] and it will never be here until they can skip over the liability, [01:28:44.520 --> 01:28:46.520] which is what they're trying to do in California. [01:28:46.520 --> 01:28:48.520] And yet these doctors get on the webinar, [01:28:48.520 --> 01:28:53.520] and they're telling people in both Spanish and sign language and English [01:28:53.520 --> 01:29:03.520] to go get your children vaccinated, and that's against 21 CFR 312.7. [01:29:03.520 --> 01:29:08.520] Now, they're not an agent for that vaccine manufacturer, [01:29:08.520 --> 01:29:10.520] but they're acting as an agent by going up there [01:29:10.520 --> 01:29:13.520] and giving this public information out. [01:29:13.520 --> 01:29:17.520] And I'm trying to file a medical complaint [01:29:17.520 --> 01:29:20.520] to the California Medical Board against these doctors for this [01:29:20.520 --> 01:29:23.520] because they're required to actually say, [01:29:23.520 --> 01:29:26.520] and if you tell the truth, this could cause death. [01:29:26.520 --> 01:29:28.520] They don't say that. [01:29:28.520 --> 01:29:33.520] They say that, in fact, the epidemiologist said, [01:29:33.520 --> 01:29:38.520] vaccines are better than your own natural immune system. [01:29:38.520 --> 01:29:41.520] And I'll wait until after the break. [01:29:41.520 --> 01:29:42.520] Hang on. [01:29:42.520 --> 01:29:45.520] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, blue of our radio. [01:29:45.520 --> 01:29:47.520] I won't give out the call-in number. [01:29:47.520 --> 01:29:48.520] We have a full call board. [01:29:48.520 --> 01:29:50.520] Kerry, if you can, drop off, [01:29:50.520 --> 01:29:54.520] and you can call back in on our listen line [01:29:54.520 --> 01:29:57.520] and listen to the show, and that will free up a call-in line. [01:29:57.520 --> 01:30:00.520] We'll be right back. [01:30:00.520 --> 01:30:06.520] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, [01:30:06.520 --> 01:30:09.520] the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.520 --> 01:30:12.520] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:12.520 --> 01:30:14.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:14.520 --> 01:30:16.520] Back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.520 --> 01:30:18.520] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.520 --> 01:30:20.520] When you give up data about yourself, [01:30:20.520 --> 01:30:22.520] you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.520 --> 01:30:24.520] And once your privacy is gone, [01:30:24.520 --> 01:30:27.520] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.520 --> 01:30:29.520] So protect your rights. [01:30:29.520 --> 01:30:32.520] Go to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.520 --> 01:30:35.520] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:35.520 --> 01:30:38.520] This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:38.520 --> 01:30:42.520] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.520 --> 01:30:46.520] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:46.520 --> 01:30:49.520] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:49.520 --> 01:30:52.520] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.520 --> 01:30:56.520] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.520 --> 01:31:00.520] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.520 --> 01:31:04.520] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.520 --> 01:31:07.520] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people [01:31:07.520 --> 01:31:10.520] have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.520 --> 01:31:13.520] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas [01:31:13.520 --> 01:31:15.520] and regulate our emotions. [01:31:15.520 --> 01:31:18.520] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.520 --> 01:31:21.520] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.520 --> 01:31:24.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, [01:31:24.520 --> 01:31:31.520] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.520 --> 01:31:34.520] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [01:31:34.520 --> 01:31:36.520] that fell on the afternoon of September 11. 