[00:00.000 --> 00:12.840] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:12.840 --> 00:21.400] Closed with gold at $1,318.52 an ounce, silver $16.39 an ounce, Texas crude $63.39 a barrel, [00:21.400 --> 00:31.160] bitcoins at $8,127.35, theorems at $819.48, and finally, Bitcoin cashed at $1,013.04 a [00:31.160 --> 00:32.160] crypto coin. [00:32.160 --> 00:40.240] Today in History, the year 1940, Walt Disney's second full-length animated film, Pinocchio, [00:40.240 --> 00:45.040] premieres in theaters today in history. [00:45.040 --> 00:50.200] In recent news, current county California Superior Court Judge David Lampe stated in a ruling [00:50.200 --> 00:55.800] today that the Tasteries Bakery in Bakersfield indeed has the right to refuse to bake a cake [00:55.800 --> 01:00.200] for same-sex wedding, but only because the act of baking is protected under free speech, [01:00.200 --> 01:02.440] more specifically, artistic expression. [01:02.440 --> 01:05.800] Judge Lampe made it clear that freedom of religion does not give a business the right [01:05.800 --> 01:09.640] to refuse service to groups protected by the Civil Rights Act. [01:09.640 --> 01:13.680] Quote, a retail tire shop may not refuse to sell a tire because the owner does not want [01:13.680 --> 01:15.600] to sell tires to same-sex couples. [01:15.600 --> 01:19.920] No baker may place their wears in a public display case, open their shop, and then refuse [01:19.920 --> 01:23.520] to sell because of race, religion, gender, or gender identification. [01:23.520 --> 01:26.920] Kathy Miller, the owner of the bake shop, responded by stating that, quote, I am very [01:26.920 --> 01:31.880] happy to serve everything from my cases to anybody, but I cannot be part of a celebration [01:31.880 --> 01:34.080] that goes against my Lord and Savior. [01:34.080 --> 01:38.280] This ruling seems to have been perfect timing since the high-profile case of the Colorado [01:38.280 --> 01:42.800] baker Jack Phillips, who did the same by refusing to bake a wedding cake for the same-sex couple [01:42.800 --> 01:48.560] a few years back, is about to be ruled on by the Supreme Court. [01:48.560 --> 01:52.360] Under initiatives set by Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu's government, tens [01:52.360 --> 01:55.680] of thousands of African refugees will soon be forcibly expelled from Israel. [01:55.680 --> 01:59.800] In his being reported that on Sunday, Israeli government employees began handing out some [01:59.800 --> 02:05.000] 20,000 notices informing 20,000 African men that they have two months to leave the country [02:05.000 --> 02:06.680] or risk facing jail time. [02:06.680 --> 02:12.000] These unmarried men are being given two options, go to prison or take $3,500 and be transported [02:12.000 --> 02:13.000] to a third country. [02:13.000 --> 02:16.560] With no official statements as to where that would be, it is suspected that it is most [02:16.560 --> 02:17.560] likely Rwanda. [02:17.560 --> 02:21.800] Israeli pilots and doctors, among several others, have stated that they would not cooperate [02:21.800 --> 02:24.440] with any government efforts to remove migrants. [02:24.440 --> 02:29.320] The scenario has been in place since 2005, when Egypt's crackdown on Sudanese refugees [02:29.320 --> 02:33.840] triggered the mass migration of some 60,000 Africans who crossed into Israel before their [02:33.840 --> 02:37.040] 130-mile barrier was finished in 2013. [02:37.040 --> 02:40.040] It is estimated that some 20,000 have left since then. [02:40.040 --> 02:45.680] The low-star lowdown is currently seen as sponsors to apply for a service record advertised [02:45.680 --> 02:52.680] by the U.S. Department of State for the U.S. and U.S. Department of State for the U.S. [03:15.680 --> 03:22.680] and the U.S. Department of State. [03:45.680 --> 04:01.200] Okay, howdy-howdy, Rwanda Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rural Raw Radio on this, the 15th day of [04:01.200 --> 04:04.800] February, 2018. [04:04.800 --> 04:12.640] As usual here lately, I'll start out talking about my electronic paralegal. [04:12.640 --> 04:16.360] Oh, by the way, we have the phone lines open. [04:16.360 --> 04:17.360] They'll be open all night. [04:17.360 --> 04:24.840] Our call-in number, 512-646-1984, and if you don't want to hear me harping about this [04:24.840 --> 04:30.560] traffic ticket website all night, then give us a call and ask us some questions. [04:30.560 --> 04:32.280] I do have the site up and working. [04:32.280 --> 04:37.920] I've added some adjustments to it. [04:37.920 --> 04:50.400] It is intended as a demo site, and so I've added in some research to it. [04:50.400 --> 04:58.960] Everywhere I ask a question, if you go to trafficticket.website and click on the test [04:58.960 --> 05:06.960] audit page, that goes to the first of these questionnaires that we've implemented, and [05:06.960 --> 05:14.440] the first part of the first questionnaire goes to due process, and just taking a little [05:14.440 --> 05:21.200] bit of tweaking to get this to come out just the way I want it to, but we're getting there. [05:21.200 --> 05:23.080] I have the questionnaires working right. [05:23.080 --> 05:32.000] I have the statement of facts building itself the way it's supposed to, and now we're adding [05:32.000 --> 05:37.640] in content in the explanation section. [05:37.640 --> 05:44.360] What this will do is not just be a questionnaire, it'll be a teaching tool. [05:44.360 --> 05:51.160] We ask these questions, and for the most part, the layperson will have no idea why we're [05:51.160 --> 05:54.200] asking these questions. [05:54.200 --> 06:00.960] Sometimes that makes it somewhat more difficult for us to get good quality answers. [06:00.960 --> 06:08.640] So we have a notes section, and on the notes section, I'm researching out the different [06:08.640 --> 06:18.600] issues, like, for instance, this starts with, I ask if the stop was based on a traffic issue [06:18.600 --> 06:29.520] or, yes, traffic issue, and if you say yes, then I ask if the officer who responded, responded [06:29.520 --> 06:34.240] based on a notice of an accident. [06:34.240 --> 06:43.480] Now the reason I start with traffic issue this way is that if you are arrested for a [06:43.480 --> 06:53.840] traffic citation under 543.002, the officer is required to take you directly to the nearest [06:53.840 --> 06:55.520] magistrate. [06:55.520 --> 07:02.800] However, if you're arrested on something other than a traffic issue, something that's [07:02.800 --> 07:09.240] not under the Texas Transportation Code, the statute that requires the officer to take [07:09.240 --> 07:13.320] you to a magistrate is 14.06. [07:13.320 --> 07:18.800] So we make these separations, and in each of those I have an explanation of why I asked [07:18.800 --> 07:24.360] this question at this time, what the importance of it is. [07:24.360 --> 07:32.280] And with each question we do this, so if you go through the questionnaires and you read [07:32.280 --> 07:41.760] all of these explanations that we have, and there are some of them are rather lengthy, [07:41.760 --> 07:49.000] and as a matter of fact, today I discovered a minor error in the software in that the [07:49.000 --> 07:59.440] section where I put in my explanations is a fixed div, is a fixed box in the HTML code. [07:59.440 --> 08:04.960] And apparently it needs to be a scrollable box, because when I get to the bottom of the [08:04.960 --> 08:10.760] box, I can't scroll the content once off the bottom of the page. [08:10.760 --> 08:15.520] But I'll get hold of my programmer and we'll get that changed to a scrollable box and we'll [08:15.520 --> 08:17.520] get that taken care of. [08:17.520 --> 08:25.240] And each time you ask for a question, on the far right hand side, there's an arrow at [08:25.240 --> 08:30.040] the top you can click and it'll bring out a third section, and in that will be a statement [08:30.040 --> 08:32.720] of facts. [08:32.720 --> 08:40.040] What we're adding in behind these is code that says if you were arrested, yes, were [08:40.040 --> 08:43.920] you arrested an existing warrant, yes, do you have reason to believe it's the officer [08:43.920 --> 08:48.240] who testified for the magistrate to secure the warrant, lie to the magistrate, if you [08:48.240 --> 08:56.240] say yes, then in code you can't see, we put in some code that tells it to include a document [08:56.240 --> 08:59.240] that is a motion for a Frank's hearing. [08:59.240 --> 09:03.240] And we'll ask all the questions we need for a Frank's hearing. [09:03.240 --> 09:07.440] If you say yes, if you say no, then we'll just skip over and keep going. [09:07.440 --> 09:18.440] And this way, as you move down through the questions, it will steadily build a statement [09:18.440 --> 09:27.960] of facts and then it will log where documents are needed or indicated. [09:27.960 --> 09:35.120] And then I have a rather big job of building those documents and I don't have all that [09:35.120 --> 09:38.560] done yet, so you may know. [09:38.560 --> 09:44.120] As you go through these, I don't have case law support and explanations at every one [09:44.120 --> 09:45.120] of these questions. [09:45.120 --> 09:51.160] Thus, frankly, that is a very big job that I haven't completed yet, but I'm working [09:51.160 --> 09:52.160] on it. [09:52.160 --> 10:00.000] And it's steadily coming together and the biggest issue with it has been figuring out [10:00.000 --> 10:07.040] how to do it, figuring out how to order my questions, how to lay the questions in. [10:07.040 --> 10:12.400] It's too complex to go in on the air, but I'm getting all of that sorted out down to [10:12.400 --> 10:18.160] a set of procedures and routines that I'll now be able to hire a group of people and [10:18.160 --> 10:24.200] train them to do parts of this and we can start quickly putting this stuff together. [10:24.200 --> 10:30.160] So we're making major headway, this thing is coming up quickly. [10:30.160 --> 10:33.360] We do have a caller, we have Jeff from Mississippi. [10:33.360 --> 10:37.680] Hello Jeff, what do you have for us today? [10:37.680 --> 10:42.040] Well, hey Randy, thanks for having me on. [10:42.040 --> 10:43.040] You are welcome. [10:43.040 --> 10:44.040] Too quick. [10:44.040 --> 10:45.040] Thank you. [10:45.040 --> 10:52.080] Well, I just wanted to say that I just truck drove through Boyd Texas. [10:52.080 --> 10:54.320] Wow. [10:54.320 --> 11:02.600] Up to 287, I did not get off on the 730 exit, but just ahead I got to visit the Wise County [11:02.600 --> 11:04.600] rest area. [11:04.600 --> 11:07.720] Oh, be careful up there. [11:07.720 --> 11:10.600] So I was very impressed. [11:10.600 --> 11:17.280] Okay, we used to have an issue at the Wise County rest area. [11:17.280 --> 11:20.440] One of our sheriffs went to prison over that. [11:20.440 --> 11:28.880] His name, Leroy Birch, big boy, six foot six, 300 pounds. [11:28.880 --> 11:35.400] I saw him one day in town and he had both feet in a cast. [11:35.400 --> 11:38.720] I said, Leroy, what happened to you? [11:38.720 --> 11:44.320] Oh, he's down there at that rest stop and he stopped somebody, smart mouth. [11:44.320 --> 11:51.280] He was rude and obnoxious not to just get the heck out of here and he peeled out and [11:51.280 --> 11:53.400] peeled across Mosey's feet. [11:53.400 --> 11:59.160] I said, Leroy, did you learn anything? [11:59.160 --> 12:01.640] That's not funny. [12:01.640 --> 12:05.880] What they were doing was they were going to that rest stop and someone would go into the [12:05.880 --> 12:06.880] restroom. [12:06.880 --> 12:11.720] One of these plain clothes guys would walk in and when they stepped away from urinal, [12:11.720 --> 12:16.240] he'd bump into them and accuse them of making a homosexual pass at them and then they'd [12:16.240 --> 12:24.080] arrest them for public indecency and arrest like that can ruin your life and then they'd [12:24.080 --> 12:31.280] have them put up a $10,000 or $20,000 bond and if they would agree to waive their bond [12:31.280 --> 12:36.280] return, they would dismiss the case. [12:36.280 --> 12:37.880] They made a mistake. [12:37.880 --> 12:43.880] They did that to a gay guy out of California. [12:43.880 --> 12:47.360] He was not impressed. [12:47.360 --> 12:52.160] He gave them a whole different perspective on gay people. [12:52.160 --> 12:57.760] He gave them a fight they didn't believe and about a half dozen of them wound up in prison. [12:57.760 --> 12:58.760] Wow. [12:58.760 --> 13:06.480] Oh boy, that rest area, I don't think that's going on anymore, but the rest area is kind [13:06.480 --> 13:09.920] of famous. [13:09.920 --> 13:14.320] So you didn't get lost in Boyd, did you? [13:14.320 --> 13:15.320] What's that? [13:15.320 --> 13:17.960] You didn't get lost in Boyd, did you? [13:17.960 --> 13:20.640] No, I stayed on the 287. [13:20.640 --> 13:22.160] I was going to Amarillo. [13:22.160 --> 13:25.840] Oh, so you bypassed us by about six miles. [13:25.840 --> 13:32.960] Yeah, I just stopped the rest area and I waved at you and I was hoping you could see me. [13:32.960 --> 13:43.040] Well, that was what you were running was actually the Chisholm Trail. [13:43.040 --> 13:51.080] You will not notice as you travel up Highway 287 in North Texas that every 