[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The Fall Indies Flash is brought to you by The Low Star of Lowdown, providing your jelly [00:05.840 --> 00:13.560] bulletins for the commodities market, Today in History, News Updates and the inside scoop [00:13.560 --> 00:21.360] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.360 --> 00:28.240] Markets for Wednesday, 17 May 2017 are currently trading with gold at $1,260.87 an ounce, silver [00:28.240 --> 00:34.640] at $16.88 an ounce, Texas Crude $48.66 a barrel, and Bitcoin is sitting a little over [00:34.640 --> 00:43.240] $1,800 at $1,808 U.S. currency. [00:43.240 --> 00:48.320] Today in History, the year 1809, Napoleon I of France, orders the annexation of the [00:48.320 --> 00:55.520] Papal States to the French Empire, Today in History. [00:55.520 --> 01:00.160] In recent news, 27-year-old DNC staffer Seth Rich, who was mysteriously shot to death while [01:00.160 --> 01:05.120] walking home from a bar in the early hours in July 2016, caused a plethora of conspiracy [01:05.120 --> 01:07.280] theories when this incident occurred. [01:07.280 --> 01:11.320] The murder was first reported as a robbery as per the testimony of Seth's father, but [01:11.320 --> 01:15.140] when no items were noticeably taken, the story then morphed into the death being a result [01:15.140 --> 01:18.760] of a confrontation with a yet to be identified assailant. [01:18.760 --> 01:22.800] It was suspected by many researchers and talk show radio host that Seth Rich must have had [01:22.800 --> 01:28.000] something to do with the DNC email leaks of last year to add fuel to the fire of suspicion. [01:28.000 --> 01:32.640] Less than a month after Rich's death, WikiLeaks offered $20,000 for information on the murder, [01:32.640 --> 01:37.640] along with later in September a GOP lobbyist offering up to $100,000 for information on [01:37.640 --> 01:38.640] the murder. [01:38.640 --> 01:42.800] Well, as of this week, Seth's case seems to have hit the chatterwaves again when on Monday, [01:42.800 --> 01:47.920] Washington D.C.'s Fox 5 reported that Rod Wheeler, a former D.C. homicide detective [01:47.920 --> 01:51.920] who was a private investigator on the case, believed Rich had communicated with WikiLeaks [01:51.920 --> 01:53.200] before his death. [01:53.200 --> 01:58.480] Rod Wheeler did state that he was misquoted when interviewed by CNN on Tuesday, while [01:58.480 --> 02:02.800] Fox News on the same day put an anonymous federal investigator who said that the FBI [02:02.800 --> 02:07.560] investigation found that Rich had been in contact with Gavin McFadden, whom Fox identified [02:07.560 --> 02:14.880] as the director of WikiLeaks. [02:14.880 --> 02:18.800] Private Chelsea Manning, formerly Bradley Manning, tweeted a photo of her feet in tennis shoes [02:18.800 --> 02:23.280] with the caption First Steps of Freedom shortly after she was released Wednesday today, having [02:23.280 --> 02:28.720] served a fraction of her 35-year sentence on 20 counts, including six Espionage Act violations [02:28.720 --> 02:32.120] for giving classified Pentagon materials to WikiLeaks. [02:32.120 --> 02:36.320] Former President Barack Obama granted her clemency in January before he left office. [02:36.320 --> 02:40.760] The Army stated that Manning will be on special unpaid off-duty status with the option to [02:40.760 --> 02:42.760] relocate and live where she wants. [02:42.760 --> 02:48.760] A documentary entitled X, Y, Chelsea is being created about Private Chelsea Manning, the [02:48.760 --> 02:52.760] transgendered soldier convicted of giving classified government materials to WikiLeaks. [02:52.760 --> 03:20.760] This was Ruth Rody with your lowdown for May 17, 2017. [03:20.760 --> 03:34.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with the radio, and we're talking to John in Texas, [03:34.080 --> 03:39.440] and I kind of ran off the cliff there at the end, John. [03:39.440 --> 03:44.320] That's okay. [03:44.320 --> 03:52.920] What I was basing my argument on the information is that when complainants made Article 205, [03:52.920 --> 03:57.760] that states and counties having one or more criminal district courts, which Dallas has [03:57.760 --> 04:01.640] 11, and information must be filed in each misdemeanor phase. [04:01.640 --> 04:10.720] Yes, but the problem with that is, is it doesn't affect you. [04:10.720 --> 04:17.040] It's a requirement, but it doesn't affect your due course of law. [04:17.040 --> 04:22.440] Now it says the information must be filed, and a complaint is required to be given to [04:22.440 --> 04:23.440] some magistrate. [04:23.440 --> 04:24.440] I just think that's 206. [04:24.440 --> 04:37.240] And 204, doesn't it require the prosecution to draw up the complaint after they're given [04:37.240 --> 04:38.240] an affidavit? [04:38.240 --> 04:39.240] No, no, no. [04:39.240 --> 04:42.680] The prosecutor doesn't draw up the complaint. [04:42.680 --> 04:48.320] The complaint is submitted to the prosecutor by a complainant. [04:48.320 --> 04:54.800] And because the complainant is not intended to be learned in counsel, they don't expect [04:54.800 --> 04:59.960] the complaint to necessarily be in proper form. [04:59.960 --> 05:07.480] So the prosecutor is required to take the complaint and reduce it to an information. [05:07.480 --> 05:13.040] Information looks just like a complaint, except it's legally in proper form. [05:13.040 --> 05:14.040] That's the difference. [05:14.040 --> 05:17.880] And information is not a charging instrument. [05:17.880 --> 05:27.240] It has to, they require one, and that's just to make sure that the charge is properly made. [05:27.240 --> 05:36.800] But it is the complaint that carries the weight, that invokes the duty of the magistrate. [05:36.800 --> 05:41.560] And that's why it's required to be sent to a magistrate and not to the court. [05:41.560 --> 05:47.880] The information goes to the court, but the court doesn't have jurisdiction yet. [05:47.880 --> 05:52.080] The complaint's to go to the magistrate. [05:52.080 --> 05:56.200] The only three things a magistrate can do. [05:56.200 --> 06:01.360] He can marry people, and that's so he can make a few extra bucks, hold an examining [06:01.360 --> 06:05.360] trial and say, that's it. [06:05.360 --> 06:07.880] The complaint goes to him. [06:07.880 --> 06:15.280] And then he holds the hearing, and under 16.17, he issues an order. [06:15.280 --> 06:20.160] Whether he released a person under his liberty, bound him to the court, remanded him to the [06:20.160 --> 06:23.640] jail, and released him on bail. [06:23.640 --> 06:31.320] And then he's to seal up all the documents had in the hearing under 17.30, cause his [06:31.320 --> 06:36.000] name to be written across the seal of the envelope and forward it to the clerk of the [06:36.000 --> 06:38.160] court of jurisdiction. [06:38.160 --> 06:45.560] The determination of probable cause under 16.17 is what gives the trial court subject [06:45.560 --> 06:48.360] matter jurisdiction to hear the case. [06:48.360 --> 06:56.280] 16.17 says, if there is no order within 48 hours, a finding of no probable cause is entered [06:56.280 --> 06:57.280] into court. [06:57.280 --> 06:59.280] That's pretty definitive. [06:59.280 --> 07:03.520] That's where your claims are. [07:03.520 --> 07:11.480] I asked for probable cause and an affidavit of probable cause, and he has complaints in [07:11.480 --> 07:15.320] here and everything's in the complaint. [07:15.320 --> 07:20.280] The complaint can be the affidavit as well, if it has enough facts in it. [07:20.280 --> 07:22.080] Okay, stop. [07:22.080 --> 07:23.080] Back up. [07:23.080 --> 07:24.080] You started in the middle. [07:24.080 --> 07:25.080] Okay. [07:25.080 --> 07:29.320] You started with the process. [07:29.320 --> 07:36.960] How did you, when you got the ticket, were you pulled over while motivating down a highway? [07:36.960 --> 07:39.160] Yes. [07:39.160 --> 07:43.520] The officer turned his lights on you and you pulled on him. [07:43.520 --> 07:45.640] When he turned his lights on you, you slowed down. [07:45.640 --> 07:48.120] He didn't pass you. [07:48.120 --> 07:50.600] So you pulled over and stopped. [07:50.600 --> 07:51.600] Is that correct? [07:51.600 --> 07:58.160] It was exiting an HOV lane and they jumped in front of my car and they were standing [07:58.160 --> 08:00.600] in the roadway and pulled me over. [08:00.600 --> 08:01.600] Oh, okay. [08:01.600 --> 08:04.000] That's just as good. [08:04.000 --> 08:09.480] And they stopped you under the authority of the Texas Transportation Code. [08:09.480 --> 08:10.480] The Transportation Code? [08:10.480 --> 08:11.480] Correct. [08:11.480 --> 08:12.480] That is correct. [08:12.480 --> 08:18.440] What authority did that officer have to enforce the Texas Transportation Code? [08:18.440 --> 08:24.240] None at that point because he didn't have probable cause. [08:24.240 --> 08:25.240] No. [08:25.240 --> 08:34.120] Even if he did have probable cause, you understand that the Texas Transportation Code is a code [08:34.120 --> 08:36.640] of limited enforcement. [08:36.640 --> 08:38.920] Okay. [08:38.920 --> 08:45.400] If I observe you commit a violation of the Texas State Penal Code, I can go down and file [08:45.400 --> 08:47.800] a complaint against you. [08:47.800 --> 08:55.800] If I observe you violating a provision of a professional conduct code, I can't file [08:55.800 --> 08:58.280] a criminal complaint against you. [08:58.280 --> 09:04.720] I can file a grievance with the oversight board, like a bar group, the state bar, state [09:04.720 --> 09:12.240] commissioner of judicial conduct, the American Medical Association, all these professional [09:12.240 --> 09:14.000] oversight committees. [09:14.000 --> 09:19.360] Well, essentially the Department of Public Safety is an oversight committee for commercial [09:19.360 --> 09:20.360] drivers. [09:20.360 --> 09:21.360] Right. [09:21.360 --> 09:26.440] And they can enforce the Texas Transportation Code. [09:26.440 --> 09:33.560] And certain other officers can enforce the Texas Transportation Code. [09:33.560 --> 09:37.920] But the ones who can do that are very limited. [09:37.920 --> 09:44.920] Let me bring up my subject matter jurisdiction challenge, if you haven't heard this before, [09:44.920 --> 09:47.920] you're going to think it's insane. [09:47.920 --> 09:51.840] I agree it is insane. [09:51.840 --> 09:53.680] Okay. [09:53.680 --> 10:01.200] Texas Administrative Code 4.13 authorizes the sheriff of the county to appoint five persons [10:01.200 --> 10:04.480] to be certified as police officers as follows. [10:04.480 --> 10:05.480] Okay. [10:05.480 --> 10:07.920] Police officers. [10:07.920 --> 10:16.480] In Texas, we distinguish between a peace officer and a police officer. [10:16.480 --> 10:23.720] A peace officer can be a police officer, but there are two different things. [10:23.720 --> 10:30.520] All of the Department of Public Safety officers are certified peace officers. [10:30.520 --> 10:34.120] But they are not employed as peace officers. [10:34.120 --> 10:45.120] They are employed as police officers, traffic cops, glorified media maids. [10:45.120 --> 10:53.200] They are charged with enforcing the Texas Transportation Code that only applies to commercial [10:53.200 --> 10:54.200] drivers. [10:54.200 --> 11:02.840] Now, the Texas Administrative Code authorizes the appointment of local law enforcement peace [11:02.840 --> 11:09.080] officers to act in the capacity of peace officers, and this authorization comes under [11:09.080 --> 11:16.800] Texas Administrative Code 4.13 authority to enforce an officer the department may [11:16.800 --> 11:23.680] stop and the department means the Department of Public Safety or enter or detain on a highway [11:23.680 --> 11:29.760] or at a port of entry a motor vehicle that is subject to the Texas Transportation Code [11:29.760 --> 11:32.280] Chapter 644. [11:32.280 --> 11:36.760] A non-commissioned employee, they can hire people to do inspections. [11:36.760 --> 11:43.880] An officer is a dedicated, they'll go down to item four. [11:43.880 --> 11:50.400] Municipal police officers from any of the Texas cities meeting the training and certification [11:50.400 --> 11:56.280] requirements contained in subsection B of this section and certified by the department [11:56.280 --> 12:04.000] may stop and enter or detain on a highway or a port of entry within the municipality [12:04.000 --> 12:10.480] a motor vehicle subject to the Texas Transportation Code 644. [12:10.480 --> 12:12.640] I'm sorry, I missed the part in section three. [12:12.640 --> 12:16.520] An officer, the department or non-commissioned employee, the department that is trained and [12:16.520 --> 12:20.800] certified to enforce federal safety regulations may prohibit. [12:20.800 --> 12:27.160] The further operation of a vehicle, blah, blah, blah, Chapter 552, Federal Safety Regulation, [12:27.160 --> 12:32.480] Texas Transportation Code 644, that's not the one I'm looking for, let's go down to [12:32.480 --> 12:33.480] Texas. [12:33.480 --> 12:39.480] The general provisions of Texas Transportation Code 644.101 stipulates who can be certified [12:39.480 --> 12:44.320] to enforce the Texas Transportation Code as follows. [12:44.320 --> 12:48.240] And these are the municipal police officers that are referred to. [12:48.240 --> 12:53.680] The department shall establish procedures including training for the certification of [12:53.680 --> 13:01.680] municipal police officers, sheriffs and deputies, deputy sheriffs to enforce this chapter. [13:01.680 --> 13:10.520] A police officer of any of the following municipalities is eligible