[00:00.000 --> 00:09.120] Pedophiles. They live and hunt in our midst, prompting some to call for forced microchipping [00:09.120 --> 00:13.360] and tracking. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and in a moment, I'll tell you why chipping [00:13.360 --> 00:17.560] even the most heinous offenders is a very bad idea. [00:17.560 --> 00:22.080] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back [00:22.080 --> 00:27.880] again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.880 --> 00:34.120] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy. [00:34.120 --> 00:39.200] It's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private [00:39.200 --> 00:46.560] search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [00:46.560 --> 00:51.520] In our surveillance mad society, there's a wise Chinese proverb we should keep in mind. [00:51.520 --> 00:56.600] The fire you kindle for your enemy often burns you more than it burns him. Chipping pedophiles [00:56.600 --> 01:01.640] might sound like a good idea until we realize it won't stop there. First, pedophiles, then [01:01.640 --> 01:06.280] drug dealers, then drunk drivers and tax cheats, and finally that guy who built a deck on the [01:06.280 --> 01:11.360] back of his house without the right permit. Next, they'll tag nuclear workers, food workers, [01:11.360 --> 01:16.040] then teachers, and eventually they'll come for us all. No matter how good forced chipping [01:16.040 --> 01:21.280] looks, we must say no. Big Brother has surrounded us with dried kindling, and he's hankering [01:21.280 --> 01:26.520] for a match. Let's not hand it to him. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, [01:26.520 --> 01:37.360] the world's most private search engine. The Indian government may be wiping the smile off [01:37.360 --> 01:43.000] of Colgate's face. Activists claim the toothpaste giant patented an ancient Indian recipe they've [01:43.000 --> 01:47.240] been using for thousands of years. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. I'll be back in a moment [01:47.240 --> 01:52.440] to tell you more. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll [01:52.440 --> 01:57.560] never get it back again, and once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start [01:57.560 --> 02:03.200] to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information [02:03.200 --> 02:09.880] to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [02:09.880 --> 02:17.560] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [02:17.560 --> 02:22.840] Is Colgate a copycat? Indian activists say the company's newly minted patent for tooth [02:22.840 --> 02:27.920] powder is an ancient recipe, and they plan to fight it. Colgate is brushing this off. [02:27.920 --> 02:32.920] It claims a new twist on the traditional formula. The patent calls for red iron oxide instead [02:32.920 --> 02:38.480] of red ochre, but red ochre contains iron oxide. Hmm. The threatened patent challenge [02:38.480 --> 02:45.080] could have teeth. In 1995, India fought U.S. efforts to patent turmeric, India won. In the [02:45.080 --> 02:50.520] meantime, India is documenting 30 million web pages worth of its ancient herbal formulas. [02:50.520 --> 02:54.600] Officials hope this step will prevent companies like Colgate from patenting India's age-old [02:54.600 --> 03:16.120] recipes. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [03:16.120 --> 03:39.800] All right, folks. We are back. This is Rule of Law Radio. This is our private search engine. [03:39.800 --> 03:54.200] We are in the last two hours of the show. We're halfway home. So, folks, get in line. [03:54.200 --> 04:01.920] Call in number 512-646-1984. Right now, we are talking to Julius and Ms. Mary. What was [04:01.920 --> 04:02.920] that, Randy? [04:02.920 --> 04:12.200] It was just covering for my foopa on the way out. Second half, not second hour. But I [04:12.200 --> 04:14.680] didn't say it was over. I did that. [04:14.680 --> 04:19.400] Yeah, it didn't sound off and say goodnight like it usually does, but we're good to go. [04:19.400 --> 04:28.360] Okay. And you were talking about, okay, I assumed I knew where you were going about [04:28.360 --> 04:38.880] a similar line product. I do want to put up a questionnaire on the site where you can [04:38.880 --> 04:45.480] go in and answer the questions and it'll spit you out all the documents you need. And this [04:45.480 --> 04:50.840] is work with Eddie on that and also spit you out a lawsuit against it. [04:50.840 --> 04:57.440] Well, it occurred to me that we could start with something very simple, just one offense [04:57.440 --> 05:04.440] that they are committing. What has been happening so far is that when people go to court with [05:04.440 --> 05:10.760] their own cases, they may or may not have the presence of mind to figure out what's [05:10.760 --> 05:17.000] going on and then, you know, file a judicial misconduct complaint and or a barg reasons [05:17.000 --> 05:24.920] against the prosecutor. But if we set up this little project the way that I'm conceptualizing [05:24.920 --> 05:32.920] it, anybody not even involved in a case and generated judicial misconduct complaint and [05:32.920 --> 05:40.200] a barg reason simply by going to their computer and looking up, first of all, the docket of [05:40.200 --> 05:47.640] the court to see which class these filing misdemeanors have been issued a warrant for [05:47.640 --> 05:53.640] nonappearance and then going to your website, pulling up those forms and we'll have some [05:53.640 --> 05:58.720] boilerplate which the forms can be filled in with so that they all say the same thing [05:58.720 --> 06:04.920] and people don't have to know the entire law themselves or research it in order to fill [06:04.920 --> 06:08.360] out one of these complaints. And that has been a big stumbling block. [06:08.360 --> 06:12.560] Okay. Do you have a suggestion for how to do this? [06:12.560 --> 06:20.480] Yes. We're working up a set of instructions for people for how to do it and we're anticipating [06:20.480 --> 06:27.040] doing some training of anybody who would volunteer to do this and anybody who spends 30 minutes... [06:27.040 --> 06:30.880] Give him a simplified overview, Ms. Mary, of exactly what the steps are we've talked [06:30.880 --> 06:31.880] about. [06:31.880 --> 06:36.400] The first thing that people do is they go to the computer, they look up the docket at [06:36.400 --> 06:43.720] the municipal court, they then run through the docket to see which are class C misdemeanors [06:43.720 --> 06:48.720] which have been issued a case of a class C final misdemeanor that's had a warrant issued [06:48.720 --> 06:57.480] for it. If that warrant has been issued and they get that by looking at the log of that [06:57.480 --> 07:04.480] particular cause number, they then go to your website and pull up your judicial misconduct [07:04.480 --> 07:12.960] complaint form and the bar grievance complaint form and they fill them out with the date [07:12.960 --> 07:18.080] and the cause number and the boilerplate of what the offense was and the laws that they're [07:18.080 --> 07:25.280] violating are already in the complaint form and then they just send it off. [07:25.280 --> 07:34.200] Okay, question. Do you have programming expertise? [07:34.200 --> 07:35.200] No. [07:35.200 --> 07:41.360] Do you have somebody that does that would be willing to donate a little time? [07:41.360 --> 07:44.560] I actually do, Randy. I have somebody that does. [07:44.560 --> 07:45.560] Okay. [07:45.560 --> 07:50.840] I've been trying to get someone and this is something that I have been working on for [07:50.840 --> 07:51.840] a very long time. [07:51.840 --> 07:52.840] Okay. [07:52.840 --> 07:53.840] Well, what program? [07:53.840 --> 08:03.120] There's something I have that's not on the website. I have a very extensive due process [08:03.120 --> 08:04.120] questionnaire. [08:04.120 --> 08:05.120] Right. [08:05.120 --> 08:12.320] And the thing that I thought was this is so complicated for most people to get their [08:12.320 --> 08:18.160] minds around, all of the violations that they're doing is so complicated and take so much time [08:18.160 --> 08:19.160] to go through. [08:19.160 --> 08:21.280] I thought we'd start with this one thing. [08:21.280 --> 08:22.280] Okay. [08:22.280 --> 08:23.280] Hold on. [08:23.280 --> 08:28.920] I have a suggestion. This is something I've worked on for a long time. It's been a lot [08:28.920 --> 08:34.400] of time thinking about and working through. [08:34.400 --> 08:42.440] And this questionnaire I'm talking about was designed for this purpose as concerns due [08:42.440 --> 08:44.880] process. [08:44.880 --> 08:52.080] If you have someone who has a ticket and you want to develop all of the information you [08:52.080 --> 09:01.960] need to produce all of the documentation you need, what would be the very first question [09:01.960 --> 09:04.920] you would ask the person? [09:04.920 --> 09:10.600] And then, what kind of answers would you expect from that person? [09:10.600 --> 09:16.800] And based on each of the potential answers, what question would you then ask? [09:16.800 --> 09:19.240] Right. [09:19.240 --> 09:26.800] Once we have that sorted out, I said I have a questionnaire that is very complex. [09:26.800 --> 09:37.280] But nobody who uses it will realize that because for any set of answers, you will follow a [09:37.280 --> 09:44.600] very direct line from the front to the back and it will appear to be very simple because [09:44.600 --> 09:51.120] the first questions will isolate whole categories of law. [09:51.120 --> 09:57.000] The next question will isolate more sophisticated categories of law. [09:57.000 --> 10:02.000] And very quickly, you'll be drilled down to very specific issues. [10:02.000 --> 10:12.240] We can create a questionnaire that will eliminate all of those portions of law that don't apply [10:12.240 --> 10:14.560] and take the person to the ones that do. [10:14.560 --> 10:19.440] And when they answer a question, we ask a question and they answer the question this [10:19.440 --> 10:20.440] way. [10:20.440 --> 10:28.120] Then we tell the system, in this case, produce a judicial conduct complaint, criminal complaint. [10:28.120 --> 10:34.040] They challenge the subject manager section, whatever is indicated. [10:34.040 --> 10:39.240] So once the person has walked through the questionnaire, the system knows precisely what [10:39.240 --> 10:44.360] is needed for their particular issue and just spit it right out. [10:44.360 --> 10:51.240] I just need someone, I don't have time to sit down and work all of this out. [10:51.240 --> 10:58.480] What I hear is you're saying that that's for a person who gets the ticket, right? [10:58.480 --> 10:59.480] Yes. [10:59.480 --> 11:00.480] Okay. [11:00.480 --> 11:05.520] This little project that I have been starting, anybody can do. [11:05.520 --> 11:06.880] They don't have to get a ticket. [11:06.880 --> 11:11.600] And the good thing about it is that a lot of people can do it and they don't have to [11:11.600 --> 11:15.760] be involved in fighting their own case while they're doing it. [11:15.760 --> 11:22.440] Would it be possible to talk to you more about this off air? [11:22.440 --> 11:24.160] Yes, it would. [11:24.160 --> 11:32.880] I would like a written proposal first so that I have something to go by so I kind of understand. [11:32.880 --> 11:37.680] When you talk about these things, you have all of this in your mind. [11:37.680 --> 11:42.600] And you tend not to give me complete referential index. [11:42.600 --> 11:45.840] You do it, I do it, everybody does it. [11:45.840 --> 11:52.280] That's why when I asked Michael from Massachusetts earlier to go back and give us kind of a brief [11:52.280 --> 11:56.440] so we could reorient people, they'd know where he was at. [11:56.440 --> 12:00.840] If you give me kind of a synopsis of what you're doing, then I can kind of keep up with [12:00.840 --> 12:01.840] you. [12:01.840 --> 12:02.840] Okay. [12:02.840 --> 12:04.720] Yes, I'd very much like to see this. [12:04.720 --> 12:08.040] This is something I've spent a lot of time on. [12:08.040 --> 12:09.040] Okay. [12:09.040 --> 12:12.640] You have no idea how much time I've spent on this. [12:12.640 --> 12:20.320] Well, then I'll talk to Eddie about it on Sunday and we'll work something up and maybe [12:20.320 --> 12:23.240] we can talk on the phone privately about it. [12:23.240 --> 12:24.240] Okay. [12:24.240 --> 12:32.600] For anybody who's listening, anyone who has some programming knowledge, let me offer [12:32.600 --> 12:36.040] you a project. [12:36.040 --> 12:47.760] In order to implement this questionnaire, I can build a basic questionnaire easy enough. [12:47.760 --> 12:52.720] And what I want to do with it is take the one I have, I have a one for due process. [12:52.720 --> 12:59.480] Now take this and give it to a lawyer and have him run a few clients through it. [12:59.480 --> 13:08.000] And then ask the lawyer, are there any issues that you would chudicate that I don't have [13:08.000 --> 13:09.000] in here? [13:09.000 --> 13:12.480] Let me give you a quick example of how this works. [13:12.480 --> 13:15.720] I had some, what got the germ to get all this started? [13:15.720 --> 13:22.000] Well, someone asked me if I knew what a frankshearing was and I told them, well, yeah, I've heard [13:22.000 --> 13:24.160] of it, but I don't remember what it is. [13:24.160 --> 13:31.260] I do this radio show, I get people calling in with all sorts of potential remedies. [13:31.260 --> 13:36.200] But there's so many of them that I lose track of