[00:00.000 --> 00:07.840] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Blowdown, providing the jelly [00:07.840 --> 00:15.440] bulletins for the commodities market, today's history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.440 --> 00:23.360] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.360 --> 00:29.960] Markets for Wednesday the 21st of June 2017 closed off with gold at $1,246.47 an ounce. [00:29.960 --> 00:36.680] Silver, $16.46 an ounce, Texas Crude, $43.23 a barrel, and Bitcoin is sitting at about [00:36.680 --> 00:45.800] $2,651 U.S. currency. [00:45.800 --> 00:51.160] Today in History, the year 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Texas vs. Johnson that the [00:51.160 --> 00:56.520] act of American flag burning was a form of political protest protected by the First Amendment. [00:56.520 --> 01:05.800] In recent years, according to NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, a U.S. [01:05.800 --> 01:10.240] Air Force pilot is being evaluated at a local hospital after an unexpected ejection from [01:10.240 --> 01:15.960] the F-16 due to a crash around 10.30 a.m. local time at Houston's Ellington Airport. [01:15.960 --> 01:20.080] The pilot was conducting a training flight when he had to eject shortly after takeoff. [01:20.080 --> 01:24.560] The Houston Fire Department stated city officials decided to evacuate people within a 4,000 square [01:24.560 --> 01:26.880] foot radius of Ellington Airport. [01:26.880 --> 01:31.760] The evacuation was expected to last about six hours due to the F-16 having live ammunition [01:31.760 --> 01:39.440] on board when it crashed. [01:39.440 --> 01:42.960] The Lieutenant Jeff Neville was stabbed in the neck earlier this morning at the Flint [01:42.960 --> 01:45.560] Michigan Airport by a resin of Canada. [01:45.560 --> 01:49.600] He's luckily in stable condition now, but our prosecutors have charged the man for aggravated [01:49.600 --> 01:54.520] assault with a deadly weapon with the FBI investigating the case as a possible act of terrorism. [01:54.520 --> 01:58.000] High standards have told media outlets that the stabber allegedly referred to people being [01:58.000 --> 02:06.960] killed in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan during the attack. [02:06.960 --> 02:11.600] Heavy rainfall has already hit parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama as tropical storm [02:11.600 --> 02:16.120] Cindy makes her way into the coast, the center of which is expected to make landfall early [02:16.120 --> 02:19.000] Thursday near the Texas-Louisiana border. [02:19.000 --> 02:23.120] 12 inches of rainfall, along with one to three feet of storm surge, is expected. [02:23.120 --> 02:25.640] Unfortunately, Austin and San Antonio are not getting any of it. [02:25.640 --> 02:30.480] Literally, no rain is expected to make it this far northwest, so stay cool in the scorching [02:30.480 --> 02:32.360] heat, my friends. [02:32.360 --> 02:37.400] The Long Star Lowdown is currently the first sponsors. [02:37.400 --> 02:40.160] You have a five-door service cut to advertise with us. [02:40.160 --> 02:44.640] Feel free to give me a call at 210-363-2257. [02:44.640 --> 03:11.200] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for June 21, 2017. [03:11.200 --> 03:22.160] Thank you. [03:41.200 --> 03:46.480] go to school and earn the gold and the rules. So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.480 --> 04:00.200] It's a ticket, and you must just prove it. Bad boy, bad boy. What's it gonna do? Oh, what's it gonna do when they come for you? Bad boy, bad boy. What's it gonna do? Oh, what's it gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.200 --> 04:07.200] You took it done, that's one. You took it done, this one. You took it done, your mother and you took it done, your father. You took it done, your father and your... [04:07.200 --> 04:19.200] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Calton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio on this Thursday, the 29th day of June 2017. [04:19.200 --> 04:26.200] Well, I've had some issues with my electronic lawyer, but I got her up and running. [04:26.200 --> 04:42.200] I've finally got... I've had it working, but it had a number of bitches, but it seemed to have everything pretty well smoothed out, got the documents pretty well straightened out. It was more complex than I had anticipated. [04:42.200 --> 04:55.200] But I got it all up and working. I mean, the process now of migrating it down to a database, which would eliminate a lot of the flakiness I get from Microsoft Word products. [04:55.200 --> 05:08.200] But if you get a ticket, go to trafficticket.website, fill in the documentation. I'll send you 108 pages of documentation. [05:08.200 --> 05:17.200] We are beginning to get some responses to the documentation, and so far it's showing to be effective. [05:17.200 --> 05:30.200] The one thing in all of the documentation that appears to be the most effective is the T-close complaint, the professional conduct complaint against the police officer. [05:30.200 --> 05:39.200] We've been saying on this show that you'll never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [05:39.200 --> 05:52.200] You'll win your case if you have the politics on your side, and there seems to be little that generates more politics than professional conduct complaints. [05:52.200 --> 06:01.200] We file criminal charges and we file motions and pleadings and jerk the courts around. They don't seem to care. [06:01.200 --> 06:09.200] But when we start filing professional conduct complaints against the individuals, then they begin to get excited. [06:09.200 --> 06:13.200] And we've had some folks getting excited. [06:13.200 --> 06:27.200] Scott Richardson out of Garland has had some good results. He's had two of the police officers that he found T-close complaints against are no longer with the department. [06:27.200 --> 06:32.200] That's kind of part of the strategy. [06:32.200 --> 06:40.200] A policeman, he's rated by the insurance carriers by the number of professional conduct complaints he gets. [06:40.200 --> 06:51.200] So when his boss sends him out there to write a ticket, and he goes out there and writes tickets the way he was trained to in any case, [06:51.200 --> 07:05.200] first degree felony aggravated assault charges, and a professional conduct complaint with the first degree felony charge included in the complaint, [07:05.200 --> 07:08.200] he's going to get real excited about that. [07:08.200 --> 07:14.200] I have some poor guy in Highland Park. [07:14.200 --> 07:23.200] He told me over and wrote me a ticket. Well, real professional, real nice guy. [07:23.200 --> 07:34.200] When I filled out the ticket form on the website, I put his name in and somehow that looks familiar. [07:34.200 --> 07:44.200] I had a friend who lives in Highland Park. He got a ticket and I had him go to the site and fill it out. It was the same cop. [07:44.200 --> 07:52.200] So he's going to get two T-close complaints and two first degree felony aggravated assault charges against him. [07:52.200 --> 08:02.200] He is not going to be a happy camper and he's not going to be secure in his position. [08:02.200 --> 08:08.200] Two T-close complaints and quick succession. [08:08.200 --> 08:18.200] While his department may pay no attention to him, his insurance carrier absolutely will pay attention to him. [08:18.200 --> 08:21.200] So it will be interesting to see how that shakes out. [08:21.200 --> 08:26.200] I'm looking forward to going to court on with these documents. [08:26.200 --> 08:31.200] I have two tickets now that I get to go to court on. [08:31.200 --> 08:35.200] One of them is with a judge that I have a history with. [08:35.200 --> 08:41.200] I went to the judge to file a criminal complaint and he refused to take it. [08:41.200 --> 08:48.200] His wife was the justice of the peace and she was killed in an auto accident. [08:48.200 --> 08:55.200] He was appointed to take her place and then he got elected after that in these small counties. [08:55.200 --> 09:04.200] Once you get in an office, you can almost count on staying there unless somebody like me comes along. [09:04.200 --> 09:11.200] So I went to him to file a complaint and he was more than a little bit rude and arrogant. [09:11.200 --> 09:16.200] So I went to the next JP and filed a complaint against him. [09:16.200 --> 09:26.200] And when that JP refused to take the complaint, and that was only in accordance with the 1406 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, [09:26.200 --> 09:31.200] I weighed up a complaint against her and took it to the district attorney. [09:31.200 --> 09:40.200] And used those complaints to set up the district attorney. [09:40.200 --> 09:53.200] It gave me opportunity to present the law to the district attorney and gave him time to look it over and kind of digest the code I was bringing in. [09:53.200 --> 10:00.200] So that when I brought the first degree felony charge against the district judge, [10:00.200 --> 10:15.200] I already had standing in my position and the prosecuting attorney stood aside and let me give the complaints to the grand jury with no interference. [10:15.200 --> 10:17.200] That was remarkable. [10:17.200 --> 10:29.200] Now I'm going back before this JP and I am going to have absolute great fun at his professional expense. [10:29.200 --> 10:34.200] We'll see if he uses arrogant this time as he was the first time. [10:34.200 --> 10:45.200] Now I just went to his office and requested some records recently and he started out being pretty arrogant with me. [10:45.200 --> 10:52.200] But when I'm using the same building as the sheriff's department, [10:52.200 --> 10:59.200] so I walked from his window to the sheriff's department's window and asked for an officer to come out and take a criminal complaint against him. [10:59.200 --> 11:02.200] And I guess they told him about that. [11:02.200 --> 11:12.200] So he came out and I got a whole lot more amenable to what I was wanting and definitely got easier to get along with. [11:12.200 --> 11:16.200] So we'll see what he does with this criminal prosecution. [11:16.200 --> 11:25.200] Okay, we have Scott in Texas on the line. Our call lines are open. The call in number is 512-646-1984. [11:25.200 --> 11:28.200] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. [11:28.200 --> 11:32.200] We are going to Scott in Texas. Hello, Scott. [11:32.200 --> 11:34.200] Howdy, howdy. [11:34.200 --> 11:45.200] Well, being pretty busy today, got that print and all figured out and 104 of those copies dropped in the mail. [11:45.200 --> 11:54.200] Oh, wonderful. We're starting, he's starting to mail out to the city of Plano. [11:54.200 --> 12:02.200] They were saying they write a thousand tickets a week and there were a thousand charges, [12:02.200 --> 12:10.200] but one went through a good portion of them were failures to appear and some of them were municipal ordinance charges. [12:10.200 --> 12:21.200] So we pulled all those out and new tickets got down to 760-something tickets in one week. [12:21.200 --> 12:31.200] So if anybody's out there that lives around Texas that wants to get involved in this, contact me. We'll make a deal. [12:31.200 --> 12:43.200] I will set you up with a white-labeled website. You go to your local municipalities, get their lawyer lists and mailings out. [12:43.200 --> 12:52.200] Start sending people in. The thing is we've got 6.6 million tickets a year in Texas. I can't get to all of them. [12:52.200 --> 12:58.200] So if somebody wants to make some nice, easy, passive income. [12:58.200 --> 13:04.200] We've been banging around the legal reform movement for a good while now. [13:04.200 --> 13:14.200] And most of those of us who are really active in the movement are all flat broke. [13:14.200 --> 13:22.200] We spend all our time helping other people and we'll go out and spend the time making money. [13:22.200 --> 13:28.200] And probably we do this because we're not really focused on money. [13:28.200 --> 13:35.200] If we were, we'd probably make a whole lot more and do less of this, but it is what it is. [13:35.200 --> 13:47.200] However, in the process of trying to work out a remedy, I was led to this place. [13:47.200 --> 14:01.200] And it looks like we can use traffic tickets as a way to generate a healthy, passive income with some folks in the movement or folks not in the movement. [14:01.200 --> 14:06.200] But that's not why we were doing it. That's not why I set this up. [14:06.200 --> 