[00:00.000 --> 00:07.800] This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, online [00:07.800 --> 00:08.800] at thelibertybeat.com. [00:08.800 --> 00:13.920] I'm Brian Hagan with your Liberty Beat for Friday, May 23rd, 2014. [00:13.920 --> 00:22.440] Gold opened today at $1,289, silver opened at $19.32, and Bitcoin is trading at $546.09. [00:22.440 --> 00:27.280] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from Bitmain Technology, creators of the Antminer S1 180 [00:27.280 --> 00:32.480] gigahash bitcoin miner. No pre-order, ships on time. Sometimes it's early. Buy yours [00:32.480 --> 00:40.160] today at bitmaintech.com or call them up at 844-BITMAIN. That's 844-248-6246. [00:40.160 --> 00:44.920] And support comes from Affordable Sound, CD and DVD duplication, along with posters and [00:44.920 --> 00:49.680] promotions materials. Mention promo code LIBERTY and when you order 10 or more posters, you [00:49.680 --> 00:57.200] get 10 free. Online at AffordableSound.com or give them a call at 512-459-5253. [00:57.200 --> 01:02.520] In the news, nearly every phone call in Afghanistan, domestic and international, is being recorded [01:02.520 --> 01:08.040] by the NSA. That's revealed by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who decided to name [01:08.040 --> 01:12.880] Afghanistan as the country that other media outlets had previously referred to only as [01:12.880 --> 01:17.960] Country X. According to Russia Today, the redaction of the name had come at the request [01:17.960 --> 01:26.520] of the US government. The US House of Representatives has voted 303 to 221 to pass a bill designed [01:26.520 --> 01:32.080] to end the NSA's bulk data collection of domestic phone records. The USA Freedom Act aims to [01:32.080 --> 01:37.800] reform the NSA in response to revelations by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. Under [01:37.800 --> 01:42.680] the new bill, the NSA would have to limit its data collection to specific terms. However, [01:42.680 --> 01:46.760] critics worry that the bill has been watered down. Civil liberty and privacy advocates [01:46.760 --> 01:51.060] fear that last minute changes to the bill's language will allow the NSA to continue to [01:51.060 --> 01:58.200] collect Americans' information. On Tuesday, the Obama administration announced the release [01:58.200 --> 02:03.520] of classified memos dealing with the targeted drone assassination of American citizen Anwar [02:03.520 --> 02:09.920] al-Awlaki. Solicitor General Donald B. Verrill Jr. decided not to appeal a recent court decision [02:09.920 --> 02:14.240] requiring the release of the documents under the Freedom of Information Act. The memos, [02:14.240 --> 02:18.400] written by Harvard law professor David J. Barron, will be reviewed and redacted before [02:18.400 --> 02:22.720] being opened to the public. The lawsuit was brought forth by the New York Times and the [02:22.720 --> 02:28.280] American Civil Liberties Union. Support for Liberty Beat comes from Voice and Exit, maximizing [02:28.280 --> 02:32.880] human flourishing through radical innovation. Tickets on sale now. Get 10% off with promo [02:32.880 --> 02:38.920] code FREEDOM June 21st at Austin Music Hall. Get yours at voiceandexit.com. And support [02:38.920 --> 02:43.840] comes from Accountable Authority, now offering a public database of police abuse and misconduct. [02:43.840 --> 02:50.760] Take action and join for free to gain community support and protection. Online at accountableauthority.com. [02:50.760 --> 03:17.760] This is the Liberty Beat for Friday, May 23rd, 2014. Check out the website at theLibertyBeat.com. [03:17.760 --> 03:31.160] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore with Law Radio. And we're talking to Jeanne [03:31.160 --> 03:39.200] in New York. Traffic ticket. First, the officer did have reasonable probable cause to make [03:39.200 --> 03:48.640] the stop. Now, there's plenty of New York case law on right to travel. And one caution, [03:48.640 --> 03:57.360] it's not a God given right. It is a constitutional right. Well, constitution doesn't give you [03:57.360 --> 04:05.000] that right. You have to understand about rights. Nobody gave you rights. The constitution doesn't [04:05.000 --> 04:14.520] give you any rights. The constitution just specifically forbids the government from interfering [04:14.520 --> 04:20.040] with certain rights. And that's why when you bring the constitution into court, the courts [04:20.040 --> 04:24.920] will tell you don't bring the constitution in here, because that's not what the constitution [04:24.920 --> 04:30.920] is for. It's not for granting you rights. It's for preventing government from interfering [04:30.920 --> 04:36.640] with certain enumerated rights. But you still have all of the other rights. And this is [04:36.640 --> 04:46.160] how we explain it. A public official may only do what the law specifically authorizes him [04:46.160 --> 04:54.920] to do. You, on the other hand, as a citizen in a republic, you can do anything you want [04:54.920 --> 05:05.080] to unless the law specifically forbids you to do it. And travel is something that no [05:05.080 --> 05:17.120] law forbids you to do. So therefore you may do it. The real issue of right to travel is [05:17.120 --> 05:28.360] not does something grant me this right? The real question is, where in law am I forbidden [05:28.360 --> 05:40.020] to operate a motorized piece of equipment for private use? Now I am forbidden to operate [05:40.020 --> 05:48.080] a motorized piece of equipment for commercial purposes. But where am I forbidden to operate [05:48.080 --> 05:56.320] for private use? Does that make sense, Jane? Yes, it does. That's how you have to go after [05:56.320 --> 06:02.960] it. But understand when you go into these municipal courts, they really don't care. [06:02.960 --> 06:09.280] They get 100 people a week or every time they hold court and everybody comes in with the [06:09.280 --> 06:13.880] same story and they don't want to hear it. Guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty. They're there [06:13.880 --> 06:22.200] to collect money. So if you want to beat them, then never ask them to do anything you actually [06:22.200 --> 06:28.720] want them to do. I'll give you an example. I got a ticket down here and I went into court. [06:28.720 --> 06:35.220] First thing is it's only a ticket. The worst that can happen to you is you have to pay [06:35.220 --> 06:42.880] the ticket. You got nothing to lose. So I go into court and they ordered me to be there [06:42.880 --> 06:47.520] on a certain day. Generally they just say on or before a certain time. So I always go [06:47.520 --> 06:51.880] down there and demand to see a magistrate when the magistrate is not around. But this [06:51.880 --> 06:57.480] time they did it right and told me to be at court on this Monday at six o'clock. So I [06:57.480 --> 07:05.200] showed up and when they call my name, I walked up to the judge and I looked at his name. [07:05.200 --> 07:13.240] And then looked up at him and I judge Deadman. I said, I seem to remember a judge Deadman [07:13.240 --> 07:21.880] here in Asel, Texas, but I don't remember him having quite that much gray hair. And [07:21.880 --> 07:28.440] I did remember this judge and he was a very pleasant human being. And he looked up at [07:28.440 --> 07:36.480] me and he said, yes, Mr. Kelton, and I don't remember your belly being quite that big. [07:36.480 --> 07:40.800] Good point. But, you know, I've started off by telling the judge, I am not impressed. [07:40.800 --> 07:51.440] And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, how would you like to plea to this? No insurance and speeding. [07:51.440 --> 07:56.520] I had proof of insurance, but I refused to give it to him because I didn't like the way [07:56.520 --> 08:05.040] he asked me. So I said, well, I would like to plea reluctantly. He said, well, Mr. Kelton, [08:05.040 --> 08:11.080] you can't plea reluctantly. Okay. Then I'm not going to plea. Instead, I want you to [08:11.080 --> 08:19.120] hold an examining trial. No, Mr. Kelton, I'm not going to hold an examining trial. Okay. [08:19.120 --> 08:24.080] Then I want you to have the bailiff come over here and arrest you. Well, why would I have [08:24.080 --> 08:29.880] the bailiff arrest me for official misconduct, criminal violation 39.03 Pita Code by failing [08:29.880 --> 08:33.800] to perform a duty you're required to perform and in the process deny me the full free access [08:33.800 --> 08:39.080] to your enjoyment of writing. Hey, bailiff, get over here. The judge said, no, no, no. [08:39.080 --> 08:44.120] I am not going to have the bailiff come over here and arrest me. I said, well, okay. Then [08:44.120 --> 08:50.180] I want you to have the prosecutor come up here and advise you that you have a duty to [08:50.180 --> 08:56.000] do this as is his duty under the American Bar Association standards for the prosecutorial [08:56.000 --> 09:03.680] function. And the prosecutor said, I'm not doing anything. Okay. Then I want you to take [09:03.680 --> 09:10.400] my criminal complaint against the prosecutor. No, no, we're not going to do any of that. [09:10.400 --> 09:17.640] I said, I'm going to go home. Okay, Mr. Kelton, you go home. So they called me back for trial [09:17.640 --> 09:27.760] and I talked to the prosecutor and told him, you know, you guys got kind of a problem. [09:27.760 --> 09:33.600] I put in a couple of information requests and I don't believe how stupid your city attorney [09:33.600 --> 09:39.280] is. I got the dumbest responses from him. You are not going to believe and I'm going [09:39.280 --> 09:43.920] to be bringing you a couple of classy misdemeanor criminal complaints against the, your city [09:43.920 --> 09:49.080] attorney. And I know you got a jury here for me, but I'm sure I'm going to get to that [09:49.080 --> 09:55.560] jury because I have this challenge to subject matter jurisdiction before the court. Well, [09:55.560 --> 10:01.920] yeah, Mr. Kelton, the judge is going to deny that. I said, I know he is, but I don't care. [10:01.920 --> 10:05.880] And when he does, since I'm here at arm's length to the court, I won't be able to participate [10:05.880 --> 10:14.040] in your jury anyway. So you might as well send them home. So we get, they call my name [10:14.040 --> 10:21.040] and the judge said, is the prosecution ready? And the prosecutor said, no, your honor, the [10:21.040 --> 10:29.600] prosecution is not ready. Case dismissed. Wait, wait, I object. Mr. Kelton, you object [10:29.600 --> 10:34.960] to us dismissing the case. Yeah, judge, we were just about to get to the good part. You're [10:34.960 --> 10:42.840] dismissed Mr. Kelton. They don't want to deal with someone who is prepared to deal with [10:42.840 --> 10:51.360] them. And when you go in there from the perspective that the court is going to rule against you [10:51.360 --> 11:01.160] out of hand at every turn, that protects you. They are very accustomed to betrayal. They [11:01.160 --> 11:09.280] know you come in there with a very large investment in rule of law. You need to feel like you [11:09.280 --> 11:16.960] are protected by your police officers in courts. And when you come in there and they just blow [11:16.960 --> 11:23.680] off everything, they know how debilitating that is. It angers people, frustrates them [11:23.680 --> 11:32.320] and causes them to react and respond in the worst possible ways. They get you to react [11:32.320 --> 11:40.200] emotionally to them instead of thoughtful. So go in there with the expectation they're [11:40.200 --> 11:45.280] going to rule against you out of hand at every turn and you don't care because you're only [11:45.280 --> 11:52.480] going to ask them to do what law requires them to do. And every time they rule against [11:52.480 --> 11:59.800] you, you just take your little pad of paper and check. If you were listening earlier, [11:59.800 --> 12:06.440] your only purpose in the trial court is to put the facts and the law on the record. You [12:06.440 --> 12:16.560] don't care what that judge does. It's all about court of appeals. So if anytime you're [12:16.560 --> 12:23.080] not like a lawyer, you're in a whole different position. Lawyers have to deal with judges. [12:23.080 --> 12:29.960] I once sued Denton County, Texas for $11 million. I sued 24 litigants, judges, prosecutors, [12:29.960 --> 12:40.240] all of them public officials. I sued my worst nightmare. 