[00:00.000 --> 00:04.920] This news brief brought to you by the International News Net. [00:04.920 --> 00:10.380] A new economic policy institute study has found unemployment among African-Americans [00:10.380 --> 00:17.120] could reach a 25-year high, with the national rate soaring to 17.2 percent and the rates [00:17.120 --> 00:20.200] in five states exceeding 20 percent. [00:20.200 --> 00:26.020] Due to state cutbacks in payments, pharmacy giant Walgreen has threatened to stop filing [00:26.020 --> 00:31.280] Medicaid prescriptions at more than half of its locations in Washington state. [00:31.280 --> 00:36.200] Medicaid payment rates are lower than rates paid by Medicare and by private insurers. [00:36.200 --> 00:40.040] Many doctors refuse to take Medicaid for that reason. [00:40.040 --> 00:44.560] Cass Sunstein, Barack Obama's nominee to head the Office of Information and Regulatory [00:44.560 --> 00:50.760] Affairs, has advocated a policy under which the government would presume someone has consented [00:50.760 --> 00:54.600] to having his or her organs harvested after death. [00:54.600 --> 00:58.880] Under such a policy, hospitals would remove organs from people who would navigate permission [00:58.880 --> 01:00.480] for this to be done. [01:00.480 --> 01:05.920] Sunstein calls this doctrine presumed consent. [01:05.920 --> 01:11.440] The Nation magazine says if you're angry about Wall Street's reckless excesses or disappointed [01:11.440 --> 01:16.360] with Barack Obama's limp approach to reform, you can do something about it. [01:16.360 --> 01:20.920] You can withdraw your money from the large banks that brought the system to ruin, then [01:20.920 --> 01:23.200] were rescued with government bailouts. [01:23.200 --> 01:28.680] Instead, you can put your money in smaller, safer banks or credit unions, the thousands [01:28.680 --> 01:34.640] of community institutions that do not rake in profits from greed and recklessness. [01:34.640 --> 01:39.320] An Internet campaign called Move Your Money is showing people how they can push back against [01:39.320 --> 01:40.680] the big banks. [01:40.680 --> 01:45.000] The Nation points out this campaign is potentially more than a feel-good gesture. [01:45.000 --> 01:50.360] If coordinated with institutional reform efforts, it could lead to a broader rebellion against [01:50.360 --> 01:56.040] the financial system, with citizens reclaiming the power to act directly when politicians [01:56.040 --> 02:03.400] are too intimidated by moneyed interests to act in the public welfare. [02:03.400 --> 02:07.780] The Great Recession has spread poverty to millions more U.S. children, according to [02:07.780 --> 02:10.720] a recent report by the Brookings Institute. [02:10.720 --> 02:16.400] The report estimates a large number of states witnessed marked increases in child poverty [02:16.400 --> 02:18.440] in 2009. [02:18.440 --> 02:25.200] In 2008, one in five children under 18 lived in families below the official poverty level. [02:25.200 --> 02:32.480] The report's estimates are based on a staggering 24% increase in food stamp use in one year. [02:32.480 --> 02:36.720] Brookings researcher Julia Isaacs said if the current recession follows the pattern [02:36.720 --> 02:41.640] of other recessions, the child poverty rate will increase for several years. [02:41.640 --> 02:48.240] An earlier Brookings study estimated the child poverty rate could reach 25% by 2012. [02:48.240 --> 02:53.800] Isaacs concluded such predictions are sobering since child poverty rates were higher in the [02:53.800 --> 03:23.560] U.S. than in most other rich nations even before the recession. [03:23.560 --> 03:44.760] According to a report by the Brookings Institute, the rate of child poverty in the U.S. is [03:44.760 --> 04:04.720] higher in the U.S. than in the United States, according to a report by the Brookings Institute. [04:04.720 --> 04:23.960] According to a report by the Brookings Institute, the rate of child poverty in the U.S. is [04:23.960 --> 04:46.200] higher in the U.S. than in the United States, according to a report by the Brookings Institute. [04:46.200 --> 04:56.840] What are you going to do when we come for you, Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Deborah Stevens? [04:56.840 --> 05:07.400] We're going to talk about some traffic issues tonight and take your calls, 512-646-1984. [05:07.400 --> 05:12.920] So Eddie, you wanted to give us an update on this Ellis County Observer situation and [05:12.920 --> 05:18.200] then we're going to talk about what happens when the judge just denies everything out [05:18.200 --> 05:20.600] of hand totally in violation of all laws. [05:20.600 --> 05:22.560] So go ahead, Eddie. [05:22.560 --> 05:27.040] Well, I've been trying to keep up with the postings on the blog site there at the Ellis [05:27.040 --> 05:28.160] County Observer. [05:28.160 --> 05:35.060] They have now broken it up into three separate threads of blog postings and I'm telling you, [05:35.060 --> 05:41.200] it has come out that some of the ones that are naysaying to what I've posted are actually [05:41.200 --> 05:43.280] officers. [05:43.280 --> 05:47.200] They were denying it at first but now they're admitting it. [05:47.200 --> 05:51.920] And by the same token, despite all the evidence you put in front of them, all the information [05:51.920 --> 05:57.160] you put in front of them, they refuse to accept the fact that the law says this when they [05:57.160 --> 06:01.360] want to enforce it like that because that's what they've been taught to do is enforce [06:01.360 --> 06:03.480] it like that. [06:03.480 --> 06:07.480] So if you folks out there that listen in, get a chance. [06:07.480 --> 06:11.120] Please go over to the Ellis County Observer website. [06:11.120 --> 06:13.660] It's elliscountyobserver.com. [06:13.660 --> 06:15.240] Find the postings. [06:15.240 --> 06:19.000] My name's popping up on quite a few of them so all you really should have to do is type [06:19.000 --> 06:23.040] in my name on the search bar there and it should pull up the three different posts they're [06:23.040 --> 06:24.120] using. [06:24.120 --> 06:30.680] And post your opinions on the information that has been put on there so far. [06:30.680 --> 06:36.040] I am by far the largest poster since I tend to put in an enormous amount of information [06:36.040 --> 06:40.680] on these things when I put it out there in an effort to get as much information into [06:40.680 --> 06:45.380] the hands and heads of these people as possible. [06:45.380 --> 06:51.640] But I've pretty much come to the conclusion that a head made entirely out of rock is not [06:51.640 --> 06:54.000] good for much. [06:54.000 --> 07:00.640] And trying to put ideas in it is like trying to drive a golf ball through a mountain. [07:00.640 --> 07:09.360] So if anyone else out there has a better approach, please go post it and give it a shot because [07:09.360 --> 07:16.800] these gentlemen are absolutely untenable in their lack of knowledge on government, the [07:16.800 --> 07:19.640] Constitution, and the rights of the people. [07:19.640 --> 07:22.840] And these are officers. [07:22.840 --> 07:29.520] So it is extremely important that they get reeducated as quickly as possible because [07:29.520 --> 07:35.360] they are the front line of the screw up. [07:35.360 --> 07:37.600] Without a fail, they are. [07:37.600 --> 07:40.960] The sharp end of the spear, so to speak. [07:40.960 --> 07:46.960] Well, that's one way of putting it, I guess. [07:46.960 --> 07:50.680] But what we'd also like to talk about, if Randy's willing, is to engage in a little [07:50.680 --> 07:59.080] debate and discussion on handling a judge in court that absolutely refuses to provide [07:59.080 --> 08:04.840] due process and abide by the process of law. [08:04.840 --> 08:08.920] This is some things that we tried to deal with or dealt with a little bit in the seminar. [08:08.920 --> 08:12.720] We did not get to spend very much time on it because of the time constraints we had [08:12.720 --> 08:15.120] with the amount of information we had. [08:15.120 --> 08:21.120] But tonight, if we have the approval of Randy and participation, we are going to attempt [08:21.120 --> 08:28.560] to put forth some suggestions and ideas and methods of controlling what the judge does. [08:28.560 --> 08:34.280] And if the judge remains absolutely out of control and refuses to abide by the law, what [08:34.280 --> 08:37.040] your recourse is going to be? [08:37.040 --> 08:42.800] Mr. Bayless, drag that judge down off that bench. [08:42.800 --> 08:49.240] But what I, yeah, we've seen that work so far, along with judge you're hereby dismissed [08:49.240 --> 08:51.520] and so on and so forth. [08:51.520 --> 08:56.400] The point being that this is where it becomes extremely important that we be in support [08:56.400 --> 09:02.940] of each other and go to court as court watchers in these cases. [09:02.940 --> 09:07.720] I am still in the process of getting handfuls of documents made up for the court watchers [09:07.720 --> 09:13.400] to have so that it's very easy to understand what you're supposed to do with them and when [09:13.400 --> 09:15.360] you're supposed to do it. [09:15.360 --> 09:20.680] But you're really going to have to learn what the process is so that you know when that [09:20.680 --> 09:23.460] judge is doing something he shouldn't be. [09:23.460 --> 09:28.320] And part of that is going to involve that everyone needs to study up on the Code of [09:28.320 --> 09:30.240] Criminal Procedure. [09:30.240 --> 09:36.360] The Code of Criminal Procedure says this is what you will do and that's exactly what they [09:36.360 --> 09:38.480] do not do. [09:38.480 --> 09:44.080] And every time you know what they're supposed to do and aren't, then you know what to do [09:44.080 --> 09:46.760] with that piece of paper in your hand. [09:46.760 --> 09:51.920] So that being said, I'm going to give it to Randy for a minute and let him throw out some [09:51.920 --> 09:57.200] ideas that we can either debate, argue or flesh out a little. [09:57.200 --> 10:05.600] Okay, if we're ever to get the courts back, I honestly believe the traffic court's where [10:05.600 --> 10:08.760] we're going to get our start. [10:08.760 --> 10:15.040] That guy is the, he doesn't, the judge doesn't realize it but he's the most vulnerable. [10:15.040 --> 10:22.640] To me, Ohio disqualifies him as a matter of course because the judge in the municipal [10:22.640 --> 10:30.800] court, and this only applies to municipal, not JP, the municipal judge works at the pleasure [10:30.800 --> 10:41.360] of the city and the pleasure of the city involves extracting large amounts of funds from private [10:41.360 --> 10:45.600] citizens in the form of fines and fees. [10:45.600 --> 10:53.720] If the judge fails to find sufficient numbers guilty, he can expect his job to terminate. [10:53.720 --> 11:02.480] And according to Taft who wrote the decision in Toomey, Ohio, that makes the judge disqualified [11:02.480 --> 11:09.440] as a matter of law because he has an interest in the outcome of the case. [11:09.440 --> 11:17.800] With that said, once we step beyond that, if we're going to get this done, instead of [11:17.800 --> 11:24.900] going into the court with the idea of getting justice from the court, we all know that's [11:24.900 --> 11:31.560] not going to happen and all we'll do is go in there and be very disappointed. [11:31.560 --> 11:37.720] I suggest that we mount a legal attack on the judges. [11:37.720 --> 11:47.400] These policemen you're talking to on that website, they're just bonehead bottom feeders. [11:47.400 --> 11:55.360] You're not going to get them to admit that what they really like to do is wrong. [11:55.360 --> 11:57.040] That's why they're policemen. [11:57.040 --> 11:59.360] There are good policemen out there. [11:59.360 --> 12:06.320] You met some in Rockdale, but there are others with an agenda. [12:06.320 --> 12:13.840] There are a lot of people who seek out these positions for reasons that should keep them [12:13.840 --> 12:17.640] from being in these positions. [12:17.640 --> 12:26.240] And talking to them is, you're talking to air, you're not going to change those guys. [12:26.240 --> 12:29.000] And I was in court the other day and there was a prosecutor there, you're not going to [12:29.000 --> 12:31.200] change this prosecutor. [12:31.200 --> 12:33.400] The guy was a lump. [12:33.400 --> 12:39.400] I expected him to say, duh, at any moment, but he didn't. [12:39.400 --> 12:42.580] He hardly said anything. [12:42.580 --> 12:50.000] He clearly had no idea what was in front of him and his documents were in front of him. [12:50.000 --> 12:56.560] Had no idea what they, he had read them, had no idea what they meant. [12:56.560 --> 13:03.840] And the judge asked him if he had read these, well, yeah, I read over them a couple of days ago. [13:03.840 --> 13:10.640] And it just says that the laws don't apply and we all know that's not true. [13:10.640 --> 13:13.240] That was his argument. [13:13.240 --> 13:15.900] The cross complaint was in there. [13:15.900 --> 13:24.360] The judge denied the cross complaint without a motion from the prosecutor. [13:24.360 --> 13:30.360] So the judge is acting as the prosecutor because the prosecutor is a bonehead and he can't. [13:30.360 --> 13:35.840] So what do we do when we have a judge who's clearly the criminal? [13:35.840 --> 13:38.640] Go for the judge. [13:38.640 --> 13:41.160] You sit there in court and just rack them up. [13:41.160 --> 13:44.440] I was sitting back there watching this grinning. [13:44.440 --> 13:47.600] Every time the judge pulled one of these, I'd start writing and just grinning all over [13:47.600 --> 13:48.600] the place. [13:48.600 --> 13:52.560] And the prosecutor got to looking back at me like he's wondering, what is going on with [13:52.560 --> 13:53.840] this guy? [13:53.840 --> 13:59.120] The judge is hammering his buddy here and he thinks it's cool. [13:59.120 --> 14:05.680] Well, yeah, if we're going to get the courts back, we're going to have to legally crucify [14:05.680 --> 14:08.720] a couple of judges. [14:08.720 --> 14:16.680] And this judge did enough to get himself a stint in the state penitentiary, just in this [14:16.680 --> 14:17.840] one case. [14:17.840 --> 14:23.460] So we need to stop being afraid of these guys. [14:23.460 --> 14:28.960] We need to demand that they do what they're required to do. [14:28.960 --> 14:35.880] And when they don't, we should ask them to stand down from the bench. [14:35.880 --> 14:40.120] In this case, it was on the record and that was perfect. [14:40.120 --> 14:43.320] This would have been a good time to tell him, your honor, you need to get down off that [14:43.320 --> 14:49.880] bench and get a jurist who can provide a fair hearing as I have a right to a fair jurist [14:49.880 --> 14:52.680] in the first instance. [14:52.680 --> 14:57.080] And you are nowhere near it. [14:57.080 --> 15:02.840] The guy I was there with wanted to call me as an expert witness because the judge is [15:02.840 --> 15:06.280] asking him what the law is. [15:06.280 --> 15:09.720] What does 1406 Code of Criminal Procedure say? [15:09.720 --> 15:14.440] Well, the prosecutor just gave him a copy of it. [15:14.440 --> 15:18.600] And he wanted to call me, I would have explained it to him, but he refused to allow him to [15:18.600 --> 15:24.000] call witnesses because he didn't want the law in front of him. [15:24.000 --> 15:31.240] First thing we do, judicial conduct complaint against the judge, tort letter to the city, [15:31.240 --> 15:36.040] bar grievance against the judge, and the judges in municipal courts are always still going [15:36.040 --> 15:38.560] to carry their bar card. [15:38.560 --> 15:42.960] And there's a good chance he practices outside this position. [15:42.960 --> 15:47.000] So we bar grieve him in any case because we're going to do our best to get him fired. [15:47.000 --> 15:50.360] And if we get three or four grievances against him, he gets fired. [15:50.360 --> 15:54.160] The only thing he can do is go flip hamburgers. [15:54.160 --> 