[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing you daily [00:05.840 --> 00:13.480] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.480 --> 00:20.080] into the tides of the alternative. [00:20.080 --> 00:25.240] Markets for Wednesday, the 14th of December, 2016, are currently trading with gold at $1,143.78 [00:25.240 --> 00:29.920] an ounce, silver at $16.79 an ounce, textiles at $16.79 an ounce. [00:29.920 --> 00:42.760] Textiles crude, $52.98 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently sitting at about $778 U.S. currency. [00:42.760 --> 00:48.480] Today in history, the year 1958, the 3rd Soviet Antarctic Expedition becomes the first to [00:48.480 --> 00:53.040] reach the southern pole of inaccessibility, the area calculated to be the furthest on [00:53.040 --> 00:54.920] the continent from the shoreline. [00:54.920 --> 01:00.840] It lies about 546 miles from the actual south pole, at an elevation of over 12,000 feet [01:00.840 --> 01:05.920] today in history. [01:05.920 --> 01:09.960] In recent news, for only the second time in a decade, the Federal Reserve will be raising [01:09.960 --> 01:10.960] interest rates. [01:10.960 --> 01:14.560] The Federal Reserve's Interest Rates Setting Committee said Wednesday today that it would [01:14.560 --> 01:19.760] raise interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point, that is between the 0.5, which it's [01:19.760 --> 01:23.120] currently at, up to 0.75. [01:23.120 --> 01:27.080] The Fed statement did say that, quote, the committee expects the economic conditions [01:27.080 --> 01:31.280] will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds [01:31.280 --> 01:36.320] rate, and that the federal funds rate is likely to remain for some time below levels that [01:36.320 --> 01:44.040] are expected to prevail in the long run. [01:44.040 --> 01:47.720] The Obama administration blocked states from cutting off federal grants to Planned Parenthood [01:47.720 --> 01:48.720] today. [01:48.720 --> 01:52.480] Wednesday, the executive rule stipulates that states may not prohibit an organization from [01:52.480 --> 01:56.480] participating in Title X, the state federal program that gives out tens of millions of [01:56.480 --> 02:00.920] dollars for family planning, for any reason other than the organization's ability to [02:00.920 --> 02:02.120] provide services. [02:02.120 --> 02:06.000] However, President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to support efforts to cut off public [02:06.000 --> 02:09.160] funding for Planned Parenthood, so long as they continue to offer abortions. [02:09.160 --> 02:13.200] He has also nominated the Asset Health and Human Services Secretary, Representative Tom [02:13.200 --> 02:18.080] Price, who has also supported measures to defund Planned Parenthood, and Vice President-elect [02:18.080 --> 02:22.200] Indiana Governor Mike Pence is completely in favor of cutting off the group's taxpayer [02:22.200 --> 02:31.120] support, so we'll have to see if this executive rule will be overturned. [02:31.120 --> 02:36.640] Abdul Salam Abdul Razak, a military spokesperson for the Naur al-Din al-Zinki Syrian rebel [02:36.640 --> 02:41.000] group, told Reuters today that within hours the implementation of an evacuation agreement [02:41.000 --> 02:42.640] for Aleppo will begin. [02:42.640 --> 02:47.200] The deal included the evacuation of people from the villages of Fahua and Kefraya. [02:47.200 --> 02:50.760] Some 50,000 people, including militants and their families and whoever wants to leave [02:50.760 --> 02:54.280] among civilians, will be headed for the province of Idlib. [02:54.280 --> 03:18.080] This was Brooke Rodey with your Lowdown for December 14, 2016. [03:18.080 --> 03:25.560] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton from Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to ICO in [03:25.560 --> 03:29.720] New York. [03:29.720 --> 03:33.720] This is difficult since you're already out of the house. [03:33.720 --> 03:40.800] There's a lot it could help you do to stop a foreclosure, but once you're already out [03:40.800 --> 03:44.840] of the house, it becomes much more difficult. [03:44.840 --> 03:51.160] New York is a judicial state, so they had to file a lawsuit. [03:51.160 --> 03:58.360] When they filed the lawsuit, did you file a response in objection to the suit? [03:58.360 --> 04:00.720] Yeah, I did. [04:00.720 --> 04:02.320] I did everything. [04:02.320 --> 04:04.360] I took it to the federal. [04:04.360 --> 04:09.960] I removed the file from state to federal, and it was sent back to state on the record [04:09.960 --> 04:15.000] of settlement, which it did not apply because it was fraud. [04:15.000 --> 04:16.000] Okay. [04:16.000 --> 04:19.240] The state is in Florida, it's not in New York. [04:19.240 --> 04:22.760] I'm in New York because I become homeless. [04:22.760 --> 04:26.560] Okay, what state was the property in? [04:26.560 --> 04:30.040] Florida, Miami, Florida. [04:30.040 --> 04:32.440] Oh, Florida, okay. [04:32.440 --> 04:33.440] Yeah. [04:33.440 --> 04:37.400] Florida is also a judicial state. [04:37.400 --> 04:44.320] I don't know what I can do now because there's so much information I need to get, and it [04:44.320 --> 04:50.320] is especially difficult after you're already out of the property, and especially if you're [04:50.320 --> 04:52.720] out of the state. [04:52.720 --> 04:58.520] Any action that you would take would have to be taken in Florida. [04:58.520 --> 05:03.360] I have your pending at the third district court. [05:03.360 --> 05:10.600] Okay, the first thing that I would need is a timeline. [05:10.600 --> 05:14.080] I need to know what happened and in what order. [05:14.080 --> 05:19.560] Do you have all of your closing documents from when you got the mortgage? [05:19.560 --> 05:21.560] Yes, sir. [05:21.560 --> 05:24.320] Okay, I would need those. [05:24.320 --> 05:33.680] Do you have someone in Florida who can go to the county clerk's office for you? [05:33.680 --> 05:35.680] Yes, sir. [05:35.680 --> 05:42.040] Okay, then this would be far too complex to do on the air. [05:42.040 --> 05:53.800] If you will send me an email to randy at ruleoflawradio.com, I'll send you back an email explaining what [05:53.800 --> 06:03.440] I need so that I can... Go ahead. [06:03.440 --> 06:14.080] Randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [06:14.080 --> 06:22.360] You can go to the rule of law radio website and you'll find a link to my email there. [06:22.360 --> 06:25.640] Okay. [06:25.640 --> 06:26.760] And send me an email. [06:26.760 --> 06:33.640] I'll respond back with what you need in order to give you some direction on what you can [06:33.640 --> 06:34.640] do. [06:34.640 --> 06:35.640] Okay. [06:35.640 --> 06:47.040] Do you have... I want to join her because I was listening to a person before me and [06:47.040 --> 06:49.680] I filed a complaint. [06:49.680 --> 06:55.840] I contested the lawsuit, I appealed, and they had denied. [06:55.840 --> 07:06.040] I even tried to... I complained against to the judge and in retaliation, he issued a [07:06.040 --> 07:13.120] writ of possession knowing that he never should have done that because all the documents that [07:13.120 --> 07:14.120] were fraudulently created. [07:14.120 --> 07:15.120] Okay. [07:15.120 --> 07:26.480] But I lost my voice, I could not... Okay, I need a timeline, I need to know what has [07:26.480 --> 07:34.160] occurred and if the judge has acted inappropriately, I really like going after judges. [07:34.160 --> 07:38.400] I will show you how to do that, but first I need some details. [07:38.400 --> 07:46.600] From what you've told me so far, because of the way you've explained your situation, [07:46.600 --> 07:52.720] I'm concerned that there are issues that you haven't taken on because you haven't spoken [07:52.720 --> 07:59.520] to me to any specific claims or causes of action. [07:59.520 --> 08:05.760] So I'll be concerned with... Do you have a lawyer in this process? [08:05.760 --> 08:13.200] I had three lawyers and they got to the... Ah, three lawyers. [08:13.200 --> 08:16.520] We may be able to sue the lawyers. [08:16.520 --> 08:18.560] I would love to. [08:18.560 --> 08:21.400] Okay, get me a timeline. [08:21.400 --> 08:27.320] I don't need to know... I don't need any arguments as to what should have happened [08:27.320 --> 08:29.280] or what they should have done. [08:29.280 --> 08:34.320] Just give me a simple list, this happened, this happened, this happened. [08:34.320 --> 08:45.520] All I need is a frame of reference first and then that way... This is traumatic for you [08:45.520 --> 08:54.120] and you have a lot of issues that caused you a lot of emotional pain and difficulty. [08:54.120 --> 09:00.800] When you try to tell somebody about what happened, you tend to go from one traumatic issue to [09:00.800 --> 09:06.240] the next, to the next, to the next, and it's hard. [09:06.240 --> 09:11.760] It's really, really hard to write all this out because you wind up re-experiencing all [09:11.760 --> 09:13.720] that misery. [09:13.720 --> 09:18.360] So don't even go into all that. [09:18.360 --> 09:25.400] This day I got a mortgage, on this day they filed a bankruptcy, on this day... Just give [09:25.400 --> 09:28.680] me a basic timeline. [09:28.680 --> 09:34.360] And then that way I can come back and ask you questions about what happened between [09:34.360 --> 09:42.040] this point and this point and it's a lot easier for you to give me those details. [09:42.040 --> 09:47.280] If I ask you to write out the whole story, it will be a horrible experience for you. [09:47.280 --> 09:50.720] So just give me a quick timeline and... [09:50.720 --> 09:53.720] Yeah, but I need a question that I need to ask you. [09:53.720 --> 09:54.720] Okay. [09:54.720 --> 10:03.920] There was an appeal pending at the third district court and it took them 58 days to enter into [10:03.920 --> 10:06.920] the appeal. [10:06.920 --> 10:15.520] The bank didn't even bother to request an entrance before 30 days. [10:15.520 --> 10:22.960] And then there were orders to answer after such date and they never did. [10:22.960 --> 10:25.600] Is that a default? [10:25.600 --> 10:30.440] That is a default and you can ask the court for default judgment or for summary judgment [10:30.440 --> 10:36.680] against them depending on the nature of the order. [10:36.680 --> 10:44.360] But I have to see what the order contained to know whether it would be a default judgment, [10:44.360 --> 10:47.840] a summary judgment or sanctions. [10:47.840 --> 10:52.560] Default summary judgment? [10:52.560 --> 10:59.160] You could... Default or summary judgment, generally... Default judgment generally only [10:59.160 --> 11:05.880] applies to the original petition. [11:05.880 --> 11:15.280] After that, if there is a dispositive motion, a motion that would dispose of the case, it [11:15.280 --> 11:24.360] would be a summary judgment motion or a motion that would dispose of an issue. [11:24.360 --> 11:29.360] If they were... The bank was required to respond to an issue and they didn't respond [11:29.360 --> 11:35.160] to it, then you would ask for summary judgment ruling on that issue. [11:35.160 --> 11:40.080] It's dispositive, it disposes of that issue and it may not necessarily dispose the whole [11:40.080 --> 11:42.880] case if that makes sense. [11:42.880 --> 11:47.680] I can explain it better once I have more details of what's going on. [11:47.680 --> 11:53.880] I don't have enough detail now to be able to give you any really definitive answers. [11:53.880 --> 12:03.520] Well, I am per se now and like the judge told me, he told me, it's time for you to vote [12:03.520 --> 12:09.720] because you know more than most of the lawyers that sit in front of me and I cannot have [12:09.720 --> 12:10.720] you here. [12:10.720 --> 12:13.320] That's what he told me. [12:13.320 --> 12:23.800] Well, good, then give me the timeline and I know more than most of those lawyers too. [12:23.800 --> 12:29.240] I have some dirty tricks I can help you pull to maybe get them to come to the table and [12:29.240 --> 12:32.720] make you a deal. [12:32.720 --> 12:39.320] I'm a distant person, I've been doing like a criminal... They fabricated documents, [12:39.320 --> 12:48.680] I don't know if you know who Marshall C. Watson is, but that guy, he fabricated an assignment, [12:48.680 --> 12:56.960] a note and he stole the property from me with the help of the judge. [12:56.960 --> 13:04.200] The judge allowed him, even when I complained, I requested him in a reading chairing hearing. [13:04.200 --> 13:12.720] Okay, hold on, hold on, there are going to be a lot of things of this nature and I won't [13:12.720 --> 13:17.320] have time to go through all of those on the air. [13:17.320 --> 13:23.720] Get me a timeline so that I have some idea of what's actually going on. [13:23.720 --> 13:30.440] Right now I have no way to reference what's going on so it's hard for me to put pieces [13:30.440 --> 13:31.440] together. [13:31.440 --> 13:38.160] Send me an email, the timeline doesn't have to be an email, just send me an email so that [13:38.160 --> 13:43.760] I know how to reach you and I will send you back an email explaining in more detail what [13:43.760 --> 13:44.760] I need. [13:44.760 --> 13:45.760] Okay. [13:45.760 --> 13:49.880] Okay, thank you very much. [13:49.880 --> 13:57.560] Okay, now we're going to go to Don in New Mexico. [13:57.560 --> 13:58.560] Hello Don. [13:58.560 --> 14:00.840] Hello Randy, how are you? [14:00.840 --> 14:02.120] I am good. [14:02.120 --> 14:03.920] What do you have for us today? [14:03.920 --> 14:07.440] Well, a couple of things I'd like to talk to you about. [14:07.440 --> 14:13.200] Thanks for taking my call and bring up my, I was looking at reading grand jury stuff [14:13.200 --> 14:20.000] here and I've got some questions for you about the federal grand juries. [14:20.000 --> 14:28.800] If you want to talk about them, the grand jury handbook that I found on the internet [14:28.800 --> 14:36.320] talks about grand juries and how information is brought to their attention. [14:36.320 --> 14:41.760] The first way is through the U.S. attorney or assistant U.S. attorney. [14:41.760 --> 14:47.960] The second way is information can be brought to them by the court that impaneled it. [14:47.960 --> 14:55.800] And the third way is from the personal knowledge of a member of the grand jury or from matters [14:55.800 --> 14:59.800] properly brought to a member's attention. [14:59.800 --> 15:03.840] It's the properly brought that I wanted to talk to you about. [15:03.840 --> 15:14.680] Okay, if you look in the duties of grand jurors in the Fed, it shall be the duty of the grand [15:14.680 --> 15:21.880] jury to investigate into all crimes subject to indictment that come to their knowledge [15:21.880 --> 15:27.880] by whatever means. [15:27.880 --> 15:36.720] So don't put too much stock in a grand jury handbook because that's put together by the [15:36.720 --> 15:42.440] courts and the prosecutor and they only put in there what they want the grand jury to [15:42.440 --> 15:43.440] see here. [15:43.440 --> 15:49.960] Of course, because this thing also says that they only look into crimes that are punishable [15:49.960 --> 15:54.520] by more than one year, it has to be infamous, right? [15:54.520 --> 15:58.600] And so the duties of the grand jury, you're talking in the statute? [15:58.600 --> 16:01.680] Yes, it's in the statutes. [16:01.680 --> 16:07.000] And a lot of the states have theirs modeled after the Fed. [16:07.000 --> 16:08.640] I know Colorado does. [16:08.640 --> 16:10.480] I'm trying to think. [16:10.480 --> 16:11.480] There's several of them. [16:11.480 --> 16:17.160] Actually, most of them are modeled that way and it says by whatever means. [16:17.160 --> 16:22.040] So it doesn't matter how the grand jury gets knowledge. [16:22.040 --> 16:29.040] Now the prosecutor is going to want to keep control of that grand jury. [16:29.040 --> 16:34.560] He's not going to want you to be able to give notice to a grand jury. [16:34.560 --> 16:42.400] What he's going to tell you is what the one in Fort Lauderdale told me is that if I attempt [16:42.400 --> 16:48.720] to give notice to the grand jury of crime, he'll charge me with jury tampering. [16:48.720 --> 16:52.440] And I told him, knock yourself out. [16:52.440 --> 16:57.480] You charge me with jury tampering, I will charge you with witness tampering and obstruction [16:57.480 --> 17:00.440] and we'll see who wins in the end. [17:00.440 --> 17:01.440] Dang, Cookie. [17:01.440 --> 17:02.440] Cookie? [17:02.440 --> 17:03.440] Me love cookies. [17:03.440 --> 17:04.440] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:04.440 --> 17:05.440] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:05.440 --> 17:06.440] Cookies? [17:06.440 --> 17:07.440] Yucky? [17:07.440 --> 17:08.440] No, no bad cookies. [17:08.440 --> 17:11.160] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:11.160 --> 17:12.720] These are cyber cookies. [17:12.720 --> 17:13.720] No, can't eat? [17:13.720 --> 17:16.880] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:16.880 --> 17:17.880] These have apples. [17:17.880 --> 17:18.880] Really? [17:18.880 --> 17:20.880] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:20.880 --> 17:22.880] Mmm, yummy apple. [17:22.880 --> 17:26.800] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.800 --> 17:33.000] I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:33.000 --> 17:34.520] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.520 --> 17:39.960] Now I go to logosradio.network.