13th litigant was an officer that [12:40.240 --> 12:46.480] identified himself to be as my worst nightmare. He wouldn't tell me his name, so I sued him. [12:46.480 --> 12:56.600] Oh, that was a hoot. I called 60 lawyers, $11 million suit. The last one was the previous [12:56.600 --> 13:03.080] district attorney, Jerry Cobb, and I sued the current district attorney. I called him [13:03.080 --> 13:07.880] and I said, hello, Mr. Cobb. My name is Randy Kelton and I have sued Denton County and I [13:07.880 --> 13:12.520] need somebody to represent my case. Oh, Mr. Kelton, I know all about your case. I can't [13:12.520 --> 13:17.000] represent you. You've made allegations against judges in there and I have to represent clients [13:17.000 --> 13:22.640] in this county. I said, what's the matter, Jerry? You're afraid those judges will screw [13:22.640 --> 13:29.840] your next client to get back at you? And he said what every other lawyer said. You darn [13:29.840 --> 13:37.320] right they will. Now, I don't know if that was true or not, but I do know that every [13:37.320 --> 13:43.640] lawyer I talked to believed that it was true, so it might as well be. See, the lawyer is [13:43.640 --> 13:49.880] in a difficult position. You're not. You're not going to be bringing more clients before [13:49.880 --> 13:55.240] this judge. You don't care if he's PO'd or not. You don't need him on your side. He's [13:55.240 --> 14:01.280] going to rule against you anyway, so act with him. I was recently in court and this lawyer [14:01.280 --> 14:08.920] was pretty kicked at me. Mr. Kelton, are you an attorney? Oh, no, no. And we're right at [14:08.920 --> 14:12.760] the bench, right in front of the judge. So I said there's a lot of judges it wishes I [14:12.760 --> 14:21.480] was an attorney. And to answer your question, no, I'm not here dangling by my bar card. [14:21.480 --> 14:30.160] The lawyer was so furious the paper in her hand was vibrating because she knew I understood [14:30.160 --> 14:37.680] it. She looked at me and saw the pro se from hell and she was white. I make it a point [14:37.680 --> 14:46.080] to be. Just go ahead and fail to do something that the American Bar Association model standards [14:46.080 --> 14:51.560] require you to do. Go ahead. I have a bar grievance in against you so fast they make [14:51.560 --> 14:58.280] your head spin. They'll double your malpractice insurance immediately. And judge, go ahead. [14:58.280 --> 15:03.200] Give me a bad ruling, judge. Wonderful. Now I get to file a judicial conduct complaint [15:03.200 --> 15:06.680] against you. And depending on what it is, I get to file criminal charges against you [15:06.680 --> 15:11.120] with a district attorney. And the district attorney will absolutely refuse to act on [15:11.120 --> 15:19.280] it. At least I hope he does. Because then I'll file against the district attorney with [15:19.280 --> 15:26.200] the highest level judge I can find and he'll refuse to act on it. At least I hope he does. [15:26.200 --> 15:31.160] Because then I'll file against him with the state attorney general and try to get him [15:31.160 --> 15:37.920] to refuse to act on it. But what the attorney general is going to do is call this district [15:37.920 --> 15:44.720] judge and say, I got somebody down here trying to get me to arrest you because you wouldn't [15:44.720 --> 15:50.660] take a complaint against the prosecutor. You want to tell me what I should do with this? [15:50.660 --> 16:00.200] And the district judge is going to be furious. Here's how it works. You will never win your [16:00.200 --> 16:09.440] case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. To think so is naive. [16:09.440 --> 16:17.680] It is not that way now. It never ever has been that way. You will win your case if you [16:17.680 --> 16:26.960] have the politics on your side and all politics is local. And this is how we go about generating [16:26.960 --> 16:35.080] a little local politics. All this doo-doo rolls downhill. And when you're hammering [16:35.080 --> 16:43.920] the district attorney general for not going after a district judge, for not going after [16:43.920 --> 16:51.920] the prosecuting attorney, that becomes a public forum. By the time it gets back down to this [16:51.920 --> 16:57.680] chump judge, he's going to be in big trouble. Hang on. This is Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, [16:57.680 --> 17:00.680] WheelRawRadio. We'll be right back. [17:00.680 --> 17:05.280] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [17:05.280 --> 17:10.000] of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. And it's time we [17:10.000 --> 17:16.120] changed all that. 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[18:41.120 --> 18:47.040] For more information, please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner, [18:47.040 --> 18:56.040] or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. That's RuleOfLawRadio.com, or email M-I-C-H-A-E-L-M-I-R-R-A-S [18:56.040 --> 19:03.040] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:26.040 --> 19:33.040] Thank you very much. [19:56.040 --> 20:08.560] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, RuleOfLawRadio, and we're talking to Gene [20:08.560 --> 20:14.960] in the... No, we're not talking to Gene. Yeah, we're talking to Gene in New York. I'm trying [20:14.960 --> 20:21.320] to do two things at once, and I'm an old guy, and I don't multitask as well as I did once [20:21.320 --> 20:33.320] upon a time. Okay. Gene, does that make sense? Oh, you're not live. Oops. It was impounded? [20:33.320 --> 20:37.120] There we go. I'm sorry. Okay. Now, if your car was impounded, the first thing I suggest [20:37.120 --> 20:44.120] you do is get it out. Even if you have a fight to fight, get it out of impoundment first, [20:44.120 --> 20:52.960] and you can sue for the impoundment charges. But first, get it out, or they're going to [20:52.960 --> 21:00.880] charge an exorbitant amount, and then they're going to sell it. Getting it back is a beast. [21:00.880 --> 21:11.200] Your problem is, is the officer can articulate reasonable probable cause for the stop. Even [21:11.200 --> 21:26.120] if you're not in commerce, your son was operating a motorized piece of equipment that was equipped [21:26.120 --> 21:32.920] to be operated in commerce, and it had the appearance of being operated in commerce because [21:32.920 --> 21:39.120] it had those commercial plates on it. So he will be able to articulate reasonable probable [21:39.120 --> 21:43.760] cause. In the end, those are technicalities that don't make much difference, plus the [21:43.760 --> 21:56.960] courts don't care. Are you using Monday night traffic show? All right. Okay. Monday night, [21:56.960 --> 22:03.960] Eddie Craig does a show strictly on traffic. I avoid going deep into the traffic issue [22:03.960 --> 22:12.640] directly because he is way better on that than me, and he can tell you more specifically [22:12.640 --> 22:21.560] how to handle this. He does a show from 8 to 10 Central every Monday night. Okay. So [22:21.560 --> 22:26.920] you might give him a call Monday. He's actually a lot more aggressive than me. He'll give [22:26.920 --> 22:35.920] you some more aggressive techniques. In the end, you just want them to say, get this person [22:35.920 --> 22:40.640] out of my court. I don't want to deal with him anymore. That's probably the best you [22:40.640 --> 22:46.560] can hope for and get him to dismiss. Yes. That's what I would like. Okay. We'll call [22:46.560 --> 22:53.680] him Monday to Eddie Craig's traffic show. He will. All right. Because my son got like [22:53.680 --> 22:59.400] five citations, so that's going to be like really expensive. So if I could get that thing. [22:59.400 --> 23:07.560] Okay. What they'll do initially is they'll take the one that costs the most. And if he [23:07.560 --> 23:11.680] agrees to plea on that one, they'll drop all the rest of them. That's what they almost [23:11.680 --> 23:19.480] always do. Oh really? Yeah. And you know, if you can hammer them hard enough, they will [23:19.480 --> 23:26.880] most likely want to drop a couple of them. What were the other citations? Unlicensed [23:26.880 --> 23:41.720] vehicle, no license, unregistered car, not inspected. And there was one of, oh, no insurance. [23:41.720 --> 23:54.240] Oh, those are going to be hard to beat in the commercial arena. Getting them out of [23:54.240 --> 24:04.040] commerce is going to be your only hope. They just care about the money. And none of these [24:04.040 --> 24:14.960] are the kinds of things that go to discretion. Was he weaving? Was he going too fast? You [24:14.960 --> 24:20.360] know, he'll say he went too fast. You'll say, no, you didn't. It goes to discretion as judge. [24:20.360 --> 24:30.320] Here the officer will bring hard evidence to back up his accusations. No driver's license, [24:30.320 --> 24:36.040] unregistered vehicle. That's hard evidence. No proof of insurance, no inspection sticker. [24:36.040 --> 24:40.960] These are all things where he can bring in actual facts that are not open for dispute. [24:40.960 --> 24:46.160] The only dispute is whether or not these apply to you. They'll be hard to beat unless you're [24:46.160 --> 24:51.600] about your only option is to go for the right to travel issue. And Eddie is the one who [24:51.600 --> 25:00.240] will need to do that one. Okay. Okay. Give him a call Monday. Thank you for calling. [25:00.240 --> 25:09.240] Now we're going to go to Ms. Francis in Colorado. Hello, Ms. Francis. Who do you have stirred [25:09.240 --> 25:18.840] up now? Well, I have something that's kind of interesting. You helped me write an unlawful [25:18.840 --> 25:26.680] foreclosure suit in September of 2012. Yes, I remember that. For a brief time, about a [25:26.680 --> 25:33.560] year, okay, I lost standing in that suit. And when I lost standing, the judge dismissed [25:33.560 --> 25:41.720] all of the major players, the public trustee and all those, you know, the lender. But before [25:41.720 --> 25:45.320] he dismissed the lender, the lender went on record. He said he relinquished all of our [25:45.320 --> 25:50.800] rights and then they got dismissed, right? And everybody got dismissed. And so then I [25:50.800 --> 25:55.840] thought over the summer that, and he never put this on stay. He never put this particular [25:55.840 --> 26:03.400] case on stay, even though I asked for it because I had lacked standing. And so I put it into [26:03.400 --> 26:07.680] the appeals court over the summer and the appeals court pushed it back and said, hey, [26:07.680 --> 26:14.960] we cashed your check, but we can't hear this because not everyone has been dismissed. There's [26:14.960 --> 26:21.040] one more person in here. And I was like, what? And then I remembered the notary. The notary [26:21.040 --> 26:32.960] has never answered the charge. She was processed, served in early October of 2012. I filed a [26:32.960 --> 26:39.280] no answer default in with the clerk when I didn't have standing. And they told me to, [26:39.280 --> 26:46.200] you know, they denied that. And so recently on the 8th of April, I filed another one. [26:46.200 --> 26:52.800] Now I have standing a no answer default judgment against the notary. And the judge will not [26:52.800 --> 26:58.160] do anything. What can I do besides light his rope on fire? Can't do that. They won't [26:58.160 --> 26:59.160] want to. [26:59.160 --> 27:07.720] Petition for writ of mandamus. Ask the court of appeals to mandate to the judge that he [27:07.720 --> 27:11.760] perform his duty and give you a ruling on the motion. [27:11.760 --> 27:19.160] Okay. So, well now the appeals court just dismissed it. They just dismissed it and I'd [27:19.160 --> 27:21.880] have to go back and look and see if they dismiss it. [27:21.880 --> 27:29.560] Okay. Now from what you said, they didn't. Well, from what you said, the court of appeals [27:29.560 --> 27:36.480] said, we don't have jurisdiction. The issue is not right for appeal. [27:36.480 --> 27:37.720] Okay. [27:37.720 --> 27:45.800] So you can still, everything else you appealed, it's not dismissed. They just said, we don't [27:45.800 --> 27:51.760] have jurisdiction to hear it. This thing's not right. You have to dispense with this. [27:51.760 --> 27:59.960] If they accepted it, it would have to be an interlocutory because there was still a litigant. [27:59.960 --> 28:04.560] So you adjudicate this litigant. And then if the judge rules against you, now you can [28:04.560 --> 28:14.560] appeal everything. So that's wonderful. That preserved the clock. I stopped the clock. [28:14.560 --> 28:24.440] So it almost, you know, since the notary never responded, that kind of goes to dead bank [28:24.440 --> 28:30.240] and over this amount of time, the notary is not going to be able to come back and claim [28:30.240 --> 28:42.840] admissible error. I mean, two weeks, two weeks, maybe. I had to give my cat a bath, you know. [28:42.840 --> 28:50.600] But this amount of time, they won't be, she's not going to be able to claim admissible error. [28:50.600 --> 28:57.840] And you can ask for default judgment against you for the full amount. See how that works. [28:57.840 --> 29:03.560] You might get it. You get default judgment. Now you've won. Now you have to collect. [29:03.560 --> 29:11.760] Right. Well, and then the other thing is it gives me res judicata to go into the quiet [29:11.760 --> 29:16.800] title and to go back into the void of the 120 hearing notes. [29:16.800 --> 29:24.520] Exactly. Res judicata on quiet title. That's perfect. You go back on that particular one, [29:24.520 --> 29:34.480] the notary statute. Do you have a monetary claim against the notary? [29:34.480 --> 29:38.280] You know what? I don't know. I have to pull. I'll pull the case up after while we're on [29:38.280 --> 29:39.280] break. [29:39.280 --> 29:43.520] Okay, good. Because if you don't and you're asking for declaratory judgment, that's a [29:43.520 --> 29:50.600] piece of cake. Okay, hang on. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Wheel of our Radio, our call [29:50.600 --> 29:57.960] in number 512-646-1984. Danny Carroll, I see you there. We'll get to you. We'll be right [29:57.960 --> 29:58.960] back. 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By ordering [32:41.960 --> 32:45.520] now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus [32:45.520 --> 32:49.960] the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and [32:49.960 --> 32:53.200] other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of [32:53.200 --> 32:57.640] this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have the [32:57.640 --> 33:04.640] free society we all want and deserve. [33:27.640 --> 33:42.