[00:00.000 --> 00:06.000] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing your deli [00:06.000 --> 00:08.000] bulletins for the commodities market. [00:08.000 --> 00:21.000] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.000 --> 00:27.000] Markets for Friday, the 15th of July, 2016, are currently trading with gold at $1,337.39 [00:27.000 --> 00:34.000] an ounce, silver at $20.22 an ounce, Texas crude at $45.68 a barrel, and Bitcoin is [00:34.000 --> 00:43.000] currently sitting at about $669 U.S. currency. [00:43.000 --> 00:49.000] Today in history, the year 1799, the Rosetta Stone is found in the Egyptian village of [00:49.000 --> 00:54.000] Rosetta by French captain Pierre Francois Bachard during Napoleon's Egyptian campaign. [00:54.000 --> 00:59.000] Inscribed with the decree issued at Memphis, Egypt in 196 B.C. on behalf of King Ptolemy [00:59.000 --> 01:05.000] V, it appears in three scripts, ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, Demotic script, and ancient Greek. [01:05.000 --> 01:09.000] This finding was a major breakthrough since the stone essentially provided the key to [01:09.000 --> 01:19.000] deciphering and opened the modern understanding of Egyptian hieroglyphs today in history. [01:19.000 --> 01:24.000] In recent news, 10.45 p.m. Thursday night during the Bastille Day fireworks celebration [01:24.000 --> 01:30.000] in the southern French city of Nice, 31-year-old Mohamed La Rueige Barreau, native of Tunisia, [01:30.000 --> 01:35.000] ran over people in a rented 19-ton refrigerated truck before a gunfight with three police [01:35.000 --> 01:37.000] officers, which finally killed him. [01:37.000 --> 01:43.000] Today the death toll rose to 84 and 202 injured as a result the French government has extended [01:43.000 --> 01:47.000] a national state of emergency with this third terrorist attack in France in 19 months. [01:47.000 --> 01:52.000] Though he had a history with police of theft and assault, he was never on any database [01:52.000 --> 01:55.000] or had ever been flagged for radicalization. [01:55.000 --> 01:58.000] He initially ran over two people and continued driving while running over more. [01:58.000 --> 02:02.000] He fired at three police officers who then pursued him and finally shot and killed him [02:02.000 --> 02:08.000] outside the Hyatt Hotel and Casino on the Pomenade des Anglais, a famous seaside boulevard [02:08.000 --> 02:12.000] where he had driven for over a mile running over people as they viewed the closing [02:12.000 --> 02:14.000] fireworks ceremony of Bastille Day. [02:14.000 --> 02:19.000] The 84 dead included 10 children and teenagers, two German students and their teacher, [02:19.000 --> 02:22.000] two Americans, two Tunisians, and one Russian. [02:22.000 --> 02:27.000] Of the 202 people wounded, 52 have serious injuries and 25 are in intensive care. [02:27.000 --> 02:31.000] Hours before the attack, President Hollande had stated that the state of emergency put [02:31.000 --> 02:35.000] in place after the November 13 attacks in Paris would end soon. [02:35.000 --> 02:39.000] However, as a consequence of this new event, the government will now seek to extend the [02:39.000 --> 02:42.000] state of emergency for another three months. [02:42.000 --> 02:44.000] The Lone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. [02:44.000 --> 02:48.000] If you have a client or a service you'd like to advertise with us, feel free to give me [02:48.000 --> 02:52.000] a call at 210-363-2257. [02:52.000 --> 03:21.000] This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for July 15, 2015. [03:21.000 --> 03:22.000] Okay. [03:22.000 --> 03:23.000] Howdy, howdy. [03:23.000 --> 03:34.000] This is Randy Kelton with a radio on this Friday, the 15th day of July, 2016. [03:34.000 --> 03:36.000] Beth won't be with us this week or next week. [03:36.000 --> 03:44.000] She's got a business that she's in the process of moving, but she should be back after that. [03:44.000 --> 03:46.000] We'll have the phone lines open all night. [03:46.000 --> 03:50.000] I'm making sure they're turned on right now so the phone lines are open. [03:50.000 --> 04:00.000] I'm going to start out talking about something I've been trying to get mentally structured [04:00.000 --> 04:05.000] in a way that it will make sense to people. [04:05.000 --> 04:14.000] I have been frustrating public officials for a long time, and I just found one of my old [04:14.000 --> 04:22.000] folders that it was titled, Jurisdictions I Have Annoyed, and it was about 10 or 15 years [04:22.000 --> 04:27.000] old and had about 30 different jurisdictions in it already. [04:27.000 --> 04:35.000] I have been annoying these folks for a long time, and in the process, over time you develop [04:35.000 --> 04:41.000] some strategies and ways of doing things. [04:41.000 --> 04:52.000] I'm trying to construct a way of explaining how it is I'm able to do what I do, because [04:52.000 --> 04:56.000] it's all about how you hold your mind. [04:56.000 --> 05:06.000] It makes this much easier to do, and it's taken a while to be able to take what I'm [05:06.000 --> 05:14.000] actually doing and turn it into an explanation that makes sense. [05:14.000 --> 05:20.000] I think I've kind of got it in a way, and everybody who listens to the show on a regular [05:20.000 --> 05:29.000] basis has heard most of it in bits and pieces, but I'm trying to put together a single [05:29.000 --> 05:34.000] presentation that will make it all make sense, and the radio is a good place to do that [05:34.000 --> 05:44.000] because I have to craft my language very carefully because I can't see my listeners, so I don't [05:44.000 --> 05:47.000] know when I've confused you. [05:47.000 --> 05:59.000] Mainly, what I do when I walk into a courthouse or any other public building is I always try [05:59.000 --> 06:09.000] to remember that all of these people that work at this place are public officials. [06:09.000 --> 06:16.000] They're public servants, the judge, the prosecutor, the clerks, the bailiffs. [06:16.000 --> 06:18.000] They're all the servants. [06:18.000 --> 06:20.000] I am the master. [06:20.000 --> 06:27.000] This is a little more difficult than it sounds because we are so accustomed to being ordered [06:27.000 --> 06:35.000] around by our public officials, and we're very accustomed to going to our public officials [06:35.000 --> 06:44.000] to seek remedy for governmental or official problems, and because our public officials [06:44.000 --> 06:52.000] tend to be in a position where they should be much more knowledgeable than you and I [06:52.000 --> 07:02.000] about the subject matter, we have a tendency to give their pronouncements authority. [07:02.000 --> 07:06.000] We need to fix that. [07:06.000 --> 07:16.000] One of the questions that now almost as a knee-jerk reaction comes to mind when a public [07:16.000 --> 07:22.000] official tells me that I have to do a certain thing, I always ask them, where did you get [07:22.000 --> 07:23.000] that? [07:23.000 --> 07:29.000] I had a judge tell me that I had to take my complaint to the police department. [07:29.000 --> 07:33.000] I said, well, Your Honor, where did you find that in law? [07:33.000 --> 07:36.000] I've never seen that in law anywhere. [07:36.000 --> 07:39.000] Well, Mr. Kelton, this is how it's done. [07:39.000 --> 07:42.000] I don't particularly care how it's done. [07:42.000 --> 07:45.000] I care what the law says. [07:45.000 --> 07:52.000] Now, what law directs me to give a complaint to a police officer and what law gives a police [07:52.000 --> 07:57.000] officer authority to take my verified criminal complaint? [07:57.000 --> 07:59.000] I don't know where that is in law. [07:59.000 --> 08:01.000] Show it to me. [08:01.000 --> 08:09.000] I no longer accept pronouncements of public officials as authoritative. [08:09.000 --> 08:14.000] It would be easier if we could, but we cannot. [08:14.000 --> 08:21.000] For the most part, they do not tell you what is lawful and what is not lawful. [08:21.000 --> 08:27.000] They tell you what they prefer to do and what they do not prefer to do. [08:27.000 --> 08:36.000] So in order for us to take back our system, we need not everybody, but just a sampling [08:36.000 --> 08:43.000] of people in every county who is willing to take these people to task. [08:43.000 --> 08:46.000] So we're going to get a couple of callers. [08:46.000 --> 08:49.000] I don't want to spend too much caller time on this. [08:49.000 --> 08:56.000] I will hone this in the next few weeks and try to get a good, effective presentation [08:56.000 --> 09:02.000] together so that it's easier to understand how to go after these guys. [09:02.000 --> 09:08.000] There's just a couple of other things I would like to address before we go to the calls. [09:08.000 --> 09:15.000] And one is, as the master, you think of yourself as the CEO. [09:15.000 --> 09:18.000] Let's say you're the CEO of a corporation. [09:18.000 --> 09:23.000] You walk in the building, you walk past the mailroom, and you see the guy in the mailroom, [09:23.000 --> 09:27.000] the very bottom right, and he's in there goofing off. [09:27.000 --> 09:35.000] He's got his headsets on and he's texting on his phone, and he's not doing anything with the mail. [09:35.000 --> 09:41.000] Do you as the CEO go in there and chew out the guy in the mailroom? [09:41.000 --> 09:43.000] Of course not. [09:43.000 --> 09:46.000] You don't deal with the guy in the mailroom. [09:46.000 --> 09:47.000] You're the CEO. [09:47.000 --> 09:49.000] You deal with the executive vice presidents. [09:49.000 --> 09:57.000] So you go find the executive vice president who heads up that portion of your corporation, [09:57.000 --> 10:01.000] and you chew him out about the guy in the mailroom, [10:01.000 --> 10:09.000] about not managing his portion of the business in such a way that this doesn't happen. [10:09.000 --> 10:12.000] And then the executive vice president will go to the general manager, [10:12.000 --> 10:17.000] who will go to the manager of that department, who will go to this person's direct supervisor, [10:17.000 --> 10:21.000] and everybody gets chewed out down the line. [10:21.000 --> 10:27.000] And only this guy's direct supervisor chews him out. [10:27.000 --> 10:32.000] That is a very effective way of running a business. [10:32.000 --> 10:37.000] It's also a very effective way of running a government. [10:37.000 --> 10:41.000] We have people calling themselves sovereigns. [10:41.000 --> 10:48.000] Eh, we're not exactly the kindest sort of sovereigns, but we're not sovereign citizens. [10:48.000 --> 10:52.000] Sovereign and citizen are kind of a contradiction of terms. [10:52.000 --> 10:57.000] If you're a sovereign, you have citizens who answer to you, and we don't have that. [10:57.000 --> 11:01.000] This is not a democracy. This is a republic. [11:01.000 --> 11:06.000] And in a democracy, all power flows from the people. [11:06.000 --> 11:10.000] In a republic, all power flows from the individual. [11:10.000 --> 11:15.000] So we are responsible. [11:15.000 --> 11:21.000] I don't like the term sovereign. I like the term master, master of our servants. [11:21.000 --> 11:23.000] That puts us in perspective. [11:23.000 --> 11:30.000] When we start acting like that, we don't give legal advice. [11:30.000 --> 11:35.000] We don't correct, directly correct our local officials. [11:35.000 --> 11:42.000] When a policeman pulls me over and acts ignorant, I get about three words out of him I don't like. [11:42.000 --> 11:44.000] I don't argue with him. [11:44.000 --> 11:49.000] I don't tell him, this is what the law is, this is what my rights are, you're supposed to do this, [11:49.000 --> 11:53.000] you're supposed to, no, I don't give him all that stuff. [11:53.000 --> 11:58.000] He's a low-level flunky. I don't manage low-level flunkies. [11:58.000 --> 12:02.000] I take out my phone down 9-1-1. [12:02.000 --> 12:04.000] I don't tolerate this kind of behavior. [12:04.000 --> 12:06.000] You want to have yourself an attitude? [12:06.000 --> 12:09.000] You need to go home and have your attitude with your wife or your kids. [12:09.000 --> 12:13.000] Don't bring it here to work and use it on me, [12:13.000 --> 12:20.000] because I'm going to get somebody else out here and ask him to take a criminal complaint against you. [12:20.000 --> 12:24.000] This works. City of Arlington. [12:24.000 --> 12:31.000] The municipal court, I walk in, I ask the policeman sitting at the little guard desk, [12:31.000 --> 12:37.000] which of these lines do I get in to see criminal, the criminal files? [12:37.000 --> 12:39.000] He said, do you have a ticket here? I said, no, don't. [12:39.000 --> 12:42.000] Are you an attorney? No, I'm not. [12:42.000 --> 12:45.000] You can't see these files. [12:45.000 --> 12:49.000] Oh, you're saying I can't see these files if I'm not an attorney or don't have a ticket here. [12:49.000 --> 12:51.000] I said, that's right. [12:51.000 --> 12:53.000] Do you have a supervisor? [12:53.000 --> 12:56.000] Yes, I do. What do you need a supervisor for? [12:56.000 --> 13:00.000] I need to talk to the supervisor. Get him, please. [13:00.000 --> 13:04.000] So he calls the supervisor. I wait a while. The supervisor comes out. [13:04.000 --> 13:11.000] The supervisor says, well, I'm so-and-so. What can I do for you? I need you to arrest him. [13:11.000 --> 13:14.000] The cop looks up like, what? [13:14.000 --> 13:17.000] And the supervisor, well, why would I arrest him? [13:17.000 --> 13:22.000] Class A misdemeanor, official person, criminal violation, 3903 Pena Code. [13:22.000 --> 13:27.000] And the policeman is astounded. He don't know what's going on. [13:27.000 --> 13:30.000] And the guy said, well, how did he do that? Well, he lied to me. [13:30.000 --> 13:33.000] He told me I couldn't see these records. [13:33.000 --> 13:44.000] So by telling me that, he violated 1.27 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which says all courts shall be public. [13:44.000 --> 13:46.000] He exerted authority. [13:46.000 --> 13:51.000] He did not express having in the process denied me full free access to the enjoyment of right [13:51.000 --> 13:57.000] in violation of 39.03 Pena Code. Arrest him. [13:57.000 --> 14:02.000] That was so much fun. [14:02.000 --> 14:10.000] Well, he did everything he can to try to satisfy this situation. [14:10.000 --> 14:15.000] But as far as I was concerned, you know, they told me, oh, he was just mistaken. [14:15.000 --> 14:19.000] You can't see these records. No, no, guys, sorry. [14:19.000 --> 14:24.000] But that bell has already been rung. You can't unring it. [14:24.000 --> 14:32.000] And he referred me to the police department to Internal Affairs. It wasn't the fight I wanted to have. [14:32.000 --> 14:38.000] So I went ahead and told him I'd contact Internal Affairs and went and looked at my records. [14:38.000 --> 14:45.000] But I can pretty well assure you, the next guy that comes in and asks where to see criminal records, [14:45.000 --> 14:50.000] they're not going to get any song and dance themselves or down your pants. [14:50.000 --> 14:57.000] We need to learn how to be the masters of our servants when we can do that. [14:57.000 --> 15:01.000] Our servants will truly become our servants again. [15:01.000 --> 15:08.000] I have a full board of callers. So I'm going to start out with Leslie in Pennsylvania. [15:08.000 --> 15:10.000] Hello, Ms. Leslie. [15:10.000 --> 15:12.000] Hello, and how are you? [15:12.000 --> 15:17.000] I am good. What do you have for us today? [15:17.000 --> 15:23.000] Okay. Well, tonight I was calling about Deborah in Texas' problem. [15:23.000 --> 15:26.000] She went to a motion hearing today. [15:26.000 --> 15:36.000] And the motion was on motion to strike the response of people that don't even belong in her case. [15:36.000 --> 15:39.000] Okay. I have an email to that effect. [15:39.000 --> 15:46.000] And was that the only thing before the court? [15:46.000 --> 15:55.000] Well, she had also filed later another motion to strike and a motion for sanctions on the attorney. [15:55.000 --> 16:06.000] Okay. In the email, Deborah complained that she raised the issue of statute of limitations [16:06.000 --> 16:10.000] and standing of this other party. [16:10.000 --> 16:15.000] And the judge didn't rule on that. [16:15.000 --> 16:20.000] He didn't rule on anything. He just put it off for another day and said we're going to start all over. [16:20.000 --> 16:33.000] Okay. Hold on. He can deny sanctions, and they generally are very, very cautious about imposing sanctions. [16:33.000 --> 16:40.000] Sanctions terrify lawyers, frankly, because the judge can sanction them anything he wants to. [16:40.000 --> 16:44.000] But the judges are real careful about sanctions. They don't do that often. [16:44.000 --> 16:50.000] For reading the email and considering what was before the court, I think the judge is correct. [16:50.000 --> 16:54.000] And I'll explain why when we come back on the other side. [16:54.000 --> 17:22.000] Randy Kelton, Backpack, Wheel of Life Radio, we'll be right back. [17:24.000 --> 17:32.000] Looking for options to reduce food costs without compromising health or securing long-term 25-year storable food for an uncertain future? [17:32.000 --> 17:36.000] Then non-GMOsolutions.com is your common sense answer. [17:36.000 --> 17:39.000] Take advantage of a 10% discount to promo code LOGOS. [17:39.000 --> 17:46.000] No longer will you compromise taste and quality for full-term shelf life or eat poor quality food due to cost. 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[18:27.000 --> 18:32.000] Every $25 donation enters you for a chance to win prizes from Central Texas Gunworks. [18:32.000 --> 18:35.000] First prize being a Spiked Skull Lower Receiver. [18:35.000 --> 18:37.000] Second prize being a Taurus Curve. [18:37.000 --> 18:39.000] Ten winners will receive gift cards from All About Vapor. [18:39.000 --> 18:45.000] And if you donate your $25 contribution early enough, you will also receive a complimentary jar of My Magic Mud. [18:45.000 --> 18:50.000] Donations by all major credit cards are accepted, as well as contributions by Bitcoin. [18:50.000 --> 18:52.000] The LOGOS Radio Network Fundraiser. [18:52.000 --> 19:16.000] Head on over to LOGOSRadioNetwork.com for more information and to donate to keep the LOGOS Radio Network on the air. [19:22.000 --> 19:24.000] The LOGOS Radio Network Fundraiser. [19:52.000 --> 19:58.000] Okay, we are back. [19:58.000 --> 20:03.000] Randy Keltner, Vet Pack, and we're talking to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [20:03.000 --> 20:07.000] Let me just a second my page crapped out. [20:07.000 --> 20:13.000] I'm having a little bit of an issue today. [20:13.000 --> 20:18.000] Okay, got it back. There you go. [20:18.000 --> 20:23.000] Okay, Ms. Leslie. [20:23.000 --> 20:32.000] Okay, what was in the motion before the court today? [20:32.000 --> 20:47.000] It was a motion to strike the response of the people that answered the complaint because they had no interest whatsoever in the property where the mortgage was deducted. [20:47.000 --> 20:54.000] Did the judge explain why he ruled the way he did? [20:54.000 --> 21:03.000] He said he had no time. It was a very complicated case. He put it off for three weeks. [21:03.000 --> 21:06.000] Okay, wait, wait, say that again. [21:06.000 --> 21:12.000] He put the hearing off for another three weeks. He would not make any ruling today. [21:12.000 --> 21:16.000] Oh, wow. [21:16.000 --> 21:30.000] I was thinking if this was a motion for sanctions, then it's not often they give sanctions, but this is the motion to strike and the judge didn't enter a ruling. [21:30.000 --> 21:35.000] That means he's taking his timings being careful. [21:35.000 --> 21:52.000] Yes, I think it goes deeper than that because two days ago, the defendant entered into the court response to the motion for sanctions with orders and they were refused. [21:52.000 --> 21:59.000] The orders were refused saying it's another two days before the hearing. I think they did it on a Thursday proof of meeting. [21:59.000 --> 22:05.000] They tried to go expertise and get it signed off on Tuesday. [22:05.000 --> 22:21.000] Okay. Let me explain what Ms. Leslie is talking about. When you ask the court to do something, when you ask the court to render a ruling in the form of an order, you generally make up that order yourself. [22:21.000 --> 22:35.000] The judge wants you to prepare the order you want him to sign. Generally, in the order, you ask the judge to order this or order that, and then you put under it granted or denied. [22:35.000 --> 22:46.000] The judge, the court doesn't have to create all these documents. That's supposed to be filed with the motion. [22:46.000 --> 22:54.000] It sounds like these lawyers are just professionally goofing up left and right. [22:54.000 --> 23:06.000] They have to have by law that in these seven days before, and Deborah brought that to the attention to the court, and he reamed out the attorneys for not putting it in seven days ahead of time. [23:06.000 --> 23:12.000] I think that was the back end of why he wanted to put off the hearing for another three weeks. [23:12.000 --> 23:32.000] The fact that the order was really not very important. If you don't put the order in, then what the judge, if he's going to rule in your favor, he will simply ask the other side, the side he's ruling in favor of, to create the order. [23:32.000 --> 23:37.000] But it sounds like the judge was doing something else. [23:37.000 --> 23:42.000] It sounds like he deliberately blacked their eye. [23:42.000 --> 23:54.000] Yes, he did that too. But they, because they put in their response to a motion to sanction two days before the hearing and not seven days before the hearing. [23:54.000 --> 23:58.000] Whoa, wait, hold on. Let me make sure I got this right. [23:58.000 --> 24:10.000] That wasn't just an order that they didn't. In your first statement, I thought you meant that they filed their document in time, but they didn't include an order. [24:10.000 --> 24:15.000] You're saying they didn't file their response until two days before? [24:15.000 --> 24:23.000] Yes, they amended their, they did an amendment on their pleading as well. This is Deborah. [24:23.000 --> 24:31.000] Okay. Hi, Randy. I thought Ms. Leslie's voice had changed. [24:31.000 --> 24:42.000] Yeah, well, I just wanted her to put in that part about how they, the pleading, that was also the pleading that they put in two days before hearing. [24:42.000 --> 24:47.000] Okay, so explain the pleading they put in two days before the hearing. [24:47.000 --> 24:56.000] It was an amended pleading? [24:56.000 --> 25:04.000] Okay, so they already had an answer. We're saying pleading and I should be saying answer in motion. [25:04.000 --> 25:22.000] Yeah, without reading anything and then they had to go in and get a copy from the courthouse out of the clerk's office. They had to get a copy of my pleading and then they, and now they file an answer like a whole month later and two days before the hearing. [25:22.000 --> 25:28.000] So then I take it the judge threw out their answer? [25:28.000 --> 25:30.000] He refused to acknowledge it. [25:30.000 --> 25:32.000] Oh, they got a problem. [25:32.000 --> 25:39.000] They filed it two days before. He said I'm not going to, I'm going to just pretend this isn't here. [25:39.000 --> 25:45.000] Hold on, hold on, hold on. We're getting a lot of background noise. [25:45.000 --> 25:56.000] We hear, if something's bumping around on the table or something, you may not even be able to hear it, especially if you have headsets on, but we can really hear it loud. [25:56.000 --> 26:01.000] Okay, go ahead. [26:01.000 --> 26:09.000] Oh, Leslie, can you tell me what I was saying? I didn't even wait up for you. I think I have the background noise. [26:09.000 --> 26:16.000] Okay, what was I saying? I forgot. Darn it. [26:16.000 --> 26:22.000] Oh, now wait a minute. I'm the old one. I get to forget. [26:22.000 --> 26:26.000] I feel like it today. [26:26.000 --> 26:36.000] Okay, we were talking about, I was trying to make, to distinguish the exact nature of this, of what the judge didn't hear. [26:36.000 --> 26:43.000] Was there already some sort of a response to your motion before the court? [26:43.000 --> 26:53.000] Oh, okay. They, they are respondents. They're not the defendant and they filed a, they filed an answer just general without actually reading my. [26:53.000 --> 27:05.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. Let's be careful of what we're saying here. You filed a petition. They filed an answer to your petition. [27:05.000 --> 27:17.000] If you file a motion, they file a response to your motion. So you said they filed an answer. Were you referring to the original petition or were you referring to the motion to strike? [27:17.000 --> 27:23.000] They filed an answer to my original petition as a respondent, but not as a defendant. [27:23.000 --> 27:32.000] Okay, did they file an answer, a response to your motion to strike? [27:32.000 --> 27:35.000] Yes, two days before the hearing. [27:35.000 --> 27:45.000] Okay, so they didn't already have a response in and then tried to file an amended. They don't have one at all. [27:45.000 --> 27:56.000] That means as a matter of law, the judge must accept everything you state in your motion as true. [27:56.000 --> 28:06.000] And if your motion is sufficient, if the judge can look at all of the facts and law you state. [28:06.000 --> 28:21.000] And if he presumes everything is true and unrebutted, if that amounts to enough that he can give you the ruling, you have the ruling by default. [28:21.000 --> 28:25.000] That's the law. [28:25.000 --> 28:36.000] And from my perspective, this sounds great. It sounds like the judge is holding these lawyers feet to the fire. [28:36.000 --> 28:45.000] And what they do is they first count it for another three weeks for another hearing so that we can review everything. [28:45.000 --> 28:51.000] I think that's a great thing. He didn't just blow you off. [28:51.000 --> 28:55.000] He's going to give you a good ruling. [28:55.000 --> 29:03.000] And he probably didn't want to blow off these lawyers quite that quickly. [29:03.000 --> 29:12.000] He wanted to make it look like he has done his homework and he probably doesn't want to blow off these lawyers without doing his homework. [29:12.000 --> 29:28.000] And then on the other hand, he's probably going to look at your pleading very, very carefully and see if he can find a way out from under your issues. [29:28.000 --> 29:36.000] And working with Ms. Leslie, you write very good pleadings. [29:36.000 --> 29:42.000] I'm sure he already looked at the pleadings and knows he's going to have a hard time not giving you the ruling. [29:42.000 --> 29:52.000] Hang on. About to go to break. Randy Kelton, Vet Pac, Rule of Law Radio, I'll call it number 512-646-1984. [29:52.000 --> 30:02.000] We'll be right back. [30:02.000 --> 30:10.000] Energy drinks are all the rage these days, but nowadays even young children are chugging beverages like Red Bull and Rockstar on the way to school. [30:10.000 --> 30:15.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with more on this dangerous trend. [30:15.000 --> 30:21.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.000 --> 30:25.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.000 --> 30:31.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.000 --> 30:37.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [30:37.000 --> 30:44.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Vim. Start over with Startpage. [30:44.000 --> 30:51.000] They say that waking up is hard to do. It's tough rolling out of bed in the morning, [30:51.000 --> 30:56.000] but now even young people are turning to caffeinated energy drinks to kickstart their days. [30:56.000 --> 31:02.000] According to the Journal of Pediatrics, up to 50% of American youth are consuming them, despite the risks. [31:02.000 --> 31:05.000] Many of these drinks contain large amounts of caffeine. [31:05.000 --> 31:09.000] Eight ounces of Red Bull, for example, contains about the same caffeine as a cup of coffee. [31:09.000 --> 31:14.000] Pediatricians caution that youngsters can have a difficult time handling the caffeine rush. [31:14.000 --> 31:23.000] While many kids just get wired or irritable, other potential effects include seizures, heart palpitations, strokes, or even sudden death. [31:23.000 --> 31:28.