[00:00.000 --> 00:07.600] This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, online [00:07.600 --> 00:09.360] at thelibertybeat.com. [00:09.360 --> 00:13.760] I'm Brian Hagan with your Liberty Beat for Friday, January 30th, 2015. [00:13.760 --> 00:20.760] Gold is trading at $1,258, silver $16.94, and bitcoin is trading around $243.35. [00:20.760 --> 00:27.620] Today's bitcoin price brought to you by ExpressCoin, the fastest, most reliable way to buy bitcoin. [00:27.620 --> 00:30.480] Buy bitcoin today at ExpressCoin.com. [00:30.480 --> 00:34.560] Your job, your home, your car, your money, all these things provide you with a sense [00:34.560 --> 00:35.560] of security. [00:35.560 --> 00:37.440] But what about your family security? [00:37.440 --> 00:41.040] What have you done to prepare if all of these things were suddenly gone? [00:41.040 --> 00:45.680] eFoods Direct has the food security you need for every emergency. [00:45.680 --> 00:48.120] eFoods Direct is food security. [00:48.120 --> 00:55.320] Go to eFoodsDirect.com slash Liberty Beat or call 800-620-5520 and mention Liberty Beat [00:55.320 --> 01:00.960] for 50% off their food preparation planning packs. [01:00.960 --> 01:04.760] While appearing before the Senate Armed Forces Committee, former Secretary of State Henry [01:04.760 --> 01:09.200] Kissinger was confronted by protesters calling for his arrest. [01:09.200 --> 01:14.200] Activists with code pink interrupted the proceedings, holding a banner and carrying handcuffs. [01:14.200 --> 01:18.640] Senator John McCain referred to the protesters as low life scum when demanding the Capitol [01:18.640 --> 01:19.640] police remove them. [01:19.640 --> 01:25.080] If we can't get the Capitol Hill police in here immediately, McCain apologized to Kissinger. [01:25.080 --> 01:31.200] I have never seen anything as disgraceful and outrageous and despicable. [01:31.200 --> 01:36.160] Ross Ulbrich trial, day nine, as the jury heard testimony from former FBI agent Il-Won [01:36.160 --> 01:40.440] Young, who testified about the role he played in seizing and analyzing Silk Road servers [01:40.440 --> 01:41.440] in Bitcoin. [01:41.440 --> 01:44.900] Also of significance yesterday, the government began the story of a Silk Road vendor who [01:44.900 --> 01:48.760] threatened to release the names of thousands of user identities if Dread Pirate Roberts [01:48.760 --> 01:51.280] would not pay him $700,000. [01:51.280 --> 01:55.240] It was this threat that would lead Dread Pirate Roberts, as shown to the jury on Torch [01:55.240 --> 02:01.280] Act, to tell a member of Hells Angels Canada that he wanted to see his blackmailer executed. [02:01.280 --> 02:05.120] As the tension rose, the day's proceedings came to an end just before the government [02:05.120 --> 02:08.760] laid out the details of the alleged murder for hire arrangement. [02:08.760 --> 02:13.120] It was apparent that the prosecution was raising that evidence just before they rested their [02:13.120 --> 02:14.120] case. [02:14.120 --> 02:17.520] The Liberty Beat's John Bush covering the trial in New York says that judging by the [02:17.520 --> 02:22.440] faces of the jurors, that aspect of the case may have an impact on their decisions. [02:22.440 --> 02:25.640] The Liberty Beat's continuing trial coverage continues next week. [02:25.640 --> 02:29.960] See thelibertybeat.com for details on how you can help keep that coverage happening. [02:29.960 --> 02:35.480] The Liberty Beat is made possible by WatchMyBit.com, the first ever micropayment-based video service. [02:35.480 --> 02:40.080] If you're a content creator, visit WatchMyBit.com to learn how you can use Bitcoin to generate [02:40.080 --> 02:41.880] revenue for your art. [02:41.880 --> 02:43.780] That's WatchMyBit.com. [02:43.780 --> 02:49.040] It also comes from Justice Ranveer's Bitcoinism.LibertyMeet, thoughts on Bitcoin and the future digital [02:49.040 --> 02:50.040] economy. [02:50.040 --> 02:52.960] Check out the blog at Bitcoinism.LibertyMeet. [02:52.960 --> 02:57.600] This is the Liberty Beat for Friday, January 30th, 2015. [02:57.600 --> 03:27.080] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [03:27.600 --> 03:55.640] Okay, we are back. [03:55.640 --> 04:01.360] Randy Carlton, Steve Skidmore, Rural Radio, and we're going to Rob in New Mexico. [04:01.360 --> 04:02.360] Hello, Rob. [04:02.360 --> 04:03.360] Hey, Randy. [04:03.360 --> 04:06.360] I thought there was another guy before me. [04:06.360 --> 04:09.360] Oh, he must have dropped off. [04:09.360 --> 04:10.360] Okay. [04:10.360 --> 04:14.760] Were you able to read the stuff I texted you? [04:14.760 --> 04:15.760] No, I wasn't. [04:15.760 --> 04:16.760] Good. [04:16.760 --> 04:19.760] Sorry, it's been a busy day. [04:19.760 --> 04:20.760] Oh, no. [04:20.760 --> 04:21.760] Okay. [04:21.760 --> 04:22.760] Okay. [04:22.760 --> 04:27.440] No, I didn't mean if you had time, I meant were you able to actually, the pictures aren't [04:27.440 --> 04:29.560] very good. [04:29.560 --> 04:36.360] My wife has horrible eyesight, thank God, otherwise she wouldn't have married me. [04:36.360 --> 04:39.360] I saw your picture on Facebook. [04:39.360 --> 04:40.360] Yeah. [04:40.360 --> 04:41.360] You're right. [04:41.360 --> 04:42.360] Yeah. [04:42.360 --> 04:43.360] Yeah. [04:43.360 --> 04:44.360] Okay. [04:44.360 --> 05:01.000] When I bought my house, we bought it as is, and they informed us that there was lead paint. [05:01.000 --> 05:03.960] They informed us that there was new paint. [05:03.960 --> 05:06.960] They informed us that there was new carpet. [05:06.960 --> 05:14.600] About six months after we bought the house, the water heater tank went out, was leaking [05:14.600 --> 05:16.200] all over the place. [05:16.200 --> 05:19.240] We called somebody to come out and replace that. [05:19.240 --> 05:25.400] When the guy was replacing it, he noticed that the wires were completely put in wrong, [05:25.400 --> 05:33.920] and he noticed that the furnace next to the water heater was leaking gas into the upper [05:33.920 --> 05:35.920] area of the closet where it was in. [05:35.920 --> 05:44.200] He said that needed to come out and be replaced too, because it could blow up. [05:44.200 --> 05:50.160] Would that constitute fraud by nondisclosure, because they disclose the other things? [05:50.160 --> 05:52.280] Not if you bought it as is. [05:52.280 --> 05:53.280] Okay. [05:53.280 --> 05:56.560] Can't get it out. [05:56.560 --> 06:05.720] As is means everything you can see, you accept. [06:05.720 --> 06:08.240] What about a- [06:08.240 --> 06:09.240] And a hot water heater. [06:09.240 --> 06:13.040] You probably couldn't claim that anyway, because they didn't know it was going to go out. [06:13.040 --> 06:16.440] The wiring, you could see the wiring, you could look at it. [06:16.440 --> 06:24.000] Yeah, he said that the way it was put in was wrong, so it wasn't a matter of just wearing [06:24.000 --> 06:25.000] out. [06:25.000 --> 06:30.440] It wasn't an old-age thing, he said it was installed improperly. [06:30.440 --> 06:36.040] Yeah, but if you agree to as is, you're not likely to have a claim. [06:36.040 --> 06:42.840] It's possible, but it's going to depend on the law in Mexico. [06:42.840 --> 06:50.400] What about a piece of plywood shelf on the bottom of a cabinet, goodness gracious, sorry, [06:50.400 --> 06:59.160] covering a big hole in the bottom of the cabinet where water had rotted through and was creating [06:59.160 --> 07:05.000] all kinds of interesting black, slimy stuff. [07:05.000 --> 07:15.280] Well, if I was the judge, my question would be, could you have seen that if you had looked [07:15.280 --> 07:20.640] in the cabinet prior to purchasing? [07:20.640 --> 07:21.640] It looked like the cabinet. [07:21.640 --> 07:25.200] In fact, I thought the cabinet had a wood bottom to it. [07:25.200 --> 07:27.420] I thought that was actually the bottom of the cabinet. [07:27.420 --> 07:33.880] We subsequently got another leak and I had to take everything out of there. [07:33.880 --> 07:37.000] At that point, I noticed that that wasn't actually the bottom of the cabinet. [07:37.000 --> 07:42.400] I pulled that piece of plywood out and found a big rusted out hole. [07:42.400 --> 07:50.160] The question would be, could you have found that had you inspected it carefully before [07:50.160 --> 07:51.160] purchasing? [07:51.160 --> 07:57.120] Could I have, yeah, I guess so. [07:57.120 --> 07:58.120] Yeah. [07:58.120 --> 08:06.560] Since you accepted it as is, I don't see any way you'll be able to develop a claim. [08:06.560 --> 08:07.560] Okay. [08:07.560 --> 08:11.600] They're going to say, hit the road, chump. [08:11.600 --> 08:16.160] It was just some icing I was trying to put on top of the cake. [08:16.160 --> 08:19.160] I mean, I got a bunch of other stuff. [08:19.160 --> 08:23.720] Now, at the time of closing- Wait a minute. [08:23.720 --> 08:24.720] Hold on. [08:24.720 --> 08:25.720] Hold on. [08:25.720 --> 08:26.720] What? [08:26.720 --> 08:29.320] The grass police had a thought. [08:29.320 --> 08:33.280] The grass police. [08:33.280 --> 08:40.920] Where were the grass police when this wiring was being put in? [08:40.920 --> 08:42.760] Did they have a permit for the wiring? [08:42.760 --> 08:48.280] Well, as far as I know, the seller is the one that did all of that stuff. [08:48.280 --> 08:54.640] Well, you might check to see if there was a permit for the wiring because if there was, [08:54.640 --> 09:00.600] now the city accrues liability. [09:00.600 --> 09:02.760] You want to be the grass police, Bubba? [09:02.760 --> 09:06.480] We'll welcome you to the deep end of the pool. [09:06.480 --> 09:08.080] Cool. [09:08.080 --> 09:16.360] You want to come out and force me to pay you to inspect my wiring before I can put it in? [09:16.360 --> 09:23.880] Well, you take on- If that's the case, then when I purchase a house within that jurisdiction, [09:23.880 --> 09:31.600] I have a right to a reasonable expectation that the city has done its job in enforcing [09:31.600 --> 09:39.160] the building code, an electrical code, and now I find that they didn't. [09:39.160 --> 09:44.320] Would those be public record? [09:44.320 --> 09:48.800] You should be able to go to the city and pull all of the building permits on this property. [09:48.800 --> 09:49.800] Okay. [09:49.800 --> 09:50.800] Cool. [09:50.800 --> 09:51.800] That's good. [09:51.800 --> 10:04.120] And my last question, you know, we didn't get proper hazard insurance for it. [10:04.120 --> 10:09.760] I got a policy, but it wasn't sufficient, it was too short in duration. [10:09.760 --> 10:18.760] So at closing, the seller agreed to arrange the insurance and I paid for it. [10:18.760 --> 10:25.200] Now, we didn't alter the contract, obviously the contract says that the buyer is supposed [10:25.200 --> 10:28.000] to provide hazard insurance. [10:28.000 --> 10:30.120] You got a problem. [10:30.120 --> 10:36.040] If it's the same as in Texas, because in Texas they have a provision that says there are [10:36.040 --> 10:41.080] no verbal contracts in real property. [10:41.080 --> 10:43.440] Everything has to be in writing. [10:43.440 --> 10:49.560] My question on that would be then if I had provided the insurance at closing like I was [10:49.560 --> 10:56.720] supposed to, why did I pay an additional year of insurance on top of the year I was supposed [10:56.720 --> 10:59.760] to have on top of the escrow insurance? [10:59.760 --> 11:02.680] So you, oh wait, hold on. [11:02.680 --> 11:06.440] So that's different. [11:06.440 --> 11:13.940] You paid for insurance, a contract accrued, this wasn't just a verbal agreement. [11:13.940 --> 11:16.200] This became a contract. [11:16.200 --> 11:17.200] Okay. [11:17.200 --> 11:24.000] Based on, you know, if you had a verbal agreement and somebody didn't, like this guy's supposed [11:24.000 --> 11:27.600] to do something and you're supposed to pay, well, you want to sue him because he didn't [11:27.600 --> 11:32.000] do it or he's suing you because you didn't pay him and you say, well, he didn't do it. [11:32.000 --> 11:35.440] Well, that's a verbal contract and he couldn't enforce. [11:35.440 --> 11:43.400] However, when you have a verbal agreement and then something of value changes hands, [11:43.400 --> 11:47.840] that places a duty on the other party and it creates the contract. [11:47.840 --> 11:51.760] So you paid him for insurance that he didn't get. [11:51.760 --> 11:53.640] Right. [11:53.640 --> 11:54.640] That's fraud. [11:54.640 --> 11:55.640] That's theft. [11:55.640 --> 12:03.880] On top of that, the escrow company has been collecting insurance for the past two and [12:03.880 --> 12:08.760] a half years, not giving it back to me. [12:08.760 --> 12:12.240] Where did that money go? [12:12.240 --> 12:16.320] They say they're still sitting on it, but they won't give me any information about the [12:16.320 --> 12:17.320] account. [12:17.320 --> 12:24.040] Once you sue them, they will. [12:24.040 --> 12:28.120] You sue their errors in emissions policy, they're going to get real excited. [12:28.120 --> 12:29.120] Yep. [12:29.120 --> 12:34.040] That's part of the qualified written request that I already sent them that they didn't [12:34.040 --> 12:38.560] respond in time and didn't give me any of the documentation that I asked for. [12:38.560 --> 12:44.400] By the way, the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act requires that they provide a full accounting [12:44.400 --> 12:45.400] annually. [12:45.400 --> 12:48.400] Yes, it does. [12:48.400 --> 12:56.440] Never had one, asked for one in my qualified written request, didn't send me one. [12:56.440 --> 13:00.380] They're ripe for a pretty decent lawsuit. [13:00.380 --> 13:07.680] The fact that you were paying for insurance gave you a reasonable expectation that you [13:07.680 --> 13:08.680] were insured. [13:08.680 --> 13:14.840] And since you paid them for the insurance, they had a duty to buy it or take the liability [13:14.840 --> 13:15.840] themselves. [13:15.840 --> 13:16.840] Right. [13:16.840 --> 13:22.080] So sue them for whatever the insurance would have paid, triple. [13:22.080 --> 13:27.160] And on top of that, they're billing us $30 a month more than what the contract calls [13:27.160 --> 13:28.160] for. [13:28.160 --> 13:31.360] Now, that's a big deal. [13:31.360 --> 13:33.920] I will get to your calculations. [13:33.920 --> 13:42.440] I'll calculate how much that would lower your payments, how much you would overpay over [13:42.440 --> 13:44.560] the term of the note. [13:44.560 --> 13:48.480] And this is how that one works. [13:48.480 --> 13:54.100] You don't sue for the amount you were actually defrauded of. [13:54.100 --> 13:59.080] You sue based on the amount you would have been defrauded of had their plan ran through [13:59.080 --> 14:00.080] fruition. [14:00.080 --> 14:08.680] So if you'd have paid this extra $30 for 30 years, it adds up more than would appear [14:08.680 --> 14:16.800] because every month you knock $30 extra off the principal. [14:16.800 --> 14:25.760] And then the calculation for your payment is based on the interest on the principal [14:25.760 --> 14:28.440] that's left every month. [14:28.440 --> 14:33.040] So anytime you pay an extra payment on the front end, every dollar on the front will [14:33.040 --> 14:36.480] knock about three off the back. [14:36.480 --> 14:42.280] So every 30 bucks you paid in not only knocked it down 30 bucks, but it lowered the interest [14:42.280 --> 14:43.760] next month. [14:43.760 --> 14:46.160] That adds up a lot quicker than you would think. [14:46.160 --> 14:54.840] Steve Skidmore is not here right now, but his was $43 over 30 years and he would have [14:54.840 --> 14:59.480] overpaid the note $50,000. [14:59.480 --> 15:06.560] But you don't sue for $50,000, you sue for triple. [15:06.560 --> 15:09.520] These guys need to get their accounting right. [15:09.520 --> 15:15.360] So I'll look at the note and I'll run the calculation on the note to make sure their [15:15.360 --> 15:17.560] calculation was correct. [15:17.560 --> 15:22.160] But in the end, it doesn't matter because the note is what you agreed to pay. [15:22.160 --> 15:23.160] Right. [15:23.160 --> 15:28.240] They can do all the song and dance other than that that they want to. [15:28.240 --> 15:35.760] So it appears that not only did they intend to collect that $30 every month, how much [15:35.760 --> 15:39.600] were you paying for insurance? [15:39.600 --> 15:44.400] We're paying $75 and something cents a month for insurance, comes out to a little over [15:44.400 --> 15:48.280] $800 a year. [15:48.280 --> 15:49.600] You stick that one on there. [15:49.600 --> 15:57.920] They intended to collect that for the full term of the note as well. [15:57.920 --> 16:01.720] You'll have a really nice calculation here. [16:01.720 --> 16:04.680] They just finally went and got insurance. [16:04.680 --> 16:10.560] They bought $150,000 of insurance for a $75,000 property. [16:10.560 --> 16:17.200] It's only costing them $600 a year. [16:17.200 --> 16:26.920] What I was looking at, they can maintain a cushion of, what is it, 12%, I think. [16:26.920 --> 16:32.200] And they've got something like 28%. [16:32.200 --> 16:39.080] I didn't understand that 12% and 8%, I missed something there. [16:39.080 --> 16:40.080] Hold on. [16:40.080 --> 16:46.640] I'm confused. [16:46.640 --> 16:48.920] Maybe I've been breathing diesel fumes. [16:48.920 --> 16:52.880] Randy Kelton and Steve Skidmore, We Blah Radio. [16:52.880 --> 16:55.880] Call it number 512-646-1984. [16:55.880 --> 16:56.880] Glad you're back, Alex. [16:56.880 --> 16:57.880] We'll be right back. [16:57.880 --> 17:07.360] January is the time for new beginnings, a chance to sharpen our focus on what's important [17:07.360 --> 17:10.320] and recommit to ourselves and loved ones. [17:10.320 --> 17:15.440] Logos Radio Network is holding their third gun giveaway as a part of their annual fundraiser. [17:15.440 --> 17:20.720] Donate $25 today and be entered into a drawing for a Glock 42 pistol. [17:20.720 --> 17:25.760] Second place gets two CHL classes, both sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks. [17:25.760 --> 17:32.120] The first 50 people who donate $25 will receive a free jar of My Magic Mud detoxifying tooth [17:32.120 --> 17:33.120] powder. [17:33.120 --> 17:36.240] Please visit logosradionetwork.com for more details. [17:36.240 --> 17:41.960] If you appreciate truth in media and have enjoyed Logos Radio Network programming, contribute [17:41.960 --> 17:47.520] to this very important fundraiser sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks and My Magic Mud. [17:47.520 --> 17:53.240] Secure your chance to win a Glock 42 and get your free jar of My Magic Mud now. [17:53.240 --> 17:55.520] Contest ends January 31st. [17:55.520 --> 18:00.520] Support free speech radio at its best. [18:00.520 --> 18:05.240] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.240 --> 18:09.320] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.320 --> 18:13.640] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.640 --> 18:14.640] can win two. [18:14.640 --> 18:19.440] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.440 --> 18:25.320] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [18:25.320 --> 18:29.840] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [18:29.840 --> 18:34.060] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.060 --> 18:39.160] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.160 --> 18:41.320] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.320 --> 18:46.840] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.840 --> 18:49.800] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.800 --> 18:59.320] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [18:59.320 --> 19:00.320] collectors now. [19:00.320 --> 19:06.280] If you are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [19:06.280 --> 19:18.480] Well, don't let nothing get to you, only the father can deliver you, so don't let bad [19:18.480 --> 19:31.080] people hurt you until Satan get behind you, know what I mean, my friend, and all of your [19:31.080 --> 19:32.080] children. [19:32.080 --> 19:33.080] Come on. [19:33.080 --> 19:42.640] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Steve Skigmore, Rule of Law Radio, and I need you to send [19:42.640 --> 19:52.440] me dates for when you started paying for this insurance and when you, when they, are you [19:52.440 --> 19:55.240] still paying for this insurance? [19:55.240 --> 20:01.040] Oh, hold on. [20:01.040 --> 20:02.480] There you go. [20:02.480 --> 20:03.480] Somebody had you muted. [20:03.480 --> 20:10.520] Okay, are you still paying, you're paying $600 a year now for the insurance instead [20:10.520 --> 20:12.720] of $800? [20:12.720 --> 20:17.320] No, they purchased insurance for $600, we're still paying the $800. [20:17.320 --> 20:18.320] Oh. [20:18.320 --> 20:23.640] And according to Respa, they're allowed, they're allowed to maintain a cushion, they can, they [20:23.640 --> 20:28.320] can have a little bit more than what's required, but I believe it's only 12% over. [20:28.320 --> 20:32.880] Oh, okay, that's what you were talking about, I missed part of that going out, okay. [20:32.880 --> 20:36.000] So it was only 12% and they've got 30%. [20:36.000 --> 20:40.440] Yeah, close to it, 25%, 30%, somewhere in there. [20:40.440 --> 20:47.600] No, that's, okay, you're doing it backwards, that's 30% over. [20:47.600 --> 20:55.240] It's 20, 200 bucks and 200 bucks times three is 600 bucks, so it's exactly 20% over. [20:55.240 --> 20:59.600] Right, which they can't do- 20, I'm sorry, 25% over. [20:59.600 --> 21:06.920] Yeah, they can only be- No, no, I'm brain dead, that's 33% over. [21:06.920 --> 21:18.280] It's 33% of the original, you're supposed to play 600, 200 bucks or more is 33% of that. [21:18.280 --> 21:25.240] Yeah, okay, yeah, right, gotcha. [21:25.240 --> 21:28.520] I went to school and learned how to suffer. [21:28.520 --> 21:30.320] Yeah, yeah. [21:30.320 --> 21:35.360] But it was long before new math, so I struggle. [21:35.360 --> 21:46.160] Okay, so give me dates of when these amounts changed and I will put that into calculation. [21:46.160 --> 21:48.260] Okay, will do. [21:48.260 --> 21:52.280] For those of you listening, I have this huge spreadsheet that took me about six months [21:52.280 --> 22:02.520] to build that I can put in your note, the principal interest, put in the amounts from [22:02.520 --> 22:07.200] the HUD-1 settlement statement, and I can get you a really whopping claim against the [22:07.200 --> 22:08.200] lender. [22:08.200 --> 22:09.200] Oh, yeah. [22:09.200 --> 22:16.360] And this is on top of the $3,000 they're already holding in escrow for insurance. [22:16.360 --> 22:22.160] Oh, so they already have three- Oh, this is even better. [22:22.160 --> 22:28.720] Okay, 3,000 and they're allowed to hold 12%. [22:28.720 --> 22:37.360] So they're holding five years' cushion and still charging $200 a month or a year. [22:37.360 --> 22:42.960] Well, yeah, yeah, yeah, $200 a year over. [22:42.960 --> 22:43.960] It gets better. [22:43.960 --> 22:52.960] We got a settlement statement, a one-page HUD-1, and the contract. [22:52.960 --> 22:53.960] One-page HUD-1? [22:53.960 --> 22:54.960] Mm-hmm. [22:54.960 --> 22:58.880] I've never seen a one-page HUD-1. [22:58.880 --> 23:00.640] Yeah, it's just one page. [23:00.640 --> 23:06.960] What's the bottom number, the number at the bottom of the page, the line number? [23:06.960 --> 23:08.960] I can't pull it up right now. [23:08.960 --> 23:10.960] It's on the stuff I sent you this morning. [23:10.960 --> 23:14.360] Okay, then I bet you just got the front page. [23:14.360 --> 23:15.360] Yeah. [23:15.360 --> 23:19.840] Does it list all the fees that were charged at closing? [23:19.840 --> 23:22.240] No, that's on the settlement statement. [23:22.240 --> 23:24.240] The HUD-1 statement just has a total. [23:24.240 --> 23:28.040] Now, HUD-1 is the settlement statement. [23:28.040 --> 23:34.800] We have a separate settlement statement, typed out kind of thing, that has all the fees itemized, [23:34.800 --> 23:35.800] the HUD-1 statement. [23:35.800 --> 23:43.480] Is that a settlement statement or is that a, there's another document that they have [23:43.480 --> 23:44.480] to produce. [23:44.480 --> 23:48.920] I haven't done it in so long, I forgot what it was. [23:48.920 --> 23:54.040] It's an estimate prior, it's an estimate of the cost prior and it's one page. [23:54.040 --> 23:56.520] Good faith estimate. [23:56.520 --> 24:02.720] No good faith estimate, no truth in lending statement, no HUD-1 settlement book, no right [24:02.720 --> 24:06.120] to rescind, no nothing. [24:06.120 --> 24:09.120] Three documents, that's it. [24:09.120 --> 24:14.480] Okay, you're not in foreclosure on this, are you? [24:14.480 --> 24:19.320] No, we were thinking that they were going to try, that's why I'm trying to move on [24:19.320 --> 24:26.360] this, but there's only seven houses on my road and one of them is already vacant, two [24:26.360 --> 24:32.920] more are about to be vacant, so I don't think they're going to try and kick us out. [24:32.920 --> 24:38.200] You could probably go to and make them a deal to buy out their note. [24:38.200 --> 24:48.280] Okay, this would take too long to do here, but look at how long have you had the property? [24:48.280 --> 24:52.600] We've been in it just under three years, it'll be three years on March 20th. [24:52.600 --> 24:53.760] What? [24:53.760 --> 24:56.640] Three years, you can rescind? [24:56.640 --> 25:10.640] Oh, if you rescind, they have to give you back every dollar you gave them, taxes, everything, [25:10.640 --> 25:18.240] and the only requirement to rescind is them charging you $35 more than they're supposed [25:18.240 --> 25:23.320] to, and you got way over that, so quickly send them a notice to rescind. [25:23.320 --> 25:24.320] Yeah. [25:24.320 --> 25:30.000] Now, you don't have to go through the rescind with it if you want to keep the property, [25:30.000 --> 25:37.640] but once you send the notice to rescind, then you can make an offer to purchase back or [25:37.640 --> 25:46.040] buy one across the street that's empty that you can get cheap. [25:46.040 --> 25:52.040] So let me run the numbers because you can rescind and you still have a claim against [25:52.040 --> 25:56.760] them for the fraud they perpetrated. [25:56.760 --> 26:03.800] Okay, before I talk much more about that, I need to look at the numbers. [26:03.800 --> 26:10.560] So call back next Thursday or Friday, whichever you can, and I will have had time to do the [26:10.560 --> 26:11.560] numbers. [26:11.560 --> 26:12.560] Okay. [26:12.560 --> 26:15.560] Okay, thank you. [26:15.560 --> 26:18.160] Good night. [26:18.160 --> 26:19.160] You too. [26:19.160 --> 26:23.680] Now we're going to Alex in Texas, Texas, Alex in New York. [26:23.680 --> 26:25.240] Hey, Randy. [26:25.240 --> 26:26.600] Hello, Alex. [26:26.600 --> 26:29.320] It's been a while. [26:29.320 --> 26:35.800] Kind of just dropped off the map for a couple of years there. [26:35.800 --> 26:45.440] You know, not completely, but life is, you know, it's a roller coaster, no doubt. [26:45.440 --> 26:50.160] Let me just, I was going to bring up some general questions to you. [26:50.160 --> 26:55.880] And these are things that, you know, I lack the experience in, especially when it comes [26:55.880 --> 27:00.280] to being in criminal court, and this is mostly for criminal, but I guess it's the same probably [27:00.280 --> 27:02.440] for civil. [27:02.440 --> 27:07.200] And even when I go into the books, it's not something you can get out of a book. [27:07.200 --> 27:11.120] I don't believe and I don't know how to do the research. [27:11.120 --> 27:16.840] So what I'm asking you these questions is also to find out, you know, how can I know [27:16.840 --> 27:22.440] or find out these answers for myself, you know, if not that specific question, similar [27:22.440 --> 27:23.440] ones. [27:23.440 --> 27:26.880] And I'll give you an idea, because I got like a dozen questions, we're probably never [27:26.880 --> 27:27.880] going to get to it all. [27:27.880 --> 27:33.800] It's not going to take too much time, but, you know, like for instance, when they bring [27:33.800 --> 27:39.520] less the official unofficial charges, right, and they're dropped where there is no record [27:39.520 --> 27:42.680] of it, or it's not able to be referenced. [27:42.680 --> 27:43.680] But the charges are still- [27:43.680 --> 27:44.680] Wait, hold on. [27:44.680 --> 27:48.520] You're saying they're charges and there's no record? [27:48.520 --> 27:55.360] Well, let me see, like for instance, there is official and there's unofficial charges. [27:55.360 --> 28:00.360] They could be dropped officially or unofficially, you know, like, you know, they're gonna drop [28:00.360 --> 28:01.360] the charges. [28:01.360 --> 28:06.440] Wait a minute, that's new, that's new news to me. [28:06.440 --> 28:09.720] It's that news to you, well, because I'm- [28:09.720 --> 28:10.720] Yeah, unofficial charges. [28:10.720 --> 28:11.720] ...to be referenced. [28:11.720 --> 28:18.640] Well, you know, let's put it this way, they bring the charges against you, and officially [28:18.640 --> 28:21.120] or unofficially, they can have it dropped. [28:21.120 --> 28:26.000] And what I mean by that is that, you know, one could be referenced in the future and [28:26.000 --> 28:27.000] the other one can't. [28:27.000 --> 28:30.920] They could leave it pending. [28:30.920 --> 28:33.280] And I wanted to see if that was correct. [28:33.280 --> 28:36.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. [28:36.000 --> 28:39.640] I think you're mixing up terms. [28:39.640 --> 28:48.280] If a prosecution is dropped, then they can reinstate it later, or if it's dismissed for [28:48.280 --> 28:57.060] any reason, they can bring it back, unless it's dismissed for double jeopardy. [28:57.060 --> 29:00.940] If you're found not guilty, it can never come back. [29:00.940 --> 29:08.880] But if you're not found not guilty, or the case doesn't go through to a final adjudication, [29:08.880 --> 29:11.280] and it's dropped before that, it can be brought back. [29:11.280 --> 29:15.180] If it goes to final adjudication, it cannot be brought back. [29:15.180 --> 29:18.440] So there's no official or unofficial. [29:18.440 --> 29:25.720] If they drop the charges, that must be officially done if the charge was officially brought. [29:25.720 --> 29:32.560] And the way they do that is the prosecutor will file a document with the court stating [29:32.560 --> 29:38.520] that he lacks sufficient evidence to pursue prosecution, and he must ask the court to [29:38.520 --> 29:41.560] dismiss the case. [29:41.560 --> 29:42.560] That's all official. [29:42.560 --> 29:43.560] There's no unofficial. [29:43.560 --> 29:44.560] Hang on. [29:44.560 --> 29:45.560] We're about to go to break. [29:45.560 --> 29:52.320] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, rear of our radio, I call in number 512-646-1984. [29:52.320 --> 30:01.400] We'll be right back. [30:01.400 --> 30:04.080] Girls and boys, is the big difference the toys? [30:04.080 --> 30:06.920] It turns out gender is about more than just dolls and trucks. [30:06.920 --> 30:10.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment to share some interesting differences [30:10.880 --> 30:13.080] between the sexes. [30:13.080 --> 30:18.400] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [30:18.400 --> 30:20.480] of your personal information. [30:20.480 --> 30:21.480] That's creepy. [30:21.480 --> 30:23.440] It doesn't have to be that way. [30:23.440 --> 30:26.560] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:26.560 --> 30:30.680] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches, or use tracking [30:30.680 --> 30:32.960] cookies, and they're third-party certified. [30:32.960 --> 30:37.440] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [30:37.440 --> 30:40.280] Great search results and total privacy. [30:40.280 --> 30:43.800] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:43.800 --> 30:47.840] Researchers and parents know that girls prefer dolls while boys head for the trucks, but [30:47.840 --> 30:49.840] gender differences don't stop there. [30:49.840 --> 30:54.000] Psychologists have discovered that the sexes have favorite colors, temperature preferences, [30:54.000 --> 30:55.680] and they even hear differently. [30:55.680 --> 30:58.880] Girls are attracted to warm colors like red, yellow, and orange. [30:58.880 --> 31:04.160] They also tend to work better in warmer temperatures, and they interpret loud speaking as threatening. [31:04.160 --> 31:07.940] Boys on the other hand are drawn to cooler colors like blue, black, and gray. [31:07.940 --> 31:12.320] They tend to learn better in cooler temperatures, and they associate loud speaking with confidence. [31:12.320 --> 31:17.320] But think twice before redecorating, changing the thermostat, or modulating your voice. [31:17.320 --> 31:20.840] Psychologists say these gender differences are tendencies, not hard, fast rules. [31:20.840 --> 31:22.