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Francis [33:42.520 --> 33:53.800] in Colorado. Okay, did you look at the suit? Did you ask for anything specifically against, [33:53.800 --> 34:00.120] did you name the notary and say you want this much damages? [34:00.120 --> 34:04.440] Not from her. The prayer just basically says, news the court to issue an order declaring [34:04.440 --> 34:08.980] that the above alleged holder has produced no evidence to show standing. To enforce the [34:08.980 --> 34:13.320] above reference deed of trust, we pray the court will award us damages and an opinion [34:13.320 --> 34:19.720] in our favor that will allow for quieting of the title and the notary is named but there [34:19.720 --> 34:26.440] is no specific damages. Perfect. Okay, hang on. That's beautiful. So since you didn't [34:26.440 --> 34:37.400] ask for anything from the notary specifically, you prepare a petition for default judgment [34:37.400 --> 34:48.080] against the notary in the form of a declaratory judgment. Declaratory judgment doesn't ask [34:48.080 --> 34:58.640] for any damages from the notary. Only declaration that the particular acknowledgement is void [34:58.640 --> 35:07.600] and no force in effect. That's relatively easy for the judge to do and it does not require [35:07.600 --> 35:13.800] a prove-up hearing. If you ask for damages, there would need to be a prove-up hearing. [35:13.800 --> 35:21.000] If you ask for declaratory judgment, it's done and over with. Now you're not going [35:21.000 --> 35:25.720] to, it's not like you're going to sue a crapola out of the notary and try to take [35:25.720 --> 35:31.680] her house in a refrigerator. You're just asking for a declaration. Easy for the court [35:31.680 --> 35:41.000] to do. Okay. Now you have your rest due to cata. Okay. Okay. And so can you help me with [35:41.000 --> 35:48.480] that? Absolutely. Absolutely. Okay. I'm a little bit busy. I've got funding for my [35:48.480 --> 35:55.400] major project and I'm heading out to California early in the week to get this put together. [35:55.400 --> 36:01.280] But I'll help you with that and then I'm going to want some help back from you. Okay. [36:01.280 --> 36:09.040] Well, that's the deal. I will get, I will read the bones and then, then you look it [36:09.040 --> 36:15.360] over and see what you think. Okay. It's just in there. I mean, I filed, you know, the petition, [36:15.360 --> 36:22.360] but I didn't answer the declaratory judgment. Yeah. This is fairly simple that you made [36:22.360 --> 36:32.320] a claim based on this acknowledgement that the acknowledgement was invalid. The notary [36:32.320 --> 36:41.240] failed to respond and thereby tantamount to admission that the notary was invalid and [36:41.240 --> 36:47.600] asked for a declaratory judgment. You're not asking for a lot of money. You're not [36:47.600 --> 36:52.880] for them to stop the foreclosure. You're not asking for anything, but just a simple, that [36:52.880 --> 37:01.200] should be easy. That could be death to the whole thing. [37:01.200 --> 37:05.680] I thought that might've been a little bit of a coup. It's the same judge that has my [37:05.680 --> 37:12.280] quiet title and he refused to allow Joe Escobel's evidence to go into the record along with [37:12.280 --> 37:19.480] my evidence that I found that the people who signed that qualified holder statement was [37:19.480 --> 37:25.520] not a bank and that was Chase admitting to the comptroller of the currency just after [37:25.520 --> 37:30.440] they took my house that they were merging with a non-bank entity and you couldn't sign [37:30.440 --> 37:38.920] that form without your money. Well, before we point too hard at the judge, [37:38.920 --> 37:49.760] how was your complaint framed? By that I mean, was it framed in a way that this information [37:49.760 --> 37:57.520] would go to an issue that was before the court? You know, I'd have to reread my original [37:57.520 --> 38:03.560] one to see exactly what it was. I had put in all my qualified holder, I mean, qualified [38:03.560 --> 38:08.800] written requests so that they were in administrative default, but I'm not sure I used the right [38:08.800 --> 38:14.160] language. I used somebody else's template. Okay, because that may be why he didn't let [38:14.160 --> 38:22.120] it in. We have to look at that and see if there is a, see if there's something that [38:22.120 --> 38:30.160] actually went to, because if it didn't, then he was right in not letting that, those facts [38:30.160 --> 38:39.160] or that evidence in, it would prejudice the case without actually going to an issue before [38:39.160 --> 38:45.840] the court. Does that make sense? It does. I wondered about that myself and you know, [38:45.840 --> 38:50.560] my biggest issue is I've got the zombie lender is evidently risen from the grave and hired [38:50.560 --> 38:56.040] three attorneys and is evidently paying them with a dirt rocks and dust and you know, whatever [38:56.040 --> 39:00.560] the worms haven't eaten at this point, because they've been out of business since 2009, but [39:00.560 --> 39:05.480] I've got three, count them three attorneys who don't have standing and I've asked them [39:05.480 --> 39:08.200] for the principal's address and they don't have- [39:08.200 --> 39:17.240] Hold on, hold on. How, wait a minute, how do you know that this dead guy actually hired [39:17.240 --> 39:25.560] these lawyers? Well, I've asked the court, I've compelled the court, I filed the motion [39:25.560 --> 39:31.040] to compel the court or compel these attorneys to prove up agency, that they have agency [39:31.040 --> 39:36.120] with their principal and that's never been ruled on either. See, then I lost my standing. [39:36.120 --> 39:42.640] Okay, okay. Here's the deal. Got it back. Okay, here's the deal. The only thing you [39:42.640 --> 39:50.000] actually know is that these lawyers came to the court and filed some documents because [39:50.000 --> 39:56.040] these lawyers signed it. Okay. You got their signature on it. That you know. Now they said [39:56.040 --> 40:03.040] they represented this other company, but you don't know if they did or not sue the lawyers [40:03.040 --> 40:15.400] directly. Okay. Because, you know, they may just made this up. They may have just saw [40:15.400 --> 40:19.920] this foreclosure and picked it up and figured, you know, if we can foreclose on it, we can [40:19.920 --> 40:30.480] take the property. If the actual holder is dead, the holder of the claim, the security [40:30.480 --> 40:35.200] instrument is a dead guy, then they'll take the property and sell it in the name of the [40:35.200 --> 40:42.400] lender and then they keep all the money. So sue them personally. This is the lender. Not [40:42.400 --> 40:47.760] the lender, sue the lawyers. You don't know anything about the lender. All you know is [40:47.760 --> 40:55.080] the lawyer said something about a lender. You can't talk to the lender. You got somebody [40:55.080 --> 41:06.960] who can do a seance. You can't talk to the lender. You don't know if the agency cannot [41:06.960 --> 41:13.600] be proven out of the mouth of the agent. It must be proven out of the mouth of the principal. [41:13.600 --> 41:18.480] So you never talked to the principal. They won't bring you the principal. So as far as [41:18.480 --> 41:27.080] you're concerned, there is no principal. So they made this up. So sue them personally. [41:27.080 --> 41:35.720] Okay, because what they've done is they've filed a motion to dismiss my quiet title. [41:35.720 --> 41:41.600] But they were not involved in the foreclosure. The lender was not involved in the foreclosure. [41:41.600 --> 41:45.720] It was the servicer who foreclosed on behalf of the lender, but the lender was already [41:45.720 --> 41:55.800] out of business. Did they file a petition and intervention? No. They'd have to intervene. [41:55.800 --> 42:02.440] Were they named in the quiet title? Was this lender named in the quiet title? Yes, because [42:02.440 --> 42:10.160] they were the only ones on the record. Had these lawyers came in claiming to rep, you'd [42:10.160 --> 42:17.200] sue the lawyers directly, a separate civil suit against the lawyers. And I'm trying to [42:17.200 --> 42:22.960] think of how to get a shot at the judge. You probably don't have to worry about the judge [42:22.960 --> 42:27.600] much. It's like we said earlier, all you're doing here is putting the facts and the law [42:27.600 --> 42:32.960] on the record. And you really don't care what the Trump judge does, because they probably [42:32.960 --> 42:38.480] bought and paid for him by letting him win, beat him at the golf course. I had a lawyer [42:38.480 --> 42:44.600] tell me in Florida, all you have to do is lose 500 bucks to the judge on the golf course [42:44.600 --> 42:50.080] and you win your case. I said, only 500 bucks? He said, yeah. Any more than that, they'd [42:50.080 --> 42:57.760] have to report it. So that's all I'm worth, 500 bucks. And he said, yeah. So they probably [42:57.760 --> 43:04.920] lost a golf game to the judge. So now he owes them. So you don't care what he does. These [43:04.920 --> 43:10.600] lawyers don't play golf with the court of appeals. So you're just setting a record [43:10.600 --> 43:25.480] for the appeal, but sue these lawyers personally. Have you barged them? No. Oh, shamey, shamey. [43:25.480 --> 43:35.240] You are slipping. Grieve them for filing a frivolous pleading. Introduce these guys to [43:35.240 --> 43:46.320] the deep end of the pool. Okay. Is that about it, Francis? Do you have something else? Okay. [43:46.320 --> 43:52.400] Thank you very much. This is Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, Steve Skidmore, Rural Law [43:52.400 --> 43:59.840] Radio. I call it number 512-646-1984. We will be right back. [43:59.840 --> 44:08.160] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com. And I would like to invite you to come by our [44:08.160 --> 44:13.520] store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas. I'm Brave New Books and [44:13.520 --> 44:18.600] J.P. To see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. Have a look [44:18.600 --> 44:22.720] at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. Take a [44:22.720 --> 44:27.600] peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, [44:27.600 --> 44:35.320] olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. Call 512-264-4043 or find us online [44:35.320 --> 44:43.720] at naturespureorganics.com. That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. Don't forget to like [44:43.720 --> 45:01.320] us on Facebook for information on events and our products. naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.320 --> 45:06.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? 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Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click [45:55.640 --> 46:12.000] on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:12.000 --> 46:41.840] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio and we're going to [46:41.840 --> 46:45.320] turn it over to Danny in Tennessee. Hello, Danny. [46:45.320 --> 46:51.760] Hey, how are you doing? I'm doing good. What do you have for us [46:51.760 --> 46:55.040] tonight? Well, one thing, maybe if she's still listening, [46:55.040 --> 47:00.120] the lady from New York that called you a while ago, one thing she was talking about was getting [47:00.120 --> 47:03.600] the car out of the impound. Yes. [47:03.600 --> 47:09.280] They've got a problem in that the registration is not in their name. It's not just expired, [47:09.280 --> 47:14.960] it's in the seller's name. Good point. I didn't think I'd say in that [47:14.960 --> 47:24.560] tour. They're not going to be able to get it out at all. [47:24.560 --> 47:28.920] So they'll probably have to try and go back to the seller to see if he'll do that for [47:28.920 --> 47:33.200] them, huh? Exactly. He's probably not going to be happy. [47:33.200 --> 47:37.920] But if he wants to be paid for the rest of the car, he'll probably go do it. But they [47:37.920 --> 47:42.760] need to do it quickly because they charge like 80, 90, 100 bucks a day. [47:42.760 --> 47:47.080] Yeah. That goes up fast. How is your foreclosure [47:47.080 --> 47:51.560] issue going? Well, I put in, well, I don't know how much [47:51.560 --> 48:00.960] you remember about it, but put in for a quant title action and they put in a motion to dismiss [48:00.960 --> 48:09.320] for lack of standing and failure to state a claim. Lack of standing was because this [48:09.320 --> 48:14.400] was my mother's house after she died, so it's really the executor that should be taking [48:14.400 --> 48:18.680] the action. But as far as stating the claim, the judge [48:18.680 --> 48:24.640] decided, well, yeah, I had stated a claim there, so got past that point. But the standing [48:24.640 --> 48:32.000] he did, so it's been a good while back and forth through a number of things, but no deeds [48:32.000 --> 48:37.760] and stuff done, finally got to the point of being one in standing and the only plaintiff [48:37.760 --> 48:44.240] in the case now. And that's been a while. And since their issues [48:44.240 --> 48:50.480] and that motion to dismiss, they have all been settled and they haven't put in the answer. [48:50.480 --> 48:59.240] I put in for a default judgment. And one thing that came up that seemed a little funny feeling [48:59.240 --> 49:09.320] to me when trying to get a date for a hearing on this, the court assistant or whatever she's [49:09.320 --> 49:15.600] called, the court coordinator to call it in Texas, well, she wanted me to give me a set [49:15.600 --> 49:22.040] of dates and times and consult with him about a time. Well, that's never happened before [49:22.040 --> 49:26.440] always. They've done a couple of things and I've done a couple of things. [49:26.440 --> 49:33.280] Okay, hold on, hold on. That's generally a standard procedure. If you're putting a motion [49:33.280 --> 49:41.760] on for hearing, then you want a couple of dates so you can ask the other side which [49:41.760 --> 49:51.680] date here is more preferable for you. But this is a default. They're not necessarily [49:51.680 --> 50:03.600] a party to it. They would have to answer or file a motion for extension of time and show [50:03.600 --> 50:07.040] excusable error or they don't have standing in this. [50:07.040 --> 50:14.080] Yeah, well, that's kind of what I think. Well, I know it sounds reasonable. What I'm saying [50:14.080 --> 50:19.920] is that this has not happened before. That whoever went there just got a time and notified [50:19.920 --> 50:24.760] the other and we've all showed up. There's a first time that's brought up about us consulting [50:24.760 --> 50:28.120] with the other about what would be a good time. [50:28.120 --> 50:33.520] That's really kind of a standard procedure in most places. I know there's here in Texas. [50:33.520 --> 50:41.440] If you set a hearing, they don't want you to tell the other attorney who may have a [50:41.440 --> 50:46.920] court date that day that you've got to be in court here because that creates a serious [50:46.920 --> 50:53.800] conflict. They want you to talk to them and find a date that's mutually acceptable. The [50:53.800 --> 50:59.760] way you get that is give them the option of two days. You don't like this one, I'm going [50:59.760 --> 51:03.760] to set it for this one. You don't like that, then go complain to the judge. [51:03.760 --> 51:09.520] Okay. I understand it sounds reasonable. That's not the thing. The thing is that it hasn't [51:09.520 --> 51:12.840] been done before and then all of a sudden right here at the end, she's bringing this [51:12.840 --> 51:16.000] up like that. [51:16.000 --> 51:23.200] It may have been something that they should have been doing, but have you set other motions [51:23.200 --> 51:24.840] for hearing? [51:24.840 --> 51:28.160] Before, yes. [51:28.160 --> 51:32.320] Has the other side set motions for hearing without consulting you? [51:32.320 --> 51:33.320] Yes. [51:33.320 --> 51:41.520] Well, that is interesting that all of a sudden they decided to do it right. Is that something [51:41.520 --> 51:43.800] you want to take up an issue over? [51:43.800 --> 51:50.040] Well, no. Anytime something changes from the way it was before, I feel like there's something [51:50.040 --> 51:53.640] going on behind the scenes that I'm not aware of. [51:53.640 --> 52:04.360] Yes, but that one is pretty