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[01:32:51.520 --> 01:32:53.520] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:53.520 --> 01:32:55.520] from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.520 --> 01:32:59.520] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.520 --> 01:33:05.520] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [01:33:05.520 --> 01:33:08.520] logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:08.520 --> 01:33:13.520] The Texas Transportation Code [01:33:38.520 --> 01:33:43.520] The Texas Transportation Code [01:33:44.520 --> 01:33:47.520] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:33:47.520 --> 01:33:49.520] rule of law radio, [01:33:49.520 --> 01:33:52.520] and we got two segments and five callers. [01:33:52.520 --> 01:33:54.520] The board kind of loaded up. [01:33:54.520 --> 01:33:56.520] Everyone's falling asleep. [01:33:56.520 --> 01:33:59.520] Oh Ted, don't count, he's asleep, yeah. [01:33:59.520 --> 01:34:03.520] So, okay, Greg, [01:34:03.520 --> 01:34:11.960] The Pfizer who produces this stuff has pretty well got themselves immunized. [01:34:11.960 --> 01:34:23.720] However, those who use it, those who provide it, they don't have any immunity. [01:34:23.720 --> 01:34:29.860] These doctors promoting it, if anyone in the county subsequently uses it and is injured [01:34:29.860 --> 01:34:37.000] because they promoted it improperly, they can be sued personally. [01:34:37.000 --> 01:34:39.960] You there? [01:34:39.960 --> 01:34:43.600] Yes, that's what I thought. [01:34:43.600 --> 01:34:45.400] So they have a cause of action. [01:34:45.400 --> 01:34:51.640] Now I don't have a cause of action, but I'm listening to these people advertising these [01:34:51.640 --> 01:34:56.800] products and they're not even technically allowed to do that. [01:34:56.800 --> 01:35:03.120] But I don't know how to get myself into the position where I can either bring a cause [01:35:03.120 --> 01:35:08.160] of action against them, maybe the best I can do is complain to the medical board. [01:35:08.160 --> 01:35:12.040] And of course, you've got to get through and then somebody's going to say, yeah, okay, [01:35:12.040 --> 01:35:15.440] let's go another, you know, we'll take your complaint and we'll look into it. [01:35:15.440 --> 01:35:17.080] Maybe in two years, you'll get a response. [01:35:17.080 --> 01:35:21.640] I think that, you know, of course, if you were a doctor who was talking about natural [01:35:21.640 --> 01:35:26.240] immunity, they'd have your license up on the chopping block in about 15 minutes. [01:35:26.240 --> 01:35:28.480] So that's how quickly the board works. [01:35:28.480 --> 01:35:32.680] And I know it's also politically motivated, California, you know, California is not a [01:35:32.680 --> 01:35:40.440] great state to be in, but, you know, fighting back in these ways, there must be something [01:35:40.440 --> 01:35:48.960] that I can do to push back on this wholesale advertising of something that will in fact [01:35:48.960 --> 01:35:52.280] kill you. [01:35:52.280 --> 01:35:58.440] We know right now through actuary that the millennial population between the ages of [01:35:58.440 --> 01:36:09.520] 25 and 40 are seeing a 40% excess mortality rate, 2021 and 2022, 40%. [01:36:09.520 --> 01:36:12.080] That's insane. [01:36:12.080 --> 01:36:17.600] So these people are selling death and I want to stop it and I don't know how to do it. [01:36:17.600 --> 01:36:22.680] So, you know, we'll code a federal regulation, does that do anything for me? [01:36:22.680 --> 01:36:25.440] You know, can I file a suit in some way? [01:36:25.440 --> 01:36:32.440] Can I, you know, is there anything that I can do to become either a wedge or I don't, [01:36:32.440 --> 01:36:40.280] you know, just a hammer or something, a barrier to stop them from doing this? [01:36:40.280 --> 01:36:42.520] Can you call back tomorrow night? [01:36:42.520 --> 01:36:44.080] I need to think about this. [01:36:44.080 --> 01:36:45.080] Okay. [01:36:45.080 --> 01:36:50.080] I would say consider starting with criminal complaints because then you can hand it off [01:36:50.080 --> 01:36:55.360] to the DA and let the DA, you know, you've already got a sworn criminal complaint affidavit [01:36:55.360 --> 01:37:00.880] that invokes the duty of the DA, won't put it in the hands of some magistrates too, but [01:37:00.880 --> 01:37:06.320] the DA is going to feel like he's the one who's supposed to