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right [17:39.960 --> 17:45.680] hand side, bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you [17:45.680 --> 17:46.680] some yummy new cookies. [17:46.680 --> 17:47.680] New cookies for me? [17:47.680 --> 17:53.600] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon, I go through [17:53.600 --> 17:57.200] this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.200 --> 17:58.520] C is for Cookie. [17:58.520 --> 18:00.520] C is for Classified. [18:00.520 --> 18:05.240] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:05.240 --> 18:09.360] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. [18:09.360 --> 18:13.680] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.680 --> 18:14.680] can win too. [18:14.680 --> 18:19.640] You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.640 --> 18:25.360] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer [18:25.360 --> 18:29.920] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [18:29.920 --> 18:34.120] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.120 --> 18:39.240] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.240 --> 18:41.040] Consultation is available as well. [18:41.040 --> 18:46.880] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:46.880 --> 18:49.880] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.880 --> 18:58.880] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [18:58.880 --> 18:59.880] collectors now. [18:59.880 --> 19:26.960] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton of Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Don in New [19:26.960 --> 19:27.960] Mexico. [19:27.960 --> 19:36.600] Okay, Don, I'm going to shut up and let you talk and quit interrupting here. [19:36.600 --> 19:37.600] You're not. [19:37.600 --> 19:38.600] Wait, wait, wait, wait. [19:38.600 --> 19:39.600] I think I'm going to quit interrupting. [19:39.600 --> 19:40.600] There you go. [19:40.600 --> 19:41.600] Yeah, yeah, okay. [19:41.600 --> 19:42.600] I promise I'm going to quit interrupting by interrupting. [19:42.600 --> 19:43.600] I'm going to shut up. [19:43.600 --> 19:44.600] Just for a minute. [19:44.600 --> 19:45.600] I'm going to be preparing. [19:45.600 --> 19:46.600] I've already got the criminal complaint written up. [19:46.600 --> 20:07.720] I found out who the supervisor's supervisor is, I sent a letter to the supervisor's supervisor [20:07.720 --> 20:13.120] and just to bring, should I bring everybody up to speed on that or? [20:13.120 --> 20:20.080] It helps, it helps if when you get to the grand jury and they say, well, did you do [20:20.080 --> 20:21.080] this? [20:21.080 --> 20:22.080] You say, yeah, I did that. [20:22.080 --> 20:23.080] Did you do this? [20:23.080 --> 20:24.080] I did that. [20:24.080 --> 20:33.280] So that you can show that even if you didn't do every possible thing you could have done, [20:33.280 --> 20:40.400] that you took great effort to resolve this before you got to them, it will have more [20:40.400 --> 20:41.400] credibility. [20:41.400 --> 20:50.520] Okay, so I complained, I complained to the IRS agent revenue officer that was issuing [20:50.520 --> 20:57.000] notices of levy that were illegal and they're not, he issued notices of levy that were not [20:57.000 --> 21:04.960] done according to the secretary's authority and he used them in the private sector. [21:04.960 --> 21:08.520] I don't need to go into all that. [21:08.520 --> 21:14.720] So I complained to his supervisor once I found out who his supervisor was, which was a bit [21:14.720 --> 21:21.120] of work because the people at FOIA who answered the letters for freedom of information act [21:21.120 --> 21:30.280] request, I believe they purposefully don't answer questions or they misstate what your [21:30.280 --> 21:35.520] questions are and then they say, oh, we can't respond to that. [21:35.520 --> 21:47.560] And so, okay, it is my practice that if they misstate what I asked for and then deny it [21:47.560 --> 21:55.640] because of their misstatement, I construe that as a deliberate act, as a deliberate [21:55.640 --> 21:59.520] violation of the act. [21:59.520 --> 22:05.800] Early this morning, I spent two or three hours writing a set of criminal complaints based [22:05.800 --> 22:18.600] on the city of Tyler's city attorney, his response to six of my information requests. [22:18.600 --> 22:23.240] Oh, this was a humdinger. [22:23.240 --> 22:34.920] But he asked for clarification and I treated the request for clarification as frivolous [22:34.920 --> 22:39.160] and an act of delay for delay's sake. [22:39.160 --> 22:42.560] I don't assume he made a mistake. [22:42.560 --> 22:50.440] I assume that if it appears as though they deliberately misconstrued what I said, then [22:50.440 --> 22:55.080] they deliberately misconstrued what I said and I'll hold them responsible for it. [22:55.080 --> 23:00.080] If they made a legitimate mistake, let them explain it. [23:00.080 --> 23:01.080] Right. [23:01.080 --> 23:06.320] And they answer, they end their letters with, you know, you can always appeal or you can [23:06.320 --> 23:08.840] file in court, right? [23:08.840 --> 23:11.760] And there's a third way and I like your way better. [23:11.760 --> 23:15.360] Yeah, you can appeal to a grand jury. [23:15.360 --> 23:16.360] That's right. [23:16.360 --> 23:24.200] And I sent another criminal complaint out today for my Privacy Act request. [23:24.200 --> 23:31.200] I sent a Privacy Act which asked for information specifically for, you know, related to me. [23:31.200 --> 23:33.320] And it was for... [23:33.320 --> 23:35.400] Under your special right of access. [23:35.400 --> 23:37.480] Well, of course, yeah. [23:37.480 --> 23:43.400] So the Privacy Act, you're supposed to be able to ask them for information that the [23:43.400 --> 23:46.200] government has about you. [23:46.200 --> 23:55.480] And so I asked for records showing W-2s for certain years, 1099s that were issued during [23:55.480 --> 24:00.040] certain years, notices of levy and so on. [24:00.040 --> 24:05.560] And the response I got back was, your letter contains questions or statements that deal [24:05.560 --> 24:08.800] with the legality of the income tax system. [24:08.800 --> 24:14.260] And it followed up with, we will not reply to future letters concerning these topics. [24:14.260 --> 24:16.160] And I didn't make any statements whatsoever. [24:16.160 --> 24:18.800] I asked for records. [24:18.800 --> 24:24.320] I would consider that a knowing and deliberate violation of the Act. [24:24.320 --> 24:25.600] Oh, yeah. [24:25.600 --> 24:27.600] Criminal complaint was mailed out today. [24:27.600 --> 24:29.600] Well, you bet. [24:29.600 --> 24:33.120] I mean, you know, and they filed it at the end of the letter. [24:33.120 --> 24:34.120] If you don't like it, you can appeal. [24:34.120 --> 24:35.120] You can take it to court. [24:35.120 --> 24:36.120] You can... [24:36.120 --> 24:40.960] But they don't give me the option of sending a criminal complaint, which I did. [24:40.960 --> 24:45.680] I recall I bushwhacked Judge Robert Hopkins. [24:45.680 --> 24:50.840] He was the head criminal district judge in Travis County with a set of criminal complaints [24:50.840 --> 25:00.320] against the district attorney, accusing the district attorney of secreting criminal complaints [25:00.320 --> 25:05.960] against all the highest judges in Texas from a grand jury. [25:05.960 --> 25:08.680] And he's trying to weasel out of it. [25:08.680 --> 25:13.520] I pulled my standard trick where I walk in and walk up to the bar, point at the bailiff. [25:13.520 --> 25:14.520] You come here. [25:14.520 --> 25:15.520] They hate that. [25:15.520 --> 25:16.520] Lawyers don't do that. [25:16.520 --> 25:17.520] They're real timid when they go into court. [25:17.520 --> 25:18.520] So he comes over and said, may I help you? [25:18.520 --> 25:19.520] He said, yes, you may. [25:19.520 --> 25:20.520] And my name is Randall Kelsey. [25:20.520 --> 25:21.520] I instruct the judge that I have business with the court. [25:21.520 --> 25:22.520] He said, may I tell him the nature of the business? [25:22.520 --> 25:23.520] No, you may not. [25:23.520 --> 25:24.520] I have business with the court. [25:24.520 --> 25:25.520] And it's none of yours. [25:25.520 --> 25:26.520] You're dismissed. [25:26.520 --> 25:27.520] Because I want the bailiff furious. [25:27.520 --> 25:28.520] So he runs up to the judge and tells him, some jerk out here. [25:28.520 --> 25:29.520] He says, no, you may not. [25:29.520 --> 25:30.520] I have business with the court. [25:30.520 --> 25:31.520] And it's none of yours. [25:31.520 --> 25:32.520] You're dismissed. [25:32.520 --> 25:38.800] Because I want the bailiff furious, he runs up to the judge and tells him, some jerk out [25:38.800 --> 25:39.800] here. [25:39.800 --> 25:42.360] He says, he's got business and won't tell me what it is. [25:42.360 --> 25:49.680] So the judge looks out at me and I'm holding up this red folder and the judge simply cannot [25:49.680 --> 25:51.480] help himself. [25:51.480 --> 25:54.920] He has to know what's in it. [25:54.920 --> 25:57.080] Bad move, bubba. [25:57.080 --> 25:58.960] He finishes his motion hearings. [25:58.960 --> 26:01.720] He calls me up. [26:01.720 --> 26:04.160] He said, Mr. Cotton, I understand you have business with the court. [26:04.160 --> 26:05.760] I said, yes, your honor, I do. [26:05.760 --> 26:09.480] And I hold up the folder and say, may I approach? [26:09.480 --> 26:13.080] And that really means, in legalese, can I give you these documents? [26:13.080 --> 26:15.940] Generally, they'll send the bailiff to retrieve it. [26:15.940 --> 26:18.240] But he was hearing cases right at the bench. [26:18.240 --> 26:20.080] So he said, well, come on up. [26:20.080 --> 26:23.440] He generally was a nice guy. [26:23.440 --> 26:24.880] I hand him the folder. [26:24.880 --> 26:30.360] He opens it up and he's looking at criminal charges against all 15 of the judges of the [26:30.360 --> 26:31.760] Court of Criminal Appeals. [26:31.760 --> 26:38.160] He's looking at a complaint against the district attorney, accusing him of secreting the complaint [26:38.160 --> 26:41.680] against these judges in the Court of Criminal Appeals. [26:41.680 --> 26:47.640] And you could see he saw his career flash before his eyes. [26:47.640 --> 26:52.800] He told me that I needed to file easily that he's a district judge and district judges [26:52.800 --> 26:54.760] in Travis County don't take criminal complaints. [26:54.760 --> 26:58.400] And I said, well, that's okay, Judge, I'm not here to invoke your duties as district [26:58.400 --> 26:59.400] judge. [26:59.400 --> 27:02.680] I'm here to invoke your duty as a magistrate. [27:02.680 --> 27:06.400] And that's a duty from which you may not shield yourself. [27:06.400 --> 27:11.240] And that's when he sat back and looked at me like I could see he was thinking, could [27:11.240 --> 27:14.400] I get away with it if I have my bailiff shoot this guy? [27:14.400 --> 27:19.520] And then he told me that, well, I should file this with the sheriff's department. [27:19.520 --> 27:21.520] I said, I did that, Judge. [27:21.520 --> 27:23.920] And he threw him in the trash. [27:23.920 --> 27:27.400] Well, you can appeal to the Court of Appeals. [27:27.400 --> 27:30.320] I said, Judge, don't ask me to appeal. [27:30.320 --> 27:36.280] He said, you go before a corrupt judge and he renders a bogus decision and they say, [27:36.280 --> 27:37.560] that's okay, Judge. [27:37.560 --> 27:41.880] You can go before a whole panel of corrupt judges and they'll really screw your oil. [27:41.880 --> 27:46.920] And he just kind of laughed and said, well, Mr. Kelton, I don't think it's quite that [27:46.920 --> 27:47.920] bad. [27:47.920 --> 27:50.800] I said, that's because you're not pro se. [27:50.800 --> 27:53.160] I got a better idea. [27:53.160 --> 27:55.200] I'll appeal to the grand jury. [27:55.200 --> 27:58.480] Well, Mr. Kelton, you can appeal to the grand jury. [27:58.480 --> 27:59.480] I said, sure I can. [27:59.480 --> 28:05.120] I can appeal to the grand jury to indict the sheriff for felony shielding from prosecution [28:05.120 --> 28:07.720] violation of 3805 Penal Code. [28:07.720 --> 28:13.200] And the judge sat back in his seat and just stared at me. [28:13.200 --> 28:16.280] He had nothing to say. [28:16.280 --> 28:20.160] Yes, we can appeal to a grand jury. [28:20.160 --> 28:24.200] And did you hear the beginning of the show? [28:24.200 --> 28:26.720] You know, I missed that and I'll catch it on the... [28:26.720 --> 28:29.240] Oh, just quickly. [28:29.240 --> 28:34.320] You heard that I filed first degree felony aggravated assault charges against my local [28:34.320 --> 28:36.320] district judge. [28:36.320 --> 28:38.560] Yes. [28:38.560 --> 28:40.960] The grand jury met today. [28:40.960 --> 28:42.800] I gave them to them last month. [28:42.800 --> 28:45.840] I'm sorry, they met yesterday. [28:45.840 --> 28:53.800] I called the district attorney's office at about two o'clock and asked his clerk to ask [28:53.800 --> 28:59.920] the prosecutor if I got a no bill on these cases. [28:59.920 --> 29:06.440] She went back, was there quite a while, came back and said, the prosecutor doesn't have [29:06.440 --> 29:11.400] time right now, but he said he will call you Monday to talk about these. [29:11.400 --> 29:13.400] Oh, wow. [29:13.400 --> 29:14.400] Whoa. [29:14.400 --> 29:15.400] Holy moly. [29:15.400 --> 29:20.400] Is that the county grand jury? [29:20.400 --> 29:21.400] Yeah. [29:21.400 --> 29:22.400] Yeah. [29:22.400 --> 29:24.120] And that's the federal judge. [29:24.120 --> 29:29.400] No, this one's not the federal judge, this is the district judge. [29:29.400 --> 29:33.000] But he's going to talk to me about it. [29:33.000 --> 29:34.840] Wow. [29:34.840 --> 29:37.840] That sounds to me like he didn't get a no bill. [29:37.840 --> 29:38.840] Wow. [29:38.840 --> 29:43.760] Ooh, this could get heavy. [29:43.760 --> 29:45.760] I'm looking forward to Monday. [29:45.760 --> 29:47.760] I bet you are. [29:47.760 --> 29:49.760] Oh, my goodness. [29:49.760 --> 29:56.040] The prosecutor may go on vacation Monday, you never know. [29:56.040 --> 30:02.880] I think he has heartburn about now. [30:02.880 --> 30:05.160] Does stress make your hair turn gray? [30:05.160 --> 30:10.000] For years, silver foxes have been claiming as much, but scientists now say they can explain [30:10.000 --> 30:11.000] why. [30:11.000 --> 30:17.