[00:00.000 --> 00:06.120] If you shop online, chances are a vendor is sizing you up and setting prices according [00:06.120 --> 00:07.440] to what they think you'll pay. [00:07.440 --> 00:11.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with some tips to protect yourself [00:11.720 --> 00:15.560] from discriminatory pricing. [00:15.560 --> 00:17.160] Privacy is under attack. [00:17.160 --> 00:20.760] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:20.760 --> 00:25.520] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:25.520 --> 00:30.440] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:30.440 --> 00:33.320] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:33.320 --> 00:37.640] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [00:37.640 --> 00:41.120] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:41.120 --> 00:44.320] Start over with StartPage. [00:44.320 --> 00:48.400] Internet retailers are hunting for easy prey in the online jungle. [00:48.400 --> 00:52.400] Without warning, they might charge you more than another customer for the exact same item [00:52.400 --> 00:54.800] based on your web browser and visit history. [00:54.800 --> 00:59.840] Capital One Bank reportedly charges higher interest rates to Firefox users, and Amazon [00:59.840 --> 01:05.120] got caught raising prices based on buyer cookies, codes stored on people's computer that link [01:05.120 --> 01:06.120] to their purchase history. [01:06.120 --> 01:09.320] While this is infuriating, it's perfectly legal. [01:09.320 --> 01:13.880] Your best defense is to delete cookies, shop around for the best price, make notes and [01:13.880 --> 01:15.400] take your sweet time. [01:15.400 --> 01:18.840] And before you make a large purchase, you may want to have someone else check the deal [01:18.840 --> 01:21.040] using a different computer and browser. [01:21.040 --> 01:32.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:32.400 --> 01:35.120] What's a birthday party without balloons and whistles? [01:35.120 --> 01:37.440] A European birthday party, that's what. [01:37.440 --> 01:42.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you how the EU's uptight regulators are putting [01:42.400 --> 01:45.840] an end to childhood fun next. [01:45.840 --> 01:47.440] Privacy is under attack. [01:47.440 --> 01:51.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:51.040 --> 01:55.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:55.840 --> 02:00.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:00.760 --> 02:03.600] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:03.600 --> 02:07.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [02:07.920 --> 02:11.400] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [02:11.400 --> 02:14.520] Start over with StartPage. [02:14.520 --> 02:18.840] Think about a party pooper, in the name of child safety, the European Union has made [02:18.840 --> 02:24.000] it a crime for kids to use party whistles, blow up balloons and catch magnetic fish [02:24.000 --> 02:25.000] at parties. [02:25.000 --> 02:27.400] And the fear-mongering doesn't stop there. [02:27.400 --> 02:32.920] EU bureaucrats say toy noisemakers with long paper tongues are dangerous, they've banned [02:32.920 --> 02:37.560] all teddy bears unless they're washable and they're controlling the sounds made by rattles [02:37.560 --> 02:38.560] and toy instruments. [02:38.560 --> 02:43.800] Next thing you know, European kids will be celebrating their birthdays in padded cells [02:43.800 --> 02:48.120] for their own protection of course, but these rules aren't so surprising if you think about [02:48.120 --> 02:49.120] it. [02:49.120 --> 02:52.120] After all, we know how much those regulators hate whistleblowers. [02:52.120 --> 03:22.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [03:22.080 --> 03:43.820] Thank you very much for watching. [03:43.820 --> 04:03.820] I know some part of that. I know some energy. They see me evident. [04:03.820 --> 04:14.820] Okay, we're back. We're talking to John in Texas about the routine, running the routine. [04:14.820 --> 04:21.820] I know I'm going into a little more detail, but we talk about running the routine. [04:21.820 --> 04:28.820] The routine is really kind of route. It's kind of just step-by-step. [04:28.820 --> 04:34.820] What is much more important is this whole issue of sovereignty. [04:34.820 --> 04:41.820] If you listen to a lot of Patriot radio, your sovereignty kicked bandied around a lot. [04:41.820 --> 04:46.820] I had someone call into the show once and he said to Mr. Kilton, [04:46.820 --> 04:51.820] how do you express your sovereignty? [04:51.820 --> 05:00.820] I said, well, I'd like one. As far as I know, there's no prescription for expressing your sovereignty. [05:00.820 --> 05:07.820] Your sovereignty makes you the CEO of this corporation. [05:07.820 --> 05:17.820] So if we act like the CEO of the corporation, the CEO who is in a corporation that creates rules for the corporation, [05:17.820 --> 05:24.820] that even the CEO is subject to, but he's still the CEO. [05:24.820 --> 05:34.820] And as the CEO, if I have a low-level employee like a prosecuting attorney or a district judge [05:34.820 --> 05:41.820] who is not performing his duty the way I have prescribed for him to perform his duty, [05:41.820 --> 05:48.820] I'm going to go to that low-level employee and shoot him out. [05:48.820 --> 05:53.820] That's not my job. I'm the CEO. I have people in place to do that. [05:53.820 --> 06:01.820] If anybody here has ever called the company president's office and got a hold of their secretary and shoot out the secretary, [06:01.820 --> 06:07.820] you'll see how powerful this kind of way of holding your mind is. [06:07.820 --> 06:15.820] So we're the CEO. We go in and direct our employees to do what they're required to do by law. [06:15.820 --> 06:22.820] If they fail to do what they're required to do, we don't argue with the employee. [06:22.820 --> 06:27.820] We go to their boss and their boss's boss and their boss's boss's boss. [06:27.820 --> 06:37.820] And what the routine is that we present is just a matter of following the thunder. We set them up. [06:37.820 --> 06:44.820] And a lot of people, when they ask an official to do something they're supposed to do and they don't do it, [06:44.820 --> 06:50.820] they get upset and feel hurt and mistreated and betrayed. We shouldn't do that. [06:50.820 --> 06:54.820] We are the sovereigns. This is our system. [06:54.820 --> 07:00.820] This is not working right. It's because we didn't make it work right. So let's make it work right. [07:00.820 --> 07:08.820] Let's only ask someone to do what they are required to do. [07:08.820 --> 07:17.820] And when they do not do what they're required to do, we don't go to them and complain. [07:17.820 --> 07:27.820] We go to the person above them or way above them. It doesn't matter because we're the CEOs. We go as high as we want to. [07:27.820 --> 07:37.820] And I'm suggesting that if we're going to make a change, go to the prosecuting attorney and evoke his duty under article 2.03 paragraph A. [07:37.820 --> 07:41.820] When he's made known in any matter that a public official is violating the law, [07:41.820 --> 07:47.820] and his office shall induce complaint and information, submit it to the grand jury. When he fails to do that, [07:47.820 --> 07:53.820] we go to the highest judicial officer that we can find. [07:53.820 --> 08:00.820] And that will be either Chief Justice of the Supreme or to the Court of Criminal Appeals. [08:00.820 --> 08:07.820] Court of Criminal Appeals doesn't have a Chief Justice. So the best place to go is Chief Justice of the Supreme. [08:07.820 --> 08:12.820] Then we invoke his duty as a magistrate. [08:12.820 --> 08:21.820] When he fails to perform his duty, then we come back to the prosecutor that we file criminal charges against the prosecutor. [08:21.820 --> 08:25.820] But what is talking about when we get out? [08:25.820 --> 08:36.820] If we do this artfully, we can send a political message to the Chief Justice. [08:36.820 --> 08:43.820] If we file a very clean complaint against the prosecutor, [08:43.820 --> 08:48.820] and we say we took a criminal complaint to the prosecuting attorney, [08:48.820 --> 08:56.820] and the prosecuting attorney failed to act in accordance with article 2.03A and reduced complaint to an information and submitted to the grand jury, [08:56.820 --> 09:09.820] but instead exercised an authority he did not have, and in the process shielded the person from prosecution. [09:09.820 --> 09:15.820] We give that to the Chief Justice. Now he's going to look at it, and he's going to scratch his head, [09:15.820 --> 09:20.820] and initially the first time he gets up, like with mine, he's probably saying, [09:20.820 --> 09:28.820] what in the heck is going on? And he doesn't realize yet that this is a setup. [09:28.820 --> 09:34.820] And I hope I've been so busy taking care of other people's business that I haven't taken care of my own. [09:34.820 --> 09:44.820] I hope by Monday to have mine filed with the Chief Justice, because I'm filing 38 criminal charges with him. [09:44.820 --> 09:57.820] And when he refuses to act, then I'll come to the District Attorney and file 38 criminal charges against the Chief Justice with the District Attorney. [09:57.820 --> 10:03.820] Now what they see here is this guy is setting us up. [10:03.820 --> 10:12.820] This is what we want you to set up the District Attorney so that we can create political pressure on the District Attorney. [10:12.820 --> 10:16.820] We give him to refuse to act. We go to the highest judge who can. [10:16.820 --> 10:26.820] And when that judge refuses to act with criminal charges against the District Attorney, we come back to the District Attorney's office [10:26.820 --> 10:34.820] and file criminal complaints against the Chief Justice with the District Attorney's office. [10:34.820 --> 10:42.820] And kind of depends on what you want to do. And we probably need to dance this around a little bit. [10:42.820 --> 10:52.820] We can file with the District Attorney's office with the complaint addressed to the grand jury. [10:52.820 --> 11:08.820] Or we can file the complaint with the District Attorney and direct the District Attorney to appoint an attorney pro Tim to stand in his stead. [11:08.820 --> 11:16.820] Because the complaints against the Chief Justice arise out of complaints against the District Attorney. [11:16.820 --> 11:27.820] And this would disqualify the District Attorney. And when the District Attorney is disqualified, I think it's 206 or 7. [11:27.820 --> 11:28.820] Do you remember Eddie? [11:28.820 --> 11:30.820] 2.07 Attorney Pro Tim. [11:30.820 --> 11:31.820] Yes, okay, okay. [11:31.820 --> 11:44.820] Under 2.07, he's required to petition the District Court to appoint an attorney pro Tim, an attorney to stand in his place. [11:44.820 --> 11:51.820] Because when the prosecuting attorney is disqualified, his whole office is disqualified. [11:51.820 --> 12:02.820] If the prosecutor is disqualified, he cannot appoint one of his subordinates to stand in his place because his subordinate is the... [12:02.820 --> 12:04.820] What's the term, Eddie? [12:04.820 --> 12:06.820] He's his agent. [12:06.820 --> 12:11.820] No, there's a special term to use in corporate law. [12:11.820 --> 12:15.820] He is a... I'll think of it in a second. [12:15.820 --> 12:30.820] But they use this in corporate law where... I'm sorry, in corporate law where the agent has to do whatever the superior directs. [12:30.820 --> 12:31.820] Principal? [12:31.820 --> 12:36.820] No, there's a special term. I apologize, folks, I've gotten old. [12:36.820 --> 12:41.820] I'll think of this term, I'll pop into my brain as soon as I stop looking for it. [12:41.820 --> 12:50.820] But the point is, is when the prosecutor is alter ego, that's the term I'm looking for. [12:50.820 --> 12:56.820] The District Attorney's subordinates are the alter ego of the District Attorney. [12:56.820 --> 12:59.820] They're not going to do anything against their boss. [12:59.820 --> 13:02.820] So we need someone who doesn't have a dog in this hunt. [13:02.820 --> 13:08.820] And we... Texas law is absolutely the best corporate jurist I've ever seen. [13:08.820 --> 13:11.820] It has all the tools. [13:11.820 --> 13:16.820] And the tool here is Article 207, Attorney Pro Temp. [13:16.820 --> 13:30.820] They're to appoint someone who is either a prosecutor in another jurisdiction or simply a bar card-caring attorney to stand in the prosecutor's place and prosecute the prosecutor. [13:30.820 --> 13:42.820] And if we can get them to do that, then they appoint an attorney pro tem and he's going to look at this and say, this stuff's getting out of hand. [13:42.820 --> 13:50.820] Now the next thing he's going to do, if I don't do it right, this guy's going to do the same thing to me. [13:50.820 --> 13:59.820] And when I filed these 53 complaints in Tarrant County with a county judge, I bushwacked him in his courtroom. [13:59.820 --> 14:08.820] I did the bailiff routine where I called the bailiff over and told him that my name is Randall Kelton and struck the judge that I have business with the court. [14:08.820 --> 14:11.820] The bailiff said, may I tell him, judge the nature of the business? [14:11.820 --> 14:12.820] No, you may not. [14:12.820 --> 14:15.820] I have business with the court and it's not a virtue dismissed. [14:15.820 --> 14:17.820] I liked this bailiff. [14:17.820 --> 14:21.820] He looked at me and he said, oh, okay. [14:21.820 --> 14:23.820] No attitude. [14:23.820 --> 14:25.820] He was great. [14:25.820 --> 14:35.820] And when the judge finished his hearings, you always want to do this in a court when the court is having motion hearings because there's lots of breaks. [14:35.820 --> 14:37.820] He called me up. [14:37.820 --> 14:39.820] I gave him these criminal complaints. [14:39.820 --> 14:41.820] He opened them up. [14:41.820 --> 14:48.820] He looked at criminal charges against the district attorney for secreting criminal charges against the judge from the grand jury. [14:48.820 --> 14:53.820] He went out, read them over, took an hour and a half, came back. [14:53.820 --> 15:04.820] He sat down and he said, Mr. Kelton, am I to understand if I don't act on these in a way you deem appropriate that you're prepared to file criminal charges against me? [15:04.820 --> 15:09.820] And I said, with all due respect, your honor, and a heartbeat. [15:09.820 --> 15:15.820] At first, an only judge who ever did it right. [15:15.820 --> 15:18.820] He said, well, then I better do this right then. [15:18.820 --> 15:19.820] And he did. [15:19.820 --> 15:22.820] Called in a court reporter. [15:22.820 --> 15:27.820] Had read each complaint onto the court record. [15:27.820 --> 15:35.820] Had me swear to each complaint and had the court reporter verify my affirmation. [15:35.820 --> 15:37.820] And filed a wall with the grand jury. [15:37.820 --> 15:46.820] And as I understand, the prosecuting attorney had conniption fits. [15:46.820 --> 15:51.820] And a friend of mine worked for the Terracotta Sheriff's Department. [15:51.820 --> 15:56.820] That grand jury duty came to Jim and he was Jim's grandson. [15:56.820 --> 16:08.820] And Jim came to me and said, David wanted to know what your pictures do and hanging up in the grand jury room in Tarrant County with a note under it that says, if you see this man called security. [16:08.820 --> 16:16.820] This tells me what we would have did there was very, very powerful. [16:16.820 --> 16:30.820] How many people do you think we would need to do this before the prosecuting attorneys presented these complaints to the grand jury as a matter of course. [16:30.820 --> 16:35.820] Well, now, Randy, I kind of see that as them wanting to make sure you ain't getting in there to do it again. [16:35.820 --> 16:39.820] Well, that too, but that's not going to help. [16:39.820 --> 16:41.820] And I think they do that. [16:41.820 --> 16:50.820] You know, Johnny, I talked too much that time, but I will I will finish this up on the other side and get right back to you. [16:50.820 --> 16:55.820] This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens at Craig Radio. [16:55.820 --> 17:00.820] We'll be right back on the other side. [17:00.820 --> 17:07.820] Capital Coin and Bullion is a family owned business built on the promise to bring you affordable pricing on all coin and bullion products. [17:07.820 --> 17:13.820] In addition to coins and bullion, we now offer storeable freeze dried foods produced by Augustin Farms. [17:13.820 --> 17:20.820] Ammunition at 10% above wholesale prices, Berkey water products, gift certificates and our silver pool. [17:20.820 --> 17:24.820] A new way to guarantee silver by prepaying at a locked price. [17:24.820 --> 17:27.820] We can even help you set up a metals IRA account. [17:27.820 --> 17:31.820] Call us at 512-646-6404 for more details. [17:31.820 --> 17:38.820] As always, we buy, sell and trade precious metals, give appraisals and cater to those with all sizes of coin collections. 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[18:24.820 --> 18:26.820] How to answer letters and phone calls. [18:26.820 --> 18:28.820] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports. [18:28.820 --> 18:33.820] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:33.820 --> 18:38.820] The Michael Miras Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.820 --> 18:40.820] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.820 --> 18:49.820] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Miras banner or email Michaelmiras at yahoo.com. [18:49.820 --> 18:56.820] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:56.820 --> 18:59.820] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:26.820 --> 19:38.820] Okay, we're back. [19:38.820 --> 19:50.820] And I know I've spent a lot of time on this and I probably sound like I'm kind of beating a dead horse. [19:50.820 --> 20:00.820] But, you know, I've given out the standard prescription a number of times and it's really not enough. [20:00.820 --> 20:04.820] There's something much more important here than just the steps. [20:04.820 --> 20:12.820] If we get our mind in the right place, then the steps will be obvious. [20:12.820 --> 20:25.820] They will be the natural outgrowth of how we hold our mind and we need to learn how to be sovereigns. [20:25.820 --> 20:39.820] You know, we go to school and in school, they do everything they can to take away our sense of our sovereignty. [20:39.820 --> 20:44.820] Now, I'm not accusing the schools of doing this on purpose. [20:44.820 --> 20:47.820] It's just how things work. [20:47.820 --> 20:52.820] We are forced to enter into a school system. [20:52.820 --> 21:01.820] This is not our choice because the adults know that if we grow up ignorant, we'll grow up handicapped. [21:01.820 --> 21:11.820] So the forces to go to school, whether you like it or not, and in the schools, according to the Education Reform Bill pushed you by Ross Perot, [21:11.820 --> 21:17.820] it says schools shall instill in the child a deep and abiding faith for the American former government. [21:17.820 --> 21:19.820] Well, they do that. [21:19.820 --> 21:31.820] They spend the first, they take 12 years, the most formative years of your life, telling you about all these great and wonderful rights you have. [21:31.820 --> 21:39.820] While at the same time, they make it very clear why you may have all these rights. [21:39.820 --> 21:44.820] While you're in this school, don't even think of trying to express one of them. [21:44.820 --> 21:56.820] Because the whole weight of the system of all rights squarely on your head, this is what all of us in the patriot movement primarily deal with, [21:56.820 --> 22:06.820] is we have people who were conditioned through their entire school term, the most formative years of their lives, [22:06.820 --> 22:16.820] to hearing the rhetoric, all of this high-minded rhetoric about all these rights and privileges we have as sovereign citizens. [22:16.820 --> 22:26.820] While it was clearly demonstrated to us that we could not effectively express those rights or we would suffer greatly for it, [22:26.820 --> 22:32.820] that people get out of school and all of a sudden we expect them to become empowered citizens. [22:32.820 --> 22:34.820] It doesn't happen. [22:34.820 --> 22:44.820] So, if I spend a lot of time talking about sovereignty, we need to make change up. [22:44.820 --> 22:50.820] You get a ticket, you walk into court and something happens. [22:50.820 --> 22:56.820] You step up in front of the judge and you feel this hollowness in the pit of your stomach. [22:56.820 --> 23:00.820] You know, what's he going to do? Charge me 300 bucks? Big deal. [23:00.820 --> 23:06.820] That's the worst he could do. That's the worst. And he's going to do the worst unless I get him to do something different. [23:06.820 --> 23:10.820] But we step up in front of that judge and our hands are shaking. [23:10.820 --> 23:14.820] We get this hollow feeling in the pit of our stomach. [23:14.820 --> 23:16.820] Think about that. [23:16.820 --> 23:24.820] Think about the last time you were sent to the principal and more appropriately, [23:24.820 --> 23:32.820] the first time you were sent to the principal and had to sit in the principal's office [23:32.820 --> 23:36.820] outside waiting for him to see you. [23:36.820 --> 23:40.820] They always make you wait for a while so you have time to stew. [23:40.820 --> 23:44.820] And you go into the principal and you are terrified. [23:44.820 --> 23:46.820] You have no idea what's going to happen to you. [23:46.820 --> 23:58.820] And the principal is all reasonable and easy to get along with but all the time it's clear that one slight false move [23:58.820 --> 24:02.820] and the sky will fall in on you. [24:02.820 --> 24:12.820] They start out putting us in awe of authority because they believe that's the only way they can keep control. [24:12.820 --> 24:22.820] In the schools, the tiniest little chink in their armor, they believe will cause the whole system to deteriorate around it. [24:22.820 --> 24:28.820] So they put us through this 12 years of this indoctrination. [24:28.820 --> 24:36.820] We get out, we don't have any more interaction with the government unless we get a ticket or something. [24:36.820 --> 24:42.820] And when we get a ticket and go to court, we'll be stepped into the courtroom. [24:42.820 --> 24:52.820] The only operational model we have for dealing with these figures of authority, governmental authority, [24:52.820 --> 24:54.820] of what we learned in school. [24:54.820 --> 24:58.820] So we go back and pull out those old responses. [24:58.820 --> 25:04.820] Folks, we've got to fix that. We need a new model. [25:04.820 --> 25:18.820] And the one I suggest is when you go into a courtroom, think of yourself not as a student going before the principal, [25:18.820 --> 25:26.820] but as the parent going before the principal and wanted to know what the heck is going on here. [25:26.820 --> 25:40.820] Now, that's a model that we can use to give us a way of more appropriately reacting to the courts and people in authority. [25:40.820 --> 25:46.820] That's why I talk about us being sovereigns and how to act as a sovereign. [25:46.820 --> 25:52.820] When you go to, if you want your children to get in trouble at school and they call you down there, [25:52.820 --> 25:56.820] you have a whole different set of responses that you can access. [25:56.820 --> 26:06.820] So everything I'm talking about here is about the shifting from the student perspective to the parent perspective. [26:06.820 --> 26:10.820] I assure you it will change everything. [26:10.820 --> 26:16.820] If you hold yourself, your mind in the perspective of a sovereign, when you go before these courts, [26:16.820 --> 26:22.820] what you should do will almost dictate itself. [26:22.820 --> 26:30.820] When I go to the prosecuting attorney and ask him to do what he's required to do by law and he refuses to do it, [26:30.820 --> 26:34.820] the idea of arguing with him doesn't even occur to me. [26:34.820 --> 26:44.820] As a matter of fact, when I go to a prosecuting attorney and ask him to take a complaint against a public official, [26:44.820 --> 26:48.820] I hope he doesn't do it. [26:48.820 --> 26:54.820] I hope that he doesn't do what I'm asking him to do. [26:54.820 --> 27:02.820] Because that way I get to walk the routine on him and kick him in his behind. [27:02.820 --> 27:06.820] Then I get to go to the highest judge in the state. [27:06.820 --> 27:12.820] When he doesn't do what he's supposed to do, I get to kick the highest judge in the states behind. [27:12.820 --> 27:20.820] In terms of politics, this is like crabs in a bucket. [27:20.820 --> 27:28.820] The higher you get in any political hierarchy, the more people you have below you that want your position. [27:28.820 --> 27:46.820] And you will find as you move up in the hierarchy that the officials you deal with become far more professional and far more sensitive to the threat that you create for them. [27:46.820 --> 27:50.820] Understand, the court is not afraid of you. [27:50.820 --> 27:54.820] These officials are not afraid of you. [27:54.820 --> 28:04.820] What they're afraid of is that you will create cannon fodder for their political enemies to use against them. [28:04.820 --> 28:06.820] So, go to the prosecutor. [28:06.820 --> 28:08.820] When he doesn't do his job, go to the Chief Justice. [28:08.820 --> 28:14.820] When he doesn't do his job, come back to the prosecutor, demand that he appoint an attorney pro tem. [28:14.820 --> 28:18.820] When he refuses, then you go to the grand jury. [28:18.820 --> 28:24.820] And you show the grand jury, I went here, I went here, I went here, I went here. [28:24.820 --> 28:31.820] I exercised every avenue of redress and they screwed up every one of them. [28:31.820 --> 28:43.820] If you get the story built up strong enough, we will find a grand juror who's one of his children, a grand children, or one of his neighbors. [28:43.820 --> 28:48.820] A neighbor's children has been well voted to the system. [28:48.820 --> 28:51.820] And that's all you need. [28:51.820 --> 29:00.820] You actually don't even need that because you have a prosecutor who knows that you never know what a grand jury's going to do. [29:00.820 --> 29:03.820] So, I hope this all makes sense. [29:03.820 --> 29:09.820] I know I've kind of been around about, Johnny, does that make sense to you? [29:09.820 --> 29:15.820] Yeah, it makes absolute sense and I appreciate the detail. [29:15.820 --> 29:21.820] You know, I'm no stranger to being in court and I'm certainly not intimidated by it. [29:21.820 --> 29:30.820] And although my means are somewhat unconventional, they are generally effective in getting cases dismissed prior to trial. [29:30.820 --> 29:39.820] But on the occasion that we have to go to trial, you know, I can always get them to violate policy assessment on appeal. [29:39.820 --> 29:43.820] Okay, hang on. We will finish up with you on the other side. [29:43.820 --> 29:51.820] Randy Kelton, Dennis Stevens, Eddie Craig, Rue LaValle Radio, our calling number, 512-626-1984. [29:51.820 --> 29:59.820] And I'll try to get this moving along. We'll be right back on the other side. [29:59.820 --> 30:04.820] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [30:04.820 --> 30:06.820] The government says that fire brought it down. [30:06.820 --> 30:11.820] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [30:11.820 --> 30:14.820] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [30:14.820 --> 30:17.820] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [30:17.820 --> 30:18.820] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [30:18.820 --> 30:19.820] I'm a structural engineer. [30:19.820 --> 30:21.820] I'm a New York City correction officer. [30:21.820 --> 30:22.820] I'm an Air Force pilot. [30:22.820 --> 30:23.820] I'm a father who lost his son. [30:23.820 --> 30:26.820] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [30:26.820 --> 30:29.820] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [30:56.820 --> 31:00.820] You can see what our powders, seeds, and oil can do for you. [31:00.820 --> 31:06.820] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy. [31:06.820 --> 31:09.820] And neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [31:09.820 --> 31:12.820] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [31:12.820 --> 31:13.820] Brave New Books? [31:13.820 --> 31:20.820] Yes. Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, and G. Albert Griffin. [31:20.820 --> 31:24.820] They even stock interfood, Burkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [31:24.820 --> 31:26.820] There's no way a place like that exists. [31:26.820 --> 31:28.820] Go check it out for yourself. [31:28.820 --> 31:32.820] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [31:32.820 --> 31:36.820] Oh, by UT, there's never anywhere to park down there. [31:36.820 --> 31:43.820] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [31:43.820 --> 31:47.820] It does exist, but when are they open? [31:47.820 --> 31:52.820] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [31:52.820 --> 31:59.820] Call 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [32:22.820 --> 32:28.820] Yeah, I won't. [32:28.820 --> 32:31.820] Oh, I won't. [32:31.820 --> 32:39.820] I won't let you pull the wool over my eyes. [32:39.820 --> 32:54.820] You see, once you refuse your news, also come in line. It seems you like to space, but please take some words to the wise. [32:54.820 --> 33:08.820] Please stop trying to pull the wool over my eyes. [33:08.820 --> 33:12.820] Okay, we're back. [33:12.820 --> 33:25.820] And we're talking to Johnny in Texas and we spent a lot of time on this, but Johnny touched on an issue that was that I had been concerned about that we haven't been addressing lately. [33:25.820 --> 33:29.820] And it is the issue most dear to my heart. [33:29.820 --> 33:35.820] And Johnny, I hope that I haven't beaten this into a pulp. [33:35.820 --> 33:44.820] No, I appreciate the detail. You know, as I was saying before the break, I, you know, generally can get a case dismissed prior to trial. [33:44.820 --> 33:49.820] If, you know, on the occasion that it does go to trial, you know, I don't really care what happens. [33:49.820 --> 34:00.820] My sole purpose for being at the trial is to sit there and make a list of all of their laws that they pretend to uphold and defend, that I can get them to violate and use that to win on appeal. [34:00.820 --> 34:08.820] But what all of that affects is they brought the fight to me. I fended them off, you know, and they go until they bring the next fight. [34:08.820 --> 34:18.820] I want to start taking the fight to them. And my goal is to have my picture next year's in the Tarrant County Courthouse in your future. [34:18.820 --> 34:22.820] Okay, you're the reason I do this show. [34:22.820 --> 34:38.820] Really, if we can get one or two guys like you in every county, if we can get one or two guys like you in half the counties, everything will change. [34:38.820 --> 34:47.820] Great change has never happened because the massive, masses rose up and demanded change. [34:47.820 --> 34:59.820] Great change has always happened because a few people focused in a certain direction gave the masses direction. [34:59.820 --> 35:08.820] And this is not a criticism of the masses because everybody has their own focus. Everybody has their own issues. [35:08.820 --> 35:14.820] Everybody can't do everything. Everybody can't know everything. [35:14.820 --> 35:31.820] I've gotten older and in getting older, one of the things I had to face is that the more I learned, the more I came to know, the more I realized how limited my knowledge is. [35:31.820 --> 35:44.820] Yeah, I know a bunch about this one tightly focused issue and it's helped me to get a lot more comfortable when I get outside my area of focus. [35:44.820 --> 35:50.820] Then I go to somebody else who knows that area better. [35:50.820 --> 35:57.820] We have masses out there and they all have different focuses and they need us. [35:57.820 --> 36:13.820] It's not that we lead them around like sheep. They're not sheeple. They all have their own focuses and they need those of us who are focused in this direction to give them the tools they need so they can do what we're doing. [36:13.820 --> 36:18.820] They won't do it as good as you do Johnny. They don't need to. [36:18.820 --> 36:28.820] We get a few people like you who are kicking these guys in their rear ends, their professional rear ends. [36:28.820 --> 36:38.820] When this happens, everybody finds out about it. My local justice in the peace went to a seminar in Austin for JP's training seminar. [36:38.820 --> 36:49.820] When they found out he was from Boyd, Texas, he had six different magistrates, six different municipal judges come to him and said, you know, Randall Kelton. [36:49.820 --> 37:00.820] He said half the seminar were people asking questions about what I had done to different magistrates. [37:00.820 --> 37:11.820] Not just one person and most every magistrate there, all of them knew all about what went on because they tell each other how they get their minds kicked. [37:11.820 --> 37:16.820] It won't take many and we can change everything. [37:16.820 --> 37:25.820] When I first started this, I never imagined that we might actually be able to change everything. [37:25.820 --> 37:31.820] But we can't within the limited scope of what we're doing. [37:31.820 --> 37:42.820] And I once told my district attorney when I was trying to give him to take some criminal complaints against the public officials. [37:42.820 --> 37:47.820] I said, Barry said, you know, I'm a Vietnam veteran. [37:47.820 --> 37:56.820] And because of that, these hands have wrongful blood on them. But no more. [37:56.820 --> 38:14.820] 10, 20, 30 years from now, when we look back on this time and this day, I'm going to be able to say that I did everything I could to achieve justice. [38:14.820 --> 38:18.820] Barry, what are you going to say? [38:18.820 --> 38:35.820] And if those of us who were selected out of the masses to focus on this one issue, if we do our job well, everybody else doesn't have to. [38:35.820 --> 38:39.820] We can change things. We can have a dramatic effect. [38:39.820 --> 38:46.820] You know, I look back on my life in the easy times, don't stand out. [38:46.820 --> 38:54.820] The times when I did something hard and did it because it was right and for the right reasons, that's what stands out. [38:54.820 --> 38:59.820] So I'm hoping I can generate a very tiny army. [38:59.820 --> 39:03.820] Don't need a big one. Just a small one. [39:03.820 --> 39:07.820] And we'll change everything. Okay, enough preaching. I'm not going to preach anymore. [39:07.820 --> 39:10.820] Johnny, do you have anything else you want to address with us? [39:10.820 --> 39:18.820] No, I appreciate your help and I'm sure you have. I'm sure you have the caller stacking up, so I'm going to drop off now. I appreciate the money. [39:18.820 --> 39:19.820] Thank you. [39:19.820 --> 39:24.820] Thank you and stay in touch and keep us appraised of your battles. [39:24.820 --> 39:25.820] We'll do. [39:25.820 --> 39:33.820] Okay, now we're going to go to Jay in California. [39:33.820 --> 39:35.820] Jay, okay. [39:35.820 --> 39:39.820] Where didn't he boss last night? [39:39.820 --> 39:47.820] You were going to tell me new strategies to formulate with the judge. [39:47.820 --> 39:54.820] I went before the judge today and he had an agenda and he was clearly hostile towards me. [39:54.820 --> 40:13.820] I say that because he said that I was threatening. He said that I was disrespectful of the court all because I'm standing up for a constitutional argument for my right. [40:13.820 --> 40:22.820] He went on to say that he was dismissing my complaint because he didn't think that they had properly been served. [40:22.820 --> 40:36.820] He literally shut me out of court and he kept threatening to disconnect on me and I told him, I said, why do you keep threatening me and he hung up? [40:36.820 --> 40:39.820] Okay, do you have this recorded? [40:39.820 --> 40:41.820] Yes, I do. [40:41.820 --> 40:46.820] First thing, judicial conduct complaint. [40:46.820 --> 40:53.820] Okay, before I say that, what you just said was very general. [40:53.820 --> 40:55.820] Right. [40:55.820 --> 40:58.820] What was his more specific complaints? [40:58.820 --> 41:06.820] What I'm trying to find a way to get to is this judge has a duty to apply law to fact. [41:06.820 --> 41:10.820] Your attitude is not a fact. [41:10.820 --> 41:17.820] The fact that you may exhibit disrespect for the court, that's not a fact. [41:17.820 --> 41:26.820] That's not something he can adjudicate. That's not something he can refuse to adjudicate based on. [41:26.820 --> 41:32.820] What did the court do or what did he not do? [41:32.820 --> 41:46.820] He did tell me that he was throwing out my complaint and proceeding with the complaint, the original complaint that came in to reward the State Commission. [41:46.820 --> 41:53.820] That much I got out of it and he struck my complaint from the record. [41:53.820 --> 41:58.820] Whoa, hold on. Struck your complaint from the record? [41:58.820 --> 42:06.820] He said that they were not properly filed as far as he was concerned because they were not properly filed. [42:06.820 --> 42:09.820] Okay, hold on. Complaints. [42:09.820 --> 42:12.820] Are you talking a civil complaint or criminal? [42:12.820 --> 42:18.820] It was a civil complaint that was filed and I filed an answer and cross-complaint. [42:18.820 --> 42:22.820] So my cross-complaint is what got thrown. [42:22.820 --> 42:28.820] He was saying he was throwing out that he wasn't going to act on. [42:28.820 --> 42:46.820] Okay, now you need to request findings of fact and conclusions of law and the way I suggest doing that is you put together findings of fact and conclusions of law at your own. [42:46.820 --> 42:54.820] These are the facts in the case. This is the law as it applies to those facts. [42:54.820 --> 43:10.820] Ask the judge to accept your findings of fact and conclusions at law or provide you with his own so that you may perfect your appeal to the court of appeals. [43:10.820 --> 43:11.820] Okay. [43:11.820 --> 43:16.820] When he refuses to do that, then you charge him with sedition. [43:16.820 --> 43:17.820] Okay. [43:17.820 --> 43:23.820] And move to disqualify him for being legally incompetent. [43:23.820 --> 43:25.820] Okay. [43:25.820 --> 43:35.820] You can't disqualify him for being biased, but you can disqualify him for being legally incompetent. [43:35.820 --> 43:42.820] Okay. This is hold on. We'll pick this up on the other side. This is Randall Kelton, Deborah Stephens and Craig. [43:42.820 --> 43:43.820] We have our radio. [43:43.820 --> 43:47.820] I'll call in number five and two, six, four, six, nine, two, three, four. [43:47.820 --> 43:51.820] Edward, Fred, Ken, Mark, I see you there. [43:51.820 --> 43:53.820] Hang on. We will get you. [43:53.820 --> 44:00.820] We'll be right back on the other side. [44:00.820 --> 44:03.820] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:03.820 --> 44:06.820] Win your case without an attorney with jurisdictionary. [44:06.820 --> 44:13.820] The affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [44:13.820 --> 44:14.820] step by step. [44:14.820 --> 44:18.820] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.820 --> 44:22.820] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.820 --> 44:25.820] Thousands have won with our step by step course. [44:25.820 --> 44:27.820] And now you can too. [44:27.820 --> 44:33.820] Your jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:33.820 --> 44:42.820] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:42.820 --> 44:51.820] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more. [44:51.820 --> 45:00.820] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [45:00.820 --> 45:05.820] The Oklahoma City bombing, top 10 reasons to question the official story. [45:05.820 --> 45:09.820] Reason number one, John Doe number two and other accomplices. [45:09.820 --> 45:17.820] On the day of the bombing, nearly all of the witnesses that saw Tim McVeigh and the writer truck report that he was accompanied by other perpetrators. [45:17.820 --> 45:24.820] FBI and federal prosecutors insist that Tim McVeigh alone delivered the writer truck bomb to the Murray building and detonated it. [45:24.820 --> 45:32.820] The only witness the government produced to place McVeigh at the building that morning, Dana Bradley, who lost her children and one of her legs in the bombing, [45:32.820 --> 45:38.820] testified that she saw McVeigh with another man, the fable John Doe number two, exiting the writer truck. [45:38.820 --> 45:44.820] While at least 15 other witnesses claim to have seen McVeigh with other perpetrators the day of the bombing, [45:44.820 --> 45:52.820] no less than 226 witnesses placed him with other men in the days before the bombing, including when he rented the writer truck, [45:52.820 --> 45:56.820] and in some cases have positively identified the other perpetrators. [45:56.820 --> 46:24.820] For more information, please visit okcbombingtruth.com. [46:24.820 --> 46:33.820] I'm always a musty careful what I'm wishing for. When I'm hungry, I like to notice what I am. [46:33.820 --> 46:41.820] Okay, we're back. We're in the California University of Oregon with our radio, and we're talking to Jay in California. [46:41.820 --> 46:49.820] Jay, if we're going to beat these guys, we've got to become