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:22.520 --> 31:30.760] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.760 --> 31:32.600] What are you thinking? [31:32.600 --> 31:38.360] Microplant powder with iodine and probiotics for a total body detox for around $10 a month. [31:38.360 --> 31:43.680] mvusa.org has 12 formulations of microplant powder for absorbing and removing toxins from [31:43.680 --> 31:48.400] your kidneys, liver, blood, lungs, stomach, and colon, and feel better than ever. [31:48.400 --> 31:52.960] It alkalizes, oxygenates, kills parasites, does the job of 10 products. [31:52.960 --> 31:55.040] That saves you space, time, and money. [31:55.040 --> 31:59.080] Call 888-910-4367 only at mvusa.org. [31:59.080 --> 32:05.160] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.160 --> 32:08.680] In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people are ever [32:08.680 --> 32:13.040] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.040 --> 32:16.080] Defending those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.080 --> 32:19.840] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.840 --> 32:23.960] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:23.960 --> 32:25.320] our rights through due process. [32:25.320 --> 32:29.320] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.320 --> 32:33.080] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.080 --> 32:35.480] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [32:35.480 --> 32:39.480] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.480 --> 32:40.800] ordering your copy today. [32:40.800 --> 32:44.160] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.160 --> 32:48.560] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.560 --> 32:50.880] documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.880 --> 32:54.080] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.080 --> 33:23.760] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:24.960 --> 33:28.000] Okay, we are back. [33:28.000 --> 33:34.800] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Alex in New York. [33:34.800 --> 33:41.480] And Alex, I'm not sure if I understood you correctly, so I may have kind of jumped the [33:41.480 --> 33:42.480] gun there. [33:42.480 --> 33:44.520] No, no, no, not at all. [33:44.520 --> 33:50.000] You're explaining these things and again, it's not so much the answer, Randy, it's [33:50.000 --> 33:55.280] more about how do I come up with the answer or know where to look for it. [33:55.280 --> 34:00.280] That's part, that's really my main question because I could come up with endless questions. [34:00.280 --> 34:04.360] But in some of these, these are general because I don't know how to... [34:04.360 --> 34:08.680] Okay, there's a very simple way of doing this. [34:08.680 --> 34:11.880] Not necessarily easy, but simple. [34:11.880 --> 34:14.160] Read the code. [34:14.160 --> 34:16.120] Read it twice. [34:16.120 --> 34:21.720] And you'll be surprised, the penal code, Code of Criminal Procedure, they're not as big [34:21.720 --> 34:27.240] as they appear because they're all outlined, so there's lots of white space. [34:27.240 --> 34:33.880] And as you read the codes, especially the penal code, you really only need to read the [34:33.880 --> 34:42.200] first sections of the penal code that define what culpability is. [34:42.200 --> 34:46.160] And the definitions of terms, there's two or three chapters there in the front you need [34:46.160 --> 34:53.440] to read through so you understand how penal laws are constructed. [34:53.440 --> 35:01.040] And then read the code you're charged with, read the whole statute because in order to [35:01.040 --> 35:09.760] convict you of any crime, they must conclusively prove every element. [35:09.760 --> 35:14.660] That's what they miss a lot, or a lot of the elements. [35:14.660 --> 35:18.680] So read those and then read the Code of Criminal Procedure twice. [35:18.680 --> 35:26.440] If you read it twice, you'll understand it better than the lawyers do. [35:26.440 --> 35:33.080] And you were on a while, you heard my dissertation earlier about never make a proactive statement [35:33.080 --> 35:36.080] of law out of your own mouth. [35:36.080 --> 35:41.680] When you read the code the first time, don't even try to understand it, just read it through. [35:41.680 --> 35:46.880] All you're doing when you read it the first time is you're developing referential index. [35:46.880 --> 35:50.440] You're developing a memory trace. [35:50.440 --> 35:55.960] When you go back to the front and read it again, you'll see something in the front, [35:55.960 --> 36:03.920] like in Texas Code of Criminal Procedure in Chapter 2, there's a reference to a magistrate [36:03.920 --> 36:09.880] when he sits for the purpose of examining into a criminal accusation, that is an examining [36:09.880 --> 36:11.880] court. [36:11.880 --> 36:15.120] First time I read it, I had no idea what that meant. [36:15.120 --> 36:22.240] Second time I read it, I said, oh, that refers to Chapter 16, a whole chapter on examining [36:22.240 --> 36:24.280] court. [36:24.280 --> 36:29.720] When you read it the second time, you'll start stitching the pieces together. [36:29.720 --> 36:35.320] And you'll be able to walk these guys through the code in a way that they can't deal with. [36:35.320 --> 36:40.640] I do this to lawyers all the time. [36:40.640 --> 36:46.880] My prosecuting attorney, at the time he was a county attorney, he warned me that if I [36:46.880 --> 36:50.520] wasn't careful, I could get charged with the illegal practice of law. [36:50.520 --> 36:52.840] I said, oh, no, no problem with that. [36:52.840 --> 36:59.120] He said, illegal practice of law only goes to someone holding themselves out as an attorney [36:59.120 --> 37:05.760] while representing a personal injury suit or property damage. [37:05.760 --> 37:08.080] And he said, no, that can't be. [37:08.080 --> 37:10.120] So yeah, go read 38.123. [37:10.120 --> 37:17.160] And he took it out, and he read it, and he said, I'll be darned, you're right. [37:17.160 --> 37:22.320] I said, Greg, you ought to be ashamed of yourself having to look that up. [37:22.320 --> 37:24.880] When was the last time you read that thing? [37:24.880 --> 37:29.320] And he said, I don't know that I've ever read the whole thing. [37:29.320 --> 37:33.280] Greg, that's pitiful. [37:33.280 --> 37:38.720] He said, well, I don't know a single attorney who's read the whole thing. [37:38.720 --> 37:39.720] Wow. [37:39.720 --> 37:42.320] And it's amazing. [37:42.320 --> 37:46.520] They don't know what the code is. [37:46.520 --> 37:53.920] I interviewed a woman who was a 12-year criminal district judge, and there were a number of [37:53.920 --> 37:54.920] codes in there. [37:54.920 --> 37:57.480] She had no idea. [37:57.480 --> 38:02.600] But then again, they don't come across these all the time. [38:02.600 --> 38:08.000] They, for the most part, other lawyers don't know these codes either, so they never bring [38:08.000 --> 38:13.360] them up, and they adjudicate the cases the same way every time, and they don't get off [38:13.360 --> 38:17.280] into these codes. [38:17.280 --> 38:23.400] You come in there learning, knowing the codes, that gives them a problem. [38:23.400 --> 38:27.400] And that's why I say to people that they want the common law and all this other stuff, I [38:27.400 --> 38:32.960] said, no, no, no, no, no, statute is fine. [38:32.960 --> 38:38.300] You've got all the checks and balances you need there, and these are the statutes they [38:38.300 --> 38:41.480] pretend to follow. [38:41.480 --> 38:48.400] So when I take their own statutes and stuff it down their throats, they got nowhere to [38:48.400 --> 38:49.400] go. [38:49.400 --> 38:54.920] So read the code, primarily the Code of Criminal Procedure, just read through it, and go back [38:54.920 --> 38:58.960] to the front, read through it again. [38:58.960 --> 39:02.460] Second time you read it, it'll read like a comic book, because you'll see all of these [39:02.460 --> 39:04.200] things they're doing wrong. [39:04.200 --> 39:11.480] They do it in a proper way of asserting them, especially once you're in court, because I [39:11.480 --> 39:12.480] know that... [39:12.480 --> 39:14.480] Okay, here's how you assert them. [39:14.480 --> 39:19.760] If you know what you're doing, they'll lie to you, they'll whatever. [39:19.760 --> 39:23.420] Okay, this is good, this is easy. [39:23.420 --> 39:33.040] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do, because you never [39:33.040 --> 39:38.840] ask a public official to do anything that the law does not specifically require him [39:38.840 --> 39:41.200] to do. [39:41.200 --> 39:45.700] And I don't know where the code is at, but I've had someone read it to me before from [39:45.700 --> 39:47.360] New York. [39:47.360 --> 39:57.720] You have a code that mimics the Ku Klux Klan Act, 18 U.S. Code 242, which says that if [39:57.720 --> 40:05.640] a public official acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity exerts or [40:05.640 --> 40:12.680] purports to exert an authority they do not expressly have or, my favorite part, fails [40:12.680 --> 40:18.360] to perform a duty they are required to perform and in the process denies a citizen in the [40:18.360 --> 40:25.800] full free access to her enjoyment right, well, that's class A misdemeanor. [40:25.800 --> 40:33.840] I was just in court and the judge threatened to arrest me, and he was furious. [40:33.840 --> 40:35.720] He hates me anyway. [40:35.720 --> 40:39.920] He left the courtroom and I called the bailiff over, I need you to take my complaint against [40:39.920 --> 40:40.920] the judge. [40:40.920 --> 40:45.880] Well, what complaint do you want to make? [40:45.880 --> 40:50.560] I want to accuse the judge of class A misdemeanor, official misconduct, criminal violation 39.03 [40:50.560 --> 40:53.480] penal code, in that he failed to perform a duty. [40:53.480 --> 40:56.880] That he failed to perform a duty he was required to perform and in the process denied me the [40:56.880 --> 40:58.600] full free access to her enjoyment right. [40:58.600 --> 41:04.160] And since he did it in your sight and in your presence, you have a duty under Article 2.13 [41:04.160 --> 41:09.200] to keep the peace in accordance with 14.01 and 14.06 Code of Criminal Change or go do [41:09.200 --> 41:10.200] your job. [41:10.200 --> 41:18.920] And he just stood there looking at me with his mouth open. [41:18.920 --> 41:20.400] That's how you invoke the code. [41:20.400 --> 41:25.040] And if he doesn't do it, then you go to the prosecutor and I guess you try to enforce [41:25.040 --> 41:26.360] it that way. [41:26.360 --> 41:33.240] I went straight to the prosecutor's office and at first they didn't let me come in. [41:33.240 --> 41:37.680] They told me I had to go file a complaint with the police sheriff's department. [41:37.680 --> 41:40.520] I said, well, I already tried that and they wouldn't take it. [41:40.520 --> 41:42.540] That's one of the complaints I want to file. [41:42.540 --> 41:46.960] So they called me back and I got a real good relationship with our current district attorney. [41:46.960 --> 41:52.400] I went back in his office, he had three or four lawyers in there, I took out a dime and [41:52.400 --> 41:57.480] put it on his desk and he said, what is that for? [41:57.480 --> 42:07.760] I said, well, Greg, I'm fixing to put you on one, least I could do is give it to you. [42:07.760 --> 42:10.240] He didn't find it quite as funny as I did. [42:10.240 --> 42:15.920] I said, I need you to take my criminal complaint against the district judge and the chief [42:15.920 --> 42:17.920] of security for the courthouse. [42:17.920 --> 42:24.760] Oh, Mr. Kelton, you always give me a pain in the behind. [42:24.760 --> 42:27.760] We were discussing a statute- [42:27.760 --> 42:33.640] Here's what I heard, Randy, as you explained the story and I've heard from certain people [42:33.640 --> 42:38.520] and I don't know how true it is and everything, but I've heard from other people who say that [42:38.520 --> 42:46.280] whenever you bring charges or criminal charges against officials, they're the ones with the [42:46.280 --> 42:53.520] power, supposedly, whatever, he goes, remember, they're the ones that run the system and they [42:53.520 --> 42:56.440] can some, you know, he goes, sometimes that's backfiring. [42:56.440 --> 42:57.440] Okay. [42:57.440 --> 43:02.800] Yes, I know that argument, but they don't do that. [43:02.800 --> 43:06.800] And I'll, you were about to go to break, but when we come back, I'll explain how to make [43:06.800 --> 43:09.360] sure that doesn't happen. [43:09.360 --> 43:13.200] And it goes to the fact that they're all public servants. [43:13.200 --> 43:14.200] Right. [43:14.200 --> 43:20.160] And you're not, they're the servants, you're the master. [43:20.160 --> 43:23.880] And I'll, when we come back, I'll talk about how to be the master. [43:23.880 --> 43:25.820] It makes them crazy. [43:25.820 --> 43:28.640] And they don't want anything to do with you. [43:28.640 --> 43:37.200] This is Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Wulva Radio, our call-in number, 512-646-1984. [43:37.200 --> 43:41.040] Call boards are getting kind of empty, so if you have a question or a comment, give [43:41.040 --> 43:47.520] us a call and over this long break, you can go look at our sponsors and help us meet our [43:47.520 --> 43:54.920] goal on this fundraiser, but we'll be right back. [43:54.920 --> 44:08.120] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by our [44:08.120 --> 44:13.440] store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Suite D here in Austin, Texas behind Brave New Books and [44:13.440 --> 44:18.200] Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.200 --> 44:22.600] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.600 --> 44:26.600] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian Eme oil, [44:26.600 --> 44:30.320] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.320 --> 44:37.520] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.520 --> 44:43.160] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.160 --> 45:01.200] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.200 --> 45:04.360] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.360 --> 45:09.560] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [45:09.560 --> 45:14.960] for CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.960 --> 45:18.840] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.840 --> 45:23.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.120 --> 45:27.960] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:27.960 --> 45:34.280] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.280 --> 45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.280 --> 45:43.600] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.600 --> 45:49.