[00:00.000 --> 00:05.440] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:05.440 --> 00:12.360] Markets for Wednesday, 29 March 2017 are currently trading with gold $1,253.03 an ounce, silver [00:12.360 --> 00:21.400] $18.20 an ounce, Texas Crude $48.37 a barrel and Bitcoin is sitting at 1,043 U.S. currency. [00:21.400 --> 00:27.120] Today in history, the year 1882, the Knights of Columbus, the world's largest Catholic [00:27.120 --> 00:32.160] fraternal service organization are established, originally serving as a mutual benefit society [00:32.160 --> 00:35.280] to working class and immigrant Catholics in the United States. [00:35.280 --> 00:39.360] It developed into a fraternal benefit society dedicated to providing charitable services, [00:39.360 --> 00:44.560] promoting Catholic education and Catholic public policy, and actively defending Catholicism [00:44.560 --> 00:46.000] in various nations. [00:46.000 --> 00:50.640] With roughly two million members consisting of Catholic men age 18 and older and nearly [00:50.640 --> 00:55.400] 15,000 councils, the Knights of Columbus consist of four different degrees and the order is [00:55.400 --> 00:58.520] a member of the International Alliance of Catholic Knights. [00:58.520 --> 01:03.520] The KFC founded today in history. [01:03.520 --> 01:07.800] In recent years, David Robert Daly-Eiden and Sandra Merritt were charged Tuesday yesterday [01:07.800 --> 01:12.320] by California Attorney General Xavier Becerra with 15 felony counts of violating the privacy [01:12.320 --> 01:13.320] of healthcare providers. [01:13.320 --> 01:17.560] If you recall, they are the two anti-abortion activists who pose as alternative identities [01:17.560 --> 01:21.960] in a fictitious bioresearch company to meet Planned Parenthood officials secretly recording [01:21.960 --> 01:26.560] their conversations leading to the selling of fetal tissue in organs for profit scandal. [01:26.560 --> 01:32.800] The charge consists of 14 instances between October 2013 and July of 2015, where Daly-Eiden [01:32.800 --> 01:36.360] and Merritt filmed Planned Parenthood personnel without permission. [01:36.360 --> 01:40.680] They are facing a felony count for each person they discreetly recorded, along with an additional [01:40.680 --> 01:44.080] felony charge for criminal conspiracy to invade privacy. [01:44.080 --> 01:47.760] Mary Alice Carter, Interim Vice President of Communications for Planned Parenthood, [01:47.760 --> 01:52.000] the Federation of America has said in a statement Tuesday that the nationwide investigation [01:52.000 --> 01:55.760] have made it clear that Planned Parenthood has done nothing wrong and that only people [01:55.760 --> 02:01.080] who broke the law are those behind the fraudulent tapes. [02:01.080 --> 02:06.040] Abidemi Ajiboye, Assistant Professor at Case Western Reserve University, lead author of [02:06.040 --> 02:10.640] a research paper published yesterday Tuesday in the Lancet, stated that we have been able [02:10.640 --> 02:15.600] to make the electrical signals which represent thoughts and use that to control simulations [02:15.600 --> 02:17.120] of the arm and hand. [02:17.120 --> 02:21.440] Most experimental new technology is being called neuroprostetics, expected to be available [02:21.440 --> 02:23.760] to the general public in five to ten years. [02:23.760 --> 02:28.000] The tech relies on creating an entirely new neurological central nervous connection between [02:28.000 --> 02:32.520] the brain and a paralyzed limb by implanting an electrode array which is used to detect [02:32.520 --> 02:37.080] and record and braid signals from the motor cortex of the brain and then uses those signals [02:37.080 --> 02:39.360] to actuate movements from mechanical limbs. [02:39.360 --> 02:44.520] Robert Kirsch, a professor of biomedical engineering at Case Western, told NPR essentially [02:44.520 --> 02:49.400] that we have an algorithm that sort of transforms neural signals into movement and that the [02:49.400 --> 02:51.400] code is in our brain. [02:51.400 --> 03:15.880] This was Work Roadie with your lowdown for March 29, 2017. [03:15.880 --> 03:25.360] We are back, Randy Calton, rule of law radio, and I'm almost finished with this dissertation. [03:25.360 --> 03:31.760] Once a new president takes office, every U.S. attorney in the country has to tender his [03:31.760 --> 03:36.400] resignation to the new president and the new president decides whether he'll accept it [03:36.400 --> 03:37.400] or not. [03:37.400 --> 03:42.800] Well, this is kind of a unique time in history as we have a president that's essentially [03:42.800 --> 03:45.480] a wild card. [03:45.480 --> 03:52.800] Every U.S. an attorney right now is expecting to be removed from office and replaced with [03:52.800 --> 03:59.960] a political appointee because Trump needs to appoint people that will be in his camp [03:59.960 --> 04:03.120] and U.S. attorney is a really good appointment. [04:03.120 --> 04:10.640] So all the U.S. attorney needs, I'm sorry, all the attorney general needs is an excuse [04:10.640 --> 04:14.880] to get rid of one of these U.S. attorneys. [04:14.880 --> 04:21.880] So the last thing they want to happen right now is for the attorney general to pay attention [04:21.880 --> 04:24.600] to them. [04:24.600 --> 04:26.320] So we help them pay attention. [04:26.320 --> 04:28.320] Does that make sense, Ciri? [04:28.320 --> 04:40.280] Yes, Doug, timing is crucial, you're right. [04:40.280 --> 04:50.640] Now, instead of doing in a serial approach, I approach it in a parallel approach, meaning [04:50.640 --> 04:55.960] I noticed everybody simultaneously. [04:55.960 --> 05:04.920] I would imagine you could still apply what you suggested, that let me break it down. [05:04.920 --> 05:10.880] In terms of the timing, like for example, I said, within 30 days, I expect resolution [05:10.880 --> 05:15.920] to this problem, but also I'm going to seek remedy. [05:15.920 --> 05:18.560] I reserve my time to seek remedy. [05:18.560 --> 05:23.000] That breaks one of my rules. [05:23.000 --> 05:27.960] Never give fair warning. [05:27.960 --> 05:29.920] In 30 days, you just file. [05:29.920 --> 05:34.720] You ask this person to do something, they don't do something in 30 days, you just file [05:34.720 --> 05:39.320] with the next one, and then you don't tell them what you're going to do, because if you [05:39.320 --> 05:42.280] tell them they're going to do something, they don't pay attention to it. [05:42.280 --> 05:47.440] In 30 days, they get a call from somebody else saying, I got this guy here trying to [05:47.440 --> 05:49.760] get me to take action against you. [05:49.760 --> 05:52.080] What's this about? [05:52.080 --> 05:56.240] That is far more effective, political-wise. [05:56.240 --> 06:03.600] Now, I could be wrong, and this is my style, by the way I've done it. [06:03.600 --> 06:10.600] I tend to like to bushwack them, because I really have politics to go on in the background. [06:10.600 --> 06:17.760] I don't ever want them to be able to accuse me of threatening them or trying to unduly [06:17.760 --> 06:19.240] influence them. [06:19.240 --> 06:22.000] I want to bushwack them. [06:22.000 --> 06:29.520] When I come at them, I want them to be surprised that I'm there. [06:29.520 --> 06:32.040] That's when they realize that I've set them up. [06:32.040 --> 06:36.720] That's when I want everybody to think that I'm setting them up. [06:36.720 --> 06:37.720] I don't know. [06:37.720 --> 06:39.680] Go ahead with the way you do it. [06:39.680 --> 06:41.920] I haven't done it that way. [06:41.920 --> 06:46.560] I think whatever works. [06:46.560 --> 06:51.920] You have done this, and it works to a certain extent, at least with respect to the threat [06:51.920 --> 06:59.000] of violence and intimidation and stalking, that stops, although it's continuing to a [06:59.000 --> 07:02.560] certain extent, but it's not as much as it used to be. [07:02.560 --> 07:09.120] It used to be these people, basically, one time they actually twisted my arm and throw [07:09.120 --> 07:17.040] me out of the court. [07:17.040 --> 07:21.240] Because I had so many things to do, I didn't bother to file a criminal complaint against [07:21.240 --> 07:24.280] them, because I had so many other things to do. [07:24.280 --> 07:27.800] I fully understand. [07:27.800 --> 07:34.000] I have so many criminal complaints, there's no way I can get to all of them. [07:34.000 --> 07:39.640] We have to sit back and look at, where do I want to get to, and which of my criminal [07:39.640 --> 07:42.480] complaints will lead me to the outcome I want? [07:42.480 --> 07:51.520] It's kind of a sad commentary on current law, Cereed, that you have so many criminal complaints. [07:51.520 --> 07:52.520] That's sad. [07:52.520 --> 07:53.520] Go ahead. [07:53.520 --> 08:05.720] So, now that we are where we are, they basically have put a foreclosure, tell them a prophecy, [08:05.720 --> 08:11.160] which I was able to at least postpone it for the time being, but I just noticed that [08:11.160 --> 08:17.320] multiple entities have filed for a motion for a lift-off stay in Chapter 13. [08:17.320 --> 08:20.000] Okay, hold on, hold on. [08:20.000 --> 08:23.360] Question, you're in Chapter 13. [08:23.360 --> 08:26.120] Did you claim the property is unsecured? [08:26.120 --> 08:33.360] Unsecured and without any priority, basically at the bottom of the barrel. [08:33.360 --> 08:34.360] Perfect. [08:34.360 --> 08:43.680] Okay, one thing I suggest, and what I do in California when it comes to foreclosure, the [08:43.680 --> 08:50.040] first thing I want to do is file a quiet title action. [08:50.040 --> 08:56.920] Look at the document, this entity who's making a claim depends on forstanding to make the [08:56.920 --> 08:59.400] claim. [08:59.400 --> 09:02.680] File a quiet title action against that claim. [09:02.680 --> 09:08.280] A quiet title action is immune from 12B6. [09:08.280 --> 09:15.080] The criminal complaint I filed against federal Judge McBride was that I filed a quiet title [09:15.080 --> 09:21.280] in the state, Wells Fargo removed it to the feds and filed a 12B6. [09:21.280 --> 09:26.280] I filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction, without hearing the challenge to subject matter [09:26.280 --> 09:32.440] jurisdiction the judge dismissed under 12B6 for failure to state a claim on which recovery [09:32.440 --> 09:35.280] can be had. [09:35.280 --> 09:40.960] Well duh, it was a quiet title action, I didn't ask for any recovery. [09:40.960 --> 09:45.400] Quiet title is immune from 12B6. [09:45.400 --> 09:51.680] The last thing the bank wants to do is go to discovery. [09:51.680 --> 09:56.880] That's why they fight with the 12B6 so hard. [09:56.880 --> 10:00.360] File a quiet title action, you can keep that in the court. [10:00.360 --> 10:04.560] The last one we filed we kept in the court six years. [10:04.560 --> 10:09.440] The Supreme just dismissed it, just refused to pick it up. [10:09.440 --> 10:20.360] We filed to ask the court to distinguish Glasky and the difference between Glasky and Jenkins [10:20.360 --> 10:22.080] and they refused to pick it up. [10:22.080 --> 10:25.320] Six years it took them. [10:25.320 --> 10:30.000] With a quiet title you can keep them in court five or six years. [10:30.000 --> 10:38.320] Once they ruled against us and they said absolutely Wells Fargo has the right to make [10:38.320 --> 10:42.920] a claim against this property, didn't we say, oh, so you're the dirty rotten scoundrel [10:42.920 --> 10:45.800] we've been looking for all this time. [10:45.800 --> 10:50.200] Then you come back and sue them based on the HUD one supplement. [10:50.200 --> 10:54.120] Are you familiar with that argument, the false fees? [10:54.120 --> 11:02.880] No, I'm not, but I actually filed for a quiet title in federal court and the judge came and [11:02.880 --> 11:09.400] said she does not have subject matter jurisdiction because quiet title is a state action. [11:09.400 --> 11:12.960] He is exactly right. [11:12.960 --> 11:13.960] That is exactly right. [11:13.960 --> 11:17.520] I filed in the state court and they removed it to the federal court. [11:17.520 --> 11:27.200] I filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction based on the 2011 Jurisdiction and Removal [11:27.200 --> 11:32.960] Clarification Act, are you familiar with that? [11:32.960 --> 11:33.960] Write this down. [11:33.960 --> 11:41.520] It changed 200 years of law and most of these judges don't even know about it, 2011 Jurisdiction [11:41.520 --> 11:45.880] and Venue Clarification Act. [11:45.880 --> 11:49.760] There was a split between the circuits. [11:49.760 --> 11:56.240] Some of the circuits said when a state action with federal issues is removed to the federal [11:56.240 --> 12:04.560] court, the court can hear both the state and the federal issues under the doctrine of judicial [12:04.560 --> 12:07.080] economy. [12:07.080 --> 12:11.840] Other circuits said no, no, no, we cannot hear state issues. [12:11.840 --> 12:15.520] That is an undue preemption of state law. [12:15.520 --> 12:23.760] In 2011, the legislature stepped in and settled this difference. [12:23.760 --> 12:32.200] They said that while a case with state and federal issues can be removed to the federal [12:32.200 --> 12:40.560] court, the federal court must sever the state issues and remand those to the state. [12:40.560 --> 12:43.720] That changed 200 years of law. [12:43.720 --> 12:48.480] If you file a quiet title, you can count on the other side removing it to the federal [12:48.480 --> 12:49.480] court. [12:49.480 --> 12:53.840] But in your case, since you've already filed one in the federal court, now you can come [12:53.840 --> 12:59.200] back and file one in the state court and they can't remove it. [12:59.200 --> 13:05.720] Main reason for filing the action, the quiet title, is to get to discovery. [13:05.720 --> 13:09.440] You ask them to prove up their position. [13:09.440 --> 13:14.080] You can keep them for five years and our particular one, they did not remove it to the federal [13:14.080 --> 13:15.080] court. [13:15.080 --> 13:24.000] We spent six years in the state court on this issue alone. [13:24.000 --> 13:31.320] I actually, the other side had sued me and without serving me, got in state court, without [13:31.320 --> 13:37.480] serving me, got a default, but didn't get a default judgment since I filed for a Chapter [13:37.480 --> 13:38.480] 13. [13:38.480 --> 13:46.040] Now, if I go to the state court and file for a quiet title action, I don't know what that [13:46.040 --> 13:47.360] would, you know... [13:47.360 --> 13:48.360] Okay. [13:48.360 --> 13:49.360] Hold on. [13:49.360 --> 13:50.360] Hold on. [13:50.360 --> 13:53.440] The default judgment, did you challenge it? [13:53.440 --> 13:55.160] Yes, I did. [13:55.160 --> 13:59.400] It's actually a default by the clerk and not a default judgment. [13:59.400 --> 14:00.400] Okay. [14:00.400 --> 14:08.320] If 70% of all default judgments get overturned and the primary reason they'll get overturned [14:08.320 --> 14:17.960] is lack of proper notice and even if your pro say the courts will overturn a default motion [14:17.960 --> 14:24.120] for lack of proper service because they do not want the other side winning by not giving [14:24.120 --> 14:30.920] you an opportunity to adjudicate your case, that'll almost certainly get overturned. [14:30.920 --> 14:34.480] So how did they sue you in the state court? [14:34.480 --> 14:36.480] What did they sue for? [14:36.480 --> 14:43.320] The ATM, I filed for UCC-1 financing statement in Secretary of State. [14:43.320 --> 14:52.240] So these people, the other side, have commented that these financing statements are fraudulent [14:52.240 --> 15:00.600] and they're asking the judge to penalize me and vacate all the filings in the California [15:00.600 --> 15:02.760] Secretary of State. [15:02.760 --> 15:09.320] And my counter-argument to that was that first of all, you guys have not served me. [15:09.320 --> 15:13.200] Second of all, the court has no jurisdiction to rule on that. [15:13.200 --> 15:20.800] That has already been adjudicated by the three branches of the government under Zasinovsky. [15:20.800 --> 15:22.800] You have no standing. [15:22.800 --> 15:26.680] Wait a minute, you're saying under Zasinovsky? [15:26.680 --> 15:33.400] Yeah, because I rescinded the note, so once I rescinded the note, the mortgage, they have [15:33.400 --> 15:38.800] 20 days to stay and injunce it. [15:38.800 --> 15:43.560] Did you rescind the note within the three-year statutory time period? [15:43.560 --> 15:46.760] So there are two arguments on that. [15:46.760 --> 15:50.880] Whether it was within the three years or it was not within the three years, they have [15:50.880 --> 15:53.640] 20 days to confront that. [15:53.640 --> 15:54.640] Okay. [15:54.640 --> 15:59.280] So the court does not have jurisdiction to hear that argument, whether it was within [15:59.280 --> 16:00.280] it. [16:00.280 --> 16:01.280] So it's actually... [16:01.280 --> 16:02.280] No, hold on. [16:02.280 --> 16:03.280] Hold on. [16:03.280 --> 16:04.280] Hold on. [16:04.280 --> 16:05.280] Hold on. [16:05.280 --> 16:06.280] You didn't answer my question. [16:06.280 --> 16:07.280] I was going to some place very specific. [16:07.280 --> 16:16.800] I am, as we speak, writing a certiori to the U.S. Supreme on this exact issue. [16:16.800 --> 16:21.040] And the argument goes like this. [16:21.040 --> 16:34.120] If I file the rescission under 1635J, not 1635F, 1635J says that on notice of acceleration, [16:34.120 --> 16:35.120] the right... [16:35.120 --> 16:45.000] If you can show $35 of unreported fees, your right to rescind is reinvigorated. [16:45.000 --> 16:49.440] And they're saying you still have to do it within three years, and I'm saying the statute [16:49.440 --> 16:54.000] of limitations is not a bar, it's an affirmative defense. [16:54.000 --> 16:55.000] They didn't... [16:55.000 --> 16:56.000] We'll be right back. [16:56.000 --> 16:57.000] I'll pick it up on the other side. [16:57.000 --> 16:58.000] Dang, Cookie. [16:58.000 --> 16:59.000] Cookie? [16:59.000 --> 17:00.000] Me love cookies. [17:00.000 --> 17:01.000] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:01.000 --> 17:02.000] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:02.000 --> 17:03.000] Cookie? [17:03.000 --> 17:04.000] Yucky? [17:04.000 --> 17:05.000] No, it's not bad cookies. [17:05.000 --> 17:06.000] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:06.000 --> 17:07.000] These are cyber cookies. [17:07.000 --> 17:08.000] No, Cookie. [17:08.000 --> 17:09.000] No. [17:09.000 --> 17:10.000] They are cyber cookies, and they clog up your computer. [17:10.000 --> 17:11.000] Me have apples. [17:11.000 --> 17:12.000] Really? [17:12.000 --> 17:13.000] Oh, that's... [17:13.000 --> 17:20.000] An actual apple. [17:20.000 --> 17:26.800] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.800 --> 17:32.880] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:32.880 --> 17:34.520] Bye-bye, Yucky Cookie. [17:34.520 --> 17:40.200] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand [17:40.200 --> 17:46.200] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:46.200 --> 17:47.200] new cookie. [17:47.200 --> 17:48.200] New cookies? [17:48.200 --> 17:49.200] For me? [17:49.200 --> 17:51.040] Consider it an early Christmas present. [17:51.040 --> 17:55.840] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [17:55.840 --> 17:56.840] radio network too. [17:56.840 --> 17:57.840] These are cookies. [17:57.840 --> 17:58.840] These are classified. [17:58.840 --> 18:05.880] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [18:05.880 --> 18:12.880] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to get debt collectors out of [18:12.880 --> 18:25.880] your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them, and make them pay you to go [18:25.880 --> 18:26.880] away. [18:26.880 --> 18:38.880] The Michael Merris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.880 --> 18:40.880] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.880 --> 18:46.880] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner [18:46.880 --> 18:49.880] or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com. [18:49.880 --> 18:56.880] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:56.880 --> 19:05.880] To learn how to stop debt collectors next, you are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:05.880 --> 19:07.880] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:07.880 --> 19:20.880] Well, don't let nothing get to you, only the father can deliver you. [19:20.880 --> 19:25.880] Don't let my people hurt you until they get behind you. [19:25.880 --> 19:26.880] Okay. [19:26.880 --> 19:27.880] We are back. [19:27.880 --> 19:28.880] Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. [19:28.880 --> 19:31.880] And we're talking to Sareed in California. [19:31.880 --> 19:43.880] So, what I'm claiming is that the statute of limitations is not a bar, but it is an affirmative [19:43.880 --> 19:50.880] defense so that if the other party doesn't act within the 20-day statutory time limit, [19:50.880 --> 19:58.880] for those who don't know, what the Jasonowski decision said is the real estate settlement [19:58.880 --> 19:59.880] procedures act. [19:59.880 --> 20:06.880] I'm sorry, the Truth in Lending Act says that if you're not given proper notice of your [20:06.880 --> 20:12.880] right to rescind, then you can rescind the note within three years. [20:12.880 --> 20:18.880] And recension means you give me back everything I gave you. [20:18.880 --> 20:21.880] I give you back everything you gave me. [20:21.880 --> 20:26.880] And what the banks have been saying was is when you file a notice of recension, you have [20:26.880 --> 20:33.880] to give us back everything we gave you first, essentially either pay off the note or turn [20:33.880 --> 20:38.880] the property over to us, and then we give you back everything you gave us. [20:38.880 --> 20:43.880] And the Jasonowski decision said, no, it doesn't work that way. [20:43.880 --> 20:49.880] Once recision is filed, notice of recision is filed, it's like removal. [20:49.880 --> 20:54.880] Recision is accomplished, and even the father can't undo it. [20:54.880 --> 21:03.880] The bank has 20 days to either initiate the recension process or file an opposition in [21:03.880 --> 21:09.880] the court, and I think where you're going to read is they didn't file that opposition [21:09.880 --> 21:11.880] within the 20 days. [21:11.880 --> 21:15.880] So they waived it, and this goes to latches. [21:15.880 --> 21:21.880] Under the doctrine of latches, if you have rights and you don't assert them, you sit on [21:21.880 --> 21:24.880] them and waive them. [21:24.880 --> 21:27.880] Therefore, you don't have them, and that's what we're saying. [21:27.880 --> 21:29.880] They have a right to file an opposition. [21:29.880 --> 21:32.880] They've got 20-day statutory right. [21:32.880 --> 21:37.880] They could have done that and claimed statute of limitations as a bar to prosecution, but [21:37.880 --> 21:39.880] they didn't. [21:39.880 --> 21:42.880] They sat on their rights, and therefore they waived them. [21:42.880 --> 21:46.880] Have you taken that position, Sherry? [21:46.880 --> 21:47.880] Oh, hold on. [21:47.880 --> 21:48.880] I'm sorry. [21:48.880 --> 21:49.880] I forgot to unmute you. [21:49.880 --> 21:51.880] There you go. [21:51.880 --> 21:52.880] Yes, I have. [21:52.880 --> 21:53.880] Hello? [21:53.880 --> 21:54.880] Hello? [21:54.880 --> 21:55.880] Yes, good. [21:55.880 --> 21:56.880] Hello, I'm here. [21:56.880 --> 22:05.880] Yes, I have, and both the lower court in both state and federal court, as well as the [22:05.880 --> 22:12.880] 9th Circuit Court of Appeal and the 63rd Court of Appeal, they simply did not look at it at [22:12.880 --> 22:13.880] all. [22:13.880 --> 22:18.880] 63rd Court of Appeal took it as if it was a cause of action. [22:18.880 --> 22:22.880] Even though I plead to them, I said, look, this is not a cause of action. [22:22.880 --> 22:28.880] It's a non-judicial judgment endorsed by all three branches of the government, but they're [22:28.880 --> 22:29.880] still, they didn't get it. [22:29.880 --> 22:33.880] And I know why they didn't get it is because they're bribed. [22:33.880 --> 22:40.880] And I have found ample evidence that the Chief Judge of the 60th Court of Appeal has obtained [22:40.880 --> 22:47.880] loans, basically bribes, that are unavailable to the public under the Fannie Mae guidelines. [22:47.880 --> 22:55.880] You know, Fannie Mae has a table, and under those tables, the limit for a single family [22:55.880 --> 22:56.880] home. [22:56.880 --> 23:04.880] And you see that every two years or so, there is refinancing of the same properties without [23:04.880 --> 23:11.880] reconvening, which is basically, all those are outstanding loans that those judges are [23:11.880 --> 23:12.880] getting. [23:12.880 --> 23:17.880] Every couple of years, they get like half a million, a million, two million dollars of [23:17.880 --> 23:18.880] additional bribes. [23:18.880 --> 23:19.880] And I've found it. [23:19.880 --> 23:26.080] In fact, with respect to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal Chief Judge Thomas, I found [23:26.080 --> 23:32.880] out that he has had multiple, and I mean multiple, real estate development companies. [23:32.880 --> 23:42.880] And I found that from the Montana Secretary of State, and I have those documents, if you [23:42.880 --> 23:44.880] like, I would send them, and we can post them very, very late. [23:44.880 --> 23:45.880] Oh, okay. [23:45.880 --> 23:49.880] Now you're scaring me, Sir Eid. [23:49.880 --> 23:53.520] This is deep water. [23:53.520 --> 24:02.120] You need someone besides yourself taking on these issues. [24:02.120 --> 24:10.200] And I'm always afraid when we point fingers at these really high level officials, this [24:10.200 --> 24:11.200] is dangerous. [24:11.200 --> 24:16.080] And now I'm worried, now I'm concerned. [24:16.080 --> 24:23.800] We can go after them without those, let's talk about this part off the air. [24:23.800 --> 24:24.800] Right. [24:24.800 --> 24:36.680] I can't risk you this way, does that make sense, Sir Eid? [24:36.680 --> 24:37.680] Yes. [24:37.680 --> 24:44.000] Let's talk about this part off the air, the broad part. [24:44.000 --> 24:52.360] We can talk about this on the air and go after them without the broad part, because if the [24:52.360 --> 24:59.240] judge fails to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, and apply the [24:59.240 --> 25:04.600] laws that comes to him to the facts in the case, at the end of the day, it doesn't necessarily [25:04.600 --> 25:07.520] matter why he didn't do that. [25:07.520 --> 25:11.400] It matters that he didn't do that. [25:11.400 --> 25:16.320] And in the process of failing to perform a duty he was required to perform, he denied [25:16.320 --> 25:20.240] you and the full and free access to your enjoyment, right. [25:20.240 --> 25:30.680] You can go after him this way, and you're not quite so dangerously implicated. [25:30.680 --> 25:37.840] And this is cleaner, Judge McBride and Fort Worth, I didn't accuse him of anything other [25:37.840 --> 25:42.480] than just being arrogant. [25:42.480 --> 25:49.800] Judge McBride will rule against a prosaed litigate no matter what, that's what he does. [25:49.800 --> 25:58.400] He's 90 years old, and he spent a lot of time on the bitch being annoyed by prosaed litigants. [25:58.400 --> 26:05.400] And now he's got this personal prejudice against him, but he's 90 years old, it's time for [26:05.400 --> 26:06.400] him to retire. [26:06.400 --> 26:11.440] He's got a new president who's going to want to appoint federal judges. [26:11.440 --> 26:19.720] I may give him another federal judge to appoint, but I'm hoping that I can get the U.S. [26:19.720 --> 26:24.280] Attorney to pressure Judge McBride to step down. [26:24.280 --> 26:31.120] But in any case, what he did was criminal, and technically it's criminal, and whoever [26:31.120 --> 26:39.240] tries to protect him, they're criminals, and when you start pointing criminal fingers at [26:39.240 --> 26:44.880] public officials, one public official for protecting another, they get real excited [26:44.880 --> 26:50.000] about that, and it creates a lot of political pressure. [26:50.000 --> 26:57.920] So anyway, let's stop here, I am concerned. [26:57.920 --> 27:02.600] Call me tomorrow, we'll talk about this off the air. [27:02.600 --> 27:04.600] You already have my number. [27:04.600 --> 27:05.600] Yes. [27:05.600 --> 27:07.600] Okay, thank you, Suri. [27:07.600 --> 27:08.600] Thanks. [27:08.600 --> 27:13.120] Okay, now we're going to go to Ms. Leslie in Pennsylvania. [27:13.120 --> 27:21.120] Yes, and Pennsylvania is very cold, and I'm not there now. [27:21.120 --> 27:29.400] It's the bad grandma, Zoni. [27:29.400 --> 27:34.840] In California, I have a friend in California who's moving to Arizona, and he said the [27:34.840 --> 27:38.400] California's called Arizona's Zoni's. [27:38.400 --> 27:42.680] So now you're a Zoni snowbird. [27:42.680 --> 27:46.280] My husband says we're humans. [27:46.280 --> 27:47.280] Humans. [27:47.280 --> 27:54.680] Leslie has moved to Yume, Arizona. [27:54.680 --> 28:04.200] If you have teeth issues, especially, the place to go is Los Algodones. [28:04.200 --> 28:08.600] Los Algodones is right across the border from Yuma. [28:08.600 --> 28:18.240] I went down there and got four extractions, six root canals, two crowns, $1,800. [28:18.240 --> 28:21.160] Okay, that's fine. [28:21.160 --> 28:23.560] Here, one root canal, $1,100. [28:23.560 --> 28:25.040] Yeah, I know. [28:25.040 --> 28:33.880] Los Algodones is not like Eagle Pass, and there's two other two places in Texas, and [28:33.880 --> 28:37.000] I went to both of those, and I won't go back there again. [28:37.000 --> 28:39.040] I was not comfortable. [28:39.040 --> 28:48.000] El Paso, I have a friend who's from Laredo, and he said he doesn't go there anymore, [28:48.000 --> 28:49.640] and he's Mexican. [28:49.640 --> 28:50.640] He's from there. [28:50.640 --> 28:51.640] He doesn't go there. [28:51.640 --> 28:57.040] So I never went to that one, and then the two in Texas, I won't go to those again. [28:57.040 --> 29:00.960] They were, it was pretty scary. [29:00.960 --> 29:06.200] Look like ghost towns, but Los Algodones, its only purpose for being is to service [29:06.200 --> 29:11.760] the snowbirds who come down from Canada during the winter and spend the winter in Yuma. [29:11.760 --> 29:14.640] It's huge motorhome park, sir. [29:14.640 --> 29:22.360] And then they go across the border, and behind Los Algodones, there's nothing but desert [29:22.360 --> 29:24.680] for 100 miles. [29:24.680 --> 29:28.760] If you look at it on the map, there's no towns, there's no nothing out there. [29:28.760 --> 29:34.360] And Los Algodones has the federales, they have the Los Algodones police, and they have [29:34.360 --> 29:36.400] a tourist police. [29:36.400 --> 29:43.080] So one place you'll be safe in Mexico is Los Algodones, and you get some really good [29:43.080 --> 29:44.080] deals. [29:44.080 --> 29:48.280] They didn't do some good on the glasses, but on the teeth, they did real good. [29:48.280 --> 29:53.760] Anyway, so now the, what did you call yourself, a yoni? [29:53.760 --> 29:54.760] A Yuma. [29:54.760 --> 29:55.760] Humans. [29:55.760 --> 29:56.760] Humans. [29:56.760 --> 29:57.760] A human. [29:57.760 --> 29:58.760] Okay. [29:58.760 --> 29:59.760] You're not human anymore. [29:59.760 --> 30:08.040] In Africa, there's a tiny wrap that would make a tasty snack for jackals and wildcats, [30:08.040 --> 30:10.360] but they won't touch him with a 10-foot pole. [30:10.360 --> 30:14.440] I got to Catherine Albrecht, and after the break, I'll tell you what his secret weapon [30:14.440 --> 30:16.080] is. [30:16.080 --> 30:17.680] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.680 --> 30:21.280] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.280 --> 30:26.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.040 --> 30:31.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.000 --> 30:33.800] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.800 --> 30:38.160] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:38.160 --> 30:41.640] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.640 --> 30:44.960] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.960 --> 30:50.200] In Northeastern Africa, tiny creatures called crested rats can walk safely among the most [30:50.200 --> 30:51.840] voracious predators. [30:51.840 --> 30:55.560] They're slow and easy to catch, and apparently very appetizing. [30:55.560 --> 30:56.920] So how do they survive? [30:56.920 --> 31:01.280] With one of the most ingenious defenses in the animal kingdom, they chew the roots and [31:01.280 --> 31:06.920] bark of a toxic plant called the acocanthera tree, then rub the saliva on a row of quills [31:06.920 --> 31:07.920] down their backs. [31:07.920 --> 31:11.920] When an enemy approaches, they expose their flanks invitingly. [31:11.920 --> 31:16.480] Predators either smell the poison in bolts or take a bite and soon fall dead from heart [31:16.480 --> 31:17.480] failure. [31:17.480 --> 31:22.200] The toxin you see comes from the poison arrow tree, the same one hunters once used to kill [31:22.200 --> 31:23.200] elephants. [31:23.200 --> 31:27.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:53.200 --> 33:06.400] Live, free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:06.400 --> 33:36.240] Okay, we are back, off to the new rule of law radio and [33:36.240 --> 33:44.000] we're talking to Leslie in, in, in Yuma, Arizona, what do you have for us now today? [33:44.000 --> 33:45.000] Leslie? [33:45.000 --> 33:52.360] I was going to bring you up to date on my foreclosure, and I can give a brief outline [33:52.360 --> 33:53.360] of what happened. [33:53.360 --> 33:59.360] They filed for foreclosure and in our defense we had, they failed to join all necessary [33:59.360 --> 34:03.280] parties, all indispensable parties. [34:03.280 --> 34:10.760] There was a pillow rescission and they had three notices, notice of intent to rescind, [34:10.760 --> 34:15.440] notice of default of the intention of that they didn't respond to that and then the final [34:15.440 --> 34:16.440] notice. [34:16.440 --> 34:23.920] And then we had a forged assignment of mortgage where we had documentation that it was forged [34:23.920 --> 34:28.520] from the person that they say, assigned it. [34:28.520 --> 34:34.000] And then we had a court order from a federal court that gave a complete list of all of [34:34.000 --> 34:39.480] the history of the loan as to who owned it. [34:39.480 --> 34:45.760] And it wasn't like the assignment of mortgage said and it wasn't like what's decided in [34:45.760 --> 34:46.760] these complaints. [34:46.760 --> 34:55.280] So the judge threw out all of our defense and I filed a judicial conduct complaint. [34:55.280 --> 35:00.920] We filed an interlocutory appeal and that got thrown back because they said we couldn't [35:00.920 --> 35:04.480] appeal until after it was all decided. [35:04.480 --> 35:11.880] And then the judge found for some re-judgment against us, so now we filed for appeal. [35:11.880 --> 35:15.520] Now, this is what happened, this was November 10th. [35:15.520 --> 35:18.800] We filed a notice of appeal. [35:18.800 --> 35:28.920] We were ordered to send a 1925 statement of error that was due to be in on December 2nd [35:28.920 --> 35:30.240] and it was. [35:30.240 --> 35:36.640] The judge received it and the opposition received it. [35:36.640 --> 35:47.200] The court was supposed to certify the transcript and the paperwork and exhibits to the Superior [35:47.200 --> 35:49.440] Court within 60 days. [35:49.440 --> 35:57.200] That was due November 10th, that was due from 60 days and January 9th. [35:57.200 --> 36:08.040] And the, there was a motion of Informer-Pulper filed a petition by our attorney and that was [36:08.040 --> 36:10.880] filed November 22nd. [36:10.880 --> 36:18.040] Now they're supposed to answer that within 20 days, they haven't answered it yet. [36:18.040 --> 36:24.120] They were supposed to certify the court record, that was due within 60 days and they haven't [36:24.120 --> 36:25.840] done that yet. [36:25.840 --> 36:31.160] And they were supposed to answer the 1925 statement within 30 days and it hasn't been [36:31.160 --> 36:33.600] done yet. [36:33.600 --> 36:44.600] Now the judge himself has violated three rules of civil procedure, the 1925 is the 1032 and [36:44.600 --> 36:49.000] the Informer-Pulper which is 2040. [36:49.000 --> 36:56.200] And we got recently a motion to quash the appeal from the back. [36:56.200 --> 37:03.480] Now the court ordered that the motion to quash this appeal is denied without prejudice. [37:03.480 --> 37:13.200] And then it had a little interesting thing in the first paragraph, it said, C-Fabella, [37:13.200 --> 37:18.400] the Appalachian Development Company, appealed denied, issued to failure to join a dispensable [37:18.400 --> 37:24.080] party in the court's judicial subject matter jurisdiction and could not be waived. [37:24.080 --> 37:31.440] I never saw the motion to quash my attorney, but it must have had something in there because [37:31.440 --> 37:37.200] they wanted to put that in their blanket about that, would they? [37:37.200 --> 37:44.280] No, well I don't know, Suspente did the, if you've never seen the motion, if it didn't [37:44.280 --> 37:53.480] name all the indispensable parties, then the court had a duty to do this and you've already [37:53.480 --> 37:58.120] had this issue in this case. [37:58.120 --> 38:04.840] So if you see the, it may be in the heading that the, where the problem exists. [38:04.840 --> 38:05.840] Right. [38:05.840 --> 38:12.360] And then at the end, the last paragraph says, additionally, review of this matter indicates [38:12.360 --> 38:16.600] the certified records have not been transmitted to this court. [38:16.600 --> 38:23.120] They moved to digits 1931, the record of appeal and treating transcripts and exhibits necessary [38:23.120 --> 38:27.960] for determination shall be transmitted to the appellate court within 60 days. [38:27.960 --> 38:32.360] The trial court's protonatory is directed to transmit the certified records within 30 [38:32.360 --> 38:34.360] days of the date of this order. [38:34.360 --> 38:39.520] So I see everybody's moving around and they move. [38:39.520 --> 38:42.320] Have you filed criminal charges against the protonatory? [38:42.320 --> 38:50.600] No, but I'm going to, I'm thinking of another judicial crime that complain is in order because [38:50.600 --> 38:51.600] it will be reprimanded. [38:51.600 --> 38:57.080] No, wait a minute, wait a minute, this is not, this is beyond judicial conduct. [38:57.080 --> 39:00.320] This is criminal. [39:00.320 --> 39:05.680] The judge can commit crimes just like everybody else. [39:05.680 --> 39:09.240] The judge fails to perform a duty, he's quite performing in the process, denies you in full [39:09.240 --> 39:13.920] free access to enjoy me right, that's definitely a crime in Pennsylvania. [39:13.920 --> 39:23.000] It's also a crime in Arizona and since you are in Arizona now, you can file with the [39:23.000 --> 39:25.840] U.S. Attorney in Arizona. [39:25.840 --> 39:30.760] That's better than Pennsylvania. [39:30.760 --> 39:42.280] You heard earlier us talking about the position U.S. attorneys are in at the moment. [39:42.280 --> 39:49.800] So this local po-dunk U.S. attorney in Phoenix is not going to want you stomping all over [39:49.800 --> 39:54.760] the U.S. attorney because of him. [39:54.760 --> 40:00.520] This might be a good time to really get their attention, I mean couldn't hurt. [40:00.520 --> 40:03.120] It's kind of like chicken soup. [40:03.120 --> 40:09.960] Yeah, well I intended to, I intended to judge after all of this is over but I was being [40:09.960 --> 40:15.440] in another conduct complaint because I already had one and they threw it out of course but [40:15.440 --> 40:20.640] this is based on the rules of civil procedure that he's obviously not following. [40:20.640 --> 40:26.680] I mean it's over 120 days that we're waiting on a 1925 thing. [40:26.680 --> 40:32.080] We can't even, they can't even schedule the, put the breathing schedule together for the [40:32.080 --> 40:33.080] appeal. [40:33.080 --> 40:39.280] They're denying you and your wife to petition the court for redress of grievance. [40:39.280 --> 40:40.280] That's criminal. [40:40.280 --> 40:41.280] Yeah. [40:41.280 --> 40:48.920] And what we haven't been doing is taking these judges on criminally. [40:48.920 --> 40:54.800] All we've been doing is using their internal procedures. [40:54.800 --> 41:02.760] I would sure like to see what happens when you start petitioning U.S. attorneys to indict [41:02.760 --> 41:05.040] this judge. [41:05.040 --> 41:08.280] Does everybody like this judge? [41:08.280 --> 41:14.560] Does this judge not have any political enemies? [41:14.560 --> 41:18.840] You will never, you will never get them to be afraid of you. [41:18.840 --> 41:25.640] You'll get them to be afraid of the political cannon fodder you make available to their [41:25.640 --> 41:26.640] enemies. [41:26.640 --> 41:27.640] Right. [41:27.640 --> 41:31.000] So even though he's a state judge, I can file this in the federal court because it's [41:31.000 --> 41:32.000] a federal offense. [41:32.000 --> 41:34.000] You're in Arizona. [41:34.000 --> 41:35.000] Okay. [41:35.000 --> 41:36.000] I will. [41:36.000 --> 41:41.000] He denied you in procedural due process. [41:41.000 --> 41:42.000] Right. [41:42.000 --> 41:45.560] That's under Title III, too, he's a little... [41:45.560 --> 41:54.000] 18 U.S. Code 242, you can file in the Fed. [41:54.000 --> 41:56.560] Take the state to the Fed, the Fed to the state. [41:56.560 --> 42:05.680] The Fed is not going to have any reason to protect this judge, especially if you get [42:05.680 --> 42:10.600] the U.S. attorney right in the seat of his professional pants. [42:10.600 --> 42:16.600] Ms. Leslie, that's sounding wicked. [42:16.600 --> 42:28.760] I do like it, but you know, the more I look at this, they do everything they can to hide [42:28.760 --> 42:32.640] their criminal responsibility. [42:32.640 --> 42:39.960] When we start pushing the criminal side, you know, the judge is pretty sure that he's not [42:39.960 --> 42:42.840] going to get indicted. [42:42.840 --> 42:46.480] So who here would like to play Russian roulette? [42:46.480 --> 42:47.480] Right. [42:47.480 --> 42:59.840] I filed against all the highest judges in Texas a really nitpicking minor complaint. [42:59.840 --> 43:05.520] I filed a habeas corpus and they said, you can't file a habeas corpus without filing [43:05.520 --> 43:06.920] a motion for leave to file. [43:06.920 --> 43:08.760] And I said, heck with that. [43:08.760 --> 43:09.760] This is the great writ. [43:09.760 --> 43:10.760] You're writ of right. [43:10.760 --> 43:12.240] You have no power to grant or deny leave. [43:12.240 --> 43:13.680] Well, they wouldn't take it without it. [43:13.680 --> 43:18.240] Trying to get this kid out of jail in Conroe, so I filed a motion for leave to file. [43:18.240 --> 43:20.640] They denied it. [43:20.640 --> 43:25.200] I charged them criminally for denying that. [43:25.200 --> 43:32.720] It took me a year, two days after I filed it and made initial contact with U.S. attorney [43:32.720 --> 43:36.760] with it, two days later they let this kid out of jail. [43:36.760 --> 43:39.000] They threw him out of jail. [43:39.000 --> 43:44.080] Took me a year and finally got it before the grand jury. [43:44.080 --> 43:49.200] The way I did that took me a while to figure it out. [43:49.200 --> 43:55.280] I finally got the U.S. attorney, I mean the district attorney, to give it to the grand [43:55.280 --> 43:56.280] jury. [43:56.280 --> 43:59.840] And after a month and a half, I went to the... [43:59.840 --> 44:07.840] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from natursjureorganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by [44:07.840 --> 44:13.240] our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D here in Austin, Texas, find brave new books [44:13.240 --> 44:16.680] and chase things to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very [44:16.680 --> 44:17.680] own eyes. [44:17.680 --> 44:22.520] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.520 --> 44:26.560] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian emu oil, [44:26.560 --> 44:34.680] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps and colloidal silver and gold, call 512-264-4043 or find [44:34.680 --> 44:36.680] us online at natursjureorganics.com. [44:36.680 --> 44:38.680] That's 512-264-4043 natursjureorganics.com. [44:38.680 --> 44:47.360] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.360 --> 44:48.360] natursjureorganics.com. [44:48.360 --> 45:04.360] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.360 --> 45:11.120] In your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.120 --> 45:14.120] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.120 --> 45:18.920] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.920 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:27.960] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.960 --> 45:33.