mechanics. [46:49.820 --> 47:06.820] It's really hard. You know, I represented myself in a trial in Cherokee County, and I freely admit I was absolutely incompetent. [47:06.820 --> 47:10.820] I wasn't incompetent because I was not knowledgeable. [47:10.820 --> 47:22.820] I was incompetent to represent myself because I was too emotionally involved, and I went into the case with this arrogant notion [47:22.820 --> 47:36.820] that I could separate myself from the emotion and the threat of the situation, and I was absolutely wrong. [47:36.820 --> 47:43.820] What I'm asking you to do is extremely difficult. [47:43.820 --> 48:01.820] I'm asking you to take all the emotional content and put it over here somewhere and go back and look at it like a mechanic trying to isolate a problem with a piece of equipment. [48:01.820 --> 48:10.820] Okay, let's look at what the judge did. What are the facts that are before the judge? [48:10.820 --> 48:15.820] What is the law that applies to those facts? [48:15.820 --> 48:22.820] Keep in mind that this judge has no authority to have an attitude. [48:22.820 --> 48:32.820] If he wants to have an attitude, he can leave that at home when he leaves the house, but he's not to bring it into the courtroom. [48:32.820 --> 48:41.820] And for him to accuse you of being disrespectful, unless you call him an A-hole or an SOB, [48:41.820 --> 48:55.820] indicates that he is judicially incompetent to provide a fair jurist in the first instance, something to which you have a right. [48:55.820 --> 49:12.820] And if you can show that this judge failed to apply the law to the facts, then you ask him to disqualify himself for incompetence. [49:12.820 --> 49:16.820] And that's when we're going to hurt his feelings. [49:16.820 --> 49:19.820] And you do that on the record. [49:19.820 --> 49:20.820] Okay. [49:20.820 --> 49:29.820] So, if try to do this without any emotion, I know that I'm asking a whole lot. [49:29.820 --> 49:40.820] That's very hard. What I did do is that when I made the recording, as soon as I got it out, I sent your copy. [49:40.820 --> 49:47.820] So, you'll see it. It's marked in the matter of my mother's name, but it's marked in the matter of. So, you'll see it. [49:47.820 --> 49:51.820] Okay. In the matter of, okay, then I'll know what to look for. Did you send it to... [49:51.820 --> 49:52.820] Did you send it to Rural Law? [49:52.820 --> 49:54.820] Randy of Rural Law. Yeah. [49:54.820 --> 49:56.820] Okay, I'll look at it. [49:56.820 --> 50:02.820] I sent it to Randy of Rural Law. It's a bit long because it took me a minute to get things set up in different things. [50:02.820 --> 50:12.820] But the thing that happened is that, like you were saying, what I realized in the middle of it, when they said something about the fact that [50:12.820 --> 50:20.820] I didn't even come to my mother's funeral, that's what the prosecuting attorney said, that he didn't even have enough respect to come to my mother. [50:20.820 --> 50:26.820] I said, how dare you? And I lost it because my PTSD kicked in. [50:26.820 --> 50:36.820] And I said, how dare you accuse me of not coming to a funeral when I'm discussing the fraud that took away my homestead in the first place? [50:36.820 --> 50:47.820] I said, and then you accuse me of not caring enough to come to my mother, but even the court recognizes by memorandum that I'm indigent. [50:47.820 --> 50:56.820] So, how do you expect for me to pay for airfare, hotel, and one of the most expensive areas of the country? You can't do it. [50:56.820 --> 50:59.820] Not on my income. [50:59.820 --> 51:08.820] Okay, understand. They know how to do confrontation. [51:08.820 --> 51:14.820] Lawyers, this is what they do. This is what they specialize in. [51:14.820 --> 51:26.820] There's another seminar. There's a presentation I would like to do about how to isolate yourself from this, but this is what they do. [51:26.820 --> 51:33.820] Don't think you can get into a confrontation with these guys and not be outgunned. They cheat. [51:33.820 --> 51:43.820] And for this prosecutor to do that, we have some tools we can use. How many bar grievances have you filed against the attorneys on the other side? [51:43.820 --> 51:50.820] Not a lot, because the carpal tunnel has been really hard just to get the paperwork for the court out. [51:50.820 --> 52:03.820] But I'm struggling. Carpal tunnel, if Deborah's listening, go online and do a search for Poi, P-O-I. [52:03.820 --> 52:05.820] P-O-I. [52:05.820 --> 52:26.820] This is Deborah is a fire dancer. She spins Poi and they light him up and it is incredible to watch. She is a train with a big wick that's like a weight on the end of this train. [52:26.820 --> 52:42.820] And she hooks it onto two fingers, one on each hand and spins them. This is developed in New Zealand, but it will absolutely eliminate carpal tunnel syndrome. [52:42.820 --> 52:44.820] Wow. [52:44.820 --> 53:04.820] They developed this because they were primarily weavers and they were getting risk problems and they started spinning Poi. We have some videos of Deborah spinning Poi and they look incredible, but when you see it in person, it's even more incredible. [53:04.820 --> 53:19.820] But spinning these trains, you take a train with a weight on it and hook it to your index and middle finger on each hand and spin both of them at once. [53:19.820 --> 53:27.820] That is a trick. Getting those to spin in the same plane and not hit each other. [53:27.820 --> 53:38.820] When you get to where you can do that real good, you dip those things in fuel and light them up, then you make sure they don't hit you because they're pretty hot. [53:38.820 --> 53:41.820] But it will absolutely eliminate carpal tunnel. [53:41.820 --> 53:44.820] Okay, okay, I will look into that. [53:44.820 --> 53:47.820] Look into Poi and New Zealand. [53:47.820 --> 53:49.820] That will eliminate carpal tunnel. [53:49.820 --> 53:59.820] Okay, because that's been a biggest part of dealing with it between the physical pain and the emotional pain, trying to write all this stuff. [53:59.820 --> 54:14.820] Let me make a suggestion. First thing, you know, if you listen to my show a lot, people call you with issues. The first thing I ask them to do is write me a timeline. [54:14.820 --> 54:18.820] Do you have a complete timeline? [54:18.820 --> 54:20.820] Yes, I do. [54:20.820 --> 54:22.820] Okay. [54:22.820 --> 54:32.820] Once you get the timeline down, now go back to that timeline and look at each step and compare it to law. [54:32.820 --> 54:38.820] The timeline is just a basic structure. Once you have a timeline, then you go in and start filling in the pieces. [54:38.820 --> 54:47.820] You want to find each place where the court has failed to apply the law to the facts. [54:47.820 --> 54:56.820] The only authority the judge has, determining the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, applying the law to the facts. [54:56.820 --> 55:04.820] If he determined a fact that was not in accordance with the rules of evidence, you raise that as an issue. [55:04.820 --> 55:11.820] And one other aspect, we were talking about sovereignty earlier. [55:11.820 --> 55:19.820] As the sovereign, you have a duty to police the police, to police the court, to police everyone. [55:19.820 --> 55:30.820] If the judge failed to properly determine the facts, if he accepted as facts something that wasn't properly proven, [55:30.820 --> 55:41.820] file a judicial conduct complaint against him for each one. The more specific and detailed, the better. Make each allegation. [55:41.820 --> 55:46.820] Don't take a whole bunch of things he did and put them together in one complaint. [55:46.820 --> 55:51.820] File each one separately, separate than he did. [55:51.820 --> 56:03.820] Now, the Commission on Judicial Conduct for New York will get these complaints and they will disallow you one of them. [56:03.820 --> 56:16.820] As a matter of course. But each one they disallow, you should put a little check on your board that his bond rating just went up on that one. [56:16.820 --> 56:26.820] And his bond rating just went up on that one. The way to get rid of a judge is to get his bond revoked. [56:26.820 --> 56:37.820] If it can't be bonded, it can't be a judge. The judges all protect themselves. You won't get the judges to throw out another judge. [56:37.820 --> 56:47.820] But you can get his insurance cut me to throw him out. They're not bound by the same set of rules. [56:47.820 --> 56:55.820] You need to introduce them to the process from hell. [56:55.820 --> 57:08.820] You understand their weaknesses. And the other weakness, if the judge fails to apply the law to the facts, [57:08.820 --> 57:15.820] and the process denies you in the form of free access to or enjoyment of right, then he commits criminal act. [57:15.820 --> 57:28.820] If the judge fails to rule on an issue you brought before the court, then he denies you in your right to petition a court for redress of grievance [57:28.820 --> 57:34.820] and subjects you to outlawry which is forbidden by Constitution. [57:34.820 --> 57:44.820] And that's a crime. So I would suggest run the routine on the prosecutor in New York. [57:44.820 --> 57:53.820] You send him a complaint and the prosecutors go to refuse to act on it and then start after the prosecutor and the judges. [57:53.820 --> 58:04.820] Create yourself some politics. This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevenson Craig. Do you have anything else before I go to the other side? [58:04.820 --> 58:14.820] Not really on this issue, Randy. I want to call you back at another time with another issue that happened, but this is the main one that I wanted to talk to you about. [58:14.820 --> 58:16.820] I'll call you later. [58:16.820 --> 58:22.820] Okay, start sharp shooting this judge. If you're going to get remedy, that's how you're going to do it. [58:22.820 --> 58:34.820] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevenson Craig with La Radio. Edward from Massachusetts, Fred California, Ken in New York, Mark Miami, Tyler in Wyoming. [58:34.820 --> 58:40.820] We'll see you there. We will go to Edward when we come back on the other side. Thank you for holding. [58:40.820 --> 58:49.820] Our calling number is 502-646-1984. We'll be right back. [58:49.820 --> 59:00.820] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.820 --> 59:12.820] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.820 --> 59:27.820] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.820 --> 59:49.820] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.820 --> 59:59.820] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:59.820 --> 01:00:14.820] Bad economic times are hurting more than employment. They're also hurting education. Now some schools are dropping Fridays and offering four-day school weeks instead. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to describe the trend. [01:00:14.820 --> 01:00:25.820] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:25.820 --> 01:00:33.820] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:33.820 --> 01:00:44.820] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:01:04.820 --> 01:01:17.820] To soften the blow, some schools are lengthening the four remaining days and shortening lunch breaks. If kids spend that fifth day doing something productive, I'm all for it. Who knows, maybe parents will take over where the schools leave off. [01:01:17.820 --> 01:01:32.820] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:01:32.820 --> 01:01:39.820] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:02:02.820 --> 01:02:14.820] It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:02:33.820 --> 01:02:40.820] The league says it's for your own safety, even if you have to put up with longer lines and get pawed by brawny strangers. [01:02:40.820 --> 01:02:51.820] To me, this is big brother in action and another example of how our right to privacy, not to mention our private parts, are getting manhandled. Let's call a foul on the NFL for unnecessary interference. [01:02:51.820 --> 01:03:03.820] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:21.820 --> 01:03:29.820] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:03:51.820 --> 01:04:02.820] Massive shoe sits. I don't care what anybody says. Massive shoe sits does not have a T in the middle. [01:04:02.820 --> 01:04:05.820] Okay, what do you have for us, Ed? [01:04:05.820 --> 01:04:22.820] I spoke to you, I don't know, about 10 days ago and about the... [01:04:22.820 --> 01:04:27.820] Are you on a headset or on a hands free? [01:04:27.820 --> 01:04:29.820] Hold on. [01:04:29.820 --> 01:04:32.820] That sounds better. [01:04:32.820 --> 01:04:48.820] Yes, but if you might want to pull the mic a little bit from your mouth, it may be just either over modulating, or if you're like me and you're hard of hearing, I tend to turn up my headset. [01:04:48.820 --> 01:04:56.820] And if you're using a headset and the sound is too loud, it'll feed back any mic. Okay, go ahead. [01:04:56.820 --> 01:05:03.820] Yes, if I hold the phone close to my ear so I can hear, but far away from my mouth, we get rid of it. [01:05:03.820 --> 01:05:09.820] Wait, hold on. Are you on a wireless phone? [01:05:09.820 --> 01:05:11.820] No. [01:05:11.820 --> 01:05:14.820] Okay, because sometimes they'll get that squeaking in it. [01:05:14.820 --> 01:05:19.820] Okay, we're getting some bad reception and you're getting this squeaking in it. [01:05:19.820 --> 01:05:21.820] Okay, try it again. Let's see if it's better. [01:05:21.820 --> 01:05:30.820] Okay, all right. Okay, so I spoke to you about 10 days ago. I'm one of the Remedy's guys. [01:05:30.820 --> 01:05:51.820] And so Bank of America had started the Service Member Civil Relief Act, which is the low threshold of tests that they've got to pass here in Massachusetts to move on to foreclose. [01:05:51.820 --> 01:05:53.820] So I called you. [01:05:53.820 --> 01:05:57.820] Okay, hold