to apply for certification under [13:10.520 --> 13:12.640] this section. [13:12.640 --> 13:20.840] A municipality with a population of 50,000 or more, a municipality with a population [13:20.840 --> 13:28.040] of 25,000 or more, any part of which is located in accounting with a population of 500,000 [13:28.040 --> 13:30.040] or more. [13:30.040 --> 13:35.360] A community with a population of less than 25,000, any part of which is located in accounting [13:35.360 --> 13:42.200] with a population of 3.3 million, Houston's the only county that big. [13:42.200 --> 13:48.480] And that contains or is adjacent to an international port. [13:48.480 --> 13:52.840] Only Houston falls, or Harris County falls within that. [13:52.840 --> 13:59.120] A municipality with a population of at least 34,000 that is located in a county that borders [13:59.120 --> 14:02.120] two or more states. [14:02.120 --> 14:07.880] There are no municipalities in the state of Texas that meets that requirement. [14:07.880 --> 14:12.720] A municipality any part of which is located in a county bordering the Mexican states. [14:12.720 --> 14:20.160] A municipality with a population of less than 5,000 that is located adjacent to a bay connected [14:20.160 --> 14:26.280] to the Gulf of Mexico and in a county adjacent to a county with a population greater than [14:26.280 --> 14:29.400] 3.3 million. [14:29.400 --> 14:35.320] A municipality that is located within 25 miles of an international port and in a county [14:35.320 --> 14:40.360] that does not contain a highway that is part of the national system of interstate and defense [14:40.360 --> 14:48.520] highways and is adjacent to a county with a population of greater than 3.3 million. [14:48.520 --> 14:50.520] Back down to Harris County. [14:50.520 --> 14:52.520] Is this insane? [14:52.520 --> 15:01.560] A municipality with a population of less than 8,500 that is the county seat and contains [15:01.560 --> 15:06.520] a highway that is part of the national system of interstate and defense highways. [15:06.520 --> 15:10.840] Well Wise County that I live in almost made it. [15:10.840 --> 15:19.000] We have a municipality in excess of 8,500 people and it is the county seat but we don't [15:19.000 --> 15:24.680] have an international interstate defense highway. [15:24.680 --> 15:31.440] We got our 35 that runs a little bit to the east but don't quite make it here. [15:31.440 --> 15:37.720] A sheriff or a deputy sheriff of a county bordering the 90 Mexican states or of a county [15:37.720 --> 15:41.880] with a population of 1 million or more is eligible to apply for certification under [15:41.880 --> 15:42.880] this section. [15:42.880 --> 15:49.120] A deputy sheriff or any peace officer that does not attend continuing education courses [15:49.120 --> 15:56.840] or on the enforcement of traffic and highway laws and of the use of radar equipment prescribed [15:56.840 --> 16:02.800] by sub chapter F, chapter 1701 occupations code shall not enforce traffic and highway [16:02.800 --> 16:05.000] laws. [16:05.000 --> 16:10.640] The department by rule shall establish reasonable fees for sufficient sufficient to recover [16:10.640 --> 16:16.640] for municipality or a county in the cost of certifying its peace officers. [16:16.640 --> 16:22.840] There are, we have a Scott which is coming up next put in the information request to [16:22.840 --> 16:31.760] the department of public safety for all non DPS police officers is to enforce the transportation [16:31.760 --> 16:32.760] code. [16:32.760 --> 16:43.200] They sent him a spreadsheet, he's got 27 on it, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, [16:43.200 --> 16:51.040] yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, no, yes, yes, none, none, none, none, none, [16:51.040 --> 17:01.640] none, Horrieatten, one, one, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, go, you can't [17:01.640 --> 17:05.760] even eat these cookies, these are fiber cookies. [17:05.760 --> 17:08.760] Cookies? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [17:08.760 --> 17:11.760] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [17:11.760 --> 17:13.760] No, can't you eat? [17:13.760 --> 17:16.760] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:16.760 --> 17:17.760] These have apples. [17:17.760 --> 17:19.760] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:19.760 --> 17:21.760] Hmm, yummy apple. [17:21.760 --> 17:25.760] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:25.760 --> 17:32.760] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:32.760 --> 17:33.760] Bye-bye, yucky cookies. [17:33.760 --> 17:41.760] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, bookmark the link, [17:41.760 --> 17:46.760] and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [17:46.760 --> 17:48.760] No cookies? For me? [17:48.760 --> 17:52.760] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon, [17:52.760 --> 17:56.760] I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:56.760 --> 17:57.760] These are cookies. [17:57.760 --> 17:59.760] These are classified. [17:59.760 --> 18:04.760] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:04.760 --> 18:08.760] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [18:08.760 --> 18:14.760] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [18:14.760 --> 18:20.760] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [18:20.760 --> 18:24.760] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [18:24.760 --> 18:26.760] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:26.760 --> 18:28.760] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [18:28.760 --> 18:33.760] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:33.760 --> 18:38.760] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.760 --> 18:40.760] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.760 --> 18:46.760] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner [18:46.760 --> 18:49.760] or email Michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [18:49.760 --> 18:57.760] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.760 --> 19:01.760] Learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:01.760 --> 19:05.760] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [19:05.760 --> 19:10.760] LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:10.760 --> 19:14.760] Well, don't let nothing get to you. [19:14.760 --> 19:17.760] Only the father can do it for you. [19:17.760 --> 19:20.760] Don't let bad mind people hurt you. [19:20.760 --> 19:27.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, ruleoflawradio, and we're talking to John in Texas. [19:27.760 --> 19:29.760] Okay, John. [19:29.760 --> 19:33.760] Now, that's just the half of it. [19:33.760 --> 19:40.760] Okay, I'm setting up and I've been a long time building this electronic lawyer. [19:40.760 --> 19:47.760] And I'm implementing it with traffic for two reasons. [19:47.760 --> 19:52.760] If we're going to change the system, we need people to do it. [19:52.760 --> 20:02.760] And when I talk to people on the show who have been charged with crimes that'll cost them their liberty, [20:02.760 --> 20:11.760] it's real hard for me to say, hey, you need to go in there and kick their butts every way from Sunday. [20:11.760 --> 20:13.760] Because it's not fair. [20:13.760 --> 20:16.760] Their liberty is at risk. [20:16.760 --> 20:22.760] And my only concern is protecting their liberty, or at least that's my primary first concern. [20:22.760 --> 20:29.760] And any considerations I may have have to stand aside to somebody else's liberty. [20:29.760 --> 20:32.760] Traffic tickets, liberty is not an issue. [20:32.760 --> 20:37.760] And when somebody calls in the show and they're charged with something that can put them in jail, [20:37.760 --> 20:40.760] they're generally pretty terrified. [20:40.760 --> 20:44.760] But when somebody calls in with a traffic ticket, they are P.O. [20:44.760 --> 20:47.760] They're not terrified. They're not worried about going to jail. [20:47.760 --> 20:55.760] They're worried about those no good scoundrels reaching into my pocket and taking the money I was going to buy me a new flat screen TV with. [20:55.760 --> 20:58.760] And they are not happy. [20:58.760 --> 21:08.760] Even the guy that doesn't have our interest that just wants to go about his business [21:08.760 --> 21:11.760] and they're interfering with him doing that. [21:11.760 --> 21:16.760] When he gets that traffic ticket, he is annoyed and he's P.O. [21:16.760 --> 21:18.760] And he's ready to do something. [21:18.760 --> 21:19.760] Okay. [21:19.760 --> 21:31.760] So let's give him something to do that will wind their clocks and get this just with traffic. [21:31.760 --> 21:51.760] If we can get people all over the states by the hundreds pounding these guys with an information request that requests the certification and training records of this officer who pulled me over. [21:51.760 --> 22:03.760] I want you to prove to me that he has authority under the provisions of the Texas Transportation Code and the Texas State Administrative Code to enforce the Texas Transportation Code. [22:03.760 --> 22:14.760] If he doesn't have it, when he turned those lights on me and forced me to pull over, he arrested my freedom of movement and seized me in my person. [22:14.760 --> 22:23.760] And did so while acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity which he did not have. [22:23.760 --> 22:30.760] And that's an act of official oppression, 39.03 Texas Penal Code and it's class A misdemeanor in state of Texas. [22:30.760 --> 22:35.760] But he was also impersonating a public official. [22:35.760 --> 22:41.760] He was impersonating a police officer, which he was not. [22:41.760 --> 22:48.760] Personating a public official is a state jail felony under 37.11 Texas Penal Code. [22:48.760 --> 22:55.760] However, at the time, he was prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [22:55.760 --> 22:58.760] 2202 B2A. [22:58.760 --> 23:05.760] If a person commits simple assault and the arrest is construed as assault. [23:05.760 --> 23:14.760] And he does so while prominently displaying a deadly weapon, a second degree felony in the state of Texas. [23:14.760 --> 23:28.760] Unless he is a public official acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity, in which case it is a felony of the first degree. [23:28.760 --> 23:35.760] Have you filed a counterclaim accusing the police officer of first degree felony aggravated assault? [23:35.760 --> 23:42.760] I put in six criminal complaints to that magistrate, to which he did nothing. [23:42.760 --> 23:47.760] Oh, good. Have you filed criminal charges against the magistrate? [23:47.760 --> 23:49.760] Not yet. [23:49.760 --> 23:52.760] Oh, you need to... [23:52.760 --> 23:56.760] I'm putting together a set of these documents. [23:56.760 --> 24:06.760] The counter complaint has the criminal affidavit attached to it and a brief on the duty of the magistrate. [24:06.760 --> 24:16.760] So when you go in and when the magistrate, while acting in his official capacity, hasn't made no deal, that a crime has been committed. [24:16.760 --> 24:27.760] Once that magistrate fails to perform his duty under Article 2.10 and 2.11, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, then he has failed to perform a duty he's required to perform. [24:27.760 --> 24:39.760] And in the process, shielded the officer from prosecution in violation of 3805 penal code, which happened to be a felony in the state of Texas. [24:39.760 --> 24:49.760] 9-1-1, you haven't lived until you've called 9-1-1 on the judge. [24:49.760 --> 24:57.760] I have done that several times. It works better than you would expect. [24:57.760 --> 25:09.760] Republic of Texas several years ago came to me, had this kid in jail in Conroe. I got the president, I got the attorney general for the Republic of Texas. [25:09.760 --> 25:17.760] And they got this kid in jail. They've had him doing this patriot mythology garbage, and he's been in jail for a couple months. [25:17.760 --> 25:23.760] He's lost his apartment. He's lost his truck. He's lost all his carpentry tools. He's lost everything. [25:23.760 --> 25:31.760] And from Austin, from Waco to Corsicana, I ragged on these guys all the way down there. [25:31.760 --> 25:39.760] We get down there, I drop a habeas corpus on them. They stopped a murder trial to hear my habeas. [25:39.760 --> 25:53.760] I went in the court, the judge finished examining a witness, carry out, and called me up and said, Mr. Kelton, are you an attorney? [25:53.760 --> 25:58.760] Oh, no, judge. I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. Thank you very much. [25:58.760 --> 26:04.760] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, since you're not an attorney, I'm not going to accept this habeas. [26:04.760 --> 26:12.760] I turned to the bailiff. Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. Arrest that judge. [26:12.760 --> 26:18.760] He said, well, I can't arrest a judge. I said, sure can. Just go up there and throw the cuffs on him and drag him off to jail. [26:18.760 --> 26:28.760] Don't have far to go. It's right down there in the basement. All this time, the judge, now, they had said this was the meanest judge in the district. [26:28.760 --> 26:40.760] He sat there and kept his mouth shut. And I tell the bailiff, I said, well, are you going to perform your duty as prescribed by Article 2.13 Code of Criminal Procedure? [26:40.760 --> 26:44.760] Are you going to shield this judge from prosecution in violation of the 3805 Penal Code? [26:44.760 --> 26:53.760] I want you to arrest the judge. I said, well, life is filled with little decisions we all get to make, so you're a turner. [26:53.760 --> 27:08.760] He refused to arrest the judge. And when he absolutely refused, then the judge said, Mr. Bailiff, if Mr. Kelton doesn't leave my courtroom, you two arrest him. [27:08.760 --> 27:19.760] I turned to the judge and I said, with all due respect, your honor, that's cheating. He picked up the gavel, maybe, but I got the gavel. [27:19.760 --> 27:30.760] I said, good point. I turned to the bailiff. You come with me. I stormed out. That was so much fun. You wouldn't believe it. [27:30.760 --> 27:43.760] I went to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals with criminal charges against that judge and the habeas. I wound up putting all of them in front of the grand jury, all 15 of them. [27:43.760 --> 27:56.760] That's a different story. That one goes to politics. But you're in a position to wind their clocks. [27:56.760 --> 28:07.760] Go to trafficticket.website. At the beta site, we just got it up. [28:07.760 --> 28:17.760] There's a link on there to put in your ticket information. Put that in. I will send you some docs. [28:17.760 --> 28:18.760] Okay. [28:18.760 --> 28:27.760] We'll use yours as part of the test bed. We'll run these documents through. Eventually, once we get this up and go and we're going to charge $50 for those. [28:27.760 --> 28:37.760] For now, we're just testing. We won't charge anything. Lucy, it's trafficticket.website. [28:37.760 --> 28:48.760] So far, it's already gone to trial. That first trial is over with. I put in my motion for a new trial. [28:48.760 --> 28:49.760] Okay. [28:49.760 --> 28:52.760] We don't care. [28:52.760 --> 28:53.760] Okay. [28:53.760 --> 28:58.760] This goes to subject matter jurisdiction. [28:58.760 --> 29:08.760] And I'm going to include the special appearance. Now, technically, the special appearance had to be filed first. [29:08.760 --> 29:14.760] But these guys are not the sharpest knives in the drawer. [29:14.760 --> 29:24.760] If they were, they wouldn't be down here in this chump municipal court grubbing for dollars. So we'll go ahead and throw that one in there just for the heck of it. [29:24.760 --> 29:31.760] Yeah, but first thing, what we'll do is there are two information requests. [29:31.760 --> 29:36.760] The information requests go to the second issue. [29:36.760 --> 29:48.760] Even if the above requirements were met according to the Texas Administrative Code, Chapter 37, Chapter 1, Chapter 4 at 414. [29:48.760 --> 29:51.760] So it's the Texas Administrative Code 4.14. [29:51.760 --> 30:02.760] The municipality would have to have entered into a memorandum of understanding with the Texas Department of Public Safety. [30:02.760 --> 30:08.760] Microchips, scanners, and cookies. Oh my. Don't look now, but here comes the e-receipt. [30:08.760 --> 30:14.760] I'm Dr. Canford Albrecht and I'll be right back to explain the dangers of paperless receipts in just a moment. [30:14.760 --> 30:20.760] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.760 --> 30:25.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.760 --> 30:30.760] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.760 --> 30:33.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.760 --> 30:40.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.760 --> 30:43.760] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.760 --> 30:47.760] First, retailers started asking for your zip code. [30:47.760 --> 30:55.760] Next, they wanted your phone number and now they want your e-mail address to send you receipts electronically rather than handing you a slip of paper. [30:55.760 --> 31:02.760] Companies don't mention what this does to your privacy. Instead, they claim it's more convenient and, hey, it may even save a few trees. [31:02.760 --> 31:08.760] But e-receipts link you to your purchases in a giant database so they can build consumer profiles. [31:08.760 --> 31:13.760] Taylor adds to individual shoppers and sell your information to third parties. [31:13.760 --> 31:23.760] Having all your purchases in an online database sounds like an open invitation to hacking and abuse, not to mention an onslaught from unscrupulous marketers. [31:23.760 --> 31:28.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:53.760 --> 32:07.760] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [32:07.760 --> 32:12.760] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.760 --> 32:19.760] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.760 --> 32:24.760] The traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:24.760 --> 32:34.760] Former Sheriff's Deputy, Kay Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:34.760 --> 32:40.760] You can get your own copy of this valuable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.760 --> 32:47.760] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:47.760 --> 32:50.760] There are hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.760 --> 32:54.760] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.760 --> 33:21.760] By ordering your copy today and together, we can have free society we all want and deserve. [33:21.760 --> 33:28.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, Rule of Law Radio. We're talking to John in Texas. [33:28.760 --> 33:36.760] Okay, 414, Memorandum of Understanding. [33:36.760 --> 33:58.760] There's more. We go down to 415 and there are some reports that the city would be required to submit to the Department of Public Safety. [33:58.760 --> 34:09.760] Okay, here's where it gets interesting. You have these municipalities enforcing the Transportation Code without authority. [34:09.760 --> 34:32.760] Well, when they're granted authority, under this Memorandum of Understanding, they're reimbursed their cost of enforcing the Transportation Code up to 110% so they can make 10% over. [34:32.760 --> 34:40.760] And they're required to submit reports of their cost to the Department and of the amounts they collect. [34:40.760 --> 35:06.760] Well, I've got a white paper by the Texas Homeland Security and they're suggesting a change to 644-101 that addresses who can enforce because they're getting complaints from truck drivers that they're being stopped [35:06.760 --> 35:33.760] and multiple times in one day for inspections. And it appears that these municipalities are over enforcing and that they only received a half of a billion in funds from these nine cities. [35:33.760 --> 35:48.760] Now, I look at the Office of Court Administration and they report just over a billion dollars in funds collected. [35:48.760 --> 35:57.760] Now, wait a minute. Something's not right here. These numbers aren't fitting together. [35:57.760 --> 36:12.760] So it appears as though the cities that are collecting illegally keep 60% and give 40% to the general fund. [36:12.760 --> 36:21.760] But I can't find where they're required to do that, where the law is. I'm sure it's there. I just haven't located it yet. [36:21.760 --> 36:33.760] So how do these cities that aren't allowed to enforce, how do they collect all this money? They should only be able to keep 10% over their cost. [36:33.760 --> 36:44.760] And why is the Department of Public Safety reporting half a billion and the Office of Court Administration reporting a billion? [36:44.760 --> 36:55.760] There are not problems here. But this points at those problems. And I'm going to suggest that there are a lot more citations written than are reported. [36:55.760 --> 36:57.760] Right. [36:57.760 --> 37:14.760] We start asking these really pointed questions. We're going to get these guys up and up and down. So this is the first implementation of an electronic lawyer. [37:14.760 --> 37:23.760] The first thing we do is we give you these sets of documents that really put these guys on the spot. [37:23.760 --> 37:30.760] What's going to happen with your information request? They don't even understand what I'm asking for. [37:30.760 --> 37:43.760] And the only responses that we've gotten back so far are, we have no records responsive to your request as we do not enforce the direct transportation code. [37:43.760 --> 37:48.760] Those two collateral estoppel. [37:48.760 --> 38:04.760] So my suggestion, I know you've got stuff going on, but I have a hard time getting there when we haven't done the first steps first. [38:04.760 --> 38:06.760] Okay. [38:06.760 --> 38:18.760] So these other things we can do, but these guys can't get you to court. They can't do anything until they get past this front part. [38:18.760 --> 38:23.760] Subject matter jurisdiction challenge can be filed at any time, no matter how we vote in history. [38:23.760 --> 38:29.760] So now we go back to subject matter jurisdiction challenge and abate everything else. [38:29.760 --> 38:42.760] So if you have a decision for an abatement or let the, go ahead and file your motion for new trial, which the judge will immediately deny, [38:42.760 --> 38:53.760] then you give notice of appeal and then you file a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction in the court of appeals. [38:53.760 --> 39:10.760] And it'll appeal to the county court. You file a challenge subject matter jurisdiction in the county court saying that the county court does not have jurisdiction because the trial court did not have jurisdiction. [39:10.760 --> 39:14.760] Believe it, I'm stepping away from myself here. [39:14.760 --> 39:18.760] This is a classy misdemeanor. [39:18.760 --> 39:22.760] So your appeal is trial to no vote. [39:22.760 --> 39:25.760] The court is the court that you're in a JP court. [39:25.760 --> 39:34.760] It is a JP court. And then the judge recused himself and transferred it to another JP. [39:34.760 --> 39:40.760] That's okay. He didn't have any jurisdiction here. [39:40.760 --> 39:45.760] But when it goes to the county court, it'll be trial to no vote. [39:45.760 --> 39:46.760] Okay. [39:46.760 --> 39:47.760] What does that mean? [39:47.760 --> 39:54.760] So that means now the courts will lie to you about what it means. [39:54.760 --> 40:07.760] What it means is, is that it's trial to no vote as if the first trial didn't happen, but only for the purpose of perfecting appeal. [40:07.760 --> 40:12.760] Meaning that you don't have to appeal on writ of error. [40:12.760 --> 40:18.760] If it were a court of record, then you would have to appeal based on writ of error. [40:18.760 --> 40:23.760] But since it's not, since it's a JP, they're not a court of record. [40:23.760 --> 40:28.760] So it's trial to no vote. If the first trial didn't happen, so you don't have to claim any errors. [40:28.760 --> 40:39.760] You can file the subject matter jurisdiction challenge first here and claim that and file the criminal charges with the county court as well. [40:39.760 --> 40:41.760] The counter claim. [40:41.760 --> 40:47.760] So all of these documents can be filed in the second court as if it was the first court. [40:47.760 --> 40:49.760] Okay. [40:49.760 --> 40:55.760] This will get them hopping and jumping. They can't answer these. [40:55.760 --> 41:05.760] And you have a judge who actually is a lawyer and he's going to be looking at code and not at some patriot mythology. [41:05.760 --> 41:11.760] If not arguing that I have a right to travel, we're not even speaking to the right to travel. [41:11.760 --> 41:13.760] Right. [41:13.760 --> 41:19.760] We're only talking about authority to enforce. [41:19.760 --> 41:26.760] These guys can get over that. Then we might talk about right to travel. [41:26.760 --> 41:28.760] Okay. [41:28.760 --> 41:36.760] Now, what do I do about the judge? What do I go after the judge for? [41:36.760 --> 41:43.760] Since he threw me in jail for three days for recording in his court. He got me for contempt. [41:43.760 --> 41:45.760] When was this? [41:45.760 --> 41:49.760] This was at the trial, after the trial. [41:49.760 --> 41:54.760] Date, date. Was it before February or before March? [41:54.760 --> 42:00.760] It was March. I actually know it was in April. [42:00.760 --> 42:03.760] Oh my goodness. [42:03.760 --> 42:10.760] Look up Turner v. Driver. [42:10.760 --> 42:13.760] Yeah, that was when you just mentioned prior. [42:13.760 --> 42:32.760] File criminally against the judge for false imprisonment. Send the county commissioners court judge a notice of tort. [42:32.760 --> 42:44.760] Look up the Travisat case for the amount. He got like $22,000 a minute, so run the numbers. [42:44.760 --> 42:48.760] Judge has himself a problem. [42:48.760 --> 42:57.760] Notice of tort in $22,000 a minute. [42:57.760 --> 42:59.760] Yes. [42:59.760 --> 43:07.760] Send me an email and I'll look up the Travisat case for you. I'll fill in some of these details for you. [43:07.760 --> 43:08.760] Okay. [43:08.760 --> 43:11.760] And you get his clock wound. [43:11.760 --> 43:14.760] Yeah. [43:14.760 --> 43:18.760] He had a duty to already know. [43:18.760 --> 43:19.760] Right. [43:19.760 --> 43:20.760] Okay. [43:20.760 --> 43:33.760] And get me an email randy at rulebloweradio.com and I'll get you some information and go to trafficticket.website and fill in the traffic ticket information. [43:33.760 --> 43:35.760] We'll get you out a bunch of documents. [43:35.760 --> 43:38.760] All right. Well, thank you so much, Randy. [43:38.760 --> 43:44.760] Alrighty. Okay. Now we're going to go to Scott in Tejas. [43:44.760 --> 43:48.760] Scott, what have you been up to? [43:48.760 --> 43:51.760] Oh, man. I have been basically got break. [43:51.760 --> 43:56.760] So let's take it out. [43:56.760 --> 44:01.760] Oh, you are back. [44:01.760 --> 44:21.760] It's the 2017 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works, Defense Distributed in Fatsal, Delhi. Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter to win. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. From Central Texas Gun Works, first place up for grabs, a spikes tactical AR-15. [44:21.760 --> 44:37.760] Second place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm pistol. From Defense Distributed, third place, the AR-308 80% lower. Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower. From Fatsal, Delhi, fifth place, $100 gift card for Fatsal, Delhi. [44:37.760 --> 44:47.760] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. That's logosradionetwork.com. Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [44:47.760 --> 44:59.760] If you purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, get ten chances to win. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [45:18.760 --> 45:27.760] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.760 --> 45:42.760] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.760 --> 45:51.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:51.760 --> 46:13.760] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.760 --> 46:32.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton in the rule of law radio, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. Okay, Scott. [46:32.760 --> 46:55.760] All right, well, we're down in Houston this morning, court watching for a buddy of mine, oh, Jody. So the judge was really nice, of course, after you follow a bunch of judicial conducts on him and take him to task, they seem to get an attitude adjustment quite well. [46:55.760 --> 47:13.760] So, and as far as that fellow that was just went to jail for three days for filming, he has a lawsuit on Turner v. Driver. He just got all he has to do is his homework, and there's where the electronic lawyer could kick right on in on that one. [47:13.760 --> 47:21.760] Yeah, that's what I want to get done, because I've got a couple of my own. [47:21.760 --> 47:24.760] One in your rock wall case. [47:24.760 --> 47:40.760] Oh, yeah, you got one too, Turner v. Driver. I'm sitting here. I got back about five o'clock this afternoon, and I've been working on my pellet brief for the fifth, and I think I'm getting this thing finished up quite nicely. [47:40.760 --> 47:59.760] So once you can get all the case law attached to it, they're going to have a fun read with this, basically attaching two cities that are operating non-compliant doing their straight-up policy actions, but tying both of them in and then attacking the county judge [47:59.760 --> 48:12.760] and the commissioner's court for their supervisory neglect on all this. It's turning into quite a read, so it should be interesting. [48:12.760 --> 48:17.760] Okay, how many pages is this brief? [48:17.760 --> 48:20.760] Right now it's at 13. [48:20.760 --> 48:23.760] No, that's not too bad. [48:23.760 --> 48:44.760] No, the other time you put in all that case law and stuff, it just stretches out, but now once you start putting all the exhibits with this thing, there's where time's going to come in, because everything like putting in the subject matter jurisdictions and putting in all that paperwork in on the front end, then denying everything, [48:44.760 --> 48:57.760] I have some points and authorities doing all this denial, blah, blah, blah, and as you have one of these cases, this is basically two years where the case is all tied up into one deal. [48:57.760 --> 48:59.760] This is not like some overnight thing. [48:59.760 --> 49:19.760] This took two years to develop all this whole Fifth Circuit of Appeals thing, but once you get it all convinced and packed together, then you can start seeing where they're violating all the laws and just really trying to ramp it out here. [49:19.760 --> 49:33.760] And it's just, okay, everybody now, they really start paying attention to this stuff, keeping good timeline, keeping good notes, and then the paperwork, and it's following up with the paperwork. [49:33.760 --> 49:43.760] He's submitted, but you still need to follow up with certain things, but if you do it, then you're really going to snatch these people's attention real quick. [49:43.760 --> 49:49.760] Their heads are going to snap. They're going to start treating you a lot different too, just right off the bat. [49:49.760 --> 50:01.760] Like you saw over there in Rockwall, those guys were, I had beat them up to the stone age just judicial conducts, bar grieve in the county attorney. [50:01.760 --> 50:05.760] Everybody was getting a taste of it. [50:05.760 --> 50:08.760] So that's just what everybody's going to have to start doing. [50:08.760 --> 50:12.760] You want to take it back? You got to work for it. [50:12.760 --> 50:19.760] The case law says that rights belong to the belligerent litigant. [50:19.760 --> 50:23.760] If you want your rights, you must come and take them. [50:23.760 --> 50:28.760] And that's what our documents we're designing are for. [50:28.760 --> 50:33.760] What Scott's doing right now, he's going through these issues. [50:33.760 --> 50:53.760] Now I'll take all of the issues he's gone through, what he's laying out right now, and we will lay those out into a set of tools where each issue he addresses, we figure out, okay, what question can we ask that points us at this issue? [50:53.760 --> 51:09.760] And then if we get a yes, then we, what questions do we need to ask to develop the issue? And as they each, as they answer each point, we'll have an argument for each point. [51:09.760 --> 51:15.760] And this tool, we begin to stitch these cases together. [51:15.760 --> 51:21.760] We're not on the front end of the very first ones are all pretty well standard filings. [51:21.760 --> 51:28.760] But after that, we will start building documents by issues. [51:28.760 --> 51:36.760] This is not as hard as it sounds on the front end. There's a lot here and it's kind of complex. [51:36.760 --> 51:45.760] But it's not terribly difficult because lawyers think what they're doing is an art form. There's no such thing. [51:45.760 --> 51:58.760] Law is all about elements and elements, issues and points. [51:58.760 --> 52:05.760] There's only a limited number of statutes and a limited number of elements in those statutes. [52:05.760 --> 52:17.760] You can come to those from a multitude of different directions, but once you get to that element, the parameters of that element are always the same. [52:17.760 --> 52:30.760] So as we build arguments for the elements, we stick those in the database and then we develop questions that point at those elements and we start pulling them out. [52:30.760 --> 52:35.760] I did DUI and it made a huge map. [52:35.760 --> 52:44.760] So big it shut down my wife's computer, took it 20 to 30 minutes to open the file. It was so big. [52:44.760 --> 52:54.760] But that's when I had a revelation. I said, wait a minute, I'm actually asking the same questions over and over in here. [52:54.760 --> 53:03.760] The guy says, yes, here, I'll go out and set a question. But if he says no, then that means he skipped one of the elements. [53:03.760 --> 53:10.760] We didn't need to go to that one. But I'll ask one or two questions and I'll go back to the same questions I would have asked. [53:10.760 --> 53:19.760] So I said, wait a minute, instead of putting those in there a number of times, let's just break them out into a separate element and call it as needed. [53:19.760 --> 53:29.760] Well, did I ever get a big surprise? There were only 15 elements with about four or five questions in each one. [53:29.760 --> 53:39.760] But there's so many different directions I could get to that element from that it made when I put the whole map together, it looked monstrous. [53:39.760 --> 53:48.760] And it made the body of law look horribly complex. But when I broke it down, there were only 15 elements. [53:48.760 --> 53:57.760] All of the law is pretty much that way. So all we have to do is structure out all of the elements and get our arguments built. [53:57.760 --> 54:10.760] And then we just ask questions that point to it and when it points to that element, the system grabs it, drops it in the document, and they'll stitch these documents together better than our lawyer can do it. [54:10.760 --> 54:16.760] Because it never, ever forgets to ask the pertinent question. [54:16.760 --> 54:26.760] So this is what we'll be doing with what Scott's doing. We've got three or four other people that are doing similar stuff. [54:26.760 --> 54:40.760] It's nice to have two or three different people doing the same thing because they come at it from different directions and somebody else will address issues that we didn't think about addressing. [54:40.760 --> 54:53.760] And every time we come across a new issue or a new way to address it, we can take it, drop it in the system, ask questions to point to it, and then we've got it forever. [54:53.760 --> 54:57.760] And maybe down the road, the laws of change will have to make adjustments. [54:57.760 --> 55:08.760] But we will put together the accumulated knowledge in the field into one tool. [55:08.760 --> 55:17.760] When we get this thing completed, you'll be able to come into court with this electronic paralegal. [55:17.760 --> 55:21.760] And there's not a lawyer alive who can keep up with it. [55:21.760 --> 55:37.760] I was at a big data meeting of big data programmers from Verizon, AT&T, IBM, and they're all complaining that artificial intelligence is not living up to its hype. [55:37.760 --> 55:47.760] So I told them I have this tool I'm building and it will kick any living lawyers behind and it has no intelligence whatsoever. [55:47.760 --> 55:50.760] One of the guys there said, no, wait a minute, I'm an attorney. [55:50.760 --> 55:52.760] And I'll take offense to that. [55:52.760 --> 55:56.760] I said, well, a present company included. [55:56.760 --> 56:02.760] All this thing does is connect dots, no intelligence whatsoever. [56:02.760 --> 56:07.760] And I asked them, I said, you're trying to develop artificial intelligence. [56:07.760 --> 56:17.760] So how do you define the organic intelligence that you're trying to artificially emulate? [56:17.760 --> 56:21.760] You're starting from a high level of abstraction. [56:21.760 --> 56:27.760] What is the basic element of intelligence that you're trying to emulate? [56:27.760 --> 56:33.760] And they all looked at me like I just stepped off the moon. [56:33.760 --> 56:38.760] So I'm not surprised that artificial intelligence hasn't held up and lived up to its hype. [56:38.760 --> 56:43.760] And I think it's because they don't understand what intelligence is. [56:43.760 --> 56:47.760] I'm an engineer and all I know how to do is connect dots. [56:47.760 --> 56:55.760] And I start stitching these dots together and every once in a while I come across a space where I've got a couple missing. [56:55.760 --> 56:57.760] I want to come across missing dots. [56:57.760 --> 57:07.760] Then I've got this other tool that I use that is designed to help me fill in those little dots. [57:07.760 --> 57:13.760] And it's all very specific connecting the dots procedures. [57:13.760 --> 57:19.760] I'm beginning to think that all of intelligence is just connecting the dots. [57:19.760 --> 57:25.760] Because once we have all of this put together, this thing won't be intelligent. [57:25.760 --> 57:28.760] But it'll look like it is. [57:28.760 --> 57:33.760] It'll certainly look like it's smarter than these lawyers. [57:33.760 --> 57:36.760] But then again, that may not be saying much. [57:36.760 --> 57:39.760] Okay, enough disparaging lawyers. [57:39.760 --> 57:43.760] Does that make sense where we're going, Scott? [57:43.760 --> 57:46.760] Oh, shoot, I'm already there. [57:46.760 --> 57:49.760] We're just having a piece of it all together. [57:49.760 --> 57:55.760] Like you say, there's not a whole lot of different criminal statutes you have to know. [57:55.760 --> 58:02.760] But all you have to know is just where the crimes are being committed and know how to point those out. [58:02.760 --> 58:09.760] And then once you can get to where you can start doing that, then it makes it easy to address, even with the electronic lawyer, [58:09.760 --> 58:15.760] because you know where to take it and you know how to read it and defend it. [58:15.760 --> 58:17.760] And break it again. [58:17.760 --> 58:20.760] Okay, we get this done right. [58:20.760 --> 58:24.760] The ordinary person won't have to worry about any of that. [58:24.760 --> 58:33.760] We'll have it all done electronically and let the courts try to deal with our electronic lawyer instead of the pro se. [58:33.760 --> 58:34.760] Hang on. [58:34.760 --> 58:37.760] We're ready to help move my radio. [58:37.760 --> 58:39.760] Okay, this top of the hour. [58:39.760 --> 58:40.760] I can't see my clock. [58:40.760 --> 58:46.760] Yeah, this is the top of the hour. It's a good time to go to our logos radio network and help us with our fundraiser. [58:46.760 --> 59:12.760] We'll be right back. [59:17.760 --> 59:27.760] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.760 --> 59:40.760] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.760 --> 59:51.760] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:51.760 --> 59:59.760] You're listening to the logos radio network and logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.760 --> 01:00:20.760] The following newsflash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown, providing your jelly bulletins for the commodity market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.760 --> 01:00:42.760] Top markets for Wednesday, the 17th of May, 2017 are currently trading with gold at $1,260.87 an ounce, silver $16.88 an ounce, Texas crude $48.66 a barrel, and Bitcoin is sitting a little