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:53.000 --> 32:01.000] Call 1-1-0-4-3-6-7 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you, only at SQSA.org. [32:01.000 --> 32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:05.000 --> 32:10.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.000 --> 32:13.000] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.000 --> 32:17.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.000 --> 32:20.000] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.000 --> 32:26.000] Our traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:26.000 --> 32:29.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:29.000 --> 32:34.000] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [32:34.000 --> 32:36.000] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.000 --> 32:41.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.000 --> 32:46.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:46.000 --> 32:51.000] and a copy of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:51.000 --> 32:55.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.000 --> 33:04.000] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:04.000 --> 33:15.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [33:15.000 --> 33:25.000] I got a warrant, and I'm going to solve them, to the government them, prosecute them. [33:25.000 --> 33:33.000] Okay. [33:33.000 --> 33:35.000] Okay, we are back. [33:35.000 --> 33:43.000] Randy Chalton, Vet Pack, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [33:43.000 --> 33:47.000] Deborah, you on? [33:47.000 --> 33:48.000] Yeah, I'm still here. [33:48.000 --> 33:49.000] There we go. [33:49.000 --> 33:50.000] Okay. [33:50.000 --> 33:59.000] I'm looking at the email you sent me, and you asked the judge to take judicial notice of a set of facts here. [33:59.000 --> 34:02.000] You asked to enter these facts into the court. [34:02.000 --> 34:06.000] That's tantamount to asking the judge to take judicial notice. [34:06.000 --> 34:11.000] Did he accept that into the record? [34:11.000 --> 34:18.000] He had taken, there's that one, there's that one, what do you call that thing? [34:18.000 --> 34:19.000] I'm so tired. [34:19.000 --> 34:21.000] I'm so sorry, Randy. [34:21.000 --> 34:28.000] There is the one document filed into the county land records that states that they had transferred all of their interests, [34:28.000 --> 34:38.000] and I gave him that as Exhibit A, and when he decided, first he put his hands up and said, [34:38.000 --> 34:42.000] no, you keep that, and then later I tried to give it to him again. [34:42.000 --> 34:47.000] He finally took it, and then later, because I told him, I said, [34:47.000 --> 34:51.000] this shows that they've transferred all their interests to another party, [34:51.000 --> 35:01.000] and these guys couldn't possibly be representing the people that they say they represent because they transferred all their interests, [35:01.000 --> 35:07.000] and I said, besides that, statute of limitations is out, and I explained a few more things to him, [35:07.000 --> 35:12.000] and then he gave me that document back, and then he told me, we're just going to start all over, [35:12.000 --> 35:25.000] so just call the court administrator and just set it up for a couple of hours next time, basically. [35:25.000 --> 35:29.000] Okay, I don't know what that meant, we're going to start all over. [35:29.000 --> 35:34.000] Did that mean he's going to re-hear this issue? [35:34.000 --> 35:39.000] Yeah, he felt like he couldn't cover all of it today because there were the two attorneys standing there, [35:39.000 --> 35:45.000] and one of those attorneys is really interesting that he showed up representing the trust, [35:45.000 --> 35:53.000] and he's never filed anything, he's never put in an appearance or an affidavit of who he is, [35:53.000 --> 35:58.000] it's like somebody just wandering in off the street. [35:58.000 --> 36:04.000] Wonderful. He probably thinks he's dealing with an ignorant pro se, [36:04.000 --> 36:12.000] and the ignorant pro se won't know to raise that issue, so that's wonderful. [36:12.000 --> 36:20.000] If he doesn't have a notice of appearance, then he needs to get back behind the bar. [36:20.000 --> 36:27.000] That's right, and I can't send him anything or serve him anything because I have no idea who he is. [36:27.000 --> 36:32.000] Did you raise that issue in court today? [36:32.000 --> 36:35.000] No, the judge kept telling me to shut up. [36:35.000 --> 36:40.000] Okay, good. I mean, not good that he kept telling you to shut up, [36:40.000 --> 36:51.000] but good that you didn't raise that issue today because he may not think of filing a notice of appearance before the next hearing. [36:51.000 --> 36:58.000] If you come to the next hearing and he's there, if there's any lawyer there that doesn't have a notice of appearance, [36:58.000 --> 37:05.000] then you ask the court to direct them to get behind the bar because they're not a part of this hearing. [37:05.000 --> 37:12.000] And I've never seen a power of attorney that they are representing who they are saying they represent either. [37:12.000 --> 37:22.000] The court will accept them with a notice of appearance, and that's because lawyers are in a special situation. [37:22.000 --> 37:29.000] Because they have bar cards, they tend to trust that part of what they say. [37:29.000 --> 37:47.000] Okay, you were raising the issue of assignment. Did you put before the court Texas Property Code 13.001? [37:47.000 --> 37:57.000] I did, 16.035A and B about the statute of limitations on the 13.035. [37:57.000 --> 38:01.000] Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute. I understand statute of limitations. [38:01.000 --> 38:17.000] Just one thing at a time. If these guys, if you have an assignment in the record that assigns the beneficial interest to another party, [38:17.000 --> 38:21.000] 13.001 is critically important. [38:21.000 --> 38:27.000] If you have it on the record, then you can refer the court back to 13.001. [38:27.000 --> 38:39.000] It does not matter who these guys are. It does not matter if they are, in fact, the bona fide, genuine holder of the dead instrument. [38:39.000 --> 38:54.000] In Texas law, if their claim has not been properly acknowledged or proven and filed in the public record, they can use it for toilet paper. [38:54.000 --> 39:03.000] Important to understand that if they try to bring up any claim that's not properly filed in the record, you object. [39:03.000 --> 39:14.000] Under 13.001, it doesn't matter what that claim is. It's not properly filed in the record so this court can't see it, they can't hear it. [39:14.000 --> 39:20.000] It's not in the courtroom. Don't let them get past it. [39:20.000 --> 39:29.000] And there was one other thing that was concerning to me is that I have a default judgment and I went to court 28 days after the actual default. [39:29.000 --> 39:37.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. You have a default judgment. You have a default judgment against you or you have one that you're trying to bring? [39:37.000 --> 39:45.000] Against them. Yeah, I served them. I waited the 21 days. They didn't file anything. [39:45.000 --> 39:50.000] 28 days after that, I went to court and that's when all this kind of started. [39:50.000 --> 40:01.000] But the judge told me today that if I think that I am going to get a default judgment based on that they haven't filed anything until now, [40:01.000 --> 40:12.000] he said that I'm, I forget the term he used, I'm sidetracked or I'm very sidetracked or something like that. [40:12.000 --> 40:21.000] Yeah, he's right. This issue is not right. This issue is striking their pleadings. [40:21.000 --> 40:27.000] Default judgment is what should be done first because it's dispositive. [40:27.000 --> 40:34.000] If you have a dispositive claim, bring it first because it disposes of everything it's done with. [40:34.000 --> 40:40.000] Then they don't have to hear all this stuff. It doesn't matter anymore. It becomes moot. [40:40.000 --> 40:47.000] Yeah, but he told me that I don't care if they have, I don't care if the defendant comes back in three years from now. [40:47.000 --> 40:54.000] You still don't have a default judgment. [40:54.000 --> 41:01.000] How did he make that claim? Termination. [41:01.000 --> 41:10.000] No, no. He said they can come back in three years and he still would not allow me to have a default judgment basically. [41:10.000 --> 41:17.000] Then the judge, okay, if the statutory time has run, [41:17.000 --> 41:27.000] that should get a judicial conduct complaint and motion to disqualify for being for judicial incompetence. [41:27.000 --> 41:36.000] He's just told you that he has personally decided that he was not going to determine the facts [41:36.000 --> 41:41.000] in accordance with the rules of evidence and apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [41:41.000 --> 41:46.000] You need to ask him to stand down. [41:46.000 --> 41:54.000] Had it caused to be appointed, the fair and competent jurist you have a right to in the first instance, [41:54.000 --> 42:03.000] it's inappropriate for you to have to deal with an incompetent jurist and then have to go to appeal to appeal his bad decisions. [42:03.000 --> 42:11.000] He's already stated in court that he's going to refuse to apply law, so ask him to stand down. [42:11.000 --> 42:15.000] Okay. How do I go about doing that? I've never done that before. [42:15.000 --> 42:20.000] Motion to disqualify for judicial incompetence. [42:20.000 --> 42:24.000] Okay. [42:24.000 --> 42:32.000] If you have a right to the rule of law, the judge has already indicated, unless there's something mitigating here, [42:32.000 --> 42:40.000] has he made a ruling up to this point on statute of limitations? [42:40.000 --> 42:42.000] No. [42:42.000 --> 42:48.000] Okay. Then you need a motion to disqualify. [42:48.000 --> 42:57.000] Okay. So don't try to do a motion for summary judgment or anything like that. [42:57.000 --> 43:02.000] Yes. Do your motion for default judgment. [43:02.000 --> 43:04.000] Okay. [43:04.000 --> 43:10.000] Do your motion for default judgment for failing to time the answer. [43:10.000 --> 43:20.000] Actually, I would do that first because the judge has apparently indicated that that's what he wants you to do. [43:20.000 --> 43:26.000] He told you you're getting your cart before your horse. [43:26.000 --> 43:33.000] You have a dispositive motion and you haven't filed it and he wants you to file the dispositive motion. [43:33.000 --> 43:44.000] You're asking him to strike another lawyer's pleading. He's not going to want to do that because that's going to sting the other lawyer. [43:44.000 --> 43:52.000] So he would rather you give him something he can rule straight up and not sting the lawyer. [43:52.000 --> 44:02.000] Hang on. Going to break. Be right back. [44:02.000 --> 44:06.000] Hello. My name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com [44:06.000 --> 44:12.000] and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 9204 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas. [44:12.000 --> 44:18.000] I'm Brave New Books and Chase Payne to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.000 --> 44:22.000] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.000 --> 44:30.000] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, olive oil soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.000 --> 44:37.000] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.000 --> 44:43.000] That's 512-264-4043 naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.000 --> 44:47.000] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.000 --> 45:01.000] Naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.000] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary. [45:07.000 --> 45:15.000] The affordable, easy to understand, 4 CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.000] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:34.000 --> 45:43.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.000 --> 45:52.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics and much more. [45:52.000 --> 46:14.