[00:00.000 --> 00:07.800] Ramon Governor Peter Schumlin isn't known to shirk a political fight, but he beat a [00:07.800 --> 00:12.000] hasty retreat when a different kind of opponent showed up in his backyard. [00:12.000 --> 00:17.000] But Dr. Catherine Albrecht, in a moment, I'll tell you what have the governor running scared. [00:17.000 --> 00:19.000] Privacy is under attack. [00:19.000 --> 00:23.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:23.000 --> 00:28.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:28.000 --> 00:33.000] To protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:33.000 --> 00:36.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [00:36.000 --> 00:43.000] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [00:43.000 --> 00:46.000] Start over with StartPage. [00:46.000 --> 00:48.000] Wildlife Pop Quiz. [00:48.000 --> 00:52.000] What do you do if you wake up in the middle of the night and see bears in the yard? [00:52.000 --> 00:53.000] My answer? [00:53.000 --> 00:55.000] Check the locks and dive back under the covers. [00:55.000 --> 00:58.000] But for Mons Governor Peter Schumlin is no city boy. [00:58.000 --> 01:04.000] When he saw four bears feasting on the bird feeders outside his Montelier home, he yelled out the window. [01:04.000 --> 01:07.000] When that didn't work, he tried shooing the bears away. [01:07.000 --> 01:12.000] Finally, naked to his toes, he went outside to rescue his feeders. [01:12.000 --> 01:14.000] Mama Bear was not amused. [01:14.000 --> 01:19.000] She chased the bear bottom governor right back inside, then returned to her snack. [01:19.000 --> 01:23.000] I guess bears, like many of us, ignore the hand-waving of politicians. [01:23.000 --> 01:28.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:34.000 --> 01:38.000] Americans spend big bucks to filter impurities from dirty tap water. [01:38.000 --> 01:42.000] The researchers have found a cheap and easy way to leave your water sparkling. [01:42.000 --> 01:46.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you how to do it after this. [01:46.000 --> 01:48.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:48.000 --> 01:52.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52.000 --> 01:57.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:57.000 --> 01:59.000] So protect your rights. [01:59.000 --> 02:03.000] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:03.000 --> 02:05.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:05.000 --> 02:12.000] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [02:12.000 --> 02:15.000] Start over with StartPage. [02:16.000 --> 02:21.000] If your tap water is looking sketchy, but you can't afford an expensive water filtration system, [02:21.000 --> 02:25.000] here's a trick to improve your drinking water and your health for pennies. [02:25.000 --> 02:32.000] Researchers at Johns Hopkins say sunlight and a twist of lime juice reduces harmful bacteria, such as E. coli, [02:32.000 --> 02:36.000] and it works nearly as well as other methods like boiling. [02:36.000 --> 02:41.000] Just add two tablespoons of lime juice or half a lime for every two liter bottle of water. [02:41.000 --> 02:44.000] Then leave it in the sun for six hours, and you're good to go. [02:44.000 --> 02:51.000] One caution, while viruses were also dramatically reduced with this technique, they weren't entirely eliminated, [02:51.000 --> 02:53.000] so when in doubt, boil them out. [02:53.000 --> 03:18.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [03:23.000 --> 03:28.000] Whatcha gonna do? [03:28.000 --> 03:30.000] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:30.000 --> 03:31.000] Whatcha gonna do? [03:31.000 --> 03:33.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:33.000 --> 03:35.000] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:35.000 --> 03:36.000] Whatcha gonna do? [03:36.000 --> 03:39.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:39.000 --> 03:45.000] When you were eight and you had bad traits, you go to school and learn to go, well they don't rule. [03:45.000 --> 03:47.000] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:47.000 --> 03:53.000] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:53.000 --> 03:54.000] Whatcha gonna do? [03:54.000 --> 03:56.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:56.000 --> 03:58.000] Bad boys, bad boys. [03:58.000 --> 03:59.000] Whatcha gonna do? [03:59.000 --> 04:01.000] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:01.000 --> 04:03.000] Alright folks, good evening. [04:03.000 --> 04:07.000] This is July 12th, 2012. [04:07.000 --> 04:10.000] This is Eddie Craig with Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens. [04:10.000 --> 04:13.000] Right now we're having a little bit of technical difficulty with Randy. [04:13.000 --> 04:16.000] I'll be trying to get him in on this next segment. [04:16.000 --> 04:22.000] Right now I am going to get us started and after the break comes back we'll have Randy with us. [04:22.000 --> 04:30.000] Okay, the things that we want to go over tonight, deal with this little legislative sleight of hand, [04:30.000 --> 04:36.000] were for all the past, I don't know, three or four decades, [04:36.000 --> 04:49.000] these people have been passing the bills in the Texas legislature into alleged law and at the end of each of these bills, [04:49.000 --> 04:52.000] they have a suspension clause. [04:52.000 --> 04:58.000] For instance, in the 1995 original version of the Texas Transportation Code, [04:58.000 --> 05:05.000] the one that was is approximately less than half as thick as the current version of the Transportation Code, [05:05.000 --> 05:10.000] in 1995 section 28 of that code had the section titled, [05:10.000 --> 05:14.000] Emergency and this is how it reads, [05:14.000 --> 05:21.000] the importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the calendars in both houses, [05:21.000 --> 05:26.000] create an emergency and an imperative public necessity [05:26.000 --> 05:33.000] that the constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house, [05:33.000 --> 05:38.000] be suspended and this rule is hereby suspended. [05:38.000 --> 05:46.000] Now the rule they're talking about is that the Texas Constitution in article 3 section 32 [05:46.000 --> 05:52.000] specifically mandates that no bill shall have the force and effective law [05:52.000 --> 05:57.000] unless it is read on the floor of each house over three several days. [05:57.000 --> 06:01.000] This is how section 32 of article 3 reads. [06:01.000 --> 06:05.000] Reading on three several days suspension of rule, [06:05.000 --> 06:12.000] no bill shall have the force of a law until it has been read on three several days in each house [06:12.000 --> 06:15.000] and free discussion allowed there on. [06:15.000 --> 06:22.000] But four-fifths of the house in which the bill may be pending may suspend this rule, [06:22.000 --> 06:28.000] the yeas and days being taken on the question of suspension and entered upon the journals. [06:28.000 --> 06:36.000] Now that second section starting with the but was added in 1999. [06:36.000 --> 06:46.000] Well that section runs headlong and collides with article 3 section 62 [06:46.000 --> 06:53.000] and this is how it reads and it's rather lengthy but we can probably get through it in one segment. [06:53.000 --> 06:59.000] Okay, section 62 continuity of state and local governmental operations, [06:59.000 --> 07:04.000] suspension of constitutional procedural rules. [07:04.000 --> 07:12.000] Subsection 8, the legislature in order to ensure continuity of state and local governmental operations [07:12.000 --> 07:20.000] in periods of emergency resulting from disasters caused by enemy attack [07:20.000 --> 07:26.000] shall have the power and the immediate duty to provide for prompt and temporary succession [07:26.000 --> 07:34.000] to the powers and duties of public offices of whatever nature and weather filled by election or appointment, [07:34.000 --> 07:41.000] the incumbents of which may become unavailable for carrying on the powers and duties of such offices. [07:41.000 --> 07:47.000] Provided, however, that article one of the Constitution of Texas known as the Bill of Rights [07:47.000 --> 07:55.000] shall not be in any manner affected, amended, impaired, suspended, repealed or suspended hereby. [07:55.000 --> 08:03.000] Subsection B, when such a period of emergency or the immediate threat of enemy attack exists, [08:03.000 --> 08:10.000] the legislature may suspend the procedural rules imposed by this Constitution that relate to, [08:10.000 --> 08:17.000] 1, the order of business of the legislature, 2, the percentage of each house of the legislature [08:17.000 --> 08:25.000] necessary to constitute a quorum, 3, the requirement that a bill must be read on three days in each house [08:25.000 --> 08:31.000] before it has the force of law, 4, the requirement that a bill must be referred to [08:31.000 --> 08:39.000] and reported from committee before its consideration, and 5, the date on which laws passed by the legislature take effect. [08:39.000 --> 08:47.000] Subsection C, when such a period of emergency of the immediate threat of enemy attack exists, [08:47.000 --> 08:53.000] the governor, after consulting with the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house of representatives, [08:53.000 --> 09:02.000] may suspend the constitutional requirement that the legislature hold its sessions in Austin the seat of government. [09:02.000 --> 09:09.000] When this requirement has been suspended, the governor shall determine a place other than Austin [09:09.000 --> 09:17.000] at which the legislature will hold its sessions during such period of emergency or immediate threat of enemy attack. [09:17.000 --> 09:22.000] The governor shall notify the lieutenant governor and the speaker of the house of representatives [09:22.000 --> 09:26.000] of the place and time at which the legislature will meet. [09:26.000 --> 09:35.000] The governor may take security precautions consistent with the state of emergency and determining the extent to which the information may be released. [09:35.000 --> 09:44.000] Subsection D, to suspend the constitutional rules specified by subsection B, which was the one through five items that I read, [09:44.000 --> 09:51.000] including the requirement that a bill must be read on three days in each house before it has the force of law, [09:51.000 --> 10:01.000] to suspend the constitutional rules specified by subsection B of this section, the governor must issue a proclamation [10:01.000 --> 10:09.000] and the house of representatives and the senate must concur in the proclamation as provided by this section. [10:09.000 --> 10:19.000] Subsection E, the governor's proclamation must declare that a period of emergency resulting from disasters [10:19.000 --> 10:27.000] caused by enemy attack exists or that the immediate threat of enemy attack exists [10:27.000 --> 10:39.000] and that the suspension of constitutional rules relating to legislative procedure is necessary to assure continuity of state government. [10:39.000 --> 10:54.000] The proclamation must specify the period not to exceed two years during which the constitutional rules specified by subsection B of this section are suspended. [10:54.000 --> 11:11.000] The house of representatives and the senate by the majority of the members present must concur in the governor's proclamation. [11:11.000 --> 11:27.000] A resolution of the house of representatives and the senate concurring in the governor's proclamation suspends the constitutional rules specified by subsection B of this section for the period of time specified by the governor's proclamation. [11:27.000 --> 11:37.000] The constitutional rules specified by subsection B of this section may not be suspended for more than two years under a single proclamation. [11:37.000 --> 11:53.000] A suspension may be renewed, however, if the governor issues another proclamation as provided by subsection E of this section and the house of representatives and the senate by concurrent resolution concur in that proclamation. [11:53.000 --> 12:00.000] Now, Randy, have you made it up on the yet? [12:00.000 --> 12:01.000] I think so. [12:01.000 --> 12:02.000] Ah, good. [12:02.000 --> 12:03.000] We do have you. [12:03.000 --> 12:04.000] All right. [12:04.000 --> 12:05.000] Okay. [12:05.000 --> 12:10.000] Now, let me reiterate for you exactly what this is telling us. [12:10.000 --> 12:28.000] Section 62 says that the only way to suspend the procedural rules, one of which is the requirement of being read three days on each floor of each house, on the floor of each house, is by the procedures in this particular section. [12:28.000 --> 12:50.000] Now, notice in section 62 of article three, there is absolutely no information as to by what majority or percentage the legislature must concur other than to say that they must concur by majority in this manner. [12:50.000 --> 12:53.000] Let me find it back here and let's see. [12:53.000 --> 13:12.000] When this requirement has been suspended, the governor shall make a proclamation to suspend the constitutional rule specified by subsection B. The governor must issue the proclamation and the house of representatives and the senate must concur in proclamation as provided by this section. [13:12.000 --> 13:18.000] But it does not say by what percentage or majority they must concur. [13:18.000 --> 13:33.000] So, when you go back to article 32, since the constitution can't rightfully have conflicts, the first thing that must be done is they must be reconcilable together. [13:33.000 --> 13:47.000] Well, all this new section that's been added to 32 does is it creates a four-fifth majority requirement to suspend this reading rule. [13:47.000 --> 13:56.000] It does not supplant or remove the requirements of article 62 or section 62 of article three. [13:56.000 --> 14:11.000] Because of that, the legislature cannot simply proclaim public emergency and suspend the required reading the way they've been doing for 30 to 40 years. [14:11.000 --> 14:34.000] They simply can't do it right here in this article. All they did was say the importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public necessity that the constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house be suspended. [14:34.000 --> 14:41.000] Okay, section 62 specifically limits the state of emergency to this. [14:41.000 --> 14:52.000] Local government operations in periods of emergency resulting from disasters caused by enemy attack. [14:52.000 --> 15:01.000] There's nothing in there about crowded house calendars and imperative public necessity. [15:01.000 --> 15:11.000] So guess what, folks? For every bill passed in the legislature that has this emergency clause in it, it's not a dad-gum law. [15:11.000 --> 15:15.000] It has not at all the force and effect of law. [15:15.000 --> 15:29.000] It was not enacted under the constitutional requirement of what constitutes a valid emergency to suspend the three-day reading requirement. [15:29.000 --> 15:35.000] We have been shanghied and duped again. [15:35.000 --> 15:44.000] Why? I've got something else going on now, but I've been looking into this, and if I'm wrong, somebody please tell me the title of the book and where to find it. [15:44.000 --> 16:03.000] But in case nobody's paid any attention, we've got literally dozens if not hundreds of books that dissect the federal constitution line by line, phrase by phrase, word by word to determine exactly how it applies and what it means. [16:03.000 --> 16:09.000] I cannot find a single book that does that with the Texas Constitution. [16:09.000 --> 16:25.000] Now, if there is one, I would love to know about it. But because of the way our Constitution has been mangled by moronic additions, it reads more like a dang statute than it does a Constitution. [16:25.000 --> 16:45.000] I doubt very seriously if anyone is bothered to undertake that process where it even matters, because it's such an ever-amorphous changing globule of dissenting opinion on what constitutes anything remotely constitutional, nobody's bothered. [16:45.000 --> 16:56.000] But I may take that task on at least to the degree of getting the important stuff known. This is Rule of Law Radio, this is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens. We'll be right back to take this up on the other side of the break. [17:15.000 --> 17:26.000] These days, you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Angie Edward Griffin. They even stock inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. There's no way a place like that exists. [17:26.000 --> 17:32.000] Go check it out for yourself. It's downtown in 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [17:32.000 --> 17:35.000] Oh, by UT? There's never anywhere to park down there. [17:35.000 --> 17:46.000] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. It does exist, but when are they open? [17:46.000 --> 17:59.000] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. So give them a call at 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [17:59.000 --> 18:08.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Miras Proven Method. [18:08.000 --> 18:20.000] Michael Miras has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [18:20.000 --> 18:26.000] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:26.000 --> 18:33.000] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:33.000 --> 18:40.000] The Michael Miras Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.000 --> 18:59.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Miras banner or email Michaelmiras at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:10.000 --> 19:38.000] Alright folks, we are back. This is rule of law radio. This is Eddie Craig with Randy Kelton. [19:38.000 --> 19:46.000] Deborah Stevens is off tonight. Alright Randy, we do have some callers up on the board, but we're going to get them callers, Chris, Roy, Mark. [19:46.000 --> 19:51.000] Y'all hang in there for just a few minutes. We need to go over this for a little bit before we start taking your calls. [19:51.000 --> 19:56.000] But don't get off the board guys. Just hang in there and we'll pick you up in just a minute. [19:56.000 --> 20:04.000] Alright Randy, you and I talked about this the other day and we talked about doing it on the show tonight, so you're at least readily familiar with what I was going into. [20:04.000 --> 20:20.000] So given those distinctions between the two articles or sections under article three, it would seem to me like the courts don't have any choice since they do not create an irreconcilable conflict than to read them together. [20:20.000 --> 20:34.000] And by that, all this amendment did was declare by what majority the House must agree with the governor's proclamation. [20:34.000 --> 20:57.000] It seems like the legislature has set the precedent for all of the other offices. Well, you know, this little statutory or constitutional restriction here, it is seriously inconvenient for us. [20:57.000 --> 21:06.000] So we'll just ignore this little one and nobody will notice. And perhaps the right nobody noticed for 30 years. [21:06.000 --> 21:15.000] There have been a number of issues of this nature that nobody seems to notice or if they notice, they don't bring it up. [21:15.000 --> 21:24.000] If the legislature is not going to follow their own law, why should we expect anybody else to follow law? [21:24.000 --> 21:42.000] So we as the sovereign need to tell them why. And while you were talking, I was thinking, which law would be the best one to bring this up on as an issue? [21:42.000 --> 21:47.000] And it is 1401B, was that right? [21:47.000 --> 21:51.000] Yeah, 1401B of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [21:51.000 --> 22:02.000] Where the legislature changed it in 1965 and authorized police officers to arrest someone for anything. [22:02.000 --> 22:10.000] That's when this police state began. That's when an officer could arrest you if he didn't like the way you looked at him. [22:10.000 --> 22:16.000] What they call attitude arrests. He could arrest for anything. [22:16.000 --> 22:19.000] That's the one I want to take it up on. [22:19.000 --> 22:25.000] Well, you know who actually got that bill rolling was our then existing attorney general. [22:25.000 --> 22:35.000] He decided that it was foolish for the officers to have to get a warrant for a misdemeanor offense that was committed in their presence. [22:35.000 --> 22:41.000] So he petitioned the legislature to enact that portion of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [22:41.000 --> 22:47.000] He thought it was foolish that we should protect our rights by saying when these people could arrest us. [22:47.000 --> 22:51.000] This is what he's created. [22:51.000 --> 22:55.000] 65, that would have been white. [22:55.000 --> 22:58.000] I believe so. [22:58.000 --> 23:05.000] He helped us out here. Now he's created a police state for us, but I think that will undermine it. [23:05.000 --> 23:14.000] There's that one. And then there was a memo by John West, the head attorney for the Department of Public Safety, where he sent a memo out. [23:14.000 --> 23:23.000] Telling his officers that they could arrest someone and hold them up to 48 hours without taking them before a magistrate. [23:23.000 --> 23:30.000] And all the policing agencies picked that up and accepted it as a law and it's not in law anywhere. [23:30.000 --> 23:33.000] They just made it up. [23:33.000 --> 23:35.000] Like they do so many other things. [23:35.000 --> 23:44.000] And we have stood up to them and forced them to do it different. [23:44.000 --> 23:46.000] So it's your fault, Eddie. [23:46.000 --> 23:48.000] Entirely possible. [23:48.000 --> 23:59.000] Not my fault. I don't accept responsibility. I'm a guy and we don't accept responsibility for our behavior. [23:59.000 --> 24:05.000] Okay, let's go to callers. We've got a stackin' up early today. [24:05.000 --> 24:08.000] Yep. All right, let's go to Chris in Texas. [24:08.000 --> 24:10.000] All right, Chris, what you got? [24:10.000 --> 24:12.000] All right. How y'all doing tonight? [24:12.000 --> 24:14.000] So far so grand. [24:14.000 --> 24:16.000] Except for this other bit of news, of course. [24:16.000 --> 24:19.000] I sure appreciate you taking my call. [24:19.000 --> 24:24.000] And first question that I have here, I just have a few short questions. [24:24.000 --> 24:35.000] First one is, how would a person go about attacking a search warrant before any charges are filed? [24:35.000 --> 24:38.000] That's an open-ended question. [24:38.000 --> 24:41.000] We have to know a lot more about the search warrant. [24:41.000 --> 24:48.000] The first thing you want to look at is certainly the affidavit in support and the criminal and the... [24:48.000 --> 24:55.000] There has to be some type of affidavit filed with a magistrate. [24:55.000 --> 24:59.000] Now, there has to be a statement of probable cause for the warrant to even be issued. [24:59.000 --> 25:02.000] Has the warrant been executed? [25:02.000 --> 25:04.000] Yes. [25:04.000 --> 25:08.000] Okay, then go to the magistrate who issued it. [25:08.000 --> 25:21.000] In 15.16, he's required to make the warrant and the associated documentation open for public inspection by the public immediately. [25:21.000 --> 25:26.000] And how do I find which magistrate even issued it? [25:26.000 --> 25:31.000] Because I have called every court in this city to find out. [25:31.000 --> 25:34.000] Who executed the warrant? [25:34.000 --> 25:37.000] An officer out of downtown Fort Worth. [25:37.000 --> 25:41.000] Then go down there and demand that they produce a copy of that warrant for your inspection. [25:41.000 --> 25:47.000] They're required to show it to you on demand even when they arrive at the scene with it. [25:47.000 --> 25:50.000] They cannot refuse to show you the warrant. [25:50.000 --> 25:52.000] Hold on. [25:52.000 --> 25:57.000] Hold on. Let's not run too quickly. [25:57.000 --> 26:11.000] I would suggest that you write up an information request and send one to every magistrate in Tarrant County. [26:11.000 --> 26:14.000] Or at least every justice of the piece. [26:14.000 --> 26:25.000] Now, Tarrant County, Fort Worth, the Tarrant County jail has a magistrate in the jail all the time. [26:25.000 --> 26:39.000] So probably the first place to go is ask the jail for a list of all of the magistrates that are used by the jail. [26:39.000 --> 26:41.000] Okay. [26:41.000 --> 26:45.000] And then send your request to each one of those magistrates. [26:45.000 --> 26:51.000] You see, the magistrate has a different set of issues than the police do. [26:51.000 --> 26:57.000] So the magistrate, if he has an issue with the warrant, he's going to say so. [26:57.000 --> 26:58.000] Okay. [26:58.000 --> 27:06.000] And if you get a response back from all of the magistrates saying they have an issue with the warrant, [27:06.000 --> 27:15.000] all of the ones that are used by the jail, then you make up a request to each county and district judge and request it from them. [27:15.000 --> 27:19.000] Actually, you can do it at the same time. [27:19.000 --> 27:21.000] Okay. Do it all at the same time? [27:21.000 --> 27:22.000] Yes. [27:22.000 --> 27:24.000] And send them all one. [27:24.000 --> 27:39.000] And if all of them say they didn't do it, now you could have evidence that either the police acted without a warrant and made up the warrant themselves. [27:39.000 --> 27:45.000] Or some magistrate is lying to you. [27:45.000 --> 27:53.000] And the police, if they've pulled a shenanigan, they're not likely to accuse the judge of lying to them. [27:53.000 --> 27:56.000] So that could get real interesting. [27:56.000 --> 28:10.000] If you go to the police, they're likely to run out and get one and come up with some BS reason to get the magistrate to produce one. [28:10.000 --> 28:15.000] But that's the first place I want to go. [28:15.000 --> 28:23.000] Actually, the first place is like what Eddie said, just go down and ask them to see the warrant. [28:23.000 --> 28:27.000] What was the warrant for? [28:27.000 --> 28:31.000] Did they search a home or a car? [28:31.000 --> 28:33.000] A home. [28:33.000 --> 28:38.000] And what did the warrant say they were looking for? [28:38.000 --> 28:46.000] They confiscated all of our computers. [28:46.000 --> 28:50.000] Do you have the names of the officers? [28:50.000 --> 28:56.000] Not yet, but I'm supposed to have them tomorrow. [28:56.000 --> 28:59.000] Okay, so you didn't see a warrant? [28:59.000 --> 29:02.000] I have a warrant here in my hand. [29:02.000 --> 29:03.000] Oh, okay. [29:03.000 --> 29:06.000] Just a lead warrant here in my hand. [29:06.000 --> 29:11.000] Who's magistrate's signature is on that warrant? [29:11.000 --> 29:17.000] You would have to be a forensic genius to figure out what this says. [29:17.000 --> 29:28.000] Okay, then what I suggest you do is take that warrant to every judge, every justice of the peace in Tarrant County. [29:28.000 --> 29:42.000] You go down to the courthouse and I go down to the jail and show that to the jailer and ask the jailer to try to use his signature that is. [29:42.000 --> 29:43.000] Okay, hold on. [29:43.000 --> 29:44.000] We're about to go to break. [29:44.000 --> 29:46.000] We'll pick this up on the other side. [29:46.000 --> 29:47.000] This is Randy Keltner. [29:47.000 --> 29:48.000] They received a code. [29:48.000 --> 29:49.000] We have a radio. [29:49.000 --> 29:54.000] Our calling number is 512-646-1984. [29:54.000 --> 29:59.000] We'll be right back on the other side. [29:59.000 --> 30:06.000] A noble lie, Oklahoma City 1995 will change forever the way you look at the true nature of terrorism. [30:06.000 --> 30:10.000] Based on the damage patting to the building, but the government seems impossible. [30:10.000 --> 30:13.000] The grand jury did not want to hear anything I had to say. [30:13.000 --> 30:17.000] The decision was made not to pursue any more of those individuals. [30:17.000 --> 30:22.000] Some of these columns were ripped up, shredded, tossed around. [30:22.000 --> 30:26.000] The people that did the things they did knew doggone well what they were doing. [30:26.000 --> 30:30.000] Expose the cover up now at anobleye.com. [30:30.000 --> 30:36.000] MPUSA.org has moved and expanded its operations for faster worldwide shipping. [30:36.000 --> 30:42.000] Our product line has grown from five to nearly 100 items in less than five years. [30:42.000 --> 30:46.000] Our food has grown naturally, always chemical free, not found in stores. [30:46.000 --> 30:50.000] Great for daily intake and perfectly your emergency storage shelter. [30:50.000 --> 31:00.000] Call 908-6912608 or visit MPUSA.org and see what our powders, seeds and oil can do for you. [31:00.000 --> 31:06.000] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the internet isn't so easy. [31:06.000 --> 31:09.000] And neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [31:09.000 --> 31:12.000] Oh well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [31:12.000 --> 31:13.000] Brave New Books? [31:13.000 --> 31:18.000] Yes, Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, [31:18.000 --> 31:20.000] Ron Paul and G. Albert Griffin. [31:20.000 --> 31:24.000] They even stock inner food, Berkey products and Calvin Soaps. [31:24.000 --> 31:26.000] There's no way a place like that exists. [31:26.000 --> 31:28.000] Go check it out for yourself. [31:28.000 --> 31:32.000] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street just south of UT. [31:32.000 --> 31:36.000] Oh by UT? There's never anywhere to park down there. [31:36.000 --> 31:43.000] Actually they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [31:43.000 --> 