[00:00.000 --> 00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [00:05.500 --> 00:09.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [00:09.500 --> 00:11.000] Our liberty depends on it. [00:11.000 --> 00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [00:16.500 --> 00:18.500] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.500 --> 00:22.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.000 --> 00:26.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:26.500 --> 00:32.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.000 --> 00:34.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.500 --> 00:38.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [00:38.000 --> 00:42.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:42.000 --> 00:45.500] Start over with Startpage. [00:45.500 --> 00:47.500] Spar, it's what fighters do. [00:47.500 --> 00:51.000] It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First Amendment. [00:51.000 --> 00:54.000] If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. [00:54.000 --> 00:56.500] Spar with an extra P. [00:56.500 --> 01:03.000] S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:03.000 --> 01:08.500] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, assembly, and religion. [01:08.500 --> 01:10.500] But petition for redress is another matter. [01:10.500 --> 01:14.500] We have the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [01:14.500 --> 01:17.500] It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on in our government, [01:17.500 --> 01:21.000] we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:21.000 --> 01:30.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:30.500 --> 01:34.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:34.500 --> 01:38.000] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [01:38.000 --> 01:39.500] Our liberty depends on it. [01:39.500 --> 01:43.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [01:43.000 --> 01:46.000] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:46.000 --> 01:48.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.000 --> 01:51.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.500 --> 01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:56.500 --> 01:58.000] So protect your rights. [01:58.000 --> 02:01.500] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:01.500 --> 02:04.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:04.000 --> 02:08.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [02:08.000 --> 02:12.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.000 --> 02:15.500] Start over with StartPage. [02:15.500 --> 02:19.500] When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms [02:19.500 --> 02:22.000] around the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. [02:22.000 --> 02:26.000] It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms, [02:26.000 --> 02:30.000] arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away without a fight. [02:30.000 --> 02:33.500] Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? [02:33.500 --> 02:37.500] The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured the spirit of the Second Amendment so well [02:37.500 --> 02:41.500] when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is just one guarantee [02:41.500 --> 02:45.500] against arbitrary government, one more safeguard against the tyranny, [02:45.500 --> 02:50.500] which now appears remote in America, but which historically has proved to always be possible. [02:50.500 --> 03:17.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:17.000 --> 03:21.000] Well, I received my remedy today. [03:21.000 --> 03:24.500] It came in a box just like the thing. [03:24.500 --> 03:28.000] I accepted it for value right away. [03:28.000 --> 03:32.500] It's not sooner, not later. [03:32.500 --> 03:39.500] We are originators and the pathway seems to get straighter every day. [03:39.500 --> 03:46.500] And I can take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use. [03:46.500 --> 03:54.000] Whatever's good for the gander is going to work for the fools. [03:54.000 --> 04:01.500] I know some architects. I know some engineers. [04:01.500 --> 04:08.500] They see the evidence. They know a certain thing's queen. [04:08.500 --> 04:11.500] What's up with the blatant deception? [04:11.500 --> 04:19.500] Okay. Howdy, howdy. We're in the California Brett Fountain with our radio on this Friday. [04:19.500 --> 04:25.500] What day is it, Brett? The 20th day of January 2023. [04:25.500 --> 04:29.500] And we're going to sweet Tina in California. [04:29.500 --> 04:32.500] Did I say that right? [04:32.500 --> 04:34.500] Okay. Wait a minute. Hold on, Tina. [04:34.500 --> 04:37.500] We had a first time caller and he dropped off on the break. [04:37.500 --> 04:42.500] He just got back, so we'll take you up as soon as we get done with Sean. [04:42.500 --> 04:43.500] Okay, Tina? [04:43.500 --> 04:46.500] Thank you. [04:46.500 --> 04:52.500] Okay. Sean. Let's see. I unmuted the wrong one. [04:52.500 --> 04:55.500] There we go. Okay. You're up, Sean. [04:55.500 --> 04:59.500] We were just going to break here. [04:59.500 --> 05:07.500] No worries. I talked to you guys again. [05:07.500 --> 05:08.500] Where were we? [05:08.500 --> 05:10.500] You guys were telling me about a petition for rudiment. [05:10.500 --> 05:14.500] I can't even pronounce that. Rudiment dindin. [05:14.500 --> 05:19.500] In some states, they call it a writ of mandate. [05:19.500 --> 05:28.500] You're asking a higher court to order a lower court to do what the court is commanded to do. [05:28.500 --> 05:36.500] And here you ask the federal court to order a state court to butt out a federal law. [05:36.500 --> 05:39.500] And there's another stuff. We are not lawyers. [05:39.500 --> 05:41.500] We take a little bit of a different approach. [05:41.500 --> 05:46.500] We are citizens in a republic and everybody answers to us. [05:46.500 --> 05:54.500] So my position on that is you have a state judge impersonating a federal judge. [05:54.500 --> 06:01.500] So you contact the special agent in charge of your local FBI, [06:01.500 --> 06:08.500] because now our FBI have become secret police and nobody will tell you who they are. [06:08.500 --> 06:13.500] So if you give a complaint to anyone other than the special agent in charge, [06:13.500 --> 06:18.500] you've just set it out into the wind. You have no idea. [06:18.500 --> 06:23.500] Like a black hole. You can't hold anybody accountable for doing anything with it. [06:23.500 --> 06:28.500] So the one guy whose name you can find is the special agent in charge. [06:28.500 --> 06:35.500] So you send a criminal complaint against the judge to the special agent in charge, [06:35.500 --> 06:46.500] send it certified, and insure it for $500. That costs you about $10, $15 extra. [06:46.500 --> 06:53.500] And then inside the complaint, you put in a cover letter asking the special agent in charge [06:53.500 --> 06:59.500] to initial this document and return it in the included stamp self-addressed envelope [06:59.500 --> 07:05.500] so you'll know he actually got it. Well, you're not going to get that back. [07:05.500 --> 07:08.500] He's just going to take it and trash it. [07:08.500 --> 07:13.500] And when you don't get it back in, say, 10 days or two weeks, [07:13.500 --> 07:19.500] you call the postal inspectors and tell them you want your $500. [07:19.500 --> 07:28.500] You sent this letter with him registered, and you insured it for $500, and the recipient didn't get it. [07:28.500 --> 07:32.500] Why do you know he didn't get it? Well, I put in a cover letter and asked him to return it, [07:32.500 --> 07:36.500] and I didn't get that cover letter back, so I want my $500. [07:36.500 --> 07:41.500] So what's going to happen is the special agent in charge is going to get a visit [07:41.500 --> 07:46.500] from the postal inspectors because they're not going to want to pay you $500. [07:46.500 --> 07:53.500] They don't care about $500, but that'll raise their bond rating, their insurance. [07:53.500 --> 07:59.500] So it costs them more over the whole policy instead of just this one issue. [07:59.500 --> 08:01.500] So they're going to go down there, these guys get a visit, [08:01.500 --> 08:08.500] and he'll force the special agent in charge to swear under oath that he got it. [08:08.500 --> 08:15.500] And then when he doesn't give notice and let you know that he gave notice to the grand jury of crime [08:15.500 --> 08:23.500] or to some magistrate of crime, then you file criminal charges against the special agent in charge [08:23.500 --> 08:29.500] with the local federal grand jury. [08:29.500 --> 08:35.500] The only address you have for the federal grand jury is the U.S. Attorney's Office. [08:35.500 --> 08:40.500] We send it to the U.S. Attorney's Office, and the U.S. Attorney is going to get that, [08:40.500 --> 08:44.500] and he's going to throw it in the trash and not send you back the cover letter. [08:44.500 --> 08:49.500] The cover letter will say to the foreman of the grand jury, [08:49.500 --> 08:53.500] please initial this and return it to me so I'll know you actually received it, [08:53.500 --> 08:58.500] as we have problems with U.S. attorneys secreting criminal complaints [08:58.500 --> 09:02.500] against public officials from the grand jury. [09:02.500 --> 09:07.500] And please initial this, do not sign it. [09:07.500 --> 09:12.500] As the U.S. Attorney has a rubber stamp with the foreman's name on it [09:12.500 --> 09:16.500] that he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments, [09:16.500 --> 09:19.500] and we want to make sure it's not rubber stamped. [09:19.500 --> 09:26.500] Well, what do you think the likelihood is that that letter is going to get to the foreman of the grand jury? [09:26.500 --> 09:29.500] Somewhere between little and none. [09:29.500 --> 09:34.500] And when you don't get that one back, then you file another complaint, [09:34.500 --> 09:38.500] but you file this one against the U.S. Attorney, [09:38.500 --> 09:47.500] accusing the U.S. Attorney of shielding the special agent in charge from prosecution. [09:47.500 --> 09:52.500] The U.S. Attorney's going to open that one and look at it and say, that chump set me up. [09:52.500 --> 09:54.500] Yes, we did. [09:54.500 --> 10:01.500] And then when you don't get that cover letter back, which has a cover letter to the foreman again, [10:01.500 --> 10:07.500] then you give notice to the U.S. Attorney General in Washington, D.C. [10:07.500 --> 10:11.500] Brett, do you remember the statute for that? [10:11.500 --> 10:13.500] No, I don't think I've ever seen that. [10:13.500 --> 10:15.500] Yeah, there is a statute that tells... [10:15.500 --> 10:17.500] Like where they have to resign? [10:17.500 --> 10:19.500] Offer a letter? [10:19.500 --> 10:24.500] It's like a federal whistleblower statute. [10:24.500 --> 10:32.500] If a federal employee has knowledge that another federal employee has committed a crime, [10:32.500 --> 10:38.500] he is to give notice to the U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C. [10:38.500 --> 10:43.500] So we're not exactly federal employees, but we do it under that statute anyway. [10:43.500 --> 10:47.500] We just give notice to the U.S. Attorney in D.C. [10:47.500 --> 10:53.500] Sean, do you know what every U.S. Attorney in the country must do when a new president is sworn into office? [10:53.500 --> 10:55.500] No, sir. [10:55.500 --> 11:01.500] They must issue their resignation. [11:01.500 --> 11:06.500] And the new president gets to decide if he wants to accept their resignation or not. [11:06.500 --> 11:14.500] So we got a new president a couple years ago, and he's got a resignation for every one of those U.S. Attorneys. [11:14.500 --> 11:18.500] Gotcha. [11:18.500 --> 11:21.500] Bye, Bubba. [11:21.500 --> 11:25.500] And then he gets to replace them with his buddies. [11:25.500 --> 11:27.500] Are you seeing a pattern here, Sean? [11:27.500 --> 11:31.500] Are you noticing, as Randy's describing, and then you do this and then you do that, [11:31.500 --> 11:39.500] are you seeing a pattern here where the one who it was originally, you had an original complaint against somebody. [11:39.500 --> 11:41.500] That's not part of it anymore. [11:41.500 --> 11:49.500] Now it has escalated to the person who had a responsibility to act on that complaint and didn't. [11:49.500 --> 11:55.500] And then your next complaint is going to somebody else about that one and on and on. [11:55.500 --> 12:04.500] What you do is you uncheck bigger and bigger gobs of poop and get them rolling downhill. [12:04.500 --> 12:11.500] That part of it. [12:11.500 --> 12:12.500] Exactly. [12:12.500 --> 12:21.500] And that guy on the bottom, we'll see how honorable he is when he's got all these feds crawling down his throat. [12:21.500 --> 12:27.500] You're right, because she's just a state or county judge as appointed by the governor. [12:27.500 --> 12:28.500] Oh, wonderful. [12:28.500 --> 12:30.500] This will not make her happy. [12:30.500 --> 12:36.500] You know, you file a judicial conduct complaint each time you file a new complaint [12:36.500 --> 12:42.500] and file another judicial conduct complaint against the judge and include the new complaint. [12:42.500 --> 12:45.500] Gotcha. [12:45.500 --> 12:53.500] Here's one against the special agent charged with shielding her from prosecution. [12:53.500 --> 12:57.500] And here's one against the U.S. attorney. [12:57.500 --> 12:59.500] Gotcha. [12:59.500 --> 13:01.500] I will definitely do that. [13:01.500 --> 13:04.500] Now I'm trying to figure out how that would help me with my judgment though. [13:04.500 --> 13:14.500] I'm still looking at a judgment of almost half a million dollars from what she did. [13:14.500 --> 13:17.500] That's a whole different issue. [13:17.500 --> 13:22.500] Was this judgment issued by a state court? [13:22.500 --> 13:24.500] Yes. [13:24.500 --> 13:26.500] It was issued by a state court. [13:26.500 --> 13:31.500] I was in the hospital because I had just had two heart attacks. [13:31.500 --> 13:33.500] They went to court. [13:33.500 --> 13:36.500] And I know I'm supposed to get ADA considerations, [13:36.500 --> 13:42.500] but I didn't know I was supposed to file and notify the court that I deserved ADA considerations [13:42.500 --> 