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.000 --> 46:24.000] Thank you for watching. [46:44.000 --> 47:06.000] Okay, we are back. [47:06.000 --> 47:14.000] We're talking to Debra in Texas. [47:14.000 --> 47:31.000] But yes, Debra, I think he was clearly asking you to give him something he could dispose of this case with and not have to get bad blood between him and the lawyers. [47:31.000 --> 47:32.000] Okay. [47:32.000 --> 47:41.000] This kind of goes to always consider you'll never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [47:41.000 --> 47:45.000] You'll win your case if you have the politics on your side. [47:45.000 --> 47:52.000] So always consider what politics is going on here. [47:52.000 --> 47:59.000] You know, the judge and these lawyers have an ongoing relationship because they deal with one another all the time. [47:59.000 --> 48:05.000] And he's not going to want to sting one of them if he can avoid it. [48:05.000 --> 48:13.000] So just from what I've heard you say, it sounds like he's trying to get you to give him something he can throw him out on. [48:13.000 --> 48:34.000] So what I might suggest is you prepare a motion for default judgment and move to stay the motion to strike until the motion for default judgment is heard. [48:34.000 --> 48:42.000] Because that sounds like exactly what the judge wanted. [48:42.000 --> 48:44.000] Okay. [48:44.000 --> 48:49.000] And you might just get what you're asking for. [48:49.000 --> 48:52.000] Randy? Randy? [48:52.000 --> 48:53.000] Okay. [48:53.000 --> 49:03.000] They told her that they would not give her a hearing on a motion for default judgment because he answered her complaint. [49:03.000 --> 49:10.000] They put in a motion, a sufficient intervention or whatever they called it. [49:10.000 --> 49:17.000] The judge asked for a motion and okay, they put in a motion and put in a motion for default judgment anyway. [49:17.000 --> 49:27.000] And in the motion for default judgment, you claim that the motion, the petition and intervention is invalid. [49:27.000 --> 49:36.000] And you argue why it's invalid in your motion for default judgment. [49:36.000 --> 49:40.000] You could probably need something else. [49:40.000 --> 49:43.000] You will not set a hearing. [49:43.000 --> 49:46.000] Yeah, you file the motion and then ask them to set a hearing. [49:46.000 --> 49:56.000] You file a motion to stay the hearing on the motion to strike. [49:56.000 --> 49:59.000] Okay. [49:59.000 --> 50:10.000] Let's ask for default judgment because you didn't file in time because from what you told me, that sounds like what the judge was asking you for. [50:10.000 --> 50:14.000] Okay, I see what you're saying because they didn't either. [50:14.000 --> 50:17.000] Yeah, nobody filed in time. [50:17.000 --> 50:20.000] They said it doesn't matter. [50:20.000 --> 50:23.000] Don't care what he says, make him rule it. [50:23.000 --> 50:25.000] Okay. [50:25.000 --> 50:29.000] It's all about the Court of Appeals. [50:29.000 --> 50:31.000] Okay, that's good. [50:31.000 --> 50:35.000] That would dispose of everything so you could say yes or no, right? [50:35.000 --> 50:42.000] Yeah, if this other party feels like they have an issue, let them file a case. [50:42.000 --> 50:44.000] But you didn't name these guys. [50:44.000 --> 50:54.000] You just named the one party and the one party didn't answer in time so you have a right to default judgment. [50:54.000 --> 51:04.000] Now, if you get default judgment and this other party feels like they have an issue, let them file one. [51:04.000 --> 51:07.000] Okay. [51:07.000 --> 51:15.000] And from what you told me about what happened today, that sounds like what the judge was asking you for. [51:15.000 --> 51:16.000] Oh, okay. [51:16.000 --> 51:22.000] Get me out of this mess. [51:22.000 --> 51:25.000] Okay, do we have anything else? [51:25.000 --> 51:28.000] He did say, now that's it. [51:28.000 --> 51:36.000] He said that it was a very complicated case and was going to take two hours when all he needs to do is look at the last assignment. [51:36.000 --> 51:39.000] It wasn't for them. [51:39.000 --> 51:42.000] Yeah. [51:42.000 --> 51:46.000] Well, okay, we'll see what happens with the default judgment. [51:46.000 --> 51:48.000] Okay. [51:48.000 --> 51:49.000] Okay. [51:49.000 --> 51:50.000] We'll do. [51:50.000 --> 51:54.000] Thank you, Ms. Leslie and Ms. Debra. [51:54.000 --> 51:55.000] Thanks, Randy. [51:55.000 --> 51:56.000] Appreciate it. [51:56.000 --> 51:57.000] Okay. [51:57.000 --> 52:01.000] Now we're going to go to Scott in Texas. [52:01.000 --> 52:03.000] Hello, Scott. [52:03.000 --> 52:04.000] Hey, Randy. [52:04.000 --> 52:05.000] How are you doing? [52:05.000 --> 52:07.000] I'm doing good. [52:07.000 --> 52:09.000] Have you been to court again? [52:09.000 --> 52:10.000] Oh, yeah. [52:10.000 --> 52:17.000] We'll just talk about calling the police on the police. [52:17.000 --> 52:19.000] This is really good. [52:19.000 --> 52:28.000] So I had to go to Lake Dallas again, and for the first three times, normally their court doors are locked at 830. [52:28.000 --> 52:43.000] Well, after the last time when I called 911 twice on the court because the bailiff kicked me out of the court last time because technically I was like two minutes late or whatever, [52:43.000 --> 52:54.000] and then they refused to let me have any type of hearing, went outside, called 911, asked for a share if he didn't show up. [52:54.000 --> 52:59.000] So about an hour later, I called again, and they magically just let me in. [52:59.000 --> 53:14.000] Well, this time when I went in, now they seem to have the court door swung wide open to almost 930, and anybody that came into the lobby had instant access to the court. [53:14.000 --> 53:18.000] Funny how that happens. [53:18.000 --> 53:29.000] So now anybody can go to Lake Dallas and actually go to court these days without having to wait for hours upon hours to get into court. [53:29.000 --> 53:39.000] So now I get into court, and I'm sitting there, and the city attorney calls me back and wants to know what I want to do. [53:39.000 --> 53:57.000] And they're not even going to have the motions here, and they want to go straight into discovery about filing for basically to get all the four-year requests for the video and blah, blah, blah. [53:57.000 --> 54:02.000] And she said, well, how do you want to proceed with this? [54:02.000 --> 54:10.000] And I said, basically, I just told her, I said, well, I don't comply with anything that's going on with this deal because now you all aren't even going to have the motions hearing, [54:10.000 --> 54:18.000] and they want to move straight into just having the four-year request for the information or whatever. [54:18.000 --> 54:24.000] Okay, hold on, hold on, Scott. Motion hearings, what motions do you have before the court? [54:24.000 --> 54:30.000] I had all kinds. I had subject matter jurisdiction, you know. [54:30.000 --> 54:34.000] Okay, we need to make a distinction here. [54:34.000 --> 54:35.000] Okay. [54:35.000 --> 54:40.000] Subject matter jurisdiction is not a motion. [54:40.000 --> 54:45.000] It's a petition, and there are only three. [54:45.000 --> 54:54.000] Petition, nobody can go anywhere or hear anything until they've heard the subject matter jurisdiction. [54:54.000 --> 54:56.000] Right. [54:56.000 --> 55:01.000] Well, and so I filed that, but they weren't even going to hear that. [55:01.000 --> 55:03.000] They said, no, we're not even going to hear that. [55:03.000 --> 55:08.000] We're just going to hear this about, I don't know. [55:08.000 --> 55:13.000] Okay. Oh, this is wonderful. [55:13.000 --> 55:17.000] They're not going to hear the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [55:17.000 --> 55:21.000] That is seminal. I'm sorry, what's the crisis itself? [55:21.000 --> 55:23.000] Okay, so wait, it gets a little bit better. [55:23.000 --> 55:28.000] So then I said, well, I'm just not going to comply with anything that's going on here. [55:28.000 --> 55:32.000] And she goes, well, how about we just, have you seen the video? [55:32.000 --> 55:33.000] And I said, no. [55:33.000 --> 55:40.000] So she plops the video in because the whole reason I got pulled over was I ran a stop sign, allegedly. [55:40.000 --> 55:50.000] So now she's playing the video, and the cop dash cam doesn't even have me on his camera running a stop sign at all. [55:50.000 --> 55:54.000] So basically, I just didn't come to a complete stop, but it wasn't even on there. [55:54.000 --> 55:59.000] And she's looking at it and she's like, oh, she goes, have you seen enough? [55:59.000 --> 56:04.000] I was like, yep, have you? [56:04.000 --> 56:07.000] That's good. [56:07.000 --> 56:10.000] She goes, well, what do you want to do? [56:10.000 --> 56:17.000] I said, look, the court wasn't ready the first three times, and I want this case dismissed. [56:17.000 --> 56:18.000] Well, I can't do that. [56:18.000 --> 56:23.000] Well, let me just call the judge back here, and we'll see how she wants to go. [56:23.000 --> 56:24.000] So okay, fine. [56:24.000 --> 56:25.000] They go get the judge. [56:25.000 --> 56:32.000] She comes back there in the little chamber thing, and she goes, well, we just, I can't dismiss this case. [56:32.000 --> 56:34.000] And what do you want to do, judge? [56:34.000 --> 56:37.000] And she goes, well, we're just going to have a little bar hearing. [56:37.000 --> 56:39.000] And so it's fine. [56:39.000 --> 56:47.000] So now I got to go sit back out there in the bullpen and wait for her to call me back up. [56:47.000 --> 56:49.000] So I'm sitting out there for a little bit. [56:49.000 --> 56:58.000] And as I'm sitting there for about, oh, about a good 30, 45 minutes, one of the bailiffs comes over and shakes my hand. [56:58.000 --> 57:00.000] Says, you're looking pretty sharp today. [57:00.000 --> 57:01.000] I said, thank you. [57:01.000 --> 57:03.000] How are you doing? [57:03.000 --> 57:05.000] And he said, I'm doing just fine. [57:05.000 --> 57:09.000] And he walks back over to go hang out and perch by the judge. [57:09.000 --> 57:12.000] Well, about 15 minutes passed. [57:12.000 --> 57:16.000] I've been waiting for about a good hour now, and I call the bailiff back over. [57:16.000 --> 57:19.000] I said, hey, you mind if I step outside? [57:19.000 --> 57:24.000] I wouldn't mind taking a little dip of snuff or something, you know, and just kind of stretch my legs. [57:24.000 --> 57:29.000] He said, no, sir, Mr. Richardson, you go right ahead. [57:29.000 --> 57:31.000] So I walk outside. [57:31.000 --> 57:42.000] I run into some people that I knew from the last time I was there, and I sat there and chatted with them for a little bit, hung around outside, came back in, chatted with them some more. [57:42.000 --> 57:46.000] And finally, I said, well, I guess I'll go back in there. [57:46.000 --> 57:47.000] So I wrap on the door. [57:47.000 --> 57:48.000] He opens it up. [57:48.000 --> 57:50.000] He goes, well, it's about time you came back. [57:50.000 --> 57:52.000] I said, well, shoot, I've been waiting around here all day. [57:52.000 --> 57:54.000] I still ain't seen the judge yet. [57:54.000 --> 57:57.000] And so he says, well, let me wand you real quick. [57:57.000 --> 57:58.000] I said, fine. [57:58.000 --> 58:02.000] And let me see your folder, your notebook, and all that stuff. [58:02.000 --> 58:03.000] I open it up. [58:03.000 --> 58:06.000] And I had a little, almost like a little paper box cutter in there. [58:06.000 --> 58:08.000] He says, well, I see you got that razor blade. [58:08.000 --> 58:13.000] I said, oh, shoot, I forgot, I keep it in here to cut out applications for what I do. [58:13.000 --> 58:17.000] He said, if you just go sit down and go, don't say a word. [58:17.000 --> 58:18.000] He goes, I'm not going to say nothing. [58:18.000 --> 58:20.000] You just sit down and just wait. [58:20.000 --> 58:22.000] I said, well, I need to see the judge right now. [58:22.000 --> 58:24.000] I've been waiting all this time. [58:24.000 --> 58:26.000] And by law, I need to see her next. [58:26.000 --> 58:30.000] He said, you're fixed up, too. [58:30.000 --> 58:31.000] Hang on, hang on. [58:31.000 --> 58:33.000] About to go to break. [58:33.000 --> 58:36.000] Randy Kelton, back pack, rule of our radio. [58:36.000 --> 58:41.000] Here with Scott jerking around the courts again and having way too much fun. [58:41.000 --> 58:50.000] We'll be right back. [58:50.000 --> 58:54.000] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.000 --> 59:01.000] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.000 --> 59:06.000] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.000 --> 59:13.000] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.000 --> 59:18.000] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.000 --> 59:27.000] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.000 --> 59:40.000] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.000 --> 59:44.000] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.000 --> 59:50.000] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.000 --> 01:00:00.000] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.000 --> 01:00:08.000] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly bulletins for the commodity market. [01:00:08.000 --> 01:00:19.000] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:19.000 --> 01:00:43.000] Markets for Friday, the 15th of July, 2016, are currently trading with gold at $1,337.39 an ounce, silver $20.22 an ounce, Texas crude $45.68 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently sitting at about 669 U.S. currency. [01:00:43.000 --> 01:00:54.000] Today in history, the year 1799, the Rosetta Stone is found in the Egyptian village of Rosetta by French Captain Pierre Francois Bachard during Napoleon's Egyptian campaign. [01:00:54.000 --> 01:01:05.000] Inscribed with a decree issued at Memphis, Egypt in 196 B.C. on behalf of King Ptolemy V, it appears in three scripts, Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs, Demotic Script, and Ancient Greek. [01:01:05.000 --> 01:01:18.000] This finding was a major breakthrough since the stone essentially provided the key to deciphering and opened the modern understanding of Egyptian hieroglyphs today in history. [01:01:18.000 --> 01:01:37.000] In recent news, 1045 p.m. Thursday night during the Bastille Day Fireworks Celebration in the southern French city of Nice, 31-year-old Mohamed Laouege Babel, native of Tunisia, ran over people in a rented 19-ton refrigerated truck before a gunfight with three police officers, which finally killed him. [01:01:37.000 --> 01:01:55.000] Today, the death toll rose to 84 and 202 injured as a result of French government has extended a national state of emergency with this third terrorist attack in France in 19 months. Though he had a history with police of theft and assault, he was never on any database or had ever been flagged for radicalization. [01:01:55.000 --> 01:02:14.000] He initially ran over two people and continued driving while running over more. He fired at three police officers who then pursued him and finally shot and killed him outside the Hyatt Hotel and Casino on the Pomenade des Anglais, a famous seaside boulevard where he had driven for over a mile running over people as they viewed the closing fireworks ceremony of Bastille Day. [01:02:14.000 --> 01:02:27.000] The 84 dead included 10 children and teenagers, two German students and their teacher, two Americans, two Tunisians and one Russian. Of the 202 people wounded, 52 have serious injuries and 25 are in intensive care. [01:02:27.000 --> 01:02:41.000] Hours before the attack, President Hollande had stated that the state of emergency put in place after the November 13 attacks in Paris would end soon. However, as a consequence of this new event, the government will now seek to extend the state of emergency for another three months. [01:02:41.000 --> 01:03:04.000] The Lone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. If there's a product or service you'd like to advertise with us, feel free to give me a call at 210-363-2257. This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for July 15th, 2016. [01:03:04.000 --> 01:03:27.000] It's all according to the will of the Almighty. I read his book and it says, cares for the unsightly. These warmongers come by that term rightly. [01:03:27.000 --> 01:03:41.