[00:00.000 --> 00:09.880] As Mexicans celebrate the 200th anniversary of their independence from Spain, the US Department [00:09.880 --> 00:15.560] of Homeland Security has deployed a fleet of Predator drones to patrol the border. Homeland [00:15.560 --> 00:21.640] Security has also deployed 1,200 extra troops, part of a $600 million package, to combat [00:21.640 --> 00:29.520] illegal immigration and spiraling drug violence. Lebanese and Palestinians mark the 28th anniversary [00:29.520 --> 00:35.800] of the Sabra and Shatila refugee camp massacres Thursday amid calls for an investigation into [00:35.800 --> 00:41.440] the atrocity. While the Israeli army cordoned off the two Palestinian camps on the outskirts [00:41.440 --> 00:48.400] of Beirut, Lebanese forces entered the camps and massacred 3,500 unarmed Lebanese and Palestinian [00:48.400 --> 00:54.360] residents. Representative Rush Holt announced Thursday the Government Accountability Office [00:54.360 --> 01:00.320] is opening an inquiry into an FBI investigation into the 2001 anthrax attacks that killed [01:00.320 --> 01:06.560] five people. The FBI closed the case in February after concluding Dr. Bruce Ivins committed [01:06.560 --> 01:12.040] suicide shortly before government investigators planned to file charges against him. Holt [01:12.040 --> 01:17.920] said, in the wake of the bungled FBI investigation, all of us deserve credible answers about how [01:17.920 --> 01:24.200] the attacks happened. The passage of the DREAM Act, for years the subject of sit-ins and [01:24.200 --> 01:30.200] hunger strikes, many of which were led by undocumented youth, may soon become a reality. [01:30.200 --> 01:35.160] The Act would give permanent residency status to illegal immigrants who complete two years [01:35.160 --> 01:40.480] of college or serve in the U.S. military. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced [01:40.480 --> 01:46.640] Thursday he would detach the DREAM Act to the fiscal 2011 defense authorization bill, [01:46.640 --> 01:51.840] saying Barack Obama had endorsed the move. It is uncertain whether the bill could pass [01:51.840 --> 01:57.320] on its own, but linking it to a defense bill increases the likelihood of its passage. Critics [01:57.320 --> 02:03.720] say if the DREAM Act passes, an estimated 65,000 undocumented youth would be eligible [02:03.720 --> 02:10.720] for college and permanent residency. Asia Times Online reports the process of bringing [02:10.760 --> 02:16.720] the Taliban to the negotiating table is gaining momentum, with the U.S. and its allies escalating [02:16.720 --> 02:21.920] efforts to get out of Afghanistan. The website says the Taliban have agreed to state their [02:21.920 --> 02:27.000] position on several issues so that formal talks with Washington will be internationally [02:27.000 --> 02:32.840] acceptable. News of the negotiations emerged following the traditional iftar, or breaking [02:32.840 --> 02:38.920] of the fast dinners, in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia during Ramadan. In previous [02:38.920 --> 02:44.360] years these dinners have been purely ceremonial, but this month they resulted in both sides [02:44.360 --> 02:51.360] making concrete suggestions and the Saudis and the Pakistani army relaying the messages. [03:44.520 --> 03:51.520] What you gonna do? What you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, [03:51.520 --> 04:12.120] bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys, [04:12.120 --> 04:18.120] what you gonna do when they come for you? You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on [04:18.120 --> 04:23.520] your mother and you chuck it on your brother. You chuck it on your brother and you chuck [04:23.520 --> 04:28.520] it on your sister. You chuck it on this one and you chuck it on me. Bad boys, bad boys, [04:28.520 --> 04:33.120] what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys, what [04:33.120 --> 04:39.120] you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys, what you [04:39.120 --> 04:43.120] Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:43.120 --> 04:48.620] Bad boys, bad boys. Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:48.620 --> 04:53.620] Nobody now give you no break. Police now give you no break. [04:53.620 --> 04:56.120] Black soul soldier, manna give you no break. [04:56.120 --> 04:59.120] Black teeth in your eyes, you now give you no break. [04:59.120 --> 05:01.120] Bad boys, bad boys. [05:01.120 --> 05:05.120] All right, bad boys, bad boys. What are you going to do when we come for you? [05:05.120 --> 05:10.120] Bad boys, bad boys. Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [05:10.120 --> 05:36.120] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [05:41.120 --> 05:49.120] And I wanted to start off tonight by reading an article, a short article, and playing a video clip. [05:49.120 --> 05:53.120] This seems like some good news. Taking off on Catherine Albrecht's Good News Friday. [05:53.120 --> 05:58.120] I'd like to start bringing a little good news to the table every Friday if possible. [05:58.120 --> 06:07.120] And this seems like some good news here. Actually, this article was released on September 7th, a little week and a half or so ago. [06:07.120 --> 06:25.120] The ACLU and some other entities are suing Department of Homeland Security over DHS's policy of searching internally people's laptops, [06:25.120 --> 06:36.120] looking at the files, their cell phones, electronic devices in general of not just anybody but American citizens, United States citizens. [06:36.120 --> 06:39.120] So I'm going to read a little bit of this article. I think this is great. [06:39.120 --> 06:46.120] It's about time some folks stepped up over stuff like this because privacy is very important. [06:46.120 --> 06:55.120] You know, and I will also point everyone to startpage.com, America's most private and anonymous search engine. [06:55.120 --> 07:01.120] They are excellent. They are third-party verified actually by multiple entities. [07:01.120 --> 07:08.120] They are based out of Europe, and they do not store your IP address. They do not store what you search for. [07:08.120 --> 07:17.120] They use multiple search engines on the market that are in high demand like Yahoo and others. [07:17.120 --> 07:21.120] They don't use Google, at least not yet. They may be using Google soon. [07:21.120 --> 07:26.120] At this point, they don't use Google, but they use so many search engines that they're as good as Google. [07:26.120 --> 07:35.120] I've never, I think in the last two years that I've been using Startpage, I've had to use Google maybe two times [07:35.120 --> 07:38.120] to search for something very technical that I couldn't find with them. [07:38.120 --> 07:43.120] And the thing that's so great about them is the anonymity and the privacy. [07:43.120 --> 07:53.120] They have their own network of servers, of proxy servers, and the proxy servers do the searching directly to the search engines. [07:53.120 --> 08:01.120] And so when you go and search on Startpage, you're actually searching on those big search engines. [08:01.120 --> 08:08.120] But your IP address isn't directly interacting with those major search engines. [08:08.120 --> 08:12.120] So it's absolutely anonymous. It's absolutely private. [08:12.120 --> 08:18.120] Startpage does not store your IP address, and they do not store what you search for. [08:18.120 --> 08:28.120] And even if these other search engines are storing IP addresses, well, they're just storing the anonymous proxy server IP addresses of Startpage, so big deal. [08:28.120 --> 08:33.120] So very good thing, Startpage, anonymous, and private search engine. [08:33.120 --> 08:39.120] And so I encourage everyone to use that and boycott Google. Do not use Gmail. [08:39.120 --> 08:44.120] In fact, I've gotten to the point where I'm rejecting all emails that come from Gmail. [08:44.120 --> 08:49.120] If you have Gmail, don't bother emailing me because it's not going to get to me. [08:49.120 --> 08:54.120] I'm not going to deal with Gmail anymore because it's not anonymous, it's not private. [08:54.120 --> 09:03.120] Google records everything that you write, and they send it to the government as well as what you search for and your IP address and gives it to the government. [09:03.120 --> 09:04.120] That's just admitted. [09:04.120 --> 09:17.120] So at any rate, on the lines of privacy and anonymity here, which we all should, two concepts that we all should hold dear, [09:17.120 --> 09:30.120] we're talking about the privacy of the data stored on our electronic equipment as we're traveling not only within this country, but leaving the country and coming back. [09:30.120 --> 09:42.120] Well, apparently DHS has a new policy that they like to gather data off of people's laptops, copy everything, keep it to analyze it for later, [09:42.120 --> 09:49.120] or just straight up confiscating your laptop, confiscating your electronic devices and maybe returning them later. [09:49.120 --> 09:51.120] And we're talking American citizens here. [09:51.120 --> 09:55.120] I mean, this is, I'm sorry, it's over the top. [09:55.120 --> 10:00.120] I mean, this goes beyond violating your privacy and anonymity. [10:00.120 --> 10:06.120] And of course, when you're traveling over the border, you're not going to have that much anonymity because you've got to show your passport. [10:06.120 --> 10:11.120] But certainly you are entitled to a reasonable degree of privacy. [10:11.120 --> 10:14.120] So let me read a little bit about this lawsuit here. [10:14.120 --> 10:19.120] Civil Liberties, this is from, by the way, TPM, TPM Raker. [10:19.120 --> 10:22.120] This article came out on September 7th. [10:22.120 --> 10:23.120] Excuse me. [10:23.120 --> 10:31.120] Civil Liberties groups sued the Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday alleging that the government should not be able to search, [10:31.120 --> 10:40.120] copy or keep the data on electronic devices carried by people crossing the border without a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing. [10:40.120 --> 10:45.120] The American Civil Liberties Union, the New York Civil Liberties Union, [10:45.120 --> 10:57.120] the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, NACDL, announced on Tuesday that they filed a lawsuit against DHS concerning the policy, [10:57.120 --> 11:05.120] arguing that Americans, quote, do not surrender their privacy and free speech rights when they travel abroad. [11:05.120 --> 11:13.120] DHS policy says that electronic devices such as laptops, cameras and cell phones can be searched as a matter of course [11:13.120 --> 11:22.120] and that the border agents can copy the contents of the devices in order to continue searching them once the traveler has been allowed to enter the U.S., [11:22.120 --> 11:26.120] even if the traveler is not suspected of any wrongdoing. [11:26.120 --> 11:30.120] Information obtained by the ACLU indicated that over 6,000 travelers, [11:30.120 --> 11:43.120] nearly half of whom are U.S. citizens, had their electronic devices searched at the border between October 1st, 2008 and June 2nd, 2010. [11:43.120 --> 11:47.120] These days almost everybody carries a cell phone, this is a quote, [11:47.120 --> 11:52.120] these days almost everyone carries a cell phone or a laptop when traveling and almost everyone stores information [11:52.120 --> 11:58.120] they wouldn't want to share with government officials from financial records to love letters to family photos, [11:58.120 --> 12:04.120] says Catherine Crump, a staff attorney with the ACLU Speech Privacy and Technology Project. [12:04.120 --> 12:10.120] Innocent Americans should not be made to feel like the personal information they store on their laptops and cell phones [12:10.120 --> 12:15.120] is vulnerable to searches by government officials anytime they travel out of the country. [12:15.120 --> 12:18.120] DHS did not immediately respond to requests for comment. [12:18.120 --> 12:22.120] The suit was filed on behalf of the National Press Photographers Association, [12:22.120 --> 12:28.120] the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and 26-year-old Pascal Abidour, [12:28.120 --> 12:34.120] a dual U.S. French citizen who had his laptop searched and confiscated the Canadian border in May of 2010. [12:34.120 --> 12:45.120] And I'm going to play a short video for you here produced by the ACLU and this young gentleman concerning this case. [12:45.120 --> 13:07.120] My name is Pascal Abidour, I'm 26 years old and I'm getting a Ph.D. in Islamic Studies from McGill University in Montreal. [13:07.120 --> 13:16.120] My studies have taken me to Yemen, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon. [13:16.120 --> 13:21.120] I was taking a train from Montreal to New York to visit my mother for Mother's Day. [13:21.120 --> 13:30.120] He was approached by a government agent who asked him to see his passport and asked him some questions. [13:30.120 --> 13:34.120] The agent figured out what he was studying and where he had been in the last year [13:34.120 --> 13:40.120] and on that basis called him into the cafe car where she proceeded to take his laptop, open it up and search through it. [13:40.120 --> 13:50.120] She proceeded to show other immigration officers what was on my screen, what was on the screen without showing me [13:50.120 --> 13:59.120] and eventually turned it around and it was images I had downloaded off of Google Image Search, like a Hamas rally. [13:59.120 --> 14:02.120] The government agents decided to take him off the train in handcuffs. [14:02.120 --> 14:09.120] I explained it to the immigration officer that the reason I had these photos was that this was my research. [14:09.120 --> 14:12.120] He was taken off the train with all of his possessions. [14:12.120 --> 14:17.120] The train then departed without him and he was sort of stranded at this border outpost. [14:17.120 --> 14:21.120] He was taken into a cell and forced to sit there for several hours. [14:21.120 --> 14:28.120] They asked everything about my life and my interests, why I'm interested in Islam, why I've traveled in the Middle East. [14:28.120 --> 14:34.120] Ultimately the government agents did allow him to enter the country but not until they had already decided to seize his devices [14:34.120 --> 14:38.120] and to keep his laptop for an indefinite period of time. [14:38.120 --> 14:44.120] Eventually when I received the laptop back I looked at the last open date of files [14:44.120 --> 14:51.120] and based on that I was able to determine that they looked extensively at my personal photos, [14:51.120 --> 14:59.120] personal saved chats with my girlfriends. I knew that my rights had been violated and that I would need some help. [14:59.120 --> 15:05.120] My goal in working with the ACLU is to prevent this from happening to anyone ever again. [15:05.120 --> 15:12.120] The ACLU and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers are bringing this lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security [15:12.120 --> 15:16.120] to protect the rights of all Americans across the border free from intrusive government searches. [15:16.120 --> 15:24.120] I'm an American citizen and I don't believe anyone should be targeted for what they study and what they believe. [15:24.120 --> 15:28.120] To establish a constitution free zone at the border where the government can simply go through all of your papers [15:28.120 --> 15:33.120] and most personal thoughts simply because you happen to be crossing the border is not the type of rule [15:33.120 --> 15:42.120] that really honors the constitutional principles that we in this country are proud of standing for. [15:42.120 --> 15:51.120] All right folks, to find out more go to ACLU.com slash laptop and it's about time that some people start standing up [15:51.120 --> 16:00.120] and filing lawsuits over this sort of thing because I believe in this age people have started somewhat to lose sight [16:00.120 --> 16:08.120] of the preciousness of anonymity and privacy. People are just like kind of taking it for granted now, [16:08.120 --> 16:13.120] oh well you know everybody's just going to know who you are wherever you go and you just don't have any privacy [16:13.120 --> 16:19.120] and what do you have to hide anyway and that is just the total backwards mindset. [16:19.120 --> 16:24.120] All right, what they're trying to do now is to put these mobile x-ray vans all over the street, [16:24.120 --> 16:29.120] these mobile backscatter machines which I'm chasing down the legal issues regarding that [16:29.120 --> 16:35.120] and biometric face scanning devices on every street corner. [16:35.120 --> 16:41.120] So the government will literally track you personally everywhere you go. [16:41.120 --> 16:46.120] This is the antithesis of anonymity and it has to be stopped. [16:46.120 --> 16:51.120] We have a right to anonymity. We absolutely have a right to it. [16:51.120 --> 16:56.120] We have a right for the government not to be tracking us personally everywhere we go and everything we do [16:56.120 --> 17:03.120] and so that's what we're fighting for here at Rule of Law. We'll be right back. [17:03.120 --> 17:07.120] Capital Coin and Bullion is your local source for rare coins, precious metals and coin supplies [17:07.120 --> 17:10.120] in the Austin metro area. We also shift worldwide. [17:10.120 --> 17:15.120] We are a family owned and operated business that offers competitive prices on your coin and metal purchases. [17:15.120 --> 17:21.120] We buy, sell, trade and consign rare coins, gold and silver coin collections, precious metals and scrap gold. [17:21.120 --> 17:26.120] We purchase and sell gold and jewelry items. We offer daily specials on coins and bullion. [17:26.120 --> 17:31.120] We are located at 5448 Burnett Road, Suite 3 at the corner of Burnett and Shellmark [17:31.120 --> 17:35.120] and we're open Mondays and Fridays 10 to 6 Saturdays 10 to 5. [17:35.120 --> 17:43.120] You are welcome to stop in our shop during regular business hours or call 512-646-6440 with any questions. [17:43.120 --> 17:47.120] Ask for Chad and say you heard about us on Rule of Law radio or Texas Liberty Radio. [17:47.120 --> 17:54.120] That's Capital Coin and Bullion at the corner of Burnett and Shellmark and we're open Mondays and Fridays 10 to 6 Saturdays 10 to 5. [17:54.120 --> 18:14.120] That's Capital Coin and Bullion 512-646-6440. [18:14.120 --> 18:17.120] Okay folks, we're back. [18:17.120 --> 18:24.120] Yes, so the government would have their way, they would be the ones who would have privacy [18:24.120 --> 18:29.120] and we would be the ones, the sovereigns who are