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.840 --> 45:39.280] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.280 --> 45:43.560] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.560 --> 45:49.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.720 --> 45:51.720] prosa tactics, and much more. [45:51.720 --> 46:19.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:19.720 --> 46:27.720] We are back, Randy Kelton of Rule of Law Radio, and I ran off the cliff again. [46:27.720 --> 46:34.800] The reason what happened here was finally it went before the grand jury and the head [46:34.800 --> 46:40.600] of the month and a half, and I went to the Clare Dawson Brown, the assistant DA who handled [46:40.600 --> 46:47.400] the grand jury, and I asked her what's the problem here, and she said, well, Mr. Kelton, [46:47.400 --> 46:54.400] I made sure that every grand jury member read your entire pre-sentment, and I thought, what, [46:54.400 --> 46:55.400] in the world? [46:55.400 --> 46:56.400] That was 111 pages. [46:56.400 --> 46:57.400] It was a book. [46:57.400 --> 47:02.400] So why would she do that? [47:02.400 --> 47:06.160] You know, I thought that she gave it to the grand jury, then she'd go in there because [47:06.160 --> 47:11.080] the law commanded her to, and I insisted and didn't let her off the hook, and then she'd [47:11.080 --> 47:15.640] go in there and argue against it and get a no-bill. [47:15.640 --> 47:21.520] They were actually trying to get these guys indicted, so I'm thinking, what is going on [47:21.520 --> 47:22.520] here? [47:22.520 --> 47:24.920] They finally dawned on me. [47:24.920 --> 47:28.360] Ron Earl, 25-year district attorney. [47:28.360 --> 47:35.360] He's the guy that took out Tom DeLay, the Speaker of the House, got him put in prison [47:35.360 --> 47:38.520] and nobody ever filed a criminal charge against Tom DeLay. [47:38.520 --> 47:41.040] Was he legal? [47:41.040 --> 47:42.520] Ron Earl did that. [47:42.520 --> 47:48.600] 25-year district attorney, not running for office again, is retiring. [47:48.600 --> 47:50.320] He's a Democrat. [47:50.320 --> 47:54.240] All 15 of these judges are Republicans. [47:54.240 --> 47:57.240] That dirty rotten scoundrel. [47:57.240 --> 48:04.600] He used my complaint as cannon fodder to try to take these judges out with him. [48:04.600 --> 48:08.440] Leslie, that should tell us a whole lot. [48:08.440 --> 48:09.440] Yes. [48:09.440 --> 48:14.400] You told me they're not going to be afraid of me. [48:14.400 --> 48:18.200] What they're going to be afraid of is the political cannon fodder I can give to somebody [48:18.200 --> 48:19.200] else. [48:19.200 --> 48:27.760] And right now, with Trump in office, the political cannon fodder is reason to remove the US [48:27.760 --> 48:33.240] attorney and replace him with a Trump appointee. [48:33.240 --> 48:38.440] Does this sound like fun? [48:38.440 --> 48:44.400] Yes, sounds like fun to me. [48:44.400 --> 48:46.800] And it looks pretty straightforward. [48:46.800 --> 48:52.960] The clerk has a statutory duty. [48:52.960 --> 48:58.640] The clerk failed to perform that statutory duty and prevented you from prosecuting your [48:58.640 --> 48:59.640] appeal. [48:59.640 --> 49:00.640] That's pretty straightforward. [49:00.640 --> 49:01.640] That doesn't touch. [49:01.640 --> 49:02.640] That doesn't touch. [49:02.640 --> 49:03.640] Oh, both of them. [49:03.640 --> 49:13.800] The lower level says that if the failure to join the rule of civil procedure, if somebody [49:13.800 --> 49:21.600] brings to the attention of the court that there's an indispensable party to the case, [49:21.600 --> 49:28.160] the judge has to cancel it, to dismiss it, and he didn't do that. [49:28.160 --> 49:33.560] Every one of those, and this is what I'm promoting, they say, well, you go before a corrupt [49:33.560 --> 49:37.120] judge and you render a bogus decision, that's okay. [49:37.120 --> 49:42.880] You can appeal to a whole panel of corrupt judges, and they'll really screw your royal. [49:42.880 --> 49:46.880] Better idea is appeal to a grand jury and see what they think is shenanigans. [49:46.880 --> 49:56.560] Yeah, well, I think that's what we'll do because we're standing on staying here until July [49:56.560 --> 50:03.720] and then going back to Pennsylvania to try to get the house and stuff and decide what [50:03.720 --> 50:05.920] we're going to do with it. [50:05.920 --> 50:08.200] I think so. [50:08.200 --> 50:11.440] We have to have it renovated, but that's beside the point. [50:11.440 --> 50:16.360] You can't do that, and when you find out, we get a clear title. [50:16.360 --> 50:26.920] Well, you may have a good shot at changing the political state of this judge. [50:26.920 --> 50:29.880] Because he's... Go ahead. [50:29.880 --> 50:36.520] This is the same judge that threw out my case against the Code Enforcement Officer because [50:36.520 --> 50:40.880] he told me the only thing I could plant in my yard was hostage. [50:40.880 --> 50:44.600] Is this a state judge? [50:44.600 --> 50:53.480] Yeah, he told me the only thing I could plant in my yard was hostage, and he made me rip [50:53.480 --> 50:59.320] off all of my primrose, even primrose. [50:59.320 --> 51:07.320] I had beautiful even primrose, he made me rip them all out so they would read. [51:07.320 --> 51:12.040] Have you went around... Did you go around and make file complaints against everybody [51:12.040 --> 51:14.840] with roses? [51:14.840 --> 51:22.040] No, I should have, because everybody of us goes that evening primrose. [51:22.040 --> 51:25.760] Can you see how this works for you, Bubba? [51:25.760 --> 51:28.760] That's what I was saying. [51:28.760 --> 51:31.680] This judge, I think I had enough of him. [51:31.680 --> 51:39.120] He threw out my case against the Code Enforcement Officer. [51:39.120 --> 51:44.960] So see, if you can go after him, get him thrown out, you could go back after the Code Enforcement [51:44.960 --> 51:45.960] Officer. [51:45.960 --> 51:46.960] Yeah. [51:46.960 --> 51:52.160] You can reopen all that, depends on how much fight you want to do. [51:52.160 --> 51:55.720] But these are the kind of things that changes the whole landscape. [51:55.720 --> 51:56.720] Yeah. [51:56.720 --> 52:02.360] When you start going after him criminally, policies change real fast. [52:02.360 --> 52:07.960] Well, that's what I'm thinking, because he didn't even read a single word I wrote on [52:07.960 --> 52:13.160] any of my readings, he just threw them all out. [52:13.160 --> 52:21.560] I'm wondering, how are the... What is the judge going to do when he renders a ruling [52:21.560 --> 52:29.480] that I think is improper and I filed criminally against him instead of filing an appeal? [52:29.480 --> 52:34.000] What's his argument going to be? [52:34.000 --> 52:38.200] How's he going to protect himself? [52:38.200 --> 52:46.160] The criminal is totally separate from civil, and the judge has nothing to say. [52:46.160 --> 52:53.240] He's the accused, the DA has something to say, but then you can drop political cannon fodder [52:53.240 --> 52:59.800] on the DA, especially in Pennsylvania. [52:59.800 --> 53:10.680] In Pennsylvania, the DA has statutory discretion, and because he has statutory discretion, unlike [53:10.680 --> 53:15.560] all the other states in the union, you have standing. [53:15.560 --> 53:22.720] Now, I'm in Texas, now you're in Arizona, they're both under Spanish, modeled on Spanish [53:22.720 --> 53:23.720] law. [53:23.720 --> 53:32.000] While I have a duty to report crime, once I report the crime, I have no standing as to [53:32.000 --> 53:35.720] the adjudication of the allegation. [53:35.720 --> 53:45.160] Pennsylvania, since they granted the prosecutor statutory discretion, first-blush discretion, [53:45.160 --> 53:53.040] they gave you the right to appeal his decision, and you can appeal it all the way to the Supreme. [53:53.040 --> 54:02.000] So you file against the judge with the local prosecutor, and when he refuses to prosecute, [54:02.000 --> 54:10.320] then you accuse the local prosecutor not of exercising prosecutorial discretion, wherein [54:10.320 --> 54:15.560] he determines whether or not there's cause to believe that a crime has been committed [54:15.560 --> 54:17.960] and the name of the person has committed it. [54:17.960 --> 54:27.400] But rather, he exercised prosecutorial decaprice, and that is not a privilege that he was granted [54:27.400 --> 54:29.320] in the law. [54:29.320 --> 54:36.360] So you file an appeal with the Court of Common Pleas, and at the same time, you file criminal [54:36.360 --> 54:43.360] charges with the Pennsylvania Attorney General, and the Pennsylvania Attorney General, who [54:43.360 --> 54:53.320] has a regional prosecutorial jurisdiction, he can exercise first-blush discretion. [54:53.320 --> 55:02.720] And when he refuses to prosecute the prosecutor, what do you do? [55:02.720 --> 55:11.080] You file against him with the prosecuting attorney, and ask the prosecuting attorney to appoint [55:11.080 --> 55:18.120] an attorney for him, and at the same time, appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, and appeal [55:18.120 --> 55:22.120] them all the way up to the Supreme. [55:22.120 --> 55:25.640] That will create politics coming out your ears. [55:25.640 --> 55:26.640] Oh, yeah. [55:26.640 --> 55:29.640] I have a question for you. [55:29.640 --> 55:30.640] Okay. [55:30.640 --> 55:38.200] When I file criminally down here, because it's time we're going to be down here, and can [55:38.200 --> 55:47.160] I also file a lawsuit against the judge for his order? [55:47.160 --> 55:48.160] That is a good question. [55:48.160 --> 55:52.600] That's something that I want to look at. [55:52.600 --> 56:05.520] The Code says that if a public official acts outside scope, then he's not protected, has [56:05.520 --> 56:08.080] no immunity. [56:08.080 --> 56:15.440] So we have a case in Texas where a sheriff's deputy in El Paso picked a 19-year-old girl [56:15.440 --> 56:20.360] up at one jail to transport her to another jail, and decided to have a little recreation [56:20.360 --> 56:23.400] on the way, pulled over and raped her. [56:23.400 --> 56:25.160] He was sued. [56:25.160 --> 56:29.640] He claimed qualified immunity. [56:29.640 --> 56:35.000] And the Court said that rape is not within scope. [56:35.000 --> 56:41.760] He claimed that he was acting in the scope of his employment. [56:41.760 --> 56:48.040] And the judge, the Court said rape is not within scope, therefore he has no immunity. [56:48.040 --> 56:54.800] So you can claim that criminal acts on the part of the judge is not within the scope [56:54.800 --> 57:01.320] of his authority, and misbeisance in office is not within scope, failure to perform a [57:01.320 --> 57:04.320] duty he's required to perform. [57:04.320 --> 57:08.320] You can claim it's not within scope, but let him argue that issue. [57:08.320 --> 57:09.320] Yeah. [57:09.320 --> 57:18.560] Because I was thinking also, because of the failure to join an indispensable party and [57:18.560 --> 57:26.560] giving an order for foreclosure when the Court has no subject matter jurisdiction, you know. [57:26.560 --> 57:34.000] And okay, my argument on subject matter jurisdiction is that it's not your place to determine jurisdiction. [57:34.000 --> 57:41.880] It's not the opposition's place, it is the judge's place. [57:41.880 --> 57:44.680] He is solely responsible. [57:44.680 --> 57:54.560] So if he was in a position to where he actually ruled that he didn't have jurisdiction. [57:54.560 --> 58:00.480] So if he didn't have it at the end, he didn't have it at the beginning, and the fact that [58:00.480 --> 58:05.560] he was acting outside his jurisdiction is resjudicata, and he's the one that made the [58:05.560 --> 58:08.000] determination so he can't argue it. [58:08.000 --> 58:13.000] So go back and charge him criminally from the beginning, impersonating a public official. [58:13.000 --> 58:16.760] Now, it doesn't mean we have to do something. [58:16.760 --> 58:17.760] Hang on. [58:17.760 --> 58:18.760] Hang on. [58:18.760 --> 58:19.760] About to go to break. [58:19.760 --> 58:20.760] I dove off the cliff. [58:20.760 --> 58:23.960] Last time, I'm going to try to not do that this time. [58:23.960 --> 58:25.600] This is Randy Kelton. [58:25.600 --> 58:32.520] Do low radio, the old cliff diver, real bad, not watching my clock close enough and running [58:32.520 --> 58:33.520] off the edge. [58:33.520 --> 58:40.880] Okay, I'll call it numbers 5126461984, I think that's the first time I gave that out today. [58:40.880 --> 58:50.320] I'm getting better here at the end, we'll be right back. [58:50.320 --> 58:54.440] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.440 --> 58:59.640] Books for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.640 --> 59:00.960] can really help. [59:00.960 --> 59:05.320] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.320 --> 59:06.320] today. [59:06.320 --> 59:10.320] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.320 --> 59:13.440] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.440 --> 59:18.680] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.680 --> 59:22.960] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:22.960 --> 59:27.880] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.880 --> 59:32.920] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.920 --> 59:45.680] Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [59:45.680 --> 59:48.680] us online at bfa.org. [59:48.680 --> 01:00:00.600] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.600 --> 01:00:05.360] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star of Lowdowns. [01:00:05.360 --> 01:00:10.760] Markets for Wednesday the 29th of March, 2017, are currently trading with gold $1,253.03 [01:00:10.760 --> 01:00:18.160] an ounce, silver $18.20 an ounce, Texas Crude $48.37 a barrel, and Bitcoin is sitting at [01:00:18.160 --> 01:00:21.160] $1,043 U.S. currency. [01:00:21.160 --> 01:00:27.040] Today in history, the year 1882, the Knights of Columbus, the world's largest Catholic [01:00:27.040 --> 01:00:32.080] fraternal service organization, are established, originally serving as a mutual