[00:00.000 --> 00:06.320] We all know the FBI likes getting citizens to inform on their friends, but did you know [00:06.320 --> 00:08.720] Facebook is now up to the same dirty tricks? [00:08.720 --> 00:13.880] I'm Dr. Cameron Albright and I'll tell you how Facebook is turning users into snitches [00:13.880 --> 00:16.880] that rat each other out next. [00:16.880 --> 00:18.600] Privacy is under attack. [00:18.600 --> 00:22.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [00:22.200 --> 00:27.200] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [00:27.200 --> 00:28.720] So protect your rights. [00:28.720 --> 00:32.160] Let them know to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [00:32.160 --> 00:34.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [00:34.960 --> 00:40.560] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [00:40.560 --> 00:42.280] Yahoo and Bing. [00:42.280 --> 00:44.280] Start over with StartPage. [00:44.280 --> 00:50.840] In an age where every crumb of personal data is prized by snoopy governments and shady [00:50.840 --> 00:53.640] marketers, pseudonyms are shields of freedom. [00:53.640 --> 00:58.680] Fake names help us connect on the web without having to trade our most precious asset, privacy. [00:58.680 --> 01:04.160] But now Facebook is asking users to snitch on friends who use aliases and it's got me [01:04.160 --> 01:05.600] hopping mad. [01:05.600 --> 01:09.840] By showing people's accounts to their Facebook friends and asking what that person's real [01:09.840 --> 01:15.680] name is, Facebook is assaulting a basic freedom to call ourselves whatever we choose, except [01:15.680 --> 01:18.440] of course on official documents. [01:18.440 --> 01:20.800] Facebook is not your friend, it's a snoop. [01:20.800 --> 01:23.240] Don't let it breach your trust with your real friends. [01:23.240 --> 01:30.080] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30.080 --> 01:37.120] Is too much internet driving Americans crazy? [01:37.120 --> 01:41.520] New research says the web can make us lonely and depressed and even psychotic. [01:41.520 --> 01:46.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll talk about the internet's impact on our state of mind [01:46.920 --> 01:49.120] in a moment. [01:49.120 --> 01:50.840] Privacy is under attack. [01:50.840 --> 01:55.280] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [01:55.280 --> 01:59.480] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:59.480 --> 02:04.520] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [02:04.520 --> 02:07.240] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [02:07.240 --> 02:12.880] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [02:12.880 --> 02:14.560] Yahoo and Bing. [02:14.560 --> 02:18.040] Start over with StartPage. [02:18.040 --> 02:22.320] It's no secret many Americans spend more time tweeting, texting and e-mailing than they [02:22.320 --> 02:23.320] do sleeping. [02:23.320 --> 02:26.920] But can too much time online make us plum crazy? [02:26.920 --> 02:31.200] Proof is piling up that the internet may be making us lonelier, more depressed, prone [02:31.200 --> 02:36.600] to obsessive compulsive disorders and in extreme cases, even psychotic. [02:36.600 --> 02:41.840] Researchers are documenting actual changes in the brain caused by even moderate web exposure. [02:41.840 --> 02:46.240] They're finding that digitized minds are constantly scanning for a fix just like drug [02:46.240 --> 02:51.440] addicts, with every ping delivering a squirt of dopamine, that many reward system for opening [02:51.440 --> 02:52.440] that message. [02:52.440 --> 02:54.920] Maybe it's time we stopped answering the call. [02:54.920 --> 03:21.760] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [03:21.760 --> 03:32.960] Okay, we are back. [03:32.960 --> 03:38.280] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Jason [03:38.280 --> 03:39.280] in Texas. [03:39.280 --> 03:40.280] Yes, sir. [03:40.280 --> 03:41.280] Okay. [03:41.280 --> 03:42.280] Where were we? [03:42.280 --> 03:46.800] Well, I just wanted to touch on some points that you made. [03:46.800 --> 03:51.640] You know, there's undoubtedly been hopefully some new listeners out there and maybe people [03:51.640 --> 03:58.000] have just kind of started tuning in to you guys and the whole, the routine that you just [03:58.000 --> 04:03.120] ran down might sound crazy to them, but hitting on some of the points you talked about, you [04:03.120 --> 04:10.320] know, we didn't write this stuff, it's there and it is our law and hitting on the second [04:10.320 --> 04:14.080] point you talked about, these people don't have to like us, but they damn sure better [04:14.080 --> 04:19.440] respect us if we're to get this thing back on track where it needs to be. [04:19.440 --> 04:22.480] Well said, well said. [04:22.480 --> 04:29.280] I had a city council member call me once and this is after I forced the mayor and a city [04:29.280 --> 04:36.920] councilman to stand trial and he said, you know, everybody in town is laughing at you. [04:36.920 --> 04:43.480] And I said, well, it's a good thing I don't make my living in this town. [04:43.480 --> 04:49.760] But if I'm going to have people, if I have to choose between people liking me and respecting [04:49.760 --> 04:55.600] me, that's not a hard choice. [04:55.600 --> 05:02.400] And it's, we didn't, let me qualify this with, when you're filing all of these criminal [05:02.400 --> 05:08.040] complaints, we don't want anybody indicted. [05:08.040 --> 05:11.640] That's never ever the point. [05:11.640 --> 05:17.600] The criminal law is not about punishing and incarcerating people. [05:17.600 --> 05:21.400] It's about deterrents. [05:21.400 --> 05:28.400] You know, I have some grandkids and I love my grandkids dearly, but if one of them runs [05:28.400 --> 05:35.320] out in the road, well, I'm fixing 10 is high, that's all this is about. [05:35.320 --> 05:41.800] It's not about getting an indictment, it's about forcing them to face the prospect of [05:41.800 --> 05:42.800] indictment. [05:42.800 --> 05:50.240] I mentioned when we started a white paper that I was working on and what the white paper [05:50.240 --> 06:02.000] goes to is a couple of minor adjustments and wording in a couple of statutes and the requirement [06:02.000 --> 06:09.480] that the grand jury meet at least once a month for the purpose of hearing complaints by private [06:09.480 --> 06:12.000] citizens. [06:12.000 --> 06:19.000] Now we hope that if we can get that in, that nobody ever shows up. [06:19.000 --> 06:26.400] And if nobody ever shows up, that'll mean that it's working perfectly. [06:26.400 --> 06:32.360] Because cops out drinking a little too long the other night with buddies and it gets home [06:32.360 --> 06:33.360] late. [06:33.360 --> 06:36.440] Mama is not happy with him and he's drunk anyway. [06:36.440 --> 06:41.840] He wakes up with a hangover, he's late for work, Sergeant Sony's case and he pulls me [06:41.840 --> 06:48.560] over and I'm my usual obnoxious and demanding self and he gets this notion of doing one [06:48.560 --> 06:52.760] of these attitude arrests. [06:52.760 --> 06:57.840] Well with me that's probably a bad idea because I'll give him a romp through the legal system, [06:57.840 --> 07:02.080] he will not believe. [07:02.080 --> 07:10.400] And if he has to think what would a grand jury of his peers think about what I'm about [07:10.400 --> 07:20.840] to do, we will dramatically increase his level of professionalism and possibly preserve [07:20.840 --> 07:25.160] his job or his ability to move ahead in his job. [07:25.160 --> 07:29.920] Because if he arrests me and pulls this crap over, by the time I get through crawling down [07:29.920 --> 07:37.960] his boss and their boss's throats, he won't ever get another promotion again. [07:37.960 --> 07:46.960] So the whole point is to give our public officials a reason to follow our law. [07:46.960 --> 07:52.880] And Jason, if you run this routine on them, when you get done with them, you know absolutely [07:52.880 --> 08:05.000] the worst thing is you're nobody, just some nobody comes in here and just kicks our behind. [08:05.000 --> 08:10.120] So who did this guy talk to? [08:10.120 --> 08:14.560] How many people has he told about this that they're going to come and do the same thing? [08:14.560 --> 08:19.000] Which one's going to be the next one? [08:19.000 --> 08:21.520] This is our job. [08:21.520 --> 08:24.840] This is the sovereign duty. [08:24.840 --> 08:27.960] Don't wait until they do something really horrible and they wind up in prison for the [08:27.960 --> 08:29.960] rest of their lives. [08:29.960 --> 08:35.840] First time they step across a legal line, you smack them good. [08:35.840 --> 08:42.160] And you back away and leave them alone and let them become good public servants. [08:42.160 --> 08:46.480] You could get rid of all of the public servants we have, replace them all, we wind up in the [08:46.480 --> 08:47.480] same place. [08:47.480 --> 08:51.320] Yeah, yeah, that's right. [08:51.320 --> 09:03.240] And this procedure, it's elegant and it's ethical and it is powerful and it's fun. [09:03.240 --> 09:09.040] Hey Randy, real quick, touch them back on your white paper. [09:09.040 --> 09:17.680] In reading the requirement for the court record as far as the grand jury is concerned, when [09:17.680 --> 09:22.200] I read that, and we spoke about this on the air before, when I read through that, the [09:22.200 --> 09:26.640] requirement is the presentment of indictment to be recorded in the record. [09:26.640 --> 09:32.880] Now I do realize there are some counties where the grand jury will record the no bill, however [09:32.880 --> 09:33.880] it's... [09:33.880 --> 09:39.240] Most of them do Tarrant County does, Johnson County did. [09:39.240 --> 09:43.520] Yeah, there's actually some of them who just do it, just to do it, and then there's others [09:43.520 --> 09:44.520] don't. [09:44.520 --> 09:49.400] For those counties that don't, and people who try to challenge that and ask for that [09:49.400 --> 09:55.000] court record, and they're not down with the, well it's not in statute, if the clerk told [09:55.000 --> 09:57.120] them that, the clerk would be correct. [09:57.120 --> 10:05.800] So going to your white paper, is that something, what's your opinion on writing that in, that [10:05.800 --> 10:06.800] those... [10:06.800 --> 10:10.640] Oh no, no, no, I didn't write that in. [10:10.640 --> 10:14.440] That is a relatively minor issue. [10:14.440 --> 10:27.360] But if I file a criminal complaint, and I don't get evidence, say I read the minutes [10:27.360 --> 10:34.840] of the court, and I find nothing in there that speaks to this complaint, and I look [10:34.840 --> 10:42.120] in the county clerk's records and I find no record of this complaint, then that creates [10:42.120 --> 10:45.680] the adverse inference that these people didn't do their jobs. [10:45.680 --> 10:51.560] If I sent the complaint to a prosecuting attorney under 2.03, he's required to reduce [10:51.560 --> 10:54.560] the complaint of an information submitted to the grand jury. [10:54.560 --> 11:02.200] Under 2.05, he's required to submit the complaint to some magistrate, and the magistrate is [11:02.200 --> 11:08.600] required to hold an examining trial under 2.11 code of criminal procedure. [11:08.600 --> 11:14.840] And the requisites of the examining trial are covered by a whole chapter, chapter 16. [11:14.840 --> 11:23.080] And 16.17 says that when the magistrate makes a determination, he's to issue an order stating [11:23.080 --> 11:31.320] whether he bound the person for trial, released him at his liberty, submitted him to the post-set [11:31.320 --> 11:41.000] bail, submitted him to the jail, and under 16.20, he's to prepare a warrant. [11:41.000 --> 11:45.640] And under 17.30, he's to seal all those documents in an envelope because his name would be written [11:45.640 --> 11:49.920] across the seal of the envelope and file it forwarded to the clerk's court of jurisdiction. [11:49.920 --> 11:54.480] If I go to court of jurisdiction, it'll always be the district court in a matter of a complaint [11:54.480 --> 11:59.400] against the public official, and I don't find those records. [11:59.400 --> 12:11.080] It's a reasonable, probable cause to believe that the, so right there in the, our legislators [12:11.080 --> 12:14.840] over the last 200 years did an incredible job. [12:14.840 --> 12:25.720] They built us an incredibly well-constructed, corpus durus, body of law. [12:25.720 --> 12:31.760] It all fits together absolutely elegantly. [12:31.760 --> 12:35.360] We just have to read the whole thing. [12:35.360 --> 12:39.440] These guys, the lawyers and such, want to read the one they want to read and then ignore [12:39.440 --> 12:40.440] the rest. [12:40.440 --> 12:41.440] Yeah. [12:41.440 --> 12:43.200] Well, I'm an engineer. [12:43.200 --> 12:45.400] I don't get to do that. [12:45.400 --> 12:55.680] You know, one of my first courses in electronic theory, the professor came in and said, electricity, [12:55.680 --> 13:01.480] we don't know what it is, but we do know some things that it does and based on our experience, [13:01.480 --> 13:05.680] we developed certain theorems, axioms, postulates to describe what it does, but all through [13:05.680 --> 13:09.840] your electronics career, never forget we don't know what it is. [13:09.840 --> 13:15.200] So, if you encounter a phenomenon that doesn't match one of our theorems, axioms, postulates, [13:15.200 --> 13:17.400] quick like a bunny rabbit, you throw it out. [13:17.400 --> 13:24.120] The theorems, axioms and postulates because mother nature has all these laws. [13:24.120 --> 13:28.840] This law, mother nature enforces all of her laws all the