[00:00.000 --> 00:07.760] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [00:07.760 --> 00:15.400] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.400 --> 00:23.160] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.160 --> 00:29.720] Markets for Friday, the 13th of January, 2017, are currently trading with gold at $1,197.15 [00:29.720 --> 00:37.240] an ounce, silver $16.80 an ounce, Texas crude $53 a barrel, and Bitcoin is on its way up [00:37.240 --> 00:45.280] at $830 U.S. currency. [00:45.280 --> 00:51.280] Today in history, the year 1942, Henry Ford patents of the soybean or hemp body car, built [00:51.280 --> 00:56.000] with agricultural plastics, 30% lighter and therefore more fuel efficient than a regular [00:56.000 --> 01:01.080] car. It was made in part because of the rationing of steel during World War II. It was designed [01:01.080 --> 01:09.160] to run on hemp fuel. Ford's hemp car, patented today in history. [01:09.160 --> 01:14.520] In recent news, Russia's ambassador in Washington, Sergei Kislyak, has invited the incoming Trump's [01:14.520 --> 01:19.320] designated national security advisor, Michael T. Flynn, to their Syrian peace talks later [01:19.320 --> 01:24.760] this month with Turkey and Iran. A spokesman for Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, [01:24.760 --> 01:29.600] said Friday today that the United States would attend the talks. Syrian government and opposition [01:29.600 --> 01:34.200] representatives are also expected to attend. This comes after a year-long attempt between [01:34.200 --> 01:38.920] the Obama administration and Russia to attempt to implement a ceasefire in Syria. Both have [01:38.920 --> 01:43.240] routinely accused each other of sabotaging that effort. Russia and Iran have provided [01:43.240 --> 01:47.840] military support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his fight against U.S.-backed [01:47.840 --> 01:52.680] rebel forces and al-Qaeda allied fighters. According to Turkish media reports, Turkish [01:52.680 --> 01:57.760] Foreign Minister Mavlud Kapusoglu said Thursday that the United States should definitely be [01:57.760 --> 02:03.480] invited and that is what we agreed with Russia. Nobody can ignore the role of the United States. [02:03.480 --> 02:08.240] The peace talks are going to be held in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, and are scheduled [02:08.240 --> 02:15.160] to begin January 23rd. [02:15.160 --> 02:19.800] Lockheed Martin Chief Executive Merlin Hewson told reporters after meeting with President-elect [02:19.800 --> 02:24.040] Donald Trump at Trump Tower in New York on Friday today that they were close to a new [02:24.040 --> 02:29.240] contract deal that would cut the cost of the F-35 Joint Strike Force fighter program. This [02:29.240 --> 02:33.120] meeting seems to have been sparked from a Trump tweet on December 22nd where he said [02:33.120 --> 02:38.680] that quote, based on the tremendous cost and cost overruns of Lockheed Martin F-35, I have [02:38.680 --> 02:44.240] asked Boeing to price out a comparable F-18 Super Hornet. Each F-35 fighter jet cost the [02:44.240 --> 02:47.840] U.S. taxpayer more than $100 million. The 15-year-old program has been riddled with [02:47.840 --> 02:54.840] delays and setbacks. This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for January 13, 2017. [03:17.840 --> 03:24.840] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, U of I Radio. We're talking to William in Texas. Okay, William, [03:27.200 --> 03:33.160] I'll try to quit interrupting you so much. I do apologize for that, but mostly you're [03:33.160 --> 03:38.600] knowledgeable and I like that. And mostly I'm talking to the people who are trying to come [03:38.600 --> 03:43.120] up to you and Eddie for about seven years now. [03:43.120 --> 03:50.120] Okay, if I sound pedantic it's because I'm trying to bring everybody up to speed on where [03:50.360 --> 03:55.520] you're at and trying to make sure we stitch all the pieces together. Okay, I'll shut up [03:55.520 --> 03:56.320] now. [03:56.320 --> 04:03.320] Well, what I was saying is I have gotten to a point now where I've never had them do so [04:04.560 --> 04:10.320] much misconduct. I don't know how to file. I have an idea on how to file the notice, [04:10.320 --> 04:13.720] but I don't want to get myself in trouble. So if I can get some help. [04:13.720 --> 04:20.720] Okay, let's talk about filing complaints. I keep losing the number. I think it's 37, [04:20.720 --> 04:31.720] it's either 37 or 38.171. There is a requirement to give notice of a crime if you have knowledge [04:31.720 --> 04:38.720] of a felony. If you have knowledge of a felony and you don't report it, that's a class A [04:41.640 --> 04:48.640] misdemeanor in the state of Texas. So here's the deal. If you have a duty to report crime, [04:51.640 --> 04:58.640] you cannot be punished for reporting crime. To the degree that when I go in to report [04:58.640 --> 05:05.640] crime, if someone says anything to me that I can in any way construe as threatening, [05:10.160 --> 05:17.160] that's witness tampering, obstruction of justice, shielding from prosecution. [05:17.160 --> 05:24.160] And when you report crime, you have exactly the same immunity from civil litigation that [05:29.720 --> 05:36.720] a judge has. Okay, if you have knowledge they're not, they're violating laws, you have a duty [05:38.160 --> 05:43.580] to file and you're protected. Okay, with that said, there is a strategy [05:43.580 --> 05:50.580] and an art to this. Don't just go out filing criminal complaints because we can find them. [05:51.800 --> 05:57.120] Eddie Craig can sure tell you about this because when we first talked to him before he came [05:57.120 --> 06:04.120] on the show, he was taking on an issue in Nacogdoches and he called to find out what [06:04.120 --> 06:11.120] to do when these officials violated the law because he was real knowledgeable in the law [06:13.480 --> 06:18.480] at the time. But he didn't know how to handle it when they violated the law. I said, well, [06:18.480 --> 06:23.480] file criminal charges on them. Episode of criminal complaints, 113. [06:23.480 --> 06:30.480] Oh, geez. No, I haven't filed a criminal complaint, just the judicial. [06:30.480 --> 06:37.480] Okay. Well, I said, well, Eddie, why so few? He said, I ran out of ink, I ran out of toner. [06:41.920 --> 06:48.560] Yeah, that does get extended. Okay. The point of that is in any of these cases, [06:48.560 --> 06:55.560] the more you know about the law and the prescribed procedure, the more you can find to hammer [06:55.560 --> 07:02.560] them with. They screw up everything. So, point is, instead of just digging out everything [07:10.480 --> 07:17.480] we can find to complain about, let's build a story of corruption and then pick our complaints [07:17.480 --> 07:24.480] carefully so each one, as we add more, points toward this story that we built. So, they [07:30.680 --> 07:36.280] begin to fit together and they make sense. You'll find some complaints you would like [07:36.280 --> 07:43.040] to file, but they don't fit in with your story. I had a bailiff once drag me out of the courthouse, [07:43.040 --> 07:49.560] knock me down, break my elbow, to prevent me from getting to the grand jury with criminal [07:49.560 --> 07:56.560] complaints against the prosecutor. And I looked at that and I said, okay, how can I frame [07:58.520 --> 08:05.520] this so that it leads me toward my ultimate outcome? And there was just no way I could [08:05.520 --> 08:12.520] do that. So, as bad as that hurt, as angry and frustrated as I was, I did not fight against [08:16.280 --> 08:23.280] that bailiff because all it did was distract me from my purpose. Turned out to be in this [08:25.480 --> 08:32.480] county, the county I live in, the most powerful thing I've done. He really hurt me and they [08:32.480 --> 08:38.420] all knew it, but he screwed up. He didn't mean to knock me down. He did mean to push [08:38.420 --> 08:43.000] me out of the courthouse, prevent me from filing the complaints, but as I stepped out [08:43.000 --> 08:50.000] the door, he put his hand on my back and gave a slight push. Just as my foot hit a carpet [08:50.000 --> 08:55.480] and it caused that, now from underneath, because I was scooting forward before I had my weight [08:55.480 --> 09:02.480] on it and let it start to slip, I fell backwards and landed on my elbow on a marble step. And [09:02.480 --> 09:09.480] crushed my elbow through my suit jacket. That really hurt, but I didn't go after the bailiff. [09:12.840 --> 09:19.840] And that's when everybody in the courthouse said, this guy's the real deal. He's not [09:19.840 --> 09:26.600] just coming down here mouthing about wanting us to do it right. He really is. And you will [09:26.600 --> 09:33.600] find that it's very powerful. When you start picking your complaints very carefully so [09:35.760 --> 09:42.760] that they all add one to the other, then what the courts are going to say is this scoundrel [09:44.960 --> 09:49.200] William Watshem, he is setting us up. [09:49.200 --> 09:54.920] Well, you've been interested when I went down to check the court record and they tried to [09:54.920 --> 10:01.920] say that the court records were by rule 12 and I just happened to have a copy of my judicial [10:02.920 --> 10:09.920] hearing on a rule 12, which I gave them a copy of and it stated that citations, complaints [10:10.840 --> 10:15.760] are not judicial records and are open to the public. And I gave them a copy and you should [10:15.760 --> 10:18.160] have seen their mouths drop. [10:18.160 --> 10:25.160] What I tend to do is I'm a little more difficult than you. I tend not to give legal advice. [10:29.640 --> 10:36.640] I go to the Randall County district clerk and tell her this is up near Amarillo and [10:37.840 --> 10:42.760] I want to see these files. I gave her about six or seven files I want to see. She said, [10:42.760 --> 10:46.160] well, we have all those in the computer. I said, I understand that, but I need to see [10:46.160 --> 10:52.360] the physical file. Well, everything's in the computer. I said, maybe, but I'm not concerned [10:52.360 --> 10:57.360] to what's actually in there. I'm concerned with what's not in there and I expect some [10:57.360 --> 11:02.000] documents not to be in there and when I don't find them, then I'm going to file a request [11:02.000 --> 11:05.400] for them. Well, if we don't have them, we can't give it to you. I said, that's true, [11:05.400 --> 11:10.160] but you can't give me a response that says we have no records responsive to your request. [11:10.160 --> 11:13.600] She said, well, I don't have the personnel or I don't have the time. You'll just have [11:13.600 --> 11:20.600] to look at the computer. Wait right there. Don't go anywhere. Somebody's going to want [11:22.560 --> 11:29.560] to talk to you. I opened the door and pointed the sergeant on the bailiffs. You come here. [11:30.200 --> 11:36.720] They hate to be summoned. What can I do for you? Watch this. Ms. Clerk, I want to see [11:36.720 --> 11:39.800] those records I asked you for. I told you I don't have the time and personnel. You'll [11:39.800 --> 11:43.200] have to look at the computer. I said, turn to the bailiff. Did you hear that? Yes, I [11:43.200 --> 11:50.200] did. Arrest that woman. That was so much fun. You would not believe it. I don't give legal [11:58.840 --> 12:05.840] advice if I can avoid it. I got a 9-1-1. You don't have to fill out the complaint. You [12:05.840 --> 12:12.840] don't have to pursue it. The lieutenant at the municipal police department is the one [12:14.200 --> 12:20.120] that signed and swore to the complaint on me. Unfortunately, they said it was on the 15th. [12:20.120 --> 12:24.800] I've got documentation that the only thing that was in the record at that time was the [12:24.800 --> 12:31.800] ticket. It was on the 15th. What did it refer to? Well, the lieutenant at the municipal police [12:39.120 --> 12:45.520] station signed the complaint. Well, swore to it. It says it's sworn. Okay. The complaint. [12:45.520 --> 12:50.800] The means one previously mentioned. Are you talking about the traffic citation? No, no, [12:50.800 --> 12:57.800] no, no, no. This is an actual sworn complaint with the code. I've never seen them take the [12:58.800 --> 13:05.800] time to do it before, but they did it on this one. Okay, but this was based on the traffic [13:06.960 --> 13:13.960] citation. Right. Just making sure I'm in the right place. He can do that, actually. Yeah, [13:13.960 --> 13:20.960] you can't stop him from doing it. No, what I'm saying is he can do that. Yeah. Well, [13:24.640 --> 13:28.360] if you're not allowed to, then how would you, like Eddie said, who could file a complaint [13:28.360 --> 13:35.360] on the dead body? Yeah, I could. If you could help send me that file that you were saying [13:36.520 --> 13:41.080] and kindly just point me in the right directions with the information I provided you on how [13:41.080 --> 13:45.440] to file these complaints or if I can. Okay. Well, that was where I was trying to get to [13:45.440 --> 13:52.440] is you want to file Judicial Conduct Complaints, bar grievances? Do you want to file criminal [13:53.040 --> 13:58.760] complaints? Can you file a bar grievance on the city attorney for dismissing the case [13:58.760 --> 14:03.520] without his party? Yeah. You can file a bar grievance on him because he parts his hair [14:03.520 --> 14:10.240] on the left. Okay. That sounds like it'd be interesting. Okay. Have you heard my treatment [14:10.240 --> 14:17.240] of bar grievances? No, I don't think so. Okay. Here's the deal. If you file a bar grievance [14:18.920 --> 14:24.920] against the lawyer in the state of Texas, the state bar is going to get that grievance [14:24.920 --> 14:29.640] and they're going to throw it in the trash and they're going to send you a letter back [14:29.640 --> 14:35.240] that says we examined into your accusation, find it does not rise to the level of misconduct, [14:35.240 --> 14:42.240] makes no difference what you charge. And that's a good thing. The reason that's a good thing [14:44.360 --> 14:49.840] is their insurance carrier knows they're going to throw it in the trash. So how do they gauge [14:49.840 --> 14:56.840] their level of risk? By valid bar grievances? By the numbers. One bar grievance your first [14:56.840 --> 15:03.840] year of practice, they cancel immediately. Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, [15:05.280 --> 15:12.280] they cancel. Three, they cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. Think of it this way. [15:12.440 --> 15:17.080] You buy a new car, you go down to Walmart, you go outside, come out, somebody bashes [15:17.080 --> 15:22.680] your fender in. You call the insurance company, they come out, fix it, the W premium. You [15:22.680 --> 15:28.200] go down there next month, somebody bashes in another one. Call the insurance company, [15:28.200 --> 15:33.480] they come out and fix it, they cancel. Your fault, their fault, nobody's fault. They don't [15:33.480 --> 15:40.480] care. You are a bad risk. You're history. That's bad enough for car insurance, but when [15:41.400 --> 15:48.400] you're paying, you start at 25 grand for malpractice insurance. That's a big deal. And one of the [15:48.400 --> 15:55.400] problems with bar grievance... The information. Pardon me? How do you know that the insurance [15:57.240 --> 16:04.240] company gets the information? You won't know directly, but I also have a little treatment [16:04.240 --> 16:11.240] on when should a lawyer notify his insurance carrier of a potential claim. You read this, [16:14.960 --> 16:21.960] then you will say, holy mackerel. In the contract, if the lawyer has any reason to believe that [16:21.960 --> 16:28.960] something can result in a claim, he must notify his carrier. Because if he doesn't, he's not [16:31.880 --> 16:38.880] covered. If he gets a grievance against him and doesn't notify his carrier, what's the [16:39.440 --> 16:45.440] grievance? He don't have any coverage, even though he's paying 25 grand a year. Hang on, [16:45.440 --> 16:52.440] we'll be right back. [17:15.440 --> 17:22.440] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. I click control, shift, delete, [17:30.080 --> 17:36.280] and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. Bye bye yucky cookies. Now I go to logosradio [17:36.280 --> 17:41.280] network dot com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, bookmark [17:41.280 --> 17:47.000] the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookies. [17:47.000 --> 17:53.120] New cookies for me? Consider it an early Christmas present. And every time I order on Amazon, [17:53.120 --> 17:58.120] I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. C is for [17:58.120 --> 18:03.960] cookie. C is for cookie. Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, [18:03.960 --> 18:09.440] or even lawsuits? Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael [18:09.440 --> 18:14.880] Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too. You'll [18:14.880 --> 18:19.720] get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil [18:19.720 --> 18:24.800] rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to [18:24.800 --> 18:29.320] answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, [18:29.320 --> 18:34.360] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael [18:34.360 --> 18:39.800] Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation [18:39.800 --> 18:44.840] is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click [18:44.840 --> 18:51.840] on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com [18:51.840 --> 19:00.840] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:00.840 --> 19:07.840] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:07.840 --> 19:18.840] Well, don't let nothing get to you. Only the Father can deliver you. Don't let bad [19:18.840 --> 19:19.840] mind people hurt you. [19:19.840 --> 19:28.840] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin with You Are Radio. Ed, William, this all goes to the politics. [19:28.840 --> 19:36.840] When you bar grieve a lawyer, the lawyer is forbidden to address the grievance with you. [19:36.840 --> 19:41.840] All his communications concerning the grievance must go to the bar because they don't want [19:41.840 --> 19:46.840] the lawyer coming back and threatening or bullying you over the grievance. So it's kind [19:46.840 --> 19:53.840] of like you both go into court and the lawyer gets over behind his table, you get behind [19:53.840 --> 19:58.840] your table, and before the court starts, you walk over and kick him right square in the [19:58.840 --> 20:02.840] seat of his pants. And you come back behind your table and he's got to stand there and [20:02.840 --> 20:12.840] act like you didn't do it. That is so much fun. But be careful. I suggest that never [20:12.840 --> 20:20.840] file a frivolous grievance. You never have to. Are you familiar with a bar grievance [20:20.840 --> 20:21.840] website? [20:21.840 --> 20:23.840] Yes, I am. [20:23.840 --> 20:33.840] Okay, good, good, good. You look through those questions and you will find more things you [20:33.840 --> 20:41.840] can grieve those guys for that you can keep up with. Finding a grievance is easy. But [20:41.840 --> 20:49.840] again, grievances, judiciconda complaints, criminal complaints. You want to lay this [20:49.840 --> 20:57.840] out and kind of create a story. So eventually you want to get to a grand jury. You want [20:57.840 --> 21:04.840] to be able to say to the grand jury, you know, I did everything I could. I tried filing grievances [21:04.840 --> 21:08.840] against them and just threw them in the trash. And I accused the lawyer of doing this and [21:08.840 --> 21:15.840] the judge of doing this. And both of those point toward the conspiracy you're going to [21:15.840 --> 21:23.840] allege. All of those should lead up to your criminal complaints. I have lots of things [21:23.840 --> 21:29.840] I could complain about and lots of things that really make me angry. But they don't [21:29.840 --> 21:38.840] fit with a good story. So it's a side thing, like they're breaking my elbow. That was an [21:38.840 --> 21:44.840] aside. It didn't follow with what I was after. So I had to leave it out. [21:44.840 --> 21:54.840] Right. You get a good story going and you'll clarify these guys. You stop giving them advice. [21:54.840 --> 22:00.840] It's hard to do. Oh, it is hard. Yeah, you want to tell them what your rights are. You [22:00.840 --> 22:08.840] want to let them know how to cow eat the cabbage. But I can tell you the first time you pull [22:08.840 --> 22:20.840] the 9-1-1 trick on them, you get hooked. I'm in Arlington, city of Arlington. And I asked [22:20.840 --> 22:30.840] the clerk for some records. And she said that asked me if I was an attorney. And I said, [22:30.840 --> 22:38.840] no, I'm not. She said, are you the defendant in this case? I said, no, I'm not. Well, then [22:38.840 --> 22:45.840] you can't look at these records. Oh, okay. Mr. Bailiff, will you come over here? And [22:45.840 --> 22:51.840] he comes over and he's got his arms crossed and he's real tense. What can I do for you? [22:51.840 --> 22:58.840] Well, I need you to arrest her. Well, I can't arrest her. She sure can. Just get your cuffs [22:58.840 --> 23:03.840] out and snap on her and drag her off to jail. It has to be fun to stand around here doing [23:03.840 --> 23:13.840] nothing all day. So he's not sure if I'm joking or not. But what I'm doing is making sure [23:13.840 --> 23:21.840] they can't accuse me of being agitated. Right. But I'm sneaking up on them. The clerk is [23:21.840 --> 23:30.840] standing there and I guarantee you she did not see that coming. Now, had I tried to give [23:30.840 --> 23:39.840] her fair warning, she's going to call me agitated and ask the bailiff to remove me from the [23:39.840 --> 23:44.840] building. If I tell her this is my rights and this is the law and this is what you're [23:44.840 --> 23:52.840] supposed to do, they are going to treat that as a threat always and use it against you. [23:52.840 --> 23:58.840] Right. I just went into my local city hall here and they got a new clerk that really [23:58.840 --> 24:06.840] didn't know me well. And I got a request to be put on the agenda for the city council [24:06.840 --> 24:12.840] meeting. She said, well, what's your issue? I said, possibly the city attorney has been [24:12.840 --> 24:23.840] a bad boy. And she said, well, Mr. Kelton, I am offended by that. What? She said, I'm [24:23.840 --> 24:29.840] offended by that. Call Greg Errington. He's the city manager. She said, call Greg right [24:29.840 --> 24:36.840] now. She didn't see that coming. She shut her mouth and went and called Greg and he's [24:36.840 --> 24:42.840] made a set of meeting for me. When I went in his office, he said, well, what's your [24:42.840 --> 24:45.840] problem with this clerk? I said, I don't have a problem with the clerk. She just got an [24:45.840 --> 24:52.840] attitude and I thought I'd use you to help adjust her attitude. And he said, Mr. Kelton, [24:52.840 --> 25:01.840] I think you've got it adjusted. Don't argue with them. You are the master. They are the [25:01.840 --> 25:10.840] servants. The master does not explain himself to the servant. The master tells the servant [25:10.840 --> 25:16.840] what the master wants done. And when the servant doesn't do it, then the master takes action, [25:16.840 --> 25:25.840] takes corrective action. When you start doing that to them, you will not believe how effective [25:25.840 --> 25:32.840] it is. I got to tell you this story. It is my favorite. I go into an eviction hearing. [25:32.840 --> 25:37.840] There's two of us. A friend of mine was, we're helping people stop evictions. And David goes [25:37.840 --> 25:42.840] up and sits down in the court. Hayes knew David real well. He used to throw him in jail for [25:42.840 --> 25:48.840] contempt every time he went in there. So they sat down and I'm standing at the bar. And [25:48.840 --> 25:52.840] finally the judge looked up and said, can I help you? I said, yes, your honor. My name [25:52.840 --> 25:57.840] is Randy Kelton and I have a hearing deficiency. Well, Mr. Kelton, that's what's wrong with [25:57.840 --> 26:03.840] your hearing. The whole judge, I was down in Mexico the other day and I drank too much [26:03.840 --> 26:09.840] of that cheap tequila and lost my hearing aid. Well, I was lying to him in my pocket. [26:09.840 --> 26:14.840] Well, Mr. Kelton, why are you telling me this? I said, do you have accommodation for the [26:14.840 --> 26:20.840] hearing impaired? No, Mr. Kelton, I do not. I see you have a sound system here. Will you [26:20.840 --> 26:27.840] turn it up? No, I will not. Well, then will you speak up? And he did. Told me if I didn't [26:27.840 --> 26:32.840] say shut up, told Bailey if I didn't say shut up, he's going to throw me out of the court [26:32.840 --> 26:38.840] room. I got to my hearing. We had a challenge subject matter jurisdiction. They start the [26:38.840 --> 26:43.840] hearing. I said, objection, your honor. I'm here to answer the court. I have a challenge [26:43.840 --> 26:47.840] subject matter jurisdiction before the court. Yes, you just filed that 20 minutes ago. Yes, [26:47.840 --> 26:52.840] your honor. Matter of fact, I did. Well, I'm going to deny that motion. You're going to [26:52.840 --> 26:57.840] deny a challenge subject matter jurisdiction without reading it. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I am. [26:57.840 --> 27:03.840] I slammed my folder shut. Boom, we're done here. I step up, walk to the bar, point to [27:03.840 --> 27:10.840] the bailiff. You come with me. Go to the door. Bailey's standing there looking confused. [27:10.840 --> 27:16.840] Well, okay. He comes outside. I said, Mr. Kelton, what can I do for you? I need you to arrest [27:16.840 --> 27:22.840] the judge. Well, why would I arrest the judge? Class A misdemeanor, official oppression, [27:22.840 --> 27:27.840] criminal violation, 39.03 penal code, in that he failed to perform the duty he is required [27:27.840 --> 27:32.840] to perform, and in the process denied me in the full and free access to or enjoyment of [27:32.840 --> 27:37.840] the right. Well, Mr. Kelton, what right did he deny you in? Well, he denied me in my right [27:37.840 --> 27:42.840] to accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Then the bailiff said, well, [27:42.840 --> 27:47.840] Mr. Kelton, why didn't you tell the judge about the Americans with Disabilities Act? [27:47.840 --> 27:56.840] Heck, if I'd have done that, he might have turned the sound up. Bailey stood there and [27:56.840 --> 28:02.840] his grin started across his face. Well, you set him up. I said, yeah, he was a sucker [28:02.840 --> 28:15.840] for that one, wasn't he? See my point? That judge was so arrogant. Smart mouth, arrogant, [28:15.840 --> 28:22.840] used to pushing people around. We'd break him from sucking eggs. They don't see it [28:22.840 --> 28:29.840] coming. And once you've done something that that to him wants, the word will go out. Watch [28:29.840 --> 28:36.840] this scoundrel. He's just trying to get you to do something so you can call it so he can [28:36.840 --> 28:45.840] call the police and try to get you arrested. And they are absolutely correct. I am. So [28:45.840 --> 28:52.840] don't screw with me. All right. I'm going to get off here so the other guy who's been [28:52.840 --> 28:58.840] waiting can get on. I do appreciate it. We appreciate everything you all do. Okay. And [28:58.840 --> 29:02.840] I will look at those documents you sent me and I'll give you a response. I appreciate [29:02.840 --> 29:16.840] it. Thank you. Good night. Okay. Mr. Olivier. Okay. You got 40 seconds. You've only waited [29:16.840 --> 29:22.840] two hours to speak 40 seconds. All right. Okay. I'm just kidding. We're about to go [29:22.840 --> 29:28.840] to break it. We'll pick this up on the other side. This is Randy Kelton, Rue de la Radio. [29:28.840 --> 29:35.840] And for any of you interested, I have my ebook. I will should have it published by the end [29:35.840 --> 29:40.840] of next week. And if anybody purchase ebooks, we're going to sell it for a hundred dollars. [29:40.840 --> 29:49.840] If anybody purchase it, we'll put four chances in the gun giveaway, just like your donor [29:49.840 --> 30:03.840] gave, 25 bucks for each. And we'll be right back. In a South African game park, a rhinoceros [30:03.840 --> 30:09.840] died during an operation to embed a remotely readable tracking microchip in its horn. I'm [30:09.840 --> 30:14.840] Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll have details on the tragic death of Spencer the Rhino [30:14.840 --> 30:20.840] next. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it [30:20.840 --> 30:25.840] back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish [30:25.840 --> 30:32.840] too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [30:32.840 --> 30:37.840] it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by startpage.com, the private [30:37.840 --> 30:45.840] search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with startpage. Africa [30:45.840 --> 30:50.840] has a real problem with poachers who hunt endangered animals for ivory and meat. To [30:50.840 --> 30:54.840] stop the slaughter, they've tried various countermeasures, including locator microchips [30:54.840 --> 30:59.840] to track the animal's movements. But a game park in South Africa made the wrong decision [30:59.840 --> 31:04.840] when they tried to embed a microchip into the horn of a rhino named Spencer. To perform [31:04.840 --> 31:09.840] the procedure, veterinarians injected him with sedatives, inserted the chip and tried [31:09.840 --> 31:14.840] to wake him up with stimulants. The combination tragically resulted in the animal's death. [31:14.840 --> 31:19.840] It was a painful reminder that drugging and chipping living creatures can be dangerous [31:19.840 --> 31:25.840] and sometimes deadly. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most private [31:25.840 --> 31:32.840] search engine. [31:55.840 --> 32:03.840] the world's most private search engine. [32:25.840 --> 32:32.840] the world's most private search engine. [32:55.840 --> 33:02.840] the world's most private search engine. [33:02.840 --> 33:09.840] the world's most private search engine. [33:09.840 --> 33:16.840] the world's most private search engine. [33:16.840 --> 33:23.840] the world's most private search engine. [33:23.840 --> 33:30.840] Luke K, we are back. Randy Kelton, World Wide Radio and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. [33:30.840 --> 33:34.840] Okay, Olivier, go ahead. [33:34.840 --> 33:41.840] Yeah, um, I found something interesting. I went and read that document that the, uh, [33:41.840 --> 33:47.840] judge...suspended my, uh... [33:47.840 --> 33:53.840] Okay, you filed a federal suit against the city. [33:53.840 --> 33:57.840] Of course. [33:57.840 --> 34:01.840] Go ahead, I'm just bringing everybody else up to speed. [34:01.840 --> 34:08.840] Right. So now the judge, to a sponsor, said that I failed to state the claim. [34:08.840 --> 34:15.840] And, um, I failed to state the claim and he said he gave me the ruling on that, [34:15.840 --> 34:24.840] which was on 28 U.S.C. 1915. [34:24.840 --> 34:33.840] When I wanted to look it up, I wanted to go read it and it says Subsequent Subject to Subject B, [34:33.840 --> 34:45.840] which is referencing to prisoners, that hold the title of that document is about prisoners. [34:45.840 --> 34:57.840] I went and found more case law and in the case law, it described why Congress passed that enactment [34:57.840 --> 35:15.840] and then mentioned that for a court to apply those procedures would be breaking...would be violating the defendant's right. [35:15.840 --> 35:19.840] Okay, I'm unclear here. [35:19.840 --> 35:21.840] Okay. [35:21.840 --> 35:22.840] You're saying... [35:22.840 --> 35:24.840] He wrote it for prisoners. [35:24.840 --> 35:43.840] Okay, and the case he referred to, did it go to filings by prisoners or did it go to prisoners being deprived of due process? [35:43.840 --> 35:55.840] The case that he used, he didn't use the case, he used the 28 U.S.C. 1915 procedure that's on purpose. [35:55.840 --> 36:02.840] But that whole code is for prisoners. [36:02.840 --> 36:06.840] And you're not a prisoner so it didn't apply to you. [36:06.840 --> 36:13.840] Exactly. Subsection A, it starts off, it says Subject to Subsection B. [36:13.840 --> 36:16.840] That means we got to go to jump down to Subsection B. [36:16.840 --> 36:28.840] Subsection B says, notwithstanding Subsection A, if a prisoner brings a civil action [36:28.840 --> 36:36.840] or files an appeal in the form of purpose, the prisoner shall be required to pay the full amount of a filing fee. [36:36.840 --> 36:43.840] The court shall assess and find funds exist, collect as a partial payment of any... [36:43.840 --> 36:44.840] So they're talking about prisoners. [36:44.840 --> 36:46.840] So that's Subsection B. [36:46.840 --> 36:54.840] Let's go back to Subsection A. It says, let's start over again, Subject to Subsection B. [36:54.840 --> 36:59.840] Subjects in Subsection B are prisoners. [36:59.840 --> 37:04.840] Any court of the United States may authorize the commencement, [37:04.840 --> 37:13.840] prosecution or defense of any suit, action or proceeding, civil or criminal, or appeal therein [37:13.840 --> 37:20.840] without prepayment of fees or security thereof by a person who submits an affidavit [37:20.840 --> 37:26.840] that includes a statement of all assets such prisoner possesses, [37:26.840 --> 37:33.840] that the person is unable to pay such fee or give security thereof. [37:33.840 --> 37:39.840] Such affidavit shall state the nature of the action, defense or appeal, [37:39.840 --> 37:51.840] and affidavit believes that the person is entitled to redress, period. [37:51.840 --> 37:55.840] So we're talking about prisoners. So he has no leg to stand on. [37:55.840 --> 38:01.840] So he made this ruling based on the presumption that you were a prisoner. [38:01.840 --> 38:12.840] Right. Not only have the federal Supreme Court ruled that if the courts apply that against the defendant, [38:12.840 --> 38:21.840] it would be automatically violating their rights because they would have to notify the defendant. [38:21.840 --> 38:35.840] You said a defendant. Is the Supreme Court saying that this statute that references specifically prisoners is unconstitutional? [38:35.840 --> 38:42.840] Or are they referring to the courts applying this to someone who's not a prisoner? [38:42.840 --> 38:47.840] They're applying it to both prisoner and someone who's not a prisoner. [38:47.840 --> 38:57.840] So the Supreme Court has essentially struck this particular provision down. [38:57.840 --> 39:03.840] Right. But it exists in a way. [39:03.840 --> 39:15.840] It exists in a way to where there's mediation or certain steps that they can take. [39:15.840 --> 39:21.840] And that law was enacted to make sure that the prisoners took all those steps, [39:21.840 --> 39:25.840] so that if it could be avoided, it wouldn't get there. [39:25.840 --> 39:33.840] That's what the main authority of this was there for. Then the courts abused it. [39:33.840 --> 39:39.840] So the court is treating you like and using that. This is great. [39:39.840 --> 39:46.840] That'll win your appeal. But there's something else. [39:46.840 --> 39:49.840] Yeah. That's what I was waiting for. [39:49.840 --> 39:52.840] Yeah. Let's go to the screws. [39:52.840 --> 39:58.840] Screws. That's right. Screws versus US. [39:58.840 --> 40:09.840] I'm sorry, US 93, I believe. [40:09.840 --> 40:14.840] But screws versus US. Just do screws versus US. You'll get lots of hits on it. [40:14.840 --> 40:21.840] It's a really seminal case, and it's still good law. [40:21.840 --> 40:30.840] It says essentially that if a public official acts in a way that has been deemed improper by the court, [40:30.840 --> 40:39.840] that he violates due process in the only meaning of the term. [40:39.840 --> 40:44.840] It goes on to say, and I'm just paraphrasing. It's been a long time since I've actually read it. [40:44.840 --> 40:51.840] It says that if a public official violates the ruling of this court, I'm just going to back up. [40:51.840 --> 40:57.840] It says that a private citizen can't claim ignorance of the law as a defense to prosecution. [40:57.840 --> 41:06.840] A public official is held to a much higher standard that if a public official violates the ruling of this court [41:06.840 --> 41:14.840] and he be sain, he may not be heard to say he knows not what he does. [41:14.840 --> 41:21.840] Essentially what screws says is if you are acting in an official capacity, [41:21.840 --> 41:27.840] then exerting or purporting to exert an authority in that capacity, [41:27.840 --> 41:36.840] you know all of the law pertaining to that capacity. Whether you know it actionally, [41:36.840 --> 41:42.840] you are held to imputed knowledge of the law. [41:42.840 --> 41:49.840] If you don't know it, you deliberately kept yourself ignorant of it and you're responsible for it. [41:49.840 --> 41:58.840] So it cannot be construed that this judge did not know full well that he applied a statute to you [41:58.840 --> 42:04.840] that did not apply to you. The Supreme Court had already ruled that it did not. [42:04.840 --> 42:12.840] It falls under screws. He acted knowingly and intentionally to deny you in a right. [42:12.840 --> 42:24.840] 18 U.S. Code 242. While you can still sue him, I'm sorry, while you can still pursue your act, [42:24.840 --> 42:28.840] then the appeals court, this should get a criminal complaint against you. [42:28.840 --> 42:37.840] Actually, it should get a criminal complaint in the state. [42:37.840 --> 42:46.840] And here's how we get there. The federal judge is operating out of the federal courthouse. [42:46.840 --> 42:50.840] But that federal courthouse does not belong to the United States. [42:50.840 --> 42:57.840] It has not been ceded to the United States. Do you know what that means, Olivier? [42:57.840 --> 42:59.840] You mean within the state jurisdiction? [42:59.840 --> 43:07.840] Yeah. Well, no, ceded. If a piece of property has been ceded to the federal government, [43:07.840 --> 43:13.840] it becomes a part of the federal government. It's excised out from the states. [43:13.840 --> 43:18.840] They generally do that with federal prisons so that the feds can hire their own guards [43:18.840 --> 43:24.840] and don't have to use state security guards or state police. [43:24.840 --> 43:29.840] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to break. This is, this will be a lot of fun. [43:29.840 --> 43:33.840] You'll like this. This is Randy Kelton, Rue of La Radio. [43:33.840 --> 43:38.840] I call in number 512-646-1984. [43:38.840 --> 43:47.840] Okay, good. Make sure you go to Logos Radio Network and look at our new gun giveaway. [43:47.840 --> 44:01.840] We'll be right back. [44:01.840 --> 44:05.840] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com [44:05.840 --> 44:11.840] and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Suite D here in Austin, Texas. [44:11.840 --> 44:17.840] I'm Brave New Books and Chase Banks to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:17.840 --> 44:21.840] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that stars our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:21.840 --> 44:25.840] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Eme oil, [44:25.840 --> 44:29.840] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:29.840 --> 44:42.840] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.840 --> 44:46.840] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:46.840 --> 45:00.840] Naturespureorganics.com. [45:00.840 --> 45:03.840] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.840 --> 45:10.840] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, poor CD course [45:10.840 --> 45:14.840] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:14.840 --> 45:18.840] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.840 --> 45:22.840] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.840 --> 45:27.840] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [45:27.840 --> 45:33.840] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [45:33.840 --> 45:39.840] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [45:39.840 --> 45:42.840] and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.840 --> 45:48.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:48.840 --> 45:51.840] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.840 --> 46:19.840] Please visit LulavlawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:19.840 --> 46:21.840] Okay, we are back. [46:21.840 --> 46:26.840] We're in the Kelvin, Lulavlaw Radio, and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. [46:26.840 --> 46:33.840] And Olivier, frankly, I want to do some strategizing here. [46:33.840 --> 46:39.840] These are some issues that I've been working up as ways to get them. [46:39.840 --> 46:46.840] Judges, they do whatever they want to and they say, hey, that's okay, you can appeal. [46:46.840 --> 46:51.840] And I'm coming to the position that, yeah, I can appeal. [46:51.840 --> 46:54.840] I can appeal to the Court of Appeals. [46:54.840 --> 47:04.840] I can also appeal to a grand jury because a judge of all people cannot stand there [47:04.840 --> 47:13.840] and claim that he somehow didn't know he was violating the law and denied me and my rights. [47:13.840 --> 47:20.840] H.G. Wells, in his outline of history, on speaking to the corruption of the popes [47:20.840 --> 47:29.840] during the Dark Ages, very aptly observed, the giver of the law most owes the law allegiance. [47:29.840 --> 47:34.840] He of all beings should behave as though the law compels him. [47:34.840 --> 47:40.840] But it is the universal failing of mankind that what we are given to administer, [47:40.840 --> 47:44.840] we promptly presume we own. [47:44.840 --> 47:50.840] These judges promptly presume they own the law and I maintain they do not own it. [47:50.840 --> 47:56.840] I do. And you do. Not that judge. [47:56.840 --> 48:00.840] So when the judge renders a ruling that denies you in a right, [48:00.840 --> 48:08.840] while you have the option of appealing his decision to a higher court, [48:08.840 --> 48:12.840] he denies you in a right. [48:12.840 --> 48:15.840] That's a crime the way I read the code. [48:15.840 --> 48:22.840] And since the courthouse that the judge is in does not belong to the federal government, [48:22.840 --> 48:27.840] the judge does not stand in a federal enclave. [48:27.840 --> 