[00:11.960 --> 00:19.280] ounce, silver $15.96 an ounce, Texas crude $46.08 a barrel, and Bitcoin is sitting nearly [00:19.280 --> 00:24.760] at $2,178.00 U.S. currency. [00:24.760 --> 00:30.400] Today in History, the year? 1789. Kickstarting the French Revolution, citizens of Paris stormed [00:30.400 --> 00:35.040] the Bastille, representing the royal authority in the center of Paris. The prison contained [00:35.040 --> 00:39.960] just seven inmates at the time of its storming, but was a symbol of the abuses by the monarchy. [00:39.960 --> 00:43.560] Its fall was the flashpoint of the French Revolution. [00:43.560 --> 00:49.360] Bastille Day, Today in History. [00:49.360 --> 00:54.280] In recent news, Russian Foreign Minister spokeswoman Maria Zakharova stated today, Friday, in a [00:54.280 --> 00:58.920] news briefing, that, quote, the number of staff at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow exceeds [00:58.920 --> 01:04.040] a number of our embassy employees in Washington by a big margin. One of our options, apart [01:04.040 --> 01:09.120] from a tit-for-tat expulsion of Americans, would be to even out the numbers. There are [01:09.120 --> 01:13.520] too many employees of the CIA and Pentagon's espionage unit working under the roof of the [01:13.520 --> 01:19.320] American diplomatic mission, whose activity does not correspond at all with their status. [01:19.320 --> 01:23.400] This Russian retaliation, likely because the Trump administration has refused to hand back [01:23.400 --> 01:27.560] two Russian diplomatic compounds, which were seized at the same time as some of the Russian [01:27.560 --> 01:32.080] diplomats were sent home last year. That was when former President Barack Obama ordered [01:32.080 --> 01:42.080] the expulsion of 35 suspected Russian spies back in December. [01:42.080 --> 01:47.200] Samsung in a press release recently unveiled its first-ever Cinema LED screen that displays [01:47.200 --> 01:52.820] huge 33.8 feet and provides 4K resolution, as well as peak brightness levels that are [01:52.820 --> 01:57.960] nearly 10 times brighter than those offered by standard cinema projector technologies. [01:57.960 --> 02:02.680] Along with being equipped with distortion-free tech and offers a nearly infinite contrast [02:02.680 --> 02:07.760] ratio which facilitates deep blacks and extremely bright colors, the Cinema LED screen is set [02:07.760 --> 02:13.280] to be paired with a brand new surround sound system from JBL. The Super S, as it's being [02:13.280 --> 02:19.560] dubbed, is in action at the Lotte World Tower location of Lotte Cinemas in Korea, with Cars [02:19.560 --> 02:28.040] 3 and Spider-Man Homecoming being the first movie scheduled to play on it. [02:28.040 --> 02:33.440] In a press release, Visa stated that it will be awarding up to 500,000 to 50 eligible U.S.-based [02:33.440 --> 02:39.320] small business food service owners who commit to joining the 100% cashless quest. In short, [02:39.320 --> 02:43.640] it's an effort to convince 50 small business restaurants, cafes, and food trucks to go [02:43.640 --> 02:49.440] 100% cashless in favor of credit or debit, with the incentive of receiving $10,000 to [02:49.440 --> 02:53.560] help pay for the tech upgrades. [03:19.440 --> 03:26.480] The Super S, as it's being dubbed, is in action at the Lotte [03:26.480 --> 03:32.480] World Tower location of Lotte Cinemas in Korea, with Cars 3 and Spider-Man homecoming being [03:32.480 --> 03:37.760] the first movie scheduled to play on it. [03:37.760 --> 03:46.080] In a press release, Visa stated that it will be awarding up to 500,000 to 50 eligible U.S. [03:46.080 --> 03:52.520] customers, with the incentive of receiving $10,000 to help pay for the tech upgrades [03:52.520 --> 03:56.640] in Korea, with Cars 3 and Spider-Man homecoming being the first movie scheduled to play on [03:56.640 --> 03:57.640] it. [03:57.640 --> 04:02.300] In a press release, Visa stated that it will be awarding up to 500,000 to 50 eligible U.S. [04:02.300 --> 04:07.400] customers, with the incentive of receiving $10,000 to help pay for the tech upgrades [04:07.400 --> 04:12.900] in Korea, with Cars 3 and Spider-Man homecoming being the first movie scheduled to play on [04:12.900 --> 04:25.780] involves chapter 543 of the Transportation Code, chapters 14, 15, 23 of the Code of Criminal [04:25.780 --> 04:35.980] Procedure, and it all comes down to an argument over what is constitutionally unreasonable [04:35.980 --> 04:46.220] in relation to the authority delegated to a peace officer or to a specifically and specially [04:46.220 --> 04:52.820] authorized police officer under chapter 543 of the Transportation Code. [04:52.820 --> 05:01.340] Now, this is more or less the setup of how chapter 543 does things. [05:01.340 --> 05:08.100] But the first thing we have to understand about chapter 543 is a couple of things in [05:08.100 --> 05:10.220] regards to its form. [05:10.220 --> 05:16.620] Now what I'm going to do is I'm going to start kind of up the top of this a little bit. [05:16.620 --> 05:20.060] I'm not going to read the whole thing because this entire white paper is going to go up [05:20.060 --> 05:25.180] in an article that I'm doing on the legal blog hopefully in the next day or two. [05:25.180 --> 05:32.220] Now here in this paragraph on page 10, furthermore, the legal duties of the officer at the time [05:32.220 --> 05:39.880] of a transportation stop as set forth in chapter 543 of the Transportation Code are local and [05:39.880 --> 05:44.900] specific to that function, i.e. the traffic stop. [05:44.900 --> 05:51.740] As such, the specific instruction set forth therein removes the officer's individual discretion [05:51.740 --> 05:57.980] as to what course of action she or he is authorized by law to make when it comes to obtaining [05:57.980 --> 06:06.180] a signed notice or promise to appear or when and if to deliver someone before a magistrate. [06:06.180 --> 06:15.700] The officer's mandatory legal duties are specifically stated within section 543.002 of the Transportation [06:15.700 --> 06:21.300] Code, wherein the officer is directed in the following way. [06:21.300 --> 06:26.780] If the person arrested is being charged with a misdemeanor, that person shall, which is [06:26.780 --> 06:34.740] a command upon the officer, be taken immediately, not later, not after they've been booked in [06:34.740 --> 06:39.580] jail, immediately before a magistrate. [06:39.580 --> 06:48.460] If the misdemeanor offense charged is failure to stop in the event of an accident causing [06:48.460 --> 06:56.700] damage to property, or the person demands an immediate appearance before a magistrate, [06:56.700 --> 07:05.340] or the person refuses to make a written promise to appear in court as provided by this sub-chapter. [07:05.340 --> 07:11.620] Now the sub-chapter in question is sub-chapter A of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and that's [07:11.620 --> 07:12.620] exactly what I write here. [07:12.620 --> 07:16.660] As you can see in the last part of the last sentence, the requirements of obtaining a [07:16.660 --> 07:22.580] written promise to appear is limited to the offenses specifically codified in sub-chapter [07:22.580 --> 07:27.420] A of chapter 543 of the Transportation Code. [07:27.420 --> 07:36.380] Now sub-chapter A is 543.001 through.010, or 011, I forget exactly which one it ends [07:36.380 --> 07:39.540] at, but it's not very long. [07:39.540 --> 07:44.580] We would also be making note, or should also be making note, of what appears to be extremely [07:44.580 --> 07:52.960] clear language within the body of section 543.002 as well as what's in its title. [07:52.960 --> 08:01.180] The statute specifically authorizes the taking of the accused individual to a completely [08:01.180 --> 08:07.580] different location and before the nearest available magistrate. [08:07.580 --> 08:14.200] We need to really understand the implications of the term taken in relation to this statute [08:14.200 --> 08:18.380] and our individual right of liberty. [08:18.380 --> 08:24.620] The term taken is derived from the root term take which is, in pertinent part, defined [08:24.620 --> 08:26.760] as follows. [08:26.760 --> 08:32.660] The word take has many shades of meaning, with the precise meaning which it is to bear [08:32.660 --> 08:38.940] in any case depending on the subject with respect to which it is used, i.e.g. imminent [08:38.940 --> 08:42.740] domain, larceny, or arrest. [08:42.740 --> 08:50.620] Well, here we're going to read you the definition of take relating to arrest. [08:50.620 --> 08:54.620] To seize or apprehend a person. [08:54.620 --> 08:59.140] To arrest the body of a person by virtue of lawful process. [08:59.140 --> 09:05.420] Thus, a capius commands the officer to take the body of the defendant. [09:05.420 --> 09:08.040] See sees. [09:08.040 --> 09:12.500] Now understand something, and this is the definition of take as it appears in Black's [09:12.500 --> 09:19.460] Law 6th edition page 1453. [09:19.460 --> 09:26.780] Now since take says see sees, we now need to fully understand the use of the term seize, [09:26.780 --> 09:35.340] seized, and seizure in relation to the term take when their meaning is in relation to [09:35.340 --> 09:36.340] arrest. [09:36.340 --> 09:37.340] Right? [09:37.340 --> 09:40.700] That just makes sense. [09:40.700 --> 09:50.100] To seize means to take possession of forcibly, to grasp, to snatch, or to put in possession. [09:50.100 --> 09:57.900] In the case of state vs. dees, Florida Appellate Court 280 South 2nd 51 and 52. [09:57.900 --> 10:04.220] A person is seized within 4th amendment when police officer restrains person's freedom [10:04.220 --> 10:06.320] to walk away. [10:06.320 --> 10:15.020] State vs. Ochoa 112 Arizona 582 and 544 Pacific 2nd 1097 and 1099. [10:15.020 --> 10:21.020] It exists when a reasonable person would feel that he was not free to leave. [10:21.020 --> 10:24.940] U.S. vs. Albert. [10:24.940 --> 10:27.380] See seizure. [10:27.380 --> 10:33.740] Seizure of an individual within the 4th amendment connotes the taking of one physically or constructively [10:33.740 --> 10:40.560] into custody and detaining him, thus causing a deprivation of his freedom in a significant [10:40.560 --> 10:45.280] way with real interruption of his liberty of movement. [10:45.280 --> 10:50.780] That again is U.S. vs. Albert 816 Federal 2nd 958. [10:50.780 --> 10:56.980] Such occurs not only when an officer arrests an individual, but whenever he restrains the [10:56.980 --> 10:59.700] individual's freedom to walk away. [10:59.700 --> 11:09.980] Robins vs. Harem Washington 773 Federal 2nd 1004 and see Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure [11:09.980 --> 11:17.820] 41, 18 U.S.C. annotated section 3101 ex sequitur. [11:17.820 --> 11:27.780] And that is the definitions of seized and seizure from Black's Law 6 edition page 1359. [11:27.780 --> 11:31.180] Now that analysis leads us to this. [11:31.180 --> 11:37.740] Therefore, given the clear meaning and import of the term taken as used within the form [11:37.740 --> 11:44.540] of the statute, one must wonder just how it was that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals [11:44.540 --> 11:50.020] intentionally screwed the proverbial pooch when the morons on the court actually ruled [11:50.020 --> 11:56.820] against the individual rights of the people in the 2008 case of Aziz v. State when they [11:56.820 --> 12:03.700] decided that a transportation stop in Texas is not to be afforded the same level of Fourth [12:03.700 --> 12:09.100] and Fifth Amendment protections against warrantless searches and seizures as any other type of [12:09.100 --> 12:15.060] warrantless search or seizure of persons or property by a governmental actor. [12:15.060 --> 12:18.500] Can you say double standard? [12:18.500 --> 12:20.840] How about corruption? [12:20.840 --> 12:25.820] How about complete and total incompetence of constitutional limitations of governmental [12:25.820 --> 12:32.980] authority and an individual's fundamental rights? [12:32.980 --> 12:42.500] You wonder why I refuse to acknowledge that there is even the possibility of there being [12:42.500 --> 12:48.000] an honest and intelligent attorney anywhere on the face of the entire planet because they [12:48.000 --> 12:59.460] take language that is right there and they twist it around to deprive you of the rights [12:59.460 --> 13:05.680] that would protect you from the interpretation they're concocting. [13:05.680 --> 13:07.960] It does get worse, however. [13:07.960 --> 13:13.640] Here in Texas, they violated both the Bill of Rights and the Code of Criminal Procedure [13:13.640 --> 13:18.100] when they declared that you're not entitled to assistance of counsel or to an examining [13:18.100 --> 13:22.780] trial in a Class C, fine-only misdemeanor or to an examining trial for pretty much any [13:22.780 --> 13:24.180] misdemeanor. [13:24.180 --> 13:31.260] Now, when you read the statute on the examining trial in 16.01, the only thing it says is [13:31.260 --> 13:39.100] that an accused individual is entitled to an examining trial prior to indictment for [13:39.100 --> 13:40.380] a felony. [13:40.380 --> 13:47.900] Now, when you read the statute straight up the way it reads, that does not remove the [13:47.900 --> 13:52.940] right to a probable cause determination from misdemeanors. [13:52.940 --> 14:00.460] It specifically says that you cannot seek an indictment for an individual in a felony [14:00.460 --> 14:08.500] allegation until they have had an examining trial provided. [14:08.500 --> 14:12.460] That's the only limitation it makes. [14:12.460 --> 14:19.880] You cannot send the charge to a grand jury for an indictment until the individual accused [14:19.880 --> 14:23.260] of a felony has had an examining trial. [14:23.260 --> 14:31.140] Now, common sense would say that since a probable cause determination is an absolute requirement [14:31.140 --> 14:40.860] for any criminal offense, it cannot be separated by class of offense into you have the right, [14:40.860 --> 14:45.940] you don't have the right. [14:45.940 --> 14:53.140] Because the majority of these arrests, whether felony or misdemeanor, are being performed [14:53.140 --> 15:01.820] without a warrant, which is presumptively invalid and unlawful on its face because it [15:01.820 --> 15:04.260] was done without a warrant. [15:04.260 --> 15:12.020] It cannot be automatically presumed in any reasonable way that a warrantless arrest or [15:12.020 --> 15:21.100] search and seizure was valid simply because no one challenged it or because no one knew [15:21.100 --> 15:25.660] they could challenge it. [15:25.660 --> 15:31.500] To make that presumption is to say we deny you in the right you reserved under the Bill [15:31.500 --> 15:39.740] of Rights unless you specifically invoke them and make us pay attention to them. [15:39.740 --> 15:52.340] You know, if I hired somebody to work in my house, it should not be a requirement for [15:52.340 --> 16:02.420] me to have to put in writing that that person shall not steal any of my property when they [16:02.420 --> 16:10.580] enter or leave my home or at any time while they are in my home. [16:10.580 --> 16:13.540] I shouldn't have to put that in writing. [16:13.540 --> 16:18.820] My right to that property is entirely presumptive on its face. [16:18.820 --> 16:28.820] I don't have to invoke that right for a servant that I've hired in order to make it valid [16:28.820 --> 16:33.100] that he is not allowed to steal from me. [16:33.100 --> 16:35.300] You understand that? [16:35.300 --> 16:40.200] It's stupid to make the argument that you can hire somebody to work in your home and [16:40.200 --> 16:45.900] they are free to steal from you regardless of your right to the property if you fail [16:45.900 --> 16:51.260] to verbally invoke and demand that they honor that right. [16:51.260 --> 16:54.100] But that's what your public servants are doing. [16:54.100 --> 17:01.100] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break to carry on. [17:24.100 --> 17:48.100] We'll be right back after this break to carry on. [17:48.100 --> 18:12.100] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break to carry on. [18:12.100 --> 