[00:00.000 --> 00:07.680] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly [00:07.680 --> 00:15.440] bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates and the inside scoop [00:15.440 --> 00:23.440] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.440 --> 00:29.920] Markets for Friday the 27th of October 2017 close with gold at $1,273.86. [00:29.920 --> 00:38.600] Silver $16.86 an ounce, Texas Crude $52.64 a barrel, Bitcoin sitting about $5,785 and [00:38.600 --> 00:47.440] dash coins about $280 US currency. [00:47.440 --> 00:52.800] Today in history, the year 1988, then President Ronald Reagan suspended construction of the [00:52.800 --> 00:58.240] new US Embassy in Moscow due to Soviet spying devices in the structure of the building. [00:58.240 --> 01:08.280] In recent news, President Trump failed to comply with the secrecy law of 1992 via his approval [01:08.280 --> 01:13.640] of only partial declassification of some 2800 classified files released on Thursday concerning [01:13.640 --> 01:16.720] the conspiratorial assassination of President John F. Kennedy. [01:16.720 --> 01:21.320] This is particularly odd considering President Trump tweeted the day before the release that, [01:21.320 --> 01:26.000] quote, the long-anticipated release of the JFK files will take place tomorrow. [01:26.000 --> 01:27.000] So interesting. [01:27.000 --> 01:31.640] However, it turns out that President Trump, in fact, ordered a withholding of some 300 [01:31.640 --> 01:37.280] or so files President Trump tweeted today that the, quote, JFK files are being carefully [01:37.280 --> 01:38.280] released. [01:38.280 --> 01:42.240] In the end, there will be great transparency and this might help to get just about everything [01:42.240 --> 01:43.240] to the public. [01:43.240 --> 01:45.920] It is clear, however, what is really occurring. [01:45.920 --> 01:49.480] The president is being threatened by the intelligentsia to redact. [01:49.480 --> 01:53.400] In a presidential memorandum released the same day as the documents, President Trump [01:53.400 --> 01:58.400] stated that the, quote, executive departments and agencies have proposed to me that certain [01:58.400 --> 02:03.840] information should continue to be redacted because of national security, law enforcement [02:03.840 --> 02:05.800] and foreign affairs concerns. [02:05.800 --> 02:11.920] I have no choice today but to accept those redactions rather than allow potentially irreversible [02:11.920 --> 02:18.560] harm to our nation's security. [02:18.560 --> 02:23.080] On a lighter topic, earlier this week, a hunter in a wooded area north of Waco called police [02:23.080 --> 02:28.960] after he stumbled upon a lot of ganja, roughly 10,000 plants in 13 separate locales after [02:28.960 --> 02:31.000] police found it and stole it all. [02:31.000 --> 02:35.440] On a sheriff's office's Facebook post, they stated that, quote, based on the sophistication [02:35.440 --> 02:39.840] of the operation as well as the size of it, it was determined it may well be the largest [02:39.840 --> 02:43.280] operation of its kind ever located in Hill Country. [02:43.280 --> 02:47.640] It took three days for Fresnick investigators to gather evidence from the scene and to eradicate [02:47.640 --> 02:54.640] the plants, investigators have yet to identify the farmers. [03:17.640 --> 03:21.240] Okay, we are back. [03:21.240 --> 03:26.160] Randy Kelton, rule of our radio and we're talking to Deborah and Leslie. [03:26.160 --> 03:29.560] Okay, statement of facts. [03:29.560 --> 03:37.360] Now, in the example in Cherokee County, I didn't use a statement of facts in the document [03:37.360 --> 03:45.880] I created, but I put together a statement of facts first and I put them together so [03:45.880 --> 03:54.560] that a person reading the statement of facts, if I've given him referential index and told [03:54.560 --> 04:00.560] him this is where I'm going, that I have public officials here all working in concert inclusion [04:00.560 --> 04:05.320] with one another, so they're going to read the facts in the context that I've set up [04:05.320 --> 04:06.320] for them. [04:06.320 --> 04:12.560] So I try to lay in the facts that a reasonable person of ordinary prudence will look at and [04:12.560 --> 04:20.200] tend to stitch them together in a way that makes sense in the context I've framed. [04:20.200 --> 04:28.200] Then when they read the argument in support or the statement, then it will follow down [04:28.200 --> 04:36.240] those facts and if you in your statement draw the same conclusions that you got your reader [04:36.240 --> 04:43.080] to draw when they read the facts, they're going to think you're really smart, but in [04:43.080 --> 04:50.560] this case, I didn't use the statement of facts because it was so big already, but I tried [04:50.560 --> 04:58.920] to write these in a way so that this accusation led to the next one and to the next one. [04:58.920 --> 05:04.880] So as you move through them, it began to make sense how all of these stitched together. [05:04.880 --> 05:12.720] When I accuse someone of doing some horrible thing, then it's not just out of the blue [05:12.720 --> 05:19.440] I've shown precedent how I got here, how one thing led to another, did that make sense? [05:19.440 --> 05:22.880] Yes, it does, I have one question. [05:22.880 --> 05:28.000] Are we able to put evidence on a CD or a USB? [05:28.000 --> 05:29.000] Absolutely. [05:29.000 --> 05:36.000] Yeah, you can have, they will either look at it or not, and almost certainly they will. [05:36.000 --> 05:39.000] A CD is best. [05:39.000 --> 05:40.320] Oh, okay. [05:40.320 --> 05:45.680] They tend not to trust flash drives and such, and flash drives can be erased and all kind [05:45.680 --> 05:50.840] of stuff happened to them, and not a rewriteable CD. [05:50.840 --> 05:56.120] So once you write it one time and stop writing, it's done, it can't be changed, so that way [05:56.120 --> 06:00.840] you're sure that nothing happens to it. [06:00.840 --> 06:08.960] And generally they're pretty comfortable about CDs because all their systems have antivirus [06:08.960 --> 06:14.400] programs that will check the CD before it accesses it. [06:14.400 --> 06:18.160] Flash drives are a little more difficult and they're really reluctant to stick flash drives [06:18.160 --> 06:22.080] in their machine unless they know where it comes from. [06:22.080 --> 06:26.800] So but CDs are comfortable with. [06:26.800 --> 06:31.520] Okay, all right, so okay, we'll look on that then. [06:31.520 --> 06:36.640] Is there anything about lying attorneys or is that part of the job discretion? [06:36.640 --> 06:48.320] Well, it is a lawyer under the Texas Rules of Disciplinary Procedure are commanded to [06:48.320 --> 06:52.320] speak with candor to the court. [06:52.320 --> 06:58.520] If they lie to the court about a material fact, that's aggravated perjury. [06:58.520 --> 07:07.160] If they lie to the court about a fact that's not material, then that goes to a bar grievance. [07:07.160 --> 07:13.800] And if they lie to the court and the court believes their lies and you're negatively [07:13.800 --> 07:19.680] affected as a result, that's malpractice. [07:19.680 --> 07:25.400] And you have standing to sue them even if they're not your attorney. [07:25.400 --> 07:31.640] So you're in a situation here where it has to do with mortgage. [07:31.640 --> 07:34.880] You want to see who's got deep pockets. [07:34.880 --> 07:42.160] Those lawyers, they got malpractice insurance, they got deep pockets and the problem with [07:42.160 --> 07:49.440] their malpractice insurance is just like your insurance carrier for your car. [07:49.440 --> 07:56.800] If you hit somebody else and your insurance company has to pay, they don't care about [07:56.800 --> 07:57.800] you. [07:57.800 --> 07:58.800] They're not going to ask your opinion. [07:58.800 --> 08:04.760] They're going to go to the other side and try to make the best deal they can make. [08:04.760 --> 08:09.000] When you sue a lawyer for malpractice, his insurance carriers going to make the best [08:09.000 --> 08:15.320] deal they can make, and they are not above throwing the lawyer under the bus to get [08:15.320 --> 08:27.000] out of litigation, takes it out of their control and lawyers hate that. [08:27.000 --> 08:28.000] I'm sure they do. [08:28.000 --> 08:32.600] Well, I would say that maybe we should just start with one lawyer at a time, the one that [08:32.600 --> 08:37.960] we're up against currently and just have her go first and put all the evidence against [08:37.960 --> 08:44.480] her and go that way because when you're dealing with at least now it looks like over 120 complaints [08:44.480 --> 08:48.160] then that's a lot of complaints. [08:48.160 --> 08:55.520] Oh, you just read the complaint that I gave to some folks to file in Newark, Texas. [08:55.520 --> 08:56.520] Right. [08:56.520 --> 09:10.040] We did something I had great fun with because the defendant and he's the defendant, my guys [09:10.040 --> 09:18.800] the defendant, was calling into rule of law radio network and talking about the improprieties [09:18.800 --> 09:25.320] of the city of Newark, Texas that Newark, Texas filed this frivolous suit as a slap [09:25.320 --> 09:28.920] suit. [09:28.920 --> 09:35.320] Slap suit goes to a bridging First Amendment rights and that's the only way we could get [09:35.320 --> 09:37.680] here. [09:37.680 --> 09:41.040] We claimed that they were trying to prevent him from calling back into the show and talk [09:41.040 --> 09:47.840] about their improprieties so we added a slap suit claim against them. [09:47.840 --> 09:52.360] That was so much fun. [09:52.360 --> 09:55.440] But we sued the lawyers. [09:55.440 --> 10:06.040] What we did was the first claim against the lawyer was a claim of baritry and we claimed [10:06.040 --> 10:12.280] that the lawyer advised their client to take an action that would result in litigation [10:12.280 --> 10:18.960] which the lawyer would then get to litigate because of that baritry and asked the court [10:18.960 --> 10:25.000] to order the lawyer to pay back to the city of Newark all of the monies they received [10:25.000 --> 10:28.880] from the city of Newark for this litigation. [10:28.880 --> 10:37.680] So the first thing we asked the court to do is take money from one litigant that we sued [10:37.680 --> 10:44.280] and give it to another litigant that we sued, the city of Newark. [10:44.280 --> 10:49.080] And then we asked to get that money back from the city of Newark because they listened to [10:49.080 --> 10:53.240] these dumb lawyers. [10:53.240 --> 10:59.120] And then we filed bar grievances against the, we started the bar grievance process against [10:59.120 --> 11:09.680] the lawyers and we filed criminal charges with the district attorney against the lawyers [11:09.680 --> 11:12.040] and they appointed an administrative board. [11:12.040 --> 11:15.040] We filed against the administrative board too. [11:15.040 --> 11:19.160] At the end of the day it's all politics. [11:19.160 --> 11:27.320] What we're trying to do is get everybody to throw the lawyer under the bus. [11:27.320 --> 11:33.200] You started this, you ran your mouth and got us to do all of this, try to get them all [11:33.200 --> 11:35.640] to throw them under the bus. [11:35.640 --> 11:39.560] That'll see, Gene. [11:39.560 --> 11:48.280] It's about trying to figure out how you can best get, you know, I'm always thinking what's [11:48.280 --> 11:52.720] the grand jury going to think when they read this. [11:52.720 --> 11:57.400] And that was the best way I could write it so it seemed to make sense why the city of [11:57.400 --> 12:01.640] Newark would do something so stupid. [12:01.640 --> 12:07.120] And it was unreasonable to think that the city of Newark would just come up with this [12:07.120 --> 12:10.000] really stupid thing to do. [12:10.000 --> 12:18.360] It's more reasonable to think that the lawyer advised them to do it, like the bank here. [12:18.360 --> 12:23.680] The banks, you know, they're just, they're not lawyers, they're just doing their stuff [12:23.680 --> 12:27.440] and these lawyers tell them to do this stupid stuff. [12:27.440 --> 12:33.480] So we go after them, give the banks somebody to throw under the bus, they're going after [12:33.480 --> 12:34.480] the lawyers. [12:34.480 --> 12:38.480] And I do like to go after lawyers. [12:38.480 --> 12:39.480] Okay. [12:39.480 --> 12:40.480] Oh, I know. [12:40.480 --> 12:41.480] Okay. [12:41.480 --> 12:42.480] Well, we'll let you go now. [12:42.480 --> 12:49.480] Now, is the juror's imprudence, how do you, is that, that's not.com, is it it's.website? [12:49.480 --> 12:50.480] It's.website. [12:50.480 --> 12:51.480] Oh,.website. [12:51.480 --> 12:52.480] Okay. [12:52.480 --> 12:53.480] We're ready. [12:53.480 --> 12:54.480] Okay. [12:54.480 --> 13:03.480] We'll take care of that and get that finished up because I got so much of it, you know. [13:03.480 --> 13:08.480] So much of it done, but we, we still, it looks like we've got a lot more to do on this. [13:08.480 --> 13:13.480] And I fixed the database so that everything would be orderly. [13:13.480 --> 13:14.480] Oh, wonderful. [13:14.480 --> 13:16.480] I'm, I'm working on that now. [13:16.480 --> 13:21.480] I've got a, I'm hiring a programmer to build my databases. [13:21.480 --> 13:25.480] Maybe I need to talk to you and get you to build my databases for me. [13:25.480 --> 13:28.480] Well, I, I use access and it's very simple. [13:28.480 --> 13:33.480] You just build a table and you put on the table what information you want to put into the [13:33.480 --> 13:38.480] database, you know, the names, the, the law, you know, all that stuff. [13:38.480 --> 13:43.480] Mine are a little more complicated than that. [13:43.480 --> 13:49.480] I build this questionnaire and every time I put a question in the questionnaire, I need [13:49.480 --> 13:55.480] to set a code that'll create a table in the database for that question and link that table [13:55.480 --> 14:01.480] in the database to a parent table in the same relationship that this question is linked [14:01.480 --> 14:04.480] to the question before it. [14:04.480 --> 14:10.480] And also create a folder on a folder structure linked the same way. [14:10.480 --> 14:18.480] So that as I create questions, it creates a database and a folder structure for me. [14:18.480 --> 14:22.480] And that's something I've been working on a long time and I've had trouble getting the [14:22.480 --> 14:26.480] programmers to wrap their heads around it. [14:26.480 --> 14:28.480] It's kind of backwards. [14:28.480 --> 14:33.480] But for something that's simple, all I had to do was go down the docket and every time [14:33.480 --> 14:38.480] there was an entry in the docket, who put it in there, the data was put in there, which [14:38.480 --> 14:45.480] court, what was the docket number and, and the number of the document and that kind of [14:45.480 --> 14:51.480] information and what rule was broken in what court, you know what I mean? [14:51.480 --> 14:55.480] Because it was a lot easier for that. [14:55.480 --> 15:01.480] And then just make a born document and input all of the different violations. [15:01.480 --> 15:06.480] Every violation is a new entry, even if they have other entries. [15:06.480 --> 15:15.480] So there's one full document for each, each violation of any law. [15:15.480 --> 15:16.480] Good. [15:16.480 --> 15:18.480] I'm going to want to look at how you put this together. [15:18.480 --> 15:30.480] I'm building up, I'm going to use the ticket website as a platform to initiate the electronic [15:30.480 --> 15:32.480] lawyer program. [15:32.480 --> 15:34.480] Okay. [15:34.480 --> 15:38.480] I can use it to fly on, essentially fly under the radar. [15:38.480 --> 15:45.480] And what I'm going to want to do is build a set of databases in there so that we ask [15:45.480 --> 15:50.480] these questions and we have all of the arguments stored in the database. [15:50.480 --> 15:54.480] And once they answer the, as they answer the question, it'll go to the database and pull [15:54.480 --> 16:00.480] the relevant information, stick it in an output document so that when they get done with it, [16:00.480 --> 16:07.480] it'll spit out criminal complaints, bar grievances, judicial conduct complaints, T-close complaints, [16:07.480 --> 16:12.480] everything that's indicated, it just spits them out and all people have to do assignment [16:12.480 --> 16:15.480] to send them. [16:15.480 --> 16:16.480] Okay. [16:16.480 --> 16:20.480] Well, it's 1.3 megs, so it's not that big and it's in access. [16:20.480 --> 16:24.480] Sorry, you should be able to use it if you have access. [16:24.480 --> 16:25.480] Okay. [16:25.480 --> 16:26.480] Thank you. [16:26.480 --> 16:27.480] Do you have anything else for us? [16:27.480 --> 16:29.480] We're about to go to break. [16:29.480 --> 16:30.480] I don't know. [16:30.480 --> 16:31.480] That's it. [16:31.480 --> 16:32.480] Thank you very much. [16:32.480 --> 16:33.480] Eddie, any further questions? [16:33.480 --> 16:34.480] Thank you. [16:34.480 --> 16:35.480] No, I'm great. [16:35.480 --> 16:36.480] Thanks. [16:36.480 --> 16:37.480] Okay. [16:37.480 --> 16:38.480] Thank you, Leslie and Debbie. [16:38.480 --> 16:39.480] Thank you. [16:39.480 --> 16:42.480] We will be in close touch. [16:42.480 --> 16:43.480] Okay. [16:43.480 --> 16:44.480] We are about to go to break. [16:44.480 --> 16:50.480] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio are called in number 512-646-1984. [16:50.480 --> 16:52.480] Jason, Larry, Brett, see you there. [16:52.480 --> 16:54.480] We'll get to everybody. [16:54.480 --> 16:59.480] We'll be right back. [16:59.480 --> 17:01.480] Thanks, Cookie. [17:01.480 --> 17:02.480] Cookie? [17:02.480 --> 17:03.480] Me love Cookie. [17:03.480 --> 17:04.480] Oh, hi Cookie Munchers. [17:04.480 --> 17:06.480] No, these are Yucky Cookie. [17:06.480 --> 17:07.480] Cookie? [17:07.480 --> 17:08.480] Yucky? [17:08.480 --> 17:09.480] No bad cookies. [17:09.480 --> 17:10.480] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:10.480 --> 17:12.480] These are cyber cookies. [17:12.480 --> 17:13.480] No, can you eat? [17:13.480 --> 17:16.480] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:16.480 --> 17:17.480] These have apples. [17:17.480 --> 17:18.480] Really? [17:18.480 --> 17:20.480] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:20.480 --> 17:21.480] Yummy apple. [17:21.480 --> 17:26.480] I'm going to throw away these Yucky Cookies in the trash. [17:26.480 --> 17:32.480] I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:32.480 --> 17:34.480] Bye bye, Yucky Cookies. [17:34.480 --> 17:40.480] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand side, [17:40.480 --> 17:46.480] bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [17:46.480 --> 17:48.480] New cookies for me? [17:48.480 --> 17:53.480] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon I go through this link [17:53.480 --> 17:56.480] and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:56.480 --> 17:57.480] These are cookies. [17:57.480 --> 17:59.480] These are classified. [17:59.480 --> 18:05.480] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:05.480 --> 18:08.480] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. [18:08.480 --> 18:14.480] Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [18:14.480 --> 18:20.480] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [18:20.480 --> 18:24.480] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons? [18:24.480 --> 18:26.480] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:26.480 --> 18:28.480] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [18:28.480 --> 18:33.480] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [18:33.480 --> 18:38.480] The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:38.480 --> 18:40.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:40.480 --> 18:46.480] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner [18:46.480 --> 18:49.480] or email MichaelMeares at yahoo.com. [18:49.480 --> 18:57.480] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.480 --> 19:00.480] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [19:00.480 --> 19:05.480] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [19:05.480 --> 19:09.480] LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:09.480 --> 19:14.480] Well, don't let nothing get to you. [19:14.480 --> 19:17.480] Only the father can do it by you. [19:17.480 --> 19:20.480] And don't let bad-mine people hurt you. [19:20.480 --> 19:23.480] Unless they've got to get behind you. [19:23.480 --> 19:28.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. [19:28.480 --> 19:33.480] And we're going to Jason in Texas. Hello, Jason. [19:33.480 --> 19:39.480] Well, good afternoon, sir. Wonderful show tonight. I've truly enjoyed listening. [19:39.480 --> 19:44.480] We'll send you a check for that plug tomorrow. Thank you. [19:44.480 --> 19:48.480] I'll return one in the mail. [19:48.480 --> 19:55.480] You know, if I start off with a couple of quotes that I've discovered here in my research in the last couple of months, [19:55.480 --> 20:01.480] and I just find them to be extremely relevant to almost every caller that is called in, [20:01.480 --> 20:11.480] you know, whether it was Scott with the 22 non-responsive inquiries to John in New York [20:11.480 --> 20:14.480] and even the two wonderful ladies you just had on. [20:14.480 --> 20:19.480] This first quote is from U.S.D. Twill, U.S.D. Prudin. [20:19.480 --> 20:21.480] And it says in my quote, [20:21.480 --> 20:27.480] Silence can only be equated with fraud where there is a legal or moral duty to speak [20:27.480 --> 20:33.480] where an inquiry left unanswered would be intentionally misleading. [20:33.480 --> 20:36.480] We cannot condone this shocking behavior. [20:36.480 --> 20:39.480] This sort of deception will not be tolerated. [20:39.480 --> 20:45.480] And if this is routine, it should be corrected immediately. [20:45.480 --> 20:48.480] I thought that was just a wonderful quote. Yes, yes. [20:48.480 --> 20:53.480] We cite Twill the U.S. on a regular basis. [20:53.480 --> 20:57.480] Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if most of your listeners have heard this. [20:57.480 --> 21:01.480] And if they have, then hopefully they'll enjoy hearing it again next time. [21:01.480 --> 21:06.480] But the second one that I came across that really touched me, [21:06.480 --> 21:10.480] this is from the United States Supreme Court, [21:10.480 --> 21:14.480] Federal Insurance Corporation, B. Merrill. [21:14.480 --> 21:16.480] And it says in my quote, [21:16.480 --> 21:21.480] Oh, Todd, that is odd because when I referenced Twill, [21:21.480 --> 21:25.480] I was thinking federal crop insurance B. Merrill as well. [21:25.480 --> 21:30.480] I've thought that one needs to be brought up in this context as well. [21:30.480 --> 21:34.480] I mean, and here, and if you don't mind, [21:34.480 --> 21:36.480] I'm not going to read it for your listeners. [21:36.480 --> 21:38.480] It's, you know, in a quote, [21:38.480 --> 21:41.480] whatever the form in which the government functions, [21:41.480 --> 21:46.480] anyone entering into an arrangement with the government takes the risk [21:46.480 --> 21:50.480] of having accurately ascertained that he who reports to the act [21:50.480 --> 21:55.480] that the government stays within the bounds of his authority. [21:55.480 --> 21:57.480] And another one came from the night that... [21:57.480 --> 21:58.480] Wait, wait, hold on. [21:58.480 --> 22:01.480] Let me explain the context of that. [22:01.480 --> 22:05.480] That's what Merrill is saying. [22:05.480 --> 22:10.480] This guy, as Darin is right at the end of World War II, [22:10.480 --> 22:12.480] he buys crop insurance, [22:12.480 --> 22:16.480] the federal government's providing crop insurance. [22:16.480 --> 22:19.480] He buys crop insurance for summer wheat, [22:19.480 --> 22:21.480] and then he plants winter wheat [22:21.480 --> 22:25.480] and he buys crop insurance for winter wheat. [22:25.480 --> 22:29.480] Well, drought winter wheat fails. [22:29.480 --> 22:31.480] It makes a claim on the insurance. [22:31.480 --> 22:33.480] And the government said, [22:33.480 --> 22:40.480] we can't sell you winter wheat insurance behind summer wheat. [22:40.480 --> 22:44.480] And they said, but your guy sold it to me. [22:44.480 --> 22:47.480] Yeah, he did. [22:47.480 --> 22:51.480] But he didn't have authority to do that. [22:51.480 --> 22:53.480] And they said, well, you're responsible anyway. [22:53.480 --> 22:57.480] And they said that if you had been dealing with a private company, [22:57.480 --> 22:59.480] you would have a claim. [22:59.480 --> 23:03.480] But where the government is forbidden to do a certain thing, [23:03.480 --> 23:07.480] just because a government operative was mistaken [23:07.480 --> 23:12.480] or gave misinformation does not authorize the government to do [23:12.480 --> 23:15.480] what they're forbidden to do. [23:15.480 --> 23:17.480] So that's their standing. [23:17.480 --> 23:20.480] So what they're telling you is, [23:20.480 --> 23:22.480] is when you deal with the government, [23:22.480 --> 23:25.480] you need to make absolutely sure [23:25.480 --> 23:29.480] that what that guy's telling you is true. [23:29.480 --> 23:31.480] So when you start asking for information [23:31.480 --> 23:33.480] and they don't want to give it, [23:33.480 --> 23:38.480] you pull out federal crop insurance for you, Meryl. [23:38.480 --> 23:41.480] And that led me to a third quote. [23:41.480 --> 23:45.480] And that led me to a third quote that is also just super relevant [23:45.480 --> 23:48.480] to all of the callers and to anybody listening. [23:48.480 --> 23:51.480] And it came from the ninth circuit court of appeals, [23:51.480 --> 23:56.480] Lavender Marsh, and I quote, persons dealing with the government [23:56.480 --> 24:00.480] are charged with knowing government statutes and regulation. [24:00.480 --> 24:04.480] And they assume the risk that government agents [24:04.480 --> 24:09.480] may exceed their authority and provide misinformation. [24:09.480 --> 24:12.480] And boy, do they. [24:12.480 --> 24:14.480] What was that one again? [24:14.480 --> 24:16.480] This one I'm not familiar with. [24:16.480 --> 24:18.480] Really? [24:18.480 --> 24:21.480] Now that one you can send me a check for. [24:21.480 --> 24:24.480] Definitely do that. [24:24.480 --> 24:26.480] It was the ninth circuit court of appeal, [24:26.480 --> 24:31.480] Lavender Marsh in 1981. [24:31.480 --> 24:33.480] Lavender Marsh. [24:33.480 --> 24:35.480] 1981? [24:35.480 --> 24:37.480] 1981. [24:37.480 --> 24:40.480] Good. This is a great one. [24:40.480 --> 24:42.480] It really is. [24:42.480 --> 24:45.480] And I mean, when I found it, [24:45.480 --> 24:48.480] it completely pertained to my case and my situation, [24:48.480 --> 24:51.480] dealing with a speeding ticket, [24:51.480 --> 24:54.480] and put up nowhere bill, [24:54.480 --> 24:57.480] state and Texas, [24:57.480 --> 25:02.480] where I completely was railroaded by a municipal judge, [25:02.480 --> 25:05.480] completely oppressed. [25:05.480 --> 25:09.480] And now I'm on to the appeal process. [25:09.480 --> 25:14.480] And while I seem to be able to at least voice [25:14.480 --> 25:17.480] my argument to this judge, [25:17.480 --> 25:20.480] whereas in the municipal court, [25:20.480 --> 25:24.480] the overrule came just as soon as I said that I have [25:24.480 --> 25:27.480] a challenge of subject matter jurisdiction. [25:27.480 --> 25:31.480] That was about as far as I got before I was overruled. [25:31.480 --> 25:35.480] And of course, as I tried to begin to explain my position, [25:35.480 --> 25:37.480] was met with another overruled. [25:37.480 --> 25:40.480] And when I tried to get a third sentence in there, [25:40.480 --> 25:43.480] I was told that if I spoke another word on the subject, [25:43.480 --> 25:46.480] the judge was going to hold me in contempt of court. [25:46.480 --> 25:51.480] So, you know, for all your listeners out there [25:51.480 --> 25:56.480] that are in these battles, you know, stick with it. [25:56.480 --> 25:58.480] Don't let them bully you. [25:58.480 --> 26:03.480] I found myself in a counting court just two days ago, [26:03.480 --> 26:07.480] and, you know, I got caught recording them, [26:07.480 --> 26:10.480] and it thoroughly infuriated them. [26:10.480 --> 26:13.480] And if you'd have been a fly on the wall, [26:13.480 --> 26:17.480] you would have really enjoyed watching the judge [26:17.480 --> 26:20.480] just sit and squirm in his little throne, [26:20.480 --> 26:22.480] trying to make the math work [26:22.480 --> 26:25.480] on how he could either hold me in contempt of court [26:25.480 --> 26:27.480] or have one of the sheriffs, [26:27.480 --> 26:31.480] that he slapped a cuffs on me and hauled me away. [26:31.480 --> 26:33.480] But he couldn't do it. [26:33.480 --> 26:36.480] And he knew he was in a bad spot. [26:36.480 --> 26:40.480] And, boy, you could tell he wanted to so badly. [26:40.480 --> 26:44.480] And, you know, the lessons that I have learned [26:44.480 --> 26:48.480] in