them and it's hard to keep them because [13:36.200 --> 13:38.840] they're not in context. [13:38.840 --> 13:40.320] So they asked me about a frankshearing. [13:40.320 --> 13:41.320] I didn't remember what it was. [13:41.320 --> 13:47.800] I went after the show, I looked it up and when I saw what it was, I said, holy mackerel, [13:47.800 --> 13:51.600] how could I ever have forgotten that? [13:51.600 --> 13:57.400] What a frankshearing is a hearing for the purpose of determining the veracity of a police [13:57.400 --> 14:02.960] officer who testified before a magistrate to secure a warrant. [14:02.960 --> 14:07.800] You get to subpoena a judge that always makes him crazy. [14:07.800 --> 14:12.640] So I looked at my questionnaire and I said, okay, were you arrested? [14:12.640 --> 14:13.640] Yes. [14:13.640 --> 14:16.760] Were you arrested on an existing warrant? [14:16.760 --> 14:17.760] Yes. [14:17.760 --> 14:25.720] Do you have reason to believe that the officer who testified to secure the warrant misrepresented [14:25.720 --> 14:28.160] the truth to the magistrate? [14:28.160 --> 14:38.240] If you answer yes, then the system jumps over to this set of questions that develop a frankshearing. [14:38.240 --> 14:43.720] So what I need is a neuron. [14:43.720 --> 14:46.720] I don't need a biological neuron. [14:46.720 --> 14:52.760] I need an electrical neuron or a programming neuron. [14:52.760 --> 15:03.000] What a neuron does is stores a fact or stores a link to other facts. [15:03.000 --> 15:06.680] That's basically all the neuron has to do. [15:06.680 --> 15:15.760] I need a widget, a widget that when if you're looking at my questionnaire and you say, well, [15:15.760 --> 15:17.920] you should ask this question right here. [15:17.920 --> 15:28.760] You click on the widget and it will open up a little routine that will ask you to input [15:28.760 --> 15:36.560] a question and then ask you if the output to the question, what answers do you expect [15:36.560 --> 15:39.000] to receive from this question? [15:39.000 --> 15:41.520] And you list those. [15:41.520 --> 15:44.440] What would you do based on each answer? [15:44.440 --> 15:55.640] If one of the answers goes to another topic as opposed to saving a piece of data, question [15:55.640 --> 16:02.680] how old are you, that saves a piece of data, question you have reason to believe the officer [16:02.680 --> 16:11.720] lied to the judge, that doesn't save a piece of information, that leads to another place. [16:11.720 --> 16:20.280] If the question goes to another question, then create a table in the database with a relational [16:20.280 --> 16:24.560] link back to this field, to this question. [16:24.560 --> 16:32.640] And create a folder in the file structure, give them both a name, ask the person doing [16:32.640 --> 16:34.800] this to give them a descriptive name. [16:34.800 --> 16:43.640] It is named the folder and the table, the same name, and then the questions that it [16:43.640 --> 16:53.080] goes to, each question in the database gets a field and it creates a file in the file [16:53.080 --> 16:56.080] structure with each of the questions in it. [16:56.080 --> 17:01.240] This is Randy Kelk, David Steele, David Craig, who is a radio. [17:01.240 --> 17:04.920] The Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [17:04.920 --> 17:10.120] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [17:10.120 --> 17:14.120] Capital Coin features a great selection of high quality coins and precious metals. [17:14.120 --> 17:17.800] In addition to providing the best prices in the nation, we want to bring you the best [17:17.800 --> 17:20.960] shopping experience both in store and online. [17:20.960 --> 17:25.120] In addition to coins and bullion, we carry popular young Jeopardy products such as Beyond [17:25.120 --> 17:27.520] Tangy Tangerine and Pollen Burst. [17:27.520 --> 17:32.520] We offer freeze-dried, storeable foods by Augustin Farms, Bergy Water Products, ammunition [17:32.520 --> 17:34.920] at 10% above wholesale, and more. [17:34.920 --> 17:39.760] You can lock in a spot price with our silver pool, and we set up Metals IRA accounts. [17:39.760 --> 17:44.000] Call us at 512-646-644-0 for more details. [17:44.000 --> 17:49.160] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [17:49.160 --> 17:52.800] We're open Monday through Friday 10-6, Saturday 10-2. [17:52.800 --> 18:00.680] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-644-0. [18:00.680 --> 18:06.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:06.000 --> 18:09.440] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. [18:09.440 --> 18:13.800] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.800 --> 18:14.800] can win two. [18:14.800 --> 18:19.640] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.640 --> 18:20.640] civil rights statute. [18:20.640 --> 18:24.960] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [18:24.960 --> 18:26.960] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:26.960 --> 18:29.560] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [18:29.560 --> 18:34.240] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:34.240 --> 18:39.360] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.360 --> 18:41.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.480 --> 18:47.040] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner [18:47.040 --> 18:50.040] or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [18:50.040 --> 18:57.040] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.040 --> 19:00.040] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:00.040 --> 19:07.040] Well, don't let nothing get to you, only the father can do it by you. [19:07.040 --> 19:12.040] And don't let backmine people hurt you, until safe and get behind. [19:12.040 --> 19:20.040] You know what I mean? My friend, my life juxtaposed. [19:20.040 --> 19:32.040] Okay, we're back. [19:32.040 --> 19:35.040] We're ready to call for Deputy Stephen Z. Craig with my radio. [19:35.040 --> 19:40.040] I call in number 512-646-1984. [19:40.040 --> 19:48.040] If you have a question or comment, now's a good time to get in line because it generally begins to stack up right towards the end of the show. [19:48.040 --> 19:51.040] And I was talking about a widget. [19:51.040 --> 19:58.040] This came about because when I went to Australia, I kind of picked on those folks who were not reading the code. [19:58.040 --> 20:03.040] But it turned out their penal code was 500 pages. [20:03.040 --> 20:13.040] I wondered if they didn't read the code and worked out this procedure by taking the code and converting it into a set of questions. [20:13.040 --> 20:16.040] And that worked out real well for data mining. [20:16.040 --> 20:29.040] And once I have the structure together, now I need a way to take a basic set of questions and turn that into an expert. [20:29.040 --> 20:35.040] We're creating an expert engine and I need this neuron to do that. [20:35.040 --> 20:51.040] The structure I defined before we went on break was we have a widget that will create a table in a database and a folder in a file structure. [20:51.040 --> 21:02.040] And we have trouble getting programmers to wrap their head around this because most programmers aren't accustomed to dealing with a dynamic database. [21:02.040 --> 21:09.040] One that recreates itself or recreates new tables and fields on the fly. [21:09.040 --> 21:17.040] And for those of you who are not familiar with databases, the table would be like the document. [21:17.040 --> 21:24.040] The individual fields in the table would be like the questions inside the document. [21:24.040 --> 21:35.040] If the widget creates it this way, then we will have a file structure that will look exactly like the database schema. [21:35.040 --> 21:39.040] Big problem with databases is documentation. [21:39.040 --> 21:46.040] You have all these fields and all these interrelationships and not enough documentation to tell you what relates to what. [21:46.040 --> 21:59.040] If the database schema looks like a standard file structure, the human being can look at a standard file structure and it's absolutely clear how all of these folders relate to one another. [21:59.040 --> 22:11.040] So I need a widget that will create either a table or a field in this one step. [22:11.040 --> 22:16.040] And then do a recursive call back to the beginning and recall itself. [22:16.040 --> 22:18.040] He lasts the first question. [22:18.040 --> 22:24.040] Based on the answer, he'll either create a table or a field and it will come back and ask another question. [22:24.040 --> 22:26.040] Start all over again. [22:26.040 --> 22:35.040] So it can probably be done with, I wrote it in PHP in about four lines of code. [22:35.040 --> 22:46.040] But with my weakness and my limited knowledge of PHP, there's a lot of little details that need to be addressed. [22:46.040 --> 22:50.040] But a good programmer should be able to write a neuron. [22:50.040 --> 23:01.040] And we can take this neuron and put it in a set of questions for traffic, a set of questions for due process, for family law, for any of these. [23:01.040 --> 23:06.040] Bar grievance, judicial conduct complaint. [23:06.040 --> 23:10.040] And I have the questionnaire for bar grievances. [23:10.040 --> 23:20.040] I am working on the one for judicial conduct, but this basic structure will work for any field of knowledge. [23:20.040 --> 23:30.040] And that little neuron will allow other experts to insert their expertise in this field of knowledge. [23:30.040 --> 23:36.040] And the system will evolve itself. [23:36.040 --> 23:44.040] And it will eventually capture the knowledge of all of these experts and we can then take that knowledge and make it available to the prosaic. [23:44.040 --> 23:48.040] That's when you really begin to kick behind. [23:48.040 --> 23:51.040] Okay. [23:51.040 --> 23:54.040] Mary is still there with me. [23:54.040 --> 23:58.040] No, Mary is not there. We only have Ramon in Texas up on the board. [23:58.040 --> 24:04.040] Oh, okay. I'm sorry. I didn't mean to run off and leave you folks. [24:04.040 --> 24:09.040] Mary, if you're still in Julius, if you're still listening, absolutely. [24:09.040 --> 24:12.040] I would like to talk to you if you send me an email. [24:12.040 --> 24:16.040] I will get back to you and we can coordinate something. [24:16.040 --> 24:30.040] And if anybody out there is a really sharp programmer, I need a really good programmer who can write a really simple, elegant, electronic neuron. [24:30.040 --> 24:34.040] Then we can, I have a number of these ready to go. [24:34.040 --> 24:43.040] I just need this piece, you know, so that they can essentially evolve and learn on their own. [24:43.040 --> 24:46.040] They can start to learn by various people's input. [24:46.040 --> 24:52.040] If anybody is willing to take on the task for us, let me know, send me an email. [24:52.040 --> 24:56.040] Randy at Rule of Law Radio. [24:56.040 --> 24:58.040] And I would very much like to hear from you. [24:58.040 --> 25:03.040] Okay. We're going to go to Ramon in Texas. [25:03.040 --> 25:05.040] Ramon. [25:05.040 --> 25:06.040] Hey, Randy. [25:06.040 --> 25:09.040] What do you have for us today? [25:09.040 --> 25:14.040] Well, I mean, what I wanted to ask you about... [25:14.040 --> 25:24.040] I have a ton of questions, so I'm going to try to simplify them while I have you on the first question that I have and then I'm trying to understand. [25:24.040 --> 25:34.040] And I hope I don't want your feedback on is the question in the county records with regard to county records. [25:34.040 --> 25:39.040] When you look in the county records, an assignment to an instrument, right? [25:39.040 --> 25:48.040] Whenever an instrument has an assigner reassign it to someone else, there's a section... [25:48.040 --> 25:54.040] Some of the documents have a requested by... [25:54.040 --> 26:05.040] And then it's an entity, right, that's referred to under a requested by reference in an assignment of a document. [26:05.040 --> 26:06.040] Are you following me so far? [26:06.040 --> 26:08.040] Yes, I am. [26:08.040 --> 26:27.040] So what I want to better understand is... I mean, my understanding would be that the entity that owns or has rights to the instrument would assign to someone else or have the privilege of the rights to assign a document or instrument to... [26:27.040 --> 26:31.040] Or the rights to another entity. [26:31.040 --> 26:35.040] So if someone's requesting it, what is that? [26:35.040 --> 26:48.040] The property is supposed to be held in a trust and it is the trustee who holds the property. [26:48.040 --> 26:53.040] Now, he has no interest in the property. [26:53.040 --> 27:08.040] The beneficiary has the right to change the assignment, to request the assignment, but he has no power to actually do the assignment. [27:08.040 --> 27:11.040] That's why it's in a trust. [27:11.040 --> 27:14.040] Only the trustee can do that. [27:14.040 --> 27:25.040] So the beneficiary would request of the trustee that the trustee make the change of the assignment asked for. [27:25.040 --> 27:33.040] If the beneficiary can take the action himself, the document is not a trust, but it's a grant. [27:33.040 --> 27:37.040] That means the property has been granted to the beneficiary. [27:37.040 --> 27:52.040] And in Texas, in the business and commerce code, I think it's in Chapter 12, this particular issue... [27:52.040 --> 27:55.040] I mean, I have to think a second to reframe it. [27:55.040 --> 28:16.040] When you write a deed of trust, it is... Oh, okay. I got it. A lender is forbidden to require a borrower to transfer either personal or