transparent and non-anonymous [18:29.120 --> 18:33.120] and that just ain't the way it's going to fly with me personally. [18:33.120 --> 18:36.120] That ain't the way it's going to fly with us here at Rule of Law radio. [18:36.120 --> 18:40.120] We take anonymity and privacy very seriously around here [18:40.120 --> 18:46.120] and the government is already going around taking photographs of people at rallies like the tea parties [18:46.120 --> 18:47.120] and stuff like that. [18:47.120 --> 18:51.120] This is why they want to put RFID chips in your driver's licenses [18:51.120 --> 18:54.120] so they won't even have to be real overt about it anymore. [18:54.120 --> 18:58.120] They'll just walk around with a reader, with an RFID reader. [18:58.120 --> 18:59.120] This is why we have to stop that. [18:59.120 --> 19:03.120] That's why we have to stop these biometric face scanning devices. [19:03.120 --> 19:04.120] We have a right to anonymity. [19:04.120 --> 19:09.120] We have a right to not be tracked and traced everywhere we go and everything we do. [19:09.120 --> 19:11.120] We have a right to our privacy as citizens. [19:11.120 --> 19:16.120] We have a right unless there's some extenuating circumstance to show that we should be under [19:16.120 --> 19:21.120] some suspicion to not have our laptop searched, to not have our cell phone searched [19:21.120 --> 19:24.120] whether we're inside the country or whether we're coming back in. [19:24.120 --> 19:25.120] We're citizens. [19:25.120 --> 19:27.120] We're not foreigners, okay? [19:27.120 --> 19:28.120] So this is ridiculous. [19:28.120 --> 19:30.120] It's got to be stopped. [19:30.120 --> 19:31.120] We have to learn. [19:31.120 --> 19:37.120] We have to reevaluate our moral compass here and have a renewed outlook [19:37.120 --> 19:42.120] and a renewed cherishing of anonymity and privacy, all right? [19:42.120 --> 19:48.120] It's very, very important and crucial to our republic, to the survival of our republic. [19:48.120 --> 19:49.120] We can't take these things for granted. [19:49.120 --> 19:52.120] We have to hold them dear and we have to protect them. [19:52.120 --> 19:57.120] So Randy, what do you think about this ACLU lawsuit? [19:57.120 --> 20:00.120] I don't trust them. [20:00.120 --> 20:07.120] Remember the issue of the electronic voting machines in Austin [20:07.120 --> 20:10.120] when the ACLU sued to stop them? [20:10.120 --> 20:12.120] No, I don't remember that. [20:12.120 --> 20:14.120] Well, they did. [20:14.120 --> 20:18.120] We were trying to get something done about it and the ACLU had sued. [20:18.120 --> 20:21.120] Wonderful, they sued. [20:21.120 --> 20:23.120] What came of it? [20:23.120 --> 20:27.120] The ACLU sued to keep anybody else from suing. [20:27.120 --> 20:31.120] Okay, well, there's more entities involved here other than the ACLU. [20:31.120 --> 20:36.120] There's the National Press Photographers Association and they damn well mean business. [20:36.120 --> 20:40.120] Now, I don't know if the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers means any business or not, [20:40.120 --> 20:43.120] but I know that the Press Photographers Association does. [20:43.120 --> 20:47.120] And I know that this guy, Pascal, definitely means business. [20:47.120 --> 20:51.120] So between them, I think something will happen. [20:51.120 --> 20:53.120] Something will go somewhere. [20:53.120 --> 20:56.120] I would hope so, but I don't trust the ACLU. [20:56.120 --> 20:59.120] Well, in general, I don't either. [20:59.120 --> 21:02.120] And I don't remember the ins and outs of that case. [21:02.120 --> 21:06.120] You know, I think that there are probably, you know, some kind of a CIA front group in general, [21:06.120 --> 21:10.120] but there are people that work at the ACLU that mean well. [21:10.120 --> 21:16.120] And just because they as an entity, you know, may be questionable, [21:16.120 --> 21:23.120] I believe there are people that work there in charge of different projects that are on the up and up. [21:23.120 --> 21:25.120] And this possibly could be one of the times. [21:25.120 --> 21:29.120] I mean, you're the one that's always saying we have to make these kinds of issues political. [21:29.120 --> 21:35.120] And this is just the case where you've got these civil liberties organizations stepping in [21:35.120 --> 21:40.120] to make this issue political, including the New York Civil Liberties Union. [21:40.120 --> 21:42.120] So. [21:42.120 --> 21:51.120] Well, I haven't heard of the ACLU changing anything in a very long time. [21:51.120 --> 21:57.120] It seems all they do is they take on the contentious issue and sue to keep anybody else. [21:57.120 --> 22:04.120] Well, I was more wanting to question you about the legal technical points of the lawsuit concerning, [22:04.120 --> 22:12.120] does DHS or the federal government have the authority to extend this level of search and seizure [22:12.120 --> 22:18.120] of citizens' electronic equipment when they're coming back into the country? [22:18.120 --> 22:20.120] Because I don't think they do. [22:20.120 --> 22:27.120] I mean, as far as I know, they only have the authority to determine whether you're a U.S. citizen or not. [22:27.120 --> 22:32.120] And if you are, you don't have to go through the wringer with immigration [22:32.120 --> 22:38.120] and why are you coming into this country and where have you been and why are you studying Islam [22:38.120 --> 22:41.120] and why have you made trips to the Middle East and blah, blah, blah, [22:41.120 --> 22:45.120] and why are you interested in learning Arabic languages and all these sorts of things? [22:45.120 --> 22:50.120] I mean, that's the kind of grilling that's done to a foreigner, not to a citizen. [22:50.120 --> 22:57.120] And so that's more the kind of thing that I was wanting to question you about concerning the legal issues [22:57.120 --> 23:01.120] of whether the government has the authority to do this to citizens or not. [23:01.120 --> 23:02.120] I don't think they do. [23:02.120 --> 23:05.120] Once they've determined that you're a citizen, you don't have any warrants for your arrest [23:05.120 --> 23:12.120] or any outstanding war crimes or anything like that in your bags and such pass-through customs, [23:12.120 --> 23:16.120] you're good to go. [23:16.120 --> 23:27.120] Well, I don't know what Homeland Security has been authorized to do in the laws that govern them. [23:27.120 --> 23:32.120] Until I've read the laws that govern them, I don't know what they can do. [23:32.120 --> 23:34.120] Well, this is about entering into the country. [23:34.120 --> 23:37.120] Yeah, that's iffy. [23:37.120 --> 23:42.120] Well, on first blush, I'm going to say absolutely not, [23:42.120 --> 23:47.120] but we need to look at what rights have been given to Homeland Security. [23:47.120 --> 23:49.120] What authorities you mean? [23:49.120 --> 23:52.120] Authorities, excuse me. [23:52.120 --> 23:53.120] Okay. [23:53.120 --> 23:56.120] Well, in the meantime, while we're waiting for Eddie, we've got the phone boards open, [23:56.120 --> 23:59.120] 512-646-1984. [23:59.120 --> 24:01.120] We do have a caller on the line. [24:01.120 --> 24:03.120] Folks, please call in. [24:03.120 --> 24:05.120] We've got CJ from Texas on the line. [24:05.120 --> 24:07.120] We're calling in. [24:07.120 --> 24:08.120] What's on your mind tonight? [24:08.120 --> 24:09.120] Thank you. [24:09.120 --> 24:11.120] Actually, I called to talk about smart meters, [24:11.120 --> 24:17.120] which goes very much to what you're just talking about. [24:17.120 --> 24:23.120] I see them as basically almost like a camera for home so that government, [24:23.120 --> 24:29.120] the electric company, and anybody who can hack into the system can basically see exactly what you're doing, [24:29.120 --> 24:34.120] where you are, when you're not home, how many people are with you, all kinds of things like that. [24:34.120 --> 24:40.120] And I'm actually in my own personal fight with it at the moment. [24:40.120 --> 24:49.120] Encore is threatening to turn off my electricity on Monday because I won't let them install a smart meter. [24:49.120 --> 24:54.120] They already tried using the police to bully me into it, and that didn't work. [24:54.120 --> 25:00.120] So they're trying to do the, we're going to turn off your electricity. [25:00.120 --> 25:04.120] And I found the PUC, the Public Utility Commission, [25:04.120 --> 25:10.120] rules that govern exactly what circumstances, [25:10.120 --> 25:13.120] under what circumstances they can turn off your electricity. [25:13.120 --> 25:17.120] And it was all paid up and up to date, [25:17.120 --> 25:24.120] and there is nothing in the rules that even remotely allows them to turn it off for this situation. [25:24.120 --> 25:28.120] And it's section 25.29. [25:28.120 --> 25:35.120] And I sent Encore a letter stating this fact. [25:35.120 --> 25:39.120] I told everybody that I talked to with Encore that that's the case, [25:39.120 --> 25:41.120] and they just keep repeating the same stuff. [25:41.120 --> 25:42.120] They can't give me laws. [25:42.120 --> 25:43.120] They can't give me statutes. [25:43.120 --> 25:47.120] They can't give me PUC rules. [25:47.120 --> 25:48.120] I beg them. [25:48.120 --> 25:52.120] I say, tell me how I'm wrong. [25:52.120 --> 25:54.120] Tell me where to look. [25:54.120 --> 25:56.120] They can't tell me. [25:56.120 --> 25:57.120] I called the PUC. [25:57.120 --> 25:59.120] I called a complaint. [25:59.120 --> 26:04.120] And then I called them on the phone because I said, you know, this is getting to emergency status. [26:04.120 --> 26:06.120] Could you take a look at it? [26:06.120 --> 26:13.120] And I got a supervisor, and he just double-talked all over the place. [26:13.120 --> 26:17.120] First he tells me one thing, and then he tells me that this rule is an old rule. [26:17.120 --> 26:23.120] And then he tells me, oh, the actual rule is down here at this other section. [26:23.120 --> 26:26.120] That section says exactly the same thing as the section I quoted. [26:26.120 --> 26:35.120] Then he says, oh, no, there's something about tariffs from Encore, something that Encore wrote themselves. [26:35.120 --> 26:41.120] He says, oh, well, the PUC approved it, and they said in there that they can do it, [26:41.120 --> 26:45.120] that they can turn off electricity for denial of access. [26:45.120 --> 26:48.120] So that's what gives them the right. [26:48.120 --> 26:54.120] I said, are you sitting here telling me that something that Encore wrote trumps the law? [26:54.120 --> 26:55.120] Are you kidding me? [26:55.120 --> 27:00.120] And he, of course, he couldn't say anything that made any sense. [27:00.120 --> 27:06.120] So it's looking pretty good that I'm right, that it's illegal for them to disconnect service, [27:06.120 --> 27:10.120] but they still say they're going to do it anyway on Monday, [27:10.120 --> 27:18.120] which leaves me without water and with some disabled dogs that can't go without air conditioning. [27:18.120 --> 27:27.120] And so all I know left to do is petition the court for a restraining order. [27:27.120 --> 27:29.120] I had that in mind. [27:29.120 --> 27:33.120] I don't know how to do that as well as I know how to file a civil case, for example. [27:33.120 --> 27:39.120] But at this point, I don't have time because they're going to do this on Monday, so they say. [27:39.120 --> 27:43.120] They may be bluffing, and they may know that it's illegal. [27:43.120 --> 27:48.120] Randy, do you have any examples of temporary restraining orders, petitions on your website? [27:48.120 --> 27:55.120] No, not for this purpose, but a temporary restraining order is simply a letter to the judge, [27:55.120 --> 27:59.120] a motion to the judge asking the judge to order them to stop. [27:59.120 --> 28:03.120] Well, even if it's not for this particular purpose, just to have the form. [28:03.120 --> 28:04.120] Well, there isn't a form. [28:04.120 --> 28:06.120] It's a motion. [28:06.120 --> 28:07.120] Motions are motions. [28:07.120 --> 28:13.120] It is. I would have to find what the equity court is in this area that could, you know, [28:13.120 --> 28:17.120] who has the jurisdiction, whether it's the court at law, the county court at law, [28:17.120 --> 28:18.120] or the district court. [28:18.120 --> 28:19.120] I'm not sure about that. [28:19.120 --> 28:24.120] Go to the JP, probably the local JP. [28:24.120 --> 28:26.120] He's already an enemy. [28:26.120 --> 28:31.120] He already hates me, so that's not a good idea. [28:31.120 --> 28:35.120] Someone needs to send you the book, How to Win Friends and Influence People. [28:35.120 --> 28:40.120] And also, Randy, there's probably something on the website just so that she could get a form, [28:40.120 --> 28:45.120] you know, just to show what the header should look like and, you know, these sorts of things. [28:45.120 --> 28:50.120] Yeah, that's going to depend on the court, but I don't have any TROs in there. [28:50.120 --> 28:53.120] There may be one in the O'Connor's book that I see. [28:53.120 --> 28:54.120] Oh, absolutely. [28:54.120 --> 28:56.120] There's a great one in O'Connor's. [28:56.120 --> 29:04.120] If you have O'Connor's forms, there's a great temporary restraining order blank in there. [29:04.120 --> 29:05.120] I'm sorry. [29:05.120 --> 29:06.120] I'm brain dead. [29:06.120 --> 29:08.120] I didn't think of that. [29:08.120 --> 29:09.120] No, that's okay. [29:09.120 --> 29:14.120] And actually, that was something I had already thought of, and I thought, oh, my gosh, through all this, [29:14.120 --> 29:16.120] where am I going to find the time to research this? [29:16.120 --> 29:18.120] You already have. [29:18.120 --> 29:19.120] Yeah. [29:19.120 --> 29:22.120] For the most part, I think I just need to piece some things together. [29:22.120 --> 29:30.120] But as I said, this is going to be Monday, and I can't do it before they're threatening to do it. [29:30.120 --> 29:38.120] So all I was going to try to do is I'm trying to gather some people who might come up, and is that the music? [29:38.120 --> 29:39.120] Yes. [29:39.120 --> 29:42.120] Where is the hearing? [29:42.120 --> 29:43.120] There's no hearing. [29:43.120 --> 29:44.120] Oh, there's not a hearing yet. [29:44.120 --> 29:46.120] Where are you located? [29:46.120 --> 29:49.120] Near Gerald, which is about 30 minutes away. [29:49.120 --> 29:50.120] Okay, yeah. [29:50.120 --> 29:51.120] All right. [29:51.120 --> 29:52.120] Hang on the line, CJ. [29:52.120 --> 29:53.120] We'll talk some more on the other side. [29:53.120 --> 30:02.120] We'll be right back with Eddie Craig. [30:02.120 --> 30:05.120] Christ fed them multitudes with only one loaf of bread. [30:05.120 --> 30:07.120] Poor people, there's something for you. [30:07.120 --> 30:10.120] Austin's Own Caribbean, One Love Kitchen. [30:10.120 --> 30:12.120] On the banks of Colorado River. [30:12.120 --> 30:15.120] At 3109 East First Street is where you'll find One Love Kitchen. [30:15.120 --> 30:18.120] Jerk chicken, vegetarian restaurant. [30:18.120 --> 30:21.120] Monday through Wednesday, lunch and dinner, $5. [30:21.120 --> 30:26.120] Friday and Saturday, we got late night, and for a sound crew, still $5 place. [30:26.120 --> 30:32.120] Jerk chicken and vegetarian place to beat One Love Kitchen, Austin, Texas. [30:32.120 --> 30:39.120] Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn was sentenced to eight years' hard labor for criticizing Stalin in a letter to a friend. [30:39.120 --> 30:41.120] Good thing those days are past, or are they? [30:41.120 --> 30:42.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [30:42.120 --> 30:44.120] More in a moment. [30:44.120 --> 30:51.120] Google is watching you, recording everything you've ever searched for and creating a massive database of your personal information. [30:51.120 --> 30:52.120] That's creepy. [30:52.120 --> 30:54.120] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:54.120 --> 30:57.120] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:57.120 --> 31:04.120] Startpage.com doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking cookies, and they're third party certified. [31:04.120 --> 31:08.120] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [31:08.120 --> 31:11.120] Great search results and total privacy. [31:11.120 --> 31:14.120] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:14.120 --> 31:21.120] Back in the bad old Soviet days, officials routinely opened people's letters and scanned them for political correctness. [31:21.120 --> 31:28.120] Today, the government of Finland is opening and scanning people's letters for a different reason, to deliver their mail electronically. [31:28.120 --> 31:36.120] Hundreds of Finnish citizens are letting postal workers open their mail and scan each letter and bill into a computer file they can see online or receive by email. [31:36.120 --> 31:39.120] They hope the idea eventually goes viral. [31:39.120 --> 31:44.120] Federal officials promise the staff is sworn to secrecy and would never read the contents of the letters. [31:44.120 --> 31:50.120] Somehow, if he were alive today, I doubt Alexander Solzhenitsyn would be among the first to sign up. [31:50.120 --> 32:17.