31:47.000] It does exist, but when are they open? [31:47.000 --> 31:52.000] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [31:52.000 --> 32:19.000] So give them a call at 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [32:19.000 --> 32:23.000] I hope you followed the law of the land. [32:23.000 --> 32:26.000] I don't understand. [32:26.000 --> 32:31.000] The job is to protect the service and not to beat other views. [32:31.000 --> 32:34.000] How's this work? [32:34.000 --> 32:45.000] When you're gonna stop abuse, you're gonna stop abuse. [32:45.000 --> 32:52.000] Okay, we're back. Randy, Calvin, Deborah, Stephen, Eddie, Craig, and we're talking to Chris in Texas. [32:52.000 --> 32:54.000] Chris, you have the warrant. [32:54.000 --> 33:02.000] What the warrant says they are to search for. [33:02.000 --> 33:04.000] Is that the part you're asking for? [33:04.000 --> 33:06.000] Okay, yeah. Let's start again. [33:06.000 --> 33:09.000] Somebody had you muted. I think it was Eddie. [33:09.000 --> 33:11.000] Okay. [33:11.000 --> 33:14.000] Actually, I was supposed to do that. [33:14.000 --> 33:18.000] Yeah, what does it say that they are to search for? [33:18.000 --> 33:39.000] Any and all electronic devices that are capable of analyzing, creating, displaying, converting, or transmitting electronic or magnetic computer impulses or data that are used, owned, or accessed by, or any other person at this resident. [33:39.000 --> 34:01.000] These devices include that are not limited to computers, including self-contained laptop or notebook computers, computer components, computer peripherals, word processing equipment, modems, monitors, printers, keyboards, acoustic couplers, cables, spotters, encryption circuit boards, optical scanners, [34:01.000 --> 34:13.000] internal hard drives, digital cameras, and other computer-related electronic or physical devices that serve to transmit or receive information to or from a computer. [34:13.000 --> 34:32.000] Overseas information. Well, that's interesting. What type of business are you engaged in? Or better yet, better question is, do you have any idea why they're seeking this kind of... [34:32.000 --> 34:56.000] Only what one of them stated while they were there. And I took this alleged search warrant to an attorney today, and I have her on recording stating that this warrant looked like it was not valid on its face because it does not state any probable cause for getting the warrant. [34:56.000 --> 35:15.000] She also said because the judge's signature is like a computer dropped it on and somebody wrote in, Judge City of Fort Worth, this whole thing is computer generated. [35:15.000 --> 35:34.000] Good chance it is. So now you need to get every judge's signature. If you can find a signature that looks like that, then you hit that judge and demand that he show you the affidavit of probable cause. [35:34.000 --> 35:38.000] It should have been attached to the warrant that you were given. [35:38.000 --> 36:00.000] No, it was not. Okay. Then definitely take that signature down. And you might look in the court record. I think the clerk can pull up records based on the judge's name. [36:00.000 --> 36:14.000] Or you might ask to see the judge's oaths of office. Oaths of office? Yeah. Or any documents that all of the judges have to prepare and sign. [36:14.000 --> 36:36.000] Okay. That way you can do this without actually telling them what you're doing. It's always better to make them wonder what's going on because they all get to whispering back and forth and they start calling the clerk and they start calling judges. [36:36.000 --> 36:43.000] But Eddie, can you think of another document? The oath of office raises too many red flags. [36:43.000 --> 36:51.000] That you want to look for on the judge? Yeah, some document the judge would have to sign. [36:51.000 --> 36:57.000] Well, you can look at any other warrant and any other record for that matter. You can look at any court order and any record. [36:57.000 --> 37:14.000] I understand that. But how are you going to get all of the different judges and signatures without spending two or three days digging through all the records and doing search after search? There should be a place. There should be something all the judges have to sign. [37:14.000 --> 37:20.000] The oath of office is one. It's probably something simpler and less. [37:20.000 --> 37:32.000] Other than the oath and the anti-bribery statement, I don't know something that they would all have to sign immediately that would be publicly accessible. [37:32.000 --> 37:45.000] Think about that, Chris. See if you can come up with something the judges would have to sign and would pretty well all be in one location or in one set of hands. [37:45.000 --> 37:53.000] Okay. And I have one final question for you here. [37:53.000 --> 38:09.000] If someone is arrested on a warrant and they're not taken before a magistrate, before they're taken to the jail, is that written of habeas corpus on a rule of law website? Is that the written habeas corpus? [38:09.000 --> 38:15.000] Yes, it is. Written just for that purpose. Okay. [38:15.000 --> 38:27.000] That's precisely what it goes to. The only defense is a showing of due diligence and effort to locate a magistrate. [38:27.000 --> 38:38.000] And you might send the, was it the Sheriff's Department or the Fort Worth Police? Fort Worth Police Department. [38:38.000 --> 38:48.000] Then send the Chief of Police a request for the list of county magistrates that they provide to their officers. [38:48.000 --> 38:50.000] Okay. [38:50.000 --> 38:59.000] And he's going to send you back a response saying that you have requested a record they do not have and they are not required to create it. [38:59.000 --> 39:16.000] Well, he's more than willing to help be helpful because I know at some point today he received a phone call from the city manager because I called down there to the mayor's office called the city manager, [39:16.000 --> 39:31.000] the mayor gave me the city manager's number, called there and told them about the gross misjustice that had been done and the violation of our rights while the officers were there. [39:31.000 --> 39:37.000] Did they give you a copy of an inventory? [39:37.000 --> 39:41.000] They gave me an incomplete inventory. [39:41.000 --> 39:43.000] Oh, wonderful. [39:43.000 --> 39:51.000] So you need to list all of the things they took that were not on the inventory. [39:51.000 --> 40:06.000] And take that list and give it to a notary and ask the notary to take this list and put it in this envelope and send it back to me by notary presentment. [40:06.000 --> 40:08.000] Okay. [40:08.000 --> 40:16.000] You have a list of everything that was taken and you created it before you looked at anything they have. [40:16.000 --> 40:23.000] And you'll have the stamped envelope showing when the post office put the stamp on it. [40:23.000 --> 40:35.000] And that way you can have the notary open it in the courtroom or in a deposition and read what's in it. [40:35.000 --> 40:47.000] So you can, that will give you, that will establish what you maintain was taken and that gives it to you uncontactment. [40:47.000 --> 40:50.000] And then you compare that to the list that they have. [40:50.000 --> 40:58.000] Is there anything of major value that they took that they didn't list? [40:58.000 --> 41:02.000] Not that I've seen so far. [41:02.000 --> 41:07.000] Oh, okay. And that may be an unimportant issue. [41:07.000 --> 41:18.000] Maybe you may be making, if you address an issue that goes to distinction without a difference, then you look like you're nitpicking. [41:18.000 --> 41:32.000] And it will cause the court and the prosecutors and the juries, like a grand jury to be a lot more skeptical about what you present. So we'd be careful of the issues that we raise. [41:32.000 --> 41:33.000] Okay. [41:33.000 --> 41:41.000] So if there's nothing of any importance that they didn't list, I would not raise that as an issue. [41:41.000 --> 41:46.000] And I do have one last question I need to ask you. [41:46.000 --> 42:01.000] Are the police allowed to have some kind of servers on the Internet with the legal content on them and just looking for someone to connect to that server? [42:01.000 --> 42:08.000] Yes. They are allowed to do that. [42:08.000 --> 42:19.000] All right. It's long as they don't have a virus that acts, that takes you to that place when you didn't intend to. [42:19.000 --> 42:34.000] Let's see. I don't know if that would be true or not at this point because they were talking about a specific peer-to-peer web sharing software. [42:34.000 --> 43:01.000] Ah, okay. Then that's unusual unless it's some kind of major transfer because for a while there, the movie companies and the music industry were pursuing these peer-to-peer sites, but they pretty well, we haven't heard much from that lately. [43:01.000 --> 43:02.000] Uh-huh. [43:02.000 --> 43:10.000] So, you know, there may be something to it, but, you know, I have no way to, you know, don't know what's going on. [43:10.000 --> 43:28.000] So if somebody has taken copyrighted materials and disseminated it like when sat in a movie, somebody spent 15, 20 million to produce and tapes the movie and puts it on the Internet, [43:28.000 --> 43:33.000] if I was that guy, I would be really, really unhappy. [43:33.000 --> 43:43.000] And with good costs, but here again, we don't know what is going on here, and all we can really speak to are the legal specifics. [43:43.000 --> 43:50.000] Okay. This is Randy Kelton, Deb. Stephen J. Craig with our radio. Do you have anything else for us? [43:50.000 --> 43:53.000] One thing on the other side, and I'll let you get to the other caller. [43:53.000 --> 43:59.000] Okay. Okay. We'll be right back. I'll call it number 502-606-1984. [44:23.000 --> 44:27.000] Next is that why we got the page to not come in today, end quote. [44:27.000 --> 44:34.000] Bruce Shaw, as interviewed on KFL or TV, was also told by ATF agents that they had been paged to not come into work. [44:34.000 --> 44:41.000] The ATF initially denied these claims, and now variously claim that one of their agents was in a free falling elevator, which has been disproven, [44:41.000 --> 44:45.000] or that they had been in an all night stick out, or that they had been at a golf tournament. [44:45.000 --> 44:55.000] As they try to sort out their lies, all we want to know is, did the ATF receive a warning, and if so, why did they not pass it on to others in the world? [44:55.000 --> 45:18.000] For more information, go to okcbombandtruth.com. [45:25.000 --> 45:27.000] And now you can too. [45:27.000 --> 45:33.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:33.000 --> 45:42.000] 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. [45:42.000 --> 45:51.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.000 --> 46:00.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:00.000 --> 46:25.000] Okay, we're back. [46:25.000 --> 46:40.000] We're talking to Chris in Texas and you had one more question, Chris. [46:40.000 --> 46:54.000] I was just going to say, would it matter that they would have had to knowingly load their servers into this program in order for them to even share over it? [46:54.000 --> 46:56.000] No. [46:56.000 --> 46:57.000] Okay. [46:57.000 --> 47:04.000] You mean you said that they would actually have to commit the crime in order to establish that you committed a crime? [47:04.000 --> 47:10.000] Yes, they are committing a crime in order to accuse someone else of doing it. [47:10.000 --> 47:34.000] You know, I can't find anything in law that specifically authorizes that, but the courts have consistently held that if the police, it's not their intent to harm or defraud anyone, but rather to catch a criminal that they can cross some of these lines. [47:34.000 --> 47:50.000] So you won't get any traction there, or at least unless it's really outrageous and if they used it as a profit source for a while and then decided to clamp down on everybody, then you'd have some grounds. [47:50.000 --> 47:58.000] But if they set this up as a sting, they can absolutely do that. [47:58.000 --> 48:05.000] Okay, so, but you did say that this warrant should have had an affidavit attached to it? [48:05.000 --> 48:07.000] Absolutely. [48:07.000 --> 48:08.000] Okay. [48:08.000 --> 48:15.000] Affidavit are probable cause, and you want to see the affidavit are probable cause. [48:15.000 --> 48:22.000] So I would start by going through all the courts. This may just be the police phishing. [48:22.000 --> 48:28.000] And if they are, then you could have them pretty well disqualified. [48:28.000 --> 48:35.000] And then all the fruits of this fruit of the poison tree. [48:35.000 --> 48:37.000] Okay. [48:37.000 --> 48:43.000] All right. Well, Randy, I sure appreciate you taking my call, Eddie. I appreciate it. [48:43.000 --> 48:48.000] And I will let you get on to the other callers. I know they've been waiting. [48:48.000 --> 48:57.000] Okay. Thank you. Now we're going to go to... Looks like a lost... Oh, there we go. Roy in Texas. [48:57.000 --> 48:58.000] Yes, hello. [48:58.000 --> 49:01.000] Hello, Roy. What do you have for us? [49:01.000 --> 49:11.000] Okay. I have, to the point, I have a municipal speeding limit, 48 to 35 by a municipal revenue. [49:11.000 --> 49:21.000] And so whenever I went down to the court about two or five days later, I asked to see my code of my file. [49:21.000 --> 49:23.000] She didn't know what the world I was talking about. [49:23.000 --> 49:28.000] She took my ticket, or the ticket I had, and it had two copies on there. [49:28.000 --> 49:31.000] She took off one foot and trash and kept the other one. [49:31.000 --> 49:35.000] And I tried to talk to her and she just kept keying into the computer. [49:35.000 --> 49:38.000] And then she asked me my name, my phone number, and all this kind of stuff. [49:38.000 --> 49:42.000] I said, you already got that information. She said, I have to have this. [49:42.000 --> 49:46.000] And I said, now I want to know what is in my file. [49:46.000 --> 49:51.000] And she said, what do you mean? I said, well, I need to know what's in my file. [49:51.000 --> 49:56.000] She said, oh, that's going to take a long time. That's since 1990. [49:56.000 --> 50:02.000] I said, lady, this ticket was only last Friday. You understand? [50:02.000 --> 50:08.000] So she gets, she brings the ticket, and that's all that's in my file is one ticket. [50:08.000 --> 50:13.000] And the ticket she had is signed, the ticket I have is not signed. [50:13.000 --> 50:16.000] So I don't know if that means anything. [50:16.000 --> 50:20.000] But now, as long as the one that's in the file is signed. [50:20.000 --> 50:24.000] Okay. Well, anyway, I asked, I said, I want to see a magistrate. [50:24.000 --> 50:27.000] She looked at me like I was from Russia or somewhere. [50:27.000 --> 50:29.000] She said, we don't have