15:57.000] We bar grieve the prosecuting attorney. [15:57.000 --> 16:03.360] Understand prosecuting attorneys who are prosecutors for municipalities. [16:03.360 --> 16:06.260] That's the bottom of the bucket. [16:06.260 --> 16:09.840] It don't get much lower than that. [16:09.840 --> 16:16.080] The guys who are smart, the guys who are the head of their class, they get picked up by [16:16.080 --> 16:22.800] major law firms when they walk out of law school, they get big contracts. [16:22.800 --> 16:28.760] The guys who should have been a representative for a beer company while they were in college [16:28.760 --> 16:32.400] and takes three or four times to pass the bar, nobody wants them. [16:32.400 --> 16:39.040] So they have to get out and become, get appointed as court appointed counsel, somewhere they [16:39.040 --> 16:42.120] can get business, pay the bills. [16:42.120 --> 16:47.680] The ones who can't do that become prosecutors. [16:47.680 --> 16:52.280] And municipal courts are the bottom rung of the prosecutors. [16:52.280 --> 16:54.520] So you can't expect much from these guys. [16:54.520 --> 16:56.960] Okay, listen, we're going to break. [16:56.960 --> 17:00.400] We'll be right back. [17:00.400 --> 17:04.480] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [17:04.480 --> 17:07.720] Are you confused by words like the constitution or the federal reserve? [17:07.720 --> 17:08.720] What? [17:08.720 --> 17:12.480] Well, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [17:12.480 --> 17:18.120] Hi, my name is Steve Holt and like millions of other Americans, I was diagnosed with stupidity [17:18.120 --> 17:19.320] at an early age. [17:19.320 --> 17:23.300] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home [17:23.300 --> 17:25.440] in America, the television. [17:25.440 --> 17:30.440] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [17:30.440 --> 17:34.200] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me and thousands of other foxaholics suffering [17:34.200 --> 17:36.520] from sports zombieism recover. [17:36.520 --> 17:40.760] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [17:40.760 --> 17:42.840] without feeling tired or uninterested. [17:42.840 --> 17:50.800] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, then you need to call 512-480-2503 [17:50.800 --> 17:54.840] or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [17:54.840 --> 17:58.240] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [17:58.240 --> 18:07.720] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [18:07.720 --> 18:30.480] Well, it's been like it's out of control on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark bowl. [18:30.480 --> 18:38.480] edge of a hole inside a deep dark hole. I'm always on the lookout for something to soothe my soul. [18:40.480 --> 18:50.480] So I sit back and I watch the evidence unfold and I see justice is the door. [18:53.480 --> 18:57.480] Justice is the door. [18:57.480 --> 19:05.480] Sometimes we fell a little too far at sea and then we got to get back on course quickly. [19:05.480 --> 19:12.480] We go under heavy advisory from the man that came all the way from Galilee. [19:12.480 --> 19:18.480] A kitchen's all a safe and warm place to be where I don't have to work so hard to be free. [19:18.480 --> 19:28.480] Some guys are trying to rewrite history but they got caught. Now them guys got to flee. Looks like justice. [19:28.480 --> 19:51.480] Looks like justice. Yeah, yeah. [19:51.480 --> 20:03.480] Okay, we are back. Talking about the average IQ of these people. [20:03.480 --> 20:06.480] Well, we're getting there. [20:06.480 --> 20:22.480] I'm looking it up now. It would appear that the average IQ in some places varies but the national average it would appear is 90% or 90 points, a 90-point IQ. [20:22.480 --> 20:28.480] And it should be noted that in Texas, 20 is legally retarded. [20:28.480 --> 20:38.480] 20? Or 70, I'm sorry. 20 point difference between that and retarded. 70 is retarded, legally retarded. [20:38.480 --> 20:49.480] When Bush's IQ turned out to be 90, 90 became the national average. But it's not. [20:49.480 --> 20:57.480] It's not yet. It's always been statistically between 100 and 110. [20:57.480 --> 21:05.480] Clinton was more dangerous than Bush. His IQ is 148. [21:05.480 --> 21:09.480] I don't know about that. [21:09.480 --> 21:24.480] And Papa Bush was bad news. He was smart. Fortunately for us, Baby Bush was a bonehead, brain-dead moron or he would have been a whole lot worse than he was. [21:24.480 --> 21:34.480] He just slid it in on us without us realizing what they were doing to us, which is his dad and Clinton were doing. [21:34.480 --> 21:47.480] But anyway, I've always heard the average IQ is between 100 and 110. And police are average 10% below. I'm not surprised. [21:47.480 --> 21:57.480] And it's probably because we have a lot of, a few very smart policemen and a lot of very dumb policemen. [21:57.480 --> 22:12.480] Guy can't do anything else. He can get in police work and use the credibility the good policemen have created to make himself feel better. [22:12.480 --> 22:19.480] And then he winds up tearing down all of them. And that's exactly what's happening. [22:19.480 --> 22:24.480] This is what I was going to with the judges and the prosecutor. [22:24.480 --> 22:43.480] You got to understand when you go into a JP court, I mean to a municipal court, you're dealing with the lowest rung. The guys who can't make it out there in the real world, they get municipal jobs because they pay chump change. [22:43.480 --> 22:52.480] And the only ones who will take them are the ones, the attorneys who can't make their living being an attorney. [22:52.480 --> 23:04.480] And the judges are worse than prosecutors. Generally the prosecutors are young and they're starting out and they're just inexperienced and they didn't do too well in law school. [23:04.480 --> 23:09.480] So nobody's going to hire them. They have to go out and get some experience first. [23:09.480 --> 23:21.480] They'll start out in the municipal court. And if they turn out to have some good sense, they may go out on their own or they'll move up to the county and the district. [23:21.480 --> 23:26.480] If they can't function out in the real world, they stay in government. [23:26.480 --> 23:38.480] So that's to our advantage. This guy sat there the other day and clearly had absolutely no clue what was going on. [23:38.480 --> 23:44.480] And when the court was over, he jumped up and ran from the courtroom. [23:44.480 --> 23:50.480] He wanted out of there and he wanted out of there quickly. [23:50.480 --> 23:56.480] You and I, we are the ones that can change this. [23:56.480 --> 24:00.480] I had this suggestion a long time ago, but it never got any purchase. [24:00.480 --> 24:05.480] I'd like to see people act as court watchers. [24:05.480 --> 24:10.480] The court watchers, the baddest motor scooter in the building. [24:10.480 --> 24:23.480] Because if the judge is sitting there doing his thing and he's got an accused over here that he's working over and he's got half a dozen people out there taking notes [24:23.480 --> 24:37.480] and doing what I'm going to be doing, I am looking for every spot where the judge fails to apply the law to the facts. [24:37.480 --> 24:46.480] And I will file a separate judicial conduct complaint against that judge and a separate bar grievance against that judge for each one [24:46.480 --> 24:54.480] and address each one as a separate cause of action in a tort letter to the city. [24:54.480 --> 25:04.480] If we could get just two or three people hanging around the courts, when you've got nothing better to do, go sit and watch some court proceedings. [25:04.480 --> 25:09.480] Watch how they do it, compare it to what you know about the law and start taking notes. [25:09.480 --> 25:14.480] And then go down and look at some court records. [25:14.480 --> 25:17.480] And then start hammering these judges. [25:17.480 --> 25:32.480] When the judges start getting complaints against them from third parties, non-interested third parties, that is really, really bad news for them. [25:32.480 --> 25:39.480] You know, if you're going for a judge and he renders a decision you don't like, well, they expect you to be upset with him. [25:39.480 --> 25:47.480] But when they get guys that aren't connected hammering them, these are guys that don't have an interest. [25:47.480 --> 25:56.480] Now they can't put this off as just someone who's upset or feels mistreated. [25:56.480 --> 25:59.480] And you have standing. [25:59.480 --> 26:02.480] You have standing as a private attorney general. [26:02.480 --> 26:05.480] We've heard this talk about private attorney generals. [26:05.480 --> 26:13.480] Well, the case law I got on private attorney general is all hogwash. [26:13.480 --> 26:30.480] But there is one instance where you can act as a private attorney general and that's when you sue for yourself and all others similarly situated. [26:30.480 --> 26:38.480] And we can always sue for injunctive relief to right a civil wrong. [26:38.480 --> 26:42.480] We are the sovereigns. [26:42.480 --> 26:44.480] This is our republic. [26:44.480 --> 26:47.480] I know they don't want us to think that way. [26:47.480 --> 26:50.480] They don't want it to be, but it still is so far. [26:50.480 --> 26:52.480] And we need to keep it that way. [26:52.480 --> 26:56.480] The way we're going to do it is start undermining these judges on the bottom. [26:56.480 --> 27:09.480] I assure you every time a judge gets sued here in the municipal court, every municipal court in Texas finds out about it. [27:09.480 --> 27:12.480] Because they have damage control. [27:12.480 --> 27:18.480] They have risk management and risk management is going to want to look at these suits. [27:18.480 --> 27:24.480] And they're going to be saying, you know, how exposed are we? [27:24.480 --> 27:33.480] And we want them to look extremely exposed, especially if we can crucify a judge or two. [27:33.480 --> 27:36.480] We can turn this judge into history. [27:36.480 --> 27:46.480] Every other judge is going to have a look at it, especially when the judge gets turned into history for doing what all these judges are doing. [27:46.480 --> 27:51.480] The guy rendered rulings without reading the documents. [27:51.480 --> 28:03.480] He read the notice in demand and apparently missed the part where the demand was is that you read all the pleadings [28:03.480 --> 28:07.480] and rule on each item raised in each pleading. [28:07.480 --> 28:11.480] Apparently he missed that when he read it. [28:11.480 --> 28:15.480] So we start filing judicial conduct complaints. [28:15.480 --> 28:17.480] We start filing bar grievances. [28:17.480 --> 28:22.480] The tort letter to the city is the one that will get their attention. [28:22.480 --> 28:29.480] And of course, my favorite pastime is criminal complaints. [28:29.480 --> 28:36.480] And there were a few bandied around in this situation and we'll get to hammer the judge for that one. [28:36.480 --> 28:46.480] When we come back from break, I'll just walk through the process and how this is supposed to work, just kind of in general. [28:46.480 --> 28:50.480] And then we take some calls and see what your opinions are. [28:50.480 --> 28:59.480] Yeah, and I have a comment about this too concerning the low IQ of these lower rungs on the totem pole, so to speak. [28:59.480 --> 29:02.480] This is not just a happenstance. [29:02.480 --> 29:05.480] This is very intentional. [29:05.480 --> 29:09.480] The people who are pulling the strings at the top are very smart. [29:09.480 --> 29:10.480] They're very intelligent. [29:10.480 --> 29:12.480] They know exactly what they're doing. [29:12.480 --> 29:30.480] They intentionally put in place these idiots for the purpose of running interference to keep people like us from being able to move ahead with progress. [29:30.480 --> 29:49.480] And so I want to contemplate and discuss a strategy of how to get past this nonsense of dealing with the idiots so that we can get to the real culprits who know exactly what they're doing. [29:49.480 --> 29:51.480] This is a classic MO. [29:51.480 --> 29:58.480] It happens with intelligence agencies all the time and it goes on all the way down to our local police departments. [29:58.480 --> 30:02.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [30:02.480 --> 30:13.480] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [30:13.480 --> 30:17.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [30:17.480 --> 30:21.480] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [30:21.480 --> 30:26.480] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [30:26.480 --> 30:33.480] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [30:33.480 --> 30:42.480] 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. [30:42.480 --> 30:51.480] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [30:51.480 --> 31:00.480] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [31:21.480 --> 31:25.480] This is a race for Mr. Bush. [31:25.480 --> 31:30.480] This is a race for the teen. [31:30.480 --> 31:35.480] Well, I need a prosecutor to come and help me prosecute them wicked leaders. [31:35.480 --> 31:37.480] You see, they're all liars. [31:37.480 --> 31:39.480] They're liars. [31:39.480 --> 31:40.480] I tell sweet stories. [31:40.480 --> 31:41.480] You don't believe me. [31:41.480 --> 31:42.480] Say what they tell me. [31:42.480 --> 31:45.480] 3% of Americans vote for Bush. [31:45.480 --> 31:48.480] So how the hell did he get the presidency? [31:48.480 --> 31:50.480] That's why we have a warrant for him. [31:50.480 --> 31:52.480] Everybody listen carefully. [31:52.480 --> 31:54.480] It's into the world that litigation is passing. [31:54.480 --> 31:58.480] This is a race for Mr. Bush. [31:58.480 --> 32:03.480] This is a warrant for Bush. [32:03.480 --> 32:05.480] This is a race for Mr. Bush. [32:05.480 --> 32:07.480] Okay, we are back. [32:07.480 --> 32:14.480] We've got some callers on the line, and just to be in line with what Randy was discussing, [32:14.480 --> 32:23.480] obviously the bully, egomaniac types who are shallow are going to be drawn to these kind of power-tripping jobs, [32:23.480 --> 32:33.480] and I'm not saying that there aren't very qualified, heartfelt, solid law enforcement agents out there, [32:33.480 --> 32:34.480] peace officers. [32:34.480 --> 32:39.480] Of course there are, but of course there's going to be the bully in the parking lot type [32:39.480 --> 32:45.480] that is going to be drawn to that type of vocation, [32:45.480 --> 32:51.480] and you know that the powers that be, the people that are pulling the strings, are going to play on this. [32:51.480 --> 32:55.480] This is a classic MO of every intelligence agency. [32:55.480 --> 32:58.480] This is how they set up their Patsies. [32:58.480 --> 33:06.480] They pick the homeless rogue on the street, people who are mentally retarded, [33:06.480 --> 33:13.480] that can't even hardly speak, that are psychopaths, that have all kinds of problems, [33:13.480 --> 33:19.480] mental problems, physical problems, to set them up, to take them down, [33:19.480 --> 33:27.480] to use as interference to keep people like us from being able to accomplish our goals, [33:27.480 --> 33:33.480] to run this kind of interference, and we've got to learn how to get past this and not get hung up on it, [33:33.480 --> 33:38.480] and we've got to develop an overall strategy because some people are going to have to deal with this, [33:38.480 --> 33:45.480] but you know it's the guys, the guy at the top that are setting up these pawns, [33:45.480 --> 33:52.480] that's who we're really after here, and so that's where this strategy ultimately goes to. [33:52.480 --> 33:55.480] So at this point I want to go to some callers. [33:55.480 --> 34:00.480] I want to take Bill, one of our close friends, Bill from Texas, Bill V. [34:00.480 --> 34:03.480] Bill, thank you for calling in. You have questions, comments? [34:03.480 --> 34:05.480] Hello, how are you, Debbie? [34:05.480 --> 34:07.480] Good, Bill. [34:07.480 --> 34:09.480] I just had a couple