15 miles there's [13:51.080 --> 13:56.080] a town like Clockwork all the way up to Colorado. [13:56.080 --> 14:04.160] The reason for that is 15 miles is as far as you could drive a herd in a day. [14:04.160 --> 14:13.360] So everywhere the herd drivers tended to camp, settlements sprung up to serve them and now [14:13.360 --> 14:16.400] we have a town every 15 miles. [14:16.400 --> 14:19.080] Interesting bit of trivia. [14:19.080 --> 14:20.080] Yeah. [14:20.080 --> 14:21.080] Okay. [14:21.080 --> 14:31.960] Well, my first question is I never really quite understood if you're in court and the [14:31.960 --> 14:39.440] judge gets up and walks out of the courtroom and turns around and comes back in. [14:39.440 --> 14:42.000] What is going on there and what should you do? [14:42.000 --> 14:45.040] I have no idea. [14:45.040 --> 14:48.960] The judge can certainly get up and walk out of the courtroom if he wants to because he [14:48.960 --> 14:58.800] might have to go to the bathroom or he might have left his pen in his office or there's [14:58.800 --> 15:02.560] myriad of reasons why he could get up and leave the courtroom. [15:02.560 --> 15:08.240] But if he didn't adjourn the court, then the court is still in session. [15:08.240 --> 15:11.960] He can leave the courtroom to meet with councils. [15:11.960 --> 15:14.680] There's a lot of reasons he can really leave the courtroom. [15:14.680 --> 15:19.200] I don't know that it is something that you could raise an issue about. [15:19.200 --> 15:20.200] Okay. [15:20.200 --> 15:22.700] That's fine. [15:22.700 --> 15:27.800] So there's no need to stop and object and try to do anything or? [15:27.800 --> 15:28.800] No. [15:28.800 --> 15:29.800] No. [15:29.800 --> 15:30.800] Okay. [15:30.800 --> 15:31.800] Bye. [15:31.800 --> 15:38.320] You only get to object if it harms you and if the judge gets up and walks off the bench [15:38.320 --> 15:44.760] and goes in a door and the prosecutor gets up and walks into that same door and now you [15:44.760 --> 15:45.760] can object. [15:45.760 --> 15:46.760] Okay. [15:46.760 --> 15:58.400] That would tend to indicate an ex parte communication, but otherwise you wouldn't have a claim. [15:58.400 --> 16:00.280] Okay. [16:00.280 --> 16:08.960] My second question is, well, it's a two-part question, the challenge to jurisdiction that [16:08.960 --> 16:15.800] you would supply to the court before trial, is that a dispositive motion? [16:15.800 --> 16:16.800] Is that a motion? [16:16.800 --> 16:20.440] Oh, that is, no, that's a pleading. [16:20.440 --> 16:22.960] There are three pleadings. [16:22.960 --> 16:32.080] Take matter jurisdiction, double jeopardy, just lost what the other one is, and I'll [16:32.080 --> 16:35.040] pick it up when we come back on the other side. [16:35.040 --> 16:41.360] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of law radio, a call in number 512-646-1984. [16:41.360 --> 16:44.480] We'll be right back. [16:44.480 --> 16:49.200] Well, we'll be back shortly. [16:49.200 --> 17:00.560] We'll be back without a little too early this time, but at least we can follow up. [17:00.560 --> 17:01.560] Dang, Cookie. [17:01.560 --> 17:02.560] Cookie? [17:02.560 --> 17:03.560] I mean, I love cookies. [17:03.560 --> 17:04.560] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:04.560 --> 17:06.560] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:06.560 --> 17:07.560] Cookie? [17:07.560 --> 17:08.560] Yucky? [17:08.560 --> 17:09.560] No, no bad cookies. [17:09.560 --> 17:11.160] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:11.160 --> 17:12.160] These are cyber-cookies. [17:12.160 --> 17:13.680] No, can't you eat? [17:13.680 --> 17:14.680] No. [17:14.680 --> 17:16.800] They are cyber-cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:16.800 --> 17:17.800] These have apples. [17:17.800 --> 17:18.800] Really? [17:18.800 --> 17:19.800] Yeah. [17:19.800 --> 17:20.800] That's an actual apple. [17:20.800 --> 17:21.800] Hmm. [17:21.800 --> 17:22.800] Yummy apple. [17:22.800 --> 17:26.880] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.880 --> 17:33.080] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:33.080 --> 17:34.600] Bye-bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.600 --> 17:40.280] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand [17:40.280 --> 17:46.280] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:46.280 --> 17:47.280] new cookies. [17:47.280 --> 17:49.000] New cookies for me. [17:49.000 --> 17:51.080] Consider it an early Christmas present. [17:51.080 --> 17:55.880] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [17:55.880 --> 17:56.880] radio network, too. [17:56.880 --> 17:57.880] These are cookies. [17:57.880 --> 17:58.880] These are classified. [17:58.880 --> 18:05.880] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:05.880 --> 18:09.560] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. [18:09.560 --> 18:13.680] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.680 --> 18:14.680] can win, too. [18:14.680 --> 18:19.520] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.520 --> 18:25.280] civil rights statute, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer [18:25.280 --> 18:29.480] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how [18:29.480 --> 18:34.120] to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.120 --> 18:39.240] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.240 --> 18:41.360] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.360 --> 18:46.920] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris spanner [18:46.920 --> 18:49.920] or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [18:49.920 --> 18:59.440] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [18:59.440 --> 19:00.440] next. [19:00.440 --> 19:26.440] If you are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [19:26.440 --> 19:36.120] Okay, we are back. [19:36.120 --> 19:40.440] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rule of Law Radio. [19:40.440 --> 19:50.840] On this Friday, Thursday, the 15th day of February, 2018, and if I get my mouse to cooperate, [19:50.840 --> 19:54.120] we will go back to Jeff in Mississippi. [19:54.120 --> 19:56.920] Okay, go ahead, Jeff. [19:56.920 --> 20:03.120] Dispositive pleadings, the challenge to jurisdiction. [20:03.120 --> 20:11.640] Okay, pleadings, original petition is a pleading, subject matter jurisdiction is a pleading, [20:11.640 --> 20:18.880] double jeopardy is a pleading, those are the pleadings, the rest are motions, but a subject [20:18.880 --> 20:24.000] matter jurisdiction is definitely dispositive. [20:24.000 --> 20:33.160] Dispositive meaning it disposes of the case, and that makes it interlocutory. [20:33.160 --> 20:39.200] We just had a dispositive ruling in a case I'm helping someone with, and we will file [20:39.200 --> 20:42.440] an appeal immediately. [20:42.440 --> 20:48.280] They disposed of all our claims and kept the other claims in place, so they're trying [20:48.280 --> 20:56.640] to go to trial, so we file a notice of interlocutory appeal because they've ruled on a dispositive [20:56.640 --> 20:59.640] motion disposable of our claims. [20:59.640 --> 21:02.880] Does that make sense? [21:02.880 --> 21:05.160] Okay, yeah. [21:05.160 --> 21:10.400] And so you want the judge to rule on that dispositive pleading first? [21:10.400 --> 21:20.080] Yes, we're asking him for a findings of fact and conclusions at law, and I had one from [21:20.080 --> 21:28.400] someone else and they referenced Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 297, which I read with [21:28.400 --> 21:32.360] absolute glee. [21:32.360 --> 21:41.880] What it said is the on request, the judge shall provide findings of fact and conclusions [21:41.880 --> 21:44.080] at law. [21:44.080 --> 21:49.360] Did not say he may, might, or can if he wants to. [21:49.360 --> 21:54.840] So if the judge doesn't provide findings of fact and conclusions at law, we'll put him [21:54.840 --> 21:59.800] in front of a grand jury and let him explain that. [21:59.800 --> 22:05.600] To perform a duties required to perform it in the process, deny citizen's full and free [22:05.600 --> 22:13.120] access to enjoyment right, you effectively deny a person in their right to appeal because [22:13.120 --> 22:20.200] they have no idea what to appeal on because they don't know what the nature of the ruling [22:20.200 --> 22:22.640] was. [22:22.640 --> 22:27.720] So we'll introduce him to two forms of appeal. [22:27.720 --> 22:36.280] The appeal to the court of criminal appeals or the appeal to the appellate court in Tarrant [22:36.280 --> 22:42.440] County and we'll also appeal to a grand jury to invite the judge. [22:42.440 --> 22:45.480] We'll see how that works out for him. [22:45.480 --> 22:46.480] All right. [22:46.480 --> 22:50.560] Mr. I can ignore the law if I want to. [22:50.560 --> 23:02.080] My third question is just to catch the listeners up, I had gone to prison over a rifle charge [23:02.080 --> 23:10.360] on a college campus and while I was in prison, I won my appeal. [23:10.360 --> 23:16.240] Actually after I got out of prison, I did a year, won my appeal and the order said that [23:16.240 --> 23:26.800] the judge or the court made a mistake and my attorney had found out some information [23:26.800 --> 23:37.200] that she was not supposed to find and that created a, I can't say the word now, but because [23:37.200 --> 23:44.600] she couldn't tell me, conflict of interest and he would not allow her to remove herself [23:44.600 --> 23:50.040] or withdraw, she kept arguing that, well, I know something that he's not supposed to [23:50.040 --> 23:57.640] know and I can't be his attorney, but the judge would not allow her to withdraw and [23:57.640 --> 24:05.320] so the Supreme Court, Mississippi Supreme Court stated that the court made a mistake [24:05.320 --> 24:08.560] when it did not allow her to withdraw. [24:08.560 --> 24:15.920] So I actually have an order showing there from the Supreme Court stating that the district [24:15.920 --> 24:18.320] judge made a mistake. [24:18.320 --> 24:28.240] So if I sue him in a Title 42, 1983, what kind of defense could they come back with, [24:28.240 --> 24:31.920] you know, like failure to stay the claim or judicial immunity? [24:31.920 --> 24:41.400] Okay, what I would think the complaint would be is that the judge failed to properly apply [24:41.400 --> 24:51.440] the law to the facts and that becomes resjudicata, but what they're going to say is that the [24:51.440 --> 24:59.920] judge has absolute immunity. [24:59.920 --> 25:09.840] Yes, judges have immunity, but what they don't have immunity from is criminal prosecution. [25:09.840 --> 25:20.360] So the judge denied you in a constitutionally protected right in violation of 18 U.S. Code [25:20.360 --> 25:21.360] 242. [25:21.360 --> 25:30.240] So you might push for a federal grand jury indictment. [25:30.240 --> 25:37.840] Okay, and I should do that before I try to sue him? [25:37.840 --> 25:46.520] Yes, because if you can show, if you get a, if you get a, it'd be really hard to get [25:46.520 --> 25:52.480] an indictment of a state judge by a federal grand jury, getting past the U.S. Attorney [25:52.480 --> 25:54.760] would be a trick. [25:54.760 --> 26:03.960] But if you did, then that would be evidence that the judge acted outside of scope and you [26:03.960 --> 26:14.800] can claim in your suit that applying the law to the facts is a ministerial duty, not judicial. [26:14.800 --> 26:23.120] And not attacking his ruling, you're charging him with failure to apply the law to the facts [26:23.120 --> 26:28.880] and duty he is statutorily required to do, or at least by case law required to do. [26:28.880 --> 26:31.440] And I can send you case law on that. [26:31.440 --> 26:34.800] I was just talking to somebody about that issue yesterday. [26:34.800 --> 26:46.120] Actually today I have some email on some cases that I found on this subject and they go to [26:46.120 --> 26:47.120] federal issues. [26:47.120 --> 26:52.920] A due process, I did find case law that said federal and state due process is essentially [26:52.920 --> 26:54.720] the same. [26:54.720 --> 27:03.560] So you can cite, if you're in a state court, you can cite federal due process case law. [27:03.560 --> 27:11.760] But this one went to both federal and state that the judge had a duty to properly apply [27:11.760 --> 27:15.040] the law to the facts. [27:15.040 --> 27:19.400] So you can claim that the judge failed to perform a duty he is required to perform and [27:19.400 --> 27:22.840] in the process denied you in full for access to or drawing a right. [27:22.840 --> 27:27.480] And that will go to 18 U.S. Code 242. [27:27.480 --> 27:36.640] And then you can come back and say that it's unreasonable to construe that judicial immunity [27:36.640 --> 27:40.400] applies to criminal acts. [27:40.400 --> 27:48.360] Criminal acts are ultra vires outside the scope of the judge's contract with the federal [27:48.360 --> 27:50.560] government or with the state. [27:50.560 --> 27:58.600] But you've got argument to make, I will definitely remember that. [27:58.600 --> 28:08.560] What another good avenue be to do a declarative suit, like first, I think you already have [28:08.560 --> 28:09.560] that. [28:09.560 --> 28:18.880] Oh, you have, I have an order from the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court said that the [28:18.880 --> 28:25.040] judge failed to, they said he made a mistake. [28:25.040 --> 28:33.360] You say he failed to properly apply the law to the facts. [28:33.360 --> 28:37.280] And that goes to, that's resjudicata. [28:37.280 --> 28:40.840] That's already been determined by the state supreme. [28:40.840 --> 28:45.560] So then you go for the judge. [28:45.560 --> 28:50.200] They're not accustomed to people coming for the judge, at least criminally. [28:50.200 --> 28:56.400] Then you, when you filed with the U.S. attorney, he's going to absolutely refuse to do anything. [28:56.400 --> 29:03.040] The last time I went through one of these was on Judge McBride in Fort Worth, federal [29:03.040 --> 29:04.040] judge. [29:04.040 --> 29:12.720] And I filed a complaint with the special agent in charge in Dallas. [29:12.720 --> 29:18.200] And there's a process to run, but I like with most of my other cases, I get too busy with [29:18.200 --> 29:24.240] other stuff, other people's stuff and don't get to take care of my own. [29:24.240 --> 29:30.800] Once you file with the SAC, the way I read, I can remember which one it is. [29:30.800 --> 29:41.480] I think it's 28 or 48, USC 353, I like to look it up, but there's a statute that requires [29:41.480 --> 29:46.520] him to give notice to the state, to the U.S. attorney general when a public official, federal [29:46.520 --> 29:48.960] official is violating the law. [29:48.960 --> 29:54.800] Hang on, Randy Kelton, they have receivings, we'll have a radio, we'll be right back. [29:54.800 --> 30:05.440] Here's to get rich quick scheme for you. [30:05.440 --> 30:09.040] What would you do if your ATM machine wouldn't stop spitting out cash? [30:09.040 --> 30:14.