48:33.840] Remember when Kennedy was shot in Texas? [48:33.840 --> 48:42.840] The feds come pouring in and the sheriff promptly threw him out. [48:42.840 --> 48:46.840] Then he said, well, the president's been shot. Yes, he has. [48:46.840 --> 48:50.840] And that's state jurisdiction, not federal. [48:50.840 --> 48:57.840] They have since passed a special law making it a federal crime to kill a president or a federal judge. [48:57.840 --> 49:01.840] But anybody else, somebody killed in the courthouse? [49:01.840 --> 49:04.840] That's a state crime, not a federal crime. [49:04.840 --> 49:07.840] You are not on federal property. [49:07.840 --> 49:12.840] The fact that that judge is enforcing federal laws is irrelevant. [49:12.840 --> 49:17.840] If the judge sitting in the courtroom pulls out a pistol and shoots somebody, [49:17.840 --> 49:22.840] they're going to prosecute him in the state, not the fed. [49:22.840 --> 49:25.840] You see where I'm going, Oliver? Oliver. [49:25.840 --> 49:28.840] I'll leave you here. [49:28.840 --> 49:38.840] What happens if you file criminal charges against that federal judge with a state grand jury? [49:38.840 --> 49:45.840] The rule is take the fed to the state, the state to the fed. [49:45.840 --> 49:58.840] Now, this judge may feel as though these guys will protect him, but he can't be sure. [49:58.840 --> 50:04.840] So who wants to play Russian roulette? [50:04.840 --> 50:14.840] Olivier, when you're filing criminal complaints, you are protected, just like that judge is. [50:14.840 --> 50:19.840] When I'm filing criminal complaints, man, I'd give one word out of somebody. [50:19.840 --> 50:24.840] Somebody say to me, oh, wow, man, you better be careful. [50:24.840 --> 50:30.840] You could get in a lot of trouble, 911, immediately. [50:30.840 --> 50:33.840] So you're protected when you're filing criminal complaints, [50:33.840 --> 50:37.840] even if you're filing against a federal judge in a state court. [50:37.840 --> 50:41.840] Okay, that's one way of doing it. [50:41.840 --> 50:51.840] And you were listening earlier when we were talking about 28 U.S. Code 535. [50:51.840 --> 50:54.840] Were you there then, Olivier? [50:54.840 --> 50:59.840] I don't remember that, but I remember hearing it. [50:59.840 --> 51:02.840] Oh, you want to tattoo this one backwards on your forehead [51:02.840 --> 51:05.840] so you can read it in the mirror every time you look at it. [51:05.840 --> 51:13.840] This is, it reads like a whistleblower suit for federal employees. [51:13.840 --> 51:25.840] It says that if a federal employee is made known that another federal employee has committed a crime, [51:25.840 --> 51:33.840] they must report the crime to the attorney general in D.C. [51:33.840 --> 51:37.840] I had to read that two or three times for it to really make sense. [51:37.840 --> 51:40.840] That's a whistleblower statute. [51:40.840 --> 51:51.840] That's so if you're working for a government agency and you see wrongs being committed, [51:51.840 --> 51:55.840] you have a statutory duty to report that. [51:55.840 --> 52:02.840] And you don't report it local where they will tend to retaliate against you. [52:02.840 --> 52:08.840] You must report it to the attorney general in Washington, D.C. [52:08.840 --> 52:11.840] So here's the deal. [52:11.840 --> 52:19.840] You take a complaint against the federal judge to a FBI agent [52:19.840 --> 52:27.840] and accuse the federal judge of official oppression. [52:27.840 --> 52:34.840] And you know what that FBI agent is going to do with that complaint. [52:34.840 --> 52:43.840] Make sure you do it on rough paper so when you use it for toilet paper it's not very comfortable. [52:43.840 --> 52:44.840] Okay. [52:44.840 --> 52:54.840] Then you wait about a week and then you send a letter to the attorney general's office in Washington, D.C. [52:54.840 --> 53:01.840] and you request the disposition of your complaint against this federal judge. [53:01.840 --> 53:08.840] And you're not likely to hear anything back because they don't know anything about this complaint. [53:08.840 --> 53:21.840] And it's very unlikely anyone at the attorney general's office will be aware of 28 U.S. Code 535. [53:21.840 --> 53:23.840] So they'll probably just ignore it. [53:23.840 --> 53:26.840] They're going to look for something in their records. [53:26.840 --> 53:30.840] They won't find anything and they'll just ignore it. [53:30.840 --> 53:35.840] So you wait a week or so and if you don't get a response, [53:35.840 --> 53:45.840] you have reason to believe that this local FBI agent did not give your complaint to the attorney general. [53:45.840 --> 53:53.840] He failed to perform a duty he was required to perform and in the process denied you the full free access to your enjoyment of right 18 U.S. Code 242. [53:53.840 --> 54:03.840] So you make up a complaint against the FBI agent and you file that with the U.S. attorney [54:03.840 --> 54:12.840] accusing the FBI agent of not forwarding your complaint to the attorney general. [54:12.840 --> 54:25.840] Now, what's the U.S. attorney going to do with your complaint against the FBI agent and your complaint against the U.S. judge? [54:25.840 --> 54:31.840] Your complaint against the FBI agent is for not acting on the complaint against the U.S. judge. [54:31.840 --> 54:44.840] Now, since he is the U.S. attorney, the presumption would be that he has prosecutorial discretion. [54:44.840 --> 54:54.840] Well, under 28 U.S. Code 535, I see no exclusion for the U.S. attorney in there. [54:54.840 --> 55:00.840] I don't see anything that says you have to do this unless you're the U.S. attorney. [55:00.840 --> 55:03.840] It doesn't say that. [55:03.840 --> 55:15.840] So the U.S. attorney likewise will have a duty to report this to the attorney general in D.C. [55:15.840 --> 55:24.840] Remember yesterday we talked about these U.S. attorneys having to file their resignation with the new president? [55:24.840 --> 55:27.840] Right. [55:27.840 --> 55:36.840] This U.S. attorney is not going to be a happy camper when you file a criminal complaint with the U.S. attorney, [55:36.840 --> 55:49.840] I mean with the attorney general against this U.S. attorney for violating 28 U.S. Code 535. [55:49.840 --> 55:53.840] It's all politics. [55:53.840 --> 56:00.840] I can sue because of what the judge did. [56:00.840 --> 56:04.840] I'm not talking about suing here. I'm talking about filing criminal charges. [56:04.840 --> 56:09.840] No, no, no. I understand that. I understand that. I followed the process. I wrote it down. [56:09.840 --> 56:19.840] The problem with the complaint, is that the same document I got from you last time? [56:19.840 --> 56:28.840] No, filing a complaint, yeah, that's on your standard criminal complaint form. That's not a civil complaint. [56:28.840 --> 56:29.840] Okay. [56:29.840 --> 56:37.840] Do you have a copy of, did I send you a copy of a fill-in-the-blank federal criminal complaint? [56:37.840 --> 56:39.840] Yes, you did. [56:39.840 --> 56:45.840] Okay. So you use that for the complaint against the judge that you give to the FBI agent. [56:45.840 --> 56:51.840] That's if you want to go that direction. That's why I did both of them. [56:51.840 --> 56:56.840] You can actually file against this judge in the state. [56:56.840 --> 57:00.840] And where, like the grand jury you say? [57:00.840 --> 57:12.840] Yeah. He violated a state law. When he denied you and put him free access to a joint of right, [57:12.840 --> 57:16.840] Tennessee has one of those. [57:16.840 --> 57:23.840] I just found a nearest state house, the state court, nearest state courthouse to the federal court to file it. [57:23.840 --> 57:29.840] Well, this is, yeah, this would be whatever county he's in. [57:29.840 --> 57:35.840] Okay. [57:35.840 --> 57:41.840] Probably with a district judge is the best place to do it. [57:41.840 --> 57:48.840] He's probably best to file it with a district judge in his capacity as a magistrate. [57:48.840 --> 57:58.840] I assure you, when you get that in the district judge's hands, he is not going to be a happy camper. [57:58.840 --> 58:04.840] And all the phone lines in the county are going to start lighting up. [58:04.840 --> 58:09.840] It's always best to get as high as you can in the hierarchy. [58:09.840 --> 58:18.840] The higher you go stomping on people's positions, the more you terrify the guys at the bottom, [58:18.840 --> 58:20.840] because they become a cannon fodder. [58:20.840 --> 58:22.840] Hang on, got to go to break. [58:22.840 --> 58:26.840] Pick this up on the other side, Randy Kelton, root of our radio. [58:26.840 --> 58:29.840] And make sure you check out our sponsors. [58:29.840 --> 58:33.840] And don't forget, Randy's real fun. [58:33.840 --> 58:34.840] Randy's real fun. [58:34.840 --> 58:36.840] You're in bad shape. [58:36.840 --> 58:49.840] Okay, we'll be right back. [58:49.840 --> 58:53.840] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.840 --> 59:00.840] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.840 --> 59:05.840] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.840 --> 59:12.840] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.840 --> 59:17.840] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.840 --> 59:23.840] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.840 --> 59:27.840] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.840 --> 59:33.840] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.840 --> 59:40.840] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.840 --> 59:44.840] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.840 --> 59:51.840] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:51.840 --> 01:00:02.840] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:02.840 --> 01:00:06.840] All in these flashes brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.840 --> 01:00:09.840] Providing the jelly bulletins for the commodity market. [01:00:09.840 --> 01:00:11.840] Today in history. [01:00:11.840 --> 01:00:13.840] News updates. [01:00:13.840 --> 01:00:22.840] And the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:22.840 --> 01:00:29.840] Markets for Friday the 13th of January 2017 are currently trading with gold at $1,197.15 an ounce. [01:00:29.840 --> 01:00:34.840] Silver, $16.80 an ounce. Texas crude, $53 a barrel. [01:00:34.840 --> 01:00:44.840] And Bitcoin is on its way up at $830 U.S. currency. [01:00:44.840 --> 01:00:50.840] Today in history, the year 1942, Henry Ford patents the soybean or hemp body car, [01:00:50.840 --> 01:00:55.840] built with agricultural plastics, 30% lighter and therefore more fuel efficient than a regular car. [01:00:55.840 --> 01:00:59.840] It was made in part because of the rationing of steel during World War II. [01:00:59.840 --> 01:01:01.840] It was designed to run on hemp fuel. [01:01:01.840 --> 01:01:08.840] Ford's hemp car patented today in history. [01:01:08.840 --> 01:01:12.840] In recent news, Russia's ambassador in Washington, Sergei Kislyak, [01:01:12.840 --> 01:01:16.840] has invited the incoming Trump's designated national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn, [01:01:16.840 --> 01:01:20.840] to their Syrian peace talks later this month with Turkey and Iran. [01:01:20.840 --> 01:01:25.840] A spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday today [01:01:25.840 --> 01:01:27.840] that the United States would attend the talks. [01:01:27.840 --> 01:01:31.840] Syrian government and opposition representatives are also expected to attend. [01:01:31.840 --> 01:01:35.840] This comes after a year-long attempt between the Obama administration and Russia [01:01:35.840 --> 01:01:37.840] to attempt to implement a ceasefire in Syria. [01:01:37.840 --> 01:01:41.840] Both have routinely accused each other of sabotaging that effort. [01:01:41.840 --> 01:01:45.840] Russia and Iran have provided military support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad [01:01:45.840 --> 01:01:49.840] in his fight against U.S.-backed rebel forces and al-Qaeda allied fighters. [01:01:49.840 --> 01:01:55.840] According to Turkish media reports, Turkish Foreign Minister Mavlud Kapusoglu said Thursday [01:01:55.840 --> 01:02:00.840] that the United States should definitely be invited and that is what we agreed with Russia. [01:02:00.840 --> 01:02:02.840] Nobody can ignore the role of the United States. [01:02:02.840 --> 01:02:06.840] The peace talks are going to be held in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, [01:02:06.840 --> 01:02:14.840] and are scheduled to begin January 23rd. [01:02:14.840 --> 01:02:19.840] Lockheed Martin Chief Executive Merlin Hewson told reporters after meeting with President-elect Donald Trump [01:02:19.840 --> 01:02:24.840] at Trump Tower in New York on Friday today that they were close to a new contract deal [01:02:24.840 --> 01:02:28.840] that would cut the cost of the F-35 Joint Strike Force fighter program. [01:02:28.840 --> 01:02:32.840] This meeting seems to have been sparked from a Trump tweet on December 22nd where he said that, [01:02:32.840 --> 01:02:37.840] quote, based on the tremendous cost and cost overruns of Lockheed Martin F-35, [01:02:37.840 --> 01:02:41.840] I have asked Boeing to price out a comparable F-18 Super Hornet. [01:02:41.840 --> 01:02:45.840] Each F-35 fighter jet cost the U.S. taxpayer more than $100 million. [01:02:45.840 --> 01:02:50.840] The 15-year-old program has been riddled with delays and setbacks. [01:02:50.840 --> 01:03:18.840] This is Rick Rode with your Lowdown for January 13th, 2017. [01:03:18.840 --> 01:03:20.840] Okay, we are back. [01:03:20.840 --> 01:03:22.840] Randy Kelton, we were on the radio. [01:03:22.840 --> 01:03:25.840] We're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. [01:03:25.840 --> 01:03:33.840] Over the break, can you consider how this might help your case or your position [01:03:33.840 --> 01:03:37.840] and which one might give you more leverage? [01:03:37.840 --> 01:03:40.840] Well, for that matter, you could do both, I suppose. [01:03:40.840 --> 01:03:43.840] What do you think, Olivier? [01:03:43.840 --> 01:03:53.840] I'm not familiar with the process, but I'm going to win the appeal no matter what. [01:03:53.840 --> 01:04:02.840] You see, the criminal side doesn't have anything to do with the civil side. [01:04:02.840 --> 01:04:09.840] If you file a criminal complaint, you never speak to it on the civil side [01:04:09.840 --> 01:04:14.840] because the court should be real upset with you if you try to use criminal prosecution [01:04:14.840 --> 01:04:18.840] to gain leverage in a civil case. [01:04:18.840 --> 01:04:19.840] Okay. [01:04:19.840 --> 01:04:22.840] So you just don't say anything about it. [01:04:22.840 --> 01:04:25.840] Yeah, it's just my opinion. [01:04:25.840 --> 01:04:33.840] If the other side says anything about it, they're trying to use it to unduly influence the court, [01:04:33.840 --> 01:04:35.840] and you ask for sanctions against them. [01:04:35.840 --> 01:04:39.840] That's none of this court's business, and it's improper for this guy [01:04:39.840 --> 01:04:43.840] to bring that business into this court. [01:04:43.840 --> 01:04:44.840] Right. [01:04:44.840 --> 01:04:52.840] And now you've got the federal judge. [01:04:52.840 --> 01:04:58.840] They feel like they're absolutely immune, and for some reason, [01:04:58.840 --> 01:05:02.840] nobody's taking them on criminally. [01:05:02.840 --> 01:05:07.840] Okay, I'll take them on the criminal, because now I've got another judge who, [01:05:07.840 --> 01:05:14.840] the judges of the lower court, the general section, deny my head of this court this unlawfully. [01:05:14.840 --> 01:05:17.840] I filed a suit on them. [01:05:17.840 --> 01:05:25.840] They suicide those suits, saying that I failed to state a claim, [01:05:25.840 --> 01:05:29.840] and that they are immune from suits. [01:05:29.840 --> 01:05:37.840] And they, did they all, okay, what was, did you read the memorandums on those others [01:05:37.840 --> 01:05:40.840] to see what the basis was? [01:05:40.840 --> 01:05:45.840] Were they all dismissed based on the same case law? [01:05:45.840 --> 01:05:48.840] Not the same case law. [01:05:48.840 --> 01:05:55.840] The other ones were based on a failure to state a claim, I think 12B6 or something, [01:05:55.840 --> 01:06:02.840] and then against the judges, they're saying that the judges are immune from suits, [01:06:02.840 --> 01:06:06.840] and that they cannot reverse their judgment. [01:06:06.840 --> 01:06:09.840] I'm not asking for a reversal of their judgment. [01:06:09.840 --> 01:06:13.840] I'm asking for compensation. [01:06:13.840 --> 01:06:17.840] They're making it seem like I'm asking them to reverse the judgment. [01:06:17.840 --> 01:06:22.840] Right, and they're very quick to mischaracterize. [01:06:22.840 --> 01:06:29.840] So that's why you always want to read this memorandum real careful and take them apart on it, [01:06:29.840 --> 01:06:36.840] because this judge that just dismissed your last case based on the fact that you were a prisoner, [01:06:36.840 --> 01:06:43.840] he should get a motion for reconsideration and demonstrate to him his error, [01:06:43.840 --> 01:06:51.840] so that when he ignores it, he can't pretend that he didn't know and that he did not act deliberately, [01:06:51.840 --> 01:07:01.840] and it might be a good idea to use the motion for reconsideration as a setup for the criminal complaints. [01:07:01.840 --> 01:07:07.840] But see, I don't have that much time. [01:07:07.840 --> 01:07:12.840] I'm not in a position where all that seems like it's going to stall the time. [01:07:12.840 --> 01:07:14.840] Okay, and you're saying... [01:07:14.840 --> 01:07:19.840] I need my clock. I need this clock. I have 21 of them. [01:07:19.840 --> 01:07:24.840] I need one of them to run immediately. I'm not in the place where I'm comfortable. [01:07:24.840 --> 01:07:28.840] Don't expect that to happen. [01:07:28.840 --> 01:07:37.840] I have people with foreclosures and stuff, and I tell them there's one thing that's consistent about civil cases. [01:07:37.840 --> 01:07:40.840] They take forever. [01:07:40.840 --> 01:07:48.840] Even if you win a judgment, collecting it's almost impossible. [01:07:48.840 --> 01:07:50.840] From the city? [01:07:50.840 --> 01:07:58.840] From the city, it's less difficult from the city, but you can expect it to take three to five years. [01:07:58.840 --> 01:07:59.840] Okay. [01:07:59.840 --> 01:08:04.840] And the city will do everything they can to wear you down. [01:08:04.840 --> 01:08:10.840] That's what they do, so that's why I'm suggesting to people that we try some different strategies. [01:08:10.840 --> 01:08:18.840] The city has got essentially unlimited funds to work with because they're working with taxpayer money. [01:08:18.840 --> 01:08:20.840] So they don't have much to lose. [01:08:20.840 --> 01:08:25.840] Even if they lose the whole case, they just take taxpayer money and pay for it. [01:08:25.840 --> 01:08:28.840] So they don't care. [01:08:28.840 --> 01:08:34.840] And I'm suggesting we start making it hot for them. [01:08:34.840 --> 01:08:41.840] We start giving them a reason to care because now you're coming after them personally. [01:08:41.840 --> 01:08:46.840] Criminal complaint, that don't take much time to crank one of those out. [01:08:46.840 --> 01:08:53.840] You have the documentation that you're writing anyway, like a motion for reconsideration. [01:08:53.840 --> 01:09:00.840] If you write a motion for reconsideration and you show that judge where he used wrong law, [01:09:00.840 --> 01:09:08.840] and then he fails to take corrective action, that shows mens reas. [01:09:08.840 --> 01:09:14.840] That shows a knowing evil intent. [01:09:14.840 --> 01:09:17.840] And that goes to criminal. [01:09:17.840 --> 01:09:20.840] All crimes are thought crimes. [01:09:20.840 --> 01:09:26.840] And he acted with an evil mind because he may have acted on ignorance the first time, [01:09:26.840 --> 01:09:29.840] even though he's a judge and can't claim that. [01:09:29.840 --> 01:09:36.840] But once you give him notice and he still acts wrongfully, that's a good criminal. [01:09:36.840 --> 01:09:41.840] And you know nobody's going to prosecute him. [01:09:41.840 --> 01:09:48.840] The problem for the federal judge is it puts a mark on his chart. [01:09:48.840 --> 01:09:58.840] When he goes, you know, the federal judge holds office during good behavior. [01:09:58.840 --> 01:10:00.840] He's been filing criminal charges against him. [01:10:00.840 --> 01:10:05.840] If you get an indictment, he's history. [01:10:05.840 --> 01:10:10.840] Court warrant or removal, they'll pull him off the bench. [01:10:10.840 --> 01:10:14.840] So I'm going to do it in the county, but I can't. [01:10:14.840 --> 01:10:15.840] It's a due process. [01:10:15.840 --> 01:10:19.840] I read a case law that it is a due process violation. [01:10:19.840 --> 01:10:22.840] Yeah, and due process is criminal. [01:10:22.840 --> 01:10:24.840] It's not civil too? [01:10:24.840 --> 01:10:27.840] Yes, both. [01:10:27.840 --> 01:10:34.840] But they want you to think that your remedies are exclusive. [01:10:34.840 --> 01:10:43.840] They want you to think that if you elect the civil remedy, then you have no criminal remedy. [01:10:43.840 --> 01:10:49.840] And then there was this woman in Oregon who was raped, brutal rape by this guy, [01:10:49.840 --> 01:10:58.840] and they caught the guy, and they filed criminal charges against him. [01:10:58.840 --> 01:11:04.840] And he went to jail for a couple years, not very long, and then she sued him. [01:11:04.840 --> 01:11:06.840] And oh, they jumped up and down. [01:11:06.840 --> 01:11:15.840] Oh, you can't, double jail, you can't sue him after he's been put in jail. [01:11:15.840 --> 01:11:21.840] And the Supreme Court picked it up and said, yes, you can. [01:11:21.840 --> 01:11:27.840] The civil action is not punishment and is not related to the criminal action. [01:11:27.840 --> 01:11:33.840] Okay, so I'll write it up. [01:11:33.840 --> 01:11:43.840] You asked me versus the United States government on violation of due process. [01:11:43.840 --> 01:11:46.840] Yes, procedural due process. [01:11:46.840 --> 01:11:48.840] Procedural due process? [01:11:48.840 --> 01:11:49.840] Yes. [01:11:49.840 --> 01:11:50.840] I'll write out my specs. [01:11:50.840 --> 01:11:56.840] Well, actually, this is not exactly, we're not, for the criminal side, [01:11:56.840 --> 01:11:59.840] you're not claiming due process violation. [01:11:59.840 --> 01:12:02.840] You're claiming a penal for violation of the penal code. [01:12:02.840 --> 01:12:04.840] No, no, I know the criminal side. [01:12:04.840 --> 01:12:09.840] I understand your concept of the criminal, but I want to understand, [01:12:09.840 --> 01:12:12.840] do I have position in the civil? [01:12:12.840 --> 01:12:15.840] Yes, due process violation. [01:12:15.840 --> 01:12:17.840] Yeah, but you can't sue the judge. [01:12:17.840 --> 01:12:20.840] Judge absolutely can't be sued. [01:12:20.840 --> 01:12:22.840] I'm suing the United States though. [01:12:22.840 --> 01:12:24.840] Yeah, you can sue the United States. [01:12:24.840 --> 01:12:26.840] Okay, all right. [01:12:26.840 --> 01:12:30.840] So how about as far as the judge telling me that I can't sue the state judge [01:12:30.840 --> 01:12:37.840] because the habeas corpus says that if they deny unlawfully, it's a suit against the judge. [01:12:37.840 --> 01:12:42.840] That goes in your motion for reconsideration. [01:12:42.840 --> 01:12:43.840] You give the judge... [01:12:43.840 --> 01:12:45.840] Oh, okay, okay, okay, okay. [01:12:45.840 --> 01:12:49.840] You say, this is where you erred. [01:12:49.840 --> 01:12:56.840] And then in doing that, you've also got your appeal almost ready. [01:12:56.840 --> 01:13:00.840] But there's another side to that. [01:13:00.840 --> 01:13:08.840] The judge acted improperly, and once you give him notice that he acted improperly, [01:13:08.840 --> 01:13:10.840] he needs to fix it. [01:13:10.840 --> 01:13:14.840] If he don't fix it, then he shows that he intended to deny you in this right. [01:13:14.840 --> 01:13:21.840] That goes to mens reis, to criminal intent. [01:13:21.840 --> 01:13:25.840] And he should go to jail for that. [01:13:25.840 --> 01:13:31.840] Okay, if I file a criminal complaint after that, I got you. [01:13:31.840 --> 01:13:37.840] That could change the whole climate here. [01:13:37.840 --> 01:13:43.840] Because I do have 21 of them, so we'll play hot potatoes. [01:13:43.840 --> 01:13:51.840] Well, these are things that I haven't seen done, and I don't know why. [01:13:51.840 --> 01:13:56.840] You would think that about everything that can be thought of has been thought of. [01:13:56.840 --> 01:14:05.840] But I keep seeing these ways of going at these people that I haven't seen anybody do. [01:14:05.840 --> 01:14:07.840] Part of it I can understand. [01:14:07.840 --> 01:14:12.840] A lawyer is not going to want to go after a federal judge. [01:14:12.840 --> 01:14:14.840] Right, and what you're saying is making sense. [01:14:14.840 --> 01:14:18.840] Because when I looked up these cases, I found repeated over and over and over. [01:14:18.840 --> 01:14:24.840] So I'm like, man, these judges, for them to be putting these many decisions on there, [01:14:24.840 --> 01:14:28.840] they're making this decision repeatedly, and they're comfortable with it. [01:14:28.840 --> 01:14:30.840] So you're right. [01:14:30.840 --> 01:14:33.840] You're saying we're missing the puzzle, and I think what you're saying is correct. [01:14:33.840 --> 01:14:35.840] So I'm going to put it to use. [01:14:35.840 --> 01:14:39.840] I wanted to give you some more information where I was reading the state statutes [01:14:39.840 --> 01:14:41.840] and how you were writing it. [01:14:41.840 --> 01:14:48.840] On our TCA code, which is the state law, I found 47104, which is duty for the [01:14:48.840 --> 01:14:50.840] State Highway Patrol. [01:14:50.840 --> 01:14:54.840] It is the duty of the member of the Tennessee Highway Patrol under the direction [01:14:54.840 --> 01:15:00.840] of the Commission of Safety to, one, patrol the highways, the state highways, [01:15:00.840 --> 01:15:07.840] enforce all laws and all rules and regulations of the Department of Transportation [01:15:07.840 --> 01:15:17.840] with regulating traffic on and use of those highways, and, two, assist the [01:15:17.840 --> 01:15:22.840] Department of Revenue and the county clerks of the state in the collection of [01:15:22.840 --> 01:15:30.840] all tax and revenue going to the state and in the enforcement of all laws [01:15:30.840 --> 01:15:32.840] relating to the state. [01:15:32.840 --> 01:15:40.840] So state law only reference that highway patrol, highway state patrol has [01:15:40.840 --> 01:15:45.840] authority to regulate traffic. [01:15:45.840 --> 01:15:49.840] And then the next statute... [01:15:49.840 --> 01:15:50.840] Wait a minute. [01:15:50.840 --> 01:15:52.840] That's what I was listening for, and I didn't get that. [01:15:52.840 --> 01:15:57.840] It sounded like it said that they enforce all laws, which would include [01:15:57.840 --> 01:16:02.840] penal laws, so did I misunderstand that? [01:16:02.840 --> 01:16:09.840] Yes, they are the only ones to enforce traffic laws, enforce all laws and all [01:16:09.840 --> 01:16:16.840] laws with rules and regulations of the Department of Transportation, regulating [01:16:16.840 --> 01:16:23.840] traffic on the use of those highways and assist the Department of Revenue and the [01:16:23.840 --> 01:16:28.840] county clerks of the state in the collection of all taxes and revenues going [01:16:28.840 --> 01:16:34.840] to the state and in the enforcement of all laws relating to the state. [01:16:34.840 --> 01:16:37.840] Okay, relating to the state. [01:16:37.840 --> 01:16:41.840] I want to see some case law, what that means. [01:16:41.840 --> 01:16:43.840] Relating to the same. [01:16:43.840 --> 01:16:45.840] Only traffic, Kirk? [01:16:45.840 --> 01:16:49.840] This sounds like the traffic cops just left, chicks. [01:16:49.840 --> 01:16:52.840] Hang on, got to go to break. [01:16:52.840 --> 01:16:59.840] We'll be right back. [01:16:59.840 --> 01:17:00.840] I love Logos. [01:17:00.840 --> 01:17:03.840] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:03.840 --> 01:17:06.840] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:06.840 --> 01:17:07.840] I need my truth fix. [01:17:07.840 --> 01:17:09.840] I'd be lost without Logos. [01:17:09.840 --> 01:17:12.840] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:12.840 --> 