13:45.500] because it's complications from diabetes. [13:45.500 --> 13:53.500] They went into court and they awarded someone a bunch of money [13:53.500 --> 13:59.500] in terms of taxes saying that I needed to pay them for taxes they had paid. [13:59.500 --> 14:02.500] Now they haven't paid those taxes. [14:02.500 --> 14:04.500] That's the other issue as well. [14:04.500 --> 14:05.500] Okay. [14:05.500 --> 14:06.500] Hold on. [14:06.500 --> 14:11.500] Did you get a ruling in absentia? [14:11.500 --> 14:13.500] Yes. [14:13.500 --> 14:14.500] Okay. [14:14.500 --> 14:16.500] That you can almost always get turned over. [14:16.500 --> 14:19.500] Did you file an appeal with the higher court? [14:19.500 --> 14:21.500] Not yet. [14:21.500 --> 14:23.500] Okay. [14:23.500 --> 14:25.500] Are you within the time limit? [14:25.500 --> 14:27.500] I don't think I am. [14:27.500 --> 14:30.500] I think it's 10 days. [14:30.500 --> 14:34.500] But what I am going to file is a motion to set aside due to fraud. [14:34.500 --> 14:36.500] That's all I could think of. [14:36.500 --> 14:40.500] How long are you still incapacitated? [14:40.500 --> 14:43.500] Yeah, I haven't worked in nearly a year. [14:43.500 --> 14:45.500] Oh. [14:45.500 --> 14:46.500] Oh, you haven't worked in a year. [14:46.500 --> 14:49.500] How long ago did this occur? [14:49.500 --> 14:57.500] That occurred in May of last year. [14:57.500 --> 14:59.500] You may have waited too long. [14:59.500 --> 15:05.500] This needs to be, unless you can show cause as to why you took so much time. [15:05.500 --> 15:12.500] No, but the judgment was just completed in December 16th and finalized of last year. [15:12.500 --> 15:13.500] Oh, okay. [15:13.500 --> 15:16.500] So December 16th, it's generally 30 days. [15:16.500 --> 15:18.500] You may get 60. [15:18.500 --> 15:22.500] Did you file a motion for reconsideration? [15:22.500 --> 15:24.500] No, not as of yet. [15:24.500 --> 15:29.500] Only because whenever I tried to file a motion with the judge, she'd throw it out, [15:29.500 --> 15:33.500] and I was doing the motions from a hospital bed. [15:33.500 --> 15:34.500] Oh, okay. [15:34.500 --> 15:38.500] If you were in a hospital, just file a notice of intent to appeal [15:38.500 --> 15:45.500] and ask for an extension of time due to health issues. [15:45.500 --> 15:50.500] They'll almost always give that to you, and then start this through your appellate process. [15:50.500 --> 15:52.500] You raised this issue on appeal. [15:52.500 --> 15:55.500] They're likely to toss it. [15:55.500 --> 15:56.500] Gotcha. [15:56.500 --> 16:02.500] And then, are you guys familiar with fraud on the court? [16:02.500 --> 16:08.500] Nothing you've spoken to on this call indicates fraud on the court. [16:08.500 --> 16:10.500] That would be a different issue. [16:10.500 --> 16:14.500] If someone committed fraud in order to get this claim, that would be one thing, [16:14.500 --> 16:19.500] but in this case, you were incapacitated, so they got all of this in absentia. [16:19.500 --> 16:25.500] And before you go into the content, [16:25.500 --> 16:29.500] you want to stay with the fact that you were incapacitated [16:29.500 --> 16:35.500] and unable to defend yourself and request a new trial. [16:35.500 --> 16:36.500] Gotcha. [16:36.500 --> 16:38.500] But the fraud on the court actually happened at pretrial. [16:38.500 --> 16:41.500] That's why I was asked. [16:41.500 --> 16:42.500] Oh, okay. [16:42.500 --> 16:43.500] Hang on. [16:43.500 --> 16:45.500] Let's post this up on the other side. [16:45.500 --> 16:48.500] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the wheel of our radio. [16:48.500 --> 16:55.500] And we do have an empty slot, our call-in number, 512-646-1984. [16:55.500 --> 16:58.500] Give us a call, and we'll be right back. [16:58.500 --> 16:59.500] Hold on. [16:59.500 --> 17:04.500] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:04.500 --> 17:08.500] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [17:08.500 --> 17:12.500] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, [17:12.500 --> 17:14.500] and now you can win two. [17:14.500 --> 17:18.500] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court [17:18.500 --> 17:20.500] using federal civil rights statutes, [17:20.500 --> 17:24.500] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, [17:24.500 --> 17:26.500] how to answer letters and phone calls, [17:26.500 --> 17:28.500] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [17:28.500 --> 17:33.500] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.500 --> 17:38.500] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.500 --> 17:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:40.500 --> 17:43.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:43.500 --> 17:48.500] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [17:48.500 --> 17:56.500] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-m at yahoo.com [17:56.500 --> 18:00.500] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:00.500 --> 18:04.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.500 --> 18:06.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [18:06.500 --> 18:08.500] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [18:08.500 --> 18:11.500] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:11.500 --> 18:14.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:14.500 --> 18:16.500] the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:16.500 --> 18:18.500] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:18.500 --> 18:21.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [18:21.500 --> 18:24.500] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:24.500 --> 18:27.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:27.500 --> 18:30.500] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:30.500 --> 18:32.500] that will help you understand what due process is [18:32.500 --> 18:34.500] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.500 --> 18:36.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [18:36.500 --> 18:39.500] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:39.500 --> 18:41.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [18:41.500 --> 18:44.500] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:44.500 --> 18:46.500] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [18:46.500 --> 18:49.500] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [18:49.500 --> 18:53.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:53.500 --> 19:00.500] Order your copy today, and together we can have a free society we all want and deserve. [19:00.500 --> 19:11.500] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, www.logosradionetwork.com. [19:11.500 --> 19:14.500] Well, don't let nothing get to you. [19:14.500 --> 19:17.500] Only the Father can deliver you. [19:17.500 --> 19:20.500] And don't let bad-minded people hurt you. [19:20.500 --> 19:23.500] Until they can get behind you. [19:23.500 --> 19:26.500] Know what I mean, my friend? [19:26.500 --> 19:30.500] Knowledge at your disposal. [19:30.500 --> 19:32.500] Trust in God, my friend. [19:32.500 --> 19:34.500] Tell Him you're proud of Him. [19:34.500 --> 19:37.500] God, learn His name once again. [19:37.500 --> 19:40.500] Every one you know, He will say it. [19:40.500 --> 19:43.500] Trust in God, my friend. [19:43.500 --> 19:46.500] Tell Him you're proud of Him. [19:46.500 --> 19:48.500] How long is it? [19:48.500 --> 19:50.500] Okay, we are back. [19:50.500 --> 19:53.500] Randy Kelton. [19:53.500 --> 19:55.500] I'm getting... [19:55.500 --> 19:57.500] Can you get that noise down? [19:57.500 --> 19:59.500] There we go. [19:59.500 --> 20:01.500] We seem to have a little trouble with our background music. [20:01.500 --> 20:05.500] It's getting some kind of extra noise in it. [20:05.500 --> 20:07.500] Okay, we are back. [20:07.500 --> 20:10.500] We're talking to Sean in Missouri. [20:10.500 --> 20:18.500] And you had a case ruled against you while you were ill and incapacitated. [20:18.500 --> 20:25.500] Do not let them drag you into the merits of the case. [20:25.500 --> 20:27.500] Gotcha. [20:27.500 --> 20:34.500] You need to argue first that whatever went on was improper because I was not able to defend myself. [20:34.500 --> 20:43.500] And you need a new trial so that you'll have opportunity to adequately defend yourself on the issues. [20:43.500 --> 20:48.500] And they will try to force you to argue the merits. [20:48.500 --> 20:52.500] And it's hard not to because you want to argue those merits. [20:52.500 --> 20:53.500] Right. [20:53.500 --> 20:56.500] But right now you want to avoid that. [20:56.500 --> 20:59.500] First, we get a new trial. [20:59.500 --> 21:01.500] They're going to tell you you can appeal. [21:01.500 --> 21:07.500] An appeal is inappropriate because you were unable to set the record for appeal. [21:07.500 --> 21:10.500] Gotcha. [21:10.500 --> 21:12.500] So that should get it. [21:12.500 --> 21:15.500] That should get it. [21:15.500 --> 21:18.500] Can I ask you just one more question if that's okay? [21:18.500 --> 21:20.500] Yes. [21:20.500 --> 21:28.500] So in pre-trial, I notified the court of the fraud scheme of the plaintiff. [21:28.500 --> 21:35.500] The plaintiff came to court as one person, but he actually is someone else with a different name. [21:35.500 --> 21:42.500] After I notified the court, he and his attorney conspired to tell the court that it wasn't true. [21:42.500 --> 21:47.500] I then filed a motion notifying the court again from a hospital bed saying, [21:47.500 --> 21:51.500] hey, I have tape recordings that could prove that they're both lying. [21:51.500 --> 21:56.500] His attorney then immediately filed a motion to withdraw. [21:56.500 --> 22:03.500] The judge didn't do anything else except say, well, now that he's gone, I don't expect anything else bad to happen. [22:03.500 --> 22:06.500] But at that point, the damage had been done. [22:06.500 --> 22:11.500] This other person he was pretending to be was sabotaging my business. [22:11.500 --> 22:16.500] It's a crazy story, but that's what happened. [22:16.500 --> 22:23.500] And so it was my understanding that the judge asked the guy, well, there's one other piece. [22:23.500 --> 22:31.500] The gentleman filed a motion to strike, which covered up the crime that I just told the judge about. [22:31.500 --> 22:33.500] So the judge— [22:33.500 --> 22:35.500] Wait a minute. Hold on. Step back. [22:35.500 --> 22:42.500] He filed a motion to strike his own pleading? [22:42.500 --> 22:50.500] He filed a motion to strike my pleading after I told them that, hey, his client is actually someone else. [22:50.500 --> 22:53.500] And that other person was running around saying he owned— [22:53.500 --> 22:57.500] Wait a minute. Hold on. [22:57.500 --> 23:02.500] How did you give them notice? [23:02.500 --> 23:06.500] About the other person, about his other identity? [23:06.500 --> 23:08.500] Yes. [23:08.500 --> 23:13.500] Through a motion, because you can't have ex parte communication, so I filed a motion. [23:13.500 --> 23:23.500] No, no. I mean, did you—did that motion contain facts? [23:23.500 --> 23:25.500] Yes. [23:25.500 --> 23:31.500] On what grounds did they ask to strike the motion? [23:31.500 --> 23:35.500] They literally just said I was crazy and rambling. [23:35.500 --> 23:38.500] That was the ground. [23:38.500 --> 23:46.500] Okay. Well, that's good. That'll support your assertion that you were incapacitated. [23:46.500 --> 23:49.500] Don't let them get into any of that. [23:49.500 --> 23:56.500] And you're going to want to argue the merits, and they will take advantage of that. [23:56.500 --> 23:57.500] Gotcha. [23:57.500 --> 24:02.500] At this point, object to any issues addressing the merits. [24:02.500 --> 24:14.500] Go back to the fact that you were incapacitated and unable to properly represent yourself in the court and ask for a new trial. [24:14.500 --> 24:16.500] Okay. [24:16.500 --> 24:19.500] I'll do that. I appreciate everything. [24:19.500 --> 24:23.500] Okay. Good luck. Keep us up to speed on how this goes. [24:23.500 --> 24:26.500] I definitely will. Thanks again. Bye now. [24:26.500 --> 24:33.500] Okay. Thank you, Sean. Now we're going to go to Sweet Tina. Hello, Sweet Tina. [24:33.500 --> 24:38.500] This is Sweet, Sweet Non-Charlish Tina. [24:38.500 --> 24:40.500] Tenacious Tina. [24:40.500 --> 24:44.500] Yes, tenacious Tina. [24:44.500 --> 24:47.500] What do you have for us today? [24:47.500 --> 24:52.500] I have new wording for you that I wonder if you guys... [24:52.500 --> 24:58.500] Whoa. Hold on. Tell me you're not on a hands-free device. [24:58.500 --> 25:01.500] I am not on a hands-free device. [25:01.500 --> 25:07.500] Hmm. You're kind of muffled. I think we had that yesterday, too. [25:07.500 --> 25:10.500] Okay. Try to remember your accent. [25:10.500 --> 25:17.500] That's what it is. You've got that strange foreign accent. You need to learn how to speak English, young lady. [25:17.500 --> 25:27.500] Oh. Now my partner's always telling me that because he doesn't understand me. [25:27.500 --> 25:35.500] Okay. Try to move the mic a little bit from your mouth. It kind of sounds like you're in a well. [25:35.500 --> 25:36.500] Okay. Go ahead. [25:36.500 --> 25:44.500] You know, it's the cell phone. We have to sue the cell phone companies for giving us defective devices. [25:44.500 --> 25:50.500] Yeah. That's what we need to do. Okay. What do you have for us today? [25:50.500 --> 25:56.500] I'm going to give you a legal maxim to know if you've ever heard of this before. [25:56.500 --> 26:11.500] And it's called UBI, J-U-S, then I-B-I, then R-E-M-E-D-I-U-N. [26:11.500 --> 26:18.500] Have you ever heard of that maxim? [26:18.500 --> 26:20.500] I can tell you're confused now. [26:20.500 --> 26:21.500] I never have. [26:21.500 --> 26:26.500] It's not English. I have not either, but Florence introduced me to it. [26:26.500 --> 26:33.500] It's called the literal meaning is where there is a wrong, there is a remedy. [26:33.500 --> 26:46.500] And obviously it's Latin, and the explanation is the maxim states that if any wrong has been committed, the law provides a remedy. [26:46.500 --> 26:52.500] In simple terms, the law specifies a remedy for every wrong. [26:52.500 --> 27:04.500] It shall also be described as the principle that no