[00:00.000 --> 00:07.480] The following flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [00:07.480 --> 00:13.880] Markets for Wednesday, the 15th of March, 2017, are currently trading with gold at $1,212.75 [00:13.880 --> 00:20.800] an ounce, silver at $17.11 an ounce, Texas crude at $47.72 a barrel, and Bitcoin is sitting [00:20.800 --> 00:26.080] at about $1,253 U.S. currency. [00:26.080 --> 00:32.000] Wednesday in history, the year 1916, the United States President Woodrow Wilson sent 6,600 [00:32.000 --> 00:36.560] United States troops over the U.S.-Mexican border to pursue Pancho Villa in what is known [00:36.560 --> 00:38.600] as the Mexican Expedition. [00:38.600 --> 00:42.760] The expedition was launched in retaliation for Villa's attack on the town of Columbus, [00:42.760 --> 00:43.760] New Mexico. [00:43.760 --> 00:51.760] The Pancho Villa Expedition was launched today in history. [00:51.760 --> 00:55.880] In recent news, the Justice Department Wednesday today publicly charged two Russian spies in [00:55.880 --> 01:00.840] two hackers for the 2014 data breach connected to half a billion Yahoo accounts, one of the [01:00.840 --> 01:03.000] largest known hacks in American history. [01:03.000 --> 01:07.480] The four men are collectively facing 47 criminal charges, including conspiracy, computer fraud, [01:07.480 --> 01:11.920] economic espionage, theft of trade secrets, and aggravated identity theft. [01:11.920 --> 01:16.480] One of the three Russian Federal Security Service agents, Alexey Alekseyevich Baran, [01:16.480 --> 01:20.800] was already among the FBI's most wanted cyber criminals, all three of whom are Russian nationals [01:20.800 --> 01:21.800] and residents. [01:21.800 --> 01:25.720] The U.S. Department of Justice officials did not explain what the FSB agents were necessarily [01:25.720 --> 01:30.360] looking for, but did note that, quote, some victim accounts were of predictable interest [01:30.360 --> 01:35.520] to the FSB, including personal accounts belonging to Russian journalists, Russian and U.S. government [01:35.520 --> 01:39.520] officials, employees of prominent Russian cybersecurity companies, along with Russian [01:39.520 --> 01:44.640] investment banking firms, a French transportation company, U.S. financial services and private [01:44.640 --> 01:49.960] equity firms, a Swiss bitcoin wallet and banking firm, and a U.S. airline. [01:49.960 --> 01:54.080] Yahoo had publicly revealed in September of last year that hackers breach its network [01:54.080 --> 02:04.680] in late 2014, stealing personal data associated with more than 500 million users. [02:04.680 --> 02:08.120] Republican Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul, when talking to the media concerning the release [02:08.120 --> 02:13.240] by MSNBC of a few pages of President Trump's 2005 tax return, which showed that Trump made [02:13.240 --> 02:19.240] 153 million in 2005 and paid 36.5 million in income taxes for the year, which is in [02:19.240 --> 02:24.160] severe contrast to the Democratic socialist Senator Bernie Sanders, who in 2014 only paid [02:24.160 --> 02:29.440] a tax rate of about 13.5 percent, far below Trump's 2005 rate of 25. [02:29.440 --> 02:33.280] Paul said that, quote, since Senator Sanders is such a good socialist, I think he'd want [02:33.280 --> 02:34.480] to pay his fair share. [02:34.480 --> 02:38.120] I'm expecting news any day that he's going to send a couple of hundred thousand into [02:38.120 --> 02:42.840] the IRS so he can pay his fair share. [02:42.840 --> 02:46.960] The Lone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors, product or service that you [02:46.960 --> 02:47.960] like to advertise with us. [02:47.960 --> 02:49.960] Feel free to get a call at 210-363-2257. [02:49.960 --> 02:56.960] This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for March 15, 2017. [03:19.960 --> 03:23.960] Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do? [03:26.960 --> 03:31.960] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.960 --> 03:37.960] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.960 --> 03:42.960] When you were eight and you had bad traits You'd go to school and learn the golden rules [03:42.960 --> 03:48.960] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? Is it you get high and your mouth get cool? [03:49.960 --> 03:53.960] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:53.960 --> 03:58.960] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [03:59.960 --> 04:04.960] You talk it on that one, you talk it on this one You talk it on you're mothe and you talk it on your hodder [04:05.960 --> 04:10.960] You talk it on your mothe and you talk it on your sister You talk it on your husband and you talk it on me [04:10.960 --> 04:32.960] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:32.960 --> 04:43.960] Nobody now gives you no break. Police now gives you no break. That's also German now gives you no break. [04:43.960 --> 04:55.960] Okay, howdy, howdy. This is Randy Kelton, Ruebler Radio on this Friday, the 10th day of March 2017. [04:55.960 --> 05:01.960] Well, we may have a little issue today. Last week we apologized for not being able to do the show. [05:01.960 --> 05:10.960] It was, we think it was some internet issues. We're not sure, but for some reason I couldn't be heard on the show, [05:10.960 --> 05:18.960] so we had to kind of pull the plug. I hope we do better this week. And call lines are open. [05:18.960 --> 05:26.960] I'm opening the phones right now. If I seem somewhat distracted, it's because I'm having to act as the producer [05:26.960 --> 05:35.960] and the host, and that gets somewhat complex every once in a while, so bear with me. [05:35.960 --> 05:42.960] We are going to do our four-hour show tonight, so if you have a question or a comment, give us a call, [05:42.960 --> 05:57.960] 512-646-1984, and we are running our giveaway for the AR-15. We have an AR-15 gun giveaway this year, [05:57.960 --> 06:07.960] so if you're interested in getting in the drawing, go to Logos Radio Network and Fairytale. [06:07.960 --> 06:14.960] Once you donate, you will get a chance in the drawing. I'm sorry, if every 25 you donate, [06:14.960 --> 06:25.960] you get a chance in the drawing for the AR-15 we're giving away. We're also selling the legal, the e-book, [06:25.960 --> 06:34.960] Legal 101 and 80s Traffic Seminar and Dr. Frederick Graves' Jurisdictionary. [06:34.960 --> 06:43.960] If you listen to this program and you find benefit and value, or if you have a legal issue [06:43.960 --> 06:53.960] and you want to be able to protect yourself, and you don't know anything about law, my suggestion, [06:53.960 --> 07:02.960] the first thing you do is go to Logos Radio Network and get Dr. Graves' Jurisdictionary. [07:02.960 --> 07:10.960] Go through his 24 CDs. When you've gone through those CDs, [07:10.960 --> 07:20.960] you basically understand a large part of what lawyers don't know when they get out of law school. [07:20.960 --> 07:31.960] Lawyers in law school learn how to argue legal issues. They don't really learn how to practice law. [07:31.960 --> 07:38.960] Okay, I'm not sure if I'm on the air or not. I think I've messed everything up today. I can't get Robert. [07:38.960 --> 08:05.960] I'm going to shut this off. I think the plug has been pulled. [08:08.960 --> 08:11.960] I'm going to shut this off. [08:38.960 --> 08:41.960] I'm going to shut this off. [09:08.960 --> 09:19.960] Okay, it seems my engineer couldn't connect. I'm able to connect. [09:19.960 --> 09:28.960] I'm not really sure if I'm on the air or not. I don't have all the equipment the producer has, [09:28.960 --> 09:33.960] but I'm going to assume that I am, and I apologize for the delay. [09:33.960 --> 09:43.960] We seem to have a little minor glitch here. This is kind of a common thing with this antiquated system that we're trying to use, [09:43.960 --> 09:53.960] but this is Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, on this Friday, the 17th day of March 2017. [09:53.960 --> 10:00.960] Now, we have the producer in the background. He's trying to figure out if we're on or not, [10:00.960 --> 10:05.960] and so I don't know if I am or not. I'm going to act like I am. [10:05.960 --> 10:11.960] So, if I sound a little odd or I get a little distracted, maybe because my producer's chiming in, [10:11.960 --> 10:20.960] trying to get everything up and working, and let me send him a little message. [10:20.960 --> 10:25.960] I'm on, I think. It gets real interesting around here sometimes. [10:25.960 --> 10:33.960] While I'm waiting on that, there is something I did want to address today, [10:33.960 --> 10:39.960] something that went on the other day that I thought was interesting. [10:39.960 --> 10:48.960] It kind of gave me an opportunity to go in a direction that I hadn't went in before. [10:48.960 --> 10:57.960] Now, if anybody's there, if you can hear me, I have turned on the phones. [10:57.960 --> 11:05.960] I don't hear the archive playing in the background, so that pretty well tells me I'm probably on the air. [11:05.960 --> 11:13.960] Okay, I had a relative that is a drug addict get in an altercation with family, [11:13.960 --> 11:17.960] and family called the police and they arrested her. [11:17.960 --> 11:29.960] They arrested her in Pelican Bay, Texas, which is a tiny little hamlet right by Eagle Mountain Lake near Azale, Texas. [11:29.960 --> 11:35.960] They arrested her and took her about 20 miles away to Blue Mountain Jail. [11:35.960 --> 11:39.960] Now, a lot of these small hamlets don't have their own jails, [11:39.960 --> 11:48.960] so they lease jail space from other larger cities that do have jails and have space they're not using. [11:48.960 --> 11:58.960] So the officer arrested Shelly, took her to Blue Mountain, and they held her for a few hours. [11:58.960 --> 12:03.960] The magistrate came in and released her on her own recognizance. [12:03.960 --> 12:13.960] Well, that wasn't too bad, but they arrested her at about 11 o'clock in the morning from her house. [12:13.960 --> 12:19.960] Took her out of her house, cuffed her, took her to jail, no coat, no sweater, no nothing. [12:19.960 --> 12:27.960] Then took her to jail 20 miles away and released her at 11 o'clock at night in 32 degree temperatures. [12:27.960 --> 12:34.960] No coat, no transportation, and the jail was kind of out in the middle of nowhere. [12:34.960 --> 12:38.960] They just dumped her out there. [12:38.960 --> 12:41.960] So that doesn't seem right. [12:41.960 --> 12:46.960] And the way I read the code, it isn't right. [12:46.960 --> 12:53.960] As I read the code, that is depraved hard assault. [12:53.960 --> 12:59.960] And I charged the... [12:59.960 --> 13:01.960] Okay, you're live on TuneIn. [13:01.960 --> 13:03.960] Okay, it looks like I'm live. [13:03.960 --> 13:06.960] I got an email telling me that I'm live. [13:06.960 --> 13:14.960] Well, I got a voluntary statement form from the chief of police [13:14.960 --> 13:21.960] and told him that I would be filing criminal charges against his officer. [13:21.960 --> 13:27.960] Well, he obviously wasn't very happy about that. [13:27.960 --> 13:31.960] But I told him I'm not after your officer. [13:31.960 --> 13:38.960] We've been addressing this problem of arresting people and throwing them in jail for quite a while now. [13:38.960 --> 13:45.960] And this was an excellent opportunity to demonstrate the problem with arresting someone, [13:45.960 --> 13:57.960] taking them straight to jail in variance to the very clearly worded rule of law. [13:57.960 --> 14:06.960] What the code says is if someone is arrested without a warrant, [14:06.960 --> 14:09.960] they must be taken directly to the nearest magistrate. [14:09.960 --> 14:12.960] They cannot be taken directly to jail. [14:12.960 --> 14:19.960] They must be taken directly to the nearest magistrate or they can be released on their own recognizance [14:19.960 --> 14:24.960] for a classy misdemeanor or for a misdemeanor, [14:24.960 --> 14:29.960] a police officer at his discretion can release you on your own recognizance. [14:29.960 --> 14:34.960] Well, they take them straight to jail as a matter of policy. [14:34.960 --> 14:45.960] So the problem that the arresting officer had when he did everything essentially in accordance with policy, [14:45.960 --> 14:49.960] he didn't do it in accordance with law. [14:49.960 --> 14:52.960] And that raises an issue. [14:52.960 --> 15:02.960] When the magistrate saw the shell shelly at the jail, he just dismissed everything that's in her home. [15:02.960 --> 15:12.960] Well, had the officer took her directly to the nearest magistrate, the magistrate would have done that right away. [15:12.960 --> 15:18.960] She wouldn't have sat in jail half a day and then been released in the middle of nowhere with no jacket on. [15:18.960 --> 15:30.960] So she was subjected to some pretty serious punishment by a jail [15:30.960 --> 15:36.960] when she was not even accused of a crime. [15:36.960 --> 15:39.960] So I call that assault. [15:39.960 --> 15:46.960] And since they put her in a position to where her life was in jeopardy, [15:46.960 --> 15:58.960] 32 degrees with no covering can very quickly cause hypothermia, especially when she's got 20 miles to go. [15:58.960 --> 16:06.960] And I asked the chief of police, what happens if we find her frozen to death out there? [16:06.960 --> 16:09.960] Then it's depraved heart murder. [16:09.960 --> 16:14.960] But in this case, it was depraved heart assault. [16:14.960 --> 16:19.960] So I'll charge the officer with it and he'll jump up and down railing righteous indignation [16:19.960 --> 16:22.960] and swear on a stack of bobbles he didn't do anything wrong. [16:22.960 --> 16:25.960] Sorry, Bubba, life is tough. [16:25.960 --> 16:31.960] You followed policy, instead of following law, we'll see how that works out for you. [16:31.960 --> 16:37.960] It's another way of putting pressure on these guys to change their policies. [16:37.960 --> 16:47.960] This is Randy Kelton with the Radio on this Friday, the 17th day of March 2017. [16:47.960 --> 16:49.960] We're going to break. [16:49.960 --> 16:51.960] We have our fundraiser going. [16:51.960 --> 16:54.960] It's a good time to go to Logos Radio Network and check out our gun giveaway. [16:54.960 --> 16:58.960] We've got two guns and two other pieces. [16:58.960 --> 17:18.960] We'll be right back. [17:18.960 --> 17:23.960] OK, I'm going to assume I'm off the air. [17:23.960 --> 17:28.960] I'm