01:17:15.840] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I [01:17:15.840 --> 01:17:19.840] really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:19.840 --> 01:17:21.840] How can I help Logos? [01:17:21.840 --> 01:17:23.840] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.840 --> 01:17:26.840] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [01:17:26.840 --> 01:17:30.840] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your [01:17:30.840 --> 01:17:31.840] cookies. [01:17:31.840 --> 01:17:34.840] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:17:34.840 --> 01:17:37.840] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.840 --> 01:17:41.840] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a [01:17:41.840 --> 01:17:42.840] few pesos. [01:17:42.840 --> 01:17:43.840] Do I pay extra? [01:17:43.840 --> 01:17:44.840] No. [01:17:44.840 --> 01:17:46.840] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.840 --> 01:17:47.840] No. [01:17:47.840 --> 01:17:48.840] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:48.840 --> 01:17:49.840] No. [01:17:49.840 --> 01:17:50.840] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.840 --> 01:17:53.840] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:53.840 --> 01:17:54.840] This is perfect. [01:17:54.840 --> 01:17:56.840] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.840 --> 01:17:57.840] You're welcome. [01:17:57.840 --> 01:18:00.840] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:18:00.840 --> 01:18:03.840] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping [01:18:03.840 --> 01:18:07.840] destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at [01:18:07.840 --> 01:18:08.840] an affordable price. [01:18:08.840 --> 01:18:11.840] We provide a wide assortment of your favorite products featuring a great [01:18:11.840 --> 01:18:13.840] selection of high-quality coins and precious metals. [01:18:13.840 --> 01:18:17.840] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for [01:18:17.840 --> 01:18:18.840] investors. [01:18:18.840 --> 01:18:22.840] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metals [01:18:22.840 --> 01:18:23.840] dealers and journalists. [01:18:23.840 --> 01:18:26.840] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [01:18:26.840 --> 01:18:30.840] In addition, we carry popular longevity products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine [01:18:30.840 --> 01:18:31.840] and Polynbers. [01:18:31.840 --> 01:18:35.840] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storable Foods, Berkey Water [01:18:35.840 --> 01:18:38.840] Products, ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [01:18:38.840 --> 01:18:42.840] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept Bitcoins as payment. [01:18:42.840 --> 01:18:45.840] Call us at 512-646-6440. [01:18:45.840 --> 01:18:50.840] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of [01:18:50.840 --> 01:18:51.840] Anderson. [01:18:51.840 --> 01:18:54.840] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. [01:18:54.840 --> 01:19:00.840] Visit us at capitalcoinandbullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:00.840 --> 01:19:12.840] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:12.840 --> 01:19:20.840] Oh, come on. [01:19:20.840 --> 01:19:21.840] Okay. [01:19:21.840 --> 01:19:22.840] We are back. [01:19:22.840 --> 01:19:27.840] Randy Kelsen with the Radio and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. [01:19:27.840 --> 01:19:29.840] Okay. [01:19:29.840 --> 01:19:33.840] It sounds somewhat similar to Texas. [01:19:33.840 --> 01:19:36.840] Now, make sure I'm understanding this right. [01:19:36.840 --> 01:19:47.840] You're saying that the law in Tennessee for state troopers only allows them to [01:19:47.840 --> 01:19:50.840] enforce the transportation code and collect taxes. [01:19:50.840 --> 01:19:54.840] Am I correct in that? [01:19:54.840 --> 01:19:55.840] Yes. [01:19:55.840 --> 01:20:02.840] It is a duty under the Commissioner of Safety to patrol the state highways and [01:20:02.840 --> 01:20:06.840] enforce all laws basically pertaining to traffic. [01:20:06.840 --> 01:20:16.840] Is there anywhere else in the code where the state police is authorized to [01:20:16.840 --> 01:20:19.840] enforce anything else but the traffic code? [01:20:19.840 --> 01:20:23.840] Can you say that again? [01:20:23.840 --> 01:20:33.840] Is there any other place in Tennessee law that might authorize the state [01:20:33.840 --> 01:20:35.840] police to enforce the penal codes? [01:20:35.840 --> 01:20:39.840] Yes. [01:20:39.840 --> 01:20:46.840] They're allowed to enforce the penal code, but they're the only one who's [01:20:46.840 --> 01:20:51.840] allowed to regulate traffic, city cops are not. [01:20:51.840 --> 01:21:00.840] I found other statutes in here that restrict the city from making any taxes [01:21:00.840 --> 01:21:12.840] or fees off of all ordinances, rules, and regulations thereof passed and [01:21:12.840 --> 01:21:18.840] acted or promulgated by any incorporated municipality of the state in [01:21:18.840 --> 01:21:28.840] conflict with 655-501 are declared inoperative and of no effect. [01:21:28.840 --> 01:21:35.840] Neither 655 nor this section prohibit municipalities from maintaining and [01:21:35.840 --> 01:21:42.840] operating safety lanes, inspection bureaus or stations or shall abridge [01:21:42.840 --> 01:21:46.840] their rights to require city automobiles tax. [01:21:46.840 --> 01:21:50.840] So this right here is telling you the rights that they do have. [01:21:50.840 --> 01:21:55.840] No municipalities shall require any person who does not reside within the [01:21:55.840 --> 01:22:00.840] corporation's boundary to purchase a city automobile tax or pay any license [01:22:00.840 --> 01:22:07.840] fee, regulation fee, inspection fee, safety inspection fee, or any citation [01:22:07.840 --> 01:22:16.840] or any fine or noncompliance with any regulatory license or inspection [01:22:16.840 --> 01:22:25.840] requirement or tax of whatsoever, of whatever nature for the privilege of [01:22:25.840 --> 01:22:33.840] driving a motor vehicle on the road, street or highways of such municipalities. [01:22:33.840 --> 01:22:39.840] So I've been finding a whole bunch of law that's restricting our city cops [01:22:39.840 --> 01:22:43.840] in Tennessee from regulating traffic. [01:22:43.840 --> 01:22:51.840] In Texas, sometimes you'll get a ticket and they'll cite you for violating a [01:22:51.840 --> 01:22:56.840] city ordinance and sometimes they'll cite you for violating the transportation [01:22:56.840 --> 01:22:57.840] code. [01:22:57.840 --> 01:23:03.840] So you're saying that in Tennessee the municipalities have been strictly [01:23:03.840 --> 01:23:10.840] forbidden to pass laws governing transportation? [01:23:10.840 --> 01:23:15.840] Everywhere. [01:23:15.840 --> 01:23:25.840] That's more clear than what we have in Texas because Eddie would argue that the [01:23:25.840 --> 01:23:34.840] municipality cannot enforce laws or ordinances against anyone who has not [01:23:34.840 --> 01:23:43.840] contracted with the city or who's not a part of the municipal corporation. [01:23:43.840 --> 01:23:50.840] With that aside, it sounds like in Tennessee municipalities have been [01:23:50.840 --> 01:23:59.840] strictly forbidden from passing their own laws, any laws concerning [01:23:59.840 --> 01:24:01.840] transportation. [01:24:01.840 --> 01:24:02.840] Yes. [01:24:02.840 --> 01:24:11.840] So is there anything authorizing the police, the municipal police to enforce [01:24:11.840 --> 01:24:17.840] the Tennessee transportation code? [01:24:17.840 --> 01:24:18.840] Yes. [01:24:18.840 --> 01:24:20.840] There is an exception. [01:24:20.840 --> 01:24:27.840] When there is a violation, an accident, when there's an accident or someone's [01:24:27.840 --> 01:24:32.840] in harm and they've been called out and they have to do a report and whatever [01:24:32.840 --> 01:24:42.840] they came out for, if they have a city code that matches, like a misdemeanor [01:24:42.840 --> 01:24:46.840] or whatever, that matches the state code in the transportation that occurred, [01:24:46.840 --> 01:24:53.840] then they have authority to cite that state code. [01:24:53.840 --> 01:24:59.840] Where nowhere in the city can move the authorities to do traffic without an [01:24:59.840 --> 01:25:03.840] accident, there's special requirements. [01:25:03.840 --> 01:25:10.840] But then with the accident, the only authority was to investigate and write a [01:25:10.840 --> 01:25:18.840] report. Did it say anything about authorizing them to make a criminal [01:25:18.840 --> 01:25:25.840] accusation and enforce the criminal accusation? [01:25:25.840 --> 01:25:27.840] It didn't seem like that to me. [01:25:27.840 --> 01:25:31.840] It said that they may cite the state. [01:25:31.840 --> 01:25:35.840] Yeah, yeah, it said that they may cite them with it. [01:25:35.840 --> 01:25:38.840] But still, it goes to state. [01:25:38.840 --> 01:25:41.840] It doesn't go to city court and the city collect money. [01:25:41.840 --> 01:25:44.840] There's something wrong with that. [01:25:44.840 --> 01:25:54.840] Are you taking where it says they may cite to mean they may write them a ticket? [01:25:54.840 --> 01:25:55.840] Right. [01:25:55.840 --> 01:26:04.840] Because that seems to be contradictory because the policeman comes out and [01:26:04.840 --> 01:26:10.840] investigates an accident. He has no personal knowledge. [01:26:10.840 --> 01:26:11.840] Right. [01:26:11.840 --> 01:26:18.840] And normally, like in Texas, you can't arrest unless the person sees you here or [01:26:18.840 --> 01:26:19.840] you have a warrant. [01:26:19.840 --> 01:26:25.840] If you have some witnesses on the outside that's seen him run the red light, [01:26:25.840 --> 01:26:29.840] then the cop is going to be like, okay, you ran the red light, you caused the [01:26:29.840 --> 01:26:30.840] accident. [01:26:30.840 --> 01:26:34.840] Now that ain't good enough. [01:26:34.840 --> 01:26:40.840] If Tennessee law is similar to Texas law, and I'm going to bet it is, the [01:26:40.840 --> 01:26:46.840] police officer can't arrest you because somebody else said you did something [01:26:46.840 --> 01:26:53.840] unless it's a felony and there is a likelihood you will escape. [01:26:53.840 --> 01:26:55.840] Then he can arrest you. [01:26:55.840 --> 01:27:01.840] The police officer cannot arrest you for a misdemeanor he did not see. [01:27:01.840 --> 01:27:02.840] No, no, no. [01:27:02.840 --> 01:27:03.840] I didn't say arrest. [01:27:03.840 --> 01:27:04.840] I cite. [01:27:04.840 --> 01:27:05.840] Just cite you. [01:27:05.840 --> 01:27:07.840] But citing is essentially the same thing. [01:27:07.840 --> 01:27:10.840] He's writing a complaint against you. [01:27:10.840 --> 01:27:17.840] Well, not in that one because he had authority to come out to the scene. [01:27:17.840 --> 01:27:23.840] After he had authority to come out to the scene, his city code, his authority, [01:27:23.840 --> 01:27:28.840] the authority that he has states that. [01:27:28.840 --> 01:27:32.840] I'm saying, yeah, he's got authority to come out and investigate. [01:27:32.840 --> 01:27:34.840] Okay. [01:27:34.840 --> 01:27:48.840] But to then write a citation for an infraction that he did not observe. [01:27:48.840 --> 01:27:52.840] You see, I want to say I had a little accident years ago. [01:27:52.840 --> 01:27:59.840] Now, both two of us were pulling out and both of us were turning left. [01:27:59.840 --> 01:28:03.840] And this guy was to my left. [01:28:03.840 --> 01:28:06.840] So when it was to his left. [01:28:06.840 --> 01:28:08.840] So we pulled up to the side of the street. [01:28:08.840 --> 01:28:13.840] I was in one driveway and he was about 100 feet down in another driveway. [01:28:13.840 --> 01:28:20.840] So I pulled up and I looked to my left at cars that were coming in the lane I was [01:28:20.840 --> 01:28:22.840] crossing first. [01:28:22.840 --> 01:28:24.840] And then I looked when there was nothing there. [01:28:24.840 --> 01:28:29.840] Then I looked in the other lane that I was going to pull into to see the cars [01:28:29.840 --> 01:28:31.840] coming at me. [01:28:31.840 --> 01:28:34.840] Well, he did the same thing. [01:28:34.840 --> 01:28:38.840] He looked in my direction to see if there was anybody on his side of the road. [01:28:38.840 --> 01:28:41.840] But I was on the other side so he didn't see me. [01:28:41.840 --> 01:28:42.840] Same with me. [01:28:42.840 --> 01:28:44.840] I looked in my side and he was on the other side. [01:28:44.840 --> 01:28:46.840] I didn't see him. [01:28:46.840 --> 01:28:50.840] And we both looked at oncoming traffic as we pulled into it. [01:28:50.840 --> 01:28:53.840] We just pulled right into each other. [01:28:53.840 --> 01:28:56.840] A sheriff's deputy told us to get the cars out of the road. [01:28:56.840 --> 01:28:58.840] He's just a minor little bender vendor. [01:28:58.840 --> 01:29:01.840] And then this city cop shows up. [01:29:01.840 --> 01:29:03.840] And he does a little investigation, writes me a ticket. [01:29:03.840 --> 01:29:05.840] I go to court. [01:29:05.840 --> 01:29:14.840] And I ask him, when you, when the accident occurred, were you present? [01:29:14.840 --> 01:29:16.840] He said, well, no, I wasn't. [01:29:16.840 --> 01:29:17.840] Well, what were you? [01:29:17.840 --> 01:29:19.840] He says, I was on another call. [01:29:19.840 --> 01:29:20.840] Okay. [01:29:20.840 --> 01:29:25.840] When you got to the scene, did you, how were the cars positioned in the highway? [01:29:25.840 --> 01:29:27.840] He said, well, they weren't. [01:29:27.840 --> 01:29:29.840] They were in the parking lot. [01:29:29.840 --> 01:29:30.840] Oh, okay. [01:29:30.840 --> 01:29:32.840] Then you measured the glass patterns in the highway. [01:29:32.840 --> 01:29:34.840] There was no glass. [01:29:34.840 --> 01:29:37.840] Then you measured the skid marks. [01:29:37.840 --> 01:29:40.840] You said there were no skid marks. [01:29:40.840 --> 01:29:43.840] Then how did you know an accident even happened? [01:29:43.840 --> 01:29:47.840] Well, I talked to both the witnesses. [01:29:47.840 --> 01:29:49.840] So, did you write this ticket? [01:29:49.840 --> 01:29:50.840] He says, yes, I did. [01:29:50.840 --> 01:29:53.840] So when did you commit aggravated torture? [01:29:53.840 --> 01:29:54.840] So you wrote this ticket? [01:29:54.840 --> 01:29:56.840] Or just now when you said you didn't see what occurred? [01:29:56.840 --> 01:29:57.840] Hang on. [01:29:57.840 --> 01:30:02.840] We'll be right back. [01:30:02.840 --> 01:30:05.840] Vogue Magazine is making a new fashion statement. [01:30:05.840 --> 01:30:08.840] Models who are too thin are no longer in. [01:30:08.840 --> 01:30:09.