comments. [34:09.480 --> 34:16.480] I wanted to make a couple little corrections to a couple things that Randy said about IQ. [34:16.480 --> 34:18.480] Is that okay? [34:18.480 --> 34:19.480] Please. [34:19.480 --> 34:21.480] Sure, he can take it. [34:21.480 --> 34:26.480] This is Dr. V, so he knows what he's talking about. [34:26.480 --> 34:33.480] Hey, Randy. Listen, you were being too kind when you said the average IQ is between 100 and 110. [34:33.480 --> 34:40.480] Actually, there's only a handful of nations where the average IQ of the nation is above 100. [34:40.480 --> 34:44.480] Most of them are below 100. [34:44.480 --> 34:47.480] Even the United States, the average IQ is 98, [34:47.480 --> 34:54.480] but the overall average IQ of the world is probably in the low 90s, not between 100 and 110. [34:54.480 --> 34:59.480] I just pulled up, when I saved in my archive from a website, [34:59.480 --> 35:07.480] a professor named Dr. Richard Lin wrote a book and published national IQ estimates [35:07.480 --> 35:11.480] of all the different countries of the world. [35:11.480 --> 35:17.480] The country with the highest national average IQ was Hong Kong at 107, [35:17.480 --> 35:27.480] and South Korea was 106, Japan was next at 105, Taiwan at 104, Singapore 103. [35:27.480 --> 35:32.480] You see the Asian nations have the highest IQs of the population. [35:32.480 --> 35:37.480] Then it went Austria and Germany and Italy and Netherlands were 102, [35:37.480 --> 35:45.480] Sweden, Switzerland, Belgium and China were right around 100, New Zealand and United Kingdom 100. [35:45.480 --> 35:48.480] Then every other nation in the world was below 100. [35:48.480 --> 35:51.480] Those were the only ones above 100. [35:51.480 --> 35:58.480] The other thing I wanted to say regarding mental retardation, there's two parts to that. [35:58.480 --> 36:00.480] It's not just the IQ. [36:00.480 --> 36:04.480] Mental retardation is an IQ below 70, [36:04.480 --> 36:10.480] but also the person has to have significant limitations in adaptive functioning [36:10.480 --> 36:13.480] in at least two major areas of life. [36:13.480 --> 36:20.480] Let's suppose a person gets tested and he gets measured with an IQ of 60, [36:20.480 --> 36:24.480] but he's functioning adaptively in life. [36:24.480 --> 36:28.480] He's got a job, he can take care of himself, he can communicate effectively, [36:28.480 --> 36:33.480] he's pretty independent, he's doing the things he needs to do to adapt. [36:33.480 --> 36:38.480] He would not be labeled mentally retarded, so it's more than just an IQ. [36:38.480 --> 36:42.480] It's an IQ problem and it's a problem in adaptive functioning. [36:42.480 --> 36:46.480] The other thing is there's different levels of retardation. [36:46.480 --> 36:57.480] Mild mental retardation would be considered an IQ of 50 to 70 with adaptive functioning problems. [36:57.480 --> 37:02.480] Moderate retardation would be an IQ of, say, 35 to 50. [37:02.480 --> 37:07.480] Severe mental retardation would be an IQ of 20 to 35, [37:07.480 --> 37:11.480] and profound mental retardation would be 20 or below. [37:11.480 --> 37:16.480] So even within the mental retardation range, there's significant variability. [37:16.480 --> 37:22.480] I was really glad that you called because there was a question I wanted to ask [37:22.480 --> 37:30.480] relating to a lot of people who tend to be drawn toward police work, [37:30.480 --> 37:34.480] and that's the narcissist and the sociopath. [37:34.480 --> 37:40.480] Can you kind of describe how they deal with their environment [37:40.480 --> 37:46.480] so that we can maybe better understand how to deal with these people? [37:46.480 --> 37:51.480] Well, yeah, you know, I don't have any studies in front of me [37:51.480 --> 37:56.480] that say that narcissists and sociopaths are drawn to police work, [37:56.480 --> 38:01.480] so that would be conjecture on our part or your part, [38:01.480 --> 38:07.480] but it does appear that there are certain people that are driven to power. [38:07.480 --> 38:10.480] Some people really like to have power over other people, [38:10.480 --> 38:13.480] and then there are some people that don't care to have power at all. [38:13.480 --> 38:15.480] They're just not driven by power, [38:15.480 --> 38:20.480] and it is true that people that are naturally driven to power [38:20.480 --> 38:24.480] tend to be more narcissistic in nature. [38:24.480 --> 38:27.480] The other thing is, as far as sociopathic, [38:27.480 --> 38:32.480] the hallmark feature of a sociopath is a person who lacks a conscience. [38:32.480 --> 38:35.480] They really don't feel, they don't develop empathy [38:35.480 --> 38:37.480] or don't have empathy for other people, [38:37.480 --> 38:40.480] and they can lie and cheat and violate people's rights, [38:40.480 --> 38:42.480] and it doesn't bother them, [38:42.480 --> 38:46.480] and most people who have a conscience [38:46.480 --> 38:49.480] can't really understand how somebody functions that doesn't have a conscience. [38:49.480 --> 38:52.480] They can't even really believe that people are like that, [38:52.480 --> 38:54.480] but there are people like that, [38:54.480 --> 38:59.480] and usually with the sociopath, the only time they feel bad is when they get caught. [38:59.480 --> 39:00.480] They don't feel bad about what they did. [39:00.480 --> 39:02.480] They feel bad that they got caught, [39:02.480 --> 39:07.480] but this lacking a conscience is something that in psychology [39:07.480 --> 39:12.480] we think that there's a critical period when the brain is developing, [39:12.480 --> 39:16.480] and if the person doesn't have the right nurturance from the environment [39:16.480 --> 39:21.480] or the right type of role models to see how a conscience operates [39:21.480 --> 39:25.480] and how it develops and how empathy works with other people, [39:25.480 --> 39:30.480] if they miss out on that, then at some point at brain development, [39:30.480 --> 39:34.480] the door closes and they can't get it back. [39:34.480 --> 39:39.480] So if you don't develop a conscience during that critical period of brain development, [39:39.480 --> 39:41.480] you probably never can get one, [39:41.480 --> 39:44.480] and it's hard to imagine people that don't have one, [39:44.480 --> 39:47.480] but there are people that really don't have a conscience. [39:47.480 --> 39:56.480] So I really don't have any studies in front of me to say that most policemen are sociopaths. [39:56.480 --> 40:02.480] So I'm not saying that someone who is a sociopath is necessarily a bad guy. [40:02.480 --> 40:06.480] He just doesn't have a tool that we have. [40:06.480 --> 40:11.480] Well, no, I would say that somebody who is a sociopath is a bad guy. [40:11.480 --> 40:13.480] Because if you don't have a conscience [40:13.480 --> 40:17.480] and you don't have the capacity to feel empathy for other people, [40:17.480 --> 40:21.480] then you're going to violate the rights of people in everything you do. [40:21.480 --> 40:27.480] You know, see, my concern is that the powers that be, [40:27.480 --> 40:32.480] the intelligent ones that are in control, who may or may not be sociopaths, [40:32.480 --> 40:35.480] are intentionally, it's documented, [40:35.480 --> 40:41.480] they are very deliberately picking other sociopaths, if you want to say other, [40:41.480 --> 40:50.480] or they're picking sociopaths with low IQs to put in these Patsy type of roles [40:50.480 --> 40:58.480] in order to run interference and screw everything up for people like us. [40:58.480 --> 41:00.480] And so how do we deal with this? [41:00.480 --> 41:03.480] Because honestly, I don't want to deal with it at all. [41:03.480 --> 41:09.480] I want to just like kind of like scoot around the Patsy, so to speak, [41:09.480 --> 41:14.480] and deal with the guy who's really running things, [41:14.480 --> 41:18.480] who may be a bigger sociopath or a psychopath, so to speak. [41:18.480 --> 41:23.480] It's easier for me to comment or give an opinion on the politicians [41:23.480 --> 41:25.480] as being sociopaths than police officers, [41:25.480 --> 41:30.480] because with politicians I see them lying every day. [41:30.480 --> 41:35.480] You can see they get up and they'll say one thing to one constituency group [41:35.480 --> 41:39.480] and then say something else to a different constituency group. [41:39.480 --> 41:41.480] And when they're running for office, [41:41.480 --> 41:44.480] they'll say whatever they need to say to get elected. [41:44.480 --> 41:49.480] So somebody who has a conscience could not get up every day unknowingly lying. [41:49.480 --> 41:51.480] They just couldn't do it. [41:51.480 --> 41:53.480] So the good people don't run for political office, [41:53.480 --> 41:56.480] other than a handful like a Ron Paul, for instance. [41:56.480 --> 41:58.480] So I'm not saying there's no exceptions to that, [41:58.480 --> 42:04.480] but it seems to me in general politicians have to lie to get elected. [42:04.480 --> 42:06.480] And that's partly the people's fault, [42:06.480 --> 42:09.480] because people they don't want to be told the truth. [42:09.480 --> 42:11.480] They want to be told what makes them feel good, [42:11.480 --> 42:14.480] and the politicians know that, so the politicians stroke them [42:14.480 --> 42:17.480] and tell them what they want to hear and what makes them feel good. [42:17.480 --> 42:19.480] But a person with a conscience couldn't do that. [42:19.480 --> 42:24.480] So I believe you do have a lot of politicians that are sociopaths, [42:24.480 --> 42:28.480] and even possibly more so than the police. [42:28.480 --> 42:31.480] But then like you say, Debbie, they hire the little minions [42:31.480 --> 42:35.480] that are driven to power to carry out their policies [42:35.480 --> 42:37.480] and violate the rights of others. [42:37.480 --> 42:43.480] But they have the advantage, and here's why I say that. [42:43.480 --> 42:47.480] A sociopath doesn't play by the rules. [42:47.480 --> 42:53.480] Their behavior is not constrained by morals or ethics. [42:53.480 --> 42:55.480] The only thing that constrains their behavior [42:55.480 --> 42:57.480] is whether or not they can get away with something. [42:57.480 --> 43:01.480] And so we're fighting people who don't play by the rules. [43:01.480 --> 43:04.480] There are no rules, and so we're at a disadvantage. [43:04.480 --> 43:08.480] It's just like if I went into a boxing ring with Mike Tyson in his prime, [43:08.480 --> 43:12.480] and I'm going to constrain his behavior, I'm going to tie his hands and feet, [43:12.480 --> 43:16.480] well, I could beat him, okay, because I don't have those rules, [43:16.480 --> 43:18.480] and he's constrained by those rules. [43:18.480 --> 43:22.480] So in a sense, the sociopaths have a huge advantage over us [43:22.480 --> 43:25.480] because they don't mind lying and stealing and cheating [43:25.480 --> 43:27.480] and doing whatever they need to do to win. [43:27.480 --> 43:30.480] And that's probably why they get into power and maintain power, [43:30.480 --> 43:33.480] because they do things that we wouldn't do. [43:33.480 --> 43:36.480] And so it's very difficult to overcome that. [43:36.480 --> 43:39.480] You're describing a lot of police, Ahmed. [43:39.480 --> 43:44.480] Well, there's got to be a way that we can actually turn that to be our advantage. [43:44.480 --> 43:51.480] I mean, on a moral, spiritual standpoint, we absolutely have the higher ground. [43:51.480 --> 43:54.480] We've got to figure out a way to turn the tables here. [43:54.480 --> 44:04.480] We'll be right back, Dr. Bill Veith. [44:24.480 --> 44:26.480] How to answer letters and phone calls. [44:26.480 --> 44:28.480] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [44:28.480 --> 44:33.480] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [44:33.480 --> 44:38.480] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [44:38.480 --> 44:40.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [44:40.480 --> 44:44.480] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com [44:44.480 --> 44:49.480] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [44:49.480 --> 44:57.480] That's RuleOfLawRadio.com, or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S at yahoo.com [44:57.480 --> 45:01.480] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [45:01.480 --> 45:23.480] Music [45:23.480 --> 45:28.480] Always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [45:28.480 --> 45:33.480] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [45:33.480 --> 45:39.480] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [45:39.480 --> 45:45.480] I'm just here making my living, pushing buttons. [45:45.480 --> 45:51.480] I give my message out to anyone who's out in distance. [45:51.480 --> 45:56.480] Vote for bravery and against slavery, showing resistance. [45:56.480 --> 46:01.480] First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start strutting. [46:01.480 --> 46:06.480] I'm just so glad to make my living, pushing buttons. [46:06.480 --> 46:19.480] Music [46:19.480 --> 46:24.480] I wish that town could play Monopoly, we all wanted to win the game. [46:24.480 --> 46:28.480] Okay, we're back. [46:28.480 --> 46:36.480] There's a totally unplanned topic here, but the topic at hand is how do we deal with the psychopaths? [46:36.480 --> 46:44.480] The lower level, low rung psychopaths and the psychopaths who are at the top pulling the strings. [46:44.480 --> 46:55.480] I mean Ray McGovern has said many times that they referred to the higher ups in the intelligence community as the crazies. [46:55.480 --> 46:57.480] What have the crazies done now? [46:57.480 --> 47:05.480] So we've got Dr. Bill Vieth on the line who can help give us some insight on how to deal with these very dangerous people. [47:05.480 --> 47:14.480] This is a great concern to me because if you want to put this in libertarian quote unquote terminology, [47:14.480 --> 47:23.480] it looks to me like the very small, tiny percentage of population that refuses to abide by the non-aggression truce [47:23.480 --> 47:31.480] just happens to be the ones that have gotten into power at all levels from the lowest level to the highest level [47:31.480 --> 47:35.480] and the most dangerous ones and apparently according to what Eddie is about to tell us, [47:35.480 --> 47:38.480] even the ones with the lowest IQ are the ones at the top. [47:38.480 --> 47:41.480] So Bill, stay on the line. [47:41.480 --> 47:44.480] Eddie, Randy, everyone, we're going to go to Eddie now. [47:44.480 --> 47:51.480] Eddie, you wanted to comment on an article that you just read and then I want to get Bill's comments. [47:51.480 --> 47:53.480] Eddie? [47:53.480 --> 47:54.480] I'm here. [47:54.480 --> 47:55.480] Okay, go ahead. [47:55.480 --> 48:02.480] I was reading this study here while I was looking this stuff up that was done in 1916 by an associate professor [48:02.480 --> 48:08.480] of psychology at Harvard and he used the standard Army military test for IQ base [48:08.480 --> 48:12.480] and he tested police officers in multiple major cities across the U.S. [48:12.480 --> 48:21.480] and it showed that in 1916, the average IQ for an on-the-street police officer was 104. [48:21.480 --> 48:29.480] In 1916, when the school systems were much better than they are now, didn't have as much information, but still. [48:29.480 --> 48:37.480] And now it turns out that in this testing process, when he tested many of the officials above the beat cop [48:37.480 --> 48:44.480] to the ones that were actually holding office above them, they had a 15% IQ difference. [48:44.480 --> 48:51.480] The guys in charge were 15% lower than the guys on the street. [48:51.480 --> 48:55.480] So it's no wonder we have a top-down mess. [48:55.480 --> 49:04.480] When you can't even speak common sense to the man on the street, it's a hopeless case when you approach the guy above him. [49:04.480 --> 49:06.480] The Peter Principle. [49:06.480 --> 49:11.480] Everyone tends to rise to their own level of incompetence. [49:11.480 --> 49:13.480] Possibly. [49:13.480 --> 49:18.480] But one of the things