still in the air because I was supposed to get a beep and I didn't. [17:28.960 --> 17:33.960] So I took us off myself. [17:33.960 --> 17:37.960] But if the system took me off and didn't give me the beep, [17:37.960 --> 17:42.960] the switch is a toggle and I toggle this back on. [17:42.960 --> 17:44.960] I'm not sure what's going on because I don't hear background music. [17:44.960 --> 17:52.960] I should be hearing the commercials playing in the background and I don't hear it. [17:52.960 --> 17:55.960] So I'm confused. [17:55.960 --> 18:23.960] Let's see if I can talk to my producer. [19:55.960 --> 20:24.960] Let's see if I can talk to my producer. [20:24.960 --> 20:28.960] The judge is there to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, [20:28.960 --> 20:31.960] then apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [20:31.960 --> 20:32.960] So the judge isn't annoyed. [20:32.960 --> 20:34.960] You don't care. [20:34.960 --> 20:39.960] You're there to get the facts and the law on the record. [20:39.960 --> 20:50.960] So did, OK, back to the issue of the Americans with Disabilities Act. [20:50.960 --> 20:52.960] What was the nature of your, OK, [20:52.960 --> 20:59.960] you claimed that they didn't provide handicap access. [20:59.960 --> 21:07.960] How did that go to an issue that was before the court? [21:07.960 --> 21:27.960] Well, it never, the judge didn't approve it and honestly, I did not word my petition correctly. [21:27.960 --> 21:30.960] I mean, well, I thought I did. [21:30.960 --> 21:34.960] I thought it was acceptable. [21:34.960 --> 21:39.960] OK, OK, now let me take a step back from that. [21:39.960 --> 21:50.960] Was this, OK, if I remember right, this is a rental contract claim, correct? [21:50.960 --> 21:52.960] Right, right. [21:52.960 --> 22:03.960] So you're making the claim of breach of contract by the apartment complex. [22:03.960 --> 22:04.960] Right, right. [22:04.960 --> 22:18.960] And your contract includes the rights accorded under all the laws that apply to the rentee, rentor. [22:18.960 --> 22:19.960] Right. [22:19.960 --> 22:22.960] And the rentee, they're the rentee. [22:22.960 --> 22:24.960] They're the ones that's renting it to you. [22:24.960 --> 22:27.960] And their laws, they have to follow. [22:27.960 --> 22:35.960] The presumption in the contract is that both parties will abide by all law. [22:35.960 --> 22:40.960] I'm sure you have a clause in the contract to that effect. [22:40.960 --> 22:44.960] If you don't, it's implicit. [22:44.960 --> 22:55.960] So it is implied at the very least that you have a right to access to the property that you rented. [22:55.960 --> 22:59.960] So this would go to breach of contract. [22:59.960 --> 23:11.960] What was the, is there any claim in your petition that this could be construed to fall under? [23:11.960 --> 23:16.960] This claim of American with Disabilities Act. [23:16.960 --> 23:28.960] Maybe, Randy, it's, they moved all of my furniture and my bed out of my bedroom and into the kitchen [23:28.960 --> 23:35.960] and started repairing my room, but they never repaired it. [23:35.960 --> 23:38.960] And they said I couldn't go back in the room. [23:38.960 --> 23:46.960] And little did they know that I just happened to have an operation that week. [23:46.960 --> 23:48.960] Okay, I'm in. [23:48.960 --> 23:49.960] Okay. [23:49.960 --> 23:55.960] If this is confusing for everyone, it's a bit confusing for me. [23:55.960 --> 24:01.960] I had some trouble getting in from the beginning, so my producer hit the panic button. [24:01.960 --> 24:04.960] And he couldn't get onto the boards. [24:04.960 --> 24:08.960] And I could get on the board, so I brought us in. [24:08.960 --> 24:12.960] And the first segment, I wasn't sure if I was on the air or not. [24:12.960 --> 24:14.960] So I acted like I was. [24:14.960 --> 24:16.960] And someone sent me an email says I was. [24:16.960 --> 24:18.960] But I still wasn't sure. [24:18.960 --> 24:21.960] And the archives were still running. [24:21.960 --> 24:25.960] So I think we got it straightened out. [24:25.960 --> 24:29.960] So I have the phone lines open if anybody can hear me. [24:29.960 --> 24:35.960] Somebody call in so I know you can hear me and I can answer the phone. [24:35.960 --> 24:38.960] We can talk and make sure that I'm on the air live. [24:38.960 --> 24:48.960] Otherwise, I have the archive running, which I don't think is because I can't hear it in the background. [24:48.960 --> 24:49.960] And I hit the fade out. [24:49.960 --> 24:50.960] The fade outs are working. [24:50.960 --> 24:54.960] So I should be live on the air. [24:54.960 --> 25:01.960] Anyway, I found that situation interesting. [25:01.960 --> 25:08.960] I have myself been arrested and thrown out on the street with no way home before. [25:08.960 --> 25:13.960] And apparently, this is a very common practice around the country. [25:13.960 --> 25:18.960] While this was going on, a friend of mine called me from Salt Lake City, Utah. [25:18.960 --> 25:20.960] And I told him what was happening. [25:20.960 --> 25:25.960] And he said in Salt Lake, they had someone released that way back in the winter. [25:25.960 --> 25:29.960] And he froze to death. [25:29.960 --> 25:32.960] That's depraved heart murder. [25:32.960 --> 25:38.960] But the guy apparently had no family, so he had no one to fight for him. [25:38.960 --> 25:49.960] But in this case, I'm going to pursue this officer for depraved heart, the assault, and see if I can't get everybody's attention. [25:49.960 --> 25:51.960] Anyway, our phone lines are open. [25:51.960 --> 25:55.960] Call in numbers 512-646-1984. [25:55.960 --> 25:59.960] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [25:59.960 --> 26:06.960] Unless I've confused everybody and we don't know what the heck is going on. [26:06.960 --> 26:09.960] Check my Skype, my producers. [26:09.960 --> 26:10.960] I don't know what's going on. [26:10.960 --> 26:17.960] Anyway, okay, we'll try to get this sorted out and finish out the rest of this show the way we should. [26:17.960 --> 26:22.960] But by the next segment, we'll have it sorted out in any case. [26:22.960 --> 26:26.960] But things are moving along well. [26:26.960 --> 26:40.960] I have my criminal complaints against Federal Judge McBride in the hands of the FBI, who has done nothing, which I would certainly expect. [26:40.960 --> 26:44.960] The last thing they want to do is go after a federal judge. [26:44.960 --> 26:49.960] And I sent a request to the attorney general. [26:49.960 --> 26:51.960] Let me take a step back. [26:51.960 --> 27:05.960] I filed against the federal judge because he dismissed my case with prejudice for failure to state a claim on which recovery can be had. [27:05.960 --> 27:20.960] Now, that might have been okay, except that the case that was filed was a declaratory judgment suit. [27:20.960 --> 27:34.960] And if you've tried to take an action in the federal court, you wind up getting your case thrown out under Rule 12B-6, failure to state a claim on which recovery can be had. [27:34.960 --> 27:44.960] Since the Ashcroft-Tombly decision, it kind of opened the doors for the judges to just dismiss anything they want to. [27:44.960 --> 27:54.960] And if you are a pro se litigant in the federal court, they're going to throw your case out. [27:54.960 --> 27:56.960] They don't care what you plead. [27:56.960 --> 27:59.960] They're going to say your pleading is not sufficient. [27:59.960 --> 28:07.960] If you give absolute, incontrovertible proof, they're going to throw your case out for failure to state a claim. [28:07.960 --> 28:11.960] Federal judges have been bought and paid for. [28:11.960 --> 28:28.960] So, if you want to get in the court, especially with these foreclosure issues, the one thing the judges want to avoid beyond all others is discovery. [28:28.960 --> 28:38.960] They may actually be the bona fide holder of the dead instrument. [28:38.960 --> 28:43.960] The problem is, is they screwed things up so bad they can't prove it. [28:43.960 --> 28:51.960] And the last thing they want is for you to get an opportunity to request discovery, which they cannot produce. [28:51.960 --> 28:54.960] So, they're going to do everything they can to avoid discovery. [28:54.960 --> 29:02.960] Well, if you go in with a quiet title action, quiet title is strictly a state issue. [29:02.960 --> 29:12.960] And with the 2011 Venue and Removal Clarification Act, it has made it clear to the federal courts that when a case with state issues [29:12.960 --> 29:18.960] and federal issues is removed to the federal court, the federal court must sever and remove the state issues. [29:18.960 --> 29:26.960] Well, if it's a quiet title action, it only has state issues, so the federal court has no subject matter jurisdictions in the first place. [29:26.960 --> 29:32.960] So, I filed a challenge subject matter jurisdiction without hearing it, Judge McBride dismissed with prejudice. [29:32.960 --> 29:41.960] That was a discretionary ruling on his part, which he can't get to until he gets past subject matter jurisdiction. [29:41.960 --> 29:51.960] He exerted or purported to exert an authority he did not expressly have, denied meaningful free access to override the Class A misdemeanor in the state of Texas. [29:51.960 --> 30:02.960] And we're not done with him yet. We'll be right back. [30:02.960 --> 30:08.960] PowerPoint has crept into our lives and reached the level of near obsession in corporate America. [30:08.960 --> 30:10.960] Are we going overboard with it? [30:10.960 --> 30:16.960] This is Dr. Catherine Albrecht back with a commentary on how PowerPoint erodes critical thinking next. [30:16.960 --> 30:22.960] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.960 --> 30:27.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.960 --> 30:32.960] So, protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.960 --> 30:35.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:35.960 --> 30:42.960] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.960 --> 30:46.960] Start over with StartPage. [30:46.960 --> 30:49.960] We've all experienced it. Death by PowerPoint. [30:49.960 --> 30:54.960] Microsoft's presentation program has turned countless meetings into mind-numbing boredom. [30:54.960 --> 31:00.960] Got a product idea? Do a PowerPoint. Trouble in the battlefield? PowerPoint again. Ugg. [31:00.960 --> 31:05.960] Unless it's creatively spiffed up with lots of pictures, PowerPoint can be the death of a meeting. [31:05.960 --> 31:11.960] It relieves the lazy speaker from having to actually write a thoughtful speech or convey a persuasive argument. [31:11.960 --> 31:15.960] Too often, instead of analysis, we get mind-numbing bullet points. [31:15.960 --> 31:23.960] The key is never to put your speech up on the screen. Use lots of pictures and never, ever, never read from a slide. [31:23.960 --> 31:30.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:53.960 --> 32:00.960] Call 4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you, only at NQSA.org. [32:00.960 --> 32:05.960] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:05.960 --> 32:10.960] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.960 --> 32:13.960] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.960 --> 32:17.960] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.960 --> 32:20.960] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.960 --> 32:25.960] These rights afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.960 --> 32:28.960] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:28.960 --> 32:33.960] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [32:33.960 --> 32:35.960] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.960 --> 32:40.960] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.960 --> 32:45.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.960 --> 32:50.960] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.960 --> 32:54.960] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.960 --> 32:59.960] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:03.960 --> 33:10.960] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [33:10.960 --> 33:19.960] Yeah, I got a warrant, and I'm going to solve them. [33:19.960 --> 33:24.960] To the head of government, prosecute them. [33:24.960 --> 33:26.960] Okay. [33:26.960 --> 33:30.960] I'm sorry. [33:30.960 --> 33:39.960] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton. [33:39.960 --> 33:46.960] We'll go on this Friday, the 17th day of March 2017. [33:46.960 --> 33:52.960] And we seem to have all of our technical issues ironed out. [33:52.960 --> 33:59.960] Makes the show more interesting when we have to do the show while dancing on the head of a pen. [33:59.960 --> 34:02.960] It sure gets you woke up. [34:02.960 --> 34:05.960] Okay, we're going to go to Brent in Texas. [34:05.960 --> 34:09.960] I'm sorry, Brett in Texas. Hello, Brett. [34:09.960 --> 34:11.960] Hello there, Randy. [34:11.960 --> 34:16.960] What do you have for us today? [34:16.960 --> 34:22.960] Well, primarily I just wanted to call and, like you said, just make sure everything's working. [34:22.960 --> 34:27.960] But since we've seen that everything is working, I do have a question. [34:27.960 --> 34:35.960] Maybe you can speak to the way that a pro se litigant can figure out which laws apply. [34:35.960 --> 34:40.960] I remember reading in the jurisdiction materials about controlling law, [34:40.960 --> 34:44.960] and I'd like to see if you can speak to that. [34:44.960 --> 34:46.960] You were talking about federal law just now. [34:46.960 --> 34:51.960] I've had a couple of county judges tell me that, well, there's no such thing as admissions [34:51.960 --> 34:53.960] and no such thing as you can't do discovery. [34:53.960 --> 34:59.960] This is a criminal case being trafficked, and, oh, well, FRCP doesn't apply here. [34:59.960 --> 35:03.960] This is Texas. [35:03.960 --> 35:09.960] Maybe you can speak to how one can figure out which laws apply. [35:09.960 --> 35:10.960] Okay. [35:10.960 --> 35:20.960] Do you have the rules of civil procedure and the rules of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure? [35:20.960 --> 35:29.960] And the judges will say, well, you can't file a cross-complaint in a criminal case. [35:29.960 --> 35:35.960] And my response to that is, where'd you come up with that? [35:35.960 --> 35:39.960] You know, I've got the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure here, [35:39.960 --> 35:48.960] and