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:20.120 --> 32:33.120] Okay, folks, we're back. [32:33.120 --> 32:39.120] We're talking with CJ about this smart grid technology, and I've talked about this before, too. [32:39.120 --> 32:55.120] Anytime you hear the word smart, okay, or sustainable, that's all part of the evil Agenda 21 population control plan, formulated by the UN to reduce the population of the world by 80 percent, [32:55.120 --> 33:06.120] as well as to take away our rights to own private property, including our own body, and to control what we do and don't put into our own bodies, [33:06.120 --> 33:10.120] i.e. Codex Alimentarius, which we talked about last night and such. [33:10.120 --> 33:15.120] And so we're talking about the smart grid technology and the smart meters and all this stuff. [33:15.120 --> 33:19.120] I'm about sick of hearing that word, you know, by the way. [33:19.120 --> 33:30.120] But at any rate, part of it, too, is that they are creating appliances now where the government will be able to control your thermostat of your refrigerator [33:30.120 --> 33:36.120] and your air conditioner over the power line through the smart technology. [33:36.120 --> 33:37.120] Well, guess what? [33:37.120 --> 33:41.120] Ain't going to ever happen with me because I will never have an appliance like that. [33:41.120 --> 33:45.120] And my thermostats all run off of batteries. [33:45.120 --> 33:47.120] So I'll be safe from that. [33:47.120 --> 33:52.120] And, yeah, Austin's trying to do the same old smart grid, smart meters thing, too. [33:52.120 --> 33:54.120] So I'll be fighting that when the time comes. [33:54.120 --> 34:02.120] So, Eddie, we're talking with CJ, and the electric company has threatened to shut off her electricity [34:02.120 --> 34:07.120] if she does not allow them to replace the meter with a smart meter. [34:07.120 --> 34:08.120] And she's saying no. [34:08.120 --> 34:12.120] She's looked up the regulations in the PUC, Texas PUC code, [34:12.120 --> 34:21.120] and there's nothing that authorizes the electric company to shut her electricity off just because she won't let them put in a smart meter. [34:21.120 --> 34:25.120] So we're talking about having her file a temporary restraining order, [34:25.120 --> 34:30.120] petition for temporary restraining order against the electric company because they're threatening to do it as early as Monday. [34:30.120 --> 34:34.120] So, CJ, you had some more comments. [34:34.120 --> 34:43.120] Well, I was saying that the only solution for the moment that I can come up with is to hold a gathering [34:43.120 --> 34:54.120] to try and stop the trucks on Monday and get the media out, which it seems as though Encore really does not want that. [34:54.120 --> 34:58.120] So that would be another way to get to them just for the Monday issue. [34:58.120 --> 35:03.120] And then, yes, if I can figure out how to do the ask for a temporary restraining order, [35:03.120 --> 35:14.120] I can look at the elements needed for that, and I could easily prove it if the law is followed, of course. [35:14.120 --> 35:22.120] And then further on, I think I found some ways to just in general help people to fight these. [35:22.120 --> 35:27.120] I think contract law might be the way to fight these before you get them. [35:27.120 --> 35:32.120] I don't have any ideas on how to get rid of them once you've got them. [35:32.120 --> 35:42.120] But contract law, I think, is the way perhaps to fight the installation in general. [35:42.120 --> 35:45.120] But right now I just have my emergency personal situation. [35:45.120 --> 35:53.120] And I thought maybe some of my fellow listeners might be interested in coming up on Monday. [35:53.120 --> 35:59.120] I set up an email account that if anybody is interested in finding out more, [35:59.120 --> 36:03.120] they can email me and I can give all the specifics and that kind of thing. [36:03.120 --> 36:09.120] It's smartmeterssuck at yahoo.com. [36:09.120 --> 36:11.120] I thought that would be easy to remember. [36:11.120 --> 36:13.120] I love it. [36:13.120 --> 36:21.120] Again, smartmeterssuck, meters is plural, at yahoo.com. [36:21.120 --> 36:25.120] I don't have a specific time when they'll be coming. [36:25.120 --> 36:31.120] So the best plan I can come up with is to be here at 8. [36:31.120 --> 36:35.120] And they usually do these things in the morning. [36:35.120 --> 36:36.120] It's not a guarantee. [36:36.120 --> 36:41.120] And if anybody can come whenever they can and stay as long as they can, [36:41.120 --> 36:44.120] either until they come or until 5 o'clock rolls around, [36:44.120 --> 36:49.120] that's not a good plan, I realize, but I don't know how else to arrange it. [36:49.120 --> 36:54.120] So if a few people could come and help out, help block the trucks from the road, [36:54.120 --> 37:00.120] I live on a road that isn't traveled at all, so traffic is not an issue. [37:00.120 --> 37:06.120] You know, maybe we could stop it that way, get some media attention. [37:06.120 --> 37:09.120] Make sure you film everything. [37:09.120 --> 37:10.120] Make sure what? [37:10.120 --> 37:12.120] You film everything, video. [37:12.120 --> 37:14.120] Oh, absolutely, cameras abound. [37:14.120 --> 37:19.120] And listen, if you have a smartphone, again, the word smart, you know, [37:19.120 --> 37:27.120] like a Nokia N97 or an iPhone or an Android or one of these other so-called smart phones, [37:27.120 --> 37:30.120] the word smart's really starting to get to me. [37:30.120 --> 37:31.120] It's starting to smart. [37:31.120 --> 37:32.120] Let's put it that way. [37:32.120 --> 37:37.120] At any rate, download the quick app, qik.com. [37:37.120 --> 37:41.120] And with the quick app, you put it on your phone, [37:41.120 --> 37:47.120] and you can live upstream video live to the Internet, to your account. [37:47.120 --> 37:51.120] So it's much more effective than just recording it, like on a recording device, [37:51.120 --> 37:54.120] because then the cops can always just like grab your phone and break it [37:54.120 --> 37:56.120] or delete the file or whatever. [37:56.120 --> 38:01.120] But when you use quick, it's real-time live stream to the Internet. [38:01.120 --> 38:02.120] It's too late. [38:02.120 --> 38:03.120] They can't delete it. [38:03.120 --> 38:09.120] So get the qik at quick.com. [38:09.120 --> 38:10.120] Even better. [38:10.120 --> 38:11.120] I don't have that. [38:11.120 --> 38:14.120] But if somebody could bring one of those, I've never heard of that. [38:14.120 --> 38:15.120] That's a fantastic idea. [38:15.120 --> 38:21.120] Yeah, you have to have an ouch phone, a smart phone, in order to do that one. [38:21.120 --> 38:22.120] Yes. [38:22.120 --> 38:29.120] And then if we can – I'm thinking this is going to have to turn into some sort of organized movement, [38:29.120 --> 38:34.120] because I was surprised to find out that Texas is not really fighting these at all. [38:34.120 --> 38:37.120] California, they have got it together. [38:37.120 --> 38:38.120] They are awake. [38:38.120 --> 38:41.120] Cities are banning it all the time. [38:41.120 --> 38:42.120] That's awesome. [38:42.120 --> 38:43.120] It is. [38:43.120 --> 38:44.120] And we aren't doing anything. [38:44.120 --> 38:47.120] And I'm sure that's part of Encore's plan. [38:47.120 --> 38:52.120] But there's nobody in any organized fashion that's doing this. [38:52.120 --> 38:55.120] Well, now's your chance to be a leader, CJ. [38:55.120 --> 38:58.120] Find out – coordinate with some of these groups out in California [38:58.120 --> 39:02.120] and find out what they've done to be successful and start something up here. [39:02.120 --> 39:04.120] We'll support it. [39:04.120 --> 39:06.120] There is something you may want to check on. [39:06.120 --> 39:12.120] In most states, when there is a dispute between a landlord and a tenant, [39:12.120 --> 39:19.120] the landlord does not have the authority to turn off the tenant's utilities [39:19.120 --> 39:23.120] for the purpose of getting them to leave the premises. [39:23.120 --> 39:32.120] You might want to see if there's a way to bring those same laws to bear to the relevance of your situation. [39:32.120 --> 39:33.120] Very good point. [39:33.120 --> 39:35.120] That doesn't apply to my situation, [39:35.120 --> 39:39.120] but that's a very good thing to keep in mind for other people's situation. [39:39.120 --> 39:41.120] I think you were right earlier, CJ. [39:41.120 --> 39:43.120] You're under contract. [39:43.120 --> 39:49.120] And if they turn your power off, that goes to contort. [39:49.120 --> 39:53.120] That will ring in tort and in contract. [39:53.120 --> 39:54.120] Okay. [39:54.120 --> 40:01.120] That will be an area I need to research if I still have a computer that will work. [40:01.120 --> 40:03.120] Yeah, I think so. [40:03.120 --> 40:09.120] Well, also what I found out that I think is relevant – I'm just not sure how yet – [40:09.120 --> 40:15.120] the end users do not have a contract with Encore if Encore is the – [40:15.120 --> 40:19.120] I don't know what they call them, but they own the line. [40:19.120 --> 40:24.120] Then you have your REP, your retail provider. [40:24.120 --> 40:29.120] That's like TXU and Direct Energy and all those are retail providers. [40:29.120 --> 40:35.120] And we, the end users, do not have a contract with Encore. [40:35.120 --> 40:38.120] They accidentally admitted that to me. [40:38.120 --> 40:40.120] It makes no difference. [40:40.120 --> 40:41.120] It makes no difference. [40:41.120 --> 40:50.120] They have a contract with the provider, and you are the intended third-party beneficiary. [40:50.120 --> 40:55.120] Encore has a government-regulated monopoly. [40:55.120 --> 40:58.120] They don't get to do what they want to. [40:58.120 --> 40:59.120] No, they sure shouldn't. [40:59.120 --> 41:02.120] Are you saying that because I don't have a contract with Encore, [41:02.120 --> 41:05.120] that probably won't help with fighting the smart meter? [41:05.120 --> 41:07.120] Because it kind of seemed to me like it would. [41:07.120 --> 41:08.120] No, it won't hurt you. [41:08.120 --> 41:15.120] Encore will have a – you actually have a contract with the provider. [41:15.120 --> 41:16.120] Right. [41:16.120 --> 41:22.120] You should make your complaint to the provider and let them know they're the ones that you'll sue first. [41:22.120 --> 41:25.120] You don't know from Encore. [41:25.120 --> 41:28.120] You don't have a contract with Encore. [41:28.120 --> 41:34.120] You need to contact your provider and tell them you have a contract with them to provide service, [41:34.120 --> 41:37.120] and as long as it's paid for, you expect service. [41:37.120 --> 41:42.120] If they intentionally interrupt your service, you'll sue the crap bowl out of them [41:42.120 --> 41:48.120] and get your provider to step in to stop Encore. [41:48.120 --> 41:49.120] Do you think they can do that? [41:49.120 --> 41:50.120] Bet they. [41:50.120 --> 41:52.120] You better believe they can. [41:52.120 --> 41:55.120] Well, they have been very quiet through this situation, [41:55.120 --> 41:58.120] so that may be some additional thing I need to check on. [41:58.120 --> 42:02.120] You needed to be hammering them, not Encore. [42:02.120 --> 42:06.120] Well, Encore has already committed to it against me, so I can't – [42:06.120 --> 42:07.120] You don't understand. [42:07.120 --> 42:08.120] You don't understand. [42:08.120 --> 42:10.120] I can't sue them for other things. [42:10.120 --> 42:14.120] You're fighting the wrong battle. [42:14.120 --> 42:16.120] Encore is not your battle. [42:16.120 --> 42:18.120] You don't have a contract with Encore. [42:18.120 --> 42:23.120] You have a contract with the provider. [42:23.120 --> 42:27.120] When the provider is looking at getting sued because of what somebody else is doing, [42:27.120 --> 42:31.120] they're not going to be happy. [42:31.120 --> 42:34.120] Thank you for organizing that for me. [42:34.120 --> 42:38.120] Isn't it your provider that is coming to change the meter? [42:38.120 --> 42:40.120] No, it's Encore. [42:40.120 --> 42:44.120] It's always been Encore, but there has been never any physical [42:44.120 --> 42:51.120] or written communication regarding the smart meter at all from the provider. [42:51.120 --> 42:54.120] Have you communicated with a provider? [42:54.120 --> 42:57.120] Okay. [42:57.120 --> 42:59.120] Does the provider even know this is happening? [42:59.120 --> 43:01.120] Yeah. [43:01.120 --> 43:04.120] I have been trying to find that out, and I will try harder. [43:04.120 --> 43:07.120] But have you told the provider that you are not going to – [43:07.120 --> 43:10.120] that you're not in agreement with this? [43:10.120 --> 43:11.120] No. [43:11.120 --> 43:15.120] You tell the provider, if your subcontractor comes down here [43:15.120 --> 43:20.120] and interrupts my service, I will consider it that you're interrupting my service [43:20.120 --> 43:24.120] because they're working for you. [43:24.120 --> 43:27.120] You're the one that I have a contract with to provide service. [43:27.120 --> 43:29.120] Well, not only that, you don't have to let Encore on your property [43:29.120 --> 43:32.120] because you have no contract with them. [43:32.120 --> 43:34.120] That was exactly my point. [43:34.120 --> 43:36.120] That was exactly where my thought process was. [43:36.120 --> 43:38.120] I would call 911 if they show up. [43:38.120 --> 43:40.120] Call the sheriff. [43:40.120 --> 43:41.120] Okay. [43:41.120 --> 43:42.120] I hear the music. [43:42.120 --> 43:45.120] I don't know if that's a good idea in these times. [43:45.120 --> 43:48.120] I think it's always a good idea. [43:48.120 --> 43:50.120] I can tell you why it isn't in this case. [43:50.120 --> 43:54.120] Well, maybe not in your case, but, you know, Randy always calls 911. [43:54.120 --> 43:57.120] Hey, I call 911 if somebody tries to invade my property. [43:57.120 --> 44:24.120] We'll be right back. [44:27.120 --> 44:29.120] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [44:29.120 --> 44:34.120] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [44:34.120 --> 44:39.120] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [44:39.120 --> 44:41.120] Personal consultation is available as well. [44:41.120 --> 44:45.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [44:45.120 --> 44:50.120] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [44:50.120 --> 44:58.120] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [44:58.120 --> 45:09.120] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [45:09.120 --> 45:10.120] Okay, folks, we're back. [45:10.120 --> 45:13.120] We're talking with CJ. [45:13.120 --> 45:17.120] So it sounds to me like the temporary restraining order petition should be [45:17.120 --> 45:22.120] against Encore since they're the ones that are threatening to come out [45:22.120 --> 45:25.120] and actually do the work of changing the meters out, [45:25.120 --> 45:33.120] but that the lawsuit should be against the provider with whom you have the contract. [45:33.120 --> 45:35.120] And certainly if you don't have a contract with Encore, [45:35.120 --> 45:39.120] then they have no right to enter your property anyways. [45:39.120 --> 45:44.120] And depending on the local political situation, you know, it's up to you [45:44.120 --> 45:47.120] if you want to call 911 or call the sheriff. [45:47.120 --> 45:50.120] I mean, you know, if it's a rural area, then there's all these local politics. [45:50.120 --> 45:55.120] But I mean, I'll tell you what, I live in urban Austin. [45:55.120 --> 45:59.120] It's like anybody tries to come on my property, that is not allowed. [45:59.120 --> 46:01.120] That gets a 911 call for sure. [46:01.120 --> 46:07.120] I was going to say if you call the police, make sure you have witnesses [46:07.120 --> 46:11.120] because they're not going to be on your side. [46:11.120 --> 46:12.120] That's exactly right. [46:12.120 --> 46:19.120] Actually, I did a tort trespass to Encore off of my property and they called the police [46:19.120 --> 46:27.120] and the police sounded like they were marketing agents for Encore telling me why I needed this [46:27.120 --> 46:31.120] and why, you know, this thing is great and you need to let them on here [46:31.120 --> 46:34.120] and we're going to help them disconnect your service. [46:34.120 --> 46:42.120] And I said, number one, you can't enforce PUC regulation. [46:42.120 --> 46:45.120] And now I would say it's a civil matter. [46:45.120 --> 46:46.120] It's a contract matter. [46:46.120 --> 46:48.120] You definitely can't enforce that. [46:48.120 --> 46:50.120] But I didn't have that thought the other time. [46:50.120 --> 46:54.120] I said, you can't enforce PUC regulation. [46:54.120 --> 46:58.120] And any other questions they asked, I said, I can't make any statements [46:58.120 --> 47:02.120] and I'm not going to answer any questions at this time. [47:02.120 --> 47:04.120] They made them mad. [47:04.120 --> 47:05.120] They cussed at me. [47:05.120 --> 47:06.120] Whoa. [47:06.120 --> 47:07.120] They did what? [47:07.120 --> 47:08.120] They threatened me. [47:08.120 --> 47:09.120] Wait. [47:09.120 --> 47:10.120] Do you know who cussed at you? [47:10.120 --> 47:12.120] Oh, I do in some cases. [47:12.120 --> 47:14.120] File criminal charges against him. [47:14.120 --> 47:16.120] That's verbal assault right there. [47:16.120 --> 47:17.120] Yes, it is. [47:17.120 --> 47:20.120] That's aggravated assault. [47:20.120 --> 47:24.120] Did you say they threatened you, CJ? [47:24.120 --> 47:28.120] Well, they threatened me with, well, of course there's the bullying tactics [47:28.120 --> 47:33.120] kind of thing that we're all used to if we stand up for our rights. [47:33.120 --> 47:38.120] I don't know if they specifically said they were going to arrest me. [47:38.120 --> 47:40.120] They lied to me. [47:40.120 --> 47:42.120] Yeah, the one that cussed at me, cussed at me. [47:42.120 --> 47:45.120] Like the first 30 seconds I was out there talking to them. [47:45.120 --> 47:47.120] And I, of course, never cussed. [47:47.120 --> 47:48.120] I was polite. [47:48.120 --> 47:50.120] I was calm. [47:50.120 --> 47:51.120] And because I... [47:51.120 --> 47:52.120] Okay. [47:52.120 --> 47:56.120] The next time one uses a piece of foul language, dial 911. [47:56.120 --> 48:00.120] And always video everything. [48:00.120 --> 48:03.120] Anytime the police come to your property, video camera. [48:03.120 --> 48:04.120] Quick. [48:04.120 --> 48:05.120] Absolutely. [48:05.120 --> 48:07.120] Especially the quick. [48:07.120 --> 48:10.120] I mean, I would get a smartphone just to have quick. [48:10.120 --> 48:11.120] In fact, I did. [48:11.120 --> 48:14.120] I got an iPhone just so that I could do quick. [48:14.120 --> 48:15.120] Seriously. [48:15.120 --> 48:20.120] It's unfortunate that we have reached a point where our police considered [48:20.120 --> 48:26.120] a point of pride to be the best test liar in the office. [48:26.120 --> 48:27.120] Absolutely. [48:27.120 --> 48:30.120] Anytime you deal with a public serpents, have to use quick. [48:30.120 --> 48:33.120] Just the video camera isn't enough because they can grab it from you [48:33.120 --> 48:37.120] and destroy the camera or at the very least delete the file [48:37.120 --> 48:39.120] and then lie and say nothing about it. [48:39.120 --> 48:41.120] You have to have that quick app. [48:41.120 --> 48:43.120] In these days, if you're going to be a freedom fighter, [48:43.120 --> 48:46.120] you've got to have a smartphone and you've got to have quick. [48:46.120 --> 48:50.120] And don't forget to disable the GPS on your smartphone [48:50.120 --> 48:55.120] so that everywhere you go isn't tracked back to the whole anonymity thing. [48:55.120 --> 48:59.120] There are ways to preserve your anonymity and privacy in this age. [48:59.120 --> 49:03.120] You just have to be smart about it. [49:03.120 --> 49:05.120] There's a good use of the smart, right? [49:05.120 --> 49:06.120] Right. [49:06.120 --> 49:08.120] Well, I don't need to take up any more of your time. [49:08.120 --> 49:13.120] I really appreciate it