time. [13:28.840 --> 13:32.000] That's the way I feel about the code. [13:32.000 --> 13:37.760] If it's in the code, enforce it. [13:37.760 --> 13:45.840] If it creates a bad result, change it, but until you change it, enforce it. [13:45.840 --> 13:49.480] You don't have to like it, just do it. [13:49.480 --> 13:55.920] If you're incapable of doing it, stand aside and we'll get someone who can. [13:55.920 --> 13:59.720] This is not hard. [13:59.720 --> 14:06.160] Now, now they know how the cow has cabbage, my goodness. [14:06.160 --> 14:08.000] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [14:08.000 --> 14:11.840] Okay, we have anything else station that calls or stacking up? [14:11.840 --> 14:16.240] Yeah, I had a traffic issue, but I'll call Eddie on it. [14:16.240 --> 14:17.240] Okay. [14:17.240 --> 14:22.280] He gave me something to talk to him about on Monday, but I'll run this routine and I'll [14:22.280 --> 14:24.080] let you know the results I get. [14:24.080 --> 14:25.080] Good, good. [14:25.080 --> 14:27.640] You're going to have fun with that. [14:27.640 --> 14:35.600] The best part is, is we're asking them to do things that we really don't want them to [14:35.600 --> 14:42.520] do because if they do what we ask them to, it ruins all our funds. [14:42.520 --> 14:47.960] If we want to pass the tar baby around as much as we can, huh? [14:47.960 --> 14:48.960] Exactly. [14:48.960 --> 14:56.080] And if it works even better, if they know full well that when they don't do what you [14:56.080 --> 15:05.680] want them to and what you ask them to, you're just tickled, this is great, then they know [15:05.680 --> 15:10.280] you're setting them up and it just drives them up the wall and this is what we need [15:10.280 --> 15:11.880] to get it fixed with. [15:11.880 --> 15:12.880] Okay. [15:12.880 --> 15:13.880] Thank you, Jason. [15:13.880 --> 15:14.880] Another result I get. [15:14.880 --> 15:21.960] We are going to go to Rob in New Mexico and Rob is going to tell us some truck driver [15:21.960 --> 15:22.960] jokes. [15:22.960 --> 15:29.320] I'm actually hoping to not ever tell any more truck driving jokes. [15:29.320 --> 15:33.240] I'm talking to a guy on Monday about maybe being a tow truck driver. [15:33.240 --> 15:39.600] Then I'd be a heck of a lot more. [15:39.600 --> 15:43.400] Are they providing you with body armor? [15:43.400 --> 15:48.120] Well, I got a bigger gun than most people. [15:48.120 --> 15:49.120] Okay. [15:49.120 --> 15:52.720] What do you have for us tonight, Rob? [15:52.720 --> 15:53.720] Well, okay. [15:53.720 --> 15:59.400] I got a funny story with a question and another funny story that's kind of unrelated to the [15:59.400 --> 16:00.720] question that follows it. [16:00.720 --> 16:05.320] So I'll give you the related ones first. [16:05.320 --> 16:13.720] We went down to the magistrate court and filed the documents for Kay's case regarding the [16:13.720 --> 16:20.120] careless driving citation and I asked the court who the prosecutor was so that I could [16:20.120 --> 16:28.000] serve him his copies and she said that it would be the arresting officer. [16:28.000 --> 16:35.480] And I said, oh, is he an attorney? [16:35.480 --> 16:36.480] Okay, hang on. [16:36.480 --> 16:37.480] We're about to go to break. [16:37.480 --> 16:40.880] This does sound like you're going to be having fun with this. [16:40.880 --> 16:45.640] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig, Rule of Law Radio. [16:45.640 --> 16:49.360] I call in number 512-646-1984. [16:49.360 --> 17:06.800] We'll be right back. [17:06.800 --> 17:32.900] Thank you very much. [17:32.900 --> 17:40.900] We're all brick and tangy tangerine, tangy tangerine, tangy tangerine. [17:40.900 --> 17:45.900] Order Beyond Tangy Tangerine and other great young Jebedee products at LogosRadioNetwork.com [17:45.900 --> 17:48.900] by clicking on the Tangy Tangerine banner. [17:48.900 --> 17:52.900] Sign up as a preferred customer for wholesale prices or become a distributor [17:52.900 --> 17:55.900] and support LogosRadioNetwork.com. [17:55.900 --> 17:57.900] So what do you say, Elvis? [17:57.900 --> 17:59.900] I learn much. [17:59.900 --> 18:04.900] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? 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[18:40.900 --> 18:46.900] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Miras banner [18:46.900 --> 18:49.900] or email Michael Miras at yahoo.com. [18:49.900 --> 18:56.900] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:56.900 --> 18:59.900] To learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:27.900 --> 19:33.900] Okay, we are back with Randy Kelton, Deb. Steve, and J.D. Craig from Rule of Law Radio, [19:33.900 --> 19:37.900] and we're talking to Rob in Mexico. [19:37.900 --> 19:43.900] So, the lawyer is a, the cop's a lawyer. [19:43.900 --> 19:45.900] Well, maybe not. [19:45.900 --> 19:48.900] I asked the clerk, and she didn't seem to think that he was a lawyer, and I said, [19:48.900 --> 19:50.900] well, how is he going to act as the prosecutor? [19:50.900 --> 19:53.900] And she said, well, that's just what they do. [19:53.900 --> 19:58.900] And I said, oh, okay, well, I'm kind of confused. [19:58.900 --> 20:01.900] Isn't a police officer a member of the executive branch? [20:01.900 --> 20:03.900] And she said, well, I don't know anything about that. [20:03.900 --> 20:05.900] That's just how they do it. [20:05.900 --> 20:11.900] Have you looked at New Mexico law? [20:11.900 --> 20:16.900] Do they have an illegal practice of law statute or a baritree statute? [20:16.900 --> 20:21.900] They do have illegal practice of law, and I've got them dead rights on the division of powers [20:21.900 --> 20:23.900] in the Constitution. [20:23.900 --> 20:31.900] Unfortunately, our legislators in their infinite lack of wisdom did create a statute [20:31.900 --> 20:37.900] allowing police officers to prosecute on the citations that they issue. [20:37.900 --> 20:39.900] So, what I'm before... [20:39.900 --> 20:49.900] That contributes to the obvious evils of the accumulation of power in any one office. [20:49.900 --> 20:55.900] But I don't see how they can do that. [20:55.900 --> 20:57.900] I guess so. [20:57.900 --> 21:07.900] Technically, the statute in Texas does not prevent a private citizen from acting as counsel in a criminal issue. [21:07.900 --> 21:26.900] The statute's 38.123, and it forbids you to act as counsel in an injury case, a personal injury. [21:26.900 --> 21:29.900] That's the only thing it applies to. [21:29.900 --> 21:34.900] So, they apply it to things that it don't apply to. [21:34.900 --> 21:43.900] And I'm expecting at some point to get an inquiry from the legal practice of law committee. [21:43.900 --> 21:45.900] A friend of mine just got one. [21:45.900 --> 21:48.900] I have never gotten one. [21:48.900 --> 21:51.900] And I'm looking forward to it. [21:51.900 --> 21:53.900] I'm going to ask... [21:53.900 --> 21:55.900] Go ahead. [21:55.900 --> 22:01.900] When I mailed the documents to the prosecutor, to the cop, [22:01.900 --> 22:10.900] I addressed them to the attorney for the prosecution and then named the officer. [22:10.900 --> 22:17.900] And filed a bar grievance against him just to see what the bar says. [22:17.900 --> 22:23.900] Well, you might file criminally against him, since you don't have the bar to file. [22:23.900 --> 22:31.900] Yeah, we're absolutely going after him criminally, but I just thought for fun, like, file a bar grievance against him, since he didn't act as an attorney. [22:31.900 --> 22:45.900] But what I think we can help find is some case law somewhere that talks about the fact that a legal fiction must be represented by a licensed attorney. [22:45.900 --> 22:50.900] Oh, we certainly have that in Texas. [22:50.900 --> 22:59.900] But here, yeah, we're here, we have, you're going about the officer acting as prosecutor. [22:59.900 --> 23:03.900] So he's representing the corporation. [23:03.900 --> 23:09.900] Well, he's representing the state, which is a legal fiction, whatever else it may be. [23:09.900 --> 23:12.900] Okay, is this a state police officer? [23:12.900 --> 23:14.900] Yes, sir. [23:14.900 --> 23:18.900] Okay, is this the same one that your wife went before last time? [23:18.900 --> 23:22.900] Yeah, the one that was acting as magistrate. [23:22.900 --> 23:26.900] Yeah, did you file on him for that? [23:26.900 --> 23:33.900] Well, we haven't actually turned any of his occupants in yet. We're working on putting them together. [23:33.900 --> 23:35.900] So, okay, that's always putting them together. [23:35.900 --> 23:39.900] That should get a motion to recuse. [23:39.900 --> 23:52.900] Right, until I went down there to file the motions that he was the prosecutor. [23:52.900 --> 23:57.900] Oh, this is, yeah, have you gotten a response on any of the motions? [23:57.900 --> 24:08.900] Not yet, no, no. I asked her when the match didn't be holding motion hearings and she said that he would probably do it immediately before the non-jury trial. [24:08.900 --> 24:15.900] Non-jury, do you not have jury in New Mexico? [24:15.900 --> 24:24.900] We do, unless you either, if it's a petty misdemeanor, you have to request it within 10 days of the arraignment. [24:24.900 --> 24:41.900] It's a regular misdemeanor. You have to waive enough out of jury trial in writing, but she was arranged, so we haven't had any time post arraignment to the jury trial. [24:41.900 --> 24:45.900] Are jury trials guaranteed by constitution? [24:45.900 --> 24:47.900] Yes, they are. [24:47.900 --> 24:51.900] Okay, you can demand it anyway. [24:51.900 --> 24:59.900] We have. We have what's in the documents that we filed. [24:59.900 --> 25:06.900] Okay, I stopped talking because I got noise in the background and I'm muted. [25:06.900 --> 25:12.900] Okay, so what motions did you file? [25:12.900 --> 25:31.900] Well, we filed a motion to dismiss, which raises the issue of lack of notice, which raises the issue of, oh shoot, I can't remember what all we put in it, raises lack of notice. [25:31.900 --> 25:43.900] We put in an objection to non-jury trial, put in an objection to the citation, use of complaint. [25:43.900 --> 25:53.900] Yeah, I can't remember what else it had, but, and then we put in also at ease non-traffitation affidavit that I have modified due to New Mexico statutes. [25:53.900 --> 26:00.900] And also a judicial notice to process status. [26:00.900 --> 26:05.900] Traditional notice of process status. [26:05.900 --> 26:07.900] What is that about? [26:07.900 --> 26:19.900] Basically that a process litigant is held to a lower standard than an attorney, and they can't be dismissed for lack of form. [26:19.900 --> 26:21.900] Lack of form, okay. [26:21.900 --> 26:23.900] I'm trying to remember. [26:23.900 --> 26:28.900] Been a long time since I courted that case. Do you remember the case on that? [26:28.900 --> 26:32.900] I'm probably going to get this wrong, but I don't want to say Heinz versus Jenkins. [26:32.900 --> 26:35.900] No, that's not it, that's not it. [26:35.900 --> 26:41.900] I almost remember it, but when you get old, you can almost remember a lot of stuff. [26:41.900 --> 26:46.900] I can't say. I can't hear it for you inside. [26:46.900 --> 26:50.900] Okay, do you have anything else for us? Our calls are kind of backing up here. [26:50.900 --> 27:06.900] Yeah, yeah, my other question was, this goes to the tomorrow state and federal court post foreclosure against Bank of America under FCRF, DCPA, TCPA, and lawful foreclosure and conversion. [27:06.900 --> 27:11.900] This has been going on for about almost a year and a half. [27:11.900 --> 27:21.900] Bank of America has not filed their corporate disclosure statements as required by, I believe it's 5.1, the federal will still procedure. [27:21.900 --> 27:31.900] I have asked their attorney repeatedly in email, in writing, and by phone to produce it, and he hasn't done it. [27:31.900 --> 27:38.900] Aside from barred grieving him and filing a motion to disqualify counsel, which are already filed, what can I do? [27:38.900 --> 27:44.900] A motion to strike all of his pleadings. [27:44.900 --> 27:50.900] He has no agency to file the pleadings. [27:50.900 --> 28:07.900] Well, and that's the other thing, is that I see back home loan servicing and it's Bank of America N.A. that responded, and I realize that they probably did absorb back home loan servicing, but absent that corporate disclosure statement. [28:07.900 --> 28:11.900] Where's the proof of that? [28:11.900 --> 28:16.900] So, move to, for no answer default. [28:16.900 --> 28:18.900] Okay. [28:18.900 --> 28:20.900] Cool. [28:20.900 --> 28:27.900] And claim that they did not raise the issue of naming the wrong party. [28:27.900 --> 28:34.900] No, they just say they're responding as successor by merger, but there's no corporate disclosure statement. [28:34.900 --> 28:41.900] Okay, so the lawyer put that in a pleading, and there's no evidence of it then. [28:41.900 --> 28:43.900] Absolutely. [28:43.900 --> 28:46.900] So the lawyer can't testify. [28:46.900 --> 28:54.900] All right, well, that's why I filed a motion to disqualify him because the bank hasn't produced any affidavits or anything. [28:54.900 --> 29:05.900] No exhibits except for the judicial notice of the documents in the county records that were different than the documents in the county records. [29:05.900 --> 29:07.900] And I asked him. [29:07.900 --> 29:09.900] That should have got aggravated perjury. [29:09.900 --> 29:12.900] Yeah, well, I'm going after that. [29:12.900 --> 29:19.900] So basically just trying to get as much in there as I can. [29:19.900 --> 29:25.900] But we've got our settlement conference, the required mandatory settlement on February 7th. [29:25.900 --> 29:41.900] And the attorney for the foreclosure