14:13.200] I set this up to shut down illegal traffic enforcement in State of Texas. [14:13.200 --> 14:24.200] We can help to wake up a lot of people that don't understand how bad things are. [14:24.200 --> 14:31.200] Once they get a ticket, now they're unhappy and we got their attention. [14:31.200 --> 14:50.200] Now's a good time to take that point of anger and frustration and use it as a doorway for us to open them up to what is really going on and we will wind up with a lot more people doing what Scott Richardson's doing. [14:50.200 --> 15:04.200] Then we're after these people and when they get a ticket or a complaint against them, instead of just standing back and defending themselves, they go after them like a tornado. [15:04.200 --> 15:15.200] And it will cause our public officials to be much more careful and more professional and their dealings with the individuals. [15:15.200 --> 15:21.200] Okay, Scott, what do you have for us today? [15:21.200 --> 15:28.200] Well, I guess that's about it. I'm just going to palm off on that. [15:28.200 --> 15:33.200] I'll get that kicked off. [15:33.200 --> 15:45.200] Well, you see that blurb out on YouTube and that's got nearly 400 hits and seven people actually paid for that. [15:45.200 --> 15:58.200] So that was a good indication. People actually responded and didn't get anyone that seemed to have any objection to pay. [15:58.200 --> 16:08.200] Because we've got people that are, they've got tickets, they're going to be put to some inconvenience and some cost. [16:08.200 --> 16:17.200] And it appears as though the people were kidding. It's not the cost that is their concern. They are PO'd. [16:17.200 --> 16:24.200] They don't like being pushed around and they like the idea of being able to push back. [16:24.200 --> 16:28.200] We will push back when we come back on the other side. [16:28.200 --> 16:33.200] We're about to go to break. This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens with our radio. [16:33.200 --> 16:36.200] And Debra's hanging around back there in the background. [16:36.200 --> 16:40.200] We'll make it before he shows over just to rank her back on the air. [16:40.200 --> 16:43.200] We don't get to hear her voice on here enough. [16:43.200 --> 16:46.200] And we still have our fundraiser going on. [16:46.200 --> 16:50.200] It's a good time to go look at Lobo's radio network and check out our gun giveaway. [16:50.200 --> 16:55.200] And the products we have there, if you buy those products every $25 you spend, [16:55.200 --> 16:57.200] gets you a chance in the gun giveaway. [16:57.200 --> 17:21.200] Hang on, we'll be right back. [17:27.200 --> 17:33.200] Click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookie and clear them. [17:33.200 --> 17:34.200] Bye bye Yucca Cookies. [17:34.200 --> 17:40.200] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side. [17:40.200 --> 17:47.200] Bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [17:47.200 --> 17:49.200] No cookies for me. [17:49.200 --> 17:51.200] Consider it an early Christmas present. [17:51.200 --> 17:57.200] Every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.200 --> 17:58.200] Here's for cookie. [17:58.200 --> 18:00.200] Consider it a Christmas present. [18:00.200 --> 18:08.200] It's the 2017 Lobo's Radio Network Annual Fundraiser sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. [18:08.200 --> 18:10.200] Defense Distributed in Fatsal's Delay. [18:10.200 --> 18:13.200] Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter the win. [18:13.200 --> 18:16.200] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [18:16.200 --> 18:22.200] From Central Texas Gun Works, 1st place, up for grabs of Spike's Tactical AR-15. [18:22.200 --> 18:26.200] 2nd place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol. [18:26.200 --> 18:30.200] From Defense Distributed, 3rd place, the AR-308 80% lower. [18:30.200 --> 18:33.200] 4th place, the AR-15 80% lower. [18:33.200 --> 18:38.200] And Fatsal's Delay, 5th place, $100 gift cards for Fatsal's Delay. [18:38.200 --> 18:40.200] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [18:40.200 --> 18:42.200] That's logosradionetwork.com. [18:42.200 --> 18:47.200] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal101, you get 4 chances to win. [18:47.200 --> 18:51.200] Purchase Eddie Craig's Traffic Seminar and get 10 chances to win. [18:51.200 --> 18:54.200] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [18:54.200 --> 19:22.200] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [19:22.200 --> 19:32.200] Thank you for watching. [19:52.200 --> 20:02.200] Thank you for watching. [20:22.200 --> 20:32.200] Thank you for watching. [20:52.200 --> 20:57.200] The Constitution authorizes the legislature to write law. [20:57.200 --> 21:02.200] And pulled out the codes where it authorized them to do that. [21:02.200 --> 21:07.200] And then showed where, pulled out some case law, pulled out a few cases from Eddie. [21:07.200 --> 21:18.200] And pulled out some more that said clearly that only the legislature can write law. [21:18.200 --> 21:24.200] And I didn't argue Chapter 39 of the government code or 29. [21:24.200 --> 21:28.200] I just argued that the legislatures authorized the right law. [21:28.200 --> 21:30.200] They have no power to delegate that authority. [21:30.200 --> 21:34.200] So it would be interesting to see how that one works. [21:34.200 --> 21:37.200] See how they get around it. [21:37.200 --> 21:46.200] Okay, well, if that's all you got, we got another caller who may actually have some information for us today. [21:46.200 --> 21:51.200] And get back, fire up that prayer and get busy. [21:51.200 --> 21:55.200] Oh, they're at you as soon as something gets cracking. [21:55.200 --> 21:57.200] Okay, thank you, Scott. [21:57.200 --> 22:02.200] Okay, now we're going to Jeff in Mississippi. [22:02.200 --> 22:07.200] Hey, good buddy. [22:07.200 --> 22:09.200] Thank you. Hi, Randy. Can you hear me? [22:09.200 --> 22:13.200] Ten-four, good buddy. [22:13.200 --> 22:18.200] Okay, well, I'm out in trucker, but I got three questions to ask you. [22:18.200 --> 22:20.200] Okay. [22:20.200 --> 22:32.200] And the first one is my, I had a gun charge on Mississippi State campus and I was convicted, but it went to appeal. [22:32.200 --> 22:38.200] I filed a petition for a rehearing and it looks like I got it. [22:38.200 --> 22:41.200] Oh. [22:41.200 --> 22:51.200] I was surprised. In fact, I even wrote the clerk and asked them, do you mean that you accepted my document or you actually accepted my petition? [22:51.200 --> 22:56.200] And they wrote back and said, yeah, they're going to re-hear your case. [22:56.200 --> 23:01.200] Wonderful. What was the ruling? [23:01.200 --> 23:05.200] Well, the ruling was against me. [23:05.200 --> 23:08.200] No, no, no, no. [23:08.200 --> 23:18.200] Is this a re-hearing based on the appeal or was it a motion for re-hearing? [23:18.200 --> 23:25.200] Re-hearing doesn't sound like it means a new trial. [23:25.200 --> 23:29.200] No, no, I think that they're just going to re-hear the case. [23:29.200 --> 23:32.200] No, that's a trial. [23:32.200 --> 23:36.200] A re-hearing sounds like they're going to re-hear a motion or a pleading. [23:36.200 --> 23:39.200] Hang on. Back to go to break. We'll pick this up on the other side. [23:39.200 --> 23:46.200] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rita LaRidio, occult number 5126461984. [23:46.200 --> 23:54.200] We'll be right back. [23:54.200 --> 23:58.200] Oh, wait a minute. I thought that said six seconds. [23:58.200 --> 24:04.200] Forget that, Jeff. I'm brain dead today. [24:04.200 --> 24:10.200] Okay. I thought that said that went by awful fast. [24:10.200 --> 24:13.200] I've been up since what this morning, so I'm kind of losing it. [24:13.200 --> 24:16.200] Okay, Jeff, I am sorry. [24:16.200 --> 24:22.200] A re-hearing? That doesn't sound like a new trial. [24:22.200 --> 24:27.200] So did this decision come from the trial court or the court of appeals? [24:27.200 --> 24:30.200] Court of appeals. [24:30.200 --> 24:35.200] Court of appeals will have entered a ruling. [24:35.200 --> 24:42.200] What was the ruling for the reason for re-hearing? [24:42.200 --> 24:51.200] I don't know, because all I did was I got a letter from the clerk saying that your re-hearing has been accepted. [24:51.200 --> 24:58.200] Partition for re-hearing. So it's just a small letter from the clerk, like informal. [24:58.200 --> 25:02.200] Okay, I'm not sure what that means. [25:02.200 --> 25:11.200] Okay, did you file an appeal or did you file a petition for re-hearing? [25:11.200 --> 25:19.200] First, I filed an appeal and lost the appeal. [25:19.200 --> 25:24.200] Okay, so what did you file after that? [25:24.200 --> 25:30.200] I filed a petition for re-hearing because they never gave any points or authority. [25:30.200 --> 25:39.200] So on my petition, I went back and claimed that I objected to my Second Amendment gun rights in Chicago versus McDonald's [25:39.200 --> 25:45.200] and the court never even addressed it, so therefore I petitioned for a re-hearing. [25:45.200 --> 25:48.200] Okay, now it's making sense. [25:48.200 --> 25:57.200] Misunderstood and thought you were re-hearing the original case, this is a re-hearing of the appeal. [25:57.200 --> 26:01.200] I'm sorry, yeah, I should have been clearer on that too. [26:01.200 --> 26:06.200] Okay, now it's making sense. I think that's very good news. [26:06.200 --> 26:07.200] Okay. [26:07.200 --> 26:10.200] Apparently your points were well taken. [26:10.200 --> 26:15.200] Well, do I need to turn around and write new documents? [26:15.200 --> 26:23.200] Look at your documents. You can amend them if you need to. [26:23.200 --> 26:33.200] Look at your documents, see if you can, you know, I want you to write one of these documents and then you go back a week or a month later and read it. [26:33.200 --> 26:40.200] If there are any errors or weaknesses, they tend to jump right out at you. [26:40.200 --> 26:41.200] All right. [26:41.200 --> 26:53.200] So I would heartily suggest that you go back and re-read that thing and probably you should get in front of the mirror and read it out loud. [26:53.200 --> 26:54.200] Okay. [26:54.200 --> 27:00.200] Or if you're driving around in that truck with somebody else, read it to him and annoy the heck out of him. [27:00.200 --> 27:10.200] But read it out loud, it'll help you get all, make sure all the pieces fit together and you make sure you've got a good document. [27:10.200 --> 27:11.200] Okay. [27:11.200 --> 27:15.200] So rewrite my brief and send it back in. [27:15.200 --> 27:16.200] Maybe. [27:16.200 --> 27:23.200] If you have any major blunders sitting back in, but if it's just minor stuff, I wouldn't. [27:23.200 --> 27:26.200] Well, my brief is fantastic. [27:26.200 --> 27:36.200] But I was just thinking of shortening it up and really just only highlighting the important issues that I wanted to come in on. [27:36.200 --> 27:39.200] Because in my brief I listed a whole bunch of stuff. [27:39.200 --> 27:41.200] But I did a pretty good job. [27:41.200 --> 27:44.200] I don't think I can improve on what I had. [27:44.200 --> 27:45.200] Good. [27:45.200 --> 27:46.200] I'm just lack of knowledge. [27:46.200 --> 27:49.200] Yeah, they leave well enough alone. [27:49.200 --> 27:52.200] Okay, so just sit back and wait for an answer. [27:52.200 --> 27:53.200] Yes. [27:53.200 --> 27:58.200] So this is really good news. [27:58.200 --> 28:06.200] They would not have agreed to read you unless they found merit in your position. [28:06.200 --> 28:08.200] Okay, yeah. [28:08.200 --> 28:14.200] So they may have had a clerk that didn't do a very good job. [28:14.200 --> 28:19.200] Since you were pro se, he figured you would just lay down and roll over. [28:19.200 --> 28:25.200] He got back to them and they don't want this going to the Supreme. [28:25.200 --> 28:31.200] Or it could well be that they don't want a really bad decision coming out. [28:31.200 --> 28:34.200] Or it could be that the politics is changing. [28:34.200 --> 28:39.200] We've got a new president and a more aggressive president. [28:39.200 --> 28:44.200] They may figure this is more in his favor. [28:44.200 --> 28:49.200] And he just won in the Supreme big time. [28:49.200 --> 28:51.200] So he's got more clout. [28:51.200 --> 28:57.200] So the Fifth Circuit may be looking at a different playing field. [28:57.200 --> 28:59.200] You don't know what's going on. [28:59.200 --> 29:03.200] But I take that as a very good sign. [29:03.200 --> 29:06.200] Oh, great. It's good to hear some good news. [29:06.200 --> 29:08.200] Joe, this is wonderful. [29:08.200 --> 29:12.200] This is the first good news you've had in the whole case. [29:12.200 --> 29:14.200] I think so, yeah. [29:14.200 --> 29:25.200] Okay, my second question is I put in Title 42, 1983. [29:25.200 --> 29:33.200] And then I appealed that up to the Ninth Circuit. [29:33.200 --> 29:37.200] And then I just simply haven't heard anything from them. [29:37.200 --> 29:41.200] Is one of the court's tactics just to simply put it in the closet? [29:41.200 --> 29:43.200] Do you never hear from them again? [29:43.200 --> 29:47.200] No, I've got two questions. [29:47.200 --> 29:50.200] I'll pick that up on the other side. [29:50.200 --> 29:52.200] This is Randy Kelton. [29:52.200 --> 29:57.200] David Stevens, we'll radio a call in number 512-646-1984. [29:57.200 --> 30:00.200] We'll be right back. [30:00.200 --> 30:03.200] Are you having guilty thoughts? [30:03.200 --> 30:05.200] They could land you in jail. [30:05.200 --> 30:08.200] Neuro forensic brain scans are being used to prove guilt in India, [30:08.200 --> 30:11.200] and they could be coming to a courtroom near you. [30:11.200 --> 30:14.