it doesn't say anything about a prohibition against filing a counter-complaint in a criminal action. [35:48.960 --> 35:58.960] So the judge has made a proactive law out of his own mouth. [35:58.960 --> 36:01.960] Now I want to see the law behind it. [36:01.960 --> 36:05.960] Or did you just make that up? [36:05.960 --> 36:14.960] If you just made that up, then you have exerted or purported to exert an authority you do not expressly have. [36:14.960 --> 36:20.960] And the question you asked was very appropriate. [36:20.960 --> 36:28.960] It is something that I have developed a way to do. [36:28.960 --> 36:40.960] But when you ask me how I do that, I haven't explained to myself how I do that. [36:40.960 --> 36:45.960] So I'm not very adept at explaining to everybody else how I do that. [36:45.960 --> 36:49.960] You know, how do you ride a bicycle? [36:49.960 --> 36:52.960] Just get on it and ride it. [36:52.960 --> 36:58.960] If you had to explain to somebody how you ride a bicycle, that can get pretty difficult. [36:58.960 --> 37:08.960] So it's good that you asked me that question, and I had been considering that since I'm building these maps. [37:08.960 --> 37:12.960] I'm building questionnaires based on code. [37:12.960 --> 37:21.960] And once I get all of the questionnaires, and the questionnaires, I just take the code and convert it to questions. [37:21.960 --> 37:28.960] And then I got to a point to where I was beyond the code. [37:28.960 --> 37:32.960] Like I have a questionnaire for due process. [37:32.960 --> 37:34.960] Were you arrested? Yes. [37:34.960 --> 37:36.960] Were you arrested on an existing warrant? [37:36.960 --> 37:38.960] Yes or no. [37:38.960 --> 37:42.960] Did the officer personally see the offense being committed? [37:42.960 --> 37:44.960] Now, this is not an appeal code. [37:44.960 --> 37:47.960] This is out of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [37:47.960 --> 37:52.960] So you need to read the Code of Criminal Procedure. [37:52.960 --> 37:55.960] Actually, you don't even have to do that. [37:55.960 --> 38:04.960] If you go to jurisimprudence.website, on that site, I have a bunch of frogs on there, [38:04.960 --> 38:07.960] because I call this the frog farm conspiracy. [38:07.960 --> 38:15.960] Top frog on the left goes to a habeas corpus that I wrote for a kid in Conroe. [38:15.960 --> 38:18.960] And he was a member of the Republic of Texas, [38:18.960 --> 38:23.960] and he's doing a lot of this patriot mythology that they all told him to do. [38:23.960 --> 38:26.960] And he's being held in jail. [38:26.960 --> 38:34.960] So I wrote this habeas for him, and the habeas walks down due process. [38:34.960 --> 38:39.960] It is my analysis of the Code of Criminal Procedure. [38:39.960 --> 38:40.960] It's pretty large. [38:40.960 --> 38:46.960] Not everything is in there, but most of it's in there. [38:46.960 --> 38:52.960] Since I've written that one, I've developed some more issues to include. [38:52.960 --> 38:56.960] But read that habeas. [38:56.960 --> 38:59.960] It walks down the code. [38:59.960 --> 39:11.960] There is a talisman, a key that I have to figure out when a public official is violating a law. [39:11.960 --> 39:14.960] And that's 39.03 penal code. [39:14.960 --> 39:18.960] In the Fed, it's 18 U.S. Code 242. [39:18.960 --> 39:27.960] And every state has a similar statute that says that if a public official exerts [39:27.960 --> 39:32.960] or purports to exert an authority they do not expressly have, [39:32.960 --> 39:39.960] and in the process denies a citizen in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a right, [39:39.960 --> 39:42.960] well, that's a criminal act. [39:42.960 --> 39:49.960] So I look at what my officials do and ask myself, [39:49.960 --> 39:58.960] is this something that the official is commanded to do by law? [39:58.960 --> 40:02.960] Or is this something he just made up? [40:02.960 --> 40:13.960] Or if he does something, does the law give the official the specific authority to perform this act? [40:13.960 --> 40:21.960] I just read a case by the Fifth Circuit, and on the one hand I was happy about the decision, [40:21.960 --> 40:26.960] but on the other I was very disturbed about the basis for the ruling. [40:26.960 --> 40:35.960] And this is your ability to videotape your public officials. [40:35.960 --> 40:44.960] This college kid crossed the street from the Fort Worth Police Department videotaping the police department. [40:44.960 --> 40:50.960] Cops come out, jerk him around, cuff him, put him in the car, hold him for an hour or so, [40:50.960 --> 40:52.960] and then decided he was right. [40:52.960 --> 40:58.960] They couldn't figure out any law he was breaking, so they turned him loose, or he sued him. [40:58.960 --> 41:03.960] And they claimed qualified immunity. [41:03.960 --> 41:11.960] And the Fifth Circuit, in determining whether or not to grant qualified immunity, [41:11.960 --> 41:19.960] said that at the time the officers cuffed this kid and put him in the car, [41:19.960 --> 41:28.960] the right to videotape the courthouse was not clearly established. [41:28.960 --> 41:33.960] Now everybody should be saying, say what? [41:33.960 --> 41:40.960] Not clearly established? Are you kidding me? [41:40.960 --> 41:43.960] Brett, what's wrong with that? [41:43.960 --> 41:45.960] It's crazy. [41:45.960 --> 41:48.960] Well, I'm the master here. [41:48.960 --> 41:52.960] Is it going to be enumerated? Is it going to be restricted? [41:52.960 --> 41:56.960] Yeah, my rights are not enumerated. [41:56.960 --> 42:02.960] The only thing about my rights that are enumerated are restrictions on my rights. [42:02.960 --> 42:11.960] What should be clearly established is the authority of the officer to take the action. [42:11.960 --> 42:23.960] And his authority to arrest this person for doing something that was not stated in a statute as criminal [42:23.960 --> 42:26.960] was a violation of law himself. [42:26.960 --> 42:34.960] They used the wrong measuring stick, and that's one I certainly want to go after. [42:34.960 --> 42:43.960] However, okay, back to the point. The point is, a public official may only do [42:43.960 --> 42:49.960] what they are specifically authorized to do. [42:49.960 --> 42:52.960] And this is exactly the tact I want to take. [42:52.960 --> 43:00.960] I'm going to go to the Mansfield Justice of the Peace Court, Judge Hayes. [43:00.960 --> 43:05.960] Judge Hayes and I have a history, and I'm going to take out my cell phone. [43:05.960 --> 43:09.960] I'm going to point it at everybody and record the proceedings [43:09.960 --> 43:12.960] and see if I can get him to arrest me again. [43:12.960 --> 43:16.960] Last time, I had my cell phone in my pocket, and he looked at me and said, [43:16.960 --> 43:18.960] Mr. Colton, are you recording these proceedings? [43:18.960 --> 43:22.960] And I said, well, yeah, of course. [43:22.960 --> 43:26.960] And he had cuffed me and dragged me out of the courtroom. [43:26.960 --> 43:31.960] About 10 minutes later, he saw better of it and had the cuffs taken off. [43:31.960 --> 43:35.960] Well, I'm going to go back and do that again because now we have this ruling, [43:35.960 --> 43:43.960] and I'm going to get the judge to do something that he is not specifically authorized to do. [43:43.960 --> 43:49.960] Then I'm going to sue him for it, and when the appeals court addresses this issue [43:49.960 --> 43:53.960] of whether the right was clearly defined, then I'll go after the appeals court. [43:53.960 --> 44:01.960] Hang on. We're in the Calgary Oval Law Radio. We'll be right back. [44:01.960 --> 44:05.960] Hello. My name is Stuart Smith from naturespureorganics.com, [44:05.960 --> 44:10.960] and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street Sweet D [44:10.960 --> 44:13.960] here in Austin, Texas behind Brave New Books and Chase Payne [44:13.960 --> 44:17.960] to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:17.960 --> 44:21.960] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:21.960 --> 44:25.960] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Eme oil, [44:25.960 --> 44:29.960] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:29.960 --> 44:36.960] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:36.960 --> 44:42.960] That's 512-264-4043, naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.960 --> 44:46.960] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:46.960 --> 45:00.960] Naturespureorganics.com. [45:00.960 --> 45:03.960] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.960 --> 45:06.960] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:06.960 --> 45:14.960] the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.960 --> 45:18.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.960 --> 45:22.960] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.960 --> 45:27.960] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.960 --> 45:33.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.960 --> 45:38.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.960 --> 45:42.960] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.960 --> 45:48.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:48.960 --> 45:51.960] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:51.960 --> 46:01.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:01.960 --> 46:24.960] Okay, we are back. [46:24.960 --> 46:30.960] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas. [46:30.960 --> 46:38.960] And if I seem like I'm rambling here a little bit, I'm trying to figure out how to explain this. [46:38.960 --> 46:47.960] And primarily everything is based on, does the official have the specific authority [46:47.960 --> 46:57.960] to do what he or she is doing, or is the official failing to do something they're required to do? [46:57.960 --> 47:02.960] Read out 39.03 Texas Penal Code, read it a couple of times, [47:02.960 --> 47:07.960] and then compare their behavior to that statute. [47:07.960 --> 47:10.960] Does that make sense, Brent? [47:10.960 --> 47:12.960] Right, yes, it does. [47:12.960 --> 47:19.960] But what I can't do yet is I haven't read enough of the various different parts of the law [47:19.960 --> 47:22.960] to know right off the bat when the judge is lying. [47:22.960 --> 47:28.960] And he says, well, FRCP doesn't apply here, or if he says there's no such thing as admissions in criminal. [47:28.960 --> 47:33.960] And I have to go later and get on my computer and start looking through things, [47:33.960 --> 47:38.960] and then I find out some gem like the criminal code, [47:38.960 --> 47:42.960] the procedure says that if it's not defined or in contrast with the criminal, [47:42.960 --> 47:44.960] well, then the civil procedures apply. [47:44.960 --> 47:48.960] So then I sit back in my chair and I say, hey, he lied to me, [47:48.960 --> 47:50.960] but it's too late to say something about it. [47:50.960 --> 47:53.960] Oh, no, it's not. [47:53.960 --> 48:04.960] And I suggest that it's much better if you don't do it in court. [48:04.960 --> 48:07.960] Bushwhack is great. [48:07.960 --> 48:14.960] I love it when I sneak up behind a public official and kick him right square in his professional pants, [48:14.960 --> 48:20.960] and he has to look around a little bit to figure out how that happened. [48:20.960 --> 48:24.960] Bushwhack is great. [48:24.960 --> 48:32.960] Right now, when I go to court, I've got a copy of several copies of bar grievance forms, [48:32.960 --> 48:34.960] judicial conduct complaints forms. [48:34.960 --> 48:41.960] I just found the Texas professional police officers' associate T. Close. [48:41.960 --> 48:44.960] I found their form. [48:44.960 --> 48:49.960] I'm looking for, I need to get a form for court reporters. [48:49.960 --> 48:56.960] Everybody who has a license, I'll have a form to file a complaint against them. [48:56.960 --> 49:00.960] And if I go to court, I'm laying around out there on the desk. [49:00.960 --> 49:03.960] And when the judge tells me some nonsense like that, [49:03.960 --> 49:07.960] I pick up the judicial conduct complaint and I start writing it out, [49:07.960 --> 49:12.960] and I ask him to give me a moment, I need to put this note in this complaint. [49:12.960 --> 49:16.960] So he goes home, the next day, or a day or two later, [49:16.960 --> 49:23.960] he starts getting notices from the district attorney that I'm trying to get him arrested [49:23.960 --> 49:27.960] from the state commission on judicial conduct that I filed a complaint against him. [49:27.960 --> 49:32.960] And he's saying, what? What happened? [49:32.960 --> 49:35.960] If the guy had an issue, he should have brought it up to me in court. [49:35.960 --> 49:39.960] Nah, not as much fun if I do it that way. [49:39.960 --> 49:43.960] Besides, you got me outgunned. [49:43.960 --> 49:46.960] Once you step out of that courtroom, [49:46.960 --> 49:51.960] you might as well take that robe off because you can't pull any shenanigans on me then. [49:51.960 --> 49:54.960] It makes it a lot harder for them to deal with you. [49:54.960 --> 50:02.960] Right now, in Tarrant County, the word is that scoundrel Kelton walks into your courtroom. [50:02.960 --> 50:06.960] He's trying to get you to do something so he can run down the district attorney [50:06.960 --> 50:09.960] or the grand jury and try to get you indicted. [50:09.960 --> 50:12.960] That's true, I am. [50:12.960 --> 50:15.960] So don't screw with me. [50:15.960 --> 50:19.960] And he's not going to tell you, he's not going to give you fair warning. [50:19.960 --> 50:24.960] I just went to my city manager today because I had a friend of mine file some information requests [50:24.960 --> 50:28.960] and yesterday was the last day to answer. [50:28.960 --> 50:36.960] And I told Greg that I'm here to violate my own rule. [50:36.960 --> 50:38.960] He said, what rule is that? [50:38.960 --> 50:43.960] My rule against giving fair warning. [50:43.960 --> 50:46.960] Never give fair warning. [50:46.960 --> 50:49.960] If you try to give a public official fair warning, [50:49.960 --> 50:55.960] they will always treat that as a threat. [50:55.960 --> 50:58.960] So don't give them fair warning. [50:58.960 --> 51:02.960] Just smile at them and put a mark on your chart. [51:02.960 --> 51:08.960] But in a few days, are you ever going to get yourself a surprise, Bubba? [51:08.960 --> 51:10.960] That is so much fun. [51:10.960 --> 51:15.960] And it's a lot more effective that way. [51:15.960 --> 51:18.960] If you work