middle law firm, they sent me a letter declining my settlement offer saying that they thought they could beat me on some read judgment. [29:41.900 --> 29:45.900] They're offering me $1,000 to drop it right now. [29:45.900 --> 29:47.900] Oh, I'm nice of them. [29:47.900 --> 29:49.900] Okay. [29:49.900 --> 29:51.900] They're an insurance person. [29:51.900 --> 29:53.900] Okay, okay, we're about to go to break. [29:53.900 --> 29:59.900] Ready to count W. Stephen Z. Craig, move on radio, we'll be right back. [29:59.900 --> 30:05.900] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [30:05.900 --> 30:12.900] The agreement says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [30:12.900 --> 30:15.900] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [30:15.900 --> 30:17.900] Thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [30:17.900 --> 30:19.900] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [30:19.900 --> 30:20.900] I'm a structural engineer. [30:20.900 --> 30:21.900] I'm a New York City correction officer. [30:21.900 --> 30:22.900] I'm an Air Force pilot. [30:22.900 --> 30:24.900] I'm the father who lost his son. [30:24.900 --> 30:25.900] We are Americans. [30:25.900 --> 30:27.900] And we deserve the truth. [30:27.900 --> 30:30.900] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [30:30.900 --> 30:36.900] HempUSA.org has moved and expanded its operations for faster worldwide shipping. [30:36.900 --> 30:41.900] Our product line has grown from five to nearly 100 items in less than five years. [30:41.900 --> 30:46.900] Our food has grown naturally, always chemical free, not found in stores. [30:46.900 --> 30:50.900] Great for daily intake and perfect for your emergency storage shelter. [30:50.900 --> 31:00.900] Call 908-6912608 or visit hempusa.org and see what our powders, seeds, and oil can do for you. [31:00.900 --> 31:06.900] It is so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the Internet isn't so easy. [31:06.900 --> 31:09.900] And neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [31:09.900 --> 31:12.900] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books then. [31:12.900 --> 31:13.900] Brave New Books? [31:13.900 --> 31:20.900] Yes, Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, Ron Paul, and G. Albert Griffin. [31:20.900 --> 31:24.900] They even stock inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soap. [31:24.900 --> 31:26.900] There's no way a place like that exists. [31:26.900 --> 31:28.900] Go check it out for yourself. [31:28.900 --> 31:32.900] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [31:32.900 --> 31:36.900] Oh, by UT? There's never anywhere to park down there. [31:36.900 --> 31:44.900] Surely they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [31:44.900 --> 31:47.900] It does exist, but when are they open? [31:47.900 --> 31:52.900] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. [31:52.900 --> 32:07.900] You can get them a call at 512-480-2503 or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [32:22.900 --> 32:27.900] Yeah, I won't [32:27.900 --> 32:31.900] Oh, I won't [32:31.900 --> 32:39.900] I won't let you pull the wool over my eyes [32:39.900 --> 32:46.900] They must refuse your news or so come in line [32:46.900 --> 32:53.900] It seems you like the space, but please take some words to the wide [32:53.900 --> 32:55.900] Okay, we are back. [32:55.900 --> 33:00.900] Randy Kelton, Debbie Stephens, and Zana Craig with Rule of Law Radio. [33:00.900 --> 33:04.900] And we were talking to Rob in New Mexico. [33:04.900 --> 33:15.900] And before I go there, I didn't want to remind everybody about the fundraiser and the AR-15 giveaway and lower receiver that was added to it last night. [33:15.900 --> 33:19.900] So we'll have two giveaways on the gun issue. [33:19.900 --> 33:29.900] One is the AR-15 itself and the other is a lower receiver on which you can build your own weapon. [33:29.900 --> 33:40.900] I really don't know what that is. I don't deal with guns anymore much, but anyone who knows the weapon probably knows exactly what that lower receiver is about. [33:40.900 --> 33:49.900] And we have several other giveaways with the fundraiser. [33:49.900 --> 33:54.900] If you go to Logos Radio Network, they're all listed there. [33:54.900 --> 33:58.900] And we've extended it to the end of February. [33:58.900 --> 34:03.900] Okay, Rob in New Mexico. What else do you have for us, Rob? [34:03.900 --> 34:11.900] I think that's about it. I just want to make sure I got this right. Go after the Beck's attorney for aggravated perjury. [34:11.900 --> 34:17.900] Move to strike all these things for lack of agency and move for no answer default. [34:17.900 --> 34:24.900] Yeah, if he didn't have agency, he moved to strike all these things. [34:24.900 --> 34:28.900] He had no authority to file anything in the court. [34:28.900 --> 34:47.900] If you sued this other entity, they would have needed to file something in the court showing that they were in fact this other entity and not just a statement by a lawyer without agency. [34:47.900 --> 34:55.900] That ought to be fine. It's a nice, interesting issue to bring to the court of appeals. [34:55.900 --> 34:59.900] That might be more fun than just deposing him. [34:59.900 --> 35:16.900] Well, you like the issues that if the court rules against you, they will undermine existing law and everybody else can use the ruling and screw up everything. [35:16.900 --> 35:19.900] You like those issues. [35:19.900 --> 35:27.900] If the court now comes and says that anybody can come into court and claim to represent somebody, they don't have to prove it. [35:27.900 --> 35:30.900] Yeah, that's going to mess up everything. [35:30.900 --> 35:40.900] Yeah, well, that's kind of where I was going with that. He won't even respond to me now. He doesn't respond to my letters, my emails, all my phone calls. [35:40.900 --> 35:41.900] Good. [35:41.900 --> 35:45.900] He's just scared of me. [35:45.900 --> 35:48.900] Okay, we need to move along. [35:48.900 --> 35:49.900] Thank you, Rob. [35:49.900 --> 35:51.900] Thank you very much. God bless. [35:51.900 --> 35:57.900] Okay, now we're going to go to Steve in Texas. Steve, are you back with us? [35:57.900 --> 35:59.900] Yeah, I'm back with you. [35:59.900 --> 36:05.900] I'm sorry I put you to sleep earlier. I just have that effect on people. [36:05.900 --> 36:21.900] Okay, it's actually stupid that Steve, a buddy of mine called in, but I've got some good news. Back in October, a team of about five or six of us did an audit in Williamson County Land Records. [36:21.900 --> 36:33.900] You know, January 29th, from 9 to 8, 9 to noon, that's a Tuesday, January 29th, we're going to be before the county commissioners presenting the report. [36:33.900 --> 36:40.900] Dave Krieger, David Rodgers is the attorney who's writing the opinion letter. [36:40.900 --> 36:45.900] We went through 1,577 land records. [36:45.900 --> 36:49.900] We tried to get to 1,600, but we just ran out of time. [36:49.900 --> 36:57.900] We were down in the basement of Williamson County for four days. [36:57.900 --> 37:04.900] The land records woman there, her name's Nancy Richter, and she's elected. [37:04.900 --> 37:15.900] She's, and what she decided to do was when she caught on all this MERS actions and everything that was going on with the mortgages and illegal foreclosures, et cetera, et cetera, [37:15.900 --> 37:26.900] she pulled all the records of the mayors, the city councilmen, the judges, the district attorneys, all the politicians in Williamson County. [37:26.900 --> 37:30.900] And those are the records we went through. [37:30.900 --> 37:38.900] On Tuesday, we're going to, Dave Krieger and Dave Rodgers are going to present that for the county commissioners. [37:38.900 --> 37:50.900] And then afterwards, we're going to step outside and shoot a video on the findings, and that's going to go on YouTube and go viral. [37:50.900 --> 37:51.900] Hello? [37:51.900 --> 37:59.900] Can you give us just a brief synopsis of the findings, or is this something you want to hang on to? [37:59.900 --> 38:07.900] Well, it's 155 pages, but basically out of 1,577 records we went through. [38:07.900 --> 38:23.900] In 1,482 of them, we found banker fraud, or MERS, or illegal robosigners, or, you know, all the issues that come up in the issues of mortgages. [38:23.900 --> 38:33.900] Out of 1577, 14,482 of them had compromised titles. [38:33.900 --> 38:35.900] I guess you can put it that way. [38:35.900 --> 38:38.900] Yes, that sounds like about 90%. [38:38.900 --> 38:40.900] That's about 90%. [38:40.900 --> 38:44.900] And so it's very exciting. [38:44.900 --> 38:51.900] When this goes viral, there's going to be a lot of people in Williamson County that are going to find out about this. [38:51.900 --> 38:55.900] And of course, we all know Williamson County motto is come on vacation, leave on probation. [38:55.900 --> 39:01.900] So it will be sweet to get this out. [39:01.900 --> 39:08.900] We need as many court watchers as we can there Tuesday, January 29 from 9 to noon. [39:08.900 --> 39:13.900] It'll be on the Georgetown Square in their old courthouse there. [39:13.900 --> 39:19.900] And it's going to be exciting. [39:19.900 --> 39:25.900] There's breakthroughs happening all over the country on the mortgage issue. [39:25.900 --> 39:33.900] I've been working in that. I moved to Dallas from Austin to specifically work for that work in this. [39:33.900 --> 39:41.900] So that's why I'm calling to let the people in Central Texas know that we need as many court watchers as possible. [39:41.900 --> 39:44.900] The more people there, the better. You know how that goes. [39:44.900 --> 39:46.900] Yes. [39:46.900 --> 39:48.900] Go ahead. [39:48.900 --> 39:56.900] I would, if you know this attorney, I would like to get him on the show and maybe talk about that. [39:56.900 --> 39:57.900] Okay. [39:57.900 --> 40:03.900] I extended an offer to Dave Krieger once, but he never got back to me and I didn't follow up with him. [40:03.900 --> 40:08.900] Yeah, Dave's got county records, people calling him from all over the country. [40:08.900 --> 40:11.900] I want an audit to their land records. [40:11.900 --> 40:18.900] I guess you know Dallas County, Harris County and Brasovia County are all suing MERS right now. [40:18.900 --> 40:30.900] Yeah, I read the lawsuit by Craig Watkins and the answer by MERS and I agreed with MERS. [40:30.900 --> 40:36.900] The suit was frivolous and Craig will get his hat handed to him. [40:36.900 --> 40:44.900] I'm trying to leverage a law that really doesn't quite fit. [40:44.900 --> 40:53.900] And in MERS's answer, they gave a great answer and the lawyers seemed to be very full of themselves. [40:53.900 --> 41:00.900] They said there was no statutory requirement for them to file anything and I agreed with that. [41:00.900 --> 41:06.900] And they went on to say, yeah, but if we don't, we might not have a claim. [41:06.900 --> 41:11.900] And I said, yeah, that's what I read in 13.001. [41:11.900 --> 41:13.900] You don't have to file it, Bubba. [41:13.900 --> 41:17.900] You can screw yourself if you want to. [41:17.900 --> 41:30.900] But so they essentially stipulated the position that most of us are really taking is that they didn't file these documents. [41:30.900 --> 41:35.900] That's okay with me because that means you don't have a proper claim. [41:35.900 --> 41:56.900] And there's one thing I was wondering when you spoke to MERS, did you look to see if on the deeds of trust where MERS was indicated, if the lender filed and signed the deed of trust? [41:56.900 --> 41:59.900] I didn't talk to MERS. [41:59.900 --> 42:04.900] No, no, no, on the when you were going through the records. [42:04.900 --> 42:11.900] MERS is a concession by the lender, not the borrower. [42:11.900 --> 42:23.900] The borrower has no power to appoint an agent for the lender or to say to the lender, yeah, you loan me this money, but I don't want to pay you back. [42:23.900 --> 42:26.900] I want to pay this MERS company over here. [42:26.900 --> 42:29.900] That's not something the borrower has power to do. [42:29.900 --> 42:31.900] That's a concession by the lender. [42:31.900 --> 42:37.900] And in order for that to have force and effect, the lender would have had to have affirmed those concessions. [42:37.900 --> 42:43.900] And I have never seen a document signed by the lender. [42:43.900 --> 42:49.900] All this issue versus MERS is irrelevant. [42:49.900 --> 42:53.900] There was never a point to start with. [42:53.900 --> 42:54.900] Okay. [42:54.900 --> 42:59.900] Well, they've been, they haven't paid the filing fees to the county and that's what the county's mad about. [42:59.900 --> 43:04.900] So they're reselling these mortgages over and over and over and over and over again and they're paying any filing fees. [43:04.900 --> 43:09.900] So that's what the county's. [43:09.900 --> 43:13.900] That was, that was the problem that Craig Watkins tried to get around. [43:13.900 --> 43:28.900] There was a, I don't remember what the statute was in the business commerce code that required, that appeared to require filing, but it was merely a requirement. [43:28.900 --> 43:33.900] There was no remedy if they didn't. [43:33.900 --> 43:39.900] And this is what Craig was hanging his hat on and looked like he was not going to get that one. [43:39.900 --> 43:41.900] Okay. [43:41.900 --> 43:46.900] Okay. Well, you know, we, the court watchers, January 29th, anybody's available. [43:46.900 --> 43:47.900] So. [43:47.900 --> 43:48.900] Okay. [43:48.900 --> 43:56.900] You might call in Monday on the 80 Craig show and do this again to remind everybody. [43:56.900 --> 44:00.900] You like that. [44:00.900 --> 44:03.900] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:03.900 --> 