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:09.840 --> 01:30:15.840] Back to tell you why a ban on too skinny models is a good thing for women of all ages next. [01:30:15.840 --> 01:30:17.840] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.840 --> 01:30:21.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.840 --> 01:30:26.840] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.840 --> 01:30:27.840] So protect your rights. [01:30:27.840 --> 01:30:31.840] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.840 --> 01:30:33.840] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.840 --> 01:30:37.840] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com. [01:30:37.840 --> 01:30:41.840] A private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.840 --> 01:30:44.840] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.840 --> 01:30:51.840] The glossy pages of fashion magazines often feature bony waifs who look more like skeletons than healthy women. [01:30:51.840 --> 01:30:54.840] While the girls are glorified as style icons, [01:30:54.840 --> 01:30:59.840] too often they're just pubescent kids who have dropped out of school and developed eating disorders. [01:30:59.840 --> 01:31:05.840] But now the editors of Vogue Magazine are imposing a minimum age of 16 for models. [01:31:05.840 --> 01:31:08.840] Often they're banning girls who are too skinny from their pages. [01:31:08.840 --> 01:31:13.840] As a woman and a former model myself, I'm glad that Vogue is cleaning up its act. [01:31:13.840 --> 01:31:19.840] And as a libertarian, I'm especially glad it was public pressure, not government force, that turned the tide. [01:31:19.840 --> 01:31:22.840] Now that's a model solution. [01:31:22.840 --> 01:31:30.840] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.840 --> 01:31:36.840] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.840 --> 01:31:38.840] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.840 --> 01:31:43.840] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.840 --> 01:31:46.840] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.840 --> 01:31:48.840] Thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:48.840 --> 01:31:50.840] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.840 --> 01:31:51.840] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.840 --> 01:31:52.840] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.840 --> 01:31:53.840] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.840 --> 01:31:55.840] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.840 --> 01:31:57.840] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.840 --> 01:32:00.840] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.840 --> 01:32:32.840] Trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:32.840 --> 01:32:38.840] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.840 --> 01:32:45.840] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.840 --> 01:32:50.840] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.840 --> 01:32:56.840] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.840 --> 01:32:58.840] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.840 --> 01:33:01.840] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.840 --> 01:33:11.840] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:11.840 --> 01:33:26.840] I see it too, I see it too. [01:33:26.840 --> 01:33:27.840] Okay. [01:33:27.840 --> 01:33:28.840] We are back. [01:33:28.840 --> 01:33:29.840] We're in DeKalcon. [01:33:29.840 --> 01:33:32.840] We're talking to the Tennessee. [01:33:32.840 --> 01:33:48.840] The point I was going to is in Texas, a traffic cop, assuming he's authorized to enforce the transportation code, [01:33:48.840 --> 01:33:56.840] he can only write a ticket for a violation that he personally sees or hears. [01:33:56.840 --> 01:34:03.840] And I've always claimed that when they come out and investigate an accident and write a ticket, that's illegal. [01:34:03.840 --> 01:34:10.840] Because he can see or hear the offense being committed, and it's a class C misdemeanor. [01:34:10.840 --> 01:34:16.840] So under the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, he can't write that ticket. [01:34:16.840 --> 01:34:21.840] Is it similar in Tennessee? [01:34:21.840 --> 01:34:23.840] I think you're correct. [01:34:23.840 --> 01:34:29.840] Yes, it is, because I remember being in the case because I argued the same thing. [01:34:29.840 --> 01:34:35.840] So did a municipal officer come out and investigate an accident? [01:34:35.840 --> 01:34:39.840] I mean, I can see that he could write a report. [01:34:39.840 --> 01:34:41.840] Right, he was supposed to write a report. [01:34:41.840 --> 01:34:55.840] But to fill out a ticket, that would seem to violate your rights to be free from arrest without a warrant, [01:34:55.840 --> 01:34:59.840] and you are under arrest until you sign that citation. [01:34:59.840 --> 01:35:08.840] Arrest without a warrant unless the officer partially sees or hears. [01:35:08.840 --> 01:35:12.840] Yes, you're right on that one. [01:35:12.840 --> 01:35:20.840] Okay, so I'm still interested in how we... [01:35:20.840 --> 01:35:28.840] The issue of the police being able to enforce the transportation code in the first place. [01:35:28.840 --> 01:35:42.840] No, no, they're not allowed to enforce it, but there are certain city misdemeanors that they have underneath 101. [01:35:42.840 --> 01:35:52.840] And they're saying that once it falls beneath that category, they have to cite which state reference it goes to. [01:35:52.840 --> 01:36:04.840] No, they use the 101 to enforce motor carrier laws unlawfully, because 101 is for a certain misdemeanor. [01:36:04.840 --> 01:36:08.840] But under certain misdemeanors, it has a list of categories. [01:36:08.840 --> 01:36:11.840] None of those things are transportation. [01:36:11.840 --> 01:36:16.840] So the city is unlawfully extorting money, and they don't have no authority. [01:36:16.840 --> 01:36:25.840] I'm looking at a state law right now that says 4-7-105, enforcement of motor carrier laws. [01:36:25.840 --> 01:36:37.840] The members of the state highway patrol have jurisdiction and authority to make such investigations of operators of motor vehicles for hire, [01:36:37.840 --> 01:36:47.840] and they may cease it to ascertain whether or not they are operating in compliance with 65-15-109 [01:36:47.840 --> 01:36:56.840] and whether or not they are otherwise complying with the provisions of the law relating to such operators. [01:36:56.840 --> 01:37:14.840] And they have authority to make arrests for any violation of Title 65-15, which is motor and carrier laws, or of any other traffic law of the state. [01:37:14.840 --> 01:37:25.840] So I read the Tennessee section up and down, and I find nowhere, no authority for the city to do transportation or traffic. [01:37:25.840 --> 01:37:33.840] But I find authority for state highway patrol, and I see where it says that you're not, [01:37:33.840 --> 01:37:39.840] they have a statute that says you're not allowed to arrest someone for a misdemeanor. [01:37:39.840 --> 01:37:44.840] And all traffic laws, all traffic violations in Tennessee are misdemeanors. [01:37:44.840 --> 01:37:47.840] Misdemeanors, exactly. [01:37:47.840 --> 01:37:54.840] So it sounds like while the code is written somewhat different, the effect is the same. [01:37:54.840 --> 01:38:04.840] In that the state has a special policing group that enforces the transportation code, [01:38:04.840 --> 01:38:10.840] and then there are other policing groups that do other things. [01:38:10.840 --> 01:38:13.840] Right. The city police work for the city. [01:38:13.840 --> 01:38:22.840] It has a statute, and they're saying that they're not allowed to make money off of licensing fees, no way, no how, forever. [01:38:22.840 --> 01:38:26.840] So how are you making, how you charge people off of licensing? [01:38:26.840 --> 01:38:43.840] So that just means that they can't file, they can't pass ordinances that require people who live in the city to pay a specific tax or a specific fee. [01:38:43.840 --> 01:38:47.840] Right. But this right here says enforcement of motor carrier laws. [01:38:47.840 --> 01:38:52.840] This is the only place that it gives anyone authority in the Tennessee statute. [01:38:52.840 --> 01:38:57.840] Even when you go to the other section, motor carrier, it refers back to this. [01:38:57.840 --> 01:39:00.840] So nowhere does it give city authority. [01:39:00.840 --> 01:39:09.840] You might want to write up a subject matter jurisdiction challenge on that issue. [01:39:09.840 --> 01:39:11.840] Okay, let me speak to who? [01:39:11.840 --> 01:39:12.840] Danielle's for a minute. [01:39:12.840 --> 01:39:19.840] I don't have that issue. Every time I go to court, they throw mines out because I ask them where's the law? [01:39:19.840 --> 01:39:24.840] And they're like, they look at the officer and they're like, well, officer, we don't have a problem here. [01:39:24.840 --> 01:39:27.840] I'm like, you're a criminal. You're setting it up. What do you mean, officer? [01:39:27.840 --> 01:39:33.840] You need to tell him that they need to stop bringing one-on-one in here because it's illegal all back. [01:39:33.840 --> 01:39:38.840] It's illegal all the way around because you're not allowed to do transportation. [01:39:38.840 --> 01:39:47.840] I got 500 pages with 16 citations on each page of unlawful arrest [01:39:47.840 --> 01:39:55.840] and due process violations committed against the community. [01:39:55.840 --> 01:40:02.840] That's close to $8,000. I mean, that's close to $8,000 in the last year. [01:40:02.840 --> 01:40:11.840] It sounds like you have the makings of a good private attorney general suit. [01:40:11.840 --> 01:40:17.840] Well, I'm trying to get the information for you, but sometimes it's kind of hard. [01:40:17.840 --> 01:40:27.840] Okay. Well, it appears as though Texas and Tennessee are pretty close. [01:40:27.840 --> 01:40:35.840] The restrictions on the city that you're speaking to, we have similar restrictions in Texas. [01:40:35.840 --> 01:40:40.840] They're just numbered and arranged somewhat different. [01:40:40.840 --> 01:40:46.840] So municipal police can't enforce the traffic code. [01:40:46.840 --> 01:40:51.840] No. I don't think no state allows them to enforce traffic code. [01:40:51.840 --> 01:40:58.840] The way it's written, I keep on going back to U.S. code and going back down to the city and going back up. [01:40:58.840 --> 01:41:03.840] I can't find no time where it gives the city municipalities authority. [01:41:03.840 --> 01:41:13.840] They don't teach them the traffic laws. So how can you enforce it if you're not taught? [01:41:13.840 --> 01:41:21.840] Nowhere in there, even when it says here over the city, it gives the powers or duties of the chief police. [01:41:21.840 --> 01:41:28.840] The chief of police shall have general control and supervision of all members of the police department [01:41:28.840 --> 01:41:31.840] and shall direct the police work of the city. [01:41:31.840 --> 01:41:45.840] He shall be familiar with and generally responsible for seeing to the enforcement of all city laws and ordinances. [01:41:45.840 --> 01:41:53.840] Traffic laws are state laws. You, that one little city. [01:41:53.840 --> 01:42:02.840] And that fits better because a municipality is essentially a corporation. [01:42:02.840 --> 01:42:07.840] And a corporation can set up bylaws. [01:42:07.840 --> 01:42:15.840] But the only people who are affected by those bylaws are members of the corporation. [01:42:15.840 --> 01:42:27.840] Not everybody else in the neighborhood, but that would be city employees, contractors who are contracted with the city. [01:42:27.840 --> 01:42:37.840] But if you just happen to live within an area they claim encloses their authority, [01:42:37.840 --> 01:42:52.840] that doesn't necessarily bring you under their ordinances unless you have admitted to the authority of their ordinances. [01:42:52.840 --> 01:42:58.840] Correct. And they're using 101 to fight all traffic laws, right? [01:42:58.840 --> 01:43:04.840] And we know traffic for commerce, but they're using 101 to fight all traffic laws, which is state. [01:43:04.840 --> 01:43:08.840] And they don't have no authority to enforce state laws. [01:43:08.840 --> 01:43:17.840] It's city. 101 has a category of city misdemeanors that they can enforce. [01:43:17.840 --> 01:43:23.840] That's what 101 is designated for. 10-101 is designated for. [01:43:23.840 --> 01:43:30.840] But every citation that they've written for 10-101 traffic is illegal. [01:43:30.840 --> 01:43:34.840] And that's not unusual. [01:43:34.840 --> 01:43:40.840] Okay, so how can you convert that into a private attorney general's suit? [01:43:40.840 --> 01:43:50.840] What I'm looking for is a way for you to make some money that will work somewhat more quickly than a protracted suit of judges and federal officials. [01:43:50.840 --> 01:43:53.840] Hang on. Pick this up when you're on the side. [01:43:53.840 --> 01:44:00.840] Randy Chalkin, Unibrow Radio, we'll be right back. [01:44:23.840 --> 01:44:29.840] Hemp is not marijuana, and marijuana is not hemp. They are different varieties of the same species. [01:44:29.840 --> 01:44:38.840] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts and to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best-kept health secret you need to know about. [01:44:38.840 --> 01:44:47.840] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten-free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. [01:44:47.840 --> 01:44:56.840] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367, and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you. [01:44:56.840 --> 01:45:00.840] Only at HempUSA.org. [01:45:00.840 --> 01:45:03.840] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:03.840 --> 01:45:15.840] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.840 --> 01:45:22.840] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.840 --> 01:45:27.840] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.840 --> 01:45:34.