one, though. [50:29.000 --> 50:33.000] I said, I need to see a magistrate. [50:33.000 --> 50:37.000] I forget what he called now. I'm all nervous. [50:37.000 --> 50:42.000] This plenary here, I mean this hearing, what they call a magistration. [50:42.000 --> 50:44.000] Anyway, I said, I want to know. [50:44.000 --> 50:46.000] It's called an examining trial. [50:46.000 --> 50:48.000] Examining trial, exactly. I said, I want an examining trial. [50:48.000 --> 50:50.000] She said, we don't have any of those either. [50:50.000 --> 50:55.000] And so in the meantime, this guard that's at the door, he come walking over there [50:55.000 --> 50:57.000] and he's going to explain what a magistrate is. [50:57.000 --> 50:59.000] And he starts talking. I said, hey, wait a minute. [50:59.000 --> 51:01.000] Did you know that the mayor's a magistrate? [51:01.000 --> 51:03.000] He said, no. I said, okay, no more questions. [51:03.000 --> 51:05.000] I got right to him. [51:05.000 --> 51:08.000] Anyway, they said, you have to plead guilty. [51:08.000 --> 51:10.000] I said, what? I'm not pleading guilty. [51:10.000 --> 51:16.000] She said, you have to plead either not guilty, guilty, or no open dindo. [51:16.000 --> 51:17.000] Something like that. [51:17.000 --> 51:19.000] And I said, I'm not pleading to anything, lady. [51:19.000 --> 51:22.000] I said, I want a magistrate. [51:22.000 --> 51:24.000] I want my examining trial. [51:24.000 --> 51:26.000] She said, you're not going to get that. [51:26.000 --> 51:28.000] She said, you have to plead guilty. [51:28.000 --> 51:35.000] And she told me I had to plead guilty to even go to a pre-trial to see if there would be a trial. [51:35.000 --> 51:40.000] She said, a pre-trial is in front of the lawyer and then you determine whether you can have a court. [51:40.000 --> 51:42.000] You know, you can go to trial. [51:42.000 --> 51:44.000] Okay. Where was this at? [51:44.000 --> 51:46.000] With Abilene, Texas. [51:46.000 --> 51:47.000] Abilene. [51:47.000 --> 51:52.000] A pre-trial in front of the lawyer. You should go to that pre-trial. [51:52.000 --> 51:56.000] Well, they said I can't go to unless I plead guilty. [51:56.000 --> 52:01.000] And I want Ted's place up. [52:01.000 --> 52:04.000] Please tell me that you were recording this. [52:04.000 --> 52:10.000] My wife had to record her in her car that day. I'm sorry, man. [52:10.000 --> 52:17.000] Okay. If you take the phone, mouthpiece and beat yourself around the eyes and nose. [52:17.000 --> 52:23.000] I told her, yes. I'm running into a brick toilet here. [52:23.000 --> 52:34.000] Anyway, I want to know how I can get to something to get to a trial because, you know, I was going to put in for a parent and a court trial, motion and all this kind of stuff. [52:34.000 --> 52:40.000] But where's my phone from here? How does there some of those bricks down in that toilet? [52:40.000 --> 52:54.000] Well, the thing that's going on here, based upon your experience and what you've relayed to us, if it's accurate, I doubt this girl will ever manage to get a single thing the court's trying to do ever out of the courthouse and into the mail to anybody. [52:54.000 --> 53:01.000] Probably not. But her supervisor was standing behind her. I was speaking kind of loud. [53:01.000 --> 53:12.000] And her supervisor came up behind her. The garden from the door came over and the other people, everybody was looking, you know, I was getting a little agitated. [53:12.000 --> 53:19.000] But I'm wondering where I go from here. I mean, I'm stumped. [53:19.000 --> 53:21.000] Eddie, you want to pick this up? [53:21.000 --> 53:28.000] At this point, there's not a lot to pick up. All you need to do is make sure you start keeping a record of everything that goes on. [53:28.000 --> 53:33.000] Well, I wrote down her name, you know, and all that, that she refused to magistrate. [53:33.000 --> 53:35.000] Did you file anything in court that day? [53:35.000 --> 53:37.000] No, I did not. [53:37.000 --> 53:40.000] Did you get anything file stamped by the court that day? [53:40.000 --> 53:41.000] No. [53:41.000 --> 53:44.000] Then how do you intend to prove you went in in compliance with the citation? [53:44.000 --> 53:46.000] By going tomorrow. [53:46.000 --> 53:48.000] That'll do. [53:48.000 --> 53:50.000] Do you have the seminar material? [53:50.000 --> 53:54.000] Yeah, I got the seminar material, but I don't have any updates. [53:54.000 --> 54:01.000] Okay, send me a contact email and I'll get you the updated affidavit that you need. [54:01.000 --> 54:08.000] But you need to go down and file an affidavit if you're not a commercial truck driver or taxi driver or anything like that, are you? [54:08.000 --> 54:09.000] No. [54:09.000 --> 54:12.000] And you weren't on the day you got the ticket, were you? [54:12.000 --> 54:18.000] No, and I told that to Carl. When he pulled me over, I said, hey, what's the problem here? [54:18.000 --> 54:24.000] I said, you got a merchant going on, what can I help? And that cop looked at me like that was weird, you know. [54:24.000 --> 54:28.000] And he said, I'm detaining you from violation. [54:28.000 --> 54:33.000] And I said, well, okay, he said, give me your driver's license and insurance. [54:33.000 --> 54:36.000] So I said, well, insurance is not going to be too bad. I can get that for you. [54:36.000 --> 54:39.000] But the driver's license may be a little more difficult. [54:39.000 --> 54:45.000] So I handed you my insurance and he said, what do you mean about your driver's license? [54:45.000 --> 54:50.000] I said, I'm not engaged in commerce. I'm not using it. I don't know why you need it. You don't need it. You can. [54:50.000 --> 54:53.000] I can just show it to you. He said, you cannot. [54:53.000 --> 54:59.000] He said, the judge says you've got to show it to me. He said, the transportation code says you've got to show it to me. [54:59.000 --> 55:01.000] This guy's off the rocker. [55:01.000 --> 55:03.000] And anyway, I did show it to him. I said, okay. [55:03.000 --> 55:09.000] I spoke louder. I said, under the rest and only under the rest do I show you this driver's license. [55:09.000 --> 55:12.000] So he finally showed it. Anyway, that was my cop interview. [55:12.000 --> 55:17.000] But okay, so I affidavit. Yeah, I'll email you tonight. [55:17.000 --> 55:24.000] Okay. Yeah, the affidavit is not in transportation. You need to go and get that notarized. You need to take it down there. [55:24.000 --> 55:30.000] If they can't give you a cause number, write the citation number in the cause number block. [55:30.000 --> 55:36.000] Okay. And file it and make sure that you keep the original of the affidavit. [55:36.000 --> 55:39.000] You always keep the originals of your affidavit. [55:39.000 --> 55:44.000] Okay. You only give away originals of pleadings, not affidavits. [55:44.000 --> 55:46.000] All right. [55:46.000 --> 55:53.000] When you file it in the court, get them to stamp your original copy as being filed in the court. [55:53.000 --> 55:57.000] Okay. Provided this girl even knows what a stamp is. [55:57.000 --> 55:59.000] Probably not. [55:59.000 --> 56:04.000] All right. And that will prove that you complied with the notice to appear. [56:04.000 --> 56:09.000] After that, it's a waiting game. I was waiting to see what they do, huh? [56:09.000 --> 56:16.000] Yes. Okay. All righty. I really want to take some of those bricks apart and the taller takeout down there. [56:16.000 --> 56:22.000] Man. Okay. Well, I guess that's it. I'll go ahead and email you tonight. [56:22.000 --> 56:28.000] Okay, Roy. Thank you much. You're welcome. Bye-bye. [56:28.000 --> 56:34.000] All right. Now we're going to go to Mark in Wisconsin. Mark, what can we do for you? [56:34.000 --> 56:38.000] Well, thank you for taking my call this evening, Randy and Eddie. [56:38.000 --> 56:43.000] One of the things I wanted to mention, Eddie, I sent you a link to bigbluebutton.org, [56:43.000 --> 56:48.000] which would be software that you'd be able to afford for running conferencing, [56:48.000 --> 56:55.000] since you'd asked about that a few shows ago, wanting some video conferencing software. [56:55.000 --> 57:02.000] Then the other, previously you guys were talking about reptiles and attorneys. [57:02.000 --> 57:06.000] There's a book, The Sociopath Next Door, The Ruthless Versions of the Rest of Us by Maria Stout. [57:06.000 --> 57:13.000] It might be an interesting read for you. Now, as to reason I'm calling, [57:13.000 --> 57:22.000] there are multiple old cases that have been decided and are otherwise closed except for the payments [57:22.000 --> 57:27.000] with this party that I'm involved with in a small claims action. [57:27.000 --> 57:33.000] And I have three different pieces of paper I'd like to create and have served [57:33.000 --> 57:39.000] or added to the court records in these cases. The blanket one would be, [57:39.000 --> 57:52.000] Dear Judge, don't accept a motion to seal these records. Keep these records open in public. [57:52.000 --> 57:58.000] So I don't know if I need an amicus brief or something else. [57:58.000 --> 58:09.000] That would be recorded to say that untimely there hasn't been a motion of any files to that purpose. [58:09.000 --> 58:14.000] They probably won't entertain that one. [58:14.000 --> 58:19.000] We'll get to the rest of them on the other side. [58:19.000 --> 58:24.000] I know this is going to be fun. You're always causing somebody some grief. [58:24.000 --> 58:29.000] It's going to be hard. This is read with Calvin, David, Steven, Zed, and Craig. [58:29.000 --> 58:36.000] Our call in number is 512-646-1984. [58:36.000 --> 58:42.000] We'll be right back with Mark, Skyler, and Mark and Skyler. [58:42.000 --> 58:50.000] We'll get back on the other side. [58:50.000 --> 58:55.000] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.000 --> 59:01.000] because they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.000 --> 59:06.000] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.000 --> 59:12.000] Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:12.000 --> 59:17.000] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.000 --> 59:23.000] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.000 --> 59:27.000] into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.000 --> 59:32.000] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.000 --> 59:43.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.000 --> 59:50.000] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.000 --> 01:00:00.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.000 --> 01:00:08.000] Attention, morning coffee drinkers. The FBI says if you paid cash for that cup of Joe, [01:00:08.000 --> 01:00:13.000] you may be a potential terrorist. I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you [01:00:13.000 --> 01:00:16.000] how the feds want to track your coffee habits next. [01:00:16.000 --> 01:00:22.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:22.000 --> 01:00:27.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:27.000 --> 01:00:32.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:00:32.000 --> 01:00:38.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:00:38.000 --> 01:00:45.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:00:45.000 --> 01:00:51.000] What does a terrorist look like? According to the FBI, it could be anyone who cares about privacy, [01:00:51.000 --> 01:00:55.000] shielding their IP address on the web and always paying with cash. [01:00:55.000 --> 01:01:01.000] No joke, pay cash for a cup of coffee and the FBI says you too may be a potential criminal. [01:01:01.000 --> 01:01:08.000] It's all in a flyer. The FBI is circulating among Internet cafe owners, urging them to spy on their patrons. [01:01:08.000 --> 01:01:14.000] Are customers hiding their screens from view? Are they making voiceover IP calls or using Google Earth [01:01:14.000 --> 01:01:21.000] to look at, say, train stations? Report them all, says the FBI, and become a member of the police state. [01:01:21.000 --> 01:01:31.000] Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:01:31.000 --> 01:01:38.000] Is it iPhone or iSpy? In Germany, one man had to file a lawsuit to learn how his cell phone carrier [01:01:38.000 --> 01:01:45.000] was tracking his every move 24-7. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll have the creepy details in a moment. [01:01:45.000 --> 01:01:51.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:51.000 --> 01:01:56.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:56.000 --> 01:02:01.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:01.000 --> 01:02:07.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:02:07.000 --> 01:02:14.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:02:14.000 --> 01:02:18.000] Do you know how much data your cell phone company collects on you? [01:02:18.000 --> 01:02:23.000] In Germany, Green Party politician Malta Spitz didn't, so he asked. [01:02:23.000 --> 01:02:28.000] When his carrier objected, he sued. Tracking people's whereabouts is what phone companies do. [01:02:28.000 --> 01:02:33.000] To route calls efficiently, they ping customers' cell phones every few seconds. [01:02:33.000 --> 01:02:39.000] But when a court ordered Deutsche Telekom to cough up its records on Spitz, what he learned was shocking. [01:02:39.000 --> 01:02:44.000] In a six-month period, the company had logged his location 35,000 times, [01:02:44.000 --> 01:02:48.000] often to within a few hundred yards of his precise location. [01:02:48.000 --> 01:02:51.000] So the next time you turn on your cell phone, know this. [01:02:51.000 --> 01:02:55.000] Your carrier is not only watching, it's taking notes. [01:02:55.000 --> 01:03:01.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:03:01.000 --> 01:03:11.000] Looking for some truth? You found it. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:04:31.000 --> 01:04:36.000] Hi, I'm Mark. I'm here to help Mr. Stevenson search with the radio. [01:04:36.000 --> 01:04:41.000] I'm just talking to Mark in this concert. [01:04:41.000 --> 01:04:44.000] Okay, Mark, you had another issue. [01:04:44.000 --> 01:04:53.000] Okay, yeah. Those cases that I'm wanting to insert into the record, please don't close this case. [01:04:53.000 --> 01:04:58.000] Close the case files and make them private. [01:04:58.000 --> 01:05:01.000] I'm trying to remember the term for that. I am a third party. [01:05:01.000 --> 01:05:04.000] I'm not involved as either the defendant or the plaintiff, [01:05:04.000 --> 01:05:08.000] but I use the records from those cases to help prove my case. [01:05:08.000 --> 01:05:12.000] And I'd like the case to be kept. The records be kept open. [01:05:12.000 --> 01:05:20.000] Is there any indication that they were sealed or someone has made a motion to seal? [01:05:20.000 --> 01:05:24.000] As far as I'm aware, no one has made any motions to seal. [01:05:24.000 --> 01:05:29.000] I just wanted to get somehow into the record that if there is a motion to seal these, [01:05:29.000 --> 01:05:32.000] I would like to be consulted as a third party. [01:05:32.000 --> 01:05:34.000] You can't. [01:05:34.000 --> 01:05:35.000] I can't. [01:05:35.000 --> 01:05:38.000] You don't have standing. They won't put attention to it. [01:05:38.000 --> 01:05:46.000] Okay, now there are two...in this collection of cases, there are two that are special. [01:05:46.000 --> 01:05:50.000] One of them, and again, I'm a third party, [01:05:50.000 --> 01:05:56.000] one of them at trial, it was never brought up that the corporation that he was signing as the agent for [01:05:56.000 --> 01:05:58.000] didn't exist yet. [01:05:58.000 --> 01:06:02.000] And in the other case, a judgment was filed on 8.9. [01:06:02.000 --> 01:06:08.000] On 8.10, they filed a paperwork removing the registered agent from the corporation [01:06:08.000 --> 01:06:11.000] and kept it at an address where they'd been evicted from. [01:06:11.000 --> 01:06:15.000] And on 8.11, a new corporation was formed. [01:06:15.000 --> 01:06:22.000] Are those material that I as a third party can advise the court of? [01:06:22.000 --> 01:06:25.000] Or are they, once again, I have no standing? [01:06:25.000 --> 01:06:27.000] I don't know. [01:06:27.000 --> 01:06:32.000] Is it information that would be material to the case? [01:06:32.000 --> 01:06:35.000] Well, in the particular with the... [01:06:35.000 --> 01:06:41.000] If you're attempting to collect money and the party that you're attempting to collect the money from, [01:06:41.000 --> 01:06:47.000] you know, the corporation is putting itself in a position to be dissolved, [01:06:47.000 --> 01:06:54.000] I would think that, you know, watching, alerting the judge to the fact that the day after you said [01:06:54.000 --> 01:06:59.000] these guys owed you $13,000, or they owed the plaintiff $13,000, [01:06:59.000 --> 01:07:05.000] they took an action to work on dissolving the company, or the state dissolving the company, [01:07:05.000 --> 01:07:07.000] I would think would be material. [01:07:07.000 --> 01:07:14.000] But the only one that would have standing to raise the issue would be the other litigant. [01:07:14.000 --> 01:07:16.000] Okay. [01:07:16.000 --> 01:07:19.000] Are these actions that are ongoing? [01:07:19.000 --> 01:07:22.000] They have not been paid off. [01:07:22.000 --> 01:07:27.000] The judge has wrapped the gavel months ago, if not over a year ago, [01:07:27.000 --> 01:07:31.000] and said you owe the plaintiff money. [01:07:31.000 --> 01:07:39.000] So are the individuals in the process of prosecuting a judgment? [01:07:39.000 --> 01:07:44.000] They started, and in one case, I talked to one attorney, [01:07:44.000 --> 01:07:48.000] he said that we're in negotiations to settle this, [01:07:48.000 --> 01:07:55.000] but negotiations with this guy to settle it could mean, you know, a phone call every six months. [01:07:55.000 --> 01:08:00.000] Yeah, and then padding the bill for the lawyer. [01:08:00.000 --> 01:08:04.000] Did you give this information to the lawyers? [01:08:04.000 --> 01:08:09.000] I have mentioned it to the lawyers, and that's how I found in the first case [01:08:09.000 --> 01:08:13.000] that it was never brought up in trial, but the corporation didn't exist, [01:08:13.000 --> 01:08:16.000] that he was signing as. [01:08:16.000 --> 01:08:20.000] So the attorney had a dumbfounded moment there and went, [01:08:20.000 --> 01:08:24.000] no, that was never brought up. [01:08:24.000 --> 01:08:30.000] You've probably done all that you can. [01:08:30.000 --> 01:08:31.000] Okay. [01:08:31.000 --> 01:08:34.000] I was looking to see if they were still being adjudicated, [01:08:34.000 --> 01:08:39.000] because you might, if they were very similar, you might look at a jointer. [01:08:39.000 --> 01:08:40.000] Okay. [01:08:40.000 --> 01:08:44.000] If you joined them all together, then you'd have standing. [01:08:44.000 --> 01:08:46.000] Okay, yeah. [01:08:46.000 --> 01:08:50.000] All they've done for me is provided great quotes, [01:08:50.000 --> 01:08:54.000] like one of the interrogatories, he said, the reason I shouldn't be sued [01:08:54.000 --> 01:09:00.000] is because we don't have the money to pay the lawsuit. [01:09:00.000 --> 01:09:02.000] That's as good as it is. [01:09:02.000 --> 01:09:03.000] That's as good as it is. [01:09:03.000 --> 01:09:07.000] Love the internet type of thing, but yeah, for most of what you're trying to do there, [01:09:07.000 --> 01:09:09.000] you're going to lack standing. [01:09:09.000 --> 01:09:12.000] Okay, that's fine then. [01:09:12.000 --> 01:09:18.000] Now, how often should a judge override what the court of the court has in their record? [01:09:18.000 --> 01:09:21.000] And is that kosher? [01:09:21.000 --> 01:09:27.000] That depends on the nature of the information, I would think. [01:09:27.000 --> 01:09:32.000] If the clerk has a court setting for a certain date, [01:09:32.000 --> 01:09:35.000] the judge could certainly override that. [01:09:35.000 --> 01:09:38.000] I'm not sure what you're referring to. [01:09:38.000 --> 01:09:39.000] All right. [01:09:39.000 --> 01:09:44.000] The two things, the first one was whether or not a default judgment was entered, [01:09:44.000 --> 01:09:48.000] and the judge said, nope, that's a clerical error, I never entered it, [01:09:48.000 --> 01:09:52.000] but the computer said it did, it never happened. [01:09:52.000 --> 01:09:57.000] And the second one is the attorney didn't become the attorney of record [01:09:57.000 --> 01:10:01.000] until well after a month since the case started, [01:10:01.000 --> 01:10:05.000] and I'm looking to go in and note that, [01:10:05.000 --> 01:10:08.000] and then move the court to strike all of his pleadings, [01:10:08.000 --> 01:10:11.000] which comes up to, you'd mentioned that earlier, [01:10:11.000 --> 01:10:17.000] what is the case law or the Latin phrase for voiding when the attorney is dorkus malorkus [01:10:17.000 --> 01:10:20.000] and doesn't register with the court, [01:10:20.000 --> 01:10:26.000] and makes pleadings that in theory would become void since he hasn't registered with the court? [01:10:26.000 --> 01:10:29.000] Okay, are you asking for the case law for that? [01:10:29.000 --> 01:10:31.000] Case law or the Latin phrase? [01:10:31.000 --> 01:10:36.000] If it's common enough or space enough, there should be some Latin phrase for it. [01:10:36.000 --> 01:10:41.000] No, there may be one, I could probably, I've got a Latin dictionary here somewhere, [01:10:41.000 --> 01:10:44.000] and I could probably look one up. [01:10:44.000 --> 01:10:49.000] One day I was putting together some really interesting Latin phrases. [01:10:49.000 --> 01:10:51.000] Okay. [01:10:51.000 --> 01:10:59.000] I was going to make up a seal with the eagle, [01:10:59.000 --> 01:11:03.000] but instead of arrows and fig leaves, [01:11:03.000 --> 01:11:08.000] I was going to put a club in one hand and dollar bills in the other, [01:11:08.000 --> 01:11:13.000] and some Latin phrase that says, come to us, we'll take your money, [01:11:13.000 --> 01:11:16.000] and something really obnoxious. [01:11:16.000 --> 01:11:18.000] Okay. [01:11:18.000 --> 01:11:22.000] But there's no phrase for that that I know of. [01:11:22.000 --> 01:11:24.000] Okay. [01:11:24.000 --> 01:11:26.000] Case law then. [01:11:26.000 --> 01:11:30.000] Ideas where I should look? [01:11:30.000 --> 01:11:32.000] Agency. [01:11:32.000 --> 01:11:34.000] Okay. [01:11:34.000 --> 01:11:38.000] Send me an email, ask for my agency folder. [01:11:38.000 --> 01:11:41.000] Agency folder, okay. [01:11:41.000 --> 01:11:50.000] Then under, you've mentioned earlier in the year about how you had Chase [01:11:50.000 --> 01:11:56.000] with the real estate issue where Chase sent the lawyer on some people [01:11:56.000 --> 01:12:02.000] and you were suing the lawyer for Chase's paperwork not being correct. [01:12:02.000 --> 01:12:09.000] Basically going to a meritorious claims and contention, [01:12:09.000 --> 01:12:17.000] and representing a client, a lawyer will not advance a claim that they know is not factually true. [01:12:17.000 --> 01:12:21.000] Where is, that must have some case law behind it. [01:12:21.000 --> 01:12:27.000] You'll find that in the American Bar Association standards, model standards, [01:12:27.000 --> 01:12:35.000] and every, most every state, all the three have adopted the American Bar Association model standards in total. [01:12:35.000 --> 01:12:37.000] Right. [01:12:37.000 --> 01:12:45.000] They made minor adjustments to them, but you can pretty well go by the American Bar Association model standards. [01:12:45.000 --> 01:12:51.000] It's in there. [01:12:51.000 --> 01:12:58.000] I'm sure I have case law on it in my research folder. [01:12:58.000 --> 01:13:05.000] It's not something I've looked at for a long time, so being old like I am, I forget what's in there. [01:13:05.000 --> 01:13:08.000] That's fine. [01:13:08.000 --> 01:13:20.000] Then finally, both Mr. Graves, yourself and Eddie have pointed out that lawyers regularly file paperwork under, I believe, [01:13:20.000 --> 01:13:29.000] Rule 12, no subject matter, no claim for which relief can be granted whenever they get a case to try and get it dismissed. [01:13:29.000 --> 01:13:34.000] Is that a grievable offense that they are advancing something that they know is not true? [01:13:34.000 --> 01:13:36.000] Absolutely. [01:13:36.000 --> 01:13:38.000] All right. [01:13:38.000 --> 01:13:50.000] Well, okay, as to grievable offenses, I think the most grievous offense you could charge a lawyer with is breathing in public. [01:13:50.000 --> 01:13:52.000] Okay. [01:13:52.000 --> 01:13:54.000] But I'm not really being facetious. [01:13:54.000 --> 01:14:01.000] I am sort of, but as to what's a grievable offense, you can file a grievance for anything you want to. [01:14:01.000 --> 01:14:10.000] They look at, they go to the bar grievance.net site and you can walk through the American Bar Association standards in a questionnaire format [01:14:10.000 --> 01:14:16.000] and makes it a lot easier to go through and you'll be surprised what you'll find in there. [01:14:16.000 --> 01:14:19.000] What you can nail an attorney for. [01:14:19.000 --> 01:14:30.000] I have a book on malpractice and no one who is a lawyer read this book before they went to law school. [01:14:30.000 --> 01:14:39.000] They would be a CPA or something else because you can sue a lawyer for almost anything. [01:14:39.000 --> 01:14:41.000] Right. [01:14:41.000 --> 01:14:51.000] According to the case law, there was another issue, but I lost it as to, oh, there are rules 12. [01:14:51.000 --> 01:14:56.000] We've been having people sue the lawyer under FD CPA. [01:14:56.000 --> 01:15:00.000] And the only issue we bring up is who are you? [01:15:00.000 --> 01:15:01.000] I don't know you. [01:15:01.000 --> 01:15:03.000] I never entered into a contract with you. [01:15:03.000 --> 01:15:06.000] I never entered into a contract with your alleged principal. [01:15:06.000 --> 01:15:07.000] Who are you? [01:15:07.000 --> 01:15:10.000] Prove up agency standing in capacity. [01:15:10.000 --> 01:15:17.000] Well, they will come back with rule 12 motion to dismiss for failure state of claim and then they will argue the mortgage. [01:15:17.000 --> 01:15:40.000] So we come back with the motion to strike as the responses frivolous as it raises issues that are not before the court and addresses no issue that is before the court and ask that the motion be struck and ask for no answer default. [01:15:40.000 --> 01:15:48.000] The rule 12 motion tolls the time to answer until 10 days after the motion has been denied. [01:15:48.000 --> 01:15:51.000] So we asked for sanctions. [01:15:51.000 --> 01:15:57.000] We asked to strike the pleading is frivolous like it never happened in the 21 days that be passed. [01:15:57.000 --> 01:16:01.000] So we ask for no answer default. [01:16:01.000 --> 01:16:03.000] We're not going to get it. [01:16:03.000 --> 01:16:09.000] But the lawyer is going to say they set us up for that. [01:16:09.000 --> 01:16:19.000] We're going to say yes we did because included in the answer will be this analysis I'm doing on the county records. [01:16:19.000 --> 01:16:27.000] And we say we filed this because we looked at the county records and we found this problem and this one and this one and this one and this one and this one and this one and this one. [01:16:27.000 --> 01:16:32.000] And this is why we think he doesn't have agents standing in capacity. [01:16:32.000 --> 01:16:39.000] The lawyer is going to say he set me up for that. [01:16:39.000 --> 01:16:42.000] OK. Do you have anything else for us? [01:16:42.000 --> 01:16:44.000] I believe that's everything. [01:16:44.000 --> 01:16:46.000] Thank you much for your time. [01:16:46.000 --> 01:16:48.000] Thank you for calling in Mark. [01:16:48.000 --> 01:16:49.000] This is Randy Kelly. [01:16:49.000 --> 01:16:51.000] Deb Stephen said Craig. [01:16:51.000 --> 01:16:53.000] We live on radio. [01:16:53.000 --> 01:16:54.000] Come back. [01:16:54.000 --> 01:16:56.000] We've got Skyler Robin and Harold. [01:16:56.000 --> 01:17:00.000] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.000 --> 01:17:07.000] Capital Coin and Boolean is a family owned business built on the promise to bring you affordable pricing on all coin and Boolean products. [01:17:07.000 --> 01:17:16.000] In addition to coins and Boolean we now offer storeable freeze dried foods produced by Augustin Farms ammunition at 10 percent above wholesale prices. [01:17:16.000 --> 01:17:18.000] Berkey water products. 