if anybody can help out to come up on the day [49:13.120 --> 49:15.120] to try and stop the truck. [49:15.120 --> 49:17.120] Tell me about that e-mail address one more time. [49:17.120 --> 49:23.120] It is smartmeters.yahoo.com. [49:23.120 --> 49:24.120] I love it. [49:24.120 --> 49:25.120] All right. [49:25.120 --> 49:26.120] Thanks, C.J. [49:26.120 --> 49:31.120] And get the motion for a temporary restraining order from the O'Connor's forms. [49:31.120 --> 49:35.120] And if the J.P. won't take it, just file it in the county court. [49:35.120 --> 49:36.120] Okay, I will. [49:36.120 --> 49:38.120] Thank you so much and I'll keep you up to date. [49:38.120 --> 49:39.120] Okay, thanks. [49:39.120 --> 49:40.120] Thanks. [49:40.120 --> 49:41.120] Okay, bye. [49:41.120 --> 49:44.120] Okay, we're going now to Frank in New York. [49:44.120 --> 49:46.120] Frank, thanks for calling in. [49:46.120 --> 49:48.120] What's your question for us tonight? [49:48.120 --> 49:50.120] How are you doing? [49:50.120 --> 49:54.120] I'm the one that sent all those e-mails about the ADL paper and everything. [49:54.120 --> 49:57.120] I'm glad you gave it a little bit of hammering [49:57.120 --> 50:01.120] because they need a reaction that's appropriate. [50:01.120 --> 50:05.120] And I'm thankful to Randall for socking it to them. [50:05.120 --> 50:09.120] And I'm glad you all, you know, just hammered them [50:09.120 --> 50:14.120] because they need to go back to wherever Israel or wherever they're financing from. [50:14.120 --> 50:17.120] But anyways, I just wanted to tell you that. [50:17.120 --> 50:24.120] And last time I was on, I had a couple questions, but I guess I was short on time. [50:24.120 --> 50:28.120] What happens when a judge, I'm in for a traffic thing, [50:28.120 --> 50:31.120] I'm doing an action for a freedom right to travel, [50:31.120 --> 50:36.120] the judge tells me to shut up and don't say a word. [50:36.120 --> 50:41.120] And of course I shut up. [50:41.120 --> 50:47.120] And then he does all this stuff and tells me not to file any papers in my case. [50:47.120 --> 50:50.120] He tells me, intimidating me like that. [50:50.120 --> 50:53.120] I know I've got to file charges against him and everything like that. [50:53.120 --> 50:56.120] But what can I expect the next time I go into court? [50:56.120 --> 51:00.120] It depends on what kind of charges you file against the judge. [51:00.120 --> 51:08.120] Yeah, so I want to nail them so hard that it wakes them up because I believe in that. [51:08.120 --> 51:13.120] I believe that the cops should harass everybody who's asleep until they wake up. [51:13.120 --> 51:19.120] And the longer they're asleep, the harder the cops should go after them [51:19.120 --> 51:24.120] because I think really the cops are just having fun with us because they're sleeping. [51:24.120 --> 51:27.120] They really don't want to destroy the country or nothing like that. [51:27.120 --> 51:29.120] I think a lot of them are patriotic. [51:29.120 --> 51:32.120] I think a lot of them really care about this country. [51:32.120 --> 51:34.120] But we're so stupid. [51:34.120 --> 51:36.120] We deserve whatever the heck we get. [51:36.120 --> 51:38.120] And they're pretty nice about it. [51:38.120 --> 51:44.120] I mean, the way they do things, they know they can get away with murder, [51:44.120 --> 51:50.120] but they just kind of like spray you with mace or slam you up against a wall [51:50.120 --> 51:55.120] or tell you who's boss until you're either a chicken no good, [51:55.120 --> 51:59.120] or some kind of a pup who needs to be pushed around until you wake up [51:59.120 --> 52:03.120] or you're a dead head anyways and need to be sorted out. [52:03.120 --> 52:07.120] Maybe you're smoking too much weed or something. [52:07.120 --> 52:13.120] But I go down to New Pulse, New York, and I talk to everybody who's willing to listen. [52:13.120 --> 52:15.120] And there's a lot of people waking up. [52:15.120 --> 52:17.120] I'm telling you guys are great. [52:17.120 --> 52:26.120] And I wanted to ask you if you wouldn't mind if I put your logo up or something [52:26.120 --> 52:32.120] like in town just to stick it up, just for good karma or something. [52:32.120 --> 52:35.120] You're talking free advertising? [52:35.120 --> 52:37.120] Yeah, like if I stuck it up on the wall. [52:37.120 --> 52:39.120] They have a wall where everybody sticks stuff. [52:39.120 --> 52:42.120] Is that a rhetorical question? [52:42.120 --> 52:43.120] Would you mind? [52:43.120 --> 52:44.120] Of course not. [52:44.120 --> 52:47.120] Give you too much traffic or anything. [52:47.120 --> 52:50.120] Oh, that would break our hearts if we had too much traffic. [52:50.120 --> 52:51.120] By all means. [52:51.120 --> 52:52.120] I'll do that then. [52:52.120 --> 52:54.120] By all means. [52:54.120 --> 52:55.120] I'll do it. [52:55.120 --> 52:57.120] You guys have been a goldmine for me. [52:57.120 --> 53:05.120] And you guys always seem to get me inspiration when I'm being battered, you know, [53:05.120 --> 53:11.120] by all sides, including my father who's pretty much mad that I'm going after his buddy [53:11.120 --> 53:16.120] that was the judge and the supervisor of the town, and I'm hammering them, [53:16.120 --> 53:18.120] and he doesn't want to talk to me anymore. [53:18.120 --> 53:21.120] And you guys give me like, you guys are like my family almost. [53:21.120 --> 53:25.120] I mean, not really, but I mean, it feels like you guys are the only one telling me the truth, [53:25.120 --> 53:30.120] you know, and you've gotten me over a lot of humps where I just wanted to give up [53:30.120 --> 53:37.120] and, you know, do stupid things like, but of course I won't, but I wanted to. [53:37.120 --> 53:43.120] And, you know, just having you guys around has just been just amazing. [53:43.120 --> 53:48.120] And I tell everybody about you, whether they're listening to me, I don't know, [53:48.120 --> 53:52.120] but at least if they get big problems or they get hammered hard enough by the police, [53:52.120 --> 53:54.120] they've got a place to go. [53:54.120 --> 53:57.120] They don't give up hope and do something stupid. [53:57.120 --> 54:02.120] Yeah, we try to avoid that because it plays right into their hands. [54:02.120 --> 54:05.120] Yeah, you guys are a goldmine, I'm telling you. [54:05.120 --> 54:08.120] You don't even know how much you're appreciated. [54:08.120 --> 54:11.120] Well, thanks, Frank, we appreciate that. [54:11.120 --> 54:14.120] All my friends look up to you guys, I mean, in a pinch, you know. [54:14.120 --> 54:21.120] So you guys are like stopping anarchy, you know, you're just great. [54:21.120 --> 54:26.120] Sometimes we feel like anarchy is starting faster than we can stop it. [54:26.120 --> 54:31.120] I think you guys are really putting them, you guys are really helping a lot. [54:31.120 --> 54:32.120] Thank you. [54:32.120 --> 54:38.120] I know you guys don't make a lot of money and I know you guys are not appreciated [54:38.120 --> 54:40.120] as much as you need to be. [54:40.120 --> 54:43.120] I would travel down there and if you needed backup, [54:43.120 --> 54:49.120] I would take my old dog Sammy and scare off the bad guys for you. [54:49.120 --> 54:50.120] That's sweet. [54:50.120 --> 54:54.120] Thank you, Frank. [54:54.120 --> 54:56.120] So anyways, what would you do, Randy? [54:56.120 --> 55:01.120] For instance, a judge tells you, you shut the hell up and I know you, of course, [55:01.120 --> 55:02.120] but what about me? [55:02.120 --> 55:05.120] I mean, it's my dad's friend, it's in my town, I'm in my own bed, [55:05.120 --> 55:07.120] I'm sorry, my language, but... [55:07.120 --> 55:14.120] When the judge said that he told you not to file any documents in the case, [55:14.120 --> 55:17.120] Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? [55:17.120 --> 55:19.120] Mr. Bailiff is an old codger. [55:19.120 --> 55:20.120] Good. [55:20.120 --> 55:22.120] He can't hear his own... [55:22.120 --> 55:27.120] I saved his life from diabetic shock one time at a Fourth of July rally, [55:27.120 --> 55:29.120] so no one would steal his gun. [55:29.120 --> 55:32.120] He's just really, really old. [55:32.120 --> 55:35.120] He's ready to die. [55:35.120 --> 55:42.120] Maybe you'll have to give him CPR or maybe mouth-to-mouth. [55:42.120 --> 55:46.120] Maybe you should try that. [55:46.120 --> 55:51.120] I love the guy, but he's too old for this job. [55:51.120 --> 55:55.120] Well, why don't you try to take his gig? [55:55.120 --> 55:59.120] Maybe I should, but they got me for felony contempt [55:59.120 --> 56:01.120] when I had a problem with my girlfriend. [56:01.120 --> 56:02.120] Uh-oh. [56:02.120 --> 56:03.120] A long time ago. [56:03.120 --> 56:04.120] Yeah, they did that. [56:04.120 --> 56:06.120] They railroaded me really bad, Deborah, [56:06.120 --> 56:10.120] and you know, my girlfriend didn't want me arrested. [56:10.120 --> 56:13.120] Felony contempt? [56:13.120 --> 56:18.120] Yeah, felony contempt to court [56:18.120 --> 56:23.120] because her son said he saw my 892 Honda or something [56:23.120 --> 56:26.120] go past the house in a blizzard, [56:26.120 --> 56:28.120] and they rounded me up and threw me back in jail, [56:28.120 --> 56:32.120] and I had put another $10,000 bail on me, [56:32.120 --> 56:38.120] and the woman who called the police died. [56:38.120 --> 56:40.120] You know, I was like... [56:40.120 --> 56:42.120] She just like totally croaked. [56:42.120 --> 56:46.120] She like died of some kind of diabetic thing, [56:46.120 --> 56:50.120] and basically I couldn't get no cooperation. [56:50.120 --> 56:52.120] I just remained silent, [56:52.120 --> 56:57.120] got my jaw broken in jail by some thug, [56:57.120 --> 57:01.120] and I couldn't speak in court, so I just gave up. [57:01.120 --> 57:04.120] I couldn't go any further, [57:04.120 --> 57:07.120] so I just pled guilty to everything to get out of there [57:07.120 --> 57:10.120] because I couldn't eat enough and they weren't feeding me. [57:10.120 --> 57:13.120] I couldn't sue. I couldn't speak. [57:13.120 --> 57:15.120] It was pretty awful. [57:15.120 --> 57:18.120] It was an awful thing, [57:18.120 --> 57:21.120] and I couldn't get a lawyer to take the case. [57:21.120 --> 57:24.120] I would have gone about learning sign language. [57:24.120 --> 57:25.120] Yeah. [57:25.120 --> 57:28.120] I thought about that a long time ago, and I never did it. [57:28.120 --> 57:30.120] That will get you even more contempt [57:30.120 --> 57:32.120] for the sign that I'm thinking you would use. [57:32.120 --> 57:33.120] Yeah. [57:33.120 --> 57:35.120] That would have been the first one I used [57:35.120 --> 57:38.120] just to make sure we were on the same page. [57:38.120 --> 57:39.120] I was a sweetheart, though. [57:39.120 --> 57:42.120] I laughed my ass off because, you know, [57:42.120 --> 57:45.120] as my jaw was hanging there in five pieces, [57:45.120 --> 57:47.120] I just laughed my ass off. [57:47.120 --> 57:50.120] I could not believe how bad it was. [57:50.120 --> 57:53.120] I just transcended all the pain. [57:53.120 --> 57:57.120] They called me the guy who has a high tolerance to pain, [57:57.120 --> 57:58.120] which I don't. [57:58.120 --> 58:01.120] I just couldn't believe how bad it was. [58:01.120 --> 58:03.120] It's just hilarious. [58:03.120 --> 58:05.120] I knew they couldn't kill me. [58:05.120 --> 58:08.120] Well, never say never. [58:08.120 --> 58:10.120] Well, they could, I guess. [58:10.120 --> 58:14.120] I mean, that's what they did to Jesse Trinity's brother. [58:14.120 --> 58:18.120] That was all part of the Oklahoma City bombing cover-up. [58:18.120 --> 58:21.120] They meant to kill somebody else as part of the cover-up, [58:21.120 --> 58:23.120] and they killed Jesse Trinity's brother instead, [58:23.120 --> 58:25.120] and so now they just made things worse for themselves, [58:25.120 --> 58:27.120] but these things happen. [58:27.120 --> 58:28.120] Listen, Frank, we're at the end of the... [58:28.120 --> 58:29.120] we're at the top of the hour here. [58:29.120 --> 58:31.120] Do you have anything else for us? [58:31.120 --> 58:32.120] No, I just... [58:32.120 --> 58:34.120] I'll call in some other time when I gather my steam. [58:34.120 --> 58:35.120] All right, thanks, Frank. [58:35.120 --> 58:37.120] You give them hell, okay? [58:37.120 --> 58:38.120] Bye-bye. [58:38.120 --> 58:39.120] Okay. [58:39.120 --> 58:40.120] All right, when we get back, [58:40.120 --> 58:41.120] we've got Gary from Texas callers. [58:41.120 --> 58:45.120] If you'd like to call in 512-646-1984, [58:45.120 --> 58:49.120] we have another three hours to go on our Friday four-hour info [58:49.120 --> 58:52.120] marathon here on the rule of law. [58:52.120 --> 59:16.120] We'll be right back after INN World Report needs. [59:22.120 --> 59:49.120] We'll be right back. [59:52.120 --> 01:00:07.120] The Pentagon says it will reopen hundreds of cases [01:00:07.120 --> 01:00:10.120] of alleged purchases of child pornography [01:00:10.120 --> 01:00:12.120] by Department of Defense employees [01:00:12.120 --> 01:00:15.120] officials had previously declined to investigate. [01:00:15.120 --> 01:00:19.120] Earlier this month, the Upshot website reported that in 2007, [01:00:19.120 --> 01:00:23.120] the Pentagon was investigating 264 military service members, [01:00:23.120 --> 01:00:25.120] civilian employees, and contractors [01:00:25.120 --> 01:00:30.120] who purchased access to a child pornography website. [01:00:30.120 --> 01:00:33.120] The Taliban Friday kidnapped 19 people [01:00:33.120 --> 01:00:36.120] associated with Afghanistan's parliamentary election, [01:00:36.120 --> 01:00:39.120] including a candidate, Abdul Rahman Hayat. [01:00:39.120 --> 01:00:44.120] Afghanistan votes Saturday to elect 249 lawmakers. [01:00:44.120 --> 01:00:46.120] The Taliban have threatened to disrupt the poll [01:00:46.120 --> 01:00:50.120] and have already killed three candidates. [01:00:50.120 --> 01:00:53.120] Two Afghans were killed Thursday in another protest [01:00:53.120 --> 01:00:56.120] over a rumored burning of the Koran [01:00:56.120 --> 01:01:01.120] nearly a week after a pastor in Florida canceled plans to do so. [01:01:01.120 --> 01:01:04.120] That brought to five the number of people killed in Afghanistan [01:01:04.120 --> 01:01:09.120] during protests about Koran burnings that never happened. [01:01:09.120 --> 01:01:13.120] NATO Secretary General Anders Rasmussen Wednesday [01:01:13.120 --> 01:01:17.120] dismissed suggestions the war in Afghanistan could be resolved [01:01:17.120 --> 01:01:20.120] by handing over the South to Taliban insurgents, [01:01:20.120 --> 01:01:23.120] saying this was a recipe for civil war. [01:01:23.120 --> 01:01:26.120] Robert Blackwill, a former foreign policy adviser [01:01:26.120 --> 01:01:29.120] to ex-President George Bush, has proposed Afghanistan [01:01:29.120 --> 01:01:33.120] be divided on ethnic lines, arguing it is impossible [01:01:33.120 --> 01:01:36.120] to defeat the Taliban or force them into negotiations. [01:01:36.120 --> 01:01:40.120] Blackwill argued the US and its allies should concentrate [01:01:40.120 --> 01:01:44.120] on ensuring they did not lose the Afghan West and North. [01:01:44.120 --> 01:01:48.120] More than 40 foreign policy experts in the Afghanistan study group [01:01:48.120 --> 01:01:51.120] have suggested ending military operations in the South [01:01:51.120 --> 01:01:53.120] and a power-sharing deal. [01:01:53.120 --> 01:01:57.120] Rasmussen said the Taliban would not be satisfied with the South, [01:01:57.120 --> 01:02:00.120] adding NATO's mission was to prevent the country [01:02:00.120 --> 01:02:02.120] from becoming a haven for militants, [01:02:02.120 --> 01:02:07.120] even though NATO couldn't defeat every last Taliban fighter. [01:02:07.120 --> 01:02:10.120] Influential Republicans pledged Wednesday to support [01:02:10.120 --> 01:02:13.120] Christine O'Donnell's election campaign after party leaders [01:02:13.120 --> 01:02:16.120] initially turned their backs on the Tea Party candidate. [01:02:16.120 --> 01:02:19.120] Following her upset win in the Delaware primary, [01:02:19.120 --> 01:02:22.120] O'Donnell's victory over Representative Mike Castle [01:02:22.120 --> 01:02:25.120] had sent Republicans into a state of shock. [01:02:25.120 --> 01:02:28.120] Aides for the top fundraising arm for Senate Republicans [01:02:28.120 --> 01:02:31.120] said Tuesday she would not get help from them. [01:02:31.120 --> 01:02:34.120] But National Republican Committee Chairman John Cornyn [01:02:34.120 --> 01:02:38.120] said Wednesday O'Donnell would have party support after all. [01:02:38.120 --> 01:02:41.120] O'Donnell's win posed one of the biggest upsets [01:02:41.120 --> 01:02:43.120] to the Republican establishment this year, [01:02:43.120 --> 01:02:48.120] a campaign season marked by a series of outsider Tea Party victories. [01:02:48.120 --> 01:02:50.120] O'Donnell, though, was a perennial candidate [01:02:50.120 --> 01:02:52.120] with no government experience [01:02:52.120 --> 01:02:55.120] and a history of personal financial problems. [01:02:55.120 --> 01:02:59.120] This news brief brought to you by the International Newsnet. [01:02:59.120 --> 01:03:04.120] You are listening to the Rule of Law Radio Network [01:03:04.120 --> 01:03:07.120] at ruleoflawradio.com. [01:03:07.120 --> 01:03:11.120] Live free speech talk radio at its best. [01:03:20.120 --> 01:03:25.120] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. [01:03:25.120 --> 01:03:32.120] I read his book and it says he cares not for the unsightly. [01:03:32.120 --> 01:03:39.120] These warmongers come by that term rightly. [01:03:39.120 --> 01:03:46.120] I won't pay for the war with my body. [01:03:46.120 --> 01:03:50.120] Ain't gonna pay for the car with my money. [01:03:50.120 --> 01:03:53.120] I won't pay for the fun with my body. [01:03:53.120 --> 01:03:56.120] Their plan's wicked and their logic shoddy. [01:03:56.120 --> 01:04:01.120] All right, their plan is wicked and their logic is shoddy. [01:04:01.120 --> 01:04:08.120] We're not gonna pay for the oil and their toys with our body and our money. [01:04:08.120 --> 01:04:11.120] The whole agenda smells funny. [01:04:11.120 --> 01:04:13.120] I wanna fight in a war. [01:04:13.120 --> 01:04:15.120] We're fighting in the war of our own. [01:04:15.120 --> 01:04:19.120] We are picking a fight this time here on the Rule of Law, [01:04:19.120 --> 01:04:21.120] ruleoflawradio.com. [01:04:21.120 --> 01:04:23.120] We're at the top of the hour now, [01:04:23.120 --> 01:04:28.120] and I'm gonna take this opportunity to plug our sponsors. [01:04:28.120 --> 01:04:31.120] Folks, if