for a large corporation, [51:18.960 --> 51:22.960] say you're in the mail room and you're kind of goofing off [51:22.960 --> 51:28.960] and the CEO walks through the mail room and he sees you over there goofing off. [51:28.960 --> 51:36.960] He's not going to say anything to you because he's not your direct supervisor. [51:36.960 --> 51:41.960] What he's going to do is he's going to go to the executive vice president [51:41.960 --> 51:48.960] who handles that part of the business and chew him out. [51:48.960 --> 51:53.960] The executive vice president is going to walk it down the line and when it gets to your supervisor, [51:53.960 --> 51:58.960] he is in big trouble because of you. [51:58.960 --> 52:02.960] That's the way it's supposed to work. [52:02.960 --> 52:06.960] When you walk into a public building, they're all servants. [52:06.960 --> 52:09.960] You're the master. [52:09.960 --> 52:12.960] So if I have a problem with one of these servants, [52:12.960 --> 52:16.960] then I don't go to this servant because I didn't hire him. [52:16.960 --> 52:20.960] I go to the guy who hired him. [52:20.960 --> 52:25.960] And then he finds out that I'm upset from his boss. [52:25.960 --> 52:30.960] That's a lot more effective. [52:30.960 --> 52:31.960] Does that make sense? [52:31.960 --> 52:34.960] Am I explaining this so it's... [52:34.960 --> 52:36.960] That does make sense. [52:36.960 --> 52:39.960] I mean, we're kind of on a little bit different topic, but yeah, totally. [52:39.960 --> 52:41.960] I'm with you on that. [52:41.960 --> 52:46.960] I'm having a similar experience right now. [52:46.960 --> 52:49.960] I had in one evening, one police officer, [52:49.960 --> 52:54.960] I did enough reading the penal code to find that what he did to me that evening, [52:54.960 --> 52:59.960] in one evening he accomplished 28 penal code offenses. [52:59.960 --> 53:04.960] And so I decided, well, I'm going to go talk to the... [53:04.960 --> 53:07.960] First off, I did a criminal complaint. [53:07.960 --> 53:09.960] Well, that went exactly nowhere. [53:09.960 --> 53:14.960] I turned around and I said, well, maybe I can get some attention from the police chief [53:14.960 --> 53:17.960] because I want somebody above him to get that attention, right? [53:17.960 --> 53:19.960] Like you were saying. [53:19.960 --> 53:25.960] Well, so the police chief was disturbingly unreceptive [53:25.960 --> 53:29.960] and he had a very bad attitude about it, treated me like trash. [53:29.960 --> 53:32.960] So I said, well, okay, well, I'm going to talk to the mayor about that. [53:32.960 --> 53:34.960] And he got the mayor. [53:34.960 --> 53:37.960] I said, well, we need to talk about some internal affairs kind of thing [53:37.960 --> 53:39.960] that you're chief of police. [53:39.960 --> 53:42.960] And I don't think he's going to have a very good day on Monday. [53:42.960 --> 53:43.960] Wonderful. [53:43.960 --> 53:47.960] That's exactly how to do it. [53:47.960 --> 53:52.960] You make your complaint not against the original officer, [53:52.960 --> 53:55.960] but against the one who had a duty to take an action. [53:55.960 --> 54:06.960] And then you understand that the mayor is a magistrate. [54:06.960 --> 54:07.960] They don't realize they're mayor. [54:07.960 --> 54:10.960] Well, they kind of realize they're magistrates. [54:10.960 --> 54:18.960] So you take a verified criminal act to David to the mayor. [54:18.960 --> 54:21.960] Against the chief of police. [54:21.960 --> 54:27.960] And when the mayor doesn't perform his or her duty as a magistrate, [54:27.960 --> 54:31.960] then you take a criminal complaint against the mayor, [54:31.960 --> 54:36.960] to the next place would be a justice, I guess you could do it [54:36.960 --> 54:40.960] to the municipal court judge. [54:40.960 --> 54:42.960] Put the municipal court judge on the dime, [54:42.960 --> 54:51.960] give him an opportunity to hold an examining trial on the mayor, his boss. [54:51.960 --> 54:56.960] What do you think he's going to do? [54:56.960 --> 55:02.960] You get to watch that little chicken dance. [55:02.960 --> 55:04.960] And then you go to the JP. [55:04.960 --> 55:08.960] I just went to the JP in Southlake with criminal charges [55:08.960 --> 55:13.960] against the municipal judge in Southlake [55:13.960 --> 55:22.960] because she wouldn't take 58 felony charges against the municipal attorney. [55:22.960 --> 55:25.960] Oh, that was so much fun. [55:25.960 --> 55:33.960] And now I'll file against the justice of the peace with the county judge. [55:33.960 --> 55:40.960] And I actually had a county judge in Tarrant County a number of years ago [55:40.960 --> 55:42.960] do exactly what he was supposed to. [55:42.960 --> 55:46.960] I gave him, I bushwhacked him in his court. [55:46.960 --> 55:47.960] He's having a hearing. [55:47.960 --> 55:50.960] I've called the bailiff over, told the bailiff, [55:50.960 --> 55:55.960] my name is Randall Kelton, instruct the judge that I have business with the court. [55:55.960 --> 55:58.960] The bailiff said, may I tell him the nature of the business? [55:58.960 --> 56:00.960] I said, no, you may not. [56:00.960 --> 56:03.960] I have business with the court and it's none of yours. [56:03.960 --> 56:08.960] And he looked me right in the eye and he said, okay. [56:08.960 --> 56:12.960] He goes over and tells the judge, I like that bailiff. [56:12.960 --> 56:16.960] You know what that told me about that bailiff? [56:16.960 --> 56:19.960] Do not mess with this guy. [56:19.960 --> 56:21.960] You're not going to confuse him. [56:21.960 --> 56:23.960] You're not going to distract him. [56:23.960 --> 56:25.960] The guy is sharp. [56:25.960 --> 56:27.960] Don't mess with him. [56:27.960 --> 56:32.960] Well, the judge got, he finished his hearings and then he asked me, [56:32.960 --> 56:35.960] I said, Mr. Kelton, I understand you have business with the court. [56:35.960 --> 56:36.960] I said, yes, your honor, I do. [56:36.960 --> 56:40.960] And I held up this folder and said, may I approach? [56:40.960 --> 56:46.960] Now what that means is, can I give you these documents? [56:46.960 --> 56:50.960] Most of the time when you do that, they'll send the bailiff to get the documents. [56:50.960 --> 56:52.960] And that's what he did in this case. [56:52.960 --> 56:57.960] Judge Bob Perkins, head criminal district judge in Travis County, [56:57.960 --> 56:59.960] he called me up and said, yeah, come on up. [56:59.960 --> 57:01.960] And I handed them directly to him. [57:01.960 --> 57:03.960] But generally they send the bailiff to get it. [57:03.960 --> 57:12.960] He opens it up and he's looking at criminal charges against a justice of the peace, [57:12.960 --> 57:18.960] accusing the justice of the peace of failing to take criminal complaints [57:18.960 --> 57:21.960] against the district attorney. [57:21.960 --> 57:25.960] He read that and he looked up at me and he looked back down at it [57:25.960 --> 57:29.960] and the thing was a hundred and something pages thick. [57:29.960 --> 57:34.960] He thumbed through a little bit and he said, Mr. Kelton, are you in a hurry? [57:34.960 --> 57:37.960] No, your honor, got all afternoon. [57:37.960 --> 57:40.960] Well, would you mind if I went out and read this? [57:40.960 --> 57:41.960] I said, I wouldn't mind at all. [57:41.960 --> 57:43.960] I'll wait right here. [57:43.960 --> 57:48.960] He came back an hour and a half later, called in a court reporter, [57:48.960 --> 57:52.960] called in his court clerk. [57:52.960 --> 57:58.960] The first thing he did was he said, Mr. Kelton, I've read through your complaints [57:58.960 --> 58:03.960] and am I to understand that if I don't act in a way you deem appropriate, [58:03.960 --> 58:07.960] that you're prepared to file criminal charges against me? [58:07.960 --> 58:12.960] And I thought, uh-oh, not good, but I'm in for a penny and for a pound. [58:12.960 --> 58:16.960] I said, with all due respect, your honor, in a heartbeat. [58:16.960 --> 58:19.960] And he said, well, I better do this right then. [58:19.960 --> 58:20.960] And he did. [58:20.960 --> 58:26.960] Had me read each one onto the record, had the clerk verify my signature [58:26.960 --> 58:28.960] and file them with the court. [58:28.960 --> 58:31.960] That's the only one I've ever had do it right. [58:31.960 --> 58:36.960] That's what you want them to do, but they're not going to. [58:36.960 --> 58:38.960] And he's just walking up the top. [58:38.960 --> 58:41.960] The more difficulty you create higher up, [58:41.960 --> 58:44.960] the more dangerous it gets for the one on the bottom. [58:44.960 --> 58:45.960] Hang on. [58:45.960 --> 58:49.960] Randy Kelton, Real Law Radio, we'll be right back. [58:49.960 --> 58:53.960] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.960 --> 58:56.960] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible [58:56.960 --> 59:00.960] and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.960 --> 59:03.960] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive [59:03.960 --> 59:05.960] study Bibles available today. [59:05.960 --> 59:09.960] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes [59:09.960 --> 59:12.960] that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.960 --> 59:15.960] The free books are a three-volume set called [59:15.960 --> 59:17.960] Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.960 --> 59:20.960] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:20.960 --> 59:23.960] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:23.960 --> 59:27.960] growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.960 --> 59:30.960] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version [59:30.960 --> 59:33.960] and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.960 --> 59:40.960] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.960 --> 59:44.960] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.960 --> 59:49.960] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.960 --> 59:55.960] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [59:55.960 --> 59:59.960] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [59:59.960 --> 01:00:03.960] Markets for Wednesday, the 15th of March, 2017, [01:00:03.960 --> 01:00:07.960] are currently trading with gold at $1,212.75 an ounce, [01:00:07.960 --> 01:00:09.960] silver at $17.11 an ounce, [01:00:09.960 --> 01:00:12.960] Texas crude at $47.72 a barrel, [01:00:12.960 --> 01:00:18.960] and bitcoin is sitting at about $1,253 U.S. currency. [01:00:18.960 --> 01:00:25.960] Today in history, the year 1916, the United States President Woodrow Wilson [01:00:25.960 --> 01:00:29.960] sends 6,600 United States troops over the U.S.-Mexican border [01:00:29.960 --> 01:00:33.960] to pursue Pancho Villa in what is known as the Mexican Expedition. [01:00:33.960 --> 01:00:36.960] The expedition was launched in retaliation for Villa's attack [01:00:36.960 --> 01:00:38.960] on the town of Columbus, New Mexico. [01:00:38.960 --> 01:00:48.960] The Pancho Villa Expedition was launched today in history. [01:00:48.960 --> 01:00:51.960] In recent news, the Justice Department Wednesday today [01:00:51.960 --> 01:00:55.960] publicly charged two Russian spies and two hackers for the 2014 data breach [01:00:55.960 --> 01:00:57.960] connected to half a billion Yahoo accounts, [01:00:57.960 --> 01:01:00.960] one of the largest known hacks in American history. [01:01:00.960 --> 01:01:03.960] The four men are collectively facing 47 criminal charges, [01:01:03.960 --> 01:01:06.960] including conspiracy, computer fraud, economic espionage, [01:01:06.960 --> 01:01:09.960] theft of trade secrets, and aggravated identity theft. [01:01:09.960 --> 01:01:12.960] One of the three Russian Federal Security Service agents, [01:01:12.960 --> 01:01:14.960] Alexey Alexeyevich Parlan, [01:01:14.960 --> 01:01:17.960] was already among the FBI's most wanted cyber criminals, [01:01:17.960 --> 01:01:20.960] all three of whom are Russian nationals in residence. [01:01:20.960 --> 01:01:22.960] His Department of Justice officials did not explain [01:01:22.960 --> 01:01:24.960] what the FSB agents were necessarily looking for, [01:01:24.960 --> 01:01:26.960] but did note that, quote, [01:01:26.960 --> 01:01:29.960] some victim accounts were of predictable interest to the FSB, [01:01:29.960 --> 01:01:32.960] including personal accounts belonging to Russian journalists, [01:01:32.960 --> 01:01:34.960] Russian and U.S. government officials, [01:01:34.960 --> 01:01:37.960] employees of prominent Russian cybersecurity companies, [01:01:37.960 --> 01:01:39.960] along with Russian investment banking firms, [01:01:39.960 --> 01:01:41.960] a French transportation company, [01:01:41.960 --> 01:01:44.960] U.S. financial services and private equity firms, [01:01:44.960 --> 01:01:48.960] a Swiss bitcoin wallet and banking firm, and a U.S. airline. [01:01:48.960 --> 01:01:51.960] Yahoo had publicly revealed in September of last year [01:01:51.960 --> 01:01:54.960] that hackers breach its network in late 2014, [01:01:54.960 --> 01:02:03.960] stealing personal data associated with more than 500 million users. [01:02:03.960 --> 01:02:05.960] Republican Senator from Kentucky Rand Paul [01:02:05.960 --> 01:02:08.960] when talking to the media concerning the release by MSNBC [01:02:08.960 --> 01:02:11.960] of a few pages of President Trump's 2005 tax return, [01:02:11.960 --> 01:02:14.960] which showed that Trump made $153 million in 2005 [01:02:14.960 --> 01:02:17.960] and paid $36.5 million in income taxes for the year, [01:02:17.960 --> 01:02:21.960] which is in severe contrast to the Democratic Socialist Senator Bernie Sanders, [01:02:21.960 --> 01:02:25.960] who in 2014 only paid a tax rate of about 13.5%, [01:02:25.960 --> 01:02:28.960] far below Trump's 2005 rate of 25. [01:02:28.960 --> 01:02:29.960] Paul said that, quote, [01:02:29.960 --> 01:02:33.960] since Senator Sanders is such a good socialist, I think he'd want to pay his fair share. [01:02:33.960 --> 01:02:38.960] I'm expecting news any day that he's going to send a couple of hundred thousand into the IRS [01:02:38.960 --> 01:02:41.960] so he can pay his fair share. [01:02:41.960 --> 01:02:44.960] The Lone Star Lowdown is currently looking for sponsors. [01:02:44.960 --> 01:02:47.960] If you have a product or a service that you'd like to advertise with us, [01:02:47.960 --> 01:02:52.960] feel free to give me a call at 210-363-2257. [01:02:52.960 --> 01:02:59.960] This is Rick Brody with your Lowdown for March 15, 