44:14.900] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [44:14.900 --> 44:18.900] If you have a lawyer know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.900 --> 44:22.900] If you don't have a lawyer know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.900 --> 44:27.900] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [44:27.900 --> 44:33.900] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:33.900 --> 44:42.900] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:42.900 --> 44:51.900] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more. [44:51.900 --> 45:00.900] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866 law easy. [45:00.900 --> 45:05.900] The Oklahoma City bombing top 10 reasons to question the official story. [45:05.900 --> 45:16.900] Reason number one, John Doe number two and other accomplices on the day of the bombing nearly all of the witnesses that saw Tim McVeigh and the right of truck report that he was accompanied by other perpetrators. [45:16.900 --> 45:24.900] The FBI and federal prosecutors insist that Tim McVeigh alone delivered the right of truck bomb to the Murra building and detonated it. [45:24.900 --> 45:32.900] The only witness the government produced to place McVeigh at the building that morning, Dana Bradley, who lost her children and one of her legs in the bombing, [45:32.900 --> 45:38.900] testified that she saw McVeigh with another man, the fable John Doe number two, exiting the right of truck. [45:38.900 --> 45:50.900] 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, [45:50.900 --> 45:56.900] including when he rented the right of truck and in some cases have positively identified the other perpetrators. [45:56.900 --> 46:12.900] For more information, please visit okcbombingtruth.com. [46:26.900 --> 46:36.900] Thank you for watching. [46:56.900 --> 47:06.900] Thank you for watching. [47:27.900 --> 47:37.900] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelp and David Stevens, Eddie Craig from Rood of Law Radio, and we're going to David in Texas. [47:37.900 --> 47:41.900] David, you have something on securitization. [47:41.900 --> 47:50.900] Yes, Randy, I do. I was doing a little research and I called the county clerk. [47:50.900 --> 48:00.900] This is in Belle County and she said, well, you go to Texas Land Records and if you want to make copies, [48:00.900 --> 48:05.900] it'll cost you, but you can look at the index all day long and there's no charge. [48:05.900 --> 48:12.900] So, well, that'd be great. Then I can either pay and get what I need or else I can come in and see you and get what I need. [48:12.900 --> 48:21.900] Anyway, if you go to Texas Land Records, so I was doing my research, I said, well, let me try something. [48:21.900 --> 48:24.900] So I put in the word trust, both place caps all the way across. [48:24.900 --> 48:36.900] And lo and behold, here comes up it says trustee for mortgage securitization and it looks exactly like the information [48:36.900 --> 48:46.900] that I'm getting back on my home loan mortgage where it was securitized except now we've covered that some of these mortgage [48:46.900 --> 48:57.900] securitization groups are going to the courthouse and recording their pass-through certificates. [48:57.900 --> 49:08.900] That is interesting. Can you do a search on them by the type of trust or I know in Tarrant County and Travis, [49:08.900 --> 49:13.900] you can search, I think you can search for trust documents. [49:13.900 --> 49:20.900] Yes, you can on this Texas Land Records. You can do it by type of search. [49:20.900 --> 49:27.900] My funds were running low, so I wasn't looking at the instrument itself. I was just looking at the index. [49:27.900 --> 49:31.900] So I plan to do more, but I wanted you to know and I guess. [49:31.900 --> 49:39.900] Okay, wait, hold on. Your funds were running low. What county were you looking at? [49:39.900 --> 49:42.900] In Bell County. [49:42.900 --> 49:49.900] Okay. In Bell County, do you have to pay to look at the document or to print it? [49:49.900 --> 49:54.900] Oh, if I go in in person, I don't have to pay to look. [49:54.900 --> 49:57.900] No, no, I'm talking about on their website. [49:57.900 --> 50:01.900] Oh, you have to pay to look at the document on their website. Yeah. [50:01.900 --> 50:04.900] Oh, that sucks. [50:04.900 --> 50:10.900] But you can look at the index, but I discovered enough on the index to know, you know, it gives everything [50:10.900 --> 50:20.900] that the document itself, it gives all the recording information to the grantee and the grantors are. [50:20.900 --> 50:28.900] And accidentally, I discovered I was looking for a family trust information and I found the word, [50:28.900 --> 50:35.900] I just put the word trust in and I came up with this thing about all these, [50:35.900 --> 50:40.900] these securitized loans, mortgage loans. [50:40.900 --> 50:53.900] So if you go online in your county and you look for the one most of them say, for example, mine says [50:53.900 --> 51:01.900] the name of the bank, Deutsche Bank, pass through trust certificates number 203 through 306. [51:01.900 --> 51:10.900] Okay. All you got to do if they did the same thing is look in your trust records and you can get a copy of those certificates. [51:10.900 --> 51:20.900] What they're saying, Randy, is those certificate holders are holders of the mortgage to your property? [51:20.900 --> 51:32.900] Are the trust certificates filed on individual properties or is the trust certificate simply filed in the record? [51:32.900 --> 51:36.900] Well, I can't answer that because I only looked at the index. [51:36.900 --> 51:37.900] I was looking. [51:37.900 --> 51:40.900] Okay. I'm sure it's just filed in the record. [51:40.900 --> 51:49.900] I'm wondering did they file the entire trust document because as I understand that thing is several hundred pages long. [51:49.900 --> 51:56.900] Well, one particular one I was looking at had 14 pages. [51:56.900 --> 51:59.900] That sounds like a deed of trust. [51:59.900 --> 52:01.900] Well, that would be interesting to look at. [52:01.900 --> 52:06.900] I'll look in Tarrant County because I can look at the entire document. [52:06.900 --> 52:08.900] I'm Tarrant or Travis. [52:08.900 --> 52:23.900] The site that I quoted only has out of the 254 counties in Texas. It only shows about 75 or 80. It doesn't have Travis County where I needed to be in it. [52:23.900 --> 52:30.900] Anyway, it didn't have this county, but it had Bell County where I also needed to be. [52:30.900 --> 52:40.900] That's how you can get the records for Travis County from Tarrant Travis County's own website. [52:40.900 --> 52:50.900] Yes. Yes. I have a information sheet on how to do that. I just had a bigger fish to fry in Bell County before I got back to Travis. [52:50.900 --> 52:54.900] Oh, okay. I didn't know if it doesn't cost. [52:54.900 --> 52:59.900] I'll check Travis County tomorrow. I'll have a look at what they have there. [52:59.900 --> 53:12.900] Okay. Well, that would be interesting because we're talking about securitization and if they're recording the securitization certificates as holders of mortgages, [53:12.900 --> 53:20.900] then that's why we're getting two and three and four people coming back and filing for foreclosure once a note has been paid off. [53:20.900 --> 53:26.900] You pay off the bank and then the security holder comes back and forecloses on you. [53:26.900 --> 53:34.900] Well, I haven't really seen much of that. I've heard the threat of it, but I haven't seen it occurring. [53:34.900 --> 53:39.900] Well, I've heard of about three or four and seven million. [53:39.900 --> 53:43.900] Yeah. So that hasn't happened often. [53:43.900 --> 53:54.900] But I would like to see more about this securities issue because I'm looking for more tools we can use to find these guys. [53:54.900 --> 54:03.900] Well, it didn't make common sense to me, Randy. Why would the MERS not record, and I know the answer is dollars, [54:03.900 --> 54:12.900] why would they not record the actual mortgage, but then they come back and record the securitization of the mortgage? [54:12.900 --> 54:19.900] That was exactly what I was thinking. To what purpose are they filing this? [54:19.900 --> 54:25.900] If nothing else, I guess just to put the document itself in the record, in the public record. [54:25.900 --> 54:33.900] Maybe someone complained. There weren't a whole lot of them. There were only about 25 that I found in the whole county of Bell. [54:33.900 --> 54:37.900] And you know that there's MERS, MERS, MERS all over Bell. [54:37.900 --> 54:39.900] Yes, I do. [54:39.900 --> 54:41.900] Okay. I'll have a look at this tomorrow. [54:41.900 --> 54:43.900] Okay, Randy. [54:43.900 --> 54:44.900] Thank you. [54:44.900 --> 54:47.900] Okay. Thank you, David. [54:47.900 --> 54:50.900] Yes, sir. [54:50.900 --> 54:57.900] Okay, now we're going to go to Danny in Illinois. [54:57.900 --> 55:01.900] Hello, Danny. What do you have for us tonight? [55:01.900 --> 55:07.900] Well, I have something kind of interesting. You most likely know more about it. [55:07.900 --> 55:21.900] I actually had a notice of federal tax lien put on me, and I ended up talking to some other people, and they recommended me checking with the... [55:21.900 --> 55:26.900] And this was apparently filed in the county. [55:26.900 --> 55:30.900] So they told me I needed to check with the Secretary of State. [55:30.900 --> 55:42.900] So I called up there and found out who I needed to speak with, and they gave me a website to go to, and I actually was able to do a search on their website, and nothing came up. [55:42.900 --> 55:47.900] So there's no federal tax lien on there, so I just recently got a copy. [55:47.900 --> 55:53.900] Wait a minute. What did you look for with the Secretary of State? [55:53.900 --> 55:58.900] I looked for any filings for federal tax lien. [55:58.900 --> 56:03.900] And it wouldn't be filed with the Secretary of State. It would only be filed with the county. [56:03.900 --> 56:11.900] The lien would be filed with the registrar of the county where the property resides. [56:11.900 --> 56:14.900] There wouldn't be anything in the Secretary of State. [56:14.900 --> 56:26.900] Because they said they do searches there, and they also have federal tax lien numbers there that you can also search if you had a number. [56:26.900 --> 56:38.900] Okay, this is... It may be something I'm not aware of, but I can't think of any reason why the Secretary of State would have anything to do with tax liens. [56:38.900 --> 56:45.900] That's a property issue, and that's always a county issue. [56:45.900 --> 56:58.900] The tax liens, I was just with Ben Durham yesterday, and he got a tax lien tossed because they hadn't followed the proper procedures. [56:58.900 --> 57:09.900] But when we were in Pennsylvania, we did some research on that, and there's a special agreement between all of the states and the IRS [57:09.900 --> 57:17.900] that the IRS doesn't have to follow the county procedures in filing a tax lien. [57:17.900 --> 57:27.900] So all these people that are going to state law on tax liens, this doesn't apply. [57:27.900 --> 57:40.900] Because every state has joined into this agreement with the IRS that they can just file their tax lien with no notice. [57:40.900 --> 57:43.900] Interesting. [57:43.900 --> 57:47.900] Actually, Deborah found that when we were in Pennsylvania, and I was surprised at it. [57:47.900 --> 57:57.900] But based on that agreement, the filing of federal tax liens was actually correct. [57:57.900 --> 58:02.900] We've had a few thrown out, and that's because the local judges weren't aware of this agreement. [58:02.900 --> 58:08.900] Whoever was defending the tax lien didn't have enough sense to bring it to the judge's attention. [58:08.900 --> 58:11.900] Hang on, this is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig. [58:11.900 --> 58:20.900] On the radio, we're going to our top of the hour break. Come back, we have one more hour, so give us a call, get in line. [58:20.900 --> 58:25.900] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [58:25.900 --> 58:35.900] And if I have time, I have a white paper that I'm working on that I wanted to read into the, read on the show [58:35.900 --> 58:38.900] and kind of see if I could get some feedback on it. [58:38.900 --> 58:43.900] We may get to that in the next hour. This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig. [58:43.900 --> 58:49.900] We'll be right back. [58:49.900 --> 58:53.900] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.900 --> 59:00.900] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.900 --> 59:05.900] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.900 --> 59:12.900] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.900 --> 59:17.900] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.900 --> 59:26.900] 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. [59:26.900 --> 59:39.900] 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. [59:39.900 --> 59:48.900] That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:48.900 --> 59:59.900] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.900 --> 01:00:09.900] Attention foreign language students! Hit the books and get out those dictionaries. There's major good news about learning the second language. [01:00:09.900 --> 01:00:15.900] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back to tell you about a new study on bilingualism after this. [01:00:15.900 --> 01:00:21.900] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:00:21.900 --> 01:00:26.900] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:00:26.900 --> 01:00:34.900] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:00:34.900 --> 01:00:41.900] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:00:41.900 --> 01:00:44.900] Start over with StartPage. [01:00:44.900 --> 01:00:51.900] Learning a foreign language brings many benefits, but a new study has found a major long-term health benefit to bilingualism. [01:00:51.900 --> 01:00:54.900] It may delay the onset of Alzheimer's. [01:00:54.900 --> 01:00:58.900] Canadian researchers reviewed hospital records of patients with dementia. [01:00:58.900 --> 01:01:07.900] They discovered that bilingual people were diagnosed three or four years later than those who only spoke one language, even though they had less education and job status. [01:01:07.900 --> 01:01:17.900] Though brains of bilingual people still develop Alzheimer's, the scientists said, speaking another language better prepares their brains to compensate for the onset of the disease, [01:01:17.900 --> 01:01:20.900] due to the enhanced brain networks they've developed. [01:01:20.900 --> 01:01:23.900] Huh, maybe it's time to brush up on that French, Nespa. [01:01:23.900 --> 01:01:31.900] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:01:31.900 --> 01:01:41.900] Blame it on bottled water or changing tastes, but in the U.S. sales of milk have slumped to their lowest level in decades. [01:01:41.900 --> 01:01:47.900] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and in a moment I'll talk about why Americans are drinking far less milk. [01:01:47.900 --> 01:01:53.900] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:01:53.900 --> 01:01:58.900] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:01:58.900 --> 01:02:03.900] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:02:03.900 --> 01:02:13.900] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:02:13.900 --> 01:02:16.900] Start over with StartPage. [01:02:16.900 --> 01:02:23.900] Chocolate chip cookies and bowls of cereal must be feeling lonely because milk consumption in America is slumped to an all-time low, [01:02:23.900 --> 01:02:26.900] with more than half of adults no longer drinking it at all. [01:02:26.900 --> 01:02:35.900] Last year, total milk beverage sales were about 6 billion gallons, the lowest since 1984, far behind soda, bottled water, and beer. [01:02:35.900 --> 01:02:46.900] So what's going on? Consumer tastes have changed. Energy drinks and bottled teas have arrived, and the public is afraid of the antibiotics and synthetic hormones used on cows. [01:02:46.900 --> 01:02:54.900] But don't worry, milk lovers, there is some good news. Organic milk sales are up 20%, even while regular milk sales fell. [01:02:54.900 --> 01:03:01.900] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:03:24.900 --> 01:03:30.900] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage. [01:03:54.900 --> 01:04:04.900] I will guide these worlds, if they're safe, I will come to take these things. [01:04:04.900 --> 01:04:14.900] I will guide these worlds, if they're safe, I will come to take these things. [01:04:14.900 --> 01:04:24.900] Okay, we are back. We are talking to Danny in Illinois. [01:04:24.900 --> 01:04:39.900] IRS is one of the things that I've kind of steered clear of, and these tax liens, people have been fighting them for a long time, and I don't know of anybody that's won. [01:04:39.900 --> 01:04:44.900] Oh, I was just pointing. [01:04:44.900 --> 01:04:56.900] It's generally better. I picked my battles very carefully, and do you have your own business? [01:04:56.900 --> 01:04:58.900] Yeah, yeah. [01:04:58.900 --> 01:05:15.900] Good. You shouldn't have to pay any taxes anyway. You might want to talk to David Lewis. He's really good at, if you have something old, the IRS didn't redo your taxes, and they wind up giving you money back. [01:05:15.900 --> 01:05:26.900] He just helped a woman that had a $20,000 mean. He redid her taxes. She paid $2,000 and everything was gone. [01:05:26.900 --> 01:05:35.900] Okay. So you just need someone to do your taxes who knows what they're doing. [01:05:35.900 --> 01:05:38.900] And how would I get ahold of him? [01:05:38.900 --> 01:05:46.900] Just send me an email. I'll send it to him. Randy at Rubella Radio. [01:05:46.900 --> 01:05:49.900] Or was that the number you was giving out earlier in the show? [01:05:49.900 --> 01:05:58.900] Yeah, that was the number I gave out earlier. 512-772-4700. [01:05:58.900 --> 01:06:05.900] Okay. You have some information on property taxes? [01:06:05.900 --> 01:06:20.900] Yeah, that would probably be Eddie Craig. That's really got what got him started with us in the beginning. But then again, that's going to be specific to the state. [01:06:20.900 --> 01:06:29.900] And I used to live in Illinois. I grew up in Chicago and got out of there as soon as I could. [01:06:29.900 --> 01:06:31.900] Probably good. [01:06:31.900 --> 01:06:41.900] But Eddie Craig has done a lot of research on property taxes. So you might call him Monday night and talk to him about it. [01:06:41.900 --> 01:06:44.900] Oh, I thought Monday night was traffic night. [01:06:44.900 --> 01:06:56.900] Yeah, but he's still the property tax guy. He would be glad to give you his information on that. [01:06:56.900 --> 01:06:59.900] Okay. [01:06:59.900 --> 01:07:02.900] Thank you. Thank you, Danny. [01:07:02.900 --> 01:07:09.900] Okay, we're going to go to Steve in Kansas. Hello, Steve. [01:07:09.900 --> 01:07:12.900] Hi, Randy. How are you doing? [01:07:12.900 --> 01:07:16.900] I'm doing good. I don't care what everybody says. [01:07:16.900 --> 01:07:24.900] Okay. I will say I was going to try talking to you privately, but at the same time, I'll do it this way. I guess I did. [01:07:24.900 --> 01:07:30.900] Yeah, I was talking to a mutual friend of ours, Michael, in Chicago. [01:07:30.900 --> 01:07:32.900] Uh-huh. [01:07:32.900 --> 01:07:40.900] And he said talk to you. He was at a, he was at a boat show and started to get talked with him very long. [01:07:40.900 --> 01:07:47.900] And he says, get hold of Randy on a tax warrant situation. [01:07:47.900 --> 01:07:49.900] A tax warrant? [01:07:49.900 --> 01:08:03.900] It's a tax, a tax warrant filed in the county court and delivered by the local sheriff. [01:08:03.900 --> 01:08:09.900] They're going to arrest you over taxes? Have they prosecuted you? [01:08:09.900 --> 01:08:16.900] No. And I called the tax bureau. I said, was this civil or criminal? And they said, no, this is civil. [01:08:16.900 --> 01:08:23.900] Okay. Then they're using the term warrant. It's probably a lien. [01:08:23.900 --> 01:08:29.900] The warrant is probably authorization to see something then. [01:08:29.900 --> 01:08:33.900] But that's an unusual turn of phrase. [01:08:33.900 --> 01:08:40.900] Yeah. Well, that's right. That's what other people thought too. That's why I wrote you through your email. [01:08:40.900 --> 01:08:45.900] In fact, they even closed a copy of it where you might take a look at it. [01:08:45.900 --> 01:08:54.900] Oh, yeah. I didn't get to it today. I've been buried deep in a really, really large document. [01:08:54.900 --> 01:09:04.900] I understand. I understand. But, you know, thank God, press for time. And Michael and I, I got, I got talked to him about his book and different stories he had. [01:09:04.900 --> 01:09:08.900] And we've had very similar lives. And I said, well, who's this guy you were with? [01:09:08.900 --> 01:09:16.900] You know, he ended up in trying to get this or getting the sheriff to arrest people and ended up in problems and then whatever like that. [01:09:16.900 --> 01:09:19.900] And so that's brand new. [01:09:19.900 --> 01:09:27.900] Yeah, that's me. Always in Williamson County. He was there with me in Williamson County. It got a bit exciting. [01:09:27.900 --> 01:09:38.900] Well, I mean, when you get to the email, you'll see I'm, we're about the same age and same brothers and we're the oldest and you name it. [01:09:38.900 --> 01:09:45.900] And I've about done it. And same thing with Michael. So I trusted him and I've listened to your show the last couple of nights. [01:09:45.900 --> 01:09:54.900] It's a great show, Randy. It really is. I'm really impressed with this and would like to do more with you if we could. [01:09:54.900 --> 01:09:58.900] How long? Well, thank you. I appreciate it. [01:09:58.900 --> 01:10:02.900] And we, we could sure use more listeners. [01:10:02.900 --> 01:10:07.900] And the fact that you know Michael Bannerick, I won't hold that against you. [01:10:07.900 --> 01:10:10.900] Okay. Okay. [01:10:10.900 --> 01:10:13.900] And you can tell him I said so. [01:10:13.900 --> 01:10:14.900] Okay. [01:10:14.900 --> 01:10:27.900] Now we get to know each other through the sheriff's deal and all this and this is pretty much for my children and everything else. This is what I do full time and try to get the country fixed. [01:10:27.900 --> 01:10:34.900] And got a pretty nice website and everything that I'm involved in. And that's why it's been around a lot of people through it. [01:10:34.900 --> 01:10:42.900] So I thought, well, one way or another, either become a member of your deal or maybe work something out with an ad or whatever we can do to help you, Randy. [01:10:42.900 --> 01:10:48.900] Okay. Good. Send me a link. Send me an email. I've got some stuff I want to show you. [01:10:48.900 --> 01:10:54.900] I said I was in a really deep in a big document. [01:10:54.900 --> 01:11:02.900] What that document is is a free online mortgage analysis tool. [01:11:02.900 --> 01:11:13.900] And trying to get that set up where other people can use to put the tool on their website. [01:11:13.900 --> 01:11:20.900] So people can, this tells you, it's really huge. [01:11:20.900 --> 01:11:30.900] I'm surprised even when I put it together how much information is in there, but we pretty well tell people how to protect themselves. [01:11:30.900 --> 01:11:39.900] And, you know, you like to think that the banks are the big bad guys. Well, turns out they're a pretty easy mark. [01:11:39.900 --> 01:11:47.900] Now, we don't get the courts to rule in our favor, but we can beat up the banks for a long time. [01:11:47.900 --> 01:11:58.900] And if we can't win the whole enchilada in the end, we can certainly show people how to stay in their property for a very long time. [01:11:58.900 --> 01:12:07.900] And also have a number of other tools we'll be bringing up where we will be providing remedy. [01:12:07.900 --> 01:12:12.900] I have one we'll be putting together on a criminal evaluation. [01:12:12.900 --> 01:12:25.900] If someone's been arrested, this one will tell them what the charge is, what the elements of the charge are, what elements are present, what elements are not present, [01:12:25.900 --> 01:12:37.900] what they can expect from the prosecutor based on their stated history, what they can expect them to offer based on the elements of the crime that are or are not present, [01:12:37.900 --> 01:12:45.900] what they can expect them to settle for, what they can expect a court appointed counsel to do for them, which is next to nothing. [01:12:45.900 --> 01:12:57.900] And why, what a paid lawyer should do for them, what motions they should file and how you can kick his behind when he don't. [01:12:57.900 --> 01:12:58.900] And this is all involved. [01:12:58.900 --> 01:13:12.900] We will be building another one for traffic where you fill out the questionnaire and it'll spit you out the documents you need to address the traffic issue and it'll spit you out a lawsuit against the city. [01:13:12.900 --> 01:13:14.900] Terrific, terrific, really. [01:13:14.900 --> 01:13:21.900] Yeah, and we want to make these available to other people with websites so we can get these out there. [01:13:21.900 --> 01:13:27.900] You know, we show people how to take the system to task. [01:13:27.900 --> 01:13:39.900] And it doesn't take a large number of people after a jurisdiction, especially when you're going after these officials criminally for their bad behavior. [01:13:39.900 --> 01:13:44.900] It doesn't take many to reach a tipping point. [01:13:44.900 --> 01:13:56.900] Where these officials say enough of this, one of my favorite experiences is I walked in and asked the base to arrest a clerk and she said, I quit. [01:13:56.900 --> 01:13:57.900] I am out of here. [01:13:57.900 --> 01:14:01.900] I did not sign up for this. [01:14:01.900 --> 01:14:11.900] She left and the J.P. come out and said, what did you do to my clerk? [01:14:11.900 --> 01:14:12.900] Oh, that was a hoot. [01:14:12.900 --> 01:14:15.900] This was in Hazel, Texas. [01:14:15.900 --> 01:14:25.900] But I mean, I just when the when a certain citizens start fighting back, these guys are afraid of us. [01:14:25.900 --> 01:14:27.900] Well, and it should be. [01:14:27.900 --> 01:14:33.900] Randy, I'm telling you, and I just fell on this jurisprudence, which that's what Michael gave me. [01:14:33.900 --> 01:14:34.900] So we're going on. [01:14:34.900 --> 01:14:36.900] He's got that silence that I've heard of that. [01:14:36.900 --> 01:14:41.900] And just what you say is no official has any immunity from criminal prosecution. [01:14:41.900 --> 01:14:45.900] Now, this is a guy I need to get with you. [01:14:45.900 --> 01:14:49.900] So I mean, this is, like I said, check on me. [01:14:49.900 --> 01:14:58.900] I've got a subject matter or a subject that's related to Michael and in there's our website. [01:14:58.900 --> 01:14:59.900] Take a look at it. [01:14:59.900 --> 01:15:03.900] If you can get back with me just as soon as you can. [01:15:03.900 --> 01:15:09.900] And we'll, you know, we'll see if we can work something out between us because I'd love to work with you. [01:15:09.900 --> 01:15:11.900] And this needs to be done. [01:15:11.900 --> 01:15:14.900] Randy really does. [01:15:14.900 --> 01:15:20.900] So, and you've got a terrific demeanor on the radio, you never rush anybody, you never get upset of what I've heard. [01:15:20.900 --> 01:15:23.900] You just, I mean, I just love this. [01:15:23.900 --> 01:15:24.900] I really do. [01:15:24.900 --> 01:15:28.900] And I want to get it out there more and more. [01:15:28.900 --> 01:15:32.900] Well, I can get cranked up on occasion. [01:15:32.900 --> 01:15:33.900] Yeah. [01:15:33.900 --> 01:15:35.900] Oh, yeah. [01:15:35.900 --> 01:15:36.900] I know that. [01:15:36.900 --> 01:15:39.900] I just maybe better kind of ease into this deal. [01:15:39.900 --> 01:15:41.900] But listen to you. [01:15:41.900 --> 01:15:44.900] Well, we work real hard. [01:15:44.900 --> 01:15:52.900] You know, we never, ever, we're always never badger a guest. [01:15:52.900 --> 01:15:55.900] We really struggle with listeners. [01:15:55.900 --> 01:15:58.900] I'm never intentionally rude to a listener. [01:15:58.900 --> 01:16:07.900] I mean, to a caller, but sometimes we have to put them in check when we have, you know, that's why you have someone try to hijack your show. [01:16:07.900 --> 01:16:16.900] And especially when they come on the show and start preaching patriot mythology. [01:16:16.900 --> 01:16:17.900] Oh, well. [01:16:17.900 --> 01:16:23.900] And I don't mind it as long as it's not something that'll get people in trouble. [01:16:23.900 --> 01:16:27.900] Do you remember Tim Turner? [01:16:27.900 --> 01:16:29.900] The name's for me, Jimmy. [01:16:29.900 --> 01:16:31.900] Why, why? [01:16:31.900 --> 01:16:37.900] He went around promoting this administrative procedures. [01:16:37.900 --> 01:16:38.900] Right. [01:16:38.900 --> 01:16:41.900] And he got people to do stuff that got him put in jail. [01:16:41.900 --> 01:16:43.900] New batch of that's right. [01:16:43.900 --> 01:16:44.900] I remember that. [01:16:44.900 --> 01:16:47.900] He's in all the farm states and all that stuff doing that. [01:16:47.900 --> 01:16:48.900] Okay, hang on. [01:16:48.900 --> 01:16:49.900] Hang on. [01:16:49.900 --> 01:16:50.900] We're about to go to break. [01:16:50.900 --> 01:16:53.900] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Steven, J.D. Craig, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:16:53.900 --> 01:16:57.900] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:57.900 --> 01:17:00.900] We'll be right back. 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[01:18:52.900 --> 01:18:55.900] The bookstore also carries the works of Dr. Joel Wallach, [01:18:55.900 --> 01:19:00.900] founder of Young Jevity and creator of Beyond Tangy Tangerine. [01:19:00.900 --> 01:19:25.900] Oh, come on. [01:19:25.900 --> 01:19:35.900] I can't get everything I want. [01:19:35.900 --> 01:19:37.900] Okay, we are back. [01:19:37.900 --> 01:19:41.900] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig with our radio. [01:19:41.900 --> 01:19:48.900] And Steve, what is the primary thrust of your show? [01:19:48.900 --> 01:19:55.900] Well, it's a video site, basically. [01:19:55.900 --> 01:19:59.900] A lot of clips, a lot of videos, not the latest news. [01:19:59.900 --> 01:20:05.900] Educational site, help site for people come on and stay and learn things. [01:20:05.900 --> 01:20:12.900] We also have just opened a new report thing where you can upload your own news stories, [01:20:12.900 --> 01:20:16.900] your clips or whatever like that, different categories you can upload. [01:20:16.900 --> 01:20:20.900] So it's involved. [01:20:20.900 --> 01:20:24.900] It costs money to put up whatever like that, [01:20:24.900 --> 01:20:28.900] but it's meant to try to educate people and motivate them [01:20:28.900 --> 01:20:32.900] into helping to fix this country, Randy. [01:20:32.900 --> 01:20:36.900] Good, good. That fits right in with what we do. [01:20:36.900 --> 01:20:42.900] Yes, sir. That's why I said, you know, and everything, it seems to happen. [01:20:42.900 --> 01:20:48.900] Just on a personal note, if you keep your eyes open and you go, just go on faith. [01:20:48.900 --> 01:20:54.900] And I run into good people, adults, grownups that are dedicated [01:20:54.900 --> 01:20:59.900] and they lead you on to somebody else, just like you with from Michael the Uke, [01:20:59.900 --> 01:21:02.900] or from your Richard Mack and other people there. [01:21:02.900 --> 01:21:09.900] They're just terrific people. [01:21:09.900 --> 01:21:12.900] Did I lose you? No, sir. You hear me? [01:21:12.900 --> 01:21:15.900] Uh-oh. I'm here. [01:21:15.900 --> 01:21:22.900] Excuse me, I clicked off one of the Skype windows [01:21:22.900 --> 01:21:25.900] and the instant I clicked at your voice stop, [01:21:25.900 --> 01:21:27.900] I shut you off or something. [01:21:27.900 --> 01:21:29.900] Well, I don't know where or less. [01:21:29.900 --> 01:21:33.900] You're asking about the site and it's an educational site [01:21:33.900 --> 01:21:36.900] and we've got a new thing on where it's you report [01:21:36.900 --> 01:21:42.900] and you can upload your own situation and stuff that people have captured [01:21:42.900 --> 01:21:49.900] or integrity videos or if you see a criminal activity involved, things like this, [01:21:49.900 --> 01:21:56.900] but it's made to educate and then motivate people into helping to fix this country, Randy. [01:21:56.900 --> 01:22:02.900] Good, good. Maybe we can take some of those people who are having issues [01:22:02.900 --> 01:22:06.900] and direct them towards some real remedies. [01:22:06.900 --> 01:22:13.900] Yes, sir. Like I said, I'm just real impressed with this and I don't know if you heard before, [01:22:13.900 --> 01:22:18.900] but in meeting these people, of which I wanted to do, get involved with them [01:22:18.900 --> 01:22:23.900] because I know that's where I belong. I'm comfortable with them. [01:22:23.900 --> 01:22:29.900] They're grown up, adults, they all have got the same type of attitude and commitment [01:22:29.900 --> 01:22:36.900] to helping fix this country and just like from Michael just to conversation and stuff [01:22:36.900 --> 01:22:38.900] and I told him a little bit what I was going to do. [01:22:38.900 --> 01:22:43.900] He says, call you and it doesn't surprise me, Randy, of the type of person you are [01:22:43.900 --> 01:22:47.900] and what I've heard. I am really impressed. [01:22:47.900 --> 01:22:49.900] Well, thank you. Thank you. [01:22:49.900 --> 01:22:55.900] Just send your friends. We need all the streams we can get to get our numbers up [01:22:55.900 --> 01:23:00.900] and we can get more advertising and actually pay for this thing. [01:23:00.900 --> 01:23:04.900] Yes, sir. I know that problem. [01:23:04.900 --> 01:23:09.900] But now, like I said, check out the emails, got the site on there. [01:23:09.900 --> 01:23:14.900] Check the site and order after the election stuff. We're kind of redoing some things [01:23:14.900 --> 01:23:20.900] and we have a lot of contacts with different people across the country [01:23:20.900 --> 01:23:23.900] and some rather large organizations. [01:23:23.900 --> 01:23:25.900] Good. Okay. We are going to have some tools. [01:23:25.900 --> 01:23:31.900] I hope within a week to have bar grievance.net up. [01:23:31.900 --> 01:23:36.900] And we're going to want that made available to everybody. [01:23:36.900 --> 01:23:45.900] Okay. Well, of all the remedies, that may well be the single most powerful. [01:23:45.900 --> 01:23:47.900] Okay. [01:23:47.900 --> 01:23:55.900] Of all of the things we can do to change the system, sometimes the greatest influence [01:23:55.900 --> 01:23:59.900] is found in places you wouldn't expect. [01:23:59.900 --> 01:24:04.900] I know most of my listeners have heard this before, but I'm going to go through this again. [01:24:04.900 --> 01:24:09.900] A bar grievance. If you file a bar grievance against a lawyer. [01:24:09.900 --> 01:24:11.900] Yes, sir. [01:24:11.900 --> 01:24:17.900] The state bar is going to get that grievance and they're going to throw it in the trash. [01:24:17.900 --> 01:24:18.900] Okay. [01:24:18.900 --> 01:24:22.900] And that's a good thing. [01:24:22.900 --> 01:24:29.900] The reason it's a good thing is their insurance carrier knows they're going to throw it in the trash. [01:24:29.900 --> 01:24:33.900] So how are they to gauge their level of risk? [01:24:33.900 --> 01:24:39.900] A valid bar grievance is hectic on all of the trash by the numbers. [01:24:39.900 --> 01:24:44.900] One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they will cancel immediately. [01:24:44.900 --> 01:24:47.900] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice. [01:24:47.900 --> 01:24:51.900] If you've been practicing 20 years, they'll cancel your insurance. [01:24:51.900 --> 01:24:56.900] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [01:24:56.900 --> 01:25:03.900] These lawyers go bananas when you start bar grievance. [01:25:03.900 --> 01:25:05.900] So we're setting up a site. [01:25:05.900 --> 01:25:21.900] I have taken the American bar association model standards and the American bar association standards for the prosecutorial function and converting them into a questionnaire. [01:25:21.900 --> 01:25:29.900] Within four questions, I can bring you to any single standard. [01:25:29.900 --> 01:25:30.900] Perfect. [01:25:30.900 --> 01:25:47.900] The thing that makes this workable is if you read the code and you read something that sounds workable or interesting or on point, you're always wondering about all the rest of that code. [01:25:47.900 --> 01:25:51.900] What have I missed? [01:25:51.900 --> 01:26:01.900] Taking the standards and turning them from proactive statements into interrogatories into questions. [01:26:01.900 --> 01:26:09.900] Then you follow the line of questioning and you don't have that fear that you've missed something important. [01:26:09.900 --> 01:26:14.900] Because if there was something connected that was important, we would have addressed it. [01:26:14.900 --> 01:26:24.900] So it makes it a lot easier for people to walk through these and questions trigger an area of the mind much different than a statement. [01:26:24.900 --> 01:26:29.900] But in four questions, you'll be on any particular grievance. [01:26:29.900 --> 01:26:37.900] The system will write the grievance in terms of the standard violated. [01:26:37.900 --> 01:26:48.900] And then it will allow the person to download, sign and send and one more minor little thing. [01:26:48.900 --> 01:27:01.900] It will save a copy of that grievance on our machine, which happens to be in Reykjavik, Iceland for good reason. [01:27:01.900 --> 01:27:10.900] It will save the grievance with the name of the lawyer concatenated, first name to last name. [01:27:10.900 --> 01:27:16.900] So if you do a search on this lawyer's name, you'll get a hit right on that grievance. [01:27:16.900 --> 01:27:19.900] So you're going to keep a database of lawyers? [01:27:19.900 --> 01:27:21.900] Yes, I am. [01:27:21.900 --> 01:27:22.900] Oh, well. [01:27:22.900 --> 01:27:28.900] Now, if you are in Utah and you follow bar grievance, [01:27:28.900 --> 01:27:32.900] and then reveal that bar grievance, why? [01:27:32.900 --> 01:27:35.900] That's a felony. [01:27:35.900 --> 01:27:42.900] But if you're in Utah and you go on to my website in Reykjavik, Iceland, [01:27:42.900 --> 01:27:48.900] and my website spits you out a bar grievance and then says one on its site, [01:27:48.900 --> 01:27:52.900] well, that bar grievance hasn't been filed yet. [01:27:52.900 --> 01:27:55.900] So it's not secret yet. [01:27:55.900 --> 01:28:00.900] And when you file it, you're forbidden to reveal it. [01:28:00.900 --> 01:28:03.900] But I'm not. [01:28:03.900 --> 01:28:05.900] Well, and I'll tell you why. [01:28:05.900 --> 01:28:06.900] This is another thing. [01:28:06.900 --> 01:28:12.900] Right now, I said this, like I said, if you just kind of run on faith that, you know, [01:28:12.900 --> 01:28:17.900] I'm going to find the answers that I'm looking for if I just talk to the right people. [01:28:17.900 --> 01:28:25.900] And I'd already had on my list to do this, even have domain names that I purchased to do this at some point. [01:28:25.900 --> 01:28:32.900] But obviously, I mean, you have a lot more knowledge on this than I do and how much. [01:28:32.900 --> 01:28:36.900] I'm so glad to hear you're willing to do this. [01:28:36.900 --> 01:28:38.900] If I can help you connect with that or whatever. [01:28:38.900 --> 01:28:42.900] Like I said, just, you know, write me or whatever like that. [01:28:42.900 --> 01:28:49.900] Okay, we will, I will contact you tomorrow and we'll, I'm hoping I've been working on this for four or five years. [01:28:49.900 --> 01:28:51.900] It's been a long time. [01:28:51.900 --> 01:28:53.900] We're all busy. [01:28:53.900 --> 01:28:55.900] But oh, let me ask you this, please. [01:28:55.900 --> 01:29:00.900] With this grievance thing, okay, what keeps them from throwing them in the trash? [01:29:00.900 --> 01:29:06.900] Show them the fact that they, you will have exposure to with. [01:29:06.900 --> 01:29:16.900] Oh, but we don't carefully throw them in the trash because one bargree with double your malpractice insurance and it starts at between 25 and 30,000 a year. [01:29:16.900 --> 01:29:17.900] Okay. [01:29:17.900 --> 01:29:24.900] So it's all about the money and we're going to cost them a lot of money. [01:29:24.900 --> 01:29:37.900] Oh, well, you mean like an attorney, one attorney I've had in a suit representing me for over six years and $80,000 and I finally had to fire him. [01:29:37.900 --> 01:29:39.900] Oh, don't fire him. [01:29:39.900 --> 01:29:41.900] Follow my practice suit against him. [01:29:41.900 --> 01:29:43.900] That's the next thing we're going to add to the suit. [01:29:43.900 --> 01:29:51.900] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevens, Eddie Craig, rule of law radio or call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:51.900 --> 01:29:59.900] Mike, Robert, I see you. We'll get to you when I come back and we'll be right back. [01:29:59.900 --> 01:30:06.900] A noble lie, Oklahoma City, 1995 will change forever the way you look at the true nature of terrorism. [01:30:06.900 --> 01:30:10.900] Based on the damage pattern to the building, but the government seems impossible. [01:30:10.900 --> 01:30:13.900] The grand jury did not want to hear anything I had to say. [01:30:13.900 --> 01:30:17.900] The decision was made not to pursue any more of those individuals. [01:30:17.900 --> 01:30:22.900] Some of these columns were ripped up, shredded, tossed around. [01:30:22.900 --> 01:30:26.900] The people that did the things they did have dug on well what they were doing. [01:30:26.900 --> 01:30:31.900] Expose the cover up now at anobleye.com. [01:30:31.900 --> 01:30:37.900] The rule of law radio network is proud to present a due process of law seminar hosted by our own Eddie Craig. 