18:28.420] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break to carry on. [18:28.420 --> 18:51.220] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break to carry on. [18:51.220 --> 19:07.540] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break to carry on. [19:07.540 --> 19:30.340] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break to carry on. [19:30.340 --> 19:59.860] All right, folks. [19:59.860 --> 20:01.260] We are back. [20:01.260 --> 20:06.900] Now, let's go on just a little bit further here and see what else we're dealing with. [20:06.900 --> 20:11.780] It is at this point in the officer's duties and authority that the statutes become misleading [20:11.780 --> 20:18.100] to those that read only one section outside of the context of the others in this chapter. [20:18.100 --> 20:26.500] If you read section 543.003 in isolation from the other statutes in this chapter, or in [20:26.500 --> 20:32.420] this sub-chapter, rather, it appears that every single notice or promise to appear on [20:32.420 --> 20:38.180] an issued citation is required by law to be signed by the accused individual. [20:38.180 --> 20:43.980] However, the rules of statutory construction do not allow statutes to be read in isolation [20:43.980 --> 20:49.980] apart from or an exclusion of their subject matter context and any other statutes relating [20:49.980 --> 20:52.100] to the same subject. [20:52.100 --> 20:58.880] This is called reading the statutes in paramateria, which is Latin meaning upon the same subject. [20:58.880 --> 21:03.980] And these petty bureaucratic courts completely suck at doing so. [21:03.980 --> 21:10.500] Even though section 543.003 appears to require that every citation be signed by the accused [21:10.500 --> 21:16.200] individual, it is not the only statute that discusses this point of procedure in relation [21:16.200 --> 21:18.720] to the officer's authority and duty. [21:18.720 --> 21:27.780] The other statute that is controlling on this point is section 543.004, which is even titled [21:27.780 --> 21:33.460] notice to appear required certain offenses. [21:33.460 --> 21:42.340] When you read it, you can see that the directives of section 543.003 are not absolute and binding [21:42.340 --> 21:48.500] upon the accused individual in a manner that requires the individual to sign the citation [21:48.500 --> 21:51.900] before the officer is authorized to release them. [21:51.900 --> 21:57.900] Furthermore, if no such requirement exists in the statutes that would make the signing [21:57.900 --> 22:05.820] of the promise to appear absolutely mandatory upon the arrested individual, then the officer [22:05.820 --> 22:12.460] has no individual discretion to refuse to release them, deliver them before a magistrate, [22:12.460 --> 22:19.620] or take them directly to jail simply because they do not wish or refuse to sign the citation. [22:19.620 --> 22:28.060] The duties of the officer as specifically stated by section 543.004a are as follows. [22:28.060 --> 22:36.220] The officer shall issue a written notice to appear if the offense charged is speeding [22:36.220 --> 22:45.180] or the offense is a violation of the open container law under section 49.03 penal code [22:45.180 --> 22:53.540] and the person makes a written promise to appear in court as provided by section 543.005. [22:53.540 --> 23:04.020] Section 543.004b then sets forth that subsection a applies only as provided by chapter 703 [23:04.020 --> 23:11.740] and even then only if the person is a resident of or is operating a vehicle licensed in a [23:11.740 --> 23:15.420] state or country other than this state. [23:15.420 --> 23:24.900] Finally, section 543.004c tells us that the offenses specified by subsection a are the [23:24.900 --> 23:35.460] only offenses for which issuance of a written notice to appear is mandatory. [23:35.460 --> 23:37.220] So what does all this mean? [23:37.220 --> 23:44.260] Well, it means that the officer is abusing his or her authority and acting illegally [23:44.260 --> 23:49.900] when she or he either threatens or actually does take you into physical custody after [23:49.900 --> 23:55.540] you have refused to sign the notice or promise to appear on a citation for an offense that [23:55.540 --> 24:03.100] is not specifically listed in section 543.000a or alternatively conditioned upon section [24:03.100 --> 24:07.420] 543.000b of the transportation code. [24:07.420 --> 24:17.060] Thus, sections 543.002, 003, and 005 are not the statutes that are controlling on the officer's [24:17.060 --> 24:24.240] actions or discretion when it comes time to sign the citation as they are merely directory [24:24.240 --> 24:25.560] in nature. [24:25.560 --> 24:31.100] The only enforceable statute at this particular point of the transportation stop catch and [24:31.100 --> 24:36.500] release process is section 543.004. [24:36.500 --> 24:42.420] Now just so you understand what directory means in relation to a statute, it means that [24:42.420 --> 24:49.500] the statute is an enactment of a legislative body that indicates only what should be done [24:49.500 --> 24:53.140] with no provision for enforcement. [24:53.140 --> 24:57.860] In fuller terms, this means that the provisions of a directory statute are a matter of form [24:57.860 --> 25:04.140] only and do not affect any substantial right and do not relate to the essence of the thing [25:04.140 --> 25:10.020] to be done so that compliance is a matter of convenience rather than substance. [25:10.020 --> 25:16.400] The strict fulfillment of a directory statute is not necessary to the validity of a proceeding [25:16.400 --> 25:21.580] but with which there is a duty to comply as nearly as practicable. [25:21.580 --> 25:27.500] In simpler terms, the officer has no authority or discretion to make mandatory that which [25:27.500 --> 25:35.100] is declared in a directory statute to be optional and having no provision making it enforceable. [25:35.100 --> 25:41.580] Therefore, according to the precedent established by the Texas Supreme Court in the case of [25:41.580 --> 25:55.580] Simons v. Arnum, 110 Texas 309 and 220 SW 66 at 325 from 1920, as a matter of law, courts [25:55.580 --> 25:59.700] must take statutes as they find them. [25:59.700 --> 26:05.500] You all pardon me for a second, this computer has got my mouse jumping all over the place [26:05.500 --> 26:06.500] and I don't know why. [26:06.500 --> 26:10.220] I can't see anything I'm trying to get to here. [26:10.220 --> 26:12.620] All right. [26:12.620 --> 26:25.900] Hang on a sec, still the same problem, it just continues and continues. [26:25.900 --> 26:26.900] Okay. [26:26.900 --> 26:33.980] Anyway, courts must take statutes as they find them. [26:33.980 --> 26:37.820] More than that, they should be willing to take them as they find them. [26:37.820 --> 26:47.300] They should search out the intendment of a statute giving full effect to all. [26:47.300 --> 26:57.500] You know, there are days when I really hate computers, especially Windows-based computers. [26:57.500 --> 27:05.980] Yeah, it's going to be one of those days. [27:05.980 --> 27:06.980] Most definitely. [27:06.980 --> 27:07.980] Huh. [27:07.980 --> 27:08.980] I love it. [27:08.980 --> 27:11.860] Anyway, now that everything on the computer has managed to freeze up for no particular [27:11.860 --> 27:19.860] reason while I'm trying to work here, needless to say, I've got a lot of cases cited in this [27:19.860 --> 27:24.220] that make it very clear that the courts are not free to alter a statute to suit their [27:24.220 --> 27:25.220] whim. [27:25.220 --> 27:30.880] They are not free to determine that the statute requires A, B and C when the statute doesn't [27:30.880 --> 27:35.260] say anything about A, B and C. [27:35.260 --> 27:42.060] It's a complete prohibition of the court's ability to legislate from the bench. [27:42.060 --> 27:44.340] That's what these cases go to. [27:44.340 --> 27:53.740] But right now, here in Texas, every court that we have is doing exactly that. [27:53.740 --> 27:59.860] They are legislating from the bench, rewriting law to suit the outcome they want instead [27:59.860 --> 28:05.980] of how it is actually written, and then telling the people to suck it up because they're the [28:05.980 --> 28:09.700] only people with the authority to make such determinations. [28:09.700 --> 28:13.940] No, they are not. [28:13.940 --> 28:16.580] They work for us. [28:16.580 --> 28:19.480] They are not independent of us. [28:19.480 --> 28:23.320] They don't have powers apart from us. [28:23.320 --> 28:28.180] Their power is completely dependent upon us. [28:28.180 --> 28:37.900] And I'm here to tell you we need to be doing something to take it away permanently. [28:37.900 --> 28:44.020] Because this system no longer serves the people of Texas. [28:44.020 --> 28:50.420] No system in any state serves the people of the state. [28:50.420 --> 28:56.900] It serves those who have a petty love of power and authority over others. [28:56.900 --> 29:03.760] And it serves those who line their own pockets by accusing others for the sole purpose of [29:03.760 --> 29:12.740] being able to steal from them through a legal process. [29:12.740 --> 29:22.360] And every time I hear an attorney try to justify the things these people do, I want to beat [29:22.360 --> 29:32.340] them into absolute unconsciousness for spewing that much stupidity upon me in utter filth, [29:32.340 --> 29:36.300] because that's all it was. [29:36.300 --> 29:44.000] If we do not start paying closer attention, start serving on juries, and start forcing [29:44.000 --> 29:52.340] our public servants to live by the law that we put in place for them to follow, then what [29:52.340 --> 29:57.260] good are we as people, and what right do we have to control them at all? [29:57.260 --> 30:01.660] We'll be right back. [30:01.660 --> 30:03.420] How long will you live? [30:03.420 --> 30:07.620] Life insurance companies want to know, and they're harvesting information from some surprising [30:07.620 --> 30:10.500] sources to determine your risk and set insurance premiums. [30:10.500 --> 30:14.660] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with more. [30:14.660 --> 30:19.400] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches, and creating a massive [30:19.400 --> 30:21.740] database of your personal information. [30:21.740 --> 30:25.060] That's creepy, but it doesn't have to be that way. [30:25.060 --> 30:28.420] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:28.420 --> 30:32.320] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches, or use tracking [30:32.320 --> 30:34.580] cookies, and they're third-party certified. [30:34.580 --> 30:39.060] If you don't like big brothers spying on you, start over with Startpage. [30:39.060 --> 30:41.660] Create search results and total privacy. [30:41.660 --> 30:45.180] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:45.180 --> 30:49.580] Life insurance companies used to set rates based on application information and medical [30:49.580 --> 30:54.240] exams, but now companies are turning to marketing databases for clues. [30:54.240 --> 30:58.860] They're sussing out credit card purchases, internet activity, magazine subscriptions, [30:58.860 --> 31:03.220] and grocery card data, and social media posts are an even bigger bonanza. [31:03.220 --> 31:07.980] They're looking for lifestyle indicators like physical activity, financial status, and healthy [31:07.980 --> 31:11.020] food choices to see who's likely to keel over. [31:11.020 --> 31:14.140] Better not post that photo if you're a prize-winning cheesecake. [31:14.140 --> 31:16.560] This is just one more reason to guard your privacy. [31:16.560 --> 31:20.640] If you leave a trail of negative lifestyle indicators, you could find yourself uninsurable [31:20.640 --> 31:23.260] or paying exorbitant life insurance premiums. [31:23.260 --> 31:25.260] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:25.260 --> 31:27.700] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:27.700 --> 31:31.780] What are you thinking? [31:31.780 --> 31:37.660] Microplant powder with iodine and probiotics for a total body detox for around $10 a month. [31:37.660 --> 31:43.260] musa.org has 12 formulations of microplant powder for absorbing and removing toxins from [31:43.260 --> 31:47.940] your kidneys, liver, blood, lungs, stomach, and colon, and feel better than ever. [31:47.940 --> 31:52.500] It alkalizes, oxygenates, kills parasites, does the job of 10 products. [31:52.500 --> 31:54.580] That saves you space, time, and money. [31:54.580 --> 32:01.860] Call 888-910-4367 only at musa.org. [32:01.860 --> 32:04.580] Rule Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:04.580 --> 32:08.420] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:08.420 --> 32:12.380] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.380 --> 32:15.580] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [32:15.580 --> 32:19.380] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.380 --> 32:23.460] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:23.460 --> 32:24.780] our rights through due process. [32:24.780 --> 32:28.820] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:28.820 --> 32:32.580] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:32.580 --> 32:34.660] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [32:34.660 --> 32:38.980] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:38.980 --> 32:40.300] ordering your copy today. [32:40.300 --> 32:43.460] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:43.460 --> 32:48.060] The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [32:48.060 --> 32:50.380] documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.380 --> 32:54.340] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.340 --> 33:02.260] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.260 --> 33:05.580] At Free Speech Radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:32.260 --> 33:39.260] at free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [34:02.260 --> 34:07.420] Alright folks, we are back. [34:07.420 --> 34:09.240] The phones are now on. [34:09.240 --> 34:15.820] The call-in number is 512-646-1984. [34:15.820 --> 34:21.180] Like I said, this document will be up at an article on the blog sometime this week. [34:21.180 --> 34:29.060] I'm just looking for someone to give it a review and grammar and spelling correction [34:29.060 --> 34:33.400] effort so I can get it out of my eyes for a little while because I'm going completely [34:33.400 --> 34:38.060] blind on this stuff, having to spend so much time on it. [34:38.060 --> 34:45.160] But it's pretty much ready to go as far as the information it contains. [34:45.160 --> 34:56.020] It does have a lot of useful information when it comes to challenging the reasonableness [34:56.020 --> 35:04.980] that is given to an officer in the form of discretion within Chapter 543 of the Transportation [35:04.980 --> 35:06.500] Code. [35:06.500 --> 35:10.440] Because a lot of the stuff that's in this document that I have not read to you tonight [35:10.440 --> 35:18.180] deals with dissecting what is reasonable and unreasonable about basically giving an officer [35:18.180 --> 35:28.740] absolute freedom to choose whether or not they escalate a traffic situation, let's just [35:28.740 --> 35:35.020] say a broken taillight, and I don't mean broken, I just mean the light isn't functioning. [35:35.020 --> 35:39.420] Whether or not the officer, according to the statute, he absolutely does have complete [35:39.420 --> 35:46.460] discretion over what he does in response to that taillight that he sees being out. [35:46.460 --> 35:49.380] He can do absolutely nothing. [35:49.380 --> 35:57.900] He can just jot down the license plate number and mail the person a citation. [35:57.900 --> 36:04.900] He can do any of those things because that offense is not an offense of the two, it's [36:04.900 --> 36:11.440] not one of the two offenses, that the statute specifically says that a promise to appear [36:11.440 --> 36:15.260] must be signed for. [36:15.260 --> 36:20.220] So he doesn't have to start up a car chase, he doesn't have to do any of the stuff that [36:20.220 --> 36:25.460] he normally chooses to do anyway. [36:25.460 --> 36:34.220] How can it be constitutionally reasonable to