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [30:14.200 --> 30:18.200] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches, [30:18.200 --> 30:21.200] and creating a massive database of your personal information. [30:21.200 --> 30:22.200] That's creepy. [30:22.200 --> 30:24.200] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:24.200 --> 30:27.200] StartPage.com is the world's most private search engine. 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[32:27.200 --> 32:30.200] Our conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching [32:30.200 --> 32:33.200] tool available that will help you understand what due process is [32:33.200 --> 32:35.200] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.200 --> 32:39.200] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [32:39.200 --> 32:41.200] and ordering your copy today. [32:41.200 --> 32:44.200] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.200 --> 32:47.200] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:47.200 --> 32:50.200] hundreds of research documents and further useful resource material. [32:50.200 --> 32:54.200] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.200 --> 33:02.200] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.200 --> 33:22.200] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:22.200 --> 33:24.200] Okay, we are back. [33:24.200 --> 33:30.200] Randy Kelkin, Debra Stevens, we're in the radio and we're talking to Jeff in Mississippi. [33:30.200 --> 33:34.200] I was busy on the break and I lost my place. [33:34.200 --> 33:35.200] Okay. [33:35.200 --> 33:38.200] I had two questions. What were they? [33:38.200 --> 33:43.200] The second question was I filed a Title 42-1983 case. [33:43.200 --> 33:46.200] Oh, okay, I got it. [33:46.200 --> 33:48.200] It takes a long time. [33:48.200 --> 33:51.200] In Ninth Circuit. [33:51.200 --> 33:55.200] How did you get to the Ninth Circuit? [33:55.200 --> 34:01.200] The case was in Fort Smith, Arkansas, so it went up to... [34:01.200 --> 34:06.200] I'm sorry, that's probably the eighth circuit up in St. Louis. [34:06.200 --> 34:08.200] Oh, okay. [34:08.200 --> 34:11.200] I thought I was thinking it would wind up in the fifth. [34:11.200 --> 34:13.200] Anyway, okay. [34:13.200 --> 34:15.200] That answered that question. [34:15.200 --> 34:22.200] The other question is how long ago did you file the... [34:22.200 --> 34:23.200] Appeal? [34:23.200 --> 34:25.200] Yes. [34:25.200 --> 34:28.200] Probably nine months ago. [34:28.200 --> 34:31.200] Okay, he's getting time. [34:31.200 --> 34:37.200] The last appeal we filed in California took about that long. [34:37.200 --> 34:44.200] The appeals court will get to it when they get to it and it depends on their docket. [34:44.200 --> 34:49.200] So, no, they don't set it somewhere and never get back to it. [34:49.200 --> 34:53.200] They will get to it, but they put it in the pile. [34:53.200 --> 35:00.200] They took your appeal and they gave it to a law clerk and the law clerk will analyze your appeal [35:00.200 --> 35:03.200] and then he'll write a recommendation to the judges. [35:03.200 --> 35:08.200] Then he puts it back on the stacks and then he goes to the next one. [35:08.200 --> 35:14.200] So, it's just got to work his way through the stack and it depends on how many they got. [35:14.200 --> 35:21.200] We are like 20% short on federal judges right now across the country. [35:21.200 --> 35:24.200] We don't have enough judges. [35:24.200 --> 35:28.200] So, all of the courts are backed up. [35:28.200 --> 35:31.200] So, expect it to take a while. [35:31.200 --> 35:32.200] That's fine. [35:32.200 --> 35:33.200] That's fine. [35:33.200 --> 35:43.200] My last question is I've actually filed two Title 42s against people who lost both of them very easily. [35:43.200 --> 35:47.200] In both cases, the courts never even explained. [35:47.200 --> 35:52.200] They just simply came in and just said it was meritless and they're throwing it out. [35:52.200 --> 35:58.200] I was reading some documents by Carl Lentz and I know that we've talked about this before, [35:58.200 --> 36:07.200] but it did kind of make sense that when you use legalese terms like pro se and deemed and plaintiff and stuff, [36:07.200 --> 36:17.200] that it's playing by their game and that therefore they can throw it out because they complain [36:17.200 --> 36:21.200] or they can agree that all your facts in the law are right. [36:21.200 --> 36:24.200] It's just that they don't have any jurisdiction to provide remedy. [36:24.200 --> 36:26.200] So, in other words, it's useful. [36:26.200 --> 36:30.200] Is that true? [36:30.200 --> 36:37.200] Well, they would have to give you notice. [36:37.200 --> 36:38.200] Okay. [36:38.200 --> 36:40.200] They'd have to notice? [36:40.200 --> 36:41.200] Yeah. [36:41.200 --> 36:47.200] If they deny you notice of the reason for the ruling, [36:47.200 --> 36:51.200] then they deny you and your right to petition for an appeal. [36:51.200 --> 36:56.200] You don't have a right to an appeal, but you have a right to petition. [36:56.200 --> 36:57.200] Okay. [36:57.200 --> 37:04.200] And if they rule against you and don't tell you why, then they're denying you and do a process. [37:04.200 --> 37:15.200] And I'm suggesting that if a judge rules against you and refuses to give you points in authority as you file criminally against the judge. [37:15.200 --> 37:16.200] Okay, got it. [37:16.200 --> 37:17.200] Okay. [37:17.200 --> 37:20.200] I have not yet, so I need to do that. [37:20.200 --> 37:31.200] And filing against their professional credentials is turning out to be the most powerful things that we're doing. [37:31.200 --> 37:38.200] We're doing tickets right now and professional conduct complaints against the police officers. [37:38.200 --> 37:41.200] It has got them hopping up and down. [37:41.200 --> 37:43.200] They are unhappy. [37:43.200 --> 37:47.200] Scott, who was on earlier tour of the policeman he's filed against, [37:47.200 --> 37:49.200] had no longer with the department. [37:49.200 --> 37:53.200] That doesn't mean they quit because of that PICO's complaint, [37:53.200 --> 37:55.200] but we sure like to think they did. [37:55.200 --> 37:57.200] Okay. [37:57.200 --> 38:01.200] How do you start off filing criminally against the judge? [38:01.200 --> 38:11.200] You just make up a criminal accusation and go to jurisimprudence.website. [38:11.200 --> 38:12.200] Yep. [38:12.200 --> 38:25.200] And go to the Cherokee County unique and in there you'll find a folder with criminal complaints in it and read that out for David. [38:25.200 --> 38:27.200] Okay. [38:27.200 --> 38:31.200] That's a demonstration of how to put this together. [38:31.200 --> 38:44.200] I will be writing some complaints against the judges for failing to apply the law to the facts here in the relatively near future [38:44.200 --> 38:49.200] and I'll have those up on the website so you can pull them and look at them. [38:49.200 --> 38:51.200] Okay. [38:51.200 --> 38:58.200] The judges say, well, if you don't like my ruling, well, you can just appeal it. [38:58.200 --> 39:01.200] So, well, yeah, I can appeal it. [39:01.200 --> 39:06.200] I can appeal it to a court of appeals who are more corrupt than you are, [39:06.200 --> 39:11.200] or I can appeal to a grand jury to have them indict you. [39:11.200 --> 39:15.200] That they don't want you to do. [39:15.200 --> 39:16.200] Okay. [39:16.200 --> 39:17.200] Right. [39:17.200 --> 39:18.200] Okay. [39:18.200 --> 39:20.200] Randy, thank you. [39:20.200 --> 39:21.200] Okay. [39:21.200 --> 39:22.200] Thank you, Jeff. [39:22.200 --> 39:23.200] Okay. [39:23.200 --> 39:31.200] Now we're going to Olivier in Tennessee. Hello, Olivier. [39:31.200 --> 39:35.200] Oh, it's Michael, major background noise. [39:35.200 --> 39:36.200] Hello? [39:36.200 --> 39:39.200] Hello. [39:39.200 --> 39:42.200] You have horrible background noise. [39:42.200 --> 39:44.200] I'm aiming up. [39:44.200 --> 39:45.200] That's better. [39:45.200 --> 39:49.200] Sounded like you were dragging the mic on the floor. [39:49.200 --> 39:51.200] Much better. [39:51.200 --> 39:53.200] Okay. [39:53.200 --> 39:56.200] Colin just talked to you about that C closed thing he's talking about. [39:56.200 --> 39:58.200] Oh, he told me earlier. [39:58.200 --> 40:02.200] And I saw something else, but it seemed like it was training. [40:02.200 --> 40:15.200] Then I went back and looked and I found something that says the department of commerce and insurance. [40:15.200 --> 40:19.200] And they have a complaint form. [40:19.200 --> 40:43.200] I read over there, I read over their information and it says that they have the ability to revoke licenses and civil actions against individuals. [40:43.200 --> 40:44.200] Interesting. [40:44.200 --> 40:49.200] What is the name of this? [40:49.200 --> 40:51.200] Commerce and insurance. [40:51.200 --> 40:58.200] Commerce and insurance sounds like exactly the right place. [40:58.200 --> 41:01.200] Olivier and I were talking earlier about that. [41:01.200 --> 41:08.200] He was looking in Georgia for, he had some issues with some place in Georgia. [41:08.200 --> 41:15.200] You know, it's out of state, you don't want to go to Georgia and file suits and that's a hassle. [41:15.200 --> 41:17.200] It's got to be an easier way. [41:17.200 --> 41:20.200] So we're looking for how to file due to some kind of complaints against him. [41:20.200 --> 41:23.200] And now he's back in Tennessee looking at Tennessee. [41:23.200 --> 41:32.200] You mentioned earlier when you first started looking, you came up with a reference to a Tennessee Department of Homeland Security. [41:32.200 --> 41:36.200] And that really got my attention. [41:36.200 --> 41:57.200] What issue or what interest did the Tennessee Department of Homeland Security have concerning police conduct? [41:57.200 --> 42:19.200] I don't know for 100% sure, but from the information that I got from the time that I had to preview it, it seems like they take complaints and address complaints against anyone, any officer. [42:19.200 --> 42:30.200] What I'm thinking is Homeland Security, how does bad police work go to Homeland Security? [42:30.200 --> 42:41.200] Now what I'm thinking is there may be something in their charter that we don't know about that may give them some clout. [42:41.200 --> 42:49.200] Because generally when you say Homeland Security, everybody shutters. [42:49.200 --> 42:54.200] So it really got my attention there. [42:54.200 --> 42:56.200] Okay. [42:56.200 --> 43:01.200] I'm going to look into that here in Texas. [43:01.200 --> 43:12.200] Part of the reason it got my attention so much is I was doing research on who can enforce the traffic code in Texas. [43:12.200 --> 43:22.200] And I came across a legislative report that had a section by the Texas Department of Homeland Security. [43:22.200 --> 43:38.200] And interestingly enough, it was addressing traffic, but it addressed municipalities who were enforcing certain provisions of the transportation code and they were required. [43:38.200 --> 43:41.200] And this is under the... [43:41.200 --> 43:43.200] We got music. [43:43.200 --> 43:44.200] Go ahead. [43:44.200 --> 43:45.200] Yeah, music. [43:45.200 --> 43:46.200] The music. [43:46.200 --> 43:53.200] Oh, okay. Hang on, Randy Kelton, we'll go to the radio and we'll be right back. [44:17.200 --> 44:22.200] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.200 --> 44:30.200] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian emu oil, motion candles, olive oil soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.200 --> 44:37.200] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. [44:37.200 --> 44:43.200] That's 512-264-4043 naturespureorganics.com. [44:43.200 --> 44:49.200] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products naturespureorganics.com. [45:14.200 --> 45:19.200] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.200 --> 45:23.200] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.200 --> 45:28.200] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.200 --> 45:34.200] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.200 --> 45:43.200] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.200 --> 45:52.200] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.200 --> 46:15.200] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:15.200 --> 46:26.