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[01:32:39.900 --> 01:32:44.900] You got a couple other callers and I see the time's running down here so I want to give them a chance. [01:32:44.900 --> 01:32:56.900] But I've got a quick story if you don't mind that by Congress site things we do is back before the election in November we broke the story that there was a... [01:32:56.900 --> 01:33:08.900] We had copied up to 14,000 death threats against Romney on Facebook, had all the names and everything like this and broke the story. [01:33:08.900 --> 01:33:18.900] Then by 7 o'clock threats picked it up and we were running 30,000 people across the site an hour and I was living. [01:33:18.900 --> 01:33:29.900] So I checked on it fine and I ended up... I had to be in a courtroom at 10 o'clock that morning and I'd get out and I've got all these e-mail messages from my people. [01:33:29.900 --> 01:33:40.900] You know, call me, call me. I said, what's going on? These are all the people from Romney are calling us and the Secret Service is calling them and they want us to take the story off. [01:33:40.900 --> 01:33:42.900] I said, what for? [01:33:42.900 --> 01:33:45.900] They said, well, because they're afraid of his safety. [01:33:45.900 --> 01:34:01.900] And I said, well, that's not really our job. It's kind of the Secret Service's job. But after having it up, I don't know, for four or five hours we went ahead with another story of how the people are going to riot. [01:34:01.900 --> 01:34:19.900] But we'd tracked in the copy of all the names of people that had written they were going to riot if Romney won. And so we ran, tell you what, we ran 710,000 new visitors to that site in that day, Randy. [01:34:19.900 --> 01:34:22.900] So that's what we do, things like that. [01:34:22.900 --> 01:34:25.900] Well, that'd be great. [01:34:25.900 --> 01:34:37.900] So it's been an absolute pleasure, sir, of talking with you. It's like, well, I'm sitting in my house just talking to you on a conversation and I really enjoy the show. [01:34:37.900 --> 01:34:41.900] Give it to my e-mail, write me tomorrow, if you would please, and I'll let you know. [01:34:41.900 --> 01:34:43.900] Okay, I will do that. [01:34:43.900 --> 01:34:51.900] Okay, thank you. And now we're going to go to Mike in Idaho. [01:34:51.900 --> 01:34:55.900] Is that Idaho? That's Idaho, not Indiana, right? Or is that right, Mike? [01:34:55.900 --> 01:34:58.900] 801, yeah, that's Utah. [01:34:58.900 --> 01:35:00.900] I'm just passing through. [01:35:00.900 --> 01:35:07.900] Yeah, well, mostly Montana, but lives in Utah and that's where the court stuff's going on. [01:35:07.900 --> 01:35:12.900] Oh, I was looking at the 801 area code. [01:35:12.900 --> 01:35:21.900] Oh, yeah, well, my house is in Utah, but I work in Montana and rarely make it back to Utah. [01:35:21.900 --> 01:35:25.900] Are you up there in the oil patch? [01:35:25.900 --> 01:35:35.900] Oh, no, not yet. When the oil patch still goes through, I'll be back in Utah. [01:35:35.900 --> 01:35:44.900] I'm all over the place. And unfortunately, court problems tend to happen in different places too, and usually not the place that I'm at. [01:35:44.900 --> 01:35:51.900] But anyway, I don't know if you remember my call. It was back in, I think, the beginning of December. [01:35:51.900 --> 01:36:02.900] But I'd bailed out an ex-girlfriend a few years ago and the bail bondsman had been, you know, she took off to California. [01:36:02.900 --> 01:36:10.900] And it turned out there was only traffic tickets, and the court, if she didn't show up, they just wanted the... [01:36:10.900 --> 01:36:19.900] Or because she was bailed out, they wanted to get her, but when they didn't, then they just asked for the money to be defaulted and closed the case, [01:36:19.900 --> 01:36:23.900] or not defaulted, but what do they call it? [01:36:23.900 --> 01:36:33.900] So what the bondsman did, though, I offered to give him the $1,000 that the court was after, he refused that several times and said, [01:36:33.900 --> 01:36:38.900] no, I'm going to spend whatever it takes to track her down. [01:36:38.900 --> 01:36:44.900] And then he left the summons on some random porch. [01:36:44.900 --> 01:36:58.900] And then, you know, so I didn't know I was supposed to be there, went into court, and the Judge Pro Tem just gave him the $10,000 judgment. [01:36:58.900 --> 01:37:01.900] And then I found out about it two weeks later. [01:37:01.900 --> 01:37:14.900] So when I talked to you before, we were going to...or I was going to file an appeal and then, you know, possibly go after the judge for... [01:37:14.900 --> 01:37:25.900] I keep the initial misconduct and then file a...or counters to the bondsman, you know, for whatever I could, three times. [01:37:25.900 --> 01:37:37.900] But I found a rule in the Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 60B, that allows you to have the judge set aside judgment based on, you know, [01:37:37.900 --> 01:37:45.900] a problem with the procedure or fraud or...well, I've got it right here. [01:37:45.900 --> 01:37:56.900] That's the mistake, inadvertent, surprised, excusable neglect, you know, et cetera, et cetera. [01:37:56.900 --> 01:38:11.900] So when I wrote the...when I filed, you know, the motion, I wanted to say fraud, but I didn't want to tip the bondsman off that I was going to be coming after him. [01:38:11.900 --> 01:38:22.900] So he might be able to assemble a better defense. So I just, you know, said that, you know, it must have been a mistake or something, but I wasn't served. [01:38:22.900 --> 01:38:28.900] You know, it was left at the wrong house. Nobody signed for it. [01:38:28.900 --> 01:38:36.900] You know, the rules of civil procedure require that, you know, there's somebody signed for it at the address. [01:38:36.900 --> 01:38:41.900] And then I waited. The judge was supposed to look at it at the beginning of the month. [01:38:41.900 --> 01:38:47.900] She finally looked at it yesterday and said it aside. [01:38:47.900 --> 01:38:51.900] She signed the motion, but they're signed the order. [01:38:51.900 --> 01:38:58.900] The thing that I'm trying to figure out now and right when I got on the phone with your call screen or my uncle, who's an attorney in Utah, [01:38:58.900 --> 01:39:11.900] finally called me back, but I'm not sure exactly what this court date that they set on March 22nd is about, because the clerk, clerk told me that, well, it's not the trial. [01:39:11.900 --> 01:39:17.900] I'm not sure what we're showing up for, but... [01:39:17.900 --> 01:39:25.900] You're probably showing up for...OK, this is what they do, especially in traffic court. [01:39:25.900 --> 01:39:30.900] They want you to just give them money. [01:39:30.900 --> 01:39:37.900] They don't want to hold a trial. They don't want to go to all that trouble, so they force you to come in and make an appearance. [01:39:37.900 --> 01:39:42.900] And then as soon as you get there, they cancel it. [01:39:42.900 --> 01:39:57.900] They have a friend who has a class A misdemeanor, and he drives across country, and he had to come to court three times so far, and it costs him two weeks of work every time he does, because he misses a run out and a run back. [01:39:57.900 --> 01:40:05.900] And so it's costing him $6,000 each time they do this, and they've done it three times so far. [01:40:05.900 --> 01:40:14.900] Until he'll just pay the fine, make a deal, pay the fine, rather than have them just keep draining him this way. [01:40:14.900 --> 01:40:25.900] Standard procedure. When they order me to come to court, and I come to court, and they're not prepared, I bill them. [01:40:25.900 --> 01:40:34.900] Yes, make up a bill and bill the jurisdiction. If it's a city, if it's a county, just send them a bill. [01:40:34.900 --> 01:40:43.900] Well, they might have said that if they file an appeal, it's $250, but this motion didn't cost me anything. [01:40:43.900 --> 01:40:49.900] But it's a civil case between me and another party, so I'm not sure what they get out of it. [01:40:49.900 --> 01:40:58.900] Oh, wait a minute. I'm sorry. I missed a part of that, because my phone dropped out, my Skype dropped out while you were talking, so I thought you were still talking about the ticket. [01:40:58.900 --> 01:41:04.900] Oh, no, no. The ticket was my ex-girlfriend's ticket, and she just... [01:41:04.900 --> 01:41:15.900] Oh, okay. Then my dad got in on the end, and they've had a little problem with my Skype flaking out today, so I lost part of that. I thought I had picked it up. [01:41:15.900 --> 01:41:18.900] So this is a civil? [01:41:18.900 --> 01:41:31.900] Yeah, but the bail bondsman, I paid him $100. He posted $1,000 bail for my ex-girlfriend on traffic tickets that she hadn't shown up on. She still didn't show up. [01:41:31.900 --> 01:41:40.900] And then now he's alleging that he spent $10,000 trying to find her, even though... [01:41:40.900 --> 01:41:46.900] Did you request an itemization of his costs? [01:41:46.900 --> 01:41:50.900] Well, we haven't gotten to that part yet. [01:41:50.900 --> 01:41:55.900] Have you... Okay, has a suit been filed? [01:41:55.900 --> 01:42:13.900] Well, the trial... He served the wrong address, I'm sure intentionally, so I wouldn't show up to trial, so he could just get a default judgment, which he did, even though the person who he left the summons on their porch brought the summons in, said, this isn't me. [01:42:13.900 --> 01:42:30.900] I don't know who this is, so that was in the file, and the judge, both him, still gave him the judgment, which is pretty frustrating, but I found out about this through, well, an intermediary that told me, hey, this... [01:42:30.900 --> 01:42:35.900] Okay, okay, so you filed... Do you file a motion to quash? [01:42:35.900 --> 01:42:58.900] Yeah, they will almost always do that. The courts don't like default judgment, and especially if it's default based on lack of service, they will almost always overturn the default for lack of service. [01:42:58.900 --> 01:43:06.900] The judge don't want you to appeal that, because an appeal at court will throw his decision out quickly. [01:43:06.900 --> 01:43:20.900] Yeah. Do you know why they would want me to come into court on the 26th? Like him and me show up now that the order's been fined, and it's set aside, and the clerk told me it's not a trial. [01:43:20.900 --> 01:43:31.900] If the summons does not tell you why, then you file an objection to the summons as it's insufficient notice. [01:43:31.900 --> 01:43:33.900] Okay, one agent. [01:43:33.900 --> 01:43:38.900] You can't be called to come to court unless they tell you why. When we come back, I'll tell you a little story about that. [01:43:38.900 --> 01:43:59.900] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig, Ruth LaRadeo, we're about to go into our last segment. If you've got one caller, so if you've got a question of calling, I'm sorry, we've got two callers, so we're going to run outside, but we'll be right back. [01:43:59.900 --> 01:44:08.900] 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. [01:44:08.900 --> 01:44:11.900] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books, then. [01:44:11.900 --> 01:44:12.900] Brave New Books? [01:44:12.900 --> 01:44:23.900] 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. They even stock dinner food, Burkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [01:44:23.900 --> 01:44:26.900] There's no way a place like that exists. [01:44:26.900 --> 01:44:31.900] Go check it out for yourself. It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street, just south of UT. [01:44:31.900 --> 01:44:35.900] Oh, by UT? There's never anywhere to park down there. [01:44:35.900 --> 01:44:43.900] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking facility just behind the bookstore. [01:44:43.900 --> 01:44:46.900] It does exist, but when are they open? [01:44:46.900 --> 01:45:00.900] Monday through Saturday, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., and 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays. So give them a call at 512-480-2503, or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:45:00.900 --> 01:45:03.900] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.900 --> 01:45:18.900] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, debt by step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.900 --> 01:45:22.900] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.900 --> 01:45:33.900] Thousands have won with our debt by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:33.900 --> 01:45:42.900] 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. [01:45:42.900 --> 01:45:55.900] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:55.900 --> 01:46:13.900] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.900 --> 01:46:45.900] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Debra