over $1,800 at $1,808 U.S. currency. [01:00:42.760 --> 01:00:54.760] Today in history, the year 1809, Napoleon I of France orders the annexation of the Papal States to the French Empire. Today in history. [01:00:54.760 --> 01:01:13.760] In recent years, 27-year-old DNC staffer Seth Rich, who was mysteriously shot to death while walking home from a bar in the early hours in July of 2016, caused a plethora of conspiracy theories when this incident occurred. [01:01:13.760 --> 01:01:27.760] It was suspected by many researchers and talk show radio hosts that Seth Rich must have had something to do with the DNC email leaks of last year to add fuel to the fire of suspicion. [01:01:27.760 --> 01:01:37.760] Less than a month after Rich's death, WikiLeaks offered $20,000 for information on the murder, along with later in September, a GOP lobbyist offering up to $100,000 for information on the murder. [01:01:37.760 --> 01:01:52.760] Well, as of this week, Seth's case seems to have hit the chatterwaves again when on Monday, Washington D.C.'s Fox 5 reported that Rod Wheeler, a former D.C. homicide detective who was a private investigator on the case, believed Rich had communicated with WikiLeaks before his death. [01:01:52.760 --> 01:02:13.760] Rod Wheeler did state that he was misquoted when interviewed by CNN on Tuesday, while Fox News on the same day put an anonymous federal investigator who said that the FBI investigation found that Rich had been in contact with Gavin McFadden, whom Fox identified as the director of WikiLeaks. [01:02:13.760 --> 01:02:30.760] Private Chelsea Manning, formerly Bradley Manning, tweeted a photo of her feet and tennis shoes with the caption, First Steps of Freedom, shortly after she was released Wednesday today, having served a fraction of her 35-year sentence on 20 counts, including six espionage act violations for giving classified Pentagon materials to WikiLeaks. [01:02:30.760 --> 01:02:52.760] Former President Barack Obama granted her clemency in January before he left office. The Army stated that Manning will be on special unpaid off-duty status with the option to relocate and live where she wants. A documentary entitled XY Chelsea is being created about private Chelsea Manning, the transgendered soldier convicted of giving classified government materials to WikiLeaks. [01:03:00.760 --> 01:03:16.760] Story for everyone here, I thought I was not going to get into the fear. Yeah, the story. [01:03:16.760 --> 01:03:43.760] I was one of the boys. I would lie in front of my father's door until he returned. I would lie in front of my daughter's door. He has nothing to do with this crazy widow. I will hate my concern. I will lie in front of my daughter's door. [01:03:43.760 --> 01:03:53.760] I will lie in front of my daughter's door. I will lie in front of my daughter's door. I will lie in front of my daughter's door. [01:03:53.760 --> 01:04:04.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. Okay, Scott. [01:04:04.760 --> 01:04:23.760] Well, the reason I would say that I want everybody to really study it and to know it, because a big problem that a lot of people have, I knew I had at the beginning, is when did a judge or a city attorney or a county attorney, when did they actually break the law? [01:04:23.760 --> 01:04:42.760] A lot of people are really confused, especially with their first time going after this stuff. They don't know where a judge or somebody's overstepped their boundaries and crossed the line and started acting rogue on the bench under the color of law. [01:04:42.760 --> 01:04:59.760] It's violating your rights, but that's where a lot of people don't know that. So once they kind of start studying it, studying these things, and then they can keep a good timeline, the timeline is going to help them because everybody forgets that's why it's important to keep a good timeline on this stuff, [01:04:59.760 --> 01:05:20.760] because you're going to be able to plug all that stuff in, and the little things that you think are nothing can turn out to be a pretty big event, and those things all stack up into the overall charge that you're going to make in a complaint if you're going to follow civil suit, [01:05:20.760 --> 01:05:33.760] all of these turn into individual charges that can be addressed that strengthen your case, and not only that, it's going to make the, you're wanting to impeach the other side in credibility. [01:05:33.760 --> 01:05:47.760] And as you're building your case, you're impeaching their credibility while you're making your stronger, and by knowing where their limitations are, it's only going to help you in the long run. [01:05:47.760 --> 01:05:58.760] Yes, and you will absolutely be amazed at how many crimes these guys commit. [01:05:58.760 --> 01:06:05.760] When I first started working through all this, I read the penal code and the Code of Criminal Procedure and looked at what they did. [01:06:05.760 --> 01:06:23.760] And I thought, have I stepped through the looking glass? How can this be so screwed up? How can the practice be so dramatically different than the Code? [01:06:23.760 --> 01:06:35.760] And of course, I thought I had missed something. I spent 15 years researching this, and finally realized I hadn't missed anything. These guys are just not doing it right. [01:06:35.760 --> 01:06:47.760] And for the most part, they don't have a clue. So when they look incredulous when you bring up these issues, they think you're nuts. [01:06:47.760 --> 01:06:57.760] And with good cause, they've been doing the same thing for 20, 30 years. And nobody ever raised an objection. [01:06:57.760 --> 01:07:07.760] Nobody ever held a law out in front of them and pointed right to it where they had to look at it. They just assumed there's something that we've been missing. [01:07:07.760 --> 01:07:20.760] We haven't missed anything. Law is what it is. They're just not following it. They commit so many crimes, like when I addressed earlier about the policeman turning his lights on you. [01:07:20.760 --> 01:07:36.760] He didn't have any idea that what he's doing goes directly to the first-degree felony aggravated assault. I tell this to officers and they look like deer in the headlights. [01:07:36.760 --> 01:07:50.760] They just almost can't believe it. But we just got more stuff we can go after him for than you could ever keep up with. [01:07:50.760 --> 01:08:06.760] Well, that's true. And the main thing that people are going to have to really start addressing is their training, their lack of training, and the evidence being withheld by prosecution, 39.14. [01:08:06.760 --> 01:08:24.760] Basically, it's the Brady policy, Michael Morton acts, whatever, but when the prosecution is withheld or withholding expropriatory evidence favorable to the accused and you don't address that, you don't put motions in to try to get that and fight for all that stuff, [01:08:24.760 --> 01:08:37.760] you know, these are the things that are discharging, just like the DPS Foyah and there's only, I think it's 28 officers in the state of Texas. [01:08:37.760 --> 01:08:44.760] No, you counted 28, but you included the title. There was only 27 names. That's absurd. [01:08:44.760 --> 01:08:45.760] Oh, good. [01:08:45.760 --> 01:08:50.760] That's obscene. [01:08:50.760 --> 01:09:03.760] Those are all the county. I've sent the Foyah in for all the municipal here in the state of Texas to see if it comes back with anything, because if it doesn't come back with anything, it's only county officers are authorized. [01:09:03.760 --> 01:09:09.760] That means every municipal court is acting. [01:09:09.760 --> 01:09:11.760] Outside law. [01:09:11.760 --> 01:09:21.760] It's outside law. You got operating ultra virus using under the color law as an engine of plunder to get everybody's money. [01:09:21.760 --> 01:09:35.760] But people don't know this and that's how they have to, once they even read that kind of stuff and it's like, when you do a Foyah asking for their authority to enforce the Texas Transportation Law to your own city and they write you back, they have none. [01:09:35.760 --> 01:09:37.760] That's an eye opener. [01:09:37.760 --> 01:09:57.760] People should look at that and go, holy smoke. I've showed that to people in Rockwell Court while I was going through the multiple resets and people would look at it and, well, shoot, when I gave it to the attorney that they forced me to have represent me so I couldn't talk to the judge no more, he saw it and he couldn't believe it. [01:09:57.760 --> 01:09:59.760] And that's an attorney. [01:09:59.760 --> 01:10:05.760] So what does that tell you? These people don't know what the law is. [01:10:05.760 --> 01:10:10.760] Or who has the authority to be enforcing it. [01:10:10.760 --> 01:10:26.760] So we're going to try to fix a lot of that. And if we do this right, the ordinary individual who uses this tool doesn't need to know all of this. One of the motions we're filing is an objection to oral argument. [01:10:26.760 --> 01:10:38.760] Remove the court to make all its determinations based on the pleadings. They want to call you to court repeatedly for no reason. [01:10:38.760 --> 01:10:46.760] Cost you day off work, you have to come down there and go through the frustration of dealing with these people, then they do nothing. [01:10:46.760 --> 01:10:58.760] And that's just how anger you and frustrates you and gets you to give up and pay them their money. Just bully tactics. So we're going to turn it back on them. [01:10:58.760 --> 01:11:14.760] They order the municipal court, if you're charged with a class C misdemeanor, the only time they can order you to court is if they have a motion before the court or to trial. That's it. [01:11:14.760 --> 01:11:24.760] If they order you to court and they don't have a trial, then you file criminally against the judge for simulating legal process. [01:11:24.760 --> 01:11:34.760] When the judge doesn't give you, I mean, when the prosecuting attorney doesn't provide you with all the required discovery 30 days before the trial. [01:11:34.760 --> 01:11:44.760] 29th day, the trial, you file official oppression against it and a bargue grievance. [01:11:44.760 --> 01:11:49.760] But you file official oppression with the grand jury. See how that works for him. [01:11:49.760 --> 01:11:57.760] You don't want to do your job. The judge refuses to read one of my pleadings. I charge you. [01:11:57.760 --> 01:12:04.760] I had a stack of complaints against a Garland judge that two inches high. [01:12:04.760 --> 01:12:16.760] We filed, we tried to file it with the Dallas County District Attorney. They interfered with us. We added criminal complaints against Craig Watkins, took it to Tarrant County. [01:12:16.760 --> 01:12:22.760] They took it, didn't act on it. The Garland judge resigned. [01:12:22.760 --> 01:12:26.760] He saw it coming at it. [01:12:26.760 --> 01:12:35.760] Yeah, that's bringing the house down with them. They're not used to people standing up and asserting their rights. [01:12:35.760 --> 01:12:42.760] I mean, you got to go out there and assert your rights, file these things on them and stay with it. That's the thing. [01:12:42.760 --> 01:12:47.760] Everybody just will want to think, oh, I can put in one piece of paper and it goes away. [01:12:47.760 --> 01:12:58.760] These people are going to buy two tooth and nail. You have to go in there like it is war and you are not stopping. It is them or you. [01:12:58.760 --> 01:13:06.760] And you just keep piling on the paperwork. And then once people start realizing the power of third party complaints, [01:13:06.760 --> 01:13:12.760] that's why court watchers are so important that people would just start buddying up and going to court. [01:13:12.760 --> 01:13:21.760] The court watcher is a third party witness. He carries more weight in the criminal complaints than the person up there gets in court. [01:13:21.760 --> 01:13:26.760] And then when you can find out you can be a third party witness in your own case. [01:13:26.760 --> 01:13:29.760] Oh, that really throws a wrench in their works then. [01:13:29.760 --> 01:13:34.760] So it's just no one, you got to know all these little intricacies. [01:13:34.760 --> 01:13:42.760] Once you start knowing those, it helps everybody to piece all this stuff together and makes it move a whole lot more efficient. [01:13:42.760 --> 01:13:51.760] This lawyer thing is going to help so many people because it takes a lot of time to write this stuff and you got to be pretty precise. [01:13:51.760 --> 01:14:05.760] But all you need is just the facts of what happened in your case and know how to point out where they're acting out of law is where they're breaking the law, violating your rights. [01:14:05.760 --> 01:14:13.760] Once you can disseminate both of those, you can click those in all kinds of complaints and just start hammering away at these people. [01:14:13.760 --> 01:14:18.760] This is going to be a lot of fun. Okay, I need to move on. We're only going to have an hour left. [01:14:18.760 --> 01:14:22.760] Thanks a lot, Scott. And don't stop. [01:14:22.760 --> 01:14:29.760] Okay. Okay, now we're going to go to Olivier in Tennessee. Hello, Olivier. [01:14:29.760 --> 01:14:31.760] How you doing? [01:14:31.760 --> 01:14:35.760] Doing good. What do you have for us today? [01:14:35.760 --> 01:14:47.760] I'm not sure what's wrong, but we're just getting every third word. [01:14:47.760 --> 01:14:56.760] Did you find a different spot to stand so you can get a better signal? [01:14:56.760 --> 01:14:58.760] Can you hear me? [01:14:58.760 --> 01:15:01.760] Just got one word there. [01:15:01.760 --> 01:15:03.760] You got one word. [01:15:03.760 --> 01:15:06.760] That's better. Now