handle it. [01:37:06.320 --> 01:37:09.600] What would be the claim? [01:37:09.600 --> 01:37:14.600] You'd have to pick a crime out of the California code, the criminal code, find a crime in there [01:37:14.600 --> 01:37:19.000] that is being committed against all these people. [01:37:19.000 --> 01:37:20.000] Depraved heart murder? [01:37:20.000 --> 01:37:21.000] Sounds likely. [01:37:21.000 --> 01:37:29.480] Well, under our health and safety code, they're not giving informed consent when they're actually [01:37:29.480 --> 01:37:30.480] selling that drug. [01:37:30.480 --> 01:37:33.480] No, it's something that's a crime. [01:37:33.480 --> 01:37:39.040] Okay, look through the criminal code. [01:37:39.040 --> 01:37:40.040] They're promoting poison. [01:37:40.040 --> 01:37:44.920] Yeah, you don't want something that's a violation of some professional code. [01:37:44.920 --> 01:37:50.280] You want something that's a legit straight up crime, like person against person harm. [01:37:50.280 --> 01:37:56.640] If they promote something and I listen to them and I believe them and I take action [01:37:56.640 --> 01:38:02.320] based on what they told me and I'm harmed thereby, that's something I can sue them for, [01:38:02.320 --> 01:38:09.200] but I would think at least depraved heart assault. [01:38:09.200 --> 01:38:15.160] Okay, that helps me focus my attention in that area. [01:38:15.160 --> 01:38:17.240] Yeah, you could still figure out later. [01:38:17.240 --> 01:38:19.360] There might be some other cause of action civilly. [01:38:19.360 --> 01:38:23.320] There might be a class action or something else you can figure out, but that's a one [01:38:23.320 --> 01:38:24.320] and done thing. [01:38:24.320 --> 01:38:27.320] Let's pull the pin lock the grenade, you're done. [01:38:27.320 --> 01:38:33.920] Right, if it's civil, they won't do anything because that's a tort claim. [01:38:33.920 --> 01:38:38.840] Oh, you can beat them up so bad with tort claims. [01:38:38.840 --> 01:38:41.240] But I like criminal better. [01:38:41.240 --> 01:38:48.960] When you start beating up the public officials, then they start making change because they [01:38:48.960 --> 01:38:50.440] don't like being beat up. [01:38:50.440 --> 01:38:54.720] If you go after them criminally and then the public officials don't want to do their job, [01:38:54.720 --> 01:38:57.080] then you go after the public officials. [01:38:57.080 --> 01:39:02.560] And for that, we can refer you to Tina Colbrook. [01:39:02.560 --> 01:39:04.040] She's really going after them. [01:39:04.040 --> 01:39:10.560] Yeah, then I would say that since this doctor appeared on a webinar with our county health [01:39:10.560 --> 01:39:18.400] director and the spokesperson for, I call him the COVID czar because he's just a mouthpiece, [01:39:18.400 --> 01:39:20.760] then he's acting in a public capacity. [01:39:20.760 --> 01:39:25.440] This doctor who works at Sutter, he's acting in a public capacity. [01:39:25.440 --> 01:39:31.960] So now he's opened himself up to a tort claim as a member of a, as a public servant. [01:39:31.960 --> 01:39:32.960] How about that? [01:39:32.960 --> 01:39:33.960] That's an easy one. [01:39:33.960 --> 01:39:39.840] No, no, don't go there because then they'll want to get into qualified immunity. [01:39:39.840 --> 01:39:42.520] This guy's on his own. [01:39:42.520 --> 01:39:48.360] He's worked, he's acted in concert and collusion with a public official, but you want to go [01:39:48.360 --> 01:39:49.720] after him on his own. [01:39:49.720 --> 01:39:52.720] He's got his own insurance. [01:39:52.720 --> 01:39:54.480] Yes he does. [01:39:54.480 --> 01:40:02.240] So let's, let's build a set of tools. [01:40:02.240 --> 01:40:09.080] Let's work on creating a claim against him for depraved heart assault. [01:40:09.080 --> 01:40:16.000] If I tell you to go stand in this one spot and I know that this one spot happens to be [01:40:16.000 --> 01:40:21.280] in the middle of a railroad track and, and I know that you're not too clever. [01:40:21.280 --> 01:40:26.160] You may be a little retarded or something and you don't understand what's going on [01:40:26.160 --> 01:40:29.440] and a train runs over you. [01:40:29.440 --> 01:40:32.480] That's called depraved heart murder. [01:40:32.480 --> 01:40:34.880] Okay. [01:40:34.880 --> 01:40:39.080] That's