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back to tell you how stress ages us prematurely. [30:17.400 --> 30:19.000] Privacy is under attack. [30:19.000 --> 30:22.640] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.640 --> 30:27.400] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.400 --> 30:32.520] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.520 --> 30:35.160] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:35.160 --> 30:39.440] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:39.440 --> 30:42.960] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.960 --> 30:45.800] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.800 --> 30:48.520] When the going gets tough, the hairs turn gray. [30:48.520 --> 30:53.000] It may sound like folklore, but scientists say chronic stress really does make us look [30:53.000 --> 30:55.320] older and heightens the risk of disease. [30:55.320 --> 31:00.880] During a four-week experiment, Duke University researchers injected mice with an adrenaline-like [31:00.880 --> 31:04.120] compound that mimics stress in human beings. [31:04.120 --> 31:10.400] They found a sharp reduction in P53, a protein that keeps cells healthy and prevents cancer. [31:10.400 --> 31:15.880] When the mice's level of P53 stayed low, their chromosomes began to develop irregularities [31:15.880 --> 31:19.920] that sped up the aging process and increased their risk of cancer. [31:19.920 --> 31:21.760] So don't skip that vacation. [31:21.760 --> 31:23.840] It may do more than just calm your mind. [31:23.840 --> 31:25.320] It could help keep you young. [31:25.320 --> 31:27.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:27.040 --> 31:29.440] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:29.440 --> 31:35.880] Did you know there are three million edible food plants on earth, and none have the nutritional [31:35.880 --> 31:37.520] value of the hemp plant? [31:37.520 --> 31:40.400] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder. [31:40.400 --> 31:45.800] It does not contain chemicals or THC, is non-GMO, and is 100% gluten-free. [31:45.800 --> 31:51.240] Hemp protein powder burns fat, builds muscle, contains 53% protein, and feeds the body the [31:51.240 --> 31:52.480] nutrients it needs. [31:52.480 --> 32:03.040] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you, only at HempUSA.org. [32:03.040 --> 32:05.840] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.840 --> 32:09.680] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:09.680 --> 32:13.560] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.560 --> 32:16.840] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:16.840 --> 32:20.880] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.880 --> 32:24.720] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.720 --> 32:26.160] our rights through due process. [32:26.160 --> 32:30.080] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:30.080 --> 32:33.840] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.840 --> 32:36.240] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.240 --> 32:40.240] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:40.240 --> 32:41.560] ordering your copy today. [32:41.560 --> 32:44.840] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.840 --> 32:49.320] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:49.320 --> 32:51.640] documents and other useful resource material. [32:51.640 --> 32:54.840] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.840 --> 33:22.800] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:22.800 --> 33:28.520] We are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Don in New Mexico. [33:28.520 --> 33:29.520] Okay. [33:29.520 --> 33:31.800] You're filing complaints. [33:31.800 --> 33:34.320] How are you filing them? [33:34.320 --> 33:44.720] Well, so far these, I've got one, two, three, four complaints that I've sent to the people [33:44.720 --> 33:47.280] at FOIA and the Privacy Act. [33:47.280 --> 33:53.800] In those letters, they tell you if you have questions, contact this person. [33:53.800 --> 33:59.120] They give a name, ID number, and so I'm sending the criminal complaint to that person. [33:59.120 --> 34:03.240] Oh, that is so good. [34:03.240 --> 34:09.080] And I'm sending a letter, well, in there with the criminal complaint telling them to forward [34:09.080 --> 34:12.280] the criminal complaint onto the head of their agency. [34:12.280 --> 34:19.480] Yes, for all of those who haven't heard this before, Don is the one that brought 28 U.S. [34:19.480 --> 34:23.200] Code 535 to me, and it was a gem. [34:23.200 --> 34:29.480] We have that statute in Texas as Article 2.03. [34:29.480 --> 34:37.900] And what that statute effectively does is when a prosecutor in Texas is made known that [34:37.900 --> 34:43.920] a public official has violated law relating to his office, he has a question. [34:43.920 --> 34:45.920] He must give it to the grand jury. [34:45.920 --> 34:55.200] And the one in the Fed made it so that any official who gets notice that a public official [34:55.200 --> 35:02.000] is violating the law, they have to give it to the attorney general. [35:02.000 --> 35:06.560] So he's kind of sneaking up on them. [35:06.560 --> 35:13.200] He gives it to this flunky down at the bottom that don't know squat, and then when he does, [35:13.200 --> 35:18.080] the only thing that the comment that I've made, Don, is that you gave them fair warning. [35:18.080 --> 35:26.560] And told them to send it to the attorney general. [35:26.560 --> 35:28.840] I'm a little more rotten than you are. [35:28.840 --> 35:31.560] I wouldn't have given them fair warning. [35:31.560 --> 35:34.720] I'm just thing them with it. [35:34.720 --> 35:42.080] But the way I understood what you said is you never ask them to do anything they're [35:42.080 --> 35:44.280] not required to do. [35:44.280 --> 35:45.280] Exactly. [35:45.280 --> 35:50.040] And that way, I don't have to explain to them what they're required to do. [35:50.040 --> 35:54.120] And this is a thing that proceeds tend to do a lot. [35:54.120 --> 36:00.520] And if you look out here in the Patriot community, it's one of the things that frustrates me [36:00.520 --> 36:11.080] probably more than anything, is that we feel like we have to cite a law for the law to [36:11.080 --> 36:14.400] have a fact. [36:14.400 --> 36:21.080] We feel like we have to tell them what they're supposed to do before they're supposed to [36:21.080 --> 36:22.080] do it. [36:22.080 --> 36:26.080] Well, I got my right, you're supposed to do this, and you're supposed to do that. [36:26.080 --> 36:29.880] Now, what the heck with all that garbage? [36:29.880 --> 36:33.080] I quit giving them any warning at all. [36:33.080 --> 36:40.600] What I found out is if I tell somebody what my rights are, they treat me as though I am [36:40.600 --> 36:42.760] agitated. [36:42.760 --> 36:52.360] If I tell a public official what he's supposed to do, they always construe that as a threat. [36:52.360 --> 36:55.320] So heck with that nonsense. [36:55.320 --> 36:58.720] I just tell them what I want them to do. [36:58.720 --> 37:07.880] When I ask for information, I don't ask for information under 552 government code or 1.29 [37:07.880 --> 37:08.880] code of criminal procedure. [37:08.880 --> 37:11.640] I just ask for it. [37:11.640 --> 37:16.400] I don't have to be their lawyer for them if they want somebody to look up the code, like [37:16.400 --> 37:23.040] this guy in Tyler that answered my information request. [37:23.040 --> 37:30.640] I didn't give him any code when I gave him the request, but when I filed a criminal complaint [37:30.640 --> 37:36.000] against him, I gave him lots of code. [37:36.000 --> 37:39.400] I gave him all the code. [37:39.400 --> 37:42.560] There's a lot more fun in Bushwick. [37:42.560 --> 37:46.000] Anyway, that's for anybody who's per se. [37:46.000 --> 37:53.600] Try to avoid the impulse to tell people what your rights are or to tell them what they're [37:53.600 --> 37:57.200] supposed to do. [37:57.200 --> 38:00.920] They're supposed to do it. [38:00.920 --> 38:07.640] The laws are self-actuating. [38:07.640 --> 38:13.120] You don't have to cite the law for the law to have effect, and I have seen more than [38:13.120 --> 38:20.920] one case where the courts have tried to say that because you didn't cite a law, an official [38:20.920 --> 38:27.000] wasn't required to act under the law, like take before magistrate. [38:27.000 --> 38:31.600] They're saying that you have to request to be taken before magistrate. [38:31.600 --> 38:34.720] I'm saying, wait a minute. [38:34.720 --> 38:41.640] The law commands that officer to take you before a magistrate. [38:41.640 --> 38:50.160] That law doesn't only apply if I tell him specifically to do what the law commanded [38:50.160 --> 38:51.160] him to do. [38:51.160 --> 38:56.480] He's required to do it anyway. [38:56.480 --> 39:01.960] No matter what they say about my right, if he didn't do it, I'm going to accuse him [39:01.960 --> 39:04.640] of failing to perform a duty he's required to perform. [39:04.640 --> 39:06.360] Anyway, okay. [39:06.360 --> 39:11.480] I interrupted you again, and I said I wasn't going to do that. [39:11.480 --> 39:13.560] I'm going to pull that from future letters. [39:13.560 --> 39:19.640] I won't tell them to send it to the head of their agencies, right? [39:19.640 --> 39:21.480] I don't want to give them that fair warning. [39:21.480 --> 39:22.480] Right. [39:22.480 --> 39:25.000] I wouldn't tell them anything. [39:25.000 --> 39:26.800] This is what I want. [39:26.800 --> 39:27.800] Here's a complaint. [39:27.800 --> 39:28.800] Handle it. [39:28.800 --> 39:29.800] There you go. [39:29.800 --> 39:39.080] I also sent out a letter on December 1st to Attorney General Lynch asking for the status [39:39.080 --> 39:46.040] of one of the criminal complaints that I filed early against the FOIA folks to see what I [39:46.040 --> 39:47.720] get back from that. [39:47.720 --> 39:53.840] I wonder what the odds are that you'll get a letter back saying, we don't know what you're [39:53.840 --> 39:56.520] talking about. [39:56.520 --> 39:57.520] Or no letter at all. [39:57.520 --> 40:02.280] There doesn't get all. [40:02.280 --> 40:09.560] No response at all can be construed as a negative response if we didn't get it. [40:09.560 --> 40:10.560] That's right. [40:10.560 --> 40:16.160] When I don't get a response or I get a negative response from the Attorney General, I'm going [40:16.160 --> 40:24.440] to file another criminal complaint against the person that I sent it to and start working [40:24.440 --> 40:25.440] that way. [40:25.440 --> 40:32.200] I'm going to get the other criminal complaint ready for the grand jury, hopefully sometime. [40:32.200 --> 40:36.480] I'm hoping to step up one more manager. [40:36.480 --> 40:40.720] That's exactly how we got the agent fired in Fort Lauderdale. [40:40.720 --> 40:41.920] Yeah. [40:41.920 --> 40:45.400] I'm up to the third, the second supervisor. [40:45.400 --> 40:54.360] I sent a complaint about the immediate supervisor plus a FOIA request asking for the supervisor's [40:54.360 --> 41:01.600] supervisor, so I'm hoping to get to the third level of supervisors. [41:01.600 --> 41:05.200] I may stop there and file the criminal complaint or I may go up one more. [41:05.200 --> 41:07.280] I don't know yet. [41:07.280 --> 41:12.720] You got to know that there's a lot of phone calling going on. [41:12.720 --> 41:16.080] This is getting old. [41:16.080 --> 41:22.440] A lot of people getting unhappy and this is perfect. [41:22.440 --> 41:23.440] I'm really proud of you. [41:23.440 --> 41:27.800] You know, it has a purpose bigger like you said before. [41:27.800 --> 41:33.520] There's a purpose bigger than my issue. [41:33.520 --> 41:38.440] What I'm doing is supporting the Bill of Rights. [41:38.440 --> 41:41.640] This is our job. [41:41.640 --> 41:43.080] That's what I'm supposed to be doing. [41:43.080 --> 41:44.840] Don, were you ever in the military? [41:44.840 --> 41:49.000] It pertains to my issue and I have a personal stake in it. [41:49.000 --> 41:54.880] Making access to the grand jury is something that I'm going to have to do because it's [41:54.880 --> 41:58.920] part of the Bill of Rights. [41:58.920 --> 42:09.080] It's been my experience that making grand jury noises scares the bejesus out of everybody. [42:09.080 --> 42:14.200] It's been a raise of the notch, isn't it? [42:14.200 --> 42:15.920] It raises a couple of notches. [42:15.920 --> 42:18.840] They get real excited. [42:18.840 --> 42:25.680] Most of them figure, well, even if it comes before a grand jury, I won't get indicted. [42:25.680 --> 42:31.080] From that perspective, I want to say, okay, I'm going to take 14 blanks in one live round. [42:31.080 --> 42:36.080] I'm going to scramble them up and I'm going to stick them in a clip and cock it. [42:36.080 --> 42:41.320] Who wants to take the first shot? [42:41.320 --> 42:46.520] Grand jury noises is like Russian roulette. [42:46.520 --> 42:53.840] I looked at the exemptions FOIA and for the Privacy Act and questioning the legality of [42:53.840 --> 42:58.240] income tax is not one of the exemptions listed. [42:58.240 --> 43:04.160] Even if I was, which I wasn't, it's still not a valid reason to deny a request. [43:04.160 --> 43:05.160] That's perfect. [43:05.160 --> 43:09.360] That should get a direct criminal complaint. [43:09.360 --> 43:12.720] That's exactly what I did to this guy in Tyler. [43:12.720 --> 43:22.120] I asked him for the criminal affidavit in support of cause numbers so-and-so and his [43:22.120 --> 43:28.040] whole answer was he claimed that my request was overbroad. [43:28.040 --> 43:36.360] He wrote down that I asked for the complaint in support of cause numbers so-and-so. [43:36.360 --> 43:43.120] It would be beneficial if you would provide me with a cause number. [43:43.120 --> 43:44.120] Duh! [43:44.120 --> 43:48.320] I had to read that twice to be sure he did that. [43:48.320 --> 43:51.920] He did it in two different places. [43:51.920 --> 43:54.200] It's obvious that he wasn't paying attention. [43:54.200 --> 43:55.200] Hang on. [43:55.200 --> 43:59.000] Randy Kelton, Muvla Radio, we'll be right back. [43:59.000 --> 44:06.240] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com. [44:06.240 --> 44:11.120] I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Suite D here [44:11.120 --> 44:15.320] in Austin, Texas, buying Brave New Books and Chase Bank to see all our fantastic health [44:15.320 --> 44:18.120] and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.120 --> 44:22.520] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.520 --> 44:26.560] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Eme oil, [44:26.560 --> 44:30.240] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.240 --> 44:43.080] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com, that's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.080 --> 45:01.120] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products, naturespureorganics.com. [45:01.120 --> 45:04.280] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.280 --> 45:09.520] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [45:09.520 --> 45:14.080] 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.080 --> 45:18.760] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.760 --> 45:23.040] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.040 --> 45:27.920] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [45:27.920 --> 45:34.680] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.680 --> 45:39.320] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.320 --> 45:43.480] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.480 --> 45:49.