I can hear you. [01:15:06.760 --> 01:15:29.760] I wanted to talk about the disqualification of a judge. If a judge refused to allow to raid constitutional defenses in a trial, that's a disqualification? [01:15:29.760 --> 01:15:38.760] Wait a minute. I am having a terrible time understanding your... Can you put the mic down by your chin? [01:15:38.760 --> 01:15:40.760] Can you hear me now? [01:15:40.760 --> 01:15:42.760] That's better. Okay, now try. [01:15:42.760 --> 01:15:44.760] Okay. [01:15:44.760 --> 01:15:55.760] Disqualification for the judges. If a judge refused to allow you to raid constitutional defenses, that's a disqualification? [01:15:55.760 --> 01:15:58.760] I would call that criminal. [01:15:58.760 --> 01:16:15.760] If the judge does not allow you to petition the court for redress of grievance, and that's what that goes to, then he's denying you a procedural due process, and that's a crime. [01:16:15.760 --> 01:16:26.760] And that being a crime, crime of official oppression, should be sufficient to disqualify. [01:16:26.760 --> 01:16:29.760] People cannot not to take the judge's own for their criminal behavior. [01:16:29.760 --> 01:16:31.760] They say, oh, well, you can appeal. [01:16:31.760 --> 01:16:36.760] Well, I can appeal to the court of appeals, or I can appeal to a grand jury. [01:16:36.760 --> 01:16:38.760] We'll see what's going to look like better. [01:16:38.760 --> 01:16:40.760] Hang on. About to go to break. [01:16:40.760 --> 01:16:43.760] Randy Kelton, Rula Radio. [01:16:43.760 --> 01:16:59.760] Call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:16:59.760 --> 01:17:13.760] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now, that there's no going back. I need my truth fix. I'd be lost without logos. And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.760 --> 01:17:21.760] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have any money to give, because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [01:17:21.760 --> 01:17:23.760] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.760 --> 01:17:30.760] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:30.760 --> 01:17:34.760] Now, go to LogosReguleNetwork.com. [01:17:34.760 --> 01:17:37.760] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.760 --> 01:17:42.760] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:42.760 --> 01:17:43.760] Do I pay extra? [01:17:43.760 --> 01:17:44.760] No. [01:17:44.760 --> 01:17:46.760] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.760 --> 01:17:47.760] No. [01:17:47.760 --> 01:17:48.760] Can I use my Amazon pride? [01:17:48.760 --> 01:17:49.760] No. [01:17:49.760 --> 01:17:50.760] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.760 --> 01:17:56.760] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:17:56.760 --> 01:17:57.760] We are welcome. [01:17:57.760 --> 01:17:59.760] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:59.760 --> 01:18:08.760] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. 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[01:18:46.760 --> 01:18:51.760] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [01:18:51.760 --> 01:18:54.760] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [01:18:54.760 --> 01:19:10.760] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6404. [01:19:25.760 --> 01:19:35.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, the rule of law radio, and we're talking to Oliver in Olivier, Tennessee. [01:19:35.760 --> 01:19:44.760] Okay, if the judge denies you and your right to petition the court for redress agreements, [01:19:44.760 --> 01:20:00.760] and that can be him not allowing you to bring valid arguments before the court or failing to rule on arguments you do bring. [01:20:00.760 --> 01:20:10.760] Now, those are repealable errors, but the way I read the code, those are crimes. [01:20:10.760 --> 01:20:19.760] This is not something that's a legitimate error. This is an overt act on part of the judge to deny your access to the court. [01:20:19.760 --> 01:20:27.760] So that's not error. That's crime. [01:20:27.760 --> 01:20:29.760] Are you there? [01:20:29.760 --> 01:20:35.760] I understand, but I'm trying to remove them off my case. [01:20:35.760 --> 01:20:44.760] What I'm saying is, if you have a judge who's a criminal, that should disqualify him to sit on the bench, period, [01:20:44.760 --> 01:20:50.760] especially in your case, and he's a criminal's committed crimes against you from the bench. [01:20:50.760 --> 01:21:01.760] Once you file the criminal charges, then you move to disqualify him for cause. [01:21:01.760 --> 01:21:08.760] And they're not used to that. They used to be able to... [01:21:08.760 --> 01:21:11.760] Once you file a criminal charge for it, can you just... [01:21:11.760 --> 01:21:29.760] Absolutely. File the criminal charge first, and then go back and ask, you know, move to remove the judge based on the crimes you alleged he committed from the bench. [01:21:29.760 --> 01:21:41.760] So realistically, how do they keep a judge on the case when you're pursuing criminal charges against him? [01:21:41.760 --> 01:21:45.760] Well... [01:21:45.760 --> 01:21:55.760] Okay, I did get there. I thought getting the judge disqualified was for being unfair and partial. [01:21:55.760 --> 01:22:03.760] No, that'll get him... Those are grounds for recusal, not disqualification. [01:22:03.760 --> 01:22:10.760] If he has an interest in the case, then he can be disqualified. [01:22:10.760 --> 01:22:20.760] So you give him an interest in the case by pursuing him criminally. [01:22:20.760 --> 01:22:31.760] I don't know that there's much law on this, where the judge in the process of the case commits crimes against you. [01:22:31.760 --> 01:22:39.760] Granted, this can be called an appealable error, but that's not your only remedy. [01:22:39.760 --> 01:22:51.760] I don't know of anything in law that denies you the remedy of criminal prosecution of a judge who fails to perform the duty he's required to perform. [01:22:51.760 --> 01:22:58.760] And in the process denies you the right. That's official oppression, where in most states it will be official misconduct. [01:22:58.760 --> 01:23:01.760] And that's a crime. [01:23:01.760 --> 01:23:08.760] So how does he sit on the bench when he's in violation of law? [01:23:08.760 --> 01:23:18.760] How could he reasonably rule on a criminal charge when he's facing criminal charges based on the rulings that he's making? [01:23:18.760 --> 01:23:21.760] You see how you poison his well? [01:23:21.760 --> 01:23:29.760] Yeah, but I still have a block of turning in these criminal charges. [01:23:29.760 --> 01:23:34.760] Have you walked him up the system? [01:23:34.760 --> 01:23:37.760] Have I walked it up the system? [01:23:37.760 --> 01:23:45.760] Yeah, part of the routine. The whole point of fighting the complaint is not to get them to act on it. [01:23:45.760 --> 01:23:50.760] Never ask public officials to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:23:50.760 --> 01:23:59.760] I want to go to the first magistrate and hand it to him and just leave it and go away, right? [01:23:59.760 --> 01:24:07.760] No, hand it to him, tell him to convene an examining trial, get him to refuse right then. [01:24:07.760 --> 01:24:12.760] Call 911, get an officer down, take a complaint. [01:24:12.760 --> 01:24:13.760] Okay. [01:24:13.760 --> 01:24:15.760] I do this all the time. [01:24:15.760 --> 01:24:23.760] Once that happens, is that enough for me to file my motion to get the judge to refuse? [01:24:23.760 --> 01:24:24.760] Yes. [01:24:24.760 --> 01:24:26.760] And you're doing other things? [01:24:26.760 --> 01:24:41.760] Here you would file a motion to disqualify claiming the judge committed crimes from the bench. [01:24:41.760 --> 01:24:43.760] Okay, still there? [01:24:43.760 --> 01:24:46.760] Yeah. [01:24:46.760 --> 01:24:51.760] And this is something separate from the litigation that you're doing. [01:24:51.760 --> 01:24:54.760] You file criminal charges, they stand alone in separate. [01:24:54.760 --> 01:24:56.760] I found criminal charges. [01:24:56.760 --> 01:25:00.760] I want to file it with somebody and get them to refuse to take it. [01:25:00.760 --> 01:25:08.760] Because then I take a complaint against that person to the next guy up the line and you walk up to the higher level courts. [01:25:08.760 --> 01:25:21.760] And when you go to a high level judge and give him a criminal complaint against a judge just under him for not prosecuting the guy under him, [01:25:21.760 --> 01:25:26.760] it'll be clear to this judge that you're setting him up. [01:25:26.760 --> 01:25:34.760] He's either going to have to throw all his buddies under the bus or he's going to have to put himself as the next in line. [01:25:34.760 --> 01:25:39.760] It's going to make this judge a real unhappy. [01:25:39.760 --> 01:25:46.760] He won't be able to take out his unhappiness on you, but he can't owe those other guys. [01:25:46.760 --> 01:25:50.760] The end of the day, it's all political. [01:25:50.760 --> 01:26:03.760] But for time conveniences, I'm trying to get this judge because supposedly I'm supposed to be sentenced on this charge after they get their file back from the public court. [01:26:03.760 --> 01:26:10.760] So I want these judges removed before my time or not. [01:26:10.760 --> 01:26:16.760] What you're talking about seems kind of time consuming from what I have to deal with right now. [01:26:16.760 --> 01:26:19.760] Okay. [01:26:19.760 --> 01:26:25.760] I don't have any other grounds for recuse or disqualifications that I know of. [01:26:25.760 --> 01:26:34.760] So, I mean, not allowing, doesn't the Constitution give you the right to raise the sentences on your behalf? [01:26:34.760 --> 01:26:36.760] Yes. [01:26:36.760 --> 01:26:46.760] So, isn't that a restriction of a liberty that you have or a defense that you have for a fair and impartial charge? [01:26:46.760 --> 01:26:48.760] Yeah, it is. [01:26:48.760 --> 01:26:52.760] So that it must be a remedy to remove the judge off the case? [01:26:52.760 --> 01:26:55.760] I told you what the remedy was. [01:26:55.760 --> 01:26:57.760] You want another one. [01:26:57.760 --> 01:27:00.760] There's not one. [01:27:00.760 --> 01:27:05.760] So, how can we have a law that says you have all these things? [01:27:05.760 --> 01:27:13.760] Oh, they are suggesting that the appealable error is the resolution. [01:27:13.760 --> 01:27:21.760] That's what they want you to think that is your ultimate remedy and it's no such thing. [01:27:21.760 --> 01:27:31.760] It's what I told the judge in Bob Perkins, the head criminal district judge in Travis County, when he said I should appeal. [01:27:31.760 --> 01:27:33.760] Oh, don't ask me to appeal, judge. [01:27:33.760 --> 01:27:39.760] You go before a corrupt judge and he renders a bogus decision and they say, oh, that's okay. [01:27:39.760 --> 01:27:44.760] Now, appeal to a whole panel of corrupt judges and they'll really screw your royal. [01:27:44.760 --> 01:27:47.760] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, I don't think it's quite that bad. [01:27:47.760 --> 01:27:49.760] I said, that's because you're not poor or sad. [01:27:49.760 --> 01:27:51.760] I got a better idea. [01:27:51.760 --> 01:27:53.760] I'll appeal with a grand jury. [01:27:53.760 --> 01:27:56.760] Well, Mr. Kelton, you can appeal with a grand jury. [01:27:56.760 --> 01:27:57.760] Sure, I can. [01:27:57.760 --> 01:28:03.760] I can appeal with a grand jury to indict the sheriff for felony shielding from prosecution. [01:28:03.760 --> 01:28:08.760] And he kind of sat back with this look like, oh, okay. [01:28:08.760 --> 01:28:10.760] Okay. [01:28:10.760 --> 01:28:14.760] I look and see if there's another town or check it. [01:28:14.760 --> 01:28:19.760] If I can file in another town that says their grand jury is open. [01:28:19.760 --> 01:28:21.760] I'll check into that more. [01:28:21.760 --> 01:28:24.760] But our grand jury is not accessible at the moment. [01:28:24.760 --> 01:28:32.760] My mandamus and paperwork is not as close to being answered, but it hasn't been resolved yet. [01:28:32.760 --> 01:28:39.760] So I don't have access to the grand jury and all those things that you're talking about, but I'm working on it. [01:28:39.760 --> 01:28:46.760] Next thing was, okay. [01:28:46.760 --> 01:28:56.760] One of the companies that the judge just missed and the appeal sports, I guess, told them that they had to answer. [01:28:56.760 --> 01:29:12.760] They, in their brief, they claim that I did not submit a transcript and my evidence or the facts needed to be supported. [01:29:12.760 --> 01:29:21.760] And since there is no transcript, the facts are basically unfound or something like something towards that matter. [01:29:21.760 --> 01:29:29.760] Is the fact that I did not supply a transcript to the case resolved to anything? [01:29:29.760 --> 01:29:34.760] Yes, that's a big deal. [01:29:34.760 --> 01:29:41.760] And you might want to, you have your indigent so you can get it for free. [01:29:41.760 --> 01:29:47.760] Did you request a transcript from the court recorder? [01:29:47.760 --> 01:29:52.760] Hang on, we'll have to go to break. We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:29:52.760 --> 01:29:59.760] Randy Kelton, we'll go to the radio. We'll be right back. [01:29:59.760 --> 01:30:05.760] When you surf the internet, you may get the false impression that you're alone. [01:30:05.760 --> 01:30:10.760] But advertisers are likely to be watching and a Gallup poll says we don't like it one bit. [01:30:10.760 --> 01:30:13.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you more in just a moment. [01:30:13.760 --> 01:30:19.760] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:19.760 --> 01:30:24.