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.760 --> 45:52.560] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.560 --> 46:00.120] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:00.120 --> 46:19.360] Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh. [46:19.360 --> 46:26.120] Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, yeah. [46:26.120 --> 46:29.160] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:29.160 --> 46:40.440] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rue Blah Radio, and we're talking to Alex [46:40.440 --> 46:42.720] in New York. [46:42.720 --> 46:50.480] Alex, these officials really want you to think what you're thinking. [46:50.480 --> 46:56.640] And it's easy to get that because for the most part, when you deal with them, they're [46:56.640 --> 46:59.840] the ones coming after you. [46:59.840 --> 47:05.040] When you start going after them, it's a whole other animal. [47:05.040 --> 47:10.920] And the trick is remembering that you're the master. [47:10.920 --> 47:18.080] And as the master, you can do anything you want to, unless the law specifically forbids [47:18.080 --> 47:20.560] you to do something. [47:20.560 --> 47:34.160] And so far as I know, when you file a criminal complaint, it's to be filed with some magistrate. [47:34.160 --> 47:44.000] And if you look in the code, they will list all of the magistrates, 2.09 Texas Code of [47:44.000 --> 47:46.240] Criminal Procedure. [47:46.240 --> 47:51.240] Who are magistrates? [47:51.240 --> 47:57.000] Very first one, justices of the Supreme Court. [47:57.000 --> 48:02.160] Oh, that's wonderful. [48:02.160 --> 48:06.000] The magistrates, all judges wear two hats. [48:06.000 --> 48:09.360] One's a judge's hat, the other's a magistrate's hat. [48:09.360 --> 48:14.920] And when they're wearing the magistrate's hat, they're all on an equal footing. [48:14.920 --> 48:25.480] So what I tend to do is I like to file complaints against public officials for following policy. [48:25.480 --> 48:33.520] There's nothing more fun than to do that, where their policy conflicts with law. [48:33.520 --> 48:39.640] And I'm real quick to tell them, sorry, Bubba, we're just following the rules. [48:39.640 --> 48:43.280] Your problem, not my problem. [48:43.280 --> 48:48.520] Under screws VUS, the court said that if a public official acting under the color of [48:48.520 --> 49:00.440] his authority violates a ruling of this court, and he be saying, he may not be heard to say [49:00.440 --> 49:02.360] he knows not what he does. [49:02.360 --> 49:10.960] So you're following this rule or policy that violates this other law over here. [49:10.960 --> 49:17.160] You can't claim you didn't know unless you claim insanity. [49:17.160 --> 49:22.040] If you don't claim that, if you claim insanity, they'll have to fire you anyway. [49:22.040 --> 49:26.480] But if you don't claim that, then you acted with full knowledge of the criminal nature [49:26.480 --> 49:29.720] of your behavior. [49:29.720 --> 49:35.880] So if you want to commit crimes to keep your job, well, knock yourself out. [49:35.880 --> 49:37.400] Life's filled with little decisions. [49:37.400 --> 49:43.000] We all get to make some, but it's my duty to report the crime. [49:43.000 --> 49:47.760] So I like to get something small like that because I never want the guy indicted. [49:47.760 --> 49:54.320] Then, or like this bailiff that I asked to perform his duty and he refused. [49:54.320 --> 49:56.440] Here's the problem he has. [49:56.440 --> 50:02.760] The judge committed a violation of 39.03 penal code, which is Class A misdemeanor. [50:02.760 --> 50:11.040] He also threatened me in order to prevent me from exercising one of my rights. [50:11.040 --> 50:21.840] And he threatened me with a bunch of guys with loaded pistols, 22.02 B2A, makes that [50:21.840 --> 50:26.760] a first degree felony. [50:26.760 --> 50:34.760] And then the bailiff refused to take my complaint and shielded the judge from prosecution 38.05 [50:34.760 --> 50:36.960] penal code. [50:36.960 --> 50:38.280] So this really looks ugly. [50:38.280 --> 50:46.520] So I take the complaint against the bailiff and I take it to some magistrate, junior local [50:46.520 --> 50:50.400] JP, and I refuse to do anything with it. [50:50.400 --> 50:53.200] Wonderful, wonderful. [50:53.200 --> 50:56.960] Then I take it to a county judge and he'll refuse to act. [50:56.960 --> 51:05.240] Well, what I take to the county judge is a complaint against the magistrate. [51:05.240 --> 51:09.960] And then you got a bunch of noise in the background. [51:09.960 --> 51:14.760] And then from the county judge, I go to the district judge with a complaint against the [51:14.760 --> 51:23.680] county judge and the district judge in my county hates me. [51:23.680 --> 51:29.800] Thursday, he was so furious, he was shaking. [51:29.800 --> 51:38.280] And that's because I had him dead bang on a really fine point of law. [51:38.280 --> 51:42.600] And if he didn't hate me, he would probably found it interesting, but he hated me. [51:42.600 --> 51:46.760] So he was furious. [51:46.760 --> 51:53.280] And because he did that, now I get to make complaints against him. [51:53.280 --> 51:59.680] What happened once before with him is I filed a making a terroristic threat complaint against [51:59.680 --> 52:02.120] him with the attorney general. [52:02.120 --> 52:10.080] A couple months later, I was in my yard next to my house working on a truck and a policeman [52:10.080 --> 52:11.080] come over. [52:11.080 --> 52:14.560] He had a little torch doing some plastic welding. [52:14.560 --> 52:18.280] He said, we have a fire ban on, you can't have that open flame. [52:18.280 --> 52:19.280] I said, oh, this? [52:19.280 --> 52:20.280] Sure, I can. [52:20.280 --> 52:21.280] Look, nothing to it. [52:21.280 --> 52:22.280] Oh, no, no. [52:22.280 --> 52:23.280] You don't understand. [52:23.280 --> 52:24.280] We don't have a fire ban. [52:24.280 --> 52:29.040] I said, well, and I had some equipment here, high pressure equipment, so I could outrun [52:29.040 --> 52:30.040] the fire department. [52:30.040 --> 52:32.440] I know, sir, but you can't have that flame. [52:32.440 --> 52:35.720] He was a new cop, he didn't know who I was. [52:35.720 --> 52:37.840] I said, wait a minute, you're joking, right? [52:37.840 --> 52:39.080] This is just a joke, right? [52:39.080 --> 52:43.000] Oh, no, sir, wait a minute. [52:43.000 --> 52:49.680] That John Faustel, the district judge, sent you down here to harass me, didn't he? [52:49.680 --> 52:54.800] Just because I filed one little criminal complaint against him with the attorney general, he [52:54.800 --> 52:57.480] sent you down here, didn't he? [52:57.480 --> 53:02.400] And this cop took a step back, held up both hands with his palms out. [53:02.400 --> 53:06.240] One moment, sir, took out his cell phone, made a call. [53:06.240 --> 53:12.840] About 30 seconds later, Tom, the chief of police, stepped out of the city hall, looked [53:12.840 --> 53:18.080] across at me and said, Randy, what are you doing to my new officer? [53:18.080 --> 53:22.880] I said, oh, Tom, I was just jerking his chain. [53:22.880 --> 53:31.720] And the cop said, oh, God, I saw my whole career flash before my eyes. [53:31.720 --> 53:34.480] That is very telling. [53:34.480 --> 53:41.120] These judges, I mean these judges, these police are terrified of these higher level judges. [53:41.120 --> 53:44.520] These judges get them in there and just rip them to pieces. [53:44.520 --> 53:47.280] So they're terrified of these guys. [53:47.280 --> 53:48.280] But you're the master. [53:48.280 --> 53:49.280] Right. [53:49.280 --> 53:53.320] So just about how you carry yourself and what you know. [53:53.320 --> 53:54.400] Exactly. [53:54.400 --> 53:59.200] You go get as high as you can, as fast as you can. [53:59.200 --> 54:04.400] And these guys on the bottom, the sheriff told his deputies, I had a friend on the [54:04.400 --> 54:05.400] sheriff's department. [54:05.400 --> 54:06.880] I said, what did you do to the sheriff? [54:06.880 --> 54:08.760] I said, I had nothing to do with him lately. [54:08.760 --> 54:13.760] So we had a roll call this morning and he asked who knew Randy Kelton. [54:13.760 --> 54:17.960] About half of us raised our hand and he said, look, you are not to stop him. [54:17.960 --> 54:20.240] You are not to cite him. [54:20.240 --> 54:23.800] And whatever you do, don't put that SOP in my jail. [54:23.800 --> 54:29.440] They don't like it when you take them to task. [54:29.440 --> 54:31.760] But get as high as you can, as quick as you can. [54:31.760 --> 54:34.560] And you heard, did you hear Dan Reel? [54:34.560 --> 54:39.520] Dan Reel, the one you were just speaking with earlier? [54:39.520 --> 54:40.520] Yes. [54:40.520 --> 54:42.800] You'll be like him. [54:42.800 --> 54:45.280] This is way too much fun. [54:45.280 --> 54:46.640] He's good. [54:46.640 --> 54:52.440] If you've never called 9-1-1 on a police officer, you just haven't lived. [54:52.440 --> 54:53.840] I did that one time. [54:53.840 --> 54:59.160] Actually, I had to do that because they were towing my car and I was like, haven't you [54:59.160 --> 55:00.160] heard about the fourth amendment? [55:00.160 --> 55:04.800] You're going to take my property without due process. [55:04.800 --> 55:07.880] And I looked at the guy taking and stuff over there, but I didn't know what to do. [55:07.880 --> 55:08.880] The guy just took it. [55:08.880 --> 55:12.640] He goes, one more word out of you and I'm going to put you in jail. [55:12.640 --> 55:13.640] That's my fourth degree. [55:13.640 --> 55:14.640] I don't want to hear it. [55:14.640 --> 55:17.680] A car is going, you can fight it in court. [55:17.680 --> 55:19.360] I didn't really know what to do. [55:19.360 --> 55:22.800] And I had the guy on 9-1-1 and the lady's like, well, is that an officer? [55:22.800 --> 55:25.240] He goes, well, just because you, I can't help you. [55:25.240 --> 55:28.880] If you have an officer there, then that's, you know, what do you want me to do? [55:28.880 --> 55:37.920] I want you to dispatch an officer to take my complaint against this officer. [55:37.920 --> 55:41.000] Once you've done it a while, you'll get good at it. [55:41.000 --> 55:45.440] I called 9-1-1 and I did this three times. [55:45.440 --> 55:51.680] I called them on the guards at the Tarrant County courthouse last August. [55:51.680 --> 55:56.160] I called them and I said, I need you to dispatch an officer to take my criminal complaint against [55:56.160 --> 56:00.000] these two guards here at the Tarrant County courthouse. [56:00.000 --> 56:01.000] What did they do? [56:01.000 --> 56:04.920] Well, they followed policy. [56:04.920 --> 56:09.720] You want us to send an officer to arrest them for following policy? [56:09.720 --> 56:14.080] Yeah, that's about the size of it. [56:14.080 --> 56:17.000] The dispatcher tries to give me some arguments. [56:17.000 --> 56:20.360] She's trying to tell me law and I said, hold on, hold on. [56:20.360 --> 56:22.040] I thought you were the dispatcher. [56:22.040 --> 56:25.000] Are you an ADA, Assistant District Attorney? [56:25.000 --> 56:27.320] Well, no, I'm a dispatcher. [56:27.320 --> 56:29.520] So you're not a lawyer? [56:29.520 --> 56:36.840] She said, well, no, then don't give me legal advice, dispatch. [56:36.840 --> 56:42.520] Keep in mind when you call 9-1-1, it's recorded. [56:42.520 --> 56:44.320] That's why I called because it's recorded. [56:44.320 --> 56:49.120] But can they actually dispatch like a federal officer if you are quoting like a federal [56:49.120 --> 56:50.120] law? [56:50.120 --> 56:51.720] No, they'll never dispatch a federal. [56:51.720 --> 56:54.720] They don't need to. [56:54.720 --> 56:56.040] They'll dispatch one of their own. [56:56.040 --> 57:01.360] And then you get a policeman out there and when I ask them to come out, I tell them, [57:01.360 --> 57:08.720] I need you to send someone to take my complaint under and I state the code. [57:08.720 --> 57:10.720] So I'm real specific. [57:10.720 --> 57:15.480] And you get an officer out there and you get to see this chicken dance. [57:15.480 --> 57:20.320] That's where he's shifting from one foot to the other trying to find a way out of this [57:20.320 --> 57:27.720] pickle you've put him in because you call 9-1-1 and had him dispatched to an emergency [57:27.720 --> 57:32.360] and you're trying to get him to arrest one of his buddies. [57:32.360 --> 57:34.360] His problem is you're the victim. [57:34.360 --> 57:39.760] Yeah, but that's not going to backfire because if it's coming from the same precinct, the [57:39.760 --> 57:44.120] police department, they're not going to end up, but they can't, I guess, because this [57:44.120 --> 57:47.680] is already the plaintiff's mate with 9-1-1, is that it? [57:47.680 --> 57:49.200] You're the victim. [57:49.200 --> 57:53.080] They can't come out there and start thumping on you now. [57:53.080 --> 57:55.400] Perceptions everything. [57:55.400 --> 58:01.720] I called 9-1-1 and then the officer that they sent out, I told him I want you to arrest [58:01.720 --> 58:07.000] these two guys and he looked at me and he said, well, I could arrest you. [58:07.000 --> 58:10.280] Are you threatening me? [58:10.280 --> 58:12.640] I called 9-1-1 on him. [58:12.640 --> 58:15.720] Oh, that was so much fun. [58:15.720 --> 58:17.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton. [58:17.440 --> 58:24.440] Steve Skidmore, Rufa Radio, I call in number 512-646-1984. [58:24.440 --> 58:25.560] I missed the last break. [58:25.560 --> 58:26.680] I thought it was the long one. [58:26.680 --> 58:28.340] This is the long break. [58:28.340 --> 58:34.240] So you'll have time to go to our website, Logos Radio Network, and look at the gun giveaway [58:34.240 --> 58:35.240] we got. [58:35.240 --> 58:42.320] For every $25, you get your name in the hat for a drawing and help the radio station stay [58:42.320 --> 58:43.320] alive. [58:43.320 --> 58:50.320] We'll 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 --> 59:00.980] can really help. [59:00.980 --> 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 --> 59:10.340] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.340 --> 59:13.440] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.440 --> 59:18.680] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.680 --> 59:22.960] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:22.960 --> 59:27.880] of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.880 --> 59:32.900] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.900 --> 59:45.680] Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [59:45.680 --> 59:48.280] us online at bfa.org. [59:48.280 --> 01:00:03.160] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:03.160 --> 01:00:07.760] This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, online [01:00:07.760 --> 01:00:09.480] at thelibertybeat.com. [01:00:09.480 --> 01:00:13.880] I'm Brian Hagan with your Liberty Beat for Friday, January 30th, 2015. [01:00:13.880 --> 01:00:22.320] Gold is trading at $1,258, silver $16.94, and bitcoin is trading around $243.35. [01:00:22.320 --> 01:00:27.720] Today's bitcoin price brought to you by ExpressCoin, the fastest, most reliable way to buy bitcoin. [01:00:27.720 --> 01:00:30.560] Buy bitcoin today at ExpressCoin.com. [01:00:30.560 --> 01:00:33.240] Your job, your home, your car, your money. [01:00:33.240 --> 01:00:37.520] All these things provide you with a sense of security, but what about your family security? [01:00:37.520 --> 01:00:41.040] What have you done to prepare if all of these things were suddenly gone? [01:00:41.040 --> 01:00:45.680] eFoodsDirect has the food security you need for every emergency. [01:00:45.680 --> 01:00:48.200] eFoodsDirect is food security. [01:00:48.200 --> 01:00:55.400] Go to eFoodsDirect.com slash Liberty Beat or call 800-620-5520 and mention Liberty Beat [01:00:55.400 --> 01:01:01.000] for 50% off their food preparation planning packs. [01:01:01.000 --> 01:01:04.800] While appearing before the Senate Armed Forces Committee, former Secretary of State Henry [01:01:04.800 --> 01:01:09.240] Kissinger was confronted by protesters calling for his arrest. [01:01:09.240 --> 01:01:13.040] Protesters with code pink interrupted the proceedings, holding a banner and carrying [01:01:13.040 --> 01:01:14.040] handcuffs. [01:01:14.040 --> 01:01:18.720] Senator John McCain referred to the protesters as low life scum when demanding the Capitol [01:01:18.720 --> 01:01:19.720] Police remove them. [01:01:19.720 --> 01:01:25.160] If we can't get the Capitol Hill police in here immediately, McCain apologized to Kissinger. [01:01:25.160 --> 01:01:31.280] I have never seen anything as disgraceful and outrageous and despicable. [01:01:31.280 --> 01:01:36.240] Ross Ulbrich trial, day nine, has the jury heard testimony from former FBI agent Il-Won [01:01:36.240 --> 01:01:40.520] Yeom, who testified about the role he played in seizing and analyzing Silk Road servers [01:01:40.520 --> 01:01:41.520] in Bitcoin. [01:01:41.520 --> 01:01:44.980] Also of significance yesterday, the government began the story of a Silk Road vendor who [01:01:44.980 --> 01:01:48.840] threatened to release the names of thousands of user identities if Dread Pirate Roberts [01:01:48.840 --> 01:01:51.360] would not pay him $700,000. [01:01:51.360 --> 01:01:56.040] It was this threat that would lead Dread Pirate Roberts, as shown to the jury on Torchette, [01:01:56.040 --> 01:02:01.360] to tell a member of Hells Angels Canada that he wanted to see his blackmailer executed. [01:02:01.360 --> 01:02:05.400] As the tension rose, today's proceedings came to an end just before the government laid [01:02:05.400 --> 01:02:08.840] out the details of the alleged murder-for-hire arrangement. [01:02:08.840 --> 01:02:13.200] It was apparent that the prosecution was raising that evidence just before they rested their [01:02:13.200 --> 01:02:14.200] case. [01:02:14.200 --> 01:02:17.600] The Liberty Beat's John Bush, covering the trial in New York, says that judging by the [01:02:17.600 --> 01:02:22.500] faces of the