benefit society [01:00:32.080 --> 01:00:35.160] to work in class in immigrant Catholics in the United States. [01:00:35.160 --> 01:00:39.320] It developed into a fraternal benefit society dedicated to providing charitable services, [01:00:39.320 --> 01:00:44.400] promoting Catholic education and Catholic public policy, and actively defending Catholicism [01:00:44.400 --> 01:00:49.520] in various nations. With roughly 2 million members consisting of Catholic men age 18 and [01:00:49.520 --> 01:00:54.720] older and nearly 15,000 councils, the Knights of Columbus consist of four different degrees, [01:00:54.720 --> 01:00:59.600] and the Order is a member of the International Alliance of Catholic Knights. The KFC founded [01:00:59.600 --> 01:01:03.400] today in history. [01:01:03.400 --> 01:01:07.680] In recent years, David Robert Daly-Eiden and Sandra Merritt were charged Tuesday yesterday [01:01:07.680 --> 01:01:12.160] by California Attorney General Xavier Becerra with 15 felony counts of violating the privacy [01:01:12.160 --> 01:01:16.240] of health care providers. If you recall, they are the two anti-abortion activists who pose [01:01:16.240 --> 01:01:20.400] as alternative identities in a fictitious bioresearch company to meet Planned Parenthood [01:01:20.400 --> 01:01:24.880] officials secretly recording their conversations, leading to the selling of fetal tissue in organs [01:01:24.880 --> 01:01:30.680] for profit scandal. The charge consists of 14 instances between October 2013 and July [01:01:30.680 --> 01:01:36.240] of 2015, where Daly-Eiden and Merritt filmed Planned Parenthood personnel without permission. [01:01:36.240 --> 01:01:40.600] They are facing a felony count for each person they discreetly recorded, along with an additional [01:01:40.600 --> 01:01:45.920] felony charge for criminal conspiracy to invade privacy. Mary Alice Carter, Interim Vice President [01:01:45.920 --> 01:01:49.480] of Communications for Planned Parenthood, Federation of America, said in a statement [01:01:49.480 --> 01:01:53.360] Tuesday that the nationwide investigation have made it clear that Planned Parenthood [01:01:53.360 --> 01:01:58.080] has done nothing wrong and that only people who broke the law are those behind the fraudulent [01:01:58.080 --> 01:02:00.920] tapes. [01:02:00.920 --> 01:02:05.880] Abidemi Jiboye, Assistant Professor at Case Western Reserve University, lead author of [01:02:05.880 --> 01:02:10.480] a research paper published yesterday Tuesday in the Lancet, stated that we have been able [01:02:10.480 --> 01:02:15.440] to make the electrical signals which represent thoughts and use that to control simulations [01:02:15.440 --> 01:02:20.480] of the arm and hand. This experimental new technology is being called neuroprostetics, [01:02:20.480 --> 01:02:24.680] expected to be available to the general public in five to ten years. The tech relies on creating [01:02:24.680 --> 01:02:29.040] an entirely new neurological central nervous connection between the brain and a paralyzed [01:02:29.040 --> 01:02:33.880] limb by implanting an electrode array which is used to detect and record and break signals [01:02:33.880 --> 01:02:38.240] from the motor cortex of the brain and then uses those signals to actuate movements from [01:02:38.240 --> 01:02:43.160] mechanical limbs. Robert Kirsch, a Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Case Western, [01:02:43.160 --> 01:02:48.360] told NPR essentially that we have an algorithm that sort of transforms neural signals into [01:02:48.360 --> 01:02:51.360] movement and that the code is in our brain. [01:02:51.360 --> 01:03:17.360] This was Rick Brody with your lowdown for March 29, 2017. [01:03:17.360 --> 01:03:40.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Leslie at Pennsylvania. [01:03:40.680 --> 01:03:50.840] And this is something I'm trying to get more people doing because even if they beat it, [01:03:50.840 --> 01:03:56.080] anytime you make a criminal accusation, they're going to be looking around to see who their [01:03:56.080 --> 01:04:03.600] political adversaries are. And nice left-play and Russian roulette with your, not only your [01:04:03.600 --> 01:04:13.680] career but your liberty, because there's a possibility you could actually get indicted. [01:04:13.680 --> 01:04:20.280] They know the system's corrupt because they're part of the corruption. What I claim is, is [01:04:20.280 --> 01:04:27.760] we have all of these remedies written into law, but they weren't written for you or me. [01:04:27.760 --> 01:04:35.040] Your system is filled with a bunch of low-down rotten criminals. And they know they're low-down [01:04:35.040 --> 01:04:39.960] rotten criminals. And they know they're not the only one that's a low-down rotten criminal [01:04:39.960 --> 01:04:45.320] and there's a whole bunch more of them out there. So they wrote into law these protections [01:04:45.320 --> 01:04:52.120] so they could protect themselves from each other. But you and I, we get to take advantage [01:04:52.120 --> 01:05:02.960] of that. That is their weakness. And I have had really good response, better response [01:05:02.960 --> 01:05:09.680] from criminal complaints than anything else. You talk about getting these guys attention. [01:05:09.680 --> 01:05:10.680] Go ahead, listening. [01:05:10.680 --> 01:05:16.840] That's good to know. I think that's what we'll do first is we'll file the criminal [01:05:16.840 --> 01:05:23.400] complaints and then see where this appeal goes. And as soon as, I thoroughly expect [01:05:23.400 --> 01:05:27.840] to win this appeal. I mean, there's no reason why not. I'll take it to the Supreme Court [01:05:27.840 --> 01:05:33.840] if I have to, because we have just an off case decision. And on top of that, we didn't [01:05:33.840 --> 01:05:39.960] wait for them to give us back our deed and mortgage. We paid the money that we do on [01:05:39.960 --> 01:05:46.960] the law already. They can't do like they did in Justin Halsey and say, oh, you didn't [01:05:46.960 --> 01:05:52.200] have the money. We did have the money. Okay. That's why we filed because we wanted to make [01:05:52.200 --> 01:06:00.160] a claim. My husband had a, what do you call it, a pension and it was going to be liquidated. [01:06:00.160 --> 01:06:05.800] And we tried to contact the bank to see how we can go through a title company to pay it [01:06:05.800 --> 01:06:10.360] because I heard of all this fraud and stuff going on. And all these people that paid off [01:06:10.360 --> 01:06:14.720] their mortgages and still got foreclosed. So I wanted to go through a title company and [01:06:14.720 --> 01:06:19.920] buy insurance that it was paid. And I tried to contact customer service and they would [01:06:19.920 --> 01:06:24.760] not put me through until I was three months behind. I said, you got to be out of my mind. [01:06:24.760 --> 01:06:32.280] I got almost 800 credit score and you want me to be three months behind? Hello? That's [01:06:32.280 --> 01:06:39.600] what I started looking at in rescission. And when we rescinded, we had the money pay off. [01:06:39.600 --> 01:06:49.000] So you may be a perfect test case. Yeah. Because you're in foreclosure not because you couldn't [01:06:49.000 --> 01:06:54.520] pay for it, not because you didn't want to pay for it, but because the bank engineered [01:06:54.520 --> 01:07:02.240] it so that you would, so that they could foreclose. Exactly. The only problem was, [01:07:02.240 --> 01:07:11.320] if they didn't realize who they were dealing with, you ha ha. And this may be a perfect [01:07:11.320 --> 01:07:21.320] one because if you start going after the courts criminally for protecting the banks, if you [01:07:21.320 --> 01:07:33.880] can tie the criminal actions of the judge to the litigants, then you may actually be [01:07:33.880 --> 01:07:41.640] able to, when you start filing against the litigants, in order to protect themselves [01:07:41.640 --> 01:07:50.040] from prosecution, you may actually get these guys to turn on each other. We've had that [01:07:50.040 --> 01:07:58.720] in Texas just recently in a family law case, the court reporter refused to produce the [01:07:58.720 --> 01:08:09.400] transcript or failed to show up for a hearing. And we filed a complaint against the court [01:08:09.400 --> 01:08:18.760] reporter. The court reporter came in and said that the court had told the prosecutor to [01:08:18.760 --> 01:08:23.520] direct the court reporter to be in court. The court reporter said, she never told me. [01:08:23.520 --> 01:08:28.040] And the prosecutor said, yes, she did. And they wound up trying to throw each other under [01:08:28.040 --> 01:08:35.120] the bus instead of all ganging up to protect themselves against the process. If you start [01:08:35.120 --> 01:08:43.280] going after the judge criminally, then go after the litigant. Good chance to sell through [01:08:43.280 --> 01:08:50.000] the litigant under the bus to protect themselves. Not only that, but in my case, I have this [01:08:50.000 --> 01:09:01.120] forgery that's documented. I mean, the... Oh, that's misprisoned. Yeah. That's perfect. [01:09:01.120 --> 01:09:07.320] I put that in the judicial conduct complaint. Heck with the judicial conduct, that's misprisoned [01:09:07.320 --> 01:09:14.440] of felony. I know. Eighteen, for those of you who don't know what rescission, and this [01:09:14.440 --> 01:09:25.080] prison is, 18 U.S. Code 4. I mean, it's not 18 U.S. Code 2936, something way down there [01:09:25.080 --> 01:09:32.640] at the back. Four and three has been repealed right up there at the front. This prison of [01:09:32.640 --> 01:09:36.840] felony, if you have knowledge of a felony being committed, you don't report that knowledge, [01:09:36.840 --> 01:09:45.120] you commit a crime. Most states don't have a state law that reflects that, but Texas [01:09:45.120 --> 01:09:54.560] happens to be one that does. 38.171. If you have knowledge of a felony that's been committed, [01:09:54.560 --> 01:09:57.840] you don't report it. It's a class A misdemeanor. So the judge... [01:09:57.840 --> 01:10:03.280] So I can do all of these things, right? It's not a pick and choose. I can do all of them, [01:10:03.280 --> 01:10:09.560] right? Yeah. Criminal is totally separate. Nothing to do with civil. [01:10:09.560 --> 01:10:15.200] When I signed the judicial conduct complaint, I brought up that he would be party to this [01:10:15.200 --> 01:10:23.160] felony of forgery because he was letting it into his court, and he was shown with evidence [01:10:23.160 --> 01:10:32.200] that it was a forgery. Wait a minute. Hold on. Hold on. You filed that with the court of [01:10:32.200 --> 01:10:40.800] appeals, right? Not yet. I filed that with the Supreme Court that [01:10:40.800 --> 01:10:48.600] booked over the judicial... Oh, I'm sorry. I'm juxtaposing federal and criminal and federal [01:10:48.600 --> 01:10:55.360] and state. This is a state issue. Right. Right. Okay. Okay. So you're still in the state. [01:10:55.360 --> 01:11:04.400] So whoever... Your judicial conduct commission, does it have judges on it? [01:11:04.400 --> 01:11:11.640] I think it has two judges. It has laymen, and it has lawyers on it. It has like a mixture [01:11:11.640 --> 01:11:15.480] of people, but there's an equal amount of each kind of person on there. [01:11:15.480 --> 01:11:26.800] Okay. If you made allegations of the judge committing an act that is essentially misprison [01:11:26.800 --> 01:11:36.840] of felony... Right. And you made that accusation in your complaint to state commission on judicial [01:11:36.840 --> 01:11:46.880] conduct. Right. They had a duty to report. Did they? [01:11:46.880 --> 01:11:52.920] Right. Charge the commission members personally, [01:11:52.920 --> 01:12:00.560] criminally. Mm-hmm. Talk about some politics. That's gonna... [01:12:00.560 --> 01:12:07.360] You'll get excited. This is what they threw out. The court failed to be faithful to the [01:12:07.360 --> 01:12:11.640] law with the court as accomplice after the fact. The alteration warrants for the arrest [01:12:11.640 --> 01:12:16.400] of plaintiff, city mortgage, and learned counsel for the following continuing the case without [01:12:16.400 --> 01:12:31.120] regard to illegal and criminal forgery under 18PA, you know, fuel and 2101 and 4101A3, [01:12:31.120 --> 01:12:37.560] and tampering with public documents, counterfeiting the promissory note, attempted theft of real [01:12:37.560 --> 01:12:46.400] property, theft of... in the theft of property in a failure to return the canceled note and [01:12:46.400 --> 01:12:54.800] mortgage as required by TELA, attempted theft of real property under 3921B, knowingly using [01:12:54.800 --> 01:13:00.400] the forge to sign the mortgage and counterfeit note to assign attempt unlawful foreclosure. [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:03.960] Yeah. City mortgage... Oh, this... [01:13:03.960 --> 01:13:13.320] Go for the commission. The highest level you can get to is the best place to start. If [01:13:13.320 --> 01:13:18.800] you go after the commission, these guys are scoundrels. They're gonna look for somebody [01:13:18.800 --> 01:13:26.280] to throw under the bus, and they're not gonna want it to be them. So if you go after the [01:13:26.280 --> 01:13:33.840] commission, they are gonna be really unhappy with this judge for sickening the grand bad [01:13:33.840 --> 01:13:42.520] grandma on them. Now, do this under 18242? No, this is state. [01:13:42.520 --> 01:13:47.880] Okay. Start it out in the state. Just do it under state [01:13:47.880 --> 01:13:54.760] statutes. Okay. You're gonna have... If you don't have [01:13:54.760 --> 01:14:04.320] misprison of felony, you've got obstruction. Obstruction of justice? Absolutely. This [01:14:04.320 --> 01:14:10.360] is gonna go right to obstruction of justice. And you accuse the commission of obstruction [01:14:10.360 --> 01:14:17.200] of justice. The commission... The members of the commission, while acting in their capacity [01:14:17.200 --> 01:14:23.840] as a public official, had it made known to them that a crime had been committed and failed [01:14:23.840 --> 01:14:31.840] to properly report that crime. That's pretty straightforward. They act like they don't [01:14:31.840 --> 01:14:39.760] have these duties, but they do. Right. Nobody brings them up. It's time we start bringing [01:14:39.760 --> 01:14:46.120] them up. Okay. I've been doing that for a long time, [01:14:46.120 --> 01:14:52.560] but I haven't gotten anybody actually prosecuted, but I've got policies changed. If you go to [01:14:52.560 --> 01:14:58.360] Texas and file a habeas corpus, if you filed a habeas corpus with a court of criminal appeals [01:14:58.360 --> 01:15:03.760] before this, they would ask for a motion for leave to file and categorically deny leave [01:15:03.760 --> 01:15:12.640] to file. After I got them put for a grand jury, you file a habeas corpus and they're [01:15:12.640 --> 