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll tell you what one guy did with 1.5 million from [30:14.000 --> 30:17.240] a generous ATM in a moment. [30:17.240 --> 30:18.960] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.960 --> 30:22.560] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.560 --> 30:27.520] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. 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[32:54.720 --> 33:22.720] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:22.720 --> 33:31.720] Okay, we are back. [33:31.720 --> 33:38.720] Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, Rule of Law Radio and we're talking to Jeff and Ms. Sippy. [33:38.720 --> 33:39.720] Okay, Jeff. [33:39.720 --> 33:47.080] Okay, we were talking about filing criminal charges against the Mississippi District Judge [33:47.080 --> 33:49.720] with the U.S. Attorney General and... [33:49.720 --> 33:55.720] No, no, with the SAC and I can look up this statute. [33:55.720 --> 33:57.720] I used to have it memorized. [33:57.720 --> 34:00.720] One of my callers brought it to my attention. [34:00.720 --> 34:07.720] I'm thinking it's 28 U.S.C. 353, but I'm not sure. [34:07.720 --> 34:08.720] I have to check. [34:08.720 --> 34:16.720] But what it is is essentially a whistleblower statute for federal employees. [34:16.720 --> 34:21.720] It says that if you're a federal employee and you have knowledge that another federal [34:21.720 --> 34:29.720] employee has violated a law, then you are to give notice to the U.S. Attorney General. [34:29.720 --> 34:36.720] So, if you're working with a group of people and one of them does something criminal, you [34:36.720 --> 34:47.720] don't have to go to his boss or to the local policing part of the feds and give notice. [34:47.720 --> 34:51.720] You bypass all those people, go straight to the Attorney General and this would tend to [34:51.720 --> 34:54.720] avoid any kind of retaliation. [34:54.720 --> 34:57.720] At least that's the way I saw the statute. [34:57.720 --> 35:12.720] However, I don't see anything in there that exempts an FBI agent from this statute. [35:12.720 --> 35:20.720] So, I filed a criminal complaint with the SAC in Dallas and then I waited about six weeks [35:20.720 --> 35:28.720] and sent a request to the Attorney General for the notice that it received from this SAC [35:28.720 --> 35:31.720] concerning the criminal complaint against Judge McBride. [35:31.720 --> 35:32.720] I never got a response. [35:32.720 --> 35:38.720] I got a response saying they were investigating into my request and then I've never heard from [35:38.720 --> 35:39.720] them again. [35:39.720 --> 35:47.720] And I really haven't had time to follow up because I'm finishing up this ten-year project. [35:47.720 --> 35:52.720] But you would be in a better position to follow up than me. [35:52.720 --> 36:03.720] So, file against the federal judge, I'm sorry, file against the state judge with the SAC [36:03.720 --> 36:10.720] in Mississippi, the FBI special agent in charge in Mississippi. [36:10.720 --> 36:16.720] And then when he doesn't act on it, then you file against the special agent in charge with [36:16.720 --> 36:18.720] the U.S. Attorney. [36:18.720 --> 36:25.720] And when the U.S. Attorney doesn't act on it, then you file against the U.S. Attorney with [36:25.720 --> 36:34.720] the U.S. federal grand jury in D.C., not in Mississippi. [36:34.720 --> 36:41.720] And then that will go to the U.S. Attorney in D.C. and from there you can file against [36:41.720 --> 36:48.720] all of them, a notice against all of them with the U.S. Attorney General. [36:48.720 --> 36:56.400] The thing to do is send an information request to the Attorney General asking specifically [36:56.400 --> 37:02.720] for a copy of the notice that they received and I can pull that request out of my files [37:02.720 --> 37:07.720] where I did that on McBride and it'll have the statute in there. [37:07.720 --> 37:16.720] And this gives notice to the Attorney General that these local officials are violating law. [37:16.720 --> 37:22.720] And Trump has just started appointing U.S. Attorneys. [37:22.720 --> 37:27.720] There's a lot of them that need to be appointed and he's just started doing that. [37:27.720 --> 37:37.720] He has a resignation from every U.S. Attorney who was in office when Trump took over his position. [37:37.720 --> 37:43.720] And Trump needs all of the political supporters he can get. [37:43.720 --> 37:49.720] A good way to get political supporters is to appoint U.S. Attorneys. [37:49.720 --> 37:54.720] So all of these U.S. Attorneys right now are kind of quaking in their boots. [37:54.720 --> 38:01.720] Wondering if they're going to be sacrificed so that Trump can replace them with a political supporter. [38:01.720 --> 38:06.720] Good time to start shaking the bushes. [38:06.720 --> 38:08.720] Hey. [38:08.720 --> 38:13.720] Okay, correct. [38:13.720 --> 38:17.720] Okay, do you have anything else for us? [38:17.720 --> 38:19.720] No, I want you to move on. Thank you. [38:19.720 --> 38:28.720] Okay, thank you, Jeff. Okay, we don't have any callers. Call in numbers 512-646-1984. [38:28.720 --> 38:36.720] So since we don't have any callers, I'm going to go back to talking about something I've been needing to go over, [38:36.720 --> 38:42.720] but haven't been able to get through it because it seems like every time I start talking about it, [38:42.720 --> 38:49.720] I start getting calls coming in on the caller board. So I get off to go to the callers, [38:49.720 --> 38:56.720] but I haven't went through due process in quite a while. [38:56.720 --> 39:06.720] And I really need to because it's kind of the basis of everything we're doing here. [39:06.720 --> 39:15.720] When I'm trying to pull up my ebook, if I can figure out where I put it, always forget where I put it. [39:15.720 --> 39:22.720] But I want to go back and talk about some of the basics. One of the things I haven't talked about in a long time, [39:22.720 --> 39:29.720] and I probably need to do that before the ebook, because I'm not sure if this is exactly in the ebook, [39:29.720 --> 39:41.720] and that's the routine that we follow. There's a routine we follow when we start going after public officials. [39:41.720 --> 39:54.720] And that's what I was kind of addressing with Jeff from Mississippi, is that there's a method for going about doing this. [39:54.720 --> 40:06.720] It appears that nobody has used this methodology. So when I do use it, I get public officials getting real excited. [40:06.720 --> 40:11.720] And none of them want to use it because they've never heard of it and they don't know how to use it. [40:11.720 --> 40:18.720] And then I wind up making it hard for them. It's something they can't get around. [40:18.720 --> 40:25.720] And when our founders created grand juries, you know, that's the reason that Deborah and I first got together on the air [40:25.720 --> 40:29.720] was because we were both interested in the grand jury issue. [40:29.720 --> 40:39.720] She, like myself, recognized that at the end of the day, that's where our real power lies, is in a grand jury. [40:39.720 --> 40:45.720] If we're going to change this system, we're going to do it with grand juries. [40:45.720 --> 40:52.720] And I've been promoting this on the air for a long time. You run the routine on it. [40:52.720 --> 41:03.720] Like in this instance that I was mentioning earlier, I filed a complaint against the federal judge with the SAC in Dallas. [41:03.720 --> 41:12.720] Well, I know the SAC in Dallas special agent charge is not going to go after a federal judge. [41:12.720 --> 41:16.720] It's not if he wants to maintain his career. [41:16.720 --> 41:21.720] Well, this puts the SAC in a position. [41:21.720 --> 41:40.720] The position being is that the SAC, this FBI agent, is deciding who he wants to investigate crime against and who he does not. [41:40.720 --> 41:45.720] And as far as I can tell in the code, he has no authority to do that. [41:45.720 --> 41:54.720] And generally when I file these complaints, I only file complaints that are absolutely dead bang. [41:54.720 --> 42:04.720] And most of the time when I file criminal complaints, I accuse the person of acting in accordance with existing policy. [42:04.720 --> 42:11.720] For instance, the last time a police officer pulled me over, he was a sheriff's deputy, and he wasn't writing a motorcycle. [42:11.720 --> 42:19.720] And there was no inclement weather, so there's no rain or snow, or it was a really nice day. [42:19.720 --> 42:28.720] The way I read the text code criminal procedure, the only sheriff's deputies who can enforce the transportation code have to ride motorcycles. [42:28.720 --> 42:30.720] Well, he wasn't on one. [42:30.720 --> 42:36.720] That gave me reasonable probable cause to believe that he wasn't authorized to enforce transportation code. [42:36.720 --> 42:42.720] So I called 911 and asked him to arrest him for first degree felony aggravated assault. [42:42.720 --> 42:47.720] Well, I don't expect to get him indicted for first degree felony aggravated assault. [42:47.720 --> 42:50.720] Didn't really want him indicted. [42:50.720 --> 42:57.720] What I wanted was to play Russian roulette with his career. [42:57.720 --> 43:01.720] I didn't really want him to get a live bullet. [43:01.720 --> 43:07.720] I wanted them all to be blanks, but he didn't need to know that. [43:07.720 --> 43:18.720] So the idea is, is when I filed a complaint with a local magistrate, the magistrate looks at it and says, there are no way I'm going to act on this. [43:18.720 --> 43:27.720] And that goes with one of my rules, never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [43:27.720 --> 43:35.720] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him to do. [43:35.720 --> 43:40.720] So when he doesn't, he gets filed a complaint against him. [43:40.720 --> 43:50.720] Okay, we'll pick this up on the other side. This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rue Lauderdale Radio, or call in number 512-646-1984. [43:50.720 --> 44:13.720] And I will go through this routine if my voice doesn't run out. Hang on, we'll be right back. [44:21.720 --> 44:29.720] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products including our Australian emu oil, lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:29.720 --> 44:42.720] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at naturespureorganics.com. That's 512-264-4043 naturespureorganics.com. [44:42.720 --> 44:46.720] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:46.720 --> 44:51.720] naturespureorganics.com. [45:16.720 --> 45:22.720] Know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.720 --> 45:27.720] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.720 --> 45:33.720] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.720 --> 45:42.720] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.720 --> 45:51.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:51.720 --> 45:55.