you would please support our sponsors. [01:04:31.120 --> 01:04:33.120] It is very much appreciated. [01:04:33.120 --> 01:04:36.120] We need you very much to support our sponsors, [01:04:36.120 --> 01:04:39.120] because when you support our sponsors, [01:04:39.120 --> 01:04:42.120] then you support Rule of Law Radio. [01:04:42.120 --> 01:04:44.120] You support this network. [01:04:44.120 --> 01:04:46.120] You keep us on the air. [01:04:46.120 --> 01:04:49.120] We really sincerely appreciate you supporting our sponsors, [01:04:49.120 --> 01:04:51.120] especially our new sponsors, [01:04:51.120 --> 01:04:53.120] because if our sponsors don't get supported, [01:04:53.120 --> 01:04:58.120] then that means our sponsors will not continue to be our sponsors anymore, [01:04:58.120 --> 01:05:00.120] and that hurts us. [01:05:00.120 --> 01:05:03.120] So folks, we really need your help in supporting our sponsors. [01:05:03.120 --> 01:05:04.120] We need donations. [01:05:04.120 --> 01:05:05.120] We need your financial support. [01:05:05.120 --> 01:05:08.120] We are not supported by the Ford Foundation. [01:05:08.120 --> 01:05:11.120] We are not supported by Merck, okay? [01:05:11.120 --> 01:05:14.120] We are not supported by the Texas Film Commission. [01:05:14.120 --> 01:05:18.120] We are not supported by the big pharma industry. [01:05:18.120 --> 01:05:21.120] We're not supported by the oil companies. [01:05:21.120 --> 01:05:23.120] We are supported by you. [01:05:23.120 --> 01:05:27.120] It is because of you that we are able to bring this information to you. [01:05:27.120 --> 01:05:31.120] And so, folks, if you feel that this is valuable information, [01:05:31.120 --> 01:05:36.120] then please support us through donations and supporting our sponsors. [01:05:36.120 --> 01:05:42.120] We just got our newest sponsor last night, centrician Stephen Rogers. [01:05:42.120 --> 01:05:43.120] We interviewed him last night. [01:05:43.120 --> 01:05:46.120] We discussed Codex Elementarius more, Agenda 21 business. [01:05:46.120 --> 01:05:51.120] So you can order centrician, just a wonderful nutritional product. [01:05:51.120 --> 01:05:53.120] I've been taking it. [01:05:53.120 --> 01:05:54.120] I gave some to Randy today. [01:05:54.120 --> 01:05:55.120] He loves it. [01:05:55.120 --> 01:06:00.120] It makes us much more energetic, more energy, less stress. [01:06:00.120 --> 01:06:04.120] You can order centrician by clicking on the big green banner on the [01:06:04.120 --> 01:06:10.120] ruleoflawradio.com Web site where it says more energy and less stress. [01:06:10.120 --> 01:06:13.120] And, folks, this is very biblical also. [01:06:13.120 --> 01:06:17.120] You know, reading about all the herbs and Stephen was discussing last night [01:06:17.120 --> 01:06:24.120] how, you know, there's the superfoods content in centrician. [01:06:24.120 --> 01:06:28.120] You've got the hemp seed powder and the spirulina, [01:06:28.120 --> 01:06:31.120] which I've been eating spirulina for almost 20 years now. [01:06:31.120 --> 01:06:37.120] But that is really just mainly a delivery system for these adaptogenic herbs, [01:06:37.120 --> 01:06:39.120] okay, these tonic Chinese herbs. [01:06:39.120 --> 01:06:44.120] And it says in the Bible, Jehovah, Jesus our Savior, Jehovah our Savior, [01:06:44.120 --> 01:06:48.120] Jehovah gave us all good herbs for food. [01:06:48.120 --> 01:06:52.120] And so, folks, this is entirely biblical, these herbs, [01:06:52.120 --> 01:06:55.120] these wonderful tonic Chinese herbs, as the Bible says, [01:06:55.120 --> 01:06:58.120] as Jehovah our Savior says, He gave us, [01:06:58.120 --> 01:07:00.120] our Creator gave us all these good herbs for food. [01:07:00.120 --> 01:07:03.120] So please get some centrician. [01:07:03.120 --> 01:07:05.120] Promise you, you will not regret it. [01:07:05.120 --> 01:07:06.120] It is very good stuff. [01:07:06.120 --> 01:07:09.120] We've also got, I'm sorry, go ahead, Randy. [01:07:09.120 --> 01:07:11.120] It really worked for me. [01:07:11.120 --> 01:07:12.120] See? [01:07:12.120 --> 01:07:15.120] You guys never heard me tout anything like that. [01:07:15.120 --> 01:07:18.120] Yeah, I noticed he's a lot smarter. [01:07:18.120 --> 01:07:22.120] Yeah, you noticed how smart I was through the whole show and I kept my mouth shut. [01:07:22.120 --> 01:07:28.120] But if you heard my voice in the last few times I was on, [01:07:28.120 --> 01:07:32.120] I've had a lot of people comment on how tired I sounded, [01:07:32.120 --> 01:07:37.120] and I was, I've been just grinding down. [01:07:37.120 --> 01:07:43.120] I took one scoop of that today, fixed me a bowl of rice and vegetables [01:07:43.120 --> 01:07:45.120] and couldn't eat a third of it. [01:07:45.120 --> 01:07:48.120] Just wasn't hungry. [01:07:48.120 --> 01:07:50.120] And got more energy than I know what to do with it. [01:07:50.120 --> 01:07:55.120] I'm really surprised, but mostly it settled out my system. [01:07:55.120 --> 01:07:58.120] I've just been hungry lately, [01:07:58.120 --> 01:08:01.120] and obviously I was hungry for something that I wasn't getting, [01:08:01.120 --> 01:08:05.120] so I wound up just constantly eating to try to get it. [01:08:05.120 --> 01:08:08.120] Whatever was in that stuff, it stopped it. [01:08:08.120 --> 01:08:10.120] Very nutritious product. [01:08:10.120 --> 01:08:13.120] Absolutely nutrition to the hilt. [01:08:13.120 --> 01:08:16.120] It brings your body into homeostasis, state of balance. [01:08:16.120 --> 01:08:18.120] This is what herbs do. [01:08:18.120 --> 01:08:21.120] Proper herbs and properly gathered, [01:08:21.120 --> 01:08:25.120] properly processed and put together in the right combinations. [01:08:25.120 --> 01:08:29.120] This is what the Bible tells us that our Lord Jesus Jehovah, [01:08:29.120 --> 01:08:33.120] our Savior gave to us all good herbs for food, [01:08:33.120 --> 01:08:36.120] for the human health, for the health of the human body. [01:08:36.120 --> 01:08:38.120] So we've got centrician folks. [01:08:38.120 --> 01:08:39.120] Please support centrician. [01:08:39.120 --> 01:08:40.120] Please get some. [01:08:40.120 --> 01:08:41.120] You will love it. [01:08:41.120 --> 01:08:42.120] I promise you. [01:08:42.120 --> 01:08:44.120] We've also got capital coin and bullion. [01:08:44.120 --> 01:08:49.120] And even if you're not in Austin, folks, order from them. [01:08:49.120 --> 01:08:57.120] I'm telling you, Chad has the lowest markup of anybody I have ever seen. [01:08:57.120 --> 01:09:00.120] He's got all the gold and silver coins, numismatics. [01:09:00.120 --> 01:09:01.120] You can buy from him. [01:09:01.120 --> 01:09:02.120] You can sell. [01:09:02.120 --> 01:09:05.120] I mean, he's got everything that all these other online gold [01:09:05.120 --> 01:09:08.120] and silver dealers have at a fraction of the price. [01:09:08.120 --> 01:09:12.120] I'm telling you, he has screaming deals. [01:09:12.120 --> 01:09:15.120] I went by there the other day, and I was like, [01:09:15.120 --> 01:09:18.120] Chad, how can you afford to stay in business? [01:09:18.120 --> 01:09:21.120] I couldn't believe his markup. [01:09:21.120 --> 01:09:25.120] It's almost nonexistent, but he's just getting established. [01:09:25.120 --> 01:09:30.120] So, folks, take advantage of the screaming deals at capital coin and bullion, [01:09:30.120 --> 01:09:34.120] 512-646-6440. [01:09:34.120 --> 01:09:38.120] You can also go to capitalcoinandbullion.com. [01:09:38.120 --> 01:09:41.120] There's a banner on the website right underneath the centrician banner [01:09:41.120 --> 01:09:43.120] where you can go to the website. [01:09:43.120 --> 01:09:45.120] They're open Monday through Friday. [01:09:45.120 --> 01:09:47.120] Monday through Saturday is 10 to 6. [01:09:47.120 --> 01:09:48.120] I think they're closed on Sundays. [01:09:48.120 --> 01:09:50.120] You can go to his website and find out the hours. [01:09:50.120 --> 01:09:51.120] Give him a call. [01:09:51.120 --> 01:09:52.120] Stop by. [01:09:52.120 --> 01:09:54.120] They're just wonderful people, family-owned business. [01:09:54.120 --> 01:09:56.120] Him and his wife are so sweet. [01:09:56.120 --> 01:09:58.120] You really will love dealing with these people, I promise, [01:09:58.120 --> 01:10:02.120] and you'll like, you will really love the deals I'm telling you. [01:10:02.120 --> 01:10:08.120] So please support capital coin and bullion for all your precious metals needs for sure. [01:10:08.120 --> 01:10:12.120] And, of course, you've got the Mike Mears method, [01:10:12.120 --> 01:10:15.120] beating debt collectors, beating creditors, [01:10:15.120 --> 01:10:19.120] beating these credit agencies, these credit reporting agencies. [01:10:19.120 --> 01:10:22.120] He's got six cases in federal court on Pacer. [01:10:22.120 --> 01:10:26.120] You can look it up on Pacer, M-I-R-R-A-S is his last name, [01:10:26.120 --> 01:10:28.120] first name Michael, promise you. [01:10:28.120 --> 01:10:31.120] Everyone that has bought the course has won their case. [01:10:31.120 --> 01:10:36.120] We have not heard of one person being dissatisfied. [01:10:36.120 --> 01:10:42.120] It's well worth the price because these rogues are going to violate the law, [01:10:42.120 --> 01:10:46.120] and there are very specific amounts of tort claims [01:10:46.120 --> 01:10:51.120] established under these consumer protection laws, a thousand bucks a pop. [01:10:51.120 --> 01:10:53.120] I mean, that's just all there is to it. [01:10:53.120 --> 01:10:57.120] He goes after them on violations of the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act [01:10:57.120 --> 01:11:02.120] and the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and there are very specific tort amounts. [01:11:02.120 --> 01:11:07.120] And I believe his course is like 280 or something. [01:11:07.120 --> 01:11:09.120] I have to go back and look. [01:11:09.120 --> 01:11:14.120] For course one, 297, all right? [01:11:14.120 --> 01:11:17.120] For 297, you get the how to beat debt collectors. [01:11:17.120 --> 01:11:23.120] If you want parts one and two, how to beat debt collectors and creditors, it's 547. [01:11:23.120 --> 01:11:28.120] It's a screaming deal because if you're in trouble with debt collectors or credit cards, [01:11:28.120 --> 01:11:34.120] you're going to walk away with two, three grand out of one of these lawsuits that you're going to file. [01:11:34.120 --> 01:11:42.120] So you will get your money back and then some when you file your lawsuits under his method. [01:11:42.120 --> 01:11:43.120] Go ahead, Randy. [01:11:43.120 --> 01:11:47.120] We had to caution Mark in Wisconsin, one of our affiliates. [01:11:47.120 --> 01:11:52.120] He beat all these credit cards and he wanted to go get out and go take out some more [01:11:52.120 --> 01:11:55.120] so he could run them up and beat them. [01:11:55.120 --> 01:11:57.120] Well, you know what? [01:11:57.120 --> 01:12:02.120] If people really start having a lot of fun with this, they can modify the Mike Mears method. [01:12:02.120 --> 01:12:07.120] One of Mike Mears' associates, see, with the Mike Mears method, [01:12:07.120 --> 01:12:14.120] what he does is he has people sue the creditors and debt collectors for violations of these consumer protection laws, all right? [01:12:14.120 --> 01:12:20.120] And then as part of the settlement agreement that they will offer you because it's not about the debt, [01:12:20.120 --> 01:12:23.120] it has nothing to do with whether the debt is valid or not. [01:12:23.120 --> 01:12:27.120] It has to do with the fact that they violated these laws, all right? [01:12:27.120 --> 01:12:33.120] And so to get you out of their hair as part of the settlement agreement, then you tell them, [01:12:33.120 --> 01:12:39.120] I want you to retire the debt, you promise you're never going to sell the information related to the debt again, [01:12:39.120 --> 01:12:41.120] or IE, sell the debt, whatever you want to call it. [01:12:41.120 --> 01:12:43.120] Technically, they're not selling the debt. [01:12:43.120 --> 01:12:45.120] They're selling the information related to the debt. [01:12:45.120 --> 01:12:47.120] They'll never do that again. [01:12:47.120 --> 01:12:49.120] They've already charged it off anyway. [01:12:49.120 --> 01:12:54.120] And then you demand that they remove all derogatory information from your credit report. [01:12:54.120 --> 01:13:01.120] So the whole thing goes away forever because what ends up happening is every six months it will turn over to a new debt collector, all right? [01:13:01.120 --> 01:13:03.120] And it will just haunt you forever, all right? [01:13:03.120 --> 01:13:09.120] So even if you get rid of one, if you don't have some kind of a settlement agreement with the original creditor [01:13:09.120 --> 01:13:15.120] and whatever current debt collector is on you about it, then they'll just keep selling the information. [01:13:15.120 --> 01:13:17.120] It will just keep going and going and going for the rest of your life. [01:13:17.120 --> 01:13:20.120] So that's part of the settlement agreement that the whole thing goes away. [01:13:20.120 --> 01:13:21.120] They never sell it again. [01:13:21.120 --> 01:13:25.120] The debt's retired, and all the derogatory information is removed from your credit report. [01:13:25.120 --> 01:13:29.120] Well, one of Mike's associates, he's taken it one step further. [01:13:29.120 --> 01:13:32.120] He doesn't want that as part of the settlement agreement. [01:13:32.120 --> 01:13:38.120] He wants them to sell it again so he can turn around and sue them again. [01:13:38.120 --> 01:13:42.120] Okay, so this guy's had a little bit too much fun with it, so you can take it that step further. [01:13:42.120 --> 01:13:44.120] But the Mike nursing method does work. [01:13:44.120 --> 01:13:45.120] There's no question about it. [01:13:45.120 --> 01:13:47.120] We also got jurisdictionary. [01:13:47.120 --> 01:13:50.120] When you're lawsuit without a lawyer, folks, it's the ABCs. [01:13:50.120 --> 01:13:52.120] You've got to get jurisdictionary. [01:13:52.120 --> 01:13:55.120] If you're going to take yourself seriously as a pro se litigant, [01:13:55.120 --> 01:14:00.120] whether you're going to deal with trying to defend yourself in the criminal realm [01:14:00.120 --> 01:14:03.120] regarding traffic tickets or anything else, [01:14:03.120 --> 01:14:06.120] or if you're going to file a lawsuit or defend yourself against a lawsuit, [01:14:06.120 --> 01:14:12.120] just to get familiar with court process, the rules of court, these sorts of things, [01:14:12.120 --> 01:14:15.120] it's very, very, very empowering. [01:14:15.120 --> 01:14:19.120] Please, jurisdictionary is just the bare bones basic right there. [01:14:19.120 --> 01:14:22.120] And if you've got jurisdictionary and the Mike Mears method, [01:14:22.120 --> 01:14:25.120] well, then you are really good to go. [01:14:25.120 --> 01:14:28.120] All right, we've got HempUSA, order from HempUSA, [01:14:28.120 --> 01:14:34.120] and folks, we've just launched a new website for Jerry Stevens' piano service. [01:14:34.120 --> 01:14:38.120] He's been mostly advertising through the phone book, [01:14:38.120 --> 01:14:40.120] but lately, I guess over the last couple of years, [01:14:40.120 --> 01:14:44.120] people are using the Internet more and more to look up phone numbers [01:14:44.120 --> 01:14:47.120] and letting their fingers do the walking online, so to speak. [01:14:47.120 --> 01:14:51.120] So folks, brand new website, austinpianotuner.com. [01:14:51.120 --> 01:14:56.120] It's not even in the search engines yet, even when you do a search for the URL itself. [01:14:56.120 --> 01:14:58.120] So we need folks, even if you don't have a piano, [01:14:58.120 --> 01:15:02.120] if you could just get on the website and just click on the banner. [01:15:02.120 --> 01:15:04.120] We need to start driving some traffic to Jerry's website [01:15:04.120 --> 01:15:07.120] so that we can get his website up in the search engine [01:15:07.120 --> 01:15:10.120] so that people that do have pianos will find him, all right, [01:15:10.120 --> 01:15:14.120] because he is absolutely a sponsor of this network. [01:15:14.120 --> 01:15:15.120] There's no question about it. [01:15:15.120 --> 01:15:20.120] So we've got Jerry Stevens' piano service, jurisdictionary, the Mike Mears method. [01:15:20.120 --> 01:15:27.120] We've got Centrition, Capital Coin and Bullion, and of course, Eddie's traffic seminar. [01:15:27.120 --> 01:15:30.120] Okay, got to get Eddie's traffic seminar. [01:15:30.120 --> 01:15:36.120] There's a link on the website, ruleoflawradio.com, to purchase the traffic seminar. [01:15:36.120 --> 01:15:42.120] I just sent out last night some updates to the folks who are currently registered [01:15:42.120 --> 01:15:44.120] as part of the traffic seminar mailing list. [01:15:44.120 --> 01:15:51.120] Eddie has just released two brand new DVDs with a full list of research materials. [01:15:51.120 --> 01:15:55.120] I did not email that out because it's many, many, many gigs' worth of data, [01:15:55.120 --> 01:16:00.120] and I have to set up a brand new server situation and software to manage logins [01:16:00.120 --> 01:16:06.120] and people's usernames and passwords and such like that in order to deal with this. [01:16:06.120 --> 01:16:09.120] Basically, it's a brand new re-release of the traffic seminar. [01:16:09.120 --> 01:16:13.120] But in the meantime, I've got the new documents out to folks. [01:16:13.120 --> 01:16:16.120] So folks, we've got the traffic seminar as well. [01:16:16.120 --> 01:16:20.120] All of these purchases go to support ruleoflawradio.com. [01:16:20.120 --> 01:16:24.120] They go to support this network into keeping this show on the air. [01:16:24.120 --> 01:16:28.120] And I'm sorry to have to take up so much time plugging our sponsors, [01:16:28.120 --> 01:16:31.120] but folks, we really do need your help, okay? [01:16:31.120 --> 01:16:36.120] We do as much as we can to give you as much airtime as possible. [01:16:36.120 --> 01:16:42.120] And also, Three Shoes Posse and Route 1, go to threeshoesposse.com and route1.net [01:16:42.120 --> 01:16:43.120] to buy some of my music. [01:16:43.120 --> 01:16:46.120] We're about to release some brand new CDs [01:16:46.120 --> 01:16:50.120] of which you've been listening to some already of our bumper music. [01:16:50.120 --> 01:16:53.120] That's Three Shoes Posse and Route 1 bumper music, soon to be released. [01:16:53.120 --> 01:16:57.120] We'll be taking your calls when we get back on the other side. [01:17:02.120 --> 01:17:05.120] Capital Coin and Bullion is your local source for rare coins, [01:17:05.120 --> 01:17:08.120] precious metals and coin supplies in the Austin metro