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[01:18:43.000 --> 01:18:52.000] Don't wait, support the cause and get the highest quality and the lowest prices by calling 1-800-600-5553. [01:18:52.000 --> 01:18:55.000] That's 800-600-5553. [01:18:55.000 --> 01:19:14.000] FreedomTelephones.com, portable, private, perfect. [01:19:25.000 --> 01:19:30.000] I was blindsided, but now I can see your eyes. [01:19:30.000 --> 01:19:32.000] You put the fear in my heart. [01:19:32.000 --> 01:19:33.000] Okay, we're back. [01:19:33.000 --> 01:19:35.000] Rent a job that's really great. [01:19:35.000 --> 01:19:37.000] Ain't gonna fool me. [01:19:37.000 --> 01:19:39.000] Skyler in Texas. [01:19:39.000 --> 01:19:43.000] Skyler, you have a question or a comment for us? [01:19:43.000 --> 01:19:46.000] Yes, sir. How are you doing, Mr. Kelton? Thanks for having me on. [01:19:46.000 --> 01:19:48.000] I'm doing really good. [01:19:48.000 --> 01:19:54.000] I got up this morning and I checked the obituaries and I wasn't in there. [01:19:54.000 --> 01:19:58.000] At my age, that's a good thing. [01:19:58.000 --> 01:20:02.000] That is a good thing. I'm glad. [01:20:02.000 --> 01:20:10.000] Well, I had something that just happened about two days ago. Actually, it was yesterday. [01:20:10.000 --> 01:20:15.000] Sorry, got me a little shook up. [01:20:15.000 --> 01:20:19.000] And I haven't done anything about it yet, but that's why I'm calling you. [01:20:19.000 --> 01:20:23.000] Hey, Skyler, you've got a lot of background noise. Can you get somewhere a little bit quieter? [01:20:23.000 --> 01:20:27.000] You keep cutting out whenever something in the background kicks up. [01:20:27.000 --> 01:20:29.000] Okay, how was this? [01:20:29.000 --> 01:20:32.000] Well, you're sounding fine now as long as another truck doesn't go by. [01:20:32.000 --> 01:20:35.000] Okay, sorry about that. [01:20:35.000 --> 01:20:42.000] So, this happened yesterday and I've listened to you all several times in the past. [01:20:42.000 --> 01:20:48.000] Randy was the first person I thought of that maybe asked some advice about. [01:20:48.000 --> 01:20:53.000] So, it's about nine or ten o'clock and I have a few fireworks left over [01:20:53.000 --> 01:20:59.000] and my seven and three-year-old are asking me to shoot one or two of them. [01:20:59.000 --> 01:21:04.000] So, it just rained. The ground was wet. I'm in Round Rock, Texas. [01:21:04.000 --> 01:21:12.000] So, we go outside and we shoot off an artillery shell and it was really loud. [01:21:12.000 --> 01:21:19.000] So, and then after that, we shot off one more little cracker. Went inside. That was it. [01:21:19.000 --> 01:21:28.000] About ten minutes later, I get a knock on the front door and I go and answer in its Round Rock police [01:21:28.000 --> 01:21:34.000] and he asks me if I was shooting fireworks. [01:21:34.000 --> 01:21:42.000] I said, I heard fireworks and, yeah, yeah, there was fireworks outside. I said, [01:21:42.000 --> 01:21:46.000] if there's anything else you need, you can let me know. [01:21:46.000 --> 01:21:48.000] But for now, I'm going inside. That's all you need. [01:21:48.000 --> 01:21:54.000] So, I shut my door while shutting the door. You put a handle on the door and begin to push [01:21:54.000 --> 01:22:00.000] and at this point, I shut my door and locked it kind of freaking out [01:22:00.000 --> 01:22:04.000] and went right over to the window, opened up the shades and tapped on the window. [01:22:04.000 --> 01:22:07.000] One of them came over there. I'm like, what do y'all want? [01:22:07.000 --> 01:22:11.000] He said, open your door. I said, no, why do I need to open my door? [01:22:11.000 --> 01:22:15.000] He says, because we need to talk to you. I'm like, I told you all you needed to know. [01:22:15.000 --> 01:22:19.000] I'm not opening my door. I'm like, you tried to push my door open. [01:22:19.000 --> 01:22:24.000] So, at this point, he stops ignoring me. They go to the front door. They're fooling around with it. [01:22:24.000 --> 01:22:30.000] And I go in the other room and start contemplating what to do [01:22:30.000 --> 01:22:35.000] and they'll look back out and they're gone. [01:22:35.000 --> 01:22:39.000] The cars are still out front. So, I'm looking to watch, seeing what they're doing. [01:22:39.000 --> 01:22:45.000] They're still out there about, I guess, another 15 minutes passes. [01:22:45.000 --> 01:22:51.000] And by this time, I walked away and walked back and then I'd seen more cars outside. [01:22:51.000 --> 01:22:58.000] I was inside for about another 20 minutes and at this point, I'm getting ready to take my three-year-old's date here. [01:22:58.000 --> 01:23:03.000] So, I'll walk out to my man to get something. I get to my driveway. There's no cop cars inside. [01:23:03.000 --> 01:23:08.000] And four or five of them start running at me from my next-door neighbor's house [01:23:08.000 --> 01:23:13.000] where they were hiding behind the wall or by the front door. [01:23:13.000 --> 01:23:17.000] So, they start chasing me and one of them has his gunger on. [01:23:17.000 --> 01:23:22.000] I said, no, what are y'all doing? And they started coming after me. [01:23:22.000 --> 01:23:28.000] So, I turned around and I ran back inside and shut my door and they start kicking at my door. [01:23:28.000 --> 01:23:32.000] At this point, I'm freaking out. The deadbolt pops out. [01:23:32.000 --> 01:23:35.000] I have two deadbolts. The other one held. [01:23:35.000 --> 01:23:38.000] And my kids are like, Daddy, what's going on? What's going on? [01:23:38.000 --> 01:23:42.000] I'm like, I don't know what's going on. I said, y'all go in the room. So, I send them all in my son's room. [01:23:42.000 --> 01:23:45.000] Okay, we're going to run out of time. You have to move quickly. [01:23:45.000 --> 01:23:49.000] Okay. So, this all goes on. [01:23:49.000 --> 01:23:53.000] They're massing up outside. I called my wife, told her what's going on. [01:23:53.000 --> 01:23:58.000] She said, I'm coming home. I said, okay, come home. [01:23:58.000 --> 01:24:03.000] And I get on the phone with the police department and speak to the chief. [01:24:03.000 --> 01:24:08.000] I said, what's going on? You got cops out of my house. They're kicking my door over fireworks. [01:24:08.000 --> 01:24:12.000] I'm like, what is going on? And the thing is, they... I'm the neighbor who watched. [01:24:12.000 --> 01:24:16.000] I run the neighbor who watched, or I used to. I don't anymore, but somebody else does now. [01:24:16.000 --> 01:24:21.000] But they... I know a lot of them, and I'm sure they knew me. I didn't see anyone I recognized, but they know who I am. [01:24:21.000 --> 01:24:25.000] Nice neighborhood. They know I'm a business owner, blah, blah. [01:24:25.000 --> 01:24:28.000] They know I'm not, you know, a director or anything. I didn't do anything at all. [01:24:28.000 --> 01:24:31.000] Okay, okay, just... We need to go to the story. [01:24:31.000 --> 01:24:38.000] Okay. So, the cut-along story short, they evacuated my neighbors behind me out of their house. [01:24:38.000 --> 01:24:45.000] They had snipers on the roof with rifles. They had... And they had men around all my windows. [01:24:45.000 --> 01:24:50.000] And until I got the chief or somebody high up on the phone and told them, asked them, [01:24:50.000 --> 01:24:54.000] what is going on? You better get off my property, blah, blah, blah. [01:24:54.000 --> 01:24:56.000] I'm going to see the hell out of you. Why are y'all doing this? [01:24:56.000 --> 01:25:00.000] They put me through the captain on the scene. I told the same thing to him. [01:25:00.000 --> 01:25:05.000] They packed up, took the men off the roofs, got everybody down and went home. [01:25:05.000 --> 01:25:08.000] And they never hurt and they never asked another word on me. [01:25:08.000 --> 01:25:16.000] The captain said that, well, we did that because we had reports of gunfire. [01:25:16.000 --> 01:25:20.000] I said, gunfire? I said, I told him we were shooting fireworks. [01:25:20.000 --> 01:25:23.000] I said, he asked me if we were shooting fireworks. [01:25:23.000 --> 01:25:27.000] And all of this over fireworks? I think they did, they evacuated my neighbors. [01:25:27.000 --> 01:25:32.000] I went and talked to him. And I said, I said, well, what are y'all going to do about this? [01:25:32.000 --> 01:25:35.000] They said, well, we can give you a number of somebody you can talk to. [01:25:35.000 --> 01:25:39.000] And they gave me a number of somebody at the police station. I haven't called them yet. [01:25:39.000 --> 01:25:45.000] So what can I do about this? I can't believe that they did all that. [01:25:45.000 --> 01:25:49.000] And once did they not get anything from me? Ask me anything. [01:25:49.000 --> 01:25:52.000] This is me with your weapons. [01:25:52.000 --> 01:25:58.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. This is clearly the police overreacting. [01:25:58.000 --> 01:26:07.000] This is a standard procedure. Anytime you don't do everything a policeman tells you exactly when he tells you, [01:26:07.000 --> 01:26:13.000] they have been trained to just absolutely lose their professionalism. [01:26:13.000 --> 01:26:19.000] They've been taught to be jackbooted thugs. This is policy. [01:26:19.000 --> 01:26:31.000] You must absolutely maintain total control at all times. If they don't have total control, it terrifies them. [01:26:31.000 --> 01:26:38.000] What's called the chief of police in Askenberg, send someone out because you have a policeman out here [01:26:38.000 --> 01:26:43.000] who is so afraid of me, I think he's going to wet his drawers. [01:26:43.000 --> 01:26:47.000] Actually, I told that to the dispatcher. [01:26:47.000 --> 01:26:53.000] And the guys standing there looking at me like, I don't believe you just said that to my dispatcher. [01:26:53.000 --> 01:26:58.000] But he was. He was absolutely terrified. [01:26:58.000 --> 01:27:09.000] And they've trained him to be terrified. You do anything that doesn't exactly comply with everything they command you to do. [01:27:09.000 --> 01:27:16.000] Then they just freak. These guys should have the crap suit out of them. [01:27:16.000 --> 01:27:24.000] That is conspiracy to commit aggravated assault. They pointed loaded weapons at you. [01:27:24.000 --> 01:27:28.000] At a house with your children in it. [01:27:28.000 --> 01:27:32.000] I'm a combat veteran. A lot of people like guns and stuff. [01:27:32.000 --> 01:27:35.000] Well, I've spent some time on the sharp end of those things. [01:27:35.000 --> 01:27:42.000] And when someone points a weapon at me, that is a really big deal. [01:27:42.000 --> 01:27:49.000] When a policeman puts his hand on his pistol while he's talking to me, that is a really big deal. [01:27:49.000 --> 01:27:54.000] That's aggravated assault as far as I'm concerned. [01:27:54.000 --> 01:28:01.000] So he had better have himself a really good reason or I'll run the routine on him. [01:28:01.000 --> 01:28:06.000] Are you familiar with our routine? [01:28:06.000 --> 01:28:09.000] You need to listen to the show more. [01:28:09.000 --> 01:28:14.000] You start you run the routine on him. You get a broken second eggs. [01:28:14.000 --> 01:28:23.000] Take a complaint down to the district attorney for aggravated assault and conspiracy to commit against the Brown Walk Police Department. [01:28:23.000 --> 01:28:31.000] And whoever this captain is specifically and all of the unknown officers with this kept. [01:28:31.000 --> 01:28:41.000] And when the prosecutor refuses to act on it or refuses to give it to the grand jury. [01:28:41.000 --> 01:28:47.000] That's what you hope he does, because when he does that, you charge him with a separate crime. [01:28:47.000 --> 01:28:58.000] Violating Article 2.03 Code of Criminal Procedure. You charge him with official oppression, shielding from prosecution, which is felony 3805 Penal Code. [01:28:58.000 --> 01:29:05.000] You file that with the district judge. The district judge refuses to act to come back to the attorney with criminal charges against the district judge. [01:29:05.000 --> 01:29:09.000] You just make all of this misery for everybody. [01:29:09.000 --> 01:29:18.000] And these guys are going to get told the judge is unhappy. This shouldn't this is not to happen again. [01:29:18.000 --> 01:29:22.000] This is what we as sovereigns are supposed to do. [01:29:22.000 --> 01:29:26.000] And this is how we stopped this Robin Harold. I see you. [01:29:26.000 --> 01:29:32.000] Sorry, we're running out of time. But if you would call back tomorrow, we'll take you in early in the show. [01:29:32.000 --> 01:29:34.000] We have a 30 minute show tomorrow. [01:29:34.000 --> 01:29:38.000] Skyder, if you want to call back tomorrow, we can discuss a little more of this. [01:29:38.000 --> 01:29:43.000] Yeah, you come to class Sunday, Skyder. That'll work too. Two o'clock and brave new books. [01:29:43.000 --> 01:29:46.000] Two o'clock and Sunday, okay. [01:29:46.000 --> 01:29:50.000] Hang on, Skyder. [01:29:50.000 --> 01:29:59.000] Okay, we're out of time. Call us tomorrow. This is Randy Calton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig with the radio. Good night. [01:29:59.000 --> 01:30:05.000] This is Building 7, a 47 story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:30:05.000 --> 01:30:07.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:30:07.000 --> 01:30:12.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:30:12.000 --> 01:30:15.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:30:15.000 --> 01:30:18.000] And thousands of my fellow force respond to the dying. [01:30:18.000 --> 01:30:20.000] A lot of conspiracy theorists. [01:30:20.000 --> 01:30:22.000] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:30:22.000 --> 01:30:23.000] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:30:23.000 --> 01:30:24.000] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:30:24.000 --> 01:30:27.000] We're Americans. And we deserve the truth. [01:30:27.000 --> 01:30:49.000] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:30:57.000 --> 01:30:59.000] It really is. [01:31:28.000 --> 01:31:32.000] We urge our listeners to please visit us at hempusa.org. [01:31:32.000 --> 01:31:36.000] And remember, all of our products are chemical free and healthy to eat. [01:31:36.000 --> 01:31:41.000] We constantly strive to give you the best service, highest quality and rapid shipping anywhere. [01:31:41.000 --> 01:31:45.000] And we offer free shipping on orders over $95 in the U.S. [01:31:45.000 --> 01:31:51.000] Please visit us at hempusa.org or call 908-6912608. [01:31:51.000 --> 01:32:00.000] That's 908-6912608. See what our powders, seeds and oil can do for you at hempusa.org. [01:32:00.000 --> 01:32:22.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadionetwork.com. [01:32:22.000 --> 01:32:26.000] Hi folks, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:32:26.000 --> 01:32:30.000] We're not going to retire quite so early tonight, despite Randy's efforts. [01:32:30.000 --> 01:32:34.000] He's obviously missed his afternoon nap, so we're going to go from there. [01:32:34.000 --> 01:32:37.000] We've still got some callers on the board, Randy. [01:32:37.000 --> 01:32:42.000] Would you like to take those before the night's over? [01:32:42.000 --> 01:32:45.000] I can't hear. [01:32:45.000 --> 01:32:48.000] I have an anomaly on my line. [01:32:48.000 --> 01:32:55.000] I have some kind of video running in the background. [01:32:55.000 --> 01:32:58.000] So I can't hear anything. You'll have to pick it up, Eddie. [01:32:58.000 --> 01:33:00.000] Ah, okay. [01:33:00.000 --> 01:33:03.000] Alright, we're going to go to Robin in Florida. [01:33:03.000 --> 01:33:06.000] Robin, what can we do for you? [01:33:06.000 --> 01:33:10.000] Hey, what's up, gentlemen? [01:33:10.000 --> 01:33:12.000] I got a quick mortgage and mirrors question. [01:33:12.000 --> 01:33:17.000] So I don't know if you or Randy, he's gotten his wits back. [01:33:17.000 --> 01:33:23.000] That would be Randy, but I can't vouch for the wits part. [01:33:23.000 --> 01:33:25.000] Anyway, good evening, guys. [01:33:25.000 --> 01:33:27.000] I had a question. [01:33:27.000 --> 01:33:31.000] I had my foreclosure case dismissed for want of prosecution, [01:33:31.000 --> 01:33:36.000] for lack of prosecution in December. [01:33:36.000 --> 01:33:40.000] They tried to come back and get that vacated. [01:33:40.000 --> 01:33:45.000] I objected and the hearing was continued because I was in the hospital, yada, yada. [01:33:45.000 --> 01:33:51.000] My question is, in February, they did an assignment of mortgage [01:33:51.000 --> 01:33:58.000] right before they tried to vacate the judgment for want of prosecution. [01:33:58.000 --> 01:34:02.000] This was outside of the statutory guidelines. [01:34:02.000 --> 01:34:07.000] They had to do that within 60 days of the case being dismissed. [01:34:07.000 --> 01:34:14.000] So my question is, I put in the paperwork to combat that, [01:34:14.000 --> 01:34:18.000] an opposition motion with case law and whatnot. [01:34:18.000 --> 01:34:25.000] The kicker, they put in the assignment of mortgage, February 29th. [01:34:25.000 --> 01:34:31.000] So my question is, should I go in and just argue the... [01:34:31.000 --> 01:34:37.000] I mean, there's a plethora of nonsense here that I can argue that they're doing. [01:34:37.000 --> 01:34:39.000] I mean, the court doesn't even have jurisdiction. [01:34:39.000 --> 01:34:40.