jurors, that aspect of the case may have an impact on their decisions. [01:02:22.500 --> 01:02:25.720] The Liberty Beat's continuing trial coverage continues next week. [01:02:25.720 --> 01:02:30.040] See thelibertybeat.com for details on how you can help keep that coverage happening. [01:02:30.040 --> 01:02:35.120] The Liberty Beat is made possible by WatchMyBit.com, the first ever micropayment-based video service. [01:02:35.120 --> 01:02:40.160] If you're a content creator, visit WatchMyBit.com to learn how you can use Bitcoin to generate [01:02:40.160 --> 01:02:41.920] revenue for your art. [01:02:41.920 --> 01:02:43.560] That's WatchMyBit.com. [01:02:43.560 --> 01:02:47.640] Support also comes from Justice Ranveer's Bitcoinism.LibertyMeet. [01:02:47.640 --> 01:02:50.120] Thoughts on Bitcoin and the future digital economy? [01:02:50.120 --> 01:02:53.040] Check out the blog at Bitcoinism.LibertyMeet. [01:02:53.040 --> 01:02:57.680] This is the Liberty Beat for Friday, January 30th, 2015. [01:02:57.680 --> 01:03:06.360] Check out the website at thelibertybeat.com. [01:03:27.680 --> 01:03:31.320] Okay, we are back. [01:03:31.320 --> 01:03:36.040] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, RuBloy Radio, and we're talking to Alex in New York. [01:03:36.040 --> 01:03:44.760] And Alex, I would not suggest you do this before you've read the criminal procedure [01:03:44.760 --> 01:03:47.760] code a couple of times. [01:03:47.760 --> 01:03:50.680] By the way, one thing, what happens if they take the phone? [01:03:50.680 --> 01:03:56.480] I mean, I could easily see them just taking the phone and smashing it or whatever, confiscating [01:03:56.480 --> 01:03:57.480] it. [01:03:57.480 --> 01:04:07.720] Oh, but in Texas, there's probably something similar in New York. [01:04:07.720 --> 01:04:13.600] It's a felony to interfere with a 911 call. [01:04:13.600 --> 01:04:20.480] The trick is, I don't care what they do, you're in New York, so you have a good grand jury. [01:04:20.480 --> 01:04:33.360] So what you do is, if you always think, what will play well before a grand jury of my peers? [01:04:33.360 --> 01:04:41.240] So I tried to call 911 because these guys had guns and they were agitated. [01:04:41.240 --> 01:04:44.840] Agitated is their favorite term. [01:04:44.840 --> 01:04:49.440] They always want to accuse you of being agitated. [01:04:49.440 --> 01:04:52.360] So you accuse them first. [01:04:52.360 --> 01:04:55.280] Make some nuts when you do that. [01:04:55.280 --> 01:05:05.320] So you try to call 911 because you're afraid of this guy with a gun and he interferes with [01:05:05.320 --> 01:05:08.440] the 911 call. [01:05:08.440 --> 01:05:12.720] Just mark up another one. [01:05:12.720 --> 01:05:17.480] Once you got the code down, and you really need to read the penal code a couple of times [01:05:17.480 --> 01:05:25.040] as well, there's a lot of the penal code that goes to really obscure stuff, and 90% of it [01:05:25.040 --> 01:05:28.920] goes to strange stuff that you really won't care about. [01:05:28.920 --> 01:05:36.880] Primarily, the thing you want to read the most are assault, a terroristic threat if [01:05:36.880 --> 01:05:42.320] you've got one, obstruction of justice, witness tampering. [01:05:42.320 --> 01:05:45.880] These are the things they do to you. [01:05:45.880 --> 01:05:55.480] If you dial 911 and call the police on a policeman, and that policeman you call says anything [01:05:55.480 --> 01:06:02.720] that a reasonable person of ordinary prudence could construe as threatening, obstruction [01:06:02.720 --> 01:06:09.240] of justice, tampering with a witness, shielding from prosecution, they begin to stack up really [01:06:09.240 --> 01:06:13.600] fast. [01:06:13.600 --> 01:06:20.760] They're not used to somebody knowing the codes, and they're especially not used to someone [01:06:20.760 --> 01:06:25.680] who doesn't get upset when they violate the codes. [01:06:25.680 --> 01:06:28.680] This is how you keep from being- [01:06:28.680 --> 01:06:31.960] Do these things apply to officers and officials just the same? [01:06:31.960 --> 01:06:37.320] In other words, I know usually they have special rules for officers or they have special rights [01:06:37.320 --> 01:06:39.840] or whatever it is that's given to them. [01:06:39.840 --> 01:06:44.200] Do they apply to them equally or judges or office? [01:06:44.200 --> 01:06:48.960] It doesn't matter if they're public or non-public officials, employees, it applies across the [01:06:48.960 --> 01:06:50.800] board equally. [01:06:50.800 --> 01:06:54.160] You hear about official immunity. [01:06:54.160 --> 01:06:59.140] When they say official immunity, they leave something out. [01:06:59.140 --> 01:07:06.600] What they leave out is official immunity from civil litigation. [01:07:06.600 --> 01:07:14.800] No one has immunity from criminal prosecution, period. [01:07:14.800 --> 01:07:19.600] If a public official violates a law relating to his office, in every state it's a special [01:07:19.600 --> 01:07:21.480] crime. [01:07:21.480 --> 01:07:30.660] There is a section in your criminal procedure code that will address public officials. [01:07:30.660 --> 01:07:35.360] Only public officials can commit these crimes. [01:07:35.360 --> 01:07:40.280] Official oppression is the primary one. [01:07:40.280 --> 01:07:43.160] Official oppression. [01:07:43.160 --> 01:07:46.240] Texas has two that are together. [01:07:46.240 --> 01:07:54.360] Most states call the same act of official misconduct, but Texas has two statutes. [01:07:54.360 --> 01:07:59.140] One's official misconduct, one's official oppression. [01:07:59.140 --> 01:08:06.400] Official misconduct in Texas is where a public official misappropriates public funds or property [01:08:06.400 --> 01:08:10.580] belonging to the government. [01:08:10.580 --> 01:08:13.060] Official oppression is where they deny a right. [01:08:13.060 --> 01:08:17.080] In most states, those two are combined into one charge. [01:08:17.080 --> 01:08:21.920] In New York, I believe it's official misconduct. [01:08:21.920 --> 01:08:31.040] I brought this up already one time in court, and then the opposing party's attorney actually [01:08:31.040 --> 01:08:37.480] said, wait a minute, he doesn't have standing to bring those charges, they're like private. [01:08:37.480 --> 01:08:40.080] Because all the statutes and codes are private. [01:08:40.080 --> 01:08:45.640] And he goes, those are private, he doesn't have standing to bring those charges, and [01:08:45.640 --> 01:08:46.640] the judge agreed. [01:08:46.640 --> 01:08:47.640] So- [01:08:47.640 --> 01:08:48.640] Okay, hold on. [01:08:48.640 --> 01:08:54.920] He was right about that, but you weren't bringing the charges. [01:08:54.920 --> 01:08:58.360] You were giving notice of crime. [01:08:58.360 --> 01:09:03.800] And that you have a duty to do, especially if it's a felony. [01:09:03.800 --> 01:09:08.600] If it's a felony and you don't report it, then you can be arrested. [01:09:08.600 --> 01:09:12.040] So killed a messenger here, guys. [01:09:12.040 --> 01:09:14.800] I didn't write the code, I just read it. [01:09:14.800 --> 01:09:15.800] And he violated it. [01:09:15.800 --> 01:09:18.800] If you want to get mad at somebody, get mad at him. [01:09:18.800 --> 01:09:23.560] So in other words, that's why you go to your public officials to bring this, because it [01:09:23.560 --> 01:09:27.600] is their duty to bring these charges, and that's what you do, and that's what you're [01:09:27.600 --> 01:09:28.600] saying. [01:09:28.600 --> 01:09:29.600] So how come you never go to the DA? [01:09:29.600 --> 01:09:33.280] You say you go to the judge, you go to the bailiff, you go to all the, to the AG. [01:09:33.280 --> 01:09:42.520] There's nothing in law that directs a complaint to a prosecuting attorney, nothing. [01:09:42.520 --> 01:09:50.560] It's all directed to some magistrate. [01:09:50.560 --> 01:09:52.920] They are the same person. [01:09:52.920 --> 01:09:56.880] They wear two hats. [01:09:56.880 --> 01:10:01.280] When a judge is adjudicating a case, he's got his judge hats on. [01:10:01.280 --> 01:10:08.560] But when a citizen gives notice to the judge that a crime has been committed, or if a judge [01:10:08.560 --> 01:10:15.640] becomes aware in any manner that a crime's been committed, his judge's hat comes off, [01:10:15.640 --> 01:10:18.480] his magistrate's hat goes on. [01:10:18.480 --> 01:10:25.440] And now he has a duty to hold an examining trial and make a determination of probable [01:10:25.440 --> 01:10:28.720] cause. [01:10:28.720 --> 01:10:35.600] You go give notice to the judge that a crime's been committed, his judge's hat comes off, [01:10:35.600 --> 01:10:41.400] his magistrate's hat goes on, and he has a duty to hold an examining trial. [01:10:41.400 --> 01:10:43.920] But you don't care what he does. [01:10:43.920 --> 01:10:51.020] You got, you think of it in terms of this little tar baby, I got a little tar baby here. [01:10:51.020 --> 01:10:54.440] And I go up to this public official and say, I got this little tar baby here, you want [01:10:54.440 --> 01:10:55.440] to touch it? [01:10:55.440 --> 01:10:58.360] Come on, come on, come on, touch it, touch it for me. [01:10:58.360 --> 01:11:02.140] Because when he touches it, it's going to stick to it. [01:11:02.140 --> 01:11:09.080] So you ask the official to do something you actually don't want him to do, because he [01:11:09.080 --> 01:11:10.560] has a duty to do it. [01:11:10.560 --> 01:11:15.720] And when he doesn't, then he sticks to the tar baby and you go to the next one. [01:11:15.720 --> 01:11:21.600] I'm in a JP court, looking at some records, JP comes over and says, Mr. Kelton, you can't [01:11:21.600 --> 01:11:22.600] look at those. [01:11:22.600 --> 01:11:23.600] You're a security risk. [01:11:23.600 --> 01:11:26.360] Oh, I'm a security risk, aren't I? [01:11:26.360 --> 01:11:27.360] She says, yes, you are. [01:11:27.360 --> 01:11:31.080] So I folded them, closed the folder, slid it across the table. [01:11:31.080 --> 01:11:35.440] And by then, the bailiff had eased up beside me. [01:11:35.440 --> 01:11:39.120] I looked over at the bailiff and said, Mr. Bailiff, did you see that? [01:11:39.120 --> 01:11:41.520] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. [01:11:41.520 --> 01:11:45.200] Arrest that woman. [01:11:45.200 --> 01:11:47.440] That was so much fun. [01:11:47.440 --> 01:11:49.520] He couldn't believe I said that to him. [01:11:49.520 --> 01:11:51.140] Well, I can't arrest her. [01:11:51.140 --> 01:11:52.320] This is her court. [01:11:52.320 --> 01:11:55.000] Oh, you are mistaken. [01:11:55.000 --> 01:11:57.240] This is my court. [01:11:57.240 --> 01:12:02.000] And I very generously allow her to administer it according to my law, and she just breached [01:12:02.000 --> 01:12:04.440] one of them in your sight and in your presence. [01:12:04.440 --> 01:12:06.520] Arrest that woman. [01:12:06.520 --> 01:12:09.120] I have to adjudicate the court here. [01:12:09.120 --> 01:12:10.600] I don't have time. [01:12:10.600 --> 01:12:12.320] Let me take you down to my boss. [01:12:12.320 --> 01:12:13.320] That'll work. [01:12:13.320 --> 01:12:15.880] So he takes me down to the... [01:12:15.880 --> 01:12:18.160] Can you clarify two things here for me as well? [01:12:18.160 --> 01:12:23.240] Two things, presiding judge in the county, who will see how does it work? [01:12:23.240 --> 01:12:30.240] And number two is, I've heard again, I haven't read this, but I've heard again, that a courtroom, [01:12:30.240 --> 01:12:32.840] anything that happens in that courtroom is the judge's domain. [01:12:32.840 --> 01:12:39.680] Like in other words, you can walk out of the court, curse and cuss the judge out, but he [01:12:39.680 --> 01:12:46.080] goes, in the courtroom, he's got full jurisdiction, so anybody that comes into his court, he's [01:12:46.080 --> 01:12:47.080] got full authority. [01:12:47.080 --> 01:12:48.080] No, he don't. [01:12:48.080 --> 01:12:49.080] He's the same. [01:12:49.080 --> 01:12:58.640] Okay, when they say anybody who comes into his court, only someone who is summoned into [01:12:58.640 --> 01:13:03.680] his court, or comes into his court of official business. [01:13:03.680 --> 01:13:10.880] If I walk into the courtroom, I don't want that judge even talking to me. [01:13:10.880 --> 01:13:15.720] I went into a JP court once where they're having these cattle call hearings, and sat [01:13:15.720 --> 01:13:20.120] down, I was waiting for them to bail out my ignorant brother-in-law. [01:13:20.120 --> 01:13:23.120] So I went in the courtroom, sat down and watched, and the bailiff come over and said, can I [01:13:23.120 --> 01:13:24.120] help you? [01:13:24.120 --> 01:13:25.120] No. [01:13:25.120 --> 01:13:26.600] Well, what are you doing here? [01:13:26.600 --> 01:13:28.920] None of your business. [01:13:28.920 --> 01:13:34.600] He got real excited, so I stood up and said, your honor, and interrupted the court. [01:13:34.600 --> 01:13:36.600] Judge looked up and said, well, what? [01:13:36.600 --> 01:13:41.400] I said, your honor, will you pull this bulldog off of me? [01:13:41.400 --> 01:13:43.160] The judge said, well, what's going on? [01:13:43.160 --> 01:13:46.120] Your honor, he won't tell me what he's doing here. [01:13:46.120 --> 01:13:51.120] The judge said, sir, do you mind if I ask why you're here? [01:13:51.120 --> 01:13:54.160] I said, no, I don't mind. [01:13:54.160 --> 01:13:55.160] The judge was cool. [01:13:55.160 --> 01:13:58.760] He said, well, then, sir, why are you here? [01:13:58.760 --> 01:13:59.760] Entertainment. [01:13:59.760 --> 01:14:01.760] You're here for entertainment? [01:14:01.760 --> 01:14:03.320] Yes, your honor. [01:14:03.320 --> 01:14:08.440] The judge turned to the bailiff, well, leave him alone. [01:14:08.440 --> 01:14:09.800] That's all the judge could do. [01:14:09.800 --> 01:14:11.760] He had no jurisdiction over me. [01:14:11.760 --> 01:14:14.760] Okay, because then he doesn't have the authority that way. [01:14:14.760 --> 01:14:15.760] So he- [01:14:15.760 --> 01:14:16.760] Okay, now hold on. [01:14:16.760 --> 01:14:26.360] Now, if I disrupt the court, he does have authority to keep decorum in the court. [01:14:26.360 --> 01:14:30.320] But other than that, he has no power. [01:14:30.320 --> 01:14:33.560] You have the power. [01:14:33.560 --> 01:14:38.240] If he violates a law and you observe it, then you ask the bailiff to arrest him. [01:14:38.240 --> 01:14:41.040] Bailiff is a key figure. [01:14:41.040 --> 01:14:42.360] He is a court security officer. [01:14:42.360 --> 01:14:49.440] It's his duty to keep the peace in the court, and it makes no difference who breaches it. [01:14:49.440 --> 01:14:52.440] I had a bailiff tell me, well, I can arrest the judge. [01:14:52.440 --> 01:14:54.180] I work for the judge. [01:14:54.180 --> 01:14:57.200] With all due respect, you do no such thing. [01:14:57.200 --> 01:15:02.040] You work for the sheriff of the county, and it's your duty to keep the peace, arrest [01:15:02.040 --> 01:15:03.040] him. [01:15:03.040 --> 01:15:04.080] And they never do. [01:15:04.080 --> 01:15:10.240] But then I get to file against the bailiff for protecting the judge. [01:15:10.240 --> 01:15:17.800] When you go up higher, you will find that these higher level officials, they are very [01:15:17.800 --> 01:15:22.480] aware of how dangerous you are to them. [01:15:22.480 --> 01:15:31.840] First rule, everything's political, and you for them are a political time bomb. [01:15:31.840 --> 01:15:37.360] You start filing complaints against the judge, and he knows the next time he runs for office, [01:15:37.360 --> 01:15:42.080] that chump is going to run to my opponent and tell him about these criminal charges. [01:15:42.080 --> 01:15:44.760] And I'm going to get up there, he's going to bring them up, and I'm going to say, oh, [01:15:44.760 --> 01:15:46.600] they were all frivolous. [01:15:46.600 --> 01:15:54.080] But the judge knows the second rule, perception is everything. [01:15:54.080 --> 01:15:59.640] The higher level they are, the more people they got below them that want their position, [01:15:59.640 --> 01:16:03.620] the more sensitive to this kind of thing they are. [01:16:03.620 --> 01:16:11.520] The last thing that policeman wants you to know is that fact. [01:16:11.520 --> 01:16:17.840] Once you've hammered the judge, any policeman say anything to you you don't like, you dial [01:16:17.840 --> 01:16:22.840] 911 and accuse that judge of sending him out here to harass me. [01:16:22.840 --> 01:16:25.600] Does that sound like fun? [01:16:25.600 --> 01:16:33.840] I see where you're coming from, I guess I have to find out a whole lot more about it [01:16:33.840 --> 01:16:34.840] to really read the codes. [01:16:34.840 --> 01:16:35.840] Just read the codes. [01:16:35.840 --> 01:16:36.840] Do these complaints, does it stay on the record? [01:16:36.840 --> 01:16:39.840] Do these complaints go on the record somewhere? [01:16:39.840 --> 01:16:44.160] I'm not sure what all they do with them, they try to hide them. [01:16:44.160 --> 01:16:47.480] But they're out there, they're more worried about their political opponents, got to go [01:16:47.480 --> 01:16:48.480] to break. [01:16:48.480 --> 01:16:55.120] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rural Law Radio, call in number 512-646-1984, Robin, I see [01:16:55.120 --> 01:17:02.600] you there, we'll pick you up as soon as we finish with Alex on the other side. [01:17:02.600 --> 01:17:07.480] January is the time for new beginnings, a chance to sharpen our focus on what's important [01:17:07.480 --> 01:17:10.040] and recommit to ourselves and loved ones. [01:17:10.040 --> 01:17:15.200] Logos Radio Network is holding their third gun giveaway as a part of their annual fundraiser. [01:17:15.200 --> 01:17:20.560] Donate $25 today and be entered into a drawing for a Glock 42 pistol. [01:17:20.560 --> 01:17:25.800] Second place gets two CHL classes, both sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks. [01:17:25.800 --> 01:17:32.160] The first 50 people who donate $25 will receive a free jar of My Magic Mud detoxifying tooth [01:17:32.160 --> 01:17:33.160] powder. 