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.680 --> 45:51.920] pro se tactics and much more. [45:51.920 --> 45:59.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [45:59.720 --> 46:20.840] Okay. [46:20.840 --> 46:21.840] We are back. [46:21.840 --> 46:27.120] We're in the Calhoun, Louisville radio and we're talking to Don in New Mexico. [46:27.120 --> 46:41.920] Okay, you're one of the first ones that really understood the process. [46:41.920 --> 46:49.240] It's hard to imagine how they can find a way out from under, especially what I know about [46:49.240 --> 46:52.240] large organizations. [46:52.240 --> 46:59.760] Everybody's covering their behinds and the big fishes swallow the little fishes. [46:59.760 --> 47:06.040] Everybody down below feels like their job's being put at risk and the lower you are, the [47:06.040 --> 47:07.800] more trouble you got. [47:07.800 --> 47:18.640] Have you heard anything from this agent since you started this process? [47:18.640 --> 47:27.800] His supervisor responded to my FOIA request to him, so I sent a letter to his supervisor [47:27.800 --> 47:31.080] asking for the name of his supervisor. [47:31.080 --> 47:37.080] Well, he didn't respond, but he had the revenue agent respond for him. [47:37.080 --> 47:45.160] He sent me a rah rah, everybody has to pay taxes letter and at the end he put, and my [47:45.160 --> 47:51.400] supervisor's name is and his address is at the bottom of that letter. [47:51.400 --> 47:52.400] That's how I got that. [47:52.400 --> 47:58.120] That's the only thing I've heard and the address that he gave me for his supervisor in California [47:58.120 --> 47:59.600] was incorrect. [47:59.600 --> 48:05.160] I went into Google to check it because I've gotten, since FOIA seems to give me the wrong [48:05.160 --> 48:10.440] information half the time, I decided to check it before I sent a letter out and sure enough [48:10.440 --> 48:15.400] the address was wrong. [48:15.400 --> 48:22.320] That should get a complaint, but have they done anything toward collection? [48:22.320 --> 48:28.520] No, they haven't pursued seizing my house, which is what they said they were going to [48:28.520 --> 48:36.320] do when they came to visit the last time and so no. [48:36.320 --> 48:41.600] What a surprise, someone has gotten fair warning. [48:41.600 --> 48:48.280] I'm waiting for a letter back from the supervisor's supervisor with the name of his supervisor [48:48.280 --> 48:55.000] because I sent him a complaint about his employee and I don't know what to call him, is he an [48:55.000 --> 48:56.000] employee? [48:56.000 --> 48:57.000] Subordinate. [48:57.000 --> 49:00.800] Subordinate, there we go. [49:00.800 --> 49:05.320] We have subordinate and respondee at superior. [49:05.320 --> 49:09.080] Yes, we like that term. [49:09.080 --> 49:13.360] All right, can I switch gears with you? [49:13.360 --> 49:14.360] Absolutely. [49:14.360 --> 49:15.360] Okay. [49:15.360 --> 49:22.200] Bank of America, I want to talk notes for just a minute. [49:22.200 --> 49:31.520] Back in 2001, we took out a mortgage and we did a through Countrywide and we got a note [49:31.520 --> 49:37.800] from America's wholesale lender, which as you explained, never existed. [49:37.800 --> 49:38.800] Right. [49:38.800 --> 49:39.800] Okay. [49:39.800 --> 49:51.400] Let me bring up my- Okay, there is a case on that issue where [49:51.400 --> 50:04.760] the Florida judge made, it wasn't American Whole Cylinders, it was, who set them up? [50:04.760 --> 50:14.040] Anyway, they had to give the borrower back every dime he had paid them. [50:14.040 --> 50:15.040] Right. [50:15.040 --> 50:25.440] Municipal, interest, tax, escrow, everything and he kept the property. [50:25.440 --> 50:29.400] They complained that, well, we should get the property back and the judge said, oh no, [50:29.400 --> 50:30.400] you gave that to them. [50:30.400 --> 50:31.400] He kept everything. [50:31.400 --> 50:41.400] Now, I'm sure it got appealed but it was a good ruling against them. [50:41.400 --> 50:42.400] Okay, go ahead. [50:42.400 --> 50:43.400] I'm sorry. [50:43.400 --> 50:44.400] I interrupted again. [50:44.400 --> 50:45.400] Okay. [50:45.400 --> 50:46.400] All right. [50:46.400 --> 50:48.640] I like hearing positive stories. [50:48.640 --> 50:51.200] So we took out this note. [50:51.200 --> 50:59.440] In November of 2015, we paid off the note, okay? [50:59.440 --> 51:10.360] And last September, so September of 2016, I sent Bank of America who filed the release [51:10.360 --> 51:19.880] with the county clerk here and I asked them for my original loan docs and they sent me [51:19.880 --> 51:23.680] a letter back saying, no, we have to keep those for seven years. [51:23.680 --> 51:29.680] So I sent them a letter in October, middle of October saying, that's fine, I understand [51:29.680 --> 51:30.680] that. [51:30.680 --> 51:37.720] Just send me a copy of the original note marked paid and I haven't heard a word. [51:37.720 --> 51:47.720] So my question for- Did I lose you, Don? [51:47.720 --> 51:56.620] Okay, Donna, if you can hear me, we've lost your sound. [51:56.620 --> 52:00.720] So you might try hanging up and calling us back. [52:00.720 --> 52:04.600] Okay, we lost Don. [52:04.600 --> 52:07.880] Now we're going to go to John in Pennsylvania. [52:07.880 --> 52:08.880] Hello, John. [52:08.880 --> 52:09.880] Hello, Randy. [52:09.880 --> 52:10.880] How are you tonight? [52:10.880 --> 52:13.320] I am good. [52:13.320 --> 52:15.200] What do you have for us today? [52:15.200 --> 52:16.840] Okay, hold on. [52:16.840 --> 52:19.080] Wait, are you a first time caller? [52:19.080 --> 52:21.800] I don't recognize John in Pennsylvania. [52:21.800 --> 52:22.800] No. [52:22.800 --> 52:23.800] Okay. [52:23.800 --> 52:26.720] So it must have been a while. [52:26.720 --> 52:34.280] Yeah, it's been a while, but- Okay, because I probably slept and I'm old. [52:34.280 --> 52:37.320] I sleep, therefore I forget. [52:37.320 --> 52:38.960] No, that's okay. [52:38.960 --> 52:42.640] Okay, what do you have for us today? [52:42.640 --> 52:51.520] I've got a case where I recused the judge back in September and we had a hearing last [52:51.520 --> 52:58.200] Tuesday and they were supposed to assign a new judge, but they never did. [52:58.200 --> 53:04.200] So I showed up to this hearing and the next judge is holding the hearing. [53:04.200 --> 53:07.560] Now, wait a minute. [53:07.560 --> 53:09.400] You recused the judge. [53:09.400 --> 53:12.840] Well, I disqualified him and he recused himself. [53:12.840 --> 53:15.800] Okay, so he did step down. [53:15.800 --> 53:16.800] Okay. [53:16.800 --> 53:21.680] And he started the hearing by saying, I recused myself the last time. [53:21.680 --> 53:25.560] And he said, there's a new judge assigned, but he didn't feel like showing up today. [53:25.560 --> 53:27.560] So I'm going to hold this hearing. [53:27.560 --> 53:31.760] Oh, I take it you objected vehemently? [53:31.760 --> 53:37.000] No, I took the approach that you said before when they were screwing up, let them keep [53:37.000 --> 53:38.000] going. [53:38.000 --> 53:39.000] Oh, okay. [53:39.000 --> 53:45.080] He asked the clerk to call the case three times and the clerk just sat there and wouldn't [53:45.080 --> 53:50.200] call the case because she knew what was going on. [53:50.200 --> 53:53.600] Now that is interesting. [53:53.600 --> 53:56.600] So what was the outcome? [53:56.600 --> 54:00.320] Well, what I was expecting was, okay. [54:00.320 --> 54:04.880] He's going to set a time for another hearing, hearing over. [54:04.880 --> 54:13.280] Well, two attorneys were asking this recused judge to issue orders against me, which he [54:13.280 --> 54:14.280] did. [54:14.280 --> 54:19.200] Oh, wonderful. [54:19.200 --> 54:23.760] And this attorney actually brings an attorney, or this judge brings an attorney with him [54:23.760 --> 54:28.120] to court and she was joining in on this. [54:28.120 --> 54:34.560] Okay, the judge brings an attorney. [54:34.560 --> 54:43.640] How did the attorney establish standing? [54:43.640 --> 54:44.640] I don't know. [54:44.640 --> 54:50.200] She's just always there. [54:50.200 --> 54:56.760] The only judge I've ever seen bring an attorney with them, but she jumps up and talks in all [54:56.760 --> 54:58.320] the hearings. [54:58.320 --> 55:00.520] Well, that's interesting. [55:00.520 --> 55:04.480] I'd certainly want to find out who she is and what she is. [55:04.480 --> 55:07.760] Well, she's his attorney. [55:07.760 --> 55:09.240] The judge's attorney? [55:09.240 --> 55:10.240] Yes. [55:10.240 --> 55:15.160] Well, she doesn't have any standing in a case. [55:15.160 --> 55:22.760] Well, she's the attorney for the court and she works out of his chambers. [55:22.760 --> 55:23.760] Okay. [55:23.760 --> 55:26.960] Well, but the court's not on trial. [55:26.960 --> 55:35.840] Well I know, but this woman is always jumping in at all stages of hearing. [55:35.840 --> 55:45.080] I would certainly like to see where her standing is because she's a lawyer. [55:45.080 --> 55:52.840] She's not a prosecutor, so she has no immunity. [55:52.840 --> 55:53.840] That's interesting. [55:53.840 --> 56:05.920] She's there giving legal advice, so if she does anything that is harmful to you, unless [56:05.920 --> 56:13.360] there's something in Pennsylvania law, and I've never heard of this before, that when [56:13.360 --> 56:17.040] I was in Pennsylvania, we never saw it. [56:17.040 --> 56:19.280] That's not something that ever come up. [56:19.280 --> 56:26.840] Well, I've never seen it in any other court that I've ever been in. [56:26.840 --> 56:38.720] You should send this lawyer a request for power of attorney. [56:38.720 --> 56:40.760] And ask her to show authority. [56:40.760 --> 56:51.040] And if she doesn't, then if you got a ruling against you, then you sue her for malpractice. [56:51.040 --> 56:54.400] Well malpractice in Pennsylvania is hard to win. [56:54.400 --> 56:57.520] You don't care. [56:57.520 --> 57:03.760] You sue her, her malpractice insurance goes through the roof. [57:03.760 --> 57:09.480] Well they self-insure, they claim they do, but they don't. [57:09.480 --> 57:12.160] Are you saying that the lawyers self-insure? [57:12.160 --> 57:17.600] Yeah, the Bar Association, from what I've been told, insures the attorneys. [57:17.600 --> 57:19.600] Okay, that's okay. [57:19.600 --> 57:23.240] That's the way it was in Australia. [57:23.240 --> 57:28.560] All of the lawyers pay a fee into the Bar Association. [57:28.560 --> 57:29.560] I believe so. [57:29.560 --> 57:33.880] Yeah, in Australia, Florida is that way as well. [57:33.880 --> 57:39.240] In Australia, they called it the Law Society. [57:39.240 --> 57:43.160] It's worse for the lawyer. [57:43.160 --> 57:50.400] Because the Bar Association, they take all this money and they put it in a fund. [57:50.400 --> 57:55.060] And then they get to do stuff with this fund. [57:55.060 --> 58:01.520] If you get sued, and they have to give up part of their fund, they are not going to [58:01.520 --> 58:04.760] be happy campers. [58:04.760 --> 58:07.960] Now you got the bar coming after you. [58:07.960 --> 58:14.440] That's the way it works in Florida and that's the way it worked in Australia, man. [58:14.440 --> 58:20.880] You get sued by, if you're a lawyer and you get sued, boy the bar was really on your case [58:20.880 --> 58:27.040] and your fees to the bar went up, so it really doesn't make any difference. [58:27.040 --> 58:29.520] It's probably worse if the bar is self-insured. [58:29.520 --> 58:30.520] Okay. [58:30.520 --> 58:38.640] And it's really all about the, about to go to break I think, yeah, it's all about the [58:38.640 --> 58:41.040] lawyer himself and his risk. [58:41.040 --> 58:50.200] Hang on, about to go to break, Randy Kelton with our radio, we'll be right back. [58:50.200 --> 58:54.320] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.320 --> 58:59.520] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.520 --> 59:00.860] can really help. [59:00.860 --> 59:05.320] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.320 --> 59:06.320] today. [59:06.320 --> 59:10.220] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.220 --> 59:13.320] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.320 --> 59:18.600] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.600 --> 59:22.840] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:22.840 --> 59:27.780] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.780 --> 59:32.800] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.800 --> 59:45.560] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102 or visit [59:45.560 --> 59:48.560] us online at bfa.org. [59:48.560 --> 01:00:00.680] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.680 --> 01:00:05.880] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Low Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [01:00:05.880 --> 01:00:08.080] bulletins for the commodities market. [01:00:08.080 --> 01:00:20.120] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternatives. [01:00:20.120 --> 01:00:24.600] Markets for Wednesday the 14th of December of 2016 are currently trading with gold at [01:00:24.600 --> 01:00:33.640] $1,143.78 an ounce, silver $16.79 an ounce, Texas crude $52.98 a barrel and Bitcoin is [01:00:33.640 --> 01:00:42.800] currently sitting at about $778 U.S. currency. [01:00:42.800 --> 01:00:48.440] Today in history, the year 1958, the Third Soviet Antarctic Expedition becomes the first [01:00:48.440 --> 