that I was going to work on suggesting, before we get back to Dr. Vieth on this, [49:18.480 --> 49:24.480] is when it comes to handling this situation from the top down, [49:24.480 --> 49:30.480] the law that we've studied shows very clearly that in Chapter 411 of the Government Code, [49:30.480 --> 49:39.480] that it is the Texas Public Safety Commission that is responsible for the code implementation of the transportation code itself. [49:39.480 --> 49:44.480] They are responsible for the rules and regulations that control the Texas Department of Public Safety, [49:44.480 --> 49:50.480] and they are responsible for the training and delegation of authority in that regard to the local officials. [49:50.480 --> 49:55.480] Now, by law, this committee is comprised of five people. [49:55.480 --> 49:57.480] They're appointed by the governor. [49:57.480 --> 50:01.480] From the criteria it states as to the qualifications, [50:01.480 --> 50:09.480] I almost bet every member of this committee is ex or current or retired law enforcement. [50:09.480 --> 50:18.480] Be that as it may, the law also requires that these people grant an audience to the public [50:18.480 --> 50:25.480] for the purpose of discussion and debate on anything affecting the public interest. [50:25.480 --> 50:31.480] I say that we get as many people as possible and make a road trip, [50:31.480 --> 50:39.480] and we give them the meeting that makes their nightmares. [50:39.480 --> 50:41.480] That's suggestion one. [50:41.480 --> 50:45.480] Suggestion two is, since you guys are in Austin, [50:45.480 --> 50:55.480] we need to find out what the procedure, process, or requirements or ability is to come together and have a hearing [50:55.480 --> 51:03.480] in front of the legislature on what they're doing with these laws. [51:03.480 --> 51:14.480] As a citizen's committee, go before the legislature and demand to be heard about this fraud. [51:14.480 --> 51:20.480] Those are the two suggestions I've got for stirring the pot. [51:20.480 --> 51:31.480] Well, I was hoping that Dr. Reath had some suggestions on how we deal with the man with the pistol. [51:31.480 --> 51:33.480] Sides, Prozac, and a hammer? [51:33.480 --> 51:37.480] Well, you got guys here. [51:37.480 --> 51:45.480] If you're dealing with someone who does not have empathy, we need to understand what we're dealing with. [51:45.480 --> 51:51.480] This is a different animal than we deal with, for the most part, in our daily lives. [51:51.480 --> 52:01.480] And whether the police are all without empathy or not, they deal, for the most part, with criminals. [52:01.480 --> 52:09.480] And the statistics that I've heard shows that 90% of the people they arrest, they've arrested a number of times. [52:09.480 --> 52:12.480] Where are the 10%? [52:12.480 --> 52:21.480] And when they deal with one of us, they tend to group us with all the rest. [52:21.480 --> 52:29.480] And they become, even if they're not in their personal lives, sociopathic or lacking in empathy, [52:29.480 --> 52:32.480] they certainly are in their professional lives. [52:32.480 --> 52:46.480] So to think you can reason with or engender understanding and acceptance from a police officer, it is absolutely a waste of time. [52:46.480 --> 52:47.480] Dr. Reath? [52:47.480 --> 52:48.480] What do you think, Dr. Reath? [52:48.480 --> 52:51.480] Yeah, I would tend to agree with that. [52:51.480 --> 52:58.480] People, you know, people that lack empathy are basically narcissists. [52:58.480 --> 53:03.480] People that lack empathy and a conscience are sociopaths. [53:03.480 --> 53:11.480] So, you know, I wouldn't necessarily say, I certainly don't believe that every police officer is a narcissist and or a sociopath. [53:11.480 --> 53:18.480] But in dealing with them, you almost have to assume he is, whether he is or isn't, because you don't want to get the guy that is. [53:18.480 --> 53:22.480] And remember, a sociopath will do whatever he thinks he can get away with. [53:22.480 --> 53:25.480] That's the only thing that constrains his behavior. [53:25.480 --> 53:29.480] Empathy doesn't constrain it, feelings for you, caring about what you're going through. [53:29.480 --> 53:32.480] None of those go through the mind of a sociopath. [53:32.480 --> 53:36.480] It's only, am I going to get caught if I do this or can I get away with it? [53:36.480 --> 53:41.480] And if he can get away with it and he's already power driven, who knows what he would do? [53:41.480 --> 53:46.480] So you kind of have to assume when you're dealing with him, assume the worst case scenario, [53:46.480 --> 53:54.480] that the guy's a sociopath and he's driven to power and, you know, he's going to do whatever he can get away with and then proceed accordingly. [53:54.480 --> 54:03.480] Yeah. Remember Officer Ben, when he said that a lot of these police officers will arrest you [54:03.480 --> 54:07.480] and then come up with a charge on the way to the jail. [54:07.480 --> 54:12.480] And I asked him what percentage did he believe would do that? [54:12.480 --> 54:15.480] And I expected him to say five or 10 percent. [54:15.480 --> 54:21.480] He said 50 percent. That's what he admitted to. That was scary. [54:21.480 --> 54:28.480] Yeah. And, you know, I'm sure that probably in today's environment, [54:28.480 --> 54:34.480] more and more of the power driven type is, you know, gravitates towards wanting to do police work. [54:34.480 --> 54:38.480] You know, there's a lot of people out there that just would not want to do that kind of work. [54:38.480 --> 54:42.480] I mean, I wouldn't do it. I don't want to pull somebody over and write him a ticket [54:42.480 --> 54:45.480] because he's going 10 miles over the speed limit or 15 miles over the speed limit. [54:45.480 --> 54:49.480] If he's driving safely and the roads are clear and everything's fine, so what? [54:49.480 --> 54:52.480] You know, I'm not going to do that. So I don't have a drive for power. [54:52.480 --> 54:58.480] So it seems to me that the people that pursue those types of occupations [54:58.480 --> 55:02.480] have an inordinate need for power above and beyond the average person. [55:02.480 --> 55:06.480] So, you know, and people that have an inordinate drive for power [55:06.480 --> 55:14.480] are more likely to be narcissistic in nature and sociopathic in nature. [55:14.480 --> 55:18.480] Yeah. So when you're dealing with these people, you need to keep that in mind. [55:18.480 --> 55:23.480] You're not dealing with your average ordinary citizen on the street [55:23.480 --> 55:26.480] or your next door neighbor. [55:26.480 --> 55:33.480] You're dealing with a guy who looks at you as a criminal or a civilian. [55:33.480 --> 55:35.480] So what do you do? [55:35.480 --> 55:39.480] Or that just likes to lord power over you. [55:39.480 --> 55:44.480] There are some people out there that just like to lord power over people. [55:44.480 --> 55:50.480] Don't bring your objection to him. Bring your objection to his boss and his boss's boss. [55:50.480 --> 55:56.480] Because this takes advantage of the very problem that you're dealing with. [55:56.480 --> 56:00.480] When you go into the chief of police and crawl down his throat [56:00.480 --> 56:03.480] for what one of his officers has done, the chief's going to go to the captain. [56:03.480 --> 56:05.480] The captain's going to go to the lieutenant. [56:05.480 --> 56:07.480] The lieutenant's going to go to the sergeant. [56:07.480 --> 56:10.480] And by the time the sergeant gets to the policeman on the street, [56:10.480 --> 56:15.480] it's not going to make any difference what he did. He's in trouble. [56:15.480 --> 56:19.480] This is how we as professionals need to learn to handle this [56:19.480 --> 56:24.480] and not feel like we have to deal with this policeman. [56:24.480 --> 56:32.480] Because it's like dealing with a rabid dog. You know, you can try to... [56:32.480 --> 56:35.480] I remember The Fountainhead. [56:35.480 --> 56:45.480] And in the book The Fountainhead, the hero, an architect tried to shoot someone [56:45.480 --> 56:49.480] and they asked some critic and they asked him why he did it. [56:49.480 --> 56:55.480] And he said, have you ever imagined yourself in a room, [56:55.480 --> 57:01.480] locked in a room with a crazed maniac and he's had his brain eaten out [57:01.480 --> 57:08.480] and he's going to hurt you and you'll give him the most convincing arguments [57:08.480 --> 57:14.480] and the most eloquent speeches as to why he shouldn't hurt you, [57:14.480 --> 57:17.480] but it doesn't make any difference. [57:17.480 --> 57:20.480] When we're dealing with a policeman on the street, as far as he's concerned, [57:20.480 --> 57:22.480] we're a criminal. [57:22.480 --> 57:27.480] And as far as he's concerned, a criminal will say anything to him, [57:27.480 --> 57:31.480] will tell him anything that suits his purpose. [57:31.480 --> 57:35.480] He has no reason to believe a single word we say. [57:35.480 --> 57:42.480] And it's my concern with policemen that they tend to be narcissistic, [57:42.480 --> 57:49.480] not because they are by their nature, but by exposure. [57:49.480 --> 57:52.480] By the criminal element they're constantly exposed to [57:52.480 --> 57:57.480] when they interact with someone who doesn't lie to them, [57:57.480 --> 58:00.480] they have no reason to believe you're different when you're like 10% [58:00.480 --> 58:02.480] of what they deal with. [58:02.480 --> 58:06.480] So you try to argue with a policeman, try to reason with a policeman, [58:06.480 --> 58:10.480] you might as well try to reason with a brick wall. [58:10.480 --> 58:12.480] Reason with his boss, his boss, his boss. [58:12.480 --> 58:16.480] There you'll get more traction. [58:16.480 --> 58:19.480] Let's not get beat into unconsciousness on the street. [58:19.480 --> 58:23.480] I guess that is my point in the end. [58:23.480 --> 58:30.480] Certainly not give him tools to use against us. [58:30.480 --> 58:33.480] Okay, we're going to break. [58:33.480 --> 58:37.480] All right, we'll be right back. [58:37.480 --> 58:40.480] We've got Mike from Connecticut. [58:40.480 --> 58:44.480] Dr. Beath, you're welcome to stay on. [58:44.480 --> 58:52.480] What I want to know is what do you do when the judge is a psychopath? [58:52.480 --> 59:15.480] Okay, we'll be right back. [59:22.480 --> 59:25.480] We'll be right back. [59:52.480 --> 01:00:04.480] This news brief brought to you by the International News Net. [01:00:04.480 --> 01:00:09.480] An Iraq Thursday, at least 31 Iraqis were killed and 88 wounded. [01:00:09.480 --> 01:00:12.480] Meanwhile, a former Iraqi leader has criticized the decision [01:00:12.480 --> 01:00:17.480] to ban 500 Iraqis from running in March elections. [01:00:17.480 --> 01:00:22.480] 18 people were killed in Pakistan after a US drone fired missiles [01:00:22.480 --> 01:00:26.480] at a house along the border between North and South Waziristan. [01:00:26.480 --> 01:00:30.480] The drone strike may have killed Tariq, a Taliban Pakistan leader, [01:00:30.480 --> 01:00:32.480] Hakeemullah Mesood. [01:00:32.480 --> 01:00:36.480] The Taliban maintains Hakeemullah wasn't there at the time of the attack. [01:00:36.480 --> 01:00:40.480] In a Freedom of Information Act request, the American Civil Liberties Union [01:00:40.480 --> 01:00:44.480] has asked the government to disclose the legal basis for its use of drones [01:00:44.480 --> 01:00:47.480] to conduct targeted killings overseas. [01:00:47.480 --> 01:00:51.480] The ACLU seeks to find out how the US ensures compliance [01:00:51.480 --> 01:00:58.480] with international laws relating to extrajudicial killings. [01:00:58.480 --> 01:01:01.480] Author Ted Raul says the US is to blame for Haiti's position [01:01:01.480 --> 01:01:04.480] as the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. [01:01:04.480 --> 01:01:08.480] In 1957, the CIA installed Papa Doc Duvalier. [01:01:08.480 --> 01:01:13.480] Duvalier's Tonton Makou goon squads murdered at least 30,000 Haitians [01:01:13.480 --> 01:01:16.480] and drove educated people to flee into exile. [01:01:16.480 --> 01:01:22.480] In 1971, the torch passed to his son, Jean-Claude Baby Doc Duvalier. [01:01:22.480 --> 01:01:27.480] As the US poured in arms as a supposed anti-communist bulwark against Cuba, [01:01:27.480 --> 01:01:31.480] Baby Docs stole up to $800 million from the National Treasury. [01:01:31.480 --> 01:01:37.480] Under US influence, Baby Doc virtually eliminated import tariffs for US goods. [01:01:37.480 --> 01:01:42.480] Soon Haiti was awash in agricultural imports dumped by American firms, [01:01:42.480 --> 01:01:46.480] a nation that had been agriculturally self-sustaining collapsed. [01:01:46.480 --> 01:01:49.480] Farms were abandoned and hundreds of thousands of farmers [01:01:49.480 --> 01:01:52.480] migrated to the slums of Port-au-Prince. [01:01:52.480 --> 01:01:58.480] The US twice deposed the democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. [01:01:58.480 --> 01:02:05.480] Raul says American companies pay their Haitian workers $0.28 an hour. [01:02:05.480 --> 01:02:10.480] Angry Haitians have used corpses to set up roadblocks in Port-au-Prince [01:02:10.480 --> 01:02:14.480] to protest the delay in emergency aid reaching the country. [01:02:14.480 --> 01:02:19.480] Barack Obama Thursday promised Haitians they would not be forgotten, [01:02:19.480 --> 01:02:24.480] offering $100 million in immediate aid and the backing of every arm of the US government. [01:02:24.480 --> 01:02:29.480] Washington is sending emergency supplies and more than 5,000 troops. [01:02:29.480 --> 01:02:33.480] However, there was little sign of any aid effort on the ground in the capital, [01:02:33.480 --> 01:02:35.480] where chaos ruled. [01:02:35.480 --> 01:02:37.480] Gunshots were heard throughout the night, [01:02:37.480 --> 01:02:40.480] and looting was commonplace as desperate survivors [01:02:40.480 --> 01:02:45.480] scrambled to find scarce supplies of food, water, and medical equipment. [01:02:45.480 --> 01:02:48.480] Gangs were also reported to be roaming the streets, [01:02:48.480 --> 01:02:53.480] spreading false rumors of a looming tidal wave so they could steal from fleeing families. [01:02:53.480 --> 01:02:57.480] Complicating the relief effort, the airport was closed for several hours, [01:02:57.480 --> 01:02:59.480] a lack of airport fuel. [01:02:59.480 --> 01:03:09.480] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network at ruleoflawradio.com, live free speech talk radio at its best. [01:03:09.480 --> 01:03:33.480] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. I read his book and it says he cares not for the unsightly. [01:03:33.480 --> 01:03:42.480] These warmongers come by that term rightly [01:03:42.480 --> 01:03:45.480] I won't pay for the war with my body [01:03:45.480 --> 01:03:49.480] Ain't gonna pay for the car with my money [01:03:49.480 --> 01:03:52.480] I won't pay for the fun with my body [01:03:52.480 --> 01:03:56.480] Their plans wicked and their logic shoddy [01:03:56.480 --> 01:03:59.480] Ain't gonna pay for the oil with my body [01:03:59.480 --> 01:04:02.480] I won't pay for the boys with my money [01:04:02.480 --> 01:04:06.480] Ain't gonna pay for the kids with my body [01:04:06.480 --> 01:04:10.480] The whole agenda smells funny [01:04:10.480 --> 01:04:16.480] I wanna fight in a war of my own [01:04:16.480 --> 01:04:23.480] That one would be less access and fraud [01:04:23.480 --> 01:04:30.480] I wanna pay for a war of my own [01:04:30.480 --> 01:04:37.480] They live in glass houses so I can watch them throw bones [01:04:37.480 --> 01:04:40.480] I wanna fight in a war I can win [01:04:40.480 --> 01:04:43.480] I can never win the one that they got me in [01:04:43.480 --> 01:04:47.480] That one I lose long before it begins [01:04:47.480 --> 01:04:50.480] I wanna pay for a war I can win [01:04:50.480 --> 01:04:57.480] When I'm fighting in my own war [01:04:57.480 --> 01:05:02.480] It's such a peaceful feeling [01:05:02.480 --> 01:05:06.480] When I'm paying for my war [01:05:06.480 --> 01:05:32.480] We're talking about how do we deal with these people who