on. Let me bring everybody up to speed. [01:05:57.820 --> 01:06:02.820] In Massachusetts, Massachusetts has a land court. [01:06:02.820 --> 01:06:15.820] And the first thing, Massachusetts is supposedly a judicial state, but it's actually a kind of judicial, non-judicial. [01:06:15.820 --> 01:06:26.820] The first thing the lender has to do is file with the land court this Sailors and Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act. [01:06:26.820 --> 01:06:34.820] They can't foreclose on a soldier or sailor if he's in service at the time of the foreclosure. [01:06:34.820 --> 01:06:47.820] So they have to file an affidavit with the court stating that whoever this is is not subject to the Sailors and Soldiers Relief Act. [01:06:47.820 --> 01:06:58.820] This is the point in Massachusetts where you have the opportunity to go in and say, hold on here. You don't have jurisdiction. [01:06:58.820 --> 01:07:01.820] You cannot invoke the jurisdiction of this court. [01:07:01.820 --> 01:07:13.820] So in order to challenge the standing of the borrower to begin the foreclosure process, and this is the place you do it at, you do it at. [01:07:13.820 --> 01:07:17.820] And that's why we're talking about soldiers and Sailors Relief Act. [01:07:17.820 --> 01:07:19.820] Okay. Go ahead. [01:07:19.820 --> 01:07:34.820] All right. Yeah. So, well, two years ago, if I had gone in and challenged it on whether the bank has standing or not, it would have just easily been dismissed. [01:07:34.820 --> 01:07:40.820] But two years later, and you know, here in the present, politics have changed a little bit. [01:07:40.820 --> 01:07:46.820] And the court is beginning to wake up to some of the fraud. The banks are perpetrating. [01:07:46.820 --> 01:07:58.820] So this time around, on June 26, a couple of weeks ago, I got the court to come out with the order to show cause. [01:07:58.820 --> 01:08:12.820] The bank is being pushed back a little bit and being made to, I'm sure, that they have standing even, you know, come to the threshold of, you know, asking whether I'm in the service or not. [01:08:12.820 --> 01:08:20.820] So in the meantime, the bank, of course, is going full sail ahead with the foreclosure. [01:08:20.820 --> 01:08:28.820] So we have a sale date of next Friday at the 13th of 3 p.m. That's the auction time indeed. [01:08:28.820 --> 01:08:44.820] And the court is saying that the bank has until the 18th to file, you know, paperwork showing, you know, with affidavits or whatever they need to show, you know, for authenticity and all that stuff. [01:08:44.820 --> 01:08:53.820] So I put to get my wife and I put together a temporary restraining order in Massachusetts. [01:08:53.820 --> 01:09:04.820] It's a temporary restraining order or injunctive motion. Yeah, motion for preliminary injunction. [01:09:04.820 --> 01:09:09.820] Okay. Okay, hold on. This is how that normally works. [01:09:09.820 --> 01:09:22.820] If you have enough time to give the other side notice of a show cause hearing, and generally, like in the Fed, that'll be 15 days. [01:09:22.820 --> 01:09:32.820] If you have 15 days before something's going to happen, you have time to request a preliminary injunction. [01:09:32.820 --> 01:09:50.820] If you don't have that much time, then you ask for an emergency temporary restraining order in order to restrain the other side so that you have time to give them that 15 day notice. [01:09:50.820 --> 01:09:55.820] And you can have a hearing on the preliminary injunction. [01:09:55.820 --> 01:10:02.820] Okay. Does that, okay, I hope that makes sense. I'm hoping I want everybody to understand how this works. [01:10:02.820 --> 01:10:13.820] Temporary restraining order is only to restrain long enough to have a hearing on preliminary injunction. [01:10:13.820 --> 01:10:15.820] Okay, I'll shut up now. Go ahead. [01:10:15.820 --> 01:10:25.820] So anyways, here it is today, Friday, the 6th, and the auction is supposed to be seven days from today. [01:10:25.820 --> 01:10:31.820] So we put, Melissa and I, we put together the motion for this temporary restraining order. [01:10:31.820 --> 01:10:38.820] So I went to the land court today, and the clerk's office is always very nice and helpful. [01:10:38.820 --> 01:10:48.820] And he told me what could happen with this. He said, if we just handle this as a regular routine court business, you'll get an answer within 14 days. [01:10:48.820 --> 01:10:57.820] And obviously, you've got a tighter timeframe than that. He says we can ask, because we did put emergency on it, we asked for an emergency temporary restraining order. [01:10:57.820 --> 01:11:07.820] And then the clerk said, well, we put it on an expedited track. That'll get you an answer within seven days. [01:11:07.820 --> 01:11:15.820] Or he says, you can just wait a few minutes, and I can see if I can put this in front of a judge right now, and we can do it, it's part A. [01:11:15.820 --> 01:11:25.820] So I said, yeah, let's go for it. So anyways, I found myself shortly in front of Judge Long of the Land Court here in Boston. [01:11:25.820 --> 01:11:36.820] And he said to me, well, you know, the bank really doesn't even have to prove whether you're in the service or not. They can still go ahead and foreclose. [01:11:36.820 --> 01:11:41.820] You can see the guy wasn't Judge Piper, the guy who gave the order to show cause. [01:11:41.820 --> 01:12:00.820] So anyways, he said, why do you think that you can, you know, prevail on getting a temporary restraining order? He said, you know, he's basically saying, you know, the bank can just go right ahead and, you know, roll right over you and, you know, foreclose. [01:12:00.820 --> 01:12:05.820] You know, like, you know what? He said, I'm inclined to just deny this. [01:12:05.820 --> 01:12:13.820] He said, why do you think that the bank has, you know, to slow down or anything? You know, I said, well, there's quoted title here. [01:12:13.820 --> 01:12:20.820] And he makes like, well, are you aware that all this stuff is recorded in the registry of deeds? And I was like, yes. [01:12:20.820 --> 01:12:29.820] And he said, well, have you gone online and seen it or gone to the registry and looked at it, you know, like in the fifth grade or something? [01:12:29.820 --> 01:12:38.820] And so, well, actually, I have the printout off the internet right here. You can look at all the entries that are in the registry. [01:12:38.820 --> 01:12:55.820] And he said, well, I further explained that I got my mortgage with the mortgage company and mirrors is on my mortgage and Bank of America who is trying to foreclose is nowhere to be found in any of these registry records. [01:12:55.820 --> 01:13:02.820] So they all took a piece of paper up to him and he looked at it and that kind of shut him up. [01:13:02.820 --> 01:13:04.820] Perfect. [01:13:04.820 --> 01:13:16.820] Right. I had a little more respect for this guy before I got in front of him today because, you know, doing a lot of research and I've come across quite a bit of his court stuff, you know, that's long. [01:13:16.820 --> 01:13:32.820] And so anyways, the way we left it was he said, I can either deny it right now or you can just judge Piper, the judge who's been assigned in my case, he had a vacation day. [01:13:32.820 --> 01:13:39.820] So anyway, he said, he checked with one of his secretaries there and said, you know, when's Judge Piper's next available time? [01:13:39.820 --> 01:13:47.820] He said, Tuesday, 10 a.m. Boston Land Court. I have a hearing scheduled. [01:13:47.820 --> 01:13:54.820] Okay, hold on. I have some questions for you. You have a mortgage? [01:13:54.820 --> 01:13:55.820] Yes. [01:13:55.820 --> 01:13:58.820] The merge is included in the mortgage? [01:13:58.820 --> 01:13:59.820] Yes, sir. [01:13:59.820 --> 01:14:00.820] Okay. [01:14:00.820 --> 01:14:04.820] Are there any assignments in the case? [01:14:04.820 --> 01:14:11.820] No, there are not. And I discussed this with David this afternoon. There's no release of liens either. [01:14:11.820 --> 01:14:20.820] Okay, well, that I'm not surprised. Who, okay, you're saying who is the original lender? [01:14:20.820 --> 01:14:23.820] Mortgage partners, a mortgage company in New Hampshire. [01:14:23.820 --> 01:14:29.820] Mortgage partners. Who is doing the foreclosure? [01:14:29.820 --> 01:14:32.820] Bank of America. [01:14:32.820 --> 01:14:35.820] Okay. [01:14:35.820 --> 01:14:38.820] And there's no assignment to Bank of America? [01:14:38.820 --> 01:14:39.820] Correct. [01:14:39.820 --> 01:14:56.820] Okay. Then your argument to the court is Bank of America lacks standing to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of this court. [01:14:56.820 --> 01:15:12.820] According to the court record, the only one who has subject matter jurisdiction to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of this court is mortgage partners. [01:15:12.820 --> 01:15:22.820] Mortgage partners has not attempted to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of this court. Therefore, this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to proceed. [01:15:22.820 --> 01:15:30.820] And that, what you told me earlier, sounded like what the judge was asking you to tell him. [01:15:30.820 --> 01:15:31.820] Okay. [01:15:31.820 --> 01:15:40.820] And he directed you to these records for that reason. He couldn't give you legal advice, but he pointed you to where you needed to go. [01:15:40.820 --> 01:15:46.820] The only thing this judge can look at is what's in those records. [01:15:46.820 --> 01:15:52.820] So is there an appointment of substitute trustee? [01:15:52.820 --> 01:15:54.820] I'm sorry? [01:15:54.820 --> 01:15:59.820] Is there an appointment of substitute trustee by Bank of America? [01:15:59.820 --> 01:16:03.820] No, there's nothing in there. [01:16:03.820 --> 01:16:08.820] I mean, there's a mortgage, and then there's a modification, but that's it. [01:16:08.820 --> 01:16:11.820] Okay. [01:16:11.820 --> 01:16:15.820] How do you know they're foreclosing? [01:16:15.820 --> 01:16:22.820] Because they've gotten a law firm, and the law firm is bringing the action. [01:16:22.820 --> 01:16:26.820] Okay. Sue's a law firm. [01:16:26.820 --> 01:16:31.820] Well, we've got your federal lawsuit, and we're working on it. [01:16:31.820 --> 01:16:34.820] Okay, good. [01:16:34.820 --> 01:16:36.820] Okay, hang on. [01:16:36.820 --> 01:16:39.820] We will pick this back up on the other side. [01:16:39.820 --> 01:16:43.820] If we do this right, we should be able to put the brakes on them. [01:16:43.820 --> 01:16:48.820] This is Red DeKalb and Deborah Stevenson and Craig, rule of law radio. [01:16:48.820 --> 01:16:53.820] Our call in number 5126461984. [01:16:53.820 --> 01:16:59.820] We'll be right back on the other side. [01:16:59.820 --> 01:17:03.820] Capital Coin & Bullion is a family-owned business built on the promise [01:17:03.820 --> 01:17:07.820] to bring you affordable pricing on all coin and bullion products. [01:17:07.820 --> 01:17:11.820] In addition to coins and bullion, we now offer storeable freeze-dried foods [01:17:11.820 --> 01:17:16.820] produced by Augustin Farms, ammunition at 10% above wholesale prices, [01:17:16.820 --> 01:17:20.820] Berkey water products, gift certificates, and our Silver Pool, [01:17:20.820 --> 01:17:24.820] a new way to guarantee silver by prepaying at a locked price. [01:17:24.820 --> 01:17:27.820] We can even help you set up a metals IRA account. [01:17:27.820 --> 01:17:31.820] Call us at 512646440 for more details. [01:17:31.820 --> 01:17:36.820] As always, we buy, sell, and trade precious metals, give appraisals, [01:17:36.820 --> 01:17:39.820] and cater to those with all sizes of coin collections. [01:17:39.820 --> 01:17:42.820] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, [01:17:42.820 --> 01:17:46.820] about a half a mile north of Canig, next to the Ikiban Sushi and Jeanne Carwash. [01:17:46.820 --> 01:17:50.820] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [01:17:50.820 --> 01:17:56.820] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 5126466440 [01:17:56.820 --> 01:18:10.820] to stay you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio or Texas Liberty Radio. [01:18:26.820 --> 01:18:36.820] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [01:18:36.820 --> 01:18:44.820] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 5126466440 [01:18:44.820 --> 01:18:51.820] to stay you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio. [01:18:51.820 --> 01:19:01.820] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [01:19:01.820 --> 01:19:09.820] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 5126466440 [01:19:09.820 --> 01:19:15.820] to stay you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:15.820 --> 01:19:25.820] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [01:19:25.820 --> 01:19:35.820] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 5126466440 [01:19:35.820 --> 01:19:41.820] to stay you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:41.820 --> 01:19:49.820] We're talking to Edward in Massachusetts and I'm afraid we're running short of time. [01:19:49.820 --> 01:19:54.820] This is an issue, Edward, this is something I'd like to spend more time on [01:19:54.820 --> 01:19:58.820] because frankly this is what's dear to my heart. [01:19:58.820 --> 01:20:06.820] You're attacking the issue based on the details, based on what they're actually doing. [01:20:06.820 --> 01:20:10.820] This is how we win these things. [01:20:10.820 --> 01:20:18.820] I suggest, and what I've been doing lately in all of these [01:20:18.820 --> 01:20:26.820] is the only thing that I address is what's in the county record. [01:20:26.820 --> 01:20:30.820] If it's not in the county record, don't exist. [01:20:30.820 --> 01:20:35.820] Even if you have tons of information from the lender, you have assignments, [01:20:35.820 --> 01:20:39.820] you have appointments, all this