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.720 --> 46:13.720] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:25.720 --> 46:52.720] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, Denver Stevens, rule of our radio, and we're talking about how to run the routine on public officials. [46:52.720 --> 47:04.720] If we're going to straighten out the system, the primary thing we can do is learn how to be the master of the servants. [47:04.720 --> 47:11.720] We ask our public officials to protect us. We ask them to catch the bad guys. [47:11.720 --> 47:29.720] We even ask them to enforce the law against us. Enforcing the law against us gives us reason to exercise caution and not arbitrarily and capriciously act on our personal passions. [47:29.720 --> 47:51.720] Sometimes people annoy me. Sometimes they seriously annoy me. But I'm not going to pick up a pistol and go shoot somebody, because if I do, I have asked my public officials that are acting in the capacity of peace officers to come and arrest me and throw me in jail. [47:51.720 --> 48:09.720] Just like I've asked them to do the same to any other free citizen who violates one of these laws. So we've asked our public officials to protect us by enforcing these laws and help keep us from acting on our personal passions. [48:09.720 --> 48:26.720] But we have not returned the favor. It is the job of the free citizen to police the police, and we haven't been doing that to the point that the police feel absolutely immune. [48:26.720 --> 48:50.720] I'm writing this ticket program and in there I repeatedly warn people who do not argue with the policeman on the side of the road. They are trained to believe that anything other than absolute and immediate obedience is a threat to their lives and they will shoot you [48:50.720 --> 49:07.720] because they feel like they are absolutely immune from consequences. That may not be right, but that certainly appears to be how things work in the United States that I live in. [49:07.720 --> 49:22.720] Now, I know a number of people who are police officers. I have never known a police officer who will tell you that he became a police officer so he can be a Jack Booby Doug. [49:22.720 --> 49:37.720] Almost every police officer that I know or that I have known and talked to about this subject tells me the same thing. They went into law enforcement so they can help people. [49:37.720 --> 49:54.720] Then they got into the business. Once they had a commitment to the business, they found out it wasn't anything like they thought it was. They all hate the system, but feel powerless to change it. [49:54.720 --> 50:13.720] I tend to agree with them. From inside the system they are effectively powerless to change it. The only way we are going to get changed or the only way we are going to get it back on track is for the most powerful individual in the state to stand up and do his job. [50:13.720 --> 50:28.720] The most powerful individual in the state is the individual citizen. This is a republic. This is not a democracy. It is a democratic republic, but at the end of the day it is a republic. [50:28.720 --> 50:51.720] As a citizen in the republic, the buck stops here. If we don't like the way that our judicial system and criminal justice system is being administered by our public servants, then we need to stand up and do something about it. [50:51.720 --> 51:06.720] In the process, when I started out doing what I was doing, I was almost diagnosed with PSTD. I think I had some of it. [51:06.720 --> 51:24.720] If I did, I didn't really realize it until much later on in life, but I came out of the military with an incredible anger. That motivated me to go after these guys. [51:24.720 --> 51:44.720] I'm unusual to understand that. I had a special motivation for doing this, so I really didn't care what they did. Because I had a talisman, I had a touchstone that I could compare anything they would try to do to me to. [51:44.720 --> 51:54.720] And compared to that touchstone, there was nothing they could do that did not pale into insignificance, so I was more prone to take them on. [51:54.720 --> 52:02.720] Well, in the process of doing that, yeah, I got beat up a few times, but nobody ever shot me. [52:02.720 --> 52:16.720] In fact, the instances of a policeman shooting someone is extremely rare. Yeah, now we got effective media, so we hear about every instance. [52:16.720 --> 52:26.720] I suspect that the instance of police-related shootings, if anything, is less than it has been in the past. [52:26.720 --> 52:37.720] It's just communications are better. YouTube and iPhones, every incident that occurs now is just about on YouTube. [52:37.720 --> 52:44.720] So we're hearing about it all the time and we think, oh gosh, this has gotten horrible. Well, I don't think it's the worst it's always been. [52:44.720 --> 52:54.720] But if we're going to put an end to this, if we're going to get things back in line with how our founders intended that they be, [52:54.720 --> 53:01.720] you and I and each and all of us need to stand up and be counted. [53:01.720 --> 53:06.720] Well, that's not exactly true. Each and all of us don't. [53:06.720 --> 53:17.720] If we could get one or two people in any county to take these guys on, these problems will go away. [53:17.720 --> 53:29.720] From the beginning, my primary, ultimate, intended outcome is to put every judge in the country in a position such that, [53:29.720 --> 53:35.720] when they step up behind the bench and look out across the bar at the gallery and want them wondering which one, [53:35.720 --> 53:42.720] which one of those scoundrels sitting out there in that gallery is waiting for me to render a movie that he don't like, [53:42.720 --> 53:47.720] he's going down to grandeur and trying to get me indicted. [53:47.720 --> 53:55.720] And the best way to make this work is we need to find third parties. [53:55.720 --> 54:03.720] If the government's coming after me, I don't need to be filing criminal charges. I need somebody else doing it. [54:03.720 --> 54:08.720] If they're coming after you, come to me, I'll file them. [54:08.720 --> 54:14.720] If I don't have a dog in that hunt, they don't have any kind of shot at me. [54:14.720 --> 54:21.720] They say two words to me that I can in any way interpret as a threat. [54:21.720 --> 54:27.720] Then I go after them for retaliation and witness tampering, just real serious, real fast. [54:27.720 --> 54:31.720] So we have a way of doing this. We have a way of going after them. [54:31.720 --> 54:38.720] And it is a way that was intended by our founders and that's why they created grand juries. [54:38.720 --> 54:50.720] Our founders created grand juries in order to protect the population from the prosecution, from the prosecutors specifically. [54:50.720 --> 54:54.720] Prosecuting attorneys hate grand juries. [54:54.720 --> 54:58.720] The prosecutor reasonably argues. [54:58.720 --> 55:03.720] I am the person charged with the prosecution. [55:03.720 --> 55:06.720] I am learning counsel. [55:06.720 --> 55:15.720] I'm in the best position to determine whether or not there's sufficient evidence to warrant a prosecution. [55:15.720 --> 55:27.720] But they're giving this to a grand jury of 12 laypersons who don't necessarily know anything about law. [55:27.720 --> 55:29.720] I should be doing this. [55:29.720 --> 55:38.720] But our founders in their wisdom understood that even the best prosecutor is focused toward prosecution. [55:38.720 --> 55:49.720] And he will tend in his zeal toward prosecution to take cases to trial that should never be taken to trial. [55:49.720 --> 56:07.720] I have a, I know the prosecuting attorney in Wise County and it is my opinion that if there is a prosecuting attorney in the state of Texas that has his moral center in the right place, it's Greg Lowry. [56:07.720 --> 56:15.720] And I have seen him agonize over prosecutions he had to do. [56:15.720 --> 56:22.720] And he's the one that gave me the key to grand juries. [56:22.720 --> 56:32.720] He presented a kid who got his bar card, had a big party, got popped for DUI on the way home. [56:32.720 --> 56:33.720] He was mortified. [56:33.720 --> 56:37.720] This is going to ruin that kid's career right when he gets started. [56:37.720 --> 56:45.720] He had another guy at the same time, I don't have anything to do with drugs, but I knew who this guy was, Joe De Villa. [56:45.720 --> 56:51.720] He's famous in Wise County for being the biggest drug dealing family in the county. [56:51.720 --> 56:55.720] They caught him with enough to charge him with trafficking. [56:55.720 --> 56:58.720] Greg filed both with the grand jury. [56:58.720 --> 57:00.720] They indicted the lawyer. [57:00.720 --> 57:03.720] They no billed the drug dealer. [57:03.720 --> 57:06.720] Greg was distraught. [57:06.720 --> 57:12.720] He said he didn't want to present this kid, but this is my job. [57:12.720 --> 57:19.720] And I didn't have the option of not because they got him dead bang. [57:19.720 --> 57:23.720] Well, they no billed the drug dealer. [57:23.720 --> 57:31.720] And Greg said, those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're going to do. [57:31.720 --> 57:40.720] And I stood right across from him, held up both my hands, looked up at the ceiling and said, there is a God. [57:40.720 --> 57:49.720] And he was not happy with that, but I explained that I could not have heard anything any better. [57:49.720 --> 57:58.720] I hear people coming on the show claiming that prosecutors stack grand juries and have grand juries under control. [57:58.720 --> 58:01.720] They do no such thing. [58:01.720 --> 58:07.720] We look through the records in Travis County and every single set of minutes, [58:07.720 --> 58:14.720] every day that a grand jury sits in Travis County, they produce a set of minutes after the hearing. [58:14.720 --> 58:19.720] Every one of them had at least one no bill in it, some six or seven. [58:19.720 --> 58:23.720] So they are not rubber stamping what the prosecutor does. [58:23.720 --> 58:31.720] The grand jury is the gadfly. It is the unknown. It is the uncontrollable. [58:31.720 --> 58:38.720] And when I come back, we'll talk about how to take advantage of that lack of certainty. [58:38.720 --> 58:49.720] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, the rule of law radio are calling number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [58:49.720 --> 58:57.720] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:57.720 --> 59:06.720] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.720 --> 59:08.720] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.720 --> 59:17.720] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:17.720 --> 59:27.720] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.720 --> 59:32.720] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:32.720 --> 59:47.720] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.720 --> 01:00:12.720] That's freestudybible.com. [01:00:12.720 --> 01:00:41.720] Today in History, the year 1940 while Disney's second full-length animated film Pinocchio premieres in theaters. [01:00:41.720 --> 01:00:59.720] In recent news, current county California Superior Court Judge David Lampe stated in a ruling today that the Tasteries Bakery in Bakersfield indeed has the right to refuse to bake a cake for same-sex wedding, but only because the act of baking is protected under free speech, [01:00:59.720 --> 01:01:12.720] more specifically artistic expression. Judge Lampe made it clear that freedom of religion does not give a business the right to refuse service to groups protected by the Civil Rights Act. [01:01:12.720 --> 01:01:33.720] Because the owner does not want to sell tires to same-sex couples, no baker may place their wares in a public display case, open their shop, and then refuse to sell because of race, religion, gender, or gender identification. [01:01:33.720 --> 01:01:46.720] This ruling seems to have been perfect timing since the high-profile case of the Colorado baker Jack Phillips, who did the same by refusing to bake a wedding cake for the same-sex couple a few years back, is about to be ruled on by the Supreme Court. [01:01:46.720 --> 01:02:04.720] Under initiatives set by Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu's government, tens of thousands of African refugees will soon be forcefully expelled from Israel. [01:02:04.720 --> 01:02:17.720] They will not be allowed to go to prison or take $3,500 and be transported to a third country with no official statements as to where that would be is suspected as most likely Rwanda. [01:02:17.720 --> 01:02:36.720] Thraeli pilots and doctors, among several others, have stated that they would not cooperate with any government efforts to remove migrants. The scenario has been in place since 2005 when Egypt's crackdown on Sudanese refugees triggered the mass migration of some 60,000 Africans who crossed into Israel before the 130-mile barrier was finished in 2013. [01:02:36.720 --> 01:02:51.720] It's estimated that some 20,000 have left since then. [01:02:51.720 --> 01:03:07.720] This is a quick roadie with your lowdown for February 7th, 2018. [01:03:21.720 --> 01:03:36.720] This is a quick roadie with your lowdown for February 7th, 2018. [01:03:36.720 --> 01:03:54.720] This is a quick roadie with your lowdown for February 7th, 2018. [01:03:54.720 --> 01:04:06.720] Okay, we are back. Randy Calhoun, Randy Calhoun, Deborah Stevens, wrote a lot of radio on this 15th day of February 2018, and we're talking about grand juries. [01:04:06.720 --> 01:04:10.720] Grand juries are the key to getting control of the system. [01:04:10.720 --> 01:04:20.720] I know Deborah Bristles when I say this and I get negative feedback for saying this, but I never want anybody inside it. [01:04:20.720 --> 