area. [01:17:08.120 --> 01:17:10.120] We also ship worldwide. [01:17:10.120 --> 01:17:13.120] We are a family-owned and operated business that offers competitive prices [01:17:13.120 --> 01:17:15.120] on your coin and metal purchases. [01:17:15.120 --> 01:17:19.120] We buy, sell, trade, and consign rare coins, gold and silver, [01:17:19.120 --> 01:17:21.120] coin collections, precious metals, and scrap gold. [01:17:21.120 --> 01:17:23.120] We purchase and sell gold and jewelry items. [01:17:23.120 --> 01:17:26.120] We offer daily specials on coins and bullion. [01:17:26.120 --> 01:17:29.120] We are located at 5448 Burnett Road, Suite 3, [01:17:29.120 --> 01:17:31.120] at the corner of Burnett and Shulmark. [01:17:31.120 --> 01:17:35.120] And we're open Mondays and Fridays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 5. [01:17:35.120 --> 01:17:38.120] You are welcome to stop in our shop during regular business hours [01:17:38.120 --> 01:17:43.120] or call 512-646-6440 with any questions. [01:17:43.120 --> 01:17:45.120] Ask for Chad and say you heard about us on Google Law Radio [01:17:45.120 --> 01:17:47.120] or Texas Liberty Radio. [01:17:47.120 --> 01:17:50.120] That's Capital Coin and Bullion at the corner of Burnett and Shulmark, [01:17:50.120 --> 01:17:54.120] and we're open Mondays and Fridays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 5. [01:17:54.120 --> 01:18:19.120] That's Capital Coin and Bullion, 512-646-6440. [01:18:19.120 --> 01:18:24.120] Okay, folks, we are back. We're going to be taking your calls now. [01:18:24.120 --> 01:18:26.120] We've got Dave in Texas. [01:18:26.120 --> 01:18:28.120] Dave, thanks for calling in. [01:18:28.120 --> 01:18:31.120] What's on your mind tonight? [01:18:31.120 --> 01:18:32.120] Oh, hello. [01:18:32.120 --> 01:18:36.120] Yeah, I was wondering if you guys could talk about profiling [01:18:36.120 --> 01:18:41.120] and how, like, what's the legality if they pull you over for no reason [01:18:41.120 --> 01:18:46.120] and then they find something that they charge you with and arrest you, [01:18:46.120 --> 01:18:48.120] but they pulled you over for no reason. [01:18:48.120 --> 01:18:49.120] They didn't have a reason. [01:18:49.120 --> 01:18:52.120] And then on the affidavit of the arrest, [01:18:52.120 --> 01:18:58.120] they say that the reason they pulled you over is because you used your turn signal [01:18:58.120 --> 01:19:01.120] or that you didn't use your turn signal, but that's not true. [01:19:01.120 --> 01:19:04.120] I mean, is it just they're just going to believe the cop and you're screwed [01:19:04.120 --> 01:19:07.120] or what's up with, like, racial profiling? [01:19:07.120 --> 01:19:10.120] I think it was racial profiling because I'm black [01:19:10.120 --> 01:19:15.120] and I have a Cadillac tinted windows and 20, so I fit the description. [01:19:15.120 --> 01:19:20.120] But I'm just wondering, you know, what was the probable cause they had to pull me over? [01:19:20.120 --> 01:19:21.120] Well, wait a minute. [01:19:21.120 --> 01:19:23.120] Okay, so they may be able to make something up [01:19:23.120 --> 01:19:26.120] as far as, like, they could say you didn't use your blinker, [01:19:26.120 --> 01:19:30.120] but now that's one issue, but now there's a second issue, [01:19:30.120 --> 01:19:33.120] something about finding something on you. [01:19:33.120 --> 01:19:39.120] They have to have probable cause in order to search you after they've pulled you over. [01:19:39.120 --> 01:19:44.120] So what was their probable cause or what was their excuse for searching you? [01:19:44.120 --> 01:19:45.120] That's right. [01:19:45.120 --> 01:19:50.120] They started smelling marijuana in my car. [01:19:50.120 --> 01:19:53.120] And they didn't find no marijuana, but they found some prescription drugs [01:19:53.120 --> 01:19:58.120] that I didn't have no prescription for, and they charged me with felony. [01:19:58.120 --> 01:20:00.120] Ooh, fruit of the poy. [01:20:00.120 --> 01:20:02.120] You can claim fruit of the poison treatment. [01:20:02.120 --> 01:20:05.120] They'll believe the officer. [01:20:05.120 --> 01:20:06.120] That's what I'm saying. [01:20:06.120 --> 01:20:09.120] And, you know, but the reality is they ain't got no, [01:20:09.120 --> 01:20:12.120] they had no reason to pull me over in the first place [01:20:12.120 --> 01:20:14.120] because I did use my blinker. [01:20:14.120 --> 01:20:18.120] The reality is if the policeman says you didn't use your blinker, [01:20:18.120 --> 01:20:22.120] they will buy that because the court wants to buy that. [01:20:22.120 --> 01:20:28.120] Unless you have a video camera trained on your dashboard all the time while you're driving, [01:20:28.120 --> 01:20:33.120] and it's gotten to the point where I'm about to mount video cameras all over my car, [01:20:33.120 --> 01:20:39.120] facing forward, videoing the dashboard, facing backwards, and everything else. [01:20:39.120 --> 01:20:43.120] Well, you know, I go down because he had a camera on his car, [01:20:43.120 --> 01:20:47.120] so I try and go in there and they say you need an attorney to get that. [01:20:47.120 --> 01:20:49.120] But I want to meet my attorney next week. [01:20:49.120 --> 01:20:51.120] I want to get that video before I'm met up with him. [01:20:51.120 --> 01:20:52.120] They said I wouldn't give it to me. [01:20:52.120 --> 01:20:56.120] What's up with that? [01:20:56.120 --> 01:21:00.120] They're required to produce the evidence. [01:21:00.120 --> 01:21:08.120] It's just they're not required to produce the evidence exactly when you ask for it. [01:21:08.120 --> 01:21:17.120] If they don't produce it, you have to petition the court for a motion to compel [01:21:17.120 --> 01:21:20.120] so, you know, they can drag their feet. [01:21:20.120 --> 01:21:23.120] So isn't profiling illegal? [01:21:23.120 --> 01:21:24.120] Yes. [01:21:24.120 --> 01:21:27.120] You've got to prove that's what they did was to profile you. [01:21:27.120 --> 01:21:28.120] Wait a minute. [01:21:28.120 --> 01:21:31.120] Isn't being black in America illegal? [01:21:31.120 --> 01:21:35.120] Well, see, the problem with the whole profiling thing, [01:21:35.120 --> 01:21:39.120] and Eddie hit the nail on the head here, you have to prove it. [01:21:39.120 --> 01:21:43.120] And the only way that that can be proven is, like I said, [01:21:43.120 --> 01:21:50.120] is if you had a video camera trained on your dashboard for the period of time, [01:21:50.120 --> 01:21:53.120] a few minutes before they pulled you over, [01:21:53.120 --> 01:21:58.120] and that videotape would prove that you did use your turn signal, [01:21:58.120 --> 01:22:01.120] and then that could prove that they were lying. [01:22:01.120 --> 01:22:05.120] But even then, that would still be a difficult thing to prove because your blinker [01:22:05.120 --> 01:22:08.120] could have been out on the back of your car. [01:22:08.120 --> 01:22:14.120] I mean, these things are very, very difficult to prove. [01:22:14.120 --> 01:22:19.120] Okay, but the thing is, have you been charged with a crime yet? [01:22:19.120 --> 01:22:21.120] Yeah, possession of a controlled substance. [01:22:21.120 --> 01:22:25.120] Well, have you gone to the courthouse and pulled the record? [01:22:25.120 --> 01:22:27.120] I'm just going to meet up with my lawyer next week, [01:22:27.120 --> 01:22:29.120] and we're going to talk about that. [01:22:29.120 --> 01:22:33.120] And he was telling me, because the cops were over here, and I was way over here, [01:22:33.120 --> 01:22:35.120] they couldn't even see my blinker from where I was at. [01:22:35.120 --> 01:22:40.120] Well, see, where I'm getting to with this is that I doubt you've actually been charged with a crime yet, [01:22:40.120 --> 01:22:42.120] because in order to really be charged with a crime, [01:22:42.120 --> 01:22:50.120] there has to be a criminal complaint filed against you and a case sitting in a file in the court records. [01:22:50.120 --> 01:22:54.120] And somehow, I really think that hasn't happened yet. [01:22:54.120 --> 01:22:57.120] I think the prosecutor is just holding on to that information, [01:22:57.120 --> 01:23:00.120] and that a case has not even been filed against you yet, [01:23:00.120 --> 01:23:06.120] and that the prosecutor is going to coordinate with your attorney to try to pressure you for a deal, [01:23:06.120 --> 01:23:08.120] and then they're going to file the charges against you. [01:23:08.120 --> 01:23:09.120] That's what I'm saying. [01:23:09.120 --> 01:23:17.120] You need to go to the courthouse and pull your file and see if there even is one that exists. [01:23:17.120 --> 01:23:20.120] Yeah, because the attorney, he just immediately wanted to talk about the bargain, [01:23:20.120 --> 01:23:23.120] and you know, to rehab and go to this drug class and all that. [01:23:23.120 --> 01:23:24.120] Yeah, that's what I'm saying. [01:23:24.120 --> 01:23:28.120] There's probably not even a charge filed against you yet. [01:23:28.120 --> 01:23:34.120] It's not in the attorney's best interest to vigorously fight for your rights. [01:23:34.120 --> 01:23:37.120] It's in his best interest to make a deal. [01:23:37.120 --> 01:23:38.120] Because he ain't got to work for it. [01:23:38.120 --> 01:23:40.120] He just gives money for doing nothing then. [01:23:40.120 --> 01:23:43.120] Exactly. [01:23:43.120 --> 01:23:45.120] He doesn't do anything. [01:23:45.120 --> 01:23:47.120] He screws you. [01:23:47.120 --> 01:23:53.120] You know, someone else was telling me that there's an expert police witness that goes on there, [01:23:53.120 --> 01:23:55.120] and he says, okay, you were parked in here. [01:23:55.120 --> 01:23:56.120] The cop was over there. [01:23:56.120 --> 01:23:57.120] He couldn't see you. [01:23:57.120 --> 01:24:00.120] And he said you could hire this guy who's an ex-cop to testify for you. [01:24:00.120 --> 01:24:02.120] You ever heard anything like that? [01:24:02.120 --> 01:24:03.120] Well, yeah. [01:24:03.120 --> 01:24:07.120] The house warrant couldn't even see me when I was asked. [01:24:07.120 --> 01:24:10.120] You should file aggravated perjury against the cops. [01:24:10.120 --> 01:24:15.120] Yeah, the thing you have to remember is what you can prove. [01:24:15.120 --> 01:24:20.120] Basically, what you need is copies of the police reports to say where they saw you from, [01:24:20.120 --> 01:24:25.120] at the time they initially encountered you, so on and so forth, [01:24:25.120 --> 01:24:29.120] to prove your argument that they could not possibly have seen your blinker from where they were. [01:24:29.120 --> 01:24:31.120] That's going to be the problem. [01:24:31.120 --> 01:24:35.120] But now there's another thing that you need to worry about studying, getting familiar with, [01:24:35.120 --> 01:24:39.120] and that's how to handle a police officer when they do pull you over. [01:24:39.120 --> 01:24:48.120] There is nothing that requires you to roll your window all the way down far enough for that officer to stick his face through it. [01:24:48.120 --> 01:24:54.120] The first rule of being pulled over is do not roll your window down more than two inches, [01:24:54.120 --> 01:24:58.120] no matter what the officer says. [01:24:58.120 --> 01:25:01.120] Do not roll it down more than two inches. [01:25:01.120 --> 01:25:08.120] He is going to have a very hard time saying that he could have smelled anything through a two-inch gap. [01:25:08.120 --> 01:25:12.120] Not unless there's like smoke billowing out of the window. [01:25:12.120 --> 01:25:18.120] Exactly. Unless you're, you know, hosting a Cheech and Chong video in the back of your car, [01:25:18.120 --> 01:25:21.120] you shouldn't have a problem with that. [01:25:21.120 --> 01:25:30.120] But just because the cop tells you to do something does not mean you're required to do it. [01:25:30.120 --> 01:25:33.120] Well, he's going to be mad if you don't open the dang window, right? [01:25:33.120 --> 01:25:38.120] Let him get mad. Let him stomp his feet and act like a petulant child. [01:25:38.120 --> 01:25:42.120] Because at this point, his dash cam is recording everything he does. [01:25:42.120 --> 01:25:46.120] Well, Eddie, what happens when they just break the window and taser you and drag you out then? [01:25:46.120 --> 01:25:49.120] They better have good probable cause for doing either. [01:25:49.120 --> 01:25:54.120] And just because you won't roll it all the way down so that he can take a visual inspection of your car [01:25:54.120 --> 01:26:01.120] or an olfactory inspection of your car is not probable cause to go breaking your window. [01:26:01.120 --> 01:26:08.120] So what can I get? If I get aggravated, burgeoned against a cop for lying about the blinker? [01:26:08.120 --> 01:26:13.120] What's the worst I can get into if they say, you know, for filing that? What can they do to me? [01:26:13.120 --> 01:26:15.120] Absolutely nothing. [01:26:15.120 --> 01:26:20.120] If they try to, then that is retaliation. That's a felony. [01:26:20.120 --> 01:26:22.120] That's tampering with a witness. [01:26:22.120 --> 01:26:24.120] That too. [01:26:24.120 --> 01:26:25.120] Okay. [01:26:25.120 --> 01:26:28.120] That's the thing nobody does. [01:26:28.120 --> 01:26:32.120] What would you do? [01:26:32.120 --> 01:26:34.120] Oh, I'd plea bargain with them. [01:26:34.120 --> 01:26:39.120] I'd give them all the breaks in the world to correct their mistake. [01:26:39.120 --> 01:26:44.120] Yeah, but here we're talking about someone's liberty. [01:26:44.120 --> 01:26:47.120] And I hate to plea bargains. [01:26:47.120 --> 01:26:49.120] That's what I'm saying. I don't even want this on my record. [01:26:49.120 --> 01:26:53.120] First things first, you need to go to the courthouse and get the file. [01:26:53.120 --> 01:26:57.120] And if there's no file, then there's no case. [01:26:57.120 --> 01:26:59.120] Could you help me understand the file you're talking about? [01:26:59.120 --> 01:27:02.120] Because I got an affidavit of a record. [01:27:02.120 --> 01:27:07.120] At the court, you go to the courthouse. You go to the clerk of the court. [01:27:07.120 --> 01:27:12.120] District clerk. She's on the first floor. Are you in Austin? [01:27:12.120 --> 01:27:13.120] Yes. [01:27:13.120 --> 01:27:20.120] Okay. New courthouse in the back. When you go in, she's on the left side in the back. [01:27:20.120 --> 01:27:28.120] First floor. District clerk. Ask to see your criminal file. [01:27:28.120 --> 01:27:29.120] For this case? [01:27:29.120 --> 01:27:30.120] Yes. [01:27:30.120 --> 01:27:36.120] Yes. If there's a case against you, that's what it means to have charges filed against you. [01:27:36.120 --> 01:27:42.120] If charges have been filed against you, then there will be a file with the court. [01:27:42.120 --> 01:27:44.120] Have you been indicted? [01:27:44.120 --> 01:27:46.120] No. [01:27:46.120 --> 01:27:50.120] This is a felony and you haven't been indicted yet? [01:27:50.120 --> 01:27:52.120] Indicted. [01:27:52.120 --> 01:27:54.120] By a grand jury? [01:27:54.120 --> 01:27:56.120] No. I haven't even gone to court yet or nothing. [01:27:56.120 --> 01:27:59.120] Well, no. You most likely wouldn't go to court for a grand jury. [01:27:59.120 --> 01:28:07.120] A grand jury is a jury entity that reviews the potential charges against you, [01:28:07.120 --> 01:28:15.120] and the grand jury decides whether or not there's enough evidence to allow the prosecutor to prosecute the case or not. [01:28:15.120 --> 01:28:20.120] So they haven't decided to send it to a grand jury yet. [01:28:20.120 --> 01:28:24.120] There has to be an indictment for a felony in order for them to prosecute, [01:28:24.120 --> 01:28:34.120] so guaranteed there's no charges filed against you yet because they haven't even sent the evidence to a grand jury yet for review. [01:28:34.120 --> 01:28:39.120] And if they're trying to get a plea bargain out of you before there's even a grand jury indictment, [01:28:39.120 --> 01:28:46.120] then that should tell you right off the bat that your attorney is doing his best to sell you down the river for his own gain. [01:28:46.120 --> 01:28:48.120] Absolutely. [01:28:48.120 --> 01:28:54.120] Now, Randy, would this be a situation for filing a petition for rid of habeas corpus? [01:28:54.120 --> 01:28:55.120] No. [01:28:55.120 --> 01:28:56.120] Why not? [01:28:56.120 --> 01:29:01.120] When you got dirty hands, you need to be a little more careful. [01:29:01.120 --> 01:29:10.120] I mean, if they did find the drugs in the car and there were a prescription and he didn't have a prescription for it, [01:29:10.120 --> 01:29:16.120] he's got dirty hands at this point, so you need to be a little more careful. [01:29:16.120 --> 01:29:22.120] If you're clean, then you can rail in righteous indignation. [01:29:22.120 --> 01:29:25.120] But they didn't have probable cause to search for prescription drugs. [01:29:25.120 --> 01:29:27.120] That's not what the problem was. [01:29:27.120 --> 01:29:34.120] The problem is, then the reality is, is they got a pretty good hold on it. [01:29:34.120 --> 01:29:38.120] And I hate to advise them to do something that's going to cause them to go to prison. [01:29:38.120 --> 01:29:42.120] But they had no probable cause to search the car for prescription drugs. [01:29:42.120 --> 01:29:47.120] They'll still put him in prison, whether they had probable cause or not. [01:29:47.120 --> 01:29:49.120] We're in a corrupt system. [01:29:49.120 --> 01:29:53.120] Well, the thing is, they just don't even have a case against him right now. [01:29:53.120 --> 01:29:55.120] They're going to act like they do. [01:29:55.120 --> 01:29:57.120] Okay, I know they are, but they don't have a case. [01:29:57.120 --> 01:29:58.120] They haven't even filed anything. [01:29:58.120 --> 01:30:27.120] We'll be right back. [01:30:27.120 --> 01:30:28.120] Who was this person? [01:30:28.120 --> 01:30:32.120] Please go to okcbombingtruth.com. [01:30:32.120 --> 01:30:36.120] If you have a Gmail account, Google reads every message you send or receive [01:30:36.120 --> 01:30:39.120] and records the keywords in a profile they keep on you. [01:30:39.120 --> 01:30:42.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I think that's just plain creepy. [01:30:42.120 --> 01:30:44.120] I'll say more in a moment. [01:30:44.120 --> 01:30:46.120] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:46.120 --> 01:30:50.120] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:50.120 --> 01:30:55.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:55.120 --> 01:31:00.120] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:31:00.120 --> 01:31:02.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:31:02.120 --> 01:31:06.