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[01:18:46.720 --> 01:18:51.680] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:18:51.680 --> 01:18:54.800] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:18:54.800 --> 01:19:02.200] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:02.200 --> 01:19:17.200] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:17.200 --> 01:19:26.320] Okay. [01:19:26.320 --> 01:19:27.320] We are back. [01:19:27.320 --> 01:19:30.840] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rubah Radio. [01:19:30.840 --> 01:19:36.440] Steve Skidmore bailed out on us tonight, the chump. [01:19:36.440 --> 01:19:45.600] We're talking to Alex in New York, and Alex, the key is reading the code. [01:19:45.600 --> 01:19:48.600] Once you read the code, you will become a force. [01:19:48.600 --> 01:19:49.600] All right. [01:19:49.600 --> 01:19:54.560] I'm going to start reading the code, but I've got two sum of specifics really quick, and [01:19:54.560 --> 01:19:55.560] if not, no problem. [01:19:55.560 --> 01:19:58.760] We'll pick it up another time. [01:19:58.760 --> 01:20:04.000] When I'm in court, okay, and I'll ask you specific, I don't know exactly always what's [01:20:04.000 --> 01:20:09.840] going on, and I usually like to know that I know, so no matter who lies to me, does [01:20:09.840 --> 01:20:13.000] says anything, I was like, I don't care, because I just know the truth. [01:20:13.000 --> 01:20:20.240] I know what's going on, and part of it is if you're summoned to court, right, and then [01:20:20.240 --> 01:20:23.800] you challenge everything, you ask them to prove everything, you put all the burden of [01:20:23.800 --> 01:20:28.600] proof upon them, right, and one of the main things I like to challenge is their jurisdiction [01:20:28.600 --> 01:20:36.080] to begin with right off the bat, but what I don't know is no matter what you challenge [01:20:36.080 --> 01:20:43.320] or what you ask them to prove, when they don't prove it, like the opposing party, which is [01:20:43.320 --> 01:20:49.000] normally the state, and they keep reiterating it, they keep coming back at it, like they [01:20:49.000 --> 01:20:55.080] keep alleging it or claiming it or something, anything that you're challenging upon them, [01:20:55.080 --> 01:21:00.080] and the court doesn't do anything, and it keeps coming back and keeps coming back, then [01:21:00.080 --> 01:21:02.440] I'm thinking, okay, am I making a mistake, are they- [01:21:02.440 --> 01:21:04.400] No, no, you're not making a mistake. [01:21:04.400 --> 01:21:05.400] What's going on? [01:21:05.400 --> 01:21:10.080] Like, again, I don't know exactly what's going on or where I stand, because at one [01:21:10.080 --> 01:21:15.480] point I told the judge, you know, prove jurisdiction, prove that the state imbued the court with [01:21:15.480 --> 01:21:16.480] jurisdiction. [01:21:16.480 --> 01:21:20.960] Now, this is the same day, first day that I came in, there was no plea, there was no [01:21:20.960 --> 01:21:25.320] nothing, they never even asked me, hey, the judge is like, well, when do you want to come [01:21:25.320 --> 01:21:26.320] back? [01:21:26.320 --> 01:21:28.680] And I asked the judge, well, who are you talking to? [01:21:28.680 --> 01:21:32.720] Because I even asked them to prove who I am, because I never told them who I was. [01:21:32.720 --> 01:21:36.120] They kept saying, well, this is this guy, you know, they gave me an idea, I was like, [01:21:36.120 --> 01:21:37.120] well, prove it. [01:21:37.120 --> 01:21:40.840] And the guy goes, well, listen, don't play around with me, when do you want to come back? [01:21:40.840 --> 01:21:42.840] And I was like, well, who are you asking? [01:21:42.840 --> 01:21:45.120] Okay, that was number one. [01:21:45.120 --> 01:21:49.080] And I asked them to prove jurisdiction, and at the end I was like, all right, you asked [01:21:49.080 --> 01:21:51.400] me to come back, I know what authority? [01:21:51.400 --> 01:21:54.280] And then the first thing he said is put this man in cuffs. [01:21:54.280 --> 01:21:58.760] I was cuffed, taken away, and again, if they don't have jurisdiction, where do they even [01:21:58.760 --> 01:22:01.320] have the authority to even do that? [01:22:01.320 --> 01:22:06.320] They didn't even tell me for what charge, I asked them, never mentioned anything. [01:22:06.320 --> 01:22:12.480] Now, normally that's not even an issue, but the point is that, again, I don't know if [01:22:12.480 --> 01:22:18.800] I did something wrong, if somehow it was my actions or words or something that they took [01:22:18.800 --> 01:22:21.720] a perception that they got jurisdiction somehow. [01:22:21.720 --> 01:22:24.520] Okay, hold on, hold on. [01:22:24.520 --> 01:22:31.920] Once you challenged jurisdiction, and then the judge overruled your challenge, you don't [01:22:31.920 --> 01:22:37.000] address that again, not in this court. [01:22:37.000 --> 01:22:40.800] You are only there to set the record for appeal. [01:22:40.800 --> 01:22:41.800] For the appeal. [01:22:41.800 --> 01:22:49.120] Still, how do I know, was I just being pushed around, or was it something that I did? [01:22:49.120 --> 01:22:50.120] Because I know they can- [01:22:50.120 --> 01:22:52.920] No, you're just being pushed around. [01:22:52.920 --> 01:22:55.120] You're just being pushed around, okay. [01:22:55.120 --> 01:22:57.640] That's what they do, especially in the lower courts. [01:22:57.640 --> 01:23:03.920] As you get higher up, they're less prone to do that kind of thing. [01:23:03.920 --> 01:23:06.680] But the way you stop that stuff- [01:23:06.680 --> 01:23:12.880] At this point, when the judge didn't have jurisdiction, and the court, I guess all the [01:23:12.880 --> 01:23:17.000] police officers are bailiffs, I take it, the bailiff is putting cuffs on me. [01:23:17.000 --> 01:23:21.040] I mean, I immediately told the bailiff, wait a minute, you just heard it, he doesn't have [01:23:21.040 --> 01:23:25.000] jurisdiction, there's no proof, you have no authority to touch me. [01:23:25.000 --> 01:23:32.040] And the guy goes, and the police just says, don't move, don't give me a hard time, I gotta [01:23:32.040 --> 01:23:33.640] put cuffs on you. [01:23:33.640 --> 01:23:35.440] I didn't know what to do at that point. [01:23:35.440 --> 01:23:37.400] So- [01:23:37.400 --> 01:23:38.400] Don't get shot. [01:23:38.400 --> 01:23:39.400] No, of course. [01:23:39.400 --> 01:23:40.400] No, no, no. [01:23:40.400 --> 01:23:41.400] I mean, again, I'm not- [01:23:41.400 --> 01:23:42.400] Okay. [01:23:42.400 --> 01:23:45.640] Keep in mind, you can't do it there. [01:23:45.640 --> 01:23:52.080] You are not gonna force a corrupt judge to stop being corrupt in his courtroom. [01:23:52.080 --> 01:23:57.160] You're gonna do it outside his courtroom. [01:23:57.160 --> 01:24:04.160] I had a judge that really, really wanted to have me arrested, and when he told the bailiffs [01:24:04.160 --> 01:24:07.440] to arrest me, I didn't flinch. [01:24:07.440 --> 01:24:14.740] And he saw that, and he stopped them, because he's thinking, this rascal is setting me up, [01:24:14.740 --> 01:24:18.160] and he was right. [01:24:18.160 --> 01:24:20.880] You want them to think you're setting them up. [01:24:20.880 --> 01:24:26.240] You challenge subject matter jurisdiction when the judge overrules it, you don't address [01:24:26.240 --> 01:24:27.240] that again. [01:24:27.240 --> 01:24:30.720] You've already addressed it, you got it on the record. [01:24:30.720 --> 01:24:35.640] Now you go to other issues. [01:24:35.640 --> 01:24:37.400] You still make your... [01:24:37.400 --> 01:24:39.200] When you have... [01:24:39.200 --> 01:24:42.840] Just because you challenge subject matter jurisdiction doesn't mean you shouldn't adjudicate [01:24:42.840 --> 01:24:43.840] your case. [01:24:43.840 --> 01:24:49.400] Because if you get overruled on subject matter jurisdiction, and you haven't addressed your [01:24:49.400 --> 01:24:55.280] other issues, then you waive them. [01:24:55.280 --> 01:24:56.280] And you got these- [01:24:56.280 --> 01:25:06.760] So when you go to appeal, if you go to appeal, and you bring in several issues, isn't that [01:25:06.760 --> 01:25:12.040] going to make each issue even weaker, rather than if you just had one or two issues that [01:25:12.040 --> 01:25:14.080] you go on appeal for, especially jurisdiction? [01:25:14.080 --> 01:25:17.960] Because if you have jurisdiction, you don't really need anything else anyway. [01:25:17.960 --> 01:25:21.840] That's pretty big to overlook. [01:25:21.840 --> 01:25:22.840] I don't know. [01:25:22.840 --> 01:25:27.920] I'm just asking, doesn't that water down the other issues, so to speak? [01:25:27.920 --> 01:25:28.920] Yeah. [01:25:28.920 --> 01:25:32.760] That's if you have a good claim for no jurisdiction. [01:25:32.760 --> 01:25:35.920] Just saying they don't have jurisdiction is insufficient. [01:25:35.920 --> 01:25:38.840] You have to have grounds to show that they didn't have jurisdiction. [01:25:38.840 --> 01:25:42.000] Well, because it's upon them to prove it, and they never did. [01:25:42.000 --> 01:25:44.840] They have to document it, and they never did. [01:25:44.840 --> 01:25:45.840] No. [01:25:45.840 --> 01:25:46.840] There is a presumption of jurisdiction. [01:25:46.840 --> 01:25:47.840] Burden is on them. [01:25:47.840 --> 01:25:48.840] Well, yes, but until it's challenged. [01:25:48.840 --> 01:25:49.840] Once it's challenged- [01:25:49.840 --> 01:25:50.840] Yeah. [01:25:50.840 --> 01:25:54.000] But you didn't challenge it. [01:25:54.000 --> 01:25:56.520] You just said he didn't have it. [01:25:56.520 --> 01:26:02.720] You need to state why he doesn't have jurisdiction to overcome the prima facie presumption that [01:26:02.720 --> 01:26:04.600] he does. [01:26:04.600 --> 01:26:06.360] Hold on a second. [01:26:06.360 --> 01:26:14.640] I have dozens of case laws, dozens of case citations, from federal to appeals and everything, [01:26:14.640 --> 01:26:20.440] and it says that once jurisdiction is challenged, it cannot be presumed, they can't have it [01:26:20.440 --> 01:26:21.440] by will. [01:26:21.440 --> 01:26:22.440] Okay. [01:26:22.440 --> 01:26:26.960] Go back and get a definition of what amounts to challenging jurisdiction. [01:26:26.960 --> 01:26:30.160] Asking them to prove it. [01:26:30.160 --> 01:26:32.200] That's what you're saying. [01:26:32.200 --> 01:26:34.680] Show me case law that says that. [01:26:34.680 --> 01:26:41.640] Case law that I have says that a challenge is made based on a showing of prima facie [01:26:41.640 --> 01:26:46.560] evidence that the court does not have jurisdiction. [01:26:46.560 --> 01:26:50.780] Just waving your hand and saying, I challenge it, is insufficient. [01:26:50.780 --> 01:26:54.040] That's not a challenge to jurisdiction. [01:26:54.040 --> 01:26:57.680] You must show some cause as to why he doesn't have jurisdiction. [01:26:57.680 --> 01:27:00.680] Well, let's see here. [01:27:00.680 --> 01:27:05.120] Two reasons, okay, I guess in this case. [01:27:05.120 --> 01:27:06.120] Number one- [01:27:06.120 --> 01:27:07.120] Okay. [01:27:07.120 --> 01:27:08.120] Wait a minute. [01:27:08.120 --> 01:27:09.120] We're going to run out of time. [01:27:09.120 --> 01:27:11.440] I've got another caller that's been on quite a while. [01:27:11.440 --> 01:27:12.440] All right. [01:27:12.440 --> 01:27:13.440] Okay. [01:27:13.440 --> 01:27:15.440] We could kick this back and forth all night. [01:27:15.440 --> 01:27:16.440] Another time. [01:27:16.440 --> 01:27:17.440] Okay. [01:27:17.440 --> 01:27:18.440] But I understand what you're saying. [01:27:18.440 --> 01:27:21.640] I'm starting to get more of an idea and I appreciate that. [01:27:21.640 --> 01:27:24.160] So with that, you know, have a good night. [01:27:24.160 --> 01:27:25.160] Thank you. [01:27:25.160 --> 01:27:26.160] Okay. [01:27:26.160 --> 01:27:27.160] Thank you, Alex. [01:27:27.160 --> 01:27:28.160] Okay. [01:27:28.160 --> 01:27:30.320] We are going to Robin in Florida. [01:27:30.320 --> 01:27:31.320] Hello, Robin. [01:27:31.320 --> 01:27:32.320] Hello, Randy. [01:27:32.320 --> 01:27:33.320] You can hear me? [01:27:33.320 --> 01:27:34.320] Yes. [01:27:34.320 --> 01:27:35.320] Oh, good. [01:27:35.320 --> 01:27:36.320] How you doing tonight? [01:27:36.320 --> 01:27:37.320] Doing good. [01:27:37.320 --> 01:27:38.320] Good. [01:27:38.320 --> 01:27:46.320] Even though that chump Steve Skidmore didn't show up. [01:27:46.320 --> 01:27:52.320] It's been a long time since I got to chump him on the air. [01:27:52.320 --> 01:27:53.320] I know. [01:27:53.320 --> 01:27:59.360] Well, I got a situation. [01:27:59.360 --> 01:28:06.000] I'm looking at this through judicial legal glasses and political glasses, just like you've [01:28:06.000 --> 01:28:08.520] taught us all how to do. [01:28:08.520 --> 01:28:17.200] I have a property that I used to own, it went to foreclosure and got sold. [01:28:17.200 --> 01:28:20.560] But that particular property, I'd rented it out to a real estate agent. [01:28:20.560 --> 01:28:24.680] And I mentioned this to you before a while back, but now I got more clarity on what I [01:28:24.680 --> 01:28:28.120] can possibly do and I want to get your take on it. [01:28:28.120 --> 01:28:30.040] Basically he, his wife rented it. [01:28:30.040 --> 01:28:31.040] I'm sorry. [01:28:31.040 --> 01:28:35.960] They both rented it from me for 600 a month, which is like a thousand less than the market [01:28:35.960 --> 01:28:36.960] value. [01:28:36.960 --> 01:28:44.120] Cause it was, it had a judgment already and he listed it so they were going to do a short [01:28:44.120 --> 01:28:45.120] sale. [01:28:45.120 --> 01:28:48.240] So he was the listing agent. [01:28:48.240 --> 01:28:52.600] They rented it in the meantime until the short sale was done. [01:28:52.600 --> 01:28:57.000] So I was thinking, Oh, you know, I'll just rent it for 600 a month for five months or [01:28:57.000 --> 01:28:59.000] wherever that one takes. [01:28:59.000 --> 01:29:02.320] Well, that took like five, four, four or five years. [01:29:02.320 --> 01:29:11.960] So that was in 2010, July, it went to sale November 7th of 2014. [01:29:11.960 --> 01:29:18.720] So wait a minute, wait a minute, hold on. [01:29:18.720 --> 01:29:26.320] What is the statute of limitations for foreclosure in Florida? [01:29:26.320 --> 01:29:29.240] It's five years. [01:29:29.240 --> 01:29:30.240] Did they make it under? [01:29:30.240 --> 01:29:36.480] Meantime of doing all this, you know, I was just sort of, wait, wait, wait, wait, hold [01:29:36.480 --> 01:29:37.480] on. [01:29:37.480 --> 01:29:38.480] We're about to go to break. [01:29:38.480 --> 01:29:46.640] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rue Blah Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:46.640 --> 01:29:47.640] Give us a call. [01:29:47.640 --> 01:29:50.640] See if you can stump the only chump that's left. [01:29:50.640 --> 01:30:15.000] We'll be right back. [01:30:15.000 --> 01:30:44.760] Thank you. [01:30:45.840 --> 01:30:47.560] Wads have used up chewing gum. [01:30:47.560 --> 01:30:52.480] Americans chuck 120,000 tons of them into the environment every year. [01:30:52.480 --> 01:30:56.200] They stick to our streets, squeeze onto shoes and cling to our clothes. [01:30:56.200 --> 01:30:57.200] Ugh. [01:30:57.200 --> 01:30:59.960] And once these wads glom on, they're nearly impossible to remove. [01:30:59.960 --> 01:31:06.200] It's a sticky problem, but science is serving up a solution, an unsticky gum called Rev7. [01:31:06.200 --> 01:31:08.560] Rev7 is the first easily removable gum. [01:31:08.560 --> 01:31:10.560] It simply washes out with soap and water. [01:31:10.560 --> 01:31:12.000] It's also biodegradable. [01:31:12.000 --> 01:31:15.240] And flavor testers say it tastes just as good as the sticky stuff. [01:31:15.240 --> 01:31:19.520] Given that it's a synthetic plastic polymer, like other commercial chewing gums, I doubt [01:31:19.520 --> 01:31:20.920] I'll be chewing the stuff myself. [01:31:20.920 --> 01:31:24.200] But I'm hoping those other gum chewers out there make the switch. [01:31:24.200 --> 01:31:25.