real property to the lender as security. [28:16.040 --> 28:35.040] He is forbidden by statute. Though in that case, it would have to go into a trust that he would don't benefit the property or grant the property to the trustee, not to the lender. [28:35.040 --> 28:46.040] So if the lender can take a unilateral action based on this document, it's not a trust. It's a grant. [28:46.040 --> 28:54.040] And that's why there would have to be a request, and the request would have to be to the trustee. [28:54.040 --> 29:05.040] And that the trustee is the one that would have to file the assignment, not the beneficiary. [29:05.040 --> 29:13.040] And I suspect if you look in the record, you will find that they have bypassed that particular requirement. [29:13.040 --> 29:26.040] And I see that you're in Texas, so you might look in Chapter 12 with business commerce code and you will be surprised what you read there. [29:26.040 --> 29:29.040] Does that answer your question? [29:29.040 --> 29:38.040] Yes, thank you. So now let's talk about, if I may ask you, about the understatement that you used to cover the code. [29:38.040 --> 29:45.040] Okay, okay, hold on. We're about to go to break. This is Randy Cutt, Debbie Stevens and Craig with the radio. [29:45.040 --> 29:51.040] And when we come back in on the other side, we're going to talk about young activity. [29:51.040 --> 30:00.040] And if your fund doesn't have enough in it, young activity is going to donate to it. So we're going to work on that for your fund. We'll be right back. [30:00.040 --> 30:06.040] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [30:06.040 --> 30:13.040] It says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [30:13.040 --> 30:16.040] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [30:16.040 --> 30:18.040] And thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [30:18.040 --> 30:20.040] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [30:20.040 --> 30:21.040] I'm a structural engineer. [30:21.040 --> 30:22.040] I'm a New York City correction officer. [30:22.040 --> 30:23.040] I'm an Air Force pilot. [30:23.040 --> 30:25.040] I'm a father who lost his son. [30:25.040 --> 30:26.040] We're Americans. [30:26.040 --> 30:27.040] And we deserve the truth. [30:27.040 --> 30:31.040] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [30:31.040 --> 30:37.040] HempUSA.org has moved and expanded its operations for faster worldwide shipping. [30:37.040 --> 30:42.040] Our product line has grown from five to nearly 100 items in less than five years. [30:42.040 --> 30:47.040] Our food has grown naturally, always chemical-free, not found in stores. [30:47.040 --> 30:51.040] Great for daily intake and perfect for your emergency storage shelter. [30:51.040 --> 31:01.040] Call 908-6912608 or visit hempusa.org and see what our powders, seeds, and oil can do for you. [31:01.040 --> 31:07.040] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy. [31:07.040 --> 31:10.040] And neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [31:10.040 --> 31:13.040] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [31:13.040 --> 31:14.040] Brave New Books? [31:14.040 --> 31:21.040] Yes, Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, and G. Edward Griffin. [31:21.040 --> 31:25.040] They even stock inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [31:25.040 --> 31:27.040] There's no way a place like that exists. [31:27.040 --> 31:29.040] Go check it out for yourself. [31:29.040 --> 31:33.040] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [31:33.040 --> 31:34.040] Oh, by UT? [31:34.040 --> 31:36.040] There's never anywhere to park down there. [31:36.040 --> 31:44.040] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [31:44.040 --> 31:47.040] It does exist, but when are they open? [31:47.040 --> 31:52.040] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [31:52.040 --> 32:08.040] So get them a call at 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [32:22.040 --> 32:47.040] Okay, we are back. [32:47.040 --> 32:54.040] Thank you. [32:54.040 --> 33:03.040] Thank you. [33:03.040 --> 33:29.040] Thank you. [33:29.040 --> 33:55.040] Thank you. [33:55.040 --> 34:21.040] Thank you. [34:21.040 --> 34:47.040] Thank you. [34:47.040 --> 34:52.040] Absolutely. [34:52.040 --> 34:58.040] I'm sure that you've seen that a lot of the requesters then are third-party entities. [34:58.040 --> 35:00.040] Is that correct? [35:00.040 --> 35:06.040] Yes, and almost none of them are ever the trustee. [35:06.040 --> 35:09.040] Absolutely, far from that. [35:09.040 --> 35:26.040] Well, now that brings me to another question under the Texas statute of government code of the under article, let's see, it's under the internet catch-up here. [35:26.040 --> 35:31.040] 51 clerks, under article clerks, chapter 51. [35:31.040 --> 35:33.040] 51109. [35:33.040 --> 35:34.040] 903, sir. [35:34.040 --> 35:35.040] I'm sorry. [35:35.040 --> 35:37.040] Okay, 903. [35:37.040 --> 35:39.040] Okay. [35:39.040 --> 35:41.040] Go ahead. [35:41.040 --> 35:48.040] Action on fraudulent lien or property or even even to back to 901 fraudulent document or instrument. [35:48.040 --> 35:53.040] Yes, this is, I've looked at these real close. [35:53.040 --> 35:57.040] We can go in under 51903. [35:57.040 --> 35:59.040] I'm sorry, let me back up. [35:59.040 --> 36:00.040] Finish your question. [36:00.040 --> 36:02.040] I kind of jumped in in the middle. [36:02.040 --> 36:03.040] No problem. [36:03.040 --> 36:29.040] I just assumed my question correctly, sir, so which is ultimately to say, to really get your feedback, understanding this statute, this code that's already in place in regard to documents that are filed with the clerk that are filed, requested by entities that are not the trustee. [36:29.040 --> 36:32.040] How do you foresee this? [36:32.040 --> 36:34.040] Okay, that was, okay. [36:34.040 --> 36:36.040] Oh, yeah, I forgot to do something. [36:36.040 --> 36:40.040] I was supposed to talk about my beer fund. [36:40.040 --> 36:43.040] My beer fund is a mess. [36:43.040 --> 36:46.040] It's had two nickels in it for a long time. [36:46.040 --> 36:48.040] Okay. [36:48.040 --> 36:57.040] Well, I'm going to use, I became a distributor for longevity under Deborah. [36:57.040 --> 37:05.040] And all of the profits I make from it are going to Randy's beer fund. [37:05.040 --> 37:18.040] Well, actually the reason Randy's beer fund only has a couple of nickels in it is because I regularly donate everything in the beer fund to the radio, to the network to keep the network going. [37:18.040 --> 37:24.040] Deborah and I and Eddie are actually maintaining this network out of our own pockets. [37:24.040 --> 37:27.040] So sometimes it's harder to do than others. [37:27.040 --> 37:31.040] So I'm going to do the longevity, young activity and. [37:31.040 --> 37:33.040] Young gravity. [37:33.040 --> 37:35.040] I keep getting that wrong. [37:35.040 --> 37:37.040] It tastes good anywhere. [37:37.040 --> 37:43.040] Maybe it's not, it's going to take a while to affect my brain function. [37:43.040 --> 37:47.040] But any profit I make from is going into beer fund. [37:47.040 --> 37:50.040] And that'll go toward the network. [37:50.040 --> 38:03.040] So it works out good for me. So instead of asking for donations for the network, I ask you to look into longevity and use that as a great product. [38:03.040 --> 38:11.040] And all the profit I receive from your purchases will go to the beer fund, which will go to the network. [38:11.040 --> 38:19.040] Is that a sneaky way of getting at that or what anyway, look at it. [38:19.040 --> 38:21.040] Consider it. [38:21.040 --> 38:24.040] It has a double purpose. [38:24.040 --> 38:27.040] And everybody will feel better as a result. [38:27.040 --> 38:35.040] I'm sorry to interrupt you Ramon, but back to where we were 51.901 to 903. [38:35.040 --> 38:47.040] 902 is not very useful for us because it goes to different kinds of documents other than those documents specifically in the real property records. [38:47.040 --> 38:48.040] Agreed. [38:48.040 --> 38:51.040] Yeah, I looked at 901 and 903. [38:51.040 --> 39:00.040] Now under 903, you could file an action with the district court. [39:00.040 --> 39:09.040] But my concern was is if you are pro se, we're going to bump up against the pro se bias. [39:09.040 --> 39:18.040] In looking at 51.901 and looking at this from the politics of the situation. [39:18.040 --> 39:27.040] We have a bunch of clerks who are pretty upset about the bogus filings in their court records. [39:27.040 --> 39:36.040] And they're a bit concerned about their loss of revenue, where the banks have failed to do all the proper filings. [39:36.040 --> 39:40.040] But clerks generally take a very passive role. [39:40.040 --> 39:48.040] They don't actively try to go out and change things. [39:48.040 --> 39:50.040] All they do is keep the record. [39:50.040 --> 39:58.040] And when I talk to clerks, they're very frustrated, but they also feel as though they have no capacity to do anything. [39:58.040 --> 40:05.040] I looked at 51.901 and it is absolutely perfectly written. [40:05.040 --> 40:19.040] Just last week, I prepared a document, a letter as in a business letter format to the clerk of the court, the Dallas County clerk. [40:19.040 --> 40:37.040] And in that letter, I gave the clerk notice that a particular document filed in a particular record was fraudulent as the term is defined in 51.901. [40:37.040 --> 40:55.040] And fraudulent in that case referred to a document filed in the real property records that was not authorized by a someone with authority to act concerning the property. [40:55.040 --> 41:02.040] And that met someone who is in the court records showing authority to act. [41:02.040 --> 41:15.040] So we maintain that this assignment was made by someone who was not listed as an assignee. [41:15.040 --> 41:20.040] The only one who can assign a property is the one that holds it. [41:20.040 --> 41:25.040] And the only way they can hold it is if there is an assignment in the county record. [41:25.040 --> 41:37.040] And for this entity, there was no assignment in the county record. Just US Bank National Association just came out of the clear blue sky and filed this assignment. [41:37.040 --> 41:54.040] So we notified the clerk that there was no support for US Bank National Association and therefore this document did not meet the filing requirements and was fraudulent as defined by 51.901. [41:54.040 --> 42:21.040] And requested that the clerk act in accordance with the provisions of 51.901, which states that the clerk, if the clerk believes that a document is improperly filed, he shall present the issue to the district judge within two days. [42:21.040 --> 42:26.040] Well, the guy wrote it for what he took and gave it to the clerk and told him what it was about. [42:26.040 --> 42:30.040] The clerk said, well, we don't do any investigations here. You'll have to take that to the district attorney. [42:30.040 --> 42:35.040] And he said, well, maybe you want to read that letter first. [42:35.040 --> 42:49.040] And the clerk read the letter and came back and all of a sudden his attitude had changed dramatically because that was a statutory requirement that he presented to the district judge. [42:49.040 --> 43:04.040] So if he has a statutory requirement to do something, what we will be demonstrating to the clerk is that you have no option. [43:04.040 --> 43:16.040] If you fail to present that to the district clerk, we'll go to the district attorney and ask him to present you to a grand jury and indict you for misfeasance in office. [43:16.040 --> 43:28.040] So if you can be indicted for not doing something, you certainly cannot be subjected to any kind of harm for doing what you're required to do. [43:28.040 --> 43:36.040] Right. I believe that falls under the same, 903 mandates that they follow that process. [43:36.040 --> 43:46.040] Exactly. Exactly. OK, hang on. Hang on. That's for the break. I'm picking that up on the other side. This is Randy Catton. [43:46.040 --> 43:51.040] This is Craig. We live on radio. Our calling number is 502-646-1984. [43:51.040 --> 44:00.040] And this is Friday the 27th. I think Eddie forgot to say that at the beginning. I didn't. [44:00.040 --> 44:15.040] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, poor CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [44:15.040 --> 44:23.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:23.040 --> 44:34.040] Thousands have won with our step by step course. And now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:34.040 --> 44:43.040] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:43.040 --> 44:56.