what they're doing. [01:40:39.080 --> 01:40:43.360] They're promoting it safe and effective, something that is not safe and effective. [01:40:43.360 --> 01:40:48.040] And if someone listens to them and trusts them and dies as a result, that's depraved [01:40:48.040 --> 01:40:53.040] heart murder. [01:40:53.040 --> 01:40:55.320] That'll get their attention. [01:40:55.320 --> 01:40:58.560] He might be taking money from, from a vaccine manufacturer. [01:40:58.560 --> 01:40:59.560] I don't know. [01:40:59.560 --> 01:41:01.640] Maybe he's invested in, in, in Pfizer. [01:41:01.640 --> 01:41:05.920] I mean that, and then so you have that, but, but I get the direction. [01:41:05.920 --> 01:41:07.240] So I'll look, I'll look at that. [01:41:07.240 --> 01:41:10.240] I'll look at that. [01:41:10.240 --> 01:41:18.080] My second question is more basic and it's a, it's a jurisdiction and I'm, I, I've been [01:41:18.080 --> 01:41:25.040] following there's this guy that a lot of us know who seemed to have elicited a speeding [01:41:25.040 --> 01:41:26.040] ticket in Texas. [01:41:26.040 --> 01:41:35.000] He's got this whole blog thing that he's doing, you know, on you can't listen that crazy guy. [01:41:35.000 --> 01:41:36.000] It's interesting to read. [01:41:36.000 --> 01:41:44.400] Now it made me start to think is that, that if I, if I drive a car with an expired registration [01:41:44.400 --> 01:41:51.320] tag in another state, does that state have jurisdiction to cite me for an expired tag [01:41:51.320 --> 01:41:54.720] in that, in, in, in, in that state? [01:41:54.720 --> 01:42:03.080] When I first moved to Texas from Illinois, 40 years ago, two years after I moved here, [01:42:03.080 --> 01:42:07.760] a DPS officer stopped me because my plate was expired. [01:42:07.760 --> 01:42:11.120] He said, Mr. Kelton, you know, your plate is expired. [01:42:11.120 --> 01:42:14.800] I said, yeah, I know, but that's an Illinois plate. [01:42:14.800 --> 01:42:18.880] And I have apparently violated an Illinois law. [01:42:18.880 --> 01:42:23.000] You don't have authority to enforce that Illinois law. [01:42:23.000 --> 01:42:25.720] He said, Mr. Kelton, you're right about that. [01:42:25.720 --> 01:42:33.800] But if I see that plate again, I can enforce a Texas law fair enough. [01:42:33.800 --> 01:42:34.800] So you're right. [01:42:34.800 --> 01:42:44.400] No, he cannot enforce a registration violation from a different state. [01:42:44.400 --> 01:42:54.360] Then let's take this one step further, if you live in a state, it doesn't matter what [01:42:54.360 --> 01:42:58.400] state you live in or what state you are in. [01:42:58.400 --> 01:43:06.240] Like, let's say I was, I live in California, but I'm in Oregon now, what actual jurisdiction [01:43:06.240 --> 01:43:12.800] does any state have over any, I want to say, you know, what sovereign, what do we call [01:43:12.800 --> 01:43:16.440] ourselves, just human beings, we're free people, right? [01:43:16.440 --> 01:43:21.160] What actual, I mean, how does the law apply to you in any state, whether you live there [01:43:21.160 --> 01:43:26.680] and pay taxes or you live there and you don't pay taxes or you... [01:43:26.680 --> 01:43:29.600] It's called an adhesion contract. [01:43:29.600 --> 01:43:39.440] When you bring yourself within the territorial jurisdiction of a state or county, you are [01:43:39.440 --> 01:43:49.600] in a adhesion contract where you agree to abide by their penal laws. [01:43:49.600 --> 01:43:54.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Blue Love Radio, I won't give out the call in numbers [01:43:54.440 --> 01:43:58.680] about one segment and five callers, so don't think we'll get to everybody, we'll be right [01:43:58.680 --> 01:43:59.680] back. [01:43:59.680 --> 01:44:00.680] Dang, Cookie. [01:44:00.680 --> 01:44:01.680] Cookie? [01:44:01.680 --> 01:44:02.680] Me love cookies. [01:44:02.680 --> 01:44:03.680] Oh, hi, Cookie Muncher. [01:44:03.680 --> 01:44:04.680] No, these are yucky cookies. [01:44:04.680 --> 01:44:05.680] Cookie? [01:44:05.680 --> 01:44:06.680] Yucky? [01:44:06.680 --> 01:44:07.680] No, no bad cookies. [01:44:07.680 --> 01:44:11.360] You can't even eat these cookies. [01:44:11.360 --> 01:44:12.360] These are cyber cookies. [01:44:12.360 --> 01:44:13.360] No, can't eat? [01:44:13.360 --> 