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:25.760 --> 01:31:30.640] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.640 --> 01:31:31.640] I lost my son. [01:31:31.640 --> 01:31:32.640] My nephew. [01:31:32.640 --> 01:31:33.640] My uncle. [01:31:33.640 --> 01:31:34.640] My son. [01:31:34.640 --> 01:31:35.640] On September 11th, 2001. [01:31:35.640 --> 01:31:38.920] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. [01:31:38.920 --> 01:31:39.920] World Trade Center 7. [01:31:39.920 --> 01:31:43.080] A 47-story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [01:31:43.080 --> 01:31:46.920] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [01:31:46.920 --> 01:31:51.720] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more [01:31:51.720 --> 01:31:52.720] to the story. [01:31:52.720 --> 01:31:54.120] Bring justice to my son. [01:31:54.120 --> 01:31:55.120] My uncle. [01:31:55.120 --> 01:31:56.120] My nephew. [01:31:56.120 --> 01:31:57.120] My son. [01:31:57.120 --> 01:31:58.120] Go to buildingwhat.org. [01:31:58.120 --> 01:31:59.120] Why it fell. [01:31:59.120 --> 01:32:00.120] Why it matters. [01:32:00.120 --> 01:32:01.120] And what you can do. [01:32:01.120 --> 01:32:04.920] After work, I'm so tired that I want to be left alone to sleep. [01:32:04.920 --> 01:32:06.480] Hey, listen to me. [01:32:06.480 --> 01:32:07.480] Who are you? [01:32:07.480 --> 01:32:11.480] I knew you years ago when you felt healthy and young and everything worked on your body. [01:32:11.480 --> 01:32:12.720] Do you remember that? [01:32:12.720 --> 01:32:13.720] Yes. [01:32:13.720 --> 01:32:14.960] I wish I felt like that now. [01:32:14.960 --> 01:32:20.120] You can feel like that again with a new micro plant powder formulation called iodine now. [01:32:20.120 --> 01:32:24.720] It cleans the entire body from head to toe and feeds the body what it really needs. [01:32:24.720 --> 01:32:28.080] You'll be in a better mood and you'll find more drive in your romantic life. [01:32:28.080 --> 01:32:29.080] Really? [01:32:29.080 --> 01:32:31.560] I got to try iodine now and feel good again. [01:32:31.560 --> 01:32:36.080] It also protects you from radiation, heavy metals, fluoride, chlorine, and bromine, including [01:32:36.080 --> 01:32:38.000] cancer and most major diseases. [01:32:38.000 --> 01:32:39.000] You'll be amazed. [01:32:39.000 --> 01:32:40.360] You can be your own doctor. [01:32:40.360 --> 01:32:43.200] I want to keep you out of the hospital and off pharmaceuticals. [01:32:43.200 --> 01:32:44.200] Wow. [01:32:44.200 --> 01:32:46.200] Why are you so nice to me? [01:32:46.200 --> 01:32:47.200] Because I'm you. [01:32:47.200 --> 01:32:49.920] You're out of shape and I need a better looking future. [01:32:49.920 --> 01:32:50.920] Call 888-910-4367. [01:32:50.920 --> 01:32:51.920] That's 888-910-4367. [01:32:51.920 --> 01:32:52.920] Or visit microplantpowder.com. [01:32:52.920 --> 01:32:53.920] Microplantpowder.com. [01:32:53.920 --> 01:33:04.920] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:04.920 --> 01:33:05.920] Logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:05.920 --> 01:33:31.040] Okay. [01:33:31.040 --> 01:33:32.040] We are back. [01:33:32.040 --> 01:33:39.400] I'm Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rural Law Radio, here with Robin from Florida. [01:33:39.400 --> 01:33:43.000] Okay. [01:33:43.000 --> 01:33:44.480] Five years. [01:33:44.480 --> 01:33:52.760] When did you first get a notice of acceleration? [01:33:52.760 --> 01:33:55.600] That's the day the clock starts. [01:33:55.600 --> 01:34:04.440] August, September, probably September 2008, but actually I'm going to get to that. [01:34:04.440 --> 01:34:08.640] That's a secondary issue that I want to get to. [01:34:08.640 --> 01:34:14.160] I do want to sue on that, but my deal is with him first. [01:34:14.160 --> 01:34:16.640] What he did is he was supposed to do a short sale. [01:34:16.640 --> 01:34:18.600] He's a real estate agent. [01:34:18.600 --> 01:34:21.480] I trusted him to do that. [01:34:21.480 --> 01:34:23.520] I was just giving it to him, putting it in his hands. [01:34:23.520 --> 01:34:29.520] He has a special designation as a short sale expert, how they give those designations to [01:34:29.520 --> 01:34:31.080] real estate agents. [01:34:31.080 --> 01:34:37.040] Basically, I gave him all my financial information, and he apparently forwarded it to the title [01:34:37.040 --> 01:34:42.040] company or the short sale company that was taking care of the short sale. [01:34:42.040 --> 01:34:49.640] They dragged their feet, they got my information, the bank wasn't doing anything. [01:34:49.640 --> 01:34:54.720] Over a period of time, six months became a year, a year became two years, and I wasn't [01:34:54.720 --> 01:34:55.880] so much worried about it. [01:34:55.880 --> 01:35:05.480] He was paying me, even though it was below market rent, but a couple years, almost two [01:35:05.480 --> 01:35:15.400] years ago, I get a 1099 in the mail, apparently for, I don't know what, from him, from his [01:35:15.400 --> 01:35:25.320] real estate company, 1099 Miscellaneous, saying that I had $5,000 of income from him. [01:35:25.320 --> 01:35:27.000] So I asked him, what is this? [01:35:27.000 --> 01:35:29.640] He says, oh, this is the money I paid you. [01:35:29.640 --> 01:35:34.760] I did all this in email, just so you know, like you said, like Ken's rule, I did everything [01:35:34.760 --> 01:35:37.240] via email, everything's on the record. [01:35:37.240 --> 01:35:42.920] So apparently, some money, I don't know how he came up with this figure, and I asked him, [01:35:42.920 --> 01:35:46.840] please send me copies of the checks that you're claiming that you paid me. [01:35:46.840 --> 01:35:51.680] I mean, he never paid me, and the only thing he paid me for was rent for the personal property, [01:35:51.680 --> 01:35:57.840] for the house, for his personal rent, and his wife as well. [01:35:57.840 --> 01:36:05.040] So I recently, you know, gradually as this has been happening, it's been getting more [01:36:05.040 --> 01:36:09.120] belligerent a few times, he's been sort of late, you know, I've always got the rent, [01:36:09.120 --> 01:36:15.520] but sometimes I had to pull teeth to get him to drop the rent and, you know, give me the [01:36:15.520 --> 01:36:17.080] rent and stuff of that nature. [01:36:17.080 --> 01:36:24.560] So my question is, I'm looking at this through political lens and judicial lens. [01:36:24.560 --> 01:36:25.840] He sent me a 1099. [01:36:25.840 --> 01:36:29.000] My question is, how does he get my Social Security number? [01:36:29.000 --> 01:36:33.840] It's a question I know, but you understand what I'm saying. [01:36:33.840 --> 01:36:38.080] I'm sending him my Social Security number with information for the bank purpose of the [01:36:38.080 --> 01:36:41.840] short sale only. [01:36:41.840 --> 01:36:45.760] And he apparently gets my Social Security number somehow, either going in those documents, [01:36:45.760 --> 01:36:49.160] phishing it out, or somebody from the short sale company giving him my Social Security [01:36:49.160 --> 01:36:54.440] number so that he can claim income or claim on expense. [01:36:54.440 --> 01:36:59.560] That claim of income is income tax fraud. [01:36:59.560 --> 01:37:05.240] And so what I did is I sent the form to the IRS that you use, whatever the form is, telling [01:37:05.240 --> 01:37:06.240] you whatever it is. [01:37:06.240 --> 01:37:11.880] You know, I wasn't harmed up until the IRS sent me a letter, hey, you owe him $700. [01:37:11.880 --> 01:37:19.800] So that's how all these claims start coming up, because now I'm damaged. [01:37:19.800 --> 01:37:28.680] There's a form to send to the IRS to report IRS fraud, and that's what he did. [01:37:28.680 --> 01:37:29.680] Oh, okay. [01:37:29.680 --> 01:37:30.680] No, I didn't. [01:37:30.680 --> 01:37:36.400] I sent that off to them thinking, okay, maybe they're going to change it, and they'll say, [01:37:36.400 --> 01:37:37.400] okay, no problem. [01:37:37.400 --> 01:37:41.600] We change it, which I didn't think they would do, because they got to trust what he sent, [01:37:41.600 --> 01:37:42.600] right? [01:37:42.600 --> 01:37:43.600] Yeah. [01:37:43.600 --> 01:37:44.600] They sent me a tax bill. [01:37:44.600 --> 01:37:45.600] I sent him a notice. [01:37:45.600 --> 01:37:53.040] He never sent me any proof of any payments he sent me, but I sent him a notice in Tentasew. [01:37:53.040 --> 01:37:59.800] The code is IRS 7207, I think it is, for fraudulent filing of... [01:37:59.800 --> 01:38:04.480] Well, it may not make any difference. [01:38:04.480 --> 01:38:08.240] If you received that as rent, that was income. [01:38:08.240 --> 01:38:13.680] Yeah, I know, but I reported that as rental income. [01:38:13.680 --> 01:38:14.680] He can't... [01:38:14.680 --> 01:38:21.160] Oh, and so now he's trying to get you, now the IRS is trying to get you to pay it twice. [01:38:21.160 --> 01:38:23.320] Pay more money. [01:38:23.320 --> 01:38:26.960] I reported all that rent already. [01:38:26.960 --> 01:38:27.960] So he's trying to report. [01:38:27.960 --> 01:38:32.400] I don't know what he's coming...what I believe, Brandy, is that through this whole process, [01:38:32.400 --> 01:38:37.840] we stopped a few sales, he had some attorneys doing stuff, so he maybe paid them. [01:38:37.840 --> 01:38:43.560] So maybe he's saying, oh, since I paid them for you, I'm going to report this as an expense [01:38:43.560 --> 01:38:48.680] for me, because I paid for your attorneys, which I never had any agreement with no attorneys. [01:38:48.680 --> 01:38:50.240] He did this stuff for his benefit. [01:38:50.240 --> 01:38:51.680] You understand the difference there? [01:38:51.680 --> 01:38:52.680] Right. [01:38:52.680 --> 01:38:58.440] So he's saying that property was a business property and not his residence. [01:38:58.440 --> 01:39:13.120] Okay, IRS is not my area, but if you gave the IRS agent notice that this amount had [01:39:13.120 --> 01:39:19.360] already been claimed as income on your income tax, and the IRS agent's trying to charge [01:39:19.360 --> 01:39:22.080] you a second time. [01:39:22.080 --> 01:39:28.180] I go down and file charges against the IRS agent. [01:39:28.180 --> 01:39:36.760] The IRS is a scumbag agency, and they put their agents in a position where they have [01:39:36.760 --> 01:39:40.200] to be criminals to collect the tax. [01:39:40.200 --> 01:39:45.760] And if you go after one of them for being a criminal, they're bosses who forced them [01:39:45.760 --> 01:39:49.480] to do it or throw him under the bus in a heartbeat. [01:39:49.480 --> 01:39:55.360] Yeah, but I don't think it's necessarily their fault. [01:39:55.360 --> 01:39:59.200] They're just, you know, this guy reported it. [01:39:59.200 --> 01:40:04.240] I sent them, this is the IRS, hey, this is not, I didn't have any, it was not employee [01:40:04.240 --> 01:40:08.040] compensation that he claimed that I received. [01:40:08.040 --> 01:40:10.360] I sent them a notice that, hey, that's not correct. [01:40:10.360 --> 01:40:13.040] So I don't think it's their duty to change it. [01:40:13.040 --> 01:40:16.680] I think it's my duty to sue him. [01:40:16.680 --> 01:40:22.640] And according to the IRS, I need to sue them and send them a notice of the lawsuit. [01:40:22.640 --> 01:40:32.320] Yeah, but the IRS is trying to bill you for what you can show you already claimed. [01:40:32.320 --> 01:40:35.040] Did he? [01:40:35.040 --> 01:40:39.200] I was asking him for the, you know, what is this $5,100? [01:40:39.200 --> 01:40:45.120] I think in his mind, it's the stuff that he, you know, stopped closure sales and paid attorneys [01:40:45.120 --> 01:40:47.520] to do certain things. [01:40:47.520 --> 01:40:48.520] And that's for him. [01:40:48.520 --> 01:40:51.440] That's his expense, not my income. [01:40:51.440 --> 01:40:54.040] I'm just there, hey, fix this problem I got right now. [01:40:54.040 --> 01:40:57.040] But here's the political side of it. [01:40:57.040 --> 01:41:00.840] How did he get my social security number to do that? [01:41:00.840 --> 01:41:05.760] I know he did, but I'm just a dumb person that knows nothing. [01:41:05.760 --> 01:41:06.760] I have no title. [01:41:06.760 --> 01:41:10.720] And here's his real estate agent coming along. [01:41:10.720 --> 01:41:15.640] And when you gave him the social security number, it was in confidence. [01:41:15.640 --> 01:41:25.320] Well, if he's claiming that this occurred when he was acting in his capacity as a real [01:41:25.320 --> 01:41:29.520] estate agent for you, then he would be... [01:41:29.520 --> 01:41:32.520] Listing of the house. [01:41:32.520 --> 01:41:35.240] Wait, say that again? [01:41:35.240 --> 01:41:38.000] Yeah, he was the listing agent. [01:41:38.000 --> 01:41:40.960] His wife was the actual purchaser of the property. [01:41:40.960 --> 01:41:45.360] So I think he was trying to make it look like it's a arm's length transaction. [01:41:45.360 --> 01:41:48.840] There's a bunch of conflict of interest here. [01:41:48.840 --> 01:41:51.280] And so I didn't see all that out at the time. [01:41:51.280 --> 01:41:54.560] I was just, you know, learning all this stuff. [01:41:54.560 --> 01:41:58.960] You might go file against him in small claims court. [01:41:58.960 --> 01:42:07.480] Yeah, so actually, I was going to file in federal court under 7434. [01:42:07.480 --> 01:42:14.000] Which is the damages statute, which statutory damages is 5,000. [01:42:14.000 --> 01:42:18.360] Go into federal court and then bring up all these, you know, that's the real question [01:42:18.360 --> 01:42:24.840] was I have other civil claims like breach of fiduciary duty, you know, Florida real [01:42:24.840 --> 01:42:33.400] estate commission, code of ethics violations, which is a public, I guess a public policy [01:42:33.400 --> 01:42:39.200] that they have to, they have to maintain a good rapport with the public so their agents [01:42:39.200 --> 01:42:44.480] have to, you know, can't be doing stuff like this. [01:42:44.480 --> 01:42:48.360] So I'm trying to see what's the best road to go. [01:42:48.360 --> 01:42:52.520] Have you filed a complaint against his broker's license? [01:42:52.520 --> 01:42:55.560] No, I haven't. [01:42:55.560 --> 01:42:58.600] And in fact, right now his license is pending to be renewed. [01:42:58.600 --> 01:42:59.600] It's not renewed yet. [01:42:59.600 --> 01:43:00.600] It's pending. [01:43:00.600 --> 01:43:06.440] Well, I'm not his license, but the broker he works under. [01:43:06.440 --> 01:43:08.480] I believe he is the broker. [01:43:08.480 --> 01:43:10.160] Ooh, okay. [01:43:10.160 --> 01:43:16.760] That's even then again, yeah, against his license, he may not get it renewed. [01:43:16.760 --> 01:43:22.240] Professional conduct complaints are a big deal for licensed professionals. [01:43:22.240 --> 01:43:25.060] They are big deals. [01:43:25.060 --> 01:43:30.680] And another thing is to be able to file a 1099, you need my social security number. [01:43:30.680 --> 01:43:33.040] I didn't give him my social security number. [01:43:33.040 --> 01:43:38.160] It was embedded in documents that wasn't in an email or anything of that nature. [01:43:38.160 --> 01:43:39.160] Okay, hang on. [01:43:39.160 --> 01:43:44.160] If it was in documents you gave to him, then that is not a claim you would have, but there [01:43:44.160 --> 01:43:48.120] could be a question as to whether or not he could use it. [01:43:48.120 --> 01:43:49.120] Hang on. [01:43:49.120 --> 01:43:50.120] Randy Kelton. [01:43:50.120 --> 01:43:55.920] This is Gidmore, we'll do our radio, I'll call in number 512-646-1984, we'll be right [01:43:55.920 --> 01:43:58.200] back. [01:43:58.200 --> 01:44:03.760] Do you feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.760 --> 01:44:04.760] Boring! [01:44:04.760 --> 01:44:07.600] Are you confused by words like the Constitution or the Federal Reserve? [01:44:07.600 --> 01:44:08.600] What? 