give an officer that level of discretion [36:34.220 --> 36:40.220] where he is absolutely free to choose to take the less dangerous road to the public or to [36:40.220 --> 36:49.700] endanger everyone on the road and the individual he's pursuing to get a citation issued for [36:49.700 --> 36:55.260] an offense he doesn't even have to have the citation signed to issue it for? [36:55.260 --> 37:00.700] But that's exactly what 543 does. [37:00.700 --> 37:10.120] It lets the officer choose what level of force and violence he's going to use to issue that [37:10.120 --> 37:21.260] ticket, despite the fact that the statute does not require him to do anything. [37:21.260 --> 37:22.260] Get it? [37:22.260 --> 37:33.540] If you don't think that's a problem, it's only because they haven't stopped you yet. [37:33.540 --> 37:42.900] But once they do, you're going to get a first-hand taste of exactly why it's a problem. [37:42.900 --> 37:48.180] And then of course you're going to call me and ask me to save your bacon. [37:48.180 --> 37:51.180] And I'm going to have to shake my head and say, where were you when I talked about this [37:51.180 --> 37:53.540] already? [37:53.540 --> 37:58.580] I've already got more on my plate than I can handle. [37:58.580 --> 38:04.380] And what's astounding about it is that the whole purpose of doing the seminar was so [38:04.380 --> 38:11.260] that people would not have to rely on me to do everything for them. [38:11.260 --> 38:17.580] Because the one thing you have to remember about that type of setup, the whole system [38:17.580 --> 38:26.220] of fighting back ends, at least as far as the way that people come to me to get it done, [38:26.220 --> 38:29.860] if something happens to me, it's over, it's done. [38:29.860 --> 38:32.340] No one knows how to do what I do but me. [38:32.340 --> 38:38.260] And if they take me out or I die or anything, even natural causes, where are you going to [38:38.260 --> 38:41.420] go then to help yourself? [38:41.420 --> 38:45.840] Are you just going to do it again and find somebody else to do things for you in the [38:45.840 --> 38:49.740] hopes that they're doing it right? [38:49.740 --> 38:55.500] It's a question everybody needs to be asking themselves. [38:55.500 --> 39:04.140] The whole purpose of the traffic seminar was to take the load off of me and make you responsible [39:04.140 --> 39:09.660] for yourself. [39:09.660 --> 39:16.140] That obviously hasn't worked in a lot of cases, 200 plus to be exact. [39:16.140 --> 39:22.460] So I'm not really sure that when I get seminar version 2.0 done, whether or not it was going [39:22.460 --> 39:27.620] to be worth all the time and effort I'm putting into it to make it better than the first one. [39:27.620 --> 39:31.180] Because if people are going to wind up ignoring the seminar just to try to get me to do everything [39:31.180 --> 39:34.940] for them for free or on the side, then what was the point? [39:34.940 --> 39:40.780] I wasted a whole lot of time putting in all that research and developing all those pleadings [39:40.780 --> 39:46.420] just to have people waste them by not learning them. [39:46.420 --> 39:49.820] Because I wrote them and they just filed them and that's the last time they looked at them. [39:49.820 --> 39:52.660] They never read them, they never understood them and they never made the effort to argue [39:52.660 --> 39:56.860] them and then wonder why they lost. [39:56.860 --> 40:02.140] The thing about your legal pleadings in these courts people is this, your pleadings cannot [40:02.140 --> 40:07.860] argue themselves because the courts don't read your pleadings. [40:07.860 --> 40:13.160] And if they do, they intentionally skim them instead of digest them. [40:13.160 --> 40:17.080] They do not review any of the arguments you make. [40:17.080 --> 40:21.480] They just simply see the statutory sites and you're saying that this is wrong and this [40:21.480 --> 40:26.060] is wrong and they don't want to agree with you because it means they can't steal your [40:26.060 --> 40:28.700] money if they agree with you. [40:28.700 --> 40:30.860] So they deny your motion. [40:30.860 --> 40:36.840] No finding of facts, no conclusion of law and no legal basis for the denial. [40:36.840 --> 40:45.960] It's done as a form of automatic procedure to keep you rolling through the system. [40:45.960 --> 40:55.200] Now that in and of itself is the very definition of a criminal enterprise. [40:55.200 --> 41:01.340] And yet they're still operating all these years of watching them do this, finally figuring [41:01.340 --> 41:05.760] out what they're doing and exactly how they're doing it and then doing everything I could [41:05.760 --> 41:10.340] to make you aware of what they're doing and how they're doing it. [41:10.340 --> 41:18.100] And somehow they're still doing it, which leads me to ask the question of where the [41:18.100 --> 41:22.680] hell are you people? [41:22.680 --> 41:28.300] If there are so many of you out there that are sick and tired and fed up with this system [41:28.300 --> 41:37.560] and this way of doing things, where are you? [41:37.560 --> 41:43.900] The ones that call into this show, I greatly appreciate, do not get me wrong, but when [41:43.900 --> 41:49.180] it's the same people that are constantly calling in with hardly a new voice to hear from and [41:49.180 --> 42:00.440] a new event to hear from, except on the odd occasion, something isn't right and it makes [42:00.440 --> 42:02.620] you wonder. [42:02.620 --> 42:07.540] So for those that have taken up the mantle and the gauntlet and are fighting the good [42:07.540 --> 42:11.620] fight, I applaud you, I absolutely do. [42:11.620 --> 42:15.520] That was the whole point of me starting this process, whether you learned it from me or [42:15.520 --> 42:20.620] not and I'm not trying to take credit for what you know coming from me, it's just good [42:20.620 --> 42:29.240] to know that I'm no longer by myself. [42:29.240 --> 42:33.220] Even though a lot of times it still feels that way because the few that are doing it [42:33.220 --> 42:35.260] are all somewhere else. [42:35.260 --> 42:40.740] And the few that I know are fighting it are still coming to me to fight it for them, hence [42:40.740 --> 42:45.560] the reason for the quandary. [42:45.560 --> 42:52.460] So what I hoped, also in addition to the seminar material, when I started the legal blog, was [42:52.460 --> 42:58.220] to offload even more of this requirement that I be involved into the information that I [42:58.220 --> 43:04.140] put out there online for people to get to absolutely free. [43:04.140 --> 43:10.100] I may not give you the legal pleading, but I give you everything that that pleading would [43:10.100 --> 43:13.300] need to be successful. [43:13.300 --> 43:19.140] And you still will not make the effort in some cases to take the information I gave [43:19.140 --> 43:29.180] you, sit down, and learn to write a proper legal motion with that information. [43:29.180 --> 43:32.660] Why? [43:32.660 --> 43:36.140] Why won't you fight for yourselves? [43:36.140 --> 43:43.300] Why won't you learn it the way I had to learn it so that you know it as well as I know it? [43:43.300 --> 43:47.740] Instead of having to flounder around every time someone in the court asks you a question [43:47.740 --> 43:53.480] that you can't answer off the top of your head because you don't know the subject matter. [43:53.480 --> 43:55.860] That's a problem folks, like it or not. [43:55.860 --> 44:00.740] Alright, we'll be right back after this break and we'll start taking your calls. [44:00.740 --> 44:03.940] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [44:03.940 --> 44:10.700] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [44:10.700 --> 44:14.700] that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [44:14.700 --> 44:18.420] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [44:18.420 --> 44:22.580] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [44:22.580 --> 44:27.580] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [44:27.580 --> 44:34.140] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [44:34.140 --> 44:39.020] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [44:39.020 --> 44:43.140] principles and practices that control our American courts. [44:43.140 --> 44:49.340] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [44:49.340 --> 44:51.940] pro se tactics and much more. [44:51.940 --> 45:03.540] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll free, 866-LAW-EASY. [45:03.540 --> 45:09.020] Hello my name is Stuart Smith from NaturesPureOrganics.com and I would like to invite you to come by [45:09.020 --> 45:13.980] our store at 1904 Guadaloupe Street, Suite D here in Austin, Texas to find brave new [45:13.980 --> 45:17.820] books and chase back to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very [45:17.820 --> 45:18.820] own eyes. [45:18.820 --> 45:23.700] Have a look at our miracle healing clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [45:23.700 --> 45:27.780] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian Emu oil, [45:27.780 --> 45:31.420] lotion candles, olive oil soaps and colloidal silver and gold. [45:31.420 --> 45:37.900] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at NaturesPureOrganics.com. [45:37.900 --> 45:43.340] That's 512-264-4043, NaturesPureOrganics.com. [45:43.340 --> 46:12.740] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [46:13.340 --> 46:34.580] Alright folks, we are back. [46:34.580 --> 46:38.060] This is the Monday Night Rule of Law Radio Show with your host Eddie Craig. [46:38.060 --> 46:42.660] Call that number is 512-646-1984. [46:42.660 --> 46:46.300] The phones are on if you want to call and get in line. [46:46.300 --> 46:49.340] Right now our first caller up is Ralph in Texas. [46:49.340 --> 46:51.340] Ralph, what can we do for you? [46:51.340 --> 46:56.460] Hello Eddie, I want to thank you for that last comment. [46:56.460 --> 46:57.460] I appreciate it. [46:57.460 --> 47:03.380] I took that personally because I am fighting a good fight and it is kind of lonely over [47:03.380 --> 47:04.380] here in Beaumont. [47:04.380 --> 47:12.740] I just had a management case hearing and I was at one table and there was four attorneys [47:12.740 --> 47:19.100] at the other table and three pro se litigants behind them. [47:19.100 --> 47:24.300] And the bailiff was right up there by my table ready to arrest me if I said the wrong word [47:24.300 --> 47:25.300] I guess. [47:25.300 --> 47:26.300] I don't know. [47:26.300 --> 47:38.260] I thought I did pretty good, but later that day the judge dismissed 15 of 17 defendants. [47:38.260 --> 47:45.660] So that didn't sound too good, but I still have two and I think I know what they're trying [47:45.660 --> 47:46.660] to do. [47:46.660 --> 47:52.780] So I've been thinking about what my options are and I wanted to get some feedback from [47:52.780 --> 47:56.740] you and more or less put you in a deposition chair. [47:56.740 --> 47:59.020] Are you ready? [47:59.020 --> 48:02.260] Well the thing about putting me in a deposition chair, what are you going to put me in a deposition [48:02.260 --> 48:04.580] chair for? [48:04.580 --> 48:09.580] One question, or actually several versions of one question. [48:09.580 --> 48:10.580] And that is? [48:10.580 --> 48:11.580] All right. [48:11.580 --> 48:18.200] On the day of the incident, Sergeant Bullfold decided to put you in jail for failure to [48:18.200 --> 48:23.780] identify and we're now claiming we had the right to put you in jail for failure to identify [48:23.780 --> 48:27.220] because we could have put you in jail for not having a seat belt on. [48:27.220 --> 48:31.140] Why are you wearing your seat belt? [48:31.140 --> 48:33.860] That is the question. [48:33.860 --> 48:36.300] Why are you wearing your seat belt? [48:36.300 --> 48:41.980] Because the transportation code says you have to wear it, but if you're not in commerce, [48:41.980 --> 48:42.980] you don't have to wear it. [48:42.980 --> 48:45.540] That's not the way you argue it. [48:45.540 --> 48:52.220] The transportation code says you don't have to wear it and unless you're engaged in the [48:52.220 --> 48:58.460] profession or occupation of transportation as regulated by that code, you are not required [48:58.460 --> 49:01.460] to wear it. [49:01.460 --> 49:03.540] Don't ever say commerce. [49:03.540 --> 49:10.500] The word commerce is not your friend here unless you have already managed to directly [49:10.500 --> 49:14.940] establish that transportation means commerce. [49:14.940 --> 49:21.220] If you haven't done that yet, saying commerce instead of transportation will lose your case. [49:21.220 --> 49:22.220] Okay. [49:22.220 --> 49:26.380] Well, I've been using both. [49:26.380 --> 49:27.980] I've been primarily using transportation. [49:27.980 --> 49:32.900] I don't watch commerce this time. [49:32.900 --> 49:39.880] So what I'm getting at is I was just going to demur the question and say it's irrelevant [49:39.880 --> 49:41.940] because I'm not in transportation. [49:41.940 --> 49:47.060] Well, again, you're not answering my question. [49:47.060 --> 49:52.380] Why would you ask me that question if I'm not there and it's a hypothetical? [49:52.380 --> 49:56.020] They're not going to let you introduce the hypothetical as fact. [49:56.020 --> 49:58.300] No, no, no, no. [49:58.300 --> 50:04.320] I mean, I'm going to be in a deposition chair and they're going to try and trick me to say [50:04.320 --> 50:06.900] that I did not have my seat belt on. [50:06.900 --> 50:08.700] Well, I can go on forever. [50:08.700 --> 50:11.860] I'll try to make it real short. [50:11.860 --> 50:15.980] I never said I didn't have my seat belt on. [50:15.980 --> 50:21.060] And the officer said that he was qualified immunity. [50:21.060 --> 50:28.180] So after several motions are filed, motions of dismiss, response, reply, sir reply, more [50:28.180 --> 50:33.460] motions to dismiss, the judge comes back and says, hey, he never said he wasn't wearing [50:33.460 --> 50:36.220] the seat belt. [50:36.220 --> 50:40.300] So what they're going to do is now that we're in discovery, what they're going to do is [50:40.300 --> 50:44.420] they're going to put me on a witness stand, try to get me to say, no, they're not. [50:44.420 --> 50:47.080] How can they put you on the witness stand? [50:47.080 --> 50:48.080] I'm sorry. [50:48.080 --> 50:49.080] Deposition chair. [50:49.080 --> 50:51.540] How can they put you in a deposition chair? [50:51.540 --> 50:52.540] Simple. [50:52.540 --> 51:00.940] They say we're going to have depositions on you Friday with 10 days from now. [51:00.940 --> 51:02.220] They cannot. [51:02.220 --> 51:04.220] Is this a civil suit? [51:04.220 --> 51:05.740] Yes. [51:05.740 --> 51:09.400] You're suing them or they're suing you? [51:09.400 --> 51:12.060] I am suing them in federal court. [51:12.060 --> 51:13.060] Okay. [51:13.060 --> 51:18.060] Then the question again is irrelevant as to whether or not you're wearing your seat belt. [51:18.060 --> 51:20.620] It is absolutely irrelevant. [51:20.620 --> 51:22.140] Okay. [51:22.140 --> 51:28.660] The only question here, if they say, were you wearing your seat belt? [51:28.660 --> 51:31.060] Your response remains. [51:31.060 --> 51:36.680] Are you attempting to allege that I was engaging in transportation so as to be required to [51:36.680 --> 51:39.540] wear a seat belt? [51:39.540 --> 51:40.660] Okay. [51:40.660 --> 51:41.660] I like that. [51:41.660 --> 51:44.460] It has kind of a harmonious ring to it. [51:44.460 --> 51:47.260] I hope you don't mind my pun. [51:47.260 --> 51:49.940] No, that's just the way it works. [51:49.940 --> 51:50.940] Right. [51:50.940 --> 51:51.940] Okay. [51:51.940 --> 51:57.940] Well, that's along the lines of what I was thinking, but I think I'm afraid that what [51:57.940 --> 52:03.700] they're going to do is they're going to contact the judge and say that I'm not cooperating [52:03.700 --> 52:06.260] and demand that I answer the question. [52:06.260 --> 52:08.360] You did answer the question. [52:08.360 --> 52:13.680] I can only answer the question within the context of the transportation code. [52:13.680 --> 52:20.460] Are you alleging that I was engaging in transportation so as to be