obnoxious as things go. How long has it been since the dismissal [52:04.360 --> 52:06.520] of their motion to dismiss? [52:06.520 --> 52:18.200] Well, the hearing was February 25th and the order was entered about March 23rd or so, [52:18.200 --> 52:19.200] somewhere around that time. [52:19.200 --> 52:20.200] Oh, my. [52:20.200 --> 52:21.200] About two months. [52:21.200 --> 52:25.800] That's plenty of time. They're not going to be able to come back and claim admissible [52:25.800 --> 52:26.800] error. [52:26.800 --> 52:27.800] Yes. [52:27.800 --> 52:35.040] Yes, you waited long enough. You might have a good shot at this. 70% of all default judgments [52:35.040 --> 52:42.240] are overturned. It's good that you've waited that extra month because generally they'll [52:42.240 --> 52:51.180] claim admissible error, clerical error in the office. They drop the ball and judges [52:51.180 --> 52:59.800] do not like rendering a ruling that does not give the other party opportunity to adjudicate [52:59.800 --> 53:00.800] their case. [53:00.800 --> 53:11.240] I've read one case to where it said this is not a contest to see who can win on the finest [53:11.240 --> 53:20.400] point of law. That it is the intent that everyone get opportunity to address their issues and [53:20.400 --> 53:27.440] they were very reluctant to render a ruling that would deny someone the opportunity to [53:27.440 --> 53:34.480] adjudicate your case. On default judgments, you have to give them plenty of time so it's [53:34.480 --> 53:40.720] clear that they had no intention of answering and that looks like what you've done. [53:40.720 --> 53:54.360] Anyway, I contact them by email and she didn't give me just two, she gave me like five. [53:54.360 --> 54:00.960] All you do is give the other side two. If they come back with a set of dates, then you [54:00.960 --> 54:04.080] give them one or two of these others. [54:04.080 --> 54:13.760] I already passed all I own to them and I figured the latest one, one because it's later on [54:13.760 --> 54:19.040] and also it's in the afternoon and the things in the afternoon before, most of the time [54:19.040 --> 54:22.160] there's nobody else there. [54:22.160 --> 54:29.480] This will work in your favor because if they come back and complain that none of these [54:29.480 --> 54:34.640] dates are sufficient, the judge is going to tell them, we gave you five dates and none [54:34.640 --> 54:39.600] of them is sufficient, none of them is convenient, make one convenient. [54:39.600 --> 54:40.600] Yeah. [54:40.600 --> 54:50.640] If you gave them two, he might be amenable but five, so they may have done you a favor. [54:50.640 --> 54:55.960] Yeah and another thing you might find interesting in this that after they put in their motion [54:55.960 --> 55:01.440] to dismiss, well since they hadn't answered and I've been reading this book, Fighting [55:01.440 --> 55:06.880] the Foreclosure Machine, this attorney who's been involved in stuff a good bit, he had [55:06.880 --> 55:12.720] this like what y'all mentioned some time back of not assuming anything, I got to looking [55:12.720 --> 55:18.400] at more things more and looking at the papers and this was transferred from the original [55:18.400 --> 55:24.600] servicer to a new servicer beforehand and it's reverse mortgage so there's no payments [55:24.600 --> 55:32.720] involved until death or not living in the house anymore but one of the things I noticed [55:32.720 --> 55:38.960] on it and it's going to sound like at first it shouldn't be much of anything that it had [55:38.960 --> 55:46.440] stamped on it that it was created by this third party and it was to be returned after [55:46.440 --> 55:51.880] recording back to this third party and there's nothing to indicate what the role of this [55:51.880 --> 55:59.120] third party is. They looked on and found their website and it looks like a document preservation [55:59.120 --> 56:05.440] company but you know we've got no records in our case or in the public records saying [56:05.440 --> 56:10.920] what their connection is to this, why did they create it but when I brought this up [56:10.920 --> 56:21.000] in the amended, the supplement I made to the complaint, what I put in was transfer and [56:21.000 --> 56:26.080] assignment shows that it was created by and must be returned after recording to you know [56:26.080 --> 56:32.600] the third entity and they're lacking records showing otherwise presumption is that the [56:32.600 --> 56:37.160] creator of a thing is the owner of that thing and the possessor of a thing is the holder [56:37.160 --> 56:42.200] of that thing. Recordation of county records is notice to the world of existence of an [56:42.200 --> 56:46.800] instrument but it's not a substitute for the original instrument. Now first hearing [56:46.800 --> 56:52.760] we had after I put this in, attorneys wanted to talk with me some out in the hall and you [56:52.760 --> 56:57.680] know something but when I brought up something about this, well what's just about the creator [56:57.680 --> 57:05.080] of a thing is the owner of the thing and I felt like was but the other day after I got [57:05.080 --> 57:12.760] email back from one of the attorneys, you know he said he was working on this positive [57:12.760 --> 57:16.760] motion and da-da-da and the judge wasn't going to like this and one thing or another and [57:16.760 --> 57:23.680] dancing around but kind of indicated like he had don't remember what the word was he [57:23.680 --> 57:30.880] used but like informed the court that he was preparing this motion and so to me that's [57:30.880 --> 57:35.040] like I didn't get something saying that he was doing that or no one over and checked [57:35.040 --> 57:40.920] the file so has he admitted in writing to ex parte communications by that? [57:40.920 --> 57:48.640] Well, not necessarily if he just told the judge he was preparing a motion or an answer [57:48.640 --> 57:56.000] as long as he did not address anything of substance that goes to the administrative [57:56.000 --> 58:01.440] part of the court and no that would not be considered ex parte. [58:01.440 --> 58:08.360] Okay, anyway I want to check the file again and that record that sentence about the creator [58:08.360 --> 58:12.000] of the thing being the owner of the thing, it had highlight marking on it and that's [58:12.000 --> 58:15.360] the only thing I've seen in the court file any markings on it like that. [58:15.360 --> 58:20.440] Ah, the judge might have said well that's interesting and marked it so he could go back [58:20.440 --> 58:22.880] and find it so that might be a good sign. [58:22.880 --> 58:24.360] You might have got their attention. [58:24.360 --> 58:28.920] Okay, hang on we're about to go to break. [58:28.920 --> 58:36.520] This is Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rue of La Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984, [58:36.520 --> 58:41.440] Carol, Ben, Mary, David, I see you there, we'll pick you up on the other side, we'll [58:41.440 --> 58:50.320] be right back. [58:50.320 --> 58:54.440] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.440 --> 58:59.640] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.640 --> 59:00.960] can really help. [59:00.960 --> 59:05.440] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.440 --> 59:06.440] today. [59:06.440 --> 59:10.400] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.400 --> 59:13.520] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.520 --> 59:18.760] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. 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[01:00:57.240 --> 01:01:02.560] In the news, nearly every phone call in Afghanistan, domestic and international, is being recorded [01:01:02.560 --> 01:01:03.560] by the NSA. [01:01:03.560 --> 01:01:09.120] That's revealed by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who decided to name Afghanistan as [01:01:09.120 --> 01:01:14.240] the country that other media outlets had previously referred to only as Country X. [01:01:14.240 --> 01:01:18.440] According to Russia Today, the redaction of the name had come at the request of the US [01:01:18.440 --> 01:01:21.880] government. [01:01:21.880 --> 01:01:26.800] The US House of Representatives has voted 303 to 221 to pass a bill designed to end [01:01:26.800 --> 01:01:30.720] the NSA's bulk data collection of domestic phone records. [01:01:30.720 --> 01:01:36.280] The USA Freedom Act aims to reform the NSA in response to revelations by former NSA contractor [01:01:36.280 --> 01:01:37.280] Edward Snowden. [01:01:37.280 --> 01:01:41.800] Under the new bill, the NSA would have to limit its data collection to specific terms. [01:01:41.800 --> 01:01:45.520] However, critics worry that the bill has been watered down. [01:01:45.520 --> 01:01:49.400] Civil liberty and privacy advocates fear that last-minute changes to the bill's language [01:01:49.400 --> 01:01:55.720] will allow the NSA to continue to collect Americans' information. [01:01:55.720 --> 01:02:00.200] On Tuesday, the Obama administration announced the release of classified memos dealing with [01:02:00.200 --> 01:02:04.920] the targeted drone assassination of American citizen Anwar al-Awlaki. [01:02:04.920 --> 01:02:10.420] Solicitor General Donald B. Verill Jr. decided not to appeal a recent court decision requiring [01:02:10.420 --> 01:02:13.760] the release of the documents under the Freedom of Information Act. [01:02:13.760 --> 01:02:18.160] The memos, written by Harvard law professor David J. 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[01:02:50.800 --> 01:02:54.760] This is the Liberty Beat for Friday, May 23rd, 2014. [01:02:54.760 --> 01:02:56.800] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [01:02:56.800 --> 01:03:23.800] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, we moved our radio, and we're talking about [01:03:23.800 --> 01:03:28.480] Danny in Tennessee. [01:03:28.480 --> 01:03:33.200] Okay, Danny, that was interesting. [01:03:33.200 --> 01:03:38.440] It's not something I would have thought to argue. [01:03:38.440 --> 01:03:41.120] Do you have case law on this? [01:03:41.120 --> 01:03:44.000] No, not case law. [01:03:44.000 --> 01:03:51.920] I've just heard this somewhere, that if you created something, you're the owner. [01:03:51.920 --> 01:03:56.600] Oh, this is even better. [01:03:56.600 --> 01:04:06.480] If you're an agency, then that's assuming that they're an agent, but if they created [01:04:06.480 --> 01:04:10.960] it, they had it returned to them. [01:04:10.960 --> 01:04:18.840] That would create the implication that somehow this company is involved in your transaction, [01:04:18.840 --> 01:04:26.160] and if they are, they were involved in the transaction without disclosure, but how do [01:04:26.160 --> 01:04:30.440] you claim any kind of harm? [01:04:30.440 --> 01:04:40.520] Well, breach of contract, they're claiming to have gotten the transfer through the use [01:04:40.520 --> 01:04:46.480] of this instrument, and they're not the owner of the instrument, so what right do they really [01:04:46.480 --> 01:04:48.680] have to use it, make use of it? [01:04:48.680 --> 01:04:50.720] That is an interesting question. [01:04:50.720 --> 01:04:59.400] I'm wondering how, who actually owns the instrument, has any effect on the terms of the instrument? [01:04:59.400 --> 01:05:10.480] Yeah, well, I'm not sure, I just, you know, made the cute looking thing that I saw. [01:05:10.480 --> 01:05:11.480] That's cool. [01:05:11.480 --> 01:05:15.200] I bet the judge looked at it and thought, what in the heck? [01:05:15.200 --> 01:05:18.880] You probably got their attention, at least you sent them back to the law books. [01:05:18.880 --> 01:05:22.080] That'll be interesting to see how that shakes out. [01:05:22.080 --> 01:05:26.680] Yeah, well, hopefully it doesn't have to be shaken out, if default. [01:05:26.680 --> 01:05:30.840] Yeah, if you get the default, that'd be great. [01:05:30.840 --> 01:05:33.440] Okay, we got a lot of callers. [01:05:33.440 --> 01:05:34.920] Do you have anything else for us? [01:05:34.920 --> 01:05:38.600] More things, if we could, you know, related to this thing about default? [01:05:38.600 --> 01:05:39.600] Yes. [01:05:39.600 --> 01:05:43.080] I don't know if you've ever brought this out on the show before, but, you know, I've come [01:05:43.080 --> 01:05:48.640] across some things, people writing, and talking about default judgments going through, and [01:05:48.640 --> 01:05:55.320] they thought it was that a default is not useful to anybody else. [01:05:55.320 --> 01:05:59.360] It's not a precedent of any kind or something, you know, it's not like... [01:05:59.360 --> 01:06:03.280] No, no, it doesn't set any law. [01:06:03.280 --> 01:06:11.760] So it's, you know, they got tangled up, and they don't want to let anybody else have it. [01:06:11.760 --> 01:06:16.520] Usually no trial court case sets law. [01:06:16.520 --> 01:06:24.160] So in a default judgment, unless it's in a appeals court, where one side didn't respond [01:06:24.160 --> 01:06:32.980] to the appellate court where they get a default, but even that wouldn't set precedent because [01:06:32.980 --> 01:06:40.000] there were no issues decided. [01:06:40.000 --> 01:06:47.880] The opinions and decisions of lower courts can be taken on advisement by other courts. [01:06:47.880 --> 01:06:53.960] You don't get controlling opinions until you get into the appellate or supreme level. [01:06:53.960 --> 01:06:54.960] Right. [01:06:54.960 --> 01:07:00.120] And you can, you know, the way you can take trial court cases, you can also do the full [01:07:00.120 --> 01:07:08.880] faith and credit, but cases from other states, but even appeals court cases from other states [01:07:08.880 --> 01:07:17.120] you can take and they don't have a presidential value, but they are, if they address an issue [01:07:17.120 --> 01:07:24.840] that your state hasn't addressed, then they take on a lot more credence, you know, that's [01:07:24.840 --> 01:07:30.320] what the Landmark-Greer-Kessler case did, is they didn't have any case law in Kansas [01:07:30.320 --> 01:07:32.320] that addressed this issue. [01:07:32.320 --> 01:07:39.520] So they trusted the courts of other states that had addressed the issue and under full [01:07:39.520 --> 01:07:41.680] faith and credit, they can bring it in. [01:07:41.680 --> 01:07:48.720] So trial court law cases come in sort of like that, but they don't have much precedential [01:07:48.720 --> 01:07:49.720] value. [01:07:49.720 --> 01:07:51.440] But yeah, you're absolutely right. [01:07:51.440 --> 01:07:55.440] Default judgment is, that never makes law. [01:07:55.440 --> 01:08:06.040] Danny, just to revisit the issue there on the destruction of the note or deed of trust [01:08:06.040 --> 01:08:13.880] or the mortgage instrument that is the combination of both, this, okay, your signature creates [01:08:13.880 --> 01:08:18.800] or the mark of a man creates an instrument, doesn't matter who drafted it, what matters [01:08:18.800 --> 01:08:20.860] is who created it. [01:08:20.860 --> 01:08:23.200] This goes to personal property. [01:08:23.200 --> 01:08:30.000] If you create an instrument with your signature or buy your signature, that instrument is [01:08:30.000 --> 01:08:31.920] your personal property. [01:08:31.920 --> 01:08:39.280] You're going to give that personal property up to another party for ransom. [01:08:39.280 --> 01:08:49.320] If they do something that destroys that property, then they've, and keep in mind, Randy, you [01:08:49.320 --> 01:08:56.040] addressed very early in the show that we used to have mortgage burning parties, excuse me. [01:08:56.040 --> 01:09:02.680] That was the return of personal property, the paper, the instrument that you created. [01:09:02.680 --> 01:09:06.440] So long as that instrument is still out there, somebody can lay claim to it. [01:09:06.440 --> 01:09:11.240] That's why that was returned to the alleged borrower. [01:09:11.240 --> 01:09:13.000] That doesn't happen these days. [01:09:13.000 --> 01:09:23.560] They're shredded, they're turned into, or converted rather into transferable records [01:09:23.560 --> 01:09:26.000] and then they're destroyed. [01:09:26.000 --> 01:09:32.120] Did you grant anybody the authority to destroy your personal property? [01:09:32.120 --> 01:09:39.120] Okay, this is a transfer and assignment from the original servicer to a new servicer. [01:09:39.120 --> 01:09:40.120] Okay. [01:09:40.120 --> 01:09:41.120] Let's talk about right here. [01:09:41.120 --> 01:09:44.200] Let's talk about what happened to the original. [01:09:44.200 --> 01:09:46.560] They're not transferring the original. [01:09:46.560 --> 01:09:55.360] All they're assigning is some type of partial right or partial interest in the original [01:09:55.360 --> 01:09:56.360] property. [01:09:56.360 --> 01:10:02.040] Well, what it says is, and the thing that kind of got the judge's attention when it [01:10:02.040 --> 01:10:10.680] was first brought up, the transfer only says that it was transferring the original servicer's [01:10:10.680 --> 01:10:13.440] interest in the deed of trust. [01:10:13.440 --> 01:10:14.440] Exactly. [01:10:14.440 --> 01:10:15.440] Interest. [01:10:15.440 --> 01:10:17.920] They didn't transfer the deed of trust. [01:10:17.920 --> 01:10:20.720] They transferred interest. [01:10:20.720 --> 01:10:23.520] What I'm going to is the personal property. [01:10:23.520 --> 01:10:29.480] You don't care who has interest in whatever, blah, blah, blah, because Pete's dead, okay? [01:10:29.480 --> 01:10:31.140] That's another rabbit hole. [01:10:31.140 --> 01:10:35.800] But to go to the personal property, what happened to your personal property? [01:10:35.800 --> 01:10:41.120] You're supposed to get that back when that deal is satisfied. [01:10:41.120 --> 01:10:44.680] What happened to your personal property? [01:10:44.680 --> 01:10:47.000] When are you going to get your property back? [01:10:47.000 --> 01:10:53.120] Your property is in the form of paper documents that your signature created. [01:10:53.120 --> 01:10:56.000] That is personal property of the creator. [01:10:56.000 --> 01:11:04.520] If somebody destroys or damages or compromises that property, they've harmed you. [01:11:04.520 --> 01:11:07.060] You never gave them permission to do that. [01:11:07.060 --> 01:11:14.960] You only gave them permission to hold it until the deal was satisfied. [01:11:14.960 --> 01:11:21.160] So if they destroyed your property, damaged it, or compromised it, they've harmed you. [01:11:21.160 --> 01:11:23.760] You might throw that in front of the judge. [01:11:23.760 --> 01:11:26.880] Yeah, I'll do that. [01:11:26.880 --> 01:11:27.880] Okay. [01:11:27.880 --> 01:11:28.880] Do you have anything else for us? [01:11:28.880 --> 01:11:29.880] Well- [01:11:29.880 --> 01:11:30.880] We've kind of got to move along. [01:11:30.880 --> 01:11:33.880] We've got a whole board full of callers. [01:11:33.880 --> 01:11:39.120] You said something about stump to chump a while ago, so I got a little technical question [01:11:39.120 --> 01:11:40.120] for you. [01:11:40.120 --> 01:11:43.120] Good timing, Steve's bad. [01:11:43.120 --> 01:11:44.120] Okay. [01:11:44.120 --> 01:11:52.400] I know some years ago, you're talking about the process to you in a chemical prosecution. [01:11:52.400 --> 01:11:56.480] So I've gone through that a number of things, and I created a little document that somebody [01:11:56.480 --> 01:12:02.760] used some, and I call it, Notice the Process from Citation to Arraignment, going through [01:12:02.760 --> 01:12:13.520] all those steps, or at least the major ones, that they skip over, and like 1517 to go before [01:12:13.520 --> 01:12:16.760] the, let's see, to the right one. [01:12:16.760 --> 01:12:21.560] 1517 is the one that they interpret as magistration. [01:12:21.560 --> 01:12:22.560] Yeah. [01:12:22.560 --> 01:12:23.560] Okay. [01:12:23.560 --> 01:12:24.560] And then- [01:12:24.560 --> 01:12:31.320] Oh, go for a magistrate 1403, I believe. [01:12:31.320 --> 01:12:32.320] 14.06. [01:12:32.320 --> 01:12:33.320] Six, okay. [01:12:33.320 --> 01:12:34.320] And transportation code 543.006. [01:12:34.320 --> 01:12:35.320] Yes. [01:12:35.320 --> 01:12:44.200] So I cite both of those in that little paragraph saying that to start from the citation. [01:12:44.200 --> 01:12:48.400] And then you go to the magistrate, and he's supposed to do his things, and upon completing [01:12:48.400 --> 01:12:49.400] the examination- [01:12:49.400 --> 01:12:50.400] 1617. [01:12:50.400 --> 01:13:03.000] After the magistrate holds an examining trial, he must issue an order stating whether the [01:13:03.000 --> 01:13:09.560] person is released at their liberty, released on bail, or bound to the court. [01:13:09.560 --> 01:13:10.560] Okay. [01:13:10.560 --> 01:13:11.560] I interrupted. [01:13:11.560 --> 01:13:21.760] Yeah, and then 1730 that upon completion examination, he take all the papers and seal them up, send [01:13:21.760 --> 01:13:25.640] them to the proper, the clerk of the proper court. [01:13:25.640 --> 01:13:30.360] That is a really good one because that is really specific. [01:13:30.360 --> 01:13:39.440] It says that after the examining trial, the magistrate shall seal all documents had in [01:13:39.440 --> 01:13:47.760] the hearing in an envelope and cause his name to be written across the seal. [01:13:47.760 --> 01:13:52.920] Now if they just said seal it and send it, that had been one thing, but they said seal [01:13:52.920 --> 01:13:58.360] it and write your name across the seal so you can tell if anybody's touched it or opened [01:13:58.360 --> 01:13:59.360] it. [01:13:59.360 --> 01:14:02.560] That's to maintain the chain of custody. [01:14:02.560 --> 01:14:06.640] They almost never do that. [01:14:06.640 --> 01:14:11.040] They send them to the clerk, but I've never heard of them doing it in a sealed envelope. [01:14:11.040 --> 01:14:12.040] Are you familiar with 1731? [01:14:12.040 --> 01:14:13.040] Yeah. [01:14:13.040 --> 01:14:14.040] That's what I was bringing up next. [01:14:14.040 --> 01:14:15.040] Okay. [01:14:15.040 --> 01:14:16.040] Good. [01:14:16.040 --> 01:14:23.560] That tells you who the two clerks are, the county clerk or the district clerk. [01:14:23.560 --> 01:14:32.400] What 1731 says is that the... 1730 says the magistrate shall seal the documents and send [01:14:32.400 --> 01:14:35.400] them to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction. [01:14:35.400 --> 01:14:44.400] 1731 says the clerk shall keep all these documents safe and deliver them up to the next grand [01:14:44.400 --> 01:14:46.400] jury. [01:14:46.400 --> 01:14:52.360] That goes back to the constitution of Texas that requires that both felonies and misdemeanors [01:14:52.360 --> 01:14:53.840] go before a grand jury. [01:14:53.840 --> 01:14:54.840] Yeah. [01:14:54.840 --> 01:14:55.840] That's what I was getting to. [01:14:55.840 --> 01:14:56.840] Oh, okay. [01:14:56.840 --> 01:14:57.840] I'm sorry. [01:14:57.840 --> 01:14:58.840] Okay. [01:14:58.840 --> 01:15:00.840] I'll shut up now. [01:15:00.840 --> 01:15:07.840] Then the district clerk sends it to the grand jury, but the county clerk, because there [01:15:07.840 --> 01:15:16.720] are those misdemeanors that the state's attorney can write an information on, and it calls [01:15:16.720 --> 01:15:23.520] 2.05, says that on receiving a complaint, the attorney for the state shall prepare an [01:15:23.520 --> 01:15:27.360] information and file it with the court having jurisdiction. [01:15:27.360 --> 01:15:28.680] Okay. [01:15:28.680 --> 01:15:29.680] Which court is that? [01:15:29.680 --> 01:15:32.320] Where does it tell you which court that is? [01:15:32.320 --> 01:15:35.320] I think it's 201. [01:15:35.320 --> 01:15:36.320] 201. [01:15:36.320 --> 01:15:37.320] I'm sorry. [01:15:37.320 --> 01:15:38.320] 202. [01:15:38.320 --> 01:15:44.800] 201 says it shall be the primary duty of the prosecuting attorney not to secure conviction [01:15:44.800 --> 01:15:49.040] but to ensure the justice is served, blah, blah, blah. [01:15:49.040 --> 01:15:55.960] 202 tells the district attorney what cases he will handle and the county attorney what [01:15:55.960 --> 01:15:56.960] cases he will handle. [01:15:56.960 --> 01:15:57.960] It's 202. [01:15:57.960 --> 01:15:59.960] Okay. [01:15:59.960 --> 01:16:05.720] No, the question is which court does the information go to? [01:16:05.720 --> 01:16:10.160] It says prepare an information and file it in the court having jurisdiction. [01:16:10.160 --> 01:16:11.160] Okay. [01:16:11.160 --> 01:16:12.160] That... [01:16:12.160 --> 01:16:14.560] Now, we know by practice... [01:16:14.560 --> 01:16:15.560] Okay. [01:16:15.560 --> 01:16:21.360] Jurisdiction of the court is in Code of Criminal Procedure somewhere. [01:16:21.360 --> 01:16:28.280] I think it may be... it's not something I'd look up much, it's probably in Chapter 1, [01:16:28.280 --> 01:16:35.480] but it assigns misdemeanors to the county court, felonies to the district court. [01:16:35.480 --> 01:16:36.480] Okay. [01:16:36.480 --> 01:16:43.600] Well, anyway, my point is getting to that by this procedure of an information, you look [01:16:43.600 --> 01:16:47.240] at Article 5, Section 17 of the Constitution to tell you that's... [01:16:47.240 --> 01:16:51.520] Hold on a time... hold on, hold on, hold on, we're going to break. [01:16:51.520 --> 01:17:00.920] Randy Chilton, Steve Kiddmore, Rue La Radio, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.920 --> 01:17:04.080] Chances are you've heard of My Magic Mud, but have you used it? 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[01:18:39.840 --> 01:18:43.480] We roll through metals IRA accounts, and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:18:43.480 --> 01:18:46.800] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:18:46.800 --> 01:18:51.760] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:18:51.760 --> 01:18:54.880] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:18:54.880 --> 01:18:59.960] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:18:59.960 --> 01:19:10.640] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:10.640 --> 01:19:39.760] Oh, come on If I can't get everything I want [01:19:39.760 --> 01:19:50.720] I better get a range, yeah If I can't get everything I need [01:19:50.720 --> 01:19:58.680] I better get a range, yeah Okay, we are back. [01:19:58.680 --> 01:20:05.000] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rue de la Radio, and we're talking to Danny in Tennessee. [01:20:05.000 --> 01:20:06.960] We do need to move along, Danny. [01:20:06.960 --> 01:20:08.920] Okay, well, I guess that's okay. [01:20:08.920 --> 01:20:09.920] Thank you. [01:20:09.920 --> 01:20:10.920] Pretty much, yeah. [01:20:10.920 --> 01:20:14.520] But, you know, business point out, that's the last point I was making, Texas Constitution [01:20:14.520 --> 01:20:19.800] Article 5, Section 17, saying that the state's attorney can bring and file an information [01:20:19.800 --> 01:20:25.680] with the county court, the constitutional county court. [01:20:25.680 --> 01:20:30.480] Otherwise, any other court, it should be an information. [01:20:30.480 --> 01:20:34.960] And they used to do that, because I've dug into the court records and found them back [01:20:34.960 --> 01:20:35.960] there. [01:20:35.960 --> 01:20:44.840] Okay, constitutional county court, we have a county commissioner's court, which is called [01:20:44.840 --> 01:20:45.840] the county court. [01:20:45.840 --> 01:20:50.640] We have the county court of law is a constitutional county court. [01:20:50.640 --> 01:20:55.200] It seems I remember there's something different about that. [01:20:55.200 --> 01:20:59.200] That's not all counties have a constitutional county court. [01:20:59.200 --> 01:21:04.520] No, they all have a constitutional county court, because there's only about 70 Texas [01:21:04.520 --> 01:21:11.800] counties that have statutory county courts, which is county court of law. [01:21:11.800 --> 01:21:14.880] So they all have one under the constitution. [01:21:14.880 --> 01:21:19.040] Which one is that, the commissioner's court? [01:21:19.040 --> 01:21:22.720] Yeah, with the county judge. [01:21:22.720 --> 01:21:27.680] Okay, so the commissioner's court is the constitutional county court, and the county [01:21:27.680 --> 01:21:30.280] court of law is the statutory. [01:21:30.280 --> 01:21:31.280] Right. [01:21:31.280 --> 01:21:34.720] Okay, you stumped this chump. [01:21:34.720 --> 01:21:35.880] Okay. [01:21:35.880 --> 01:21:36.880] Are you happy now? [01:21:36.880 --> 01:21:38.880] I'll call in and get something interesting. [01:21:38.880 --> 01:21:42.880] You're going to tell all your hillbilly buddies that are in Tennessee? [01:21:42.880 --> 01:21:45.880] Well, I'm going to tell them some of it. [01:21:45.880 --> 01:21:48.880] I'll tell them all. [01:21:48.880 --> 01:21:49.880] Scream it from the rooftops. [01:21:49.880 --> 01:21:54.160] You sent you a t-shirt, you stumped the chump. [01:21:54.160 --> 01:21:55.160] Thank you, daddy. [01:21:55.160 --> 01:21:57.560] Now I'm going to cut you off. [01:21:57.560 --> 01:22:01.680] Okay, now we're going to go to Ben in Arizona. [01:22:01.680 --> 01:22:02.680] Hello, Ben. [01:22:02.680 --> 01:22:05.680] What do you have for us today? [01:22:05.680 --> 01:22:08.480] Hi, Mr. Kelton, how are you? [01:22:08.480 --> 01:22:09.480] I am good. [01:22:09.480 --> 01:22:11.480] I don't care what everybody says. [01:22:11.480 --> 01:22:12.480] Yeah. [01:22:12.480 --> 01:22:17.800] It's the first time I've actually ever listened to you, and I just kind of got inspired to [01:22:17.800 --> 01:22:18.800] call. [01:22:18.800 --> 01:22:20.280] I had a couple of questions. [01:22:20.280 --> 01:22:26.720] In the last couple of years, I've continuously been dealing with the county sheriff's department [01:22:26.720 --> 01:22:27.720] here. [01:22:27.720 --> 01:22:35.240] Anyways, I went on, and I built a fence around my property and stuff, more peaceful people, [01:22:35.240 --> 01:22:41.200] but they just find that they can just walk onto my property just any time they want. [01:22:41.200 --> 01:22:47.160] They believe that the no trespassing is subject to interpretation, and I'm kind of at a loss. [01:22:47.160 --> 01:22:51.760] I've hired a lawyer, and he just kind of says they're like a dead fish and doesn't really [01:22:51.760 --> 01:22:53.760] do a whole lot. [01:22:53.760 --> 01:22:58.040] Oh, okay, you're like what we got to say. [01:22:58.040 --> 01:22:59.760] I want to know what I can do. [01:22:59.760 --> 01:23:00.760] I'm young. [01:23:00.760 --> 01:23:05.760] I've got a family, and I'm just tired of kind of being bullied by these guys, if I can get [01:23:05.760 --> 01:23:08.880] my charges, and so on and so forth. [01:23:08.880 --> 01:23:10.440] I had a policeman. [01:23:10.440 --> 01:23:16.120] I live in a small county, and I'm fairly well known, but this sheriff's deputy pulled me [01:23:16.120 --> 01:23:24.880] over recently, and he must have had a bad day, because he had himself an attitude, and [01:23:24.880 --> 01:23:31.320] I commented on his attitude, and he got real excited and stepped back and put his hand [01:23:31.320 --> 01:23:40.360] on his pistol, so I took out my cell phone and dialed 911, and called the dispatcher, [01:23:40.360 --> 01:23:45.240] and asked them to dispatch an officer out here, because I've got a sheriff's deputy [01:23:45.240 --> 01:23:49.200] out here who is very agitated. [01:23:49.200 --> 01:23:52.800] That's their favorite term to use, is agitated. [01:23:52.800 --> 01:24:00.400] He is agitated, and I'm concerned because his skin is so tight, it looks like if he's [01:24:00.400 --> 01:24:06.720] stuck, he'd pop like a tick, so I get the impression that he is hyped up on anabolic [01:24:06.720 --> 01:24:11.640] steroids, so can you send me another officer out here? [01:24:11.640 --> 01:24:19.760] I would like to introduce this officer to the deep end of the pool, and dispatcher said, [01:24:19.760 --> 01:24:22.400] well, Mr. Kelton, I don't know what you're talking about. [01:24:22.400 --> 01:24:25.320] I'm talking about first-degree felony aggravated assault. [01:24:25.320 --> 01:24:32.240] Get me an officer out here to take my complaint, and when I said that, the officer got his [01:24:32.240 --> 01:24:36.880] hand off his pistol real fast. [01:24:36.880 --> 01:24:43.360] The police are relatively easy to handle if you think past them. [01:24:43.360 --> 01:24:48.280] Coming home from church on a Sunday night, and he was waiting at the end of the road. [01:24:48.280 --> 01:24:50.120] This was one entrance. [01:24:50.120 --> 01:24:56.760] He comes pulling up behind me, and immediately wants to see my ID, and I said, well, what's [01:24:56.760 --> 01:24:57.760] your business? [01:24:57.760 --> 01:24:58.760] Why are you on my property? [01:24:58.760 --> 01:25:03.720] And he says, let me see some ID, or I'm going to tase you, and right then, and he had his [01:25:03.720 --> 01:25:08.560] tater out, and right then, you know, my kids are hysterical about it, because they've never [01:25:08.560 --> 01:25:13.840] seen anything like this before, and he puts me in handcuffs and takes me out to the road, [01:25:13.840 --> 01:25:20.480] and he said it was because my dogs were barking, is why he'd done this, and it's just one instance [01:25:20.480 --> 01:25:21.480] after another. [01:25:21.480 --> 01:25:22.480] Okay. [01:25:22.480 --> 01:25:23.480] Okay. [01:25:23.480 --> 01:25:24.480] Okay. [01:25:24.480 --> 01:25:25.480] Need to read the code. [01:25:25.480 --> 01:25:27.360] Get the penal code out and read it. [01:25:27.360 --> 01:25:35.120] It's not as big as you'd think, especially look in the table of contents, and look for [01:25:35.120 --> 01:25:49.760] this section on, let's see, it'd be, in Texas, it's 39, chapter 39, it's official duties [01:25:49.760 --> 01:25:53.200] or official oppression, official misconduct. [01:25:53.200 --> 01:26:01.120] I'm trying to think of what the title of the section is, but yeah, every state is going [01:26:01.120 --> 01:26:09.400] to have a statute that reflects the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871. [01:26:09.400 --> 01:26:15.480] Ku Klux Klan Act has two parts, and most everybody's heard of the second part, 82, that's been [01:26:15.480 --> 01:26:22.960] codified into 42 U.S. Code 1983, and that's the one that says you can sue a public official [01:26:22.960 --> 01:26:27.920] if he exerts or purports to exert an authority he doesn't have or fails to perform a duty [01:26:27.920 --> 01:26:32.400] he's required to perform and dies here in a riot, you can sue him. [01:26:32.400 --> 01:26:40.720] The first part, 18 U.S. Code 242, if a public official acting under the color, meaning pretense [01:26:40.720 --> 01:26:48.560] of his authority, exerts or purports to exert an authority, he does not take that, and in [01:26:48.560 --> 01:26:53.160] the process, not a citizen full free access to or enjoyment of a riot, that's a class [01:26:53.160 --> 01:26:58.480] A misdemeanor in the Fed, that's a class A misdemeanor in Texas, and it probably is in [01:26:58.480 --> 01:27:00.960] Arizona as well. [01:27:00.960 --> 01:27:09.440] Now, this is compounded by the fact that the officer pulled a deadly weapon on you. [01:27:09.440 --> 01:27:16.600] To your knowledge, did he have a warrant authorizing him to enter your private property? [01:27:16.600 --> 01:27:20.760] I take it from what you said, he was in your drive or on your private property. [01:27:20.760 --> 01:27:23.400] Absolutely not, he did not. [01:27:23.400 --> 01:27:26.760] No, no, was this on the road? [01:27:26.760 --> 01:27:29.160] No, this was on my property. [01:27:29.160 --> 01:27:31.800] Okay, so he was on your private property. [01:27:31.800 --> 01:27:33.920] He came on the property, yeah. [01:27:33.920 --> 01:27:35.480] Is your property posted? [01:27:35.480 --> 01:27:42.400] Yes, I have a very specific posting about, you know, you have to have a warrant to navigate. [01:27:42.400 --> 01:27:45.280] Okay, here's the deal. [01:27:45.280 --> 01:27:52.040] If you try to file a, you know, this is, if you were listening earlier, never ask a public [01:27:52.040 --> 01:27:58.920] official to do anything you actually want them to do, because you never ask a public [01:27:58.920 --> 01:28:02.600] official to do anything that the law does not require them to do. [01:28:02.600 --> 01:28:09.840] You see, I got this little tar baby, and I go to this public official, did you hear me [01:28:09.840 --> 01:28:14.560] talking about going to the municipal court with a ticket? [01:28:14.560 --> 01:28:18.360] I just kind of piped in when the guy from Tennessee was talking. [01:28:18.360 --> 01:28:19.360] Oh, okay, okay. [01:28:19.360 --> 01:28:24.360] I got this little tar baby, and I go to these public officials and I say, here, I got this [01:28:24.360 --> 01:28:26.360] little tar baby, you want to touch it? [01:28:26.360 --> 01:28:28.080] Come on, touch it, touch it. [01:28:28.080 --> 01:28:32.720] And the way I do that is I ask them to do something that I really don't want them to [01:28:32.720 --> 01:28:33.720] do. [01:28:33.720 --> 01:28:38.320] I get a ticket in the town, next town down, and I go down there on the day, they tell [01:28:38.320 --> 01:28:44.440] me to, and the judge calls me up, and he wants my plea, asked me how I plea, and I said, [01:28:44.440 --> 01:28:45.440] can I plea reluctantly? [01:28:45.440 --> 01:28:48.880] And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, I need you to intervene. [01:28:48.880 --> 01:28:53.400] No, I'm going to challenge such a matter of jurisdiction of the court, but first, I want [01:28:53.400 --> 01:28:55.000] you to hold an examining trial. [01:28:55.000 --> 01:28:58.560] No, Mr. Kelton, I'm not going to hold an examining trial. [01:28:58.560 --> 01:29:00.160] Oh, okay. [01:29:00.160 --> 01:29:03.760] He just stuck to my tar baby. [01:29:03.760 --> 01:29:10.760] I asked him to hold an examining trial because the statute requires him to, and he refused [01:29:10.760 --> 01:29:11.760] to. [01:29:11.760 --> 01:29:15.560] He refused to perform a duty he was required to perform, and in the process, denied me [01:29:15.560 --> 01:29:20.360] the full free access to an enjoyment of a right, that's a Class A misdemeanor in Texas. [01:29:20.360 --> 01:29:25.440] I said, well then, Judge, I want you to get the bailiff over here to arrest you for a [01:29:25.440 --> 01:29:30.000] Class A misdemeanor, official misconduct, criminal violation, 39.03 Peter Cote. [01:29:30.000 --> 01:29:34.480] No, Mr. Kelton, I'm not going to ask the bailiff to arrest me. [01:29:34.480 --> 01:29:35.480] Oh, okay. [01:29:35.480 --> 01:29:39.360] If you want to be like that about it, then I want the prosecutor over here to come up [01:29:39.360 --> 01:29:42.720] here and tell you that you're supposed to give me an examining trial with the prosecutor. [01:29:42.720 --> 01:29:45.640] I'm not going to tell him anything. [01:29:45.640 --> 01:29:51.040] Each time I ask them to do something and they don't, that's another criminal accusation, [01:29:51.040 --> 01:29:54.120] and I'm going to take that to the grand jury, and I'll explain how we do that when we come [01:29:54.120 --> 01:29:55.120] back. [01:29:55.120 --> 01:30:03.920] Brandy Kelton and Steve Skidmore, who live on radio, we'll be right back. [01:30:03.920 --> 01:30:06.160] Do violent video games heighten aggression? [01:30:06.160 --> 01:30:09.800] A new study measuring brain activity says they do. [01:30:09.800 --> 01:30:14.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you about new research into violent video [01:30:14.320 --> 01:30:17.280] games and behavior in a moment. [01:30:17.280 --> 01:30:19.020] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.020 --> 01:30:22.620] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.620 --> 01:30:27.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.600 --> 01:30:32.760] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.760 --> 01:30:35.380] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.380 --> 01:30:41.000] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:41.000 --> 01:30:42.720] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.720 --> 01:30:46.940] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.940 --> 01:30:51.600] Violent video games, some say they're harmless fun, while others insist they make gamers [01:30:51.600 --> 01:30:52.600] aggressive. [01:30:52.600 --> 01:30:58.040] Now a new study finds that violent games do alter brain activity, not after years of play, [01:30:58.040 --> 01:31:00.200] but after one week. [01:31:00.200 --> 01:31:04.840] Researchers split male volunteers into two groups and performed MRI scans on them. [01:31:04.840 --> 01:31:07.840] One group played a shooting game for 10 hours over a week. [01:31:07.840 --> 01:31:08.840] The other didn't. [01:31:08.840 --> 01:31:13.560] Follow-up exams show that those who played the game had reduced activity in key areas [01:31:13.560 --> 01:31:17.120] of the brain that control emotions and aggressive behavior. [01:31:17.120 --> 01:31:18.120] Hmm. [01:31:18.120 --> 01:31:22.440] Maybe kids should spend a little less time with villains and more time with heroes, like [01:31:22.440 --> 01:31:23.440] maybe their parents. [01:31:23.440 --> 01:31:31.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.320 --> 01:31:32.320] I lost my son. [01:31:32.320 --> 01:31:33.320] My nephew. [01:31:33.320 --> 01:31:34.320] My uncle. [01:31:34.320 --> 01:31:35.320] My son. [01:31:35.320 --> 01:31:36.320] Well lost off to a missing person. [01:31:36.320 --> 01:31:39.080] On September 11th, 2001, most people don't know that a third tower fell on September [01:31:39.080 --> 01:31:40.080] 11th. [01:31:40.080 --> 01:31:44.480] World Trade Center seven, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane, although the official [01:31:44.480 --> 01:31:47.600] explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [01:31:47.600 --> 01:31:52.520] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there's more [01:31:52.520 --> 01:31:53.520] to the story. [01:31:53.520 --> 01:31:56.160] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [01:31:56.160 --> 01:31:58.680] Go to buildingwhat.org. [01:31:58.680 --> 01:31:59.680] Why it fell. [01:31:59.680 --> 01:32:01.520] Why it matters and what you can do. [01:32:01.520 --> 01:32:05.520] After work, I'm so tired that I want to be left alone to sleep. [01:32:05.520 --> 01:32:08.120] Hey, listen to me! Who are you? 