have no empathy, who have no moral ethics, no moral compunction. When they look at you, there's black holes in their eyes. How do you deal with this situation in a manner where you can protect yourself and be able to accomplish your goals? [01:05:32.480 --> 01:05:36.480] So, Bill, please explain. [01:05:36.480 --> 01:05:47.480] Okay, as I was starting to explain while we were on the break, again, for your audience's sake, I don't have an answer for that, and I wish I did, and I don't think there is a pat answer. [01:05:47.480 --> 01:06:14.480] I think that that's what the people in this movement, in the truth movement, we're all looking for, is how do we, we don't want to be violent, but how do we fight or, you know, how do we handle ourselves when we have people that are coming against us using violence, that don't mind violating our rights and don't mind stealing from us and doing things to us that we wouldn't think to do to other people. [01:06:14.480 --> 01:06:19.480] And so, again, they're at somewhat of an advantage, and we're at somewhat of a disadvantage. [01:06:19.480 --> 01:06:25.480] So I think the best we can do, you know, and I don't think the best thing to do is become violent. [01:06:25.480 --> 01:06:32.480] I think the best thing to do is become more proficient at what we're doing than they are, and there's good examples of that. [01:06:32.480 --> 01:06:44.480] Like, for example, Eddie is more proficient at defending himself against traffic tickets than the police or the attorneys or the judges are at coming after him for those types of alleged violations. [01:06:44.480 --> 01:06:51.480] And Randy's the same way in court on a lot of issues, and then you've got the Tom Cryers that actually beat the IRS. [01:06:51.480 --> 01:06:58.480] So there are individuals that have become so knowledgeable and proficient at what they do, they can beat the system. [01:06:58.480 --> 01:07:03.480] But the answer is how do most of us? Most of us don't have that level of skill and those proficiencies. [01:07:03.480 --> 01:07:05.480] So how do most of us beat it? [01:07:05.480 --> 01:07:11.480] And so what I've thought for many years is it's going to take a critical mass of people. [01:07:11.480 --> 01:07:13.480] Now, I don't know what that number is. [01:07:13.480 --> 01:07:17.480] I don't know if it's going to be 3 percent of the population, 5 percent, 20 percent. [01:07:17.480 --> 01:07:27.480] I don't know what the critical mass is, but at some point there will be a critical mass of people whose tolerance levels for the tyranny that they will accept [01:07:27.480 --> 01:07:29.480] has reached the threshold. [01:07:29.480 --> 01:07:31.480] They can't take it anymore. [01:07:31.480 --> 01:07:34.480] Now, again, I don't know what those threshold levels are for everybody. [01:07:34.480 --> 01:07:36.480] It's a different level for each individual. [01:07:36.480 --> 01:07:41.480] But when the threshold level is reached for a critical mass of people where they say, [01:07:41.480 --> 01:07:45.480] uh-uh, enough is enough, we're just not taking it anymore, [01:07:45.480 --> 01:07:51.480] and you get a certain percentage of people that are willing to take action and become more proficient [01:07:51.480 --> 01:07:55.480] and just dig their heels in the ground and say, no, I'm just not taking it anymore. [01:07:55.480 --> 01:07:58.480] When that point comes, I think the tyranny will end. [01:07:58.480 --> 01:08:01.480] But I have no idea when that point will come. [01:08:01.480 --> 01:08:05.480] But I do believe that it's getting closer and closer and closer. [01:08:05.480 --> 01:08:14.480] And I think that the shows like you all have and the successes that we've seen from the hosts and the guests on your types of shows [01:08:14.480 --> 01:08:22.480] are giving people, you know, an arsenal that they can use in going after, you know, the tyranny themselves [01:08:22.480 --> 01:08:25.480] and fighting back and just learning what to do. [01:08:25.480 --> 01:08:28.480] And you're preparing the groundwork right now. [01:08:28.480 --> 01:08:36.480] And I think within the next year we're going to hit some critical levels where people's tolerance thresholds are going to be exceeded. [01:08:36.480 --> 01:08:38.480] And you're going to see masses of people. [01:08:38.480 --> 01:08:42.480] It's going to be like a new awakening that are going to start to move into action. [01:08:42.480 --> 01:08:43.480] At least that's what I'm hoping. [01:08:43.480 --> 01:08:45.480] I think it's going to happen. [01:08:45.480 --> 01:08:47.480] But again, let me say one other thing. [01:08:47.480 --> 01:08:53.480] I believe, and this is just a personal belief, that evil is in charge of the world [01:08:53.480 --> 01:09:00.480] because I believe that the credit, quote, money, unquote, system that we're under [01:09:00.480 --> 01:09:06.480] is an evil system that has been designed and used to enslave the masses of people. [01:09:06.480 --> 01:09:08.480] And I think it's an evil scheme. [01:09:08.480 --> 01:09:09.480] It's certainly fraudulent. [01:09:09.480 --> 01:09:15.480] It's designed to take power over us and to take the only thing that we can give is our labor. [01:09:15.480 --> 01:09:20.480] And we store our labor with our money, and it's taken that away from us. [01:09:20.480 --> 01:09:24.480] And I believe it is kind of a spiritual battle of good versus evil. [01:09:24.480 --> 01:09:31.480] Evil is in control because every country in the world has a central bank that uses paper credit. [01:09:31.480 --> 01:09:32.480] They call it money. [01:09:32.480 --> 01:09:33.480] It's not money. [01:09:33.480 --> 01:09:34.480] Every country in the world. [01:09:34.480 --> 01:09:40.480] Now, they're not all under the same umbrella of the same banking system, but they all use fiat currency. [01:09:40.480 --> 01:09:43.480] And that's what's controlling the people of every country. [01:09:43.480 --> 01:09:47.480] And that's why you can't have free markets when you don't have real money. [01:09:47.480 --> 01:09:52.480] And so it is a spiritual war of good versus evil. [01:09:52.480 --> 01:09:55.480] I think at some point evil will destroy itself, [01:09:55.480 --> 01:10:00.480] but I don't know if that will be 100 years from now or 1,000 years from now or next year. [01:10:00.480 --> 01:10:04.480] I'm hoping evil will destroy itself in my lifetime so I get to witness it [01:10:04.480 --> 01:10:08.480] and be a part of the rejuvenation of the world. [01:10:08.480 --> 01:10:12.480] And I think that's what the people in the truth movement are all looking for [01:10:12.480 --> 01:10:19.480] and the way to arm ourselves is truth, truth, truth, and knowledge, knowledge, knowledge, [01:10:19.480 --> 01:10:24.480] and then a willingness to take action when the right time comes. [01:10:24.480 --> 01:10:30.480] And, you know, in doing this show and listening to the callers [01:10:30.480 --> 01:10:37.480] and looking at the kinds of things that's happening, I feel the pulse changing. [01:10:37.480 --> 01:10:43.480] I see the landscape beginning to adjust. [01:10:43.480 --> 01:10:45.480] I think it's beginning. [01:10:45.480 --> 01:10:47.480] I do, too. I do, too. [01:10:47.480 --> 01:10:49.480] And I hope that's more than just wishful thinking. [01:10:49.480 --> 01:10:54.480] I really believe it is because, you know, I think the human spirit wants to be free. [01:10:54.480 --> 01:10:56.480] Humans do not want to be enslaved. [01:10:56.480 --> 01:10:58.480] They don't want to be controlled. [01:10:58.480 --> 01:11:04.480] And at some point this threshold level of tolerance is going to be exceeded [01:11:04.480 --> 01:11:08.480] for a critical mass of people and that's when this new awakening is going to happen. [01:11:08.480 --> 01:11:11.480] I sure hope the sooner it happens the better. [01:11:11.480 --> 01:11:15.480] And that's why the more that the government abuses us, [01:11:15.480 --> 01:11:18.480] the more they raise our taxes, the more laws they put into effect, [01:11:18.480 --> 01:11:22.480] the more of this homeland security they do, at this point I'm almost happy about it. [01:11:22.480 --> 01:11:27.480] Every time they do that I feel like we're getting closer and closer to the masses rising up [01:11:27.480 --> 01:11:33.480] and saying that's it, no more. My threshold level has been exceeded. [01:11:33.480 --> 01:11:37.480] Well, I'm sure looking forward to the tipping point. [01:11:37.480 --> 01:11:39.480] Me, too. [01:11:39.480 --> 01:11:44.480] I've come to believe that that's what I'm doing here, [01:11:44.480 --> 01:11:51.480] that I've been put here in this place at this time for this reason. [01:11:51.480 --> 01:11:56.480] And frankly, I'm looking forward to what's coming as well. [01:11:56.480 --> 01:12:01.480] I think this is going to be an adjustment that the country's needed [01:12:01.480 --> 01:12:04.480] and the world is needed for a long time. [01:12:04.480 --> 01:12:08.480] And the sooner we get at it, the sooner we'll get past it [01:12:08.480 --> 01:12:11.480] and we can get back to having a decent life. [01:12:11.480 --> 01:12:16.480] Right. That's why when they keep talking about the collapse of the dollar is coming [01:12:16.480 --> 01:12:20.480] and I keep saying I hope it gets here tomorrow, people think I'm kind of nuts, [01:12:20.480 --> 01:12:23.480] but I feel like that's what we're going to have to have happen [01:12:23.480 --> 01:12:27.480] in order to right the ship and turn this thing around. [01:12:27.480 --> 01:12:30.480] And this slow kill is really killing us. [01:12:30.480 --> 01:12:36.480] And the longer things go, it just gives the powers to be a longer time [01:12:36.480 --> 01:12:39.480] to plunder the sinking ship. [01:12:39.480 --> 01:12:41.480] And we don't want the ship to sink slowly [01:12:41.480 --> 01:12:44.480] and give them time to plunder everything and organize what they're going to do. [01:12:44.480 --> 01:12:48.480] And I want it to happen so fast that they're not even totally prepared for it. [01:12:48.480 --> 01:12:52.480] That's why I'd like to see this dollar collapse happen really quickly [01:12:52.480 --> 01:12:56.480] and I know there's going to be a lot of pain and suffering, [01:12:56.480 --> 01:13:02.480] but that's what we have to do to purge the system and create something new for ourselves [01:13:02.480 --> 01:13:05.480] so we can be free again and rid of the evil system. [01:13:05.480 --> 01:13:09.480] But I'm hoping we can get people to help purge the legal system. [01:13:09.480 --> 01:13:14.480] And we can do that by hammering these judges. [01:13:14.480 --> 01:13:17.480] The real problem is always the judges. [01:13:17.480 --> 01:13:20.480] Well, yeah, there's going to have to be pioneers out there [01:13:20.480 --> 01:13:24.480] that get individual wins and show the rest of us the way. [01:13:24.480 --> 01:13:26.480] You know, that's true. [01:13:26.480 --> 01:13:31.480] But again, I don't think the masses aren't ready to do what you guys do yet, [01:13:31.480 --> 01:13:36.480] you know, what you do in Court Randy, what Eddie does and the Tom Cryers of the world. [01:13:36.480 --> 01:13:39.480] There are certain people out there that are the pioneers [01:13:39.480 --> 01:13:41.480] that have set the table for everybody else, [01:13:41.480 --> 01:13:46.480] but I don't think the masses of people are not there yet. [01:13:46.480 --> 01:13:53.480] But, you know, again, if we have enough people that are suffering, [01:13:53.480 --> 01:13:57.480] they may not even have to do that because some of these judges [01:13:57.480 --> 01:14:02.480] and these policemen and these military people, they've got families too. [01:14:02.480 --> 01:14:04.480] They're not going to want to see their own family members suffer, [01:14:04.480 --> 01:14:06.480] their brothers and sisters and their cousins. [01:14:06.480 --> 01:14:12.480] When the system gets so, you know, intrusive and so tyrannical, [01:14:12.480 --> 01:14:17.480] we may get some of the people that are now protecting the system [01:14:17.480 --> 01:14:19.480] to even turn over to our side very quickly, [01:14:19.480 --> 01:14:22.480] and things may start to happen very quickly in our favor [01:14:22.480 --> 01:14:26.480] where it doesn't even all have to be done in court. [01:14:26.480 --> 01:14:28.480] I agree. [01:14:28.480 --> 01:14:31.480] I think we're moving toward that tipping point. [01:14:31.480 --> 01:14:35.480] I've talked to a number of policemen who are frankly terrified [01:14:35.480 --> 01:14:39.480] of how they see things going, [01:14:39.480 --> 01:14:46.480] and I don't think that the powers that be are going to be able to control them [01:14:46.480 --> 01:14:49.480] because of the nature of this country. [01:14:49.480 --> 01:14:51.480] It's inbred into us. [01:14:51.480 --> 01:14:55.480] We were not raised to be sheep and toadies. [01:14:55.480 --> 01:14:57.480] We were raised to be free men. [01:14:57.480 --> 01:14:59.480] It's in our culture, [01:14:59.480 --> 01:15:03.480] and I think we're close to the tipping point. [01:15:03.480 --> 01:15:06.480] We just need to get more people to stand up, [01:15:06.480 --> 01:15:12.480] and as things get worse, that's going to happen, and this will go viral. [01:15:12.480 --> 01:15:15.480] Again, one thing that everybody can do. [01:15:15.480 --> 01:15:19.480] You know, everybody can't go to court and challenge a judge. [01:15:19.480 --> 01:15:22.480] They're just not prepared for it, or they might, you know, for whatever reason, [01:15:22.480 --> 01:15:25.480] everybody can't do that, but if everybody went out tomorrow [01:15:25.480 --> 01:15:28.480] and bought one ounce of silver, I mean, even that would help. [01:15:28.480 --> 01:15:33.480] We've got to do something to show the worthlessness of the paper currency, [01:15:33.480 --> 01:15:38.480] and I always go back to the money because it doesn't matter what the argument is, [01:15:38.480 --> 01:15:40.480] what the beef is with government. [01:15:40.480 --> 01:15:45.480] They can't do any of the stuff they do without that fiat currency system, [01:15:45.480 --> 01:15:47.480] without that credit. [01:15:47.480 --> 01:15:50.480] I know this is off the topic we were on, [01:15:50.480 --> 01:15:55.480] but I've been meaning to address this with you, Bill. [01:15:55.480 --> 01:16:04.480] Someone sent me an email of a copy of a House bill in Georgia, [01:16:04.480 --> 01:16:11.480] and what it proposed was is that the state of Georgia adopt gold and silver [01:16:11.480 --> 01:16:15.480] as legal tender for the state of Georgia [01:16:15.480 --> 01:16:22.480] and assess its value based on the value of the silver or gold in the coin [01:16:22.480 --> 01:16:26.480] at the current time. [01:16:26.480 --> 01:16:33.480] I hadn't considered the prospect of the states backing out of the dollar. [01:16:33.480 --> 01:16:40.480] If our states adopted those provisions, the feds would be impotent. [01:16:40.480 --> 01:16:43.480] Right. [01:16:43.480 --> 01:16:45.480] Okay, you guys, I hear the music coming. [01:16:45.480 --> 01:16:49.480] Listen, I'm going to hang up and let some other callers get in if that's okay. [01:16:49.480 --> 01:16:50.480] Thank you, Dr. Reed. [01:16:50.480 --> 01:16:51.480] Thank you, Bill. [01:16:51.480 --> 01:16:52.480] Thanks for having me. [01:16:52.480 --> 01:16:53.480] I'll be listening to the rest of the show. [01:16:53.480 --> 01:16:54.480] Take care. [01:16:54.480 --> 01:16:55.480] Okay. [01:16:55.480 --> 01:17:00.480] We'll be right back on the other side. [01:17:00.480 --> 01:17:01.480] Hello, Austin. [01:17:01.480 --> 01:17:03.480] My name is Harlan Dietrich, owner of Brave New Books, [01:17:03.480 --> 01:17:05.480] a local independent bookstore here in town. [01:17:05.480 --> 01:17:09.480] Many of you are familiar with the bookstore and have attended some of our events. [01:17:09.480 --> 01:17:13.480] We've been proud to host speakers like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Jim Mars, [01:17:13.480 --> 01:17:15.480] Catherine Albert, Webster Carpley, G. Edward Griffin, [01:17:15.480 --> 01:17:18.480] and many other heroic figures in the