blah, blah, blah, yada, yada, yada. [01:20:39.820 --> 01:20:45.820] If it's not filed in the county record, the court can't even look at it. [01:20:45.820 --> 01:20:49.820] It's all hearsay. The only thing that matters is what's in the court record. [01:20:49.820 --> 01:20:53.820] And here you direct the court to the record. [01:20:53.820 --> 01:20:58.820] Bank of America is some type of fraudulent interloper. [01:20:58.820 --> 01:21:02.820] They have no representation in the record. [01:21:02.820 --> 01:21:08.820] Therefore the court may give no credence to anything they do. [01:21:08.820 --> 01:21:15.820] And it sounded like the judge was pointing you there. [01:21:15.820 --> 01:21:20.820] Because the judge has to develop the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence. [01:21:20.820 --> 01:21:25.820] You have to present the facts to him, and then you have to give him the law. [01:21:25.820 --> 01:21:31.820] Here you present the facts that this entity has no standing [01:21:31.820 --> 01:21:35.820] because there is no representation in the court record. [01:21:35.820 --> 01:21:39.820] I haven't done close enough research on Massachusetts, [01:21:39.820 --> 01:21:44.820] but every state is going to have a requirement [01:21:44.820 --> 01:21:51.820] that before you make a claim against real property, [01:21:51.820 --> 01:21:56.820] you must file that claim with the county registrar. [01:21:56.820 --> 01:22:03.820] Now, while it's true there is no legal requirement to file the claim, [01:22:03.820 --> 01:22:07.820] you can't make the claim unless it is filed. [01:22:07.820 --> 01:22:12.820] So this is the issue you need. You need to research this issue. [01:22:12.820 --> 01:22:23.820] Look for a comparable statute to 13.001 Texas property code. [01:22:23.820 --> 01:22:34.820] It says a deed of trust not properly filed in the county registrar's office is void. [01:22:34.820 --> 01:22:40.820] Massachusetts is going to have to have something of that nature. [01:22:40.820 --> 01:22:49.820] Otherwise, the public record is maintained by the state of Massachusetts is irrelevant. [01:22:49.820 --> 01:22:58.820] It's irrelevant unless it is the resource to give you standing. [01:22:58.820 --> 01:23:00.820] Okay, does that make sense? [01:23:00.820 --> 01:23:01.820] Yes, it does. [01:23:01.820 --> 01:23:04.820] So a next question for you along this line. [01:23:04.820 --> 01:23:11.820] Should I be getting a warranty deed in there? [01:23:11.820 --> 01:23:13.820] Ah, that's hard to say. [01:23:13.820 --> 01:23:18.820] A warranty deed, it has a good side and a bad side. [01:23:18.820 --> 01:23:23.820] In your mortgage, in your note, I'm sorry, in the mortgage, [01:23:23.820 --> 01:23:33.820] if you transfer the property to someone else, then the lender has the option of calling the note. [01:23:33.820 --> 01:23:39.820] But if the lender has already called the note, doesn't make any difference. [01:23:39.820 --> 01:23:52.820] If you think you can get a quiet title on the mortgage, then you want a warranty deed. [01:23:52.820 --> 01:23:57.820] But you don't want the warranty deed too quickly. [01:23:57.820 --> 01:24:01.820] If you think you have grounds to get quiet title on the mortgage, [01:24:01.820 --> 01:24:12.820] then you file with the district court or county court, whatever it is in Massachusetts, if here's the digits, and ask them to adjudicate against this particular claim. [01:24:12.820 --> 01:24:18.820] And when they do, then you don't want to file it first because if they see it in there, [01:24:18.820 --> 01:24:28.820] they're going to say, you're trying to give me the rule against these guys so that you can cut off their avenue to fix the problem. [01:24:28.820 --> 01:24:30.820] Yeah, true. [01:24:30.820 --> 01:24:33.820] It's all chess here. [01:24:33.820 --> 01:24:34.820] It is. [01:24:34.820 --> 01:24:39.820] You don't want the court to think that you're laying in wait for these guys. [01:24:39.820 --> 01:24:43.820] So I would have the warranty deed ready. [01:24:43.820 --> 01:24:50.820] And then move for the ruling that whoever this is doesn't have standing. [01:24:50.820 --> 01:24:56.820] I suspect that your original mortgage company is no longer in business. [01:24:56.820 --> 01:24:59.820] They are in business, believe it or not. [01:24:59.820 --> 01:25:00.820] Okay. [01:25:00.820 --> 01:25:04.820] Then we need to attack the mortgage itself and we can do that. [01:25:04.820 --> 01:25:07.820] We have a number of ways to go in after that. [01:25:07.820 --> 01:25:19.820] So let me just throw in, I was going through my wife and I were going through all our closing documents for this and came across a document that said that [01:25:19.820 --> 01:25:27.820] mortgage partners intended to sell it to countrywide by a certain date within a few months after we closed the papers. [01:25:27.820 --> 01:25:32.820] And that's the closest we've come to anything talking about any kind of assignment. [01:25:32.820 --> 01:25:33.820] Okay. [01:25:33.820 --> 01:25:38.820] Countrywide is now owned by Bank of America. [01:25:38.820 --> 01:25:39.820] Yes. [01:25:39.820 --> 01:25:43.820] However, they would still have to do the assignments. [01:25:43.820 --> 01:25:50.820] So I wouldn't even bring that up that they gave me just notice. [01:25:50.820 --> 01:25:52.820] Let them bring that up. [01:25:52.820 --> 01:25:53.820] Yeah. [01:25:53.820 --> 01:25:57.820] All right, I'm just mentioning it to you, but yeah, it doesn't really help them in the court. [01:25:57.820 --> 01:25:58.820] Yeah. [01:25:58.820 --> 01:26:15.820] Look in your mortgage and see if you have the continuing paragraph 19 or 20, the authorization to sell a portion of the note of the entire note together with the security instrument. [01:26:15.820 --> 01:26:30.820] And then have you looked on Edgar, the Securities and Exchange Commission database computer to see if you could find evidence of securitization of the note. [01:26:30.820 --> 01:26:31.820] Okay. [01:26:31.820 --> 01:26:32.820] How old is this note? [01:26:32.820 --> 01:26:35.820] When was it originally entered into? [01:26:35.820 --> 01:26:36.820] Oh, five. [01:26:36.820 --> 01:26:37.820] Oh, five. [01:26:37.820 --> 01:26:38.820] Oh, five. [01:26:38.820 --> 01:26:42.820] So almost certainly was put into a trust. [01:26:42.820 --> 01:26:43.820] Sure. [01:26:43.820 --> 01:26:45.820] Find the trust. [01:26:45.820 --> 01:26:49.820] Find the trust to find out where it's a receivable and get the trust and all that stuff. [01:26:49.820 --> 01:26:50.820] Yeah. [01:26:50.820 --> 01:26:51.820] Okay. [01:26:51.820 --> 01:27:07.820] If the deed of trust is not transferred and assigned to the trustee for the trust, then they violated paragraph 20 and separated the note from the deed of trust. [01:27:07.820 --> 01:27:17.820] The only restriction you put on the lender was a restriction against separating the note and the deed of trust. [01:27:17.820 --> 01:27:30.820] That's the only thing in the mortgage that the only stipulation that the borrower put into the mortgage is that the note and the deed of trust not be separated. [01:27:30.820 --> 01:27:33.820] And that's the first thing you did. [01:27:33.820 --> 01:27:36.820] So we can go back with an argument. [01:27:36.820 --> 01:27:42.820] Without regard to whether or not the title was subsequently clouded. [01:27:42.820 --> 01:27:44.820] That's not the issue. [01:27:44.820 --> 01:28:03.820] The issue is that you put in a stipulation that a transfer of the negotiation of the note was to carry with it a subsequent and a concurrent assignment of the deed of trust. [01:28:03.820 --> 01:28:11.820] And they failed to do that and that acts as a repudiation of the contract and voluntary decision. [01:28:11.820 --> 01:28:28.820] We go in with that argument if we get a judge to agree with us and say that the lender cannot come to the court and file a claim against the property because the contract under which he has that privilege is void by his own action. [01:28:28.820 --> 01:28:33.820] Therefore, he has to come to the lender and file a claim against the lender. [01:28:33.820 --> 01:28:39.820] And if he wins that claim, then ask the court to give him a judgment against the property. [01:28:39.820 --> 01:28:47.820] If you get that ruling, that's when you drop either the warranty deed or a lien of some kind against the property. [01:28:47.820 --> 01:28:51.820] So it stands in front of his claim. [01:28:51.820 --> 01:28:53.820] Does this make sense? [01:28:53.820 --> 01:28:55.820] It makes a lot of sense, Joe. [01:28:55.820 --> 01:29:12.820] Okay, you don't want to signal that you're going to do that before the judge gives you the ruling because that may temper his ruling somewhat because he's afraid you're trying to do an end run around the borrower. [01:29:12.820 --> 01:29:17.820] And, you know, we're biased in favor of the borrower. [01:29:17.820 --> 01:29:26.820] The bank is biased in favor of the lender and the judge is looking for justice for both sides equally. [01:29:26.820 --> 01:29:28.820] Yes. [01:29:28.820 --> 01:29:34.820] If he thinks you're trying to outmaneuver the bank, he may tend to cut you off. [01:29:34.820 --> 01:29:37.820] Okay, we are running out of time. [01:29:37.820 --> 01:29:41.820] Thank you, Edward. I've got to move along. [01:29:41.820 --> 01:29:42.820] Okay. [01:29:42.820 --> 01:29:48.820] Keep us up to date on what's going on. Okay, this is the Grand Calcutta and Edward Stevens at a creek. [01:29:48.820 --> 01:29:50.820] We have a lot of radio. [01:29:50.820 --> 01:29:53.820] We have two more segments. [01:29:53.820 --> 01:29:59.820] We've got Fred in California, Mark in Michigan. [01:29:59.820 --> 01:30:06.820] A Noble Lie in Oklahoma City, 1995 will change forever the way you look at the true nature of terrorism. [01:30:06.820 --> 01:30:10.820] Based on the damage patting to the building, but the government says it's impossible. [01:30:10.820 --> 01:30:14.820] The grand jury did not want to hear anything I had to say. [01:30:14.820 --> 01:30:17.820] The decision was made not to pursue any more of those individuals. [01:30:17.820 --> 01:30:22.820] Some of these columns were ripped up, shredded, tossed around. [01:30:22.820 --> 01:30:26.820] The people that did the things they did knew doggone well what they were doing. [01:30:26.820 --> 01:30:31.820] Exposed, but cover up now at anoblelie.com. [01:30:31.820 --> 01:30:37.820] The Rule of Law Radio Network is proud to present a due process of law seminar hosted by our own Eddie Craig. [01:30:37.820 --> 01:30:42.820] He's been a former Nacodotus sheriff's deputy and for the past 21 years he's been studying the due process of law [01:30:42.820 --> 01:30:47.820] and now offers his knowledge to you at a seminar every Sunday from 2 o'clock to 5 o'clock at Brave New Books, [01:30:47.820 --> 01:30:50.820] located at 1904 Guadalupe Street. [01:30:50.820 --> 01:30:59.820] Admission is $20, so please make plans to come by and sit with Eddie and learn for yourself what the true intent of law really is. [01:30:59.820 --> 01:31:08.820] At hempusa.org we offer chemical free products to people around the world, detoxifying, self-healing while rebuilding the immune system. [01:31:08.820 --> 01:31:14.820] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest selling product, micro plant powder. 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[01:32:25.820 --> 01:32:30.820] Alright folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:32:30.820 --> 01:32:33.820] Alright, we've got some callers we've got to finish up with. [01:32:33.820 --> 01:32:37.820] If we've got the time to do it, right now we're going to go to Fred in California. [01:32:37.820 --> 01:32:39.820] Fred, what can we do for you? [01:32:39.820 --> 01:32:41.820] Hello, can you hear me? [01:32:41.820 --> 01:32:42.820] We can hear you. [01:32:42.820 --> 01:32:44.820] Good. [01:32:44.820 --> 01:32:47.820] Well, two questions here. [01:32:47.820 --> 01:32:55.820] One is, I had a friend who found a model penal code and explanatory notes. [01:32:55.820 --> 01:33:01.820] Part one, general provisions, article one preliminary, etc. [01:33:01.820 --> 01:33:13.820] And it says at 2B or 3B, it says that provisions of the code according to a defense [01:33:13.820 --> 01:33:19.820] or mitigation shall apply with the consent of the defendant. [01:33:19.820 --> 01:33:26.820] And part C says, the court with the consent of the defendant may impose [01:33:26.820 --> 01:33:32.820] sentence under the provisions of the code applicable to the offense and the offender. [01:33:32.820 --> 01:33:41.820] Now he went into court and was given a jury trial and found guilty. [01:33:41.820 --> 01:33:46.820] The judge was about to sentence him and he said, may I say something? [01:33:46.820 --> 01:33:48.820] And the judge said, yeah, what is it? [01:33:48.820 --> 01:33:54.820] And he said, I do not consent to sentencing. [01:33:54.820 --> 01:34:06.820] And the judge got a little flustered, recovered and the bailiffs put handcuffs on him, [01:34:06.820 --> 01:34:16.820] took him out of the court and to the sheriff's office and a sheriff walked up to him [01:34:16.820 --> 01:34:19.820] and said, do not get too comfortable, we are going to release you. [01:34:19.820 --> 01:34:21.820] And they released him. [01:34:21.820 --> 01:34:24.820] So in front of the court, he had been hauled away. [01:34:24.820 --> 01:34:30.820] But the papers they had him sign, which he did sign apparently, [01:34:30.820 --> 01:34:39.820] included a paper that had, I guess, a space for the sentence and that sort of thing [01:34:39.820 --> 01:34:47.820] and another date to return to court and they were blank and he walked away. [01:34:47.820 --> 01:34:59.820] And he later got some order or maybe they issued a warrant because he had not paid. [01:34:59.820 --> 01:35:01.820] He had not been told what to pay. [01:35:01.820 --> 01:35:03.820] He had not been told to return