01:04:27.720] That is not the point. Criminal prosecution is not about punishing people. [01:04:27.720 --> 01:04:31.720] Yes, we use it to punish people, but that's not why we do this. [01:04:31.720 --> 01:04:38.720] We do this to give people reason not to do those things that will get them punished. [01:04:38.720 --> 01:04:46.720] So to make the punishment real, we have to punish people, but we don't have to like it. We don't have to want it to happen. [01:04:46.720 --> 01:05:03.720] What I want is my public official to be afraid to do what he wants to do or feels like doing because he's faced with potential for retribution or consequences. [01:05:03.720 --> 01:05:07.720] Right now they feel they're not subject to consequences. [01:05:07.720 --> 01:05:13.720] So I go out of my way to introduce them to consequences. [01:05:13.720 --> 01:05:22.720] So if we can get other people to do that, will these public officials, they'll fix these problems themselves. [01:05:22.720 --> 01:05:26.720] They're not going to want to go back to those places we took them to. [01:05:26.720 --> 01:05:32.720] Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, highest court in Texas, they're a perfect example of that. [01:05:32.720 --> 01:05:42.720] I got them put in front of a grand jury for demanding that I file a motion for leave to file a habeas corpus. [01:05:42.720 --> 01:05:47.720] I said, heck, you guys don't have any power to grant or deny me leave. [01:05:47.720 --> 01:05:53.720] Well, I was trying to get another guy out of jail, so it wasn't my fight, so I filed a motion for leave. [01:05:53.720 --> 01:05:57.720] They denied me leave to file a habeas corpus. [01:05:57.720 --> 01:06:02.720] You kidding me? I went straight to the grand jury. It took me a year to get it to them. [01:06:02.720 --> 01:06:08.720] They spent three months. The grand jury got it on their first day in office. [01:06:08.720 --> 01:06:14.720] And in Tarrant County, they have three months. They get a new grand jury every three months. [01:06:14.720 --> 01:06:17.720] And they nobile good on their last day. [01:06:17.720 --> 01:06:27.720] All 15 of these judges knew that Ron Earl, 25-year district attorney, he is not running for office. [01:06:27.720 --> 01:06:32.720] Again, he's retiring. He's a Democrat. All 15 of these judges are Republicans. [01:06:32.720 --> 01:06:39.720] That no good scoundrel was using my complaint as cat and fodder to try to get all of them thrown out of office. [01:06:39.720 --> 01:06:45.720] And they sat there three months wondering if their career was going to end tomorrow. [01:06:45.720 --> 01:06:49.720] Absolutely nothing they could do. [01:06:49.720 --> 01:06:54.720] This was totally out of their control because it was a grand jury. [01:06:54.720 --> 01:07:01.720] Most powerful tools we have for dealing with public corruption. [01:07:01.720 --> 01:07:04.720] So, how do we use the grand jury? [01:07:04.720 --> 01:07:12.720] Well, you can be sure that if you try to file complaints for the grand jury, everybody's going to get in line to stop you. [01:07:12.720 --> 01:07:19.720] And it took quite a while to work out how to handle this. [01:07:19.720 --> 01:07:22.720] I've been at this since the 80s. [01:07:22.720 --> 01:07:26.720] And I've been through a lot of things you shouldn't do. [01:07:26.720 --> 01:07:33.720] Three dislocated ribs, two broken collar bones, tipped elbow, and tooth knocked out. [01:07:33.720 --> 01:07:36.720] I can tell you a lot of stuff not to do. [01:07:36.720 --> 01:07:40.720] I don't talk about that. Mostly I talk about what you should do. [01:07:40.720 --> 01:07:49.720] And I've developed a set of tools and a set of rules that I go by that keep me out of trouble. [01:07:49.720 --> 01:07:54.720] One of the rules is never give fair warning. [01:07:54.720 --> 01:07:57.720] Legal advice is fair warning. [01:07:57.720 --> 01:08:02.720] Never tell a public official what your rights are. [01:08:02.720 --> 01:08:09.720] They know whether they actually know they have imputed knowledge. [01:08:09.720 --> 01:08:15.720] And you're telling them it's not going to help to hear that all day every day. [01:08:15.720 --> 01:08:18.720] Besides, that goes under the heading of fair warning. [01:08:18.720 --> 01:08:22.720] Bushwack is so much better. [01:08:22.720 --> 01:08:33.720] I go in and rule two, never ask a public official to do anything that you actually want them to do. [01:08:33.720 --> 01:08:39.720] Because you never ask them to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [01:08:39.720 --> 01:08:43.720] So when they don't do it, you get to bushwack them. [01:08:43.720 --> 01:08:46.720] You get to land on them like a ton of bricks. [01:08:46.720 --> 01:08:50.720] So running the routine. [01:08:50.720 --> 01:08:53.720] I want to find a low level official. [01:08:53.720 --> 01:09:01.720] If I can, like I have a district judge now that rendered a ruling where he failed to apply the law to the facts. [01:09:01.720 --> 01:09:09.720] So we'll take that complaint to about the lowest level magistrate we can find in the county. [01:09:09.720 --> 01:09:17.720] And the magistrate will look at that and say, there is no way I'm going to act on this. [01:09:17.720 --> 01:09:21.720] And then I'll do what I always do and ask them to take their chicken suit off. [01:09:21.720 --> 01:09:25.720] And they're going to tell me they're not going to take their chicken suit off. [01:09:25.720 --> 01:09:29.720] Why do I ask them to take their chicken suit off? [01:09:29.720 --> 01:09:32.720] Ken Magnuson, he comes on the show on occasion. [01:09:32.720 --> 01:09:38.720] His brother is the prosecuting attorney or was the prosecuting attorney for the city of Mansfield. [01:09:38.720 --> 01:09:40.720] Ken, call me one day. [01:09:40.720 --> 01:09:42.720] What were you doing in Mansfield yesterday? [01:09:42.720 --> 01:09:45.720] Mind my own business, Ken. [01:09:45.720 --> 01:09:54.720] If you listen to the show a lot, you've probably heard me tell the story about the hearing aid trick I pulled on a judge. [01:09:54.720 --> 01:09:58.720] This was the day I pulled that gambit on the judge. [01:09:58.720 --> 01:10:00.720] He said, what were you doing in Mansfield? [01:10:00.720 --> 01:10:02.720] Minding my business, Ken. [01:10:02.720 --> 01:10:09.720] He said, well, my brother said that that officer told him that you were agitated. [01:10:09.720 --> 01:10:22.720] I said, Ken, ask your brother to ask that officer if I got agitated before I asked him to take his chicken suit off or after. [01:10:22.720 --> 01:10:25.720] I always ask him to take the chicken suit off. [01:10:25.720 --> 01:10:35.720] Everything I do, I'm thinking, how will this play before a grand jury of my peers? [01:10:35.720 --> 01:10:40.720] I never tell them I'm a sovereign citizen. [01:10:40.720 --> 01:10:48.720] If they ask, I remind them that they are public servants and I am the master of the servant. [01:10:48.720 --> 01:10:52.720] But that's as far as they ever get out of me. [01:10:52.720 --> 01:11:09.720] So when a public official fails to perform a duty, he's required to perform it in the process, denies you and the full free access to your enjoyment right. [01:11:09.720 --> 01:11:21.720] So when I ask a public official to do something he's required to do and he don't do it, then like in this case, we ask the judge to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence. [01:11:21.720 --> 01:11:26.720] The rules of evidence that apply to the laws comes to him with facts in the case. [01:11:26.720 --> 01:11:28.720] He didn't do that. [01:11:28.720 --> 01:11:35.720] So we filed a motion for findings of facts and conclusions at law. [01:11:35.720 --> 01:11:50.720] Texas Rural Civil Procedure 297 says that the judge must provide findings of facts or says the judge shall provide findings of facts and conclusions at law. [01:11:50.720 --> 01:11:57.720] If the judge fails to provide findings of facts and conclusions at law, wonderful. [01:11:57.720 --> 01:12:01.720] Now we prepare a criminal complaint and take it to a local justice of the peace. [01:12:01.720 --> 01:12:03.720] We've got a brand new one. [01:12:03.720 --> 01:12:06.720] That's one I'm looking at taking it to. [01:12:06.720 --> 01:12:10.720] And the J.P. is going to refuse to act on it. [01:12:10.720 --> 01:12:14.720] At least we hope the J.P. does. [01:12:14.720 --> 01:12:22.720] The J.P. and like all other public officials, when you try to take an action against another public official, they're going to jump in line to try to protect them. [01:12:22.720 --> 01:12:25.720] But good, that works for me. [01:12:25.720 --> 01:12:38.720] So when they do that, then we charge the justice of the peace with official oppression for denying us and the right to equal protection of the laws. [01:12:38.720 --> 01:12:44.720] We charge them with shielding from prosecution, 3805 penal code. That's a felony in Texas. [01:12:44.720 --> 01:12:50.720] And we take that complaint to whoever you want to. [01:12:50.720 --> 01:12:52.720] I'd like to walk them up to chain. [01:12:52.720 --> 01:12:54.720] Take it to the county judge. [01:12:54.720 --> 01:13:02.720] And the county judge will tell you, oh my goodness, Mr. Colton, you really shouldn't bring that to me. [01:13:02.720 --> 01:13:05.720] You should take that to the sheriff's department. [01:13:05.720 --> 01:13:11.720] And I say, oh, wow, well, thank you very much, your honor, for that legal advice. [01:13:11.720 --> 01:13:16.720] Well, I will give that all the due consideration that deserves. [01:13:16.720 --> 01:13:29.720] And now I'll go to the sheriff's department with a criminal complaint against the county judge for giving me that legal advice and not performing a duty he is required to perform, which was holding the examining trial. [01:13:29.720 --> 01:13:36.720] And then the sheriff refused to take my complaint and then I'll take a complaint against the sheriff. [01:13:36.720 --> 01:13:40.720] Actually, I don't go to the sheriff. I always ask for a deputy. [01:13:40.720 --> 01:13:44.720] Deputies tend to get excited and they act ignorant. [01:13:44.720 --> 01:13:48.720] The last couple of times I did that in Wise County. [01:13:48.720 --> 01:13:50.720] They sent out a sergeant or a tenant. [01:13:50.720 --> 01:13:56.720] They sent out someone who was really level headed. [01:13:56.720 --> 01:14:04.720] They quit sending deputies to me because I clean their clocks and make them look like idiots and they don't want that happen again. [01:14:04.720 --> 01:14:10.720] So they send out their best and these guys have handled me really well and I like to be handled well. [01:14:10.720 --> 01:14:13.720] They don't do anything stupid. They don't do anything arrogant. [01:14:13.720 --> 01:14:22.720] When I was trying to get a sergeant to take criminal complaints against the JP who was in the same building, [01:14:22.720 --> 01:14:29.720] the sergeant I was writing the complaint and the JP come out and I had asked to see some records and he said I had to wait 10 days. [01:14:29.720 --> 01:14:35.720] And I said, no, I don't have to wait 10 minutes. You don't fall under Rule 12. [01:14:35.720 --> 01:14:37.720] So you've got to go get them right now. [01:14:37.720 --> 01:14:39.720] Well, Mr. Compton, you're just going to have to wait 10 days. [01:14:39.720 --> 01:14:41.720] Oh, okay. [01:14:41.720 --> 01:14:46.720] So I went across the room to the sheriff's window and asked for somebody to take my complaint. [01:14:46.720 --> 01:14:48.720] Well, they sent out this sergeant. [01:14:48.720 --> 01:14:55.720] I'm filling out the complaint and the JP come out and he said, well, Mr. Kelkin, you know we have all of those online. [01:14:55.720 --> 01:14:59.720] Say what? Oh, yeah, you can go online and look at all of those. [01:14:59.720 --> 01:15:04.720] Oh, man, you just ruined everything. [01:15:04.720 --> 01:15:12.720] And the JP looked at me and said, well, if you got them online, [01:15:12.720 --> 01:15:18.720] I can't complain at you for not making them available to me. You ruined everything. [01:15:18.720 --> 01:15:20.720] And I told the sergeant, you ruined everything. [01:15:20.720 --> 01:15:22.720] Now I can't file a complaint against him. [01:15:22.720 --> 01:15:27.720] And the sergeant said, well, Mr. Kelkin, if you want to file a complaint, I will take it. [01:15:27.720 --> 01:15:32.720] I said, yeah, no, but I can't file a complaint against him because I don't have any grounds. [01:15:32.720 --> 01:15:41.720] Now they were, that sergeant wasn't going to say anything that I could construe as an attempt to stop me from filing this complaint. [01:15:41.720 --> 01:15:43.720] Because they've been there. [01:15:43.720 --> 01:15:50.720] They've been there and have run the routine on them and they did not want the routine run on them again. [01:15:50.720 --> 01:15:53.720] But they still don't take my complaints. [01:15:53.720 --> 01:15:55.720] And then I take a criminal complaint. [01:15:55.720 --> 01:16:01.720] I like it when they handle themselves well because then I get to go in, like I did with my last ticket, [01:16:01.720 --> 01:16:07.720] and tell the judge that this officer conducted himself like a consummate professional. [01:16:07.720 --> 01:16:11.720] But I want him arrested for first degree felony aggravated