Patriot Movement. [01:17:18.480 --> 01:17:21.480] But now Brave New Books needs your help. [01:17:21.480 --> 01:17:23.480] In order to continue to provide a space for these events [01:17:23.480 --> 01:17:26.480] and be an outlet for hard-to-find materials, [01:17:26.480 --> 01:17:29.480] we're going to need you, Austin, to help spread the word about the bookstore. [01:17:29.480 --> 01:17:33.480] Please tell your friends and family about the wide variety of materials we offer. [01:17:33.480 --> 01:17:37.480] We also have DVD duplication capabilities for all you activists. [01:17:37.480 --> 01:17:41.480] Also, if you haven't visited us yet, please come down and show your support. [01:17:41.480 --> 01:17:44.480] It is so easy to support the big corporate chain stores [01:17:44.480 --> 01:17:46.480] that do nothing to further our message. [01:17:46.480 --> 01:17:48.480] Remember, you vote with your dollars. [01:17:48.480 --> 01:17:50.480] We're counting on you, Austin. [01:17:50.480 --> 01:17:54.480] If you need any information, please call 512-480-2503 [01:17:54.480 --> 01:17:57.480] or visit us at 1904 Guadalupe Street. [01:17:57.480 --> 01:18:07.480] Thank you, everyone. [01:18:27.480 --> 01:18:36.480] Okay, we are going to your call. [01:18:36.480 --> 01:18:41.480] We've got Mike from Connecticut. [01:18:41.480 --> 01:18:42.480] Mike, thanks for calling in. [01:18:42.480 --> 01:18:44.480] What's on your mind? [01:18:44.480 --> 01:18:47.480] Hey, guys, how are you doing tonight? [01:18:47.480 --> 01:18:48.480] Can you hear me? [01:18:48.480 --> 01:18:50.480] Yes, good. Go ahead. [01:18:50.480 --> 01:18:52.480] Okay, good. Perfect timing. [01:18:52.480 --> 01:18:54.480] I have a story about a psycho cop, [01:18:54.480 --> 01:18:58.480] and I have about four questions related to the psycho cop. [01:18:58.480 --> 01:19:00.480] All right. [01:19:00.480 --> 01:19:02.480] If you remember, I called you about a month ago, [01:19:02.480 --> 01:19:06.480] and I told you about a friend of mine who had his house raided, [01:19:06.480 --> 01:19:10.480] and the local police and the ATF were at the house, [01:19:10.480 --> 01:19:15.480] but they were executing a search warrant that was signed by a local judge. [01:19:15.480 --> 01:19:19.480] And the search warrant did not authorize the federal officers on the premises, [01:19:19.480 --> 01:19:22.480] but they were there anyway. [01:19:22.480 --> 01:19:27.480] And he was arrested and charged on state charges. [01:19:27.480 --> 01:19:30.480] He was bonded out. [01:19:30.480 --> 01:19:35.480] And then a week later, he was arrested on a federal warrant. [01:19:35.480 --> 01:19:41.480] And what happened was a local narcotics officer went to a federal judge [01:19:41.480 --> 01:19:44.480] and made a federal criminal complaint. [01:19:44.480 --> 01:19:52.480] And allegedly there was a warrant signed, and the same narcotics officer found him on the street [01:19:52.480 --> 01:19:56.480] and, you know, executed the warrant. [01:19:56.480 --> 01:20:02.480] The officer tackled, I guess there was two of them, they tackled him to the ground, [01:20:02.480 --> 01:20:04.480] and they beat the hell out of him. [01:20:04.480 --> 01:20:11.480] They stomped on his back, and they kicked him in the face, and he was bleeding so bad. [01:20:11.480 --> 01:20:17.480] They took him into custody, and he was bleeding so bad that they had to take him to the hospital. [01:20:17.480 --> 01:20:23.480] And he ended up getting 12 stitches in his face and hair and everything. [01:20:23.480 --> 01:20:31.480] And right now he's sitting in federal custody on a federal crime. [01:20:31.480 --> 01:20:34.480] So I guess my question, I've got like four questions, [01:20:34.480 --> 01:20:40.480] but I know you mentioned like pulling a personnel file on a police officer in the past. [01:20:40.480 --> 01:20:43.480] I was wondering, how do I go about that? [01:20:43.480 --> 01:20:49.480] And what if they refuse my request to use personnel file? [01:20:49.480 --> 01:20:56.480] It's a FOIA request, and they have to have a valid reason to deny it. [01:20:56.480 --> 01:21:00.480] It has to be one of the records specifically excluded under FOIA for them to deny it. [01:21:00.480 --> 01:21:06.480] And whether or not a cop has been charged or accused of criminal activity prior [01:21:06.480 --> 01:21:12.480] is not something they can withhold. [01:21:12.480 --> 01:21:22.480] Generally on a police officer, you can't get his home address or a photograph or medical records. [01:21:22.480 --> 01:21:24.480] But that's it. [01:21:24.480 --> 01:21:27.480] The rest of it is generally public. [01:21:27.480 --> 01:21:34.480] Everything to do with his public affairs, with his professional affairs, is public. [01:21:34.480 --> 01:21:36.480] Or his training records if he's DPS. [01:21:36.480 --> 01:21:38.480] They like to hide that too. [01:21:38.480 --> 01:21:42.480] What do I do if they deny me? [01:21:42.480 --> 01:21:47.480] It depends on how you look at the law. [01:21:47.480 --> 01:21:51.480] They will claim an exclusion, and you check the exclusion. [01:21:51.480 --> 01:21:57.480] And if it doesn't fit, then you file a complaint with a local magistrate, a federal magistrate. [01:21:57.480 --> 01:22:04.480] Because I'm still trying to get the original search warrant because they refused to give it to me. [01:22:04.480 --> 01:22:09.480] The police station did, and it's not in the FOIA file. [01:22:09.480 --> 01:22:14.480] You know, I have a friend who's a police officer, and I asked him about this. [01:22:14.480 --> 01:22:16.480] He's a medical officer. [01:22:16.480 --> 01:22:20.480] He told me he's a really bad guy, and he said a lot of people are in the force just to want to deal with this [01:22:20.480 --> 01:22:27.480] the way he beats up on people, and he always gets away with it for some reason. [01:22:27.480 --> 01:22:29.480] I don't know why. [01:22:29.480 --> 01:22:36.480] So my other question is in regard to the arrest affidavit. [01:22:36.480 --> 01:22:43.480] This narcotics officer, he saw an affidavit, and it was based on a police report. [01:22:43.480 --> 01:22:49.480] And nothing on it was his knowledge for the federal warrant. [01:22:49.480 --> 01:22:51.480] And he didn't sign it. [01:22:51.480 --> 01:22:53.480] He can do that. [01:22:53.480 --> 01:22:59.480] A criminal complaint does not have to be based on personal knowledge. [01:22:59.480 --> 01:23:03.480] It can be based on hearsay. [01:23:03.480 --> 01:23:11.480] Now, the probable cause cannot be based on, I'm sorry, probable cause can be. [01:23:11.480 --> 01:23:18.480] The magistrate can find probable cause based on hearsay. [01:23:18.480 --> 01:23:21.480] It's sufficient to issue the warrant. [01:23:21.480 --> 01:23:30.480] But at trial on the issues, probable cause cannot be, can't be brought into court. [01:23:30.480 --> 01:23:35.480] I'm sorry, hearsay can't be brought into court. [01:23:35.480 --> 01:23:42.480] And does he have to sign the arrest, the affidavit for the arrest warrant? [01:23:42.480 --> 01:23:43.480] Someone does. [01:23:43.480 --> 01:23:49.480] He has to sign a verified affidavit and the complaint, the magistrate will sign the warrant. [01:23:49.480 --> 01:23:52.480] And yes, the warrant must be signed. [01:23:52.480 --> 01:23:53.480] Okay. [01:23:53.480 --> 01:23:57.480] Now, is there a federal database on PACER? [01:23:57.480 --> 01:24:02.480] And I can't seem to see the warrant on PACER. [01:24:02.480 --> 01:24:04.480] Is that something they do? [01:24:04.480 --> 01:24:06.480] They won't show you the warrant? [01:24:06.480 --> 01:24:07.480] Yes, it should be. [01:24:07.480 --> 01:24:11.480] As soon as a warrant is executed, it should be available. [01:24:11.480 --> 01:24:14.480] It's not available. [01:24:14.480 --> 01:24:18.480] Can I do a FOIA request for the warrant? [01:24:18.480 --> 01:24:19.480] Oh, no. [01:24:19.480 --> 01:24:21.480] Warrant doesn't fall under freedom of information. [01:24:21.480 --> 01:24:23.480] It falls under public court. [01:24:23.480 --> 01:24:27.480] You should be able to go to the court or just look on PACER. [01:24:27.480 --> 01:24:31.480] You should find it on PACER. [01:24:31.480 --> 01:24:33.480] Okay. [01:24:33.480 --> 01:24:38.480] What about, like, surveillance footage from, like, the police station? [01:24:38.480 --> 01:24:40.480] That's a different animal. [01:24:40.480 --> 01:24:50.480] They will call that evidence in an ongoing criminal investigation. [01:24:50.480 --> 01:24:56.480] You're not likely to get that. [01:24:56.480 --> 01:25:06.480] Also, you know, they had him, his attorney, his public defender, waived his, I guess, [01:25:06.480 --> 01:25:14.480] a right to an indictment within 30 days when you're in custody, federal custody. [01:25:14.480 --> 01:25:18.480] I'm not sure exactly what the time limit is in federal custody. [01:25:18.480 --> 01:25:20.480] I haven't looked that up. [01:25:20.480 --> 01:25:21.480] Okay, I think it's 30 days. [01:25:21.480 --> 01:25:24.480] Has he turned down a public defender? [01:25:24.480 --> 01:25:26.480] No, he took the public defender. [01:25:26.480 --> 01:25:27.480] Okay. [01:25:27.480 --> 01:25:32.480] First thing he needs to do is find a reason to file a bar grievance against the public defender. [01:25:32.480 --> 01:25:33.480] Yeah. [01:25:33.480 --> 01:25:38.480] Or let the public defender know that he's going to do that at the drop of a hat. [01:25:38.480 --> 01:25:41.480] That way he can get control of his own attorney. [01:25:41.480 --> 01:25:51.480] His public defender waived the probable cause here and he'll write the indictment within 30 days. [01:25:51.480 --> 01:25:53.480] The attorney had him waived that? [01:25:53.480 --> 01:25:56.480] Yeah, and he advised him to waive it. [01:25:56.480 --> 01:26:05.480] He can file a bar grievance against the attorney for that and rescind the waiver. [01:26:05.480 --> 01:26:07.480] Oh, he can rescind the waiver? [01:26:07.480 --> 01:26:08.480] I didn't know that. [01:26:08.480 --> 01:26:09.480] Sure he can. [01:26:09.480 --> 01:26:10.480] Okay. [01:26:10.480 --> 01:26:13.480] Bad advice, mistake. [01:26:13.480 --> 01:26:19.480] You signed it by mistake and rescind your signature and demand that they prove up their charges. [01:26:19.480 --> 01:26:27.480] What your public offender did was get him to agree to set in jail until they could squeeze a deal out of him. [01:26:27.480 --> 01:26:28.480] All right. [01:26:28.480 --> 01:26:30.480] Well, that's basically what they're doing. [01:26:30.480 --> 01:26:44.480] So file a bar grievance against the attorney for giving wrong advice and rescind his waiver of indictment and waiver of time for an indictment. [01:26:44.480 --> 01:26:47.480] Why on earth would you give them free time? [01:26:47.480 --> 01:26:49.480] That's what I said. [01:26:49.480 --> 01:27:02.480] Like the complaint, for instance, that has to be signed by the officer who made the complaint and didn't sign it. [01:27:02.480 --> 01:27:06.480] If it's not signed, it's not a complaint. [01:27:06.480 --> 01:27:11.480] So then he's being unlawfully held then? [01:27:11.480 --> 01:27:15.480] That should get rid of habeas corpus. [01:27:15.480 --> 01:27:16.480] Okay. [01:27:16.480 --> 01:27:20.480] But they can always go back and amend their defects. [01:27:20.480 --> 01:27:28.480] He should file a habeas corpus and claiming that no complaint, no subject matter jurisdiction of the court. [01:27:28.480 --> 01:27:34.480] There has to be a valid complaint and an unsigned complaint is not valid. [01:27:34.480 --> 01:27:35.480] Okay. [01:27:35.480 --> 01:27:36.480] One more thing. [01:27:36.480 --> 01:27:38.480] Back to the original search warrant. [01:27:38.480 --> 01:27:42.480] I'm going to go back to the police station and I'm going to ask for it again. [01:27:42.480 --> 01:27:47.480] Okay, you go to the federal magistrate who issued it. [01:27:47.480 --> 01:27:50.480] Well, no, it was actually a local search warrant. [01:27:50.480 --> 01:27:55.480] Then go to the court, the judge who issued it. [01:27:55.480 --> 01:27:57.480] The judge? [01:27:57.480 --> 01:28:01.480] Yes, the judge is the one that's supposed to make it public. [01:28:01.480 --> 01:28:05.480] Police don't keep those documents. [01:28:05.480 --> 01:28:08.480] Well, they may, but they don't officially have the document. [01:28:08.480 --> 01:28:16.480] The court officially has the document and they're the ones that have a duty to make it public. [01:28:16.480 --> 01:28:18.480] Okay. [01:28:18.480 --> 01:28:25.480] But, you know, it's weird because they didn't charge him with resisting arrest or anything like that like they usually do when they beat the heck out of people. [01:28:25.480 --> 01:28:27.480] They just put them in custody. [01:28:27.480 --> 01:28:30.480] Yeah, they must not expect him to do anything about it. [01:28:30.480 --> 01:28:33.480] Well, they figure he's going to be away for a few years. [01:28:33.480 --> 01:28:34.480] Yeah. [01:28:34.480 --> 01:28:46.480] Okay, well, let's go out there. [01:28:46.480 --> 01:28:50.480] Okay, call lines are open and they're kind of empty right now. [01:28:50.480 --> 01:29:00.480] We were talking earlier about how to deal with the judges and we kind of got left off the point that led off the subject. [01:29:00.480 --> 01:29:08.480] We need to get real familiar with judicial conduct complaints and bar grievances. [01:29:08.480 --> 01:29:10.480] They are great fun. [01:29:10.480 --> 01:29:16.480] They're a great source of entertainment and they will make the judges and the prosecutors crazy. [01:29:16.480 --> 01:29:29.480] And tort letters to the mayors and to the county commissioner's court telling them how bad you're going to sue them and how you're going to get their bass boats. [01:29:29.480 --> 01:29:31.480] We need to start stirring the pot. [01:29:31.480 --> 01:29:37.480] As soon as we come back from break, we will talk about stirring the pot. [01:29:37.480 --> 01:29:43.480] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig, Lula Law. [01:29:43.480 --> 01:29:45.480] We'll be back on the other side. [01:29:45.480 --> 01:29:51.480] The phone lines are open, 512-646-1984. [01:29:51.480 --> 01:29:59.480] We'll be right back. [01:30:21.480 --> 01:30:24.480] I'm contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:30:24.480 --> 01:30:26.480] How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:30:26.480 --> 01:30:28.480] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:30:28.480 --> 01:30:33.480] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:30:33.480 --> 01:30:38.480] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:30:38.480 --> 01:30:40.