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflongradio.com and click on the banner. [44:56.040 --> 45:01.040] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [45:01.040 --> 45:09.040] The Oklahoma City Bombing. Top 10 reasons to question the official story. Reason number one, John Doe number two, and other accomplices. [45:09.040 --> 45:17.040] On the day of the bombing, nearly all of the witnesses that saw Tim McVeigh and the Ryder truck report that he was accompanied by other perpetrators. [45:17.040 --> 45:25.040] The FBI and federal prosecutors insist that Tim McVeigh alone delivered the Ryder truck bomb to the Murr Building and detonated it. [45:25.040 --> 45:33.040] The only witness the government produced to place McVeigh at the building that morning, Dana Bradley, who lost her children and one of her legs in the bombing, [45:33.040 --> 45:39.040] testified that she saw McVeigh with another man, the fateful John Doe number two, exiting the Ryder truck. [45:39.040 --> 45:51.040] While at least 15 other witnesses claim to have seen McVeigh with other perpetrators the day of the bombing, no less than 226 witnesses placed him with other men in the days before the bombing, [45:51.040 --> 45:57.040] including when he rented the Ryder truck, and in some cases have positively identified the other perpetrators. [45:57.040 --> 46:03.040] For more information, please visit okcbombingtruth.com. [46:27.040 --> 46:43.040] We're back in Kel-Dix-Dix in grade with a video talking to Ramon in Texas. [46:43.040 --> 46:47.040] Ramon, you had a comment when we were going out. [46:47.040 --> 46:58.040] Yes, so yeah, I believe that that's the process we were talking about, that the statute actually mandates that the clerics have to follow a certain process and that the district attorney has to get involved, [46:58.040 --> 47:02.040] but in order to be investigated and so forth. [47:02.040 --> 47:05.040] So here's my other question on a higher level. [47:05.040 --> 47:20.040] Understanding that a lot of these foreclosure proceedings are anyone that actually brings action, a cause and action against an entity, that third party entity, in a federal court standing or jurisdiction, I'm sorry, [47:20.040 --> 47:29.040] that understanding that this statute is, I believe, under district court of each county, right? [47:29.040 --> 47:31.040] Right, this is state. [47:31.040 --> 47:40.040] So how does it play, how can it be a supporting argument or would it be a completely separate argument or suit? [47:40.040 --> 47:46.040] Great question, and this is why we want to go here. [47:46.040 --> 48:03.040] Those to the Rooker-Fellman doctrine, the Rooker-Fellman doctrine admonishes the federal courts from interfering with the jurisdiction of the state court. [48:03.040 --> 48:24.040] So what we do here is we go in with this in the state court and we ask the court to rule not against anyone's claim, but only that this particular document, based on the four corners of the document, [48:24.040 --> 48:30.040] show to be insufficient for filing in the court record. [48:30.040 --> 48:34.040] That's all we're asking the court to rule on. [48:34.040 --> 48:50.040] Once he does that, and especially if there has been a foreclosure, if the court looks at this document and says, yes, you're right, the supporting documentation is not there. [48:50.040 --> 48:54.040] Therefore, this document is void and of no force and effect. [48:54.040 --> 48:55.040] Oh, that's powerful. [48:55.040 --> 48:59.040] So in other words, it basically becomes an exhibit of evidence under a federal suit? [48:59.040 --> 49:02.040] It becomes even more than that. [49:02.040 --> 49:15.040] It becomes risk judicata before an adjudication, an issue adjudicated in a different court, an issue which this court has no power to revisit. [49:15.040 --> 49:28.040] And the courts very traditionally are extremely reluctant to even consider visiting an issue that has been adjudicated by another judge. [49:28.040 --> 49:34.040] Judges don't interfere with each other. [49:34.040 --> 49:39.040] When you bring this as a foreign adjudication to this court, it becomes risk judicata. [49:39.040 --> 49:43.040] This is an issue that has already been determined. [49:43.040 --> 49:47.040] This court need not revisit it. [49:47.040 --> 50:01.040] So when you bring the foreign adjudication in and show that an assignment on which the lender relied for the foreclosure was void and of no force and effect. [50:01.040 --> 50:06.040] That renders the foreclosure void and of no force and effect. [50:06.040 --> 50:08.040] Now they got a problem. [50:08.040 --> 50:21.040] What okay, but this statute 51901 through 903 was put in and I probably shouldn't say this on the air, but I'm going to anyway. [50:21.040 --> 50:28.040] It was put in for the specific purpose of screw in the Republic of Texas. [50:28.040 --> 50:39.040] David admitted that when you put it in that there was specifically because the Republic of Texas were filing these leans is commercial leans. [50:39.040 --> 50:47.040] And while they the leans were facially valid. [50:47.040 --> 50:51.040] They were a real problem for these public officials. [50:51.040 --> 50:54.040] And they needed a way to handle it. [50:54.040 --> 51:02.040] So they proposed this absolutely horrendously unconstitutional legislation. [51:02.040 --> 51:06.040] 51901 is not unconstitutional. [51:06.040 --> 51:12.040] 51903 is horrendously unconstitutional. [51:12.040 --> 51:18.040] Because it forbids the court from notifying the opposing party. [51:18.040 --> 51:27.040] This is it is a ex parte hearing. There is no oral argument allowed by either side. [51:27.040 --> 51:33.040] The the moving party gets to craft his argument. [51:33.040 --> 51:42.040] And then file it with the court and the court makes its adjudication based solely on the moving movements argument. [51:42.040 --> 51:47.040] The opposing party gets no opportunity to be but. [51:47.040 --> 51:49.040] It is adjudicated. [51:49.040 --> 51:53.040] They forbid appeal. [51:53.040 --> 51:55.040] And this was to screw the Republic of Texas. [51:55.040 --> 52:06.040] They wanted to throw out their leans and not give the Republic of Texas opportunity to come in and argue the legal validity of their leans, which they could have done. [52:06.040 --> 52:17.040] So that have a way of going in and secretly trashing the lean and leaving them with no avenue for appeal. [52:17.040 --> 52:22.040] This is horrendously unconstitutional. [52:22.040 --> 52:35.040] However, in this circumstances, it certainly works in our favor because we get to take what the legislature put in to screw the Republic of Texas with. [52:35.040 --> 52:38.040] We get to screw the banks with it. [52:38.040 --> 52:42.040] Poetic justice. [52:42.040 --> 52:53.040] Now, most states are not going to have quite as powerful a piece of legislation as we have to work with here in Texas. [52:53.040 --> 53:03.040] But most states will have the all states will have the option of declared petition to declare toward judgment. [53:03.040 --> 53:16.040] And if we pick our documents correctly, it won't matter because the court must rule on what is in the court county record. [53:16.040 --> 53:23.040] And the other party can come in and say, well, we have the standing that we claim. [53:23.040 --> 53:26.040] But that's not the issue before the court. [53:26.040 --> 53:40.040] The issue before the court is, is it filed in the county record because property code 13.001 says a claim not properly filed in the county record is void. [53:40.040 --> 53:43.040] So the other side can come in and say, we have a proper claim. [53:43.040 --> 53:46.040] And the courts can say, so what? [53:46.040 --> 53:50.040] The only thing we can consider is, is it filed properly in the county record? [53:50.040 --> 53:53.040] If it's not, you don't have that claim. [53:53.040 --> 53:58.040] Every state is going to have something similar. [53:58.040 --> 54:08.040] Every state has through their legislature has created a registrar's office, recorder of deeds, whatever happened to call them. [54:08.040 --> 54:10.040] None of these are constitutional. [54:10.040 --> 54:20.040] The state by legislature created those and they stipulated what kinds of records could be filed in them. [54:20.040 --> 54:35.040] And it was for the purpose of making it possible for people to purchase property and be sure that there was no claim against that property. [54:35.040 --> 54:48.040] Without a statute, making any claim not recorded in the record void, the whole purpose of the county registrar's office would be, be relevant. [54:48.040 --> 54:59.040] So every state's going to have a similar statute saying that if your claim is not properly filed in the county registrar's office, it is void. [54:59.040 --> 55:09.040] And so the other parties, if we, with the kinds of mess we're finding, and that's why I suggest everybody look in their records. [55:09.040 --> 55:11.040] It is a horrible mess. [55:11.040 --> 55:13.040] These guys have not just screwed it up. [55:13.040 --> 55:16.040] They've screwed it up incredibly badly. [55:16.040 --> 55:30.040] If you find assignments filed with no supporting documentation, in one case, the one we filed this letter on, we had a deed of trust that didn't name a lender. [55:30.040 --> 55:32.040] There wasn't a lender named anywhere. [55:32.040 --> 55:36.040] There was a beneficiary named, but no lender named. [55:36.040 --> 55:45.040] And then there was an assignment and we say only the lender could do the assignment and there was no lender named. [55:45.040 --> 55:51.040] And even if you would consider the lender to be the beneficiary, this person wasn't the beneficiary. [55:51.040 --> 55:56.040] So there's nothing they could do to come back and argue and fix this empty gap. [55:56.040 --> 55:59.040] So we'll have this in most areas of the state. [55:59.040 --> 56:08.040] And if you can get that ruling, then quiet title is a done deal. [56:08.040 --> 56:15.040] If they have already foreclosed on you, they are responsible for the closure. [56:15.040 --> 56:24.040] What we're looking at is that once this will work best on, it's where they have foreclosed and sold the property to a third party. [56:24.040 --> 56:32.040] And, you know, being the pro se from hell, we're looking at the best way to attack this. [56:32.040 --> 56:38.040] So if the bank has illegally foreclosed and they sold the property to a third party, [56:38.040 --> 56:43.040] the third party has either moved into the residence or at least the residence out. [56:43.040 --> 56:47.040] How do you handle this? [56:47.040 --> 56:50.040] You sue the bank? [56:50.040 --> 56:55.040] Nah, you sue the third party you purchased. [56:55.040 --> 57:06.040] Reason? The claim that you're making that the foreclosure was improper is not taken out of your private records. [57:06.040 --> 57:10.040] They're taken out of the public record. [57:10.040 --> 57:19.040] And the entity who purchased this property had full knowledge of the errors in the public record. [57:19.040 --> 57:25.040] Whether he had that knowledge or not, he is imputed to have that knowledge. [57:25.040 --> 57:31.040] But in Texas, we have a statute that imputes knowledge of everything in the county record. [57:31.040 --> 57:40.040] So we go in and say, this guy's bought this property with full knowledge that the foreclosure was fraudulent. [57:40.040 --> 57:43.040] Right, and I could talk about that earlier tonight. [57:43.040 --> 57:49.040] Wait, say that again, you were getting a little closer to the mic. [57:49.040 --> 57:53.040] I said, I think you talked about that earlier tonight when you touched on this. [57:53.040 --> 57:59.040] But the warranty deed also will come under that, you know, under, the warranty deed is supposed to be there in the bank. [57:59.040 --> 58:07.040] No, the warranty deed is surely not going to help you because it clearly gives the property to you. [58:07.040 --> 58:14.040] I've never found anything in a warranty deed that gave you the claim. [58:14.040 --> 58:19.040] Even if it was, you wouldn't want to make that claim because you didn't say you don't own the property. [58:19.040 --> 58:20.040] You started that. [58:20.040 --> 58:26.040] Unless you're talking about the warranty deed, the second party files, hang on. [58:26.040 --> 58:28.040] We'll address that on the other side. [58:28.040 --> 58:29.040] This is Randy Jarvis. [58:29.040 --> 58:30.040] This is David Stewart. [58:30.040 --> 58:31.040] This is Greg. [58:31.040 --> 58:32.040] We live low radio. [58:32.040 --> 58:37.040] I call it 512-646-1984. [58:37.040 --> 58:41.040] Going into our last hour and the calls really start backing up. [58:41.040 --> 58:43.040] We have Eric and Johnny waiting. [58:43.040 --> 58:47.040] So if you have a question or comment, get in line. [58:47.040 --> 59:13.040] We'll be right back. [59:18.040 --> 59:27.040] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.040 --> 59:40.040] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.040 --> 59:44.040] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.040 --> 59:52.040] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:52.040 --> 01:00:02.040] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:02.040 --> 01:00:04.040] Do you sleep with your cell phone? [01:00:04.040 --> 01:00:09.040] If the answer is yes, you might be among a growing number of folks who suffer from nomophobia. [01:00:09.040 --> 01:00:15.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you about people's growing fear of being disconnected next. [01:00:40.040 --> 01:00:46.040] Do you take your cell phone into the bathroom or panic if it's not in arms reach? [01:00:46.040 --> 01:00:51.040] Do you keep an extra phone on hand just in case your main phone stops working? [01:00:51.040 --> 01:00:58.040] If you do any of these things, you may have nomophobia or no-mobile phobia, the fear of being caught without your cell phone. [01:00:58.040 --> 01:00:59.040] And you wouldn't be alone. [01:00:59.040 --> 01:01:04.040] A recent survey finds two-thirds of us feel afraid without our cell phones. [01:01:04.040 --> 01:01:09.040] That's a huge increase over just four years ago, and the problem is even worse among young people [01:01:09.040 --> 01:01:14.040] where nearly 8 out of 10 people under 24 feel anxious when they're unplugged. [01:01:14.040 --> 01:01:20.040] Hmm, how could a technology that's supposed to simplify our lives have become such a burden? [01:01:20.040 --> 01:01:35.