01:00:53.080] to reach the southern pole of inaccessibility, the area calculated to be the furthest on [01:00:53.080 --> 01:00:58.600] the continent from the shoreline, it lies about 546 miles from the actual south pole [01:00:58.600 --> 01:01:05.920] at an elevation of over 12,000 feet today in history. [01:01:05.920 --> 01:01:10.000] In recent news, for only the second time in a decade, the Federal Reserve will be raising [01:01:10.000 --> 01:01:11.000] interest rates. [01:01:11.000 --> 01:01:14.600] The Federal Reserve's interest rates setting committee said Wednesday today that it would [01:01:14.600 --> 01:01:19.760] raise interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point, that is between the 0.5, which it's [01:01:19.760 --> 01:01:23.120] currently at, up to a 0.75. [01:01:23.120 --> 01:01:27.080] The Fed statement did say that, quote, the committee expects the economic conditions [01:01:27.080 --> 01:01:31.280] will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds [01:01:31.280 --> 01:01:36.320] rate and that the federal funds rate is likely to remain for some time below levels that [01:01:36.320 --> 01:01:44.040] are expected to prevail in the long run. [01:01:44.040 --> 01:01:47.720] The Obama administration blocks states from cutting off federal grants to Planned Parenthood [01:01:47.720 --> 01:01:48.720] today. [01:01:48.720 --> 01:01:52.480] Wednesday, the executive rule stipulates that states may not prohibit an organization from [01:01:52.480 --> 01:01:56.480] participating in Title X, the state federal program that gives out tens of millions of [01:01:56.480 --> 01:02:00.920] dollars for family planning for any reason other than the organization's ability to [01:02:00.920 --> 01:02:02.080] provide services. [01:02:02.080 --> 01:02:06.040] However, President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to support efforts to cut off public [01:02:06.040 --> 01:02:09.200] funding for Planned Parenthood so long as they continue to offer abortions. [01:02:09.200 --> 01:02:14.120] He has also nominated as his Health and Human Services Secretary, Representative Tom Price, [01:02:14.120 --> 01:02:18.080] who has also supported measures to defund Planned Parenthood, and Vice President-elect [01:02:18.080 --> 01:02:22.720] Indiana Governor Mike Pence is completely in favor of cutting off the group's taxpayer [01:02:22.720 --> 01:02:23.720] support. [01:02:23.720 --> 01:02:31.160] It is clear to see this executive rule will be overturned. [01:02:31.160 --> 01:02:36.680] Abdul Salam Abdul Razak, a military spokesperson for the Naur al-Din al-Zinki Syrian rebel [01:02:36.680 --> 01:02:41.040] group, told Reuters today that within hours the implementation of an evacuation agreement [01:02:41.040 --> 01:02:42.660] for Aleppo will begin. [01:02:42.660 --> 01:02:47.200] The deal included the evacuation of people from the villages of Faoua and Kefraya. [01:02:47.200 --> 01:02:50.800] Some 50,000 people, including militants and their families and whoever wants to leave [01:02:50.800 --> 01:02:54.040] among civilians, will be headed for the province of Adlib. [01:02:54.040 --> 01:03:18.720] This was Rick Rode with the Lowdown for December 14, 2016. [01:03:18.720 --> 01:03:23.900] We are back, Randy Kelton, Lula Blah Radio, and Don, I saw you there, it looks like you [01:03:23.900 --> 01:03:26.280] dropped off again. [01:03:26.280 --> 01:03:31.600] If you'll come back on, we'll pick you up as soon as we're done with John in Pennsylvania. [01:03:31.600 --> 01:03:38.800] Okay, we're talking to Don in Pennsylvania, oh wait, Albuquerque, New Mexico, that may [01:03:38.800 --> 01:03:39.800] be Don. [01:03:39.800 --> 01:03:42.800] Okay, good, good, good. [01:03:42.800 --> 01:03:44.800] I'm confused, just ignore me. [01:03:44.800 --> 01:03:46.800] Okay, go ahead, John. [01:03:46.800 --> 01:03:50.000] Well, I'm trying to figure out a strategy. [01:03:50.000 --> 01:03:57.400] I believe the judge committed some kind of criminal act and I'm planning on disqualifying [01:03:57.400 --> 01:04:03.120] all three attorneys for asking a recused judge to issue orders. [01:04:03.120 --> 01:04:14.120] It's clear a recused judge let matter of jurisdiction, so if the judge issued an order that harmed [01:04:14.120 --> 01:04:24.800] you, the way I read, okay, did you find an official misconduct statute in, oh wait, you're [01:04:24.800 --> 01:04:30.520] in Pennsylvania, I'm thinking of Don in New Mexico, you're in Pennsylvania, you have an [01:04:30.520 --> 01:04:32.320] official misconduct statute. [01:04:32.320 --> 01:04:34.760] Yeah, it's official oppression. [01:04:34.760 --> 01:04:40.160] Yeah, oh, it is in Pennsylvania, I thought Texas is the only one that had that, okay, [01:04:40.160 --> 01:04:41.160] good. [01:04:41.160 --> 01:04:43.160] Yeah, that's what it is in Pennsylvania. [01:04:43.160 --> 01:04:44.160] Perfect. [01:04:44.160 --> 01:04:51.480] If a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority he does not expressly have, [01:04:51.480 --> 01:04:56.920] that's a malfeasance in office. [01:04:56.920 --> 01:05:03.360] You should file against the judge and this starts a really nice routine. [01:05:03.360 --> 01:05:06.600] This is how you, Pennsylvania is different than every other state. [01:05:06.600 --> 01:05:08.160] I understand that. [01:05:08.160 --> 01:05:15.920] Yeah, in Pennsylvania, a prosecuting attorney has prosecutorial discretion by statute. [01:05:15.920 --> 01:05:17.080] Correct. [01:05:17.080 --> 01:05:25.040] Yeah, he has first blush, okay, here's the deal, you go to the prosecuting attorney, [01:05:25.040 --> 01:05:30.600] you give him the complaint and he's going to exercise his prosecutorial discretion and [01:05:30.600 --> 01:05:37.200] decide not to prosecute and what you're going to do is you're going to appeal to the court [01:05:37.200 --> 01:05:45.760] of common pleas, claiming that the prosecutor did not exercise prosecutorial discretion, [01:05:45.760 --> 01:05:54.440] but instead exercise prosecutorial caprice in that he did not make a determined probable [01:05:54.440 --> 01:05:59.400] cause by determining whether or not there was sufficient evidence to believe that crimes [01:05:59.400 --> 01:06:06.360] been committed, but rather decided who he wanted to prosecute and who he did not and [01:06:06.360 --> 01:06:09.400] that is not an authority he has. [01:06:09.400 --> 01:06:15.840] So you file an appeal with the court of common pleas and at the same time you file a criminal [01:06:15.840 --> 01:06:22.560] complaint against the prosecutor for shielding from prosecution with the Pennsylvania attorney [01:06:22.560 --> 01:06:30.960] general who has prosecutorial power and he's going to refuse to prosecute the prosecutor. [01:06:30.960 --> 01:06:37.200] Can you appeal his refusal to the court of common pleas? [01:06:37.200 --> 01:06:43.680] You have the authority to appeal this all the way up to the Supreme Court. [01:06:43.680 --> 01:06:53.000] You will run this, drag this judge in front of every judge all the way up to the Supreme [01:06:53.000 --> 01:07:00.800] and the last response to an appeal by a pro se I saw from the Pennsylvania Supreme was [01:07:00.800 --> 01:07:01.800] amazing. [01:07:01.800 --> 01:07:11.040] A traffic issue and this guy did a horrible job on his appeal and the Supreme sent him [01:07:11.040 --> 01:07:20.200] back a 38 page response, told him exactly what was wrong with his pleadings, exactly [01:07:20.200 --> 01:07:21.200] how to fix them. [01:07:21.200 --> 01:07:27.240] I was absolutely astounded at the thoroughness. [01:07:27.240 --> 01:07:30.600] It's a good chance you could get the judge. [01:07:30.600 --> 01:07:36.200] Okay well we've got an even better situation, our current attorney general is headed to [01:07:36.200 --> 01:07:48.560] prison for nine felonies, two weeks her replacement takes over, we've got a temporary one right [01:07:48.560 --> 01:07:54.760] now who's been there for like a month and a half but we've got a new AG coming in and [01:07:54.760 --> 01:07:58.720] I don't think he wants rule 506 run on him. [01:07:58.720 --> 01:08:03.800] So you get to welcome him to the deep end of the pool? [01:08:03.800 --> 01:08:06.960] I think I can do that. [01:08:06.960 --> 01:08:14.160] I had a judge once that was hearing a habeas that I had written for a kid, the judge before [01:08:14.160 --> 01:08:20.760] him retired, he had heart trouble and he retired suddenly and they appointed this judge that [01:08:20.760 --> 01:08:25.920] day and when the hearing was over I told him I had some documents I wanted him to look [01:08:25.920 --> 01:08:29.800] at and he said well sure and I handed them to him and there are criminal charges against [01:08:29.800 --> 01:08:36.040] the judge across the hall and he looked up well Mr. Kelton these are criminal charges. [01:08:36.040 --> 01:08:38.520] I said yes matter of fact they are. [01:08:38.520 --> 01:08:43.400] He said Mr. Kelton you understand this is my first day. [01:08:43.400 --> 01:08:50.720] I said yes your honor I just wanted to welcome you to the deep end of the pool and he didn't [01:08:50.720 --> 01:08:51.720] see the humor in that. [01:08:51.720 --> 01:08:55.680] I wonder if your attorney general will see the humor in that. [01:08:55.680 --> 01:08:57.840] Sooner or later they might. [01:08:57.840 --> 01:09:01.680] This might be a really good time. [01:09:01.680 --> 01:09:11.960] Yeah I think it's a very good time for doing this because he wants to stay out of the papers. [01:09:11.960 --> 01:09:17.160] And the whole thing about what we do here and this is what I keep telling people you're [01:09:17.160 --> 01:09:23.520] not going to get the courts or the public officials to be afraid of you. [01:09:23.520 --> 01:09:30.040] What you're going to get them to be afraid of is the political cannon fodder you'll create [01:09:30.040 --> 01:09:34.480] for their political enemies. [01:09:34.480 --> 01:09:41.280] And I suspect the last thing this attorney general is going to want is for you to file [01:09:41.280 --> 01:09:49.880] criminal charges against him accusing him of shielding a corrupt prosecutor for prosecution. [01:09:49.880 --> 01:09:59.240] Well I agree and he's a Democrat and the local DA is a Republican so that adds to it. [01:09:59.240 --> 01:10:05.320] That'll make all the other Democrats hate him. [01:10:05.320 --> 01:10:11.720] You know I tell everybody everything's political and when you first hear that it sounds awful. [01:10:11.720 --> 01:10:14.480] But really it's not. [01:10:14.480 --> 01:10:20.560] You have so much more influence this way. [01:10:20.560 --> 01:10:25.720] Now can I do the same official oppression for the attorneys as well for asking a recuse [01:10:25.720 --> 01:10:29.280] judge to issue orders? [01:10:29.280 --> 01:10:35.040] That no, that violates the bar standards. [01:10:35.040 --> 01:10:47.160] They are specifically required to give notice to the judge if he's making an error. [01:10:47.160 --> 01:10:54.720] But as to criminal, no they wouldn't be subject to that because they don't really have that [01:10:54.720 --> 01:10:58.160] official duty. [01:10:58.160 --> 01:11:03.560] They're adjudicating for their client and as long as they're not violating a specific [01:11:03.560 --> 01:11:12.680] law they can ask the judge pretty much anything they want to. [01:11:12.680 --> 01:11:18.400] He's not allowed to give them what they're asking for but they can ask. [01:11:18.400 --> 01:11:22.320] It's like a policeman walked up to you on the street and asked for your ID. [01:11:22.320 --> 01:11:28.440] He can ask all he wants to but you don't have to respond. [01:11:28.440 --> 01:11:33.400] They can ask the judge all they want to but he doesn't have to give them what they want. [01:11:33.400 --> 01:11:41.440] So they would not be criminally culpable but they should certainly get a bar grievance [01:11:41.440 --> 01:11:48.120] and if the judge ruled in their favor a malpractice suit. [01:11:48.120 --> 01:11:55.200] That's going to sting them good because even if the bar is insuring them they're going [01:11:55.200 --> 01:12:03.680] to rate their level of risk with each lawyer just like the church companies do. [01:12:03.680 --> 01:12:08.000] So bar grievance is still going to sting them good. [01:12:08.000 --> 01:12:12.800] All right well that is in the works right now. [01:12:12.800 --> 01:12:17.080] All right let me ask you one other quick question. [01:12:17.080 --> 01:12:27.320] I did a mandamus in this case to the appellate court against the lower court and they came [01:12:27.320 --> 01:12:29.600] back and said they don't have jurisdiction. [01:12:29.600 --> 01:12:35.200] What was the nature of the mandamus? [01:12:35.200 --> 01:12:41.800] The mandamus was basically this guy's been sitting on this case for two and a half years [01:12:41.800 --> 01:12:46.680] and it was you know get your act together and get things finished instead of continuing [01:12:46.680 --> 01:12:47.680] the stall. [01:12:47.680 --> 01:12:54.320] Oh that okay did you file it with the next higher court or with the court with an appeals [01:12:54.320 --> 01:12:55.320] court? [01:12:55.320 --> 01:12:58.880] Well the next higher court is the appeals court. [01:12:58.880 --> 01:13:06.800] Oh okay okay because you know in Texas we have a county court which would be similar [01:13:06.800 --> 01:13:12.280] to your court of common pleas and then we have a district court. [01:13:12.280 --> 01:13:17.640] If you went for a mandamus from a county court you wouldn't file it with a district you'd [01:13:17.640 --> 01:13:20.400] file it with the court of appeals. [01:13:20.400 --> 01:13:24.920] That's why I was asking that particular question. [01:13:24.920 --> 01:13:29.000] But if the court that you filed it with is the one you would appeal to that was the right [01:13:29.000 --> 01:13:30.720] one. [01:13:30.720 --> 01:13:35.600] Did you did they say why they didn't have jurisdiction? [01:13:35.600 --> 01:13:38.120] No it's like a one sentence. [01:13:38.120 --> 01:13:50.360] Okay then you need to file a motion for reconsideration or a petition for findings of fact and conclusions [01:13:50.360 --> 01:13:51.360] at law. [01:13:51.360 --> 01:13:57.800] They both amount to the same thing and ask the court to clarify because if that's the [01:13:57.800 --> 01:14:05.120] court of appeals you can appeal on up to the supreme but you can't appeal to the supreme [01:14:05.120 --> 01:14:08.560] if you don't know why they claim they didn't have jurisdiction. [01:14:08.560 --> 01:14:14.520] Right because then the supreme court wouldn't have jurisdiction from them. [01:14:14.520 --> 01:14:22.560] Right well even if the supreme court had jurisdiction they wouldn't know how to determine whether [01:14:22.560 --> 01:14:29.960] the court of appeals ruled correctly or not if they don't know what the facts and law [01:14:29.960 --> 01:14:34.760] are on which they base their opinion. [01:14:34.760 --> 01:14:41.480] So what you generally do when you ask for findings of fact and conclusions is you make [01:14:41.480 --> 01:14:46.320] up your own findings of facts and conclusions. [01:14:46.320 --> 01:14:53.320] Send that to them and ask them to either accept yours which would constitute a change in the [01:14:53.320 --> 01:14:56.320] ruling or prepare their own. [01:14:56.320 --> 01:15:01.320] Well mine is