wrong should be allowed to go without any compensation if it can be redressed by a court of law. [27:04.500 --> 27:14.500] According to the law, wrong actions are those which are not prescribed by moral rule or which are prohibited by law. [27:14.500 --> 27:22.500] When a person's right is denied, the law affords the remedy of an action for its enforcement. [27:22.500 --> 27:26.500] Thus, this right to a remedy includes a right of action. [27:26.500 --> 27:36.500] The maxim also states that the person whose right has been infringed has the right to enforce the infringed right through any action before the court. [27:36.500 --> 27:48.500] I think it's quite interesting to use something like that against some of the attorneys and the judges in my case, but maybe other people want to use that too. [27:48.500 --> 27:54.500] That's exactly what I was thinking. [27:54.500 --> 27:57.500] This fits your case. [27:57.500 --> 28:14.500] Where they have allowed these attorneys this attorney privilege, they have denied you in your remedy, and they're required to provide you a remedy for this particular case. [28:14.500 --> 28:27.500] Yes, and they won't realize where I got this from. I mean, how many people bring this maxim of law up? [28:27.500 --> 28:30.500] They probably will have to look it up themselves. [28:30.500 --> 28:45.500] I thought it would be fun to bring that in. The applicability of the essentials of the maxim includes to be applicable where there is a right which is recognized by the law, [28:45.500 --> 28:59.500] to the wrongful act which violates the legal rights of the person, to be applicable when sufficient relief has not been provided by the court, and to be applicable if there is a legal injury. [28:59.500 --> 29:12.500] This is a great issue to bring to the Supreme. This is the kinds of things they like to deal with. [29:12.500 --> 29:23.500] Well, we're going to bring it up in my appeal brief, and then I guess we'll have to take it to the California Supreme, and then I guess we'll have to take it to the U.S. Supreme. [29:23.500 --> 29:35.500] But I thought it was really fun. I'd never heard of it until Florence brought it to my attention, and then I looked it up, and I thought, this is fun. [29:35.500 --> 29:37.500] Uh-oh, Wendy, you're not going to want this to come. [29:37.500 --> 29:46.500] Yes. Yeah, this is great, and this goes right to your issue. The maximum can be phrased as that any person will not suffer a wrong without remedy. [29:46.500 --> 29:57.500] It means that once it is proved the right was breached, then equity will provide a suitable remedy. We'll be right back with a remedy. [29:57.500 --> 30:00.500] I hope so. [30:00.500 --> 30:07.500] Everyone knows that walking is a great exercise, but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:07.500 --> 30:13.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:13.500 --> 30:19.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:19.500 --> 30:24.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [30:24.500 --> 30:29.500] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:29.500 --> 30:39.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:39.500 --> 30:42.500] Start over with StartPage. [30:42.500 --> 30:47.500] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.500 --> 30:55.500] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.500 --> 30:59.500] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [30:59.500 --> 31:06.500] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:06.500 --> 31:09.500] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:09.500 --> 31:15.500] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:15.500 --> 31:20.500] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:20.500 --> 31:25.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:29.500 --> 31:34.500] I lost my son. My nephew. My uncle. My son. On September 11, 2001. [31:34.500 --> 31:38.500] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.500 --> 31:42.500] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.500 --> 31:46.500] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.500 --> 31:52.500] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [31:52.500 --> 31:55.500] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [31:55.500 --> 32:00.500] Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.500 --> 32:06.500] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [32:06.500 --> 32:12.500] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [32:12.500 --> 32:17.500] where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2nd Timothy 2.15. [32:17.500 --> 32:24.500] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the Word of Truth. [32:24.500 --> 32:28.500] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [32:28.500 --> 32:32.500] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [32:32.500 --> 32:39.500] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [32:39.500 --> 32:44.500] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:44.500 --> 32:50.500] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [32:50.500 --> 32:54.500] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com, [32:54.500 --> 33:02.500] on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [33:24.500 --> 33:49.500] I want, oh I want, I won't let you pull the wool over my eyes. [33:49.500 --> 33:55.500] They must refuse your news or so I've been lied. [33:55.500 --> 34:01.500] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue Law Radio. [34:01.500 --> 34:09.500] And I'm waiting for that sound to go down. We've got some background noise in that music. [34:09.500 --> 34:16.500] It sounds like wind or something. Might tell Deborah about it. [34:16.500 --> 34:21.500] Okay, we're talking to Tina in California. [34:21.500 --> 34:29.500] And that is interesting. I have never heard of this, but it certainly fits your situation. [34:29.500 --> 34:33.500] And I'm sure it fits others. I want to just go on. [34:33.500 --> 34:42.500] There's an explanation here that says the maxim state that if any wrong has been committed, [34:42.500 --> 34:47.500] the law provides a remedy. In simple terms, the law states, [34:47.500 --> 34:51.500] the law specifies a remedy for every wrong. [34:51.500 --> 34:58.500] It shall also be described as the principle that no wrong should be allowed to go [34:58.500 --> 35:03.500] without any compensation if it can be redressed by a court of law. [35:03.500 --> 35:10.500] According to the law, wrong actions are those which are not prescribed by moral rules [35:10.500 --> 35:15.500] or which are prohibited by law. When a person's right is denied, [35:15.500 --> 35:20.500] the law affords the remedy of an action for its enforcement. [35:20.500 --> 35:25.500] Thus, this right to a remedy includes a right of action. [35:25.500 --> 35:30.500] The maxim also states that the person whose right has been infringed [35:30.500 --> 35:36.500] has the right to enforce the infringed right to any action before the court. [35:36.500 --> 35:43.500] The law of tort is a development of the Latin maxim obu-ab remedium. [35:43.500 --> 35:51.500] The term u, spelled j-u-s in the maxim, refers to the legal authority to do something [35:51.500 --> 35:57.500] or demand something, whereas the term remedium refers to the right of a person [35:57.500 --> 36:01.500] to approach the court for the wrong done to him. [36:01.500 --> 36:07.500] It is to be noted that the maxim applies only to the cases where a legal wrong [36:07.500 --> 36:12.500] has been done to a person and not for the moral or political wrongs. [36:12.500 --> 36:16.500] It's really kind of fascinating to read it. [36:16.500 --> 36:22.500] The applicability or the essentials of the maxim includes to be applicable [36:22.500 --> 36:27.500] where there is a right which is recognized by the law to the wrongful act [36:27.500 --> 36:33.500] which violates the legal rights of the person, to be applicable when sufficient relief [36:33.500 --> 36:40.500] has not been provided by the court, and to be applicable if there is a legal injury. [36:40.500 --> 36:48.500] So it definitely seems to fit my case, but I think it fits quite a few other people [36:48.500 --> 36:54.500] who come on this show who have probably never heard of it as I have not. [36:54.500 --> 36:57.500] What are your thoughts? [36:57.500 --> 37:04.500] I'm definitely going to research into this in more depth. [37:04.500 --> 37:12.500] Because on the show you've heard me say that the law is extremely well constructed. [37:12.500 --> 37:22.500] There is not a remedy that I need that I cannot find in the law, and that's what this goes to. [37:22.500 --> 37:25.500] Except in California. [37:25.500 --> 37:30.500] Well yes, we're a strange state, we are. [37:30.500 --> 37:34.500] Now California has a good corpus juris, a good body of law. [37:34.500 --> 37:36.500] They're just not following it. [37:36.500 --> 37:39.500] In your case it's a perfect example. [37:39.500 --> 37:44.500] For them to say that it's perfectly all right for a lawyer to go into court [37:44.500 --> 37:48.500] and just lie like a dog, that is unacceptable. [37:48.500 --> 37:49.500] Right. [37:49.500 --> 37:50.500] Absolutely. [37:50.500 --> 37:58.500] Because it goes against everything that they, their oath of office that they take [37:58.500 --> 38:04.500] for the privilege of practicing law, specifically states that they must adhere to the truth. [38:04.500 --> 38:10.500] And it goes against every part of the business and professional rules of conduct. [38:10.500 --> 38:13.500] So why they allow it is beyond me. [38:13.500 --> 38:17.500] And you're right, once I finish these cases I'm going to go into the federal [38:17.500 --> 38:24.500] and take the state to, you know, on this because it's got to stop. [38:24.500 --> 38:28.500] And this is a great case to do that with. [38:28.500 --> 38:33.500] And this maximum, maximum is perfect. [38:33.500 --> 38:37.500] Ubi juris ibi remedium. [38:37.500 --> 38:39.500] Yes. [38:39.500 --> 38:43.500] I knew there was a reason I brought you on today. [38:43.500 --> 38:48.500] Yes, because I have to teach you some Latin English, you know. [38:48.500 --> 38:49.500] Yes. [38:49.500 --> 38:54.500] I'm always teaching you some different language. [38:54.500 --> 38:55.500] Okay. [38:55.500 --> 38:59.500] Are you going to produce us a brief on this? [38:59.500 --> 39:06.500] Well, I'm going to put it within my appellate brief, which is due on Monday. [39:06.500 --> 39:09.500] And Florence is helping me, you know, figure this out. [39:09.500 --> 39:14.500] We're getting together tomorrow to finalize a little bit more. [39:14.500 --> 39:20.500] I've been working on it for a couple of months and, you know, [39:20.500 --> 39:27.500] I'm just going to throw it all at them because they are intent on denying me from the start. [39:27.500 --> 39:32.500] They want to deny me because they only... [39:32.500 --> 39:38.500] It appears to me that whenever an attorney says anything in California, they're right. [39:38.500 --> 39:41.500] And whenever a pro se litigant comes, they're wrong. [39:41.500 --> 39:47.500] And they throw everything, you know, against the pro se litigant. [39:47.500 --> 39:50.500] They tell you that the attorneys are white. [39:50.500 --> 39:59.500] You know, they can be witnesses, even though the Trinsey v. Pagliaro says that attorneys cannot be a witness. [39:59.500 --> 40:03.500] There's so much people that they just, as you say, it's... [40:03.500 --> 40:05.500] What is it you say? [40:05.500 --> 40:13.500] It's the Walker v. Packer case that you always quote. [40:13.500 --> 40:22.500] A judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [40:22.500 --> 40:25.500] A failure to do so is an abuse of discretion. [40:25.500 --> 40:26.500] Abuse of discretion. [40:26.500 --> 40:32.500] And I am putting that in there and I keep putting it in there and they keep ignoring it, [40:32.500 --> 40:38.500] but I'm going to keep putting it in there till I smack them around the head and make them take notice. [40:38.500 --> 40:45.500] And it could take forever, but I'm not going to stop because they just don't want to. [40:45.500 --> 40:49.500] When I look at what they do, it's everything the attorneys say. [40:49.500 --> 41:01.500] They denied me my right to discovery just because those attorneys knew that I was going to go to discovery. [41:01.500 --> 41:09.500] And the only thing they could stop me with was this, you know, anti-slap, which doesn't even fit. [41:09.500 --> 41:13.500] But the judge says, oh, no, you can't have discovery. [41:13.500 --> 41:19.500] Have you ever heard of the John Wayne movie called The Searchers? [41:19.500 --> 41:21.500] No. [41:21.500 --> 41:30.500] This was a movie about where the Indians kidnapped this guy's sister and he got his uncle, who was John Wayne, [41:30.500 --> 41:34.500] and they went to get the woman back from the Indians. [41:34.500 --> 41:37.500] And for five years they chased them. [41:37.500 --> 41:43.500] And finally, the brother said to the uncle, isn't it time we stopped? [41:43.500 --> 41:50.500] And John Wayne told him, the Indian, he will run a while and then he will stop. [41:50.500 --> 41:56.500] He doesn't understand a creature that will just keep on coming. [41:56.500 --> 41:59.500] And you are that creature. [41:59.500 --> 42:01.500] I will keep on coming. [42:01.500 --> 42:04.500] I have a few hiccups along the way. [42:04.500 --> 42:08.500] I have my days where I'm like, why am I doing this? [42:08.500 --> 42:09.500] Yeah, don't we all? [42:09.500 --> 42:13.500] But I keep doing it. [42:13.500 --> 42:16.500] They don't understand a creature of that nature. [42:16.500 --> 42:28.500] Humans are the most successful predators on the planet because humans can run any animal into ground. [42:28.500 --> 42:43.500] There's a race every year in Colorado where people race a horse over a mountain, up one side and down the other. [42:43.500 --> 42:52.500] And the people always win because they run the horse to ground. [42:52.500 --> 42:56.500] The human can just keep on coming. [42:56.500 --> 42:59.500] And you're a perfect example of that. [42:59.500 --> 43:02.500] Well, I'm going to try and I am going to invite you all. [43:02.500 --> 43:05.500] I have spoken to this local radio show. [43:05.500 --> 43:12.500] I've been on it a couple of three times, one talking about the men in women's athletics, [43:12.500 --> 43:18.500] one talking about, you know, just my, you know, since I was at Cal Poly [43:18.500 --> 43:27.500] because the person who runs this radio show was an ex-professor of mine from 35 years ago. [43:27.500 --> 43:30.500] And he was like, what are you going to come talk to us about next? [43:30.500 --> 43:31.500] Because you always have an opinion. [43:31.500 --> 43:32.500] I said, what are you right? [43:32.500 --> 43:33.500] I do. [43:33.500 --> 43:36.500] And I said, I'm going to talk about that. [43:36.500 --> 43:37.500] Hold on. [43:37.500 --> 43:39.500] We're going to our sponsors. [43:39.500 --> 43:44.500] But as to opinions, why, you're a woman. [43:44.500 --> 43:47.500] Of course you have an opinion. [43:47.500 --> 43:49.500] It comes with the territory. [43:49.500 --> 43:54.500] Hang on, Randy Kelton, wet fountain, rule of law radio. [43:54.500 --> 43:59.500] This is Randy, the male chauvinist pig will be right back. [43:59.500 --> 44:03.