[00:00.000 --> 00:29.640] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 close with gold $1,353.22 an ounce. [00:29.640 --> 00:39.120] It's over $16.68 an ounce, Texas crude $65.51 a barrel, bitcoins at $6,902.19, ethereums at [00:39.120 --> 00:55.600] $420.80, bitcoin cash at $652.90, and finally light coins at $114.34, a crypto coin. [00:55.600 --> 01:01.320] Today in History, the year 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act [01:01.320 --> 01:06.240] of 1968, which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, [01:06.240 --> 01:08.160] religion, sex, or national origin. [01:08.160 --> 01:13.320] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:13.320 --> 01:18.440] in public schools, and employment, and public accommodations for places of business. [01:18.440 --> 01:28.840] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to reach new levels after a chemical attack on civilians [01:28.840 --> 01:33.080] in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which is being blamed [01:33.080 --> 01:37.680] on the democratically elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, by the United States [01:37.680 --> 01:42.200] and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified evidence as [01:42.200 --> 01:43.480] of yet. [01:43.480 --> 01:47.320] President Trump tweeted today Wednesday that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down any and [01:47.320 --> 01:51.680] all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice and new [01:51.680 --> 01:56.520] and smart, going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing animal [01:56.520 --> 01:58.760] who kills his people and enjoys it. [01:58.760 --> 02:02.760] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [02:02.760 --> 02:06.920] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [02:06.920 --> 02:11.200] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the Organization [02:11.200 --> 02:15.720] for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to investigate the site of the chemical slaughter. [02:15.720 --> 02:19.560] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [02:19.560 --> 02:24.120] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [02:24.120 --> 02:28.920] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [02:28.920 --> 02:32.680] notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [02:32.680 --> 02:38.000] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook [02:38.000 --> 02:42.320] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government, which [02:42.320 --> 02:46.880] has been fighting terrorists, or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart [02:46.880 --> 03:16.720] missile strike and then there will be no evidence for international inspectors to look at. [03:16.720 --> 03:35.640] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with our radio, and I ran off to Clifkin. [03:35.640 --> 03:41.840] Okay, I'm kind of preaching tonight, Steph, and I don't mean to be, but while I'm talking [03:41.840 --> 03:47.440] about your issue, I'm actually trying to formulate understandings in everybody who's listening [03:47.440 --> 03:52.880] who can take what you're doing and apply it to what they're doing, and let me be frank [03:52.880 --> 03:53.880] with you, Steph. [03:53.880 --> 04:02.920] When you first called in, you sounded kind of superficial, and I said, okay, okay, you [04:02.920 --> 04:12.000] need to go out and read the code, and I am never more pleased than when somebody comes [04:12.000 --> 04:18.040] back and demonstrates to me that they have in fact read the code, and they have paid [04:18.040 --> 04:23.840] attention and thought about the issues, and you have done exactly that. [04:23.840 --> 04:28.600] You're why I do this show. [04:28.600 --> 04:35.360] I can go out and beat up these people all I want to, but I'm just one guy. [04:35.360 --> 04:42.200] I'm never going to change things, unless I can get guys like you, I've never been to [04:42.200 --> 04:43.200] Idaho. [04:43.200 --> 04:50.000] I get someone in Idaho going out and beating these guys up, and when you start beating [04:50.000 --> 04:55.680] these guys up, other people are going to see you beating these guys up, and they're going [04:55.680 --> 04:58.680] to come to you and say, how did you beat these guys up? [04:58.680 --> 05:02.160] And you start showing them this thing goes, this is how we're going to take our country [05:02.160 --> 05:03.160] back. [05:03.160 --> 05:06.160] So, thank you, Steph. [05:06.160 --> 05:12.920] Well, that's the basis of this empower movement. [05:12.920 --> 05:21.400] What it is is it puts a notice of liability on the government official, and it brings [05:21.400 --> 