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelsen, Deborah Stevens from Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee about homeland security of all things. [46:26.200 --> 46:43.200] And this article was concerned with the fact that these municipalities were getting complaints from truck drivers of being pulled over multiple times in one day for vehicle inspections. [46:43.200 --> 47:12.200] And they felt that the municipalities were over-enforcing the code, and then they were collecting fees and not remitting those fees back to the Department of Public Safety under the Texas Administrative Code Section 4.14 and 13 and 14 that are certain municipal officers to do DOT safety inspections. [47:12.200 --> 47:24.200] They are required, they are allowed to keep 110% of their operating costs. The rest is to be remitted to the state. [47:24.200 --> 47:33.200] And they complained that they had a half a billion dollars that was owed and never remitted by the jurisdictions. [47:33.200 --> 47:53.200] But it got me wondering what business was this of homeland security? So what do we know about the charter for homeland security? What is their job? What's important to them? What do they regulate? [47:53.200 --> 48:03.200] And especially, what do they regulate that would get them into the business of looking over the shoulder of law enforcement? [48:03.200 --> 48:24.200] From what the quick paragraph I read, it says that when they fail to do something that they are required to do, when they violate a provision that they are required to do. [48:24.200 --> 48:35.200] So just like they are required to give a miscommunication, they are required to do. [48:35.200 --> 48:41.200] So to protect, I guess, homeland security protects the rights and the Constitution and stuff, right? [48:41.200 --> 49:02.200] I'm not sure. That's the thing. I'm not sure what homeland security does. They apparently do something that is unclear, at least to me, that would give them the concern of the world to go look at police misconduct. [49:02.200 --> 49:12.200] We may have another agency out there that we can use to help us bring the police in line that we didn't even know about. [49:12.200 --> 49:20.200] I would do some more research on that. That is most interesting. [49:20.200 --> 49:34.200] So tell me what the procedure is in Tennessee for professional conduct complaints. Have you found something other than this insurance commerce and insurance board? [49:34.200 --> 49:53.200] The insurance and commerce board and the homeland security, you can call in, you can write it in, or you can come to their office. They all have the same provision. [49:53.200 --> 50:03.200] You can call, you can write a letter, send in the complaint, or you can make an appointment to come and speak to somebody. [50:03.200 --> 50:09.200] Oh, I'm always thinking in terms of politics. [50:09.200 --> 50:20.200] I'm not thinking in terms of the politics of a politician standing up giving some speech that means pandering speech that means nothing. [50:20.200 --> 50:33.200] I'm talking about the interplay of influences by different departments and how they interact with each other. [50:33.200 --> 50:44.200] And having been in the military, I'm very clear on how departments tend to compete with one another. [50:44.200 --> 50:52.200] Everybody in an organization competes for power and influence. [50:52.200 --> 51:05.200] So it's interesting to see and get a better idea of what the interest of insurance and commerce board is. [51:05.200 --> 51:19.200] Well, the interest, it says that they regulate all businesses that deal with licenses and government officials. [51:19.200 --> 51:29.200] So apparently, police officers fall within those businesses. So that sounds like key clubs. [51:29.200 --> 51:34.200] They have to have a license and they have to have insurance. [51:34.200 --> 51:40.200] So that's the licensing board, like we take those things in Texas. [51:40.200 --> 51:54.200] It says any profession that has to have a license or has to have insurance is regulated through the Department of Commerce and Insurance. [51:54.200 --> 52:05.200] When we talked earlier, I told Olivier to see if he could find an insurance guy who could tell him who insures these people. [52:05.200 --> 52:09.200] So we would know where to find that political pressure. [52:09.200 --> 52:12.200] It looks like Olivier would like you found it. [52:12.200 --> 52:14.200] Yes. [52:14.200 --> 52:22.200] This is perfect because I guarantee you fought a complaint with these guys and their bond ratings going up. [52:22.200 --> 52:28.200] So that means this officer who arrested me six, seven, eight times. [52:28.200 --> 52:31.200] That means he's basically going to get fired. [52:31.200 --> 52:45.200] Well, almost certainly because the jurisdiction will not be able to afford to keep him because the officer's bond rating doesn't go up. [52:45.200 --> 52:49.200] The department's bond rating goes up. [52:49.200 --> 53:01.200] So what they pay for every officer goes up and if they got this one guy on there that's increasing the bond rating, he's history. [53:01.200 --> 53:03.200] So that means I filed against him. [53:03.200 --> 53:09.200] I filed against the officer who failed to assist and he was also prisoning me. [53:09.200 --> 53:12.200] So that means I have a lot of complaints to write. [53:12.200 --> 53:27.200] So what you need to do is get me a copy of the complaint form and I will build an app like I have for the traffic ticket. [53:27.200 --> 53:41.200] When you go on the website, you open the form and you fill in the information and hit the button and it merges into the document and spits the document out. [53:41.200 --> 53:55.200] The nice thing about this is when you find these complaints, all this nitpicking, annoying information you have to find and then you got to go through that document, figure out what to put in every place. [53:55.200 --> 54:03.200] But we do that one time and we build it into an app and then you just put up a page that asks you questions. [54:03.200 --> 54:10.200] You answer the questions and bam, it spits it out. [54:10.200 --> 54:15.200] So this will speed up your filing complaints. [54:15.200 --> 54:25.200] If you can open this app and it will auto populate with all your information and all you have to put in is the information for whoever you're complaining against. [54:25.200 --> 54:34.200] It makes this a lot easier and you never have to worry about getting something in the wrong place. [54:34.200 --> 54:42.200] If you'll get me their forms, we'll put together an app for that. [54:42.200 --> 54:46.200] Then we'll make it available to everybody. [54:46.200 --> 54:52.200] Then you'll tell all your friends, get them to it. [54:52.200 --> 55:08.200] I have an app for Tclos in Texas that's included in my ticket platform but I will be breaking these out into separate apps because right now I'm building a backside database. [55:08.200 --> 55:17.200] The database will give me a lot more functionality than I have so that I can break out each of these forms individually. [55:17.200 --> 55:24.200] I will be building a Bargainess form that you just called a complaint form. [55:24.200 --> 55:35.200] Any other complaint forms I can find, I'll certainly be looking into Homeland Security. [55:35.200 --> 55:39.200] One more question. [55:39.200 --> 55:59.200] Now we're talking about license insurance, right? I got a situation where the Chief of Police has restricted me from filing complaints on these officers which is violating their code and state laws. [55:59.200 --> 56:12.200] The Chief of Police and the Mayor can also get those complaints because they have a license to be whatever they are. [56:12.200 --> 56:15.200] Not the Mayor. [56:15.200 --> 56:18.200] The Mayor doesn't have to be insured? [56:18.200 --> 56:25.200] Not that I know of. The city does but not the Mayor. [56:25.200 --> 56:32.200] The Mayor definitely doesn't have to have a license or anything. He just has to be elected. [56:32.200 --> 56:35.200] He just has to be elected. [56:35.200 --> 56:41.200] Yeah but you can charge him criminally. This goes to due process. [56:41.200 --> 57:02.200] That's what I was saying. You were saying that the three departments that say it's a criminal, I contacted them and I gave them all the information but now I'm going to get the Department of Commerce and Insurance on them and the other department. [57:02.200 --> 57:10.200] Homeland Security or Homeland Security would be wonderful if they come after them. Just the name will strike fear. [57:10.200 --> 57:18.200] Those three organizations looking into them at the same time would cause a lot of pressure. [57:18.200 --> 57:31.200] You better know this causes a lot. You heard Scott Richardson on the air and I haven't told this to Scott yet. [57:31.200 --> 57:46.200] I have a friend here in Decatur, Texas who is a police officer. He called me and I was talking to him about what Scott had done and he asked me some questions about it. [57:46.200 --> 57:51.200] Now we're about 60 miles from where Scott is. [57:51.200 --> 58:04.200] He was pulled over and Woodrow was winded down and the policeman broke out his window and drug him out of the car. When he got it all on video he would put it on YouTube and got it all to me in hits. [58:04.200 --> 58:23.200] David the cop here in Decatur went to a training session and they showed that video. That is very telling. They really don't like this publicity. [58:23.200 --> 58:50.200] We'll be right back. 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[59:53.200 --> 01:00:03.200] Listen to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:03.200 --> 01:00:23.200] Thank you. [01:00:23.200 --> 01:00:45.200] The markets for Wednesday the 21st of June 2017 closed off with gold at $1,246.47 an ounce, silver $16.46 an ounce, Texas crude $43.23 a barrel and Bitcoin is sitting at about $2,651 U.S. currency. [01:00:45.200 --> 01:00:56.200] Today in history the year 1989 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Texas versus Johnson that the act of American flag burning was a form of political protest protected by the First Amendment. [01:00:56.200 --> 01:01:01.200] Today in history. [01:01:01.200 --> 01:01:16.200] In recent years, according to NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, a U.S. Air Force pilot is being evaluated at a local hospital after an unexpected injection from the F-16 due to a crash around 10.30 a.m. local time at Houston's Ellington Airport. [01:01:16.200 --> 01:01:39.200] The pilot was conducting a training flight when he had to eject shortly after takeoff. The Houston Fire Department stated city officials decided to evacuate people within a 4,000 square foot radius of Ellington Airport. The evacuation was expected to last about six hours due to the F-16 having live ammunition on board when it crashed. [01:01:39.200 --> 01:01:47.200] The Lieutenant Jeff Neville was stabbed in the neck earlier this morning at the Flint, Michigan airport by a resident of Canada. He's luckily in stable condition now. [01:01:47.200 --> 01:01:54.200] Federal prosecutors have charged the man for aggravated assault with the deadly weapon with the FBI investigating the case as a possible act of terrorism. [01:01:54.200 --> 01:02:06.200] Bystanders have told media outlets that the stabber allegedly referred to people being killed in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan during the attack. [01:02:06.200 --> 01:02:19.200] Heavy rainfall has already hit parts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama as tropical storm Cindy makes her way into the coast, the center of which is expected to make landfall early Thursday near the Texas-Louisiana border. [01:02:19.200 --> 01:02:32.200] Twelve inches of rainfall along with one to three feet of storm surge is expected. Unfortunately, Austin and San Antonio are not getting any of it. Literally, no rain is expected to make it this far northwest, so stay cool in the scorching heat, my friends. [01:02:32.200 --> 01:02:45.200] The low-star loadout is currently due for sponsors. If you have applied for a service cut to advertise with us, feel free to give me a call at 210-363-2257. [01:02:45.200 --> 01:03:03.200] This is Rick Lody with your lowdown for June 21, 2017. [01:03:15.200 --> 01:03:33.