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [44:03.500 --> 44:05.500] except in the area of nutrition. [44:05.500 --> 44:08.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [44:08.500 --> 44:10.500] And it's time we changed all that. [44:10.500 --> 44:16.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:16.500 --> 44:21.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:21.500 --> 44:25.500] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.500 --> 44:29.500] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [44:29.500 --> 44:31.500] most of which we reject. [44:31.500 --> 44:33.500] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [44:33.500 --> 44:39.500] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.500 --> 44:42.500] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [44:42.500 --> 44:47.500] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.500 --> 44:51.500] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:51.500 --> 44:54.500] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:54.500 --> 44:58.500] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.500 --> 45:00.500] Order now. [45:00.500 --> 45:03.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.500 --> 45:07.500] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:07.500 --> 45:15.500] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.500 --> 45:19.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.500 --> 45:23.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.500 --> 45:28.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.500 --> 45:34.500] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.500 --> 45:38.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.500 --> 45:43.500] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.500 --> 45:49.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.500 --> 45:52.500] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.500 --> 46:04.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.500 --> 46:29.500] Yeah, always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:29.500 --> 46:35.500] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:35.500 --> 46:41.500] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:41.500 --> 46:46.500] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [46:46.500 --> 46:56.500] Okay, we are back. [46:56.500 --> 46:58.500] Just waiting a minute for it to fade down. [46:58.500 --> 47:00.500] Yeah, I'm waiting for that background music. [47:00.500 --> 47:04.500] Generally the background music fades out really quickly, but there's something... [47:04.500 --> 47:10.500] It's fading at the same rate, but right now, for whatever reason, it's louder in our headsets. [47:10.500 --> 47:13.500] If not that, there's another noise back there. [47:13.500 --> 47:18.500] There's some sound behind it of rummaging like wind blowing. [47:18.500 --> 47:20.500] We'll have Daisy check it out. [47:20.500 --> 47:24.500] We'll have... [47:24.500 --> 47:26.500] What's her name? [47:26.500 --> 47:29.500] You're going to get tenacious, Tina, to check it out. [47:29.500 --> 47:32.500] Yeah, we'll never check it out, yeah. [47:32.500 --> 47:37.500] Okay, Tina, do you have anything else for us? [47:37.500 --> 47:41.500] Make sure you give me a copy of your brief on that. [47:41.500 --> 47:51.500] Once I get it finished, I'll give you a copy, but when I get to go on that radio show to talk about California absolute litigation privilege, I am going to post on Telegram. [47:51.500 --> 48:02.500] I want as many people to call into that show as possible to give their opinion, because he asked me if I want 30 minutes or an hour on it. [48:02.500 --> 48:09.500] I'm going to say I want an hour, because I want you all to call in and give your honest opinion. [48:09.500 --> 48:15.500] Okay, yeah, give us enough notice so we can make sure you reschedule. [48:15.500 --> 48:21.500] What time is the show normally aired or recorded? [48:21.500 --> 48:27.500] It's normally from 4 p.m. California Pacific time to 7 p.m. [48:27.500 --> 48:33.500] So that would be 6 my time, 7 New York. [48:33.500 --> 48:37.500] 7 New York time, I think. [48:37.500 --> 48:41.500] Right now it's 8.48 p.m. my time. [48:41.500 --> 48:45.500] Yes, it's 10.48 here. We're two hours ahead of you. [48:45.500 --> 48:49.500] Okay, so yes, it will be 6 p.m. your time. [48:49.500 --> 48:53.500] Yeah, New York would be 7 p.m. [48:53.500 --> 48:55.500] Okay, good, good. [48:55.500 --> 49:06.500] So if anybody's listening and wants the call-in number and such, send me an email, and I will get that to you as soon as I get it from Tina. [49:06.500 --> 49:08.500] Okay, okay. [49:08.500 --> 49:11.500] Thank you very much for everything, and I will talk to you all later. [49:11.500 --> 49:13.500] Thanks for a great show, as usual. [49:13.500 --> 49:17.500] I will go on the listen line so that you can talk to other people. [49:17.500 --> 49:18.500] Okay, thank you, Tina. [49:18.500 --> 49:21.500] We do have some empty slots on the caller board. [49:21.500 --> 49:29.500] If you have a question or comment, give us a call, our call-in number, 512-646-1984. [49:29.500 --> 49:32.500] Now we're going to Daisy in Ohio. [49:32.500 --> 49:34.500] Hello, Daisy. [49:34.500 --> 49:36.500] Hello, Randy. [49:36.500 --> 49:38.500] How are you? [49:38.500 --> 49:41.500] I am good for an old fat guy. [49:41.500 --> 49:44.500] What do you have for us today? [49:44.500 --> 49:50.500] Well, I was about to fall asleep, and I heard my name a few minutes ago. [49:50.500 --> 49:51.500] Woke me back up. [49:51.500 --> 49:55.500] I was like, am I on air? [49:55.500 --> 50:00.500] I have some questions on Discovery. [50:00.500 --> 50:16.500] So I'm in Discovery right now, and the one question I have is I requested some admissions, [50:16.500 --> 50:21.500] and they were done in like a Google Doc. [50:21.500 --> 50:30.500] The rules said basically in the rules it was an electronic document that's edible, [50:30.500 --> 50:34.500] so I shared a Google Doc. [50:34.500 --> 50:38.500] But I'm kind of reading over them now that I've done a little more research [50:38.500 --> 50:42.500] and seen some more examples, and some of them I don't. [50:42.500 --> 50:46.500] I feel like they could be a little more clear, specific. [50:46.500 --> 50:52.500] So I was curious if I should edit them in the Google Doc [50:52.500 --> 50:57.500] and let the attorney know that I did that to make them more specific, [50:57.500 --> 51:08.500] send just a second list of admissions, or the one thing is I didn't want to... [51:08.500 --> 51:12.500] I wanted to get to the 28 days, and I sent them on the 6th, [51:12.500 --> 51:19.500] so by amending them I didn't know if that would kind of restart the clock. [51:19.500 --> 51:24.500] Yeah, you'll be resetting it, and then you have to wait another month. [51:24.500 --> 51:27.500] What is this about editable, though? [51:27.500 --> 51:32.500] You shouldn't ever have to send somebody edit access to your Google Docs. [51:32.500 --> 51:40.500] I think what they're trying to say is don't send us a picture of your scanned document. [51:40.500 --> 51:44.500] Instead, send something that they can copy and paste from. [51:44.500 --> 51:51.500] They can grab a PDF that's real, that's legitimately exported from your source document, [51:51.500 --> 51:59.500] as opposed to a picture of something that was printed. [51:59.500 --> 52:00.500] Does that make sense? [52:00.500 --> 52:05.500] I read the rule to say, yeah, that does it. [52:05.500 --> 52:08.500] I thought it was a little strange to make it editable, [52:08.500 --> 52:13.500] because I was thinking they could just go in and change what I asked or something, [52:13.500 --> 52:16.500] but I made a copy of it. [52:16.500 --> 52:25.500] When I create legal documents now, I always hyperlink everything, [52:25.500 --> 52:28.500] so you can't export that as an image file. [52:28.500 --> 52:34.500] You have to export that as either a Word or PDF file. [52:34.500 --> 52:36.500] I do PDF. [52:36.500 --> 52:41.500] I don't want them to have edit access either, even as a Word document, so I'll send you a PDF. [52:41.500 --> 52:49.500] I said that because Brett said imported from a valid source. [52:49.500 --> 52:55.500] In Word, you can export from Word to PDF, and it does a really nice job. [52:55.500 --> 53:00.500] You can actually pull PDFs into the latest. [53:00.500 --> 53:09.500] There's Word 365, and I can pull a PDF into it, and it does a really nice job. [53:09.500 --> 53:18.500] You can take a photo image of a document and scan it, but it's a real mess when you do that. [53:18.500 --> 53:21.500] I think that's all they're saying is don't do that. [53:21.500 --> 53:23.500] Right, okay. [53:23.500 --> 53:39.500] Basically, instead of saying admit that, I just made the statement, so I think I'll just leave it. [53:39.500 --> 53:40.500] Yeah, that's fine. [53:40.500 --> 53:41.500] That's what you do. [53:41.500 --> 53:42.500] You make a statement. [53:42.500 --> 53:43.500] You say what's true. [53:43.500 --> 53:50.500] You're asking them to admit it, but you don't have to ask a question of it. [53:50.500 --> 53:52.500] The way you said it is just right. [53:52.500 --> 53:53.500] You made the statement. [53:53.500 --> 53:59.500] This is what's true. [53:59.500 --> 54:09.500] Then you put a little section behind it, admit with a space to check or deny with a space to check. [54:09.500 --> 54:15.500] You make the statement and then put it admitted or denied, and they check the one they want to. [54:15.500 --> 54:24.500] I have mediation coming up next week. I'm just seeing that a lot of my stuff is not really sophisticated, [54:24.500 --> 54:30.500] but it is what it is. [54:30.500 --> 54:37.500] Just go on into the court records and pull somebody's work. [54:37.500 --> 54:41.500] If you can, find a case similar to yours. [54:41.500 --> 54:50.500] When I first started doing legal research, I went down to the courthouse and asked the court for the biggest case they have, [54:50.500 --> 54:55.500] and they gave me this confused look, and I told them, I'm doing legal research. [54:55.500 --> 54:57.500] I want that. [54:57.500 --> 55:00.500] They said, what do you mean by biggest? [55:00.500 --> 55:01.500] The most money? [55:01.500 --> 55:06.500] I said, no, the biggest, the one with the most documents and filings in it, [55:06.500 --> 55:10.500] and they brought out the one for Mitchell Energy. [55:10.500 --> 55:17.500] Mitchell Energy is the company that figured out how to do fracking, and they got sued for it. [55:17.500 --> 55:25.500] They brought out three boxes of documents, and I went through those documents. [55:25.500 --> 55:27.500] I found great stuff in there. [55:27.500 --> 55:33.500] I found one criminal case by what had to be a really expensive lawyer [55:33.500 --> 55:43.500] because all of his documents were on really nice linen rag, and I found my motion in limiting in there. [55:43.500 --> 55:46.500] I had never heard of such a thing. [55:46.500 --> 55:48.500] What is a motion in limiting? [55:48.500 --> 55:54.500] I got it out, and it was all the questions they can't ask. [55:54.500 --> 55:57.500] Oh, it was glorious. [55:57.500 --> 55:59.500] We're sitting in court, and the judge is BO'd. [55:59.500 --> 56:01.500] He wants to go play golf. [56:01.500 --> 56:06.500] And he's going through my motion in limiting. [56:06.500 --> 56:17.500] And I objected to any questions about a hypnotic interview. [56:17.500 --> 56:18.500] And the judge is PO'd. [56:18.500 --> 56:21.500] Mr. Calvin, were you hypnotized? [56:21.500 --> 56:22.500] Your Honor, I don't know. [56:22.500 --> 56:24.500] You'll have to ask the prosecutor. [56:24.500 --> 56:26.500] You know how they can make you forget that kind of thing. [56:26.500 --> 56:29.500] Denied. [56:29.500 --> 56:31.500] Oh, it was glorious. [56:31.500 --> 56:35.500] And I found it, just pulled it intact. [56:35.500 --> 56:45.500] Look through a similar case to yours, and you will find motions in pleading in there you never heard of, [56:45.500 --> 56:50.500] never thought about, and you just plagiarized the crap out of them. [56:50.500 --> 56:55.500] Yeah, I actually went to the law library for the first time yesterday. [56:55.500 --> 56:57.500] Oh, you will love the librarians. [56:57.500 --> 56:58.500] Use them. [56:58.500 --> 57:03.500] They like nothing more than to be asked a difficult question. [57:03.500 --> 57:05.500] Yeah. [57:05.500 --> 57:09.500] They will go back there and do your legal research for you. [57:09.500 --> 57:15.500] Yeah, so I did that, and I pulled up some cases and things. [57:15.500 --> 57:25.500] So I have the mediation coming up, and if it just doesn't get settled, then there's a lot more work to do. [57:25.500 --> 57:31.500] So I'm trying to start to buckle down and take it a little more seriously at this point. [57:31.500 --> 57:42.500] The other question, though, with discovery is they, I'm assuming, I guess maybe they're waiting to mediation [57:42.500 --> 57:47.500] to like answer any of the discovery that I have already submitted. [57:47.500 --> 57:52.500] And I was kind of waiting for the admissions before I went to the interrogatories, [57:52.500 --> 57:57.500] but I don't know that I'm going to get the answers on the admissions, so should I just go ahead and- [57:57.500 --> 57:59.500] Yeah, just go right ahead. [57:59.500 --> 58:07.500] I never get answers to admissions, but that's fine with me because they're deemed admitted when they don't answer. [58:07.500 --> 58:09.500] Right. [58:09.500 --> 58:13.500] Yeah, I just kind of want to start getting things in. [58:13.500 --> 58:17.500] And then the other question was just what's the best process- [58:17.500 --> 58:19.500] Well, hold on to your other question. [58:19.500 --> 58:23.500] We're just about to go, we've got another break at the top of the hour. [58:23.500 --> 58:25.500] It's a little bit longer break. [58:25.500 --> 58:29.500] Hold on to that question, and we'd love to address that as well. [58:29.500 --> 58:32.500] We've got some space on the board right now. [58:32.500 --> 58:39.500] People, if you've got some questions, call us 512-646-1984. [58:39.500 --> 58:44.500] That's 512-646-1984. [58:44.500 --> 58:49.500] And we'll be right back after these sponsors. [58:49.500 --> 58:53.500] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.500 --> 59:00.500] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.500 --> 59:05.500] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.500 --> 59:12.500] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.500 --> 59:17.500] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.500 --> 59:23.500] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.500 --> 59:27.500] growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.500 --> 59:33.500] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.500 --> 59:44.500] call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.500 --> 59:49.500] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.500 --> 59:59.500] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.500 --> 01:00:05.