subject to that code and thus [52:20.460 --> 52:22.380] be required to wear a seat belt? [52:22.380 --> 52:23.380] Okay. [52:23.380 --> 52:24.380] That sounds good. [52:24.380 --> 52:27.060] I'll take the notes off the audio. [52:27.060 --> 52:33.420] What happened was I brought up Rule 1.2, which I think is why I'm still in the courts. [52:33.420 --> 52:36.380] Thank you, Eddie, because I got that from you. [52:36.380 --> 52:40.940] Otherwise, I think it would have been completely dismissed, but they don't know what to do [52:40.940 --> 52:43.980] with this 1.2 all of a sudden. [52:43.980 --> 52:44.980] 1.2 of what? [52:44.980 --> 52:45.980] Administrative code. [52:45.980 --> 52:46.980] You're talking about 1.12? [52:46.980 --> 52:47.980] Regulate and supervise. [52:47.980 --> 52:48.980] Right. [52:48.980 --> 52:49.980] 1.12. [52:49.980 --> 52:51.980] I just thought 1.2. [52:51.980 --> 52:52.980] Sorry. [52:52.980 --> 52:53.980] Okay. [52:53.980 --> 53:10.700] But anyway, I brought it up, and the judge come back with, he wouldn't use the rule number. [53:10.700 --> 53:18.300] He just come back and said that, he mentioned a rule in the transportation code and says, [53:18.300 --> 53:23.220] well, rule such and such in transportation clearly requires that anybody with a vehicle [53:23.220 --> 53:25.780] have an inspection sticker and have a driver's license. [53:25.780 --> 53:29.860] So in other words, he just completely ignored what I said. [53:29.860 --> 53:30.860] So I came back again. [53:30.860 --> 53:31.860] I'm sticking to my guns. [53:31.860 --> 53:36.020] I'm just saying the same thing over and over and over, which I've learned to do in the [53:36.020 --> 53:39.580] law over the years, is they're going to ignore you, and you just keep saying it until someone [53:39.580 --> 53:45.020] higher, higher, higher up, you got their ear, and then they'll say, oh, okay, well, sure, [53:45.020 --> 53:48.380] yeah, I understand what you're saying, but the lower courts, as long as it's free and [53:48.380 --> 53:50.060] cheap, they're not going to listen. [53:50.060 --> 53:55.380] So he come back with this and said that the transportation code that says that anyone [53:55.380 --> 54:01.460] with a vehicle, so I broke it down like you do, and I said, well, vehicle says this and [54:01.460 --> 54:08.100] driver's license says this, and I said that in rule, like I said, I call it 1.2, is the [54:08.100 --> 54:13.380] definitive statement that there are two types of traffic. [54:13.380 --> 54:19.700] One is commercial and one is non-commercial, and that's the language I use there. [54:19.700 --> 54:21.180] Well, but that's not correct. [54:21.180 --> 54:22.460] That's not accurate. [54:22.460 --> 54:23.460] That's not accurate. [54:23.460 --> 54:28.740] Don't, okay, I know I'm raining on your parade here. [54:28.740 --> 54:31.060] It's not that you're not trying, so don't take this the wrong way. [54:31.060 --> 54:35.980] I'm not trying to shoot down what you're doing, but if you're going to use the statutes, don't [54:35.980 --> 54:39.060] deviate from the statutes. [54:39.060 --> 54:43.620] The authority of the Department of Public Safety under the transportation code is specifically [54:43.620 --> 54:49.680] limited to the regulatory programs they are granted the power to create under the administrative [54:49.680 --> 54:50.980] code. [54:50.980 --> 54:59.060] The regulatory programs in question are driver's licensing, financial responsibility, and inspection. [54:59.060 --> 55:06.100] Those programs are directly related to the DPS mission statement, which is the supervision [55:06.100 --> 55:09.460] of traffic on rural highways. [55:09.460 --> 55:16.420] The supervision and regulation of commercial and for hire traffic. [55:16.420 --> 55:22.980] So as you can see, the non-commercial only matters when it comes to supervision on rural [55:22.980 --> 55:32.100] highways, but the regulation matters only in relation to commercial and for hire traffic. [55:32.100 --> 55:33.100] You see? [55:33.100 --> 55:34.100] What? [55:34.100 --> 55:37.500] Okay, I'll have to go over the finer details of what you're saying, but it sounds a lot [55:37.500 --> 55:38.500] like what I'm saying. [55:38.500 --> 55:43.340] But I'll work out the details and see- Yeah, be real careful with a lot and exactly. [55:43.340 --> 55:46.980] Okay, yeah, right, right. [55:46.980 --> 55:47.980] Okay. [55:47.980 --> 55:52.820] Let me get back to another screen. [55:52.820 --> 55:55.300] Just one second. [55:55.300 --> 55:57.820] Okay, I want to share this with you. [55:57.820 --> 55:58.820] I've been meaning to share it with you. [55:58.820 --> 56:00.940] I don't think I've emailed it to you. [56:00.940 --> 56:06.860] This is Attorney General opinion number JM977. [56:06.860 --> 56:07.860] Okay. [56:07.860 --> 56:20.940] It's November 8, 1988, got it off of, here's the website, texasattorneygeneral.gov. [56:20.940 --> 56:28.740] And this, let's see, I don't know who it is, prosecutor, Harris County Assistant Attorney, [56:28.740 --> 56:31.740] that's what the judge is asking, I think. [56:31.740 --> 56:38.180] Anyway, he's asking the Attorney General if Class C misdemeanor defendants can have a [56:38.180 --> 56:42.340] court-appointed attorney, and he says yes, definitely they can. [56:42.340 --> 56:44.020] Yeah, absolutely. [56:44.020 --> 56:47.300] Okay, well, that may come in handy for somebody. [56:47.300 --> 56:51.820] I mean, I had a court-appointed attorney and a misdemeanor, and a court-appointed attorney [56:51.820 --> 56:56.500] stood up in front of a district attorney, in front of a district judge, and says that [56:56.500 --> 56:59.860] I was not entitled to an attorney general. [56:59.860 --> 57:03.620] I mean, to a court-appointed attorney, because I had a misdemeanor, and at that time I did [57:03.620 --> 57:08.300] not have this attorney general's opinion, I just had the rule number. [57:08.300 --> 57:09.300] Yeah. [57:09.300 --> 57:13.860] Yeah, I don't recall seeing that, so if you want to email me a copy of it, I'll integrate [57:13.860 --> 57:16.740] it with the other materials for people to have for reference. [57:16.740 --> 57:21.860] Yeah, sure, yeah, if it'll help at all, yeah. [57:21.860 --> 57:26.380] Any information that we can use to whack them with is useful. [57:26.380 --> 57:30.900] Right, right. [57:30.900 --> 57:36.300] I've been reading some of Jerry Howe's material, some of Rick Schramm's stuff. [57:36.300 --> 57:38.740] Man, that's a lot of stuff. [57:38.740 --> 57:43.740] Unfortunately, when I talked to Jerry, he said he didn't know anybody that had actually [57:43.740 --> 57:50.140] done a federal lawsuit, a Title 42 type, 1983. [57:50.140 --> 57:56.860] And I know you got a lot on your plate, but maybe I can help you find a bigger plate. [57:56.860 --> 58:03.140] Well, that doesn't really help when my arm span doesn't increase just because the plate [58:03.140 --> 58:05.780] did. [58:05.780 --> 58:10.340] You're asking me to wrap my arms around a bigger plate than the one I have, and I can't [58:10.340 --> 58:12.340] make them meet as it is. [58:12.340 --> 58:16.780] Okay, okay, well, all right. [58:16.780 --> 58:20.780] I think that's all I got, I got some interesting stuff written out on paper here, but mostly [58:20.780 --> 58:23.140] it's just anecdotal, I think. [58:23.140 --> 58:29.460] The real question I had today was about the deposition if I'm asked where you were in [58:29.460 --> 58:33.780] your seatbelt, and it's irrelevant unless they're making an argument that I was in transportation. [58:33.780 --> 58:35.540] Bingo, that's exactly right. [58:35.540 --> 58:39.100] They cannot ask that question outside of the context of that code. [58:39.100 --> 58:41.340] Well, what would you like to ask- [58:41.340 --> 58:42.460] Okay, well, hang on a second. [58:42.460 --> 58:43.860] I've got a break here, Ralph. [58:43.860 --> 58:50.320] All right, folks, we'll be right back after this break, so y'all hang on. [58:50.320 --> 58:55.740] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.740 --> 58:58.540] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.540 --> 59:03.920] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:03.920 --> 59:07.020] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:07.020 --> 59:08.980] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.980 --> 59:14.880] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.880 --> 59:18.620] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.620 --> 59:23.600] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.600 --> 59:28.260] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.260 --> 59:33.460] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.460 --> 59:43.900] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.900 --> 59:47.980] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.980 --> 59:48.980] That's freestudybible.com. [59:48.980 --> 01:00:00.700] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.700 --> 01:00:05.500] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:05.500 --> 01:00:12.100] Markets for Friday, the 14th of July, 2017, are currently trading with gold at $1,228.48 [01:00:12.100 --> 01:00:19.440] an ounce, silver, $15.96 an ounce, Texas crude, $46.08 a barrel, and bitcoin is sitting nearly [01:00:19.440 --> 01:00:24.940] at 2,178 US currency. [01:00:24.940 --> 01:00:30.540] Today in history, the year 1789, kick-starting the French Revolution, citizens of Paris storm [01:00:30.540 --> 01:00:34.420] the Bastille, representing the royal authority in the center of Paris. [01:00:34.420 --> 01:00:38.020] The prison contained just seven inmates at the time of its storming, but was a symbol [01:00:38.020 --> 01:00:40.040] of the abuses by the monarchy. [01:00:40.040 --> 01:00:43.300] Its fall was the flashpoint of the French Revolution. [01:00:43.300 --> 01:00:49.420] Bastille Day, today in history. [01:00:49.420 --> 01:00:54.640] In recent news, Russian Foreign Minister spokeswoman Maria Zakharova stated today, Friday, in a [01:00:54.640 --> 01:00:59.060] news briefing, that, quote, the number of staff at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow exceeds [01:00:59.060 --> 01:01:03.020] a number of our embassy employees in Washington by a big margin. [01:01:03.020 --> 01:01:08.020] One of our options, apart from a tit-for-tat expulsion of Americans, would be to even out [01:01:08.020 --> 01:01:09.020] the numbers. [01:01:09.020 --> 01:01:12.980] There are too many employees of the CIA and Pentagon's espionage unit working under [01:01:12.980 --> 01:01:17.780] the roof of the American diplomatic mission, whose activity does not correspond at all [01:01:17.780 --> 01:01:19.460] with their status. [01:01:19.460 --> 01:01:23.620] This Russian retaliation likely because the Trump administration has refused to hand back [01:01:23.620 --> 01:01:27.700] two Russian diplomatic compounds, which were seized at the same time as some of the Russian [01:01:27.700 --> 01:01:29.660] diplomats were sent home last year. [01:01:29.660 --> 01:01:34.100] That was when former President Barack Obama ordered the expulsion of 35 suspected Russian [01:01:34.100 --> 01:01:42.220] spies back in December. [01:01:42.220 --> 01:01:47.300] Samsung in a press release recently unveiled its first-ever Cinema LED screen that displays [01:01:47.300 --> 01:01:52.940] huge 33.8 feet and provides 4K resolution, as well as peak brightness levels that are [01:01:52.940 --> 01:01:58.100] nearly 10 times brighter than those offered by standard cinema projector technologies. [01:01:58.100 --> 01:02:02.780] Along with being equipped with distortion-free tech and offers a nearly infinite contrast [01:02:02.780 --> 01:02:07.860] ratio which facilitates deep blacks and extremely bright colors, the Cinema LED screen is set [01:02:07.860 --> 01:02:12.040] to be paired with a brand new surround sound system from JBL. [01:02:12.040 --> 01:02:17.380] The Super S, as it's being dubbed, is in action at the Lotte World Tower location of [01:02:17.380 --> 01:02:22.700] Lotte Cinemas in Korea, with Cars 3 and Spider-Man Homecoming being the first movie scheduled [01:02:22.700 --> 01:02:28.180] to play on it. [01:02:28.180 --> 01:02:33.540] In a press release, Visa stated that it will be awarding up to 500,000 to 50 eligible U.S.-based [01:02:33.540 --> 01:02:38.780] small business food service owners who commit to joining the 100% cashless quest. [01:02:38.780 --> 01:02:43.200] In short, it's an effort to convince 50 small business restaurants, cafes, and food [01:02:43.200 --> 01:02:48.340] trucks to go 100% cashless in favor of credit or debit, with the incentive of receiving [01:02:48.340 --> 01:02:53.700] 10,000 to help pay for the tech upgrades. [01:03:18.340 --> 01:03:34.500] The Super S, as it's being dubbed, is in action at the Lotte Cinemas in Korea, with [01:03:34.500 --> 01:03:45.700] Cars 3 and Spider-Man Homecoming being the first movie scheduled to play on it. [01:03:45.700 --> 01:04:04.860] The Super S, as it's being dubbed, is in action at the Lotte Cinemas in Korea, with [01:04:04.860 --> 01:04:15.140] Cars 3 and Spider-Man Homecoming being the first movie scheduled to play on it. [01:04:15.140 --> 01:04:21.620] One other thing I can think of is, I'm working on some discovery for the DPS officer, the [01:04:21.620 --> 01:04:28.820] arresting officer, and Jerry, I think his name was Jerry in Maryland, did a lot of federal [01:04:28.820 --> 01:04:29.820] lawsuits. [01:04:29.820 --> 01:04:32.820] He died of cancer last year, I believe. [01:04:32.820 --> 01:04:38.140] He mentioned something about doing a lot of production of documents to make them interrogatories [01:04:38.140 --> 01:04:43.740] and requests for admission denied and the like, and so I'm working on requests for productions [01:04:43.740 --> 01:04:48.060] as well as other discoveries since we're going into that, and I just thought, can you think [01:04:48.060 --> 01:04:52.300] of anything off the top of your head right now that I might want to add to my production [01:04:52.300 --> 01:04:54.140] of documents request? [01:04:54.140 --> 01:04:58.260] I don't know what all you're asking for, so that's kind of hard to answer. [01:04:58.260 --> 01:05:04.980] Well, I mean, you know, I'm going to ask for his training, ask for his criminal complaints. [01:05:04.980 --> 01:05:09.260] The arresting officer was Department of Public Safety, right? [01:05:09.260 --> 01:05:10.260] Right. [01:05:10.260 --> 01:05:11.260] Okay. [01:05:11.260 --> 01:05:18.540] And the request for admissions that I would get from him is, can you identify the specific [01:05:18.540 --> 01:05:26.860] commercial nature of the motor vehicle you alleged the accused was allegedly operating [01:05:26.860 --> 01:05:29.140] or driving? [01:05:29.140 --> 01:05:32.420] That's one of the things I'd definitely put in an admission, because then he's going to [01:05:32.420 --> 01:05:35.380] have to admit there was no commercial motor vehicle. [01:05:35.380 --> 01:05:38.220] Now what did he use as the basis of the stop? [01:05:38.220 --> 01:05:40.220] State belt. [01:05:40.220 --> 01:05:47.780] Okay, which he could or could not see easily. [01:05:47.780 --> 01:05:54.100] He says he could see my shoulder strap, and he says it was under my arm. [01:05:54.100 --> 01:06:05.240] That's what this has been all about, but whenever he stopped me, I said, it's kind of funny. [01:06:05.240 --> 01:06:10.420] Does the video show you making any adjustments when he was pursuing you? [01:06:10.420 --> 01:06:14.220] No, you can't see inside my car. [01:06:14.220 --> 01:06:15.220] Right. [01:06:15.220 --> 01:06:19.740] Right, that's exactly the point. [01:06:19.740 --> 01:06:25.100] He has no way to determine one way or the other whether or not his assessment was true. [01:06:25.100 --> 01:06:32.380] Right, he has no proof, and I'm not admitting anything, but I told him right off the bat [01:06:32.380 --> 01:06:39.140] that I was not engaged in transportation or commerce, but I met four times, I think, in [01:06:39.140 --> 01:06:40.140] fact. [01:06:40.140 --> 01:06:41.140] Four or five, several times. [01:06:41.140 --> 01:06:43.260] Every time he'd come up to the window, I'd ask him, am I under arrest? [01:06:43.260 --> 01:06:46.660] He'd say, you're