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:34:40.000 --> 01:34:42.000] I apologize, guys. [01:34:42.000 --> 01:34:48.000] I was just bragging to Eddie about how I was multitasking so good. [01:34:48.000 --> 01:34:51.000] And then I misread the clock. [01:34:51.000 --> 01:34:55.000] Well, anyway, I've got my sound taken care of. [01:34:55.000 --> 01:34:58.000] How old is your note, Robin? [01:34:58.000 --> 01:35:05.000] It is from 2005 or 2006 here. [01:35:05.000 --> 01:35:08.000] It's a... It's a... It's a... [01:35:08.000 --> 01:35:09.000] Awesome. [01:35:09.000 --> 01:35:12.000] It merges in the note. [01:35:12.000 --> 01:35:14.000] Yeah, December, November of 2006. [01:35:14.000 --> 01:35:17.000] He has mirrors in the mortgage. [01:35:17.000 --> 01:35:18.000] Okay. [01:35:18.000 --> 01:35:21.000] And, okay, I missed most of what you were saying. [01:35:21.000 --> 01:35:25.000] I think I've got a virus and it's running videos in the background. [01:35:25.000 --> 01:35:28.000] I had a little trouble getting them shut off. [01:35:28.000 --> 01:35:30.000] Not pornographic videos. [01:35:30.000 --> 01:35:33.000] Somebody was trying to teach me how to cook. [01:35:33.000 --> 01:35:37.000] And I thought it was the advertisements on the break. [01:35:37.000 --> 01:35:40.000] I didn't do that. It turned out it was in my background. [01:35:40.000 --> 01:35:44.000] Anyway, are you in foreclosure? [01:35:44.000 --> 01:35:46.000] What's the condition of your mortgage? [01:35:46.000 --> 01:35:49.000] Yes, the case is dismissed in December for want of prosecution, [01:35:49.000 --> 01:35:51.000] for lack of prosecution. [01:35:51.000 --> 01:35:54.000] Okay, case, what case? [01:35:54.000 --> 01:35:55.000] I'm sorry? [01:35:55.000 --> 01:35:56.000] What case? [01:35:56.000 --> 01:35:57.000] The case against me. [01:35:57.000 --> 01:35:59.000] They didn't move for like a year in the court [01:35:59.000 --> 01:36:03.000] and dismissed it to respond to. [01:36:03.000 --> 01:36:08.000] So they're trying to come back and get that vacated. [01:36:08.000 --> 01:36:11.000] I got a hearing next Friday. [01:36:11.000 --> 01:36:15.000] How long has it been since the dismissal? [01:36:15.000 --> 01:36:17.000] It was December. [01:36:17.000 --> 01:36:21.000] And then they put in a, here's the kicker. [01:36:21.000 --> 01:36:23.000] In February they did an assignment of mortgage [01:36:23.000 --> 01:36:25.000] and then they did a notice of hearing to read, [01:36:25.000 --> 01:36:28.000] to voice vacate the judge. [01:36:28.000 --> 01:36:30.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:36:30.000 --> 01:36:36.000] Do you have all of the documents from the county clerk? [01:36:36.000 --> 01:36:39.000] Yes, I've got the assignment of mortgage from... [01:36:39.000 --> 01:36:44.000] Back up, back up, back up to the deed of trust. [01:36:44.000 --> 01:36:45.000] Yes. [01:36:45.000 --> 01:36:47.000] I have the deed of trust. [01:36:47.000 --> 01:36:52.000] What comes exactly after the deed of trust? [01:36:52.000 --> 01:36:54.000] Oh, in the county record? [01:36:54.000 --> 01:36:58.000] Yes. [01:36:58.000 --> 01:37:00.000] I don't know exactly what comes... [01:37:00.000 --> 01:37:02.000] I mean, that's in the county record, the mortgage. [01:37:02.000 --> 01:37:07.000] This is real important that you know how... [01:37:07.000 --> 01:37:10.000] You need to get all of the documents that are filed [01:37:10.000 --> 01:37:12.000] with the county clerk. [01:37:12.000 --> 01:37:14.000] Put them in order. [01:37:14.000 --> 01:37:20.000] The way I do it is I put the year-month-day [01:37:20.000 --> 01:37:25.000] and then a name for whatever the document is. [01:37:25.000 --> 01:37:27.000] When you load that in a folder, [01:37:27.000 --> 01:37:30.000] it will align them all by date. [01:37:30.000 --> 01:37:34.000] And then you walk down the documents. [01:37:34.000 --> 01:37:40.000] Who is your original lender from the deed of trust? [01:37:40.000 --> 01:37:42.000] What's that? [01:37:42.000 --> 01:37:45.000] From the deed of trust. [01:37:45.000 --> 01:37:47.000] Oh, from the deed of trust? [01:37:47.000 --> 01:37:51.000] Some company, I don't even think there exists this no more. [01:37:51.000 --> 01:37:53.000] Okay, we'll call them XYZ. [01:37:53.000 --> 01:37:55.000] Yeah. [01:37:55.000 --> 01:37:57.000] After the... [01:37:57.000 --> 01:37:59.000] ACT lending. [01:37:59.000 --> 01:38:01.000] Okay, ACT lending. [01:38:01.000 --> 01:38:11.000] Is there an assignment from ACT lending to someone else? [01:38:11.000 --> 01:38:14.000] No, I have not seen that. [01:38:14.000 --> 01:38:19.000] The only thing I've seen is a mirrors assignment in February of this year, [01:38:19.000 --> 01:38:22.000] not listing ACT anywhere that I can see. [01:38:22.000 --> 01:38:26.000] Okay, get every document that's in the court record [01:38:26.000 --> 01:38:31.000] and read every word of every document. [01:38:31.000 --> 01:38:34.000] First thing you do is line them up in order [01:38:34.000 --> 01:38:37.000] so you know exactly when they fall [01:38:37.000 --> 01:38:39.000] and you read everything that's in there. [01:38:39.000 --> 01:38:43.000] Who did what when and where [01:38:43.000 --> 01:38:48.000] and how does each of these individuals or entities [01:38:48.000 --> 01:38:51.000] have authority to do what they do? [01:38:51.000 --> 01:38:53.000] Yes. [01:38:53.000 --> 01:38:57.000] I have to be able to see that in the court record. [01:38:57.000 --> 01:39:00.000] If it's not in the court record, [01:39:00.000 --> 01:39:05.000] then technically it doesn't exist. [01:39:05.000 --> 01:39:09.000] We just read the brief by MERS [01:39:09.000 --> 01:39:13.000] in response to Craig Watkins suit [01:39:13.000 --> 01:39:15.000] to collect all of the filing fees [01:39:15.000 --> 01:39:18.000] that were never filed with the county clerk. [01:39:18.000 --> 01:39:21.000] And they claim that the suit was frivolous [01:39:21.000 --> 01:39:25.000] because there is no requirement [01:39:25.000 --> 01:39:28.000] to file anything with the county clerk [01:39:28.000 --> 01:39:30.000] and that is exactly true. [01:39:30.000 --> 01:39:33.000] That's precisely how I read the law. [01:39:33.000 --> 01:39:37.000] But these lawyers are pretty full of themselves [01:39:37.000 --> 01:39:39.000] and they went on to state [01:39:39.000 --> 01:39:42.000] that while you're not required to, [01:39:42.000 --> 01:39:46.000] if you don't you may not have a perfect claim [01:39:46.000 --> 01:39:50.000] for the last 200 years. [01:39:50.000 --> 01:39:52.000] It has been the intention [01:39:52.000 --> 01:39:57.000] that anyone intending to purchase property [01:39:57.000 --> 01:40:02.000] should be able to go to the county registrar's office, [01:40:02.000 --> 01:40:05.000] look in the records of that property [01:40:05.000 --> 01:40:10.000] and find any and all claims against the property. [01:40:10.000 --> 01:40:15.000] If it's not in there, they don't have a claim. [01:40:15.000 --> 01:40:20.000] If the entity that made the assignment [01:40:20.000 --> 01:40:25.000] has not itself either been the originator of the note [01:40:25.000 --> 01:40:29.000] or had the note assigned to them, [01:40:29.000 --> 01:40:32.000] it has no standing. [01:40:32.000 --> 01:40:36.000] So that document, you take that document [01:40:36.000 --> 01:40:41.000] and under Texas property code 51903, [01:40:41.000 --> 01:40:45.000] take that to a district judge [01:40:45.000 --> 01:40:48.000] and make up a pleading that says, [01:40:48.000 --> 01:40:51.000] we have this document here [01:40:51.000 --> 01:40:54.000] and if you look at the four corners of the document, [01:40:54.000 --> 01:40:56.000] all that's within it, [01:40:56.000 --> 01:41:00.000] based on the other documents in the court record, [01:41:00.000 --> 01:41:04.000] it is clear that this document is fraudulent [01:41:04.000 --> 01:41:08.000] or that it is mistakenly filed, [01:41:08.000 --> 01:41:13.000] that it has no, the filer of the document [01:41:13.000 --> 01:41:16.000] has, there is no demonstration of standing [01:41:16.000 --> 01:41:19.000] in the court record to file this document [01:41:19.000 --> 01:41:22.000] and ask the court to rule to that effect. [01:41:22.000 --> 01:41:26.000] Don't ask the court for anything else [01:41:26.000 --> 01:41:31.000] for that becomes a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:41:31.000 --> 01:41:33.000] Only ask them to declare [01:41:33.000 --> 01:41:37.000] that this document on its face is insufficient. [01:41:37.000 --> 01:41:42.000] You get that ruling and this is done ex parte. [01:41:42.000 --> 01:41:46.000] They set this up to stop the Republic of Texas [01:41:46.000 --> 01:41:49.000] from filing these liens that were filing, [01:41:49.000 --> 01:41:52.000] but now we get to use it. [01:41:52.000 --> 01:41:54.000] You get a ruling from the court [01:41:54.000 --> 01:41:59.000] that this assignment is void of no force and effect. [01:41:59.000 --> 01:42:01.000] That's risk due to Qatar, [01:42:01.000 --> 01:42:04.000] that's already been adjudicated. [01:42:04.000 --> 01:42:07.000] So you take this to the district court [01:42:07.000 --> 01:42:12.000] in a quiet title action and it's a done deal. [01:42:12.000 --> 01:42:16.000] This is an adjudication in a separate court [01:42:16.000 --> 01:42:18.000] and this court must construe [01:42:18.000 --> 01:42:21.000] that the adjudication is accurate. [01:42:21.000 --> 01:42:25.000] He may not revisit it. [01:42:25.000 --> 01:42:27.000] So should I do that? [01:42:27.000 --> 01:42:29.000] My hearing is next Friday. [01:42:29.000 --> 01:42:31.000] They didn't coordinate or anything, [01:42:31.000 --> 01:42:34.000] but should I try to... [01:42:34.000 --> 01:42:37.000] Okay, why are you in a court hearing? [01:42:37.000 --> 01:42:41.000] Why did they not do a non-judicial foreclosure? [01:42:41.000 --> 01:42:44.000] Well, this is judicial, this is in Florida. [01:42:44.000 --> 01:42:46.000] So they're trying to... [01:42:46.000 --> 01:42:48.000] Yeah, the case was dismissed [01:42:48.000 --> 01:42:53.000] and they're trying to get the judgment for dismissal vacated. [01:42:53.000 --> 01:42:59.000] Okay, check when does the judge lose plenary power? [01:42:59.000 --> 01:43:03.000] Well, they're supposed to file within 60 days [01:43:03.000 --> 01:43:06.000] from the judgment. [01:43:06.000 --> 01:43:08.000] That is your argument. [01:43:08.000 --> 01:43:13.000] In Texas, when a judge renders a ruling, [01:43:13.000 --> 01:43:18.000] his plenary power extends 30 days for that ruling, [01:43:18.000 --> 01:43:20.000] apparently it's 60 in Florida. [01:43:20.000 --> 01:43:24.000] After that, the judge lacks subject matter jurisdiction. [01:43:24.000 --> 01:43:26.000] So your challenge in this case [01:43:26.000 --> 01:43:29.000] should be a challenge to the subject matter jurisdiction [01:43:29.000 --> 01:43:32.000] of the court to hear the issue. [01:43:32.000 --> 01:43:36.000] At least that should be the first challenge. [01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:37.000] Okay, hang on. [01:43:37.000 --> 01:43:39.000] We'll be right back on the other side. [01:43:39.000 --> 01:43:41.000] This is Randy Kelton. [01:43:41.000 --> 01:43:42.000] David Stevens, Eddie Craig. [01:43:42.000 --> 01:43:44.000] We have our radio. [01:43:44.000 --> 01:43:47.000] And we're not going to close out the show early. [01:43:47.000 --> 01:43:50.000] I'm just a little brain dead. [01:43:50.000 --> 01:43:52.000] Okay, we'll be... [01:43:52.000 --> 01:43:56.000] I call in numbers 512-646-1984. [01:43:56.000 --> 01:44:24.000] We'll be right back. [01:44:24.000 --> 01:44:26.000] There's no way a place like that exists. [01:44:26.000 --> 01:44:28.000] Go check it out for yourself. [01:44:28.000 --> 01:44:32.000] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [01:44:32.000 --> 01:44:33.000] Oh, by UT? [01:44:33.000 --> 01:44:35.000] There's never anywhere to park down there. [01:44:35.000 --> 01:44:38.000] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking [01:44:38.000 --> 01:44:41.000] for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility [01:44:41.000 --> 01:44:43.000] just behind the bookstore. [01:44:43.000 --> 01:44:45.000] It does exist. [01:44:45.000 --> 01:44:47.000] But when are they open? [01:44:47.000 --> 01:44:49.000] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. [01:44:49.000 --> 01:44:51.000] and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [01:44:51.000 --> 01:44:55.000] So give them a call at 512-480-2503 [01:44:55.000 --> 01:45:00.000] or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:45:00.000 --> 01:45:03.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.000 --> 01:45:07.000] Win your case without an attorney with jurisdictionary. [01:45:07.000 --> 01:45:10.000] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course [01:45:10.000 --> 01:45:14.000] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.000 --> 01:45:18.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.000 --> 01:45:22.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.000 --> 01:45:25.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, [01:45:25.000 --> 01:45:27.000] and now you can, too. [01:45:27.000 --> 01:45:30.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:30.000 --> 01:45:33.000] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.000 --> 01:45:35.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [01:45:35.000 --> 01:45:38.000] you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:38.000 --> 01:45:40.000] about the principles and practices [01:45:40.000 --> 01:45:42.000] that control our American courts. [01:45:42.000 --> 01:45:47.