a hot potato and they don't want to touch it. [01:15:01.320 --> 01:15:04.320] That's okay. [01:15:04.320 --> 01:15:07.400] Don't care. [01:15:07.400 --> 01:15:17.520] You have a right to know the law and the facts on which they made their decision. [01:15:17.520 --> 01:15:20.920] Don't care if they don't want to give it to you. [01:15:20.920 --> 01:15:28.880] If they don't give it to you go to the district attorney with complaints against them. [01:15:28.880 --> 01:15:34.040] Now I actually got that done in Texas. [01:15:34.040 --> 01:15:36.960] In Texas we have two high courts. [01:15:36.960 --> 01:15:42.680] We have a supreme for civil, court of criminal appeals for criminal. [01:15:42.680 --> 01:15:49.040] I got all 15 judges at the court of criminal appeals put in front of a grand jury. [01:15:49.040 --> 01:15:56.440] For the most nitpicking trash I filed a habeas. [01:15:56.440 --> 01:16:01.200] And they said the clerk said well you got to file a motion for leave to file. [01:16:01.200 --> 01:16:03.120] I said screw that. [01:16:03.120 --> 01:16:04.120] This is the habeas. [01:16:04.120 --> 01:16:06.120] This is the great writ. [01:16:06.120 --> 01:16:11.280] The court has no power to grant or deny leave and they wouldn't take it without the motion. [01:16:11.280 --> 01:16:13.680] So I'm trying to get this kid out of jail. [01:16:13.680 --> 01:16:17.080] So it wasn't my fight so I filed a motion for leave to file. [01:16:17.080 --> 01:16:20.840] They denied me leave to file a habeas corpus. [01:16:20.840 --> 01:16:23.840] Went straight to the grand jury. [01:16:23.840 --> 01:16:33.920] Took me just over a year and Ron Earl, 25 year district attorney, Democrat, not running [01:16:33.920 --> 01:16:40.880] for office again, gave my criminal complaints to the grand jury against these 15 judges [01:16:40.880 --> 01:16:44.360] who were all Democrats. [01:16:44.360 --> 01:16:50.000] That scoundrel used my complaint to try to take him out of office. [01:16:50.000 --> 01:16:52.120] That opened my eyes big time. [01:16:52.120 --> 01:16:57.240] Hang on Randy, if we were lost we'd be right back. [01:16:57.240 --> 01:17:00.000] You're going to wait a minute. [01:17:00.000 --> 01:17:01.000] I love logos. [01:17:01.000 --> 01:17:04.560] Without the shows on this network I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.560 --> 01:17:07.200] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.200 --> 01:17:08.360] I need my truth speak. [01:17:08.360 --> 01:17:10.400] I'd be lost without logos. [01:17:10.400 --> 01:17:13.000] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.000 --> 01:17:16.840] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [01:17:16.840 --> 01:17:20.240] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.240 --> 01:17:21.600] How can I help logos? [01:17:21.600 --> 01:17:23.800] Well, I'm glad you asked. 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[01:17:54.040 --> 01:17:55.040] This is perfect. [01:17:55.040 --> 01:17:56.040] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.040 --> 01:17:57.040] We are welcome. [01:17:57.040 --> 01:17:58.040] Happy holidays logos. [01:17:58.040 --> 01:18:05.040] At Capital Coin and Boolean our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [01:18:05.040 --> 01:18:09.480] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [01:18:09.480 --> 01:18:13.440] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality [01:18:13.440 --> 01:18:14.440] coins and precious metals. [01:18:14.440 --> 01:18:18.880] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [01:18:18.880 --> 01:18:23.560] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metals dealers [01:18:23.560 --> 01:18:24.560] and journalists. [01:18:24.560 --> 01:18:27.560] If we don't have what you're looking for we can find it. 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[01:19:26.520 --> 01:19:33.720] But the point of that was, that was the day that it became clear to me that everything's [01:19:33.720 --> 01:19:43.960] political and that's how you got a real shot at getting something done because with Trump [01:19:43.960 --> 01:19:50.200] coming in the whole political landscape is changing. [01:19:50.200 --> 01:20:02.160] Right now everybody in politics is, they all feel like they're on thin ice and if you can [01:20:02.160 --> 01:20:09.040] create political cannon fodder for somebody, they're likely to pick it up and use it. [01:20:09.040 --> 01:20:11.720] That's exactly what Ron Herrog did. [01:20:11.720 --> 01:20:21.520] Well, there's another political thing coming up, the guy who was the former president of [01:20:21.520 --> 01:20:30.480] the Supreme Court in Pennsylvania set about to fix judicial abuse in the state and as [01:20:30.480 --> 01:20:38.560] soon he set up a group to do this and as soon as he hit his 70th birthday, he had to retire [01:20:38.560 --> 01:20:46.240] and right after he retired, they erased this group that was supposed to clean up the courts [01:20:46.240 --> 01:20:51.600] and that judge has now volunteered to be the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of [01:20:51.600 --> 01:20:52.600] Pennsylvania. [01:20:52.600 --> 01:20:53.600] Wow. [01:20:53.600 --> 01:20:59.520] Okay, who is the current U.S. Attorney? [01:20:59.520 --> 01:21:02.920] I think it's me, Patrick Nguyen. [01:21:02.920 --> 01:21:11.240] Okay, you know that when there is a new president, every U.S. Attorney in the country must file [01:21:11.240 --> 01:21:14.160] their resignation with the new president. [01:21:14.160 --> 01:21:15.160] Yes. [01:21:15.160 --> 01:21:22.880] Okay, so now is a good time to hammer the current U.S. Attorney. [01:21:22.880 --> 01:21:27.560] I figured it would be better to wait. [01:21:27.560 --> 01:21:31.400] Okay. [01:21:31.400 --> 01:21:43.560] Well, what I'm saying is take the one that's unfriendly and put a mark on his chart. [01:21:43.560 --> 01:21:52.080] If he's sitting here looking at an ex-judge looking to take his place and he has to send [01:21:52.080 --> 01:22:02.280] his resignation to Trump, what if he's got some pro se jerk down here filing criminal [01:22:02.280 --> 01:22:08.500] charges against him because he won't pursue some low-level judge? [01:22:08.500 --> 01:22:18.440] Now Trump has an excuse to use one of you to appoint someone who will be on Trump's [01:22:18.440 --> 01:22:19.440] side. [01:22:19.440 --> 01:22:22.360] Is that 535? [01:22:22.360 --> 01:22:27.880] Oh, no, no, no, no, not 535. [01:22:27.880 --> 01:22:32.040] Trump can, he can fire every U.S. Attorney in the country if he wants to. [01:22:32.040 --> 01:22:37.160] No, but can I use 535 against this guy for not prosecuting? [01:22:37.160 --> 01:22:42.320] Oh, absolutely, exactly, for not giving it to the Attorney General. [01:22:42.320 --> 01:22:44.800] And that's where I was going. [01:22:44.800 --> 01:22:51.520] To get him not to act and then you go to the Attorney General and question the Attorney [01:22:51.520 --> 01:22:52.520] General. [01:22:52.520 --> 01:22:57.840] You know, you notice the Attorney General that I filed criminal charges against this [01:22:57.840 --> 01:23:05.840] corrupt judge with this U.S. Attorney and the U.S. Attorney secreted the complaint from [01:23:05.840 --> 01:23:06.840] you. [01:23:06.840 --> 01:23:10.240] He was required under 535 to send it to you. [01:23:10.240 --> 01:23:15.040] Now the statute says official. [01:23:15.040 --> 01:23:23.480] I am certain they're going to take that to mean a federal official and not a state official. [01:23:23.480 --> 01:23:26.880] But I'm going to pretend like I don't know that. [01:23:26.880 --> 01:23:39.320] Well, so when you get to stick your finger in his eye anyway, and it's all about marks [01:23:39.320 --> 01:23:40.320] on his chart. [01:23:40.320 --> 01:23:44.520] John, were you ever in the military? [01:23:44.520 --> 01:23:47.880] No, but my father was. [01:23:47.880 --> 01:23:50.600] He would understand. [01:23:50.600 --> 01:23:55.640] I was, when I was on guard duty, I'm standing in this barracks and right across the hall [01:23:55.640 --> 01:23:58.440] from me is a copy of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. [01:23:58.440 --> 01:24:01.880] Well, I'm standing here for hours on end at parade rest. [01:24:01.880 --> 01:24:06.080] So I read that thing several times and it says if you have a problem, you have to go [01:24:06.080 --> 01:24:09.600] through your chain of command or if you don't think you can get satisfaction through your [01:24:09.600 --> 01:24:15.120] chain of command, you can always go to the inspector general. [01:24:15.120 --> 01:24:16.120] So heck with the chain of command. [01:24:16.120 --> 01:24:18.360] I went straight to the inspector general. [01:24:18.360 --> 01:24:22.440] I called the inspector general's office and I complained. [01:24:22.440 --> 01:24:28.440] Inspector general calls my squadron commander, my base commander and says, I got this guy, [01:24:28.440 --> 01:24:31.880] this troop calling me complaining about this issue. [01:24:31.880 --> 01:24:40.120] The base commander calls my squadron commander and said, I got the inspector general complaining [01:24:40.120 --> 01:24:42.400] to me about one of your troops. [01:24:42.400 --> 01:24:48.200] The squadron commander calls my OIC officer in charge of my duty section and said, I'm [01:24:48.200 --> 01:24:51.920] getting chewed out by the base commander because of one of your troops. [01:24:51.920 --> 01:24:55.160] They don't care what the problem is. [01:24:55.160 --> 01:24:56.160] They got static. [01:24:56.160 --> 01:25:00.560] They got garbage they have to deal with and they don't want to deal with it and the further [01:25:00.560 --> 01:25:04.320] down it goes, the worse it gets. [01:25:04.320 --> 01:25:08.220] That's what you want to create. [01:25:08.220 --> 01:25:14.800] You file a complaint with the attorney general against this US attorney and they don't care [01:25:14.800 --> 01:25:17.160] if it's valid or not. [01:25:17.160 --> 01:25:22.200] They're going to say to him, we're having problems because of you. [01:25:22.200 --> 01:25:23.920] What is your problem? [01:25:23.920 --> 01:25:26.360] Can you not handle your office? [01:25:26.360 --> 01:25:31.120] I got all of these US attorneys and all of them have perfect records, but you got a mark [01:25:31.120 --> 01:25:40.000] on your chart and the president wants to appoint one of his buddies to US attorney and we need [01:25:40.000 --> 01:25:42.560] a reason to get rid of one of them. [01:25:42.560 --> 01:25:48.560] Your history, that's what they're afraid of. [01:25:48.560 --> 01:25:53.160] They're all terrified of that. [01:25:53.160 --> 01:25:59.320] So if you just notify the attorney general, what the attorney general is going to do is [01:25:59.320 --> 01:26:03.640] he's going to contact this US attorney and say, hey, what's going on? [01:26:03.640 --> 01:26:09.000] Now the attorney general may not give him a hard time at all, but it's going to terrify [01:26:09.000 --> 01:26:21.320] him because the attorney general knows his name now and not in a positive way. [01:26:21.320 --> 01:26:24.680] Good chance you'll get the US attorney to take some action. [01:26:24.680 --> 01:26:27.040] It's all politics. [01:26:27.040 --> 01:26:31.600] Well, I appreciate your help. [01:26:31.600 --> 01:26:34.240] Okay. [01:26:34.240 --> 01:26:37.240] You got a plan? [01:26:37.240 --> 01:26:40.200] I'm really getting encouraged. [01:26:40.200 --> 01:26:48.720] Don and you and Olivier, I'm getting really sophisticated guys. [01:26:48.720 --> 01:26:53.920] We keep doing this and we're going to get things changed. [01:26:53.920 --> 01:26:54.920] It's not easy. [01:26:54.920 --> 01:27:02.040] No, it's not easy, but it is fulfilling. [01:27:02.040 --> 01:27:03.040] In a way. [01:27:03.040 --> 01:27:11.640] There will be a time where you look back and say, and all of this time I've been here, [01:27:11.640 --> 01:27:18.520] have I ever done the right thing for the right reason, even though it was hard? [01:27:18.520 --> 01:27:21.960] And that'll make this all worth it. [01:27:21.960 --> 01:27:25.200] That's what I'm doing and why I'm doing it. [01:27:25.200 --> 01:27:26.200] Okay. [01:27:26.200 --> 01:27:27.200] Thank you, John. [01:27:27.200 --> 01:27:28.440] I'm kind of running out of time. [01:27:28.440 --> 01:27:29.720] I need to go back to Don. [01:27:29.720 --> 01:27:31.560] I kind of lost him before he was done. [01:27:31.560 --> 01:27:33.560] Do you have anything else, John? [01:27:33.560 --> 01:27:37.280] Oh, I guess he doesn't. [01:27:37.280 --> 01:27:38.280] Okay. [01:27:38.280 --> 01:27:40.280] Don in New Mexico. [01:27:40.280 --> 01:27:42.480] Oh, hold on. [01:27:42.480 --> 01:27:46.080] I can hear you better if I unmute you. [01:27:46.080 --> 01:27:47.080] There you go. [01:27:47.080 --> 01:27:48.080] There you go. [01:27:48.080 --> 01:27:49.080] So, I'm sorry. [01:27:49.080 --> 01:27:52.520] My phone died earlier and so I switched phones. [01:27:52.520 --> 01:27:53.520] Okay. [01:27:53.520 --> 01:27:54.520] You had two more questions? [01:27:54.520 --> 01:27:55.520] Well, I do. [01:27:55.520 --> 01:27:57.520] I want to talk about Bank of America. [01:27:57.520 --> 01:28:01.920] I'm not sure where I dropped off. [01:28:01.920 --> 01:28:04.800] Okay. [01:28:04.800 --> 01:28:06.040] Bring me back up to speed. [01:28:06.040 --> 01:28:07.560] Bank of America. [01:28:07.560 --> 01:28:09.240] You paid them off. [01:28:09.240 --> 01:28:15.840] They didn't get you your note signed paid. [01:28:15.840 --> 01:28:21.640] Right, and that's right, or a copy of it, which is what the law here in New Mexico says. [01:28:21.640 --> 01:28:26.680] You know, we're supposed to get it reported or released at the county clerk, which they [01:28:26.680 --> 01:28:31.840] did, but I haven't received a copy of the original note marked paid. [01:28:31.840 --> 01:28:32.840] Okay. [01:28:32.840 --> 01:28:35.480] Has anybody made an offer on your house? [01:28:35.480 --> 01:28:36.480] No. [01:28:36.480 --> 01:28:44.080] You know, if somebody came by and offered to buy your house for a just ridiculous amount [01:28:44.080 --> 01:28:50.120] of money and you decided, well, for that much money, I'll sell this thing, and then this [01:28:50.120 --> 01:28:57.760] person goes down and looks in the record and they see this deed of trust in there, but [01:28:57.760 --> 01:29:04.480] they don't see anything showing that the lien has been released and they say, screw this. [01:29:04.480 --> 01:29:07.680] I'm not buying this place with that lien on it. [01:29:07.680 --> 01:29:12.720] You have lost the benefit of the bargain. [01:29:12.720 --> 01:29:14.200] That's the cause of action. [01:29:14.200 --> 01:29:16.200] Well, they did file. [01:29:16.200 --> 01:29:27.280] They did file a really, Oh, but they didn't give you back your note or that case about [01:29:27.280 --> 01:29:32.160] to run out, about to go to break, but we'll pick this up on the other side. [01:29:32.160 --> 01:29:37.400] That's going to go to how were you harmed? [01:29:37.400 --> 01:29:40.000] And we'll talk about that when we come back on the other side. [01:29:40.000 --> 01:29:45.320] Randy Kelton, Rue La Radio, I call it number 512-646-1984. [01:29:45.320 --> 01:29:46.320] We've got two more callers. [01:29:46.320 --> 01:29:48.000] We'll try to get to both of you. [01:29:48.000 --> 01:30:03.080] We'll be right back. [01:30:03.080 --> 01:30:05.440] Old enough to remember air raid drills. [01:30:05.440 --> 01:30:09.640] We'll remember fire drills and being from LA, I remember earthquake drills. [01:30:09.640 --> 01:30:11.800] But now kids are getting terror drills. [01:30:11.800 --> 01:30:16.