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, VetPak, we're talking to Scott in Texas. Okay, Scott, you're trying to talk to the judge. [01:03:41.000 --> 01:03:57.000] Yes, so now I get up there and I'm going to talk to the judge. And the judge, I can say, I filed the subject matter jurisdiction and discovery and all this other stuff. Well, she's not going to hear the subject matter jurisdiction. [01:03:57.000 --> 01:04:13.000] She goes, we're just going to hear the discovery of records. I said, well, I do not comply with any of these proceedings now. And she said, well, I don't even know why you're here then. [01:04:13.000 --> 01:04:36.000] I said, because you ordered me. And now she's looking down and she's fumbling around and she goes, well, you're dismissed. And I said, well, can I get that in writing? Now she grabs a notepad, basically bigger, just a little bit bigger than a sticky note and starts writing out some kind of something on a piece of paper. [01:04:36.000 --> 01:04:50.000] Then she looks over a little court clerk next to her. She goes, do you have one of these? She goes, no, I don't have one. Well, give me one of these things over here. And you know, because it has her letterhead on it. Now she starts handwriting stuff all over it. [01:04:50.000 --> 01:05:03.000] She goes, I got to write his name on there. She goes, we'll just mail you a court date sometime in December. And she said, do you want a trial by judge or trial by jury? I don't say a word. [01:05:03.000 --> 01:05:19.000] Now she has to determine what she's going to do. She said, we're just going to set this for a trial by jury. I still don't say a word. And she goes, all right, it's a trial by jury. I'm going to set this for December sometime and we'll mail you a court date. [01:05:19.000 --> 01:05:40.000] I said, have a nice day. Now the bailiff, I'm shaking his hand. Now I look over at him. I stick out my hand and I shake his hand and he goes, well, how's the wife and kid? Is your son still working? I said, my son's working. He goes, well, maybe I got you confused. I said, with somebody else, I said, I think you might have. [01:05:40.000 --> 01:05:54.000] And when I turned and walked away, I had a friend that went with me and he said, you should have seemed to look on their face when you turned around and walked out. The judge was looking down. The other bailiff that was standing up there by the judge. [01:05:54.000 --> 01:06:07.000] He's sitting over trying to figure out what was going on. He's looking around at some of the paperwork. He couldn't figure out nothing. And I turned around and walked on out and we got it all on video. [01:06:07.000 --> 01:06:21.000] Good. You need to file against the judge because she said she wasn't going to hear the subject matter jurisdiction. That is not something she has power to do. [01:06:21.000 --> 01:06:43.000] Oh yeah. I've already sent a judicial conduct and bargrieved her and all kinds of stuff. Oh yeah. And the little city attorney, she done been bargrieved already too. And she wouldn't even come out of her little room. She didn't even come into the courtroom. She was like, I ain't going near him. [01:06:43.000 --> 01:06:51.000] This is what we need to do. This is how we are the master of our service. [01:06:51.000 --> 01:07:13.000] We're going to do it all over again, Monday morning over in Mesquite. And one of the things I need to write this down because we were talking the other day about the coffin said, oh, you think you're a constitutionalist? You can get shot in the head. [01:07:13.000 --> 01:07:27.000] Yeah, that was serious. And so I need to know what you said. There was something I need to look up on that. So, and I forgot what you said. So do you remember what it was? [01:07:27.000 --> 01:07:46.000] I don't remember the context specifically, but him telling you that can get, you can get shot in the head. I would take that as either a terroristic threat or an act of obstruction of justice, but definitely aggravated assault. [01:07:46.000 --> 01:07:47.000] Yeah. [01:07:47.000 --> 01:07:53.000] Offensive speech while prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [01:07:53.000 --> 01:08:09.000] Yeah, that was serious. And this is all before the shooting here in Dallas too. That was about a month prior. So, you know, for him to come off and say that type of stuff when I'm just sitting there, you know, because I handed him a right to travel document. [01:08:09.000 --> 01:08:24.000] And I said, you know, I got a right to travel. I need you to sign this statement. You're going to violate my right to travel. Well, that was when the cop immediately calls his supervisor out. Now I have a little confab about three or four of them standing out behind the car trying to figure out what to do. [01:08:24.000 --> 01:08:36.000] And then they both come up, you know, start haranguing me and stuff. That's when that cop said, oh, you think you're a constitutionalist? You can get shot in the head for something like that. You know, you go around doing that kind of stuff. [01:08:36.000 --> 01:08:58.000] And I was like, mm-hmm. So I'm waiting on them. And they have a, I did a file for what they, I get so excited I can't remember everything. But anyway, I put in what do they have for, you know, shoot, I can't even talk. [01:08:58.000 --> 01:09:13.000] But anyhow, it's basically their authority to enforce the traffic laws. And they still haven't answered that in the FOIA request and also asked for the video and the 911 call because I called 911 on the city of Mesquite again now. [01:09:13.000 --> 01:09:26.000] And so I got, I made sure I stated that little incident on the 911 call and they still haven't responded to any of that. And that's been about a month now. [01:09:26.000 --> 01:09:43.000] This is how we will get the traffic courts fixed. We give them enough problems over a ticket, especially the cop that said you could get shot in the head. Now that is really a big deal. [01:09:43.000 --> 01:10:01.000] Mm-hmm. Oh, he's going to, he is not going to hear the end of that for a very long time. And then when the sergeant called, so when I called 911 on Mesquite, they said I had to speak to the sergeant because they didn't know what to do. [01:10:01.000 --> 01:10:18.000] And I said, fine, patch me right on through to him. Oh, well, he's busy. He'll have to call you back. I said, well, he needs to call back right now. We waited a convenient 15 minutes, but by that time they already buzzed the cops because they were sitting across the street saying, oh, well, if you drive off in your car, you can be arrested. [01:10:18.000 --> 01:10:35.000] You can get arrested even if you're walking. You just don't, you think you know the laws and all that stuff. But when I called 911, they immediately took off out of that parking lot and they bombinosed right on down the road. I didn't see them. I got my car and took off. [01:10:35.000 --> 01:11:01.000] They need more people doing that to them and they'll become better policemen. I'm in the process of reading an article that Denver just referred me to that addresses this problem with the police as being a matter of police training. [01:11:01.000 --> 01:11:12.000] And I'll talk about that either later tonight, if I have time or next week, I'll go through that article. It's pretty damning. [01:11:12.000 --> 01:11:25.000] It's saying how they have the Israelis teaching our police tactics that the Israelis use in the occupied area of Palestine. [01:11:25.000 --> 01:11:27.000] Right. I've heard of that. [01:11:27.000 --> 01:11:31.000] And this is the kind of training they're getting. [01:11:31.000 --> 01:11:35.000] Yeah, I've heard that. [01:11:35.000 --> 01:12:03.000] In the article, one of the articles was that the United States police have killed more, have murdered more citizens than any other policing department in the world. And that includes China, which is what, 20 times our size. [01:12:03.000 --> 01:12:07.000] So this is really is getting out of hand. [01:12:07.000 --> 01:12:10.000] And this is how we fix it. [01:12:10.000 --> 01:12:16.000] You don't wait till he pulls the gun on you. He just says a stupid remark. [01:12:16.000 --> 01:12:23.000] And over that stupid remark, you land on this guy like a ton of bricks. [01:12:23.000 --> 01:12:34.000] It's like when I got pulled over into Waukeny for not having a front license plate on my car and the cop arrested me, even though I told him this is not an arrestable offense. [01:12:34.000 --> 01:12:42.000] Well, he still arrested me and took me on down because with an invalid license, it's like I'm not in commerce. [01:12:42.000 --> 01:12:47.000] I'm not transporting, you know, goods or services. You know, you can tell them that and they still don't care. [01:12:47.000 --> 01:12:56.000] He was bound and determined to take me down. Well, he did. They took me into the took me in to book me in the jail and all that good stuff. [01:12:56.000 --> 01:13:03.000] I wouldn't comply. I didn't sign not one thing. And that really got them all frustrated. [01:13:03.000 --> 01:13:08.000] And I wouldn't sign. I never signed one document. I never signed in or did anything. [01:13:08.000 --> 01:13:14.000] So now I'm sitting there. They don't know what to do. And they're asking each other, what do we do? What do we do now? [01:13:14.000 --> 01:13:21.000] They won't sign nothing. Well, now the little jailer, Officer Hernandez out there in Lake Waukeny. [01:13:21.000 --> 01:13:26.000] Well, it's actually what's the name of that county? Raines County. [01:13:26.000 --> 01:13:34.000] And so anyhow, now he's real mad because I ain't signing. I ain't doing nothing. I told him I'm not even supposed to be here. [01:13:34.000 --> 01:13:40.000] I told him that like a hundred times. I'm not even supposed to be here. I'm not in commerce. I don't know why I'm even here. [01:13:40.000 --> 01:13:45.000] He said, well, you need to take your fingerprints. I said, I'm not I'm not I'm not doing anything. [01:13:45.000 --> 01:13:54.000] And he said, well, you're going to do that. I said, well, only if you're going to have to make me do it or something to that effect. [01:13:54.000 --> 01:14:01.000] And he said, I am going to make you do it. And that's when he reached out and grabbed me, jerked me up out of a little stool there and put my [01:14:01.000 --> 01:14:10.000] he's sitting there trying to make me put my hand on the thing. And I'm kind of like half ass struggling, not really, you know, not being violent or anything. [01:14:10.000 --> 01:14:18.000] But now he calls other cops in there to back him up. He called all these other cops and I said, whoa, whoa, whoa, under threat, duress and coercion. [01:14:18.000 --> 01:14:25.000] I'll put my hand on there, but I ain't signing that card. And I didn't. [01:14:25.000 --> 01:14:31.000] And after he put my little hand on there and scans off, now he's got that car. He goes, I need you to sign this car. [01:14:31.000 --> 01:14:37.000] So I'm not signing it. And boy, he got mad. He threw that card across the doggone jail. [01:14:37.000 --> 01:14:45.000] And he didn't know what to do. They just stuck me back there in a little jail cell and told me to go hang out here. [01:14:45.000 --> 01:14:52.000] And I got bonded out. And they say cost me $400 for all that stuff. But boy, do they got some problems now. [01:14:52.000 --> 01:14:59.000] And the paperwork that I've already stuck on them is just the beginning. [01:14:59.000 --> 01:15:07.000] Well, good, good work, Scott. This is how we get this stuff stopped. [01:15:07.000 --> 01:15:13.000] Okay, I take it you're going to sue this city for false imprisonment. [01:15:13.000 --> 01:15:19.000] Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. [01:15:19.000 --> 01:15:26.000] So it's going to be a wild ride. [01:15:26.000 --> 01:15:35.000] This is what I like to see. This is what I meant. The last ticket I got, the only thing I didn't give the officer any warning. [01:15:35.000 --> 01:15:43.000] I don't give them any legal advice. I don't tell them what they're supposed to do, what my rights are. I don't do any of that stuff. [01:15:43.000 --> 01:15:52.000] So he wrote me this ticket for my registration being expired. It had only been expired for six months. I don't know what his problem was. [01:15:52.000 --> 01:16:03.000] I told him, Officer Reese, I am fixing to give you a romp through the legal system. You are not going to believe. [01:16:03.000 --> 01:16:13.000] And I did. So everything that I bring to him, I wanted to come as a surprise. I wanted to be Bushwhack. [01:16:13.000 --> 01:16:19.000] That's like this thing of you calling 911. I bet they didn't see that coming. [01:16:19.000 --> 01:16:29.000] Oh, no. And I told that Sarge, I said, you know, that cop put his hand on the gun and I take that very serious. [01:16:29.000 --> 01:16:35.000] Well, he has a right to answer. You better check again. [01:16:35.000 --> 01:16:43.000] Let's see how that works out for you. Okay. Thank you, Scott. And keep us up to date on how this goes. [01:16:43.000 --> 01:16:44.000] Okay. Bye. [01:16:44.000 --> 01:16:49.000] Okey doke. Now we're about to go to break. When we come back, we're going to go to... [01:16:49.000 --> 01:16:59.000] I have you marked as Tina in California. I suspect that's probably a mess up in our database. But dear Fred Oliver, I see all of you. [01:17:20.000 --> 01:17:23.000] ...which helped keep the lights on and Logos Radio Network on the air. [01:17:23.000 --> 01:17:27.000] Head on over to logosradio network.com to make your contribution. [01:17:27.000 --> 01:17:32.000] Every $25 donation enters you for a chance to win prizes from Central Texas Gun Works. [01:17:32.000 --> 01:17:37.000] First prize being a Spiked Skull lower receiver. Second prize being a Taurus curve. [01:17:37.000 --> 01:17:39.000] Ten winners will receive gift cards from All About Vapor. [01:17:39.000 --> 01:17:45.000] And if you donate your $25 contribution early enough, you will also receive a complimentary jar of My Magic Mud. [01:17:45.000 --> 01:17:50.000] Donations by all major credit cards are accepted as well as contributions by Bitcoin. 