to the court. [01:35:03.820 --> 01:35:08.820] So a year and a half or two years later now, he is still playing with him. [01:35:08.820 --> 01:35:18.820] But my question is, do you think that, you know, I have heard of allocution [01:35:18.820 --> 01:35:25.820] and that is your opportunity to give legal reasons why you should not be sentenced, [01:35:25.820 --> 01:35:28.820] even if you are found guilty and all that. [01:35:28.820 --> 01:35:36.820] And I wonder whether, in fact, under the current system since at least 1933 [01:35:36.820 --> 01:35:43.820] and the bankruptcy and all that, whether or not we do have to give our consent [01:35:43.820 --> 01:35:48.820] because I was standing in a federal courtroom kind of by accident one day. [01:35:48.820 --> 01:35:52.820] I went into the wrong courtroom and while I was trying to figure out [01:35:52.820 --> 01:35:58.820] whether I was in the right place to see a friend present his case, [01:35:58.820 --> 01:36:05.820] there was a prisoner, obviously, in an orange jumpsuit with handcuffs behind his back [01:36:05.820 --> 01:36:12.820] and the judge was sentencing him and everything that the judge said in the way of sentencing, [01:36:12.820 --> 01:36:16.820] he followed by saying, do you agree? [01:36:16.820 --> 01:36:19.820] And this guy said yes. [01:36:19.820 --> 01:36:25.820] And I walked out in the hall with my friend and we looked at each other and said, oh my God. [01:36:25.820 --> 01:36:28.820] So what do you think? [01:36:28.820 --> 01:36:36.820] Are we in a situation where we can withdraw our consent to something? [01:36:36.820 --> 01:36:45.820] I would suggest that this hearing that you witnessed was most likely a hearing [01:36:45.820 --> 01:36:49.820] based on a plea agreement. [01:36:49.820 --> 01:36:55.820] That was why the judge was saying, do you agree? [01:36:55.820 --> 01:37:00.820] I wouldn't jump to a conclusion too quickly. [01:37:00.820 --> 01:37:07.820] But elocution is a pretty interesting thing and I've heard several stories about people [01:37:07.820 --> 01:37:12.820] who gave their elocution, turned around and walked out of the court [01:37:12.820 --> 01:37:17.820] and the bailiffs didn't stop them and nothing else ever happened. [01:37:17.820 --> 01:37:22.820] One story was that the judge lost her job and she was... [01:37:22.820 --> 01:37:25.820] Okay, hold on. I've heard these stories. [01:37:25.820 --> 01:37:26.820] Okay. [01:37:26.820 --> 01:37:32.820] What I have not received was confirmation of these stories. [01:37:32.820 --> 01:37:36.820] Be real careful about what people tell you. [01:37:36.820 --> 01:37:41.820] When Betty or Deborah or I tell you something... [01:37:41.820 --> 01:37:42.820] Yeah. [01:37:42.820 --> 01:37:43.820] Don't believe this. [01:37:43.820 --> 01:37:45.820] I understand. [01:37:45.820 --> 01:37:46.820] Yeah. [01:37:46.820 --> 01:37:54.820] I have a big problem in the legally formed community with people who come and huff and puff [01:37:54.820 --> 01:37:57.820] and make all these assertions. [01:37:57.820 --> 01:37:58.820] Yeah. [01:37:58.820 --> 01:38:06.820] But I never get any confirmation so be real careful, especially when your liberty is at risk. [01:38:06.820 --> 01:38:08.820] No kidding. [01:38:08.820 --> 01:38:19.820] All right. Well, my second question is that I received a ticket from California Highway Patrol [01:38:19.820 --> 01:38:27.820] and did a trial by declaration and I submitted a simple... [01:38:27.820 --> 01:38:33.820] I mean, this is real crude, but I just submitted a one-pager [01:38:33.820 --> 01:38:39.820] and it said probably improperly for a start, [01:38:39.820 --> 01:38:44.820] but had the case number on top and the people versus Joe Blow here [01:38:44.820 --> 01:38:46.820] and said statement of facts. [01:38:46.820 --> 01:38:50.820] And then I quoted from Showmig versus Kaiser, [01:38:50.820 --> 01:38:56.820] which I mentioned on your program once before when Harmon Taylor was on, [01:38:56.820 --> 01:39:00.820] and that is that the agency or party sitting for the agency, [01:39:00.820 --> 01:39:06.820] the magistrate of a municipal court, has no authority to enforce as to any licensee [01:39:06.820 --> 01:39:09.820] unless he is acting for compensation. [01:39:09.820 --> 01:39:10.820] Okay. [01:39:10.820 --> 01:39:12.820] Whoa, hold on. Back up. [01:39:12.820 --> 01:39:13.820] Yeah. [01:39:13.820 --> 01:39:18.820] You said two different things there and they did not seem to fit together. [01:39:18.820 --> 01:39:20.820] Say that over again. [01:39:20.820 --> 01:39:26.820] Well, the agency or party sitting for the agency, [01:39:26.820 --> 01:39:31.820] and then in parentheses it says which would be the magistrate of a municipal court, [01:39:31.820 --> 01:39:38.820] close parentheses, has no authority to enforce as to any licensee [01:39:38.820 --> 01:39:44.820] unless he, the licensee, is acting for compensation. [01:39:44.820 --> 01:39:45.820] Okay. [01:39:45.820 --> 01:39:50.820] That would be accurate considering that the transportation is a commercial activity [01:39:50.820 --> 01:39:53.820] requiring application and consent to participate. [01:39:53.820 --> 01:39:55.820] Exactly. [01:39:55.820 --> 01:40:01.820] So whether it goes on where there's no charge within a complaint [01:40:01.820 --> 01:40:05.820] that the accused was employed for compensation to do the act complained of [01:40:05.820 --> 01:40:09.820] or that the act constituted part of a contract. [01:40:09.820 --> 01:40:12.820] What state is this? [01:40:12.820 --> 01:40:13.820] Pardon me. [01:40:13.820 --> 01:40:21.820] That is Showmig versus Kaiser, 1-8-9-Cal, 5-9-6. [01:40:21.820 --> 01:40:26.820] Okay. California, okay. 5-9-6. [01:40:26.820 --> 01:40:32.820] Now, when I did the trial by declaration, [01:40:32.820 --> 01:40:37.820] I was found guilty by a judicial officer, it said, [01:40:37.820 --> 01:40:42.820] and so I applied for a trial de novo, which you're allowed to do, [01:40:42.820 --> 01:40:44.820] and I got a trial de novo. [01:40:44.820 --> 01:40:46.820] I attended to it. [01:40:46.820 --> 01:40:47.820] Hold on. [01:40:47.820 --> 01:40:50.820] You filed an appeal. [01:40:50.820 --> 01:40:55.820] You filed an appeal and the appeal goes to trial de novo. [01:40:55.820 --> 01:40:56.820] Okay, well. [01:40:56.820 --> 01:41:00.820] Okay, I'm being, I wouldn't people understand what happened here. [01:41:00.820 --> 01:41:03.820] You can't really apply for a trial de novo. [01:41:03.820 --> 01:41:09.820] Well, you filed an appeal and the appeal is trial de novo. [01:41:09.820 --> 01:41:15.820] De novo meaning as if the original trial did not happen. [01:41:15.820 --> 01:41:16.820] Right. [01:41:16.820 --> 01:41:22.820] So you have to trial over again, except in a trial de novo, [01:41:22.820 --> 01:41:29.820] it is trial de novo for the purpose of perfecting your appeal [01:41:29.820 --> 01:41:33.820] in that you don't have to show error. [01:41:33.820 --> 01:41:40.820] It is not trial de novo for the purpose of shielding the original witnesses [01:41:40.820 --> 01:41:45.820] from the consequences of their original testimony. [01:41:45.820 --> 01:41:51.820] So it's not really like everything that went on is trash and gone. [01:41:51.820 --> 01:41:55.820] Any testimony that the other side gave, if they gave testimony that was [01:41:55.820 --> 01:42:04.820] insufficient or bogus and you prove that it was bogus and the judge ruled against [01:42:04.820 --> 01:42:10.820] you and you filed an appeal and the appeal is trial de novo. [01:42:10.820 --> 01:42:17.820] They don't get to come in court and give different perjury testimony [01:42:17.820 --> 01:42:19.820] than they gave the first time. [01:42:19.820 --> 01:42:20.820] Right. [01:42:20.820 --> 01:42:22.820] Because they're going to say it was trial de novo. [01:42:22.820 --> 01:42:24.820] It's like that during didn't happen. [01:42:24.820 --> 01:42:27.820] And you said, I have had this happen in court with me. [01:42:27.820 --> 01:42:32.820] And I said, objection your honor, it is trial de novo only for the purpose [01:42:32.820 --> 01:42:35.820] of perfecting your appeal. [01:42:35.820 --> 01:42:41.820] It is not trial de novo for the purpose of shielding them from their prior testimony. [01:42:41.820 --> 01:42:46.820] Their prior testimony goes to collateral estoppel. [01:42:46.820 --> 01:42:49.820] That testimony can be brought forward. [01:42:49.820 --> 01:42:54.820] And I know that's a fine distinction, but if anybody here appeals their cases, [01:42:54.820 --> 01:43:00.820] this is a standard trick that the prosecutor tries to pull. [01:43:00.820 --> 01:43:05.820] When he gets appealed, he can't screw around in front of the higher judge [01:43:05.820 --> 01:43:08.820] the way he did in front of the municipal judge. [01:43:08.820 --> 01:43:13.820] So he wants all of his bogus testimony in the first trial to go away. [01:43:13.820 --> 01:43:15.820] Don't let it go away. [01:43:15.820 --> 01:43:16.820] Okay. [01:43:16.820 --> 01:43:17.820] Okay. [01:43:17.820 --> 01:43:18.820] I'll shut up. [01:43:18.820 --> 01:43:27.820] Well, at least in this case, after the trial de novo, which I was also found [01:43:27.820 --> 01:43:32.820] guilty on both counts, which were speeding and no driver license, [01:43:32.820 --> 01:43:42.820] I have been given by the court an appeal package and told that I can appeal it. [01:43:42.820 --> 01:43:46.820] Absolutely you should if there's nothing else just for the experience. [01:43:46.820 --> 01:43:47.820] Okay. [01:43:47.820 --> 01:43:48.820] Hang on. [01:43:48.820 --> 01:43:50.820] This is Randy Kelton, Deb Stephen, David Craig. [01:43:50.820 --> 01:43:51.820] We have a lot of radio. [01:43:51.820 --> 01:43:55.820] I call in number 512-646-1984. [01:43:55.820 --> 01:43:57.820] We'll be right back. [01:44:26.820 --> 01:44:31.820] Call us at 512-646-640 for more details. [01:44:31.820 --> 01:44:36.820] As always, we buy, sell and trade precious metals, give appraisals, [01:44:36.820 --> 01:44:39.820] and cater to those with all sizes of coin collections. [01:44:39.820 --> 01:44:44.820] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, sweet A, about a half a mile north of Canig [01:44:44.820 --> 01:44:47.820] next to the Ichiban Sushi and Genie Car Wash. [01:44:47.820 --> 01:44:50.820] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [01:44:50.820 --> 01:44:55.820] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-640 [01:44:55.820 --> 01:44:59.820] and say you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio or Texas Liberty Radio. [01:44:59.820 --> 01:45:03.820] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.820 --> 01:45:06.820] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:06.820 --> 01:45:11.820] the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how [01:45:11.820 --> 01:45:14.820] in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.820 --> 01:45:18.820] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.820 --> 01:45:22.820] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.820 --> 01:45:27.820] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.820 --> 01:45:33.820] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.820 --> 01:45:38.820] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.820 --> 01:45:42.820] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:42.820 --> 01:45:47.820] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:47.820 --> 01:45:51.820] forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.820 --> 01:45:55.820] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:55.820 --> 01:46:21.820] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.820 --> 01:46:35.820] Okay, we're back. [01:46:35.820 --> 01:46:40.820] Randy Calvary with Radio with Huck in the Fred in California. [01:46:40.820 --> 01:46:43.820] And Fred, we need to move along. [01:46:43.820 --> 01:46:48.820] We've got Mark, Tyler, and Kim who have been holding a long time. [01:46:48.820 --> 01:46:53.820] And if we don't get to all of you, I apologize for using up so much time. [01:46:53.820 --> 01:46:59.820] But frankly, we've had some really good calls, great topics. [01:46:59.820 --> 01:47:01.820] I'm really pleased with the show. [01:47:01.820 --> 01:47:05.820] I'm just a little concerned that I didn't get to everybody. [01:47:05.820 --> 01:47:07.820] And, okay, so we're going to move ahead. [01:47:07.820 --> 01:47:10.820] Okay, Fred. [01:47:10.820 --> 01:47:12.820] Well, I think you've answered my question. [01:47:12.820 --> 01:47:18.820] The judge dismissed both of my sites, [01:47:18.820 --> 01:47:24.820] the other of which was a California Supreme Court 1914 decision [01:47:24.820 --> 01:47:29.820] saying essentially the same thing that a chauffeur, a professional driver, [01:47:29.820 --> 01:47:36.820] or other motor vehicles for hire have to, you know, are subject to tax and regulation. [01:47:36.820 --> 01:47:38.820] All others are exempt. [01:47:38.820 --> 01:47:43.820] Now, she said, oh, well, that was about chauffeurs, so it doesn't apply to you. [01:47:43.820 --> 01:47:48.820] Well, of course, I was the other side of it, the all others are exempt. [01:47:48.820 --> 01:47:50.820] And, you know, and she also... [01:47:50.820 --> 01:47:54.820] Okay, did you ask the court for findings, a fact, and conclusions in law? [01:47:54.820 --> 01:47:56.820] No. [01:47:56.820 --> 01:47:57.820] Do that. [01:47:57.820 --> 01:48:01.820] Write up your own findings, a fact, and conclusions in law. [01:48:01.820 --> 01:48:07.820] Say, these are the facts, this is the law, and this is the conclusion you should have came to. [01:48:07.820 --> 01:48:11.820] Ask the court to file that in the court record. [01:48:11.820 --> 01:48:13.820] Okay. [01:48:13.820 --> 01:48:19.820] Then ask the court to either adopt your findings, a fact, or prepare their own. [01:48:19.820 --> 01:48:20.820] Okay. [01:48:20.820 --> 01:48:24.820] And when they refuse, move to