all of my research and all the people that called into the show [26:48.480 --> 26:50.480] and the people that I've talked to [26:50.480 --> 26:55.480] allowed me to stand tall with fact and law on my side. [26:55.480 --> 27:00.480] And I walked out of there that day with a reset. [27:00.480 --> 27:03.480] I tried to hold him to a summary ruling at that moment, [27:03.480 --> 27:08.480] but he was just completely unwilling to go that route. [27:08.480 --> 27:14.480] But now, this is where the worm begins to turn. [27:14.480 --> 27:19.480] And it has started turning. It has started turning. [27:19.480 --> 27:23.480] Well, I was speaking to this case in Newark earlier, [27:23.480 --> 27:28.480] and these people, Newark really came after them big time. [27:28.480 --> 27:32.480] And everything they did, they just ignored it. [27:32.480 --> 27:34.480] They filed a challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [27:34.480 --> 27:36.480] They didn't respond to it. [27:36.480 --> 27:38.480] We filed a motion for summary judgment [27:38.480 --> 27:41.480] on the subject matter jurisdiction challenge [27:41.480 --> 27:44.480] that court refused to set a hearing. [27:44.480 --> 27:48.480] And these folks are feeling like they're just, [27:48.480 --> 27:51.480] you know, it doesn't matter what they do. [27:51.480 --> 27:56.480] As a matter of fact, Tim. [27:56.480 --> 27:57.480] Yes, sir. [27:57.480 --> 27:59.480] This is the guy. [27:59.480 --> 28:03.480] And what the real reason they're going after him for [28:03.480 --> 28:06.480] is because he came on this radio show [28:06.480 --> 28:09.480] and talked about their misdeeds. [28:09.480 --> 28:13.480] And they came after him to interfere with their [28:13.480 --> 28:16.480] First Amendment rights. [28:16.480 --> 28:19.480] So he hit him with a slap suit. [28:19.480 --> 28:22.480] So, Tim. [28:22.480 --> 28:23.480] Yes, sir. [28:23.480 --> 28:28.480] Can you empathize with Jason [28:28.480 --> 28:30.480] and go in before the court and feel like [28:30.480 --> 28:33.480] they're just feeling like they're just railroad now? [28:33.480 --> 28:37.480] Well, it's like the attorney union. [28:37.480 --> 28:40.480] They just get together because that's how they make their living [28:40.480 --> 28:43.480] off of guys like us. [28:43.480 --> 28:44.480] You know, we don't know the law. [28:44.480 --> 28:45.480] They know the law. [28:45.480 --> 28:47.480] They're the professionals. [28:47.480 --> 28:49.480] So we need somebody like Randy Kelton, [28:49.480 --> 28:53.480] who's spent the last 30-something years [28:53.480 --> 28:56.480] studying this stuff to try to find out [28:56.480 --> 29:00.480] what is wrong with this, like you said earlier, [29:00.480 --> 29:04.480] gone behind the curtain, seeing who the wizard really is. [29:04.480 --> 29:09.480] So looking at it, it scares you to death [29:09.480 --> 29:13.480] because you think they started out. [29:13.480 --> 29:17.480] Actually, the first day of court that we went in, [29:17.480 --> 29:19.480] I didn't really know what to expect. [29:19.480 --> 29:20.480] I asked for a hearing. [29:20.480 --> 29:22.480] They said a trial day. [29:22.480 --> 29:25.480] I thought it's a hearing. [29:25.480 --> 29:28.480] We go inside there, and there's a little table [29:28.480 --> 29:31.480] on the right-hand side, and there's a sign-in sheet, [29:31.480 --> 29:36.480] and it shows my name and every vehicle [29:36.480 --> 29:39.480] that they have filed a complaint against me on. [29:39.480 --> 29:43.480] And there was $40 fine for each vehicle, [29:43.480 --> 29:45.480] and then $61 court costs for each vehicle, [29:45.480 --> 29:48.480] which made $808. [29:48.480 --> 29:50.480] Well, I grabbed it and went up there. [29:50.480 --> 29:54.480] And of course, the attorney prosecutor [29:54.480 --> 29:57.480] takes us to the back room, which I was caught off guard with that. [29:57.480 --> 30:00.480] I didn't know what we were doing. [30:00.480 --> 30:01.480] If you shop online, [30:01.480 --> 30:03.480] chances are a vendor is sizing you up [30:03.480 --> 30:06.480] and setting prices according to what they think you'll pay. [30:06.480 --> 30:08.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [30:08.480 --> 30:10.480] and I'll be back in a moment with some tips [30:10.480 --> 30:14.480] to protect yourself from discriminatory pricing. [30:14.480 --> 30:16.480] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.480 --> 30:18.480] When you give up data about yourself, [30:18.480 --> 30:19.480] you'll never get it back again. [30:19.480 --> 30:21.480] And once your privacy is gone, [30:21.480 --> 30:24.480] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.480 --> 30:26.480] So protect your rights. [30:26.480 --> 30:29.480] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:29.480 --> 30:32.480] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.480 --> 30:36.480] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:36.480 --> 30:40.480] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.480 --> 30:43.480] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.480 --> 30:47.480] Internet retailers are hunting for easy prey in the online jungle. [30:47.480 --> 30:48.480] Without warning, [30:48.480 --> 30:50.480] they might charge you more than another customer [30:50.480 --> 30:54.480] for the exact same item based on your web browser and visit history. [30:54.480 --> 30:58.480] Capital One Bank reportedly charges higher interest rates to Firefox users. [30:58.480 --> 31:02.480] An Amazon got caught raising prices based on buyer cookies, [31:02.480 --> 31:05.480] codes stored on people's computer that link to their purchase history. [31:05.480 --> 31:08.480] While this is infuriating, it's perfectly legal. [31:08.480 --> 31:10.480] Your best defense is to delete cookies, [31:10.480 --> 31:12.480] shop around for the best price, [31:12.480 --> 31:14.480] make notes, and take your sweet time. [31:14.480 --> 31:16.480] And before you make a large purchase, [31:16.480 --> 31:18.480] you may want to have someone else check the deal [31:18.480 --> 31:20.480] using a different computer and browser. [31:20.480 --> 31:22.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:22.480 --> 31:51.480] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:52.480 --> 31:57.480] See what our powder seeds and oil can do for you. [31:57.480 --> 31:59.480] www.TexasUSA.org [32:27.480 --> 32:34.480] This rule of law radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:34.480 --> 32:40.480] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:40.480 --> 32:47.480] By ordering now you will receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:47.480 --> 32:50.480] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.480 --> 32:54.480] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.480 --> 32:59.480] By ordering your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [33:24.480 --> 33:26.480] www.TexasUSA.org [33:54.480 --> 34:14.480] It's hard not to when you're in one of these. What I wanted to go to is they did all this stuff. They did everything wrong and Tim wanted to start filing complaints and grievances and I kept asking him to hold off because I hadn't finished screwing up. [34:14.480 --> 34:25.480] And he was not happy because they're really hammering him and he wants to hammer back. I can't blame him for that. [34:25.480 --> 34:35.480] But he held off and we just landed on him like a ton of bricks. So Tim, how does it feel now? [34:35.480 --> 34:54.480] You know, we did it. You know, first thing you had to do, of course, was the grand jury. And we had to meet with the DA to get him to sign that he had accepted our indictments to go before the grand jury. [34:54.480 --> 35:07.480] And, you know, when we walked out of there we were, well, we did it now. And then when we filed the other paperwork, we got through mailing it off, you know, getting it notarized. [35:07.480 --> 35:17.480] Okay, hold on Tim, hold on. They filed suit against him to collect these fees they assessed against him improperly. [35:17.480 --> 35:31.480] We responded to their suit with a countersuit and sued the lawyers, sued the city. They appointed this administrative board and used them improperly. [35:31.480 --> 35:42.480] So we sued all the members of the administrative board. Those guys are going to be furious because they did what they were told to do. [35:42.480 --> 35:53.480] I think you and I spoke about this and said that the attorneys will probably tell everybody, don't worry, this is just a tactic. They're trying to get out of this. We'll take care of it. [35:53.480 --> 36:08.480] Well, their problem is we have criminal charges against these board members before the grand jury as well. And they're going to be getting a call from the investigator for the district attorney's office. [36:08.480 --> 36:16.480] And the lawyer is going to tell them not to worry. But the lawyer is being charged and sued too. [36:16.480 --> 36:27.480] Yeah, and the attorneys cannot represent anyone named in these suits except themselves. [36:27.480 --> 36:36.480] Exactly. Let's dance, guys. How's this working out for you? [36:36.480 --> 36:45.480] If they sent him to represent these other people, then we can say that's a misappropriation of city funds, correct? [36:45.480 --> 36:47.480] That's baritry. [36:47.480 --> 36:54.480] Oh, it's baritry. I thought you meant on the city's dime. [36:54.480 --> 37:16.480] Yeah, they created this litigation. So we charged the lawyers with baritry, felony baritry, with the grand jury, with conspiring criminal conspiracy 1502 with the members of the administrative board. [37:16.480 --> 37:21.480] And I think was it official oppression? I think it's official oppression. [37:21.480 --> 37:27.480] Yes. So we have three criminal complaints against all of them. [37:27.480 --> 37:41.480] And now this board that they picked because the board was biased. I mean, the first month or two, everything they did was just outrageously wrong. [37:41.480 --> 37:50.480] And just like you, Jason, you're looking at these guys doing everything outrageously wrong. And on the front end, you just got to put up with it. [37:50.480 --> 37:55.480] And then you get to the point to where you get your shot at them. [37:55.480 --> 38:03.480] We put in a bar grievance against the lawyer and included the criminal complaints against the lawyer. [38:03.480 --> 38:14.480] Now, this week, we didn't get to it. We were supposed to put in a complaint by Tim's wife under open records. [38:14.480 --> 38:25.480] And the next week, Tim put in another complaint, one against the second lawyer and against the lawyer who's the head of the law firm. [38:25.480 --> 38:33.480] And each week, we'll file something different. So just steady pepper them. [38:33.480 --> 38:43.480] Turnabouts fair play. It gets a lot more fun when you're the one going after them instead of them coming after you. [38:43.480 --> 38:48.480] The point of this is it's really hard on the front end. And I'll get back to you in a bit, Tim. [38:48.480 --> 38:56.480] I didn't really want to interrupt Jason. I just wanted him to hear from somebody who's in a similar spot. [38:56.480 --> 39:02.480] And Jason, now you're ready for the fun part. [39:02.480 --> 39:13.480] I'll be honest with you. I had a tough time by my lip and just letting it all just roll off my back. And I knew it was means to an end. [39:13.480 --> 39:23.480] And I'm not a sue and get rich kind of person, but these people need to be hit where it hurts them the most. [39:23.480 --> 39:31.480] And that's their pocketbook and their power because they're abusing it. [39:31.480 --> 39:38.480] And now once you start going back after them, you will be surprised how satisfying it is. [39:38.480 --> 39:47.480] And I do warn people about this part of it. This can get to be way too much fun. [39:47.480 --> 40:04.480] Well, I'll be completely honest with you. It would be, and I don't doubt you, but I could not even begin to convey in two words the level of satisfaction that I had standing in front of that county judge [40:04.480 --> 40:18.480] with three, four, five bailiffs starting to creep up behind me waiting for him to give an order that would have made a bad situation that much worse for him. [40:18.480 --> 40:28.480] And to just stand there, tall, proud, unnerved, unbothered, it was worth its weight and gold. [40:28.480 --> 40:40.480] And that may have been one of the reasons the judge was having so much difficulty because you weren't reacting in the responding the way he expected. [40:40.480 --> 40:52.480] Absolutely. I can guarantee you that. In fact, he got so frustrated with me, he looked at me and asked me if I had any intention of hiring an attorney. [40:52.480 --> 41:04.480] And he was probably at the peak of his frustration. And my first response to it was, well, judge, I don't know how you could possibly expect me to answer that question. [41:04.480 --> 41:09.480] I have no idea what it is you're about to do next. [41:09.480 --> 41:18.480] And then I followed, and then after he sat and squirmed in his chair a few more times, grinding his teeth, still trying to make the math work in his head. [41:18.480 --> 41:30.480] And it later said, I can honestly say at this point that I seriously doubt it. I am of sound mind and of reasonable intelligence. [41:30.480 --> 41:37.480] So unless you question that, I guess you're within your discretion to hold a competency hearing. [41:37.480 --> 41:44.480] But I have no desire to make myself a ward of the court. [41:44.480 --> 41:49.480] That's good. And he knew exactly what you meant. [41:49.480 --> 41:54.480] That you were well aware that the most dangerous man in the courtroom is your lawyer. [41:54.480 --> 42:03.480] And if you hired a lawyer, he would be standing in front of that judge dangling by his bar card. [42:03.480 --> 42:10.480] That reminds me, I went to Australia to do some seminars down there. [42:10.480 --> 42:15.480] And when I got there, picked me up at the airport, went straight to the high court. [42:15.480 --> 42:21.480] And they've got this guy in there. You can get away with a lot more with the judges in Australia than here. [42:21.480 --> 42:24.480] He is crawling down this judge's throat. [42:24.480 --> 42:29.480] And the judge keeps telling him he's trying to protect his mother's estate. [42:29.480 --> 42:33.480] He keeps trying to tell him that he needs to get a lawyer. [42:33.480 --> 42:40.480] And I don't need no Sarcester lawyer and he's climbing down the throat, judge's throat, and the judge got frustrated. [42:40.480 --> 42:45.480] And finally said, Mr. Brown, you really need to get a lawyer. [42:45.480 --> 42:50.480] I can control a lawyer. I can't control you. [42:50.480 --> 42:56.480] And we all looked at each other with this. Did he really say that look? [42:56.480 --> 43:02.480] And we knew he felt it, but this he was so frustrated he actually said it. [43:02.480 --> 43:11.480] That's exactly true. The judge knows what to expect from the lawyer because he can pretty well control it. [43:11.480 --> 43:16.480] But the pros say, you're the most dangerous man in the courtroom. [43:16.480 --> 43:23.480] And his problem was that you knew you were the most dangerous man in the courtroom. [43:23.480 --> 43:27.480] So that gets better. [43:27.480 --> 43:33.480] His next question to me after that was, he asked me when I wanted to come back. [43:33.480 --> 43:44.480] To which I responded with, well, I'd like a summary judgment right now to get a case dismissed with prejudice not ever have to come back. [43:44.480 --> 43:52.480] Of course, he wanted to know, well, how about short of that? [43:52.480 --> 43:59.480] Well, it sounds like you got his attention. Hang on. Be right back. [44:22.480 --> 44:33.480] Taurus PT-111 G2 9mm Pistol from Defense Distributed 3rd Place AR-308 80% Lower 4th Place AR-15 80% Lower [44:33.480 --> 44:37.480] From Fat Sal's Deli 5th Place $100 Gift Card for Fat Sal's Deli. [44:37.480 --> 44:42.480] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. That's LogosRadioNetwork.com [44:42.480 --> 44:47.480] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [44:47.480 --> 44:54.480] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get ten chances to win. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:54.480 --> 45:00.480] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [45:00.480 --> 45:03.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.480 --> 45:07.480] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [45:07.480 --> 45:15.480] The affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.480 --> 45:22.480] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.480 --> 45:27.480] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.480 --> 45:34.480] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.480 --> 45:43.480] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.480 --> 45:52.480] You can also receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.480 --> 45:56.480] Please visit Lulavlogradio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.480 --> 46:25.480] You can call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:25.480 --> 46:33.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Lulavlogradio on this Friday, the third day of November 2017. [46:33.480 --> 46:40.480] And we're talking to Jason in Texas. Go ahead, Jason. [46:40.480 --> 46:51.480] Well, you know, if there's any, if there's only just a few things that I would want your listeners to know, you know, I'm grateful that you're here and that you put on the show and you put out this information. [46:51.480 --> 46:56.480] And as a citizen, I am tired of a corrupt system. [46:56.480 --> 47:06.480] I'm tired of seeing the YouTube videos of people, you know, being dragged out of their cars, having their windows busted out. [47:06.480 --> 47:18.480] Or even the nurse in Utah who just settled her suit for getting yanked out of her place of work because she refused to violate another citizen's rights. [47:18.480 --> 47:23.480] It takes brave citizens to stand up to these people and they make it very hard to do. [47:23.480 --> 47:30.480] I mean, they are very intimidating. They've been doing it a very long time and they are very, very good at it. [47:30.480 --> 47:42.480] But if you are as tired of it as I am, you know, I would not suggest, you know, going down, speeding down any road you can in an effort to get pulled over. [47:42.480 --> 47:56.480] But should you find yourself locked in with these tyrannical public servants, all I can ask as a fellow citizen is to take a stand. [47:56.480 --> 48:01.480] This needs to change and the sooner, the better. [48:01.480 --> 48:09.480] I have children in their 20s, you know, I fear them getting pulled over. [48:09.480 --> 48:18.480] These guys are good at escalating situations. Like I said, they've been playing this game a very long time. [48:18.480 --> 48:30.480] I'm grateful to people like Tim who is farther along his process with his wife than I am for sticking it out, having the backbone and taking a stand. [48:30.480 --> 48:35.480] We need more of that and the system will change. [48:35.480 --> 48:41.480] I think, you know, when judges, go ahead. [48:41.480 --> 48:49.480] Well, I was going to say, you know, one judicial conduct complaint from me, you know, on its own is not a big deal. [48:49.480 --> 49:04.480] But, you know, if the review board starts to get 50 judicial conduct complaints from various different citizens, you know, it starts to paint a picture that cannot be ignored. [49:04.480 --> 49:10.480] And whether it's in the state of Texas, the state of New York, or in Arizona, it doesn't matter where it is. [49:10.480 --> 49:21.480] You know, the more people that take a stand and play the game their way and file the complaint, don't let it go. [49:21.480 --> 49:26.480] Get back in their grill and take the fight to them. [49:26.480 --> 49:35.480] And the review boards will probably get so sick of seeing the same name, judges, I've got to believe, will start getting removed. [49:35.480 --> 49:42.480] And one thing that happens, Scott Richardson, he got a ticket Monday. [49:42.480 --> 49:46.480] He filed all of my documents Tuesday. [49:46.480 --> 49:49.480] He filed suit Wednesday. [49:49.480 --> 49:53.480] He tore it letter to the mayor Thursday. [49:53.480 --> 50:02.480] I mean, he is right on them and I can guarantee you, every judge in Texas knows Scott Richardson's name. [50:02.480 --> 50:12.480] When you start hammering these guys, they all talk to all the other judges and, you know, when one court gets something they haven't seen before, [50:12.480 --> 50:18.480] they tell all the other judges what's happening and they try to figure out how to handle these things. [50:18.480 --> 50:22.480] So when you start going after them, all of them know. [50:22.480 --> 50:29.480] So if you hammer a judge, you're hammering good, all the other judges are going to know you've done that. [50:29.480 --> 50:36.480] So if we can get a few people all over the state hammering these judges from every direction, [50:36.480 --> 50:44.480] they will start changing their behaviors to keep from winding up in the situation the judges are hearing about are. [50:44.480 --> 50:52.480] We just had one that's a friend of Scott's in somewhere in the Houston area. [50:52.480 --> 50:57.480] File criminal charges against him for not giving him an examining trial. [50:57.480 --> 51:06.480] And then he got arrested on a warrant from a different citation where he had failed to appear or something. [51:06.480 --> 51:19.480] And they brought him before a judge in the same county and the judge said, this is an examining trial and held an examining trial and dismissed the case against him. [51:19.480 --> 51:25.480] The guy behind him, they held one for him and dismissed the case on him. [51:25.480 --> 51:28.480] So he got their attention. [51:28.480 --> 51:35.480] And I looked at that and I said, you know, this judge had been doing what he was trying to do. [51:35.480 --> 51:40.480] He was doing what the judges before him had done. [51:40.480 --> 51:53.480] And then Jason come in and hammered in big time and he backed up and looked at our pleadings and went and read the code and found that our pleadings were dead on code. [51:53.480 --> 51:56.480] And he said, they're right. [51:56.480 --> 51:58.480] This is what the law says. [51:58.480 --> 52:03.480] And once it was clear to him what the law says, he followed it. [52:03.480 --> 52:07.480] I think we've got a lot of judges out there that will do that. [52:07.480 --> 52:18.480] Well, my judge is not quite there yet because I got the transportation code, the criminal procedure codes and the penal code. [52:18.480 --> 52:22.480] I went to Texas.gov and I pulled it. [52:22.480 --> 52:33.480] Maybe I went to DOT, Department of Transportation, TechSci, and I found the complete codes and that they have them downloadable in PDF format. [52:33.480 --> 52:41.480] And I printed the relevant section when I appeared at my arraignment a couple days ago. [52:41.480 --> 52:53.480] And, you know, he and I even were so kind as to even highlighted the relevant sections for him so it was easy for his eyes to find and he could read it for himself. [52:53.480 --> 52:55.480] Still wasn't satisfied. [52:55.480 --> 53:08.480] He wanted to go get his own code book that he had on a shelf somewhere in another office and then became so frustrated that he opted for, you know, a 30-day reset. [53:08.480 --> 53:15.480] And then, of course, you know, in the interim of all that, it came to light that I was recording and I was making an audio recording. [53:15.480 --> 53:20.480] And that, you know, I did it for my protection. [53:20.480 --> 53:26.480] And boy, that's when things really, really started to get heated. [53:26.480 --> 53:30.480] Did they make you turn off your recording device? [53:30.480 --> 53:32.480] No. [53:32.480 --> 53:57.480] I had my phone in my breast pocket and while the judge was frustratingly looking through the code book that he finally had retrieved to the bailiff, and we're two-thirds the way through the proceeding at this point, the bailiff locks up to me and asked me if my phone in my breast pocket was off. [53:57.480 --> 53:59.480] And, you know, I didn't care. [53:59.480 --> 54:02.480] I said, no, it's not. [54:02.480 --> 54:05.480] It's as awful as, you know, it's as awful as I can make it. [54:05.480 --> 54:09.480] It won't ring and it won't vibrate, so it won't disrupt this proceeding. [54:09.480 --> 54:13.480] So then his next question to me was, is, well, are you recording? [54:13.480 --> 54:16.480] And without hesitation, I am. [54:16.480 --> 54:18.480] Yes, I am. [54:18.480 --> 54:35.480] And the judge heard that answer and just knew that's when he taught me most I rate and really started working hard on the math to get me locked up or held in contempt of court. [54:35.480 --> 54:53.480] He tried to tell me that insist that I was way out of bounds for making that recording. I pointed out to him that I was well within my legal right to record my public officers, any public servant while at work. [54:53.480 --> 55:06.480] And he fired back with, well, not, it's off limits in this court. And of course, I fired back with, well, why is an open proceeding? You are a public servant. [55:06.480 --> 55:14.480] The prosecutor here is a public servant. All these bailiffs behind me here are public servants and you're all at work. [55:14.480 --> 55:23.480] He's explaining to me how this is, how this wouldn't apply here. And he could, and he got more frustrated. [55:23.480 --> 55:32.480] He assured me that I was out of bounds and I said, well, I'm 100% sure I'm well within my legal right. [55:32.480 --> 55:36.480] And I quoted him off Turner v. Driver. [55:36.480 --> 55:51.480] And, you know, he sat there grinding his teeth and doing the math in his head and probably the most frustratingly disgustingly way he went ahead and set the order to reset and dismiss. [55:51.480 --> 55:58.480] I think you don't realize what a major win that was. [55:58.480 --> 56:12.480] Oh, I do. My last experience in the municipal court. Oh, I know. Probably one of the biggest victories I've probably ever experienced, as she told. [56:12.480 --> 56:17.480] They caught you recording and didn't even make you turn it off. [56:17.480 --> 56:32.480] Now, the bailiff went ahead and asked me to put my phone. I have a briefcase that I take with me everywhere. And so, of course, I had that thing wide open the whole time, but my phone was in my breast pocket of my shirt. [56:32.480 --> 56:47.480] And, you know, once I answered yes, after the judge became my ray, he leaned over and asked me to put my phone in my briefcase. And so I did. I took it right out of my breast pocket and I set it right inside my briefcase that's wide open. [56:47.480 --> 57:08.480] And I would say maybe 60 seconds to a minute went by and then the bailiff decided to take his finger and use it to close my briefcase. And I checked the recording. It didn't matter. I still got everything clear as a bell, everything that went on, even after he attempted to close my briefcase. [57:08.480 --> 57:19.480] They never wanted to ask me to turn it off. And, you know, they weren't as so foolish as to try and take it from me. And I said, I was prepared for that. [57:19.480 --> 57:36.480] That tells me that Turner Driver is making the rounds around the court. Scott Richardson was in court and I told the bailiff to go instruct, tell the judge that I intend to record the proceedings. [57:36.480 --> 57:43.480] The bailiff went up there and told him the judge said he wouldn't allow it. The bailiff come back and said the judge said he wouldn't allow it. [57:43.480 --> 57:52.480] And I said, okay, I'm going to want you to take my criminal complaint against the judge as soon as I get it written up here. So I get it written up and I give it to him. [57:52.480 --> 58:01.480] He said he wanted me to give it to the judge. Oh, no, you can't give it to the judge. He's the criminal. You need to give that to the district attorney. [58:01.480 --> 58:09.480] And he said, oh, okay. I never heard anything more about it. And I didn't have time to chase that one down. [58:09.480 --> 58:21.480] But very good chance, me doing this and a number of other people doing this, that Turner Driver is getting around and they're finding out that you actually can record and they can't stop you. [58:21.480 --> 58:30.480] This is a really good sign. You got a really upset judge and he still doesn't stop you because he already knew about Turner Driver. [58:30.480 --> 58:35.480] Hang on. I'm about to go to break. Randy Kelton, ReelVal Radio. [58:35.480 --> 58:49.480] I call it number 512-646-1984. We've got three more callers, so we need to move along when we come back so we can get to everybody. We'll be right back. [58:49.480 --> 59:00.480] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.480 --> 59:12.480] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.480 --> 59:27.480] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.480 --> 59:49.480] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.480 --> 59:59.480] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:20.480 --> 01:00:46.480] Markets for Friday the 27th of October, 2017. Closed with gold, $1,273.86 an ounce. Silver, $16.86 an ounce. Texas Crude, $52.64 a barrel. Bitcoin, sitting about $5,785 and dash coins about $280 U.S. currency. [01:00:46.480 --> 01:00:57.480] Today in History, the year 1988, then-President Ronald Reagan suspended construction of the new U.S. Embassy in Moscow due to Soviet spying devices in the structure of the building. [01:00:57.480 --> 01:01:02.480] Today in History. [01:01:02.480 --> 01:01:16.480] In recent years, President Trump failed to comply with the secrecy law of 1992 via his approval of only partial declassification of some 2,800 classified files released on Thursday concerning the conspiratorial assassination of President John F. Kennedy. [01:01:16.480 --> 01:01:37.480] This is particularly odd considering President Trump tweeted the day before the release that, quote, the long-anticipated release of the JFK files will take place tomorrow. So interesting. However, it turns out that President Trump, in fact, ordered a withholding of some 300 or so files President Trump tweeted today that the, quote, JFK files are being carefully released. [01:01:37.480 --> 01:01:48.480] In the end, there will be great transparency. This might help to get just about everything to the public. It is clear, however, what is really occurring. The President is being threatened by the intelligentsia to redact. [01:01:48.480 --> 01:02:05.480] In a presidential memorandum released the same day as the documents President Trump stated that the, quote, executive departments and agencies have proposed to me that certain information should continue to be redacted because of national security, law enforcement and foreign affairs concerns. [01:02:05.480 --> 01:02:17.480] I have no choice today but to accept those redactions rather than allow potentially irreversible harm to our nation's security. [01:02:17.480 --> 01:02:42.480] On a lighter topic, earlier this week, a hunter in a wooded area north of Waco called police after he stumbled upon a lot of ganja, roughly 10,000 plants and 13 separate locales, after police found it and stole it all. On a sheriff's office's Facebook post, they stated that, quote, based on the sophistication of the operation as well as the size of it, it was determined it may well be the largest operation of its kind ever located in Hill Country. [01:02:42.480 --> 01:02:51.480] It took three days for forensic investigators to gather evidence from the scene and to eradicate the plants. Investigators have yet to identify the farmers. [01:02:51.480 --> 01:03:14.480] This is Brooke Rodey with Hill Lowdown for October 27th, 2017. [01:03:21.480 --> 01:03:49.480] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Jason in Texas. [01:03:49.480 --> 01:03:56.480] Jason, we need to finish up. I've got three more callers and just four more segments. [01:03:56.480 --> 01:04:17.480] No problem. I'll let you guys go. Thank you for the good work that you do to my fellow citizens. Keep fighting a good fight. And when I get a little further through this process, I'll make those audio recordings available to whoever wants to post them on YouTube so everybody can gauge what you might be up against when you find yourself in this situation. [01:04:17.480 --> 01:04:30.480] Wonderful. Okay, thank you, Jason. Now we're going to Larry in Arizona. Wait, I just lost Larry in Arizona. [01:04:30.480 --> 01:04:49.480] Okay, Debra showed back. She's in the studio now, so she may be screening him. So I'm going to give just a second in case none of these callers are screened. I haven't had a producer here today, so I've been running the board myself. [01:04:49.480 --> 01:04:59.480] So Debra may be screening it. I don't want to go to another caller. Let me go to Tim while I'm waiting for to see if Larry in Arizona comes back. [01:04:59.480 --> 01:05:05.480] There we go. Okay, Tim, you had a question or comment? [01:05:05.480 --> 01:05:21.480] Yeah, I was just going to say that you and I were discussing earlier today that we're really not wanting to go after people just to go after people. We're trying to change the system. [01:05:21.480 --> 01:05:38.480] So that people who are supposed to be responsible to the public take that very serious and instead they've been able to run rampant on our rights and everybody just gives up. [01:05:38.480 --> 01:05:44.480] I don't know how many times I've heard it. Okay, just what do I need to do so I get back to my life? [01:05:44.480 --> 01:06:04.480] What I was going to say earlier is that they started out, I would have had an $808 fine originally, and because I didn't go in and say guilty, then the next thing they did was hit me with 10 times that amount, $8,000, plus other fees. [01:06:04.480 --> 01:06:15.480] Now they're hitting me with 10 times that and they're not answering anything that I bring forward to them. [01:06:15.480 --> 01:06:29.480] So it looks like they have a nice little club that they have put together for the past 100 years or so to where they intimidate people into just giving up their money along with their rights. [01:06:29.480 --> 01:06:35.480] And now this time it's not going to work so well for them. [01:06:35.480 --> 01:06:51.480] This is a very small municipality and the amount that you're claiming so far will cripple their budget, but you're not even close to done yet. [01:06:51.480 --> 01:07:03.480] It's beginning to change and now they're in a position to where they have to respond. [01:07:03.480 --> 01:07:19.480] We're waiting because in the answer that we wrote and the counterclaim, in the counterclaim a very specifically referenced federal constitution. [01:07:19.480 --> 01:07:30.480] So we're waiting to see if they're going to remove this to the federal court because if they don't remove it to the federal court, we will remove it to the federal court. [01:07:30.480 --> 01:07:40.480] We want them to so they have to pay the federal court fees, rather than us, but in either case this is going to the federal court. [01:07:40.480 --> 01:07:47.480] And then we want the federal court to look back on the due process violations. [01:07:47.480 --> 01:08:03.480] And somehow I don't think the federal courts are going to look on these due process violations with the same tolerance that the state might. [01:08:03.480 --> 01:08:18.480] Or at least these lawyers are not going to expect them to, whether they would or not, the lawyers are not going to trust the state court not to screw them, I mean the federal court not to screw them around. [01:08:18.480 --> 01:08:23.480] So we're turning the heat up and what we're doing is strategic. [01:08:23.480 --> 01:08:36.480] We're not just throwing together anything we can and tossing it at them, we've sat down and thought about it, figured out what's the best way to go after these guys and what do we want at the end of the day. [01:08:36.480 --> 01:08:48.480] And here at the end of the day we want the city and these members of the administrative board we've sued to throw the lawyers under the bus. [01:08:48.480 --> 01:08:59.480] Makes it, they'll win our case for us, trying to get out from under our claims to them. [01:08:59.480 --> 01:09:01.480] You've got to have a strategy and we got one. [01:09:01.480 --> 01:09:03.480] Okay, Tim, I need to move on. [01:09:03.480 --> 01:09:08.480] We've, we're running out of time and I still got a bunch of callers. [01:09:08.480 --> 01:09:31.480] But you've got to keep calling in and this is important because we, because Tim calls into this show, we maintained that part of the reason of that frivolous lawsuit they filed was to prevent him from calling into this show and telling everybody what a bunch of scoundrels the city of New York, Texas is. [01:09:31.480 --> 01:09:37.480] And that makes their suit a slap suit and a special legislation for that. [01:09:37.480 --> 01:09:41.480] So we're having great fun at their expense. [01:09:41.480 --> 01:09:44.480] Okay, thank you Tim. [01:09:44.480 --> 01:09:50.480] Now we're going to go to Brett in Texas. Hello, Brett. [01:09:50.480 --> 01:09:53.480] Good evening, Randy. [01:09:53.480 --> 01:10:06.480] Thank you for everything you're doing with these, helping so many people and giving your time to, to bring us all the benefit of your research. [01:10:06.480 --> 01:10:11.480] I am with my, my situation right now. [01:10:11.480 --> 01:10:15.480] I'm trying to get to a point where I'm, I feel physically safe. [01:10:15.480 --> 01:10:17.480] I feel physically secure. [01:10:17.480 --> 01:10:26.480] My family, we feel secure and all this bogus warrants for arrest for ridiculous nonsense paperwork stuff that all of that can go away. [01:10:26.480 --> 01:10:32.480] And I know that part of that is going to be suing them and I don't know how to sue them. [01:10:32.480 --> 01:10:38.480] I know that part of that is appealing and I'm trying to figure that out as fast as I can. [01:10:38.480 --> 01:10:43.480] Okay, what is your circumstance at the moment? [01:10:43.480 --> 01:10:52.480] Well, with my most recent court case, they ruled against me, surprise, surprise. [01:10:52.480 --> 01:11:01.480] And they, they had all the evidence, they had all of, all of the, the law and the facts in front of them. [01:11:01.480 --> 01:11:06.480] And I had a, they ignored my every motion I put in there. [01:11:06.480 --> 01:11:10.480] They ignored the, the answer. [01:11:10.480 --> 01:11:20.480] I had 18 affirmative defenses to one count and two affirmative defenses to the second count. [01:11:20.480 --> 01:11:24.480] They had, it was a driving law license invalid with previous convictions. [01:11:24.480 --> 01:11:32.480] I had the two on the list, previous conviction, I had the 18 affirmative defenses on the driving law license invalid. [01:11:32.480 --> 01:11:38.480] They ignored all of that, ignored my counterclaim, just pretended it didn't exist. [01:11:38.480 --> 01:11:40.480] None of it. [01:11:40.480 --> 01:11:44.480] Wait a minute, wait a minute, did they not hear it? [01:11:44.480 --> 01:11:48.480] No. [01:11:48.480 --> 01:11:50.480] That's interesting. [01:11:50.480 --> 01:12:07.480] When you write the petition to court for redress of grievance, if you had the, if you had claims in and they didn't respond to the claims, then you charge the judge criminally. [01:12:07.480 --> 01:12:18.480] Before, yeah, it was in before, it was about six or seven months, but it was in the record before the bench trial. [01:12:18.480 --> 01:12:23.480] And it has now been about five weeks since the guilty verdict. [01:12:23.480 --> 01:12:25.480] They passed that thing the same day. [01:12:25.480 --> 01:12:27.480] We got the order in. [01:12:27.480 --> 01:12:30.480] He's been, everybody, we've been really slow about anything. [01:12:30.480 --> 01:12:41.480] But boy, with that order, as soon as he gave the guilty beyond the reasonable doubt, even when there was no evidence, somehow he found it was guilty beyond the reasonable doubt. [01:12:41.480 --> 01:12:48.480] I said, well, your honor, I do have a whole bunch of reasonable doubt to offer you. [01:12:48.480 --> 01:12:53.480] He said, well, we're beyond that, pass that now. [01:12:53.480 --> 01:12:57.480] So we need to, I need to figure out how to appeal. [01:12:57.480 --> 01:12:59.480] Wait, have you filed a notice of appeal? [01:12:59.480 --> 01:13:00.480] One facet. [01:13:00.480 --> 01:13:02.480] I'm sorry? [01:13:02.480 --> 01:13:05.480] Have you filed a notice of appeal? [01:13:05.480 --> 01:13:06.480] No, I haven't. [01:13:06.480 --> 01:13:25.480] The one where I filed a motion for reconsideration, and I provided a whole bunch of findings and facts and conclusions of law, and I was asking them to take my findings and facts and conclusions of law and dismiss the case. [01:13:25.480 --> 01:13:35.480] Or, in the alternative, the judge needed to provide his findings and facts and conclusions of law. [01:13:35.480 --> 01:13:38.480] So did you get a response on that? [01:13:38.480 --> 01:13:41.480] No response or anything. [01:13:41.480 --> 01:13:46.480] Okay, you've got 75 days. [01:13:46.480 --> 01:13:59.480] After 75 days, the petition for find it for reconsideration is considered denied by act of law. [01:13:59.480 --> 01:14:00.480] Okay. [01:14:00.480 --> 01:14:08.480] So now take your, the fact that he didn't respond to it, that's a good sign. [01:14:08.480 --> 01:14:14.480] So now you've got your brief halfway written. [01:14:14.480 --> 01:14:23.480] So now you just take that findings and facts and conclusions of law and turn it into a brief, and when it comes time, you're ready. [01:14:23.480 --> 01:14:26.480] Okay. [01:14:26.480 --> 01:14:31.480] You had mentioned something, I guess, I don't know, a few weeks ago. [01:14:31.480 --> 01:14:35.480] You mentioned something about one particular appeals court. [01:14:35.480 --> 01:14:36.480] Oh yeah, we know them. [01:14:36.480 --> 01:14:40.480] They have this characteristic they're tough to deal with or whatever. [01:14:40.480 --> 01:14:47.480] This particular one is Upshire County, and they have two concurrent appeals courts. [01:14:47.480 --> 01:14:58.480] I could appeal to, I think it's the 12th and maybe the 6th, they have two different appeals courts going out there. [01:14:58.480 --> 01:15:06.480] Do you have any suggestions about what I could research or how I could find out which one is better to deal with? [01:15:06.480 --> 01:15:10.480] Yeah, call a couple of lawyers. [01:15:10.480 --> 01:15:15.480] That's all in the area. [01:15:15.480 --> 01:15:17.480] Okay. [01:15:17.480 --> 01:15:36.480] Just call a couple of law officers and ask them, you know, tell them that you're trying to find out which appeals court they think would be better to appeal a license issue with. [01:15:36.480 --> 01:15:40.480] And this is the kind of thing lawyers would like to talk about that kind of stuff. [01:15:40.480 --> 01:15:41.480] Really? [01:15:41.480 --> 01:15:44.480] Okay. [01:15:44.480 --> 01:15:49.480] Oh, you might try a bailiff. [01:15:49.480 --> 01:15:51.480] Yeah, it's probably just call a lawyer. [01:15:51.480 --> 01:15:53.480] They'll be able to tell you. [01:15:53.480 --> 01:15:55.480] Okay. [01:15:55.480 --> 01:15:57.480] I'll take that, Jack. [01:15:57.480 --> 01:15:59.480] Well, how about suing people? [01:15:59.480 --> 01:16:07.480] I need to know how to get these people to hear you and Scott and people talking about so many suits. [01:16:07.480 --> 01:16:17.480] And, you know, Scott showed me a Title 42 federal suit and I think Jody was doing that one as well. [01:16:17.480 --> 01:16:28.480] I'm unclear about what I need to write and to whom it needs to go, what needs to accompany it, what's coming. [01:16:28.480 --> 01:16:30.480] Okay, that's not so hard. [01:16:30.480 --> 01:16:32.480] I've got a format for that. [01:16:32.480 --> 01:16:36.480] If you'll send me a request for it. [01:16:36.480 --> 01:16:47.480] I just have a setup where it starts out with a brief synopsis of what the case is about. [01:16:47.480 --> 01:16:50.480] You know, I'm suing for this purpose. [01:16:50.480 --> 01:16:53.480] And then you have a party section. [01:16:53.480 --> 01:16:54.480] You name the parties. [01:16:54.480 --> 01:16:56.480] Then you have a jurisdiction section. [01:16:56.480 --> 01:16:59.480] You state why the court has jurisdiction. [01:16:59.480 --> 01:17:00.480] I love logos. [01:17:00.480 --> 01:17:04.480] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.480 --> 01:17:07.480] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.480 --> 01:17:08.480] I need my truth spit. [01:17:08.480 --> 01:17:10.480] I'd be lost without logos. [01:17:10.480 --> 01:17:13.480] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.480 --> 01:17:16.480] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite. [01:17:16.480 --> 01:17:20.480] And I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.480 --> 01:17:22.480] How can I help logos? [01:17:22.480 --> 01:17:24.480] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:24.480 --> 01:17:29.480] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.480 --> 01:17:34.480] All you need to do is clear your cookies. Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:17:34.480 --> 01:17:37.480] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.480 --> 01:17:42.480] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:42.480 --> 01:17:43.480] Do I pay extra? [01:17:43.480 --> 01:17:44.480] No. [01:17:44.480 --> 01:17:46.480] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.480 --> 01:17:47.480] No. [01:17:47.480 --> 01:17:48.480] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:48.480 --> 01:17:49.480] No. [01:17:49.480 --> 01:17:50.480] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.480 --> 01:17:51.480] Wow. [01:17:51.480 --> 01:17:53.480] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:53.480 --> 01:17:55.480] This is perfect. [01:17:55.480 --> 01:17:56.480] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.480 --> 01:17:57.480] You're welcome. [01:17:57.480 --> 01:18:00.480] Happy holidays, logos. 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[01:19:24.480 --> 01:19:53.480] If I can't get everything I want to get a ranger, if I can't get everything I need to get a ranger, [01:19:53.480 --> 01:20:05.480] If people in the world can't get half the snsppe [01:20:05.480 --> 01:20:12.480] If we got a ranger, if we can't get all the crazy words to see [01:20:12.480 --> 01:20:14.480] If we got a ranger [01:20:14.480 --> 01:20:27.880] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with Law Radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas, [01:20:27.880 --> 01:20:38.080] and I just have a form that has all the sections in it, and is that available on your website? [01:20:38.080 --> 01:20:40.520] No, but I can send you a copy of one. [01:20:40.520 --> 01:20:46.040] I haven't built one for the purpose of putting it on the website yet, but I probably need [01:20:46.040 --> 01:20:51.120] to amongst about a thousand other things I need to do. [01:20:51.120 --> 01:20:57.280] But I will send you a basic form, and it just has all the sections. [01:20:57.280 --> 01:21:07.160] You have your brief statement, synopsis of the case, parties, jurisdiction, statement [01:21:07.160 --> 01:21:15.320] of facts, argument in support, causes of action, conclusion, prayer. [01:21:15.320 --> 01:21:16.820] You list all those out first. [01:21:16.820 --> 01:21:21.080] A whole lot like that writ of mandamus, very similar, chunks. [01:21:21.080 --> 01:21:22.080] Exactly. [01:21:22.080 --> 01:21:29.280] All of them, this is kind of a basic format for any motion or pleading. [01:21:29.280 --> 01:21:35.280] If it's a motion, you can take out the jurisdiction section and the parties section, but they always [01:21:35.280 --> 01:21:38.040] tend to lay out in the same order. [01:21:38.040 --> 01:21:43.960] A brief statement of what it's about, a statement of facts, argument in support. [01:21:43.960 --> 01:21:56.680] If it's a civil suit, then causes of action, conclusion, and prayer. [01:21:56.680 --> 01:22:01.160] We can in another show, we can talk about how to construct this thing. [01:22:01.160 --> 01:22:09.840] You actually start out at the end, you list out your causes of action, and then go to [01:22:09.840 --> 01:22:12.280] find pattern jury charges. [01:22:12.280 --> 01:22:14.680] You can look those up on the Internet. [01:22:14.680 --> 01:22:19.640] You find a pattern jury charge for each of your causes of action. [01:22:19.640 --> 01:22:25.600] Pattern jury charge is the last thing the judge is going to say to the jury. [01:22:25.600 --> 01:22:29.720] He's going to say, this is what you must find. [01:22:29.720 --> 01:22:33.480] This, this, this, and this. [01:22:33.480 --> 01:22:39.720] Once you've got the pattern jury charge, now you can write your complaint to make sure [01:22:39.720 --> 01:22:42.320] you've got all that in there. [01:22:42.320 --> 01:22:48.480] If you're arguing anything that's not in the pattern jury charge, you need to have a real [01:22:48.480 --> 01:22:55.600] good reason for arguing it because for the most part it's going to be irrelevant. [01:22:55.600 --> 01:23:02.440] The end of the day, the only thing that matters is the pattern jury charge. [01:23:02.440 --> 01:23:08.760] There's kind of a method of doing this, but at the end of the day, you're writing just [01:23:08.760 --> 01:23:11.040] an argument. [01:23:11.040 --> 01:23:12.680] You're explaining your position. [01:23:12.680 --> 01:23:20.160] It's just a little formal way of doing this for law, but it's not that difficult. [01:23:20.160 --> 01:23:27.120] With the documents you've already written, you probably have 90% of all of the work done [01:23:27.120 --> 01:23:28.120] already. [01:23:28.120 --> 01:23:33.600] You just have to move it from your other documents into your suit. [01:23:33.600 --> 01:23:34.600] Okay. [01:23:34.600 --> 01:23:35.600] All right. [01:23:35.600 --> 01:23:43.960] You've got my email, so I'll look forward to seeing that form. [01:23:43.960 --> 01:23:49.560] Now, is there somewhere that I can be researching as well to look at, I don't know, is it rules [01:23:49.560 --> 01:23:50.560] of civil procedure? [01:23:50.560 --> 01:23:51.560] Is it something? [01:23:51.560 --> 01:23:57.720] There's bound to be a sample or some kind of form that I can see, is it the rules of [01:23:57.720 --> 01:23:58.720] criminal procedure? [01:23:58.720 --> 01:23:59.720] I don't know. [01:23:59.720 --> 01:24:04.960] I was looking at PRAP and thought I figured out that was the wrong section, but that... [01:24:04.960 --> 01:24:11.320] Well, yeah, there are the rules of civil procedure. [01:24:11.320 --> 01:24:16.120] Try calling around to a couple of law firms and tell them that you're homeschooling your [01:24:16.120 --> 01:24:24.280] kids and you want to do just a basic course on law and ask them if they have any old copies [01:24:24.280 --> 01:24:31.640] of any litigation guides like O'Connor's. [01:24:31.640 --> 01:24:33.140] Eddie Craig did that. [01:24:33.140 --> 01:24:41.040] About the third call, they asked him if he had a truck and he filled up his truck. [01:24:41.040 --> 01:24:47.520] Civil litigation guide, you want a civil litigation guide or you can check the half-boss bookstores [01:24:47.520 --> 01:24:50.680] for O'Connor's civil litigation guide. [01:24:50.680 --> 01:24:52.800] Oh, that's wonderful. [01:24:52.800 --> 01:25:00.320] Thank God all of them, and if you can find, there's also O'Connor's causes of action. [01:25:00.320 --> 01:25:03.680] They tell you everything you need to know about every cause of action, how to argue it, [01:25:03.680 --> 01:25:07.480] how to argue against it, what case law to use. [01:25:07.480 --> 01:25:08.480] Those things are wonderful. [01:25:08.480 --> 01:25:12.080] They do 90% of your work for you. [01:25:12.080 --> 01:25:14.960] Wow, O'Connor's, okay. [01:25:14.960 --> 01:25:19.520] Yeah, and the lawyers, every time a new one comes out, they buy it because they don't [01:25:19.520 --> 01:25:21.520] want to be, quote, no law. [01:25:21.520 --> 01:25:22.920] But you don't care about that. [01:25:22.920 --> 01:25:29.080] You want to know what motions to file, how to write the motions, and if your case law [01:25:29.080 --> 01:25:32.520] is a little old, you don't care because 90% of it doesn't change. [01:25:32.520 --> 01:25:37.480] I mean, there's new case law, but the new case law sites the old case law and says the [01:25:37.480 --> 01:25:38.480] same thing. [01:25:38.480 --> 01:25:45.800] 90% of all of these issues are already well-defined in law so they don't change. [01:25:45.800 --> 01:25:49.720] So you can use an older one and you don't care, and probably the third or fourth law [01:25:49.720 --> 01:25:53.600] firm you call, they'll fill your truck full. [01:25:53.600 --> 01:25:55.120] Okay, great. [01:25:55.120 --> 01:25:58.840] I just emptied my truck, so that's great. [01:25:58.840 --> 01:26:05.000] So you think, am I on the right track here to getting these people to revoke warrants [01:26:05.000 --> 01:26:13.000] and to get my name in their computer like they've got Hugh and Scott and, you know, [01:26:13.000 --> 01:26:20.880] I think that the way it is right now, if I identify myself to any, maybe potentially [01:26:20.880 --> 01:26:26.000] even well-meaning officer, they're immediately going to get a bad report by looking on there [01:26:26.000 --> 01:26:29.000] and saying, oh, this guy has a warrant for his arrest. [01:26:29.000 --> 01:26:35.240] They may or may not notice that it says, well, there's paperwork next to it, but they're [01:26:35.240 --> 01:26:40.920] going to have the inclination that they need to throw me in the clique, so you think am [01:26:40.920 --> 01:26:45.000] I on the right track here to get these people to revoke warrants? [01:26:45.000 --> 01:26:49.720] Yeah, if you've got warrants, you need to go in and get them adjudicated. [01:26:49.720 --> 01:26:53.680] The warrant requires the person to arrest you and bring you before the court. [01:26:53.680 --> 01:26:58.880] So bring yourself before the court and then ask the court to withdraw the warrant because [01:26:58.880 --> 01:27:02.560] you're there. [01:27:02.560 --> 01:27:08.400] Get rid of those warrants so they don't have an option to arrest you and then go after [01:27:08.400 --> 01:27:09.400] them. [01:27:09.400 --> 01:27:11.400] What do you mean, get rid of the warrant? [01:27:11.400 --> 01:27:13.400] How do I get rid of the warrant? [01:27:13.400 --> 01:27:16.640] Go to the court. [01:27:16.640 --> 01:27:25.600] If you read a warrant, the warrant says, arrest this person and bring him before me. [01:27:25.600 --> 01:27:31.720] So whatever court issued the warrant, you walk up in front of the court and say, I'm [01:27:31.720 --> 01:27:32.720] here. [01:27:32.720 --> 01:27:33.720] Okay. [01:27:33.720 --> 01:27:36.840] Now, pull that warrant. [01:27:36.840 --> 01:27:38.800] Okay. [01:27:38.800 --> 01:27:43.960] So there's going to be jail time involved with me showing up there. [01:27:43.960 --> 01:27:45.600] They won't just grab me and throw me. [01:27:45.600 --> 01:27:48.120] Oh, and, you know, I can't do my work. [01:27:48.120 --> 01:27:49.120] How do I know? [01:27:49.120 --> 01:27:50.120] What do you have against you? [01:27:50.120 --> 01:27:56.960] Do you have a warrant based on jail time that's already been assessed? [01:27:56.960 --> 01:28:02.720] Have you been found guilty and been given jail time and no, no, no, no, then there's [01:28:02.720 --> 01:28:04.360] no jail time. [01:28:04.360 --> 01:28:05.360] Okay. [01:28:05.360 --> 01:28:10.560] That has to be adjudicated and the warrant is only for the purpose of getting you in [01:28:10.560 --> 01:28:12.520] front of the court. [01:28:12.520 --> 01:28:17.800] If you walk up in front of the court and then they arrest you, now you got, and then all [01:28:17.800 --> 01:28:23.400] it's going to be is arrest and bail, but now you've got a major false arrest charge. [01:28:23.400 --> 01:28:24.400] Okay. [01:28:24.400 --> 01:28:25.400] Wow. [01:28:25.400 --> 01:28:26.400] That's good news. [01:28:26.400 --> 01:28:32.360] I'm going to chase that down too. [01:28:32.360 --> 01:28:33.360] Yeah. [01:28:33.360 --> 01:28:36.200] Get those gone and then you can go after them. [01:28:36.200 --> 01:28:43.720] You know, whenever they come after me, they write me a, the cop writes me a ticket and [01:28:43.720 --> 01:28:48.280] when he's walking back to write the ticket, I call 911 to start filing criminal charges [01:28:48.280 --> 01:28:50.080] already. [01:28:50.080 --> 01:28:55.560] He come back visibly shaking. [01:28:55.560 --> 01:29:04.520] He was so furious and I can't get the court to call me for their first hearing. [01:29:04.520 --> 01:29:08.480] So you guys want to fight? [01:29:08.480 --> 01:29:10.680] I will give you a fight. [01:29:10.680 --> 01:29:16.080] Every step you take, just like what we're doing with Tim, we are, we let them screw up as [01:29:16.080 --> 01:29:17.080] much as they could. [01:29:17.080 --> 01:29:20.040] Now we are all over them. [01:29:20.040 --> 01:29:25.680] We want all these guys arrested and you got to know when this, these members of this administrative [01:29:25.680 --> 01:29:37.480] board, when they got the lawsuit and undoubtedly they've already got a call from the investigator [01:29:37.480 --> 01:29:41.880] for the district attorney's office asking about these criminal charges been filed against [01:29:41.880 --> 01:29:42.880] them. [01:29:42.880 --> 01:29:47.560] They are not happy campers. [01:29:47.560 --> 01:29:51.240] The last thing they want to do now is mess with them anymore. [01:29:51.240 --> 01:29:54.960] This ain't working out the way it's supposed to. [01:29:54.960 --> 01:30:01.760] When you start going after them, their attitude changes. [01:30:01.760 --> 01:30:04.320] You must have been a beautiful baby. [01:30:04.320 --> 01:30:06.320] You must have been a beautiful child. [01:30:06.320 --> 01:30:10.040] These days, a lot of parents are showing off their kids on the net. [01:30:10.040 --> 01:30:16.040] I'm Dr. Katherine Albright and I'll be back to tell you why the practice could be dangerous. [01:30:16.040 --> 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 --> 01:30:26.