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:31:06.120 --> 01:31:10.120] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:31:10.120 --> 01:31:13.120] Start over with Startpage. [01:31:13.120 --> 01:31:17.120] Hey, Gmail users, ever seen an online ad that exactly matches [01:31:17.120 --> 01:31:19.120] something you discuss in a private email? [01:31:19.120 --> 01:31:20.120] It's no coincidence. [01:31:20.120 --> 01:31:25.120] See, Google offers you Gmail about a $40 annual value for free, [01:31:25.120 --> 01:31:29.120] so they can get inside your head and figure out your interests by reading your mail. [01:31:29.120 --> 01:31:33.120] They say reading every message you send or receive helps them better target ads, [01:31:33.120 --> 01:31:37.120] but most people have no idea that Google keeps a record of their email contents, [01:31:37.120 --> 01:31:39.120] and they'd be pretty upset if they knew. [01:31:39.120 --> 01:31:43.120] When Gmail was first released, dozens of privacy experts asked Google [01:31:43.120 --> 01:31:45.120] to stay out of people's private correspondence. [01:31:45.120 --> 01:31:48.120] Unfortunately, Google ignored our request. [01:31:48.120 --> 01:31:50.120] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. [01:31:50.120 --> 01:32:19.120] For more news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com [01:32:20.120 --> 01:32:37.120] The wicked come with temptations They're trying to buy the whole place [01:32:37.120 --> 01:32:48.120] They want to force the nation Because they've fallen from grace [01:32:48.120 --> 01:32:58.120] I will not drink from that cup I just can't act out of way [01:32:58.120 --> 01:33:08.120] They got this problem they're dreaming of It won't be the slave come what may [01:33:08.120 --> 01:33:18.120] They got this problem they're dreaming of It won't be the slave come what may [01:33:18.120 --> 01:33:47.120] They got this problem they're dreaming of It won't be the slave come what may [01:33:47.120 --> 01:33:49.120] Okay, we are back, folks. [01:33:49.120 --> 01:33:52.120] We're speaking with Dave in Texas, [01:33:52.120 --> 01:33:57.120] and we're discussing this situation over the break, [01:33:57.120 --> 01:34:06.120] and it's a big question mark for us right now because there are issues at stake here. [01:34:06.120 --> 01:34:12.120] I mean, we sort of have mixed feelings about what possibly could be the best way to go, [01:34:12.120 --> 01:34:14.120] and we don't give legal advice here just to clarify. [01:34:14.120 --> 01:34:15.120] We're not attorneys. [01:34:15.120 --> 01:34:21.120] But, I mean, I know if it were me, I would fight it tooth and nail based on the probable cause issue [01:34:21.120 --> 01:34:27.120] because if they're going to say that they smell marijuana, [01:34:27.120 --> 01:34:31.120] and then they searched the car and found no marijuana, [01:34:31.120 --> 01:34:36.120] well, then obviously they lied about that and they made it up, okay, [01:34:36.120 --> 01:34:39.120] because they didn't find any marijuana. [01:34:39.120 --> 01:34:46.120] And so the whole charge regarding the prescription medications should be thrown out [01:34:46.120 --> 01:34:51.120] because they didn't have any probable cause to search the car to begin with [01:34:51.120 --> 01:34:54.120] regardless of the fact whether you had pills or not. [01:34:54.120 --> 01:35:01.120] That's my standpoint because in my book we can't just throw out the Fourth Amendment [01:35:01.120 --> 01:35:05.120] just because you had pills that you didn't have a prescription for. [01:35:05.120 --> 01:35:07.120] That's what the Fourth Amendment is here for, [01:35:07.120 --> 01:35:10.120] to protect against illegal searches and seizures. [01:35:10.120 --> 01:35:13.120] It doesn't matter what you actually had possession of, okay? [01:35:13.120 --> 01:35:18.120] It matters whether they had probable cause to search or not, all right? [01:35:18.120 --> 01:35:21.120] And if they had found marijuana, well, then that would be a different story. [01:35:21.120 --> 01:35:24.120] I would say take the deal, try to get the best deal you can. [01:35:24.120 --> 01:35:29.120] But I'm just saying if it were me, you know, I would fight for my rights based on the fact [01:35:29.120 --> 01:35:32.120] that they obviously had no probable cause to search. [01:35:32.120 --> 01:35:35.120] Now, whether they had probable cause to pull you over or not, [01:35:35.120 --> 01:35:38.120] you're never going to be able to prove that one way or the other, like I said, [01:35:38.120 --> 01:35:42.120] unless you had a video camera on your blinker, on your tail light, [01:35:42.120 --> 01:35:47.120] and a video camera on your dashboard with the whole thing going at the same time [01:35:47.120 --> 01:35:50.120] when they pulled you over to prove that you actually put your blinker on [01:35:50.120 --> 01:35:53.120] and that the blinker actually blinked in the back of your car. [01:35:53.120 --> 01:35:55.120] So just forget that one. [01:35:55.120 --> 01:35:58.120] But as far as the probable cause for search, they didn't find any marijuana. [01:35:58.120 --> 01:36:00.120] They said they smelled marijuana. [01:36:00.120 --> 01:36:01.120] It's a done deal. [01:36:01.120 --> 01:36:03.120] They didn't have probable cause to search you. [01:36:03.120 --> 01:36:08.120] I would fight till the end to get the things thrown out based on the fact [01:36:08.120 --> 01:36:12.120] that they had no probable cause to search because they obviously didn't find any marijuana. [01:36:12.120 --> 01:36:18.120] Now, Randy has a different perspective because we're talking about your liberty here, [01:36:18.120 --> 01:36:22.120] and he's got a very good point because of the fact that they actually did find [01:36:22.120 --> 01:36:27.120] prescription pills that you didn't have a prescription for in this corrupt court system [01:36:27.120 --> 01:36:32.120] and corrupt jury system because the courts and the prosecutors corrupt the juries [01:36:32.120 --> 01:36:37.120] It's a strong likelihood that they would convict you anyway [01:36:37.120 --> 01:36:41.120] even though they obviously did not have probable cause. [01:36:41.120 --> 01:36:43.120] So I don't know. [01:36:43.120 --> 01:36:48.120] Randy's saying perhaps just to take the deal because you had the pills. [01:36:48.120 --> 01:36:50.120] But I mean, in my book, it would be a matter of principle. [01:36:50.120 --> 01:36:53.120] They didn't have probable cause, all right? [01:36:53.120 --> 01:36:58.120] And in my book, we can't just roll over and throw the Fourth Amendment out the window [01:36:58.120 --> 01:37:01.120] just because of pills without a prescription. [01:37:01.120 --> 01:37:06.120] But then again, you're talking your liberty, and so it's a crapshoot. [01:37:06.120 --> 01:37:08.120] It's a gamble. [01:37:08.120 --> 01:37:10.120] Would a grand jury indict or not? [01:37:10.120 --> 01:37:11.120] We don't know. [01:37:11.120 --> 01:37:14.120] Would a petit jury convict or not? [01:37:14.120 --> 01:37:15.120] We don't know. [01:37:15.120 --> 01:37:16.120] I'll tell you one thing. [01:37:16.120 --> 01:37:21.120] If I was on that grand jury, definitely no because they did not have probable cause. [01:37:21.120 --> 01:37:23.120] But it's a corrupt system right now. [01:37:23.120 --> 01:37:25.120] So Randy, you want to make some comments? [01:37:25.120 --> 01:37:31.120] I'm saying that in the jury selection process, [01:37:31.120 --> 01:37:36.120] they would figure out that you would be prone to make them follow law, [01:37:36.120 --> 01:37:41.120] so there's no chance they'll let you on a jury. [01:37:41.120 --> 01:37:43.120] It's difficult. [01:37:43.120 --> 01:37:49.120] I hate to advise you to do something that'll get you put in jail. [01:37:49.120 --> 01:37:55.120] But then again, I also hate to give up my ideals, [01:37:55.120 --> 01:38:01.120] and part of this is from the last time I was in trial. [01:38:01.120 --> 01:38:07.120] I'm looking at six months in jail, and I was totally innocent. [01:38:07.120 --> 01:38:10.120] All I did was ask that sergeant what part of, [01:38:10.120 --> 01:38:14.120] I do not want to talk to you, do you not understand? [01:38:14.120 --> 01:38:18.120] And they smashed me into a wall and threw me in jail. [01:38:18.120 --> 01:38:22.120] Well, I went to court, and I had all of their statements. [01:38:22.120 --> 01:38:24.120] Their statements are all contradictory. [01:38:24.120 --> 01:38:28.120] There's no way they can justify what they did. [01:38:28.120 --> 01:38:34.120] But even so, I stood there looking at that courtroom speaking. [01:38:34.120 --> 01:38:38.120] Well, Bubba, you ran your mouth. [01:38:38.120 --> 01:38:41.120] Now it's time to put up or shut up. [01:38:41.120 --> 01:38:43.120] This is going to be a personal decision for you, Dave. [01:38:43.120 --> 01:38:46.120] You know, no one can make it for you. [01:38:46.120 --> 01:38:49.120] You may want to think about pushing the envelope [01:38:49.120 --> 01:38:55.120] and waiting to see if they actually get a grand jury indictment against you first. [01:38:55.120 --> 01:38:59.120] You may want to go try to pull the court record, [01:38:59.120 --> 01:39:02.120] and when it's not there, you know, [01:39:02.120 --> 01:39:07.120] kick up a storm to your defense attorney and say, what's up? [01:39:07.120 --> 01:39:10.120] There's not even any charges against me. [01:39:10.120 --> 01:39:14.120] I ain't pleading for nothing until there's at least a case filed against me [01:39:14.120 --> 01:39:17.120] or something, you may want to test the waters. [01:39:17.120 --> 01:39:18.120] I don't know. [01:39:18.120 --> 01:39:22.120] This is something that, you know, it would be a personal decision [01:39:22.120 --> 01:39:25.120] for each person in this particular situation. [01:39:25.120 --> 01:39:28.120] I mean, does that make sense, Dave? [01:39:28.120 --> 01:39:31.120] Well, if they lose, if I try to challenge it [01:39:31.120 --> 01:39:34.120] and say they ain't had no right to pull me over and they violated my rights [01:39:34.120 --> 01:39:38.120] and I lose, what they're going to do is they give you the worst sentence to them [01:39:38.120 --> 01:39:42.120] because you try to challenge it as opposed to they don't take some classes. [01:39:42.120 --> 01:39:44.120] No, that wasn't the issue. [01:39:44.120 --> 01:39:48.120] When I said earlier you should file criminal charges against the officers, [01:39:48.120 --> 01:39:50.120] maybe that's not a good idea. [01:39:50.120 --> 01:39:55.120] Well, no, he's asking if he lost in court, what would be the worst scenario? [01:39:55.120 --> 01:40:00.120] Would it be more than just taking a few classes? [01:40:00.120 --> 01:40:04.120] Yeah, that's what I'm saying. [01:40:04.120 --> 01:40:05.120] It's hard to say. [01:40:05.120 --> 01:40:08.120] There's no way to tell. [01:40:08.120 --> 01:40:12.120] I'm either going to get it off my record and not even, you know, [01:40:12.120 --> 01:40:14.120] because I'm innocent and it will be on record, [01:40:14.120 --> 01:40:20.120] or it's going to be I'm going to have a case on my record. [01:40:20.120 --> 01:40:26.120] Well, if you plea, there's going to be a conviction on your record anyway. [01:40:26.120 --> 01:40:31.120] You may want to try to at least get it reduced from a felony to a misdemeanor charge. [01:40:31.120 --> 01:40:32.120] He said he could maybe do that too. [01:40:32.120 --> 01:40:34.120] He said he could maybe do that. [01:40:34.120 --> 01:40:36.120] But he said you're going to have to go to classes and all that. [01:40:36.120 --> 01:40:42.120] Yeah, but the thing to remember is that any time you take a plea and let them do this, [01:40:42.120 --> 01:40:44.120] you've entered a plea of guilty. [01:40:44.120 --> 01:40:46.120] And once you've entered that plea, [01:40:46.120 --> 01:40:53.120] it's going to be very difficult to take it back later, if not impossible. [01:40:53.120 --> 01:40:56.120] So what are you saying, Eddie, Randy? [01:40:56.120 --> 01:40:59.120] I'm just saying he needs to be aware of all of the facts. [01:40:59.120 --> 01:41:06.120] And one of the facts is is that a plea bargain always, always, always results in a guilty plea. [01:41:06.120 --> 01:41:10.120] And so if he makes, if he fights them and, you know, [01:41:10.120 --> 01:41:14.120] pushes it to the point where they can possibly convict him, then... [01:41:14.120 --> 01:41:18.120] He can come after him for the full-blown deal if he fights them. [01:41:18.120 --> 01:41:22.120] But then he could also get it overturned later, perhaps. [01:41:22.120 --> 01:41:24.120] Not if he pleads to it. [01:41:24.120 --> 01:41:26.120] It's going to be a lot harder to have it overturned. [01:41:26.120 --> 01:41:29.120] What I'm saying is that if he does not plead to it and he fights it, [01:41:29.120 --> 01:41:31.120] then he could possibly get it overturned later. [01:41:31.120 --> 01:41:32.120] Right. [01:41:32.120 --> 01:41:35.120] Well, how does overturn work? [01:41:35.120 --> 01:41:37.120] Slow and costly. [01:41:37.120 --> 01:41:39.120] Take it to another level? [01:41:39.120 --> 01:41:43.120] Well, overturn means that they convict you once and then on your appeal, [01:41:43.120 --> 01:41:48.120] you're looking to prove that the trial court erred in the decision that it made [01:41:48.120 --> 01:41:52.120] and the evidence is allowed to be introduced and the testimony it took. [01:41:52.120 --> 01:41:58.120] Basically, when you get it overturned, you're getting it overturned on error only. [01:41:58.120 --> 01:41:59.120] Okay, okay. [01:41:59.120 --> 01:42:00.120] Now let me ask you one more thing. [01:42:00.120 --> 01:42:02.120] I'm on bail now. [01:42:02.120 --> 01:42:03.120] So what does that mean? [01:42:03.120 --> 01:42:05.120] I'm on bail for this? [01:42:05.120 --> 01:42:12.120] You're restricted at your liberty to the terms of the bail. [01:42:12.120 --> 01:42:13.120] It means you've made a... [01:42:13.120 --> 01:42:16.120] You're guilty because you can't leave the state, right? [01:42:16.120 --> 01:42:18.120] Well, no, it means you've made a contract with them. [01:42:18.120 --> 01:42:22.120] You've made a contract with the court for them to release you at limited liberty [01:42:22.120 --> 01:42:26.120] under certain terms and conditions. [01:42:26.120 --> 01:42:27.120] Okay. [01:42:27.120 --> 01:42:29.120] Well, I'm not even charged yet, so why do I have to do that? [01:42:29.120 --> 01:42:31.120] Well, because... [01:42:31.120 --> 01:42:38.120] Actually, you were technically charged when you were brought before the magistrate. [01:42:38.120 --> 01:42:47.120] The officer will have filed a report and they can use that report as a complaint [01:42:47.120 --> 01:42:48.120] and they put it before the magistrate. [01:42:48.120 --> 01:42:52.120] But the magistrate was supposed to send it to the clerk and he didn't. [01:42:52.120 --> 01:42:54.120] Yeah, that's where the chain of custody got lost. [01:42:54.120 --> 01:43:00.120] The magistrate was supposed to file the whole file with the clerk of the court [01:43:00.120 --> 01:43:02.120] and that didn't happen. [01:43:02.120 --> 01:43:03.120] Clarify something for me, Randy. [01:43:03.120 --> 01:43:08.120] Where are you getting it that they can use the report as a complaint? [01:43:08.120 --> 01:43:10.120] That's the thing they're doing. [01:43:10.120 --> 01:43:13.120] The complaint is sufficient. [01:43:13.120 --> 01:43:14.120] Well... [01:43:14.120 --> 01:43:17.120] The complaint has to be supported under oath. [01:43:17.120 --> 01:43:18.120] Wait a minute. [01:43:18.120 --> 01:43:20.120] Let's not talk him into prison over... [01:43:20.120 --> 01:43:23.120] No, no, I'm just trying to clarify something here. [01:43:23.120 --> 01:43:24.120] Okay. [01:43:24.120 --> 01:43:27.120] As a rule, this is what they do. [01:43:27.120 --> 01:43:35.120] The person comes to the judge and makes an accusation. [01:43:35.120 --> 01:43:41.120] And generally, the jailer will make the criminal accusation, not the police officer. [01:43:41.120 --> 01:43:44.120] The police officer simply write a report and give it to the jailer. [01:43:44.120 --> 01:43:49.120] The jailer will make the criminal complaint to the magistrate. [01:43:49.120 --> 01:43:51.120] Listen, we're about to go to break. [01:43:51.120 --> 01:43:52.120] Hang on the line, Dave. [01:43:52.120 --> 01:43:53.120] Okay. [01:43:53.120 --> 01:43:55.120] Okay, we'll be right back on the other side. [01:43:55.120 --> 01:44:02.120] This is the rule of law. [01:44:02.120 --> 01:44:03.120] More energy. 