01:15:19.120] not gonna ask for a motion to leave to file. That garbage is gone. And we've had a number [01:15:19.120 --> 01:15:26.840] of places where they very quickly change their policies to keep these bad things from happening. [01:15:26.840 --> 01:15:33.600] So before we go in, if you file against the members of the court, members of the commission [01:15:33.600 --> 01:15:40.920] of judicial conduct, how are they gonna shield themselves? How are they gonna protect them? [01:15:40.920 --> 01:15:45.760] What are they gonna do to protect themselves? And how can we be ready for them? [01:15:45.760 --> 01:15:52.360] That's what we hope, but if they don't, how are they gonna, what are they gonna do to [01:15:52.360 --> 01:15:58.200] protect themselves? I play chess. I want to be a step or two ahead. [01:15:58.200 --> 01:16:04.040] Okay. So until next week, let's think about what [01:16:04.040 --> 01:16:10.480] are they gonna do when we come after them? How are they gonna shield themselves? Because [01:16:10.480 --> 01:16:16.720] you can run the routine on the system. And this would be a great issue to take to the [01:16:16.720 --> 01:16:21.480] Attorney General of the State of Pennsylvania is criminal charges against the commission. [01:16:21.480 --> 01:16:27.640] Boy, he's gonna hate that. Oh, this guy, right to the Attorney General, [01:16:27.640 --> 01:16:33.720] this one go to the local one, right? Right. You could go straight to the AG and put him [01:16:33.720 --> 01:16:39.200] on this dime. Because what's this gonna tell him? They were noticed a crime and didn't [01:16:39.200 --> 01:16:43.320] do anything. And now I'm noticing you a crime. What are you gonna do, Bubba? You're gonna [01:16:43.320 --> 01:16:49.000] jump under the bus and we'll hang on. About to go to break. Randy Caldwell radio. I do [01:16:49.000 --> 01:16:53.320] need to move along. We got a couple more callers. We're running out of time. Hang on, Leslie. [01:16:53.320 --> 01:17:03.280] We'll be right back. I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost [01:17:03.280 --> 01:17:07.240] as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.240 --> 01:17:12.160] I need my truth fake. I'd be lost without logos. And I really want to help keep this [01:17:12.160 --> 01:17:15.960] network on the air. And I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite [01:17:15.960 --> 01:17:20.360] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How [01:17:20.360 --> 01:17:24.360] can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order [01:17:24.360 --> 01:17:29.200] anything from Amazon, you can help logos. But ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, [01:17:29.200 --> 01:17:35.120] first thing you do is clear your cookies. Now go to logosregulnetwork.com. Get on the [01:17:35.120 --> 01:17:40.440] Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now when you order anything from Amazon, you use that [01:17:40.440 --> 01:17:46.160] link and logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do I have to do anything different [01:17:46.160 --> 01:17:52.520] when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon pride? No. I mean, yes. Wow. Giving without doing [01:17:52.520 --> 01:17:58.560] anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are welcome. Happy [01:17:58.560 --> 01:18:05.360] holidays, logos. At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping [01:18:05.360 --> 01:18:08.600] destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable [01:18:08.600 --> 01:18:12.960] price. 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We're located at 7304 [01:18:48.560 --> 01:18:52.440] Burnett Road, sweet A, about a half mile south of Anderson. We're open Monday through [01:18:52.440 --> 01:18:59.440] Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:22.440 --> 01:19:32.440] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Leslie in Pennsylvania. [01:19:32.440 --> 01:19:37.640] I'll spend a lot of time with you, but you're always a good guest. You always got interesting [01:19:37.640 --> 01:19:47.320] stuff. So, let's talk about it. Think about this and see what happens over the week. Yeah, [01:19:47.320 --> 01:19:53.600] let's talk about it next week. If we start going after the, you file with Attorney General [01:19:53.600 --> 01:20:01.360] and Pennsylvania, he's going to see this as a political time bomb. He's going to want [01:20:01.360 --> 01:20:09.280] to keep it from blowing up in his face. Okay, thank you, Ms. Leslie. Don't get too hot down [01:20:09.280 --> 01:20:20.840] there and sunny humor. Okay, okay, now we're going to Truth Raider in Oregon. Hello, Truth. [01:20:20.840 --> 01:20:31.040] What do you have for us today? Okay, we've got Randy, smooth talking, Randy from Dallas. [01:20:31.040 --> 01:20:36.760] You're on with Truth. Raider, first call of the year from me. He probably hadn't heard [01:20:36.760 --> 01:20:41.320] from me for a while. I'm just calling to give you an update and let you know that I've become [01:20:41.320 --> 01:20:52.160] a bad motor scooter. Good news. What have you been up to? I've been up to studying that [01:20:52.160 --> 01:20:59.680] CalFounded seminar course date deal thing, put together on this flash drive, whether [01:20:59.680 --> 01:21:03.400] this cartridge thing that you've got to make copies of and you've got to be very careful [01:21:03.400 --> 01:21:10.880] when you use it, folks. When you've got the seminar material, Eddie's gig there. It's [01:21:10.880 --> 01:21:16.320] really tricky going through the computer functions there to get to the meat and potatoes that [01:21:16.320 --> 01:21:22.280] you're looking to, for your things that you need to do, the court filings, step-by-step [01:21:22.280 --> 01:21:27.160] instructions on what to say by pro-say when you're doing the tactics and how you're going [01:21:27.160 --> 01:21:33.480] to fight cases pro-per. I've been doing a little bit of that. I've been calling and [01:21:33.480 --> 01:21:37.880] talking to him a couple of times. He said, hey, 11 consecutive times. Well, I was giving [01:21:37.880 --> 01:21:42.640] him an update. Eight, five consecutive times, six consecutive times, seven, eight, nine, [01:21:42.640 --> 01:21:47.360] 10, and that's now been 11 consecutive times. They've had the opportunity to pull me over [01:21:47.360 --> 01:21:53.080] and they just make a right turn or a left turn and go about the business somewhere of [01:21:53.080 --> 01:22:02.600] code seven somewhere. You're probably on their list. Don't pull this guy over. He's a pain [01:22:02.600 --> 01:22:11.560] in the behind. Well, Eddie says, well, how can you prove that? Now, Eddie says, well, [01:22:11.560 --> 01:22:21.320] you know, that may be, but how do you know that for sure? That's what he says. My question [01:22:21.320 --> 01:22:28.120] would be, how would I find that out? How would I go into there and get some inside information [01:22:28.120 --> 01:22:34.600] on that to find out that that may be the case? I don't think you can find that out unless [01:22:34.600 --> 01:22:41.160] some police officer wanted to admit it to you because they're going to claim it's not [01:22:41.160 --> 01:22:49.800] even there. That's not something they're going to admit to. What do you think pops up on [01:22:49.800 --> 01:22:55.400] their monitor? Because when they did follow me, I had one S.O. follow me at the porch [01:22:55.400 --> 01:23:02.040] up here in my wonderful county of Clackamas and it was right on my bumper and suddenly [01:23:02.040 --> 01:23:05.040] he stops and makes a right and takes off and goes somewhere else. [01:23:05.040 --> 01:23:11.480] Yeah, he's almost certainly. I know. I got pulled over once. I was pulling a big Goose [01:23:11.480 --> 01:23:16.800] neck trailer and we seldom use it. So it sits in the yard all the time. I don't bother [01:23:16.800 --> 01:23:23.400] to plate it. So the plates are two years expired. I run in 70 and 60 and this sheriff's deputy [01:23:23.400 --> 01:23:30.480] pulled me over and he did a little song and dance and told me slow down, get those plates [01:23:30.480 --> 01:23:37.080] fixed and gave me a warning and I thought that was odd. The next morning I went across [01:23:37.080 --> 01:23:44.240] the street from my house to his little convenience store there and Bobby Jack Cruise is in there. [01:23:44.240 --> 01:23:48.960] He's always listening to the scanner. He said, what did you do that sheriff's deputy yesterday? [01:23:48.960 --> 01:23:52.760] Why do you do anything to him? Why? He said, well, I was listening to the scanner and he [01:23:52.760 --> 01:23:58.520] called your name in and the dispatcher said, don't you dare give that S.O.B. no ticket. [01:23:58.520 --> 01:24:02.640] You give him his license back and get him out of there. [01:24:02.640 --> 01:24:12.240] Why? What do I do? I'm a nice guy here. But that's what happens when you fight. They really [01:24:12.240 --> 01:24:18.080] don't like it and they're not going to tell you when you scare them. This is how you find [01:24:18.080 --> 01:24:26.400] out you scared them. The last thing they want you to know is what you're doing is effective. [01:24:26.400 --> 01:24:30.680] So they're not going to tell you just kind of how to figure it out by how they act. If [01:24:30.680 --> 01:24:37.600] they've stopped pulling you over, you have been definitely put on their list. Leave this [01:24:37.600 --> 01:24:44.560] scoundrel alone. I was deep enough into their list that I was pulled over on the side of [01:24:44.560 --> 01:24:52.080] the road one day in a light drizzly rain. This was in 02. I had just purchased this brand [01:24:52.080 --> 01:24:58.280] new avalanche and I had a 350 motor in the back of it and I had it strapped down in [01:24:58.280 --> 01:25:02.240] there, but it was kind of wiggling a little bit. And if I scratched that new car, mama [01:25:02.240 --> 01:25:07.800] would be all over me. So I stopped in the rain. I'm back there tightening it up. And [01:25:07.800 --> 01:25:14.200] this DPS state police pulled up next to me, rolled down his side window and leaned over [01:25:14.200 --> 01:25:19.080] and said, do you need some help? And I told him, no, I'm just tightening up this motor. [01:25:19.080 --> 01:25:23.680] I don't want to scratch mama's new car. And he said, oh, okay, I just wanted to see if [01:25:23.680 --> 01:25:29.520] he needed any help. And he left. He didn't ask me for my license. He didn't use that [01:25:29.520 --> 01:25:38.960] as an excuse to try to find a reason to write me a ticket. So I called the local DPS officer, [01:25:38.960 --> 01:25:46.040] office and got a hold of Sergeant Rankin, who hates me. And I told him about this officer [01:25:46.040 --> 01:25:51.760] who did that and I wanted to find out who he was. And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, what's [01:25:51.760 --> 01:25:57.280] your problem? No problem. I just wanted to let him know how much I appreciate the fact [01:25:57.280 --> 01:26:03.480] that he actually stopped to render assistance and did not use that as an opportunity to [01:26:03.480 --> 01:26:11.360] try to find a reason to arrest me. Two years later, I saw this guy in the Justice of the [01:26:11.360 --> 01:26:18.640] Peace office. There was about 10 other DPS guys there. And I didn't recognize him. Two [01:26:18.640 --> 01:26:25.320] years later, he said, well, Mr. Kelton, I looked up and I said, ooh, he said, you don't [01:26:25.320 --> 01:26:32.280] remember me, do you? Did you arrest me? And several of them there knew me and they jumped [01:26:32.280 --> 01:26:37.480] up. I'll arrest you. I'm arrested. And he said, no, I said, I'm the one that stopped [01:26:37.480 --> 01:26:46.640] to see if you needed help in the rain. Not only did that go a very long way for this [01:26:46.640 --> 01:26:57.960] officer, because the biggest SOB in Wise County called down there to speak good about him. [01:26:57.960 --> 01:27:09.920] That said, he knew how to handle the SOB. And it just demonstrated that, it made him [01:27:09.920 --> 01:27:18.080] look good. So two years later, he recognizes me. That must have went a very long way. So [01:27:18.080 --> 01:27:24.080] the more we give him a hard time, the more we should pull these kind of tricks. I called [01:27:24.080 --> 01:27:29.440] a Sergeant Rankin one time who hates me. And I said, Sergeant Rankin, you know that officer [01:27:29.440 --> 01:27:35.120] Helton stopped me out there on 287 today. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I know. You know he wrote [01:27:35.120 --> 01:27:43.280] me two tickets. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I know. You know, I will usual obnoxious and demanding [01:27:43.280 --> 01:27:50.440] self. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I know. And I just wanted to tell you, I appreciate officer Helton. [01:27:50.440 --> 01:27:59.720] What? I was really nasty to him. And there was nothing I could do to get him to get angry, [01:27:59.720 --> 01:28:07.000] to get frustrated. He was there to do his job and he did his job no matter what I did. [01:28:07.000 --> 01:28:14.600] If I need somebody with a pistol, I want you to send officer Helton. I would trust him. [01:28:14.600 --> 01:28:21.280] And I found out later from another DPS officer that Rankin, the Sergeant, was fuming he was [01:28:21.280 --> 01:28:32.880] so angry. Now he had to report that. He had to put that mark on Helton's chart. Helton [01:28:32.880 --> 01:28:37.760] pulled me over two or three times after that and he never wrote me another ticket. It was [01:28:37.760 --> 01:28:47.320] always pleasant. These things go a long way and we owe it back. We want good police officers. [01:28:47.320 --> 01:28:51.600] We need to support good police officers. And if we presume they're bad guys, they're going [01:28:51.600 --> 01:28:58.480] to be bad guys. I know a lot of police officers. I don't know a one who became a police officer [01:28:58.480 --> 01:29:04.280] so he could be a jackbooted thug. They all want to be good guys. They get trapped in [01:29:04.280 --> 01:29:10.120] a system they didn't create. And yes, I'll sting them in a heartbeat. More than 90%. [01:29:10.120 --> 01:29:16.280] But when I owe it back to them, I'll definitely give it to them. Well, I was about to protect [01:29:16.280 --> 01:29:21.280] them from serving. And that's what we want them to do. Now, I talk to Eddie about that. [01:29:21.280 --> 01:29:28.280] He says, no, it's not that they're afraid of you. It's because they're thinking fiscally. [01:29:28.280 --> 01:29:30.280] Is it worth it? [01:29:30.280 --> 01:29:42.200] I agree with him 100%. This is about making money. Criminal prosecution is about dollar [01:29:42.200 --> 01:29:49.760] flow. Absolutely. Anybody who thinks differently doesn't understand the system. I went through [01:29:49.760 --> 01:30:00.200] the records of Wise County, Texas. Small County. I went through six months of criminal charges. [01:30:00.200 --> 01:30:09.200] Do violent video games heighten aggression? A new study measuring brain activity says [01:30:09.200 --> 01:30:14.200] do. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you about new research into violent video [01:30:14.200 --> 01:30:17.200] games and behavior in a moment. [01:30:17.200 --> 01:30:22.200] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back [01:30:22.200 --> 01:30:27.200] again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.200 --> 01:30:33.200] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:30:33.200 --> 01:30:39.200] it's worth hanging onto. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine [01:30:39.200 --> 01:30:45.200] alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.200 --> 01:30:52.200] Violent video games. Some say they're harmless fun while others insist they make gamers aggressive. [01:30:52.200 --> 01:30:57.200] Now a new study finds that violent games do alter brain activity, not after years of play, [01:30:57.200 --> 01:31:04.200] but after one week. Researchers split male volunteers into two groups and performed MRI scans on them. [01:31:04.200 --> 01:31:08.200] One group played a shooting game for 10 hours over a week. The other didn't. [01:31:08.200 --> 01:31:14.200] Follow-up exams show that those who played the game had reduced activity in key areas of the brain, [01:31:14.200 --> 01:31:20.200] the control emotions, and aggressive behavior. Maybe kids should spend a little less time with [01:31:20.200 --> 01:31:23.200] villains and more time with heroes, like maybe their parents. [01:31:23.200 --> 01:31:30.200] And Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.200 --> 01:31:36.200] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.200 --> 01:31:41.200] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded [01:31:41.200 --> 01:31:46.200] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.200 --> 01:31:49.200] And thousands of my fellow force respond to the dying. [01:31:49.200 --> 01:31:53.200] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.200 --> 01:31:58.200] I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans. And we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.200 --> 01:32:01.200] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.200 --> 01:32:06.200] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.200 --> 01:32:11.200] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:11.200 --> 01:32:15.200] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:15.200 --> 01:32:21.200] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:21.200 --> 01:32:27.200] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:27.200 --> 01:32:32.200] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:32.200 --> 01:32:39.200] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:39.200 --> 01:32:46.200] And mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:46.200 --> 01:32:51.200] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:51.200 --> 01:32:57.200] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:57.200 --> 01:32:59.200] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.200 --> 01:33:02.200] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:02.200 --> 01:33:09.200] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadionetwork.com [01:33:09.200 --> 01:33:12.200] LogosRadionetwork.com [01:33:30.200 --> 01:33:37.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelsen, beautiful radio, and we're talking to Truth Raider in Oregon. [01:33:37.200 --> 01:33:42.200] Truth Raider, what else did you have for us? I keep hijacking your conversation. [01:33:42.200 --> 01:33:45.200] No worries, no worries. I find it kind of interesting. [01:33:45.200 --> 01:33:50.200] Eddie called me a Raider, and you kind of just refuted me just as Truth. [01:33:50.200 --> 01:33:56.200] Okay, the reason you come up on my computer as Truth Raider. [01:33:56.200 --> 01:33:57.200] Right. [01:33:57.200 --> 01:34:00.200] So that's how we have you in our database. [01:34:00.200 --> 01:34:09.200] Well, to each of those, each one individual will use the nickname or hyphenated or short [01:34:09.200 --> 01:34:10.200] or whatever. [01:34:10.200 --> 01:34:15.200] I'll use Raider if you prefer. [01:34:15.200 --> 01:34:20.200] Either way, I'm all about getting into the face of the people with the facts, although [01:34:20.200 --> 01:34:27.200] I'm more of a TMI type of informer or messenger type person, so I really get in deep to things [01:34:27.200 --> 01:34:30.200] to the point where people don't like me. [01:34:30.200 --> 01:34:36.200] Well, those of us who are legal researchers, we tend to do that. [01:34:36.200 --> 01:34:39.200] We tend to give too much information. [01:34:39.200 --> 01:34:47.200] I struggle with what do I need to say and what do I not need to say? [01:34:47.200 --> 01:34:53.200] And a lot of times when I'm interviewing somebody, I tend to stop them because I know [01:34:53.200 --> 01:34:59.200] that there's something that's critical to making these pieces fit together as missing, [01:34:59.200 --> 01:35:05.200] and I stop them to put that in there and they feel like I'm being pedantic and manipulative. [01:35:05.200 --> 01:35:11.200] Sometimes it frustrates me because I don't know when not to tell something, so I tend [01:35:11.200 --> 01:35:13.200] to give too much information. [01:35:13.200 --> 01:35:14.200] Right. [01:35:14.200 --> 01:35:17.200] Okay, I got a couple topics on hand here. [01:35:17.200 --> 01:35:19.200] I'll try to run through them as quickly as possible here. [01:35:19.200 --> 01:35:22.200] I'm in the time here, so let's get on it. [01:35:22.200 --> 01:35:29.200] I'm about ready to file my suit, but I'm thinking what I need to do is present a good cover [01:35:29.200 --> 01:35:34.200] letter and then the good information on the inside of it in detail, and it needs to be [01:35:34.200 --> 01:35:35.200] typed. [01:35:35.200 --> 01:35:40.200] Would you agree that it's necessary that I should have it typed? [01:35:40.200 --> 01:35:48.200] It's not necessary, but if you have the ability to, it's much, much better. [01:35:48.200 --> 01:35:49.200] Okay. [01:35:49.200 --> 01:35:52.200] You're talking about a cover letter. [01:35:52.200 --> 01:35:54.200] Yeah, cover letter and then of course the material. [01:35:54.200 --> 01:35:55.200] How should I structure it? [01:35:55.200 --> 01:35:59.200] I want to make it as formal as possible such as if they're sending me something, I want [01:35:59.200 --> 01:36:07.200] to return it to them and typed in formal and formal style and presentation back to them [01:36:07.200 --> 01:36:10.200] similar as they would file it or they would send something to me. [01:36:10.200 --> 01:36:17.200] Yeah, the only time I would do something in hand is if it's informal and personal. [01:36:17.200 --> 01:36:18.200] Okay. [01:36:18.200 --> 01:36:20.200] Otherwise, I'd always want it typed. [01:36:20.200 --> 01:36:22.200] That way, it's more clear. [01:36:22.200 --> 01:36:26.200] You make sure there's no problems reading and understanding it. [01:36:26.200 --> 01:36:28.200] Right, right, right. [01:36:28.200 --> 01:36:30.200] I'm going to start with state. [01:36:30.200 --> 01:36:31.200] Go out to the state. [01:36:31.200 --> 01:36:38.200] Right, but if that doesn't work, do they 12B6K, so then we'll have to go to Title 42 and [01:36:38.200 --> 01:36:41.200] go to that room if I need to. [01:36:41.200 --> 01:36:54.200] If you make your argument carefully, is this amenable to a declaratory judgment request? [01:36:54.200 --> 01:37:05.200] In that you want to go in and ask the court to rule on the rights of the parties. [01:37:05.200 --> 01:37:07.200] Right. [01:37:07.200 --> 01:37:19.200] The reason I always like declaratory judgments first is if there is a diversity or if it's [01:37:19.200 --> 01:37:28.200] a federal issue, then first thing the other side is going to do is 12B6. [01:37:28.200 --> 01:37:29.200] Yeah. [01:37:29.200 --> 01:37:36.200] If you do a declaratory judgment, it's not amenable to 12B6 because it doesn't ask for [01:37:36.200 --> 01:37:37.200] recovery. [01:37:37.200 --> 01:37:41.200] That's why I'm going after this federal judge. [01:37:41.200 --> 01:37:48.200] I filed a quiet hodl action, which was totally a declaratory judgment. [01:37:48.200 --> 01:37:55.200] They moved to the federal court and the federal judge, they filed a 12B6 and the federal judge [01:37:55.200 --> 01:38:00.200] dismissed with prejudice for failure to state a claim. [01:38:00.200 --> 01:38:01.200] Well, he was right. [01:38:01.200 --> 01:38:03.200] I failed to state a claim. [01:38:03.200 --> 01:38:08.200] It was a declaratory adjustment, so there are no claims. [01:38:08.200 --> 01:38:11.200] So I tortured him criminally. [01:38:11.200 --> 01:38:18.200] The trick of the declaratory judgment suit first is it gets you past the 12B6 and gets [01:38:18.200 --> 01:38:20.200] you discovery. [01:38:20.200 --> 01:38:28.200] If you then file a complaint for asking for recovery, now you have the information you [01:38:28.200 --> 01:38:32.200] need to support the claim. [01:38:32.200 --> 01:38:36.200] They mainly want to avoid discovery, so they're going to 12B6. [01:38:36.200 --> 01:38:38.200] That's where you get around to. [01:38:38.200 --> 01:38:40.200] All right. [01:38:40.200 --> 01:38:44.200] What they did, they denied my tort, so I've already been through all the steps to deny [01:38:44.200 --> 01:38:45.200] the tort. [01:38:45.200 --> 01:38:47.200] I'm just looking for recovery. [01:38:47.200 --> 01:38:55.200] It's a simple recovery, but what I'm struggling with is how do I quantify the punitive part [01:38:55.200 --> 01:38:57.200] of my claim? [01:38:57.200 --> 01:39:04.200] You need to find a similar case that has been one, a case on similar issues that's been [01:39:04.200 --> 01:39:10.200] one, and see what juries have awarded. [01:39:10.200 --> 01:39:13.200] That will always support your claim. [01:39:13.200 --> 01:39:20.200] Criminal people use Travisant out of Florida, which they granted him like $22,000 a minute. [01:39:20.200 --> 01:39:22.200] They didn't grant him $22,000 a minute. [01:39:22.200 --> 01:39:30.200] He was held for 20 minutes, and the amount they granted him amounted to $22,000 a minute. [01:39:30.200 --> 01:39:36.200] They could use that and say, this is what a jury did on false imprisonment. [01:39:36.200 --> 01:39:42.200] You need something similar to your case where a jury has granted recovery, and then you [01:39:42.200 --> 01:39:44.200] could use that. [01:39:44.200 --> 01:39:46.200] That is a base point. [01:39:46.200 --> 01:39:52.200] You can say, yeah, they granted this, but this issue was much less serious than mine, [01:39:52.200 --> 01:39:55.200] so you should double this or triple this. [01:39:55.200 --> 01:39:57.200] But you have a specific number to start with. [01:39:57.200 --> 01:40:00.200] You didn't just grab something out of the air. [01:40:00.200 --> 01:40:01.200] Right. [01:40:01.200 --> 01:40:02.200] Right. [01:40:02.200 --> 01:40:07.200] Now, with these specific circumstances, was this 20 minutes of custody in a jail cell, [01:40:07.200 --> 01:40:14.200] or was this just on scene, being detained out in the open, or was it someone in investigation? [01:40:14.200 --> 01:40:21.200] As far as I know, custody is not defined by jail cell. [01:40:21.200 --> 01:40:22.200] Okay. [01:40:22.200 --> 01:40:27.200] 20 minutes, that's not enough time to even process him into the jail. [01:40:27.200 --> 01:40:29.200] No, I wouldn't think so. [01:40:29.200 --> 01:40:32.200] Okay, so that's upon the traffic stop and the custodial arrest from that point. [01:40:32.200 --> 01:40:35.200] That's what that's based on. [01:40:35.200 --> 01:40:38.200] From the point that you can't walk away. [01:40:38.200 --> 01:40:39.200] Okay. [01:40:39.200 --> 01:40:46.200] Yeah, I was about 45 to 50 minutes, the maximum for this, yeah, this ruse that they pulled. [01:40:46.200 --> 01:40:53.200] Okay, didn't that, Travisat would be a good sample, a good source for a number. [01:40:53.200 --> 01:40:54.200] Okay, gotcha. [01:40:54.200 --> 01:40:56.200] All right, I'll look into doing that. [01:40:56.200 --> 01:40:58.200] Okay, time's pushing on here. [01:40:58.200 --> 01:41:04.200] I want to switch gears a little bit on the subject here, but it's concerning the rule of law. [01:41:04.200 --> 01:41:08.200] I got kicked out of my place a couple of years ago, for no reason. [01:41:08.200 --> 01:41:15.200] And we got a new governor and new governor made some rulings that the apartment places just can't put people out for no reason. [01:41:15.200 --> 01:41:19.200] Just terminate their lease at the end of their term and not give them any reason why they're renewing. [01:41:19.200 --> 01:41:22.200] And they must extend it from 60 days to 90 days. [01:41:22.200 --> 01:41:28.200] Because what was going on a couple of years ago here in the state is that they were getting subsidy housing, [01:41:28.200 --> 01:41:33.200] subsidy federal housing, vouchers, Section 8, that kind of a thing going on. [01:41:33.200 --> 01:41:40.200] And when they moved people in, they were able to charge a lot more money for the rent, so they just put the old tenants that were about ready to expire. [01:41:40.200 --> 01:41:44.200] At least they just put them out and moved new people in and jacked around all the way up. [01:41:44.200 --> 01:41:47.200] So there was a scandal going on concerning that here. [01:41:47.200 --> 01:41:53.200] Now those people that I live next to caused all kinds of problems. [01:41:53.200 --> 01:42:05.200] I mean, between them and myself, it was quiet. It was kind of like a pre-hostile type of a thing where there was nothing going on. [01:42:05.200 --> 01:42:12.200] It was dormant and it was quiet, but it was a mind game how they treated me. [01:42:12.200 --> 01:42:15.200] They didn't want me to live next door to them and then they got into fights and all kinds of stuff. [01:42:15.200 --> 01:42:20.200] And they had some violations and they got into it with another tenant that was living there. [01:42:20.200 --> 01:42:23.200] And they had a few write-ups and stuff. I had nothing. [01:42:23.200 --> 01:42:32.200] And I was told when they gave me the termination of my lease that those people as well were giving one as well. [01:42:32.200 --> 01:42:35.200] They were going to be giving the termination of their lease as well. [01:42:35.200 --> 01:42:44.200] I checked into it. Two years later, those people are still living there in that apartment place. Two years later. [01:42:44.200 --> 01:42:58.200] Okay. The issue. I don't think that if there was legislation passed since then, it won't be effective because there are no expo factor laws. [01:42:58.200 --> 01:43:00.200] Right. [01:43:00.200 --> 01:43:04.200] And them telling you something doesn't create a contract. [01:43:04.200 --> 01:43:11.200] So while it