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[01:18:28.000 --> 01:18:33.000] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:33.000 --> 01:18:38.000] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.000 --> 01:18:40.000] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.000 --> 01:18:49.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.000 --> 01:19:00.000] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:00.000 --> 01:19:10.000] This is the Logos Logos Radio Net. [01:19:31.000 --> 01:19:33.000] Okay, we are back. [01:19:33.000 --> 01:19:39.000] Randy Kelton is at the back of the Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Tila in California. [01:19:39.000 --> 01:19:41.000] Tila, is that the right name? [01:19:41.000 --> 01:19:43.000] Yes, it is. [01:19:43.000 --> 01:19:46.000] Okay, because it looks like Truth in Lending Act. [01:19:46.000 --> 01:19:48.000] That's why I read questions. [01:19:48.000 --> 01:19:49.000] No, it's Tina actually. [01:19:49.000 --> 01:19:51.000] C-W-E-N-A. [01:19:51.000 --> 01:19:53.000] Oh, okay. [01:19:53.000 --> 01:19:55.000] C-W-E-N-A. [01:19:55.000 --> 01:20:05.000] Frank from Ford Supplers told me to just call in and listen and see what you guys were up to because I'm in the lovely state of California, [01:20:05.000 --> 01:20:15.000] the nonjudicial foreclosure state that is so favored towards the banks and I don't know what you guys could say to help me right now. [01:20:15.000 --> 01:20:23.000] I do have an attorney finally because they filed a petition to have me labeled a vexatious litigant. [01:20:23.000 --> 01:20:27.000] Okay. [01:20:27.000 --> 01:20:42.000] Whenever I look at a foreclosure issue, the first thing I want to see are all of the documents filed with the county recorder's office. [01:20:42.000 --> 01:20:54.000] Not only the original deed of trust and the corporate assignment of deed of trust. [01:20:54.000 --> 01:20:55.000] Okay. [01:20:55.000 --> 01:20:59.000] Who was the original lender? [01:20:59.000 --> 01:21:03.000] Well, that's in debate supposedly. [01:21:03.000 --> 01:21:08.000] It was First Federal Bank of California. [01:21:08.000 --> 01:21:16.000] No, okay, what I want to know is what is the name of the lender on the deed of trust? [01:21:16.000 --> 01:21:20.000] First Federal Bank of California. [01:21:20.000 --> 01:21:21.000] Okay. [01:21:21.000 --> 01:21:23.000] It was shut down by the OTS. [01:21:23.000 --> 01:21:25.000] Okay, that was going to be my next question. [01:21:25.000 --> 01:21:30.000] The assignment, was it by that bank? [01:21:30.000 --> 01:21:34.000] No, it was by the FDIC. [01:21:34.000 --> 01:21:42.000] Okay, then the next question is that bank still in business or that lender still in business? [01:21:42.000 --> 01:21:43.000] No. [01:21:43.000 --> 01:21:48.000] Okay, here's the first issue I would want to take on. [01:21:48.000 --> 01:22:02.000] The lender was a person under law, a legal fiction, a corporation, an LLC, a company is a legal fiction under law [01:22:02.000 --> 01:22:08.000] and a person for the purpose of accruing certain rights. [01:22:08.000 --> 01:22:11.000] Well, that person died. [01:22:11.000 --> 01:22:22.000] And unlike a living, breathing human being, when a legal fiction dies, their assets don't go into probate. [01:22:22.000 --> 01:22:34.000] So here's the deal, even if MERS is listed in the deed of trust, MERS as a nominee, whatever that is, [01:22:34.000 --> 01:22:43.000] if we assume nominee means agent, then when the person died, MERS stopped being their agent [01:22:43.000 --> 01:22:46.000] because you can't be an agent for a dead guy. [01:22:46.000 --> 01:23:00.000] So how did the dead guy hire a new agent and order that agent to give away its property? [01:23:00.000 --> 01:23:11.000] We just, we filed an appeal in the appeals court in San Diego. [01:23:11.000 --> 01:23:17.000] And they denied our appeal, but they did comment that we made an interesting point [01:23:17.000 --> 01:23:27.000] and that was the dead guy issue, that how does the dead guy order someone to give away their assets [01:23:27.000 --> 01:23:31.000] because this was an asset of the lender. [01:23:31.000 --> 01:23:35.000] It belonged to the lender according to the public record. [01:23:35.000 --> 01:23:42.000] And then the lender died without assigning his beneficial interest to somewhere else. [01:23:42.000 --> 01:23:47.000] Our allegation was that they abandoned it. [01:23:47.000 --> 01:23:51.000] So that's the first argument I would make. [01:23:51.000 --> 01:24:05.000] They're trying to accuse you of being a, so what's the term? [01:24:05.000 --> 01:24:12.000] What have you filed already that's getting them to raise that issue? [01:24:12.000 --> 01:24:18.000] Well, I've had a complex issue because I filed when I was actually bailing property [01:24:18.000 --> 01:24:22.000] through an attorney a few years ago, it got dismissed with prejudice [01:24:22.000 --> 01:24:28.000] and at the time I didn't know what even that was and my attorney didn't tell me, didn't do anything. [01:24:28.000 --> 01:24:29.000] And then I just- [01:24:29.000 --> 01:24:34.000] Okay, hold on. Did you sue your attorney? [01:24:34.000 --> 01:24:35.000] No. [01:24:35.000 --> 01:24:40.000] Okay. Okay. When you go to an attorney with a case, [01:24:40.000 --> 01:24:47.000] the first thing that attorney is going to do is look for deep pockets. [01:24:47.000 --> 01:24:50.000] Well, you should do the same thing. [01:24:50.000 --> 01:24:57.000] Your attorney has pretty deep pockets because he has to have malpractice insurance. [01:24:57.000 --> 01:25:02.000] If your attorney doesn't do his job, you should sue the attorney or at least consider it. [01:25:02.000 --> 01:25:03.000] Okay. [01:25:03.000 --> 01:25:05.000] Okay, go ahead. [01:25:05.000 --> 01:25:18.000] When I had it and then I filed a suit pro se later and I was trying to do bankruptcy. [01:25:18.000 --> 01:25:29.000] They filed a notice of trustee sale which stated that I owed $365,740.43 [01:25:29.000 --> 01:25:40.000] and it stated that the total amount due and owing in this, including other charges, is that amount. [01:25:40.000 --> 01:25:49.000] And so I knew someone who said that they would buy the property and refinance it to me. [01:25:49.000 --> 01:25:58.000] So we put in a full price offer because this is, bear in mind this is eight months after they told me I owed $475,000 [01:25:58.000 --> 01:26:03.000] and two months after that they told me it was $474,000. [01:26:03.000 --> 01:26:06.000] Then it's $365,000. [01:26:06.000 --> 01:26:11.000] So I thought, well, let's get out of all this mess and make that offer. [01:26:11.000 --> 01:26:17.000] And they said, well, for the broker you've got to put it on a short sale form. [01:26:17.000 --> 01:26:19.000] And there was no contingent. [01:26:19.000 --> 01:26:24.000] It had a proof of funds from a private banker, Wells Fargo. [01:26:24.000 --> 01:26:26.000] It had a deposit check. [01:26:26.000 --> 01:26:28.000] It had everything it needed. [01:26:28.000 --> 01:26:30.000] They said we had to put it on a short sale form. [01:26:30.000 --> 01:26:34.000] He argued and argued and they said, no, no, that's the only way you can do it. [01:26:34.000 --> 01:26:41.000] So we finally did it, the broker, and then they refused it saying it was too close to a foreclosure sale. [01:26:41.000 --> 01:26:50.000] Then I filed bankruptcy to try to get time to fight and that was three months after this. [01:26:50.000 --> 01:26:56.000] And in the proof of claim they said I owed $507,000. [01:26:56.000 --> 01:27:01.000] This is three months after they stated and they sent me 97 of these notices in one day [01:27:01.000 --> 01:27:07.000] to every computation of my name and address they could think of. [01:27:07.000 --> 01:27:15.000] And so then four months after that and the objection to my, I forget the name of it, [01:27:15.000 --> 01:27:18.000] where I put in what I can pay. [01:27:18.000 --> 01:27:22.000] They said I owed, the proof of claim there said I owed $495,000. [01:27:22.000 --> 01:27:24.000] So it had gone down another few thousand. [01:27:24.000 --> 01:27:29.000] Then eight months later it was $508,000. [01:27:29.000 --> 01:27:33.000] In the second notice of trustee sale was the second trustee. [01:27:33.000 --> 01:27:35.000] In the meantime, I'd filed a lawsuit. [01:27:35.000 --> 01:27:38.000] They removed it improperly to federal court. [01:27:38.000 --> 01:27:41.000] The judge never let me get to a hearing. [01:27:41.000 --> 01:27:44.000] We kept filing all the right stuff. [01:27:44.000 --> 01:27:52.000] And he just dismissed it without legal men saying, I think it was all barred by res judicata, everything. [01:27:52.000 --> 01:27:59.000] And so now I'm still, I filed a PILA, I'd already filed a California rescission letter in 2011, [01:27:59.000 --> 01:28:01.000] which they completely ignored. [01:28:01.000 --> 01:28:03.000] I filed a PILA rescission letter. [01:28:03.000 --> 01:28:05.000] They ignored that. [01:28:05.000 --> 01:28:10.000] I filed suit for that in state court. [01:28:10.000 --> 01:28:14.000] And they finally sent me a letter saying, I don't know, you're out of time. [01:28:14.000 --> 01:28:17.000] It's been too long, but it was 20 days after. [01:28:17.000 --> 01:28:21.000] It was more than 20 days after. [01:28:21.000 --> 01:28:29.000] Have you filed, wait a minute, have you filed a suit to enforce rescission? [01:28:29.000 --> 01:28:36.000] Well, that was what this one was in the state court and the judge didn't like me. [01:28:36.000 --> 01:28:39.000] I got an attorney who turned out to be no good. [01:28:39.000 --> 01:28:43.000] He berated her for turning up by phone. [01:28:43.000 --> 01:28:47.000] He said, I don't know why I don't throw this out right now, blah, blah, blah. [01:28:47.000 --> 01:28:50.000] But I got a chance to amend it. [01:28:50.000 --> 01:28:54.000] And then I finally found a really good attorney who's helping me. [01:28:54.000 --> 01:29:01.000] And the judge is looking at him a little different, but he has allowed him to file a third amended complaint. [01:29:01.000 --> 01:29:06.000] The bank is furious and livid with me and the attorney. [01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:09.000] They've threatened sanctions against me and everything else. [01:29:09.000 --> 01:29:15.000] Sent threatening letters to my prior attorney saying, if I don't dismiss the whole thing, [01:29:15.000 --> 01:29:18.000] that they will file the sanctions against me. [01:29:18.000 --> 01:29:21.000] And the judge said, I could file sanctions. [01:29:21.000 --> 01:29:26.000] I'm thinking along that line for a frivolous suit, all that stuff. [01:29:26.000 --> 01:29:32.000] But my current attorney is keeping me in the fight, but I'm trying to find everything I can. [01:29:32.000 --> 01:29:44.000] Okay, keep in mind that your only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [01:29:44.000 --> 01:29:55.000] And if you have a well pleaded, rescissioned case, you're not going to get sanctions upheld by the court of appeals. [01:29:55.000 --> 01:29:57.000] Hang on, about to go to break. [01:29:57.000 --> 01:30:00.000] We'll be right back. [01:30:00.000 --> 01:30:03.000] Used to be you could trust a hacker. [01:30:03.000 --> 01:30:07.000] Sure, they broke into computer systems, but most lived by a code of ethics. [01:30:07.000 --> 01:30:11.000] But as WikiLeaks informant Bradley Manning found out, things have changed. [01:30:11.000 --> 01:30:15.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you more in a moment. [01:30:15.000 --> 01:30:17.000] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.000 --> 01:30:20.000] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.000 --> 01:30:25.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.000 --> 01:30:30.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.000 --> 01:30:33.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.000 --> 01:30:37.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:30:37.000 --> 01:30:41.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.000 --> 01:30:44.000] Start over with Startpage. [01:30:44.000 --> 01:30:51.000] Honest hackers live by a code that emphasizes sharing, openness, free access to computers, and world improvement. [01:30:51.000 --> 01:30:55.000] And they typically have a healthy mistrust of authority that helps keep us all safer. [01:30:55.000 --> 01:30:58.000] For example, hackers have exposed serious flaws in technology. [01:30:58.000 --> 01:31:03.000] They forewarned us that contactless credit card numbers could be siphoned right through our wallets. [01:31:03.000 --> 01:31:09.000] They also proved that human chip implants can be cloned, allowing criminals to pretend to be someone else. [01:31:09.000 --> 01:31:13.000] But these days, be careful which hackers you trust with your secrets. [01:31:13.000 --> 01:31:17.000] According to the Hacker Quarterly, lying for hackers is now an FBI informant. [01:31:17.000 --> 01:31:21.000] Many have been forced into government service to avoid jail time. [01:31:21.000 --> 01:31:30.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.000 --> 01:31:36.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.000 --> 01:31:38.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.000 --> 01:31:43.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:48.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.000 --> 01:31:53.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.000 --> 01:31:57.000] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.000 --> 01:32:00.