being detained, and I said, am I free to go? [01:06:46.660 --> 01:06:49.620] He says, no, and I said, well, what am I under arrest for? [01:06:49.620 --> 01:06:55.460] He'd say, you're being detained, and so it went back and forth for 40 minutes. [01:06:55.460 --> 01:06:56.460] It was kind of comical. [01:06:56.460 --> 01:06:58.300] Let me give you one more. [01:06:58.300 --> 01:07:02.140] This other officer that I sued, he came in late. [01:07:02.140 --> 01:07:07.620] He said he wasn't served, or he said he was served, but he gave the lawsuit to his union, [01:07:07.620 --> 01:07:11.060] and they didn't answer the lawsuit, so it took me a long time to get him in default, [01:07:11.060 --> 01:07:14.620] and as soon as I got him in default, he answered the lawsuit. [01:07:14.620 --> 01:07:15.700] A year, okay? [01:07:15.700 --> 01:07:19.740] A year after the suit was filed, he answered it and says, well, I thought my union was [01:07:19.740 --> 01:07:20.740] taking care of that. [01:07:20.740 --> 01:07:25.300] I didn't know nothing about it until it got to being a default, so he makes this affidavit. [01:07:25.300 --> 01:07:32.700] He does not make the affidavit under Paying Dependencies of Perjury, and he makes this [01:07:32.700 --> 01:07:38.460] affidavit in support of his not answering the lawsuit, so he set aside the default, [01:07:38.460 --> 01:07:45.300] and he makes in this affidavit that he was not within 20 or 30 feet of my car, and he [01:07:45.300 --> 01:07:49.420] never did anything except for be back up for the arresting officer. [01:07:49.420 --> 01:07:53.660] Well, I've got the video, and very lucky to have gotten it. [01:07:53.660 --> 01:07:56.900] I do not know how in the world I got it, because everybody said they didn't have it, but they [01:07:56.900 --> 01:08:00.540] wouldn't give it to me if they did have it, and then all of a sudden, a month after I'd [01:08:00.540 --> 01:08:03.620] asked for it, I got the cruiser video. [01:08:03.620 --> 01:08:06.100] Somebody sent it to me, so we just found this. [01:08:06.100 --> 01:08:07.100] Right. [01:08:07.100 --> 01:08:10.700] Anyway, I'm watching it, and guess what that officer said he wasn't within 20 or 30 feet [01:08:10.700 --> 01:08:11.700] of my car? [01:08:11.700 --> 01:08:21.260] He's got an AR-15 pointed at me, and he looks like he's leaning against my car, so I told [01:08:21.260 --> 01:08:22.260] the judge that. [01:08:22.260 --> 01:08:27.940] I told the judge, he's saying he wasn't within 20 or 30 feet of my car, and here's a picture [01:08:27.940 --> 01:08:30.700] of him, and it looks like he's touching it from this angle. [01:08:30.700 --> 01:08:33.660] Of course, he might be a foot, a whole foot away from it. [01:08:33.660 --> 01:08:38.680] I said, I think the judge should take that into consideration before he grants the motion [01:08:38.680 --> 01:08:40.180] to set aside the default. [01:08:40.180 --> 01:08:41.640] Maybe there's something wrong with that, too. [01:08:41.640 --> 01:08:44.660] Maybe he's not being completely honest about that, either. [01:08:44.660 --> 01:08:49.660] And that same later, that, no, there were several things that happened over two days. [01:08:49.660 --> 01:08:58.540] The very next day, the judge signs the motion for leave to put him back in the lawsuit to [01:08:58.540 --> 01:09:02.660] file motions to dismiss, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. [01:09:02.660 --> 01:09:07.500] So in other words, they're just ignoring everything I say, but it looks to me like they're giving [01:09:07.500 --> 01:09:10.860] me some really good appealable evidence. [01:09:10.860 --> 01:09:16.580] I mean, if the judge is going to allow that, it looks to me like an appeals judge would [01:09:16.580 --> 01:09:18.260] say, well, wait a minute. [01:09:18.260 --> 01:09:20.380] He lied on his affidavit. [01:09:20.380 --> 01:09:26.180] Well, the thing is, he didn't lie on his affidavit because he never made an actual affidavit. [01:09:26.180 --> 01:09:31.060] That's exactly why it's not signed under penalty of perjury, and it does not have a penalty [01:09:31.060 --> 01:09:35.880] of perjury juror at, specifically so he could not get charged with that crime if somebody [01:09:35.880 --> 01:09:37.380] challenged him what he said. [01:09:37.380 --> 01:09:40.580] Yes, but I want to hear him say that. [01:09:40.580 --> 01:09:43.220] That's the only way they're going to be able to get by with it and say, you know what, [01:09:43.220 --> 01:09:45.860] your honor, I just kind of played a little trick in it. [01:09:45.860 --> 01:09:50.580] All you need is the rules of evidence saying, that shows very clearly an affidavit is not [01:09:50.580 --> 01:09:53.380] an affidavit without a proper juror at. [01:09:53.380 --> 01:09:58.140] Well, yeah, but that's going to show. [01:09:58.140 --> 01:10:06.420] Plus what he's asserting in the affidavit is a question of fact that a jury must decide, [01:10:06.420 --> 01:10:07.420] not the judge. [01:10:07.420 --> 01:10:08.420] Yes. [01:10:08.420 --> 01:10:14.260] Well, I don't see how they're really helping themselves, and I'd love to get some opinions [01:10:14.260 --> 01:10:17.980] on this, but just to make it brief, and I'm going to have to... I know I'm taking up [01:10:17.980 --> 01:10:18.980] a lot of time. [01:10:18.980 --> 01:10:26.420] Just to make it brief, they've dismissed 15 of the 17, but whenever me and this officer [01:10:26.420 --> 01:10:31.420] get finished with each other, we're going to appeal it, and once it's appealed, that [01:10:31.420 --> 01:10:33.540] brings back the others into it. [01:10:33.540 --> 01:10:39.540] As far as I understand it, I'm new to this stuff, so I don't know, but I don't see really [01:10:39.540 --> 01:10:44.220] what good is going to do them if they're trying to keep me out of the appeals court because [01:10:44.220 --> 01:10:45.220] I'm going to get there. [01:10:45.220 --> 01:10:52.300] It might take a year or two, but heck, I mean, my goodness, what else am I going to do? [01:10:52.300 --> 01:10:54.220] I'm going to go forward with it. [01:10:54.220 --> 01:11:01.420] It's been three years already now anyway, but anyway, all I'm saying is they dismissed [01:11:01.420 --> 01:11:04.580] all these other players, but they're not out of it. [01:11:04.580 --> 01:11:12.660] It's not final yet, so you told me that I had two claims, one for Title 42 and one for [01:11:12.660 --> 01:11:20.220] legal malpractice, so I filed my legal malpractice claim a couple of weeks ago, and I put in [01:11:20.220 --> 01:11:24.540] there that there was another case, it says there are any related cases, and I said, yeah, [01:11:24.540 --> 01:11:28.340] and I gave the case number, and the judge, whenever I was in for the case management [01:11:28.340 --> 01:11:31.140] hearing, he says, do you have another case? [01:11:31.140 --> 01:11:34.020] I said, yeah, I said, well, why did you file it in a different court, and I said, because [01:11:34.020 --> 01:11:35.020] it's a legal malpractice. [01:11:35.020 --> 01:11:40.540] He said, yeah, but they're related, and I said, the Title 42 civil rights violation [01:11:40.540 --> 01:11:49.740] and the legal malpractice is actually called professional negligence to empower the defecation, [01:11:49.740 --> 01:11:56.740] and he says, well, I don't see why you think they're different, and I said, well, I can't [01:11:56.740 --> 01:11:57.740] go any further than that. [01:11:57.740 --> 01:12:04.020] The judge had to study up on it, but by God, they're different, and that's really enough. [01:12:04.020 --> 01:12:08.220] I just read the rules on it, don't remember the details off hand, but if they'll prejudice [01:12:08.220 --> 01:12:15.620] one of the parties, and it would, it would praise the party, me, because I've got enough [01:12:15.620 --> 01:12:21.540] on this one already, and it just doesn't make sense to have a legal malpractice and a Title [01:12:21.540 --> 01:12:25.220] 42 together, but here's what it was. [01:12:25.220 --> 01:12:33.340] The judge came back to me and said, I had a tort claims act on these people for state [01:12:33.340 --> 01:12:39.260] violations, because I'm using, I'm using supplemental jurisdiction, the federal courts have a Title [01:12:39.260 --> 01:12:43.740] 42 jurisdiction, and I'm using supplemental jurisdiction to try the state claims, which [01:12:43.740 --> 01:12:48.340] the judge has dismissed now, but before he dismissed it, I said, I said, you know, they [01:12:48.340 --> 01:12:52.380] did all these things, and the judge come back and said, no, that's tort claims, and you [01:12:52.380 --> 01:12:58.340] have to file that within six months, and I'm going like, well, I know that, and I had an [01:12:58.340 --> 01:13:03.060] attorney at that time, and I was talking to the attorney about me having claims against [01:13:03.060 --> 01:13:09.780] these guys, and he didn't tell me any of that, so there's several items I have on him for [01:13:09.780 --> 01:13:11.780] legal malpractice. [01:13:11.780 --> 01:13:16.380] One is that it took him four months and three weeks to contact me after he was assigned [01:13:16.380 --> 01:13:26.480] to me, and that was like a month after the six month set to, six month window of opportunity [01:13:26.480 --> 01:13:31.980] to file a notice of tort claims act, so I think he was doing that on purpose. [01:13:31.980 --> 01:13:36.620] Also, he told me he was going to represent me in the misdemeanor on the phone, and then [01:13:36.620 --> 01:13:41.660] he gets withdrawals and says that he never did represent me in the misdemeanor, and I'm [01:13:41.660 --> 01:13:48.100] going, that's kind of odd, and then, well, that was it, that's who I'm thinking of as [01:13:48.100 --> 01:13:49.100] a third one. [01:13:49.100 --> 01:13:55.540] Anyway, that's fraud, and that's quite possibly fraud because the prosecutor was prosecuting [01:13:55.540 --> 01:13:58.540] me without probable cause. [01:13:58.540 --> 01:14:03.060] He did not tell me the prosecutor was prosecuting me without probable cause. [01:14:03.060 --> 01:14:07.100] Shouldn't he have done that? [01:14:07.100 --> 01:14:12.780] Well, the thing is, what he's considering probable cause versus whether or not he had [01:14:12.780 --> 01:14:19.100] any grounds to have probable cause, they're using the fact that a complaint exists to [01:14:19.100 --> 01:14:23.620] say probable cause exists, which is completely backwards. [01:14:23.620 --> 01:14:30.220] Probable cause must exist before the complaint itself can even be valid, and a probable cause [01:14:30.220 --> 01:14:37.140] determination has to be done by a magistrate in an examining trial proceeding, and an order [01:14:37.140 --> 01:14:42.180] of probable cause generated after that proceeding has concluded. [01:14:42.180 --> 01:14:48.580] If no probable cause determination has been made within 48 hours of the conclusion of [01:14:48.580 --> 01:14:56.220] that proceeding, or after the individual has been taken into custody on the offense, then [01:14:56.220 --> 01:15:00.580] the defendant must be discharged. [01:15:00.580 --> 01:15:05.940] That's written right there in the Code of Criminal Procedure in Section 1601 of Chapter [01:15:05.940 --> 01:15:11.380] 16, Article 1601 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, okay? [01:15:11.380 --> 01:15:15.040] Article 16, I'm gonna check it out, yeah, okay. [01:15:15.040 --> 01:15:24.100] So the 48 hours for the generation of a probable cause order begins either when the probable [01:15:24.100 --> 01:15:33.040] cause proceeding, i.e. the examining trial, has concluded, or after the accused has been [01:15:33.040 --> 01:15:39.660] taken into custody on the allegation. [01:15:39.660 --> 01:15:43.380] The statute's very clear on that. [01:15:43.380 --> 01:15:52.020] They do not get to presume probable cause or the existence of a cause after 48 hours [01:15:52.020 --> 01:15:56.820] if there is no probable cause order, period. [01:15:56.820 --> 01:15:59.620] Okay, all right. [01:15:59.620 --> 01:16:04.740] Absent that probable cause order, everything they're doing is illegal under the Code of [01:16:04.740 --> 01:16:06.740] Criminal Procedure. [01:16:06.740 --> 01:16:16.420] Well, the affidavit and criminal complaint against me, it's got this style on it, it's [01:16:16.420 --> 01:16:22.340] all proper like that, and where the magistrate signs it, it says, I, and then the magistrate [01:16:22.340 --> 01:16:29.620] signs it, it says, I have read the above and foregoing affidavit and have found it to contain [01:16:29.620 --> 01:16:33.860] probable cause and issued it. [01:16:33.860 --> 01:16:38.660] When did the judge conduct an examining trial to make that probable cause determination? [01:16:38.660 --> 01:16:40.380] Where's the transcript? [01:16:40.380 --> 01:16:43.060] Where are the witness statements? [01:16:43.060 --> 01:16:47.820] Where are all the things that an examining trial is required to generate to prove probable [01:16:47.820 --> 01:16:50.340] cause determination was ever made? [01:16:50.340 --> 01:16:52.820] Never happened. [01:16:52.820 --> 01:16:53.820] Exactly. [01:16:53.820 --> 01:16:54.820] Never. [01:16:54.820 --> 01:16:55.820] Hang on just a minute. [01:16:55.820 --> 01:17:00.140] We'll be right back after this break. [01:17:00.140 --> 01:17:01.260] I love logos. [01:17:01.260 --> 01:17:04.660] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.660 --> 01:17:07.300] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.300 --> 01:17:08.540] I need my truth fixed. [01:17:08.540 --> 01:17:13.180] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.180 --> 01:17:16.980] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't [01:17:16.980 --> 01:17:20.340] have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [01:17:20.340 --> 01:17:21.900] How can I help logos? [01:17:21.900 --> 01:17:23.900] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.900 --> 01:17:26.860] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:17:26.860 --> 01:17:31.220] When ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:31.220 --> 01:17:37.580] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo, and bookmark it. [01:17:37.580 --> 01:17:43.380] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, and logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.380 --> 01:17:44.380] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.380 --> 01:17:45.380] No. [01:17:45.380 --> 01:17:47.100] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.100 --> 01:17:48.100] No. [01:17:48.100 --> 01:17:49.100] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:49.100 --> 01:17:50.100] No. [01:17:50.100 --> 01:17:51.100] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.100 --> 01:17:52.100] Wow. [01:17:52.100 --> 01:17:55.660] Giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:17:55.660 --> 01:17:56.660] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.660 --> 01:17:57.660] You're welcome. [01:17:57.660 --> 01:18:02.820] Happy Holidays, Logos. [01:18:02.820 --> 01:18:08.900] It's the 2017 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser, sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks, Defense [01:18:08.900 --> 01:18:10.900] Distributed and Fat Sal's Deli. [01:18:10.900 --> 01:18:14.180] Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:14.180 --> 01:18:16.860] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:16.860 --> 01:18:22.640] From Central Texas Gunworks, first place up for grabs, a Spike's Tactical AR-15. [01:18:22.640 --> 01:18:26.540] Second place, Taurus PT-111 G2 9-millimeter pistol. [01:18:26.540 --> 01:18:30.980] From Defense Distributed, third place, the AR-308 80% lower. [01:18:30.980 --> 01:18:33.900] Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower. [01:18:33.900 --> 01:18:36.820] From Fat Sal's Deli, fifth place, $100 gift card. [01:18:36.820 --> 01:18:40.740] From Fat Sal's Deli, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:40.740 --> 01:18:42.340] That's logosradionetwork.com. [01:18:42.340 --> 01:18:48.360] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's eBook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:48.360 --> 01:18:51.460] Purchase Eddie Craig's Traffic Seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:51.460 --> 