2017. [01:03:22.960 --> 01:03:42.960] Okay. [01:03:42.960 --> 01:03:43.960] We are back. [01:03:43.960 --> 01:03:48.960] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas. [01:03:48.960 --> 01:03:53.960] I do appreciate you calling to let me know this thing was actually working, [01:03:53.960 --> 01:03:56.960] and I hope I've made sense. [01:03:56.960 --> 01:04:05.960] I'm going to have to address this again and work up how to explain how I figure this out [01:04:05.960 --> 01:04:15.960] to get it to make sense because I'm looking at putting together an audit questionnaire, [01:04:15.960 --> 01:04:24.960] and that's to walk through what they did and then at each point show what law applies [01:04:24.960 --> 01:04:27.960] and how they violated it. [01:04:27.960 --> 01:04:34.960] Brett, this is not as complex as it appears because there really aren't too many laws [01:04:34.960 --> 01:04:38.960] that actually direct them in their behavior. [01:04:38.960 --> 01:04:46.960] And most of the ones that are there are pretty general in their application. [01:04:46.960 --> 01:04:50.960] So I'll keep working on that to make it make more sense. [01:04:50.960 --> 01:04:53.960] If it doesn't seem right, it's probably not. [01:04:53.960 --> 01:05:01.960] And primary key is where did you get the authority to do that? [01:05:01.960 --> 01:05:06.960] I want to see explicitly where you're authorized to take that action [01:05:06.960 --> 01:05:12.960] because if you're not explicitly authorized, then you are not authorized. [01:05:12.960 --> 01:05:16.960] Would that be that finding of fact and conclusion of law? [01:05:16.960 --> 01:05:23.960] It definitely would wind up in there, but since we're not in court with them, [01:05:23.960 --> 01:05:25.960] we can't ask them to produce that. [01:05:25.960 --> 01:05:29.960] If we're in court with a judge or something, we're going to ask him for the, [01:05:29.960 --> 01:05:37.960] definitely ask him what are the facts and law on which you base that claim. [01:05:37.960 --> 01:05:45.960] It goes to my prohibition, never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:05:45.960 --> 01:05:50.960] And I don't want to hear one of those even if it's from the judge. [01:05:50.960 --> 01:05:59.960] If I'm in court and a judge tells me what his opinion is, I really don't care what it is. [01:05:59.960 --> 01:06:04.960] I don't want to hear it. [01:06:04.960 --> 01:06:08.960] He is here to determine the facts in accordance with rules of evidence [01:06:08.960 --> 01:06:11.960] and apply the laws that comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:06:11.960 --> 01:06:16.960] If he's got something else going on, he needs to get down off that bench. [01:06:16.960 --> 01:06:20.960] Like we hear this judge that got on the bench and said that he, [01:06:20.960 --> 01:06:24.960] nobody's going to get a free house in his courtroom. [01:06:24.960 --> 01:06:28.960] That's why I'd ask that judge to get down off that bench. [01:06:28.960 --> 01:06:33.960] Free house or not free house is not your business. [01:06:33.960 --> 01:06:37.960] And if you can't tend to business, get out of here. [01:06:37.960 --> 01:06:40.960] You're the master, he's the servant. [01:06:40.960 --> 01:06:43.960] They forget that. [01:06:43.960 --> 01:06:46.960] And need a few of us to remind them. [01:06:46.960 --> 01:06:53.960] And it is great fun reminding them. [01:06:53.960 --> 01:06:56.960] It should be fun. [01:06:56.960 --> 01:06:58.960] It's not so scary. [01:06:58.960 --> 01:07:05.960] It shouldn't be so scary because once you start taking the law to them, [01:07:05.960 --> 01:07:08.960] they get real uncomfortable. [01:07:08.960 --> 01:07:13.960] I had someone send me an email today about, I'm hoping he calls in, [01:07:13.960 --> 01:07:20.960] about filing charges against some public officials and prosecutors [01:07:20.960 --> 01:07:25.960] and judges or prosecutors and his attorney. [01:07:25.960 --> 01:07:32.960] And he said they really got excited when they looked at his criminal complaints. [01:07:32.960 --> 01:07:36.960] And they should. [01:07:36.960 --> 01:07:38.960] Not many people do that. [01:07:38.960 --> 01:07:44.960] And once you file a criminal action against one of these guys, [01:07:44.960 --> 01:07:48.960] you become a protected class. [01:07:48.960 --> 01:07:52.960] Once I start filing complaints, [01:07:52.960 --> 01:08:00.960] if anyone says anything to me that I can in any way construe as a threat, [01:08:00.960 --> 01:08:05.960] like giving me fair warning, you know you better be careful, [01:08:05.960 --> 01:08:08.960] you can get in a lot of trouble. [01:08:08.960 --> 01:08:16.960] 3605, 3606, tampering with the witness obstruction of justice. [01:08:16.960 --> 01:08:21.960] Threaten me, Bubba, we'll see how that works out for you. [01:08:21.960 --> 01:08:25.960] Because that is exactly what it is. [01:08:25.960 --> 01:08:27.960] And the code is very specific. [01:08:27.960 --> 01:08:31.960] Both of those are felonies. [01:08:31.960 --> 01:08:35.960] And I had a police officer come up to me. [01:08:35.960 --> 01:08:36.960] I was on my property. [01:08:36.960 --> 01:08:38.960] My property is right next to City Hall. [01:08:38.960 --> 01:08:39.960] The fire band was on. [01:08:39.960 --> 01:08:41.960] And I had a little propane torch. [01:08:41.960 --> 01:08:45.960] And I was doing some plastic welding on a big tank. [01:08:45.960 --> 01:08:47.960] He didn't know who I was. [01:08:47.960 --> 01:08:48.960] And I hear, sir, sir. [01:08:48.960 --> 01:08:50.960] And I turn around and I say, yes. [01:08:50.960 --> 01:08:53.960] He said, sir, you can't have that open flame. [01:08:53.960 --> 01:08:55.960] And I held up the torch and said, sure I can. [01:08:55.960 --> 01:08:57.960] Look, nothing to it. [01:08:57.960 --> 01:08:58.960] No, no, no, you don't understand. [01:08:58.960 --> 01:09:00.960] We have a fire band on. [01:09:00.960 --> 01:09:04.960] Well, I knew that the county, they can issue a fire band, [01:09:04.960 --> 01:09:08.960] but they don't have the authority to enforce it. [01:09:08.960 --> 01:09:10.960] But I had a bunch of pressure equipment there. [01:09:10.960 --> 01:09:11.960] And that's what I was working on. [01:09:11.960 --> 01:09:13.960] I said, you see this equipment here? [01:09:13.960 --> 01:09:16.960] I can outrun the fire department. [01:09:16.960 --> 01:09:20.960] Well, I understand, sir, but you can't have that open flame. [01:09:20.960 --> 01:09:21.960] Wait a minute. [01:09:21.960 --> 01:09:23.960] You're just jostling me, right? [01:09:23.960 --> 01:09:25.960] Oh, no, sir. [01:09:25.960 --> 01:09:27.960] Wait a minute. [01:09:27.960 --> 01:09:33.960] That John Faustel, that district judge sent you down here to screw with me, didn't he? [01:09:33.960 --> 01:09:38.960] Just because I filed one crummy little complaint against him with the attorney general [01:09:38.960 --> 01:09:44.960] for making a terroristic threat, he sent you down here to harass me, didn't he? [01:09:44.960 --> 01:09:49.960] This cop takes a step back, holds up both hands with his palms out, [01:09:49.960 --> 01:09:54.960] and said, one moment, sir, takes out his cell phone dials. [01:09:54.960 --> 01:09:58.960] About 30 seconds, the chief of police stepped out of city hall, [01:09:58.960 --> 01:10:03.960] looked over at me and said, Randy, what are you doing to my new officer? [01:10:03.960 --> 01:10:04.960] It's old trauma. [01:10:04.960 --> 01:10:07.960] I was just jerking his chain. [01:10:07.960 --> 01:10:16.960] And the policeman said, oh, God, I saw my whole career pass before my eyes. [01:10:16.960 --> 01:10:21.960] They are terrified of these high-level judges. [01:10:21.960 --> 01:10:28.960] And you will find, as you move higher up the food chain, [01:10:28.960 --> 01:10:39.960] the more sensitive the officials are to you, the more they recognize you as a threat. [01:10:39.960 --> 01:10:44.960] They're all sharks swimming in a pool full of sharks. [01:10:44.960 --> 01:10:46.960] And the higher up in the food chain you are, [01:10:46.960 --> 01:10:51.960] the more you got below you that are after your position. [01:10:51.960 --> 01:10:55.960] It's not you they're so afraid of. [01:10:55.960 --> 01:11:02.960] It is the political cannon fodder you will give their next opponent that they're afraid of. [01:11:02.960 --> 01:11:12.960] And it works, especially with police, those that you would think you would have to be afraid of. [01:11:12.960 --> 01:11:21.960] Once you go up above them and start going after the judges, the police run like rabbits. [01:11:21.960 --> 01:11:28.960] They don't want anything to do with you because the last thing they want to happen [01:11:28.960 --> 01:11:34.960] is for you to accuse that judge of sending that cop out to harass you. [01:11:34.960 --> 01:11:42.960] The best time to do it is when the judge is absolutely innocent as the driven snow. [01:11:42.960 --> 01:11:46.960] So just consider, you're a district judge here, [01:11:46.960 --> 01:11:56.960] and this guy comes to the district attorney and accuses you of sending a police officer out to harass him. [01:11:56.960 --> 01:12:08.960] The judge is going to go ballistic, but not on you, on that officer. [01:12:08.960 --> 01:12:12.960] It don't make any difference if he did anything wrong or not. [01:12:12.960 --> 01:12:14.960] You know, I was in the military. [01:12:14.960 --> 01:12:19.960] I used to call the inspector general as the drop of the hat. [01:12:19.960 --> 01:12:23.960] The inspector general was assistant to the base commander, [01:12:23.960 --> 01:12:27.960] and he was always on the verge of retirement. [01:12:27.960 --> 01:12:30.960] That's why they use these guys, because they're not afraid of anybody. [01:12:30.960 --> 01:12:43.960] If he's a colonel, he'll get promoted to brigadier general, then he retires. [01:12:43.960 --> 01:12:45.960] That's just how it ups his retirement pay. [01:12:45.960 --> 01:12:47.960] There's nothing you can do to him. He's immune. [01:12:47.960 --> 01:12:50.960] So he's not afraid of anybody. [01:12:50.960 --> 01:12:58.960] So you call the IG. The IG is going to call your officer in charge, my squadron commander, chew him out. [01:12:58.960 --> 01:13:03.960] Squadron commander is going to call my officer in charge, chew him out. [01:13:03.960 --> 01:13:05.960] He don't care what the problem is. [01:13:05.960 --> 01:13:10.960] I got chewed out by the inspector general, and it's your fault. [01:13:10.960 --> 01:13:18.960] And then the OIC calls the NCOIC, who calls my noncommissioned officer in charge. [01:13:18.960 --> 01:13:23.960] So the time it gets to him, they don't care what the problem is. [01:13:23.960 --> 01:13:28.960] We have a problem, and it's your troop that caused the problem. [01:13:28.960 --> 01:13:31.960] You need to handle your troop. [01:13:31.960 --> 01:13:33.960] It goes downhill. [01:13:33.960 --> 01:13:43.960] Police structures are exactly that way, because judges really treat police officers like dirt. [01:13:43.960 --> 01:13:48.960] And police officers are terrified of judges. [01:13:48.960 --> 01:13:54.960] Once we understand the politics, then we become a force. [01:13:54.960 --> 01:13:57.960] Does that sound like fud, Brett? [01:13:57.960 --> 01:14:01.960] It does. It really does. [01:14:01.960 --> 01:14:05.960] I've been doing this, and man, it works. [01:14:05.960 --> 01:14:09.960] Now I'm going after a federal judge. [01:14:09.960 --> 01:14:14.960] And when I file that criminal charges against that federal judge, everybody went silent. [01:14:14.960 --> 01:14:17.960] Nobody wants to talk to me. [01:14:17.960 --> 01:14:20.960] They don't want anything to do with me. [01:14:20.960 --> 01:14:25.960] It's like I'm radioactive. [01:14:25.960 --> 01:14:28.960] But in the end, that's how you're going to get some peace, right? [01:14:28.960 --> 01:14:31.960] People can leave. [01:14:31.960 --> 01:14:35.960] They can leave us alone and let us be the masters and give us our rights. [01:14:35.960 --> 01:14:40.960] The last ticket I got, the cop just didn't know who I was. [01:14:40.960 --> 01:14:43.960] And I told him when he gave me the ticket. [01:14:43.960 --> 01:14:48.960] I said, Bubba, I am fixing to give you a romp through the legal system. [01:14:48.960 --> 01:14:51.960] You are not going to believe. [01:14:51.960 --> 01:14:56.960] Oh, you are, Ms. Skell. Oh, yeah, you're going to love this. [01:14:56.960 --> 01:15:01.960] I go to court and told the clerk, she said, can I help you? [01:15:01.960 --> 01:15:06.960] I said, yes, you can. That dirty rock and copper, he wrote me a ticket. [01:15:06.960 --> 01:15:09.960] And she said, he did? I said, yes, he did. [01:15:09.960 --> 01:15:11.960] Well, what did he write you for? [01:15:11.960 --> 01:15:16.960] He said my license plate was expired. [01:15:16.960 --> 01:15:18.960] She said, well, was it? [01:15:18.960 --> 01:15:22.960] Well, only six months. [01:15:22.960 --> 01:15:27.960] She said, well, Mr. Kelton, did you get it updated? [01:15:27.960 --> 01:15:29.960] No. [01:15:29.960 --> 01:15:32.960] Are you going to get it updated? No. [01:15:32.960 --> 01:15:38.960] She said, you know, if you get it updated and come in and just pay us $20, we'll drop the ticket. [01:15:38.960 --> 01:15:42.960] I said, yeah, I know. [01:15:42.960 --> 01:15:45.960] Well, Mr. Kelton, do you want to enter, please? [01:15:45.960 --> 01:15:47.960] No. [01:15:47.960 --> 01:15:49.960] Well, then what can I do for you? [01:15:49.960 --> 01:15:52.960] Well, I'm here to file a couple of documents. [01:15:52.960 --> 01:15:57.960] I filed a challenge subject matter jurisdiction and two information requests. [01:15:57.960 --> 01:16:01.960] Then they set a date for me to show up for this preliminary hearing. [01:16:01.960 --> 01:16:03.960] And I got my dates wrong. [01:16:03.960 --> 01:16:08.960] And I was supposed to be there at nine o'clock and I got there at three o'clock. [01:16:08.960 --> 01:16:12.960] And the clerk said, Mr. Kelton, where were you? We were all here. [01:16:12.960 --> 01:16:14.960] We wanted to watch. [01:16:14.960 --> 01:16:17.960] I said, well, I got my dates screwed up. [01:16:17.960 --> 01:16:19.960] So what did the prosecutor do? [01:16:19.960 --> 01:16:23.960] She said, well, he dismissed your case. [01:16:23.960 --> 01:16:26.960] He did what? He can't do that. [01:16:26.960 --> 01:16:29.960] Oh, that's no fun. [01:16:29.960 --> 01:16:30.960] Wait a minute. [01:16:30.960 --> 01:16:32.960] I called the Chief of Police. [01:16:32.960 --> 01:16:33.960] What the heck is this? [01:16:33.960 --> 01:16:36.960] This dirty rotten prosecutor dismissed my case. [01:16:36.960 --> 01:16:41.960] Yes, Mr. Kelton, you're not going to get to have your fun with us. [01:16:41.960 --> 01:16:42.960] Oh, wow. [01:16:42.960 --> 01:16:45.960] What a farting pooper. [01:16:45.960 --> 01:16:46.960] Hang on. [01:16:46.960 --> 01:16:48.960] Randy Kelton, let me come back. [01:16:48.960 --> 01:16:49.960] We do need to move along. [01:16:49.960 --> 01:16:52.960] We got a bunch of callers. [01:16:52.960 --> 01:16:53.960] Thank you, Brett. [01:16:53.960 --> 01:16:56.960] Appreciate your call and don't be a stranger. [01:16:56.960 --> 01:17:25.960] We'll be right back. [01:17:26.960 --> 01:17:30.960] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, the first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:30.960 --> 01:17:33.960] Now go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:17:33.960 --> 01:17:36.960] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:36.960 --> 01:17:42.960] Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:42.960 --> 01:17:43.960] Do I pay extra? [01:17:43.960 --> 01:17:44.960] No. [01:17:44.960 --> 01:17:46.960] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.960 --> 01:17:47.960] No. [01:17:47.960 --> 01:17:48.960] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:48.960 --> 01:17:49.960] No. [01:17:49.960 --> 01:17:50.960] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.960 --> 01:17:53.960] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:53.960 --> 01:17:54.960] This is perfect. [01:17:54.960 --> 01:17:55.960] Thank you so much. [01:17:55.960 --> 01:17:56.960] We are welcome. [01:17:56.960 --> 01:17:59.960] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:59.960 --> 01:18:04.