05:32.240] it out so that they don't stand back and hide behind their government veil, like the corporate [05:32.240 --> 05:37.320] veil that people work in. [05:37.320 --> 05:47.600] And it's called empower movement, INPOWERMovement.com, and they have a template. [05:47.600 --> 05:50.720] It's kind of a process that you go through. [05:50.720 --> 05:56.640] I don't know if it works, but my thinking is, at first, I like your approach the best, [05:56.640 --> 06:04.360] and then if I can't, you know, get them to respond, then I'll use this in notice of liability [06:04.360 --> 06:05.360] process. [06:05.360 --> 06:10.200] But I just wanted to see if they ever heard of it. [06:10.200 --> 06:11.200] INPOWERMovement. [06:11.200 --> 06:17.400] I'm trying to look it up on the Internet right now, because to me, that sounds intriguing. [06:17.400 --> 06:24.400] I-A-M-P-E-R-W-I-A-M-P-O-O-W-WRMovement. [06:24.400 --> 06:37.200] Okay, I want to see what's in it. [06:37.200 --> 06:39.200] Okay, I did not get a hit. [06:39.200 --> 06:41.680] I might have spelled it wrong. [06:41.680 --> 06:44.640] Is it I-A-M or E-M? [06:44.640 --> 06:49.640] I-N-I-N, like INPOWERMovement.com. [06:49.640 --> 07:01.080] God, no, I'm not getting a hit in it, powermovement.com. [07:01.080 --> 07:04.400] I've got it spelled right, but I'm not getting a hit on it. [07:04.400 --> 07:09.120] Let me try E-M, but I'll look that up. [07:09.120 --> 07:14.560] If there are people out there doing that, I definitely want to connect with them. [07:14.560 --> 07:19.560] If you have contact with them, connect with them, I'd like to connect with these people [07:19.560 --> 07:26.000] and give them some tools they may or may not have. [07:26.000 --> 07:32.000] Nothing I have is proprietary. [07:32.000 --> 07:39.120] Everything I do, I give out freely, because the whole purpose of this show is to get other [07:39.120 --> 07:46.280] people doing what I do and doing what you do the way it works best for you. [07:46.280 --> 07:50.400] I'm just trying to give everybody tools they can work with. [07:50.400 --> 07:54.520] I don't feel like I own any of the stuff I do. [07:54.520 --> 08:02.000] It's just I'm just trying to help everybody else get control of government, because at [08:02.000 --> 08:04.120] the end of the day, that helps me. [08:04.120 --> 08:05.120] Right. [08:05.120 --> 08:14.520] This guy's from Canada, and so he works with people in the United States and Canada. [08:14.520 --> 08:21.920] Can you send him a reference to me and see if you'll contact me? [08:21.920 --> 08:23.600] I don't know him personal. [08:23.600 --> 08:28.920] I just watched the videos that he has on the web. [08:28.920 --> 08:31.600] Can you send me a link? [08:31.600 --> 08:33.000] Sure, I will. [08:33.000 --> 08:35.880] I'll definitely link. [08:35.880 --> 08:44.080] But he has gone through this process himself, like you being beat up by the government, [08:44.080 --> 08:54.920] and he's tailored this process to the smart meters, and so that's where I'm not concerned [08:54.920 --> 08:55.920] about the smart meters. [08:55.920 --> 08:59.040] I like the idea of his process. [08:59.040 --> 09:00.040] Good. [09:00.040 --> 09:09.280] Good, maybe we can take his process and add to what we're doing and increase our effectiveness. [09:09.280 --> 09:17.000] But he supposedly has done it in Canada and has broke through that not a corporate veil, [09:17.000 --> 09:22.840] but the government veil, but they like to hide behind. [09:22.840 --> 09:23.840] That's wonderful. [09:23.840 --> 09:24.840] That's what we do. [09:24.840 --> 09:30.000] When we start taking public officials and bringing them to task, that's when we get [09:30.000 --> 09:32.520] things changed. [09:32.520 --> 09:40.080] How you and I can make change is from the guys on the bottom, the functionaries. [09:40.080 --> 09:45.560] The guys at the top send the functionaries out to do their dirty deeds. [09:45.560 --> 09:50.920] With my traffic ticket site, one of the things we include is a professional conduct complaint [09:50.920 --> 09:58.320] against a police officer, and that turns out to be the most powerful thing that we do because [09:58.320 --> 10:04.360] the police officer is sent out to do a job, and he goes out and does his job the way he's [10:04.360 --> 10:13.280] trained to do within the requirements of his office, and we're stinging for it. [10:13.280 --> 10:17.680] I sued Denton County, Texas, once for $11 million. [10:17.680 --> 10:24.320] I sued 24 litigants, and I accused each one of them of following policy. [10:24.320 --> 10:32.120] To say they were not happy campers is an understatement. [10:32.120 --> 10:39.600] I accused each one of them is doing exactly what their boss