01:18:54.980] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:54.980 --> 01:19:00.060] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:00.060 --> 01:19:07.700] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:19:07.700 --> 01:19:28.220] As I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I take a look at my life and realize [01:19:28.220 --> 01:19:29.220] there's nothing left. [01:19:29.220 --> 01:19:34.380] Cause I've been blastin' and laughin' so long that even my momma thinks that my mind is [01:19:34.380 --> 01:19:35.380] gone. [01:19:35.380 --> 01:19:38.100] I've never crossed a man that didn't deserve it. [01:19:38.100 --> 01:19:41.300] Me be treated like a punk, you know that's unheard of. [01:19:41.300 --> 01:19:45.660] You better watch how you're talkin' and where you're walkin' or you and your homies might [01:19:45.660 --> 01:19:46.660] be lyin' and chalkin'. [01:19:46.660 --> 01:19:49.660] I really hate the drip, but I gotta lope. [01:19:49.660 --> 01:19:53.300] As they grope, I see myself in the pistol smoke, fool. [01:19:53.300 --> 01:19:55.380] All right, folks, we are back. [01:19:55.380 --> 01:19:57.140] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:19:57.140 --> 01:20:00.140] Call at number 512646 1984. [01:20:00.140 --> 01:20:05.540] All right, Ralph, let's see if we can get this wrapped up for you here. [01:20:05.540 --> 01:20:15.420] Well, I was just moosin' about the magistrate signin' the affidavit and warrant that lacked [01:20:15.420 --> 01:20:16.420] probable cause. [01:20:16.420 --> 01:20:18.820] I mean, it lacked probable cause on its face. [01:20:18.820 --> 01:20:19.820] Right. [01:20:19.820 --> 01:20:21.940] Cause I was arrested for failure to identify. [01:20:21.940 --> 01:20:25.260] Failure to identify is not an arrestable offense. [01:20:25.260 --> 01:20:26.260] Correct. [01:20:26.260 --> 01:20:34.740] So how in the world, so I'm chargin' the magistrate with bein' biased and not bein' a fair and [01:20:34.740 --> 01:20:42.100] impartial magistrate and causing intentional infliction of emotional distress, excessive [01:20:42.100 --> 01:20:47.060] bail, and like I said, I'm just now learnin' how to do a complaint. [01:20:47.060 --> 01:20:53.820] This is my third one, original amendment and second amendment, and when I put this one [01:20:53.820 --> 01:21:01.020] in, the judge dismissed everybody the same day, all but two people the same day, and [01:21:01.020 --> 01:21:06.100] I'm thinkin', well, if it was that bad, why did he leave me anybody? [01:21:06.100 --> 01:21:10.180] I think I did it right, and they wanted to get rid of it as quick as they could because [01:21:10.180 --> 01:21:15.140] well, we better not hang around here, he's gettin' better at writin' these complaints, [01:21:15.140 --> 01:21:16.140] you know? [01:21:16.140 --> 01:21:18.740] So, I don't know, that's the way I thought about it. [01:21:18.740 --> 01:21:29.100] Well, look, I'm gonna email you this attorney general opinion about misdemeanors. [01:21:29.100 --> 01:21:36.860] If you want somebody to, you said to proofread what you were readin' earlier today, I'll [01:21:36.860 --> 01:21:37.860] give it a shot. [01:21:37.860 --> 01:21:39.940] I mean, what do you want me to do? [01:21:39.940 --> 01:21:46.380] Well, the thing is, you've gotta have a really good understanding of how statutory language [01:21:46.380 --> 01:21:47.540] works. [01:21:47.540 --> 01:21:51.780] It's not just spelling and grammar, but it's logical argument as well. [01:21:51.780 --> 01:21:56.060] Now, if you wanna give it a shot, you're welcome to it because this document's goin' up on [01:21:56.060 --> 01:22:05.240] the blog for everybody to get a copy of anyway, but it's not just grammatical as far as spelling [01:22:05.240 --> 01:22:07.620] and punctuation and things of that nature. [01:22:07.620 --> 01:22:15.660] It's also a review of the argument in relation to the specific terms of the statute. [01:22:15.660 --> 01:22:21.860] I am usually askin' people to proofread my docs and my I's and T's and such, but I like [01:22:21.860 --> 01:22:24.940] to give it a shot and besides, you don't have to limit. [01:22:24.940 --> 01:22:29.500] Well, if you'll send me the email with that AG opinion, I'll reply back with a copy of [01:22:29.500 --> 01:22:31.620] it and you're welcome to give it a run. [01:22:31.620 --> 01:22:33.940] All right, and then what? [01:22:33.940 --> 01:22:35.660] Just how to do that? [01:22:35.660 --> 01:22:36.660] Can you tell me real quick? [01:22:36.660 --> 01:22:42.620] Well, it'll come to you in a Word document and then you can just read that and make any [01:22:42.620 --> 01:22:49.060] changes you see, just make sure that you turn on change tracking in the document before [01:22:49.060 --> 01:22:50.940] you begin any changes. [01:22:50.940 --> 01:22:56.700] That way, I can follow everything you did when you sent it back to me and then I can [01:22:56.700 --> 01:23:00.620] approve the changes as I see fit. [01:23:00.620 --> 01:23:01.620] Okay. [01:23:01.620 --> 01:23:08.900] Right now, I can tell you it won't work because I use Linux. [01:23:08.900 --> 01:23:09.900] And? [01:23:09.900 --> 01:23:14.220] Well, I don't think, it'll open up a Word document, but I don't think it'll do that [01:23:14.220 --> 01:23:15.860] tracking you're talkin' about. [01:23:15.860 --> 01:23:21.900] If you've got OpenOffice or Apache Office, it has a whole lot of the same features that [01:23:21.900 --> 01:23:24.780] Word does, including change tracking. [01:23:24.780 --> 01:23:25.780] Okay. [01:23:25.780 --> 01:23:28.940] I never used it, so I didn't pay any attention to it. [01:23:28.940 --> 01:23:35.260] It'll be under the review menu or tools menu. [01:23:35.260 --> 01:23:36.260] Review or tools, yeah. [01:23:36.260 --> 01:23:37.260] Okay. [01:23:37.260 --> 01:23:38.260] I got it. [01:23:38.260 --> 01:23:40.060] Well, Eddie, I really appreciate it. [01:23:40.060 --> 01:23:43.140] I'm not forgettin' where I've got a lot of this education. [01:23:43.140 --> 01:23:50.540] If anybody in the Beaumont area wants to get a little practice, I can let them know what's [01:23:50.540 --> 01:23:51.780] goin' on in my case. [01:23:51.780 --> 01:23:58.100] If Eddie wants to relay some emails, otherwise I'm just gonna keep on doin' what I can. [01:23:58.100 --> 01:23:59.100] Thanks again, Eddie. [01:23:59.100 --> 01:24:00.100] Yes, sir. [01:24:00.100 --> 01:24:01.100] Thanks for callin' in. [01:24:01.100 --> 01:24:02.100] Okay. [01:24:02.100 --> 01:24:03.100] Bye. [01:24:03.100 --> 01:24:04.100] Bye-bye. [01:24:04.100 --> 01:24:05.100] All right. [01:24:05.100 --> 01:24:06.900] Now, we go to Olivier in Tennessee. [01:24:06.900 --> 01:24:08.620] Olivier, what do you got? [01:24:08.620 --> 01:24:09.620] Hello, Eddie. [01:24:09.620 --> 01:24:10.620] Howdy. [01:24:10.620 --> 01:24:14.980] I got an opinion back on one of my cases. [01:24:14.980 --> 01:24:15.980] Okay. [01:24:15.980 --> 01:24:24.220] And this was on the case with the auto transport, where they took several of my cars off my [01:24:24.220 --> 01:24:29.060] property and so forth. [01:24:29.060 --> 01:24:34.620] There were several questions in my review that they failed to review, I mean, they refused [01:24:34.620 --> 01:24:41.700] to review because they said that I did not raise those arguments in the trial courts. [01:24:41.700 --> 01:24:52.340] But the issues that they did review, one was the GTLA Act and basically all the claims [01:24:52.340 --> 01:24:58.260] that I had, they said that I failed to state a proper claim because, you know, I failed [01:24:58.260 --> 01:24:59.260] to... [01:24:59.260 --> 01:25:01.580] And they told me why or whatever. [01:25:01.580 --> 01:25:11.420] But on the GTLA part, they said that I failed to state a proper claim because I failed to [01:25:11.420 --> 01:25:23.980] claim that the city, some policy or procedure or rule, the city has harmed me. [01:25:23.980 --> 01:25:28.620] And I'm looking over everything, I'm reading everything, and I know I've read a lot of [01:25:28.620 --> 01:25:38.380] case law which states that the Pro State's complaint cannot be dismissed or denied for [01:25:38.380 --> 01:25:41.140] failure to state a claim. [01:25:41.140 --> 01:25:48.100] And every issue that they address, they finalize it with... [01:25:48.100 --> 01:25:49.100] Well, now, wait a minute. [01:25:49.100 --> 01:25:51.720] I think you've misread that. [01:25:51.720 --> 01:25:58.660] They cannot dismiss the case with prejudice because of failure to state a claim. [01:25:58.660 --> 01:26:02.980] It's not that they can't dismiss it because they can't proceed on something where you [01:26:02.980 --> 01:26:06.440] haven't made a valid claim either. [01:26:06.440 --> 01:26:11.200] The only thing they can do with a case they can't act upon is dismiss. [01:26:11.200 --> 01:26:18.620] But what they cannot do is prevent you from refiling it correctly by dismissing it with [01:26:18.620 --> 01:26:21.900] prejudice to prevent you from filing it correctly. [01:26:21.900 --> 01:26:22.900] You follow? [01:26:22.900 --> 01:26:23.900] Okay. [01:26:23.900 --> 01:26:24.900] Okay. [01:26:24.900 --> 01:26:25.900] I'm agreeing with that. [01:26:25.900 --> 01:26:26.900] Okay. [01:26:26.900 --> 01:26:30.020] I agree with that and I see where that's leading. [01:26:30.020 --> 01:26:41.220] But I've read case law where they will overturn it because they dismissed it because the defendant [01:26:41.220 --> 01:26:44.220] did not state a proper claim. [01:26:44.220 --> 01:26:51.860] Well, the point of prejudice was never raised. [01:26:51.860 --> 01:27:04.140] All the Tennessee Supreme Court issue raised was that the defendant was pro se and the [01:27:04.140 --> 01:27:11.820] court should not have construed the same rules of literacy as far as... [01:27:11.820 --> 01:27:13.100] As stating the claim. [01:27:13.100 --> 01:27:14.660] That part you're correct on. [01:27:14.660 --> 01:27:18.540] That's actually rulings from the Supreme Court as well. [01:27:18.540 --> 01:27:25.180] A pro se litigant cannot be held to the same standard in pleading his case. [01:27:25.180 --> 01:27:31.160] He's held to the same standard in compliance with certain rules of procedure and evidence, [01:27:31.160 --> 01:27:38.100] but he cannot be penalized because of his incapability of specifying a claim in the same [01:27:38.100 --> 01:27:41.080] legal language that an attorney is. [01:27:41.080 --> 01:27:47.840] In fact, the mandate on the courts is that they are to bend over backwards to understand [01:27:47.840 --> 01:27:56.340] what the pro se litigant was actually trying to say and treat the complaint accordingly. [01:27:56.340 --> 01:28:04.340] And actually the way they wrote their opinion is that, oh, well, Ms. Liggett was harmed, [01:28:04.340 --> 01:28:09.940] but he did not say that they harmed him in this way, so we have to dismiss it. [01:28:09.940 --> 01:28:10.940] Yeah. [01:28:10.940 --> 01:28:12.460] That's what you may have an action for. [01:28:12.460 --> 01:28:15.140] You may be able to appeal their ruling. [01:28:15.140 --> 01:28:18.280] You may be able to file a motion to reconsider. [01:28:18.280 --> 01:28:23.540] You may be able to file a motion to reconsider en banc, which means get every judge on it [01:28:23.540 --> 01:28:28.620] instead of just the turd heads that tried to throw it out, because remember most of [01:28:28.620 --> 01:28:32.780] these appellate courts don't rule en banc, which is with all the judges. [01:28:32.780 --> 01:28:37.740] They'll get two or three of all the available judges and they will rule. [01:28:37.740 --> 01:28:38.740] Okay. [01:28:38.740 --> 01:28:41.180] Is it en banc? [01:28:41.180 --> 01:28:42.180] Right. [01:28:42.180 --> 01:28:43.180] Yeah. [01:28:43.180 --> 01:28:45.180] It's en space b-a-n-c. [01:28:45.180 --> 01:28:58.380] Oh, b-n- No, e-n, echo Nevada, e-n, space, right, bravo, alpha, Nevada, Charlie. [01:28:58.380 --> 01:28:59.380] Okay. [01:28:59.380 --> 01:29:00.380] E-a-n-c. [01:29:00.380 --> 01:29:01.380] Okay. [01:29:01.380 --> 01:29:10.460] En banc, I looked that up, but at first I was kind of upset, but then I read over it. [01:29:10.460 --> 01:29:17.500] Then I started thinking about other cases that I read, who won, and I realized that [01:29:17.500 --> 01:29:23.700] all of them had to go to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court is the one that addressed [01:29:23.700 --> 01:29:30.620] the fact that pro-state litigant doesn't have the aptitude to literally put the claim [01:29:30.620 --> 01:29:35.300] in a certain sense, and they should not be punished for that. [01:29:35.300 --> 01:29:40.740] And in my opinion, they are admitting that that's what they're doing. [01:29:40.740 --> 01:29:42.740] Well, that may be the case. [01:29:42.740 --> 01:29:46.780] In which case, I would try to find out how many times that has happened from this particular [01:29:46.780 --> 01:29:53.180] court and raise the issue that this court is subverting the rule of law that the Supreme [01:29:53.180 --> 01:29:54.300] Court has come up with. [01:29:54.300 --> 01:30:01.340] Hang on just a second, and Olivier, we'll be right back after this break. [01:30:01.340 --> 01:30:03.340] Ugh. [01:30:03.340 --> 01:30:06.700] Folks hate Monday because it means the start of another work week. [01:30:06.700 --> 01:30:10.940] But there's one activity you can start on Monday that's likely to be a smashing success. [01:30:10.940 --> 01:30:16.060] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back to tell you what it is. [01:30:16.060 --> 01:30:17.640] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.640 --> 01:30:21.240] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.240 --> 01:30:26.020] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.020 --> 01:30:31.180] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.180 --> 01:30:33.780] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:33.780 --> 01:30:38.060] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:30:38.060 --> 01:30:41.620] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.620 --> 01:30:45.460] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.460 --> 01:30:50.020] Monday's diet is full of grace, but Tuesday's diet could be a disgrace. [01:30:50.020 --> 01:30:54.420] A study in Britain shows that people who started dieting on a Tuesday were the most likely [01:30:54.420 --> 01:30:58.860] to lose their resolve within a week and end up heavier than when they started. [01:30:58.860 --> 01:31:01.020] Friday was another bad weight loss day. [01:31:01.020 --> 01:31:05.900] More than half of the 2,000 people surveyed ditched their diets on Friday after a stressful [01:31:05.900 --> 01:31:06.900] week at work. [01:31:06.900 --> 01:31:09.020] What were the good dieting days? [01:31:09.020 --> 01:31:13.220] People who started their diets on Sunday and Monday were far more likely to shed the most [01:31:13.220 --> 01:31:15.220] weight and keep the weight off. [01:31:15.220 --> 01:31:20.300] So maybe Fleetwood Mac had it right when they sang, Monday morning you sure looked fine. [01:31:20.300 --> 01:31:22.580] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:22.580 --> 01:31:30.900] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.900 --> 01:31:36.280] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.280 --> 01:31:38.860] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.860 --> 01:31:43.340] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.340 --> 01:31:47.340] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, but thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.340 --> 01:31:48.780] first responders are dying. [01:31:48.780 --> 01:31:50.140] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.140 --> 01:31:51.140] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.140 --> 01:31:52.620] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.620 --> 01:31:53.620] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.620 --> 01:31:55.300] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.300 --> 01:31:57.900] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.900 --> 01:32:00.220] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.220 --> 01:32:03.260] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.260 --> 