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:01:35.040 --> 01:01:40.040] When teenagers don't get enough morning sunlight, they may have a tougher time sleeping at night, [01:01:40.040 --> 01:01:42.040] and that can cause lower grades. [01:01:42.040 --> 01:01:49.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you about the latest research into sunlight and night owl syndrome next. [01:01:49.040 --> 01:01:51.040] Privacy is under attack. [01:01:51.040 --> 01:01:54.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:54.040 --> 01:01:59.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:59.040 --> 01:02:01.040] So protect your rights. [01:02:01.040 --> 01:02:05.040] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:05.040 --> 01:02:07.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:02:07.040 --> 01:02:14.040] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:14.040 --> 01:02:18.040] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:18.040 --> 01:02:21.040] Do your kids have trouble getting to sleep? [01:02:21.040 --> 01:02:24.040] The cure could be a dose of morning sunshine. [01:02:24.040 --> 01:02:30.040] When teenagers don't get enough morning light, they're likely to go to bed later, get less sleep, and underperform in school. [01:02:30.040 --> 01:02:35.040] Scientists gave eighth graders special glasses to block so-called blue light. [01:02:35.040 --> 01:02:40.040] After five days, the student's evening onset of melatonin, the sleepy hormone, was delayed, [01:02:40.040 --> 01:02:43.040] and the kids fell asleep half an hour later than usual. [01:02:43.040 --> 01:02:48.040] So parents, open the blinds wide in the morning and help your kids soak up those rays. [01:02:48.040 --> 01:02:51.040] You can also buy light bulbs that mimic natural sunlight. [01:02:51.040 --> 01:02:53.040] It's the best way to help your kids shine. [01:02:53.040 --> 01:03:17.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Olberg for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:03:23.040 --> 01:03:45.040] Okay, we are back. [01:03:45.040 --> 01:04:03.040] Where are we now? [01:04:03.040 --> 01:04:07.040] Well, I was mentioning the warranty deed, which really is not the pressing issue for me, [01:04:07.040 --> 01:04:11.040] because the warranty deed is kind of after the fact once the comments were closed, [01:04:11.040 --> 01:04:16.040] which is a whole other wave of perfect storm of ugliness for Americans [01:04:16.040 --> 01:04:19.040] whose house has already been done away with. [01:04:19.040 --> 01:04:24.040] I'm not sure I understand your warranty deed issue. [01:04:24.040 --> 01:04:30.040] Are you talking about the warranty deed when the property was granted to you [01:04:30.040 --> 01:04:34.040] or after a foreclosure sale when it's granted to the next party? [01:04:34.040 --> 01:04:42.040] Right, for folks who've been buying foreclosure homes, thinking they're getting a great deal, [01:04:42.040 --> 01:04:45.040] and thinking they're living the American dream, [01:04:45.040 --> 01:04:52.040] and who are hoped and pray that they don't deal with folks like me and you on the other side, [01:04:52.040 --> 01:04:58.040] they better count their blessings that there's not many folks like us. [01:04:58.040 --> 01:05:10.040] The statute say when you purchase that foreclosure, you purchase at your payroll. [01:05:10.040 --> 01:05:17.040] If we sue the third party who purchased, they have no counter claim. [01:05:17.040 --> 01:05:28.040] The only thing they can do is go back and sue the original bank for fraud against them. [01:05:28.040 --> 01:05:34.040] But even that would be his claim because they purchased at their payroll. [01:05:34.040 --> 01:05:41.040] This is a perfect way of doing it because we make it so that the banks can't sell these profits. [01:05:41.040 --> 01:05:42.040] Bingo. [01:05:42.040 --> 01:05:49.040] I actually had another question, but it was on this side of a foreclosure, not after the foreclosure sale, [01:05:49.040 --> 01:05:52.040] but prior to the property being sold. [01:05:52.040 --> 01:05:57.040] But you know what, with the whole thing that we're talking to now, I've lost my train of thought. [01:05:57.040 --> 01:06:00.040] I'll go ahead and let out the call. [01:06:00.040 --> 01:06:03.040] Thank you for your question. [01:06:03.040 --> 01:06:07.040] Thank you for calling, Ramon, and those were some good questions. [01:06:07.040 --> 01:06:11.040] We're going to go to Eric in Washington. [01:06:11.040 --> 01:06:15.040] Eric, what do you have for us today? [01:06:15.040 --> 01:06:17.040] Hello, can you hear me? [01:06:17.040 --> 01:06:19.040] Yes, we can. [01:06:19.040 --> 01:06:24.040] Hello, Randy, Eddie, and every evening if you're not there. [01:06:24.040 --> 01:06:31.040] Something that occurred last week in the middle of the week. [01:06:31.040 --> 01:06:34.040] Okay, you kind of faded there. [01:06:34.040 --> 01:06:35.040] Can you say that again? [01:06:35.040 --> 01:06:36.040] Are you better now? [01:06:36.040 --> 01:06:39.040] Yeah, stay close to the mic. [01:06:39.040 --> 01:06:40.040] Okay. [01:06:40.040 --> 01:06:48.040] Well, my brother and I have been living together for about 16 years in that house that he owns. [01:06:48.040 --> 01:07:02.040] At the middle of last week, we sometimes get into arguments and we got into a pretty bad argument last week. [01:07:02.040 --> 01:07:16.040] And so I wound up with something that looked like ketchup or red food coloring or maybe something else in my face. [01:07:16.040 --> 01:07:22.040] And he wound up with something that looked similar. [01:07:22.040 --> 01:07:24.040] Okay, we get the point. [01:07:24.040 --> 01:07:35.040] Okay, so he was angry enough after this to want me out of the house for that night. [01:07:35.040 --> 01:07:41.040] And he said he was going to force me out and he said he was going to call 911. [01:07:41.040 --> 01:07:53.040] I begged him not to do it because when you call those guys, it's a question whether both of you are going to want to have dead or not. [01:07:53.040 --> 01:08:09.040] But so he called them and then he immediately said to the 911 dispatcher that he'd made a mistake. [01:08:09.040 --> 01:08:16.040] And then he hung up the phone and he thought that was all that was going to happen. [01:08:16.040 --> 01:08:24.040] So he left the house and he went to go do something else. [01:08:24.040 --> 01:08:36.040] And about 10 minutes later, there was about five police cruisers that showed up at the house. [01:08:36.040 --> 01:08:53.040] So they had a police officer came up to the door, knocked on it, and so I went down and opened the door, not knowing that I had this ketchup looking substance on my face. [01:08:53.040 --> 01:08:58.040] And I asked them what they wanted. [01:08:58.040 --> 01:09:07.040] I need to point out that I have seen that video on YouTube, never talked to police, and I've seen it like 10 times. [01:09:07.040 --> 01:09:11.040] And I have also showed it to my brother. [01:09:11.040 --> 01:09:14.040] So he's seen it like at least a couple times. [01:09:14.040 --> 01:09:22.040] So I went down to the front door and they said, well, what's that blood on your face? [01:09:22.040 --> 01:09:27.040] And I said, I don't know what you're talking about. [01:09:27.040 --> 01:09:31.040] So not to drag it out, I answered none of the questions. [01:09:31.040 --> 01:09:33.040] None of the questions whatsoever. [01:09:33.040 --> 01:09:39.040] They asked me, well, you know, how do you get people on your face? [01:09:39.040 --> 01:09:44.040] I said, well, I don't know what you're talking about. [01:09:44.040 --> 01:09:48.040] So then they said... [01:09:48.040 --> 01:09:51.040] Okay, move to the point. We're going to run out of time. [01:09:51.040 --> 01:09:57.040] Okay, okay. They said, turn around, put your hands behind your back. [01:09:57.040 --> 01:10:05.040] They frisked me, they handcuffed me, and then they said, well, we're going to search your house. [01:10:05.040 --> 01:10:07.040] The door was closed at this point. [01:10:07.040 --> 01:10:14.040] I said, you guys have no jurisdiction, you have no probable cause, you have no reasonable suspicion, [01:10:14.040 --> 01:10:16.040] and I do not consent to a search. [01:10:16.040 --> 01:10:22.040] However, at that time, they opened the door and they went into the house. [01:10:22.040 --> 01:10:35.040] And I noticed that the guy that was standing next to me had his sidearm drawn, [01:10:35.040 --> 01:10:41.040] and I thought, oh my God, this is the way people get killed. [01:10:41.040 --> 01:10:45.040] Okay, okay, move on through. We've got this part. [01:10:45.040 --> 01:10:49.040] Take it they didn't find your brother there. [01:10:49.040 --> 01:10:50.040] No. [01:10:50.040 --> 01:10:52.040] Did they subsequently arrest you? [01:10:52.040 --> 01:11:01.040] The point is, I think their handcuff of me was an illegal arrest. [01:11:01.040 --> 01:11:04.040] I think their search of my house was illegal. [01:11:04.040 --> 01:11:08.040] Okay, I don't think you're going to win this one. [01:11:08.040 --> 01:11:12.040] They received a 911 call from this location. [01:11:12.040 --> 01:11:13.040] Yes. [01:11:13.040 --> 01:11:18.040] And then the caller in the midst of the call said he made a mistake. [01:11:18.040 --> 01:11:19.040] Yes. [01:11:19.040 --> 01:11:24.040] Put yourself in the 911 caller's position. [01:11:24.040 --> 01:11:31.040] Someone calls 911 and in the middle of the call, they say, oh, I made a mistake when I called you. [01:11:31.040 --> 01:11:36.040] What would you think? [01:11:36.040 --> 01:11:42.040] I would think they just got threatened by the reason they called the 911. [01:11:42.040 --> 01:11:48.040] They called the 911 call and they sent the police out to investigate. [01:11:48.040 --> 01:11:49.040] They knock on the door. [01:11:49.040 --> 01:11:52.040] You open the door and you have blood on the face. [01:11:52.040 --> 01:11:55.040] They had a 911 call. [01:11:55.040 --> 01:11:56.040] There's no blood. [01:11:56.040 --> 01:11:59.040] There's some red substance on my face. [01:11:59.040 --> 01:12:06.040] You had a red substance on your face that had the appearance of being blood. [01:12:06.040 --> 01:12:11.040] They were not required to do a spectral analysis of it. [01:12:11.040 --> 01:12:17.040] The court's going to say they had reasonable cause. [01:12:17.040 --> 01:12:22.040] They had reasonable cause to believe that a crime was in progress. [01:12:22.040 --> 01:12:32.040] That doesn't mean one was, but there's not a court that's going to deny the police probable cause in that instance. [01:12:32.040 --> 01:12:35.040] I can tell you right now how this scenario played out in their minds. [01:12:35.040 --> 01:12:36.040] They arrived. [01:12:36.040 --> 01:12:40.040] It doesn't matter where you're the complainant or the perpetrator. [01:12:40.040 --> 01:12:50.040] If you're the complainant, you're standing there and appear to be bleeding, then you're trying to get the cops out of there because the bad guy is still in the house and is going to harm you if you don't. [01:12:50.040 --> 01:12:58.040] If you're the bad guy, you're covering the fact that you've already debilitated the person in the house and you're trying to get the cops out of the way before they find out. [01:12:58.040 --> 01:13:03.040] Either way, that's a no-win situation if the officers leave. [01:13:03.040 --> 01:13:11.040] Because they got the call, they have no choice but to ensure that everyone on the premises is safe. [01:13:11.040 --> 01:13:15.040] Well, well, wait a minute. [01:13:15.040 --> 01:13:17.040] They had probable cause. [01:13:17.040 --> 01:13:24.040] Sometimes, you know, we're not anti-police, and it sounds like that they didn't knock you around. [01:13:24.040 --> 01:13:27.040] They didn't, apparently you didn't see anything about it. [01:13:27.040 --> 01:13:28.040] We're a revenue. [01:13:28.040 --> 01:13:29.040] We're outrageous with you. [01:13:29.040 --> 01:13:36.040] They arrested you because of the 911 call and they did not know whether you were the victim or the perpetrator. [01:13:36.040 --> 01:13:38.040] That's why they had to search the house. [01:13:38.040 --> 01:13:51.040] Yeah, and they simply restrained you to make sure that if you were the perpetrator that you didn't all of a sudden attack one of them or try to leave quickly. [01:13:51.040 --> 01:13:59.040] I didn't hear anything in there that would give me reason to believe you have any grounds. [01:13:59.040 --> 01:14:06.040] Okay, well, what you have said sounds reasonable to me, but let me answer this question. [01:14:06.040 --> 01:14:24.040] You were undoubtedly aware of when police insert themselves into situations that they perceived to be dangerous, that they draw their guns and people and animals start dying. [01:14:24.040 --> 01:14:25.040] Well, that's true. [01:14:25.040 --> 01:14:29.040] Did the officer point his weapon at you? [01:14:29.040 --> 01:14:31.040] Nobody drew it. [01:14:31.040 --> 01:14:32.040] That's okay. [01:14:32.040 --> 01:14:38.040] If he didn't point it at you, you know, this is a, for them, this is a dangerous situation. [01:14:38.040 --> 01:14:44.040] If you're the good guy, that means the bad guy's out there. [01:14:44.040 --> 01:14:57.040] And if the bad guy steps around the corner, this officer does not want to have to waste time unsnapping that pistol and getting it out of his holster and being shot to you three times in the process. [01:14:57.040 --> 01:15:08.040] Well, yes, it seems reasonable, but you know as well as I do that the police have no obligation to protect you. [01:15:08.040 --> 01:15:12.040] So why do they take the position that... [01:15:12.040 --> 01:15:14.040] This wasn't about you. [01:15:14.040 --> 01:15:17.040] This is about protecting themselves. [01:15:17.040 --> 01:15:26.040] Okay, they don't have an obligation to protect you, but they certainly have the right to protect you. [01:15:26.040 --> 01:15:32.040] You can't hold them responsible for not protecting you. [01:15:32.040 --> 01:15:37.040] Yeah, I mean, it sounds like you're trying to make this into a lose-lose situation on the officer's side. [01:15:37.040 --> 01:15:40.040] They're wrong if they don't respond to the 911. [01:15:40.040 --> 01:15:52.040] They're wrong if they do respond to the 911 and protect themselves and whoever they encounter from further possible harm till they can secure the location and ensure there's nobody that's going to hurt anybody. [01:15:52.040 --> 01:15:55.040] Well, actually, Randy, I don't think that's true. [01:15:55.040 --> 01:16:05.040] What I'm trying to paint this as, I'm not trying to paint it as anything except that the police do not have any responsibility to protect you. [01:16:05.040 --> 01:16:07.040] So why do they have... [01:16:07.040 --> 01:16:10.040] They have a right to protect you. [01:16:10.040 --> 01:16:17.040] They may not have the responsibility, but they chose to do the job they thought they were hiring on for. [01:16:17.040 --> 01:16:30.040] No matter what somebody else wants them to do or not do, that's the job these particular individuals hired on to do, protect the public, and they acted to do that. [01:16:30.040 --> 01:16:31.040] All right. [01:16:31.040 --> 01:16:40.040] From what you said, it sounded like they acted with professional restraint. [01:16:40.040 --> 01:16:48.040] Hold on. I'd like to finish up on the other side. When we come back, I want to find out, did they actually take you to jail? [01:16:48.040 --> 01:16:49.040] Did they leave you there? [01:16:49.040 --> 01:16:53.040] This is Randy Calvin, Dennis Stevens, Eddie Craig with our radio. [01:16:53.040 --> 01:17:01.040] We'll be right back on the other side. 