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:00:05.500 --> 01:00:10.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:00:10.500 --> 01:00:16.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:00:16.500 --> 01:00:22.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.500 --> 01:00:27.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.500 --> 01:00:32.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.500 --> 01:00:35.500] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. [01:00:35.500 --> 01:00:38.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:00:38.500 --> 01:00:42.500] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:00:42.500 --> 01:00:45.500] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.500 --> 01:00:51.500] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find a third party there. [01:00:51.500 --> 01:00:54.500] He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [01:00:54.500 --> 01:01:00.500] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment was designed to prevent. [01:01:00.500 --> 01:01:06.500] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. [01:01:06.500 --> 01:01:09.500] Third party? Third Amendment? Get it? [01:01:09.500 --> 01:01:12.500] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [01:01:12.500 --> 01:01:16.500] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [01:01:16.500 --> 01:01:31.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:31.500 --> 01:01:35.500] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [01:01:35.500 --> 01:01:40.500] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. [01:01:40.500 --> 01:01:45.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [01:01:45.500 --> 01:01:51.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:51.500 --> 01:01:56.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.500 --> 01:02:01.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:01.500 --> 01:02:04.500] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:02:04.500 --> 01:02:12.500] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:15.500] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:15.500 --> 01:02:21.500] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of x-ray goggles. [01:02:21.500 --> 01:02:27.500] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. [01:02:27.500 --> 01:02:30.500] Fourth Amendment, four eyes staring at you? Get it? [01:02:30.500 --> 01:02:34.500] Unfortunately, the government is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. [01:02:34.500 --> 01:02:39.500] Case in point, TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. [01:02:39.500 --> 01:02:46.500] When government employees demand a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [01:02:46.500 --> 01:02:53.500] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly eyes to take a gander at the Fourth. [01:02:53.500 --> 01:03:10.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:23.500 --> 01:03:51.500] Okay, we are back. [01:03:51.500 --> 01:04:00.500] Every time you click that second button, that noise comes in. [01:04:00.500 --> 01:04:02.500] Okay, we'll have to get that fixed. [01:04:02.500 --> 01:04:07.500] The music sounds just fine until you click the fade button, then we get noise in. [01:04:07.500 --> 01:04:11.500] But never has been reworking the whole system, so it may have a couple of bugs in it. [01:04:11.500 --> 01:04:21.500] Okay, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 20th day of January 2023. [01:04:21.500 --> 01:04:26.500] And we're talking to Daisy in Ohio about discovery. [01:04:26.500 --> 01:04:29.500] Where were we, Daisy? [01:04:29.500 --> 01:04:37.500] Well, we were just talking about the admissions and then sending out interrogatories now. [01:04:37.500 --> 01:04:41.500] Yeah, go right ahead. [01:04:41.500 --> 01:04:53.500] And the question, another question I had is, so there's like seven actors, you know, state actors basically involved in this situation. [01:04:53.500 --> 01:05:14.500] The attorney, when I sent out my first admissions, I actually copied everybody on it, and so she emailed back and said, you know, requesting pretty much that I only contact her. [01:05:14.500 --> 01:05:20.500] I don't email anybody, any of the school district about the lawsuit. [01:05:20.500 --> 01:05:23.500] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [01:05:23.500 --> 01:05:24.500] She would like that. [01:05:24.500 --> 01:05:26.500] You don't have to listen. [01:05:26.500 --> 01:05:27.500] Okay. [01:05:27.500 --> 01:05:29.500] And then the other thing... [01:05:29.500 --> 01:05:30.500] Wait, wait. [01:05:30.500 --> 01:05:40.500] If you have one lawyer who is the lawyer for all of the clients, notice to that lawyer is notice to all of the clients. [01:05:40.500 --> 01:05:41.500] Okay. [01:05:41.500 --> 01:05:43.500] Because she doesn't want you talking to those clients. [01:05:43.500 --> 01:05:51.500] So for her to tell you that you need to notice her clients, you're good. I get to talk to them. [01:05:51.500 --> 01:06:00.500] So if she's complaining about that, ask the judge to issue sanctions against her for being a jerk. [01:06:00.500 --> 01:06:08.500] I would just quietly bargrieve her and then let her figure out what she wants to do about it. [01:06:08.500 --> 01:06:13.500] But that would be like a bar grievance to have said that to me? [01:06:13.500 --> 01:06:17.500] Yeah, try to interfere with your discovery. [01:06:17.500 --> 01:06:18.500] Okay. [01:06:18.500 --> 01:06:25.500] You're supposed to send the discovery to the request, so the person that you expect has that information. [01:06:25.500 --> 01:06:28.500] The person knows the answer. That's what I was thinking. [01:06:28.500 --> 01:06:29.500] Yeah. [01:06:29.500 --> 01:06:32.500] If she wants to butt in and be a middleman, you didn't ever sign any deal. [01:06:32.500 --> 01:06:38.500] You're not like some of these attorneys sign deals with each other, right, to say that, hey, I'm an attorney, you're an attorney. [01:06:38.500 --> 01:06:40.500] We're going to just only talk to each other. [01:06:40.500 --> 01:06:41.500] We can work it out. [01:06:41.500 --> 01:06:45.500] Neither of us is going to contact each other's client. [01:06:45.500 --> 01:06:46.500] But you never did that. [01:06:46.500 --> 01:06:54.500] Well, I did it on purpose because I copied the principal and then a school district employee who are involved in it. [01:06:54.500 --> 01:07:00.500] And I knew the school district didn't want the rumors to get started, so that's why I did it. [01:07:00.500 --> 01:07:05.500] And also because they were directly the ones that need to change the decision. [01:07:05.500 --> 01:07:09.500] You are a woman after our own hearts. [01:07:09.500 --> 01:07:11.500] Yeah. I wish you sent that back. [01:07:11.500 --> 01:07:14.500] I was like, oh, yeah, that worked. [01:07:14.500 --> 01:07:16.500] They didn't like that. [01:07:16.500 --> 01:07:26.500] It goes to our adage that you can never expect to win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [01:07:26.500 --> 01:07:37.500] To think so is naive. You can expect to win your case if you have the politics on your side and all politics is local. [01:07:37.500 --> 01:07:44.500] I have 17 criminal complaints times 7 ready to go for getting out. [01:07:44.500 --> 01:07:55.500] That's another question because I was doing this research and all the advice is to send out these mediation briefs and things. [01:07:55.500 --> 01:08:07.500] The mediator has not contacted me to talk about the case ahead of time and I don't think anybody or the other side is sending out a brief. [01:08:07.500 --> 01:08:11.500] I am wondering how necessary that is. [01:08:11.500 --> 01:08:13.500] It's already next week, so it's pretty close. [01:08:13.500 --> 01:08:22.500] And what I'm bringing is going to kind of probably not be exactly what they're expecting because it's not just based on this case, [01:08:22.500 --> 01:08:34.500] but it's based more on like what I plan to do if we can't wrap this up and file a federal lawsuit and these criminal complaints. [01:08:34.500 --> 01:08:39.500] So I'm just curious, do you think a brief would be something I would want to try to do, [01:08:39.500 --> 01:08:49.500] send out on Monday to the mediator or just go in and explain my position at that point? [01:08:49.500 --> 01:08:54.500] Better to do your explanations in writing. [01:08:54.500 --> 01:08:56.500] Do the brief. [01:08:56.500 --> 01:08:59.500] You can go in there and talk about the brief, [01:08:59.500 --> 01:09:08.500] but if you try to do this off the top of your head and you're anything like me, the top of your head is all scrambled. [01:09:08.500 --> 01:09:15.500] When I try to do this off the cuff, I always screw it up. [01:09:15.500 --> 01:09:22.500] Better to have a brief to work from. [01:09:22.500 --> 01:09:28.500] I always file an opposition to oral argument. [01:09:28.500 --> 01:09:41.500] I argue to the court that I'm a pro se litigant and it's patently unfair to pit a nonprofessional against a professional lawyer in open court. [01:09:41.500 --> 01:09:47.500] So I move the court to make all of their rulings based on the pleadings. [01:09:47.500 --> 01:09:56.500] They always deny it, but I've got it in the record for the appellate court. [01:09:56.500 --> 01:10:04.500] And then when I'm in the case, then it tends to slow the lawyers down a little bit. [01:10:04.500 --> 01:10:06.500] Okay. [01:10:06.500 --> 01:10:11.500] But bar grievances slow them down even better. [01:10:11.500 --> 01:10:12.500] Yeah. [01:10:12.500 --> 01:10:15.500] I got those coming too. [01:10:15.500 --> 01:10:17.500] I'm working on those this weekend. [01:10:17.500 --> 01:10:22.500] But the mediation is like outside of court record. [01:10:22.500 --> 01:10:26.500] It's confidential. [01:10:26.500 --> 01:10:33.500] But I haven't talked to the mediator at all, so she doesn't know anything about the case. [01:10:33.500 --> 01:10:37.500] And I just didn't necessarily want to come in on the case. [01:10:37.500 --> 01:10:41.500] Is this court ordered mediation? [01:10:41.500 --> 01:10:43.500] It's not court ordered it. [01:10:43.500 --> 01:10:44.500] It's through the court. [01:10:44.500 --> 01:10:50.500] It's court suggested, but it wasn't officially ordered. [01:10:50.500 --> 01:10:51.500] Good. I always want mediation. [01:10:51.500 --> 01:10:55.500] Mediation helps both sides. [01:10:55.500 --> 01:11:02.500] Lawyers tend to get real snotty in mediation and you get to sting them good. [01:11:02.500 --> 01:11:07.500] I was just introduced to a guy I'm helping out in San Marcos, to his lawyer. [01:11:07.500 --> 01:11:10.500] He wanted the lawyer to talk to me. [01:11:10.500 --> 01:11:17.500] I didn't particularly want to talk to him, but he introduced us and the lawyer looked at me and said, [01:11:17.500 --> 01:11:19.500] I've been practicing law for 30 years. [01:11:19.500 --> 01:11:23.500] How long have you been practicing? [01:11:23.500 --> 01:11:26.500] I said 40. [01:11:26.500 --> 01:11:28.500] But then he stormed off. [01:11:28.500 --> 01:11:35.500] So I'm going to bar grieve him for insulting me. [01:11:35.500 --> 01:11:39.500] You hurt my feelings. [01:11:39.500 --> 01:11:50.500] So even if it's a confidential mediation, if the lawyer behaves badly, is it still open for a bar grievance? [01:11:50.500 --> 01:11:54.500] Absolutely, because the bar grievance is confidential. [01:11:54.500 --> 01:11:58.500] Okay. [01:11:58.500 --> 01:12:03.500] He'll only get, be rude to you once you're breaking from that. [01:12:03.500 --> 01:12:07.500] And that's part of what they try to use. [01:12:07.500 --> 01:12:10.500] They try to overwhelm you. [01:12:10.500 --> 01:12:13.500] And when you bar grieve them, they tend to get overwhelmed. [01:12:13.500 --> 01:12:14.500] Nice. [01:12:14.500 --> 01:12:20.500] Her version of, at least I've only met her once in person, but real sweet. [01:12:20.500 --> 01:12:22.500] But the superintendent won't even look at me. [01:12:22.500 --> 01:12:27.500] So she's like the good cop, bad cop. [01:12:27.500 --> 01:12:33.500] But the other last thing, and this may not be something you guys can really speak on, [01:12:33.500 --> 01:12:37.500] I've been trying to do some research, but things tend to settle. [01:12:37.500 --> 01:12:45.500] So it's hard to find monetary sort of numbers to use as a base. [01:12:45.500 --> 01:12:58.500] But with the situation, I was curious if you guys would have an opinion