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.320 --> 01:30:17.920] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.920 --> 01:30:21.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.520 --> 01:30:26.280] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.280 --> 01:30:31.400] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.400 --> 01:30:34.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:34.040 --> 01:30:38.340] This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search [01:30:38.340 --> 01:30:41.880] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:41.880 --> 01:30:43.720] Start over with startpage. [01:30:43.720 --> 01:30:49.080] Believe it or not, kindergarten and first grade students are now required by law to [01:30:49.080 --> 01:30:54.880] participate in monthly terrorism drills, including active shooter lockdowns, bomb threats and [01:30:54.880 --> 01:30:57.240] evacuation exercises. [01:30:57.240 --> 01:30:59.080] Active shooter lockdowns in kindergarten? [01:30:59.080 --> 01:31:03.720] Do we really need mock SWAT teams traumatizing a generation of youngsters? [01:31:03.720 --> 01:31:08.600] If anything, these drills will just give terrorists a blueprint to increase casualties and plot [01:31:08.600 --> 01:31:09.600] their escape. [01:31:09.600 --> 01:31:13.920] Scaring kids into seeing terrorists under every rock is a bad psychological move for [01:31:13.920 --> 01:31:14.920] our nation. [01:31:14.920 --> 01:31:18.800] But it does ensure funding for the wasteful liberty stealing war on terror. [01:31:18.800 --> 01:31:23.560] It also guarantees that our kids will grow up into fierce, subdued, compliant adults. [01:31:23.560 --> 01:31:30.740] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.740 --> 01:31:36.120] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.120 --> 01:31:38.200] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.200 --> 01:31:43.160] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.160 --> 01:31:45.920] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.920 --> 01:31:48.600] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.600 --> 01:31:50.080] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.080 --> 01:31:51.080] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.080 --> 01:31:52.440] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.440 --> 01:31:53.440] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.440 --> 01:31:55.160] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.160 --> 01:31:57.720] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.720 --> 01:32:01.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.000 --> 01:32:03.280] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.280 --> 01:32:06.280] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.280 --> 01:32:09.920] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their Kim Trails, but good luck getting [01:32:09.920 --> 01:32:10.920] them to pay for it. [01:32:10.920 --> 01:32:14.560] Okay, I might be kidding about the Kim Trails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.560 --> 01:32:18.360] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:18.360 --> 01:32:23.560] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense, and we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus [01:32:23.560 --> 01:32:26.700] member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.700 --> 01:32:31.040] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [01:32:31.040 --> 01:32:32.120] first time. [01:32:32.120 --> 01:32:38.440] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.440 --> 01:32:42.800] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos [01:32:42.800 --> 01:32:45.400] Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.400 --> 01:32:50.560] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.560 --> 01:32:56.600] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.600 --> 01:32:58.800] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.800 --> 01:33:00.840] May not actually be kidding about Kim Trails. [01:33:00.840 --> 01:33:28.600] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:28.600 --> 01:33:33.560] We are back, Randy Kelkin of Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Don in New Mexico. [01:33:33.560 --> 01:33:40.240] So they didn't give you back your note signed, paid, and pulled. [01:33:40.240 --> 01:33:46.000] And you have a concern that somebody else may come and try to collect on that note. [01:33:46.000 --> 01:33:48.520] Of course, yeah. [01:33:48.520 --> 01:33:50.840] But nobody's done that yet. [01:33:50.840 --> 01:33:51.840] No. [01:33:51.840 --> 01:33:57.320] So you can't sue for what you're afraid might happen. [01:33:57.320 --> 01:33:59.920] You can only sue for actual harm. [01:33:59.920 --> 01:34:06.480] So how are you harmed? [01:34:06.480 --> 01:34:09.600] And that's kind of an important point to understand about law. [01:34:09.600 --> 01:34:20.360] There are a lot of laws that have prescriptions, but there is no remedy where someone's required [01:34:20.360 --> 01:34:27.520] to do something, but the law itself doesn't provide a specific remedy. [01:34:27.520 --> 01:34:28.520] Right. [01:34:28.520 --> 01:34:36.800] Now, if somebody doesn't do something and you're harmed thereby, then you have the remedy. [01:34:36.800 --> 01:34:44.560] And this is one of those where they're required to give that back to, but it doesn't prescribe [01:34:44.560 --> 01:34:48.680] a penalty or a remedy in case they don't. [01:34:48.680 --> 01:34:54.920] So you can't exercise the remedy until you've been harmed by their annex. [01:34:54.920 --> 01:34:56.200] Okay. [01:34:56.200 --> 01:35:01.720] So I can't go after them for the statute in New Mexico because I haven't been harmed. [01:35:01.720 --> 01:35:04.600] I understand that. [01:35:04.600 --> 01:35:11.080] Even though I've paid off the note, and they've released the mortgage, can I still do a qualified [01:35:11.080 --> 01:35:16.400] written request for them demanding that they present the note for observation for? [01:35:16.400 --> 01:35:17.400] No. [01:35:17.400 --> 01:35:28.080] A qualified written request is a claim of an accounting error and a demand that they [01:35:28.080 --> 01:35:29.800] correct the error. [01:35:29.800 --> 01:35:30.800] Okay. [01:35:30.800 --> 01:35:31.800] Yeah. [01:35:31.800 --> 01:35:38.560] Once the note is extinguished, then all of the consumer protection laws kind of drop [01:35:38.560 --> 01:35:39.560] off. [01:35:39.560 --> 01:35:40.560] Okay. [01:35:40.560 --> 01:35:50.480] The only thing left is the uniform commercial code. [01:35:50.480 --> 01:36:01.080] One thing you could do is sue them, sue for a petition for declaratory judgment and ask [01:36:01.080 --> 01:36:11.000] the court to order them to provide that signed release on the note. [01:36:11.000 --> 01:36:14.840] Okay. [01:36:14.840 --> 01:36:18.400] That would be a remedy, but there'd be no way to get the damages because there's no [01:36:18.400 --> 01:36:19.400] way to show harm. [01:36:19.400 --> 01:36:22.800] But a declaratory judgment doesn't ask for damages. [01:36:22.800 --> 01:36:26.000] You just ask the court to order them to do it. [01:36:26.000 --> 01:36:27.000] Okay. [01:36:27.000 --> 01:36:32.720] So, I have to wait until something happens and then address it at that time. [01:36:32.720 --> 01:36:33.720] All right. [01:36:33.720 --> 01:36:34.720] Cool. [01:36:34.720 --> 01:36:38.960] Well, I don't want to keep you guys and callers waiting, so I don't want to keep them. [01:36:38.960 --> 01:36:39.960] Okay. [01:36:39.960 --> 01:36:40.960] Thank you very much, Don. [01:36:40.960 --> 01:36:41.960] Okay. [01:36:41.960 --> 01:36:44.640] Now, we're going to go to Rhonda in Missouri. [01:36:44.640 --> 01:36:46.440] Hello, Rhonda. [01:36:46.440 --> 01:36:48.440] What do you have for us today? [01:36:48.440 --> 01:36:49.440] Yes. [01:36:49.440 --> 01:36:57.920] I was calling because I have found a declaratory judgment on a case that's pending as it relates [01:36:57.920 --> 01:37:08.320] to a defiled judgment and it was granted before a different judge, but in the case that's [01:37:08.320 --> 01:37:20.760] currently pending, the opposite side had made a motion for, to, what would it be, a motion [01:37:20.760 --> 01:37:30.960] to, just one minute, please, a motion to consolidate both cases and... [01:37:30.960 --> 01:37:31.960] Okay. [01:37:31.960 --> 01:37:32.960] Wait. [01:37:32.960 --> 01:37:33.960] Hold on. [01:37:33.960 --> 01:37:34.960] Hold on. [01:37:34.960 --> 01:37:35.960] You filed a petition with a declaratory judgment. [01:37:35.960 --> 01:37:36.960] Yes. [01:37:36.960 --> 01:37:40.920] The judge ruled in your favor. [01:37:40.920 --> 01:37:44.040] And granted it to another judge. [01:37:44.040 --> 01:37:45.040] Yes. [01:37:45.040 --> 01:37:46.040] Okay. [01:37:46.040 --> 01:37:47.040] Hold on. [01:37:47.040 --> 01:37:55.320] Was the petition for declaratory judgment, was the order by the judge an order that ended [01:37:55.320 --> 01:37:58.000] the case? [01:37:58.000 --> 01:38:02.720] Was there anything else in the declaratory judgment that kept the case moving? [01:38:02.720 --> 01:38:03.720] Yes. [01:38:03.720 --> 01:38:04.720] Okay. [01:38:04.720 --> 01:38:17.000] Because where I was going is if the order was dispositive, then the court maintains [01:38:17.000 --> 01:38:26.400] plenary jurisdiction for 30 days and that's the time in which the other side has to appeal. [01:38:26.400 --> 01:38:32.720] If that order had ended the declaratory judgment case, then after 30 days, it's over to rescue [01:38:32.720 --> 01:38:44.600] Dakota, but if there was another issue included, then the case is not ended and the other side [01:38:44.600 --> 01:38:47.680] has opportunity to appeal. [01:38:47.680 --> 01:38:51.280] Did that make sense? [01:38:51.280 --> 01:38:55.400] Well, sort of, but they didn't appeal. [01:38:55.400 --> 01:38:59.880] They just did a motion to consolidate both cases and... [01:38:59.880 --> 01:39:00.880] Okay. [01:39:00.880 --> 01:39:01.880] Wait a minute. [01:39:01.880 --> 01:39:13.360] In the declaratory judgment suit, what else was included in the declaratory judgment suit? [01:39:13.360 --> 01:39:14.360] That was it. [01:39:14.360 --> 01:39:21.080] Two of the defendants had to file it because they had failed to respond to the summons [01:39:21.080 --> 01:39:22.080] and complaints. [01:39:22.080 --> 01:39:23.080] Okay. [01:39:23.080 --> 01:39:24.080] Hold on. [01:39:24.080 --> 01:39:25.520] I'm trying to get clarity. [01:39:25.520 --> 01:39:34.480] If the declaratory judgment suit only had a request for declaratory judgment and then [01:39:34.480 --> 01:39:46.360] there was another suit that was not joined to this suit and you got a ruling on the declaratory [01:39:46.360 --> 01:39:55.760] judgment suit, did you get the ruling before there was a request for joiner? [01:39:55.760 --> 01:39:59.440] No. [01:39:59.440 --> 01:40:05.520] Did they file an appeal after the order in the declaratory judgment suit? [01:40:05.520 --> 01:40:06.880] No. [01:40:06.880 --> 01:40:16.800] Did they object to the joiner and claim that the declaratory judgment suit is res judicata [01:40:16.800 --> 01:40:19.760] and the court has lost plenary jurisdiction? [01:40:19.760 --> 01:40:23.320] No, it doesn't say that. [01:40:23.320 --> 01:40:26.960] No, no, it doesn't say that in the order. [01:40:26.960 --> 01:40:28.960] It says that in the law. [01:40:28.960 --> 01:40:29.960] Okay. [01:40:29.960 --> 01:40:30.960] Okay. [01:40:30.960 --> 01:40:42.680] Once a judge renders a ruling, there's a statutory time period in which the losing side has opportunity [01:40:42.680 --> 01:40:46.640] to appeal. [01:40:46.640 --> 01:40:52.960] Once that appellate clock runs out, if there's been no appeal, then it is a done deal. [01:40:52.960 --> 01:40:54.520] The case is over. [01:40:54.520 --> 01:40:57.520] The judge loses subject matter jurisdiction. [01:40:57.520 --> 01:41:02.100] It becomes res judicata, already adjudicated. [01:41:02.100 --> 01:41:08.760] Another court cannot come back and revisit that decision. [01:41:08.760 --> 01:41:16.000] If the court lost plenary jurisdiction, what they're probably trying to do is they screwed [01:41:16.000 --> 01:41:24.000] up, they didn't get their appeal in, they're trying to get a second bite at the apple. [01:41:24.000 --> 01:41:30.600] You object, challenge the subject matter jurisdiction of the court as concerns the declaratory judgment [01:41:30.600 --> 01:41:31.600] case. [01:41:31.600 --> 01:41:37.000] It's over, it's done. [01:41:37.000 --> 01:41:44.800] No court has the power, if that 30-day time clock has ran out, no court has power to revisit [01:41:44.800 --> 01:41:45.800] that issue. [01:41:45.800 --> 01:41:46.800] It's done. [01:41:46.800 --> 01:41:52.480] They probably screwed up and they're hoping you don't catch it. [01:41:52.480 --> 01:42:02.760] Well, one thing that I noticed is that on the e-file, our case.net e-file, it's showing [01:42:02.760 --> 01:42:07.600] that it was denied, but when he sent the order, it's showing that it was granted. [01:42:07.600 --> 01:42:15.680] Wait a minute, you're using too many pronouns, it, are you talking about the declaratory [01:42:15.680 --> 01:42:16.680] judgment suit? [01:42:16.680 --> 01:42:17.680] Yes, yes. [01:42:17.680 --> 01:42:18.680] Okay. [01:42:18.680 --> 01:42:25.680] It's done for the motion to consolidate, the motion to consolidate. [01:42:25.680 --> 01:42:28.680] What does the order in the record say? [01:42:28.680 --> 01:42:33.280] It says defendants motions to consolidate file. [01:42:33.280 --> 01:42:38.920] No, no, no, no, no, no, declaratory judgment. [01:42:38.920 --> 01:42:42.400] That's the only one that has an order. [01:42:42.400 --> 01:42:44.120] What does that order say? [01:42:44.120 --> 01:42:51.480] It just says that it was granted, the plaintiff's motion, let me see. [01:42:51.480 --> 01:42:52.480] Okay. [01:42:52.480 --> 01:43:01.000] Now the other side has filed a motion claiming that declaratory judgment was denied. [01:43:01.000 --> 01:43:02.480] Yes. [01:43:02.480 --> 01:43:04.080] Okay. [01:43:04.080 --> 01:43:13.160] Then that's, you need to file an objection, an opposition to the jointer in the form of [01:43:13.160 --> 01:43:19.480] a challenge subject matter jurisdiction, and file for sanctions against counsel for failing [01:43:19.480 --> 01:43:28.800] to speak with candor to the court, and then technically that's aggravated perjury. [01:43:28.800 --> 01:43:39.380] It is possible that they erred, because that's too blatant, just to say the order said the [01:43:39.380 --> 01:43:43.440] opposite that it said, you can't expect that that's not going to come out, so somebody [01:43:43.440 --> 01:43:45.040] probably made a mistake. [01:43:45.040 --> 01:43:50.320] You might notice the other side and say, guys, you need to fix this, and they may drop it [01:43:50.320 --> 01:43:51.800] without you having to go to court. [01:43:51.800 --> 01:44:00.280] Hang on, about to go to break, Randy Helton with our radio, we'll be right back. 