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[01:19:23.040 --> 01:19:33.040] If I can't get everything I want, we'll get a ranger. [01:19:33.040 --> 01:19:44.040] If I can't get everything I need, we'll get a ranger. [01:19:44.040 --> 01:19:59.040] If the people of the world can't get everything they want, we'll get a ranger. [01:19:59.040 --> 01:20:18.040] If the people of the world can't get everything they want, we'll get a ranger. [01:20:18.040 --> 01:20:29.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig with our radio, and we're talking to Eric in Washington. [01:20:29.040 --> 01:20:42.040] Eric, you don't mean to be difficult or contradictory, but did they actually arrest you and take you to jail or did they leave? [01:20:42.040 --> 01:20:52.040] Well, what do you call it when they handcuff you and frisk you and make you sit down and pull the guns out? [01:20:52.040 --> 01:20:55.040] You didn't answer my questions. [01:20:55.040 --> 01:20:57.040] I didn't go to jail. [01:20:57.040 --> 01:21:12.040] Okay, I will be frank. We're not anti-police, we're not anti-government, and we get a lot of calls about really horrendous crap that police do. [01:21:12.040 --> 01:21:21.040] But frankly, from what I've heard of your call, it sounds like police thought they were walking into a very dangerous situation. [01:21:21.040 --> 01:21:34.040] And I have had several friends who were police officers, and they will very quickly tell you the most dangerous call they ever have are family violence calls. [01:21:34.040 --> 01:21:36.040] That scares them more than anything. [01:21:36.040 --> 01:21:51.040] And it sounds like these policemen walking into what they thought was a potentially very dangerous situation, conducting themselves with a surprising amount of professional restraint. [01:21:51.040 --> 01:22:02.040] They didn't come in, kick the door down, 20 guns point at you, throw you down, step on your neck, knee in your back, cuff you, throw you in the car. [01:22:02.040 --> 01:22:05.040] They didn't do any of that kind of stuff. [01:22:05.040 --> 01:22:11.040] Yes, but let me ask you, what probable cause would they have, or reasonable suspicion would they have? [01:22:11.040 --> 01:22:16.040] They have the reasonable suspicion and probable cause from the 911 call. [01:22:16.040 --> 01:22:30.040] While they're in the investigation, until they determine who is the perpetrator and who is the victim, they will restrain everyone they encounter until the investigation's complete, and they feel that the area is secure. [01:22:30.040 --> 01:22:39.040] Had they not done that, a real perpetrator at any time could attempt to escape or inflict injury and harm to the officer or others. [01:22:39.040 --> 01:22:47.040] That's the entire purpose of putting somebody in cuffs and sitting them down until the officers can secure the location. [01:22:47.040 --> 01:22:49.040] They're not imprisoning anybody. [01:22:49.040 --> 01:22:56.040] They're securing the scene so that nobody sustains injury, including the person in cuffs. [01:22:56.040 --> 01:23:01.040] It sounds like they've exercised a surprising amount of restraint. [01:23:01.040 --> 01:23:05.040] These guys are probably not taking steroids. [01:23:05.040 --> 01:23:07.040] No. [01:23:07.040 --> 01:23:14.040] You didn't answer any of their questions and they didn't get super macho on you? [01:23:14.040 --> 01:23:16.040] This is surprising. [01:23:16.040 --> 01:23:19.040] Andy, isn't that my right not to speak to them? [01:23:19.040 --> 01:23:21.040] Of course it is. [01:23:21.040 --> 01:23:24.040] Is that taken as some sort of evidence that I've done something wrong? [01:23:24.040 --> 01:23:26.040] It wasn't. [01:23:26.040 --> 01:23:28.040] They did have evidence. [01:23:28.040 --> 01:23:41.040] They had an interrupted 911 call and then they have someone open the door who has the appearance of having been in a physical altercation. [01:23:41.040 --> 01:23:45.040] That is probable cause. [01:23:45.040 --> 01:23:55.040] Have they simply walked away when you didn't answer your question and you turned out to be a home invader who killed a family? [01:23:55.040 --> 01:24:02.040] Are you going to go down and defend the police for not protecting the family? [01:24:02.040 --> 01:24:04.040] Be careful what you ask for. [01:24:04.040 --> 01:24:06.040] That's another job. [01:24:06.040 --> 01:24:21.040] They were doing their job but now you're saying because they did their job it made sure that you weren't a home invader who had the family tied up in the basement that now you want to go after them. [01:24:21.040 --> 01:24:27.040] Do you want our police in a position to where they're afraid to do their jobs and afraid to try to protect you? [01:24:27.040 --> 01:24:37.040] Well, I guess I would take exception with you saying that it's their job to intercede when they have no probable cause. [01:24:37.040 --> 01:24:43.040] What do you call the 911 call if not probable cause? [01:24:43.040 --> 01:24:47.040] Would a dead body on the sidewalk be probable cause? [01:24:47.040 --> 01:24:49.040] It was corrected, Eddie. [01:24:49.040 --> 01:25:00.040] Don't correct the 911 call mid-call. You can't do that. They have to respond and verify that the call was not put off by somebody harming someone else to stop it. [01:25:00.040 --> 01:25:11.040] Wait a minute, Eddie. What if you thought your wife had severely cut herself shaving her beard and you were mistaken? [01:25:11.040 --> 01:25:23.040] So you called 911 cause she cut her throat but you were wrong. You said, oh no, no, she's fine and no, we don't need any help. [01:25:23.040 --> 01:25:28.040] The difference there is calling for an ambulance and calling for a police officer. [01:25:28.040 --> 01:25:30.040] No, wait a minute. [01:25:30.040 --> 01:25:34.040] No, there wouldn't be any difference. [01:25:34.040 --> 01:25:44.040] Police should respond any way to make sure. When they get a 911 call, that is a really big deal. [01:25:44.040 --> 01:25:49.040] Interfering with a 911 call is a felony. [01:25:49.040 --> 01:26:03.040] So this 911 dispatcher hears a 911 call that's interrupted in the middle and gives the dispatcher reason to believe that that 911 call could well have been interfered with by a third person. [01:26:03.040 --> 01:26:14.040] Now the dispatcher has reason to believe that a felony had been committed. That's called probable cause. [01:26:14.040 --> 01:26:30.040] And when they knocked on the door after getting a 911 call and saw someone that had appeared to have very recently been in a physical altercation, that was probable cause. [01:26:30.040 --> 01:26:37.040] Any court will call that probable cause and I guarantee any grand jury will call that probable cause. [01:26:37.040 --> 01:26:44.040] Okay, well, I'll ask you guys this one last question and leave it at that. [01:26:44.040 --> 01:26:58.040] You know as well as I do that when the police feel frightened and they go into these situations where they feel it is a threat, people get killed, dogs get killed. [01:26:58.040 --> 01:27:15.040] Hold on, hold on. On where occasions that does happen, but you're making the generalization that police kill people when they get frightened. [01:27:15.040 --> 01:27:22.040] And that is not a proper generalization. The vast majority of the police do a very good job. [01:27:22.040 --> 01:27:33.040] And when the police come and do a good job, we don't get called in to radio shows and we don't get YouTube videos going viral saying, look at this, look what a good job they did. [01:27:33.040 --> 01:27:38.040] So it's unfair to generalize that way. [01:27:38.040 --> 01:27:58.040] Well, I guess what I would say is that it would have been very possible for a circumstance to exist here where the police felt threatened and they killed my dog, my brother, me. [01:27:58.040 --> 01:28:08.040] Yeah, that's this. It's possible if you'd grabbed one of the policemen around the throat, that good chance they would have worked you over good. [01:28:08.040 --> 01:28:12.040] If you tried to pull the police officer's weapon, good chance it would have. [01:28:12.040 --> 01:28:21.040] But you didn't give us any indication that the police used any excessive force. [01:28:21.040 --> 01:28:26.040] It sounded like they were very restrained considering the circumstances. [01:28:26.040 --> 01:28:34.040] And I would have to consider if I was there, I would be very concerned. [01:28:34.040 --> 01:28:39.040] I would be worried for my safety and everybody else's. I would have my weapon in my hand. [01:28:39.040 --> 01:28:46.040] Yes, of course you would, but it is not their place to do what they did. [01:28:46.040 --> 01:28:52.040] What is their place? Stand outside and say, well, are they dead yet? [01:28:52.040 --> 01:29:00.040] If the police didn't respond, I'm sure you would be the first one screaming bloody murder. [01:29:00.040 --> 01:29:07.040] Someone called 911 and those dirty rascals didn't come out and do the job. [01:29:07.040 --> 01:29:12.040] They knocked on the door and this bloody guy looks at him and says, oh, everything is okay. You can go. [01:29:12.040 --> 01:29:17.040] And the police say, oh, okay, everything's okay. This bloody guy said it's okay. [01:29:17.040 --> 01:29:21.040] So we'll go home. You'd be the first one to scream bloody murder. [01:29:21.040 --> 01:29:25.040] Randy, that's not fair. That is absolutely not fair. [01:29:25.040 --> 01:29:28.040] That is absolutely fair. [01:29:28.040 --> 01:29:35.040] If you came to the door and you didn't have a mark on you, they would still have it. [01:29:35.040 --> 01:29:39.040] But you came to the door looking like you had been in a physical education. [01:29:39.040 --> 01:29:43.040] You've got to give them a break. [01:29:43.040 --> 01:29:49.040] Okay, this is Randy Calderon with the radio. Eric, we're going to move on. [01:29:49.040 --> 01:29:53.040] We're going to disagree. We can agree to disagree. [01:29:53.040 --> 01:29:58.040] Okay, this is Randy Calderon with the radio. [01:29:58.040 --> 01:30:00.040] We'll be right back. [01:30:00.040 --> 01:30:07.040] A noble lie. Oklahoma City, 1995 will change forever the way you look at the true nature of terrorism. [01:30:07.040 --> 01:30:11.040] Based on the damage pattern to the building, but the government says it's impossible. [01:30:11.040 --> 01:30:14.040] The grand jury did not want to hear anything I had to say. [01:30:14.040 --> 01:30:18.040] The decision was made not to pursue any more of those individuals. [01:30:18.040 --> 01:30:23.040] Some of these columns were ripped up, shredded, tossed around. [01:30:23.040 --> 01:30:27.040] The people that did the things they did knew doggone well what they were doing. [01:30:27.040 --> 01:30:32.040] Expose the cover up now at enobleye.com. [01:30:32.040 --> 01:30:37.040] The Rule of Law Radio Network is proud to present a due process of law seminar hosted by our own Eddie Craig. [01:30:37.040 --> 01:30:43.040] Eddie is a former Nacodotius Sheriff's Deputy and for the past 21 years he's been studying the due process of law [01:30:43.040 --> 01:30:48.040] and offers his knowledge to you at a seminar every Sunday from 2 o'clock to 5 o'clock at Brave New Books, [01:30:48.040 --> 01:30:51.040] located at 1904 Guadalupe Street. [01:30:51.040 --> 01:30:59.040] Admission is $20, so please make plans to come by and sit with Eddie and learn for yourself what the true intent of law really is. [01:30:59.040 --> 01:31:05.040] At hempusa.org we offer chemical-free products to people around the world, [01:31:05.040 --> 01:31:09.040] detoxifying, self-healing while rebuilding the immune system. [01:31:09.040 --> 01:31:14.040] We urge our listeners to