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:24.760 --> 01:30:29.760] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:29.760 --> 01:30:32.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:32.760 --> 01:30:35.760] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:35.760 --> 01:30:39.760] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:39.760 --> 01:30:42.760] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:42.760 --> 01:30:47.760] According to a new Gallup poll, most Americans are not aware they're being tracked in profile [01:30:47.760 --> 01:30:50.760] as they surf the internet, but they clearly hate the idea. [01:30:50.760 --> 01:30:55.760] Researchers ask internet users if advertisers should be allowed to customize online ads [01:30:55.760 --> 01:30:59.760] to match the websites they visited. 67% said no. [01:30:59.760 --> 01:31:05.760] Nevertheless, advertisers continue their stealthy ways. Here are three tips to stop the snooping. [01:31:05.760 --> 01:31:09.760] Number one, stick to privacy-friendly websites when possible, especially for web searches. [01:31:09.760 --> 01:31:13.760] Your search terms reveal a lot about you, like your interests and your medical conditions. [01:31:13.760 --> 01:31:15.760] Number two, delete tracking cookies. [01:31:15.760 --> 01:31:20.760] And number three, visit websites through Oproxy, like the one at StartPage.com. [01:31:20.760 --> 01:31:29.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.760 --> 01:31:35.760] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.760 --> 01:31:37.760] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.760 --> 01:31:42.760] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.760 --> 01:31:45.760] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.760 --> 01:31:48.760] And thousands of my fellow force respondents are dying. [01:31:48.760 --> 01:31:49.760] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.760 --> 01:31:50.760] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.760 --> 01:31:51.760] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:51.760 --> 01:31:52.760] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:52.760 --> 01:31:54.760] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.760 --> 01:31:57.760] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.760 --> 01:32:00.760] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.760 --> 01:32:02.760] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:02.760 --> 01:32:05.760] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:05.760 --> 01:32:08.760] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails. [01:32:08.760 --> 01:32:10.760] But good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:10.760 --> 01:32:12.760] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails. [01:32:12.760 --> 01:32:13.760] But I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:13.760 --> 01:32:15.760] That's why you have insurance. [01:32:15.760 --> 01:32:20.760] And Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.760 --> 01:32:26.760] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.760 --> 01:32:31.760] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.760 --> 01:32:37.760] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:37.760 --> 01:32:40.760] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:40.760 --> 01:32:44.760] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:44.760 --> 01:32:49.760] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:49.760 --> 01:32:55.760] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:55.760 --> 01:32:58.760] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.760 --> 01:33:01.760] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:28.760 --> 01:33:34.760] Okay, we are back. [01:33:34.760 --> 01:33:38.760] Randy Kelton, Rural Guard Radio, and we're talking to Oliver in Tennessee. [01:33:38.760 --> 01:33:39.760] Oliver. [01:33:39.760 --> 01:33:40.760] I still want to call you Oliver. [01:33:40.760 --> 01:33:43.760] Olivier in Tennessee. [01:33:43.760 --> 01:33:44.760] Hello. [01:33:44.760 --> 01:33:45.760] Okay, go ahead. [01:33:45.760 --> 01:33:46.760] Go ahead. [01:33:46.760 --> 01:34:01.760] Yeah, so everything that I've argued or all the pertinent facts are of the record that was filed with the courts in the first place. [01:34:01.760 --> 01:34:06.760] And number two, they were dismissed before they even got a chance to answer. [01:34:06.760 --> 01:34:08.760] So what's the... [01:34:08.760 --> 01:34:12.760] So essentially there was no transcript. [01:34:12.760 --> 01:34:16.760] Oh, wait a minute. [01:34:16.760 --> 01:34:17.760] Wait a minute. [01:34:17.760 --> 01:34:18.760] Hold on. [01:34:18.760 --> 01:34:19.760] There was a proceeding. [01:34:19.760 --> 01:34:20.760] There was a proceeding. [01:34:20.760 --> 01:34:30.760] Did the judge call a hearing and dismiss the case in an open hearing, or did he just send you a notice of dismissal? [01:34:30.760 --> 01:34:33.760] He just sent me a notice of dismissal. [01:34:33.760 --> 01:34:35.760] Okay, good, good, good. [01:34:35.760 --> 01:34:37.760] There is no transcript. [01:34:37.760 --> 01:34:42.760] These lawyers may not know that there is no transcript. [01:34:42.760 --> 01:34:49.760] So that's an irrelevant argument. [01:34:49.760 --> 01:34:50.760] Okay. [01:34:50.760 --> 01:34:54.760] I guess he was referring to because he left the city on the... [01:34:54.760 --> 01:35:04.760] He left the city of Clarkville on the complaint, and then he dismissed it after it went to court through several proceedings. [01:35:04.760 --> 01:35:09.760] Well, there was no transcript relevant to this litigant. [01:35:09.760 --> 01:35:17.760] This litigant was dismissed out of hand by the judge without a hearing. [01:35:17.760 --> 01:35:20.760] So there is no transcript relevant to this litigant. [01:35:20.760 --> 01:35:21.760] Okay. [01:35:21.760 --> 01:35:29.760] And one of his arguments, another argument that they had was that, well, my claim can't stand because it did not work for me. [01:35:29.760 --> 01:35:34.760] The city of Clarkville. [01:35:34.760 --> 01:35:54.760] I guess in order for me to prove conspiracy, or under the color of law, they had to prove that they were employed by the city of Clarkville, and there's no fact that the Tone Company works for the city. [01:35:54.760 --> 01:36:01.760] Wonderful. [01:36:01.760 --> 01:36:10.760] They stole it. [01:36:10.760 --> 01:36:12.760] You might... [01:36:12.760 --> 01:36:14.760] Oh, man. [01:36:14.760 --> 01:36:16.760] Now that is interesting. [01:36:16.760 --> 01:36:29.760] And then another argument they had was that, well, if I were to win this suit, I would be winning over a million dollars from all the defendants. [01:36:29.760 --> 01:36:31.760] I'm like, what kind of argument is that? [01:36:31.760 --> 01:36:33.760] I just threw the brief on the floor. [01:36:33.760 --> 01:36:36.760] I was like, I can't believe I just got there. [01:36:36.760 --> 01:36:40.760] This is what happens when you don't have an argument. [01:36:40.760 --> 01:36:58.760] So you might consider based on their, depending on how they stated that, did they actually state that they were not an employee of the city? [01:36:58.760 --> 01:37:19.760] Yes, they state that one of the claims, I mean, the claim that I'm asking for must, has to be tested with employees' actions, and their defense is that they're not an employee of the city of Clarkville. [01:37:19.760 --> 01:37:33.760] One of your complaints, okay, do you make a specific allegation against the Tone Company alleging that they told your vehicle at the behest of the city of Clarkville? [01:37:33.760 --> 01:37:38.760] Yes, it was part of the 1983 section. [01:37:38.760 --> 01:37:49.760] Okay, so we need to find out what they're actually saying here. [01:37:49.760 --> 01:38:17.760] Consider a response to the brief and state that if, in fact, the defendant is claiming that they did not act as an agent or employee of the city, then they must have acted on their own behalf. [01:38:17.760 --> 01:38:23.760] And in that case, charge them with felony theft. [01:38:23.760 --> 01:38:29.760] Well, I mean, it's still conversion, because you didn't have a proof jacket or a door to take my property. [01:38:29.760 --> 01:38:33.760] You still conversion in the spill inverse condonation. [01:38:33.760 --> 01:38:39.760] Keep the conversion and add felony theft. [01:38:39.760 --> 01:38:45.760] You could sue someone for felony theft? [01:38:45.760 --> 01:38:54.760] Yeah, if they're stating that they didn't work for this, that they weren't an agent for the city. [01:38:54.760 --> 01:39:03.760] If they have been hired by the city, then they're saying that they're not an employee of the city. [01:39:03.760 --> 01:39:07.760] Well, technically they are. [01:39:07.760 --> 01:39:10.760] They're not the ones actually doing the towing. [01:39:10.760 --> 01:39:13.760] It's the city that's doing the towing. [01:39:13.760 --> 01:39:20.760] They're using these guys' hands and feet to get the towing done. [01:39:20.760 --> 01:39:26.760] Can't see any way they can claim they're not working for the city. [01:39:26.760 --> 01:39:36.760] Do you have a contract agreement with this towing company in the city? [01:39:36.760 --> 01:39:39.760] No. [01:39:39.760 --> 01:39:46.760] Did the company build the city for the towing? [01:39:46.760 --> 01:39:50.760] They built me for the towing. [01:39:50.760 --> 01:39:53.760] The towing company did? [01:39:53.760 --> 01:39:55.760] Yeah, yes. [01:39:55.760 --> 01:39:59.760] Does the towing company have a contract with you? [01:39:59.760 --> 01:40:01.760] No. [01:40:01.760 --> 01:40:12.760] So then the question becomes, under what authority did they tow? [01:40:12.760 --> 01:40:22.760] Under what authority did they come on to your property and against your will take your property from your property, [01:40:22.760 --> 01:40:35.760] take your real property, take your cars off of your property? [01:40:35.760 --> 01:40:39.760] Without your permission. [01:40:39.760 --> 01:40:41.760] It's all falling from the city. [01:40:41.760 --> 01:40:43.760] That's why I read their arguments. [01:40:43.760 --> 01:40:47.760] I'm sitting here like, you pay the attorney to do this? [01:40:47.760 --> 01:40:49.760] Yeah. [01:40:49.760 --> 01:40:54.760] This is a theft. [01:40:54.760 --> 01:40:57.760] Am I in the complaint? [01:40:57.760 --> 01:41:00.760] We might consider it. [01:41:00.760 --> 01:41:07.760] Or after the court ruled because it's so weak that it's in the appeal court. [01:41:07.760 --> 01:41:11.760] This is the brief that they found in the appeal court. [01:41:11.760 --> 01:41:17.760] Just based on their brief, file criminal charges against them. [01:41:17.760 --> 01:41:25.760] What that'll do is get the towing company to want to choke their lawyer. [01:41:25.760 --> 01:41:28.760] Okay, I got you. [01:41:28.760 --> 01:41:32.760] Then bar grieve the lawyer. [01:41:32.760 --> 01:41:34.760] All right. [01:41:34.760 --> 01:41:43.760] So it says in 10 days that if auto transport does not answer, the court will continue to proceed without them. [01:41:43.760 --> 01:41:46.760] They're not going to answer. [01:41:46.760 --> 01:41:49.760] So the court will proceed without them. [01:41:49.760 --> 01:41:51.760] What does that mean? [01:41:51.760 --> 01:41:57.760] That means they did not oppose your claim. [01:41:57.760 --> 01:42:13.760] And if, if the appeals court finds that you had a claim that the trial court denied and the towing company didn't oppose your claim, [01:42:13.760 --> 01:42:17.760] then they stipulated to it. [01:42:17.760 --> 01:42:20.760] That's a done deal. [01:42:20.760 --> 01:42:23.760] So they didn't answer in the trial court, and they didn't. [01:42:23.760 --> 01:42:25.760] They're not going to answer in the appeal court. [01:42:25.760 --> 01:42:34.760] In the appeals court, sent me a letter saying 10 days from two days ago, it's going to be finalized, and they're going to move to case court. [01:42:34.760 --> 01:42:35.760] Okay. [01:42:35.760 --> 01:42:38.760] Well, here's the deal about the appeals court. [01:42:38.760 --> 01:42:42.760] They're pretty high level judges. [01:42:42.760 --> 01:42:45.760] They're pretty well respected judges. [01:42:45.760 --> 01:42:51.760] And they take themselves very seriously. [01:42:51.760 --> 01:42:59.760] What this towing company is doing essentially is snubbing their nose at the court of appeals. [01:42:59.760 --> 01:43:04.760] The court of appeals is not likely to be very happy about that. [01:43:04.760 --> 01:43:14.760] They do not like to adjudicate a case without giving the other party opportunity to defend themselves. [01:43:14.760 --> 01:43:20.760] But when they give you opportunity to defend yourself and you snub your nose at them, [01:43:20.760 --> 01:43:26.760] they're likely to give you motivation to defend yourself next time. [01:43:26.760 --> 01:43:29.760] This happens a lot. [01:43:29.760 --> 01:43:33.760] Don't disrespect the court. [01:43:33.760 --> 01:43:38.760] But this company, they went out of business, went bankrupt, and I thought I'm a mustang, [01:43:38.760 --> 01:43:43.760] but the rest of the party, I don't tend to go look for them because I'm not interested in them. [01:43:43.760 --> 01:43:45.760] Yes, the news is coming up. [01:43:45.760 --> 01:43:49.760] But what does that, what kind of chaos does that create? [01:43:49.760 --> 01:43:50.760] Okay, hang on. [01:43:50.760 --> 01:43:51.760] 10 seconds. [01:43:51.760 --> 01:43:52.760] We're ready to count. [01:43:52.760 --> 01:43:59.760] We'll be right back. [01:43:59.760 --> 01:44:05.760] Nutritious food is real body armor. It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion, [01:44:05.760 --> 01:44:08.760] and feeds the entire body the nutrients it needs. [01:44:08.760 --> 01:44:12.760] Did you know the US government banned the hemp plant from growing in the United States [01:44:12.760 --> 01:44:16.760] and classified it as a schedule one drug to hide it behind the marijuana plant? [01:44:16.760 --> 01:44:22.760] People have been confused about this plant for over 80 years and many still don't know what hemp is. [01:44:22.760 --> 01:44:26.760] So now you know hemp is not marijuana and marijuana is not hemp. 