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[01:45:23.640 --> 01:45:28.880] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.880 --> 01:45:34.800] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.800 --> 01:45:39.320] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.320 --> 01:45:43.640] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.640 --> 01:45:49.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.800 --> 01:45:52.600] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.600 --> 01:46:13.560] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:13.560 --> 01:46:28.120] Okay. [01:46:28.120 --> 01:46:29.120] We are back. [01:46:29.120 --> 01:46:35.320] Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Robin in Florida. [01:46:35.320 --> 01:46:37.520] Okay. [01:46:37.520 --> 01:46:42.160] I'm not sure how to handle this other than if you're going to sue him, then you have [01:46:42.160 --> 01:46:46.920] to pay the IRS first so that you're harmed. [01:46:46.920 --> 01:46:53.720] Oh, so I have to pay them first to show that I'm harmed. [01:46:53.720 --> 01:46:54.720] Right. [01:46:54.720 --> 01:46:56.720] There's no controversy. [01:46:56.720 --> 01:47:06.000] Just him sending you the 1099, and if you gave him documents that had your social security [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:11.360] number in it, I don't think you're going to get to be able to make that claim, especially [01:47:11.360 --> 01:47:23.560] if he claims that these amounts were a business cost because of his representation of you. [01:47:23.560 --> 01:47:27.280] Well, he only listed the property. [01:47:27.280 --> 01:47:29.240] He was never the one to do the short sale. [01:47:29.240 --> 01:47:34.480] They had a separate company doing a short sale, taking care of all that documentation. [01:47:34.480 --> 01:47:42.120] Well, he might maintain that he paid the separate company and then billed it back to you. [01:47:42.120 --> 01:47:43.760] Have you checked into that? [01:47:43.760 --> 01:47:44.760] Yeah. [01:47:44.760 --> 01:47:45.760] I never... [01:47:45.760 --> 01:47:46.760] Okay. [01:47:46.760 --> 01:47:49.560] You've requested documentation, and he hasn't produced it? [01:47:49.560 --> 01:47:54.120] In any documentation, he said, I'm going to have my attorney contact you. [01:47:54.120 --> 01:47:56.320] It's been very unprofessional, him coming to me. [01:47:56.320 --> 01:48:03.240] I've always put legal claims, and I talk like you. [01:48:03.240 --> 01:48:08.120] He's cursed at me through texts and stuff like that. [01:48:08.120 --> 01:48:09.120] It's just... [01:48:09.120 --> 01:48:17.520] You're just getting the tip of the iceberg version here. [01:48:17.520 --> 01:48:23.000] I'm not sure what outcome you're trying to achieve. [01:48:23.000 --> 01:48:30.720] I don't want to have this tax liability of over $700 to the IRS, and the IRS is not changing [01:48:30.720 --> 01:48:31.720] it. [01:48:31.720 --> 01:48:37.000] The only way to adjudicate this would be to... [01:48:37.000 --> 01:48:43.200] You'd have to pay the IRS first, and then sue him for the funds back. [01:48:43.200 --> 01:48:44.200] Okay. [01:48:44.200 --> 01:48:53.000] Then you can do it in small claims, and file a professional conduct complaint against him. [01:48:53.000 --> 01:48:56.440] That'll cost him a whole lot more than $700. [01:48:56.440 --> 01:48:57.440] Okay. [01:48:57.440 --> 01:49:04.000] You file a professional conduct complaint, and that's likely to double his errors in [01:49:04.000 --> 01:49:10.680] emissions insurance if it doesn't get it canceled. [01:49:10.680 --> 01:49:18.800] That's the part most people don't know about, is a really good way to hammer these guys. [01:49:18.800 --> 01:49:31.960] Okay, and back to the time limitations. [01:49:31.960 --> 01:49:34.080] Florida is a judicial state. [01:49:34.080 --> 01:49:35.080] Yes. [01:49:35.080 --> 01:49:36.080] So... [01:49:36.080 --> 01:49:37.080] Years. [01:49:37.080 --> 01:49:47.360] So, when did they file for the foreclosure? [01:49:47.360 --> 01:49:49.360] Beginning of 09. [01:49:49.360 --> 01:49:52.360] Oh, during time. [01:49:52.360 --> 01:49:59.560] April of 2010, they got a judgment. [01:49:59.560 --> 01:50:00.880] But I did your process. [01:50:00.880 --> 01:50:07.240] I tried to get the power of attorney from Mears on all my properties, never responded. [01:50:07.240 --> 01:50:10.320] I got the notary's information, never responded. [01:50:10.320 --> 01:50:15.160] I have assignments from dead entities, so I've got a lot of claims here. [01:50:15.160 --> 01:50:20.400] Oh, the filing from a dead entity is a good one. [01:50:20.400 --> 01:50:21.840] And that's just dead bang. [01:50:21.840 --> 01:50:22.840] It's so easy. [01:50:22.840 --> 01:50:23.840] Okay. [01:50:23.840 --> 01:50:31.160] What I'm going to suggest, you know, I helped a lot of people file federal lawsuits, and [01:50:31.160 --> 01:50:36.720] most of them just gave up and walked away, because while you could hold the bank off, [01:50:36.720 --> 01:50:40.000] it was so stressful for them, they walked away. [01:50:40.000 --> 01:50:44.080] And we went back and crafted a better one. [01:50:44.080 --> 01:50:49.600] You go to the bank and say, look, you know, you've got some serious problems here. [01:50:49.600 --> 01:50:55.320] You've got this break in the chain of title that you cannot fix, because the dead guy [01:50:55.320 --> 01:50:59.200] didn't do the transfer he was supposed to. [01:50:59.200 --> 01:51:04.680] Now I can sue you and we can go to court and dance around for the next two or three years, [01:51:04.680 --> 01:51:11.280] or run a calculation and see how much equity the bank has in the property. [01:51:11.280 --> 01:51:20.240] How old was the note when you stopped paying on it, or how old was the original note? [01:51:20.240 --> 01:51:22.960] Three years, two to three years. [01:51:22.960 --> 01:51:23.960] Three years. [01:51:23.960 --> 01:51:24.960] Okay. [01:51:24.960 --> 01:51:26.920] There's not going to be a lot of equity. [01:51:26.920 --> 01:51:30.320] Have property values increased or decreased in Florida? [01:51:30.320 --> 01:51:32.480] Well, they've decreased. [01:51:32.480 --> 01:51:34.520] It's gone about 40%. [01:51:34.520 --> 01:51:35.680] Okay. [01:51:35.680 --> 01:51:40.840] Then go to them and say, here's fair market value. [01:51:40.840 --> 01:51:46.880] I'll make you an offer of 50% fair market value, and I will bring to you a release of [01:51:46.880 --> 01:51:50.400] claim for these problems with title. [01:51:50.400 --> 01:51:56.440] Otherwise, you'll be stuck with this property till we both get old, and you'll be paying [01:51:56.440 --> 01:52:04.840] attorney fees trying to fight this filing issue, which there's a county in Florida [01:52:04.840 --> 01:52:10.080] that's now going after these guys criminally. [01:52:10.080 --> 01:52:13.640] So this issue's becoming real serious with the banks. [01:52:13.640 --> 01:52:14.640] Yeah. [01:52:14.640 --> 01:52:18.960] It's unlawful filing of false documents or records against real property. [01:52:18.960 --> 01:52:19.960] Yeah. [01:52:19.960 --> 01:52:20.960] That's fraud. [01:52:20.960 --> 01:52:22.960] There's a county in the state. [01:52:22.960 --> 01:52:28.960] Well, Pennsylvania and Florida have clerks that have examined their records, and now [01:52:28.960 --> 01:52:33.680] they're going back criminally after the people who've done the false filing. [01:52:33.680 --> 01:52:39.800] So that's going to scare the bejesus out of everybody who's been doing this. [01:52:39.800 --> 01:52:48.080] So now's a good time to go to the bank and say, we won't take this to the district attorney. [01:52:48.080 --> 01:52:50.700] We'd rather just settle this thing. [01:52:50.700 --> 01:52:54.920] Now they've got political reason to get it settled. [01:52:54.920 --> 01:52:56.440] No, I can do this. [01:52:56.440 --> 01:52:57.440] I have three properties. [01:52:57.440 --> 01:53:02.360] One, I'm still in, and two, that got, just within the last two years, one, three months [01:53:02.360 --> 01:53:08.280] ago, one year and a half, that it's the same situation, dead entities transferring stuff. [01:53:08.280 --> 01:53:09.520] Oh, wonderful. [01:53:09.520 --> 01:53:15.040] So you may be able to make deals on them, or you can get the property back at such a [01:53:15.040 --> 01:53:21.040] cheap amount, that in the end, you'll do a lot better, because you won't be spending [01:53:21.040 --> 01:53:27.600] all this time fighting and most likely lose anyway, because the courts just don't want [01:53:27.600 --> 01:53:33.000] to let a pro se borrower win. [01:53:33.000 --> 01:53:35.200] Yeah. [01:53:35.200 --> 01:53:39.400] I want to do that, but I would love to get your help to do that. [01:53:39.400 --> 01:53:43.400] You did do an evaluation for me a year and a half on one of them, but I just couldn't [01:53:43.400 --> 01:53:48.320] fall through on it, just I'm fighting all this stuff. [01:53:48.320 --> 01:53:50.720] I would like to do that with... [01:53:50.720 --> 01:53:55.280] We have an attorney working with us that specializes in this. [01:53:55.280 --> 01:54:05.120] If you'll send me an email, randy at ruleoflawradio.com, best if I can get the documents that are [01:54:05.120 --> 01:54:10.160] filed in the county record, so I can have a look at what we got, and see if we can broker [01:54:10.160 --> 01:54:11.160] a deal. [01:54:11.160 --> 01:54:16.240] They won't hardly deal with the borrower himself, but they will deal with a third party. [01:54:16.240 --> 01:54:17.240] That's not... [01:54:17.240 --> 01:54:18.240] Is that Kelly? [01:54:18.240 --> 01:54:19.240] No. [01:54:19.240 --> 01:54:20.240] The attorney, Kelly? [01:54:20.240 --> 01:54:21.240] No, different one? [01:54:21.240 --> 01:54:22.240] Okay. [01:54:22.240 --> 01:54:25.240] No, this is a different one up in Dallas. [01:54:25.240 --> 01:54:26.240] Oh, okay. [01:54:26.240 --> 01:54:27.240] I'll do that. [01:54:27.240 --> 01:54:34.240] You do have some of that on record, because I sent you that, well, you may not have it [01:54:34.240 --> 01:54:38.160] on record, but there's an October of 13th, I sent you... [01:54:38.160 --> 01:54:40.920] Okay, send me an email with your last name. [01:54:40.920 --> 01:54:42.920] I'll still have it. [01:54:42.920 --> 01:54:43.920] Okay. [01:54:43.920 --> 01:54:48.320] I moved a lot off my main server, but I still have all of them. [01:54:48.320 --> 01:54:49.800] Okay, good. [01:54:49.800 --> 01:54:52.800] Good, I'll do that. [01:54:52.800 --> 01:54:53.800] Wonderful. [01:54:53.800 --> 01:54:56.360] Maybe we can... [01:54:56.360 --> 01:55:01.280] If we can get one of these adjudicated in Florida, well, actually, we do have one. [01:55:01.280 --> 01:55:11.200] The main case is in Florida against American Wholesale Lenders. [01:55:11.200 --> 01:55:16.800] The court ruled that American Wholesale Lenders never existed, but they also ruled that the [01:55:16.800 --> 01:55:23.840] assignment by MERS for a company that was out of business was void. [01:55:23.840 --> 01:55:29.000] So you have Florida case law on this issue. [01:55:29.000 --> 01:55:30.000] Which court is that? [01:55:30.000 --> 01:55:33.640] I'm trying to remember the name of it. [01:55:33.640 --> 01:55:35.800] Send me the email and remind me to look for that. [01:55:35.800 --> 01:55:36.800] I have it in my records. [01:55:36.800 --> 01:55:37.800] Oh, man, I would love that. [01:55:37.800 --> 01:55:38.800] That'd be gold mine right there. [01:55:38.800 --> 01:55:39.800] Okay. [01:55:39.800 --> 01:55:40.800] I'll do that. [01:55:40.800 --> 01:55:45.800] I'll send you an email, and we'll get in contact. [01:55:45.800 --> 01:55:46.800] Wonderful. [01:55:46.800 --> 01:55:47.800] Thank you so much, man. [01:55:47.800 --> 01:55:48.800] I appreciate it. [01:55:48.800 --> 01:55:49.800] Okay. [01:55:49.800 --> 01:55:50.800] Thank you for calling. [01:55:50.800 --> 01:55:51.800] Okay. [01:55:51.800 --> 01:55:58.800] This is getting toward the end of the show. [01:55:58.800 --> 01:56:06.960] We're out of callers, and the presentation I did at the beginning of the show, I'm getting [01:56:06.960 --> 01:56:10.080] ready to start putting together a book. [01:56:10.080 --> 01:56:16.360] I've had a lot of people want me to write a book on this subject for a long time, and [01:56:16.360 --> 01:56:25.840] I'm getting prepared to do that, so I will probably be doing this same presentation again. [01:56:25.840 --> 01:56:35.400] I'm trying to get the wording down so that it's more cogent and more understandable, [01:56:35.400 --> 01:56:41.160] and the best way to do that is on a radio show like this. [01:56:41.160 --> 01:56:48.520] When you're sitting here speaking into a microphone and you can't see the person that you're talking [01:56:48.520 --> 01:56:58.240] to, it puts you in a position to where you are required to be more careful with the language [01:56:58.240 --> 01:57:06.820] that you use, and I would like to use you folks to help me sort out how to put these [01:57:06.820 --> 01:57:07.820] things together. [01:57:07.820 --> 01:57:19.800] I would especially like questions and comments as to some of the things that I talk about. [01:57:19.800 --> 01:57:21.720] My primary study is not law. [01:57:21.720 --> 01:57:29.760] My primary study is psychology, and in psychology I was never interested in abnormal psychology. [01:57:29.760 --> 01:57:33.080] I guess that was my engineering background. [01:57:33.080 --> 01:57:40.040] I'm interested in normal psychology, and you would be surprised how difficult it is to [01:57:40.040 --> 01:57:47.680] find any work on normal psychology. [01:57:47.680 --> 01:57:48.960] What is normal? [01:57:48.960 --> 01:57:53.160] What do normal human beings do? [01:57:53.160 --> 01:57:54.700] That's what I'm trying to work out. [01:57:54.700 --> 01:58:00.680] How do normal human beings think and learn and understand? [01:58:00.680 --> 01:58:05.320] I'll be working on that and I'm going to have some interesting stuff to throw at you, [01:58:05.320 --> 01:58:11.920] and I would very much like to get some feedback to let me know when what I'm saying makes [01:58:11.920 --> 01:58:14.280] sense and when it doesn't. [01:58:14.280 --> 01:58:15.280] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:15.280 --> 01:58:16.520] We're about out of time. [01:58:16.520 --> 01:58:20.800] This is Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rue of Law Radio. [01:58:20.800 --> 01:58:22.480] We will be back next week. [01:58:22.480 --> 01:58:26.880] Adi will be back Monday with his traffic show. [01:58:26.880 --> 01:58:34.480] We will be back next Thursday, and I hope I'll have Deborah on next Thursday, and then [01:58:34.480 --> 01:58:37.200] Friday we may have Steve back in by then. [01:58:37.200 --> 01:58:41.400] He's been changing locations and working late. [01:58:41.400 --> 01:58:42.400] Maybe I'll get a loan from him. [01:58:42.400 --> 01:58:44.240] He's making so much money. [01:58:44.240 --> 01:58:50.640] Thank you all for listening, and good night. [01:58:50.640 --> 01:58:56.720] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.720 --> 01:58:57.920] Recovery Version. [01:58:57.920 --> 01:59:02.900] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.900 --> 01:59:08.560] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.560 --> 01:59:11.840] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.840 --> 01:59:20.840] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.840 --> 01:59:26.360] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references plus [01:59:26.360 --> 01:59:30.360] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.360 --> 01:59:32.920] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.920 --> 01:59:41.280] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.280 --> 01:59:51.920] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:51.920 --> 01:59:53.560] Looking for some truth? [01:59:53.560 --> 01:59:56.480] You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com.