told them to do, and then [10:39.600 --> 10:43.880] demonstrated how what their boss told them to do was criminal. [10:43.880 --> 10:47.920] They go back to the boss and say, what the heck is going on here? [10:47.920 --> 10:52.960] I did what you told me to do, now I'm being harmed as a result. [10:52.960 --> 10:58.240] A police officer gets a professional conduct complaint, invalid, invalid, his insurance [10:58.240 --> 11:01.200] carrier does not care. [11:01.200 --> 11:08.120] He gets six, the agent for the bonding company is going to go to the agency and say, you [11:08.120 --> 11:14.280] got an officer here with six professional conduct complaints, we're going to raise the [11:14.280 --> 11:16.880] bond rating for your entire department. [11:16.880 --> 11:21.040] What do you think is going to happen to that officer? [11:21.040 --> 11:26.840] Who else is going to hire him with six professional conduct complaints? [11:26.840 --> 11:36.360] You end his career, and there's nothing they can do about it. [11:36.360 --> 11:41.560] We get the people to understand these tools we can use against these public officials. [11:41.560 --> 11:46.640] We can start expressing influence against them. [11:46.640 --> 11:51.160] When you start going after the guy at the bottom for doing what the guy above told him [11:51.160 --> 11:55.480] to do, this destabilizes the whole system. [11:55.480 --> 12:02.920] I do have a whole stack of callers, I did enjoy this, but I do need to move on. [12:02.920 --> 12:05.160] Keep us up to date with what happens, Stefan. [12:05.160 --> 12:09.760] I think you'll get any idea of how to beat these guys up. [12:09.760 --> 12:15.360] I'm trying, but I really appreciate your help and I'll send you an email. [12:15.360 --> 12:17.280] Okay, thank you, Stefan. [12:17.280 --> 12:24.280] Now we're going to Charles in Georgia, and Charles in Georgia is absolutely having way [12:24.280 --> 12:32.160] too much fun with these guys and with these hillbillies. [12:32.160 --> 12:38.920] I can say that because I'm in Tennessee and I am surrounded by hillbillies and I am related [12:38.920 --> 12:43.200] to every one of them two or three times. [12:43.200 --> 12:47.400] Okay, what do you have for us today, Charles? [12:47.400 --> 12:59.720] Okay, when I went to court yesterday, something that happened yesterday kind of bothered me. [12:59.720 --> 13:09.720] The judge in his pre-trial speech or pre-morning speech, whatever it was, said something that [13:09.720 --> 13:19.560] traffic tickets are misdemeanors here in the state of Georgia, and misdemeanors are crimes. [13:19.560 --> 13:23.640] That was the one thing that really stuck out about what happened, not that I went before [13:23.640 --> 13:27.600] them or anything that happened, but just that. [13:27.600 --> 13:34.480] When I got a chance to get off the road this morning, I came home and I thought about it. [13:34.480 --> 13:37.800] Misdemeanors are crimes. [13:37.800 --> 13:40.920] Why is it that traffic tickets are crimes? [13:40.920 --> 13:42.640] Can anybody explain that? [13:42.640 --> 13:48.240] And I want to read something real quick about what a crime is in the Black Star Visionary [13:48.240 --> 13:49.640] or Fourth Edition. [13:49.640 --> 14:03.800] It says here, crime is strictly a violation of law, either human or divine. [14:03.800 --> 14:11.800] In present usage, the term is commonly applied to grave offenses against the law of the state. [14:11.800 --> 14:17.800] Okay, where is that definition from? [14:17.800 --> 14:21.160] Blacks Law Dictionary, Fourth Edition. [14:21.160 --> 14:25.600] Okay, a suggestion. [14:25.600 --> 14:32.040] Never ever cite Blacks law. [14:32.040 --> 14:39.520] When you read a definition in Blacks law, they will almost always have case law in support [14:39.520 --> 14:42.880] of the definition. [14:42.880 --> 14:49.720] The courts will say you can't cite Blacks law, but you can cite the case law that Blacks [14:49.720 --> 14:53.640] law's definitions are based on. [14:53.640 --> 14:56.000] Just a little information. [14:56.000 --> 15:02.680] Would you read that again, I thought that sounded interesting, the divine part. [15:02.680 --> 15:13.000] Okay, crime, that's in quotation marks, is strictly a violation of law, either human [15:13.000 --> 15:15.680] or divine. [15:15.680 --> 15:25.160] In present usage, the term is commonly applied to grave offenses against the laws of the state. [15:25.160 --> 15:30.360] Right after that, it says Van Ripper versus Constitutional Government League, 1-Washington [15:30.360 --> 15:33.840] 2nd on page 605. [15:33.840 --> 15:36.920] Exactly, that's how you cite it. [15:36.920 --> 15:41.000] Don't mention Blacks law, do that, that's