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[01:45:38.760 --> 01:45:40.760] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:40.760 --> 01:45:42.760] That's LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:45:42.760 --> 01:45:47.760] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:45:47.760 --> 01:45:51.760] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, get 10 chances to win. [01:45:51.760 --> 01:45:54.760] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:54.760 --> 01:45:59.760] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:45:59.760 --> 01:46:25.760] Okay, we are back. [01:46:25.760 --> 01:46:30.760] Randy Kelton with our video and over the break, I was considering, [01:46:30.760 --> 01:46:36.760] what do you do if the company is out of business? [01:46:36.760 --> 01:46:41.760] You can't get a judgment against the company that went bankrupt. [01:46:41.760 --> 01:46:43.760] Oh, hold on, hold on. [01:46:43.760 --> 01:46:47.760] How big was this company? [01:46:47.760 --> 01:46:52.760] A tall company, I'm not sure. [01:46:52.760 --> 01:46:58.760] You need to find out because if it was a single owner, [01:46:58.760 --> 01:47:02.760] then you may have a claim against him personally. [01:47:02.760 --> 01:47:08.760] Guys incorporate in order to protect themselves so that they can bankrupt out like this. [01:47:08.760 --> 01:47:16.760] However, if you start a corporation and you're the CEO of the corporation [01:47:16.760 --> 01:47:19.760] and you don't have a board of directors, [01:47:19.760 --> 01:47:24.760] you're essentially the owner of the corporation, it gives you no protection [01:47:24.760 --> 01:47:31.760] because the courts consider the corporation your alter ego. [01:47:31.760 --> 01:47:32.760] Right. [01:47:32.760 --> 01:47:36.760] So you still have the individual to go after? [01:47:36.760 --> 01:47:40.760] I included her in the suit. [01:47:40.760 --> 01:47:42.760] Personally? [01:47:42.760 --> 01:47:43.760] Yes. [01:47:43.760 --> 01:47:46.760] Did she answer? [01:47:46.760 --> 01:47:48.760] No. [01:47:48.760 --> 01:47:54.760] Then you can go after her personal assets. [01:47:54.760 --> 01:48:02.760] Well, isn't that going to make the city liable? [01:48:02.760 --> 01:48:07.760] Here's how it generally works in civil matters. [01:48:07.760 --> 01:48:10.760] Whoever got the money pays. [01:48:10.760 --> 01:48:16.760] Quick story, 17 story building, New York City restaurant in the basement. [01:48:16.760 --> 01:48:20.760] He goes out on a Sunday night or Saturday night. [01:48:20.760 --> 01:48:22.760] Can't find a plumber. [01:48:22.760 --> 01:48:26.760] His brother-in-law is a plumber, but he's not a master, licensed master plumber. [01:48:26.760 --> 01:48:30.760] Causing me in, fixes the stove, caused the gas company, electric company. [01:48:30.760 --> 01:48:32.760] They both sign off on it. [01:48:32.760 --> 01:48:34.760] He opens up Sunday morning. [01:48:34.760 --> 01:48:37.760] The whole place burns down. [01:48:37.760 --> 01:48:38.760] They sued the plumber. [01:48:38.760 --> 01:48:40.760] He and everything start with. [01:48:40.760 --> 01:48:42.760] They sued the restaurant owner. [01:48:42.760 --> 01:48:44.760] He lost everything in the fire. [01:48:44.760 --> 01:48:47.760] The building owner, he lost everything in the fire. [01:48:47.760 --> 01:48:55.760] They sued the gas company and electric company named each of them 1% responsible because they signed off on it. [01:48:55.760 --> 01:48:59.760] The gas company and electric company paid the whole bill. [01:48:59.760 --> 01:49:02.760] Whoever got the money pays. [01:49:02.760 --> 01:49:06.760] And if that person's responsibility to get their money back from the other litigants. [01:49:06.760 --> 01:49:10.760] So, you don't care about this person. [01:49:10.760 --> 01:49:18.760] You get the claim unless they have some special provisions I don't know about. [01:49:18.760 --> 01:49:29.760] You've got a person here hired by the city who essentially stipulated to your claims. [01:49:29.760 --> 01:49:34.760] You could get the whole claim against this person. [01:49:34.760 --> 01:49:46.760] And then, since this person doesn't have any assets, whichever one of the litigants has the assets you get to collect from them. [01:49:46.760 --> 01:49:47.760] Okay. [01:49:47.760 --> 01:49:49.760] Oh, you should be able to. [01:49:49.760 --> 01:49:54.760] The court's probably going to tell you that you have to collect from this person. [01:49:54.760 --> 01:49:56.760] You need to research that out. [01:49:56.760 --> 01:50:00.760] Who pays the claim. [01:50:00.760 --> 01:50:06.760] So, you do a search for multiple litigants who pays the claim. [01:50:06.760 --> 01:50:09.760] Wouldn't the courts tell me after they've made their ruling? [01:50:09.760 --> 01:50:21.760] Well, they're likely to rule against you and tell you have to collect from this bankrupt person unless you find case law that says that you don't. [01:50:21.760 --> 01:50:25.760] Well, the city is the one who caused the imminent domain. [01:50:25.760 --> 01:50:31.760] Yeah, but did the city answer the appeal yet? [01:50:31.760 --> 01:50:33.760] Yes, they did. [01:50:33.760 --> 01:50:34.760] Okay. [01:50:34.760 --> 01:50:42.760] If they rule in the city's favor, they rule that the city is not liable. [01:50:42.760 --> 01:50:50.760] And if the city's not liable, then you're back to the clients who did not, ants did not respond. [01:50:50.760 --> 01:51:01.760] So, you need to find out if there's multiple litigants, then who pays the claim. [01:51:01.760 --> 01:51:03.760] Gotcha. [01:51:03.760 --> 01:51:26.760] All right, so now I want to talk about the actions that are happening because you know how the filed lawsuits, they dismiss, they dismiss them thinking that they have control over everything and you can't do nothing about it. [01:51:26.760 --> 01:51:39.760] Now that I appeal them and all these people that got dismissed are getting picked up by the appeals court, that should raise an eyebrow to them, right? [01:51:39.760 --> 01:51:43.760] Because I have several cases and all of them are happening at once. [01:51:43.760 --> 01:51:47.760] Yeah, that was definitely raised an eyebrow. [01:51:47.760 --> 01:51:57.760] But see, I didn't notice that everybody got picked up, but like I said, two weeks ago, I filed a mandamus. [01:51:57.760 --> 01:52:11.760] I filed a mandamus, so now with them having a strategy of just outright denying us and our rights and like, okay, well, Mr. Libby has already jumped that hurdle. [01:52:11.760 --> 01:52:17.760] He just appeals it and go through the process and now appeals court and have us right back at the table. [01:52:17.760 --> 01:52:21.760] So that should put some type of pressure on them, right? [01:52:21.760 --> 01:52:23.760] Absolutely. [01:52:23.760 --> 01:52:29.760] There's a good chance they may want to come to you and make a deal. [01:52:29.760 --> 01:52:41.760] They're going to try to get the feel of the judge and if it looks like they're likely to lose or most likely they'll come to you and try to make a deal. [01:52:41.760 --> 01:52:43.760] And the deal is the best way out. [01:52:43.760 --> 01:52:56.760] If you can get a decent deal, that's the best way out because if you win, then you've got to try to collect from these people and that could take forever. [01:52:56.760 --> 01:53:00.760] Okay. All right. Thank you. [01:53:00.760 --> 01:53:03.760] Okay. And, okay. [01:53:03.760 --> 01:53:08.760] Thank you, Olivier. Now we've got Wendy from Colorado. [01:53:08.760 --> 01:53:15.760] Wendy, I'm sorry it took so long. We had an unusual number of callers tonight. What do you have for us? [01:53:15.760 --> 01:53:26.760] I talked to you yesterday and I was about them driving under revocation and when the cop came up to my yard and I wasn't in the car. [01:53:26.760 --> 01:53:29.760] But I wanted, I got a few statutes for you. [01:53:29.760 --> 01:53:34.760] Before I was going to email you, but I wanted to find you statutes so I could show you a little bit. [01:53:34.760 --> 01:53:47.760] I'm, they're going to send me to prison, they said, but it says, I'll just read a little bit of the statute for you so you, because you don't know Colorado very much. [01:53:47.760 --> 01:54:06.760] Uh, see, since imposed by subpoena shall be mandatory and the court shall not grant probation or suspended sentence thereof. But in a case where the defendant is convicted, although established, he or she has drove the motive for the violation of subsection one, [01:54:06.760 --> 01:54:26.760] because of an emergency mandatory jail sentence, if any shall violation not apply for a first conviction and the court may impose a sentence of one, of one year, not more than two years in jail and $1,000 fine for three, after 3,000. [01:54:26.760 --> 01:54:45.760] Well, I have a problem with, I'm just wondering what I should do. I did find some statutes that say if there was an emergency going on or if a municipal court, they don't have jurisdiction to sentence me like you were saying. [01:54:45.760 --> 01:54:50.760] I was like, well, maybe I should go with that defense. I don't know what to do, actually. [01:54:50.760 --> 01:54:53.760] Are you in a municipal court? [01:54:53.760 --> 01:55:01.760] Well, I don't know. I go to court Tuesday. I'm not sure if I'm in a municipal court or not, but usually I am with a majesty. [01:55:01.760 --> 01:55:06.760] Well, what is the court that you're going to? What's the name of the court? [01:55:06.760 --> 01:55:23.760] It says here by Judicial Center. It just says above name dependent, you are here by summons and ordered to appear in Adams County Court Judicial Center Drive. That's what it says. [01:55:23.760 --> 01:55:42.760] Okay, this is it. That's a county court. So that court is not a municipal court. The municipal court can't handle a complaint that would involve imprisonment. Would this be your first conviction? [01:55:42.760 --> 01:55:47.760] No, no, it's not. It's like my third or fourth. [01:55:47.760 --> 01:55:54.760] Oh, that is not good. That's not going to be good. They're not going to be happy. [01:55:54.760 --> 01:56:00.760] Right. I understand that. But I wasn't driving when the cop, it doesn't matter if you're driving. [01:56:00.760 --> 01:56:17.760] But it gives me that I'm under revocation of the habitual traffic center, but in the same breath, they told me when they sent me a notice saying that I could get an early reinstatement if I got an interlock on my car. [01:56:17.760 --> 01:56:38.760] And they said that may be mad because I haven't had a DUI in 21 years. But for the same, in the statute, in the same, like it says under 138, which is that's what I'm under, it says that if I had an, I could have an interlock in my car if I'm a habitual traffic offender. [01:56:38.760 --> 01:56:47.760] But I can't get just regarding under revocation, I can't get an early reinstatement. But being that they'll even finance the people for first time offenders. [01:56:47.760 --> 01:57:02.760] They put it in the fund says financial assistance for first time offenders and persistent drunk drivers. The department shall establish a program to assist persons who apply for an interlock restriction license pursuant to this sub paragraph. [01:57:02.760 --> 01:57:13.760] Okay. Okay, hold on. Was your license suspended for DUI? [01:57:13.760 --> 01:57:18.760] No, it was just driving. It was suspended because I owed a fine to them. [01:57:18.760 --> 01:57:21.760] Okay. Do you have any DUIs? [01:57:21.760 --> 01:57:23.760] 21 years ago. [01:57:23.760 --> 01:57:33.760] Okay, that's long enough that it shouldn't be an aggravating factor. Why did you not get the interlock? [01:57:33.760 --> 01:57:56.760] Why? Because I'm just simply driving without license and going to prison and people that have two or three sports DUIs, they can have a, they can get their license reinstated if they'll do this interlock. They even told me I could until I found out my DUI was, you know, 20 years ago. [01:57:56.760 --> 01:57:59.760] They said I could have an early reinstatement. [01:57:59.760 --> 01:58:06.760] Okay. Okay. So now they're saying that you can't get the early reinstatement with the interlock. [01:58:06.760 --> 01:58:09.760] We said that the last time because I hadn't had a DUI right. [01:58:09.760 --> 01:58:12.760] Okay. [01:58:12.760 --> 01:58:26.760] I don't know Colorado law enough to know how to respond. Send me that email. I've got one guy in the Denver area. [01:58:26.760 --> 01:58:36.760] If I can locate him, I hadn't talked to him in quite a while. I'll see if I can find him who should be able to give you some good information on Colorado law. [01:58:36.760 --> 01:58:41.760] I've got a court Tuesday. Should I just go in and special appear? [01:58:41.760 --> 01:58:48.760] Yes. I'm sorry. We're out of time right now. Just send me an email and we'll talk better off there. Thank you all for listening. Good night. [01:58:48.760 --> 01:58:50.760] Bye. 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