01:32:06.500] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.500 --> 01:32:10.140] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [01:32:10.140 --> 01:32:11.140] them to pay for it. [01:32:11.140 --> 01:32:12.980] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails. [01:32:12.980 --> 01:32:14.700] But I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.700 --> 01:32:18.540] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:18.540 --> 01:32:21.300] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:21.300 --> 01:32:25.540] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [01:32:25.540 --> 01:32:26.880] zero complaints. [01:32:26.880 --> 01:32:31.240] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [01:32:31.240 --> 01:32:32.300] first time. [01:32:32.300 --> 01:32:40.980] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to HillCountryHomeImprovements.com, mention the crypto show, and get $100 off. [01:32:40.980 --> 01:32:45.620] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.620 --> 01:32:50.660] So if those out-of-town roofers come knockin', your door should be lockin'. [01:32:50.660 --> 01:32:56.660] That's 512-992-8745 or HillCountryHomeImprovements.com. [01:32:56.660 --> 01:32:59.020] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.020 --> 01:33:00.940] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:00.940 --> 01:33:11.900] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:30.940 --> 01:33:41.820] Hey, look at them yo-yos. [01:33:41.820 --> 01:33:42.820] That's the way you do it. [01:33:42.820 --> 01:33:43.820] You play the guitar on the MTV. [01:33:43.820 --> 01:33:44.820] That ain't workin'. [01:33:44.820 --> 01:33:45.820] That's the way you do it. [01:33:45.820 --> 01:33:46.820] Money for nothin' and your checks are free. [01:33:46.820 --> 01:33:47.820] Now, that ain't workin'. [01:33:47.820 --> 01:33:48.820] That's the way you do it. [01:33:48.820 --> 01:33:49.820] Let me tell you, them guys ain't dumb. [01:33:49.820 --> 01:34:05.220] Maybe get a pistol on your little finger. [01:34:05.220 --> 01:34:08.780] Maybe get a pistol on your son. [01:34:08.780 --> 01:34:09.780] All right, folks. [01:34:09.780 --> 01:34:10.780] We are back. [01:34:10.780 --> 01:34:15.780] This is Rule of Law Radio, and we are speaking with Olivier in Tennessee. [01:34:15.780 --> 01:34:18.300] All right, Olivier, go ahead. [01:34:18.300 --> 01:34:22.660] Right, um, we ended off at... [01:34:22.660 --> 01:34:31.740] So basically, they have admitted that the reason that this lawsuit can't stand or [01:34:31.740 --> 01:34:36.780] they're agreeing with the lower courts, that I failed to state a claim because of [01:34:36.780 --> 01:34:43.820] those reasons, and they basically stated outright, you know, with each claim, they said that, [01:34:43.820 --> 01:34:50.140] well, he didn't say that this person did this, which concluded that, and this person [01:34:50.140 --> 01:34:52.340] did this, which concluded that. [01:34:52.340 --> 01:34:58.860] All he did say is that they took his things without, you know what I'm saying, without [01:34:58.860 --> 01:35:05.420] whatever or, you know, and then one of the things it says is that, well, I can't... [01:35:05.420 --> 01:35:12.860] They cannot award inverse condemnation because inverse condemnation is only for real property, [01:35:12.860 --> 01:35:19.380] and the Supreme Court has already ruled that inverse condemnation deals with real and personal [01:35:19.380 --> 01:35:33.060] property, and Tennessee Rule 71 in the local rules states that all the statutes referring [01:35:33.060 --> 01:35:44.900] to eminent domain of personal and real property shall not be, shall be adhered to or something [01:35:44.900 --> 01:35:45.900] in that language. [01:35:45.900 --> 01:35:46.900] Yeah. [01:35:46.900 --> 01:35:53.580] So basically, the local rules state that personal property can be, is, underneath eminent domain, [01:35:53.580 --> 01:35:55.580] and that was in 1979. [01:35:55.580 --> 01:35:56.580] Okay. [01:35:56.580 --> 01:36:06.980] That was inducted in 1979, so that means they were aware of that since 1979, and it's 2,000 [01:36:06.980 --> 01:36:08.380] and something. [01:36:08.380 --> 01:36:10.300] 2,000 and something? [01:36:10.300 --> 01:36:12.100] Where you been, man? [01:36:12.100 --> 01:36:14.100] I was born in 83. [01:36:14.100 --> 01:36:23.380] I mean, this ruling, this procedure was in, this is where I was born, so it doesn't make [01:36:23.380 --> 01:36:33.980] no sense to me, but to me, I was mad at first, but now, after going over the set of plans [01:36:33.980 --> 01:36:38.860] and the calculations that we made, I'm starting to realize that they basically gave me an [01:36:38.860 --> 01:36:44.780] open handbook to hand them to the Supreme Court because they are... [01:36:44.780 --> 01:36:45.780] Okay. [01:36:45.780 --> 01:36:53.340] So, my next step is just to file a motion in in-bank... [01:36:53.340 --> 01:36:55.220] Motion to reconsider in-bank, yeah. [01:36:55.220 --> 01:36:56.220] Okay. [01:36:56.220 --> 01:37:02.700] Motion is to reconsider in-bank, and in that motion to reconsider, I should file every [01:37:02.700 --> 01:37:06.260] Tennessee Supreme Court case that... [01:37:06.260 --> 01:37:07.660] Yeah, exactly. [01:37:07.660 --> 01:37:13.680] And in some places, it's called an in-bank review, so just make sure you're using whatever [01:37:13.680 --> 01:37:20.280] the proper terminology is to invoke it, which shouldn't be hard to find using in-bank to [01:37:20.280 --> 01:37:21.280] look it up. [01:37:21.280 --> 01:37:22.280] Okay. [01:37:22.280 --> 01:37:27.420] Well, I've noticed that these court clerks, when you send in something and it's not in [01:37:27.420 --> 01:37:31.440] the right language, they'll send it back to you in the right language. [01:37:31.440 --> 01:37:32.620] That's okay, too, right? [01:37:32.620 --> 01:37:35.100] All the help you can get is the help you can get. [01:37:35.100 --> 01:37:36.100] Yeah. [01:37:36.100 --> 01:37:41.460] I think it's because I've been going up there, talking to them, and they say that it's awkward [01:37:41.460 --> 01:37:45.460] to have someone fight in so many cases and be outside. [01:37:45.460 --> 01:37:49.060] Yeah, and not be a part of the system they're used to. [01:37:49.060 --> 01:37:50.060] Right. [01:37:50.060 --> 01:37:51.060] Okay. [01:37:51.060 --> 01:37:56.340] They've got to be real careful how many trade secrets they let you in on, see? [01:37:56.340 --> 01:37:57.340] Okay. [01:37:57.340 --> 01:38:04.540] So, basically, I'm in good standing, and they've given me everything I need, right? [01:38:04.540 --> 01:38:05.540] This is not a... [01:38:05.540 --> 01:38:08.060] It certainly looks that way from what you're describing. [01:38:08.060 --> 01:38:12.540] If all that's accurate, then, yeah, sounds to me like you've got something to beat them [01:38:12.540 --> 01:38:13.540] up with. [01:38:13.540 --> 01:38:14.540] Okay. [01:38:14.540 --> 01:38:20.620] So, just because I didn't exclusively express all the elements- [01:38:20.620 --> 01:38:27.240] Well, the thing is, in those types of suits, you're not normally required to do that, especially [01:38:27.240 --> 01:38:30.040] in a Title 42 suit. [01:38:30.040 --> 01:38:34.540] You're specifically prohibited from laying out all the specific details. [01:38:34.540 --> 01:38:42.820] You're only supposed to give a summary of facts that would set the complaint in motion. [01:38:42.820 --> 01:38:45.300] That's all you're required to do. [01:38:45.300 --> 01:38:46.900] Right. [01:38:46.900 --> 01:38:48.420] Okay. [01:38:48.420 --> 01:38:49.980] Okay. [01:38:49.980 --> 01:38:53.860] So, this is nothing. [01:38:53.860 --> 01:38:58.220] This is just a part of a process, and we're still on top of it. [01:38:58.220 --> 01:39:01.060] Sounds like, but I wish you lots of luck with it nonetheless. [01:39:01.060 --> 01:39:02.980] Oh, yeah. [01:39:02.980 --> 01:39:04.500] Appreciate it. [01:39:04.500 --> 01:39:05.500] All right. [01:39:05.500 --> 01:39:06.500] Yeah. [01:39:06.500 --> 01:39:09.220] I was trying to figure out if it was a curve ball or not, but the more and more I read [01:39:09.220 --> 01:39:14.620] into it, the more and more I realized that I had tools and utensils to deal with it. [01:39:14.620 --> 01:39:18.620] So, I just called them and let you know what was up. [01:39:18.620 --> 01:39:19.620] Yeah. [01:39:19.620 --> 01:39:24.520] However, take that to heart, and if you know how to correct to what they're asking for, [01:39:24.520 --> 01:39:27.420] go ahead and do that. [01:39:27.420 --> 01:39:28.420] But how? [01:39:28.420 --> 01:39:36.820] Well, try to find some lawsuit that passed muster that's similar to the one you're doing, [01:39:36.820 --> 01:39:38.340] and see how they did it. [01:39:38.340 --> 01:39:39.340] No. [01:39:39.340 --> 01:39:40.340] No. [01:39:40.340 --> 01:39:45.700] The courts actually gave me the language to write it in, but how do I readdress it? [01:39:45.700 --> 01:39:50.700] Because they dismissed it, saying that I can appeal, so do I appeal? [01:39:50.700 --> 01:39:58.500] Well, you do the appeal first, but you also have the option of correcting it and refiling [01:39:58.500 --> 01:39:59.500] it. [01:39:59.500 --> 01:40:01.900] But of course, all they're doing there is trying to get fees out of you, but if you [01:40:01.900 --> 01:40:05.220] declared indigent, then it wouldn't matter anyway. [01:40:05.220 --> 01:40:06.220] Right. [01:40:06.220 --> 01:40:08.300] They declared me indigent. [01:40:08.300 --> 01:40:09.300] Right. [01:40:09.300 --> 01:40:11.420] So, you have both options available to you. [01:40:11.420 --> 01:40:18.420] You can seek an appeal, okay, which means they will send it back to this court for the [01:40:18.420 --> 01:40:25.140] trial on the merits if they overrule them, or you can simply fix the issue and refile [01:40:25.140 --> 01:40:26.780] it. [01:40:26.780 --> 01:40:27.780] It's up to you. [01:40:27.780 --> 01:40:37.020] The second option would get you on track again faster, I would think. [01:40:37.020 --> 01:40:41.100] Because the issue that you're complaining of has not been resolved, the only issue you're [01:40:41.100 --> 01:40:44.060] complaining of now is, hey, they shouldn't have dismissed it. [01:40:44.060 --> 01:40:47.820] So the only ruling you're going to get is in relation to they shouldn't have dismissed [01:40:47.820 --> 01:40:48.820] it. [01:40:48.820 --> 01:40:53.060] Then you're still back at the original square you were before they dismissed it. [01:40:53.060 --> 01:40:54.220] See what I'm saying? [01:40:54.220 --> 01:40:55.860] You may actually be going backwards. [01:40:55.860 --> 01:41:04.660] Well, I also have the declaratory judgment in that. [01:41:04.660 --> 01:41:12.180] Wouldn't a reversal of the declaratory judgment be a quicker avenue because they- [01:41:12.180 --> 01:41:18.180] Well, yeah, if the purpose of this petition was for the purpose of gaining a declaratory [01:41:18.180 --> 01:41:25.180] judgment and that's what they dismissed was the declaratory judgment, then yeah, you would [01:41:25.180 --> 01:41:33.660] because the declaratory judgment is not the suit, it's the result of the other side's [01:41:33.660 --> 01:41:39.020] failure to answer the suit, okay? [01:41:39.020 --> 01:41:45.100] So if you refile, you're starting everything completely over, including the timescales [01:41:45.100 --> 01:41:48.220] and the defaults and everything else. [01:41:48.220 --> 01:41:52.460] If you've already gotten past that point to the declaratory judgment stage and that's [01:41:52.460 --> 01:41:57.380] what they denied, which I don't understand how that would have worked, how could you [01:41:57.380 --> 01:42:04.540] get to the point of declaratory judgment without the suit standing up long enough for the judgment [01:42:04.540 --> 01:42:06.540] to be had? [01:42:06.540 --> 01:42:14.380] How could the court come after you petition for declaratory judgment and go, hey, wait, [01:42:14.380 --> 01:42:16.020] you didn't file this right. [01:42:16.020 --> 01:42:20.780] So all your timelines are skewed because you didn't file it right. [01:42:20.780 --> 01:42:24.940] So you can't win declaratory judgment. [01:42:24.940 --> 01:42:28.020] If that's what they had done, that'd be one thing, but it doesn't sound like that's what [01:42:28.020 --> 01:42:29.020] they did. [01:42:29.020 --> 01:42:35.820] They attempted to dismiss the suit after it had reached the point of default and that [01:42:35.820 --> 01:42:38.740] they did it entirely sua sponte. [01:42:38.740 --> 01:42:48.180] I filed a motion for default judgment and they denied it before they dismissed it. [01:42:48.180 --> 01:42:53.340] Yeah, but on what grounds do they deny default judgment if you were at the point where you [01:42:53.340 --> 01:42:56.340] should have already had it? [01:42:56.340 --> 01:43:05.780] Stating that the city has a GTLA immunity and they have 60 days to answer, but underneath [01:43:05.780 --> 01:43:12.500] the eminent domain in Tennessee, it says that underneath when they used to sue the city [01:43:12.500 --> 01:43:18.220] underneath the eminent domain statute, it's removed them from the GTLA requirements. [01:43:18.220 --> 01:43:22.220] And one of the GTLA requirements was the 60 days. [01:43:22.220 --> 01:43:29.100] So if all those requirements are removed, they should be to the normal requirements [01:43:29.100 --> 01:43:31.740] of answering the suit. [01:43:31.740 --> 01:43:34.460] Did you appeal their denial of summary judgment? [01:43:34.460 --> 01:43:35.460] Yes. [01:43:35.460 --> 01:43:38.180] And what was the answer on that? [01:43:38.180 --> 01:43:44.900] Oh, they stated that, uh, you know, music coming up. [01:43:44.900 --> 01:43:45.900] Yeah. [01:43:45.900 --> 01:43:49.180] Well think about that for just a second and I'll get the answer on the other side. [01:43:49.180 --> 01:43:50.180] Okay. [01:43:50.180 --> 01:43:51.180] All right, folks. [01:43:51.180 --> 01:43:52.180] We are about to enter into the last segment. [01:43:52.180 --> 01:44:00.340] All you callers hang on and we'll be right back after this break to get to you. [01:44:00.340 --> 01:44:05.660] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:44:05.660 --> 01:44:09.140] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Miras proven method. [01:44:09.140 --> 01:44:13.460] Michael Miras has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:44:13.460 --> 01:44:14.460] can win too. [01:44:14.460 --> 01:44:19.260] You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:44:19.260 --> 01:44:25.060] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:44:25.060 --> 01:44:29.700] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:44:29.700 --> 01:44:33.900] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:44:33.900 --> 01:44:38.780] The Michael Miras proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:44:38.780 --> 01:44:41.180] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:44:41.180 --> 01:44:46.700] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Miras banner [01:44:46.700 --> 01:44:49.700] or email Michael Miras at yahoo.com. [01:44:49.700 --> 01:44:57.380] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:44:57.380 --> 01:45:01.020] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:45:01.020 --> 01:45:04.220] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.220 --> 01:45:09.460] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [01:45:09.460 --> 01:45:14.700] four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:14.700 --> 01:45:18.660] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.660 --> 01:45:23.020] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.020 --> 01:45:27.820] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [01:45:27.820 --> 01:45:34.380] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.380 --> 01:45:39.140] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.140 --> 01:45:43.380] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.380 --> 01:45:49.620] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.620 --> 01:45:52.420] pro se tactics and much more. [01:45:52.420 --> 01:45:59.420] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EASY. [01:46:22.420 --> 01:46:34.820] All right, folks, we are back. [01:46:34.820 --> 01:46:38.420] We