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:30:40.480 --> 01:30:49.480] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:30:49.480 --> 01:31:00.480] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email michaelmears at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:31:19.480 --> 01:31:29.480] The wicked come with temptations. [01:31:29.480 --> 01:31:34.480] They're trying to buy the whole place. [01:31:34.480 --> 01:31:40.480] They want to poison the nation. [01:31:40.480 --> 01:31:45.480] Because they've fallen from grace. [01:31:45.480 --> 01:31:52.480] I will not drink from that cup. [01:31:52.480 --> 01:31:58.480] I just can't act out of way. [01:31:58.480 --> 01:32:03.480] They've got this problem of dreaming up. [01:32:03.480 --> 01:32:11.480] It won't be the same come what may. [01:32:11.480 --> 01:32:20.480] Okay, we are going to how to deal with these judges. [01:32:20.480 --> 01:32:21.480] Randy? [01:32:21.480 --> 01:32:26.480] Primarily dealing with judges, they're the patsies. [01:32:26.480 --> 01:32:31.480] They're really more sensitive to our complaints and our actions than anyone else. [01:32:31.480 --> 01:32:41.480] And the thing about the sociopathic police officer on the street, that is no place to try to argue our case. [01:32:41.480 --> 01:32:45.480] That is not the guy to try to deal with. [01:32:45.480 --> 01:32:48.480] You take him on with the judge. [01:32:48.480 --> 01:32:55.480] And when the judge tries to protect the policeman, then you go after the judge. [01:32:55.480 --> 01:33:05.480] Once you go after the judge, if you do it legally and do it with proper complaints, the judge can't even complain about it. [01:33:05.480 --> 01:33:07.480] He can't say a word about it. [01:33:07.480 --> 01:33:15.480] This is what I like about judicial conduct complaints and bar grievances. [01:33:15.480 --> 01:33:26.480] The guy earlier about his public defender, first thing you want to do is kick your public defender in the pants. [01:33:26.480 --> 01:33:30.480] He can't even complain to you about kicking him in the pants. [01:33:30.480 --> 01:33:35.480] Because if he says anything to you about the bar grievance, you'll file one against him for that. [01:33:35.480 --> 01:33:41.480] So you beat the crap out of him and he can't even object about it. [01:33:41.480 --> 01:33:43.480] And the judge is the same way. [01:33:43.480 --> 01:33:50.480] Once you file against him, he can't argue with you, he can't reason with you, he can't deal with you at all. [01:33:50.480 --> 01:33:54.480] You just get to beat him up and there's nothing he can do about it. [01:33:54.480 --> 01:33:56.480] And we really need to start doing that. [01:33:56.480 --> 01:34:04.480] And one thing, especially the lower level judges, they are terrified of the judicial conduct commission. [01:34:04.480 --> 01:34:12.480] Judicial conduct commission is real reluctant to go after a higher level judge. [01:34:12.480 --> 01:34:19.480] So they make themselves look as if they're actually doing something by hammering these JPs, [01:34:19.480 --> 01:34:23.480] especially municipal judges because they're hired. [01:34:23.480 --> 01:34:27.480] JPs are elected officials, they're a little more difficult to go after. [01:34:27.480 --> 01:34:31.480] But municipal judges, they're cannon fodder. [01:34:31.480 --> 01:34:35.480] So let's help turn some of them into cannon fodder. [01:34:35.480 --> 01:34:44.480] Let's give them reason to pay attention to us because they've come to realize we can end their careers. [01:34:44.480 --> 01:34:49.480] We have Doug from Texas on, don't want to make him wait too long. [01:34:49.480 --> 01:34:50.480] Hello, Doug, you there? [01:34:50.480 --> 01:34:52.480] Yeah, I'm here. [01:34:52.480 --> 01:34:54.480] Do you have a question or comment? [01:34:54.480 --> 01:34:57.480] Yeah, I've got a question. [01:34:57.480 --> 01:35:04.480] I had this guy that hit and run me and I got his license plate and everything. [01:35:04.480 --> 01:35:13.480] And they went and talked to him and he gave the police officer a phony insurance card number. [01:35:13.480 --> 01:35:16.480] And I can't get the police to do anything. [01:35:16.480 --> 01:35:18.480] This happened in July. [01:35:18.480 --> 01:35:28.480] And so I sent them a certified letter and asked them why they haven't done anything about this in the mail. [01:35:28.480 --> 01:35:31.480] And I was wondering about what should I do next? [01:35:31.480 --> 01:35:38.480] Should I go to the Sheriff's Department and request a grand jury investigation of this officer? [01:35:38.480 --> 01:35:41.480] No, no, no, no, not the Sheriff's Department. [01:35:41.480 --> 01:35:46.480] You file a criminal complaint with some magistrate. [01:35:46.480 --> 01:35:49.480] You need to make up a criminal affidavit. [01:35:49.480 --> 01:35:52.480] Complaining to the police is a waste of time. [01:35:52.480 --> 01:35:53.480] It is. [01:35:53.480 --> 01:35:58.480] Yeah, the last thing they want to mess with is a minor fender bend. [01:35:58.480 --> 01:36:05.480] Unless, of course, you do it in Nacogdoches County after I get elected. [01:36:05.480 --> 01:36:07.480] But the police aren't going to mess with it. [01:36:07.480 --> 01:36:08.480] They don't care. [01:36:08.480 --> 01:36:12.480] And the police don't have the duty to protect you. [01:36:12.480 --> 01:36:15.480] If it was me or somebody else that I know or something, they hit and run someone, [01:36:15.480 --> 01:36:21.480] they would have been out there giving them tickets and then they would have got another ticket for no insurance [01:36:21.480 --> 01:36:26.480] and lying about their insurance card and all that and been in jail fighting. [01:36:26.480 --> 01:36:31.480] Wait a minute. You can take those complaints to the justice of the peace yourself. [01:36:31.480 --> 01:36:36.480] A policeman has no special authority to file criminal complaints. [01:36:36.480 --> 01:36:39.480] He has the exact same authority that you do. [01:36:39.480 --> 01:36:43.480] So take criminal complaints to the justice of the peace. [01:36:43.480 --> 01:36:50.480] Make your argument to the justice and ask the justice to issue the issue warrants for him. [01:36:50.480 --> 01:36:55.480] I wouldn't talk to the city attorney's office. [01:36:55.480 --> 01:36:57.480] No, no, no. Don't talk to city attorneys. [01:36:57.480 --> 01:36:59.480] They are worthless. [01:36:59.480 --> 01:37:02.480] The city attorney couldn't do anything about it anyway. [01:37:02.480 --> 01:37:05.480] You expect these people to care. [01:37:05.480 --> 01:37:09.480] They don't care. [01:37:09.480 --> 01:37:11.480] They simply don't care. [01:37:11.480 --> 01:37:14.480] They've got so much work to do, they don't want more work. [01:37:14.480 --> 01:37:18.480] Yes, but one of the things about those sociopaths we were talking about earlier, [01:37:18.480 --> 01:37:23.480] they can lie without any conscience or issue right to your face. [01:37:23.480 --> 01:37:26.480] They can look concerned, but it's a feigned concern. [01:37:26.480 --> 01:37:28.480] Let's analyze for a moment. [01:37:28.480 --> 01:37:30.480] Who does the officer work for? [01:37:30.480 --> 01:37:33.480] Now, who does the city attorney work for? [01:37:33.480 --> 01:37:36.480] Is this hand going to bite its own fingers? [01:37:36.480 --> 01:37:39.480] No, not going to happen. [01:37:39.480 --> 01:37:43.480] If it bites off a finger, it can't steal as much money out of your pocket, right? [01:37:43.480 --> 01:37:44.480] Right. [01:37:44.480 --> 01:37:48.480] You make up a criminal complaint, [01:37:48.480 --> 01:37:55.480] and you can look on my website, jurisimprudence.com under the top frog on the right, [01:37:55.480 --> 01:38:01.480] and then look in its documents and research and look in the blanks folder. [01:38:01.480 --> 01:38:03.480] There will be a blank criminal complaint. [01:38:03.480 --> 01:38:06.480] Just download that and print it and fill it in. [01:38:06.480 --> 01:38:11.480] Take it to a notary, take it to the bank, have them notarize it, and go give it to the judge. [01:38:11.480 --> 01:38:16.480] And when the judge refuses to take it, you make up one against the judge. [01:38:16.480 --> 01:38:19.480] And you take that to the prosecutor. [01:38:19.480 --> 01:38:22.480] And you don't ask the prosecutor. [01:38:22.480 --> 01:38:25.480] You say, here, I have this for you. [01:38:25.480 --> 01:38:28.480] You give him a criminal complaint against the judge, [01:38:28.480 --> 01:38:31.480] and he's likely to tell you, well, I'm not going to do anything with that. [01:38:31.480 --> 01:38:34.480] And you tell him you don't care what he does with it. [01:38:34.480 --> 01:38:40.480] Because if I don't hear that this judge was indicted in the next month, [01:38:40.480 --> 01:38:44.480] then I'll go to the grand jury and file against you, so I don't care what you do. [01:38:44.480 --> 01:38:47.480] So then when you don't hear from the grand jury, [01:38:47.480 --> 01:38:53.480] you file a criminal complaint against the little snot-nosed municipal attorney [01:38:53.480 --> 01:38:58.480] and a bar grievance against both the judge and the attorney. [01:38:58.480 --> 01:39:01.480] Make it hot for them. [01:39:01.480 --> 01:39:04.480] It seems like they're just hiding a bunch of stuff there. [01:39:04.480 --> 01:39:07.480] Of course they are. They don't want to work. [01:39:07.480 --> 01:39:09.480] They're asking them to work. [01:39:09.480 --> 01:39:11.480] They don't want to bother. [01:39:11.480 --> 01:39:14.480] They're not there to sit there and let people come in and make deals. [01:39:14.480 --> 01:39:16.480] You're actually asking them to work. [01:39:16.480 --> 01:39:19.480] But you're the sovereign. [01:39:19.480 --> 01:39:23.480] It's your duty to make sure they do their work. [01:39:23.480 --> 01:39:28.480] You start kicking them in their teeth, their perspective will change. [01:39:28.480 --> 01:39:33.480] I talked to the city attorney, and she said, well, they have to file the charges. [01:39:33.480 --> 01:39:38.480] And I said, well, and she said, well, let me check into it, [01:39:38.480 --> 01:39:40.480] and then I ain't heard nothing. [01:39:40.480 --> 01:39:42.480] You're not going to hear from them. [01:39:42.480 --> 01:39:46.480] So that's not the way to do it. That's complaining. [01:39:46.480 --> 01:39:51.480] If you go to the city attorney or if you go to the police department, that's complaining. [01:39:51.480 --> 01:39:55.480] That's different than filing a criminal complaint. [01:39:55.480 --> 01:40:00.480] A criminal complaint handed to a magistrate, [01:40:00.480 --> 01:40:05.480] any judge invokes the judge's duty. [01:40:05.480 --> 01:40:09.480] You give the judge the complaint, and you don't care what he does with it. [01:40:09.480 --> 01:40:11.480] He doesn't act on it. [01:40:11.480 --> 01:40:14.480] You just walk up the line, start filing against them. [01:40:14.480 --> 01:40:17.480] Then you go to the prosecutor. [01:40:17.480 --> 01:40:24.480] The reason you do the judge first is that a prosecuting attorney [01:40:24.480 --> 01:40:31.480] has no real statutory duty to take a complaint that's given to him, [01:40:31.480 --> 01:40:36.480] because nowhere in law is a complaint directed to a prosecuting attorney. [01:40:36.480 --> 01:40:41.480] All complaints are directed to some magistrate. [01:40:41.480 --> 01:40:42.480] I said that. [01:40:42.480 --> 01:40:50.480] Actually, in one circumstance, the prosecutor has a statutory duty [01:40:50.480 --> 01:40:55.480] when the complaint is against a public official. [01:40:55.480 --> 01:41:00.480] So you go to the JP first and get the JP to refuse to see it. [01:41:00.480 --> 01:41:02.480] And this is how you do that. [01:41:02.480 --> 01:41:09.480] Just call the court and ask when they're going to have pretrial hearings. [01:41:09.480 --> 01:41:15.480] Go down while the judge is holding pretrial hearings and go up to the bailiff [01:41:15.480 --> 01:41:20.480] and tell the bailiff to tell the judge what your name is first. [01:41:20.480 --> 01:41:22.480] You don't want him asking you questions. [01:41:22.480 --> 01:41:28.480] My name is tell the judge I have business with the court. [01:41:28.480 --> 01:41:32.480] And the bailiff will say, may I tell the judge in a true business? [01:41:32.480 --> 01:41:35.480] And you can do it two ways. [01:41:35.480 --> 01:41:38.480] My favorite one is, no, you may not. [01:41:38.480 --> 01:41:42.480] I have business with the court, and it's none of yours. [01:41:42.480 --> 01:41:49.480] The other method is hand him this verified criminal affidavit. [01:41:49.480 --> 01:41:51.480] Here, give this to him. [01:41:51.480 --> 01:41:56.480] Once he puts that in front of the judge and the judge looks at it, [01:41:56.480 --> 01:41:59.480] the judge is bound under law. [01:41:59.480 --> 01:42:05.480] Now he just stopped being a judge, he became a magistrate, and he has a duty. [01:42:05.480 --> 01:42:08.480] He's going to refuse to perform that duty. [01:42:08.480 --> 01:42:14.480] That's a Class A misdemeanor in Texas, official oppression, 3903 penal code. [01:42:14.480 --> 01:42:19.480] You go to the, you make up another complaint against the judge [01:42:19.480 --> 01:42:23.480] and take it to the prosecutor attorney. [01:42:23.480 --> 01:42:29.480] Now, you haven't given the prosecutor a complaint against a citizen. [01:42:29.480 --> 01:42:33.480] You've given him a complaint against a public official. [01:42:33.480 --> 01:42:39.480] And in that case, he has an absolute duty under Article 2.03, [01:42:39.480 --> 01:42:44.480] Code of Criminal Procedure, to submit the complaint to the grand jury, [01:42:44.480 --> 01:42:47.480] which he will not do. [01:42:47.480 --> 01:42:48.480] He won't. [01:42:48.480 --> 01:42:54.480] That's obstruction of justice and tampering with government document, [01:42:54.480 --> 01:42:57.480] official oppression. [01:42:57.480 --> 01:43:01.480] Make up complaints against him and bar grievance against him. [01:43:01.480 --> 01:43:05.480] File the criminal, file those complaints with the county attorney. [01:43:05.480 --> 01:43:10.480] I like to just take them back to another judge, like I'd go to a county judge with it. [01:43:10.480 --> 01:43:12.480] And when the county judge refused to act, [01:43:12.480 --> 01:43:16.480] I'd go to the county attorney with complaints against the county judge. [01:43:16.480 --> 01:43:19.480] And from the county attorney to a district judge, [01:43:19.480 --> 01:43:25.480] a district judge to the district attorney, and from there to the grand jury. [01:43:25.480 --> 01:43:28.480] You just walk right up the line with it. [01:43:28.480 --> 01:43:32.480] And each one gets more serious. [01:43:32.480 --> 01:43:37.480] And all the while, that municipal judge, that guy in the background, [01:43:37.480 --> 01:43:39.480] is causing all this problem. [01:43:39.480 --> 01:43:42.480] Sooner or later, he's going to get it. [01:43:42.480 --> 01:43:46.480] I just thought it was so one, you know. [01:43:46.480 --> 01:43:47.480] Okay, hold on. [01:43:47.480 --> 01:43:48.480] We're about to go to break. [01:43:48.480 --> 01:43:50.480] Yeah, this is always this way. [01:43:50.480 --> 01:43:53.480] If we don't force them to do their jobs, they won't do their jobs. [01:43:53.480 --> 01:43:56.480] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, David Stevens, Eddie Craig, [01:43:56.480 --> 01:43:57.480] rule of law. [01:43:57.480 --> 01:44:06.480] We'll be right back. [01:44:06.480 --> 01:44:11.480] Aerial spring, chemtrails, the modified atmosphere, [01:44:11.480 --> 01:44:15.480] heavy metals and pesticides, carcinogens and chemical fibers [01:44:15.480 --> 01:44:18.480] all falling from the sky. [01:44:18.480 --> 01:44:21.480] You have a choice to keep your body clean. [01:44:21.480 --> 01:44:26.480] Detoxify with micro plant powder from hempusa.org [01:44:26.480 --> 01:44:31.480] or call 908-691-2608. [01:44:31.480 --> 01:44:35.480] It's odorless and tasteless and used in any liquid or food. [01:44:35.480 --> 01:44:39.480] Protect your family now with micro plant powder. [01:44:39.480 --> 01:44:43.480] Stop cleaning out heavy metals, parasites and toxins. [01:44:43.480 --> 01:44:48.480] Order it now for daily intake and stock it now for long-term storage. [01:44:48.480 --> 01:45:00.480] Visit hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608 today. [01:45:00.480 --> 01:45:09.480] When the karma is lurking around the karma, you better watch your head. [01:45:09.480 --> 01:45:14.480] Tell me, Jerry, is there a good and good in front of you? [01:45:14.480 --> 01:45:17.480] Tell me. [01:45:17.480 --> 01:45:25.480] Yeah, little Jerry, sing reality. [01:45:25.480 --> 01:45:28.480] Okay, karma is lurking around the karma. [01:45:28.480 --> 01:45:30.480] Sing, Jerry, come on. [01:45:30.480 --> 01:45:37.480] As we sow, so shall we reap. [01:45:37.480 --> 01:45:44.480] So many fruits, so many words to put on all of the leaves. [01:45:44.480 --> 01:45:52.480] Try as we will to take small steps to the giant tree. [01:45:52.480 --> 01:46:20.480] As we sow, so shall we reap. [01:46:20.480 --> 01:46:23.480] Okay, we are back. [01:46:23.480 --> 01:46:26.480] Callers, if you'd like to call in, 512-646-1984. [01:46:26.480 --> 01:46:28.480] We're talking to Doug in Texas right now. [01:46:28.480 --> 01:46:33.480] Eddie, you had some comments here. [01:46:33.480 --> 01:46:36.480] Well, not specifically addressing Doug's thing, [01:46:36.480 --> 01:46:42.480] but I think the stuff Randy's talking about is going to be the best way to do it [01:46:42.480 --> 