on what kind of numbers I should be throwing at them. [01:12:58.500 --> 01:13:07.500] Have you found any similar type of suit, either in this state or any other state? [01:13:07.500 --> 01:13:16.500] Well, so that sort of gets a little confusing because currently we're in a public records violation. [01:13:16.500 --> 01:13:17.500] We're working on those. [01:13:17.500 --> 01:13:20.500] That's what we're litigating. [01:13:20.500 --> 01:13:26.500] And there's four mandamus actions for that with a fifth that I have ready. [01:13:26.500 --> 01:13:27.500] Okay. [01:13:27.500 --> 01:13:38.500] If you're litigating, oh, okay, you're in Ohio and what you can claim is statutorily controlled, is it not? [01:13:38.500 --> 01:13:46.500] It is what the judgment, so that's where it gets, the judgment I would receive, even though they've acted in bad faith, [01:13:46.500 --> 01:13:51.500] so they may have, I don't, there could be attorney fees, but there's no attorney. [01:13:51.500 --> 01:13:57.500] So, but the judgment would only be, would be cast, but they want to go to mediation. [01:13:57.500 --> 01:14:04.500] And the reason is because I'm fully convinced they don't want to be ordered to give me these records. [01:14:04.500 --> 01:14:07.500] I think that's going to be a can of worms for them. [01:14:07.500 --> 01:14:17.500] So they, I feel like, will be willing to settle outside. [01:14:17.500 --> 01:14:21.500] Are they statutorily required to give you these records? [01:14:21.500 --> 01:14:23.500] Yes. [01:14:23.500 --> 01:14:30.500] Do you have the power to negate a statute? [01:14:30.500 --> 01:14:40.500] No, but I would have the power to, well, I would believe I would have the power to drop the lawsuit. [01:14:40.500 --> 01:14:51.500] I go after them for violating law and I've had a number of times tell me they would do something if I would drop my criminal complaint. [01:14:51.500 --> 01:14:53.500] And I would say, what? [01:14:53.500 --> 01:14:55.500] I can't do that. [01:14:55.500 --> 01:14:59.500] You're going to have to ask the court about that. [01:14:59.500 --> 01:15:01.500] All I can do is give notice of crime. [01:15:01.500 --> 01:15:04.500] I don't have anything to do with whether it's prosecuted or not. [01:15:04.500 --> 01:15:06.500] You'll have to go talk to the court. [01:15:06.500 --> 01:15:28.500] Here, if they're required to do something by law, then what you can negotiate is the harm they've caused you, not whether or not they follow law, is the open records of law in Ohio a criminal statute? [01:15:28.500 --> 01:15:32.500] I don't think it's a criminal statute. [01:15:32.500 --> 01:15:38.500] But it certainly is in Texas and it has been in most every state I've looked at. [01:15:38.500 --> 01:15:46.500] Ohio had a really cool difference about theirs, which, how did it go, Daisy? [01:15:46.500 --> 01:15:52.500] The person who violates the records request automatically owes you some money? [01:15:52.500 --> 01:15:54.500] Correct. [01:15:54.500 --> 01:16:02.500] So they're looking at, it's like $1,000 for each violation. [01:16:02.500 --> 01:16:09.500] But this is important to, I need to really get this clear with you guys because this was my strategy. [01:16:09.500 --> 01:16:22.500] So I want to make sure that's going to work because my strategy was to, the mediation, I was going to drop everything. [01:16:22.500 --> 01:16:28.500] It's the settlement proposal was where I wanted it to be. [01:16:28.500 --> 01:16:31.500] But I hear from Randy you're saying that that's not. [01:16:31.500 --> 01:16:36.500] Well, no, I was just talking about leverage. [01:16:36.500 --> 01:16:38.500] Oh, you can't ask me to drop everything. [01:16:38.500 --> 01:16:51.500] The leverage is going to be saying, okay, I'm not going to make you give me these records and I'm not going to file these criminal complaints and I'm not going to sue you for retaliation. [01:16:51.500 --> 01:16:52.500] Okay, hang on. [01:16:52.500 --> 01:16:56.500] We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:16:56.500 --> 01:17:23.500] We'll be right back. [01:17:26.500 --> 01:17:28.500] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:17:28.500 --> 01:17:33.500] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.500 --> 01:17:38.500] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.500 --> 01:17:40.500] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.500 --> 01:17:49.500] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.500 --> 01:17:59.500] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.500 --> 01:18:00.500] I love logos. [01:18:00.500 --> 01:18:04.500] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.500 --> 01:18:07.500] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.500 --> 01:18:08.500] I need my truth fixed. [01:18:08.500 --> 01:18:09.500] I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:09.500 --> 01:18:12.500] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.500 --> 01:18:15.500] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite. [01:18:15.500 --> 01:18:19.500] And I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:19.500 --> 01:18:21.500] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.500 --> 01:18:23.500] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.500 --> 01:18:26.500] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.500 --> 01:18:28.500] By ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:28.500 --> 01:18:30.500] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:30.500 --> 01:18:34.500] Now, go to logosradio.com. [01:18:34.500 --> 01:18:37.500] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.500 --> 01:18:42.500] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:42.500 --> 01:18:43.500] Do I pay extra? [01:18:43.500 --> 01:18:44.500] No. [01:18:44.500 --> 01:18:46.500] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:46.500 --> 01:18:47.500] No. [01:18:47.500 --> 01:18:48.500] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:48.500 --> 01:18:49.500] No. [01:18:49.500 --> 01:18:50.500] I mean, yes. [01:18:50.500 --> 01:18:51.500] Wow. [01:18:51.500 --> 01:18:53.500] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:53.500 --> 01:18:55.500] This is perfect. [01:18:55.500 --> 01:18:56.500] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.500 --> 01:18:57.500] We are welcome. [01:18:57.500 --> 01:18:59.500] Happy holidays, logos. [01:18:59.500 --> 01:19:06.500] This is the Logos Lafogos Radio Network. [01:19:06.500 --> 01:19:08.500] Yo, yo, yo, yo. [01:19:12.500 --> 01:19:14.500] Oh, come on. [01:19:14.500 --> 01:19:15.500] Hey. [01:19:35.500 --> 01:19:38.500] If I can't get everything I want. [01:19:38.500 --> 01:19:40.500] Yeah. [01:19:40.500 --> 01:19:43.500] I'll get a range, yeah. [01:19:43.500 --> 01:19:53.500] If I can't get everything I need, Should I never get a ranger? [01:19:53.500 --> 01:20:05.500] If the people of the world can't get happiness and peace, Should I never get a ranger? [01:20:05.500 --> 01:20:21.500] If we can't get all these crazy words to speak, Should I never get a ranger? [01:20:36.500 --> 01:20:38.500] And we're talking to Daisy in Ohio. [01:20:38.500 --> 01:20:45.500] Okay, Daisy, we were talking about settlement. [01:20:45.500 --> 01:20:52.500] If it's your purpose to get a good settlement, then by all means get a good settlement. [01:20:52.500 --> 01:20:58.500] In Texas, open records is criminal. [01:20:58.500 --> 01:21:03.500] And I use that just to put more pressure on them. [01:21:03.500 --> 01:21:09.500] But I haven't sued them for monetary damages over open records yet. [01:21:09.500 --> 01:21:13.500] So you'll have to teach us how this works. [01:21:13.500 --> 01:21:15.500] Well, we'll see, yeah. [01:21:15.500 --> 01:21:24.500] That's why I want to give them a chance in mediation to go above and beyond just the statutory damages they're facing [01:21:24.500 --> 01:21:35.500] because at the end of the day, they're looking at crimes because they're withholding records, they're connected to the retaliation stuff. [01:21:35.500 --> 01:21:40.500] And I've just put in another slew of records requests that they're going to ignore. [01:21:40.500 --> 01:21:42.500] I mean, it's nonstop with them. [01:21:42.500 --> 01:21:50.500] So I'm going in with some confidence, even though my paperwork is kind of not sophisticated. [01:21:50.500 --> 01:21:56.500] And, you know, I don't want to, you know, they might think, the lawyer might think I'm easy. [01:21:56.500 --> 01:22:01.500] I think the school district has dealt with me enough to know that I'm serious. [01:22:01.500 --> 01:22:03.500] So, but yeah. [01:22:03.500 --> 01:22:04.500] Good. [01:22:04.500 --> 01:22:08.500] You may have to grieve the lawyer a time or two to get their attention. [01:22:08.500 --> 01:22:16.500] Yeah, that's what I was thinking because I don't think my paperwork is as scary as I would like it. [01:22:16.500 --> 01:22:21.500] It's just, it's a little, you know, it's a little amateur. [01:22:21.500 --> 01:22:32.500] Yeah, this lawyer that I met at the court the other day, he's not going to expect a bar grievance for him being rude to me. [01:22:32.500 --> 01:22:35.500] So we'll break him from sucking eggs. [01:22:35.500 --> 01:22:42.500] How long does it take for them, if I were to file one this weekend, how long does it take for them to know that it was filed, do you know? [01:22:42.500 --> 01:22:44.500] About one day. [01:22:44.500 --> 01:22:46.500] Okay, perfect. [01:22:46.500 --> 01:22:49.500] Yeah, they notify them almost immediately. [01:22:49.500 --> 01:22:50.500] Okay. [01:22:50.500 --> 01:22:59.500] Because if they're dealing with someone who grieved them, they want them warned right away, you know, be careful, back up. [01:22:59.500 --> 01:23:00.500] They're grieving you. [01:23:00.500 --> 01:23:03.500] Don't give them another reason to do it again. [01:23:03.500 --> 01:23:06.500] So yeah, they'll find out very quickly. [01:23:06.500 --> 01:23:19.500] That would give the lawyer a reason to try to get them just to get rid of me versus wanting to, you know, drag it out to trial, which would be in their best interest. [01:23:19.500 --> 01:23:30.500] Yeah, and if they refuse, if you got another request in that they're going to refuse, you get to do this again. [01:23:30.500 --> 01:23:36.500] Well, I have another one to file. I have another request that's way overdue to file. [01:23:36.500 --> 01:23:45.500] And that was the other question is, and I was going to file that with the appeals on Monday, just so I had, you know, so they see it's not stopping. [01:23:45.500 --> 01:24:09.500] But that was the other question is, since I am in discovery, should I double my, how do I put this, if I'm still making public records requests and they kind of tie into the current cases, can I do both? [01:24:09.500 --> 01:24:15.500] Can I make a new records request and make it a discovery request that way? [01:24:15.500 --> 01:24:20.500] It's still available for me to file and mandamus as a public record request. [01:24:20.500 --> 01:24:24.500] You can pretty well do anything you want to. [01:24:24.500 --> 01:24:29.500] If they don't like it, they can raise an issue. [01:24:29.500 --> 01:24:31.500] Okay, that's good to know. [01:24:31.500 --> 01:24:40.500] And then you take that up with the courts and at the end of the day, it is what the court says it is, but don't police yourself. [01:24:40.500 --> 01:24:42.500] Right, okay. [01:24:42.500 --> 01:24:45.500] Yeah, let them do all the policing. [01:24:45.500 --> 01:25:01.500] I'll let Luis a little bit then. With depositions, what is the process? Would I just let the lawyer know I wanted to post so-and-so? [01:25:01.500 --> 01:25:25.500] You need to have all of your questions written up that you want to ask before you go into the deposition. And oftentimes the lawyer on the other side will want to see those questions before the deposition starts so that he can raise objections or he can negotiate with you off camera. [01:25:25.500 --> 01:25:35.500] And it'll make the deposition go more smoothly if it looks like you're both arguing back and forth during the deposition. [01:25:35.500 --> 01:25:42.500] That's going to pretty well eliminate the power of the deposition. [01:25:42.500 --> 01:25:46.500] So you want to have all your questions in order. [01:25:46.500 --> 01:26:00.500] You know, it never goes the way you expect it to, but you need to have it all lined out where you want to go. And almost invariably the lawyer is going to want to see the questions so he can formulate his objections to them. [01:26:00.500 --> 01:26:10.500] If he raises an objection and you don't agree with him, then you can agree that he'll go ahead and agree on camera or object on camera. [01:26:10.500 --> 01:26:25.500] And part of that will keep the lawyer from constantly interrupting you with objections. If he tries to do that, then you call him out on that because this is something a jury is likely to see. [01:26:25.500 --> 01:26:35.500] And if you can get the lawyer hopping up and down and acting ignorant, it really looks good on the video. [01:26:35.500 --> 01:26:42.500] Okay. So depositions are you're talking about actually recording it versus like having a stenographer? [01:26:42.500 --> 01:26:49.500] Yeah, depositions are always recorded. Always. [01:26:49.500 --> 01:26:51.500] Okay. [01:26:51.500 --> 01:26:57.500] And if you ask for depositions, they will probably expect you to provide a location. [01:26:57.500 --> 01:27:06.500] And generally you go to the public library or something, they'll have rooms there and you bring your own equipment and set it up. [01:27:06.500 --> 01:27:19.500] The lawyers will tend to do it in their office where they've got equipment, but you want your own recording. You do not want to depend on someone else's recording. [01:27:19.500 --> 01:27:21.500] Okay. [01:27:21.500 --> 01:27:33.500] And I would just contact them and say, you know, just to get the ball rolling, to say, I'm ready to depose so-and-so. Here's some time so we can do it. [01:27:33.500 --> 01:27:46.500] Yeah, find a place that you can do the depositions in where you have cameras. There may be companies around that provide that where they have offices you can rent. [01:27:46.500 --> 01:27:52.500] There are virtual office companies all over the place that has space you can rent for a day. [01:27:52.500 --> 01:28:07.500] Okay. Yeah, I do know the library does definitely have rooms. So I was kind of far out. That's after mediation if I'm actually going to do that, but that was... [01:28:07.500 --> 01:28:18.500] Don't wait until mediation to try to set up depositions. That's just putting the pressure on them. [01:28:18.500 --> 01:28:19.500] Right. [01:28:19.500 --> 01:28:29.500] You know, they're going to say, well, we need to wait till after mediation as well. If the mediation drags on too long, then we need to have these depositions out of the way. [01:28:29.500 --> 01:28:41.500] Besides, they might help your mediation. You do the mediation as if the trial is going to move ahead. [01:28:41.500 --> 01:28:53.500] Don't let them stop everything because of the mediation. If you guys want to mediate, then let's get this mediation done, but you're not holding up my case for the mediation. [01:28:53.500 --> 01:29:07.500] Well, they've done that because they were even starting to... One of the records requests, they finally started fulfilling it in batches because it's a lot of emails. [01:29:07.500 --> 01:29:17.500] And so every couple of weeks they were sending me a batch. And then since we set up mediation, they quit sending me that. [01:29:17.500 --> 01:29:27.500] Then ask the court to order them to keep sending it because they're just trying to delay the trial. And they'll argue, oh, well, what might be unnecessary cost? [01:29:27.500 --> 01:29:38.500] And let the court rule that they can stop. Don't let them do it on their own. [01:29:38.500 --> 01:29:39.500] Okay. [01:29:39.500 --> 01:29:44.500] Okay. Is that all for you? [01:29:44.500 --> 01:29:47.500] Yeah, that's it. I've completed it. [01:29:47.500 --> 01:30:01.500] Okay. Thank you, Daisy. This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio. We have Nancy on the call. We'll be right back. [01:30:01.500 --> 01:30:11.500] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.500 --> 01:30:15.