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:47.000 --> 01:45:51.000] forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.000 --> 01:45:54.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:45:54.000 --> 01:45:56.000] and click on the banner. [01:45:56.000 --> 01:46:00.000] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:08.000 --> 01:46:09.000] Hello. [01:46:09.000 --> 01:46:12.000] Oh, man, you're seeing jail. [01:46:12.000 --> 01:46:14.000] You got buses? [01:46:14.000 --> 01:46:17.000] Oh, man, I'm broke, man. [01:46:33.000 --> 01:46:35.000] Okay, we're back. [01:46:35.000 --> 01:46:38.000] Randy Kelton, David Stevens, Eddie Craig with our radio. [01:46:38.000 --> 01:46:42.000] We're talking to Robin in Florida. [01:46:42.000 --> 01:46:46.000] Okay, this is the first issue. [01:46:46.000 --> 01:46:52.000] Now, keep in mind, just because you raise the issue [01:46:52.000 --> 01:46:55.000] that the judge lacks subject matter jurisdiction [01:46:55.000 --> 01:47:01.000] doesn't mean he's just going to stop the hearing and go away. [01:47:01.000 --> 01:47:06.000] So whatever other arguments you have, bring those to the table. [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:09.000] But bring subject matter jurisdiction first. [01:47:09.000 --> 01:47:11.000] Okay. [01:47:11.000 --> 01:47:16.000] Maintain that the court lacks plenary jurisdiction [01:47:16.000 --> 01:47:20.000] as that ended 60 days after the judgment, [01:47:20.000 --> 01:47:23.000] and these guys fail to take action. [01:47:23.000 --> 01:47:26.000] So they still have a remedy. [01:47:26.000 --> 01:47:29.000] They can come back and refile. [01:47:29.000 --> 01:47:30.000] Yeah, yeah. [01:47:30.000 --> 01:47:33.000] You can certainly argue against it. [01:47:33.000 --> 01:47:38.000] So I suggest that you take the... [01:47:38.000 --> 01:47:42.000] After mentioning the county clerk's office apart piece by piece. [01:47:42.000 --> 01:47:45.000] This is what I've been doing for a while. [01:47:45.000 --> 01:47:49.000] I've been working out all of the problems we're having in there, [01:47:49.000 --> 01:47:51.000] and there are a multitude of them. [01:47:51.000 --> 01:47:57.000] These are issues that go to the politics. [01:47:57.000 --> 01:48:02.000] The local clerks are really PO'd about this mess, [01:48:02.000 --> 01:48:06.000] but they feel helpless to do anything to fix it. [01:48:06.000 --> 01:48:11.000] And the local clerks have the ear of the local judges. [01:48:11.000 --> 01:48:17.000] So you go in saying the same things that the local clerks are saying, [01:48:17.000 --> 01:48:23.000] and you have someone in the courthouse in your pocket now. [01:48:23.000 --> 01:48:27.000] And you give that judge something he can hang his hat on. [01:48:27.000 --> 01:48:31.000] And let me give you a suggestion of one thing to look at. [01:48:31.000 --> 01:48:35.000] Do you have your deed of trust, Andy? [01:48:35.000 --> 01:48:37.000] It's right here in my papers. [01:48:37.000 --> 01:48:42.000] Read the footer on the page. [01:48:42.000 --> 01:48:47.000] This is when I say read every word that's on those documents. [01:48:47.000 --> 01:48:51.000] The footer, what does the footer say? [01:48:51.000 --> 01:48:57.000] It says... [01:48:57.000 --> 01:49:01.000] Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Uniform Instruments. [01:49:01.000 --> 01:49:04.000] What number? Form number? [01:49:04.000 --> 01:49:08.000] Form 3010, 1-01. [01:49:08.000 --> 01:49:12.000] Okay. Go on to the Freddie Mac. [01:49:12.000 --> 01:49:17.000] Just do a search for Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, [01:49:17.000 --> 01:49:21.000] Uniform Documents, and you'll get a hit on their page. [01:49:21.000 --> 01:49:25.000] And then go to trustees. [01:49:25.000 --> 01:49:29.000] And you'll find that form, download that form. [01:49:29.000 --> 01:49:37.000] The closing trustee prepared these documents for you. [01:49:37.000 --> 01:49:42.000] You went to closing and he presented this document as a mortgage, [01:49:42.000 --> 01:49:47.000] and the bottom footer presented this document [01:49:47.000 --> 01:49:54.000] as a Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Uniform Document 30, whatever it was. [01:49:54.000 --> 01:49:59.000] Compare it to the one from the Fannie Mae website, [01:49:59.000 --> 01:50:03.000] and I think you will be surprised at the differences. [01:50:03.000 --> 01:50:08.000] Regardless of the nature of the differences, [01:50:08.000 --> 01:50:11.000] your document's going to have murres in it, [01:50:11.000 --> 01:50:14.000] theirs is not going to have murres in it. [01:50:14.000 --> 01:50:17.000] That's not a cosmetic change. [01:50:17.000 --> 01:50:20.000] That's a change of substance. [01:50:20.000 --> 01:50:27.000] That these two documents are not the same. [01:50:27.000 --> 01:50:32.000] Although the first was purported to be the second, [01:50:32.000 --> 01:50:34.000] you go to the judge and say, [01:50:34.000 --> 01:50:39.000] these two documents are, this first document is not a [01:50:39.000 --> 01:50:44.000] Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Uniform Document number, whatever. [01:50:44.000 --> 01:50:47.000] It's purported to be, but here's the real one, it's not. [01:50:47.000 --> 01:50:52.000] That's something the judge can sink his teeth into. [01:50:52.000 --> 01:50:56.000] That he can look at the four corners of the document and say, [01:50:56.000 --> 01:51:00.000] you are right, this is purported to be this document, [01:51:00.000 --> 01:51:04.000] and it is not this document. [01:51:04.000 --> 01:51:06.000] That he can give you a real money. [01:51:06.000 --> 01:51:15.000] You're going to have to give the judge something that he can be certain won't be challenged. [01:51:15.000 --> 01:51:18.000] And this is obvious to anyone that won't be challenged. [01:51:18.000 --> 01:51:24.000] Now what someone may challenge is whether those changes are material. [01:51:24.000 --> 01:51:28.000] And when you add a whole third party that's never been mentioned, [01:51:28.000 --> 01:51:32.000] it's going to be hard for them to get around the fact that that is material. [01:51:32.000 --> 01:51:41.000] So that's one argument you can bring that would tend to undermine the claim that the other side has. [01:51:41.000 --> 01:51:51.000] You can also bring up the paragraph 20 claim where you authorized the lender to sell a part of the note [01:51:51.000 --> 01:51:54.000] or the entire note together with the security instrument. [01:51:54.000 --> 01:51:57.000] And you authorized him to sell the note. [01:51:57.000 --> 01:51:59.000] That's a negotiation. [01:51:59.000 --> 01:52:04.000] To sell is where you transfer the beneficial interest. [01:52:04.000 --> 01:52:13.000] You would find in your records a notice of transfer where they transferred the note and the deed of trust. [01:52:13.000 --> 01:52:17.000] After 2011, they put note and deed of trust that they transfer. [01:52:17.000 --> 01:52:28.000] If you go back and look at paragraph 20, nowhere in the whole document does it authorize the lender to transfer the note. [01:52:28.000 --> 01:52:35.000] It authorizes him to negotiate it and that transfers the beneficial interest. [01:52:35.000 --> 01:52:43.000] But to transfer the legal interest from one to another is not something you authorized. [01:52:43.000 --> 01:52:45.000] It's another breach of the contract. [01:52:45.000 --> 01:52:46.000] Yes. [01:52:46.000 --> 01:52:54.000] They've breached it and by breaching the contract, they repudiate the contract and that constitutes voluntary rescission. [01:52:54.000 --> 01:53:02.000] And you claim harm against them three times the amount of the principal so you get tender by set off. [01:53:02.000 --> 01:53:12.000] They're going to say in rescission, you have to tender back to them the money they put out, they give back to you your promissory note. [01:53:12.000 --> 01:53:22.000] And you claim because of the harm, I have tender by set off, set it off against the claim I made against him. [01:53:22.000 --> 01:53:24.000] Now we dance. [01:53:24.000 --> 01:53:37.000] And then if there are anomalies with the jurat for every notary that has a jurat in the documentation request the sequential ledger. [01:53:37.000 --> 01:53:48.000] They're going to tell you they don't have it and that you could take to the court and say this, this jurat looks like it was all done by one hand and not the notary. [01:53:48.000 --> 01:54:00.000] We asked the notary to produce a ledger showing that they had actually notarized this document on this day and the notary can't produce one. [01:54:00.000 --> 01:54:07.000] I'm referring to the assignment or the when I did the mortgage itself. [01:54:07.000 --> 01:54:19.000] When you did the mortgage yourself, most likely that notary will have a record of it. [01:54:19.000 --> 01:54:28.000] I understand they're not required to keep a sequential ledger in Florida, but they don't have a record that they did that because they actually did. [01:54:28.000 --> 01:54:35.000] I always request that one because I hope I get one because I say look at this notary. [01:54:35.000 --> 01:54:37.000] The notary filled this out. [01:54:37.000 --> 01:54:39.000] It's obvious the notary did. [01:54:39.000 --> 01:54:40.000] Look at all these others. [01:54:40.000 --> 01:54:43.000] It's obvious the notary did not fill them out. [01:54:43.000 --> 01:54:48.000] So that lends credence to our argument that the notary is fraudulent. [01:54:48.000 --> 01:54:54.000] And if that's the case, then you go to the district attorney and ask him to prosecute him. [01:54:54.000 --> 01:54:56.000] And this is the reason you do it. [01:54:56.000 --> 01:55:02.000] You say, you know, you're trying to sue these guys for all these fees that you can't collect. [01:55:02.000 --> 01:55:05.000] You can't do that because they're not required to file. [01:55:05.000 --> 01:55:09.000] However, they filed all these fraudulent documents. [01:55:09.000 --> 01:55:16.000] You go back and nail the people who filed the documents for criminal actions. [01:55:16.000 --> 01:55:18.000] Then you put them on probation and get them to pay fines. [01:55:18.000 --> 01:55:23.000] You collect all that money back anyway. [01:55:23.000 --> 01:55:27.000] There's more than one way to get this one done. [01:55:27.000 --> 01:55:32.000] Okay, why don't you call in tomorrow night, I'll go over in more detail how to look through these records. [01:55:32.000 --> 01:55:37.000] And if you can, have the records there or send me a copy. [01:55:37.000 --> 01:55:41.000] We'll go over them on the air and I'll give you a good idea of how to look at these. [01:55:41.000 --> 01:55:45.000] I think you'll be surprised what you'll find. [01:55:45.000 --> 01:55:50.000] And everybody listening, get those records and go through them. [01:55:50.000 --> 01:55:52.000] You'll be amazed at the trash you find in there. [01:55:52.000 --> 01:55:54.000] We've got three minutes left. [01:55:54.000 --> 01:55:56.000] We've got two more callers. [01:55:56.000 --> 01:56:01.000] I don't mean to cut you off, Robin, but give us a call tomorrow night where we do a four-hour show. [01:56:01.000 --> 01:56:03.000] Okay, great. Thanks. [01:56:03.000 --> 01:56:04.000] Thank you. [01:56:04.000 --> 01:56:08.000] Okay, now we're going to go to Harold in Texas. [01:56:08.000 --> 01:56:13.000] Harold, quickly, what do you have for us tonight? [01:56:13.000 --> 01:56:14.000] Hello? [01:56:14.000 --> 01:56:16.000] Hello. [01:56:16.000 --> 01:56:18.000] Hey. [01:56:18.000 --> 01:56:20.000] Talk to me. [01:56:20.000 --> 01:56:35.000] Okay, well, I have a, you know, I discovered some stuff on the Internet about income tax. [01:56:35.000 --> 01:56:37.000] Okay. [01:56:37.000 --> 01:56:45.000] Okay, one of the things that, and this may or may not be true, but, you know, I just want to throw this out. [01:56:45.000 --> 01:56:48.000] Okay, go quickly. You've only got two minutes left. [01:56:48.000 --> 01:57:02.000] There's a way to sign your paycheck to make you become part of the national or the Federal Reserve system, [01:57:02.000 --> 01:57:07.000] or there is a way to become part of the Treasury system. [01:57:07.000 --> 01:57:21.000] And there's a big difference between, you know, okay, does the IRS involve itself in Treasury or, you know, the Federal Reserve? [01:57:21.000 --> 01:57:32.000] Yeah, okay, if you work for, if this makes it so that you appear to work for the Treasury or the Federal Reserve, [01:57:32.000 --> 01:57:37.000] you're going to be an employee of the government and you'll load the tax. [01:57:37.000 --> 01:57:39.000] That's exactly right. [01:57:39.000 --> 01:57:48.000] If you want to present yourself as an employee of the Federal Reserve, you're going to be safe. [01:57:48.000 --> 01:57:49.000] Okay. [01:57:49.000 --> 01:57:52.000] Well, you know, I'm going to sign my paycheck and this is the other matter. [01:57:52.000 --> 01:57:57.000] Okay, mostly, you know, we get a lot of this kind of stuff. [01:57:57.000 --> 01:58:02.000] I've never been able to get this stuff supported with statute. [01:58:02.000 --> 01:58:06.000] We can talk about it tomorrow night. We're running out of time tonight. [01:58:06.000 --> 01:58:10.000] Most of this winds up being Patriot mythology. [01:58:10.000 --> 01:58:13.000] Someone finds something that he thinks looks interesting. [01:58:13.000 --> 01:58:16.000] It seems to fit one of those personal agendas. [01:58:16.000 --> 01:58:22.000] And then they go about looking for what supports their position. [01:58:22.000 --> 01:58:24.000] They don't look at anything that doesn't. [01:58:24.000 --> 01:58:27.000] They suggest people do it. People do it. They get in trouble. [01:58:27.000 --> 01:58:31.000] And then these people say, well, you didn't do it exactly right. [01:58:31.000 --> 01:58:34.000] That's why you're going to go to jail for 20 years. [01:58:34.000 --> 01:58:36.000] So I tend to avoid these things. [01:58:36.000 --> 01:58:39.000] But we can talk about it in more detail tomorrow night. [01:58:39.000 --> 01:58:41.000] This is Randy Kelkner of Stevens and Craig. [01:58:41.000 --> 01:58:44.000] We have our radio. Thank you for listening. [01:58:44.000 --> 01:58:49.000] And this time, it really is. Good night. [01:58:49.000 --> 01:58:54.000] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible [01:58:54.000 --> 01:58:57.000] called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.000 --> 01:59:01.000] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes [01:59:01.000 --> 01:59:04.000] that explain what the Bible says, verse by verse, [01:59:04.000 --> 01:59:08.000] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.000 --> 01:59:11.000] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. 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