01:46:45.480] because we're not going to get anywhere sticking to just one target [01:46:45.480 --> 01:46:47.480] and hoping for the best. [01:46:47.480 --> 01:46:48.480] If we don't start spreading this around [01:46:48.480 --> 01:46:51.480] and kind of making everybody feel the burn, so to speak, [01:46:51.480 --> 01:46:54.480] we're not going to get anywhere. [01:46:54.480 --> 01:46:58.480] We've got to start taking multiple opportunities here, so to speak, [01:46:58.480 --> 01:47:02.480] multiple targets, multiple kills. [01:47:02.480 --> 01:47:04.480] Send the tort letter to the city. [01:47:04.480 --> 01:47:07.480] It's really not hard to show that they're in violation of law. [01:47:07.480 --> 01:47:10.480] The hard part is getting somebody to do something about it. [01:47:10.480 --> 01:47:14.480] When you start making the crimes these people are committing, [01:47:14.480 --> 01:47:18.480] public knowledge, and that public knowledge starts raining down on them [01:47:18.480 --> 01:47:23.480] from multiple sources, somebody's going to have to wake up and pay attention [01:47:23.480 --> 01:47:29.480] because that somebody wants to get their job back at the next election. [01:47:29.480 --> 01:47:33.480] Make them fear that that's not going to happen. [01:47:33.480 --> 01:47:35.480] Like when we had the Tea Party here in Nacogdoches, [01:47:35.480 --> 01:47:38.480] I was not happy with just complaining to the district attorney [01:47:38.480 --> 01:47:41.480] that she was breaking the law. [01:47:41.480 --> 01:47:44.480] I took copies of the criminal complaints that I wrote against her [01:47:44.480 --> 01:47:50.480] and I passed them out in droves down at the Tea Party. [01:47:50.480 --> 01:47:56.480] People were calling the courthouse all day wanting to know what this was about. [01:47:56.480 --> 01:47:59.480] That afternoon, or the very next day I should say, [01:47:59.480 --> 01:48:05.480] the very next day I got a call from an inspector down there at her office [01:48:05.480 --> 01:48:07.480] wanting to speak to me. [01:48:07.480 --> 01:48:11.480] Now, he left a message, I returned his phone call, [01:48:11.480 --> 01:48:15.480] but he never returned my response to him. [01:48:15.480 --> 01:48:18.480] But I got somebody's attention. [01:48:18.480 --> 01:48:26.480] So when you feel like you're not making any headway, recruit friends, [01:48:26.480 --> 01:48:30.480] which pretty much is going to get us back into the court watching scenario [01:48:30.480 --> 01:48:32.480] again as well. [01:48:32.480 --> 01:48:38.480] But the more support we can give each other, the stronger we're going to be and become. [01:48:38.480 --> 01:48:42.480] If we keep standing in the line of fire as single people, [01:48:42.480 --> 01:48:48.480] we're going to get mowed down because the system is bigger than any one of us. [01:48:48.480 --> 01:48:50.480] That's a certainty. [01:48:50.480 --> 01:48:55.480] It's not going to go away peaceful and it's not going to go away pleasant. [01:48:55.480 --> 01:48:58.480] It's going to be something we have to make happen. [01:48:58.480 --> 01:49:01.480] And we're only going to do that with numbers. [01:49:01.480 --> 01:49:03.480] Now, wait a minute. [01:49:03.480 --> 01:49:11.480] I can tell you from experience, filing criminal complaints against these public officials is a hoot. [01:49:11.480 --> 01:49:13.480] Oh, it's a lot of fun. [01:49:13.480 --> 01:49:16.480] You get to watch them just doing this little chicken dance [01:49:16.480 --> 01:49:20.480] and now all of a sudden they want to reason with you. [01:49:20.480 --> 01:49:24.480] Let's be reasonable. [01:49:24.480 --> 01:49:31.480] And I loved it when we were in Amarillo. [01:49:31.480 --> 01:49:36.480] I was so outrageously unreasonable. [01:49:36.480 --> 01:49:38.480] I had a great time. [01:49:38.480 --> 01:49:40.480] Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:49:40.480 --> 01:49:43.480] Now they want to reason with you. [01:49:43.480 --> 01:49:44.480] Oh, yeah. [01:49:44.480 --> 01:49:48.480] Wait, now, all up until this point, there's no reasoning with them. [01:49:48.480 --> 01:49:52.480] Like Dr. Reed says, they're psychopaths. [01:49:52.480 --> 01:49:54.480] You can't reason with them. [01:49:54.480 --> 01:49:57.480] Oh, but now the criminal complaints are coming down. [01:49:57.480 --> 01:50:00.480] Oh, now they want to reason with you. [01:50:00.480 --> 01:50:01.480] Yeah, yeah. [01:50:01.480 --> 01:50:03.480] Let's talk about this. [01:50:03.480 --> 01:50:09.480] Let's see if we can prize your heel out from between my teeth. [01:50:09.480 --> 01:50:14.480] Yeah, they want to get reasonable when you start coming after them. [01:50:14.480 --> 01:50:20.480] You should have seen the look on the clerk's face when I had asked for records [01:50:20.480 --> 01:50:23.480] and she got smart with me and told me I'd have to look on the computer [01:50:23.480 --> 01:50:30.480] because she doesn't have enough people and she doesn't have time to mess with me. [01:50:30.480 --> 01:50:33.480] And I told her, oh, okay, I'll be right back. [01:50:33.480 --> 01:50:34.480] I need to go see security. [01:50:34.480 --> 01:50:36.480] Boop, I'm gone. [01:50:36.480 --> 01:50:39.480] And then after I tried to get her arrested, [01:50:39.480 --> 01:50:43.480] she comes out with the records I had asked for. [01:50:43.480 --> 01:50:47.480] And then I wouldn't look at them. [01:50:47.480 --> 01:50:50.480] They said, well, she's got the records you wanted. [01:50:50.480 --> 01:50:54.480] I said, sorry, Bubba, that bell's already been rung. [01:50:54.480 --> 01:51:03.480] And the clerk had a look on her face like, I can't believe this is happening. [01:51:03.480 --> 01:51:06.480] That was a hoot. [01:51:06.480 --> 01:51:11.480] You just hadn't lived until you'd done that to them a time or two. [01:51:11.480 --> 01:51:19.480] First time you do it, you will find that their whole demeanor changes really fast. [01:51:19.480 --> 01:51:22.480] All of a sudden, they're not big and bad anymore. [01:51:22.480 --> 01:51:29.480] They're just as pleasant and polite and reasonable and understanding as they can possibly be. [01:51:29.480 --> 01:51:33.480] That's when you change to their position. [01:51:33.480 --> 01:51:35.480] You be unreasonable. [01:51:35.480 --> 01:51:39.480] You tell them, this is what you're supposed to do. [01:51:39.480 --> 01:51:44.480] Do what you're supposed to do, and I'll be happy. [01:51:44.480 --> 01:51:49.480] And always assure them, I don't want this person to have any problem. [01:51:49.480 --> 01:51:52.480] But this is my duty. [01:51:52.480 --> 01:51:55.480] You don't want me to not do my duty. [01:51:55.480 --> 01:51:57.480] Jerks. [01:51:57.480 --> 01:51:59.480] But this is how we'll get them. [01:51:59.480 --> 01:52:03.480] If we get just a few people doing this, rather than just one or two, [01:52:03.480 --> 01:52:10.480] especially if we get someone going down to the court and watch the court proceedings, [01:52:10.480 --> 01:52:13.480] nobody does that. [01:52:13.480 --> 01:52:21.480] I've been in courts in Williamson County, and they come over and ask me if they can help me, [01:52:21.480 --> 01:52:23.480] and I tell them, no. [01:52:23.480 --> 01:52:26.480] Well, do you have a case here today? [01:52:26.480 --> 01:52:28.480] No. [01:52:28.480 --> 01:52:30.480] And the guy stood there didn't know what to do. [01:52:30.480 --> 01:52:33.480] He said, do you have a civil case here? [01:52:33.480 --> 01:52:34.480] No. [01:52:34.480 --> 01:52:36.480] I'm sitting here writing. [01:52:36.480 --> 01:52:39.480] And he stood there a minute, and he said, sir, sir. [01:52:39.480 --> 01:52:40.480] And I looked up at him. [01:52:40.480 --> 01:52:42.480] I said, no more questions. [01:52:42.480 --> 01:52:43.480] They had no idea. [01:52:43.480 --> 01:52:45.480] They were terrified. [01:52:45.480 --> 01:52:47.480] Who is this guy? [01:52:47.480 --> 01:52:52.480] Somebody's actually come into our courtroom who doesn't have an issue before the court. [01:52:52.480 --> 01:52:54.480] They were terrified of me. [01:52:54.480 --> 01:53:01.480] And they should have been because I was really bad news. [01:53:01.480 --> 01:53:08.480] No allegations against me, no direct interest other than that I'm the sovereign citizen. [01:53:08.480 --> 01:53:16.480] I can start filing on all of them, and there is absolutely nothing they can do. [01:53:16.480 --> 01:53:23.480] In this case, once you up the stakes to criminal complaints against them, [01:53:23.480 --> 01:53:27.480] all of a sudden you become taboo. [01:53:27.480 --> 01:53:32.480] Everything they do makes it worse. [01:53:32.480 --> 01:53:39.480] You know, I get bailiffs follow me around all the time, but they don't speak. [01:53:39.480 --> 01:53:41.480] They don't touch me. [01:53:41.480 --> 01:53:42.480] They don't talk to me. [01:53:42.480 --> 01:53:45.480] They just follow me around and keep their distance. [01:53:45.480 --> 01:53:49.480] And I always tell them how much I appreciate all of this security [01:53:49.480 --> 01:53:52.480] because I'm going to go in here and talk to this judge. [01:53:52.480 --> 01:53:53.480] I need you guys to come. [01:53:53.480 --> 01:53:55.480] I think he's going to commit a crime. [01:53:55.480 --> 01:53:59.480] And when he does, I'm going to want you to arrest him. [01:53:59.480 --> 01:54:02.480] And then all of a sudden they want to get more distance from me. [01:54:02.480 --> 01:54:07.480] But I'm telling you, this is how we'll fix it. [01:54:07.480 --> 01:54:16.480] They realize really fast when I start after them that I know their weakness. [01:54:16.480 --> 01:54:19.480] And this is it. [01:54:19.480 --> 01:54:23.480] Bar grievance, judicial conduct complaints, T-close complaints, [01:54:23.480 --> 01:54:29.480] these are things that stay with them their entire careers. [01:54:29.480 --> 01:54:32.480] This attorney from the city of Austin the other day, [01:54:32.480 --> 01:54:34.480] I'll file a bar grievance against him. [01:54:34.480 --> 01:54:40.480] He'll be answering about that bar grievance 20 years from now if he's still an attorney. [01:54:40.480 --> 01:54:43.480] This one I seriously doubt it. [01:54:43.480 --> 01:54:47.480] He probably had to cheat on his bar exam. [01:54:47.480 --> 01:54:51.480] I don't know how this guy ever got through it because he obviously had no clues to what he was doing. [01:54:51.480 --> 01:54:55.480] But it's time we went back after them. [01:54:55.480 --> 01:54:59.480] And I'm talking too much and we've got a bunch of callers. [01:54:59.480 --> 01:55:01.480] I'm going to shut up. [01:55:01.480 --> 01:55:03.480] We've got Keith from Texas. [01:55:03.480 --> 01:55:06.480] Oh, that's Keith from Houston. [01:55:06.480 --> 01:55:07.480] Hey, Keith. [01:55:07.480 --> 01:55:08.480] How's it going? [01:55:08.480 --> 01:55:10.480] How's it going? [01:55:10.480 --> 01:55:11.480] Pretty good so far. [01:55:11.480 --> 01:55:12.480] Brady, you can keep talking. [01:55:12.480 --> 01:55:14.480] That sounds good to me, man. [01:55:14.480 --> 01:55:22.480] I'm like the guy that jumped off the 20-story building and was heard to say as he passed the 11th floor. [01:55:22.480 --> 01:55:24.480] So far, so good. [01:55:24.480 --> 01:55:26.480] That's what I'm talking about. [01:55:26.480 --> 01:55:29.480] Well, and you were right. [01:55:29.480 --> 01:55:37.480] You know, something about that, I did file my lawsuit this week against a judge and deputy [01:55:37.480 --> 01:55:43.480] and left the prosecutor off, but I did leave room for other people, obviously. [01:55:43.480 --> 01:55:49.480] Kind of the unknown one through 100 is more or less what it says. [01:55:49.480 --> 01:55:50.480] Okay. [01:55:50.480 --> 01:55:52.480] Are you counting the days? [01:55:52.480 --> 01:55:53.480] I am. [01:55:53.480 --> 01:55:54.480] Good. [01:55:54.480 --> 01:55:59.480] And I sent it with a self-addressed stamp envelope for a return of that same, [01:55:59.480 --> 01:56:04.480] the duplicate of the same document back to me with a stamp by the clerk. [01:56:04.480 --> 01:56:07.480] And this was to be presented to the court. [01:56:07.480 --> 01:56:09.480] No way to answer but. [01:56:09.480 --> 01:56:11.480] And it's very powerful. [01:56:11.480 --> 01:56:15.480] I had to produce it to 17 pages. [01:56:15.480 --> 01:56:16.480] Why? [01:56:16.480 --> 01:56:24.480] Well, I guess, Brady, because of the fact these people don't seem to like to read. [01:56:24.480 --> 01:56:33.480] They don't care anything about reading when reading would probably stop their undoing. [01:56:33.480 --> 01:56:42.480] You know, if they would read some of the things that I filed with the clerk, [01:56:42.480 --> 01:56:46.480] then I wouldn't have had to have done the suit. [01:56:46.480 --> 01:56:53.480] But now I have and included in this particular instance the only people named are the judge and the deputy. [01:56:53.480 --> 01:56:58.480] And the thing about it is, and you're right, when you pick the words right out of my mouth, [01:56:58.480 --> 01:57:05.480] what you just said previously, is that a finding in a civil court is going to go back [01:57:05.480 --> 01:57:11.480] and it's going to be a finding of criminal wrongdoing. [01:57:11.480 --> 01:57:13.480] That's going to go to the Bar Association. [01:57:13.480 --> 01:57:16.480] That's going to go to the Judicial Conduct Commission. [01:57:16.480 --> 01:57:18.480] And that's going to go to their surety company. [01:57:18.480 --> 01:57:20.480] That's going to go to T-Close. [01:57:20.480 --> 01:57:24.480] That's going to go to everybody, you know. [01:57:24.480 --> 01:57:27.480] And that's not, and you're right, and that's not something that's easily taken off, [01:57:27.480 --> 01:57:30.480] especially for an elected official. [01:57:30.480 --> 01:57:36.480] Well, now, are you able to disclose what the lawsuit is over? [01:57:36.480 --> 01:57:38.480] What brought it about, I guess I should say. [01:57:38.480 --> 01:57:42.480] A judge of relief, declaratory relief, and punitive damages. [01:57:42.480 --> 01:57:44.480] And that's a particular instance. [01:57:44.480 --> 01:57:54.480] And what it really, what it bolts down to, Eddie, is criminal conduct, you know. [01:57:54.480 --> 01:57:58.480] Just a complete abrogation of due process, [01:57:58.480 --> 01:58:03.480] where it initially started with a particular law enforcement officer. [01:58:03.480 --> 01:58:05.480] It was just criminal conduct. [01:58:05.480 --> 01:58:11.480] And it carried over and, you know, and you would think that would be the worst of it, [01:58:11.480 --> 01:58:16.480] that you'd get some sort of relief once you went to court. [01:58:16.480 --> 01:58:19.480] But that hasn't been the case. [01:58:19.480 --> 01:58:20.480] It's gone downhill. [01:58:20.480 --> 01:58:22.480] It's gotten worse. [01:58:22.480 --> 01:58:26.480] It's always, you know, but I can explain a little bit more, I guess. [01:58:26.480 --> 01:58:28.480] Yeah, yeah, hang on, Keith. [01:58:28.480 --> 01:58:29.480] Hang on, Keith. [01:58:29.480 --> 01:58:31.480] We're going to want to know more about this. [01:58:31.480 --> 01:58:34.480] We've also got Michael Anthony from New York. [01:58:34.480 --> 01:58:36.480] We'll take his call on the other side. [01:58:36.480 --> 01:58:38.480] We'll be right back. [01:58:38.480 --> 01:58:53.480] INN World Report News, top of the hour break. [01:59:08.480 --> 01:59:13.480] Well, he brought the kitchen. [01:59:13.480 --> 01:59:19.480] Yeah, he brought the kitchen. [01:59:19.480 --> 01:59:24.480] He brought the kitchen. [01:59:24.480 --> 01:59:29.480] He brought the kitchen. [01:59:29.480 --> 01:59:40.480] He brought the kitchen. [01:59:40.480 --> 01:59:42.480] Mr. Hoppin, I'm married. [01:59:42.480 --> 01:59:45.480] Mr. Einstein, you're requiring mine. [01:59:45.480 --> 01:59:46.480] So am I. [01:59:46.480 --> 01:59:49.480] With a pencil and a dot and a life on a mission. [01:59:49.480 --> 01:59:52.480] Unlock the secrets of newsletters. [01:59:52.480 --> 01:59:54.480] The time has come to choose our side. [01:59:54.480 --> 01:59:59.480] Mr. Hoppin, I'm going to help you.