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.000 --> 01:32:03.000] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.000 --> 01:32:06.000] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.000 --> 01:32:10.000] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:10.000 --> 01:32:14.000] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.000 --> 01:32:20.000] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.000 --> 01:32:26.000] And we accept Bitcoin as a multiyear A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.000 --> 01:32:31.000] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.000 --> 01:32:38.000] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.000 --> 01:32:45.000] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.000 --> 01:32:50.000] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.000 --> 01:32:56.000] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.000 --> 01:33:01.000] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.000 --> 01:33:11.000] Looking for some truth? You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:31.000 --> 01:33:48.000] The wicked come with temptations. They're trying to buy the whole place. [01:33:48.000 --> 01:34:02.000] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton back at Google Radio and we're talking to Teeley in California. And one of the things that's thinking about over the break, [01:34:02.000 --> 01:34:14.000] it sounds like the bank is trying to get you declared a vexatious litigant simply because you had incompetent counsel. [01:34:14.000 --> 01:34:24.000] And the court should not hold you responsible for the fact that the legal profession is in such a horrible mess. [01:34:24.000 --> 01:34:32.000] But aside from that, we've had some good rulings under the Truth in Lending Act. [01:34:32.000 --> 01:34:51.000] If you filed your rescission, notice of rescission, after you received a notice of acceleration, go back and look at 15 U.S. Code 1635-I. [01:34:51.000 --> 01:35:07.000] 1535-F gives you three years to file for rescission. Three years to file for rescission based on failure to give proper notice at closing. [01:35:07.000 --> 01:35:22.000] I, 1635-I, that's a whole different right to rescission. That's a right to rescission that's triggered after the initiation of foreclosure. [01:35:22.000 --> 01:35:39.000] If you can show more than $35 in undisclosed fees, your right to rescission is reinvigorated and that one never ends. There is no limitation on that one. [01:35:39.000 --> 01:35:44.000] It doesn't show a whole lot more than that. [01:35:44.000 --> 01:35:52.000] Okay, say that again. I missed the first part. Oh, just so you know, we have a suppressor on this system. [01:35:52.000 --> 01:36:00.000] If I'm talking and you try to talk, the suppressor will push your voice down below mine and I don't hear it. [01:36:00.000 --> 01:36:05.000] So sometimes I miss the first part, would you say? Okay, go ahead. [01:36:05.000 --> 01:36:20.000] I can show a whole lot more than $35. I was told to do a forensic audit when I was in the midst of all this and this was after they filed a foreclosure and I had never thought about what a forensic audit might do. [01:36:20.000 --> 01:36:35.000] It showed that they had under-reported what's the document that you get right before you do the loan, the... [01:36:35.000 --> 01:36:36.000] HUD-1? [01:36:36.000 --> 01:36:40.000] HUD-1, no, the one where they tell you what... [01:36:40.000 --> 01:36:45.000] You got a good faith estimate, HUD-1 settlement statement and truth and leniency statement. [01:36:45.000 --> 01:37:04.000] This is GFE and it showed that the audit showed that they had under-reported my interest by $700,000 that I would be paying and they've also got in their proof of claim, [01:37:04.000 --> 01:37:25.000] and they have showed corporate advance fees of $30,000, two late fees in a month sometimes and a whole bunch of other fees, $3,000 in certified mailing costs for them mailing me 97 notices of trustee sales, [01:37:25.000 --> 01:37:29.000] 67 notices of default in one day. [01:37:29.000 --> 01:37:34.000] Okay, you have a good claim. [01:37:34.000 --> 01:37:41.000] Just make sure your lawyers is aware of 1635-I. [01:37:41.000 --> 01:37:42.000] I will. [01:37:42.000 --> 01:37:52.000] Have him look at it really close because the court wants to say that that's also limited to three years, but that's not what it says. [01:37:52.000 --> 01:38:02.000] The legislature addressed in F that you've only got three years for this particular rescission, [01:38:02.000 --> 01:38:15.000] and then it went down and created a new cause for rescission and had the legislature intended that that one be restricted to three years like the above, [01:38:15.000 --> 01:38:31.000] it would have said so, but it didn't say so. It had no restriction at all, and I cannot find anywhere where there's any court decisions on rescission after foreclosure. [01:38:31.000 --> 01:38:34.000] Looks like nobody's done it. [01:38:34.000 --> 01:38:37.000] They probably have. I just haven't been able to find it. [01:38:37.000 --> 01:38:43.000] So it's a very open area for rescission. [01:38:43.000 --> 01:38:48.000] Well, that would be good. I mean, they did foreclose on me, and you'll enjoy this part. [01:38:48.000 --> 01:38:51.000] I didn't. [01:38:51.000 --> 01:38:58.000] They actually got an in rem on my property in someone else's bankruptcy. [01:38:58.000 --> 01:39:02.000] I was never properly notified of the motion for that. [01:39:02.000 --> 01:39:07.000] I was in my own bankruptcy at the time with an attorney. [01:39:07.000 --> 01:39:20.000] They only sent one regular mailed letter about it to the property address, and I was not staying at that address when that was mailed to me. [01:39:20.000 --> 01:39:23.000] I was staying at a friend's house. [01:39:23.000 --> 01:39:39.000] They had notice of my correct mailing address, and they continually send me hundreds of notices to the correct mailing address on record, except this one time they only sent the one. [01:39:39.000 --> 01:39:43.000] So I never knew about it, so I couldn't go in and fight it. [01:39:43.000 --> 01:39:57.000] So they got this secret E.R. order, which when I filed my second bankruptcy, they pulled that out, and I didn't know until after it was foreclosed on that they had got this E.R. order allowing them to foreclose no matter what. [01:39:57.000 --> 01:40:02.000] Okay. One thing you might consider, the trustee. [01:40:02.000 --> 01:40:12.000] The trustee is immune from civil suit so long as the trustee acts in good faith. [01:40:12.000 --> 01:40:33.000] Now, if you can look in the public record and see a broken chain of title, which it appears yours has a broken chain of title because the original lender never transferred the property to a third party while the original lender was in existence, [01:40:33.000 --> 01:40:39.000] then the trustee has imputed knowledge of everything that's in the public record. [01:40:39.000 --> 01:40:46.000] He may not have known, but he cannot claim he doesn't know. [01:40:46.000 --> 01:40:52.000] And if you sue just the trustee, he's got deep pockets. [01:40:52.000 --> 01:40:56.000] He's got this errors and emissions policy. [01:40:56.000 --> 01:40:58.000] Well, I've got them, we're trying for that. [01:40:58.000 --> 01:41:05.000] I've got, I'm suing the trustee, the second substitute trustee, because they've done this twice. [01:41:05.000 --> 01:41:14.000] The first lawsuit I had the other trustee in, then they substituted another one out of Texas, Barrett, Daffin, Frappier, et cetera. [01:41:14.000 --> 01:41:15.000] I'm sure you know. [01:41:15.000 --> 01:41:21.000] That's Barrett, Daffin, Frappier, and Kiss My Behind. [01:41:21.000 --> 01:41:35.000] Treder and White, yeah. And did you know Mr. Treder of that group has a patent for, and it's on some document in Texas. [01:41:35.000 --> 01:41:46.000] It's on a court case in Texas where he admits to having a patent for filing foreclosure documents all over the 50 states. [01:41:46.000 --> 01:41:56.000] And he states in one sentence that 90% of the original documents are not in existence. [01:41:56.000 --> 01:41:59.000] That's in a superior court case in Texas. [01:41:59.000 --> 01:42:04.000] That's just an aside, and I have that if you, well, statement if you want it. [01:42:04.000 --> 01:42:05.000] Yes. [01:42:05.000 --> 01:42:06.000] Anyone else? [01:42:06.000 --> 01:42:11.000] It sounds like you've really done your homework. [01:42:11.000 --> 01:42:16.000] Well, I've been trying since I learned that I didn't know anything with that first attorney. [01:42:16.000 --> 01:42:26.000] But I keep coming up against California who thinks they give their presumption of validity to everything the banks submit. [01:42:26.000 --> 01:42:36.000] Even when I've proven it's a total lie, I proved that the signatures on these forged grant deeds that they submitted into this other person's bankruptcy, [01:42:36.000 --> 01:42:41.000] I proved with a handwriting expert they weren't my signature. [01:42:41.000 --> 01:42:44.000] I wasn't even in the state when one of them was signed. [01:42:44.000 --> 01:42:47.000] And the judge said, no, it's no big deal. [01:42:47.000 --> 01:42:49.000] Yeah, it is a big deal. [01:42:49.000 --> 01:42:56.000] Okay, there's something your lawyer won't do because he's afraid to. [01:42:56.000 --> 01:43:00.000] Your lawyer won't go after the judge. [01:43:00.000 --> 01:43:04.000] You should file criminally against the judge. [01:43:04.000 --> 01:43:08.000] And definitely file judicial conduct complaints against the judge. [01:43:08.000 --> 01:43:12.000] Have you ever filed any bar grievances against the lawyer? [01:43:12.000 --> 01:43:21.000] No, I'm planning to against my second lawyer because she, on one of them, I had to get rid of her because it's just time. [01:43:21.000 --> 01:43:30.000] I just have enough going on with these three other lawsuits and appeals because she, when the bank answered my rescission one, [01:43:30.000 --> 01:43:36.000] she didn't get it to me until two days before an answer was due. [01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:38.000] She kept saying she didn't have time. [01:43:38.000 --> 01:43:40.000] And first she didn't get it. [01:43:40.000 --> 01:43:42.000] Then she was busy. [01:43:42.000 --> 01:43:46.000] And they caused me a lot of extra expense. [01:43:46.000 --> 01:43:47.000] Okay, hang on. [01:43:47.000 --> 01:43:48.000] Hang on, Bill. [01:43:48.000 --> 01:43:49.000] Pick this up on the other side. [01:43:49.000 --> 01:43:50.000] I had to do Brandy Kelton. [01:43:50.000 --> 01:43:51.000] That fact. [01:43:51.000 --> 01:43:52.000] Radio. [01:43:52.000 --> 01:43:55.000] I call it number 512-646-1984. [01:43:55.000 --> 01:43:58.000] Fred, Oliver, Mike, I see you there. [01:43:58.000 --> 01:44:00.000] We'll be right back. [01:44:28.000 --> 01:44:32.000] We carry popular longevity products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Polynburst. [01:44:32.000 --> 01:44:39.000] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storable Foods, Berkey Water Products, ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [01:44:39.000 --> 01:44:43.000] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:44:43.000 --> 01:44:46.000] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:44:46.000 --> 01:44:51.000] We're located at 7304 Burnet Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:44:51.000 --> 01:44:54.000] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:44:54.000 --> 01:45:00.000] Visit us at capitalcoin and bullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:45:00.000 --> 01:45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.000 --> 01:45:15.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.000 --> 01:45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.000 --> 01:45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.000 --> 01:45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.000 --> 01:45:34.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.000 --> 01:45:43.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.000 --> 01:45:52.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.000 --> 01:46:01.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.000 --> 01:46:38.000] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, we're back with Law Radio, and we're talking to Twina in California. [01:46:38.000 --> 01:46:42.000] Twina, did I pronounce that right? [01:46:42.000 --> 01:46:46.000] Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't. [01:46:46.000 --> 01:46:48.000] There we go. [01:46:48.000 --> 01:46:51.000] Oh, I just lost her. [01:46:51.000 --> 01:46:58.000] Well, Twina, I'm sorry, I think you just dropped on us. [01:46:58.000 --> 01:47:03.000] If we have more that you want to talk about, call back in. [01:47:03.000 --> 01:47:06.000] Oh, there she goes, she's calling back in. [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:09.000] Let me go ahead. [01:47:09.000 --> 01:47:11.000] Okay, sorry, we lost you there for a second. [01:47:11.000 --> 01:47:15.000] I wanted to give other people a chance. [01:47:15.000 --> 01:47:19.000] I probably could ask you a lot of questions and you could help. [01:47:19.000 --> 01:47:24.000] But the one thing you've just given me on that 1625-I will help. [01:47:24.000 --> 01:47:30.000] Okay, there's one other thing I would like to give you before you go. [01:47:30.000 --> 01:47:31.000] Okay. [01:47:31.000 --> 01:47:41.000] You're the client, and you apparently have a very good attorney, so you might not want to do this at this point. [01:47:41.000 --> 01:47:51.000] But generally what we have people do is the pro se, the individual. [01:47:51.000 --> 01:47:53.000] You can file complaints against the judge. [01:47:53.000 --> 01:47:58.000] Now, the lawyer can never do that because the lawyer is in there dangling by his bar card. [01:47:58.000 --> 01:48:05.000] But if you kick the judge in his professional pants, then the judge is in a hard position. [01:48:05.000 --> 01:48:14.000] You see, I tell people that pro se litigants, they have powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal attorneys. [01:48:14.000 --> 01:48:20.000] You know, if you file a bar grievance against one of those lawyers on the other side, [01:48:20.000 --> 01:48:28.000] no matter if the bar grievance is valid or not, they're going to double as malpractice insurance. [01:48:28.000 --> 01:48:31.000] I tell these lawyers, you want to play hardball? [01:48:31.000 --> 01:48:34.000] I'll introduce you to the deep end of the pool. [01:48:34.000 --> 01:48:38.000] You file two bar grievances, they'll cancel as malpractice insurance. [01:48:38.000 --> 01:48:45.000] There are only nine underwriters in the United States that do legal malpractice insurance. [01:48:45.000 --> 01:48:48.000] They're all underwritten by Lloyds of London. [01:48:48.000 --> 01:48:53.000] So no matter who their carrier is, they're underwritten by one of these guys. [01:48:53.000 --> 