please consider our largest selling product, micro plant powder. [01:31:14.040 --> 01:31:24.040] Our micro plant powder is rich in iodine, probiotics, zinc and silica to help rebuild the immune system and to create a healthy stomach flora. [01:31:24.040 --> 01:31:29.040] Micro plant powder is excellent for daily intake and is perfect to add to your storage shelter. [01:31:29.040 --> 01:31:37.040] We urge our listeners to please visit us at hempusa.org and remember all of our products are chemical-free and healthy to eat. [01:31:37.040 --> 01:31:42.040] We constantly strive to give you the best service, highest quality and rapid shipping anywhere [01:31:42.040 --> 01:31:46.040] and we offer free shipping on orders over $95 in the US. [01:31:46.040 --> 01:31:52.040] Please visit us at hempusa.org or call 908-6912608. [01:31:52.040 --> 01:31:55.040] That's 908-6912608. [01:31:55.040 --> 01:32:11.040] See what our powder, seeds and oil can do for you at hempusa.org. [01:32:25.040 --> 01:32:38.040] Okay, we are back. Randy, Calvin, David, Steve and Eddie Craig with our video. [01:32:38.040 --> 01:32:42.040] We're going to go to John in Texas. [01:32:42.040 --> 01:32:45.040] Johnny, what do you have for us tonight? [01:32:45.040 --> 01:32:54.040] Hey guys, first I just want to say that Eddie and Randy, I admire your patience and demeanor in the face of perplexities. [01:32:54.040 --> 01:33:05.040] With that said, I have a question about filing paperwork into the case file of a municipal court for somebody else. [01:33:05.040 --> 01:33:11.040] I've heard what you guys have said about the unauthorized practice of law and I've researched into it. [01:33:11.040 --> 01:33:15.040] I'm in total agreement with you and it makes perfect sense. [01:33:15.040 --> 01:33:23.040] My girlfriend has a traffic case coming up and she is injured and is unable to make it to the court. [01:33:23.040 --> 01:33:27.040] And I'm trying to find a way to go file paperwork for her. [01:33:27.040 --> 01:33:30.040] Again, just a couple of motions and then after David. [01:33:30.040 --> 01:33:33.040] All you have to do is get her to sign it. [01:33:33.040 --> 01:33:40.040] Anybody can take it to the court. You just can't file it with your name. [01:33:40.040 --> 01:33:47.040] Well, and I know that's not what's supposed to work, but this particular court, they want to see ID [01:33:47.040 --> 01:33:52.040] and they want to try to say that if you're not the party to the case, you can't file. [01:33:52.040 --> 01:33:55.040] Call 911. [01:33:55.040 --> 01:33:57.040] Okay. [01:33:57.040 --> 01:34:04.040] This is not a best you don't go to the court anyway. Just name it. [01:34:04.040 --> 01:34:10.040] Well, we've been, and I know, I've seen that in their rules of procedure. [01:34:10.040 --> 01:34:13.040] You know, you can mail, you can file things by mail. [01:34:13.040 --> 01:34:17.040] They generally try to say that they don't have it, didn't get it. [01:34:17.040 --> 01:34:20.040] Well, that's why you send it certified. Then it doesn't matter what they say. [01:34:20.040 --> 01:34:23.040] Yeah, we do. We do. We send it certified. [01:34:23.040 --> 01:34:26.040] Okay, I have another suggestion. [01:34:26.040 --> 01:34:27.040] Okay. [01:34:27.040 --> 01:34:33.040] You are not her boyfriend. Don't even know the woman. You're just a courier. [01:34:33.040 --> 01:34:35.040] Okay. [01:34:35.040 --> 01:34:45.040] Take it to him in a sealed envelope. Take you, make you up a little page in Johnny's courier service. [01:34:45.040 --> 01:34:50.040] Ask him to sign right here. Hand him the document. [01:34:50.040 --> 01:34:54.040] Kid Magnus and I have him do this for me. [01:34:54.040 --> 01:35:00.040] He did this in Johnson County. You know, it was absolutely a hoot. [01:35:00.040 --> 01:35:04.040] That is actually a very, that's a very good idea. [01:35:04.040 --> 01:35:09.040] Although we'd have to get someone else to do it because we've, we've raised so much cane in that court. [01:35:09.040 --> 01:35:11.040] They know our faces. [01:35:11.040 --> 01:35:15.040] Okay, we'll get, it's always better to have a ringer anyway. [01:35:15.040 --> 01:35:17.040] Yeah. [01:35:17.040 --> 01:35:23.040] So that would be great because you have a courier and now you have a, [01:35:23.040 --> 01:35:27.040] especially if it's somebody who's not necessarily tied to the situation, [01:35:27.040 --> 01:35:30.040] then you have a third party witness. [01:35:30.040 --> 01:35:34.040] This is the best kind of witness because you have no dog in the hut. [01:35:34.040 --> 01:35:39.040] Yeah, just get a friend and tell him he's, he just goes in and tell him he's a process server and serve it on the court. [01:35:39.040 --> 01:35:42.040] No, no, don't say that. You've got to be licensed. [01:35:42.040 --> 01:35:45.040] Just tell him you're a courier service. [01:35:45.040 --> 01:35:47.040] Yes, you do. [01:35:47.040 --> 01:35:50.040] They put this in a couple of years ago. [01:35:50.040 --> 01:35:59.040] They used to be able to serve process just a private person, but a couple of years ago they changed it. [01:35:59.040 --> 01:36:01.040] That was annoying. [01:36:01.040 --> 01:36:05.040] Well, either way, I mean, you don't have to be a process server to be a courier. [01:36:05.040 --> 01:36:10.040] And, you know, now that you say that we have served things by courier before, or not serve, but, you know, [01:36:10.040 --> 01:36:13.040] have things delivered to the court by courier. [01:36:13.040 --> 01:36:18.040] And that would give you your return, you know, to everything you need. [01:36:18.040 --> 01:36:21.040] Yeah. Okay. Well, I appreciate that. [01:36:21.040 --> 01:36:24.040] And the next question, this may be a little bit off the wall. [01:36:24.040 --> 01:36:29.040] I'm just looking, I like to look into different options and play out different scenarios, [01:36:29.040 --> 01:36:37.040] but is it possible to move a municipal court case to a federal court? [01:36:37.040 --> 01:36:40.040] And if so, what are you guys' thoughts on that? [01:36:40.040 --> 01:36:48.040] Well, no, you can't move a criminal case, a state criminal case to the fair, period. [01:36:48.040 --> 01:36:50.040] Okay. Okay. [01:36:50.040 --> 01:37:00.040] The state has exclusive jurisdiction over state law crimes. That's the problem with Terry McVeigh. [01:37:00.040 --> 01:37:08.040] You are to be tried in the state with where the offense occurred. [01:37:08.040 --> 01:37:13.040] And in his case, it happened to be a federal crime, but he still was required to be tried in Oklahoma. [01:37:13.040 --> 01:37:16.040] That would be Timothy McVeigh. [01:37:16.040 --> 01:37:21.040] And it wasn't actually a federal crime. There is no federal crime for... [01:37:21.040 --> 01:37:24.040] Yes, it was. It was a federal building. [01:37:24.040 --> 01:37:28.040] That was made a federal crime after Kennedy was killed. [01:37:28.040 --> 01:37:32.040] To kill a president, kill a judge, blow up a federal building. [01:37:32.040 --> 01:37:39.040] Well, and that actually, now that you say that in my understanding, when Kennedy was killed and the fed showed up, the sheriff... [01:37:39.040 --> 01:37:41.040] Totally. Get out of my account. [01:37:41.040 --> 01:37:47.040] Yeah. Yeah. That's why they passed the law of making it a federal crime. [01:37:47.040 --> 01:37:54.040] Yes. Okay. Well, that's all I really have for tonight. I appreciate you guys. [01:37:54.040 --> 01:38:07.040] Okay. Our call board is absolutely empty close to the end of the show. That is surprising. That generally doesn't happen. [01:38:07.040 --> 01:38:18.040] But that's okay. I was talking earlier about some of these issues, and I would like to address Eric from Washington. [01:38:18.040 --> 01:38:30.040] I was kind of concerned about that one. You know, we really hate to dump on our callers, and I certainly didn't mean to if it sounded like we were kind of dumping on Eric, [01:38:30.040 --> 01:38:39.040] because I understand that he was upset and felt put upon and mistreated by the police. [01:38:39.040 --> 01:38:55.040] But we have to really be careful what we ask for. We're very quick to jump all over police who act improperly and me of all people. [01:38:55.040 --> 01:39:03.040] You know, all I have to do is get them to squeak outside the law just a little bit, and I just revel in thumping them over it. [01:39:03.040 --> 01:39:10.040] Actually, I'd like it better when they do something minor, so you don't have to thump them quite as hard. [01:39:10.040 --> 01:39:20.040] But when they do it right, we should really appreciate it even when what they do is against us. [01:39:20.040 --> 01:39:32.040] And I've had a number of cases where I've had the police act against me, and they handled themselves like professionals, and I absolutely appreciated it. [01:39:32.040 --> 01:39:43.040] I had called the director of the Department of Public Safety seven years ago, and when Colonel Adams was the director, he knew the sound of my voice, [01:39:43.040 --> 01:39:54.040] because I called him on a relatively regular basis. And one of the times I was chewing him out, and he asked me, [01:39:54.040 --> 01:40:00.040] Mr. Councilman, just what do you expect from my officers? I said, Richard Denning. [01:40:00.040 --> 01:40:08.040] He said, what? Richard Denning. That's one of your officers. That rascal stops me every time he sees me. [01:40:08.040 --> 01:40:17.040] He always writes me a ticket, and I give him these great explanations and excuses as to why he shouldn't write me this ticket, [01:40:17.040 --> 01:40:25.040] and he agrees with me. And he assures me that when I get to the JPE that she'll just toss this thing out, [01:40:25.040 --> 01:40:31.040] and he apologizes that he doesn't have any option he has to write this ticket. [01:40:31.040 --> 01:40:42.040] And then I grind on him, and I tried to get him to do something stupid. I can't get him upset. I can't do anything to Alan Denning. [01:40:42.040 --> 01:40:56.040] And if I need a policeman with a pistol, I want you to send him. He won't cut me any slack, but he also doesn't do anything stupid or careless. [01:40:56.040 --> 01:41:05.040] And that's all I ask from my police. I don't need them to cut me slack. I want them to do the job. [01:41:05.040 --> 01:41:14.040] If I'm doing something wrong and I happen to know the policeman, I don't want him to let me off just because we're buddies. [01:41:14.040 --> 01:41:24.040] That's what they call the good old boy system, and I don't like it and I complain about it, so I don't have any right to take advantage of it. [01:41:24.040 --> 01:41:37.040] But then on the other hand, I don't expect him to do that to anyone else. Just do your job, follow the law, do your job, and I appreciate those police officers. [01:41:37.040 --> 01:41:46.040] And we still have a lot of police officers who are that way, who do their jobs, they go to work every day. [01:41:46.040 --> 01:41:58.040] I have had either three or four, I don't remember now, policemen come to me and ask me if I could help them get rid of a policeman, [01:41:58.040 --> 01:42:05.040] because he was such a scoundrel that he was making things bad for everyone. [01:42:05.040 --> 01:42:12.040] But they were part of the system and they couldn't do anything about it, and they needed somebody from the outside. [01:42:12.040 --> 01:42:21.040] And they knew and trusted me enough to know that I wouldn't screw somebody just out of being malicious. [01:42:21.040 --> 01:42:34.040] And while the officials here in Wise County didn't like me, they did trust me enough to know that I never made false or malicious accusations. [01:42:34.040 --> 01:42:47.040] But policemen have this problem that the very few who go around doing stupid stuff make all the good ones look bad, and they are frustrated by it. [01:42:47.040 --> 01:42:53.040] And I'm frustrated when we actually have policemen doing it right. [01:42:53.040 --> 01:43:07.040] In this case, I thought from just his own description that the police exercised extreme care and exceptional professionalism. [01:43:07.040 --> 01:43:14.040] So when you start complaining about public officials, be careful what you ask for. [01:43:14.040 --> 01:43:26.040] We had someone in Pennsylvania, when I was doing a seminar, complain about a clerk accepting these filings from the IRS that were bogus. [01:43:26.040 --> 01:43:28.040] They wanted to see if you could go after the clerk. [01:43:28.040 --> 01:43:31.040] And I said, no, you don't want to go after the clerk. [01:43:31.040 --> 01:43:33.040] The clerk just files it. [01:43:33.040 --> 01:43:35.040] We don't want clerks making these decisions. [01:43:35.040 --> 01:43:37.040] Be careful what you ask for. [01:43:37.040 --> 01:43:39.040] This is Randy Kelk, the deputy student. [01:43:39.040 --> 01:43:45.040] I'm Randy Kelk, deputy student. Very good to meet you on the radio. We're about to go into our last segment. [01:43:45.040 --> 01:43:54.040] So if you have a question or a comment, give us a call, 502-666-1984. We'll be right back. [01:43:54.040 --> 01:44:09.040] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy, and neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [01:44:09.040 --> 01:44:12.040] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [01:44:12.040 --> 01:44:13.040] Brave New Books? [01:44:13.040 --> 01:44:24.040] Yes, Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, Angie Ebert Griffin. They even stock inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [01:44:24.040 --> 01:44:26.040] There's no way a place like that exists. [01:44:26.040 --> 01:44:32.040] Go check it out for yourself. It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [01:44:32.040 --> 01:44:36.040] Oh, by UT? There's never anywhere to park down there. [01:44:36.040 --> 01:44:44.040] Surely they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [01:44:44.040 --> 01:44:47.040] It does exist, but when are they open? [01:44:47.040 --> 01:44:52.040] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [01:44:52.040 --> 01:45:01.040] So give them a call at 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:45:01.040 --> 01:45:15.040] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, poor CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:15.040 --> 01:45:23.