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Carlson, Debra Stevens, you're on the radio and we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee. I'm getting ready. There you go. [01:03:33.200 --> 01:03:35.200] Is that? [01:03:35.200 --> 01:03:49.200] I'm here. Okay. Do you have essentially a story written out on what all has happened here? [01:03:49.200 --> 01:03:58.200] I've got all the police reports. I've got all the police reports. I've got paperwork, cleaning and refreshing my mind. [01:03:58.200 --> 01:04:14.200] What I'm suggesting is you write a novel. You write out a story and you turn this into a single story. How do all of these pieces fit together? [01:04:14.200 --> 01:04:33.200] It's how I play chess with these guys. Try to figure out how all these pieces fit together. Then when you start filing these professional conduct complaints, you look at them and say, how can I file these complaints so that they will be cumulative? [01:04:33.200 --> 01:04:47.200] So that it will look like from one complaint to the next that it's building toward a common theme rather than just random complaints here and there. Is that making sense, Olivier? [01:04:47.200 --> 01:05:09.200] Yeah. These things may have been random incidents, but you don't have to treat them like they're random incidents. You can treat them as if they are all planned. [01:05:09.200 --> 01:05:25.200] It wasn't random because when the officers come to my window, they tell me, oh, I know that you're like suspended. That officer told me, or you was arrested last week, or we were arrested you already, and we're going to continue doing it. [01:05:25.200 --> 01:05:40.200] Good. Then build a story so that you start sending in these complaints. You don't send them in all at once, but they'll box them all together and treat them like one. You send one in, and then you send another one in. [01:05:40.200 --> 01:05:59.200] So when they see the second one, it adds to the first. They can see how the second one follows from the first, and then each one, they can see how they tend to follow all pointing toward a common theme. [01:05:59.200 --> 01:06:10.200] Have you gone on to jurismprudence.website and pulled down the Cherokee County complaints? [01:06:10.200 --> 01:06:13.200] No, I have no idea. [01:06:13.200 --> 01:06:20.200] You might want to do that. This is an example of just exactly that. [01:06:20.200 --> 01:06:24.200] Is that the program that we had to buy? [01:06:24.200 --> 01:06:33.200] No, no, no. That's just one of my websites, jurismprudence.com, a website. [01:06:33.200 --> 01:06:41.200] And on there, I was prosecuted in Cherokee County, and I filed a whole bunch of criminal complaints against them. [01:06:41.200 --> 01:06:51.200] And there's one affidavit that supports 35 criminal accusations. [01:06:51.200 --> 01:07:11.200] All these things happened, and I backed up and looked at it and said, okay, okay, how can I structure a story about this so that it makes all of these pieces appear to fit together and follow from one to the other? [01:07:11.200 --> 01:07:14.200] And that's the outcome of doing that. [01:07:14.200 --> 01:07:25.200] So I write the story, and I write the story in terms of I'm going to be using this to support criminal complaints. [01:07:25.200 --> 01:07:36.200] So once I have the story written, then I take a criminal complaint, and I go down to the story, and I pull out a section of it that goes through this complaint, and I drop it in my criminal complaint. [01:07:36.200 --> 01:07:44.200] And then I move down to the next one and drop it in, and you'll see how it builds from one to the other. [01:07:44.200 --> 01:07:52.200] A good, well-structured story will save you a tremendous amount of time. [01:07:52.200 --> 01:08:00.200] They prosecuted me, convicted me, sent me, sent me to a year in jail and $10,000 fine. [01:08:00.200 --> 01:08:06.200] Through the book they had me. I filed these complaints the next day. [01:08:06.200 --> 01:08:16.200] The prosecutor was down there wanting to make a deal, and the deal he finally made, he offered six months probation. [01:08:16.200 --> 01:08:18.200] I told him, forget it. [01:08:18.200 --> 01:08:27.200] They come back two hours later, no probation, $500 fine, and I never paid the fine. [01:08:27.200 --> 01:08:31.200] This is after a jury found me guilty. [01:08:31.200 --> 01:08:37.200] They looked at those complaints and said, this is not going to be good. [01:08:37.200 --> 01:08:44.200] So they dealt me out of jail to keep me from pursuing these before the higher courts. [01:08:44.200 --> 01:08:54.200] Go to jurisimprudence.website, click on the Cherokee County link, and open the file that says criminal complaints. [01:08:54.200 --> 01:08:59.200] I've got all kind of motions in there that you can look at. [01:08:59.200 --> 01:09:05.200] Motions to disqualify judges, motions for everything you can think of. [01:09:05.200 --> 01:09:10.200] But the main thing are those complaints and the primary affidavit that goes with it. [01:09:10.200 --> 01:09:19.200] It'll show you how to structure these, how to build the complaints, and how to really make their life miserable. [01:09:19.200 --> 01:09:23.200] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:09:23.200 --> 01:09:28.200] I've had a number of people. [01:09:28.200 --> 01:09:31.200] Jurisimprudence.web, correct? [01:09:31.200 --> 01:09:34.200] Jurisimprudence. [01:09:34.200 --> 01:09:48.200] J-U-R-I-S-I-M-P-R-U-D-E-N-C-E dot website. [01:09:48.200 --> 01:09:53.200] I also find my habeas corpus on there. [01:09:53.200 --> 01:10:01.200] I also find the brief I sent to the habeas corpus I found in the palm of the lake. [01:10:01.200 --> 01:10:05.200] That was great fun. [01:10:05.200 --> 01:10:07.200] Anyway, have a look at that. [01:10:07.200 --> 01:10:13.200] I think you'll find that instructive. [01:10:13.200 --> 01:10:19.200] We've had a number of people use it to kind of work out how to write criminal complaints. [01:10:19.200 --> 01:10:25.200] This will give you a basic format of how to write a criminal complaint. [01:10:25.200 --> 01:10:27.200] Okay. [01:10:27.200 --> 01:10:29.200] Thank you. [01:10:29.200 --> 01:10:31.200] Go ahead. [01:10:31.200 --> 01:10:33.200] I'm listening. [01:10:33.200 --> 01:10:38.200] Why did you take a deal when they threw the book at you? [01:10:38.200 --> 01:10:41.200] I mean, was you up for a deal? [01:10:41.200 --> 01:10:49.200] Yeah, I was preparing an appeal and these criminal complaints were part of the appeal. [01:10:49.200 --> 01:10:58.200] I represented myself and was totally incompetent to do that. [01:10:58.200 --> 01:11:00.200] Oh, you was not? [01:11:00.200 --> 01:11:03.200] I had a dog in the heart. [01:11:03.200 --> 01:11:06.200] I was much too angry at them. [01:11:06.200 --> 01:11:12.200] The anger came out in court and the jury threw the book at me. [01:11:12.200 --> 01:11:19.200] I'm reluctant to send somebody into court when their liberty is at risk. [01:11:19.200 --> 01:11:21.200] Probably for that reason. [01:11:21.200 --> 01:11:27.200] If anybody should have been able to handle themselves in court, I should have. [01:11:27.200 --> 01:11:28.200] But I didn't. [01:11:28.200 --> 01:11:30.200] I didn't do well at all. [01:11:30.200 --> 01:11:33.200] Too much anger. [01:11:33.200 --> 01:11:36.200] It's always bad when you have a dog in the heart. [01:11:36.200 --> 01:11:41.200] But anyway, the beat them after the fact. [01:11:41.200 --> 01:11:45.200] It did spend 27 days in solitary confinement. [01:11:45.200 --> 01:11:51.200] But that had its advantages too. [01:11:51.200 --> 01:11:58.200] But anyway, these complaints got that all tossed. [01:11:58.200 --> 01:12:08.200] So have a look at them. This is a number of years of working out how to do these things and save you a whole lot of time. [01:12:08.200 --> 01:12:21.200] And then when you start filing them, you do what you've done with the civil side is you look at what they're supposed to do. [01:12:21.200 --> 01:12:29.200] And when they fail to do what they're supposed to do, the people you file the complaints with, then you file against those people. [01:12:29.200 --> 01:12:31.200] No politics. [01:12:31.200 --> 01:12:33.200] You got this prosecutor here. [01:12:33.200 --> 01:12:34.200] He's busy. [01:12:34.200 --> 01:12:37.200] He's mind-zoned business. [01:12:37.200 --> 01:12:41.200] And you come in here trying to get him to prosecute one of the guys he works with. [01:12:41.200 --> 01:12:43.200] And he tells you to get lost. [01:12:43.200 --> 01:12:48.200] And then you file criminal charges against him, bad grievances against him. [01:12:48.200 --> 01:12:51.200] And he's saying, what? What the heck do I do? [01:12:51.200 --> 01:13:02.200] And he goes back to these people who got you to come to him and reach them the right act for sickening you on them. [01:13:02.200 --> 01:13:08.200] Politics. This is where we get really powerful politics. [01:13:08.200 --> 01:13:21.200] I just helped someone file an appeal, I mean, a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction in a trial in a municipal court. [01:13:21.200 --> 01:13:26.200] They tried this guy for eight counts of junk vehicles. [01:13:26.200 --> 01:13:30.200] Kind of similar to you, except he was a hand repair shop. [01:13:30.200 --> 01:13:33.200] And he's working on these vehicles. [01:13:33.200 --> 01:13:43.200] And they came after him and they did, I will go through all the stuff they did wrong, but they did just about everything wrong they could. [01:13:43.200 --> 01:13:48.200] So we filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [01:13:48.200 --> 01:13:51.200] It stops the appeal clock. [01:13:51.200 --> 01:13:53.200] It can be filed at any time. [01:13:53.200 --> 01:13:55.200] It can't be waived. [01:13:55.200 --> 01:14:15.200] So we filed this and in the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction, we made criminal accusations of simulating a legal process, of securing and executing documents by deception, official oppression. [01:14:15.200 --> 01:14:18.200] That's the whole stack of complaints. [01:14:18.200 --> 01:14:37.200] And we wrote the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction as a clear and direct threat that we intend to file a 42 U.S. Code 1983 suit or perhaps a RICO suit. [01:14:37.200 --> 01:14:40.200] It's all politics. [01:14:40.200 --> 01:14:52.200] We wrote this suit so they're looking at it and saying, if we lose one of these arguments, we're toast. [01:14:52.200 --> 01:15:00.200] And in order to keep from losing these arguments, we're going to bankrupt the municipality. [01:15:00.200 --> 01:15:04.200] This is a small town. [01:15:04.200 --> 01:15:08.200] They only got a couple thousand people. [01:15:08.200 --> 01:15:18.200] And this case will cost them probably as much as it's not more than their budget. [01:15:18.200 --> 01:15:26.200] So at the end of the day, it's all political and all politics is driven by money. [01:15:26.200 --> 01:15:29.200] So you're moving in the right direction. [01:15:29.200 --> 01:15:31.200] All right. [01:15:31.200 --> 01:15:33.200] Let's start. [01:15:33.200 --> 01:15:35.200] Go ahead. [01:15:35.200 --> 01:15:48.200] So I'm a research unit out those two other organizations, and I'll call you back with more information. [01:15:48.200 --> 01:15:49.200] Yes. [01:15:49.200 --> 01:15:56.200] See if you can find their charter or the statutes that set them up. [01:15:56.200 --> 01:16:00.200] That'll tell you what they're supposed to be paying attention to. [01:16:00.200 --> 01:16:06.200] It may be things we didn't expect. We may have allies we don't know about. [01:16:06.200 --> 01:16:08.200] Okay. [01:16:08.200 --> 01:16:11.200] This is good