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.000 --> 01:30:27.440] So protect your rights. [01:30:27.440 --> 01:30:31.040] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.040 --> 01:30:33.760] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.760 --> 01:30:38.080] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:30:38.080 --> 01:30:41.600] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.600 --> 01:30:44.720] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.720 --> 01:30:49.800] The Internet can be a scary place, but concerns about predators haven't stopped parents from [01:30:49.800 --> 01:30:52.160] posting their kids' pictures online. [01:30:52.160 --> 01:30:58.160] A recent study by online security company AVG found that a shocking 92% of U.S. babies [01:30:58.160 --> 01:31:00.760] have an online presence by age two. [01:31:00.760 --> 01:31:05.360] A third of American mothers report posting snapshots of their newborns online and over [01:31:05.360 --> 01:31:10.920] 5% of U.S. babies have email addresses or online profiles years before they can even [01:31:10.920 --> 01:31:11.920] type. [01:31:11.920 --> 01:31:15.640] Most of these parents merely want to share their happiness with friends and family, but [01:31:15.640 --> 01:31:19.680] please give some thought to how strangers might abuse the information. [01:31:19.680 --> 01:31:21.760] Play it safe and keep photos private. [01:31:21.760 --> 01:31:23.840] I'm Dr. Katherine Albright. [01:31:23.840 --> 01:31:30.600] More news and information at CatherineAlbright.com. [01:31:30.600 --> 01:31:35.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:35.960 --> 01:31:37.960] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.960 --> 01:31:43.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:47.040] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.040 --> 01:31:48.440] force responders have died. [01:31:48.440 --> 01:31:52.280] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correction officer, [01:31:52.280 --> 01:31:57.120] I'm an Air Force pilot, I'm a father who lost his son, we're Americans and we deserve the [01:31:57.120 --> 01:31:58.120] truth. [01:31:58.120 --> 01:32:00.680] This is your memberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.680 --> 01:32:02.880] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:02.880 --> 01:32:06.120] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.120 --> 01:32:09.760] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [01:32:09.760 --> 01:32:10.760] them to pay for it. [01:32:10.760 --> 01:32:14.400] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.400 --> 01:32:18.200] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:18.200 --> 01:32:20.960] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.960 --> 01:32:25.240] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [01:32:25.240 --> 01:32:26.560] zero complaints. [01:32:26.560 --> 01:32:30.800] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right [01:32:30.800 --> 01:32:32.000] the first time. [01:32:32.000 --> 01:32:40.640] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [01:32:40.640 --> 01:32:45.280] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.280 --> 01:32:50.400] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:50.400 --> 01:32:56.480] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.480 --> 01:32:58.480] Those counts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.480 --> 01:33:27.480] That may not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:29.480 --> 01:33:31.040] Okay, we are back. [01:33:31.040 --> 01:33:37.640] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Brett in Texas. [01:33:37.640 --> 01:33:42.120] But Brett, if you haven't been going back after them, I'm going to suggest you need [01:33:42.120 --> 01:33:43.120] to. [01:33:43.120 --> 01:33:49.120] Well, I've been telling dozens of T-close complaints, dozens of bar grievances, dozens [01:33:49.120 --> 01:33:51.120] of judicial misconduct complaints. [01:33:51.120 --> 01:33:54.960] I just don't know how to do a suit. [01:33:54.960 --> 01:33:55.960] Oh, okay. [01:33:55.960 --> 01:33:57.960] We can do that. [01:33:57.960 --> 01:34:01.760] Okay, you sent me a statement of facts, haven't you? [01:34:01.760 --> 01:34:02.760] Criminal charges, too. [01:34:02.760 --> 01:34:07.720] I haven't seen any one of the criminal charges actually get picked up, but there's probably [01:34:07.720 --> 01:34:12.800] been 40 of them I put out. [01:34:12.800 --> 01:34:16.480] Then have you filed against the prosecuting attorney? [01:34:16.480 --> 01:34:17.480] Oh, wait. [01:34:17.480 --> 01:34:20.240] To whom did you send the criminal complaints? [01:34:20.240 --> 01:34:23.240] I've sent them a lot of different places. [01:34:23.240 --> 01:34:27.240] I've sent them to magistrates like the mayor. [01:34:27.240 --> 01:34:32.800] I've sent them to the DA, I've sent them to, well, first to the assistant DA, and then [01:34:32.800 --> 01:34:33.800] to the DA. [01:34:33.800 --> 01:34:38.240] I think that's about as far up the chain as I've gotten. [01:34:38.240 --> 01:34:41.920] I was really interested in hearing you describe a little earlier in the show you were describing [01:34:41.920 --> 01:34:42.920] to him. [01:34:42.920 --> 01:34:49.800] I guess it was Debra, and I forgot the other lady's name, you're describing it going all [01:34:49.800 --> 01:34:50.800] the way to the U.S. [01:34:50.800 --> 01:34:57.920] Yeah, Debra and Ms. Leslie, yeah, just walk them up the chain, if you file with a district [01:34:57.920 --> 01:35:03.360] attorney and he doesn't act on it, then you file against the district attorney, address [01:35:03.360 --> 01:35:09.720] your complaint to the grand jury, and let the district attorney open it, and then when [01:35:09.720 --> 01:35:14.400] you haven't gotten a response from the grand jury, you can be creative, file a complaint [01:35:14.400 --> 01:35:18.680] against the former of the grand jury. [01:35:18.680 --> 01:35:24.920] Say you sent them to the foreman, and the foreman secreted them from the grand jury. [01:35:24.920 --> 01:35:32.800] Well, the foreman is not going to be happy, especially if he never saw them, and he's [01:35:32.800 --> 01:35:34.840] going to want to know what happened to him. [01:35:34.840 --> 01:35:40.760] This is all about creating politics, giving them a reason to want you out of their court [01:35:40.760 --> 01:35:45.680] system. [01:35:45.680 --> 01:35:52.840] But if you have issues before the court, and you have the facts and law before the court, [01:35:52.840 --> 01:36:00.280] the Court of Appeals is where you're, if you're going to get a win, this is what's going to [01:36:00.280 --> 01:36:01.280] happen. [01:36:01.280 --> 01:36:02.280] Okay. [01:36:02.280 --> 01:36:08.240] And you said I've got 75 days from the 8th of May, made the verdict. [01:36:08.240 --> 01:36:11.240] Yeah. [01:36:11.240 --> 01:36:18.840] The rules say that if the judge hasn't responded in 75 days, then your motion is denied as [01:36:18.840 --> 01:36:20.240] a matter of law. [01:36:20.240 --> 01:36:21.240] Okay. [01:36:21.240 --> 01:36:27.680] Do you know what rule that is, so I can quote that in the notice of appeal? [01:36:27.680 --> 01:36:34.240] No, I don't have it off the top of my head, but it should be easy enough to look up in [01:36:34.240 --> 01:36:42.760] the code when you go for motion for retrial or motion for reconsideration, just do Texas, [01:36:42.760 --> 01:36:45.720] motion for reconsideration, time to respond. [01:36:45.720 --> 01:36:47.720] I think that's how I got it. [01:36:47.720 --> 01:36:48.720] Oh, okay. [01:36:48.720 --> 01:36:53.720] I see what you're talking about. [01:36:53.720 --> 01:36:55.960] All right. [01:36:55.960 --> 01:37:01.840] And yeah, I appreciate you pointing that out about the warrant, too, because we've just [01:37:01.840 --> 01:37:07.560] been feeling for a long time that there's not really any progress in this, you know, [01:37:07.560 --> 01:37:09.160] wanting to change the system and everything. [01:37:09.160 --> 01:37:13.120] At the same time, my name is mud in their computer system. [01:37:13.120 --> 01:37:20.920] So if you have a, if you, if you're concerned that you have a warrant, one of these courts, [01:37:20.920 --> 01:37:27.280] go to the court, walk right up in front of the judge and say, I'm concerned I have a [01:37:27.280 --> 01:37:34.160] warrant for have a one to get taken care of, then you don't have to drive around afraid [01:37:34.160 --> 01:37:39.040] that you're going to get pulled over and arrested all the time. [01:37:39.040 --> 01:37:40.040] Yeah. [01:37:40.040 --> 01:37:41.040] Okay. [01:37:41.040 --> 01:37:44.040] Do you have anything else for us? [01:37:44.040 --> 01:37:45.040] Thank you. [01:37:45.040 --> 01:37:46.040] I think you covered it. [01:37:46.040 --> 01:37:47.040] Thank you. [01:37:47.040 --> 01:37:48.040] Okay. [01:37:48.040 --> 01:37:49.040] Thank you. [01:37:49.040 --> 01:37:50.040] Thank you, Brett. [01:37:50.040 --> 01:37:51.040] Now we're going to Larry in Arizona. [01:37:51.040 --> 01:37:52.040] Hello, Larry. [01:37:52.040 --> 01:37:53.040] Hi, Randy. [01:37:53.040 --> 01:37:58.840] It's actually Laura, I had Larry call because I was out feeding tonight. [01:37:58.840 --> 01:38:00.000] Oh, okay. [01:38:00.000 --> 01:38:03.880] What do you have for us today, Ms. Laura? [01:38:03.880 --> 01:38:04.880] Okay. [01:38:04.880 --> 01:38:11.320] So I'm getting ready to submit my appeal on a feeding ticket. [01:38:11.320 --> 01:38:22.200] This is a ticket I got back in July and there was no accident. [01:38:22.200 --> 01:38:26.800] It was just driving over the posted speed limit. [01:38:26.800 --> 01:38:39.720] What I wanted to know is one of my arguments I want to be is the officer gave me the citation [01:38:39.720 --> 01:38:46.720] and it was a hand from a handheld device that comes out like looks like a cash register [01:38:46.720 --> 01:38:47.720] receipt. [01:38:47.720 --> 01:38:51.600] That's the style of the citation. [01:38:51.600 --> 01:39:02.600] Now what was filed with the court was different than the copy that I was given and it was [01:39:02.600 --> 01:39:13.200] different to the point where the device measuring my speed on my ticket, it said false. [01:39:13.200 --> 01:39:20.680] On the copy that was given to the court, it said radar. [01:39:20.680 --> 01:39:24.720] In my opinion, that's falsification of a document. [01:39:24.720 --> 01:39:31.080] I don't know who did it or how it was done, but I want to be able to pursue that. [01:39:31.080 --> 01:39:33.880] I'm just not sure. [01:39:33.880 --> 01:39:39.400] You weren't given notice of nature and cause. [01:39:39.400 --> 01:39:40.400] That's how you pursue. [01:39:40.400 --> 01:39:41.400] Oh, okay. [01:39:41.400 --> 01:39:42.400] Okay. [01:39:42.400 --> 01:39:48.960] You said on yours, on your copy it said what? [01:39:48.960 --> 01:39:56.000] There's a little box and next to the word device, which they are supposed to state, [01:39:56.000 --> 01:39:59.360] how they measured your speed. [01:39:59.360 --> 01:40:01.520] It said false. [01:40:01.520 --> 01:40:03.520] F-L-A-S-E? [01:40:03.520 --> 01:40:06.240] Yes, sir. [01:40:06.240 --> 01:40:09.960] So I would take that to mean there was no device used. [01:40:09.960 --> 01:40:17.960] That's what I said in court and the judge said, well, on my copy it said radar. [01:40:17.960 --> 01:40:25.000] Then you weren't given- What is your ticket? [01:40:25.000 --> 01:40:27.320] You weren't given adequate notice. [01:40:27.320 --> 01:40:33.720] You couldn't come in and argue the radar because you were given no notice that there was a [01:40:33.720 --> 01:40:34.720] radar. [01:40:34.720 --> 01:40:38.440] Did you examine Arizona? [01:40:38.440 --> 01:40:40.320] Was this in Arizona? [01:40:40.320 --> 01:40:41.320] Yes. [01:40:41.320 --> 01:40:48.720] Okay, did you examine Arizona law to see who had authority to enforce the transportation [01:40:48.720 --> 01:40:52.560] code to the motor vehicle laws in Arizona? [01:40:52.560 --> 01:41:01.200] You know, we have been researching that in terms of what are the powers granted to peace [01:41:01.200 --> 01:41:06.800] officers and we're still trying to figure that one out. [01:41:06.800 --> 01:41:07.800] Okay. [01:41:07.800 --> 01:41:10.360] Don't look at it from that perspective. [01:41:10.360 --> 01:41:17.200] Look at it from who is authorized to enforce transportation code. [01:41:17.200 --> 01:41:22.560] Transportation code is a professional conduct code and it's almost always, with every state [01:41:22.560 --> 01:41:29.800] I've looked at except two, it is a code of limited enforcement. [01:41:29.800 --> 01:41:35.760] They put in the transportation code and the sheriffs didn't want to enforce it because [01:41:35.760 --> 01:41:38.560] they didn't have budget for it. [01:41:38.560 --> 01:41:45.320] So the states created state police for that purpose and that's why so many of them have [01:41:45.320 --> 01:41:53.960] in law that the state police are authorized to enforce the transportation code and most [01:41:53.960 --> 01:42:00.120] of them in most of the states, the other police found out they could make a lot of money enforcing [01:42:00.120 --> 01:42:06.240] transportation code so they just started enforcing it when they weren't given authority [01:42:06.240 --> 01:42:16.760] if one entity is specified as authorized to enforce, then any entity that would have [01:42:16.760 --> 01:42:24.640] authority to enforce would have to be specified because what is not included is excluded. [01:42:24.640 --> 01:42:32.040] There's a Latin term for that that Eddie Oaks quotes all the time and I never can get that [01:42:32.040 --> 01:42:33.280] one right. [01:42:33.280 --> 01:42:42.280] But if they specify that the state police are authorized to enforce, then you ask the [01:42:42.280 --> 01:42:45.880] question, then you challenge subject matter jurisdiction, maintain the officer has no [01:42:45.880 --> 01:42:50.800] authority to enforce and demand that they show authority. [01:42:50.800 --> 01:42:57.920] Nice thing about subject matter jurisdiction challenge can be, subject matter jurisdiction [01:42:57.920 --> 01:43:06.800] can be challenged at any point in the process no matter how remote in history. [01:43:06.800 --> 01:43:11.880] So you can go in with a subject matter jurisdiction challenge on appeal. [01:43:11.880 --> 01:43:19.920] You can say that the court of appeals lacks subject matter jurisdiction because the trial [01:43:19.920 --> 01:43:26.120] court lacks subject matter jurisdiction and the trial court cannot transfer to the court [01:43:26.120 --> 01:43:33.400] of appeals any more jurisdiction than it had, which was none, and then ask the court of [01:43:33.400 --> 01:43:39.000] the appeals court, if it's a county court or whatever it happens to be, to rule on the [01:43:39.000 --> 01:43:43.760] authority of the officer to enforce. [01:43:43.760 --> 01:43:46.120] That's always the first place I go. [01:43:46.120 --> 01:43:53.000] Second place I go is what evidence did the officer did, I'm sorry, what evidence did [01:43:53.000 --> 01:43:58.800] the citation contain to indicate that I'm about to run off the cliff, we'll be right [01:43:58.800 --> 01:43:59.800] back. 