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:04.960 --> 01:18:08.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [01:18:08.960 --> 01:18:13.960] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:18:13.960 --> 01:18:19.960] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:18:19.960 --> 01:18:23.960] what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, [01:18:23.960 --> 01:18:28.960] how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, [01:18:28.960 --> 01:18:33.960] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:33.960 --> 01:18:37.960] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:37.960 --> 01:18:40.960] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.960 --> 01:18:48.960] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:18:48.960 --> 01:18:59.960] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:59.960 --> 01:19:10.960] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:10.960 --> 01:19:21.960] Okay, we are back. [01:19:21.960 --> 01:19:25.960] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to Rodney in Texas. [01:19:25.960 --> 01:19:28.960] Hello, Rodney. [01:19:28.960 --> 01:19:30.960] Randy, Randy, how you doing? [01:19:30.960 --> 01:19:32.960] I'm doing good. [01:19:32.960 --> 01:19:36.960] What do you have for us today? [01:19:36.960 --> 01:19:44.960] Well, I enjoyed that information you shared with the last caller. [01:19:44.960 --> 01:19:59.960] In fact, before I called in, I was trying to look for that exact statute that you mentioned under the penal code, I guess title, or chapter 39, 3903, 39.03. [01:19:59.960 --> 01:20:00.960] Yes. [01:20:00.960 --> 01:20:16.960] And the reason why is because, well, exactly what you were telling the previous caller, number one, even though those statutes are very, very broad, [01:20:16.960 --> 01:20:32.960] a guy that you mentioned on your show, a prosecutor that you mentioned on your show before when I Googled that penal code statute, his name just happened to come up, Mr. Sanders. [01:20:32.960 --> 01:20:35.960] Sanders. [01:20:35.960 --> 01:20:57.960] Prosecutor, I think it's something Sanders, he was quoted in the article dealing with misconduct by public officials and the title that they used to go after these public officials. [01:20:57.960 --> 01:21:04.960] And I said, I remember hearing Randy mention that guy's name, Greg. [01:21:04.960 --> 01:21:08.960] Oh, no, that's Greg Lowry. [01:21:08.960 --> 01:21:10.960] Okay, okay. [01:21:10.960 --> 01:21:19.960] Well, this guy's like, you know, these statutes are the real deal and evidently he was a prosecutor, he went after some officials. [01:21:19.960 --> 01:21:40.960] And, but why I called you is I went back down to the Texas bar, the state bar of Texas, and did a little more, some more observations in addition to following some more bar grievances. [01:21:40.960 --> 01:22:01.960] And here's something that I discovered, you know that they have a, what they call a client assistance line set up for people who call in to file a grievance against their attorney for not calling them back or communicating with them. [01:22:01.960 --> 01:22:15.960] So I asked the person, I said, well, isn't that a failure to communicate? Is that a violation on the part of the attorney? [01:22:15.960 --> 01:22:27.960] Now they claim they have no vested interest in protecting or siding with the attorneys, but do you know that these people could not give me a straight answer, even though I already knew what the answer was? [01:22:27.960 --> 01:22:39.960] Now we know, you know, to communicate on the part of an attorney is an obvious grievance, and they even look, they have a list of these things on their website. [01:22:39.960 --> 01:22:45.960] By the way, if you ask them for that list, they don't want to tell you, they don't want to tell you. [01:22:45.960 --> 01:23:08.960] I mean, it's like these attorneys have all of these people under their control, and you think that if you call that line, supposedly or allegedly set up to help you to try to get in contact with your attorney, that they're working for you. [01:23:08.960 --> 01:23:26.960] But in fact, it's kind of like what you were saying. If you give people notice that you're coming after them, and you say that's a rule that you don't violate. [01:23:26.960 --> 01:23:27.960] No fair warning. [01:23:27.960 --> 01:23:42.960] No fair warning. The bottom line is, they actually, and I asked the person sitting there, the supervisor over this telephone line, I said, I said, this is an obvious conflict of interest here. [01:23:42.960 --> 01:23:49.960] I said, you guys ought to be ashamed of yourself. And I said, and you get paid for doing this? Yes, we do. [01:23:49.960 --> 01:24:10.960] And I said, I'm going to ask just again, I have my camera going, I just want to make sure you're taking calls from people who have, the attorneys have not refused for whatever reason to call them back for months. [01:24:10.960 --> 01:24:25.960] And you're taking calls from these people. And I'm going to ask you, isn't that a clear violation on the part of an attorney to refuse to call their client or not call their client? [01:24:25.960 --> 01:24:37.960] And the best that I can get out of them, Randy, was, well, it could be a violation. It could be a violation. [01:24:37.960 --> 01:24:44.960] But you understand, they're just a public relations agency for the lawyers. [01:24:44.960 --> 01:24:59.960] Right. You're right. Right. Now, that's the other question that I, you told me in one of my previous calls to you that the Texas, the state bar of Texas is a state agency. [01:24:59.960 --> 01:25:09.960] So I asked that question. The best answer that I could get from them is, well, no, we're not. We're quasi. What in the heck do you mean? [01:25:09.960 --> 01:25:18.960] Can you be more specific? What do you mean you're a quasi state agency, private agency? [01:25:18.960 --> 01:25:33.960] Well, they couldn't really give me an answer. And I said, because I would like to know, I was told by an associate of mine that this agency, if it is, if it in fact is a state agency, is supposed to be coming up before the Sunset Commission. [01:25:33.960 --> 01:25:40.960] And they go, Sunset Commission? What is the Sunset Commission? [01:25:40.960 --> 01:25:51.960] They're, they're holding hearings on this, on the renewing the bar on Tuesday of this coming week. [01:25:51.960 --> 01:25:56.960] I'm going to, I'm going to try to get to Austin. [01:25:56.960 --> 01:25:59.960] And I want to speak to the commission. [01:25:59.960 --> 01:26:03.960] And this is what I'm going to tell them. [01:26:03.960 --> 01:26:13.960] Look, guys, don't do anything. The bar is perfect, just the way it is. [01:26:13.960 --> 01:26:23.960] I do this radio show and I tell everybody, if you file a bar grievance against a lawyer in Texas State Bar Association is going to get that grievance and they're going to throw it in the trash. [01:26:23.960 --> 01:26:26.960] And that's a good thing. [01:26:26.960 --> 01:26:33.960] They throw it all, they throw them all in the trash. So how does your insurance company gauge its level of risk? By valid bar grievances? [01:26:33.960 --> 01:26:36.960] Heck, throw them all in the trash. By the numbers. [01:26:36.960 --> 01:26:44.960] One, bar grievance, first year of practice to cancel. Two, any one year of practice to cancel. Three, they cancel your law firms malpractice insurance. [01:26:44.960 --> 01:27:00.960] If you guys re-energize the State Bar Association and get the bar doing its job, then we won't have this good effective way of getting rid of lousy attorneys. [01:27:00.960 --> 01:27:08.960] So I tell everybody, file lots of bar grievances. Hammer them good. So don't change anything, guys. [01:27:08.960 --> 01:27:16.960] Well, let me tell you what I discovered, Randy. Randy, this is sad because I recorded this. [01:27:16.960 --> 01:27:30.960] A lot of these bar grievances, they never ever even make it to even being dismissed based on frivolous or whatever reason they throw it in the garbage can. [01:27:30.960 --> 01:27:44.960] I discovered, and I observed this, there were people coming down there to the State Bar complaining that they had never got notice on whether or not their bar grievances had been received, [01:27:44.960 --> 01:27:51.960] even though they, in a lot of cases, had sent the bar grievance certified, returned received, faxed it. [01:27:51.960 --> 01:28:00.960] And even, there were two guys who were standing there arguing with the clerk, like, look, I even hand-delivered and had- [01:28:00.960 --> 01:28:16.960] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. This is a state office. A bar grievance is a public document. [01:28:16.960 --> 01:28:23.960] So why do they call it the State Bar of Texas if it's not a state agency? [01:28:23.960 --> 01:28:37.960] Yeah. Well, they operate under the authority of the state of Texas that makes that bar grievance a public document. [01:28:37.960 --> 01:28:48.960] And what happens if somebody secrets a public document from the person or office it's directed to? [01:28:48.960 --> 01:28:59.960] That's 37.10 Texas Penal Code. It's a felony in the state of Texas. I'm sorry. It's a Class A misdemeanor in the state of Texas. [01:28:59.960 --> 01:29:02.960] Tampering with a government document. [01:29:02.960 --> 01:29:14.960] Yeah, yeah. But I'm just saying that I've seen and observed myself. I wouldn't make this stuff up. [01:29:14.960 --> 01:29:22.960] People filing bar grievances and the bar grievances, they never even can make- [01:29:22.960 --> 01:29:34.960] This public person over there at the Texas State Bar told me, well, if in fact the person sent their complaint and certified return receipt, [01:29:34.960 --> 01:29:48.960] it goes to a post office box and there is nobody there who attends to that post office box. I said, well, that didn't make any sense. [01:29:48.960 --> 01:30:02.960] Okay, hang on. About to go to break. Rue La Radio, we'll be right back. [01:30:02.960 --> 01:30:09.960] People scan the store shelves when they shop, but soon those shelves may be scanning you to serve highly personalized ads. [01:30:09.960 --> 01:30:14.960] Like Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll have details on the latest creepy marketing scheme in a moment. [01:30:14.960 --> 01:30:20.960] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.960 --> 01:30:25.960] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.960 --> 01:30:30.960] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.960 --> 01:30:36.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:36.960 --> 01:30:43.960] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:43.960 --> 01:30:50.960] Hey Mike, your birthday's coming and we know you love rocky roads, so indulge yourself. Yikes. [01:30:50.960 --> 01:30:53.960] What if the billboards knew who you were and what you liked? [01:30:53.960 --> 01:30:57.960] It may soon be a reality through facial recognition technology. [01:30:57.960 --> 01:31:02.960] Scanners and store displays will snap your photo and transmit your facial map to a computer. [01:31:02.960 --> 01:31:06.960] The database will instantly identify you and your buying habits. [01:31:06.960 --> 01:31:10.960] It's more than just science fiction. Kraft Foods and Adidas are testing it, [01:31:10.960 --> 01:31:15.960] and the Venetian Resort in Vegas is already using it to profile people. [01:31:15.960 --> 01:31:19.960] Maybe it's time for some clown noses and floppy hats. [01:31:19.960 --> 01:31:29.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.960 --> 01:31:35.