news. [01:16:11.200 --> 01:16:15.200] Okay. Is your friend out of jail yet? [01:16:15.200 --> 01:16:17.200] Yeah. Yes, he is. [01:16:17.200 --> 01:16:21.200] We got to get together and figure out how we're going to file all the paperwork. [01:16:21.200 --> 01:16:29.200] Right now we're working on the complaints against the judge and his attorney. [01:16:29.200 --> 01:16:35.200] Okay. Well, hang on after this break. [01:16:35.200 --> 01:16:43.200] I'm going to talk about another project, a secondary project to the electronic lawyer that I'm working on. [01:16:43.200 --> 01:16:50.200] Since Ben in jail and Lozano was in jail and he talked to all of these people, [01:16:50.200 --> 01:16:53.200] I have a project for this that we haven't gotten to yet. [01:16:53.200 --> 01:16:55.200] I'll talk about it when we come back. [01:16:55.200 --> 01:17:00.200] If you can help Deborah Stevens, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.200 --> 01:17:05.200] I love Logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:05.200 --> 01:17:09.200] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. [01:17:09.200 --> 01:17:13.200] I'd be lost without Logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.200 --> 01:17:16.200] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite [01:17:16.200 --> 01:17:20.200] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.200 --> 01:17:22.200] How can I help Logos? [01:17:22.200 --> 01:17:27.200] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help Logos. [01:17:27.200 --> 01:17:29.200] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.200 --> 01:17:31.200] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:31.200 --> 01:17:34.200] Now, go to LogosReguleNetwork.com. [01:17:34.200 --> 01:17:37.200] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.200 --> 01:17:43.200] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.200 --> 01:17:44.200] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.200 --> 01:17:45.200] No. [01:17:45.200 --> 01:17:47.200] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.200 --> 01:17:48.200] No. [01:17:48.200 --> 01:17:49.200] Can I use my Amazon pride? [01:17:49.200 --> 01:17:50.200] No. [01:17:50.200 --> 01:17:51.200] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.200 --> 01:17:54.200] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:54.200 --> 01:17:55.200] This is perfect. [01:17:55.200 --> 01:17:57.200] Thank you so much. [01:17:57.200 --> 01:17:58.200] You're welcome. [01:17:58.200 --> 01:18:27.200] Happy Holidays, Logos! [01:18:28.200 --> 01:18:35.200] Thank you so much. [01:18:58.200 --> 01:19:00.200] And donate today. [01:19:28.200 --> 01:19:35.200] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:35.200 --> 01:19:41.200] I was blindsided, but now I can see your glance [01:19:41.200 --> 01:19:46.200] You put that beer in my pocket, took the money from my hand [01:19:46.200 --> 01:19:51.200] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:19:51.200 --> 01:20:04.200] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again [01:20:04.200 --> 01:20:09.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens with our radio [01:20:09.200 --> 01:20:15.200] And we're talking to Olivier in Tennessee [01:20:15.200 --> 01:20:17.200] Where are we? [01:20:17.200 --> 01:20:21.200] He was going to tell me about a program that... [01:20:21.200 --> 01:20:25.200] Oh yes, yes, yes, yes. I had a busy break there [01:20:25.200 --> 01:20:28.200] It gets pretty busy on a break sometimes [01:20:28.200 --> 01:20:35.200] I have a, on the Juris Imprudence website [01:20:35.200 --> 01:20:42.200] I have a habeas corpus document [01:20:42.200 --> 01:20:46.200] You should look at that route of habeas corpus [01:20:46.200 --> 01:20:52.200] Because I walk through criminal due process [01:20:52.200 --> 01:20:58.200] We need to take that document and readjust it to Tennessee law [01:20:58.200 --> 01:21:01.200] Most of it is federal law [01:21:01.200 --> 01:21:07.200] There's some state law in there, but it's easy enough to convert that to state law [01:21:07.200 --> 01:21:12.200] Tennessee law because it all follows the federal prescriptions [01:21:12.200 --> 01:21:17.200] And then you take these people that are being arrested and thrown in jail [01:21:17.200 --> 01:21:23.200] And we build a questionnaire. I already have a due process questionnaire [01:21:23.200 --> 01:21:31.200] And you go in line and you go to the questionnaire and it says, well, you're arrested, yes [01:21:31.200 --> 01:21:34.200] Well, you're arrested on an existing warrant, yes or no [01:21:34.200 --> 01:21:39.200] And depending on how they answer it, it pulls up another question [01:21:39.200 --> 01:21:43.200] And if they say yes, they're arrested on an existing warrant [01:21:43.200 --> 01:21:48.200] Do you have reason to believe that the officer who testified for a magistrate to secure the warrant [01:21:48.200 --> 01:21:54.200] Misrepresented the truth to the magistrate. If they say yes, then the system flags it [01:21:54.200 --> 01:21:58.200] It spits out a Frank's hearing motion [01:21:58.200 --> 01:22:03.200] I have yet to talk to a single lawyer who knew what a Frank's hearing was [01:22:03.200 --> 01:22:10.200] It's a hearing to determine the velocity the police officer testified for a magistrate's secure warrant [01:22:10.200 --> 01:22:18.200] What this questionnaire does is goes through every point of law we could find [01:22:18.200 --> 01:22:26.200] In every motion or pleading, we ask a question that points to that pleading [01:22:26.200 --> 01:22:31.200] The question in here was, do you have reason to believe the officer misrepresented the truth [01:22:31.200 --> 01:22:33.200] That points to the Frank's hearing [01:22:33.200 --> 01:22:36.200] If you say yes, the system spits out a Frank's hearing [01:22:36.200 --> 01:22:46.200] They go through this questionnaire and it addresses every point from a rest until they get bailed out [01:22:46.200 --> 01:22:59.200] In Texas, I got 19 misdemeanor and felony charges against the officer, detainers, the magistrate, prosecutor, everybody [01:22:59.200 --> 01:23:07.200] Every one of these guys, we build this app, it's part of the electronic lawyer [01:23:07.200 --> 01:23:14.200] And they go through the questionnaire and just like the ticket program, it starts spitting out these documents [01:23:14.200 --> 01:23:17.200] All they got to do is sign them and send them [01:23:17.200 --> 01:23:20.200] Change every... [01:23:24.200 --> 01:23:26.200] Major noise [01:23:26.200 --> 01:23:31.200] Okay, something's going on on your end there [01:23:31.200 --> 01:23:35.200] Incredible background noise, I had to mute you [01:23:37.200 --> 01:23:41.200] Okay, Olivia, you're still getting horrible background noise [01:23:41.200 --> 01:23:46.200] You might want to either move fully red or move the mic [01:23:48.200 --> 01:23:50.200] Okay, that's better [01:23:51.200 --> 01:23:55.200] Okay, Olivia, do you have anything else for us? [01:23:55.200 --> 01:23:57.200] Uh... [01:24:00.200 --> 01:24:02.200] No, I think as well [01:24:02.200 --> 01:24:04.200] Okay, good, okay [01:24:04.200 --> 01:24:09.200] Thank you, Olivia, and we'll probably talk off the air [01:24:09.200 --> 01:24:14.200] Okay, now we're going to Ramadan in Arizona [01:24:15.200 --> 01:24:18.200] Ramadan, is that right? [01:24:18.200 --> 01:24:20.200] Yeah, that's how you pronounce it, thank you [01:24:20.200 --> 01:24:22.200] How are you there, Randy? [01:24:22.200 --> 01:24:24.200] I'm good [01:24:24.200 --> 01:24:26.200] That's great, that's great [01:24:26.200 --> 01:24:31.200] Just to let you know, I'm not new to the show, just new to you right now [01:24:31.200 --> 01:24:36.200] But I've talked with Eddie a couple, I called in the show to talk to Eddie a couple of times [01:24:36.200 --> 01:24:38.200] You talked to Eddie? [01:24:38.200 --> 01:24:42.200] Okay, okay, I won't hold that against you [01:24:42.200 --> 01:24:44.200] Okay [01:24:44.200 --> 01:24:46.200] Thanks [01:24:46.200 --> 01:24:54.200] The first and foremost, I gotta tell you, I appreciate the work that you and Deborah do for the people out there [01:24:54.200 --> 01:25:01.200] At least give the guidance for the people out there because it's been a great help to me [01:25:01.200 --> 01:25:07.200] You know, and even if I've had a case recently come upon me, but before then [01:25:07.200 --> 01:25:14.200] Just learning this stuff just for the heck of it, it's been fun and it's been very educational [01:25:14.200 --> 01:25:19.200] You know, just right here in my own state of Arizona, it's been very educational [01:25:19.200 --> 01:25:21.200] Good [01:25:21.200 --> 01:25:27.200] I had a case that I wanted your opinion on it [01:25:27.200 --> 01:25:34.200] Well, I was pulled over by an unmarked vehicle [01:25:34.200 --> 01:25:45.200] And he said he pulled me over because he searched my license plate and said it had a revoked slash suspended license [01:25:45.200 --> 01:25:50.200] And I'm like, whoa, how did you do that? Well, I searched your plate [01:25:50.200 --> 01:25:55.200] Okay, I'm thinking of myself, there might be something a little wrong with that [01:25:55.200 --> 01:26:12.200] Just me, but I looked and I'm actually trying to find out of how I would fight whether his unmarked vehicle, what I'm going to play, is he had jurisdiction [01:26:12.200 --> 01:26:28.200] Because I know it's unlawful and it's in the, I found the statute where it states that all employees, public employees vehicles need to be marked with city of, well actually in this case it was the city of Scottsdale [01:26:28.200 --> 01:26:36.200] And I actually have found it and it says that, and it's also, it actually was also a city council report [01:26:36.200 --> 01:26:46.200] There was a city council report put out actually just two months prior and he getting pulled over and said that all employees' vehicles need to be subject to the NB marked [01:26:46.200 --> 01:26:54.200] So here he is, he's, you know, riding around in a marked SUV, you know, it's just red and blues on me and pulls me over [01:26:54.200 --> 01:27:02.200] And now he compounded the situation, you know, being, I didn't admit to anything, he just came in and approached me by name, he asked me about my name [01:27:02.200 --> 01:27:08.200] I said, hey, is your name Robidon? I'm like, wow, he's just kind of, you know, alarming, but who wants to know? [01:27:08.200 --> 01:27:11.200] So I do, you know, I said, what are you looking for him for? [01:27:11.200 --> 01:27:16.200] Well, he has a suspended special vocal license, are you him? I'm not telling you that [01:27:16.200 --> 01:27:28.200] And so I just went down for a hill from there, you know, eventually I was arrested, sold my property and here it is, about a month later I have a bench trial [01:27:28.200 --> 01:27:35.200] And I'm like, well I'm about maybe three weeks away from this trial now and I just wanted to know like [01:27:35.200 --> 01:27:44.200] Okay, okay, go to trafficticket.website, I don't charge anything if you're out of state [01:27:44.200 --> 01:27:51.200] Well, because the documents are written for Texas, hang on just a second [01:27:51.200 --> 01:28:05.200] They're written for Texas, but in what I produce, I don't care what you were charged with [01:28:05.200 --> 01:28:17.200] I have you put it in there so that when I produce the document I can say, on this day at this time the defendant was charged by so-and-so officer with so-and-so [01:28:17.200 --> 01:28:27.200] But don't really care what it is, because all they're going to is, who are you? [01:28:27.200 --> 01:28:32.200] What authority do you have to talk to me? [01:28:32.200 --> 01:28:55.200] Prove it up. Look at Arizona law. What law authorizes a peace officer to enforce a professional conduct code? [01:28:55.200 --> 01:29:14.200] Everybody's been going after the right to travel. Wrong question, because in law the rule is never presume anything and never stipulate to anything [01:29:14.200 --> 01:29:26.200] You want to pull me over, who are you and what authority do you have and where did you get it? [01:29:26.200 --> 01:29:37.200] When you challenge his authority, he is the one that has made a proactive statement on law [01:29:37.200 --> 01:29:41.200] Hang on, I think I hear some music [01:29:41.200 --> 01:29:44.200] Yeah, I think I hear you too [01:29:44.200 --> 01:29:51.200] Yeah, my clock boots down. I can't seem to get my clocks. There it is. Okay, I have no issues with my clock today. [01:29:51.200 --> 01:30:00.200] This is Red Kelk, never seen this rule on radio. We'll be right back [01:30:00.200 --> 01:30:15.200] Fishing is a wonderful pastime. It's a terrific way to bond with family and get in touch with nature. But there's this scary kind of fishing you'll want nothing to do with. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [01:30:15.200 --> 01:30:33.200] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.200 --> 01:30:44.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage [01:30:44.200 --> 01:30:51.200] Fishing, spelled with a pH, isn't very sporting. The goal is to reel in personal information and compromise your accounts. [01:30:51.200 --> 01:30:59.200] The pH in fishing stands for phony. Fishing scams involve impersonating legitimate organizations like banks and the bait is usually a phony email. [01:30:59.200 --> 01:31:05.200] A fishing email may ask for account information or provide a link to an official looking website, but don't fall for it. [01:31:05.200 --> 01:31:17.200] Never email your bank account number, your user ID or passwords. legitimate companies won't ask you to. And it's best to enter a website address directly rather than clicking on an email link to check an account or make a purchase. [01:31:17.200 --> 01:31:21.200] Accidentally typing data into a fishing website could cost you thousands. [01:31:21.200 --> 01:31:26.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:26.200 --> 01:31:37.200] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.200 --> 01:31:45.200] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.200 --> 01:31:48.200] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:48.200 --> 01:31:49.200] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.200 --> 01:31:50.200] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.200 --> 01:31:51.200] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:51.200 --> 01:31:52.200] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:52.200 --> 01:31:54.200] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:54.200 --> 01:31:57.200] We are Americans. And we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.200 --> 01:32:00.200] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.200 --> 01:32:02.200] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:02.200 --> 01:32:05.200] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:05.200 --> 01:32:10.200] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails. Good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:10.200 --> 01:32:12.200] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails. [01:32:12.200 --> 01:32:15.200] But I'm serious about your roof. That's why you have insurance. [01:32:15.200 --> 01:32:20.200] And Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.200 --> 01:32:26.200] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.200 --> 01:32:31.200] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:31.200 --> 01:32:38.200] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.200 --> 01:32:40.200] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [01:32:40.200 --> 01:32:45.200] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.200 --> 01:32:50.200] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:50.200 --> 01:32:56.200] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.200 --> 01:32:58.200] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.200 --> 01:33:01.200] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.200 --> 01:33:07.200] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:32.200 --> 01:33:33.200] Okay, we are back. [01:33:33.200 --> 01:33:37.200] Randy Kelkin, Demi Stevens, Rolando Radio. [01:33:37.200 --> 01:33:40.200] And we're talking to Ramadan, Arizona. [01:33:40.200 --> 01:33:44.200] Okay, you are arrested. [01:33:44.200 --> 01:33:47.200] That's a fertile ground for all kind of stuff. [01:33:47.200 --> 01:33:54.200] Essentially, what I do with criminal issues is audit. [01:33:54.200 --> 01:33:57.200] We look at the code. [01:33:57.200 --> 01:34:06.200] Look at what they're required to do and then compare what they're required to do to what they actually did. [01:34:06.200 --> 01:34:17.200] And every state except in Mexico has a statute that reflects the Ku Klux Klan Act. [01:34:17.200 --> 01:34:21.200] And most people know the Ku Klux Klan Act as 18 U.S. [01:34:21.200 --> 01:34:26.200] I mean, 42 U.S. Code 1983, the right to sue a public official. [01:34:26.200 --> 01:34:29.200] But that's the second half of the Ku Klux Klan Act. [01:34:29.200 --> 01:34:36.200] The first half of it makes it a crime for a public official to exert a purport to exert an authority he doesn't express to have [01:34:36.200 --> 01:34:41.200] in the process to deny a citizen full-free access to an enjoyment right, [01:34:41.200 --> 01:34:45.200] or to fail to perform a duty he's required to perform. [01:34:45.200 --> 01:34:54.200] So, we want to look at the duties they were required to perform and didn't [01:34:54.200 --> 01:34:57.200] because they never do everything they were supposed to. [01:34:57.200 --> 01:35:08.200] When these guys come after you, the last thing you want to do is go to the merits. [01:35:08.200 --> 01:35:12.200] You want to go to the structure. [01:35:12.200 --> 01:35:15.200] You want to go to procedural due process. [01:35:15.200 --> 01:35:20.200] So, how many lives did they break in arresting you? [01:35:20.200 --> 01:35:23.200] Ramadan, do you know? [01:35:23.200 --> 01:35:25.200] I was looking very thoroughly into it. [01:35:25.200 --> 01:35:31.200] And when I was writing out my questionnaire for when he's a witness on the stand, [01:35:31.200 --> 01:35:34.200] he had no probable cause to search my place. [01:35:34.200 --> 01:35:37.200] So, to why? [01:35:37.200 --> 01:35:46.200] Because in his testimony, when I read the police report, it was conducting license plate searches as if that's his thing. [01:35:46.200 --> 01:35:47.200] Whatever. [01:35:47.200 --> 01:35:49.200] What else? [01:35:49.200 --> 01:35:51.200] He didn't identify himself. [01:35:51.200 --> 01:35:53.200] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:35:53.200 --> 01:35:56.200] He started in the middle. [01:35:56.200 --> 01:36:00.200] Oh, yeah, I'm sorry. [01:36:00.200 --> 01:36:04.200] Let's go back to the front. [01:36:04.200 --> 01:36:06.200] Who was he? [01:36:06.200 --> 01:36:08.200] What authority does he have? [01:36:08.200 --> 01:36:13.200] Under what authority did he pull you over? [01:36:13.200 --> 01:36:17.200] Well, actually, when I looked at the statue, I just found two days ago, [01:36:17.200 --> 01:36:20.200] he had no authority to hit his red and blue lights on me. [01:36:20.200 --> 01:36:24.200] No, no, no, you're still in the middle. [01:36:24.200 --> 01:36:25.200] Oh, really? [01:36:25.200 --> 01:36:29.200] You're still going to merits. [01:36:29.200 --> 01:36:36.200] Okay, in these documents that I'll send you, we don't care what the officer did. [01:36:36.200 --> 01:36:41.200] We're not even, we're not going to talk about what he did. [01:36:41.200 --> 01:36:52.200] We're going to talk about who he is and how he has authority to enforce the codes he's purporting to enforce. [01:36:52.200 --> 01:36:55.200] Oh, you mean the law enforcement agency? [01:36:55.200 --> 01:36:57.200] Do you know what I mean? [01:36:57.200 --> 01:37:03.200] He, okay, he charged you with violating a statute. [01:37:03.200 --> 01:37:08.200] What statute was that? [01:37:08.200 --> 01:37:16.200] It's a lawful initiation driving on a revoked statute in life. [01:37:16.200 --> 01:37:22.200] Okay, that's a little too general and informal. [01:37:22.200 --> 01:37:27.200] If I accuse a public official of violating a law, [01:37:27.200 --> 01:37:42.200] I will accuse them of violating Texas Penal Code 39.03B or 2202B2A. [01:37:42.200 --> 01:37:48.200] What statutory scheme were you charged under? [01:37:48.200 --> 01:37:51.200] Statutory scheme? [01:37:51.200 --> 01:37:57.200] Penal Code, Transportation Code, Administrative Code. [01:37:57.200 --> 01:37:59.200] Oh, statute. [01:37:59.200 --> 01:38:04.200] But I don't think we have penal codes here in Arizona. [01:38:04.200 --> 01:38:08.200] You have a criminal code, whatever you call it. [01:38:08.200 --> 01:38:23.200] Well, it's criminal code procedures, but it would never say the kind of crimes. [01:38:23.200 --> 01:38:34.200] You have a code that defines crimes in Arizona. [01:38:34.200 --> 01:38:38.200] Okay, what is they usually called, like Administrative Code? [01:38:38.200 --> 01:38:45.200] No, no, Penal Code, Criminal Code is going to be one of those. [01:38:45.200 --> 01:38:50.200] Okay, you're not even close to ready to fight these things yet. [01:38:50.200 --> 01:38:52.200] Oh, man. [01:38:52.200 --> 01:38:57.200] You're still living in the world they want you to live in. [01:38:57.200 --> 01:39:06.200] Let's have a look, Arizona AZ Criminal Code. [01:39:06.200 --> 01:39:11.200] Okay, Arizona revised statute Title 13. [01:39:11.200 --> 01:39:12.200] Yeah. [01:39:12.200 --> 01:39:13.200] That's the criminal code. [01:39:13.200 --> 01:39:19.200] Were you charged under Arizona revised statute Title 13? [01:39:19.200 --> 01:39:27.200] No, the Title 13 in there, one of the charges was because there was a total of five. [01:39:27.200 --> 01:39:32.200] One of them is two or three of them was in the Transportation Code. [01:39:32.200 --> 01:39:34.200] That's where I'm going. [01:39:34.200 --> 01:39:38.200] Let's talk about the Transportation Code. [01:39:38.200 --> 01:39:43.200] That's a Professions Code. [01:39:43.200 --> 01:39:49.200] Did he charge you with practicing medicine without a license? [01:39:49.200 --> 01:39:51.200] Oh, no. [01:39:51.200 --> 01:39:59.200] Did he charge you with operating a private investigator business without a license? [01:39:59.200 --> 01:40:01.200] No, definitely not. [01:40:01.200 --> 01:40:06.200] Did he charge you with operating a commercial vehicle without a license? [01:40:06.200 --> 01:40:12.200] Who has authority to enforce each one of those codes? [01:40:12.200 --> 01:40:18.200] That's one of the things I have to look into, but I believe it's the... [01:40:18.200 --> 01:40:19.200] Okay, hold on. [01:40:19.200 --> 01:40:21.200] We don't do that. [01:40:21.200 --> 01:40:30.200] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:40:30.200 --> 01:40:34.200] Okay. [01:40:34.200 --> 01:40:38.200] What specific authority do they have? [01:40:38.200 --> 01:40:50.200] In Texas, a sheriff's deputy can have authority to enforce the Transportation Code under [01:40:50.200 --> 01:41:01.200] Texas Transportation Code 701.001 or Texas Administrative Code 4.13. [01:41:01.200 --> 01:41:10.200] Under what authority can a police officer in Arizona enforce the code? [01:41:10.200 --> 01:41:12.200] I haven't found that out yet, I guess. [01:41:12.200 --> 01:41:16.200] That's where you need to start. [01:41:16.200 --> 01:41:19.200] Nobody asks them that question. [01:41:19.200 --> 01:41:28.200] And every time I ask them that question, they stand there looking like a deer in the headlights. [01:41:28.200 --> 01:41:36.200] And they say, a police officer in Texas can enforce the Transportation Code. [01:41:36.200 --> 01:41:40.200] But where the heck did you come up with that nonsense? [01:41:40.200 --> 01:41:42.200] Show me that in law. [01:41:42.200 --> 01:41:43.200] I can't find it. [01:41:43.200 --> 01:41:46.200] Can you find it? [01:41:46.200 --> 01:41:52.200] None of them can find it because it's not there. [01:41:52.200 --> 01:41:56.200] It literally is not there. [01:41:56.200 --> 01:42:04.200] They're presuming jurisdiction all this time and they don't have it. [01:42:04.200 --> 01:42:06.200] You are a private citizen. [01:42:06.200 --> 01:42:18.200] You can do anything you want to unless you and your other citizens through your legislature [01:42:18.200 --> 01:42:22.200] have decided to limit your behavior in certain respects. [01:42:22.200 --> 01:42:29.200] You've all agreed that we will limit our behavior when it comes to killing other people. [01:42:29.200 --> 01:42:31.200] When it comes to stealing from other people. [01:42:31.200 --> 01:42:39.200] There's a whole raft of things you have agreed to where you've agreed to limit your behavior. [01:42:39.200 --> 01:42:45.200] Other than that, you can do anything you want. [01:42:45.200 --> 01:42:51.200] A public official, on the other hand, while acting in his capacity as a public official, [01:42:51.200 --> 01:43:02.200] may only do what he is specifically authorized to do by statute. [01:43:02.200 --> 