may be wrongful and unjust, I wouldn't see that you would have a claim. [01:43:11.200 --> 01:43:14.200] No. No. It's been too much time anyway. [01:43:14.200 --> 01:43:21.200] But what do you think now, since we have a new CEO, and you were discussing this a little bit earlier about the processes of now, [01:43:21.200 --> 01:43:26.200] I guess a lot of the other officials there that have to put in their resignation, etc., [01:43:26.200 --> 01:43:30.200] or make the adjustments to the new commander. [01:43:30.200 --> 01:43:34.200] What do you think about what's going on with the aggressive? [01:43:34.200 --> 01:43:45.200] It seems to be, at least it's on the internal part of it. I've been looking at a few videos about it, but the immigration and deportation issues that are going on. [01:43:45.200 --> 01:43:48.200] What is your take on those concerning the rule of law? [01:43:48.200 --> 01:43:55.200] Well, I'm sure that immigration is emboldened by this new president. [01:43:55.200 --> 01:44:05.200] But, uh... [01:44:26.200 --> 01:44:30.200] They are different varieties of the same species. [01:44:30.200 --> 01:44:33.200] M-U-S-A.org wants the world to know these basic facts. [01:44:33.200 --> 01:44:39.200] And to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best kept health secret you need to know about. [01:44:39.200 --> 01:44:48.200] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO, and is loaded with nutrients. [01:44:48.200 --> 01:45:01.200] Call 888-910-4367 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you only at hemp-usa.org. [01:45:01.200 --> 01:45:04.200] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.200 --> 01:45:08.200] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:08.200 --> 01:45:16.200] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:16.200 --> 01:45:20.200] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:20.200 --> 01:45:24.200] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.200 --> 01:45:29.200] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.200 --> 01:45:35.200] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.200 --> 01:45:44.200] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.200 --> 01:45:53.200] You will receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.200 --> 01:45:57.200] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:57.200 --> 01:46:23.200] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:23.200 --> 01:46:34.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelsen, Rule Our Radio, and we're talking to Rayer in Oregon. [01:46:34.200 --> 01:46:46.200] My take is, I don't like the idea of us throwing the Mexicans out because I hire day laborers from time to time. [01:46:46.200 --> 01:46:54.200] I used to be in construction and build donut shops, and one of the Korean guys we built for him, [01:46:54.200 --> 01:47:00.200] one of them wanted to know where he could get day laborers in Wichita Falls, and I told him where the mission was, where they all collected. [01:47:00.200 --> 01:47:04.200] But I told him, don't hire white guys, don't hire black guys. [01:47:04.200 --> 01:47:12.200] If a white guy is down there at day laborers, he's there because he's a drug addict, he stinks, and he thinks he knows everything. [01:47:12.200 --> 01:47:16.200] Black guys are down there because they simply will not work. [01:47:16.200 --> 01:47:18.200] Hire Mexicans. [01:47:18.200 --> 01:47:23.200] He saw me two years later, reminded me about that, and he said, you were right. [01:47:23.200 --> 01:47:27.200] I get really good help. [01:47:27.200 --> 01:47:33.200] These are guys who know what they're doing, they're willing to work, they earn their pay. [01:47:33.200 --> 01:47:38.200] And I hate to see them all gone because there's nobody left to work. [01:47:38.200 --> 01:47:43.200] However, the law is what it is. [01:47:43.200 --> 01:47:48.200] If the law is wrong or incomplete, change it. [01:47:48.200 --> 01:48:03.200] But I have a problem when we decide which laws we will enforce and which ones we don't, because that makes the laws arbitrary and capricious. [01:48:03.200 --> 01:48:12.200] Enforce it if it creates an injustice, correct it, change the law, but follow it. [01:48:12.200 --> 01:48:15.200] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:48:15.200 --> 01:48:17.200] I agree. [01:48:17.200 --> 01:48:20.200] I have something to add to that. [01:48:20.200 --> 01:48:28.200] But this reminded me during the commercial break there about the jurisdictionary, Michael mirrors and other types of things there. [01:48:28.200 --> 01:48:35.200] Yeah, I just want to get a little bit of a footnote here that I'll get onto the diatribe with that concerning that. [01:48:35.200 --> 01:48:42.200] One year it's been since I kept getting all these calls and I'll get all these letters, etc. [01:48:42.200 --> 01:48:47.200] All I had to do is when this collector called is mention the name Michael mirrors. [01:48:47.200 --> 01:48:58.200] It spelled a name and I give them the website and they took that information down and I haven't gotten one letter or one phone call in a year since that time. [01:48:58.200 --> 01:49:01.200] That's good to hear. [01:49:01.200 --> 01:49:04.200] Yeah, just want to pass that on. [01:49:04.200 --> 01:49:06.200] It has been a year since I've heard anything from them. [01:49:06.200 --> 01:49:08.200] So that's working on that part too. [01:49:08.200 --> 01:49:09.200] We'll see what happens. [01:49:09.200 --> 01:49:11.200] Time will tell, but we'll see what happens there. [01:49:11.200 --> 01:49:14.200] My diatribe about this really quickly, I agree with you. [01:49:14.200 --> 01:49:16.200] I agree with you on that. [01:49:16.200 --> 01:49:38.200] My only beef is, is if the immigrants that do come here, as long as they have respect and they want to assimilate and they treat us, the citizens here, be kind and respectful towards us because this is my issue. [01:49:38.200 --> 01:49:46.200] These folks particularly, unfortunately, were immigrants and I just don't know, I treated them. [01:49:46.200 --> 01:49:56.200] I try to be friendly to them as much as I possibly could because they did not like me living in the apartment next to them because they had family members that they wanted to get that apartment for. [01:49:56.200 --> 01:50:02.200] They had a network of people there and family members and they wanted to have that unit for their family members. [01:50:02.200 --> 01:50:05.200] They didn't like it that I got in there and got that apartment. [01:50:05.200 --> 01:50:07.200] I think that's what it was all about. [01:50:07.200 --> 01:50:10.200] But yes, I agree. [01:50:10.200 --> 01:50:13.200] If they're respectful and they assimilate. [01:50:13.200 --> 01:50:15.200] Truth to you, Raider, you still there? [01:50:15.200 --> 01:50:17.200] Yes. [01:50:17.200 --> 01:50:20.200] I think we lost Raider. [01:50:20.200 --> 01:50:21.200] Hello. [01:50:21.200 --> 01:50:23.200] Yep, he has dropped it. [01:50:23.200 --> 01:50:30.200] Okay, we're going to go to Jack in Texas. Hello Jack. [01:50:30.200 --> 01:50:31.200] Hello Randy. [01:50:31.200 --> 01:50:34.200] Jack, yeah, there you go. We got eight minutes left. [01:50:34.200 --> 01:50:35.200] Can you hear me? [01:50:35.200 --> 01:50:36.200] Yeah, I can hear you. [01:50:36.200 --> 01:50:43.200] Okay, well let me remind you of where I was because I called yesterday. [01:50:43.200 --> 01:50:45.200] My sister got arrested. [01:50:45.200 --> 01:51:04.200] She did not get the examination trial and the lawyer was offering some kind of a special probation program and I found out the name of that program. [01:51:04.200 --> 01:51:05.200] Wonderful. [01:51:05.200 --> 01:51:13.200] He called it a pretrial diversion. Have you ever heard of that? [01:51:13.200 --> 01:51:17.200] No. [01:51:17.200 --> 01:51:19.200] That is new. [01:51:19.200 --> 01:51:24.200] He said, actually he did say it's new. [01:51:24.200 --> 01:51:27.200] He said it's a private probation, whatever that means. [01:51:27.200 --> 01:51:31.200] I didn't get to question him on everything I wanted to. [01:51:31.200 --> 01:51:52.200] But he said these prosecutors have developed this program for first time offenders and you have to get accepted to the program if there is some kind of application. [01:51:52.200 --> 01:52:10.200] And if you're accepted then they offer you like a probation for a year. You have to take some kind of classes depending on what's your offense is. [01:52:10.200 --> 01:52:13.200] Okay, I have it here. I looked it up. [01:52:13.200 --> 01:52:22.200] I found a treatment of it from Denton, Texas. Pretrial diversion program dismissals and expunctions for first time offenders. [01:52:22.200 --> 01:52:31.200] Statistics now show that for the most part, accused individuals being arrested is a first and last encounter with criminal justice system. [01:52:31.200 --> 01:52:40.200] Any criminal charge can be devastating, but individuals arrested for the first time face a variety of penalties and collateral consequences if prosecuted. [01:52:40.200 --> 01:52:55.200] To avoid damaging and far reaching effects of criminal record, lawmakers passed Texas government code 76.011, which provides for pretrial intervention programs. [01:52:55.200 --> 01:52:57.200] That's what I was looking for. [01:52:57.200 --> 01:53:07.200] In Denton County, if you're a first time offender charged with a nonviolent crime criminal offense, you may be eligible for a pretrial diversion dismissal. [01:53:07.200 --> 01:53:20.200] Attorney Nathan Miller, okay, blah, blah, blah, okay. Code 76, Texas government code 76011. [01:53:20.200 --> 01:53:24.200] Okay, go ahead. [01:53:24.200 --> 01:53:38.200] Okay, well, this is what he's recommending for my sister, but I am truly suspicious and I don't really trust these people. [01:53:38.200 --> 01:53:54.200] Plus, even if they follow through, now he said, I asked him, I asked him, I said, what if one party or the other breaks the contract? He said, it's a contract that you sign. [01:53:54.200 --> 01:54:05.200] And he said, well, the prosecutor has never broken this contract. He's done it several times. He's a client. [01:54:05.200 --> 01:54:17.200] My worry is what happens if something goes wrong with, you know, on my sister's side, we have another incident because her husband is one of these abusive types of guy. [01:54:17.200 --> 01:54:26.200] And he's been abusing her verbally and for years and physically as well. [01:54:26.200 --> 01:54:35.200] And so what happened in this last incident, she was trying to make sure she was protecting herself in case he attacked her. [01:54:35.200 --> 01:54:46.200] So if something goes wrong, she could be arrested again and that would negate the program and she would just be in trouble again. [01:54:46.200 --> 01:54:48.200] Okay. [01:54:48.200 --> 01:54:50.200] What do you think? [01:54:50.200 --> 01:55:06.200] It's a little too vague. From what you're saying, it's sounding like a family violence issue and it's a family violence issue and you have an abusive husband. [01:55:06.200 --> 01:55:11.200] This gets real iffy because it certainly could happen again. [01:55:11.200 --> 01:55:30.200] If, you know, if he does something to her and she defends herself and he gets a tiny little scratch, she can be charged with family violence and almost certainly that would negate this program and she would be right back. [01:55:30.200 --> 01:55:42.200] I have 676011 of the department may operate programs for the supervision and rehabilitation of persons in pre-trial intervention programs. [01:55:42.200 --> 01:55:50.200] The supervision of persons released on bail, Chapter 11 Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 17 Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:55:50.200 --> 01:55:59.200] What? 17? That has to do with the clerks and 4404 Code of Criminal Procedure or any other law. [01:55:59.200 --> 01:56:09.200] The provision of a person subject to or the verification of compliance with a court order issued under Article 1744. [01:56:09.200 --> 01:56:16.200] Oh, this is the pain in the neck. I'll have to study this to figure out what the heck they're talking to about. [01:56:16.200 --> 01:56:21.200] I'll go through and hyperlink all of this and then go back through and try to sort it out. [01:56:21.200 --> 01:56:31.200] If it is statutory, I don't know if it's statutory to be required or just statutory authorized, statutory to be authorized. [01:56:31.200 --> 01:56:41.200] So we're running out of time, so I will look at this. If you'll call it next week, I'll have this analyzed and I'll be able to tell you a lot more about it. [01:56:41.200 --> 01:56:52.200] Okay, I'll be great. I have one more thing. So I was trying to find that habeas corpus that we were talking about. [01:56:52.200 --> 01:56:59.200] It's broken. Somehow I was moving stuff around and I screwed up all the links again. [01:56:59.200 --> 01:57:09.200] I was building this questionnaire so I didn't get time to fix them. If you will send me an email and ask for it, I will send a copy to you. [01:57:09.200 --> 01:57:12.200] Okay, I've already done it. [01:57:12.200 --> 01:57:22.200] Okay, it's on jurisimprudence.website, but it crashed and I opened it up and reset the link and the link didn't take. [01:57:22.200 --> 01:57:30.200] And I hadn't figured out why yet, but I had so many other things going. I hadn't had time to really work out that issue. [01:57:30.200 --> 01:57:40.200] I'll try to get to it, but if you get me an email, I will send you that. Anything else you need that would be helpful. [01:57:40.200 --> 01:57:46.200] I take it your sister's issue is not traffic. I've got a bunch of traffic stuff I've just put together. [01:57:46.200 --> 01:57:49.200] No, no, it is a domestic buying. [01:57:49.200 --> 01:57:55.200] Okay, do you have a motion in lemony, Brady motion? [01:57:55.200 --> 01:57:57.200] No. [01:57:57.200 --> 01:58:08.200] Okay, send me an email and in the email, give me a little more information about it that you don't want to give out on the air and I understand that. [01:58:08.200 --> 01:58:22.200] And I'll see what I've got in my reserves and send you what some documents that may be helpful, but keeping this off her record is probably a really, really good idea. [01:58:22.200 --> 01:58:29.200] The problem is, it's going to give her husband incredible leverage over her. [01:58:29.200 --> 01:58:30.200] Okay. [01:58:30.200 --> 01:58:33.200] So I'll have to call in tomorrow, next week. [01:58:33.200 --> 01:58:39.200] Okay, call back in next week. This is Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. Thank you all for listening. [01:58:39.200 --> 01:58:50.200] We'll be back next week at eight o'clock central on Thursday and Friday. Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:50.200 --> 01:58:57.200] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament recovery version. 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