assault. [01:16:11.720 --> 01:16:14.720] Well, if he was a professional, why do you want him arrested? [01:16:14.720 --> 01:16:16.720] He followed policy. [01:16:16.720 --> 01:16:18.720] Policy is flawed. [01:16:18.720 --> 01:16:24.720] Best way to do this is to charge the person with following policy. [01:16:24.720 --> 01:16:26.720] But the policy is flawed. [01:16:26.720 --> 01:16:34.720] Now the person really feels put upon, not by you, but by the system, by his boss. [01:16:34.720 --> 01:16:36.720] They've put him in this position. [01:16:36.720 --> 01:16:42.720] So once you do the sheriff, then you go to the district judge with criminal charges against the sheriff. [01:16:42.720 --> 01:16:44.720] The district judge will refuse to take it. [01:16:44.720 --> 01:16:49.720] Then you take criminal complaints to the district attorney against the district judge. [01:16:49.720 --> 01:16:54.720] When we come back from the other side, we'll explain how this gets really exciting. [01:16:54.720 --> 01:17:07.720] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:07.720 --> 01:17:09.720] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. I'd be lost without logos. [01:17:09.720 --> 01:17:12.720] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:12.720 --> 01:17:17.720] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have any money to give [01:17:17.720 --> 01:17:21.720] because I spent it all on supplement. How can I help logos? [01:17:21.720 --> 01:17:23.720] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.720 --> 01:17:28.720] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:17:28.720 --> 01:17:30.720] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:30.720 --> 01:17:33.720] Now, go to LogosRegualNetwork.com. [01:17:33.720 --> 01:17:36.720] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:36.720 --> 01:17:42.720] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:42.720 --> 01:17:43.720] Do I pay extra? [01:17:43.720 --> 01:17:44.720] No. [01:17:44.720 --> 01:17:46.720] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:46.720 --> 01:17:47.720] No. [01:17:47.720 --> 01:17:48.720] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:48.720 --> 01:17:49.720] No. [01:17:49.720 --> 01:17:50.720] I mean, yes. [01:17:50.720 --> 01:17:54.720] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. [01:17:54.720 --> 01:17:56.720] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.720 --> 01:17:57.720] We are Logos. [01:17:57.720 --> 01:17:59.720] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:59.720 --> 01:18:04.720] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:04.720 --> 01:18:08.720] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. [01:18:08.720 --> 01:18:14.720] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:18:14.720 --> 01:18:20.720] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [01:18:20.720 --> 01:18:24.720] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [01:18:24.720 --> 01:18:26.720] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:18:26.720 --> 01:18:28.720] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [01:18:28.720 --> 01:18:33.720] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:18:33.720 --> 01:18:38.720] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:38.720 --> 01:18:40.720] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:40.720 --> 01:18:46.720] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner, [01:18:46.720 --> 01:18:49.720] or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [01:18:49.720 --> 01:18:57.720] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:18:57.720 --> 01:19:11.720] We'll learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:19:27.720 --> 01:19:43.720] Okay, we are back. [01:19:43.720 --> 01:19:50.720] Randy Kelce and Deborah Stevens rule of law radio on this 15th day of February, 2018, [01:19:50.720 --> 01:19:53.720] and we're talking about running the routine. [01:19:53.720 --> 01:19:59.720] You run this routine on them once you get to the district attorney. [01:19:59.720 --> 01:20:03.720] Special statute in Texas. [01:20:03.720 --> 01:20:10.720] Statute is article 2.03, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:20:10.720 --> 01:20:15.720] Chapter 2 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure goes to duties of officers. [01:20:15.720 --> 01:20:23.720] The first officers the legislature chose to speak to were prosecuting attorneys. [01:20:23.720 --> 01:20:30.720] 2.01 says it shall be the primary duty of prosecuting attorney not to secure conviction, [01:20:30.720 --> 01:20:33.720] but to ensure that justice is served. [01:20:33.720 --> 01:20:40.720] He shall not seek with evidence or witnesses or show the innocence of the accused or mitigate the guilt of the accused. [01:20:40.720 --> 01:20:48.720] Okay, that's nice high-minded rhetoric, but it really doesn't tell the prosecutor to do anything in particular. [01:20:48.720 --> 01:20:58.720] 2.02 addresses which prosecutors will handle which cases civil and criminal and who handles what. [01:20:58.720 --> 01:21:07.720] 2.03, the first one that orders the prosecutor to do a specific thing. [01:21:07.720 --> 01:21:13.720] When a prosecuting attorney, and I'm paraphrasing Chris because it's a little bit long and convoluted, [01:21:13.720 --> 01:21:21.720] but the gist of it is when a prosecuting attorney is made known in any manner that a public official has violated a law, [01:21:21.720 --> 01:21:32.720] a law, any law relating to his office, he shall reduce the complaint to an information submitted to the grand jury. [01:21:32.720 --> 01:21:38.720] I used to say fourth whip, but they took that out. No discretion. [01:21:38.720 --> 01:21:51.720] Then it goes on to 2.04, 2.05 and 2.06 that addresses the normal procedure when a complaint is against a citizen and not a public official. [01:21:51.720 --> 01:22:01.720] 2.03 should be construed as a special statute exempted out from the normal procedure for processing and criminal complaints. [01:22:01.720 --> 01:22:05.720] So, no discretion. [01:22:05.720 --> 01:22:10.720] A prosecuting attorney will refuse to give it to the grand jury. [01:22:10.720 --> 01:22:13.720] At least he hope he does. [01:22:13.720 --> 01:22:22.720] So, then you file a criminal complaint against the district attorney with, I'd like to do the attorney general. [01:22:22.720 --> 01:22:32.720] And the attorney general is going to give you some song and dance salsa down your pants and say how he doesn't have original jurisdiction. [01:22:32.720 --> 01:22:35.720] Well, yes, he does. [01:22:35.720 --> 01:22:51.720] Under 39.03 or 02, one of them was just a few years ago was adjusted to give the attorney general original jurisdiction [01:22:51.720 --> 01:22:54.720] the matter of a complaint against a public official. [01:22:54.720 --> 01:23:00.720] So, both the local prosecutor and the attorney general have original jurisdiction. [01:23:00.720 --> 01:23:03.720] And you don't care if he has it or not. You're going to file a complaint with him. [01:23:03.720 --> 01:23:12.720] You're going to claim he has a duty to give it to the grand jury and when you don't, then you go to the Chief Justice of the Supreme [01:23:12.720 --> 01:23:18.720] and file the complaint with the Chief Justice of the Supreme. [01:23:18.720 --> 01:23:22.720] Here's the Chief Justice of the Supreme's problem. [01:23:22.720 --> 01:23:29.720] Under 02.09, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, it is titled, Who Are Magistrates? [01:23:29.720 --> 01:23:32.720] First one in the list. [01:23:32.720 --> 01:23:37.720] Chief is the Justices of the Supreme Court. [01:23:37.720 --> 01:23:43.720] Second, Judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals. [01:23:43.720 --> 01:23:54.720] Judges of the Court of Appeals, District Judges, County Judges, Justices of the Peace Magistrates, and Recorders. [01:23:54.720 --> 01:23:58.720] First one, Justices of the Supreme Court. [01:23:58.720 --> 01:24:06.720] So, you send a Chief Justice and when he doesn't act on it, you come back to the grand jury and take it straight to a grand jury [01:24:06.720 --> 01:24:09.720] and force somebody to interfere with you. [01:24:09.720 --> 01:24:14.720] The way I do it is I try to find out when the grand jury is going to next meet. [01:24:14.720 --> 01:24:18.720] Sometimes that takes a little shucking and jiving. [01:24:18.720 --> 01:24:28.720] In Randall County, not Randall County, in Johnson County, I called down and told them that I was homeschooling my kids [01:24:28.720 --> 01:24:35.720] and I was doing a section on grand juries. [01:24:35.720 --> 01:24:41.720] And I asked them a bunch of questions. I asked them, does the grand jury meet in the courtroom or do they have their own room? [01:24:41.720 --> 01:24:44.720] Oh, they have a special room down in the basement. [01:24:44.720 --> 01:24:48.720] Is it just for grand juries? Yes, just for grand juries. [01:24:48.720 --> 01:24:50.720] They told me where it was at. [01:24:50.720 --> 01:24:54.720] I said, can I come down there and question them? No, you can't question them. [01:24:54.720 --> 01:24:59.720] We just yanked it for quite a while, but I got the one piece of information I needed. [01:24:59.720 --> 01:25:01.720] Where do they meet? [01:25:01.720 --> 01:25:08.720] And then I asked when they meet and I was directed to the district clerk and the district clerk kept the calendar [01:25:08.720 --> 01:25:10.720] and they didn't have any problem. They told me when they meet. [01:25:10.720 --> 01:25:14.720] They meet one day a month. It's generally the third Thursday of the month. [01:25:14.720 --> 01:25:16.720] Oh, well, that's really cool. [01:25:16.720 --> 01:25:21.720] Third Thursday of the month, I went down there and walked up to the bailiff who's standing in front of the door [01:25:21.720 --> 01:25:25.720] and I told the bailiff, my name is Randall Kelton and this one said, yeah, I know who you are. [01:25:25.720 --> 01:25:28.720] He didn't like me. He had an attitude. [01:25:28.720 --> 01:25:33.720] Instruct the foreman that I have business with the grand jury. [01:25:33.720 --> 01:25:35.720] That's what I always tell them. [01:25:35.720 --> 01:25:41.720] They always say, may I tell them the nature of the business? Yes, you may give him these. [01:25:41.720 --> 01:25:50.720] Now, if the foreman, which I'm sorry, if the bailiff, which this is what you'll normally do, [01:25:50.720 --> 01:25:53.720] he'll take the complaints to the prosecuting attorney. [01:25:53.720 --> 01:26:01.720] Just that, I charged the bailiff with tampering with the government document, telling in Texas, [01:26:01.720 --> 01:26:09.720] 12 counts, one for each folder because I have one folder for each grand jury member. [01:26:09.720 --> 01:26:14.720] And then I also charged the prosecuting attorney with 12 counts. [01:26:14.720 --> 01:26:22.720] In Johnson County, the bailiff did just exactly that. [01:26:22.720 --> 01:26:29.720] And the second time I came was with complaints against the bailiff and the prosecuting attorney. [01:26:29.720 --> 01:26:40.720] But this time, I went down and when I gave the, I met the bailiff, told him that he needed to get another bailiff. [01:26:40.720 --> 01:26:42.720] And why do I need to get another bailiff? [01:26:42.720 --> 01:26:49.720] Well, these complaints contain criminal accusations against you and you might not want to handle these. [01:26:49.720 --> 01:26:56.720] He went and got another bailiff. I gave him to the bailiff and the bailiff had this look in his eye. [01:26:56.720 --> 01:26:59.720] I said, Mr. bailiff, I think I know what you're thinking. [01:26:59.720 --> 01:27:02.720] You're thinking, I should give these to the prosecuting attorney. [01:27:02.720 --> 01:27:04.720] Well, that's a really bad idea. [01:27:04.720 --> 01:27:11.720] If you do that, then the prosecuting attorney is named in these complaints. [01:27:11.720 --> 01:27:13.720] I'll consider that obstruction of justice. [01:27:13.720 --> 01:27:16.720] So they got him to the grand jury. [01:27:16.720 --> 01:27:21.720] I went upstairs, sat in the courtroom waiting to see what happened. [01:27:21.720 --> 01:27:27.720] And that's when the sergeant of the bailiff said to me, I got along with him real good. [01:27:27.720 --> 01:27:28.720] We choked around all the time. [01:27:28.720 --> 01:27:34.720] He said, Mr. Kelton, you seem to be a personal individual, a personable individual. [01:27:34.720 --> 01:27:36.720] I said, well, I try to be. [01:27:36.720 --> 01:27:38.720] He said, you mind if I give you a little advice? [01:27:38.720 --> 01:27:39.720] So sure. [01:27:39.720 --> 01:27:45.720] He said, when you come down here poking the bear the way you do, you really need to be careful. [01:27:45.720 --> 01:27:49.720] I said, well, thank you very much for that advice. [01:27:49.720 --> 01:27:53.720] But Sergeant, you don't understand. [01:27:53.720 --> 01:27:56.720] He said, well, what don't I understand? [01:27:56.720 --> 01:27:59.720] I am the bear. [01:27:59.720 --> 01:28:05.720] He laughed and said, yes, Mr. Kelton, today you are the bear. [01:28:05.720 --> 01:28:09.720] Grand jury called me in and I presented the district attorney to the grand jury. [01:28:09.720 --> 01:28:12.720] They did not indict him. [01:28:12.720 --> 01:28:22.720] But if you