01:43:13.200] Where does he specifically get the authorization to force to arrest you at your liberty [01:43:13.200 --> 01:43:17.200] and seize you for the purpose of Fourth Amendment? [01:43:17.200 --> 01:43:20.200] Where did he get that authority? [01:43:20.200 --> 01:43:25.200] If he can't prove it up, then he doesn't have it. [01:43:25.200 --> 01:43:32.200] He goes to subject matter jurisdiction, wants his challenge just lost, and must be proven. [01:43:32.200 --> 01:43:34.200] So that's where we start. [01:43:34.200 --> 01:43:38.200] We don't go anywhere until you show who the heck you are. [01:43:38.200 --> 01:43:39.200] Hang on. [01:43:39.200 --> 01:43:40.200] About to go to break. [01:43:40.200 --> 01:43:44.200] Randy Kelton, David Stevens, really low radio. [01:43:44.200 --> 01:43:48.200] We've got one more segment left, so I'm not going to give out the call number. [01:43:48.200 --> 01:43:50.200] We'll be right back. [01:44:18.200 --> 01:44:25.200] We'll be right back. [01:44:48.200 --> 01:44:55.200] We'll be right back. [01:45:18.200 --> 01:45:20.200] Our lawyer should be doing. [01:45:20.200 --> 01:45:24.200] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:24.200 --> 01:45:29.200] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.200 --> 01:45:35.200] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.200 --> 01:45:40.200] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:40.200 --> 01:45:44.200] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.200 --> 01:45:50.200] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:50.200 --> 01:45:53.200] prosay tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.200 --> 01:45:57.200] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:57.200 --> 01:46:09.200] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:09.200 --> 01:46:15.200] Hello. Oh, man. [01:46:15.200 --> 01:46:23.200] I broke it. [01:46:23.200 --> 01:46:28.200] Something in this world I will never understand. [01:46:28.200 --> 01:46:32.200] Something I realize fully. [01:46:32.200 --> 01:46:39.200] Somebody don't want police like police men. Somebody don't want police like police men. [01:46:39.200 --> 01:46:41.200] Okay, we are back. [01:46:41.200 --> 01:46:48.200] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Ramadan in Arizona. [01:46:48.200 --> 01:46:52.200] Okay. [01:46:52.200 --> 01:47:02.200] If a citizen can do anything you want to, public official can only do what the law specifically authorizes them to do. [01:47:02.200 --> 01:47:17.200] So under the concept of subject matter jurisdiction, subject matter jurisdiction is presumed until it's challenged. [01:47:17.200 --> 01:47:26.200] Once subject matter jurisdiction is challenged, subject matter jurisdiction is lost until it's approved. [01:47:26.200 --> 01:47:34.200] And when you tell the subject matter jurisdiction, it's not the police officer who has to prove it. [01:47:34.200 --> 01:47:37.200] It's the judge. [01:47:37.200 --> 01:47:46.200] The judge has ordered you to come to court and threatened you with all these bad things he's going to do if you don't show up. [01:47:46.200 --> 01:47:53.200] So you don't know what his authority is to do that. [01:47:53.200 --> 01:48:08.200] Your position is, is that the officer lacked legal capacity to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court and give the court legal competency [01:48:08.200 --> 01:48:18.200] because the officer had no statutory power to enforce the code. [01:48:18.200 --> 01:48:30.200] Now, once you have made the claim, now the officer must come to the court and prove up his expression of authority. [01:48:30.200 --> 01:48:36.200] It goes to the statement I said earlier, never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:48:36.200 --> 01:48:44.200] Whenever I get a public official making a proactive statement of law out of his own mouth, I always ask him the same thing. [01:48:44.200 --> 01:48:49.200] Where did you get that? Did you just make that up? [01:48:49.200 --> 01:48:56.200] Because they don't know. They don't have a clue. [01:48:56.200 --> 01:49:02.200] And it doesn't matter whether they have jurisdiction or not, once you've challenged it, they have to prove it. [01:49:02.200 --> 01:49:06.200] If they can't, they have the right to dismissal. [01:49:06.200 --> 01:49:20.200] And in Texas at least, unless they're Department of Public Safety officer, High Reptile, they don't have authority. [01:49:20.200 --> 01:49:28.200] You can have five sheriff's deputies appointed to enforce the text, translation code, may have to be on most cycles. [01:49:28.200 --> 01:49:39.200] You have one municipal officer in a county who can do DOT inspections, and that's it. [01:49:39.200 --> 01:49:45.200] What do you have in Arizona? [01:49:45.200 --> 01:49:57.200] It's not that hard to research. You only have to research your administrative code, your transportation code, and your government code. [01:49:57.200 --> 01:50:07.200] Somewhere there will be an acting clause, and if you look for it and Google it, it's not hard to find. [01:50:07.200 --> 01:50:15.200] So do a search for authority to enforce transportation code. [01:50:15.200 --> 01:50:19.200] You get all kind of cool stuff. [01:50:19.200 --> 01:50:22.200] Okay, does that make sense? Rub it up. [01:50:22.200 --> 01:50:29.200] It makes a little bit of sense. Well, a lot of bit of sense. [01:50:29.200 --> 01:50:37.200] You want to tell them how you're not guilty, and you want to tell them what the cop did wrong. [01:50:37.200 --> 01:50:45.200] Well, that may be intuitively satisfying, but it's a bad strategy. [01:50:45.200 --> 01:50:52.200] Any time you go to the merits, you go to the discretion of the judge. [01:50:52.200 --> 01:51:01.200] The judge gets to believe whoever he wants to, and he's always going to believe the cop. Always. [01:51:01.200 --> 01:51:05.200] So you do not want to get to merits. [01:51:05.200 --> 01:51:15.200] Challenge subject matter jurisdiction. If you go into the website and fill out this, just put in the ticket information, [01:51:15.200 --> 01:51:20.200] I will send you a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [01:51:20.200 --> 01:51:28.200] Now, I had to take it and convert it to Texas law. Most of it is federal law. [01:51:28.200 --> 01:51:35.200] And I need some Texas law in there to keep them from rejecting too loudly. [01:51:35.200 --> 01:51:41.200] You could just as easily look up the cases I have on Texas, [01:51:41.200 --> 01:51:46.200] and you can find them in Arizona law because they're all going to be there. [01:51:46.200 --> 01:51:50.200] And challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [01:51:50.200 --> 01:52:00.200] I thought you looked a lot at their shorts. An absent jurisdiction, the act of the officer in making the arrest [01:52:00.200 --> 01:52:04.200] was kidnapping and aggravated assault. [01:52:04.200 --> 01:52:06.200] Yeah, most definitely. [01:52:06.200 --> 01:52:13.200] It's aggravated because he had a pistol on his hip, and it's assault because he did offensive touching. [01:52:13.200 --> 01:52:20.200] As false imprisonment, all municipalities, all government agencies across the country, [01:52:20.200 --> 01:52:27.200] waive their sovereign immunity in the matter of false imprisonment. [01:52:27.200 --> 01:52:50.200] Well, I did follow, I found a motion at the press, the identification is gained by him because he had no probable cause. [01:52:50.200 --> 01:52:54.200] How did he not have probable cause? [01:52:54.200 --> 01:53:03.200] Well, he was because he had no probable cause to search my identity of my license plate, because that's what he did. [01:53:03.200 --> 01:53:13.200] Okay, there's nothing. Your license plate is a commercial license. [01:53:13.200 --> 01:53:28.200] And when you apply an application for that commercial license, you grant certain rights to any entity authorized to enforce the professional license code. [01:53:28.200 --> 01:53:35.200] You know, professional driver can have his vehicle searched at any time. [01:53:35.200 --> 01:53:39.200] He's agreed to that when he signed for the license. [01:53:39.200 --> 01:53:49.200] So this officer, he sees a vehicle that has a commercial license prominently displayed on it. [01:53:49.200 --> 01:54:03.200] And even if it wasn't, anything he can see and he can look up without interfering with you doesn't affect your rights in any way. [01:54:03.200 --> 01:54:21.200] Any information contained in his database unless it has been sealed by a court or a judge secret from the police, he can look at and he can examine without your permission because it doesn't harm you. [01:54:21.200 --> 01:54:25.200] He doesn't interfere with any of your rights. He can do that. [01:54:25.200 --> 01:54:35.200] So he sees this vehicle that has the prominently displaying a commercial license plate. [01:54:35.200 --> 01:54:44.200] And he runs the plate on his computer and it comes back and tells him it belongs to Ramadan. [01:54:44.200 --> 01:54:52.200] And this Ramadan person has a expired license. [01:54:52.200 --> 01:54:59.200] He has probable cause to stop and see if you are Ramadan. [01:54:59.200 --> 01:55:18.200] But what he probably doesn't have that he wouldn't have in Texas, he can ask you for your name, but you don't have to give it to him. [01:55:18.200 --> 01:55:33.200] Now if he could pull up a copy of your license and look at it and then look at you and determine that you were this person by visual recognition, then he can move ahead. [01:55:33.200 --> 01:55:40.200] But you don't have to give him any information. [01:55:40.200 --> 01:55:47.200] I just talked to Robert Fox today and there are rumors going around that Robert Fox is a dead guy. [01:55:47.200 --> 01:55:50.200] Well, he was also lively for a dead guy. [01:55:50.200 --> 01:55:53.200] Robert Fox is not dead, somebody told me he's dead. [01:55:53.200 --> 01:56:09.200] And we talked just about this issue, that you're demanding that someone identify themselves when you have a right to remain silent. [01:56:09.200 --> 01:56:14.200] And this is what he says, shut up, shut up and keep shutting up. [01:56:14.200 --> 01:56:19.200] So you don't have to talk to him. [01:56:19.200 --> 01:56:25.200] You will lose the argument about him having probable cause for the stop. [01:56:25.200 --> 01:56:34.200] But you shouldn't lose the argument about him having the authority to force you to identify yourself. [01:56:34.200 --> 01:56:39.200] Did you ever identify yourself before you were arrested? [01:56:39.200 --> 01:56:46.200] Never, I never confirmed. They had all become accusatory and he said he confirmed that you are a fat one, but I'm not. [01:56:46.200 --> 01:56:50.200] And even without your consent, but I never told him. [01:56:50.200 --> 01:56:54.200] And I do have already obtained of that, but I never told him where I was. [01:56:54.200 --> 01:56:59.200] And you filed criminal charges against him yet for official oppression, negative assault? [01:56:59.200 --> 01:57:05.200] Well, not yet. I might actually have the most focus on this, but I will get to that. [01:57:05.200 --> 01:57:09.200] Okay, one thing I'll tell you about criminal complaints. [01:57:09.200 --> 01:57:13.200] That's the easiest thing you can do. [01:57:13.200 --> 01:57:20.200] The safest thing you can do and probably the most powerful thing you can do. [01:57:20.200 --> 01:57:32.200] When you file a criminal complaint, you stand in, as far as immunity goes, you stand in the shoes of the judge. [01:57:32.200 --> 01:57:39.200] You are absolutely immune from any civil litigation. [01:57:39.200 --> 01:57:51.200] And if anybody says one word to you that you can in any way construe as a threat, no matter how labelled, [01:57:51.200 --> 01:58:03.200] then that's a witness stamp and obstruction of justice. You become a protected class. You become very dangerous to these guys. [01:58:03.200 --> 01:58:08.200] Calling tomorrow night, we'll talk about this on our four-hour info marathon. [01:58:08.200 --> 01:58:11.200] We're about to run out of time tonight. [01:58:11.200 --> 01:58:24.200] Okay, look up the authority of the police officer to enforce the transportation code in Arizona and see what you find. [01:58:24.200 --> 01:58:30.200] I think you may be surprised. This is Randy Kelton's overseas radio. [01:58:30.200 --> 01:58:36.200] Thank you all for listening. We'll be back tomorrow night with our four-hour info marathon. [01:58:36.200 --> 01:58:42.200] Thank you all for listening and good night. 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