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.500 --> 01:30:26.500] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.500 --> 01:30:31.500] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.500 --> 01:30:44.500] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.500 --> 01:30:51.500] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:51.500 --> 01:30:59.500] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.500 --> 01:31:08.500] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast. If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.500 --> 01:31:14.500] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:14.500 --> 01:31:23.500] I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. But catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.500 --> 01:31:30.500] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.500 --> 01:31:36.500] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.500 --> 01:31:43.500] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.500 --> 01:31:46.500] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.500 --> 01:31:49.500] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.500 --> 01:31:51.500] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.500 --> 01:31:53.500] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.500 --> 01:31:58.500] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.500 --> 01:32:01.500] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.500 --> 01:32:05.500] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Center. [01:32:05.500 --> 01:32:13.500] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.500 --> 01:32:20.500] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.500 --> 01:32:26.500] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.500 --> 01:32:36.500] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.500 --> 01:32:41.500] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.500 --> 01:32:48.500] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.500 --> 01:32:51.500] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.500 --> 01:32:55.500] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.500 --> 01:33:02.500] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.500 --> 01:33:19.500] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:34:02.500 --> 01:34:04.500] Okay, we are back. [01:34:04.500 --> 01:34:09.500] Randy Dalton from Red Fountain here with my radio. [01:34:09.500 --> 01:34:11.500] And waiting for this music to go down. [01:34:11.500 --> 01:34:13.500] There we go. [01:34:13.500 --> 01:34:14.500] Okay. [01:34:14.500 --> 01:34:18.500] We are going to Nancy in Pennsylvania. [01:34:18.500 --> 01:34:19.500] Hello, Nancy. [01:34:19.500 --> 01:34:23.500] What do you have for us today? [01:34:23.500 --> 01:34:32.500] Well, to fill up your last half hour, I thought I'd share what I've done that you said don't do. [01:34:32.500 --> 01:34:37.500] But remember I called about smart meters, and we discussed that. [01:34:37.500 --> 01:34:44.500] And you said that's just a topic that is just, you know, in terms of using the courts for, it would be too much. [01:34:44.500 --> 01:34:53.500] And, but I did call about declaratory judgments last time I talked on the show. [01:34:53.500 --> 01:35:03.500] And I felt called to write a declaratory judgment regarding smart meters. [01:35:03.500 --> 01:35:15.500] So ideally I'm wondering if you have time to read it for flow, I would send it to you. [01:35:15.500 --> 01:35:16.500] Send it to me. [01:35:16.500 --> 01:35:17.500] I will look at it. [01:35:17.500 --> 01:35:22.500] I don't know if I'll have time to study it, depending on how big it is. [01:35:22.500 --> 01:35:25.500] But you have my email address? [01:35:25.500 --> 01:35:27.500] Yeah, yeah. [01:35:27.500 --> 01:35:30.500] Email it to me. [01:35:30.500 --> 01:35:31.500] Okay, thanks. [01:35:31.500 --> 01:35:34.500] Do it if you have any time. [01:35:34.500 --> 01:35:39.500] It was originally 44 pages, and I got it down to 20. [01:35:39.500 --> 01:35:41.500] And, but it was good. [01:35:41.500 --> 01:35:47.500] It was, in any case, it was a really good exercise in whether I file it or not. [01:35:47.500 --> 01:35:53.500] Okay, there's two caveats to your sending me the document. [01:35:53.500 --> 01:35:59.500] First, you have to promise me I won't hurt your feelings if I rip it to shreds. [01:35:59.500 --> 01:36:01.500] No, that's what I want. [01:36:01.500 --> 01:36:06.500] And second, if I really like it, I get to plagiarize it. [01:36:06.500 --> 01:36:08.500] Okay, sure. [01:36:08.500 --> 01:36:12.500] And I had a number of people help me with it too. [01:36:12.500 --> 01:36:17.500] So that's why I think it was like a really good exercise. [01:36:17.500 --> 01:36:22.500] And so I'll see what you think with all your experience in writing. [01:36:22.500 --> 01:36:26.500] So this is my first time I ever wrote a pleading. [01:36:26.500 --> 01:36:33.500] But in this case, it's not asking for any claims, no damages. [01:36:33.500 --> 01:36:40.500] It's ground-shaking in that it's telling Pennsylvania Supreme Court. [01:36:40.500 --> 01:36:44.500] Okay, before you send it, I have a couple questions. [01:36:44.500 --> 01:36:45.500] Yeah. [01:36:45.500 --> 01:36:48.500] Did you create it in Microsoft Word? [01:36:48.500 --> 01:36:50.500] Yes. [01:36:50.500 --> 01:36:51.500] Good, good, good, good. [01:36:51.500 --> 01:36:58.500] Okay, is this an original pleading or is it a – this is not something in the appeal [01:36:58.500 --> 01:37:00.500] appellate court, is it? [01:37:00.500 --> 01:37:04.500] No, this would be a declaratory judgment that I would file. [01:37:04.500 --> 01:37:05.500] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:37:05.500 --> 01:37:06.500] I'm brain dead. [01:37:06.500 --> 01:37:07.500] You said declaratory judgment. [01:37:07.500 --> 01:37:08.500] Yeah, okay. [01:37:08.500 --> 01:37:09.500] Yeah. [01:37:09.500 --> 01:37:16.500] Do you have a paragraph heading on every paragraph? [01:37:16.500 --> 01:37:21.500] A paragraph – I have a heading on – no, not on every paragraph. [01:37:21.500 --> 01:37:28.500] No, I have a heading on every – so I had four federal questions and so I created a [01:37:28.500 --> 01:37:35.500] heading for answering those four – addressing those four federal questions. [01:37:35.500 --> 01:37:50.500] Before you send it to me, go in and use Microsoft Word's styles section and set a – put a [01:37:50.500 --> 01:37:55.500] heading and set styles to the headings. [01:37:55.500 --> 01:38:08.500] When you do that, you can go to view something pane – let me open Word – navigation pane [01:38:08.500 --> 01:38:16.500] and it will put a table of contents down the side of the page and you can also have Word [01:38:16.500 --> 01:38:20.500] create a table of contents. [01:38:20.500 --> 01:38:29.500] The reason I want it is I want to know what each paragraph is intended to be about and [01:38:29.500 --> 01:38:36.500] then I will read that paragraph and make sure that it matches that heading. [01:38:36.500 --> 01:38:43.500] I suggest if you're just beginning to write legal pleadings, legal documents are much [01:38:43.500 --> 01:38:48.500] more difficult than just regular letters and regular discourse. [01:38:48.500 --> 01:38:51.500] It's very detailed. [01:38:51.500 --> 01:38:54.500] Put a heading on every paragraph. [01:38:54.500 --> 01:39:02.500] If you read one of my pleadings, sometimes I'll have two paragraphs if they're intrinsically [01:39:02.500 --> 01:39:07.500] connected together, but I try to put a heading on every single paragraph. [01:39:07.500 --> 01:39:14.500] Now, you would think that that would expand the size of the document tremendously, but [01:39:14.500 --> 01:39:16.500] it doesn't. [01:39:16.500 --> 01:39:25.500] It forces you to be much more succinct and to the point and to stay on point. [01:39:25.500 --> 01:39:33.500] The hardest thing about writing legal documents is drifting around from one point to another. [01:39:33.500 --> 01:39:40.500] You're making a legal point here and there's an associated point and lawyers just tend [01:39:40.500 --> 01:39:43.500] to drift off into that other point and then another one. [01:39:43.500 --> 01:39:50.500] I've gotten documents by lawyers that had a full page with one paragraph. [01:39:50.500 --> 01:39:57.500] We have a statute 15.17 that is a full page, a single paragraph. [01:39:57.500 --> 01:40:03.500] No human being on the planet can read that trash and understand it. [01:40:03.500 --> 01:40:10.500] In order to be able to understand it, I went in and did a search for period and replaced [01:40:10.500 --> 01:40:14.500] the period with period and carriage return. [01:40:14.500 --> 01:40:22.500] Put every sentence on a separate line before I could read and understand the thing. [01:40:22.500 --> 01:40:25.500] This is the idea. [01:40:25.500 --> 01:40:31.500] It may make some work for you because when you start breaking this apart, putting a heading [01:40:31.500 --> 01:40:39.500] on every paragraph, you'll realize that where your paragraphs drift off and go to other [01:40:39.500 --> 01:40:45.500] issues that aren't relevant to this particular issue, that's probably the most important [01:40:45.500 --> 01:40:48.500] thing you can do writing a legal document. [01:40:48.500 --> 01:40:50.500] Well, I don't know. [01:40:50.500 --> 01:41:01.500] Maybe I did it differently because I just have like 27 paragraphs and they're numbered [01:41:01.500 --> 01:41:05.500] and like one of them, I'll just read one of them. [01:41:05.500 --> 01:41:10.500] I named the defendant and that they're violating the due process clause. [01:41:10.500 --> 01:41:15.500] Then I have A, B, C on why that is. [01:41:15.500 --> 01:41:20.500] I have like A has a case law in it. [01:41:20.500 --> 01:41:21.500] Okay. [01:41:21.500 --> 01:41:26.500] The other question is your case law hyperlinked. [01:41:26.500 --> 01:41:30.500] No, I don't know how to do that. [01:41:30.500 --> 01:41:38.500] You find the case and once you find the case, like case text or one of these other cases, [01:41:38.500 --> 01:41:43.500] you go up to the address bar and select and copy the address bar, then select the name [01:41:43.500 --> 01:41:51.500] of the case and hit control K and then control V. Control V will paste it. [01:41:51.500 --> 01:41:55.500] Control K is hyperlinked. [01:41:55.500 --> 01:42:00.500] You can also right click and choose hyperlink from the flyer. [01:42:00.500 --> 01:42:03.500] You can do what? [01:42:03.500 --> 01:42:08.500] If you can't remember the keystrokes, right click gives you the options. [01:42:08.500 --> 01:42:12.500] It just pops it up there and you can pick hyperlink. [01:42:12.500 --> 01:42:19.500] You're saying go to the website that has the case and you hyperlink that website. [01:42:19.500 --> 01:42:25.500] Yeah, just take the case citation, drop it in Google and boom, you'll get a hit right on it. [01:42:25.500 --> 01:42:33.500] You have to look at, I'm also going to suggest that you look at every single case you cite [01:42:33.500 --> 01:42:42.500] and whatever the case is about, do a keyword search and find the section this case is referring to. [01:42:42.500 --> 01:42:54.500] Generally, the case citation will have a page number, like it will be 93 U.S. Code 321, 330. [01:42:54.500 --> 01:42:58.500] That means in this case on page 330. [01:42:58.500 --> 01:43:08.500] Go to the page and I like to copy out the section that the case is referring to and drop it in my document. [01:43:08.500 --> 01:43:15.500] You don't have to do that, but it makes my documents a little longer, but it makes them very much clearer. [01:43:15.500 --> 01:43:19.500] And this does something else. [01:43:19.500 --> 01:43:26.500] On this show, we have quoted a number of times Johnson v. State that says, [01:43:26.500 --> 01:43:30.500] rights belong to the belligerent litigant. [01:43:30.500 --> 01:43:35.500] Oh, we love that quotation. It sounds so great. [01:43:35.500 --> 01:43:40.500] So I put that in a document and jumped off the cliff with it. [01:43:40.500 --> 01:43:43.500] Hang on, we're about to go to our sponsor check. I got 15 seconds. [01:43:43.500 --> 01:43:48.500] I put that in a document and it referred to two different cases. [01:43:48.500 --> 01:43:53.500] I looked up those cases and they had nothing to do with the belligerent litigant. [01:43:53.500 --> 01:43:59.500] It was a bad citation. You need to catch those. We'll be right back. [01:43:59.500 --> 01:44:05.500] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:05.500 --> 01:44:10.500] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:10.500 --> 01:44:16.500] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:16.500 --> 01:44:21.500] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:21.500 --> 01:44:29.500] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [01:44:29.500 --> 01:44:33.500] most of which we reject. We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [01:44:33.500 --> 01:44:39.500] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.500 --> 01:44:47.500] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.500 --> 01:44:51.500] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.500 --> 01:45:02.500] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:02.500 --> 01:45:05.