Stevenson, Eddie Craig, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Mike in Idaho. [01:46:45.900 --> 01:47:10.900] Okay, Mike, you were being sued by the bail bondsman, and if he said he spent $10,000 to locate someone over a $1,000 bond, he's out of his mind and is lying like a dog. [01:47:10.900 --> 01:47:25.900] So I would move to, for continuance, on the hearing that's coming up for lack of proper notice is, in civil, you cannot have surprise. [01:47:25.900 --> 01:47:31.900] You can't be asked to come to court and not be told what you're going to be doing there. [01:47:31.900 --> 01:47:51.900] And if the suit's in place, file for discovery, and ask for a complete accounting of all his costs, he's not going to want to do that because if you find anything incorrect in there, that's aggravated perjury. [01:47:51.900 --> 01:47:58.900] And from there, it gets real serious. He may not be expecting you to come back at him criminally. [01:47:58.900 --> 01:48:05.900] That's what I've been trying to keep from him, finding out as well. [01:48:05.900 --> 01:48:14.900] It's kind of laying in wait for him, and you want him to set himself up. So you get this thing stricken. [01:48:14.900 --> 01:48:38.900] He tells me that my uncle told me that as far as being able to file a countersuit against him, is even if all these numbers were correct, that even in the paperwork, he called a week before court to find out if the court was going to happen. [01:48:38.900 --> 01:48:46.900] And they told him, well, we don't have any paperwork from you that, you know, proof of service. [01:48:46.900 --> 01:48:53.900] So he filed a blank group of service. She doesn't have anything on it, doesn't have a signature or anything. [01:48:53.900 --> 01:49:13.900] Somehow they took that as, okay, you know, and they went along the court. But I just saw on grounds of abuse of profit that I have that on it as well. But I'm not sure. [01:49:13.900 --> 01:49:19.900] You might file a judicial conduct complaint against a judge. [01:49:19.900 --> 01:49:27.900] Yeah, and I was thinking about that as well. And it was the judge who wrote him, some attorney that was sitting in place as a judge. [01:49:27.900 --> 01:49:37.900] Oh, that's even better. File a bar grievance against him. He will have a hernia. [01:49:37.900 --> 01:49:49.900] Yeah, well, to her, she practices, she's with a law firm, so that would immediately hurt her, not just some day when she might want to go to work. [01:49:49.900 --> 01:50:00.900] Oh, that'll hurt her big time for granting default judgment on a blank proof of service. Holy moly. [01:50:00.900 --> 01:50:07.900] She'll cry foul because she bargrewed her. She's going to think that you can't do that. [01:50:07.900 --> 01:50:13.900] But see, we know the bar grievance doesn't make any difference. [01:50:13.900 --> 01:50:25.900] Well, yeah, and even on the minute, you know, not just that he turned in a blank proof of service, but that somebody brought the summons back in and said that it was left on his porch. [01:50:25.900 --> 01:50:30.900] Yeah, so they had full knowledge that you didn't have notice. [01:50:30.900 --> 01:50:48.900] And there were procedures they could do a, he could publish, he could serve by public publication and some, you know, there are procedures for filing an advertisement in newspaper so many days and has to be certain size. [01:50:48.900 --> 01:50:52.900] They all have procedures for that. So there were other procedures to follow. [01:50:52.900 --> 01:50:57.900] Okay, we are quickly running out of time and I have one more caller. [01:50:57.900 --> 01:51:05.900] Okay, well, they have to have okay from the judge to do it in the paper in Utah. But anyway, well, thank you for your help. [01:51:05.900 --> 01:51:16.900] Okay, and think about filing a judicial conduct complaint against that judge and a bar grievance against his license. That'll get her excited. [01:51:16.900 --> 01:51:22.900] Okay, we're going to go to Robert in Texas. [01:51:22.900 --> 01:51:23.900] Reading. [01:51:23.900 --> 01:51:24.900] Hello, Robert. [01:51:24.900 --> 01:51:25.900] How are you doing? [01:51:25.900 --> 01:51:26.900] What do you have for us tonight? [01:51:26.900 --> 01:51:40.900] Well, I just bought the seminar Tuesday, so I've been listening and reading and, you know, just kind of going over a lot of stuff that I have been reading and listening to, you know, thanks to you guys and I want to thank you for all your work. [01:51:40.900 --> 01:51:57.900] Anyway, getting to the point here, I don't, I was told by Eddie, I called in Monday, my son had an MIC and they basically busted into his bathroom and he was on the pot and point flashlights had guns on their sides and [01:51:57.900 --> 01:52:13.900] basically coerced him in a saying he was drinking when he told him repeatedly he wasn't. But Eddie was telling me to file motions to suppress any statements and the citation of legal search and seizure and motion to dismiss the legal search and seizure like evidence. [01:52:13.900 --> 01:52:20.900] But I can't find these forms in the, are they in the seminar or are they on your jurisprudence page? [01:52:20.900 --> 01:52:35.900] Well, a lot of, you'll find a lot of that stuff in jurisprudence. I don't do the traffic, all the seminar stuff is all Eddie's, but I do have a lot of that stuff on jurisprudence. [01:52:35.900 --> 01:52:41.900] If you love jurisprudence and a bunch of frogs on there, I called this the frog farm conspiracy. [01:52:41.900 --> 01:52:42.900] Yeah. [01:52:42.900 --> 01:53:03.900] Top frog on the right is documents in research, go in there and it's been so long since I've worked with jurisprudence, I don't remember exactly where it's at, but dig around in there, you will find stacks of motions for different things. [01:53:03.900 --> 01:53:13.900] I'm just, do you file the motions when it's a municipal, you know, it's a citation and it's going to be in the court? [01:53:13.900 --> 01:53:19.900] Okay, here's how you file motions. You make up the motion and I suggest you do not go down there. [01:53:19.900 --> 01:53:20.900] Okay. [01:53:20.900 --> 01:53:33.900] Because if you go down there, you wind up with a lot of crap on it from the clerk and then they bring over the bayous with their pistols or the city marshals with their pistols and it can turn into a problem. [01:53:33.900 --> 01:53:51.900] I suggest you mail it to a certified mail and when you file a motion by mail, you send them three copies, one copies for the court, once for the prosecutor and one of them is to return to you. [01:53:51.900 --> 01:53:59.900] You include a stamp self-addressed envelope for them to mail the one copy back to you in and put a cover letter. [01:53:59.900 --> 01:54:09.900] First thing the cover letter should say, bring these motions to the immediate attention of the court. [01:54:09.900 --> 01:54:28.900] And that goes to a real bogus ruling by the court of appeals saying because the judge ruled against somebody and never even saw the motion and they said, well, you got to tell the clerk to bring it to the attention of the judge or you can't blame the judge for not seeing it. [01:54:28.900 --> 01:54:30.900] I said, I'm going to blame the clerk. [01:54:30.900 --> 01:54:42.900] But to avoid that, you put in there, bring these motions meet to the immediate attention of the court and stamp all three copies and provide one to the prosecutor to return the other to me. [01:54:42.900 --> 01:54:49.900] Now, we don't care what they do because you're going to have a signed return receipt. [01:54:49.900 --> 01:54:54.900] So they can't say, well, you can't file this and blah, blah, or any other crap. [01:54:54.900 --> 01:54:57.900] So that's how you get them in the court. [01:54:57.900 --> 01:54:58.900] Okay. [01:54:58.900 --> 01:55:07.900] Now, I send these to the city, I'm assuming the city court reporter or the, or what is the equivalent? [01:55:07.900 --> 01:55:10.900] No, just the municipal clerk. [01:55:10.900 --> 01:55:11.900] Okay. [01:55:11.900 --> 01:55:13.900] Technically, just send them to the municipal court. [01:55:13.900 --> 01:55:14.900] Okay. [01:55:14.900 --> 01:55:19.900] And, you know, file these motions with them, you know, like you said. [01:55:19.900 --> 01:55:24.900] And then, but where it says cause number, do I put just the citation number? [01:55:24.900 --> 01:55:26.900] Is that what I put there? [01:55:26.900 --> 01:55:29.900] No, they will put a cause number on it. [01:55:29.900 --> 01:55:33.900] But like on the motions, don't I have to put a cause number or do I put citation? [01:55:33.900 --> 01:55:36.900] No, you can call them and ask them for a cause number. [01:55:36.900 --> 01:55:44.900] But if you put your name on it, they're going to look up your name and put the last ticket you got. [01:55:44.900 --> 01:55:47.900] But it wouldn't hurt, you can call down there and ask them for a cause number. [01:55:47.900 --> 01:55:48.900] Okay. [01:55:48.900 --> 01:55:55.900] And if they, if they haven't, okay, if they haven't assigned a cause number, then put the ticket number on, they can look it up from that. [01:55:55.900 --> 01:55:56.900] Okay. [01:55:56.900 --> 01:56:04.900] And do I, do I go down to the police station and ask for like any like reports or anything like that? [01:56:04.900 --> 01:56:06.900] You know, any kind of... [01:56:06.900 --> 01:56:10.900] You can, this would go to discovery. [01:56:10.900 --> 01:56:11.900] Uh-huh. [01:56:11.900 --> 01:56:14.900] You, you file discovery right with the clerk. [01:56:14.900 --> 01:56:15.900] Yes. [01:56:15.900 --> 01:56:17.900] Don't go to the police station. [01:56:17.900 --> 01:56:19.900] Stay away from those guys. [01:56:19.900 --> 01:56:20.900] Okay. [01:56:20.900 --> 01:56:28.900] The municipal chump cops down on the end, they sometimes take too much, uh, too many steroids and they get kind of cranked up. [01:56:28.900 --> 01:56:30.900] I avoid those people. [01:56:30.900 --> 01:56:31.900] Yeah. [01:56:31.900 --> 01:56:32.900] So... [01:56:32.900 --> 01:56:35.900] Do everything by mail through the court that you can. [01:56:35.900 --> 01:56:37.900] Never go down there unless you can afford it. [01:56:37.900 --> 01:56:38.900] Okay. [01:56:38.900 --> 01:56:46.900] Because like he, he got the ticket, um, this, not, um, well, the last, this last, uh, Sunday, this last weekend. [01:56:46.900 --> 01:56:50.900] And, uh, he, I believe they said he had to the fifth to be in court. [01:56:50.900 --> 01:56:51.900] So, I mean, I'm, I'm okay. [01:56:51.900 --> 01:56:57.900] I mean, he's still got time till probably like the day I have to, I mean, I'm short on time, right? [01:56:57.900 --> 01:56:59.900] But I still got time, right? [01:56:59.900 --> 01:57:00.900] I'm just hoping. [01:57:00.900 --> 01:57:01.900] Yeah. [01:57:01.900 --> 01:57:02.900] Okay. [01:57:02.900 --> 01:57:06.900] All he has to do is go down there and he agreed to appear before magistrate. [01:57:06.900 --> 01:57:07.900] Uh-huh. [01:57:07.900 --> 01:57:12.900] And what I'd only do is go down and tell him I'm, I'm here to see the magistrate. [01:57:12.900 --> 01:57:13.900] Where's the magistrate? [01:57:13.900 --> 01:57:17.900] And then they say, well, who are you and how do you plead? [01:57:17.900 --> 01:57:27.900] And if, if Clark asked me how, how I plead, then I'm going to want to charge the clerk with impersonating a judicial officer. [01:57:27.900 --> 01:57:30.900] So you would judge. [01:57:30.900 --> 01:57:36.900] They give me some stuff and, you know, they'll give you a lot of, you know, they'll, they'll grouse back at you. [01:57:36.900 --> 01:57:39.900] And when they grouse back at me, I call security over. [01:57:39.900 --> 01:57:40.900] Come over here. [01:57:40.900 --> 01:57:42.900] I need you to arrest this person. [01:57:42.900 --> 01:57:44.900] And that generally gets their attention. [01:57:44.900 --> 01:57:46.900] And then the guy will say, well, I'm not going to arrest someone. [01:57:46.900 --> 01:57:47.900] I say, that's okay. [01:57:47.900 --> 01:57:58.900] Uh, just take my complaint and write out an incident report for me so that I have this available to me when I go to the district attorney. [01:57:58.900 --> 01:57:59.900] Listen to this. [01:57:59.900 --> 01:58:01.900] Listen to our show on Fridays. [01:58:01.900 --> 01:58:11.900] We will tell you how to handle the district attorneys and create yourself some politics and make these guys want to make this go away. [01:58:11.900 --> 01:58:12.900] I'm sorry. [01:58:12.900 --> 01:58:14.900] We are out of time. [01:58:14.900 --> 01:58:18.900] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Eddie Craig rule of law radio. [01:58:18.900 --> 01:58:20.900] We will be back. [01:58:20.900 --> 01:58:21.900] Eddie will be in debt. [01:58:21.900 --> 01:58:25.900] We'll be back Monday with the Monday night traffic show. [01:58:25.900 --> 01:58:30.900] Deborah and I will be back Thursday with our regular Thursday night. [01:58:30.900 --> 01:58:35.900] And then I'll be back next Friday with our four hour info marathon. [01:58:35.900 --> 01:58:42.900] We appreciate your listening and don't forget our fundraiser. [01:58:42.900 --> 01:58:48.900] And Deborah don't like me saying this, but don't forget Randy's beer fun. [01:58:48.900 --> 01:58:49.900] Okay. [01:58:49.900 --> 01:59:07.900] The Bible's for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament recovery version. [01:59:07.900 --> 01:59:19.900] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:19.900 --> 01:59:29.900] 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. [01:59:29.900 --> 01:59:31.900] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:31.900 --> 01:59:40.900] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.900 --> 02:00:02.900] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.