01:44:17.400] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:44:17.400 --> 01:44:18.400] These have apples. [01:44:18.400 --> 01:44:19.400] Really? [01:44:19.400 --> 01:44:20.400] Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:44:20.400 --> 01:44:21.400] Yummy apple. [01:44:21.400 --> 01:44:27.000] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:44:27.000 --> 01:44:33.160] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:44:33.160 --> 01:44:34.720] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [01:44:34.720 --> 01:44:40.400] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand [01:44:40.400 --> 01:44:46.440] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [01:44:46.440 --> 01:44:47.440] new cookies. [01:44:47.440 --> 01:44:48.440] New cookies for me? [01:44:48.440 --> 01:44:51.280] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:44:51.280 --> 01:44:56.080] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [01:44:56.080 --> 01:44:57.080] radio network too. [01:44:57.080 --> 01:44:58.080] These are cookies. [01:44:58.080 --> 01:44:59.080] These are classified. [01:44:59.080 --> 01:45:04.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.520 --> 01:45:11.280] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course [01:45:11.280 --> 01:45:14.280] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.280 --> 01:45:18.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.960 --> 01:45:23.320] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.320 --> 01:45:28.160] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [01:45:28.160 --> 01:45:34.080] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.080 --> 01:45:39.440] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.440 --> 01:45:43.720] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.720 --> 01:45:49.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.760 --> 01:45:52.280] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.280 --> 01:46:05.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EASY. [01:46:05.000 --> 01:46:23.200] Hello, oh man, you're in jail, you're broke, oh man, I'm broke, dude. [01:46:23.200 --> 01:46:31.800] Some things in this world I will never understand, some things I realize fully. [01:46:31.800 --> 01:46:41.160] Somebody's going to police that policeman, somebody's going to police the bully. [01:46:41.160 --> 01:46:47.200] Okay, we are back, Randy Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Greg in California. [01:46:47.200 --> 01:46:50.040] Greg, can you call back on this tomorrow? [01:46:50.040 --> 01:46:56.200] This is too big a subject to do on this short show and we've got one segment and three callers, [01:46:56.200 --> 01:46:57.440] I won't try to get one of them. [01:46:57.440 --> 01:46:59.800] So call back tomorrow night, we've got a four-hour show. [01:46:59.800 --> 01:47:00.800] You're welcome. [01:47:00.800 --> 01:47:01.800] We'll start. [01:47:01.800 --> 01:47:02.800] Okay. [01:47:02.800 --> 01:47:03.800] Thank you, Greg. [01:47:03.800 --> 01:47:06.520] Okay, now we're going to Jason in Wisconsin. [01:47:06.520 --> 01:47:09.800] Hello, Jason, what do you have for us today? [01:47:09.800 --> 01:47:17.800] Hey, Randy, I have my trial tomorrow morning, so that's why I'm calling you tonight. [01:47:17.800 --> 01:47:21.360] Oh, that Jason, okay, I saw your email. [01:47:21.360 --> 01:47:22.360] Yeah. [01:47:22.360 --> 01:47:27.280] You'll probably be, this is traffic, you probably won't have a trial, you'll go in there, they'll [01:47:27.280 --> 01:47:31.560] want you to make a deal and do you have motions before the court? [01:47:31.560 --> 01:47:34.520] Yes, I do. [01:47:34.520 --> 01:47:38.000] I can get into a little bit of what I did this week. [01:47:38.000 --> 01:47:43.040] First of all, I amended my motion to dismiss that's been before the court for over two [01:47:43.040 --> 01:47:46.320] weeks now. [01:47:46.320 --> 01:47:52.400] I submitted a motion to dismiss counsel against the district attorney. [01:47:52.400 --> 01:47:58.000] Yesterday, the district attorney filed a letter with the court, which we don't have a lot [01:47:58.000 --> 01:48:04.920] of time to get into that, but basically I filed a response to that and at the last minute [01:48:04.920 --> 01:48:08.200] today before court closed, the judge filed a letter. [01:48:08.200 --> 01:48:14.920] Let me pull it up here, it's only like a sentence long. [01:48:14.920 --> 01:48:19.520] The court is in receipt of the motions and responses of the respective parties and will [01:48:19.520 --> 01:48:24.240] address them immediately prior to the scheduled hearing on the merits. [01:48:24.240 --> 01:48:28.560] Okay, very seldom they'll have the hearing on the merits. [01:48:28.560 --> 01:48:33.520] Most of the time when you fought them pretty hard and you get to the trial, they dismiss, [01:48:33.520 --> 01:48:41.440] we just had Kara Bell, they just dismissed her case after a year and a half, two years. [01:48:41.440 --> 01:48:47.040] They take you right up to the end and then they bail and good chance that's what will [01:48:47.040 --> 01:48:48.040] happen. [01:48:48.040 --> 01:48:50.800] If it's not, this is traffic, you don't care. [01:48:50.800 --> 01:48:54.280] They do whatever they do, then you take it to the next higher court. [01:48:54.280 --> 01:49:01.000] Okay, that's kind of what I'm wondering about, if I go through all the motions and stuff [01:49:01.000 --> 01:49:07.480] and they just blow past it and kind of ignore it and try to go to the merits, I'm wondering [01:49:07.480 --> 01:49:08.760] how exactly I handle that. [01:49:08.760 --> 01:49:13.080] Do I just like not say anything or do I object to it or? [01:49:13.080 --> 01:49:19.600] Do you have a subject matter, do you have a dispositive motion before the court, a motion [01:49:19.600 --> 01:49:22.240] that would dispose of the case? [01:49:22.240 --> 01:49:26.840] I do have subject matter jurisdiction in my motion to dismiss. [01:49:26.840 --> 01:49:36.960] If they deny the subject matter jurisdiction challenge, ask for a claim plea and abatement [01:49:36.960 --> 01:49:42.120] or ask for an abatement of all proceedings until you have time to file a petition for [01:49:42.120 --> 01:49:46.440] rid of mandamus to the court of appeals. [01:49:46.440 --> 01:49:49.440] That'll get their attention. [01:49:49.440 --> 01:50:02.360] Okay, so I was also thinking, well, I guess your idea would probably work better, but [01:50:02.360 --> 01:50:08.400] I was thinking if they deny my motion to dismiss the forum that I intend to file an interlocutory [01:50:08.400 --> 01:50:09.400] appeal. [01:50:09.400 --> 01:50:18.800] Well, interlocutory would work the same as a petition for rid of mandamus, a petition [01:50:18.800 --> 01:50:23.880] for rid of mandamus is to ask the higher court to order the lower court to rule in accordance [01:50:23.880 --> 01:50:29.040] with law, ask the judge for findings of fact and conclusions at law and get him to refuse [01:50:29.040 --> 01:50:30.040] it. [01:50:30.040 --> 01:50:31.040] Okay. [01:50:31.040 --> 01:50:39.360] You don't have to ask it that way, say your honor, I have these claims in my motions and [01:50:39.360 --> 01:50:46.600] since you are required to properly apply the law to the facts, will you tell me what law [01:50:46.600 --> 01:50:52.680] you're applying to which facts to come to the conclusion that you came to? [01:50:52.680 --> 01:50:55.680] Okay. [01:50:55.680 --> 01:50:59.760] He's probably going to say no and then make sure your bar grieving or judicial conduct [01:50:59.760 --> 01:51:01.640] complaint against him for that. [01:51:01.640 --> 01:51:06.360] And you might consider filing official misconduct against him for failing to properly apply [01:51:06.360 --> 01:51:12.960] the law to the facts and thereby denying you in due process. [01:51:12.960 --> 01:51:14.440] Okay. [01:51:14.440 --> 01:51:19.480] So my thought here is I'm thinking this judge is probably going to act fairly professionally [01:51:19.480 --> 01:51:26.080] because I don't remember if you recall me telling you that he used to be a US attorney [01:51:26.080 --> 01:51:34.120] and so I guess it'd be that he probably will address the issues before the court and not [01:51:34.120 --> 01:51:40.000] just blow past them, I guess I'm just trying to prepare for the worst case scenario here. [01:51:40.000 --> 01:51:45.960] Worst case scenario is he rules against you and you give him notice of intent to appeal. [01:51:45.960 --> 01:51:52.720] If he rules against the subject matter jurisdiction challenge, then ask for a recess to give you [01:51:52.720 --> 01:51:56.520] time to file an