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.960 --> 01:31:37.960] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.960 --> 01:31:42.960] Over 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.960 --> 01:31:45.960] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.960 --> 01:31:47.960] Thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:47.960 --> 01:31:50.960] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.960 --> 01:31:52.960] I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:52.960 --> 01:31:56.960] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:56.960 --> 01:31:59.960] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:31:59.960 --> 01:32:02.960] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:02.960 --> 01:32:05.960] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:05.960 --> 01:32:08.960] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, [01:32:08.960 --> 01:32:10.960] but good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:10.960 --> 01:32:13.960] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:13.960 --> 01:32:16.960] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements [01:32:16.960 --> 01:32:20.960] can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.960 --> 01:32:25.960] And we accept Bitcoin as a multiyear A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:25.960 --> 01:32:31.960] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.960 --> 01:32:37.960] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:37.960 --> 01:32:39.960] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:39.960 --> 01:32:44.960] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:44.960 --> 01:32:49.960] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:49.960 --> 01:32:55.960] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:55.960 --> 01:32:57.960] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:57.960 --> 01:33:01.960] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.960 --> 01:33:04.960] Looking for some truth? You found it. [01:33:04.960 --> 01:33:22.960] Logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:22.960 --> 01:33:28.960] Okay, we are back. Randy Chelton, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to Rodney in Texas. [01:33:28.960 --> 01:33:33.960] And yes, we kind of know the State Bar Association. [01:33:33.960 --> 01:33:45.960] They're really just there to shield the attorneys from the complaints that citizens would have. [01:33:45.960 --> 01:33:50.960] They're not there to police the lawyers at all. [01:33:50.960 --> 01:33:54.960] And it's just a bad strategy for lawyers. [01:33:54.960 --> 01:33:58.960] Nobody trusts them and with good cause. [01:33:58.960 --> 01:34:03.960] If we had an effective bar, people would have a little more trust in lawyers. [01:34:03.960 --> 01:34:10.960] And I wouldn't be here telling them how to kick lawyers' behinds. [01:34:10.960 --> 01:34:14.960] Okay, Rodney, do you have anything else for us? [01:34:14.960 --> 01:34:20.960] Well, I'm sorry. I didn't mean to get on the phone and just kind of rant about that. [01:34:20.960 --> 01:34:29.960] But that last penal code that you cited, 37, what was that, 37.10? [01:34:29.960 --> 01:34:35.960] Yeah, 37.10 to have room to go over my document. [01:34:35.960 --> 01:34:37.960] Right, right. [01:34:37.960 --> 01:34:45.960] But my last question, and this is my last question, the licensing bureau or attorneys, [01:34:45.960 --> 01:34:50.960] I guess their licenses are registered for the State of Texas. [01:34:50.960 --> 01:34:54.960] Is there any way that I can file a grievance against an attorney? [01:34:54.960 --> 01:35:02.960] I know that agency is like right across the street from the State Bar. [01:35:02.960 --> 01:35:09.960] No, the licensing, all they do is provide the testing for lawyers. [01:35:09.960 --> 01:35:15.960] It's the State, I forget, I just looked at that, was looking at that today. [01:35:15.960 --> 01:35:18.960] But they just, they don't have any oversight. [01:35:18.960 --> 01:35:23.960] They just do the testing of lawyers and some of the training. [01:35:23.960 --> 01:35:30.960] The one who actually issues the license is the Texas Supreme Court. [01:35:30.960 --> 01:35:36.960] So that may be a good place to file a complaint against a lawyer. [01:35:36.960 --> 01:35:40.960] The Supreme Court's going to get it and they're going to tell you, [01:35:40.960 --> 01:35:43.960] well, you really need to file that with the State Bar. [01:35:43.960 --> 01:35:49.960] And you tell them that you filed it with the State Bar and the State Bar threw it in the trash [01:35:49.960 --> 01:35:56.960] and they secreted it from the, I forget, the designation. [01:35:56.960 --> 01:36:02.960] There's a board that it's supposed to go before, but the bar is secreting it from that board, [01:36:02.960 --> 01:36:07.960] the disciplinary council or something of that effect. [01:36:07.960 --> 01:36:13.960] The chief disciplinary council, they secret these bar grievances from the council. [01:36:13.960 --> 01:36:24.960] So since the Supreme Court issued the license, you might ask them to revoke it. [01:36:24.960 --> 01:36:34.960] Now they're not going to, but you're going to cast the lawyer in a bad light. [01:36:34.960 --> 01:36:42.960] But bar grievances are kind of better because if a lawyer gets a bar grievance against him, [01:36:42.960 --> 01:36:47.960] he's required to notify his insurance carrier. [01:36:47.960 --> 01:36:55.960] Because if you subsequently sue that lawyer for issues arising [01:36:55.960 --> 01:36:59.960] out of the same issues that led to the bar grievance, [01:36:59.960 --> 01:37:07.960] and that lawyer has not given notice to the insurance carrier, then he's not covered. [01:37:07.960 --> 01:37:10.960] And you get in the lawyer's pocket and sue the insurance carrier, [01:37:10.960 --> 01:37:19.960] and you know that any time you bring a claim of any size to an insurance company, [01:37:19.960 --> 01:37:23.960] they're like an alibi joint in a carnival. [01:37:23.960 --> 01:37:25.960] The little targets shoot. [01:37:25.960 --> 01:37:31.960] If you win it, it's the operator's job to alibi his way out of it. [01:37:31.960 --> 01:37:34.960] And that's what the insurance company's job is. [01:37:34.960 --> 01:37:40.960] Their job is trying to find a way to keep from having to pay the claim. [01:37:40.960 --> 01:37:44.960] They do the same thing the lawyers, they do to us. [01:37:44.960 --> 01:37:51.960] So if they find any way, they can deny that claim to go into. [01:37:51.960 --> 01:37:59.960] So if you look at filing a malpractice suit, you want some bar grievances first, [01:37:59.960 --> 01:38:04.960] so that you can claim in the malpractice suit that you filed this grievance [01:38:04.960 --> 01:38:08.960] and this grievance, and you sent this letter to the lawyer [01:38:08.960 --> 01:38:13.960] and this letter to the lawyer giving him notice. [01:38:13.960 --> 01:38:20.960] If you do a search for when must a lawyer notify his insurance carrier, [01:38:20.960 --> 01:38:25.960] there is a document you'll get a hit on right up at the top. [01:38:25.960 --> 01:38:32.960] And what it essentially says, if there is any chance [01:38:32.960 --> 01:38:40.960] that you could subsequently be sued over an issue, you must notice. [01:38:40.960 --> 01:38:47.960] No matter how slight the chance is, you must notice the insurance carrier. [01:38:47.960 --> 01:38:50.960] If you don't, you're not covered. [01:38:50.960 --> 01:38:56.960] So this was a lot more encompassing than I had thought, so I have that document [01:38:56.960 --> 01:38:59.960] in my bar grievance folder. [01:38:59.960 --> 01:39:06.960] When I write a bar grievance, I'll go back through it and look at what this says [01:39:06.960 --> 01:39:13.960] so I'll know how to word my grievance in a way that specifically gives the lawyer [01:39:13.960 --> 01:39:16.960] notice that he's likely to be sued. [01:39:16.960 --> 01:39:22.960] So that if you subsequently sue, then you include that grievance in there. [01:39:22.960 --> 01:39:30.960] And when you sue, the insurance carrier will definitely get the lawsuit. [01:39:30.960 --> 01:39:34.960] And you're giving the insurance carrier what they need to try to bail out [01:39:34.960 --> 01:39:42.960] of insuring him, and that will really terrify the lawyer. [01:39:42.960 --> 01:39:50.960] I have one question. It's 37.10. Isn't that a criminal under the penal code? [01:39:50.960 --> 01:39:55.960] Class A misdemeanor. [01:39:55.960 --> 01:40:00.960] First time it's a Class A, second time it's a state jail felony. [01:40:00.960 --> 01:40:07.960] Right. So if you file that against an attorney or a public official, [01:40:07.960 --> 01:40:12.960] be a judge, who would you file it with? [01:40:12.960 --> 01:40:17.960] Oh, a criminal complaint against a public official. [01:40:17.960 --> 01:40:21.960] And lawyers are quasi-public officials. [01:40:21.960 --> 01:40:25.960] Always go to the grand jury. [01:40:25.960 --> 01:40:29.960] 2.03. 2.03 says, when a prosecuting attorney, [01:40:29.960 --> 01:40:32.960] paraphrasing here because it's kind of long and wordy, [01:40:32.960 --> 01:40:36.960] if a prosecuting attorney is made known in any manner that a public official [01:40:36.960 --> 01:40:39.960] or law relate to his office, he must reduce complaint to an information [01:40:39.960 --> 01:40:42.960] submitted to the grand jury. [01:40:42.960 --> 01:40:46.960] No discretion. Go straight to the grand jury. [01:40:46.960 --> 01:40:52.960] Now, would parole officers also be considered a public official? [01:40:52.960 --> 01:40:56.960] Absolutely. [01:40:56.960 --> 01:41:00.960] Okay. I hate to ask all these questions, but I'd rather ask [01:41:00.960 --> 01:41:06.960] than to be sitting here trying to guess, and yeah, this is good stuff. [01:41:06.960 --> 01:41:10.960] I still agree with you on following bar grievances, [01:41:10.960 --> 01:41:14.960] but I just want to let everyone out there listening know this little [01:41:14.960 --> 01:41:18.960] shenanigans that this agency has in place. [01:41:18.960 --> 01:41:24.960] I mean, it's a clear conflict of interest to have these operators sitting [01:41:24.960 --> 01:41:28.960] up there fielding phone calls for lawyers who refuse to call their clients [01:41:28.960 --> 01:41:32.960] back, and when you ask them, isn't that a clear violation? [01:41:32.960 --> 01:41:36.960] It says, your failure to communicate on your will could be, [01:41:36.960 --> 01:41:41.960] and they're calling these attorneys supposedly in your behalf, Randy, [01:41:41.960 --> 01:41:48.960] to ask your attorney, how come you haven't called Mr. Kelton back in six months? [01:41:48.960 --> 01:41:51.960] Aren't you supposed to be representing him? [01:41:51.960 --> 01:41:53.960] He's sitting in jail rotting. [01:41:53.960 --> 01:41:57.960] He's sitting in jail rotting, and you won't call him back. [01:41:57.960 --> 01:42:00.960] And they're calling this. [01:42:00.960 --> 01:42:05.960] In my mind, I think that all they're doing is giving that attorney [01:42:05.960 --> 01:42:08.960] a plausible deniability to call him. [01:42:08.960 --> 01:42:12.960] In fact, they kind of let it slip when they kind of gave me that [01:42:12.960 --> 01:42:18.960] indirect answer that, well, sometimes the attorneys have good reasons [01:42:18.960 --> 01:42:23.960] for not calling their clients back. [01:42:23.960 --> 01:42:26.960] Well, I'd like to hear one of those. [01:42:26.960 --> 01:42:33.960] If he's not dead, it's not a very good reason. [01:42:33.960 --> 01:42:39.960] Well, I just have one last question regarding this case. [01:42:39.960 --> 01:42:46.960] You said the young man was filming the police, and he filed a criminal complaint. [01:42:46.960 --> 01:42:52.960] Well, the ruling came back from the Fifth Circuit saying that there was [01:42:52.960 --> 01:42:56.960] no clear violation when they did it. [01:42:56.960 --> 01:43:01.960] So at what point does it become a clear violation? [01:43:01.960 --> 01:43:02.960] No, no. [01:43:02.960 --> 01:43:11.960] What the court said was is the right to film was not clearly defined. [01:43:11.960 --> 01:43:14.960] Say what? [01:43:14.960 --> 01:43:19.960] The issue there was not the right to film, but the right of the police officer [01:43:19.960 --> 01:43:22.960] to restrict the man at his liberty. [01:43:22.960 --> 01:43:24.960] So they used the wrong calculation. [01:43:24.960 --> 01:43:29.960] Oh, oh my God. [01:43:29.960 --> 01:43:34.960] Did the attorneys for representing this guy let them get away with that? [01:43:34.960 --> 01:43:36.960] Yeah, they did. [01:43:36.960 --> 01:43:38.960] But at least we got our decision. [01:43:38.960 --> 01:43:43.960] Now I'll set one up where I bring that issue. [01:43:43.960 --> 01:43:45.960] I want to hear the other side. [01:43:45.960 --> 01:43:46.960] Okay, we're about to go to break. [01:43:46.960 --> 01:43:47.960] Thank you. [01:43:47.960 --> 01:43:49.960] Okay, thank you, Rodney. [01:43:49.960 --> 01:43:50.960] Randy Kelton, we'll radio. [01:43:50.960 --> 01:43:53.960] Olivier, we'll pick you up on the other side. [01:43:53.960 --> 01:43:59.960] We'll be right back. [01:43:59.960 --> 01:44:02.960] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:44:02.960 --> 01:44:05.960] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, [01:44:05.960 --> 01:44:08.960] and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:44:08.960 --> 01:44:12.960] Did you know the U.S. government banned the hemp plant from growing in the United States [01:44:12.960 --> 01:44:16.960] and classified it as a Schedule I drug to hide it behind a marijuana plant? 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[01:45:00.960 --> 01:45:04.960] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.960 --> 01:45:07.960] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:45:07.960 --> 01:45:11.960] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course [01:45:11.960 --> 01:45:15.960] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.960 --> 01:45:19.960] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.960 --> 01:45:23.960] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.960 --> 01:45:28.960] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.960 --> 01:45:31.