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[01:32:40.920 --> 01:32:44.120] I want to keep you out of the hospital and off pharmaceuticals. [01:32:44.120 --> 01:32:46.520] Wow. Why are you so nice to me? [01:32:46.520 --> 01:32:50.120] Because I'm you. You're out of shape and I need a better looking future. [01:32:50.120 --> 01:32:53.220] Call 888-910-4367. [01:32:53.220 --> 01:32:56.120] That's 888-910-4367. [01:32:56.120 --> 01:32:58.620] Or visit microplantpowder.com. [01:32:58.620 --> 01:33:01.720] Microplantpowder.com. [01:33:01.720 --> 01:33:05.320] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:05.320 --> 01:33:29.920] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:35.320 --> 01:33:45.920] Okay, we are back. [01:33:45.920 --> 01:33:52.920] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore with our radio and we're talking to Ben in Arizona. [01:33:52.920 --> 01:34:00.720] Ben, we could do a whole show on this and primarily what we do is due process. [01:34:00.720 --> 01:34:03.920] We've gotten into foreclosure once that became a big deal. [01:34:03.920 --> 01:34:10.320] But we do due process and we have a whole method for going after these guys. [01:34:10.320 --> 01:34:14.320] And it revolves around a grand jury. [01:34:14.320 --> 01:34:19.320] I was in court once. I bushwhacked a judge in his courtroom with some criminal complaints. [01:34:19.320 --> 01:34:23.520] And he suggested I take my complaints to the sheriff. [01:34:23.520 --> 01:34:26.920] And I said I did that, judge. And he threw them in the trash. [01:34:26.920 --> 01:34:31.120] And the judge said, well, Mr. Kelton, you can appeal. [01:34:31.120 --> 01:34:34.720] He was going to say I could appeal to the district court for rear mandamus. [01:34:34.720 --> 01:34:37.120] Don't ask me to appeal, judge. [01:34:37.120 --> 01:34:41.720] You go before a corrupt judge and they win to this bogus decision. [01:34:41.720 --> 01:34:44.320] And everybody says, oh, that's okay. [01:34:44.320 --> 01:34:49.120] You can appeal to a whole panel of corrupt judges and they'll really screw your royal. [01:34:49.120 --> 01:34:53.120] And the judge said, well, Mr. Kelton, I don't think it's quite that bad. [01:34:53.120 --> 01:34:56.720] That's because you're not pro se. I got a better idea. [01:34:56.720 --> 01:34:58.720] I'll appeal to the grand jury. [01:34:58.720 --> 01:35:02.320] And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, you can't appeal to the grand jury. [01:35:02.320 --> 01:35:06.320] Sure, I can. I can appeal to the grand jury to indict the sheriff [01:35:06.320 --> 01:35:10.320] for shielding from prosecution in violation of 3805 penal code. [01:35:10.320 --> 01:35:17.320] And the judge sat back in the bench and I could tell he was looking at me thinking, [01:35:17.320 --> 01:35:22.320] if I have my bailiff shoot this guy, could I get away with that? [01:35:22.320 --> 01:35:25.320] Here's the deal. [01:35:25.320 --> 01:35:32.120] The most dangerous guys you deal with are the policemen because they're nuts. [01:35:32.120 --> 01:35:34.720] They're out of control. [01:35:34.720 --> 01:35:37.720] You're not going to get them in control directly. [01:35:37.720 --> 01:35:44.520] The way you get them in control is you file a complaint against the officer. [01:35:44.520 --> 01:35:49.320] And I suggest any time one of these officers shows up, [01:35:49.320 --> 01:35:53.320] the first thing you do is call 911. [01:35:53.320 --> 01:35:57.320] One smart word out of this officer you don't like, [01:35:57.320 --> 01:36:01.320] you ask the dispatcher to send somebody out here to arrest him. [01:36:01.320 --> 01:36:07.320] My favorite one I ever did was I reached in my car to get my cell phone [01:36:07.320 --> 01:36:10.320] and the officer put his hand on his pistol. [01:36:10.320 --> 01:36:13.320] I come out with the cell phone and said, get your hand off that pistol. [01:36:13.320 --> 01:36:15.320] I didn't move my hand off that pistol. [01:36:15.320 --> 01:36:18.320] I dialed 911 and told the dispatcher where I was. [01:36:18.320 --> 01:36:20.320] I need you to send an officer out here. [01:36:20.320 --> 01:36:24.320] This officer, hey you, what's your name? And he tells me. [01:36:24.320 --> 01:36:27.320] I said, I got this officer here and he is terrified. [01:36:27.320 --> 01:36:29.320] I'm afraid he's going to wet his drawers. [01:36:29.320 --> 01:36:33.320] But before that, I'm afraid he's going to pull his pistol and shoot me first. [01:36:33.320 --> 01:36:38.320] Can you get somebody out here who's not terrified of me? [01:36:38.320 --> 01:36:45.320] And the guy was looking at me like, I don't believe you just said that to my dispatcher. [01:36:45.320 --> 01:36:47.320] Jerk. [01:36:47.320 --> 01:36:50.320] So here's how you handle the police officer. [01:36:50.320 --> 01:36:56.320] You take a criminal complaint against the police officer to the chief of police [01:36:56.320 --> 01:36:58.320] or the sheriff. [01:36:58.320 --> 01:37:01.320] And he'll either take it or he'll give it to one of his people. [01:37:01.320 --> 01:37:05.320] And they'll say, oh well, blah, blah, blah. [01:37:05.320 --> 01:37:08.320] And they won't act on the complaint. [01:37:08.320 --> 01:37:12.320] And then you take a complaint against the chief of police. [01:37:12.320 --> 01:37:16.320] Now if the chief sends you to a captain or lieutenant, don't mess with them. [01:37:16.320 --> 01:37:19.320] The chief of police has responded yet superior. [01:37:19.320 --> 01:37:21.320] He is responsible. [01:37:21.320 --> 01:37:23.320] He's the guy that heads the office. [01:37:23.320 --> 01:37:29.320] You file a criminal charge against him with the district attorney. [01:37:29.320 --> 01:37:33.320] And the district attorney is going to refuse to act on it. [01:37:33.320 --> 01:37:35.320] At least you hope he does. [01:37:35.320 --> 01:37:39.320] And when he refuses to act on it, you go to a district court [01:37:39.320 --> 01:37:45.320] and file a complaint with the district court against the district attorney. [01:37:45.320 --> 01:37:47.320] And this is how you do that. [01:37:47.320 --> 01:37:51.320] You take a manila envelope, you make up a criminal complaint, [01:37:51.320 --> 01:37:57.320] put it in the manila envelope, and call the judge's coordinator [01:37:57.320 --> 01:38:01.320] and ask when the judge has motion hearings. [01:38:01.320 --> 01:38:04.320] In motion hearings, they have a whole bunch of lawyers there [01:38:04.320 --> 01:38:06.320] and it takes about 30 seconds per motion. [01:38:06.320 --> 01:38:08.320] So they line up in front of the judge. [01:38:08.320 --> 01:38:13.320] So it's not like to have a big trial where they're busy [01:38:13.320 --> 01:38:16.320] and into one subject all day and they can't break. [01:38:16.320 --> 01:38:18.320] They have constant breaks. [01:38:18.320 --> 01:38:21.320] So what you do is you wear a suit and tie. [01:38:21.320 --> 01:38:25.320] You walk up to the bar and point at the baby. [01:38:25.320 --> 01:38:27.320] If you, come here. [01:38:27.320 --> 01:38:29.320] And you kind of do it that way. [01:38:29.320 --> 01:38:30.320] You're the boss. [01:38:30.320 --> 01:38:32.320] This is a republic. [01:38:32.320 --> 01:38:34.320] They are all public servants. [01:38:34.320 --> 01:38:37.320] You are the master. [01:38:37.320 --> 01:38:38.320] So you point at the baby. [01:38:38.320 --> 01:38:39.320] If you, come here. [01:38:39.320 --> 01:38:40.320] And he's going to wonder. [01:38:40.320 --> 01:38:42.320] Lawyers never do that to him. [01:38:42.320 --> 01:38:43.320] They're terrified of the courts. [01:38:43.320 --> 01:38:45.320] They're terrified of everybody in there. [01:38:45.320 --> 01:38:47.320] So he's going to wonder who you are. [01:38:47.320 --> 01:38:52.320] And you tell him your name first and then say, [01:38:52.320 --> 01:38:57.320] instruct the judge that I have business with the court. [01:38:57.320 --> 01:39:01.320] Every time I've done this, the bailiff has said the same thing. [01:39:01.320 --> 01:39:04.320] May I tell him the nature of the business? [01:39:04.320 --> 01:39:08.320] And depending on whether I'm annoyed at the bailiff, [01:39:08.320 --> 01:39:10.320] if I'm annoyed at the bailiff, I'll tell him, [01:39:10.320 --> 01:39:13.320] no, you may not, I have business with the court and it's none of yours. [01:39:13.320 --> 01:39:14.320] You're dismissed. [01:39:14.320 --> 01:39:16.320] And I go sit down. [01:39:16.320 --> 01:39:19.320] And that's what I did to this judge I told you about earlier. [01:39:19.320 --> 01:39:21.320] I did that to his bailiff. [01:39:21.320 --> 01:39:25.320] And his bailiff, he wants to reach across the bar and snatch me over it, [01:39:25.320 --> 01:39:28.320] but it's not his courtroom, so he can't. [01:39:28.320 --> 01:39:30.320] So he runs up to the judge and jibber-jabber, jibber-jabber, [01:39:30.320 --> 01:39:32.320] and the judge, jibber-jabber, jibber-jabber, [01:39:32.320 --> 01:39:35.320] looks out at me and I'm sitting here holding this folder. [01:39:35.320 --> 01:39:37.320] In this case, it's a red folder. [01:39:37.320 --> 01:39:40.320] I always want to read, but I can't get it. [01:39:40.320 --> 01:39:46.320] And he sees that red folder and it's something in the human psyche. [01:39:46.320 --> 01:39:48.320] He just can't help himself. [01:39:48.320 --> 01:39:51.320] He's got to know what's in it. [01:39:51.320 --> 01:39:54.320] So when he finished his motion hearings, he said, [01:39:54.320 --> 01:39:57.320] Mr. Kelton, I understand you have business with the court. [01:39:57.320 --> 01:40:03.320] And you hold up the folder and say, yes, Your Honor, I do. [01:40:03.320 --> 01:40:05.320] May I approach? [01:40:05.320 --> 01:40:10.320] And what that means is, may I give you this document? [01:40:10.320 --> 01:40:13.320] And normally, he'll send the bailiff over to collect it. [01:40:13.320 --> 01:40:17.320] In this particular case, the judge was hearing the motions right at the bench. [01:40:17.320 --> 01:40:19.320] He said, well, come on up, Mr. Kelton. [01:40:19.320 --> 01:40:20.320] I handed him the folder. [01:40:20.320 --> 01:40:21.320] He opens it up. [01:40:21.320 --> 01:40:27.320] He's looking at criminal charges against the district clerk, [01:40:27.320 --> 01:40:33.320] accusing her of secreting criminal charges against the district attorney [01:40:33.320 --> 01:40:37.320] secreted criminal charges against all the highest judges in Texas [01:40:37.320 --> 01:40:40.320] from the grand jury. [01:40:40.320 --> 01:40:43.320] He looked down at that and looked up at me. [01:40:43.320 --> 01:40:46.320] Well, Mr. Kelton, these are criminal complaints. [01:40:46.320 --> 01:40:49.320] And yes, as a matter of fact, they are. [01:40:49.320 --> 01:40:53.320] And Steve just told about going to a judge this way the other day. [01:40:53.320 --> 01:40:57.320] And he told the judge that he had two hats. [01:40:57.320 --> 01:41:01.320] Will you speak to that, Steve? [01:41:01.320 --> 01:41:04.320] Yeah, excuse me. [01:41:04.320 --> 01:41:05.320] I tried to. [01:41:05.320 --> 01:41:13.320] Well, I drafted a criminal affidavit and took it to the DA. [01:41:13.320 --> 01:41:15.320] The DA sent me to Austin Police Department. [01:41:15.320 --> 01:41:17.320] Austin Police Department sent me to the AG. [01:41:17.320 --> 01:41:19.320] The AG sent me to the bar. [01:41:19.320 --> 01:41:21.320] The bar sent me back to the DA. [01:41:21.320 --> 01:41:27.320] So I thought, well, who better to take this to than to the judge [01:41:27.320 --> 01:41:32.320] in front of whom all of these alleged crimes were committed? [01:41:32.320 --> 01:41:34.320] And I said, Your Honor, I understand you have two hats. [01:41:34.320 --> 01:41:36.320] And he looked at me kind of funny. [01:41:36.320 --> 01:41:40.320] And I said, you have a judge's hat and a magistrate's hat. [01:41:40.320 --> 01:41:41.320] And he said, oh, those hats. [01:41:41.320 --> 01:41:42.320] He said, yeah, what about them? [01:41:42.320 --> 01:41:45.320] I said, well, I'm going to ask you to put your magistrate's hat on [01:41:45.320 --> 01:41:48.320] and magistrate these issues. [01:41:48.320 --> 01:41:52.320] And of course, he said, well, if I was a witness to it, I can't magistrate it. [01:41:52.320 --> 01:41:54.320] So he said, go to the grand jury. [01:41:54.320 --> 01:41:56.320] And that sent me back to the DA. [01:41:56.320 --> 01:41:58.320] Okay, that is the point. [01:41:58.320 --> 01:42:02.320] All judges have two hats. [01:42:02.320 --> 01:42:08.320] They have a judge's hat when they're performing their judicial function. [01:42:08.320 --> 01:42:13.320] But when someone brings them a criminal accusation, [01:42:13.320 --> 01:42:18.320] their judge's hat comes off and their magistrate's hat goes on. [01:42:18.320 --> 01:42:23.320] And as a magistrate, they can do three things. [01:42:23.320 --> 01:42:25.320] They can marry people. [01:42:25.320 --> 01:42:28.320] And they give them that just so they can make a few extra bucks. [01:42:28.320 --> 01:42:30.320] Judges don't marry people. [01:42:30.320 --> 01:42:33.320] Magistrates marry people. [01:42:33.320 --> 01:42:37.320] They can find probable cause and they can set bail. [01:42:37.320 --> 01:42:39.320] That's what magistrates do. [01:42:39.320 --> 01:42:44.320] So when you give a judge a criminal complaint, you invoke his duty as a magistrate. [01:42:44.320 --> 01:42:48.320] In this case, I was in Travis County and I had Bushwhack, [01:42:48.320 --> 01:42:53.320] the highest level, the head criminal district judge in Travis County, [01:42:53.320 --> 01:42:57.320] essentially the highest level criminal judge in the state [01:42:57.320 --> 01:43:00.320] because Travis is the seat of government. [01:43:00.320 --> 01:43:05.320] And he kind of must have thought he was above that sort of thing. [01:43:05.320 --> 01:43:10.320] But after he talked to me for a few minutes, he knew that I had him. [01:43:10.320 --> 01:43:12.320] He said, Mr. Kelton, these are criminal complaints, Your Honor. [01:43:12.320 --> 01:43:13.320] They are. [01:43:13.320 --> 01:43:17.320] And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, you really need to take these two justices to the piece. [01:43:17.320 --> 01:43:20.320] When I was a JP, I took criminal complaints. [01:43:20.320 --> 01:43:22.320] I said, I tried that, Judge. [01:43:22.320 --> 01:43:25.320] I took an old herb here across the street and he wouldn't take them [01:43:25.320 --> 01:43:28.320] because there are criminal complaints against you in there. [01:43:28.320 --> 01:43:30.320] And then he eased back and looked at me. [01:43:30.320 --> 01:43:32.320] Now he knows who I am. [01:43:32.320 --> 01:43:38.320] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, district judges don't take criminal complaints in Travis County. [01:43:38.320 --> 01:43:40.320] Oh, that's okay, Judge. [01:43:40.320 --> 01:43:43.320] I'm not here to invoke your duty as a district judge. [01:43:43.320 --> 01:43:46.320] I'm here to invoke your duty as a magistrate, [01:43:46.320 --> 01:43:50.320] and that's a duty from which you may not shield yourself. [01:43:50.320 --> 01:43:54.320] That's when you lean back like you're going to shoot me the first time. [01:43:54.320 --> 01:43:59.320] Point is, okay, we'll get to it when we come back on the other side. [01:43:59.320 --> 01:44:03.320] You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.320 --> 01:44:04.320] Sorry. [01:44:04.320 --> 01:44:07.320] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.320 --> 01:44:08.320] What? [01:44:08.320 --> 01:44:12.320] If so, you may be diagnosed with the deadliest disease known today, stupidity. [01:44:12.320 --> 01:44:16.320] Hi, my name is Steve Holt, and