interlocutory appeal. [01:51:56.520 --> 01:51:59.200] Okay. [01:51:59.200 --> 01:52:05.400] So basically there's a very slim chance that it's actually going to get to the merits is [01:52:05.400 --> 01:52:06.400] what you're saying. [01:52:06.400 --> 01:52:07.400] Yeah. [01:52:07.400 --> 01:52:12.360] Generally, if you've got stuff before the court, they seldom get to the merits until [01:52:12.360 --> 01:52:15.720] your issues are addressed. [01:52:15.720 --> 01:52:18.000] Yeah. [01:52:18.000 --> 01:52:21.920] So one interesting thing about the letter that the district attorney submitted to the [01:52:21.920 --> 01:52:32.520] court yesterday is he addressed my accusation of barritory and in doing so, he lied to the [01:52:32.520 --> 01:52:38.480] court and told them that his assistant district attorney held my first pretrial conference [01:52:38.480 --> 01:52:42.920] when in fact he was the one who held my first pretrial conference. [01:52:42.920 --> 01:52:49.120] And in my response to the letter, I pointed that out to the court. [01:52:49.120 --> 01:52:54.880] I'm not sure that is a- It's not going to sound like a big deal. [01:52:54.880 --> 01:52:57.080] Not a substantive issue. [01:52:57.080 --> 01:53:00.800] It won't go to, it won't be considered material. [01:53:00.800 --> 01:53:09.120] Yeah, his subordinate is acting in his name so it really won't make any difference. [01:53:09.120 --> 01:53:14.760] What would be material would be to say he said that they held this particular conference [01:53:14.760 --> 01:53:20.760] that was required to be held when actually the truth is they didn't hold it at all. [01:53:20.760 --> 01:53:27.140] Then that would go to, that would be material because it could affect the outcome. [01:53:27.140 --> 01:53:33.560] So the reason I think it might be relevant is because he's trying to argue against my [01:53:33.560 --> 01:53:40.960] baritory accusation by saying that- Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:53:40.960 --> 01:53:41.960] Relevance. [01:53:41.960 --> 01:53:48.040] Because- If your subordinate is acting in your name, [01:53:48.040 --> 01:53:52.720] it's just like you were there so what's the difference? [01:53:52.720 --> 01:54:00.680] You send your subordinate in there to commit perjury, how does that make you not liable? [01:54:00.680 --> 01:54:07.920] The thing is he's trying to claim that the assistant district attorney first had the [01:54:07.920 --> 01:54:14.280] case and then passed it on to him at which point he immediately requested that my speeding [01:54:14.280 --> 01:54:20.480] ticket be changed to a- No, no, objection, relevance. [01:54:20.480 --> 01:54:24.320] He's your assistant, you are responding as superior. [01:54:24.320 --> 01:54:26.840] You can't pass this off on your subordinate. [01:54:26.840 --> 01:54:30.600] Actually, you know what it was, it wasn't the baritory. [01:54:30.600 --> 01:54:35.560] I accused him of vindictive prosecution and that's what he was trying to use as a defense [01:54:35.560 --> 01:54:36.560] for that. [01:54:36.560 --> 01:54:44.760] Wait, a vindictive prosecution, he's doing a vindictive prosecution and he's using that [01:54:44.760 --> 01:54:45.760] as a defense? [01:54:45.760 --> 01:54:46.760] Yeah. [01:54:46.760 --> 01:54:47.760] That's lame. [01:54:47.760 --> 01:54:56.880] Yeah, you got to see this letter he sent me, we don't have time to go into it but you'll [01:54:56.880 --> 01:55:00.680] get a good laugh out of it, I should email it to you. [01:55:00.680 --> 01:55:03.920] Sounds like it has clown music with it. [01:55:03.920 --> 01:55:05.560] Oh yeah. [01:55:05.560 --> 01:55:07.600] I like it when they act stupid. [01:55:07.600 --> 01:55:13.280] It seems kind of like some sort of desperation by him or something. [01:55:13.280 --> 01:55:17.240] Okay, make sure you call us back to tomorrow night and let us know what happened. [01:55:17.240 --> 01:55:18.240] Yeah, definitely. [01:55:18.240 --> 01:55:19.240] Okay, thank you. [01:55:19.240 --> 01:55:22.240] I got time to get to one more caller. [01:55:22.240 --> 01:55:23.240] You there, Jason? [01:55:23.240 --> 01:55:34.120] Yeah, yeah, I think I'm good now, you can go on to the next caller. [01:55:34.120 --> 01:55:35.120] Okay, thank you. [01:55:35.120 --> 01:55:37.560] Okay, now we're going to go to Jack in Texas. [01:55:37.560 --> 01:55:38.560] Hello, Jack. [01:55:38.560 --> 01:55:39.560] Hello, Randy. [01:55:39.560 --> 01:55:45.600] I got a few things but we'll do the quick one since there's not much time. [01:55:45.600 --> 01:55:46.600] I got a- [01:55:46.600 --> 01:55:47.600] Oh, wait a minute. [01:55:47.600 --> 01:55:48.600] Wait a minute, Jack. [01:55:48.600 --> 01:55:49.600] I think I owe you one. [01:55:49.600 --> 01:55:50.600] Is that a fact, Jack? [01:55:50.600 --> 01:55:51.600] Did you- [01:55:51.600 --> 01:55:52.600] Never mind. [01:55:52.600 --> 01:55:55.600] You pulled one on me last time. [01:55:55.600 --> 01:55:56.600] Okay. [01:55:56.600 --> 01:55:59.600] What are you up to, remember? [01:55:59.600 --> 01:56:06.960] Yeah, I got a... This is a different thing than I've been working on. [01:56:06.960 --> 01:56:07.960] Okay. [01:56:07.960 --> 01:56:17.800] I got one of those by the mail tickets for going down the tollway without a tag. [01:56:17.800 --> 01:56:23.280] It was accidental because I got in the wrong lane and couldn't move. [01:56:23.280 --> 01:56:25.360] Is there anything about that? [01:56:25.360 --> 01:56:34.920] They're saying that I owe them about 500 bucks, but that one, the toll actually goes to the [01:56:34.920 --> 01:56:43.680] vehicle and not the owner, but if you just challenge it, generally, they don't want to [01:56:43.680 --> 01:56:47.160] fight this very much. [01:56:47.160 --> 01:56:53.840] I just had someone call in, they said he owed like 250 bucks or so, and he said, no, I don't. [01:56:53.840 --> 01:56:57.160] I don't want to pay that. [01:56:57.160 --> 01:56:59.400] We can either go to court or I'll pay you 50 bucks. [01:56:59.400 --> 01:57:00.400] They said, okay. [01:57:00.400 --> 01:57:06.360] So just send them a letter then and say, hey- [01:57:06.360 --> 01:57:07.360] Yeah. [01:57:07.360 --> 01:57:08.360] Object to it. [01:57:08.360 --> 01:57:15.240] Well, I wasn't even driving my car, I was driving somebody else's car, so they got the [01:57:15.240 --> 01:57:16.240] ticket. [01:57:16.240 --> 01:57:19.520] Oh, they got the ticket. [01:57:19.520 --> 01:57:20.520] How much are they charging? [01:57:20.520 --> 01:57:24.920] I think it's like five bucks. [01:57:24.920 --> 01:57:25.920] Paid the five bucks. [01:57:25.920 --> 01:57:33.400] Picture fights are real terrible. [01:57:33.400 --> 01:57:37.840] I paid them, they didn't tell me I owed them like 500, and I got trapped onto one of those [01:57:37.840 --> 01:57:39.840] toll things the same way. [01:57:39.840 --> 01:57:44.560] And then they sent me a charge for five, and then next month, 10, next month, 20, then [01:57:44.560 --> 01:57:50.360] 40, and then 80, and just kept stacking up, and I said, screw this, I'm not paying it. [01:57:50.360 --> 01:57:53.560] And it's a fight I hadn't got to yet. [01:57:53.560 --> 01:57:59.400] Now they're up to 500 bucks or so, so I'll offer them 25 bucks, and they'll make me a [01:57:59.400 --> 01:58:00.840] counter offer and I'll pay it. [01:58:00.840 --> 01:58:03.840] That's not a fight I want to have. [01:58:03.840 --> 01:58:04.840] All right. [01:58:04.840 --> 01:58:05.840] Do you have time for it? [01:58:05.840 --> 01:58:06.840] Do I have time for this? [01:58:06.840 --> 01:58:07.840] Well, I'm still fighting the other tickets. [01:58:07.840 --> 01:58:08.840] I mean, if it's a complicated note, if it's just a matter of writing a letter, then fine. [01:58:08.840 --> 01:58:09.840] Yeah. [01:58:09.840 --> 01:58:10.840] Just call them. [01:58:10.840 --> 01:58:20.800] That should be pretty easy to have. [01:58:20.800 --> 01:58:31.720] Just call them and tell them you don't want to pay it. [01:58:31.720 --> 01:58:32.720] It's just five bucks. [01:58:32.720 --> 01:58:33.720] Just pay five bucks. [01:58:33.720 --> 01:58:34.720] Is your time worth it? [01:58:34.720 --> 01:58:35.720] Yeah, but, well, I guess we don't have time. [01:58:35.720 --> 01:58:42.720] All right, I'll talk to you another time. [01:58:42.720 --> 01:58:43.720] Okay. [01:58:43.720 --> 01:58:44.720] Thank you, Jack. [01:58:44.720 --> 01:58:50.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Blue of Law Radio, good night. [01:58:50.800 --> 01:58:56.880] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.880 --> 01:58:57.880] Recovery Version. 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