disqualify the judge. [01:48:24.820 --> 01:48:25.820] Yeah. [01:48:25.820 --> 01:48:26.820] Okay. [01:48:26.820 --> 01:48:27.820] Okay. [01:48:27.820 --> 01:48:28.820] That's good. [01:48:28.820 --> 01:48:34.820] Go ahead and talk to the other folks, and I think that pretty well answers the question. [01:48:34.820 --> 01:48:35.820] Okay. [01:48:35.820 --> 01:48:38.820] Thank you for calling in, and thank you for waiting so long. [01:48:38.820 --> 01:48:45.820] Okay, we're going to go to Mark in Michigan, and I know that Mark is causing trouble. [01:48:45.820 --> 01:48:47.820] He always does. [01:48:47.820 --> 01:48:49.820] Of course I am. [01:48:49.820 --> 01:48:54.820] So, first thing is, if somebody should say a happy birthday to you, sir. [01:48:54.820 --> 01:48:59.820] I would almost got through the whole show. [01:48:59.820 --> 01:49:02.820] I don't have birthdays anymore. [01:49:02.820 --> 01:49:06.820] They've all been canceled for lack of interest. [01:49:06.820 --> 01:49:11.820] I'm just saying your Facebook portrays you in all kinds of good stuff. [01:49:11.820 --> 01:49:12.820] There you go. [01:49:12.820 --> 01:49:15.820] Curses, spoiled again. [01:49:15.820 --> 01:49:18.820] So, last Friday, I had an interesting day. [01:49:18.820 --> 01:49:25.820] I went down for a family court hearing, and I was actually arrested on Friday morning. [01:49:25.820 --> 01:49:28.820] So, it was kind of interesting. [01:49:28.820 --> 01:49:35.820] They pulled me in on a child support thing, and as I'm going through the little security [01:49:35.820 --> 01:49:39.820] and they asked me my name, and they said, hey, you got a warrant out for you. [01:49:39.820 --> 01:49:43.820] But, yeah, I spent a little time in their little back room. [01:49:43.820 --> 01:49:50.820] And then the guy pulls me out, and this guy turns out was a family court. [01:49:50.820 --> 01:49:55.820] What we have something in Michigan called the friend of the court, and basically, you know, [01:49:55.820 --> 01:49:57.820] it's like the family court unit. [01:49:57.820 --> 01:50:00.820] This was an attorney for the friend of the court. [01:50:00.820 --> 01:50:04.820] He said some talks to me, looks over, and he's like, well, you know, you don't know anything. [01:50:04.820 --> 01:50:08.820] So, I'm just going to dismiss this warrant and blah, blah, blah. [01:50:08.820 --> 01:50:15.820] Well, so, you know, basically, he dismissed it, and I played stupid and just kind of let [01:50:15.820 --> 01:50:20.820] him do his thing, which was unfortunate because I was really interested in the fight. [01:50:20.820 --> 01:50:27.820] That said, they gave me some incredible ammunition, and I, you know, I called in to... [01:50:27.820 --> 01:50:30.820] Okay, you got my attention. [01:50:30.820 --> 01:50:36.820] They arrested you when you didn't know anything. [01:50:36.820 --> 01:50:38.820] Mm-hmm, yeah. [01:50:38.820 --> 01:50:43.820] Yeah, they pretty much did that, and then they dismissed it, and the judge wasn't even there. [01:50:43.820 --> 01:50:45.820] He dismissed it himself. [01:50:45.820 --> 01:50:47.820] There are three signatures on this paper now. [01:50:47.820 --> 01:50:50.820] Now, admittedly, I'm a little bit premature. [01:50:50.820 --> 01:50:55.820] I got to go back down and get a copy of the warrant and do all my background information. [01:50:55.820 --> 01:51:01.820] But that said, I was actually quite impressed that they did this because it just seems that [01:51:01.820 --> 01:51:08.820] it deafened me that they would do that, just completely crazy. [01:51:08.820 --> 01:51:13.820] And then, you know, and then they give me all the papers saying that, you know, hey, [01:51:13.820 --> 01:51:15.820] we did this to you. [01:51:15.820 --> 01:51:16.820] We're really sorry. [01:51:16.820 --> 01:51:21.820] And be on your way, as if I'm not supposed to do anything about it. [01:51:21.820 --> 01:51:25.820] And that's probably what they're hoping. [01:51:25.820 --> 01:51:30.820] Did any explanation ask you how the warrant came about? [01:51:30.820 --> 01:51:31.820] Nothing. [01:51:31.820 --> 01:51:35.820] Now, what I did notice, and I remember Mark Adams talked about this when he was on, [01:51:35.820 --> 01:51:40.820] I did notice that it was a contempt charge and that there had been a show cause hearing, [01:51:40.820 --> 01:51:43.820] but I never got a notice of a show cause hearing. [01:51:43.820 --> 01:51:47.820] So I'm wondering if the same thing happened in Michigan that happened in Florida. [01:51:47.820 --> 01:51:53.820] Back, Mark Adams would talk about how the county in Florida would bring about the show cause [01:51:53.820 --> 01:51:55.820] and it wasn't the moving party. [01:51:55.820 --> 01:51:57.820] It was actually the court that did this. [01:51:57.820 --> 01:52:00.820] And I'm thinking, and I've already got them on a couple other things. [01:52:00.820 --> 01:52:04.820] So there are plenty of other things to mess with them on. [01:52:04.820 --> 01:52:06.820] But I'm wondering if they did that. [01:52:06.820 --> 01:52:10.820] And again, I need to do some more footwork on that one. [01:52:10.820 --> 01:52:16.820] But I'm just trying to make sure I've got all my ducks in a row and I'm thinking clearly on this. [01:52:16.820 --> 01:52:20.820] Well, show cause hearing. [01:52:20.820 --> 01:52:22.820] I'm not sure where you're going. [01:52:22.820 --> 01:52:23.820] How are you? [01:52:23.820 --> 01:52:24.820] Okay. [01:52:24.820 --> 01:52:27.820] So there would have been an order to enter for support. [01:52:27.820 --> 01:52:32.820] And then they would have had a show cause hearing saying, hey, why didn't you pay the support? [01:52:32.820 --> 01:52:35.820] But again, I had paid the support. [01:52:35.820 --> 01:52:40.820] So it seems like all this stuff happened in the background and half an ex parte. [01:52:40.820 --> 01:52:43.820] And I have no clue what that was all about. [01:52:43.820 --> 01:52:47.820] Like I said, all I know for sure is that I had a contempt charge. [01:52:47.820 --> 01:52:50.820] And that's what this warrant was based on. [01:52:50.820 --> 01:52:52.820] Or quote unquote warrant, but I never saw a warrant. [01:52:52.820 --> 01:52:54.820] All I saw was a dismissal. [01:52:54.820 --> 01:52:55.820] Okay. [01:52:55.820 --> 01:53:09.820] In Texas, if a warrant has been issued, once the warrant is executed, it must be immediately made available for public inspection by the magistrate who issued it. [01:53:09.820 --> 01:53:28.820] So I would look to going to whoever issued that warrant and demand to see it and demand to see the statement of probably a statement of the affidavit filed with the court in the form of a statement of probable cause for the issuance of the warrant. [01:53:28.820 --> 01:53:29.820] That supports that. [01:53:29.820 --> 01:53:30.820] Okay. [01:53:30.820 --> 01:53:34.820] And yeah, no, that was kind of the route I was thinking. [01:53:34.820 --> 01:53:43.820] And then now the one thing, and I think I've bypassed this too, the friend of the court, this agency, is actually claimed under the judiciary. [01:53:43.820 --> 01:53:57.820] And if I can get them as a moving party, and I think I can, I've seen a bunch of court cases where people were given immunity, mayors and all these things in a Title 42 suit because they were acting in a judicial capacity. [01:53:57.820 --> 01:54:08.820] And I'm thinking that the reverse is going to be true, that they weren't acting in a judicial capacity, they were acting as a moving party, and therefore they surrender their immunity. [01:54:08.820 --> 01:54:12.820] That's exactly right. [01:54:12.820 --> 01:54:26.820] When someone takes a proactive, makes a proactive action, then all of this derivatives and absolute immunity goes away. [01:54:26.820 --> 01:54:28.820] Okay. [01:54:28.820 --> 01:54:29.820] Okay. [01:54:29.820 --> 01:54:35.820] Well, that goes back to the Thelka, the US. [01:54:35.820 --> 01:54:37.820] Thelka, the US. [01:54:37.820 --> 01:54:38.820] Okay. [01:54:38.820 --> 01:54:39.820] The Thelka. [01:54:39.820 --> 01:54:41.820] T-H-E-L-K-A. [01:54:41.820 --> 01:54:42.820] K-A. [01:54:42.820 --> 01:54:43.820] Okay. [01:54:43.820 --> 01:54:44.820] K-A. [01:54:44.820 --> 01:54:50.820] This is where the US leased a boat, a ship. [01:54:50.820 --> 01:54:55.820] They hired a morrow on to operate the ship, which is common for the government. [01:54:55.820 --> 01:55:03.820] The ship leased by the federal government bashes into another ship. [01:55:03.820 --> 01:55:10.820] The Thelka owner sues the other ship for getting its ship in the way and getting bashed into. [01:55:10.820 --> 01:55:29.820] The other ship countershoes, and the government said, oh, wait, well, hold on, whether you as government, you can't countershoe us. And the court said, when you enter into the commercial arena, then you become subject to suit just like anyone else. [01:55:29.820 --> 01:55:31.820] Okay. [01:55:31.820 --> 01:55:47.820] And this goes to when someone takes the action, when the government took the action, they gave up their sovereign immunity for the purpose of that action. [01:55:47.820 --> 01:55:54.820] I also caught them on a nice little caveat, and I think I should mention this one for people going through the same thing. [01:55:54.820 --> 01:56:05.820] They sent a CD in this hearing, and they sent it back to me immediately saying, hold on, a CD? You're talking about a compact disc? [01:56:05.820 --> 01:56:06.820] Yeah, yeah. [01:56:06.820 --> 01:56:10.820] It was a tape of a cough, and they sent it back to me. [01:56:10.820 --> 01:56:12.820] They said, hey, you didn't serve the other party. [01:56:12.820 --> 01:56:13.820] They gave me this paper. [01:56:13.820 --> 01:56:19.820] I couldn't believe that they did it, and basically I sent it back to them and said, hey, look, you're moving party. [01:56:19.820 --> 01:56:22.820] I said, I understand that there's a way to challenge evidence. [01:56:22.820 --> 01:56:25.820] That goes to the other party. You're not allowed to do this. [01:56:25.820 --> 01:56:27.820] You'd be denying me due process. [01:56:27.820 --> 01:56:29.820] This is an administrative decision. [01:56:29.820 --> 01:56:33.820] You wouldn't have immunity of this one, and they kept it. [01:56:33.820 --> 01:56:35.820] They actually introduced it. [01:56:35.820 --> 01:56:41.820] They kind of backed off and said, hey, we ought to heed his words on this one. [01:56:41.820 --> 01:56:46.820] And actually, after they let me lose, I went up to the hearing, and it was waiting there for. [01:56:46.820 --> 01:56:54.820] So I figured I should mention that, and that's another point that I'm going to nail them on is the denial of due process on that one, [01:56:54.820 --> 01:56:59.820] because they gave me a nice piece of paper saying that they were going to deny my due process. [01:56:59.820 --> 01:57:01.820] Oh, that's cool. [01:57:01.820 --> 01:57:04.820] I feel very courteous of them. [01:57:04.820 --> 01:57:07.820] It's always nice when they screw themselves. [01:57:07.820 --> 01:57:08.820] Right, right. [01:57:08.820 --> 01:57:11.820] So you guys have a great evening. [01:57:11.820 --> 01:57:12.820] I appreciate it. [01:57:12.820 --> 01:57:17.820] I just wanted to make sure I was on the right page and happy birthday to you, kind sir. [01:57:17.820 --> 01:57:19.820] Okay, thank you, Mark. [01:57:19.820 --> 01:57:20.820] Thank you. [01:57:20.820 --> 01:57:25.820] And as asked to the birthday thing, humbug, humbug. [01:57:25.820 --> 01:57:26.820] Thank you, sir. [01:57:26.820 --> 01:57:27.820] Okay. [01:57:27.820 --> 01:57:28.820] Thank you, Mark. [01:57:28.820 --> 01:57:33.820] Okay, now we're going to go to Tyler in. [01:57:33.820 --> 01:57:34.820] I have to reset my system. [01:57:34.820 --> 01:57:38.820] I think I lost him. [01:57:38.820 --> 01:57:40.820] Eddie, do you see Tyler up? [01:57:40.820 --> 01:57:42.820] No, I don't. [01:57:42.820 --> 01:57:46.820] The only one I see on the board is Ken, and we've got time anyway. [01:57:46.820 --> 01:57:48.820] Oh, sorry, Ken. [01:57:48.820 --> 01:57:49.820] We're out of time. [01:57:49.820 --> 01:57:50.820] And sorry, Tyler. [01:57:50.820 --> 01:57:51.820] We didn't get to you. [01:57:51.820 --> 01:57:53.820] You waited a long time. [01:57:53.820 --> 01:57:54.820] And I apologize. [01:57:54.820 --> 01:57:55.820] We didn't get to you. [01:57:55.820 --> 01:57:56.820] We tried to push that. [01:57:56.820 --> 01:57:59.820] And this is Randy Calton. [01:57:59.820 --> 01:58:02.820] Deborah Stevens at the Craig River Radio. [01:58:02.820 --> 01:58:08.820] We'll be back Monday with Deborah and Eddie on the traffic show. [01:58:08.820 --> 01:58:12.820] And then I'll be back with Deborah and Eddie Thursday. [01:58:12.820 --> 01:58:15.820] And then we'll be back again next Friday. [01:58:15.820 --> 01:58:17.820] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:17.820 --> 01:58:21.820] We appreciate you being here and all your questions. [01:58:21.820 --> 01:58:23.820] This made for a really good show. [01:58:23.820 --> 01:58:24.820] Thank you all. [01:58:24.820 --> 01:58:49.820] Good night. [01:58:49.820 --> 01:58:57.820] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.820 --> 01:59:04.820] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.820 --> 01:59:08.820] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.820 --> 01:59:11.820] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.820 --> 01:59:20.820] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.820 --> 01:59:25.820] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:25.820 --> 01:59:29.820] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.820 --> 01:59:32.820] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.820 --> 01:59:35.820] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, [01:59:35.820 --> 01:59:41.820] call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.820 --> 02:00:06.820] Or visit us online at bfa.org.