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[01:45:19.480 --> 01:45:23.560] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.560 --> 01:45:28.520] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.520 --> 01:45:35.320] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.320 --> 01:45:39.880] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.880 --> 01:45:44.160] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.160 --> 01:45:50.320] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.320 --> 01:45:57.000] pro se tactics, and much more, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:57.000 --> 01:46:01.040] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.040 --> 01:46:20.040] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, we're talking to Rhonda in Missouri. [01:46:20.040 --> 01:46:27.280] And Rhonda, from what you've told me, there is a good chance that the other side has made [01:46:27.280 --> 01:46:28.280] a mistake. [01:46:28.280 --> 01:46:37.760] And the reason I say that is, if the order is clear, and it did dispose of the case in [01:46:37.760 --> 01:46:43.840] the 30 days or up, the court loses subject matter jurisdiction. [01:46:43.840 --> 01:46:52.040] They can never ever get subject matter jurisdiction, even if you miss this and the court did a [01:46:52.040 --> 01:46:55.580] joiner and then they ruled against you. [01:46:55.580 --> 01:47:03.480] You can come back 30 years from now and revive this case and say, the court never had jurisdiction [01:47:03.480 --> 01:47:07.560] because plenary jurisdiction was lost. [01:47:07.560 --> 01:47:13.960] This is not something I could imagine a lawyer getting himself into on purpose. [01:47:13.960 --> 01:47:16.840] So there's a good chance they made a mistake. [01:47:16.840 --> 01:47:21.800] And this is, after all, civil court. [01:47:21.800 --> 01:47:24.920] And they expect both parties to be civil. [01:47:24.920 --> 01:47:30.560] So you might notice the other side and say, guys, I think you made a mistake. [01:47:30.560 --> 01:47:38.640] You put in your pleading that the declaratory judgment was denied when, in fact, here's [01:47:38.640 --> 01:47:42.200] the order that says it was granted. [01:47:42.200 --> 01:47:45.960] So we think you made a mistake. [01:47:45.960 --> 01:47:49.200] In law, it's called non sprotonque. [01:47:49.200 --> 01:47:55.120] And we ask that you correct the error and withdraw your motion for joiner. [01:47:55.120 --> 01:47:56.880] And they may agree to do that. [01:47:56.880 --> 01:48:01.720] If they don't, then you file for sanctions. [01:48:01.720 --> 01:48:04.200] Then you hammer them big time. [01:48:04.200 --> 01:48:09.880] But you want to be able to tell the judge that you spoke to opposing side and give them [01:48:09.880 --> 01:48:15.460] notice of the problems and they were recalcitrant, they refused to fix it. [01:48:15.460 --> 01:48:20.280] So here you are having to bring this before the court. [01:48:20.280 --> 01:48:27.040] The judge is a human being, and if he looks at it and it's clear that the other side screwed [01:48:27.040 --> 01:48:35.360] up and they didn't fix it, he is not going to be happy with them wasting his time. [01:48:35.360 --> 01:48:42.280] But if there was an order granting summary judgment and it wasn't appealed, that's gone. [01:48:42.280 --> 01:48:43.280] That's done. [01:48:43.280 --> 01:48:44.280] They can't be joined. [01:48:44.280 --> 01:48:45.280] They can't do anything with it. [01:48:45.280 --> 01:48:46.280] Okay. [01:48:46.280 --> 01:48:47.280] Do you have anything else for us? [01:48:47.280 --> 01:48:50.840] No, but I thank you and you have a good day. [01:48:50.840 --> 01:48:51.840] Okay. [01:48:51.840 --> 01:48:55.920] Now we're going to go to Irvin in Nevada. [01:48:55.920 --> 01:48:56.920] Hello, Irvin. [01:48:56.920 --> 01:48:57.920] Hello. [01:48:57.920 --> 01:48:58.920] Hi. [01:48:58.920 --> 01:49:03.480] My wife and I have been trying to file criminal complaints. [01:49:03.480 --> 01:49:04.480] Okay. [01:49:04.480 --> 01:49:05.480] Wait, wait. [01:49:05.480 --> 01:49:06.480] Hold on. [01:49:06.480 --> 01:49:07.480] Move the mic down by your chin. [01:49:07.480 --> 01:49:10.000] You're distorting the mic. [01:49:10.000 --> 01:49:11.000] Sorry. [01:49:11.000 --> 01:49:18.880] We had a situation where on the so-called closing of our home, the notary backdated [01:49:18.880 --> 01:49:24.520] some things, the title of company, we wanted to go after the title of company, and we got [01:49:24.520 --> 01:49:33.480] hold of a MERS milestone, which shows five or six transactions within two weeks, I'm [01:49:33.480 --> 01:49:40.720] sorry, two months of closing, and among other things that would seem to be some violations [01:49:40.720 --> 01:49:45.440] of the Patriot Act and that full disclosure for transactions over 10,000, anyway, so we [01:49:45.440 --> 01:49:51.000] wanted to file a criminal complaint along something civil, and we went to, we contacted [01:49:51.000 --> 01:49:53.280] the attorney general's office and the district attorney. [01:49:53.280 --> 01:49:56.640] They said, can't you go directly to us, you have to file a police report. [01:49:56.640 --> 01:50:02.080] We went to the police department and they said, this is federal, you have to go to the [01:50:02.080 --> 01:50:07.040] FBI, and the FBI said, it sounds like it's not our thing either, we're not going there [01:50:07.040 --> 01:50:10.000] until Monday because they're closing on the weekend. [01:50:10.000 --> 01:50:15.120] As far as exciting, I mean, or getting the right people educated, do you have any general [01:50:15.120 --> 01:50:19.720] suggestions about, you know, how to get someone to take a look at this and- [01:50:19.720 --> 01:50:20.720] Okay. [01:50:20.720 --> 01:50:25.280] What is the specific nature of the complaint that you want to file? [01:50:25.280 --> 01:50:26.280] Okay. [01:50:26.280 --> 01:50:37.000] Well, the notary, as I said, changed the date on the closing papers when we weren't present, [01:50:37.000 --> 01:50:40.280] there's a rescission involved. [01:50:40.280 --> 01:50:42.280] Okay, that is a state issue. [01:50:42.280 --> 01:50:44.800] Okay, a state issue. [01:50:44.800 --> 01:50:45.800] We had- [01:50:45.800 --> 01:50:48.320] Okay, hold on, you said there's a rescission involved. [01:50:48.320 --> 01:50:49.320] Yes. [01:50:49.320 --> 01:50:51.520] Tell me about the rescission. [01:50:51.520 --> 01:50:55.520] When was the rescission filed relative to closing? [01:50:55.520 --> 01:51:01.680] Four days before, oh, I'm sorry, the rescission was filed just four days short of three years. [01:51:01.680 --> 01:51:03.960] The closing supposedly was- [01:51:03.960 --> 01:51:07.600] What was the claim in the rescission? [01:51:07.600 --> 01:51:14.120] Oh, that we didn't get the right to cancel and we were in the three years. [01:51:14.120 --> 01:51:17.240] Okay, good, good, good. [01:51:17.240 --> 01:51:22.160] Did you get a right to cancel or did you not get two? [01:51:22.160 --> 01:51:23.160] One at all. [01:51:23.160 --> 01:51:25.160] No, we didn't get two, we didn't get one at all. [01:51:25.160 --> 01:51:26.160] Okay, good. [01:51:26.160 --> 01:51:30.440] Because the reason I said that is the case, Jasnowski- [01:51:30.440 --> 01:51:31.440] Yeah, I know, I know. [01:51:31.440 --> 01:51:32.440] They said they got- [01:51:32.440 --> 01:51:41.560] Yeah, where they kicked butt, it was the most nitpicking complaint I ever heard of. [01:51:41.560 --> 01:51:50.320] The last day of the three-year period, they filed rescission claiming not that they didn't [01:51:50.320 --> 01:51:56.080] get notice, but there was a man and wife and they only got one notice. [01:51:56.080 --> 01:51:58.600] Right, I know about that. [01:51:58.600 --> 01:52:08.160] Yeah, and I wonder who is the moron who ever let that get to the Supreme? [01:52:08.160 --> 01:52:16.440] Because those of you who are not familiar with Jasnowski, the Wells Fargo, the banks [01:52:16.440 --> 01:52:25.000] in general got their butts handed to them by the Supreme big time. [01:52:25.000 --> 01:52:31.160] They said, when you file a notice of rescission, it's a done deal. [01:52:31.160 --> 01:52:32.960] You can't unresent. [01:52:32.960 --> 01:52:35.280] The other side can't unresent. [01:52:35.280 --> 01:52:41.880] It's over, it's done with, and the banks and courts used to say, well, if you file a rescission, [01:52:41.880 --> 01:52:48.160] you have to tender back to the bank everything the bank gave you first. [01:52:48.160 --> 01:52:51.920] And Jasnowski said, no, you don't. [01:52:51.920 --> 01:52:54.120] The bank has to tender first. [01:52:54.120 --> 01:52:55.840] It changed everything. [01:52:55.840 --> 01:52:56.840] Right. [01:52:56.840 --> 01:53:03.680] And who on earth was the moron who took the risk of putting that before the Supreme? [01:53:03.680 --> 01:53:08.080] And it was a unanimous decision, so it is not going to change. [01:53:08.080 --> 01:53:10.280] Anyway, okay, go ahead. [01:53:10.280 --> 01:53:14.960] Okay, you have a rescission and the rescission sounds valid. [01:53:14.960 --> 01:53:15.960] Right. [01:53:15.960 --> 01:53:21.480] We also, MERS is involved, and MERS can run wild in this. [01:53:21.480 --> 01:53:22.480] Okay, okay, hold on. [01:53:22.480 --> 01:53:26.040] Let me ask another question, you filed a notice of rescission. [01:53:26.040 --> 01:53:27.040] Right. [01:53:27.040 --> 01:53:31.760] Did the bank respond with an opposition within 20 days? [01:53:31.760 --> 01:53:33.960] No, of course not. [01:53:33.960 --> 01:53:35.960] Okay, don't go anywhere. [01:53:35.960 --> 01:53:43.240] Don't go to MERS, don't go to anything, do not let rescission pass. [01:53:43.240 --> 01:53:46.880] This is over, it's done. [01:53:46.880 --> 01:53:50.960] This is a done deal. [01:53:50.960 --> 01:53:55.240] You go to other places and the court's going to ignore rescission and root against you [01:53:55.240 --> 01:53:56.240] on the other places. [01:53:56.240 --> 01:54:04.960] I would suggest that you petition for declaratory judgment under 28 USC 2201. [01:54:04.960 --> 01:54:11.840] I have it, 28 USC 2201, let me check it down here. [01:54:11.840 --> 01:54:17.400] Yes, it's just, that's a petition for declaratory judgment in the Fed. [01:54:17.400 --> 01:54:24.200] You ask the court to make a determination of the rights of the parties. [01:54:24.200 --> 01:54:32.680] If you file under 2201, it is immune from a 12B6 motion to dismiss for failure to state [01:54:32.680 --> 01:54:34.200] a claim. [01:54:34.200 --> 01:54:40.480] I filed one of those, Wells Fargo removed it to the Fed. [01:54:40.480 --> 01:54:45.360] I filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction in the Fed. [01:54:45.360 --> 01:54:53.240] The Wells Fargo filed a 12B6 motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim and Judge McBride [01:54:53.240 --> 01:55:02.120] dismissed my case with prejudice for failure to state a claim on which recovery can be [01:55:02.120 --> 01:55:03.120] had. [01:55:03.120 --> 01:55:05.760] Are you kidding me? [01:55:05.760 --> 01:55:10.400] Of course I failed to state a claim on which recovery can be had. [01:55:10.400 --> 01:55:13.000] It's a declaratory judgment suit. [01:55:13.000 --> 01:55:17.240] It doesn't ask for recovery. [01:55:17.240 --> 01:55:20.640] I've already filed criminal charges against the judge. [01:55:20.640 --> 01:55:24.120] I'm going to take him to a grand jury. [01:55:24.120 --> 01:55:30.120] So simple declaratory judgment suit, send me an email. [01:55:30.120 --> 01:55:37.560] I'll send you my declaratory judgment suit on that issue. [01:55:37.560 --> 01:55:46.000] Not the case law, all the stuff, and I'm very careful to only ask the court to declare the [01:55:46.000 --> 01:55:49.600] rights of the parties. [01:55:49.600 --> 01:55:57.240] Ask for no judgment, I don't have any claim, I just ask them to give us a ruling. [01:55:57.240 --> 01:56:01.280] So it's immune from 12B6. [01:56:01.280 --> 01:56:07.280] Once you get past the answer, now you go to discovery and that's the place they never [01:56:07.280 --> 01:56:09.560] want to go. [01:56:09.560 --> 01:56:16.000] And under Jasnowski, Jasnowski is so definitive, so clear. [01:56:16.000 --> 01:56:20.680] If you have other issues, you can address those elsewhere. [01:56:20.680 --> 01:56:26.520] Do the declaratory judgment first. [01:56:26.520 --> 01:56:31.400] Once you've got the declaratory judgment in, they can't get a 12B6. [01:56:31.400 --> 01:56:37.280] Now you go to discovery, in the declaratory judgment, you can discover everything you [01:56:37.280 --> 01:56:40.280] need for your other suit. [01:56:40.280 --> 01:56:46.280] Wait a minute, I thought the declaratory judgment's in federal court, not in the state, right? [01:56:46.280 --> 01:56:52.400] Every state has a declaratory judgment act, but you're probably better to file this in [01:56:52.400 --> 01:56:53.400] the FAT. [01:56:53.400 --> 01:56:56.400] Yeah, that's what I'm saying. [01:56:56.400 --> 01:57:04.040] Jasnowski's a FAT suit and you've got the declaratory judgment act. [01:57:04.040 --> 01:57:07.000] The main thing is, is it gets you past the 12B6. [01:57:07.000 --> 01:57:11.640] Yeah, that's the thing with quiet title, they kick it up from state court and then you're [01:57:11.640 --> 01:57:12.640] crushed. [01:57:12.640 --> 01:57:15.880] It seems like that happens very frequently, even if you do a quiet title asking for no [01:57:15.880 --> 01:57:17.920] money, they don't want to hear that. [01:57:17.920 --> 01:57:25.720] Yeah, well if you don't ask for any damages, if you only ask for a ruling, it's immune [01:57:25.720 --> 01:57:26.720] to 12B6. [01:57:26.720 --> 01:57:31.600] If they dismiss for 12B6, you file criminally against the judge. [01:57:31.600 --> 01:57:38.360] Okay, let me take a step back, are you familiar with the 2011 Venue and Removal Clarification [01:57:38.360 --> 01:57:39.360] Act? [01:57:39.360 --> 01:57:40.360] No. [01:57:40.360 --> 01:57:43.760] Changed 200 years of law. [01:57:43.760 --> 01:57:49.040] Some of the courts, some of the circuits said that a state suit can be removed to the Fed [01:57:49.040 --> 01:57:52.360] if it has a federal issues in it. [01:57:52.360 --> 01:57:59.080] And under judicial economy, the Fed can hear both the state and the federal issues. [01:57:59.080 --> 01:58:05.200] Some of the circuits said no, no, no, we can't hear the state issues, that's an undue intrusion [01:58:05.200 --> 01:58:08.720] on state law, on state sovereignty. [01:58:08.720 --> 01:58:14.680] 2011, the legislature stepped in and cleared up the issue. [01:58:14.680 --> 01:58:21.040] They said that while you can remove a state suit to the federal court, any state issues [01:58:21.040 --> 01:58:24.080] must be severed and remanded. [01:58:24.080 --> 01:58:30.120] So when I get a declaratory judgment, a quiet title removed to the Fed, I don't file a motion [01:58:30.120 --> 01:58:34.400] to remand, I file a challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [01:58:34.400 --> 01:58:38.280] Okay, we are out of time. [01:58:38.280 --> 01:58:42.840] Send me an email, I'll explain better. [01:58:42.840 --> 01:58:44.440] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:44.440 --> 01:58:51.440] Viva La Radio, we'll be back next week, good night.