like millions of other Americans, [01:44:16.320 --> 01:44:19.320] I was diagnosed with stupidity at an early age. [01:44:19.320 --> 01:44:25.320] I had no idea that the number one cause of the disease is found in almost every home in America, the television. [01:44:25.320 --> 01:44:30.320] Unfortunately, that puts most Americans at risk of catching stupidity, but there is hope. [01:44:30.320 --> 01:44:32.320] The staff at Brave New Books have helped me [01:44:32.320 --> 01:44:36.320] and thousands of other foxaholics suffering from sports zombieism recover. [01:44:36.320 --> 01:44:40.320] And because of Brave New Books, I now enjoy reading and watching educational documentaries [01:44:40.320 --> 01:44:43.320] without feeling tired or uninterested. [01:44:43.320 --> 01:44:46.320] So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.320 --> 01:44:54.320] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them at 1904guadalupe or bravenewbookstore.com. [01:44:54.320 --> 01:44:57.320] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:57.320 --> 01:45:00.320] and an overall increase in mental functioning. [01:45:00.320 --> 01:45:03.320] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.320 --> 01:45:07.320] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.320 --> 01:45:15.320] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:15.320 --> 01:45:19.320] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.320 --> 01:45:23.320] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.320 --> 01:45:28.320] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.320 --> 01:45:34.320] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.320 --> 01:45:39.320] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.320 --> 01:45:43.320] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.320 --> 01:45:49.320] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.320 --> 01:45:52.320] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.320 --> 01:46:14.320] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.320 --> 01:46:51.320] The people come down from the hill [01:46:51.320 --> 01:47:02.320] Into the city they will shuffle [01:47:02.320 --> 01:47:08.320] Many long nights, many strong thrills [01:47:08.320 --> 01:47:13.320] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio, [01:47:13.320 --> 01:47:17.320] and we're talking to Ben in Arizona. [01:47:17.320 --> 01:47:22.320] Ben, we do a show on Thursday and Friday night. [01:47:22.320 --> 01:47:26.320] Why don't you call in next Thursday, early in the show? [01:47:26.320 --> 01:47:31.320] And today, I went through foreclosure. [01:47:31.320 --> 01:47:35.320] Thursday, I'll go through due process. [01:47:35.320 --> 01:47:38.320] We call this running the routine on them. [01:47:38.320 --> 01:47:43.320] And we'll show you how to set this up so when you get done with these guys, [01:47:43.320 --> 01:47:47.320] they're not ever going to want anything to do with you. [01:47:47.320 --> 01:47:52.320] And what it goes to is everything's political. [01:47:52.320 --> 01:47:55.320] And this is how you create local politics. [01:47:55.320 --> 01:48:00.320] You want to get up to the highest level judge you can and get a complaint against him. [01:48:00.320 --> 01:48:03.320] Once you have a complaint against a high level judge, [01:48:03.320 --> 01:48:07.320] you will find that those high level judges are very, very careful. [01:48:07.320 --> 01:48:14.320] They're very, very cognizant of how dangerous you as a private citizen can be to their career. [01:48:14.320 --> 01:48:17.320] So they will be careful with you. [01:48:17.320 --> 01:48:23.320] And once you file against them, if the policeman shows up on your property again, [01:48:23.320 --> 01:48:29.320] you tell him, that judge sent you out here to harass me, didn't he? [01:48:29.320 --> 01:48:33.320] Just because I filed one little criminal complaint against him, [01:48:33.320 --> 01:48:38.320] he sent you out here to harass me and you watch what happens to the cop. [01:48:38.320 --> 01:48:42.320] They are terrified of those judges. [01:48:42.320 --> 01:48:50.320] I did that to one next to my house and it was over a fire ban they had, [01:48:50.320 --> 01:48:54.320] but they don't have the authority to issue a fire ban, but they do it anyway. [01:48:54.320 --> 01:48:58.320] And I was doing some little plastic work and this cop didn't know me. [01:48:58.320 --> 01:48:59.320] I lived next to City Hall. [01:48:59.320 --> 01:49:02.320] Come up and said, sir, sir, you can't have that open flame. [01:49:02.320 --> 01:49:04.320] I said, sure can, look, nothing to it. [01:49:04.320 --> 01:49:06.320] No, no, no, we have a fire ban. [01:49:06.320 --> 01:49:09.320] I said, wait a minute, you're joking, right? [01:49:09.320 --> 01:49:10.320] Oh, no, no, no. [01:49:10.320 --> 01:49:12.320] I said, you can't have that open flame. [01:49:12.320 --> 01:49:16.320] Wait a minute, that district judge, John Faustel, [01:49:16.320 --> 01:49:20.320] that Trump sent you down here to harass me, didn't he? [01:49:20.320 --> 01:49:24.320] Just because I filed one crummy little criminal complaint against him [01:49:24.320 --> 01:49:27.320] with the attorney general, he sent you down here, didn't he? [01:49:27.320 --> 01:49:33.320] And this policeman takes a step back, holds up both hands with his palms out, [01:49:33.320 --> 01:49:37.320] one moment, sir, takes out his cell phone, makes a call. [01:49:37.320 --> 01:49:39.320] I live next to City Hall. [01:49:39.320 --> 01:49:45.320] Palm, the chief of police, steps out of the City Hall in about 45 seconds. [01:49:45.320 --> 01:49:49.320] Randy, what are you doing to my new officer? [01:49:49.320 --> 01:49:53.320] Oh, Tom Hacker, I was just jerking his chain. [01:49:53.320 --> 01:50:03.320] And the policeman said, oh, God, I saw my whole career pass before my eyes. [01:50:03.320 --> 01:50:06.320] These guys are terrified of those judges. [01:50:06.320 --> 01:50:08.320] They go into court and they do something stupid, [01:50:08.320 --> 01:50:13.320] and those judges just ream them big time. [01:50:13.320 --> 01:50:16.320] So you want these guys on the bottom not to mess with you? [01:50:16.320 --> 01:50:21.320] I get pulled over, and I'm doing 70 and a 60. [01:50:21.320 --> 01:50:25.320] I'm pulling a big gooseneck trailer, and the plates are three years out of date. [01:50:25.320 --> 01:50:28.320] The cop comes back, gives me my license, and tells me, [01:50:28.320 --> 01:50:32.320] slow down a little bit and get those plates fixed. [01:50:32.320 --> 01:50:34.320] The next day, I go in the convenience store across the street, [01:50:34.320 --> 01:50:37.320] and Bob Jack Cruz listens to the scanner and said, [01:50:37.320 --> 01:50:39.320] what did you do to that cop yesterday? [01:50:39.320 --> 01:50:41.320] I said, I did nothing to him. Why? [01:50:41.320 --> 01:50:45.320] Well, he calls your name in to dispatch, and dispatch called back and said, [01:50:45.320 --> 01:50:48.320] don't you dare give that asshole being old a ticket. [01:50:48.320 --> 01:50:53.320] Give him his license and get him out of here. [01:50:53.320 --> 01:50:56.320] The police are the biggest cowards out there. [01:50:56.320 --> 01:50:57.320] Now, that's not fair. [01:50:57.320 --> 01:51:01.320] Do you need to go to the courthouse personally to file these charges, [01:51:01.320 --> 01:51:04.320] or is a written complaint, and if I do do a written complaint, [01:51:04.320 --> 01:51:07.320] does it need to be notarized or sort of mailed? [01:51:07.320 --> 01:51:10.320] Yes, absolutely needs to be notarized, [01:51:10.320 --> 01:51:13.320] and we'll show you how to write the complaints, [01:51:13.320 --> 01:51:16.320] and I have some on some websites you can look at. [01:51:16.320 --> 01:51:24.320] Go to jurisimprudence, that's J-U-R-I-S, jurisimprudence, [01:51:24.320 --> 01:51:30.320] I-M-P-R-U-D-E-N-C-E dot com, [01:51:30.320 --> 01:51:36.320] and on there you will find a link to a whole lot of criminal complaints. [01:51:36.320 --> 01:51:39.320] Just look around on the site. [01:51:39.320 --> 01:51:42.320] You'll find some really good information on there. [01:51:42.320 --> 01:51:48.320] We'll have a section on how to write criminal complaints. [01:51:48.320 --> 01:51:50.320] They're a lot of fun. [01:51:50.320 --> 01:51:53.320] You won't believe how much fun you can have with these things. [01:51:53.320 --> 01:51:56.320] When you go there, just start clicking on the frogs. [01:51:56.320 --> 01:52:00.320] Yeah, call it the frog farm conspiracy. [01:52:00.320 --> 01:52:05.320] But give us a call Monday, and we're about to run out of time, [01:52:05.320 --> 01:52:11.320] and frankly the next caller is Miss Mary from Austin, [01:52:11.320 --> 01:52:14.320] and she's the hottest babe in Austin. [01:52:14.320 --> 01:52:19.320] So Ben in Arizona, the hottest babe in Austin, let's see. [01:52:19.320 --> 01:52:20.320] Call me Monday. [01:52:20.320 --> 01:52:23.320] Call me Thursday, and I will go over due process. [01:52:23.320 --> 01:52:25.320] I think you will like this. [01:52:25.320 --> 01:52:29.320] It is incredibly powerful. [01:52:29.320 --> 01:52:30.320] Okay? [01:52:30.320 --> 01:52:32.320] Okay, thank you, sir. [01:52:32.320 --> 01:52:33.320] Thank you, Ben. [01:52:33.320 --> 01:52:37.320] Okay, now we're going to go to the hottest babe in Austin. [01:52:37.320 --> 01:52:39.320] Hello, Miss Mary. [01:52:39.320 --> 01:52:45.320] Hi, Ramsey, congratulations on the work in Cali, the contract. [01:52:45.320 --> 01:52:48.320] Wait, I couldn't understand that. [01:52:48.320 --> 01:52:50.320] Congratulations on the project. [01:52:50.320 --> 01:52:53.320] Oh, yeah, the project's funded. [01:52:53.320 --> 01:52:55.320] We're putting the pieces together. [01:52:55.320 --> 01:52:57.320] I'll be heading out to California. [01:52:57.320 --> 01:53:01.320] I've got a bunch of people that are getting lined up to get this thing started. [01:53:01.320 --> 01:53:05.320] We have a four-month launch date. [01:53:05.320 --> 01:53:06.320] Oh, good. [01:53:06.320 --> 01:53:12.320] The electronic lawyer, we're going to eliminate the profession of lawyer [01:53:12.320 --> 01:53:15.320] and get lawyers to pay us to do it, [01:53:15.320 --> 01:53:20.320] and just be as happy with us as they can be in the process. [01:53:20.320 --> 01:53:23.320] Well, you know, it's just great. [01:53:23.320 --> 01:53:30.320] I mean, things like jurisdictionary and your radio show really helps me [01:53:30.320 --> 01:53:33.320] and all my friends, and I just thank you all up there [01:53:33.320 --> 01:53:38.320] at Rural Law Radio and Logos Network and all the time you all spend up there. [01:53:38.320 --> 01:53:40.320] It's really community service. [01:53:40.320 --> 01:53:46.320] I've even gotten offered to go to college for free in D.C. to get a law degree [01:53:46.320 --> 01:53:51.320] because of the work I've been able to do because of y'all's tutelage. [01:53:51.320 --> 01:53:52.320] That is good to hear. [01:53:52.320 --> 01:53:58.320] It's very important what y'all do, and I thank y'all very much. [01:53:58.320 --> 01:54:03.320] Well, we're trying to replicate ourselves. [01:54:03.320 --> 01:54:08.320] If we can make this understandable and simple enough [01:54:08.320 --> 01:54:12.320] that people can feel comfortable starting to do this, [01:54:12.320 --> 01:54:15.320] this is how we'll take our country back. [01:54:15.320 --> 01:54:16.320] Well, it's true. [01:54:16.320 --> 01:54:20.320] You know, when I first started sitting in on the jurisdictionary classes, [01:54:20.320 --> 01:54:25.320] it took me a whole year of just writing down all the new words [01:54:25.320 --> 01:54:27.320] before I had any comprehension. [01:54:27.320 --> 01:54:30.320] The next year, the next two years, the next three years, [01:54:30.320 --> 01:54:35.320] I can sit down and talk with lawyers like I'm one of the guys. [01:54:35.320 --> 01:54:42.320] But for this year, I sat in class and I just wrote over and over and over [01:54:42.320 --> 01:54:44.320] what was on the video screen. [01:54:44.320 --> 01:54:47.320] Every week, wrote the same thing over and over. [01:54:47.320 --> 01:54:49.320] It is legalese. [01:54:49.320 --> 01:54:51.320] It is another language. [01:54:51.320 --> 01:54:56.320] And don't fool yourselves like I did when I had to represent myself [01:54:56.320 --> 01:54:58.320] in a great embarrassment. [01:54:58.320 --> 01:55:03.320] But I had to because one of the attorneys I was using, Greenling, [01:55:03.320 --> 01:55:06.320] some Greenling trust attorney, [01:55:06.320 --> 01:55:10.320] tried to sneak out another 10,000 out of my pocketbook instead of five [01:55:10.320 --> 01:55:12.320] before the next court date. [01:55:12.320 --> 01:55:15.320] I had no idea what to do against this guy. [01:55:15.320 --> 01:55:18.320] And on my own, I think I learned how to bargrieve somebody. [01:55:18.320 --> 01:55:21.320] But the opposing attorney, I was scared to bargrieve him more than once [01:55:21.320 --> 01:55:24.320] because I thought he'd send one of his goons out to kill me [01:55:24.320 --> 01:55:26.320] if he only works for felons and drug dealers. [01:55:26.320 --> 01:55:30.320] So this is the real world out here, not some old TV show. [01:55:30.320 --> 01:55:32.320] And y'all have given me real tools, [01:55:32.320 --> 01:55:35.320] and y'all have enabled me to help real people. [01:55:35.320 --> 01:55:38.320] When the police have broken their arms, [01:55:38.320 --> 01:55:55.320] I've negotiated at the city hall with some ruthless attorneys and all this. [01:56:08.320 --> 01:56:10.320] Thank you. [01:56:38.320 --> 01:56:40.320] Thank you. [01:57:08.320 --> 01:57:10.320] Thank you. [01:57:38.320 --> 01:57:40.320] Thank you. [01:58:08.320 --> 01:58:10.320] I think it's [01:58:12.320 --> 01:58:14.320] I'm like a walking [01:58:16.320 --> 01:58:18.320] I'm dangerous [01:58:20.320 --> 01:58:22.320] I'm like a walking [01:58:24.320 --> 01:58:26.320] I'm dangerous [01:58:28.320 --> 01:58:30.320] If you are a bully [01:58:31.320 --> 01:58:33.320] Treat me good [01:58:33.320 --> 01:58:36.320] If you are a bully, a bully [01:58:36.320 --> 01:58:39.320] I beg you, treat me good [01:58:41.320 --> 01:58:43.320] I'm like a stepping in praise [01:58:43.320 --> 01:58:45.320] I don't care what's inside [01:58:45.320 --> 01:58:47.320] I'm dangerous [01:58:47.320 --> 01:59:03.320] I'm dangerous [01:59:17.320 --> 01:59:20.320] I'm dangerous [01:59:48.320 --> 01:59:50.320] Looking for some truth? [01:59:50.320 --> 01:59:51.320] You found it. [01:59:51.320 --> 02:00:17.320] Logosradionetwork.com