file a complaint against the public official in Johnson County, they will get [01:28:22.720 --> 01:28:27.720] that thing straight to the district attorney. [01:28:27.720 --> 01:28:30.720] They will act on it immediately. [01:28:30.720 --> 01:28:32.720] And that's what I was trying to get him to. [01:28:32.720 --> 01:28:35.720] I wouldn't try to get anybody to indict it. [01:28:35.720 --> 01:28:41.720] But the district attorney told these guys, I'm not getting in this pickle again. [01:28:41.720 --> 01:28:48.720] I'm not going to be presented to the grand jury again by some po-don't-prose-chump and [01:28:48.720 --> 01:28:51.720] risk losing my career. [01:28:51.720 --> 01:28:57.720] If you guys screw up, you're going to have to advance to the grand jury and help me. [01:28:57.720 --> 01:29:00.720] It works. [01:29:00.720 --> 01:29:02.720] Grand juries terrify these guys. [01:29:02.720 --> 01:29:10.720] And when you start working up the chain, especially these higher level judges who were doing what [01:29:10.720 --> 01:29:16.720] the other judges does, and all of a sudden they have criminal complaints coming against [01:29:16.720 --> 01:29:19.720] them, they are not going to be happy campers. [01:29:19.720 --> 01:29:26.720] Goes to the rule that says, Paula, you will never win your case because you have the facts [01:29:26.720 --> 01:29:28.720] and the law on your side. [01:29:28.720 --> 01:29:34.720] You'll win the case if you have the politics on your side and all politics is local. [01:29:34.720 --> 01:29:37.720] This is how we create local politics. [01:29:37.720 --> 01:29:45.720] Get these guys to have a reason to not ever want to give us an opportunity to pull that [01:29:45.720 --> 01:29:47.720] garbage on them again. [01:29:47.720 --> 01:29:50.720] When I come back, I've got two callers who will go to calls. [01:29:50.720 --> 01:29:53.720] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of our radio. [01:29:53.720 --> 01:29:56.720] Call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:56.720 --> 01:29:58.720] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.720 --> 01:30:03.720] Have you had your hug today? [01:30:03.720 --> 01:30:08.720] If not, you're missing out on some of the best medicine relationships have to offer. [01:30:08.720 --> 01:30:12.720] Dr. Catherine Albrecht, I'll be back in just a moment to tell you why you should get your [01:30:12.720 --> 01:30:14.720] daily dose of hug power. [01:30:14.720 --> 01:30:16.720] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:16.720 --> 01:30:20.720] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.720 --> 01:30:25.720] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.720 --> 01:30:26.720] So protect your rights. [01:30:26.720 --> 01:30:30.720] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.720 --> 01:30:32.720] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:32.720 --> 01:30:37.720] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine [01:30:37.720 --> 01:30:40.720] alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:40.720 --> 01:30:43.720] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:43.720 --> 01:30:46.720] A hug a day could keep the heart doctor away. [01:30:46.720 --> 01:30:51.720] Researchers at the University of North Carolina say a simple embrace has benefits that go way beyond [01:30:51.720 --> 01:30:53.720] that warm and fuzzy feeling. [01:30:53.720 --> 01:30:58.720] They measure the levels of the stress hormone cortisol and the bonding hormone oxytocin, [01:30:58.720 --> 01:31:02.720] both before and after volunteer couples held hands, talked, and hugged. [01:31:02.720 --> 01:31:08.720] Following the 20-second hug, oxytocin increased and cortisol decreased in both men and women. [01:31:08.720 --> 01:31:13.720] As a result, their blood pressure also went down, lowering their risk of cardiovascular disease. [01:31:13.720 --> 01:31:15.720] So wrap your arms around the one you love. [01:31:15.720 --> 01:31:18.720] It'll do your heart and theirs a world of good. [01:31:18.720 --> 01:31:22.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht sending you a virtual hug from Radioland. [01:31:22.720 --> 01:31:29.720] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [01:31:53.720 --> 01:31:56.720] We are Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:56.720 --> 01:32:25.720] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:26.720 --> 01:32:48.720] For more information, go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:48.720 --> 01:32:56.720] Be lock-in. That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.720 --> 01:32:58.720] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.720 --> 01:33:19.720] You can actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:28.720 --> 01:33:53.720] Okay, we are back. [01:33:53.720 --> 01:34:02.720] Randy Kelton and we're going to Tim in Texas. [01:34:02.720 --> 01:34:06.720] Hello, Tim. What do you have for us today? [01:34:06.720 --> 01:34:11.720] Well, you were at the beginning of the show. [01:34:11.720 --> 01:34:18.720] You were talking to the truck driver about some things and I think you were using me as an example. [01:34:18.720 --> 01:34:26.720] Some of the things we've been going through here with the judge just not paying attention to anything [01:34:26.720 --> 01:34:31.720] and siding with the people who are suing us. [01:34:31.720 --> 01:34:40.720] So when we have to keep our optimism up, I suppose, [01:34:40.720 --> 01:34:44.720] or we just float away and give in to what they're doing. [01:34:44.720 --> 01:34:48.720] And let me make a comment here. [01:34:48.720 --> 01:34:52.720] This has really been difficult for Tim and Laura. [01:34:52.720 --> 01:34:55.720] You guys have been listening for a long time. [01:34:55.720 --> 01:35:00.720] You remember when I was prosecuted in Cherokee County. [01:35:00.720 --> 01:35:06.720] I really appreciate how difficult it is if you've never taken these guys on. [01:35:06.720 --> 01:35:15.720] And you would think sitting back watching this that the court rules against you. [01:35:15.720 --> 01:35:17.720] But it's not that easy. [01:35:17.720 --> 01:35:27.720] You and I, we all have an investment in a system that's supposed to be there to protect us. [01:35:27.720 --> 01:35:36.720] They taught us that in school and all their lives, we've lived in this country feeling like we were protected by our legal system. [01:35:36.720 --> 01:35:46.720] When you find out that is a outright lie, that is an incredible betrayal. [01:35:46.720 --> 01:35:54.720] And of all things to deal with emotionally, but betrayal is one of the worst by far. [01:35:54.720 --> 01:35:58.720] And I have to give Tim and Laura credit. [01:35:58.720 --> 01:36:01.720] They've got these guys coming after them. [01:36:01.720 --> 01:36:11.720] They're doing everything they can to intimidate them and get them to bow down and duck and run for cover. [01:36:11.720 --> 01:36:16.720] And they're not bowing down and ducking from run for cover. [01:36:16.720 --> 01:36:22.720] I've been talking to Tim and he is obviously major stressed. [01:36:22.720 --> 01:36:27.720] But the one thing I haven't heard from Tim is backing down. [01:36:27.720 --> 01:36:37.720] This is much harder than most people realize haven't been there and I do want to give you credit Tim. [01:36:37.720 --> 01:36:42.720] Even though I give you a hard time earlier today. [01:36:42.720 --> 01:36:46.720] I think we gave one another a hard time. [01:36:46.720 --> 01:36:49.720] It is stressful. It is difficult. [01:36:49.720 --> 01:36:53.720] And sometimes I get frustrated. I was really disappointed. [01:36:53.720 --> 01:36:55.720] I really didn't expect this judge. [01:36:55.720 --> 01:37:04.720] We gave him absolute, uncontrovertible, concrete evidence that there was never a jury trial. [01:37:04.720 --> 01:37:06.720] He did not care. [01:37:06.720 --> 01:37:09.720] Made no difference what we filed. [01:37:09.720 --> 01:37:11.720] He just said, didn't I? [01:37:11.720 --> 01:37:13.720] No explanation, no nothing. [01:37:13.720 --> 01:37:15.720] Denied everything. [01:37:15.720 --> 01:37:17.720] Just didn't care. [01:37:17.720 --> 01:37:19.720] We need to take him to graduate. [01:37:19.720 --> 01:37:26.720] No matter what hole you find and any of the procedure that they did, they're just going to say, [01:37:26.720 --> 01:37:30.720] and oh well, whatever. [01:37:30.720 --> 01:37:41.720] Let's see what they do when we file federal 18 U.S. Code 242 criminal charges against him. [01:37:41.720 --> 01:37:49.720] Are we going to file that against the city or are we going to file that against the district judge? [01:37:49.720 --> 01:37:52.720] District judge. [01:37:52.720 --> 01:37:59.720] It was the judge who had a duty to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence. [01:37:59.720 --> 01:38:03.720] Then apply the laws that comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:38:03.720 --> 01:38:06.720] I have someone else who has an odd email name. [01:38:06.720 --> 01:38:08.720] I don't know exactly who they are. [01:38:08.720 --> 01:38:15.720] But the question be on the first case that I referenced to that effect. [01:38:15.720 --> 01:38:22.720] Said he couldn't find what I quoted in the case and I had just read the case that day and I agreed with him. [01:38:22.720 --> 01:38:23.720] I couldn't find it either. [01:38:23.720 --> 01:38:25.720] We find that a lot of times. [01:38:25.720 --> 01:38:26.720] You got to read the case. [01:38:26.720 --> 01:38:32.720] If you got a quote from a case, you need to go find it in the case itself because like this one, it was misquoted. [01:38:32.720 --> 01:38:39.720] But because of that, I did some research and found a whole bunch more stuff on this particular issue. [01:38:39.720 --> 01:38:42.720] So we've got a lot of stuff on it. [01:38:42.720 --> 01:38:45.720] And then Tim was the one that sent me a document. [01:38:45.720 --> 01:38:51.720] I had a reference to 297-267. [01:38:51.720 --> 01:38:54.720] Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. [01:38:54.720 --> 01:38:56.720] Go ahead, Tim. [01:38:56.720 --> 01:39:07.720] Okay. And that one said that on request, the judge shall provide findings of fact and conclusions of law. [01:39:07.720 --> 01:39:24.720] And the case law that I found says that if a judge fails to properly apply the law to the facts, that it is a due process violation. [01:39:24.720 --> 01:39:30.720] Well, and that is subject to extraordinary remedy. [01:39:30.720 --> 01:39:37.720] And what extraordinary remedy means is a petition for rid of mandamus. [01:39:37.720 --> 01:39:55.720] But what that also establishes is that the judge failed to perform a duty he was required to perform it in the process. [01:39:55.720 --> 01:40:00.720] That's what I say, Mr. Leader, in the Fed. [01:40:00.720 --> 01:40:08.720] So we need to, you know, I've been thinking about how to handle this. We need to file against him in the Fed. [01:40:08.720 --> 01:40:14.720] Just like Judge McBride, he's not going to see that coming. [01:40:14.720 --> 01:40:21.720] He's thinking, well, if you don't like my ruling, well, you can appeal to the Court of Appeals. [01:40:21.720 --> 01:40:26.720] Yeah, that's right. We can. We can also appeal to grand jury, have you indicted. [01:40:26.720 --> 01:40:34.720] So we filed with the U.S. with the S.A.C. and Dallas against the district judge here. [01:40:34.720 --> 01:40:47.720] And what's going to happen is he's going to get a call from the S.A.C. or from some FBI agent wanting to know what this is all about. [01:40:47.720 --> 01:40:53.720] That's going to get this local district judge real excited. [01:40:53.720 --> 01:41:06.720] This is what we need to do to remind these judges who the most powerful person in the courthouse is and it's not the district judge. [01:41:06.720 --> 01:41:16.720] It's the ordinary citizen because the ordinary citizen can go to anyone he wants to. [01:41:16.720 --> 01:41:29.720] And if any, once you file with the feds against the district judge, if anybody says anything to you, you like, you blame the district judge. [01:41:29.720 --> 01:41:43.720] And I'm thinking, once you file against the district judge, if the city comes back and does anything that's outside the strict confines [01:41:43.720 --> 01:41:51.720] of statutory due process, then you blame the district judge. [01:41:51.720 --> 01:42:00.720] File against him. He is not going to be a happy camper charging retaliation. [01:42:00.720 --> 01:42:07.720] Excuse him of sending them, of instructing them to do that to retaliate against you. [01:42:07.720 --> 01:42:19.720] The hardest thing to argue against is the thing that has no evidence. [01:42:19.720 --> 01:42:29.720] We file federal charges against the judge and then some public official starts harassing you. [01:42:29.720 --> 01:42:32.720] Well, that dirty rotten judge sent them to do that. [01:42:32.720 --> 01:42:37.720] Well, prove you didn't, Bubba. See how that works for you. [01:42:37.720 --> 01:42:43.720] Yeah, I don't know how that would work. It seemed like the burden of proof would be on me. [01:42:43.720 --> 01:42:50.720] No, it's not. Well, the problem is it goes to one of Ken's four rules. [01:42:50.720 --> 01:42:55.720] Perception is everything. [01:42:55.720 --> 01:43:03.720] The judge has to consider what is the grand jury of your peers, not his peers, [01:43:03.720 --> 01:43:09.720] going to think about the accusations you're making. [01:43:09.720 --> 01:43:11.720] That's his problem. [01:43:11.720 --> 01:43:19.720] And in spite of what a lot of the Patriots say, the prosecuting attorney does not control the grand jury. [01:43:19.720 --> 01:43:24.720] Scalia said any prosecuted were to assault and get a ham sandwich indicted. [01:43:24.720 --> 01:43:26.720] Well, that might be true. [01:43:26.720 --> 01:43:31.720] The problem the prosecutor has is keeping the ham sandwich from getting indicted. [01:43:31.720 --> 01:43:39.720] And Greg Lowry will tell you that for certain when that brand new lawyer got indicted over a DUI. [01:43:39.720 --> 01:43:45.720] He just broke his heart, but he couldn't keep him from getting indicted. [01:43:45.720 --> 01:43:47.720] That's the hard part. [01:43:47.720 --> 01:43:55.720] Hang on. Go into break. Randy Charlton, Real Law Radio, we'll be right back. [01:44:17.720 --> 01:44:22.720] I've been confused about this plan for over 80 years and many still don't know what hemp is. [01:44:22.720 --> 01:44:27.720] So now you know hemp is not marijuana and marijuana is not hemp. [01:44:27.720 --> 01:44:29.720] They are different varieties of the same species. 