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.040 --> 01:45:34.040] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.040 --> 01:45:43.040] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.040 --> 01:45:52.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.040 --> 01:46:01.040] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.040 --> 01:46:45.040] The people come down from the hills. [01:46:45.040 --> 01:46:52.040] The people come down from the hills. [01:46:52.040 --> 01:46:55.040] Okay, we are back. [01:46:55.040 --> 01:47:04.040] And we're going to go to Jeremiah in Texas. [01:47:04.040 --> 01:47:07.040] Jeremiah, what do you have for us tonight? [01:47:07.040 --> 01:47:15.040] I got a question for you. I haven't been living in the area for a little while, and I really picked up on you quickly. [01:47:15.040 --> 01:47:27.040] I've been listening, but I haven't had to really use your advice so much because I was being taken to help any particular standard. [01:47:27.040 --> 01:47:37.040] Just recently, I got pulled over, and I got a speeding ticket. I was going about 45 miles an hour in a strip of traffic. [01:47:37.040 --> 01:47:44.040] I think it was 40 miles an hour speed limit, and I was fairly speeding. [01:47:44.040 --> 01:47:53.040] But I guess I kind of get to the bigger question that I want to ask you about what kind of sets the standard as far as people... [01:47:53.040 --> 01:48:01.040] Where do you keep yourself from drawing a line like, oh man, everybody knows that the speed limit is this and you shouldn't be speeding? [01:48:01.040 --> 01:48:11.040] Well, I guess my question is, I know that from coming listening to you, I don't have all the details I earned out, [01:48:11.040 --> 01:48:21.040] but I gather as much that it's kind of more a matter of driving with some prudence that you don't endanger somebody's property or the people themselves, [01:48:21.040 --> 01:48:27.040] then it's kind of like a guideline. I know you guys will have to hold me in on this, but... [01:48:27.040 --> 01:48:38.040] Wait, I have a question. In your personal opinion, based on all of the conditions at the time, [01:48:38.040 --> 01:48:44.040] did you have reason to believe you were creating a hazard for anyone? [01:48:44.040 --> 01:48:54.040] Oh no, not certain. You know, if you go to Tehran in Iran, they don't have any traffic signs, they don't have any traffic lights, [01:48:54.040 --> 01:49:04.040] they don't have any traffic laws, and their accident rate there is essentially the same as it is everywhere else. [01:49:04.040 --> 01:49:15.040] There's no statistical difference. So, whether or not we should or ought to do certain things, [01:49:15.040 --> 01:49:25.040] it's clear from experience in other places that all of these laws are not absolutely necessary. [01:49:25.040 --> 01:49:40.040] But from another perspective, as far as I am concerned, traffic law, that is a great place for you to learn how the system works firsthand, [01:49:40.040 --> 01:49:51.040] so that if something more serious comes along where you're falsely charged of something far more serious, like Eric could have been, [01:49:51.040 --> 01:49:56.040] they didn't arrest him, they could have arrested him for family violence. [01:49:56.040 --> 01:50:02.040] And if they had any indication of family violence, they could have arrested him. [01:50:02.040 --> 01:50:06.040] The reason they probably didn't is because he didn't answer any of their questions. [01:50:06.040 --> 01:50:15.040] He knew that much about, you know, he knew about that part, so he didn't answer the question, so they didn't have anything to arrest him for. [01:50:15.040 --> 01:50:23.040] You can be arrested for something when you're absolutely innocent. The police essentially don't care. [01:50:23.040 --> 01:50:29.040] Once they are arrest, they need a conviction. Prosecutors could care less when you're guilty or innocent. [01:50:29.040 --> 01:50:38.040] And the place to get the cheapest legal education is right here, traffic. [01:50:38.040 --> 01:50:51.040] Here in Austin, yeah, any seminar? Tell them about your seminar. [01:50:51.040 --> 01:50:59.040] Yeah, I have a seminar written on the transportation code and traffic in general, teaches people how to read, learn, understand, [01:50:59.040 --> 01:51:10.040] and research statutes in their state so that they can understand what the law is applicable to, and usually it's not them at all. [01:51:10.040 --> 01:51:16.040] We sell it off for a website, it's $250, and you can just go on and you can order that. [01:51:16.040 --> 01:51:22.040] And then we keep it updated so you only have to buy the actual seminar packet once. [01:51:22.040 --> 01:51:28.040] Now, that won't include any new volumes of books that come out for it, but right now, that's what's included. [01:51:28.040 --> 01:51:34.040] Also, it contains documents to take and file in your case in court to fight it. [01:51:34.040 --> 01:51:39.040] You do, however, have to convert it to whatever state you're in. [01:51:39.040 --> 01:51:47.040] But since you're in Texas, all you've got to do is just edit what's highlighted and file it. [01:51:47.040 --> 01:51:54.040] And also, every Sunday, he does a presentation. Tell them about that. [01:51:54.040 --> 01:52:02.040] Yeah, every Sunday from 2 to 5, we use the go 2 to 6, though, down at Brave New Books at the corner of Guadalupe and MLK. [01:52:02.040 --> 01:52:11.040] If you're going to fight the ticket, then class is a necessity because you won't understand all the arguments in the court documents [01:52:11.040 --> 01:52:19.040] not only without reading them, but without understanding from an oral argument point of view how to make them work. [01:52:19.040 --> 01:52:25.040] Okay, I'll definitely see you on Sunday. [01:52:25.040 --> 01:52:41.040] If this is not a real contentious issue for you, if you would consider paying the fine anyway, heck, this can be fun because you don't have anything to lose. [01:52:41.040 --> 01:52:56.040] Exactly. See, I'm one of those idiot students that took out a bunch of loans and I'm recently out of school, so I don't have a whole lot of money to spend $250 right now, but the ramifications in the long term... [01:52:56.040 --> 01:52:59.040] Well, what was the ticket you got? [01:52:59.040 --> 01:53:01.040] I was going... [01:53:01.040 --> 01:53:03.040] You got a speeding ticket, right? [01:53:03.040 --> 01:53:04.040] Yes, sir. [01:53:04.040 --> 01:53:10.040] Okay, there's $301 you're going to cough up, or you can spend $250, fight it, and not cough it up. [01:53:10.040 --> 01:53:29.040] Exactly. See, well, I am more in line with the greater, with a more fundamental argument that I really wasn't doing anything to harm anybody, and I'd rather know the law in that aspect so that I can say, hey, you know what, bullets. [01:53:29.040 --> 01:53:32.040] I don't have to pay this because I wasn't breaking the law. [01:53:32.040 --> 01:53:41.040] Okay, well, the thing is, you weren't breaking the law, but not for the reason you think you're not breaking the law. That's the problem. [01:53:41.040 --> 01:53:50.040] You think you weren't breaking the law because even though you were going faster than the speed limit, you didn't hurt anybody, and that's the only reason you got to worry about it. [01:53:50.040 --> 01:54:01.040] What if the situation is that particular law never applied to you to begin with, so they can't charge you with breaking it because it's impossible to break it? [01:54:01.040 --> 01:54:04.040] Is that a commerce or deal? [01:54:04.040 --> 01:54:18.040] It is. The transportation code is for those engaging in transportation, which is commercial use of the road. It's not everyday people in everyday situations traveling down the road in their own car. [01:54:18.040 --> 01:54:31.040] In this case, speeding, the speed signs are very specific in the code what they apply to. You explained that, Eddie? [01:54:31.040 --> 01:54:53.040] Yeah, in transportation code 201.904 says very specifically there that a speed sign regulates the speed of commercial motor vehicles, semis, semi tractor trailers, tractor trailers, and commercial motor vehicles for the transportation of passengers for compensation or hire, meaning buses. [01:54:53.040 --> 01:54:56.040] Which one of those were you in? [01:54:56.040 --> 01:55:01.040] Oh, every one of them at the moment. No, I'm just a little passenger car. I wasn't in any of them. [01:55:01.040 --> 01:55:07.040] No. Passenger is somebody being paid to be transported from point A to point B. [01:55:07.040 --> 01:55:22.040] Okay, well, no, wait a minute. It was a passenger car in that it was a vehicle designed such that it could transport people for hire. [01:55:22.040 --> 01:55:34.040] You just weren't using it in that capacity at that time. So therefore at that time you were using it as a private conveyance. [01:55:34.040 --> 01:55:43.040] Okay. You have a license, but you weren't using it right then. [01:55:43.040 --> 01:56:01.040] So I come and see you on Sunday. I'll invest in the $250 seminar. Would you be able to help me on Sunday get pointed in the right direction so I know how to behave in court appropriately? [01:56:01.040 --> 01:56:03.040] I was under the impression. [01:56:03.040 --> 01:56:05.040] When do you go to court? [01:56:05.040 --> 01:56:08.040] On August 18th, I believe it is. [01:56:08.040 --> 01:56:20.040] Okay, then you'll need to come to every class because we do court procedure. In fact, not this Sunday, but a week from this Sunday, we will be reenacting my court case. [01:56:20.040 --> 01:56:30.040] We'll be using the actual transcript from my court trial down here to go through and teach people everything about what they do and what you need to do in response to it. [01:56:30.040 --> 01:56:34.040] We'll be going through an actual trial. [01:56:34.040 --> 01:56:35.040] Okay. [01:56:35.040 --> 01:56:51.040] So this weekend you need to come just so you can be part of the discussion. We can start talking about your ticket and your issue. Bring all of your paperwork, including your ticket, everything you got in relation to that ticket, whether it was from the cop or from something in the mail later. [01:56:51.040 --> 01:56:53.040] Bring it all with you. [01:56:53.040 --> 01:56:54.040] Okay. [01:56:54.040 --> 01:57:06.040] And since it's an Austin citation, under no circumstances, tear that ticket apart. Leave everything attached just the way it was handed to you. [01:57:06.040 --> 01:57:14.040] It did rip a little bit. I just went to look through. Actually, it didn't rip. I did leave through the pages to read. [01:57:14.040 --> 01:57:21.040] Yeah, you can detach it on one end, but don't ever take it apart on both ends where they're all separate pages. Don't ever do that. [01:57:21.040 --> 01:57:23.040] Okay. [01:57:23.040 --> 01:57:34.040] I was thinking there was going to be some fine print that says that this is conditional. There's nothing on there. There's nothing that says that the stipulation is only applied to a commercial vehicle that you... [01:57:34.040 --> 01:57:38.040] Actually, there is. You just don't understand what you're reading. [01:57:38.040 --> 01:57:39.040] Okay. [01:57:39.040 --> 01:57:42.040] But I'll show you all that in class on the ticket. [01:57:42.040 --> 01:57:44.040] Well, thank you, sir. [01:57:44.040 --> 01:57:50.040] I'll call in when we have more time. I've got more of a fundamental question. [01:57:50.040 --> 01:57:57.040] Okay. We'll just call back in Monday if it has to deal with traffic or something like that, Jeremiah, or we can answer it in class Sunday. Okay? [01:57:57.040 --> 01:57:59.040] Well, I really appreciate it, guys. [01:57:59.040 --> 01:58:01.040] All right. No problem. Thanks for calling in. [01:58:01.040 --> 01:58:06.040] All right, folks. This has been the Friday Night Rule of Law Show. This is the end. [01:58:06.040 --> 01:58:11.040] Eric, Jeremiah, Johnny, thanks for calling in. Sorry we couldn't get to all of you again. [01:58:11.040 --> 01:58:17.040] This is Eddie Craig with Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens. Randy, you want to say goodnight? [01:58:17.040 --> 01:58:27.040] Goodnight. We'll be back Monday with Eddie, Thursday and Friday with me and Deborah, I, and maybe everybody be here. [01:58:27.040 --> 01:58:34.040] And then back again next Friday. We appreciate your listening. We especially appreciate your calling in. [01:58:34.040 --> 01:58:43.040] Even when we don't agree with you, I think I'd like that call better than most because we get to examine another side. [01:58:43.040 --> 01:58:49.040] And if we disagree with you, we only disagree with the content, not with you. Thank you for listening. [01:59:13.040 --> 01:59:20.040] 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.040 --> 01:59:30.040] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.040 --> 01:59:41.040] This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.040 --> 01:59:49.040] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.