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[01:44:48.120 --> 01:44:56.120] Visit Centrition.com to order yours or call 1-866-497-7436. [01:44:56.120 --> 01:45:01.120] After you use Centrition, you'll believe in supplements again. [01:45:01.120 --> 01:45:02.120] Thank you. [01:45:31.120 --> 01:45:36.120] As we so, so shall we read. [01:45:36.120 --> 01:45:39.120] As we read the words of the tree she was pristine. [01:45:39.120 --> 01:45:42.120] So many fruits of works she had put on. [01:45:42.120 --> 01:45:44.120] Oh, how we read. [01:45:44.120 --> 01:45:53.120] A giant tree with her small steps to the giant tree. [01:45:53.120 --> 01:45:59.120] As we so, so shall we read. [01:45:59.120 --> 01:46:07.120] And we say listen to this song. [01:46:07.120 --> 01:46:12.120] Take a map, it's working around the corner. [01:46:12.120 --> 01:46:17.120] A gas house, but not so tonight. [01:46:17.120 --> 01:46:21.120] One by one, my friend, tell everybody. [01:46:21.120 --> 01:46:25.120] Pass on the words of al-Nahiti. [01:46:25.120 --> 01:46:30.120] Help in hand, as you go along. [01:46:30.120 --> 01:46:32.120] Knock you down, man. [01:46:32.120 --> 01:46:36.120] Cherish the barn if you don't plant no seed. [01:46:36.120 --> 01:46:40.120] My friend, Lord, you'd better have a good read. [01:46:40.120 --> 01:46:43.120] You'd better live your life up to lead. [01:46:43.120 --> 01:46:46.120] Because you know me. [01:46:46.120 --> 01:46:49.120] Okay, folks, we are back. [01:46:49.120 --> 01:46:51.120] We're talking with Dave. [01:46:51.120 --> 01:46:52.120] Okay, Dave, listen. [01:46:52.120 --> 01:46:55.120] First things first, you need to go to the courthouse and get your file. [01:46:55.120 --> 01:47:00.120] And see if it even exists or what all is in it. [01:47:00.120 --> 01:47:05.120] See if they've submitted any evidence to a grand jury yet. [01:47:05.120 --> 01:47:08.120] If you're potentially under a grand jury indictment. [01:47:08.120 --> 01:47:11.120] Find out these sort of things. [01:47:11.120 --> 01:47:19.120] Randy, what about, you know, pressuring his attorney that if his attorney doesn't do the right thing, [01:47:19.120 --> 01:47:23.120] he's going to file a bar grievance or something like that? [01:47:23.120 --> 01:47:27.120] Well, if that's what I would do. [01:47:27.120 --> 01:47:30.120] I mean, at the least he can pressure the attorney, right? [01:47:30.120 --> 01:47:32.120] Yeah, you can pressure the attorney. [01:47:32.120 --> 01:47:34.120] You can hammer him pretty good. [01:47:34.120 --> 01:47:35.120] I don't understand. [01:47:35.120 --> 01:47:36.120] Why would I want to do that? [01:47:36.120 --> 01:47:37.120] You're supposed to help me, right? [01:47:37.120 --> 01:47:39.120] No, he's not going to help you. [01:47:39.120 --> 01:47:41.120] You live in a different world than we do. [01:47:41.120 --> 01:47:42.120] Wait a minute. [01:47:42.120 --> 01:47:44.120] This is a court-appointed attorney, right? [01:47:44.120 --> 01:47:47.120] No, no, this is a guy I hired. [01:47:47.120 --> 01:47:50.120] No, it's not going to make any difference. [01:47:50.120 --> 01:47:53.120] No, because that's actually even worse. [01:47:53.120 --> 01:48:01.120] Because he's going to rob you blind while he's selling you down the river. [01:48:01.120 --> 01:48:05.120] You have to understand where this attorney lives. [01:48:05.120 --> 01:48:10.120] If this attorney comes to court and puts on a vigorous fight... [01:48:10.120 --> 01:48:17.120] I got the first attorney who will remain nameless, who advertises on TV, [01:48:17.120 --> 01:48:19.120] and she wanted to plea bargain. [01:48:19.120 --> 01:48:21.120] This other guy was the one... [01:48:21.120 --> 01:48:25.120] I went to another attorney and he told me about how we could fight it [01:48:25.120 --> 01:48:27.120] if they didn't have a powerful cause. [01:48:27.120 --> 01:48:29.120] Okay, listen. [01:48:29.120 --> 01:48:36.120] What your other attorney did was give you reason to give him some money. [01:48:36.120 --> 01:48:41.120] And once you give him the money, then he's not going to do anything. [01:48:41.120 --> 01:48:43.120] Unless he's really exceptional. [01:48:43.120 --> 01:48:48.120] We haven't come across those yet. [01:48:48.120 --> 01:48:51.120] But I wouldn't trust my attorney. [01:48:51.120 --> 01:48:54.120] Definitely not trust the attorney. [01:48:54.120 --> 01:48:57.120] But if you've got an attorney that you paid, [01:48:57.120 --> 01:49:02.120] you might not want to land on him until he starts screwing up. [01:49:02.120 --> 01:49:07.120] And you can be certain he'll start screwing up. [01:49:07.120 --> 01:49:12.120] What do I do then? [01:49:12.120 --> 01:49:16.120] This is difficult. [01:49:16.120 --> 01:49:18.120] The system is corrupt. [01:49:18.120 --> 01:49:21.120] Well, Randy, isn't the first step that he should go to the courthouse [01:49:21.120 --> 01:49:23.120] and try to get the file? [01:49:23.120 --> 01:49:24.120] Yes. [01:49:24.120 --> 01:49:29.120] And shouldn't he find out from the attorney what the deal is if there's no file [01:49:29.120 --> 01:49:33.120] and say how can they have charges against me when there's not even a file in the court? [01:49:33.120 --> 01:49:37.120] Start asking the attorney some serious pointed questions [01:49:37.120 --> 01:49:40.120] and say is there a grand jury indictment against me yet? [01:49:40.120 --> 01:49:43.120] Has any evidence been submitted to a grand jury yet? [01:49:43.120 --> 01:49:45.120] What are these charges anyway? [01:49:45.120 --> 01:49:48.120] I want to see the criminal complaint. [01:49:48.120 --> 01:49:50.120] I want to see the file. [01:49:50.120 --> 01:49:52.120] Where is the file? [01:49:52.120 --> 01:49:55.120] Who has the file? [01:49:55.120 --> 01:49:59.120] Start asking some questions like that. [01:49:59.120 --> 01:50:01.120] Okay. [01:50:01.120 --> 01:50:02.120] Okay. [01:50:02.120 --> 01:50:03.120] That's my homework. [01:50:03.120 --> 01:50:10.120] That'll give you kind of an idea of what your attorney's actually going to do. [01:50:10.120 --> 01:50:13.120] Yes, because guaranteed there's not going to be a file. [01:50:13.120 --> 01:50:15.120] So then you go back to the attorney and say where's the file? [01:50:15.120 --> 01:50:17.120] What are these charges anyway? [01:50:17.120 --> 01:50:19.120] I can't find any charges against me. [01:50:19.120 --> 01:50:20.120] What is this anyway? [01:50:20.120 --> 01:50:24.120] What is this, some kind of a racket, some kind of a scam by the prosecutor? [01:50:24.120 --> 01:50:27.120] I don't blame the attorney yet, even though he's in on it, guaranteed, [01:50:27.120 --> 01:50:31.120] but say what is this, some kind of racket that the prosecutor's running over here? [01:50:31.120 --> 01:50:34.120] There's not even any charges against me. [01:50:34.120 --> 01:50:35.120] There's no file at the courthouse. [01:50:35.120 --> 01:50:37.120] What's going on here? [01:50:37.120 --> 01:50:39.120] I'm told they do this because they plea bargain with each other [01:50:39.120 --> 01:50:40.120] so they don't even bother with their power. [01:50:40.120 --> 01:50:41.120] Yes, exactly. [01:50:41.120 --> 01:50:44.120] Yes, that's exactly right. [01:50:44.120 --> 01:50:46.120] We've heard y'all talk about that before. [01:50:46.120 --> 01:50:48.120] Yes, because here's what happens. [01:50:48.120 --> 01:50:52.120] The speedy trial clock doesn't start until the file is filed. [01:50:52.120 --> 01:50:54.120] Here's what I got. [01:50:54.120 --> 01:50:58.120] All I got is an affidavit for warrant of arrest and detention is what I got right here. [01:50:58.120 --> 01:51:03.120] Well, that's enough. [01:51:03.120 --> 01:51:06.120] Affidavit for warrant of arrest and detention. [01:51:06.120 --> 01:51:11.120] Yeah, but that doesn't mean it's filed with the clerk of the court yet though. [01:51:11.120 --> 01:51:12.120] That's right. [01:51:12.120 --> 01:51:14.120] The magistrate issued that. [01:51:14.120 --> 01:51:18.120] That's one of the things he's required to do is issue a warrant [01:51:18.120 --> 01:51:22.120] after an examining trial to take bail. [01:51:22.120 --> 01:51:23.120] Someone's typing. [01:51:23.120 --> 01:51:25.120] But you didn't have an examining trial. [01:51:25.120 --> 01:51:26.120] No, no. [01:51:26.120 --> 01:51:30.120] I was magistrated in a jail and then my attorney got me out. [01:51:30.120 --> 01:51:32.120] They weren't going to let me out, but my attorney, [01:51:32.120 --> 01:51:35.120] I don't know what the hell he did, but I paid him and he got me out. [01:51:35.120 --> 01:51:38.120] You've got all of these due process issues you can raise, [01:51:38.120 --> 01:51:42.120] but you can be sure your attorney's not going to want to raise them. [01:51:42.120 --> 01:51:47.120] You can go on Jurisimprudence.com and look through those files. [01:51:47.120 --> 01:51:53.120] You'll find a set of complaints going to this due process. [01:51:53.120 --> 01:51:59.120] And I would read Randy's petition for writ of habeas corpus on Jurisimprudence.com. [01:51:59.120 --> 01:52:03.120] That will give you an idea of what is supposed to happen according to law [01:52:03.120 --> 01:52:07.120] versus what actually has happened and what actually is happening. [01:52:07.120 --> 01:52:13.120] So if it's not filed with the clerk, can I have a motion to dismiss on my own? [01:52:13.120 --> 01:52:15.120] Well, not exactly because there's nothing to dismiss. [01:52:15.120 --> 01:52:16.120] There's no case. [01:52:16.120 --> 01:52:20.120] Technically, that would be a situation for a petition for writ of habeas corpus. [01:52:20.120 --> 01:52:23.120] In other words, bring the body before the court. [01:52:23.120 --> 01:52:26.120] You're demanding for your issue to be brought before the court. [01:52:26.120 --> 01:52:30.120] But what Randy's saying is that you may not necessarily want to do that right now [01:52:30.120 --> 01:52:34.120] because you actually had some pills that you didn't have a prescription for. [01:52:34.120 --> 01:52:36.120] Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. [01:52:36.120 --> 01:52:40.120] Okay, because they may railroad you in a trial. [01:52:40.120 --> 01:52:45.120] So we're trying to figure out a strategy here, something very strategic, [01:52:45.120 --> 01:52:48.120] and that's why we're saying first thing is to go [01:52:48.120 --> 01:52:51.120] and see if there's actually a file with the clerk of the court. [01:52:51.120 --> 01:52:53.120] And if there's not, which likely there's not, [01:52:53.120 --> 01:52:57.120] then start hammering your attorney with some serious questions. [01:52:57.120 --> 01:52:58.120] Where's the file? [01:52:58.120 --> 01:52:59.120] What are these charges anyway? [01:52:59.120 --> 01:53:01.120] Why hasn't the file been filed with the clerk? [01:53:01.120 --> 01:53:05.120] There's technically no charges against me if it's not filed. [01:53:05.120 --> 01:53:08.120] I'm allegedly being charged with a felony, [01:53:08.120 --> 01:53:10.120] but where's the grand jury indictment? [01:53:10.120 --> 01:53:14.120] There has to be a grand jury indictment before I can be charged with a felony. [01:53:14.120 --> 01:53:17.120] Start asking some difficult questions like that, [01:53:17.120 --> 01:53:20.120] and if you watch him squirm, you know, [01:53:20.120 --> 01:53:23.120] and see how he's going to react and what he's going to do. [01:53:23.120 --> 01:53:25.120] Where's the file? [01:53:25.120 --> 01:53:28.120] Okay, understand your attorney's position [01:53:28.120 --> 01:53:32.120] because you go to your attorney and he seems like a really nice guy, [01:53:32.120 --> 01:53:35.120] and he may actually be a really nice guy, [01:53:35.120 --> 01:53:39.120] but he's stuck in a system he didn't create. [01:53:39.120 --> 01:53:41.120] And if he annoys that judge, [01:53:41.120 --> 01:53:46.120] that judge will rule against him on his next client out of hand, [01:53:46.120 --> 01:53:48.120] and he knows that. [01:53:48.120 --> 01:53:53.120] Well, maybe the judge won't rule against him out of hand, [01:53:53.120 --> 01:53:58.120] but every attorney I've talked to believes they will do that. [01:53:58.120 --> 01:54:01.120] So it doesn't make any difference whether he will or not. [01:54:01.120 --> 01:54:05.120] The attorney is terrified that if he does anything to annoy the judge, [01:54:05.120 --> 01:54:09.120] the judge will screw his next client to get back at him. [01:54:09.120 --> 01:54:12.120] So you go in there and ask him to do something to force the judge [01:54:12.120 --> 01:54:15.120] to actually have to sit and hold a hearing, [01:54:15.120 --> 01:54:18.120] and the judge is not going to be happy with it. [01:54:18.120 --> 01:54:20.120] Yeah, but he'll have plausible deniability [01:54:20.120 --> 01:54:22.120] because then the lawyer will go tell the judge, [01:54:22.120 --> 01:54:25.120] look, I've got an unruly client that's making me fight for his rights. [01:54:25.120 --> 01:54:26.120] It's not my fault. [01:54:26.120 --> 01:54:29.120] Yeah, that was the part we were going to go to. [01:54:29.120 --> 01:54:31.120] And actually, to answer your question, [01:54:31.120 --> 01:54:34.120] who is supposed to have filed the file with the clerk of the court? [01:54:34.120 --> 01:54:36.120] The magistrate, okay, [01:54:36.120 --> 01:54:40.120] because the magistrate who held the examining trial in the jail, [01:54:40.120 --> 01:54:42.120] which technically it wasn't an examining trial, [01:54:42.120 --> 01:54:45.120] but we'll just gloss over that for now, [01:54:45.120 --> 01:54:49.120] when the police presented the evidence and all of that [01:54:49.120 --> 01:54:54.120] and all the evidence against you where the magistrate reviewed it and set bail, [01:54:54.120 --> 01:54:59.120] that's the file that the magistrate was supposed to seal [01:54:59.120 --> 01:55:03.120] and write his name across the seal and file with the clerk of the court. [01:55:03.120 --> 01:55:06.120] And that didn't happen. The prosecutor absconded it. [01:55:06.120 --> 01:55:10.120] Technically, the prosecutor is tampering with a government document, [01:55:10.120 --> 01:55:12.120] which is a felony. [01:55:12.120 --> 01:55:15.120] It's okay for the prosecutor to have a copy of the file [01:55:15.120 --> 01:55:18.120] as long as it's been filed with the clerk of the court, [01:55:18.120 --> 01:55:22.120] but neither the prosecutor nor anyone else for that matter [01:55:22.120 --> 01:55:25.120] can have the file to the exclusion of the clerk of the court [01:55:25.120 --> 01:55:28.120] and guarantee that's what's happening right now. [01:55:28.120 --> 01:55:33.120] And so what we're saying is that, you know, before you start filing criminal charges [01:55:33.120 --> 01:55:37.120] against the prosecutor and the police and the magistrate for all these things, [01:55:37.120 --> 01:55:42.120] for tampering with the file, because of your situation, [01:55:42.120 --> 01:55:46.120] it's probably best just to pressure your attorney and see how things go. [01:55:46.120 --> 01:55:48.120] But first things first, go and see if there's a file. [01:55:48.120 --> 01:55:52.120] If there's not, start asking the attorney some pointed questions like, [01:55:52.120 --> 01:55:54.120] where's the file, who has it? [01:55:54.120 --> 01:55:56.120] See if you can get your attorney to admit that the prosecutor has it [01:55:56.120 --> 01:55:58.120] and get that recorded. [01:55:58.120 --> 01:56:00.120] Don't talk to your attorney without having, like, [01:56:00.120 --> 01:56:03.120] a hidden recorder on you or something or recording on the phone. [01:56:03.120 --> 01:56:05.120] And that's legal in the state of Texas. [01:56:05.120 --> 01:56:09.120] Only one person has to know that the conversation is being recorded. [01:56:09.120 --> 01:56:12.120] See if you can get the attorney to admit the prosecutor has the file. [01:56:12.120 --> 01:56:14.120] You could use that later. [01:56:14.120 --> 01:56:16.120] Say, well, then what if these are charges? [01:56:16.120 --> 01:56:17.120] This is a felony. [01:56:17.120 --> 01:56:19.120] Where's the grand jury indictment? [01:56:19.120 --> 01:56:21.120] Is the center grand jury review night now? [01:56:21.120 --> 01:56:24.120] Just let them know that you know some things and educate yourself, [01:56:24.120 --> 01:56:28.120] and that will let the attorney know this guy's not going to roll over so easy [01:56:28.120 --> 01:56:31.120] and maybe then at least you'll get a better deal. [01:56:31.120 --> 01:56:33.120] You see? [01:56:33.120 --> 01:56:34.120] Oh, the prosecutor, yeah. [01:56:34.120 --> 01:56:39.120] Okay, so look, go download Randy's petition for writ of habeas corpus [01:56:39.120 --> 01:56:40.120] and read through that. [01:56:40.120 --> 01:56:44.120] It's a 50-page document, but it's very educational just to let you know [01:56:44.120 --> 01:56:48.120] how things are supposed to work in comparison to what actually happened. [01:56:48.120 --> 01:56:54.120] And also we did a whole show or, you know, an hour or two on due process [01:56:54.120 --> 01:56:55.120] a couple of weeks ago. [01:56:55.120 --> 01:56:56.120] The archive is labeled. [01:56:56.120 --> 01:57:02.120] So if you'll go to ruleoflawradio.com and click on the archives button [01:57:02.120 --> 01:57:07.120] and scroll back through, you can click on the rule of law radio show. [01:57:07.120 --> 01:57:09.120] There's several shows on this network. [01:57:09.120 --> 01:57:15.120] Then you can download that due process show and educate yourself a little bit. [01:57:15.120 --> 01:57:19.120] And then you'll have a better idea of what kind of questions you need to ask [01:57:19.120 --> 01:57:21.120] to hammer your attorney. [01:57:21.120 --> 01:57:24.120] And once you've got some ammunition, you know, it can threaten, [01:57:24.120 --> 01:57:27.120] look, I'm going to file a bar grievance against you if you don't fight [01:57:27.120 --> 01:57:28.120] for my rights here. [01:57:28.120 --> 01:57:31.120] They didn't have no probable cause to search my car. [01:57:31.120 --> 01:57:32.120] They didn't find no marijuana. [01:57:32.120 --> 01:57:33.120] They never smell no marijuana. [01:57:33.120 --> 01:57:35.120] I'm staying. [01:57:35.120 --> 01:57:39.120] But you're going to have to mostly, I believe, pressure your attorney [01:57:39.120 --> 01:57:40.120] for this right now. [01:57:40.120 --> 01:57:43.120] And you may end up having to take a deal just so that you stay out of prison [01:57:43.120 --> 01:57:48.120] because you're likely to get railroaded in a trial since you actually had the pills. [01:57:48.120 --> 01:57:49.120] Okay. [01:57:49.120 --> 01:57:52.120] So you're going to have to play it a little bit. [01:57:52.120 --> 01:57:53.120] Take the judge. [01:57:53.120 --> 01:57:55.120] Can't we just try and have the judge throw it out then? [01:57:55.120 --> 01:57:58.120] Well... [01:57:58.120 --> 01:58:01.120] Because then it's unconstitutional because they didn't have probable cause, [01:58:01.120 --> 01:58:03.120] then they should throw the case out, right? [01:58:03.120 --> 01:58:04.120] Well, yes. [01:58:04.120 --> 01:58:08.120] But your liberty is at stake and you had pills. [01:58:08.120 --> 01:58:10.120] And you have to make that argument. [01:58:10.120 --> 01:58:12.120] The judge can't make it for you. [01:58:12.120 --> 01:58:13.120] Eddie, you're distorting a little bit. [01:58:13.120 --> 01:58:15.120] Maybe you need to turn it down. [01:58:15.120 --> 01:58:20.120] Yeah, you would have to make that argument. [01:58:20.120 --> 01:58:22.120] Well, I want to read up like y'all said. [01:58:22.120 --> 01:58:26.120] Read up like we said and listen to the archive from a couple of weeks ago [01:58:26.120 --> 01:58:29.120] and try to go get your file and then call us back. [01:58:29.120 --> 01:58:30.120] You guys have a great service. [01:58:30.120 --> 01:58:31.120] I really appreciate it. [01:58:31.120 --> 01:58:33.120] And I'll get y'all an update later. [01:58:33.120 --> 01:58:34.120] Okay. Thanks, Dave. [01:58:34.120 --> 01:58:35.120] Thank you. [01:58:35.120 --> 01:58:36.120] Okay. [01:58:36.120 --> 01:58:38.120] When we get back, we're going to go to Mike in Texas. [01:58:38.120 --> 01:58:40.120] We're at the mid-show break here. [01:58:40.120 --> 01:58:46.120] We've got two more hours on our Friday info marathon here on the rule of law, [01:58:46.120 --> 01:58:48.120] ruleoflawradio.com. [01:58:48.120 --> 01:58:49.120] You can listen online. [01:58:49.120 --> 01:58:50.120] Please listen online. [01:58:50.120 --> 01:58:54.120] Even if you're enjoying the show on an AM or FM station, [01:58:54.120 --> 01:58:57.120] please listen online so that we can get our stream numbers up, [01:58:57.120 --> 01:58:58.120] so we can get our sponsors. [01:58:58.120 --> 01:58:59.120] We'll be right back. 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