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:05.500 --> 01:45:11.500] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, [01:45:11.500 --> 01:45:17.500] 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:17.500 --> 01:45:21.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:21.500 --> 01:45:25.500] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:25.500 --> 01:45:30.500] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:30.500 --> 01:45:36.500] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:36.500 --> 01:45:45.500] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.500 --> 01:45:54.500] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.500 --> 01:46:06.500] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:24.500 --> 01:46:53.500] The people come down from the hill [01:46:53.500 --> 01:47:04.500] Into the city they will shuffle [01:47:04.500 --> 01:47:12.500] Many long nights, many strong thrills [01:47:12.500 --> 01:47:24.500] Land of comfort, land of love [01:47:42.500 --> 01:47:59.500] I'll put the case site in there, and then I'll put the state that I want. [01:47:59.500 --> 01:48:07.500] And what it will do is help you find a Pennsylvania case that has cited one of these cases. [01:48:07.500 --> 01:48:21.500] I do all my research on Google. I do not use Westlaw or Lexis. That is nothing but a pain in the butt. [01:48:21.500 --> 01:48:33.500] Google has all of these lawyers that are trying to find other lawyers with cases that these guys are good at handling. [01:48:33.500 --> 01:48:43.500] So they set up their websites, and they put their best motions and pleadings, and they'll do a treatise. [01:48:43.500 --> 01:48:50.500] If somebody is especially good at a certain thing, they'll do a treatise on that subject and put it on their website. [01:48:50.500 --> 01:48:59.500] Now this is not so much to educate the other lawyers, but to demonstrate to the other lawyer this lawyer's expertise. [01:48:59.500 --> 01:49:05.500] So if that lawyer gets a case that needs this expertise, they'll contact this guy. [01:49:05.500 --> 01:49:18.500] Well, we can go on there and find their treatise, and 90% of my work is just cut and pasted from lawyers' treatises on the web. [01:49:18.500 --> 01:49:24.500] I don't go looking for single cases. That makes me nuts. [01:49:24.500 --> 01:49:29.500] It's too time-consuming and never works anyway. [01:49:29.500 --> 01:49:38.500] What I've got is from American Jurisprudence. So that's already established case law? [01:49:38.500 --> 01:49:46.500] Yes, but it's kind of problematic because they haven't published American Jurisprudence, I think, in about 10 or 15 years. [01:49:46.500 --> 01:50:00.500] So it's all old. You don't need that, and it just gives you case law, but it's not big enough to be as close to point as you need. [01:50:00.500 --> 01:50:10.500] It's much easier for me. I just go on Google and search the issue, and I mainly look for lawyer websites. [01:50:10.500 --> 01:50:20.500] I've got whole documents that I've pulled out of their treatise, just copied pages in there. [01:50:20.500 --> 01:50:26.500] But then I do have to go in and check their case law. [01:50:26.500 --> 01:50:36.500] The other thing is my whole pleading is pivoted on the Constitution, the United States Constitution. [01:50:36.500 --> 01:50:40.500] That's not common for lawyers to talk about. [01:50:40.500 --> 01:50:59.500] Then I'm pinning the details of what Pennsylvania has done with smart meters that violates those clauses and amendments in my experience, what I've experienced. [01:50:59.500 --> 01:51:04.500] So we'll see. [01:51:04.500 --> 01:51:16.500] That's a great way to argue, because if you're addressing constitutional issues, they hate constitutional issues. [01:51:16.500 --> 01:51:26.500] Because if you get your constitutional issue to the Pennsylvania Supreme and they rule in your favor, then it screws up everything for them. [01:51:26.500 --> 01:51:34.500] Those are good things to argue. I'm just talking about structure and how to get all the latest case law and stuff. [01:51:34.500 --> 01:51:40.500] I use O'Connor's primarily for structure. [01:51:40.500 --> 01:51:47.500] You want that judge to see what he expects to see, where he expects to see it. [01:51:47.500 --> 01:51:56.500] You want to see the arguments in a frame that he expects it to be in the way everybody else does it. [01:51:56.500 --> 01:52:10.500] O'Connor's is not particular to Pennsylvania, but you might just look through some filings filed in Pennsylvania. [01:52:10.500 --> 01:52:17.500] Oh, you're in federal court. [01:52:17.500 --> 01:52:23.500] Yes, this is the United States issue and a federal issue. [01:52:23.500 --> 01:52:29.500] In fact, the court is across the street or kitty corner from the Independence Hall. [01:52:29.500 --> 01:52:36.500] That's any significance, but straight in the place where the Constitution was written. [01:52:36.500 --> 01:52:38.500] You're in Philadelphia? [01:52:38.500 --> 01:52:40.500] Outside, yes. [01:52:40.500 --> 01:52:51.500] Just down from Independence Hall, have you ever been to that place that the whole ceiling and the whole rooms are covered with ceramics? [01:52:51.500 --> 01:52:55.500] Oh, the Barnes Museum? I'm not sure. [01:52:55.500 --> 01:53:10.500] Oh, it was wonderful. In the basement, it was just a regular tenement house, and this guy put broken shards of pottery and stuff and tile, and tile the whole place. [01:53:10.500 --> 01:53:20.500] You have to lay down on the floor in the basement and look up at the ceiling to see the woman he's got in tile on the ceilings. [01:53:20.500 --> 01:53:23.500] It was a wonderful place, a house of glass or something. [01:53:23.500 --> 01:53:30.500] Anyway, if you're doing federal, then O'Connor's is perfect. [01:53:30.500 --> 01:53:32.500] Okay. [01:53:32.500 --> 01:53:39.500] If you structure it the way O'Connor's is structured, 90% of it the judge would pay no attention to. [01:53:39.500 --> 01:53:50.500] He would look at that document and go right down to the spot where the main issue is and just ignore all the rest of that because he already knows what it all is. [01:53:50.500 --> 01:54:04.500] I had a pro se win an eviction issue strictly because I took it right out of O'Connor's. [01:54:04.500 --> 01:54:18.500] He's my civil go-to guy, and he's disabled, so he got in a foreclosure and wrote an opposition to eviction. [01:54:18.500 --> 01:54:20.500] I read it, and he said, what do you think? [01:54:20.500 --> 01:54:22.500] I said, it's a piece of crap, Ken. [01:54:22.500 --> 01:54:23.500] He said, think you can do better? [01:54:23.500 --> 01:54:25.500] I said, darn right I can. [01:54:25.500 --> 01:54:26.500] I wrote him one. [01:54:26.500 --> 01:54:27.500] He filed it. [01:54:27.500 --> 01:54:28.500] They went into court. [01:54:28.500 --> 01:54:33.500] The judge gave him his injunction. [01:54:33.500 --> 01:54:37.500] They come out, and the lawyer said, are you an attorney? [01:54:37.500 --> 01:54:40.500] He said, well, no, but my brother is. [01:54:40.500 --> 01:54:42.500] Did you write this? [01:54:42.500 --> 01:54:45.500] He said, well, I had some help. [01:54:45.500 --> 01:54:49.500] The lawyer said, that is really good. [01:54:49.500 --> 01:54:52.500] I thought, what the heck? [01:54:52.500 --> 01:54:53.500] I didn't tell Ken. [01:54:53.500 --> 01:54:56.500] I told him later, but I didn't tell him at the time. [01:54:56.500 --> 01:55:01.500] I took that out of O'Connor's forms and filled in the blanks. [01:55:01.500 --> 01:55:04.500] This was a young lawyer. [01:55:04.500 --> 01:55:11.500] He saw that pleading and said, holy mackerel, that looks exactly like ours. [01:55:11.500 --> 01:55:14.500] He didn't realize how he did it. [01:55:14.500 --> 01:55:20.500] That's why Ken won the hearing, because the judge looked at it, and it looked exactly [01:55:20.500 --> 01:55:24.500] like every other document he got. [01:55:24.500 --> 01:55:31.500] He ignored everything, but the pertinent paragraph, read through it, signed it, out he went. [01:55:31.500 --> 01:55:40.500] If you do everything you can to make it look like a lawyer did it, then the only way you [01:55:40.500 --> 01:55:45.500] want them to know that you're not a lawyer is it doesn't have a lawyer on the bottom [01:55:45.500 --> 01:55:48.500] of it and the signature. [01:55:48.500 --> 01:55:53.500] None of this, man on the land, all cats crapola. [01:55:53.500 --> 01:55:57.500] That's a red flag to the judge to say, this is a pro se moron. [01:55:57.500 --> 01:55:59.500] I'll just blow him off. [01:55:59.500 --> 01:56:06.500] Judges cannot help but be prejudiced against pro se litigants, even if they don't want [01:56:06.500 --> 01:56:08.500] to be. [01:56:08.500 --> 01:56:11.500] We have to work especially hard to get around that part. [01:56:11.500 --> 01:56:17.500] We need to make our pleadings look much better than their pleadings. [01:56:17.500 --> 01:56:20.500] That's part of the reason you want to hyperlink it. [01:56:20.500 --> 01:56:23.500] The judge don't look at the hard copy pleadings anymore anyway. [01:56:23.500 --> 01:56:26.500] They read them all on the computer. [01:56:26.500 --> 01:56:31.500] If you do a citation and you've got it hyperlinked, and he clicks on that hyperlink and it goes [01:56:31.500 --> 01:56:37.500] right to the case, he will look at one case, maybe two, and he won't look at it anymore. [01:56:37.500 --> 01:56:42.500] Well, in the federal court in Philly, you have to have permission from the judge as [01:56:42.500 --> 01:56:45.500] a pro se to file electronically. [01:56:45.500 --> 01:56:46.500] That's okay. [01:56:46.500 --> 01:56:47.500] Get that. [01:56:47.500 --> 01:56:49.500] I think I have to submit paper first. [01:56:49.500 --> 01:56:51.500] I don't know. [01:56:51.500 --> 01:56:53.500] They will almost always grant it. [01:56:53.500 --> 01:56:54.500] They want it electronically. [01:56:54.500 --> 01:56:58.500] It makes their life way easier. [01:56:58.500 --> 01:57:00.500] So absolutely do that. [01:57:00.500 --> 01:57:06.500] If he gets a paper document, he's going to know this is not a lawyer. [01:57:06.500 --> 01:57:09.500] Every time he turns a page, it will remind him this is not a lawyer. [01:57:09.500 --> 01:57:11.500] You don't want that to happen. [01:57:11.500 --> 01:57:15.500] So absolutely sign up for e-filing. [01:57:15.500 --> 01:57:16.500] It's a Fed. [01:57:16.500 --> 01:57:20.500] The Feds are required to allow you to e-file, and it makes it really easy. [01:57:20.500 --> 01:57:22.500] It doesn't cost you anything. [01:57:22.500 --> 01:57:23.500] You don't have to print documents. [01:57:23.500 --> 01:57:25.500] You can do it all from your office. [01:57:25.500 --> 01:57:28.500] You never have to leave the office. [01:57:28.500 --> 01:57:31.500] The Feds never want to see you in court. [01:57:31.500 --> 01:57:37.500] You can do the whole case and never show up in the federal court. [01:57:37.500 --> 01:57:45.500] Yeah, it would be all paper shuffle between the utility and the PUC. [01:57:45.500 --> 01:57:46.500] Yeah, do it all electronic. [01:57:46.500 --> 01:57:47.500] It's great. [01:57:47.500 --> 01:57:48.500] I love that part. [01:57:48.500 --> 01:57:50.500] It has weaknesses. [01:57:50.500 --> 01:57:53.500] They don't have all the bugs worked out on it yet. [01:57:53.500 --> 01:57:56.500] But electronic filing is absolutely great. [01:57:56.500 --> 01:57:58.500] You can file it at 2 in the morning. [01:57:58.500 --> 01:57:59.500] It doesn't matter. [01:57:59.500 --> 01:58:02.500] We used to have to struggle to get down to the court in time. [01:58:02.500 --> 01:58:04.500] It was a major pain. [01:58:04.500 --> 01:58:07.500] Now with electronic filing, that's all over. [01:58:07.500 --> 01:58:12.500] Send me that document, and I will have great fun just ripping it to pieces. [01:58:12.500 --> 01:58:13.500] Okay. [01:58:13.500 --> 01:58:18.500] Well, I'm still not sure about what you mean about putting headings when I only have like one sentence. [01:58:18.500 --> 01:58:19.500] Don't worry about it. [01:58:19.500 --> 01:58:20.500] I'll do it. [01:58:20.500 --> 01:58:22.500] And I'll send it back to you and show you what I'm talking about. [01:58:22.500 --> 01:58:23.500] Oh, okay. [01:58:23.500 --> 01:58:24.500] All right. [01:58:24.500 --> 01:58:25.500] Okay. [01:58:25.500 --> 01:58:29.500] We are out of here. [01:58:29.500 --> 01:58:30.500] Quickly. [01:58:30.500 --> 01:58:31.500] Okay. [01:58:31.500 --> 01:58:32.500] All right. [01:58:32.500 --> 01:58:33.500] Thank you. [01:58:33.500 --> 01:58:34.500] Okay. [01:58:34.500 --> 01:58:35.500] Thank you. [01:58:35.500 --> 01:58:36.500] Thank you for listening, everyone. [01:58:36.500 --> 01:58:38.500] We'll be back next week at our regular time. [01:58:38.500 --> 01:58:42.500] Brett, what do I say now? [01:58:42.500 --> 01:58:45.500] Oh, good night. [01:58:45.500 --> 01:58:50.500] Thanks, and good night. [01:58:50.500 --> 01:58:57.500] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.500 --> 01:59:04.500] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.500 --> 01:59:08.500] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.500 --> 01:59:11.500] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.500 --> 01:59:20.500] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. 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