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[01:45:22.720 --> 01:45:27.720] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.720 --> 01:45:34.720] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.720 --> 01:45:43.720] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.720 --> 01:45:52.720] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.720 --> 01:46:01.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:22.720 --> 01:46:33.720] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. [01:46:33.720 --> 01:46:40.720] And, Tim, do you have any other questions for us? I've got two more callers in one segment. [01:46:40.720 --> 01:46:50.720] I'd love to get to them, but I'll probably try to get a hold of you in the morning and see if we can go or if you send me those documents you were talking about so that I can go ahead and file them tomorrow. [01:46:50.720 --> 01:46:55.720] Okay, I'll talk to you in the morning. [01:46:55.720 --> 01:47:02.720] Okay, thank you, Tim. Now we're going to Mark in Washington. Hello, Mark. [01:47:02.720 --> 01:47:17.720] Hello, Randy. Say, I'm a pretty straight-laced guy, but for reasons of my own, I feel justified in doing something that usually runs against my own personal ethics. [01:47:17.720 --> 01:47:36.720] I have a first cousin who works in a real estate core logistics company, and she pointed out that since my mortgage was taken out in 2005, [01:47:36.720 --> 01:47:48.720] that the likelihood of my mortgage holder being able to demonstrate proof of debt is slim to none. [01:47:48.720 --> 01:47:55.720] I would say that's an exaggeration. It's less than that. [01:47:55.720 --> 01:48:17.720] Randy, that's what I'm calling about for reasons of my own and reasons that are not material to my question, but I find it justifiable within my heart to try to force them to prove my indebtedness to them, and if they can't, I want to wash the mortgage away. [01:48:17.720 --> 01:48:21.720] Okay, hold on. Are you up to date on your mortgage? [01:48:21.720 --> 01:48:23.720] I am. I always have been. [01:48:23.720 --> 01:48:29.720] You're in a great position. Here's what happens. [01:48:29.720 --> 01:48:45.720] They get these mortgages, and the first thing they do is they negotiate the note into a trust, and then the bank stands in the front, or the lender stands in the front, as if he is the holder. [01:48:45.720 --> 01:48:49.720] But what he really is, is the servicer. [01:48:49.720 --> 01:48:56.720] That's supposed to be noticed to you under the real estate settlement procedures act, but it never is. [01:48:56.720 --> 01:49:05.720] Okay, so he's pretending like he's still the lender, and that he holds the mortgage, but he's really just the agent for the holder of the mortgage. [01:49:05.720 --> 01:49:16.720] He's the servicer, and then at some point, the servicing will generally be changed by a filing of an assignment in the record. [01:49:16.720 --> 01:49:22.720] These people are attacking the assignment. Forget about the assignments. You don't care about that. [01:49:22.720 --> 01:49:39.720] What you care about is, if you're up to date, is that when a new servicer takes over by assignment, they never transfer their payment records to them. [01:49:39.720 --> 01:49:52.720] Why would they not do that? That's insane. But if you have a servicer now, that servicer only has payment records for the time that the servicer services the loan. [01:49:52.720 --> 01:49:59.720] So, you send him a qualified written request. Ask for a complete accounting of the note. [01:49:59.720 --> 01:50:13.720] If you will send me the note, Truth and Lending Statement, HUD-1 Settlement Statement, I've got this nifty little spreadsheet that took me about six months to create. [01:50:13.720 --> 01:50:22.720] I'll drop the numbers in there, and I will give you a claim against them that will choke a horse. [01:50:22.720 --> 01:50:31.720] And then you say, I have reason to believe that I've overpaid you by this month. Show me how much I have paid. [01:50:31.720 --> 01:50:46.720] Show me the amount that was deducted from the principal and the interest, so I can calculate the total accurate payoff amount at this day. [01:50:46.720 --> 01:50:58.720] There's no chance on earth they can do that. Okay, now let's play Dirty Rotten Lowdown Scheister Lawyer for a moment. [01:50:58.720 --> 01:51:08.720] Let's say you had somebody offer you a whole bunch of money for your property and you want to sell your property. [01:51:08.720 --> 01:51:13.720] But you don't want to sell it until you know how much you're going to make on the sale. [01:51:13.720 --> 01:51:18.720] And you need to know what the payoff amount is. [01:51:18.720 --> 01:51:27.720] So you ask them for this accounting so you can calculate the payoff amount to see if it matches what they claim is the payoff amount. [01:51:27.720 --> 01:51:37.720] Well, they're not going to be able to do that. And as a result, you're going to wind up losing this sale. [01:51:37.720 --> 01:51:47.720] The cause of action for that is benefit of the bargain. You would lose the benefit of the bargain. [01:51:47.720 --> 01:51:53.720] And that's the cause of action you can sue them for. [01:51:53.720 --> 01:51:55.720] Sound interesting? [01:51:55.720 --> 01:52:00.720] I would actually have to have some sort of sale agreement, wouldn't I, in hand? [01:52:00.720 --> 01:52:05.720] No, just an offer. [01:52:05.720 --> 01:52:13.720] I'll make you the offer. Who cares? [01:52:13.720 --> 01:52:23.720] Check around, check with your real estate agent, see what the current fair market value for the property is. [01:52:23.720 --> 01:52:32.720] Find out how long you could expect it to take to sell the property. [01:52:32.720 --> 01:52:37.720] And you want to sell your property, but you can't determine the payoff amount. [01:52:37.720 --> 01:52:43.720] And fair market value is X, I owe Y. [01:52:43.720 --> 01:52:50.720] If I sold the property at fair market value, I would benefit by Z. [01:52:50.720 --> 01:53:01.720] But I can't sell the property at fair market value because I can't get an accurate payoff amount benefit of the bargain. [01:53:01.720 --> 01:53:12.720] Put them into court. You can cost them more money in attorney fees than the value of your property. [01:53:12.720 --> 01:53:23.720] Sue them for an accurate payoff amount and then ask the court to order mediation. [01:53:23.720 --> 01:53:28.720] They're not going to want to mediate. The lawyers, they're supposed to win these cases. [01:53:28.720 --> 01:53:35.720] So they don't want to come and mediate and look like they're afraid they're going to lose. [01:53:35.720 --> 01:53:37.720] You know, they want to put up this posture. [01:53:37.720 --> 01:53:44.720] So if you ask the court to order mediation, the court will love to because they don't want to have to deal with all this. [01:53:44.720 --> 01:53:48.720] They, their docket is full enough already, so they order mediation. [01:53:48.720 --> 01:53:52.720] Now the lawyer can come to the table without losing face. [01:53:52.720 --> 01:53:58.720] And you tell them, look, I will keep you guys in court till you get old. [01:53:58.720 --> 01:54:03.720] I got this chump in Texas who's got all these documents already prepared. [01:54:03.720 --> 01:54:09.720] He will keep you guys in court for the next six to 10 years. [01:54:09.720 --> 01:54:16.720] He will bar grieve you every time you sneeze, cost you your malpractice insurance. [01:54:16.720 --> 01:54:23.720] And then you'll have to hire more expensive lawyers. He will drive your costs through the roof. [01:54:23.720 --> 01:54:29.720] Or make me a deal I can't pass up. [01:54:29.720 --> 01:54:30.720] Speaker. [01:54:30.720 --> 01:54:34.720] Sounds all, sounds like you're pretty confident there, Andy. [01:54:34.720 --> 01:54:39.720] And, you know, if they can't produce proof of the cat. [01:54:39.720 --> 01:54:42.720] Okay, okay. Here's their problem. [01:54:42.720 --> 01:54:47.720] They cannot win, period. [01:54:47.720 --> 01:54:53.720] You're paid up to date. They can't win. They got no counter claim of any kind. [01:54:53.720 --> 01:54:55.720] All they can do is lose. [01:54:55.720 --> 01:55:06.720] Calling you up is because, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm just consider, I'm considering just paying off my mortgage to get these people to stop, just to get them to stop calling. [01:55:06.720 --> 01:55:09.720] How can, how can you pay off your mortgage? [01:55:09.720 --> 01:55:10.720] I've got plenty. [01:55:10.720 --> 01:55:13.720] How much, how much, how much do you owe? [01:55:13.720 --> 01:55:16.720] 165,000. [01:55:16.720 --> 01:55:18.720] Are you sure? [01:55:18.720 --> 01:55:20.720] Yeah. Well, no. [01:55:20.720 --> 01:55:34.720] What, on your latest, latest bill done from the, from the mortgage company, what was the interest amount on that done? [01:55:34.720 --> 01:55:38.720] I think it was around $700. [01:55:38.720 --> 01:55:43.720] No, no, no. I'm sorry. I said it now. I mean, an interest rate. [01:55:43.720 --> 01:55:53.720] You would not believe how often I find the interest rate they're charging you does not match what's on the note. [01:55:53.720 --> 01:55:58.720] Yeah, that's officially a 5.5%. [01:55:58.720 --> 01:56:09.720] Is that what the statement says? I've got someone in California right now that their interest rate at this point should be 4.3%. [01:56:09.720 --> 01:56:16.720] And the service is charging them 6.5. [01:56:16.720 --> 01:56:19.720] Fraud on his face. [01:56:19.720 --> 01:56:25.720] I don't really have trouble with the 5.5% interest rate, Randy, but you know. [01:56:25.720 --> 01:56:39.720] Are they actually charging you 5.5? And are they charging you 5.5 on an actual principle? [01:56:39.720 --> 01:56:41.720] You know. [01:56:41.720 --> 01:56:46.720] I can run your very quick calculation to say exactly what you should owe. [01:56:46.720 --> 01:56:57.720] That's really as you go on the internet, pull up a spreadsheet that calculates mortgage, put in the date of the mortgage, put in the principle, put in the interest. [01:56:57.720 --> 01:57:05.720] Go down to this, this, today's the latest payment. It'll tell you exactly what you should owe. [01:57:05.720 --> 01:57:12.720] I almost guarantee you it will not match what they're claiming. [01:57:12.720 --> 01:57:16.720] These guys are lying, thieving scoundrels. You may be amazed. [01:57:16.720 --> 01:57:25.720] Okay, a settlement statement has all of these fees and charges on it at closing. [01:57:25.720 --> 01:57:39.720] Did the lender provide documentation to show that the fees that were charged were necessary, were not otherwise forbidden by law, were for services actually rendered, [01:57:39.720 --> 01:57:52.720] were fees that charges the costs that were assessed were reasonable, and that the lender did not take an undisclosed markup on the fees charged. [01:57:52.720 --> 01:57:58.720] That's why the Registration Settlement Procedures Act. And I guarantee you they gave you squat. [01:57:58.720 --> 01:58:01.720] You don't know if they made that stuff up. [01:58:01.720 --> 01:58:04.720] Okay, I'll find my settlement statement. [01:58:04.720 --> 01:58:12.720] I also have a copy of the Jurisdictionary course. Would it be useful for me to run to the Jurisdictionary? [01:58:12.720 --> 01:58:18.720] Absolutely. Go through that thing. That is incredible. [01:58:18.720 --> 01:58:26.720] When I talk to somebody who's been to Jurisdictionary, I control in about five minutes by the way they talk to me. [01:58:26.720 --> 01:58:34.720] Go through Jurisdictionary. I'm about to run out of time. Send me randierrulealradio.com. [01:58:34.720 --> 01:58:40.720] Send me HUD 1 Note, Truth and Lending Statement. I'll run the numbers on it. Send it back to you. [01:58:40.720 --> 01:58:47.720] Send me the payoff amount. I'll get it back to you. We're out of time. We're back tomorrow night. Good night. [01:58:47.720 --> 01:58:49.720] Thank you. 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