are now in the last segment of the show for tonight. [01:46:38.420 --> 01:46:40.620] We are still talking with Olivier. [01:46:40.620 --> 01:46:45.060] All right, Olivier, let's wrap this up if we can. [01:46:45.060 --> 01:46:46.060] Okay. [01:46:46.060 --> 01:46:47.060] All right. [01:46:47.060 --> 01:46:50.700] Now you filed the suit. [01:46:50.700 --> 01:46:53.020] They denied summary judgment after the default. [01:46:53.020 --> 01:47:00.580] The default is based upon the eminent domain statute rather than the GTLA statute, which [01:47:00.580 --> 01:47:07.380] is accepted from when the eminent domain statute is in play. [01:47:07.380 --> 01:47:14.580] And the court still cited the conflicting statute as controlling on what grounds? [01:47:14.580 --> 01:47:15.980] On what grounds? [01:47:15.980 --> 01:47:16.980] Yeah. [01:47:16.980 --> 01:47:22.940] Why did they say the GTLA statute is controlling if the eminent domain statute obviously overrules [01:47:22.940 --> 01:47:24.220] it? [01:47:24.220 --> 01:47:30.880] On the ground that I did not state a proper claim in the inverse condemnation, which would [01:47:30.880 --> 01:47:36.900] have basically removed the GTLA immunity. [01:47:36.900 --> 01:47:38.640] Okay. [01:47:38.640 --> 01:47:46.540] So you didn't specifically state in the complaint that the GTLA timelines do not apply because? [01:47:46.540 --> 01:47:47.540] Yes. [01:47:47.540 --> 01:47:52.140] Then how are they making that statement logically? [01:47:52.140 --> 01:48:00.660] They're saying that, okay, inverse condemnation removes, basically it does remove you from [01:48:00.660 --> 01:48:08.700] the GTLA, but since Mr. Olivier did not state a proper claim for inverse condemnation because [01:48:08.700 --> 01:48:17.420] inverse condemnation is only for real property, the city is immune underneath the GTLA and [01:48:17.420 --> 01:48:20.420] the city had 60 days to answer. [01:48:20.420 --> 01:48:26.660] And your case law says that the claim does not apply only to real property, it also applies [01:48:26.660 --> 01:48:28.740] to personal property? [01:48:28.740 --> 01:48:37.780] The case law, the court rules, local court rules, and the Supreme Court, the decisions [01:48:37.780 --> 01:48:47.620] that I've found already, state that real property and personal property fall underneath Tennessee's [01:48:47.620 --> 01:48:49.740] eminent domain statutes. [01:48:49.740 --> 01:48:52.060] And inverse condemnation by default? [01:48:52.060 --> 01:48:53.060] Yes. [01:48:53.060 --> 01:48:54.060] Okay. [01:48:54.060 --> 01:48:55.060] Yes. [01:48:55.060 --> 01:48:56.060] All right. [01:48:56.060 --> 01:49:00.880] Then yeah, you can file a motion to reconsider in bank to be heard by everybody and use those [01:49:00.880 --> 01:49:04.020] cases as your bolstering support. [01:49:04.020 --> 01:49:05.500] Okay. [01:49:05.500 --> 01:49:07.860] Makes sense. [01:49:07.860 --> 01:49:12.940] So now basically I'm wrapping them all up together to say, if y'all don't overturn this, [01:49:12.940 --> 01:49:17.820] it's going to go to appeal court, but now everybody had a chance to look at it. [01:49:17.820 --> 01:49:18.820] Yeah. [01:49:18.820 --> 01:49:19.820] Okay. [01:49:19.820 --> 01:49:20.820] Thank you. [01:49:20.820 --> 01:49:21.820] Uh-huh. [01:49:21.820 --> 01:49:22.820] All right. [01:49:22.820 --> 01:49:24.820] Thanks for calling in, Olivier. [01:49:24.820 --> 01:49:25.820] All right. [01:49:25.820 --> 01:49:26.820] Good luck, man. [01:49:26.820 --> 01:49:27.820] All right. [01:49:27.820 --> 01:49:28.820] Now we have Rick in Texas. [01:49:28.820 --> 01:49:29.820] Rick, what can we do for you? [01:49:29.820 --> 01:49:37.140] Oh, I'm just going to put a little thing out there. [01:49:37.140 --> 01:49:44.980] What I'm looking at is the violations of the Hobbs Act and seeing if we can start getting [01:49:44.980 --> 01:49:50.100] people to focus on filing claims against judges that are acting corruptly. [01:49:50.100 --> 01:49:51.100] Okay. [01:49:51.100 --> 01:49:52.100] Okay. [01:49:52.100 --> 01:49:58.580] The Hobbs Act, I don't know if you're familiar with it or not. [01:49:58.580 --> 01:50:03.660] It's 18 U.S.C.... 371. [01:50:03.660 --> 01:50:09.340] I'm sorry, what'd you say? [01:50:09.340 --> 01:50:10.340] 1951. [01:50:10.340 --> 01:50:11.340] 1950? [01:50:11.340 --> 01:50:14.340] That's the year? [01:50:14.340 --> 01:50:20.180] No, it's 18 U.S.C. 1951. [01:50:20.180 --> 01:50:21.180] Okay. [01:50:21.180 --> 01:50:33.900] Basically, what it's being used for now is extortion by force and violence or by fear. [01:50:33.900 --> 01:50:37.020] And I just wanted to throw that out there because that's something I'm actually looking [01:50:37.020 --> 01:50:41.580] into right now on my wife's case. [01:50:41.580 --> 01:50:46.560] She's out of jail, but we were totally extorted for almost $40,000. [01:50:46.560 --> 01:50:52.320] So I'm looking at filing and violation of the Hobbs Act. [01:50:52.320 --> 01:50:56.560] And like I said, it's something that I would say that some of your callers and listeners [01:50:56.560 --> 01:50:57.780] might want to look into. [01:50:57.780 --> 01:51:04.020] Yeah, but you have a quandary here by going to the Hobbs Act in that regard. [01:51:04.020 --> 01:51:08.940] The Hobbs Act specifically applies to interference with commerce. [01:51:08.940 --> 01:51:14.220] Our whole argument in this is that we are not in commerce. [01:51:14.220 --> 01:51:20.900] How are you going to apply the Hobbs Act to an act that by definition must be applicable [01:51:20.900 --> 01:51:30.100] to commerce against an actor who is moving against someone that's not in commerce? [01:51:30.100 --> 01:51:31.100] Okay. [01:51:31.100 --> 01:51:36.780] Well, like I said, I'm just now looking into the Hobbs Act and there was another one... I [01:51:36.780 --> 01:51:37.780] can't recall. [01:51:37.780 --> 01:51:39.100] I don't have my notes in front of me. [01:51:39.100 --> 01:51:40.660] I just happened to come back from the store. [01:51:40.660 --> 01:51:41.660] I was listening to you. [01:51:41.660 --> 01:51:42.660] You'll love this. [01:51:42.660 --> 01:51:47.420] I'm listening to you on my cell phone as I'm stopping at the convenience store and right [01:51:47.420 --> 01:51:53.100] in front of me while you're sitting there going over the last gentleman's case was a [01:51:53.100 --> 01:51:54.100] constable. [01:51:54.100 --> 01:51:59.820] And he did take note of what I was listening to. [01:51:59.820 --> 01:52:01.740] But anyway, I thank you for your time. [01:52:01.740 --> 01:52:04.980] I'm going to look into it a little bit more, but I just figured I'd throw that out there [01:52:04.980 --> 01:52:08.020] because I did notice that it deals with extortion. [01:52:08.020 --> 01:52:15.540] Yeah, but when you read the title of Section 1951, it straight up says, interference with [01:52:15.540 --> 01:52:18.500] commerce by threats or violence. [01:52:18.500 --> 01:52:22.080] Well, extorting affecting interstate or foreign commerce. [01:52:22.080 --> 01:52:23.620] You're correct on that. [01:52:23.620 --> 01:52:31.700] Section 1951 also prescribes conspiracy to commit robbery or extortion without referring [01:52:31.700 --> 01:52:37.580] to the conspiracy statute at 18371. [01:52:37.580 --> 01:52:46.620] Although the Hobbs Act was enacted as a statute to combat racketeering and labor management [01:52:46.620 --> 01:52:47.620] disputes. [01:52:47.620 --> 01:52:52.540] Yeah, but you cannot take it out of the context of what the act applies to. [01:52:52.540 --> 01:52:59.120] So the robbery and everything else it's talking about is talking about an act upon a person [01:52:59.120 --> 01:53:01.780] engaging in commerce. [01:53:01.780 --> 01:53:03.220] Okay. [01:53:03.220 --> 01:53:05.300] It's it's I'm aware of it now. [01:53:05.300 --> 01:53:08.500] So okay, I like the word aware instead of understand. [01:53:08.500 --> 01:53:09.900] So throw that out there. [01:53:09.900 --> 01:53:10.900] Okay. [01:53:10.900 --> 01:53:12.160] Never understand. [01:53:12.160 --> 01:53:13.160] Always be aware. [01:53:13.160 --> 01:53:14.160] But thanks for your time. [01:53:14.160 --> 01:53:15.160] Have a good evening. [01:53:15.160 --> 01:53:16.160] Yes, sir. [01:53:16.160 --> 01:53:17.160] Thanks for calling in. [01:53:17.160 --> 01:53:18.160] All right. [01:53:18.160 --> 01:53:21.980] That gives us about five and a half minutes till the end of showtime here. [01:53:21.980 --> 01:53:24.700] The next caller in line is Truth Raider. [01:53:24.700 --> 01:53:29.060] Raider, what do you have? [01:53:29.060 --> 01:53:33.580] Hello? [01:53:33.580 --> 01:53:35.660] Truth Raider, are you there? [01:53:35.660 --> 01:53:40.060] Oh, you're Oh, okay, you're camping out. [01:53:40.060 --> 01:53:41.060] All right. [01:53:41.060 --> 01:53:44.980] Well, I hope you have Okay, well, I must assume at this point, he's having a conversation [01:53:44.980 --> 01:53:47.180] with someone other than me. [01:53:47.180 --> 01:53:53.260] Okay, now that being said, someone else just popped up on the board here. [01:53:53.260 --> 01:53:54.260] It says swika. [01:53:54.260 --> 01:53:56.260] Who am I talking to? [01:53:56.260 --> 01:53:57.580] Yes, sir. [01:53:57.580 --> 01:53:59.020] Stephen john. [01:53:59.020 --> 01:54:00.020] Okay. [01:54:00.020 --> 01:54:01.020] What can I do for you? [01:54:01.020 --> 01:54:06.140] I have a question on the actually two questions. [01:54:06.140 --> 01:54:15.340] One about the jurisdiction areas already kind of like study group or YouTube talk shoe group [01:54:15.340 --> 01:54:17.460] or blog for jurisdictionary? [01:54:17.460 --> 01:54:19.580] Yeah, I don't know. [01:54:19.580 --> 01:54:24.860] I don't sell jurisdictionary the network does and it's with Dr. Gray's it's not with me. [01:54:24.860 --> 01:54:30.900] Yeah, I mean, he used to have his radio show on this network where he discussed a lot of [01:54:30.900 --> 01:54:32.140] stuff that's in it. [01:54:32.140 --> 01:54:37.260] I know that there are some folks that do local study groups here in Austin on it. [01:54:37.260 --> 01:54:42.680] But I could not tell you whether or not there's any talk shoe or anything else. [01:54:42.680 --> 01:54:44.700] groups out there that do anything with it. [01:54:44.700 --> 01:54:46.700] I can't answer that. [01:54:46.700 --> 01:55:01.500] I like to ask about the the if you know anything if you could briefly discuss the the value [01:55:01.500 --> 01:55:08.860] of requesting to know where they everybody's name out there. [01:55:08.860 --> 01:55:12.260] First of all, on the birth certificate. [01:55:12.260 --> 01:55:13.260] That's not you. [01:55:13.260 --> 01:55:14.260] Okay. [01:55:14.260 --> 01:55:15.260] The birth is the name that [01:55:15.260 --> 01:55:18.260] Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. [01:55:18.260 --> 01:55:20.580] What are you wanting me to talk about? [01:55:20.580 --> 01:55:33.940] I want to discuss the the IRS political subdivision status confirmation letter that every court [01:55:33.940 --> 01:55:41.700] allegedly must have to to when when demand it based upon what law [01:55:41.700 --> 01:55:52.540] based on the vessel, the the the prosecutor acting as an unqualified error. [01:55:52.540 --> 01:56:00.500] Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, I'm gonna ask this question again, based on [01:56:00.500 --> 01:56:04.100] what law based on what statute? [01:56:04.100 --> 01:56:06.620] Well, that would be part of a law. [01:56:06.620 --> 01:56:14.380] Well, all the kinds of statutes and rules and regulations apply to someone who has their [01:56:14.380 --> 01:56:16.900] title as their ownership. [01:56:16.900 --> 01:56:17.900] Okay. [01:56:17.900 --> 01:56:18.900] Title. [01:56:18.900 --> 01:56:19.900] Okay. [01:56:19.900 --> 01:56:21.900] Look, Captain peanut. [01:56:21.900 --> 01:56:24.700] The patronet theories don't fly here. [01:56:24.700 --> 01:56:27.240] Never have never will. [01:56:27.240 --> 01:56:31.980] Most of the stuff you're attempting to make an argument while out of don't work. [01:56:31.980 --> 01:56:32.980] And for good reason. [01:56:32.980 --> 01:56:33.980] Captain peanut. [01:56:33.980 --> 01:56:34.980] I like that. [01:56:34.980 --> 01:56:39.940] Well, it goes hand in hand with the patronet image that I put out there, which is a peanut. [01:56:39.940 --> 01:56:40.940] Okay. [01:56:40.940 --> 01:56:43.860] That's that's that's not the name of my vessel. [01:56:43.860 --> 01:56:44.860] Okay. [01:56:44.860 --> 01:56:50.500] Well, whatever vessel you're on, throw the booze overboard, okay? [01:56:50.500 --> 01:56:53.620] Because it's not going to help you make better arguments. [01:56:53.620 --> 01:56:59.780] You either use the law to beat them black and blue, or they will beat you black and [01:56:59.780 --> 01:57:00.780] blue. [01:57:00.780 --> 01:57:01.780] Yeah, I'm looking for the alternative. [01:57:01.780 --> 01:57:06.380] I'm looking to stay out of their out of their disgusting rattle. [01:57:06.380 --> 01:57:11.260] Well, you know what, I'm looking not to fall into a pool of quicksand, but there's no guarantee [01:57:11.260 --> 01:57:14.660] it ain't ever gonna happen. [01:57:14.660 --> 01:57:19.980] So what you're looking to do and what you may wind up having to do, ain't always gonna [01:57:19.980 --> 01:57:20.980] be the same thing. [01:57:20.980 --> 01:57:21.980] Okay. [01:57:21.980 --> 01:57:29.580] So you're you're you're saying that when one request to to see their political subdivisions [01:57:29.580 --> 01:57:37.080] know what I asked you very, very beginning of this is on what law are you basing the [01:57:37.080 --> 01:57:43.100] claim that these are places are required to have such a letter? [01:57:43.100 --> 01:57:46.940] What law says what must be within such a letter? [01:57:46.940 --> 01:57:50.100] And what law says who must issue such a letter? [01:57:50.100 --> 01:57:51.100] That's a good question. [01:57:51.100 --> 01:57:52.100] I'll research that. [01:57:52.100 --> 01:57:53.100] All right. [01:57:53.100 --> 01:57:54.100] Work on that. [01:57:54.100 --> 01:57:55.100] And then we can talk. [01:57:55.100 --> 01:57:56.100] Thank you. [01:57:56.100 --> 01:57:57.100] All right. [01:57:57.100 --> 01:57:58.100] You have a good one. [01:57:58.100 --> 01:57:59.100] Thanks for calling in. [01:57:59.100 --> 01:58:00.100] All right, folks. [01:58:00.100 --> 01:58:03.940] It's been the Monday night rule of law radio show your host, Eddie Craig. [01:58:03.940 --> 01:58:06.420] I hope that it has been useful information. [01:58:06.420 --> 01:58:13.180] Please keep an eye on the legal blog towel of law dot wordpress.com t o o f l a w dot [01:58:13.180 --> 01:58:15.520] wordpress.com. [01:58:15.520 --> 01:58:19.120] Take a read at the articles I've got up there and pay attention to this new one when I get [01:58:19.120 --> 01:58:25.980] it posted, because it's got a lot of useful arguments and suppositions to be gone through. [01:58:25.980 --> 01:58:26.980] It's very enlightening. [01:58:26.980 --> 01:58:27.980] All right, folks. [01:58:27.980 --> 01:58:30.260] I want to thank you for listening and for calling in. [01:58:30.260 --> 01:58:31.580] Y'all have a great week. [01:58:31.580 --> 01:58:50.620] Good night and God bless. [01:58:50.620 --> 01:58:56.140] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New [01:58:56.140 --> 01:58:57.860] Testament recovery version. [01:58:57.860 --> 01:59:02.860] The New Testament recovery version has over 9000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.860 --> 01:59:08.420] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.420 --> 01:59:11.820] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.820 --> 01:59:20.780] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.780 --> 01:59:26.320] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus [01:59:26.320 --> 01:59:30.340] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.340 --> 01:59:32.880] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.880 --> 01:59:41.260] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.260 --> 01:59:48.140] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:48.140 --> 01:59:53.020] Looking for some truth? [01:59:53.020 --> 01:59:54.020] You found it. [01:59:54.020 --> 01:59:56.660] Visit us at logosradionetwork.com.