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.840 --> 01:45:43.840] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.840 --> 01:45:52.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.840 --> 01:46:21.840] Please visit LulaVlogRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.840 --> 01:46:42.840] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, LulaVlogRadio, and Olivier, am I getting this right that you're saying that the municipal police in Tennessee cannot enforce the traffic laws? [01:46:42.840 --> 01:46:53.840] And if I'm right, what do you intend to do here? What does it open the door for you to do? [01:46:53.840 --> 01:46:58.840] Well, number one, they're using that to arrest people being in jail. [01:46:58.840 --> 01:47:10.840] They're not providing them with counsel at the bail hearing, which is a critical step in the state prosecution. [01:47:10.840 --> 01:47:17.840] But that's a criminal organization. Then they don't get sufficient counsel. [01:47:17.840 --> 01:47:27.840] Counsel are denying them, not allowing them to bring up constitutional distances. [01:47:27.840 --> 01:47:31.840] When you say counsel, do you mean someone's own counsel? [01:47:31.840 --> 01:47:34.840] Like the counsel that they provide. [01:47:34.840 --> 01:47:37.840] Okay, yeah, court appointed counsel, yeah. [01:47:37.840 --> 01:47:46.840] Right, so there's a lot of things that, okay, but 10-101 is how they get everybody in there. [01:47:46.840 --> 01:47:59.840] Is there a, I lost my question. Go ahead, I lost my place here. I've been up since 2 this morning. [01:47:59.840 --> 01:48:07.840] What I wanted to do, I wanted to go ahead and shut this down, sue, whatever I had to do. But me, I'm kind of good with it. [01:48:07.840 --> 01:48:11.840] Every time they get me on it, I go beat the charges and file a suit. [01:48:11.840 --> 01:48:16.840] But now I'm realizing filing a suit is going to take like, what, five to seven years? [01:48:16.840 --> 01:48:18.840] Yes. [01:48:18.840 --> 01:48:21.840] Is the money going to be worth it? [01:48:21.840 --> 01:48:32.840] Okay, I don't know, but there may be a way to bring them to the table more quickly. [01:48:32.840 --> 01:48:38.840] And that's going after them criminally. [01:48:38.840 --> 01:48:47.840] That's what I, my last case, I won that case because I went after them criminally. [01:48:47.840 --> 01:48:55.840] They got rid of my case, but rid of me to get me off their behinds. [01:48:55.840 --> 01:49:01.840] So you can certainly up the stakes on them. [01:49:01.840 --> 01:49:12.840] What we've talked about the whole time here, you have a set of suits where you're trying to use the courts [01:49:12.840 --> 01:49:19.840] in the way they were intended to be used to seek justice, to seek remedy. [01:49:19.840 --> 01:49:24.840] But the courts are just ruling however they want to, whenever they want to. [01:49:24.840 --> 01:49:28.840] Well, this goes back to you as the sovereign. [01:49:28.840 --> 01:49:30.840] You have a duty to bring them back in line. [01:49:30.840 --> 01:49:33.840] And I think we can. [01:49:33.840 --> 01:49:37.840] Ken Magnuson, he's someone I work with. [01:49:37.840 --> 01:49:42.840] I went to Glen Rose today to observe some proceedings. [01:49:42.840 --> 01:49:46.840] And these guys made a horrible mess. [01:49:46.840 --> 01:49:53.840] The guy filed a habeas corpus, the other side didn't answer, and the judge granted it. [01:49:53.840 --> 01:49:55.840] That's criminal in space. [01:49:55.840 --> 01:50:00.840] And I'm saying, Ken, how many bar grievances have you filed? [01:50:00.840 --> 01:50:02.840] How many judicial conduct complaints? [01:50:02.840 --> 01:50:04.840] Oh, we'll wait until all this civil stuff's over. [01:50:04.840 --> 01:50:09.840] I said, no, no, no, don't wait until the civil stuff's over. [01:50:09.840 --> 01:50:12.840] It's all about politics. [01:50:12.840 --> 01:50:17.840] If you're going to wait until the case has ruled out, [01:50:17.840 --> 01:50:24.840] then it indicates that you trust the courts and the prosecutors a whole lot more than I do. [01:50:24.840 --> 01:50:26.840] I'm not going to wait for anything. [01:50:26.840 --> 01:50:35.840] And it has been my experience that if you combine the criminal with the civil, [01:50:35.840 --> 01:50:38.840] it makes them crazy. [01:50:38.840 --> 01:50:45.840] Now they want to do something to get you the heck out of here. [01:50:45.840 --> 01:50:50.840] So don't hold back on the criminal. [01:50:50.840 --> 01:51:01.840] And it's my experience that the criminal is much more powerful than the civil. [01:51:01.840 --> 01:51:04.840] If the civil, the taxpayers are going to pay it. [01:51:04.840 --> 01:51:07.840] So these public officials, they don't have a dog in that hut. [01:51:07.840 --> 01:51:09.840] They don't care. [01:51:09.840 --> 01:51:15.840] But when you start going after them personally for their personal bad behavior in this regard, [01:51:15.840 --> 01:51:25.840] now they want the suit to go away and they want you to go away so they can go back to their life. [01:51:25.840 --> 01:51:29.840] My suggestion is, if we're getting to the end of the show, [01:51:29.840 --> 01:51:33.840] don't be bashful about criminal complaints. [01:51:33.840 --> 01:51:36.840] Man, I've been filing them all over the place. [01:51:36.840 --> 01:51:39.840] We've got more people filing them all over the place. [01:51:39.840 --> 01:51:42.840] And this works. [01:51:42.840 --> 01:51:47.840] Boy, these guys get really excited and they have a reason to come to the table [01:51:47.840 --> 01:51:51.840] and make a deal you cannot pass up. [01:51:51.840 --> 01:51:53.840] Okay. [01:51:53.840 --> 01:51:56.840] So what kind of suit should I be working on? [01:51:56.840 --> 01:52:02.840] Should I wait or should I hit the county with a mandamus to make the city stop [01:52:02.840 --> 01:52:09.840] while I figure out how to sue them? [01:52:09.840 --> 01:52:15.840] I'm not sure about the mandamus. [01:52:15.840 --> 01:52:18.840] Isn't the county over the city? [01:52:18.840 --> 01:52:25.840] What I'm thinking, you're talking about a suit in traffic. [01:52:25.840 --> 01:52:30.840] And I really want to go back and look at what you have in place. [01:52:30.840 --> 01:52:36.840] And you have judges who are ruling against you just with absolute impunity. [01:52:36.840 --> 01:52:42.840] Well, if you don't like my ruling, you can just file an appeal. [01:52:42.840 --> 01:52:54.840] I am finding great advantage in coming into a courthouse as the sovereign. [01:52:54.840 --> 01:52:59.840] I'm sorry, I don't like sovereign, as the master. [01:52:59.840 --> 01:53:05.840] And I don't hesitate in filing criminal complaints against these guys. [01:53:05.840 --> 01:53:07.840] I don't tell them what they're supposed to do. [01:53:07.840 --> 01:53:11.840] I set them up so I can file a criminal complaint against them. [01:53:11.840 --> 01:53:16.840] Now, if you have a civil action going, they're going to want to, [01:53:16.840 --> 01:53:21.840] and you're back here filing against them criminally, [01:53:21.840 --> 01:53:24.840] you're jeopardizing their careers. [01:53:24.840 --> 01:53:28.840] You could end their careers. [01:53:28.840 --> 01:53:31.840] So they want a way out of this mess. [01:53:31.840 --> 01:53:35.840] If you just sue them civilly and you get these arrogant judges [01:53:35.840 --> 01:53:39.840] doing whatever they want to without regard to the law, [01:53:39.840 --> 01:53:45.840] what's going to keep them from continuing to do that? [01:53:45.840 --> 01:53:51.840] Okay, so I'll hit them criminally, but I file civilly. [01:53:51.840 --> 01:53:55.840] When I file civil, I'm allowed to file in defense, correct? [01:53:55.840 --> 01:54:03.840] Well, it depends if you have a federal claim or if you have a diversity in filing defense. [01:54:03.840 --> 01:54:06.840] Hold on, let me just step back. [01:54:06.840 --> 01:54:12.840] You said when I file criminally or did you say when I file civilly? [01:54:12.840 --> 01:54:14.840] No, civil, civil. [01:54:14.840 --> 01:54:15.840] I mean civil. [01:54:15.840 --> 01:54:19.840] When I file for the civil suit, I can do it in the federal court, right? [01:54:19.840 --> 01:54:22.840] Yeah, federal process, yes. [01:54:22.840 --> 01:54:26.840] So it'll give another judge an opportunity to do something stupid, [01:54:26.840 --> 01:54:28.840] so I've got to file criminally against him too. [01:54:28.840 --> 01:54:31.840] Exactly, and now you're getting it. [01:54:31.840 --> 01:54:36.840] The criminal and the civil, we work them together. [01:54:36.840 --> 01:54:39.840] I've got an issue going here. [01:54:39.840 --> 01:54:45.840] I get one of these officials to do something stupid and I bang him good. [01:54:45.840 --> 01:54:48.840] And then I keep adjudicating my issue. [01:54:48.840 --> 01:54:52.840] And then he tries something else and I whack him again. [01:54:52.840 --> 01:54:58.840] And what turns out from the criminal side is everything they do makes it worse for them. [01:54:58.840 --> 01:55:03.840] It goes back to the position that everything's political. [01:55:03.840 --> 01:55:07.840] So you're not going to win your case because you have the law and the facts on your side. [01:55:07.840 --> 01:55:09.840] It's all politics. [01:55:09.840 --> 01:55:19.840] So we use the criminal, that'll create a whole lot more politics than the civil. [01:55:19.840 --> 01:55:24.840] The criminal ends careers and this federal judge, [01:55:24.840 --> 01:55:29.840] he don't think you can get that before a grand jury and get an indictment. [01:55:29.840 --> 01:55:36.840] But he's not sure of that and he doesn't have any control over it. [01:55:36.840 --> 01:55:40.840] Judges are control freaks when they don't have control, [01:55:40.840 --> 01:55:44.840] and you may actually be exercising control over their future. [01:55:44.840 --> 01:55:50.840] Now this is wrongful, but they will go to the lawyer on the other side and say, [01:55:50.840 --> 01:55:57.840] you better get him off my case or I will screw your next client to get back at you. [01:55:57.840 --> 01:56:10.840] So end of the day, point is, don't hold up on the criminal side until the civil is finished. [01:56:10.840 --> 01:56:12.840] Work them both together. [01:56:12.840 --> 01:56:17.840] Work it like, this is an art form. [01:56:17.840 --> 01:56:23.840] Once you get it, then every time they do something improper, you whack them. [01:56:23.840 --> 01:56:27.840] Then you come back real nice and sweet and say, hey, let's make this deal. [01:56:27.840 --> 01:56:28.840] And they say, heck no. [01:56:28.840 --> 01:56:32.840] And you go over to the other side and you whack them again. [01:56:32.840 --> 01:56:36.840] Bitch, and you bring them to the table. [01:56:36.840 --> 01:56:37.840] And I think that's what you want. [01:56:37.840 --> 01:56:40.840] You want to bring them to the table. [01:56:40.840 --> 01:56:41.840] Okay. [01:56:41.840 --> 01:56:47.840] And when I go to the grand jury, who should I be watching out, blocking? [01:56:47.840 --> 01:56:48.840] Who should be blocking? [01:56:48.840 --> 01:56:50.840] Who should I be watching out for here? [01:56:50.840 --> 01:56:51.840] Okay. [01:56:51.840 --> 01:56:52.840] Hold on. [01:56:52.840 --> 01:56:54.840] Say that again when you go through these. [01:56:54.840 --> 01:56:55.840] Who? [01:56:55.840 --> 01:56:56.840] Grand jury. [01:56:56.840 --> 01:56:59.840] When I go file the criminal complaint in the grand jury. [01:56:59.840 --> 01:57:00.840] Okay. [01:57:00.840 --> 01:57:11.840] We're out of time tonight, but let's talk next week about my favorite subject is how to use the grand jury to great advantage, [01:57:11.840 --> 01:57:16.840] whether you ever actually get in front of them or not. [01:57:16.840 --> 01:57:29.840] The grand jury terrifies everybody because nobody feels like they can control a grand jury. [01:57:29.840 --> 01:57:35.840] Any complaint before a grand jury is like a crap shoot. [01:57:35.840 --> 01:57:40.840] You file against a federal judge and you get it to a grand jury. [01:57:40.840 --> 01:57:45.840] You know, he knows that this is a crap shoot. [01:57:45.840 --> 01:57:47.840] It doesn't matter what the law is. [01:57:47.840 --> 01:57:54.840] It matters whether or not there's a juror on there that got screwed in the federal courts a couple years ago [01:57:54.840 --> 01:58:05.840] or a juror's grandson got issues from the federal court or whatever jurisdiction this guy's looking for. [01:58:05.840 --> 01:58:09.840] And then he gets in the grand jury and he screws me big time. [01:58:09.840 --> 01:58:12.840] Nothing I can do about it. [01:58:12.840 --> 01:58:15.840] Absolutely no control whatsoever. [01:58:15.840 --> 01:58:22.840] You make complaints to the grand jury and it's like playing Russian roulette with their careers. [01:58:22.840 --> 01:58:27.840] This will get you to politics and give them reason to tell the other side, [01:58:27.840 --> 01:58:32.840] you make a deal with this guy, get him off my case or I'm going to work you over. [01:58:32.840 --> 01:58:34.840] That make sense? [01:58:34.840 --> 01:58:36.840] Right. [01:58:36.840 --> 01:58:37.840] Okay. [01:58:37.840 --> 01:58:38.840] We are out of time. [01:58:38.840 --> 01:58:42.840] This is Randy Kelton, Rue de la Radio, and thank you, Olivier. [01:58:42.840 --> 01:58:46.840] As usual, you've been a good caller. [01:58:46.840 --> 01:58:48.840] See you next week. [01:58:48.840 --> 01:59:10.840] Good luck. [01:59:19.840 --> 01:59:25.840] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:25.840 --> 01:59:29.840] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.840 --> 01:59:32.840] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.840 --> 01:59:40.840] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.840 --> 01:59:44.840] That's 888-551-0102. [01:59:44.840 --> 01:59:50.840] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:50.840 --> 01:59:52.840] Looking for some truth? [01:59:52.840 --> 01:59:53.840] You found it. [01:59:53.840 --> 02:00:21.840] Logosradionetwork.com.