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[01:46:28.600 --> 01:46:34.640] Randy Kelton, RealVa Radio and on the break, I was trying to look up who can enforce the [01:46:34.640 --> 01:46:41.480] Arizona Transportation Code but didn't quite have time to find it. [01:46:41.480 --> 01:46:50.840] Just generally, first thing you want to challenge is can the officer who wrote the citation [01:46:50.840 --> 01:46:54.320] enforce the Transportation Code? [01:46:54.320 --> 01:47:03.600] Second thing, does the complaint contain the elements that would bring you within the statutory [01:47:03.600 --> 01:47:06.240] scheme? [01:47:06.240 --> 01:47:13.640] Transportation codes in every state I've looked at so far are professional conduct codes. [01:47:13.640 --> 01:47:18.040] They only go to commercial operation of a motor vehicle. [01:47:18.040 --> 01:47:27.560] Yes, you have a license but just because you have one, that don't mean you're using it. [01:47:27.560 --> 01:47:33.000] You could be deadheading and you can tell the court you were deadheading. [01:47:33.000 --> 01:47:36.400] They'll know what that means. [01:47:36.400 --> 01:47:41.920] That means a truck driver drops off a load at one factory or one warehouse and then he [01:47:41.920 --> 01:47:47.440] has to drive across town to another factory or warehouse to pick up another load. [01:47:47.440 --> 01:47:51.640] Well, in that time, he's not being paid. [01:47:51.640 --> 01:47:55.960] During that time, he's not in commerce and the DOT doesn't apply. [01:47:55.960 --> 01:48:01.560] He's deadheading and for us, we spend all of our time deadheading. [01:48:01.560 --> 01:48:06.920] Yeah, I've got a license but I'm not using it. [01:48:06.920 --> 01:48:15.840] Does the citation contain a statement that shows that you were operating in commerce? [01:48:15.840 --> 01:48:17.840] No. [01:48:17.840 --> 01:48:21.120] I'm questioning the officer on that. [01:48:21.120 --> 01:48:26.440] I asked her when you stopped me, did you do any investigation to see if I had a bill [01:48:26.440 --> 01:48:33.120] of lading, passenger manifest, if I was hauling passengers and she said no and I asked her [01:48:33.120 --> 01:48:34.120] point blank. [01:48:34.120 --> 01:48:38.320] I said what evidence do you have that I was engaged in transportation and she says you [01:48:38.320 --> 01:48:43.120] were driving a motor vehicle on the road. [01:48:43.120 --> 01:48:53.120] Non-responsive, but anyway, okay, so he's saying that if you're driving on the road [01:48:53.120 --> 01:49:01.400] and you need code to rebut that, I'm sure from your answers that you already have most [01:49:01.400 --> 01:49:06.240] of this because you've certainly done your homework. [01:49:06.240 --> 01:49:14.320] The first thing to look at, the thing to go back and look at is who is authorized to enforce. [01:49:14.320 --> 01:49:23.120] In Texas, the Highway Patrol is authorized to enforce Highway Patrol as a subset of [01:49:23.120 --> 01:49:26.960] the Texas Department of Public Safety. [01:49:26.960 --> 01:49:32.200] Five sheriff's deputies from any county can be authorized by the County Commissioner's [01:49:32.200 --> 01:49:43.040] Court, a one municipal officer from a municipality can be certified to do DOT inspections. [01:49:43.040 --> 01:49:52.320] That's it, California, California State Police can enforce the California Highway Patrol. [01:49:52.320 --> 01:50:00.520] Los Angeles is specifically mentioned that they can enforce and then a city south of [01:50:00.520 --> 01:50:08.320] Los Angeles on the Coast Highway, they're authorized to enforce in a couple other places [01:50:08.320 --> 01:50:11.280] and that's it. [01:50:11.280 --> 01:50:18.960] Illinois, the State Police in Illinois are called Secretary of State's Police. [01:50:18.960 --> 01:50:28.400] The code says only the Secretary of State may enforce the transportation code. [01:50:28.400 --> 01:50:38.560] Tennessee, a municipal officer or a sheriff's deputy can write a citation under the transportation [01:50:38.560 --> 01:50:44.960] code in connection with a traffic accident, that's it. [01:50:44.960 --> 01:50:51.440] So there's going to be something in Arizona code, have you looked for that? [01:50:51.440 --> 01:51:01.400] We have and we found something within the transportation code, but it's a little convoluted. [01:51:01.400 --> 01:51:06.000] If I copy and paste it, can I shoot that to you in an email? [01:51:06.000 --> 01:51:09.720] Absolutely, I would very much like to see that. [01:51:09.720 --> 01:51:10.720] Okay. [01:51:10.720 --> 01:51:16.600] Just send it to randy at ruleofallradio.com. [01:51:16.600 --> 01:51:20.840] I have this traffic ticket dot website. [01:51:20.840 --> 01:51:29.880] I wrote it for Texas, but I want to get it set up for every state. [01:51:29.880 --> 01:51:35.200] So you've done a lot of the research already. [01:51:35.200 --> 01:51:40.320] I have a whole stack of pleadings that are standard pleadings that you would file in [01:51:40.320 --> 01:51:47.560] any case, a Brady motion, a motion in limity, for those of you who don't know what those [01:51:47.560 --> 01:51:53.160] are, a Brady motion is discovery in a criminal trial, a motion in limity, that's all the [01:51:53.160 --> 01:51:56.760] questions the other side can ask. [01:51:56.760 --> 01:52:04.800] A first appearance notice, a challenge subject matter jurisdiction, a mother Hubbard motion. [01:52:04.800 --> 01:52:12.440] Mother Hubbard motion is we object to oral argument, we demand all our rights, court [01:52:12.440 --> 01:52:21.480] will not pursue any right is waived unless it's waived in court, with counsel present, [01:52:21.480 --> 01:52:24.800] after full disclosure, free of coercion. [01:52:24.800 --> 01:52:32.640] And this is out of a special code on right to trial by jury, but I use the same language. [01:52:32.640 --> 01:52:36.320] Just a whole stack of motions. [01:52:36.320 --> 01:52:40.080] Primary purpose of that is to give them a headache. [01:52:40.080 --> 01:52:42.320] They don't care about law. [01:52:42.320 --> 01:52:45.240] They're just trying to make money. [01:52:45.240 --> 01:52:48.560] So you make it so they can't make money. [01:52:48.560 --> 01:52:53.120] And then when they don't answer these, then you start bargaining them, judicial conduct [01:52:53.120 --> 01:52:57.560] complaint them, professional conduct complaint against the officer. [01:52:57.560 --> 01:53:00.360] I have one for Texas, but I don't have one for the other states. [01:53:00.360 --> 01:53:02.360] I want to get these built. [01:53:02.360 --> 01:53:08.840] And then you just put in your ticket information and boom, it spits all these out. [01:53:08.840 --> 01:53:13.000] I'm going to want to talk to you about help to do that in Arizona. [01:53:13.000 --> 01:53:20.200] I'd love to help with Arizona stuff, but I'm in the process of also filing a complaint [01:53:20.200 --> 01:53:25.680] against the officer because when she testified, when she cited me, I asked her how fast she [01:53:25.680 --> 01:53:37.720] was going in court, she testified that she routinely drives 10 miles over the speed limit. [01:53:37.720 --> 01:53:49.040] Problem is, we're claiming that the transportation code is a code of limited enforcement. [01:53:49.040 --> 01:53:55.360] You can't purport to enforce the transportation code if you challenge the officer's authority [01:53:55.360 --> 01:54:00.040] to do so. [01:54:00.040 --> 01:54:05.200] I've run across this before when I was doing these arguments that they wanted to file against [01:54:05.200 --> 01:54:11.520] the officer for violating the code, and I said, wait a minute, I'm stepping on my own [01:54:11.520 --> 01:54:12.520] arguments. [01:54:12.520 --> 01:54:14.520] Okay, I got that. [01:54:14.520 --> 01:54:15.520] Okay. [01:54:15.520 --> 01:54:16.520] Okay. [01:54:16.520 --> 01:54:17.520] Did that make sense? [01:54:17.520 --> 01:54:18.520] Yes. [01:54:18.520 --> 01:54:34.760] Sometimes I step on my own tongue, but we have, you know, every case you have the option [01:54:34.760 --> 01:54:41.280] of filing so many motions and pleadings, I've got a discovery motion from the judge. [01:54:41.280 --> 01:54:47.000] We want to see all of the judge's financials. [01:54:47.000 --> 01:54:52.680] We want to see a financial statement from everybody related to the judge within three [01:54:52.680 --> 01:55:01.480] degrees of co-sanguinity, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, in-laws, everybody. [01:55:01.480 --> 01:55:09.720] Oh, and the judge is going to have a fit over that, and in effect, we can make it so they [01:55:09.720 --> 01:55:13.560] can't enforce. [01:55:13.560 --> 01:55:15.560] They don't follow any of the law. [01:55:15.560 --> 01:55:22.960] You know, I've been 30 years trying to figure out how do we fix this system, and it's become [01:55:22.960 --> 01:55:28.880] clear we're not going to fix it with some grand gesture. [01:55:28.880 --> 01:55:37.040] Where we fix it at is we find out who the licensing agency for peace officers in Arizona [01:55:37.040 --> 01:55:43.480] is, and when the officer writes you a ticket, you file a complaint with that agency against [01:55:43.480 --> 01:55:46.400] it. [01:55:46.400 --> 01:55:51.080] That agency gets the complaint, and it's just like filing a bar grievance or a judicial [01:55:51.080 --> 01:56:00.520] conduct complaint, the police officers, the agency he works for has an insurance policy, [01:56:00.520 --> 01:56:07.360] a bond, and that bonding company has an agent, and it's the agent's purpose to collect as [01:56:07.360 --> 01:56:13.800] much money from his client as he can and get out of paying any claims that he can. [01:56:13.800 --> 01:56:18.400] So he's just looking for a reason to raise the bond rating. [01:56:18.400 --> 01:56:23.480] And the only real effective way they have to do that is when an officer is sued or when [01:56:23.480 --> 01:56:27.760] a professional conduct complaint is filed against him. [01:56:27.760 --> 01:56:30.600] They don't care about how the suit was adjudicated. [01:56:30.600 --> 01:56:34.040] They don't care about whether the complaint is valid or not. [01:56:34.040 --> 01:56:37.000] They just care that they got one. [01:56:37.000 --> 01:56:40.120] They get to use that to raise the bond rating. [01:56:40.120 --> 01:56:45.280] So first thing we do is a professional conduct complaint against the officer. [01:56:45.280 --> 01:56:49.640] If we can find there's evidence that he doesn't have authority to enforce, we file criminal [01:56:49.640 --> 01:56:52.900] charges against the officer. [01:56:52.900 --> 01:56:58.080] We file a complaint against his boss. [01:56:58.080 --> 01:57:03.480] We can file one against the prosecutor for not properly training the police. [01:57:03.480 --> 01:57:07.080] Just make their lives a living hell. [01:57:07.080 --> 01:57:12.160] And I'm building a site where all the person has to do is go in and fill in the ticketed [01:57:12.160 --> 01:57:16.920] information, and boom, it just spits this stuff out. [01:57:16.920 --> 01:57:22.040] And then for the secondary documents, we'll have little questionnaires they can fill out [01:57:22.040 --> 01:57:27.440] and it starts spitting out more documents they can file. [01:57:27.440 --> 01:57:32.080] The way we'll fix this system is from the bottom. [01:57:32.080 --> 01:57:36.720] When we start hammering these police officers for doing what their boss has told them to [01:57:36.720 --> 01:57:43.040] do, and then we're filing criminal complaints and professional conduct complaints and filing [01:57:43.040 --> 01:57:48.960] suits against them, the police are going to tell the bosses, guys, you want to go out [01:57:48.960 --> 01:57:50.160] there and write those tickets? [01:57:50.160 --> 01:57:53.480] You knocked yourself out. [01:57:53.480 --> 01:57:56.400] I get six professional conduct complaints. [01:57:56.400 --> 01:57:57.880] I can't get hired. [01:57:57.880 --> 01:58:04.240] This is how we get control of it. [01:58:04.240 --> 01:58:08.760] And it is my belief that the police, for the most part, they want to do things right. [01:58:08.760 --> 01:58:10.960] They want to follow a law. [01:58:10.960 --> 01:58:16.360] And I don't know many policemen who like writing tickets anyway. [01:58:16.360 --> 01:58:25.520] But if we can begin to give the policemen plausible teniability to object against the policies [01:58:25.520 --> 01:58:31.440] they're being asked to enforce, we'll start getting the system straightened out and we'll [01:58:31.440 --> 01:58:32.600] do it from the bottom up. [01:58:32.600 --> 01:58:34.640] Because that makes sense. [01:58:34.640 --> 01:58:35.640] Laura. [01:58:35.640 --> 01:58:36.640] Yes, it does. [01:58:36.640 --> 01:58:42.840] Do you have time for one more question tonight? [01:58:42.840 --> 01:58:44.840] No, I've got eight seconds. [01:58:44.840 --> 01:58:45.840] I'm sorry. [01:58:45.840 --> 01:58:46.840] I wasn't watching close enough. [01:58:46.840 --> 01:58:47.840] We'll be back next week. [01:58:47.840 --> 01:58:50.440] See me in e-mail. [01:58:50.440 --> 01:58:56.600] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.600 --> 01:58:57.800] Recovery Version. [01:58:57.800 --> 01:59:02.800] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.800 --> 01:59:08.440] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.440 --> 01:59:11.760] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.760 --> 01:59:20.720] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.720 --> 01:59:26.240] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus [01:59:26.240 --> 01:59:30.280] charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.280 --> 01:59:32.840] This is truly a Bible you can understand. 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