01:48:57.000] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, they will cancel. [01:48:57.000 --> 01:49:00.000] One, they'll double your malpractice insurance. [01:49:00.000 --> 01:49:04.000] So these guys want to try to steal your property from you? [01:49:04.000 --> 01:49:06.000] Make it tough for them. [01:49:06.000 --> 01:49:07.000] The judge... [01:49:07.000 --> 01:49:09.000] But I'm going to take it back. [01:49:09.000 --> 01:49:21.000] If a judge tells me he's not going to apply law, see, my only purpose in the trial court is to set the record for appeal. [01:49:21.000 --> 01:49:24.000] I never expect to win in the trial court. [01:49:24.000 --> 01:49:29.000] If you win in the trial court, that's nice, but you never expect to. [01:49:29.000 --> 01:49:35.000] Your only purpose is to put the law and the facts before the court. [01:49:35.000 --> 01:49:42.000] It is the duty of the court to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, [01:49:42.000 --> 01:49:45.000] then apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:49:45.000 --> 01:49:53.000] If he refuses to do that or he has some other agenda, then you have him removed from the case [01:49:53.000 --> 01:49:57.000] because you have a right to a fair and competent jurist in the first instance. [01:49:57.000 --> 01:50:00.000] You can do that as the client. [01:50:00.000 --> 01:50:03.000] The lawyer can't because the judge will get mad at him. [01:50:03.000 --> 01:50:08.000] But if you go up as the client and kick the judge in his professional pants, [01:50:08.000 --> 01:50:11.000] don't say anything to your lawyer about it. [01:50:11.000 --> 01:50:15.000] The judge is going to go to the lawyer and say, what the heck is going on here? [01:50:15.000 --> 01:50:18.000] And the lawyer is going to say, I don't know, Judge. [01:50:18.000 --> 01:50:20.000] I don't have anything to do with it. [01:50:20.000 --> 01:50:22.000] Your lawyer has plausible deniability. [01:50:22.000 --> 01:50:28.000] Now the judge has another reason to rule in your favor, and that's to get you out of his court [01:50:28.000 --> 01:50:31.000] and keep you from beating him up. [01:50:31.000 --> 01:50:33.000] In the end. [01:50:33.000 --> 01:50:39.000] The bank and the buyers have removed the case from state court to federal court, [01:50:39.000 --> 01:50:42.000] and they're actually improper about it. [01:50:42.000 --> 01:50:44.000] So it's filed to have it remanded back. [01:50:44.000 --> 01:50:47.000] They will always remove it. [01:50:47.000 --> 01:50:53.000] I just filed criminal charges against a federal judge for dismissing a case [01:50:53.000 --> 01:50:59.000] that was removed to the federal court because I wrote that case very carefully, [01:50:59.000 --> 01:51:01.000] so it was not removable. [01:51:01.000 --> 01:51:04.000] They removed it, and this particular judge is a real stinker. [01:51:04.000 --> 01:51:07.000] If you're a pro se, he'll rule against you no matter what. [01:51:07.000 --> 01:51:14.000] I filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction instead of a remand, a motion to remand. [01:51:14.000 --> 01:51:16.000] The other side filed a Rule 12. [01:51:16.000 --> 01:51:20.000] The judge ruled on the Rule 12 and dismissed without hearing the subject matter jurisdiction. [01:51:20.000 --> 01:51:23.000] I went down and filed criminal charges against him. [01:51:23.000 --> 01:51:25.000] You want to play hardball, bad boy? [01:51:25.000 --> 01:51:27.000] I'm a pro se. [01:51:27.000 --> 01:51:33.000] I can kick your behind, and I'm going to do just exactly that. [01:51:33.000 --> 01:51:36.000] There is another way of thinking about this, [01:51:36.000 --> 01:51:39.000] but if you have a really good lawyer, it's probably not a good idea. [01:51:39.000 --> 01:51:43.000] I just did want you to get you to thinking about bar grievances. [01:51:43.000 --> 01:51:48.000] You start grieving these lawyers on the other side, and what will happen is, [01:51:48.000 --> 01:51:53.000] you see these foreclosure bills hire these lawyers that need work, [01:51:53.000 --> 01:51:57.000] and they pay them Trump chains, and they work them half to death. [01:51:57.000 --> 01:52:03.000] You bar grieve one of them, and the lawyer is going to have a fit, and he's going to quit, [01:52:03.000 --> 01:52:05.000] and they're going to have to get another lawyer, [01:52:05.000 --> 01:52:11.000] so it increases the cost of the other side to fight you. [01:52:11.000 --> 01:52:14.000] Some of the politics of what's going on. [01:52:14.000 --> 01:52:16.000] I just want to run that by you. [01:52:16.000 --> 01:52:18.000] Matt, think about it a little bit. [01:52:18.000 --> 01:52:24.000] Think about what we're doing, and call us back next week, and let's talk again. [01:52:24.000 --> 01:52:28.000] I'd like to talk to people who've done their homework. [01:52:28.000 --> 01:52:30.000] Thank you very much. [01:52:30.000 --> 01:52:34.000] I appreciate everything you've given me tonight, and I will call in next week. [01:52:34.000 --> 01:52:36.000] Okay, thank you, Trina. [01:52:36.000 --> 01:52:41.000] Okay, now we're going to jump over Fred and Oliver, because Mike is a first-time caller. [01:52:41.000 --> 01:52:43.000] Would you like to take those first? [01:52:43.000 --> 01:52:47.000] Mike, what do you have for us today? [01:52:47.000 --> 01:52:48.000] Greetings, all. [01:52:48.000 --> 01:52:53.000] It's kind of a sad story, but I've been a political prisoner ongoing for seven years [01:52:53.000 --> 01:52:58.000] in the state of Tennessee for exposing the corruption within the courts in West Tennessee, [01:52:58.000 --> 01:53:04.000] and now they're trying to send me back to prison for seven years for a crime that I never committed. [01:53:04.000 --> 01:53:07.000] And it's a total rigged game over here. [01:53:07.000 --> 01:53:09.000] The courts are completely rigged. [01:53:09.000 --> 01:53:12.000] Okay, West Tennessee where? [01:53:12.000 --> 01:53:15.000] The county is Tipton County, Tennessee. [01:53:15.000 --> 01:53:16.000] Tiptonville. [01:53:16.000 --> 01:53:19.000] Tipton, you feel? [01:53:19.000 --> 01:53:25.000] They used to beat us at basketball every time. [01:53:25.000 --> 01:53:28.000] Okay, I'm from West Tennessee, Dresden. [01:53:28.000 --> 01:53:30.000] You're from West Tennessee? [01:53:30.000 --> 01:53:32.000] Yep. [01:53:32.000 --> 01:53:34.000] Tipton County is just north of Memphis. [01:53:34.000 --> 01:53:39.000] You have Brighton, Atoca, Munford, and Covington. [01:53:39.000 --> 01:53:44.000] Covington, yeah, you're actually kind of in middle Tennessee. [01:53:44.000 --> 01:53:47.000] I'm over, Dresden is Wheatley County. [01:53:47.000 --> 01:53:49.000] It's where David Crockett was from. [01:53:49.000 --> 01:53:51.000] That's why we don't have any more bears. [01:53:51.000 --> 01:53:53.000] He killed them all. [01:53:53.000 --> 01:53:57.000] Yep, no bears, just bars. [01:53:57.000 --> 01:54:00.000] Yeah, Dresden is a beautiful place up there. [01:54:00.000 --> 01:54:03.000] If you're just looking at the trees, that is. [01:54:03.000 --> 01:54:12.000] Okay, don't feel so bad about Tennessee because it's the same everywhere. [01:54:12.000 --> 01:54:17.000] I do seminars all over the country and everybody always tells me, [01:54:17.000 --> 01:54:20.000] oh, my county is the worst county in the nation. [01:54:20.000 --> 01:54:22.000] Everybody says the same thing. [01:54:22.000 --> 01:54:26.000] There's a mess in the courts and the legal system. [01:54:26.000 --> 01:54:29.000] And it's everywhere, unfortunately. [01:54:29.000 --> 01:54:32.000] Okay. [01:54:32.000 --> 01:54:36.000] Well, I discovered the dirty little secret that they are a private [01:54:36.000 --> 01:54:39.000] for-profit corporation, that they're not a real court, [01:54:39.000 --> 01:54:43.000] and that the jail is actually a private for-profit jail. [01:54:43.000 --> 01:54:46.000] I contacted the state about it and they confirmed, yeah, [01:54:46.000 --> 01:54:48.000] it's a private for-profit jail. [01:54:48.000 --> 01:54:50.000] They have no oversight. [01:54:50.000 --> 01:54:51.000] And the court is... [01:54:51.000 --> 01:54:53.000] Hold on, hold on. [01:54:53.000 --> 01:54:56.000] Yes, they do. [01:54:56.000 --> 01:55:00.000] They may want to claim they don't, but they most certainly do. [01:55:00.000 --> 01:55:02.000] This is your first-time caller. [01:55:02.000 --> 01:55:06.000] Have you been listening to our show for a while? [01:55:06.000 --> 01:55:07.000] No, it's the first time. [01:55:07.000 --> 01:55:12.000] I basically was on the radio on usaprepairs.com for a couple of hours last week, [01:55:12.000 --> 01:55:16.000] and then I was on John Stetmore's show on Tuesday, [01:55:16.000 --> 01:55:22.000] and one of the listeners heard my story and emailed me today and said, [01:55:22.000 --> 01:55:26.000] you need to listen to this radio show and you need to call in [01:55:26.000 --> 01:55:31.000] because they probably have some suggestions that might help. [01:55:31.000 --> 01:55:35.000] Okay, here's what we do. [01:55:35.000 --> 01:55:40.000] We kick a public official behind. [01:55:40.000 --> 01:55:44.000] When you tell me that a public official has done something improper, [01:55:44.000 --> 01:55:50.000] I'm going to ask you, did you file criminal charges against him? [01:55:50.000 --> 01:55:57.000] I've actually sued this judge back in 2009, the district attorney. [01:55:57.000 --> 01:56:01.000] I actually had a district public defender tell me about the conspiracy [01:56:01.000 --> 01:56:06.000] that the DA committed in falsely charging me with his assistant, [01:56:06.000 --> 01:56:09.000] knowing that I was not guilty of the charge at all, [01:56:09.000 --> 01:56:13.000] but I'm actually the victim that was shot at 29 times [01:56:13.000 --> 01:56:19.000] and attacked without provocation simply because I was suing to board an election that I was in. [01:56:19.000 --> 01:56:23.000] For county executive, the same as county mayor in 2006, [01:56:23.000 --> 01:56:27.000] I actually won the race and then they flipped the votes that night [01:56:27.000 --> 01:56:31.000] and I was notified by a volunteer at the election office, [01:56:31.000 --> 01:56:34.000] not my volunteer but someone else's, that they had witnessed, [01:56:34.000 --> 01:56:36.000] they just literally flipped the votes, [01:56:36.000 --> 01:56:41.000] and the local TV station in Memphis even had declared me the winner. [01:56:41.000 --> 01:56:47.000] MikeParsons.org is my website, and on the front page, if you go to the bottom, [01:56:47.000 --> 01:56:51.000] you'll actually see a screenshot from Channel 5 News out of Memphis [01:56:51.000 --> 01:56:58.000] where they showed in the early returns that I was the projected winner with 79% of the vote, [01:56:58.000 --> 01:57:04.000] and the Old Boy Network apparently couldn't handle it, you know, finding a new job, [01:57:04.000 --> 01:57:06.000] and so they flipped the votes. [01:57:06.000 --> 01:57:09.000] It turns out that the person that counts the votes is appointed [01:57:09.000 --> 01:57:12.000] by the county executive I was running against, [01:57:12.000 --> 01:57:19.000] and sadly it turns out that the same person selects the registered voters that make up the jury pool, [01:57:19.000 --> 01:57:22.000] so when I was attacked without provocation, [01:57:22.000 --> 01:57:26.000] my wife and I were shot at 29 times, my dog was shot and killed right in front of me, [01:57:26.000 --> 01:57:30.000] when I was charged with aggravated assault for telling a guy to put his gun down [01:57:30.000 --> 01:57:33.000] that he was under citizen's arrest because I had a weapons permit [01:57:33.000 --> 01:57:36.000] and because I had my Glock 17 in my hand, [01:57:36.000 --> 01:57:40.000] of course I'm 100 yards away from the guy, never fired a shot at him, [01:57:40.000 --> 01:57:45.000] that doesn't matter, the fact that he shot 29 times, well that was okay too. [01:57:45.000 --> 01:57:51.000] It was the guy that was suing to avoid the election that all the judges were on, the sheriff, the DA. [01:57:51.000 --> 01:57:54.000] Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute, okay, hold on, [01:57:54.000 --> 01:57:59.000] I understand that you're angry and upset, [01:57:59.000 --> 01:58:07.000] and if you, what is it that you want to do? [01:58:07.000 --> 01:58:12.000] Well you're going into break, I hear the music, but I'm trying to find a way to stop them [01:58:12.000 --> 01:58:16.000] from railroading me into prison for 10 years. [01:58:16.000 --> 01:58:24.000] Okay, let's go to that when we come back because I hear this kind of story all the time unfortunately. [01:58:24.000 --> 01:58:28.000] We do have some tools and remedies that you can exercise, [01:58:28.000 --> 01:58:30.000] and I think you're going to like these, [01:58:30.000 --> 01:58:33.000] but it's going to take a bit of a different mindset, [01:58:33.000 --> 01:58:36.000] and we'll talk about that when we come back on the other side. [01:58:36.000 --> 01:58:40.000] This is Randy Kelton-Bett-Pack, Rule of Law Radio, [01:58:40.000 --> 01:58:50.000] call it number 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. [01:58:50.000 --> 01:58:54.000] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:58:54.000 --> 01:58:58.000] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.000 --> 01:59:02.000] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:02.000 --> 01:59:07.000] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:07.000 --> 01:59:09.000] Enter the Recovery Version. [01:59:09.000 --> 01:59:13.000] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:13.000 --> 01:59:18.000] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.000 --> 01:59:22.000] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [01:59:22.000 --> 01:59:28.000] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.000 --> 01:59:33.000] Bibles for America would like to give you a free Recovery Version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.000 --> 01:59:39.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free [01:59:39.000 --> 01:59:48.000] at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:48.000 --> 01:59:51.000] That's freestudybible.com. [01:59:51.000 --> 02:00:00.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com.