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [01:45:31.960 --> 01:45:34.960] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.960 --> 01:45:39.960] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:39.960 --> 01:45:43.960] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.960 --> 01:45:47.960] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [01:45:47.960 --> 01:45:52.960] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.960 --> 01:45:56.960] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [01:45:56.960 --> 01:46:01.960] or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:01.960 --> 01:46:19.960] Okay, we are back. [01:46:19.960 --> 01:46:24.960] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're going to Olivier in Tennessee. [01:46:24.960 --> 01:46:26.960] Hello, Olivier. [01:46:26.960 --> 01:46:28.960] How you doing, Randy? [01:46:28.960 --> 01:46:32.960] I'm doing good. What do you have for us today? [01:46:32.960 --> 01:46:39.960] Just a little bit, I've got a couple of questions and a quick update. [01:46:39.960 --> 01:46:42.960] I'll tell you, I've talked about Georgia lately because I haven't really gotten [01:46:42.960 --> 01:46:49.960] to the laws and what happened, but what was funny that occurred this last time [01:46:49.960 --> 01:46:57.960] that I got arrested for suspended license, I submitted a video for that, [01:46:57.960 --> 01:47:05.960] and I had a problem with the city giving us videos and giving us a case law [01:47:05.960 --> 01:47:10.960] stating that public groups can't have videos and all that good stuff. [01:47:10.960 --> 01:47:17.960] I called the person who was over at the apartment and notified her that [01:47:17.960 --> 01:47:23.960] I've got several paperwork with that case law on it already. [01:47:23.960 --> 01:47:27.960] I'm planning on filing federal suit, and she's new to the department, [01:47:27.960 --> 01:47:30.960] and I didn't say that I needed to put her name on it, [01:47:30.960 --> 01:47:35.960] but I'm going to be filing for some videos, and if I get that paperwork again, [01:47:35.960 --> 01:47:38.960] I'm going to put her name on it, and she's going to be liable. [01:47:38.960 --> 01:47:45.960] And I told her about all the how it's incorrect in our state statute [01:47:45.960 --> 01:47:48.960] giving us authority to sue them in the statute. [01:47:48.960 --> 01:47:50.960] I told her to read up on it. [01:47:50.960 --> 01:47:56.960] So once I filed for that paperwork, within seven days, [01:47:56.960 --> 01:48:01.960] I got two videos of that scene. [01:48:01.960 --> 01:48:05.960] So I guess we got the point across. [01:48:05.960 --> 01:48:08.960] Funny how that works. [01:48:08.960 --> 01:48:13.960] They really hate it when you take their own law back to them. [01:48:13.960 --> 01:48:21.960] I told her, I said, I hope you don't ever send that to anybody without reading it, [01:48:21.960 --> 01:48:26.960] and I was asking her who told her to put an information on it, [01:48:26.960 --> 01:48:27.960] and she wouldn't tell me. [01:48:27.960 --> 01:48:30.960] I'm like, I need to know because I don't want to put your name on it. [01:48:30.960 --> 01:48:34.960] I need to know who told you to send that paperwork off. [01:48:34.960 --> 01:48:38.960] She's like, well, you got to tell me something. [01:48:38.960 --> 01:48:40.960] She's like, well, that's what they taught us in school. [01:48:40.960 --> 01:48:44.960] I'm like, well, you need to read your paperwork. [01:48:44.960 --> 01:48:46.960] That is great. [01:48:46.960 --> 01:48:52.960] That goes to something that I've been trying to get in a position to look at. [01:48:52.960 --> 01:48:57.960] Here in Texas, they do everything wrong, [01:48:57.960 --> 01:49:06.960] and it's just not reasonable to think that all of these policemen, [01:49:06.960 --> 01:49:14.960] all on their own, decide individually to do things wrong. [01:49:14.960 --> 01:49:17.960] So since they're all doing things wrong the same way, [01:49:17.960 --> 01:49:25.960] you have to construe that somebody told them to do it that way. [01:49:25.960 --> 01:49:31.960] And if what they're doing is wrong and illegal, [01:49:31.960 --> 01:49:38.960] then the way I read the code is that's conspiracy to commit. [01:49:38.960 --> 01:49:43.960] The training is a conspiracy to commit, [01:49:43.960 --> 01:49:48.960] or at least it is certainly evidence of a conspiracy to commit. [01:49:48.960 --> 01:49:55.960] So I would certainly want to know who does this training [01:49:55.960 --> 01:49:59.960] and who approves the training [01:49:59.960 --> 01:50:08.960] because where I'm trying to get to is the prosecuting attorney. [01:50:08.960 --> 01:50:11.960] Most all of the states have directed the prosecutors [01:50:11.960 --> 01:50:15.960] to give legal advice to the police in lower courts. [01:50:15.960 --> 01:50:21.960] Their rationale was that we have learned in counsel already in public employ, [01:50:21.960 --> 01:50:25.960] we might as well use him to give legal advice to our police. [01:50:25.960 --> 01:50:31.960] That's a really bad strategy because the prosecutor, [01:50:31.960 --> 01:50:35.960] you can't expect the prosecutor to advise the police [01:50:35.960 --> 01:50:41.960] in practices and procedures that will make his life a living hell. [01:50:41.960 --> 01:50:45.960] He's going to advise them in practices and procedures [01:50:45.960 --> 01:50:49.960] that serve the prosecutorial purpose. [01:50:49.960 --> 01:50:52.960] And that's exactly what's happened. [01:50:52.960 --> 01:50:55.960] You see where I'm going here, Olivier? [01:50:55.960 --> 01:50:56.960] Yes. [01:50:56.960 --> 01:51:01.960] When is a prosecutor suable? [01:51:01.960 --> 01:51:05.960] When he gives legal advice. [01:51:05.960 --> 01:51:07.960] Okay. [01:51:07.960 --> 01:51:14.960] I went to my prosecutor after I filed a complaint against a nephew-in-law. [01:51:14.960 --> 01:51:18.960] The nephew-in-law and the niece were having marital difficulties, [01:51:18.960 --> 01:51:22.960] and he got really ignorant and I had to throw him off my property [01:51:22.960 --> 01:51:24.960] and he was still acting ignorant. [01:51:24.960 --> 01:51:27.960] So I went down and filed a criminal trespass against him. [01:51:27.960 --> 01:51:29.960] They refused to give it to the magistrate. [01:51:29.960 --> 01:51:31.960] I went to the chief of police and he said, [01:51:31.960 --> 01:51:35.960] well, I didn't give it to the magistrate because the prosecuting attorney, [01:51:35.960 --> 01:51:39.960] the county attorney advised me not to. [01:51:39.960 --> 01:51:42.960] I told him, don't go away, I'll be right back. [01:51:42.960 --> 01:51:47.960] And I went straight to Decatur's county seat to talk to the county attorney. [01:51:47.960 --> 01:51:48.960] Well, he met me in the hall. [01:51:48.960 --> 01:51:50.960] He knew I was coming. [01:51:50.960 --> 01:51:54.960] And he said, Mr. Kelton, before I ask him anything, [01:51:54.960 --> 01:52:00.960] Mr. Kelton, do you think I am out of my professional mind? [01:52:00.960 --> 01:52:04.960] Do you really think I would waive my sovereign immunity [01:52:04.960 --> 01:52:08.960] by giving advice to the police? [01:52:08.960 --> 01:52:13.960] I said, well, I didn't think so, James, but I'm just following the thunder here. [01:52:13.960 --> 01:52:19.960] I went back to the police department, knocked on the door and this cop opened the door. [01:52:19.960 --> 01:52:21.960] He said, what can I do for you, Mr. Kelton? [01:52:21.960 --> 01:52:27.960] And I said, well, the county attorney just threw the chief under the bus [01:52:27.960 --> 01:52:31.960] and I'm here to run him over with it. [01:52:31.960 --> 01:52:37.960] And the officer said, well, Mr. Kelton, can I watch? [01:52:37.960 --> 01:52:39.960] Oh, yeah, this is going to be fun. [01:52:39.960 --> 01:52:51.960] My point, this training almost certainly is under the direction of the prosecuting attorney. [01:52:51.960 --> 01:52:56.960] He's almost certainly looked at it and approved it. [01:52:56.960 --> 01:53:00.960] That's not a prosecutorial duty. [01:53:00.960 --> 01:53:04.960] That's giving legal advice. [01:53:04.960 --> 01:53:09.960] He's the prosecutor. [01:53:09.960 --> 01:53:12.960] Does that sound interesting, Olivier? [01:53:12.960 --> 01:53:16.960] Yeah, it sounds interesting, but that's not what he technically told me. [01:53:16.960 --> 01:53:21.960] He technically told me that he learned that through a training. [01:53:21.960 --> 01:53:24.960] Yeah, through a training. [01:53:24.960 --> 01:53:28.960] Where does training come from? [01:53:28.960 --> 01:53:32.960] Who approved that training? [01:53:32.960 --> 01:53:37.960] Whoever did conspired to violate law. [01:53:37.960 --> 01:53:39.960] That's criminal conspiracy. [01:53:39.960 --> 01:53:45.960] And if it was the prosecutor, and almost certainly it was, [01:53:45.960 --> 01:53:48.960] he's giving legal advice and he's sued. [01:53:48.960 --> 01:53:50.960] Okay, go ahead. [01:53:50.960 --> 01:53:55.960] I think the way she sounded it, it sounded like it's coming from the state. [01:53:55.960 --> 01:53:56.960] Yeah. [01:53:56.960 --> 01:53:58.960] That's the procedure that they teach everyone. [01:53:58.960 --> 01:54:00.960] That's great. [01:54:00.960 --> 01:54:03.960] That's even better because that's the way it is here, [01:54:03.960 --> 01:54:06.960] and that's one of the reasons I want to go there. [01:54:06.960 --> 01:54:11.960] You know, if you sue the state itself, [01:54:11.960 --> 01:54:18.960] the U.S. Supreme Court is the court of original jurisdiction. [01:54:18.960 --> 01:54:23.960] Not the district court, not the court of appeals, but the U.S. Supreme. [01:54:23.960 --> 01:54:31.960] So if you can show that the state itself is training its police [01:54:31.960 --> 01:54:36.960] in improper procedures that have the effect of violating due process, [01:54:36.960 --> 01:54:41.960] now you have a suit against the state itself. [01:54:41.960 --> 01:54:42.960] Wait a minute. [01:54:42.960 --> 01:54:43.960] Let me interject something. [01:54:43.960 --> 01:54:50.960] So how about if you get a judge on record stating or basically [01:54:50.960 --> 01:54:55.960] confirming that the state has the authority to make everyone get a driver's license [01:54:55.960 --> 01:55:05.960] and it is not a right to be on the road, isn't that considered what you're scheming up? [01:55:05.960 --> 01:55:06.960] No. [01:55:06.960 --> 01:55:11.960] That's just an ignorant judge saying something stupid. [01:55:11.960 --> 01:55:19.960] And it's not necessarily the position of the state itself. [01:55:19.960 --> 01:55:26.960] In order to get to the state, you need something beyond that judge. [01:55:26.960 --> 01:55:34.960] And that's why if they have statewide training that trains officials to act in ways [01:55:34.960 --> 01:55:43.960] that are in violation of law, that gets you directly to the state. [01:55:43.960 --> 01:55:45.960] Does that make sense? [01:55:45.960 --> 01:55:47.960] Yes, it does. [01:55:47.960 --> 01:55:53.960] See, that judge, he can be right, but most likely he's just running off at the mallet. [01:55:53.960 --> 01:55:57.960] The thing is, I see where you're coming at, [01:55:57.960 --> 01:56:04.960] but for some reason they've been really turning when I moved. [01:56:04.960 --> 01:56:10.960] First, we had to go to the police detective department to get videos. [01:56:10.960 --> 01:56:17.960] Then through all my transactions, they re-correct all the city's facilities [01:56:17.960 --> 01:56:23.960] to the proper facilities like it is in the statute because they were not doing it by statute. [01:56:23.960 --> 01:56:26.960] So it seems like the more I progress with them, [01:56:26.960 --> 01:56:32.960] the more things are getting diverted back to where the statute wrote it. [01:56:32.960 --> 01:56:34.960] Good. That's perfect. [01:56:34.960 --> 01:56:38.960] That's what we do this for. [01:56:38.960 --> 01:56:44.960] We force them to do it the way the code commands them to do it. [01:56:44.960 --> 01:56:49.960] And when I go after them, that's the only thing I want. [01:56:49.960 --> 01:56:55.960] If I go in and get my butt reamed, but get it done in accordance with law, [01:56:55.960 --> 01:56:59.960] I don't have any complaints. [01:56:59.960 --> 01:57:01.960] Just follow law. [01:57:01.960 --> 01:57:08.960] So you're doing right. You're doing good. [01:57:08.960 --> 01:57:18.960] That is exactly the thing that will give you a lot of respect and influence. [01:57:18.960 --> 01:57:22.960] When these guys have been doing things a certain way forever, [01:57:22.960 --> 01:57:25.960] have you come in there and stomp all over them, [01:57:25.960 --> 01:57:29.960] and then they have to change their procedure to exactly the way you told them to, [01:57:29.960 --> 01:57:33.960] they're going to start paying a lot of attention to you. [01:57:33.960 --> 01:57:38.960] Yeah, you're right. My attorney did that today. [01:57:38.960 --> 01:57:40.960] I talked to him yesterday. [01:57:40.960 --> 01:57:43.960] I talked to him a month ago when he first met me. [01:57:43.960 --> 01:57:46.960] He was like, hey, it's just a quick meet. [01:57:46.960 --> 01:57:48.960] I told him the situation. I don't need a driver's license. [01:57:48.960 --> 01:57:50.960] He said, everybody needs a driver's license. [01:57:50.960 --> 01:57:52.960] I said, no, you do. I said, no, you don't. [01:57:52.960 --> 01:57:54.960] I said, you're ignorant. [01:57:54.960 --> 01:57:56.960] He said, well, what do you mean? [01:57:56.960 --> 01:57:58.960] I said, driving is an occupation. [01:57:58.960 --> 01:58:01.960] We don't drive. We travel in locomotion. [01:58:01.960 --> 01:58:07.960] And he was like, no, no, no, you know, the shock of reality. [01:58:07.960 --> 01:58:12.960] He got music playing. [01:58:12.960 --> 01:58:13.960] Hello? [01:58:13.960 --> 01:58:15.960] Wait, I missed that. [01:58:15.960 --> 01:58:16.960] Oh, yeah, okay. [01:58:16.960 --> 01:58:22.960] We're at the top of the hour, so we had 45 seconds. [01:58:22.960 --> 01:58:25.960] Okay, we're out of time now. [01:58:25.960 --> 01:58:28.960] So this is Randy Kelton with Review of Law Radio. [01:58:28.960 --> 01:58:31.960] And it's a good time. It's top of the hour. [01:58:31.960 --> 01:58:32.960] I mean, it breaks. [01:58:32.960 --> 01:58:35.960] Good time to go to Logos Radio Network and look at our gun giveaway. [01:58:35.960 --> 01:58:40.960] We're giving away an AR-15 and a, oh, I forget the name of the pistol. [01:58:40.960 --> 01:58:42.960] I don't do guns anymore. [01:58:42.960 --> 01:58:46.960] But we're also giving away a pistol and some other stuff. [01:58:46.960 --> 01:58:49.960] So we'll be right back. [01:58:49.960 --> 01:58:53.960] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [01:58:53.960 --> 01:58:57.960] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:57.960 --> 01:59:01.960] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:01.960 --> 01:59:06.960] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:06.960 --> 01:59:08.960] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:08.960 --> 01:59:12.960] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:12.960 --> 01:59:17.960] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:17.960 --> 01:59:21.960] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [01:59:21.960 --> 01:59:27.960] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:27.960 --> 01:59:32.960] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:32.960 --> 01:59:43.960] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:43.960 --> 01:59:47.960] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.960 --> 01:59:50.960] That's freestudybible.com. [01:59:50.960 --> 01:59:56.960] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com.