perfect. [15:41.000 --> 15:45.800] What does grave mean? [15:45.800 --> 15:47.800] Dead. [15:47.800 --> 15:49.800] Dead. [15:49.800 --> 15:52.800] Dead? [15:52.800 --> 15:53.800] No, no, no. [15:53.800 --> 16:00.240] Okay, what does grave mean in this context? [16:00.240 --> 16:15.160] Okay, we understand that grave means of great import, of, I guess, great import, the great [16:15.160 --> 16:18.360] import is the best way I can say it. [16:18.360 --> 16:28.200] That's in the ordinary popular definition, but in law, grave in this context has to [16:28.200 --> 16:39.480] have a special meaning, does a, allowing your wheels to touch the yellow line amount to [16:39.480 --> 16:44.560] a grave violation. [16:44.560 --> 16:50.520] So what does grave mean? [16:50.520 --> 16:57.720] That's the thing about law is, and whenever you're reading case law, I'm always very, [16:57.720 --> 16:58.720] very pedantic. [16:58.720 --> 16:59.720] Dang, Cookie. [16:59.720 --> 17:00.720] Cookie? [17:00.720 --> 17:01.720] Me love Cookie. [17:01.720 --> 17:02.720] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:02.720 --> 17:03.720] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:03.720 --> 17:04.720] Cookie? [17:04.720 --> 17:05.720] Yucky? [17:05.720 --> 17:06.720] No, no bad cookies. [17:06.720 --> 17:11.720] You can't even eat these cookies, these are cyber cookies. [17:11.720 --> 17:13.720] No, can't eat. [17:13.720 --> 17:16.800] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:16.800 --> 17:17.800] We have apples. [17:17.800 --> 17:18.800] Really? [17:18.800 --> 17:21.400] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:21.400 --> 17:22.400] Yummy apple. [17:22.400 --> 17:26.840] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.840 --> 17:33.000] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:33.000 --> 17:34.560] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.560 --> 17:40.200] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand [17:40.200 --> 17:46.240] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:46.240 --> 17:47.240] new cookie. [17:47.240 --> 17:48.240] New cookies? [17:48.240 --> 17:49.240] For me? [17:49.240 --> 17:53.640] Consider it an early Christmas present, and every time I order on Amazon, I go through [17:53.640 --> 17:57.560] this link and I give a little present to this radio network, too. [17:57.560 --> 17:58.560] These are cookies. [17:58.560 --> 18:00.560] These look classified. [18:00.560 --> 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 Mears proven method. [18:09.560 --> 18:13.720] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.720 --> 18:14.720] can win two. [18:14.720 --> 18:19.560] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.560 --> 18:25.000] civil rights statute, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to [18:25.000 --> 18:29.440] answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, [18:29.440 --> 18:34.160] how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.160 --> 18:39.280] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.280 --> 18:41.400] Federal consultation is available as well. [18:41.400 --> 18:46.920] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears spanner [18:46.920 --> 18:49.920] or email MichaelMears at yahoo.com. [18:49.920 --> 18:59.520] 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 [18:59.520 --> 19:00.520] next. [19:00.520 --> 19:29.520] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Reeloflaw Radio, and we're talking to Charles in Georgia. [19:29.520 --> 19:34.600] And on the break, I looked up Grave. [19:34.600 --> 19:39.960] You gave me the definition of Grave when Grave is used as an L. I'm looking for the [19:39.960 --> 19:45.880] definition of Grave when Grave is used as an adjective, and as an adjective, it means [19:45.880 --> 19:55.640] weighty, momentous, or important, threatening, or seriously bad outcome or involving serious [19:55.640 --> 19:59.240] issues critical. [19:59.240 --> 20:09.880] How does letting your wheels touch the center line become weighty, momentous, or important? [20:09.880 --> 20:19.200] How does not calling the Jack Booty Doug Sheriff's Department immediately when you get your wheels [20:19.200 --> 20:29.360] hung on a guardrail go to threatening or a seriously bad outcome or involving serious [20:29.360 --> 20:32.520] issues critical? [20:32.520 --> 20:38.640] Well, that's exactly my point. [20:38.640 --> 20:39.720] That's my point. [20:39.720 --> 20:47.080] And it goes back to what you and Scott were talking about with this Google YouTube, Google [20:47.080 --> 20:53.000] Tube, whatever you guys were talking about earlier, you asked the question, who is doing [20:53.000 --> 20:54.000] that? [20:54.000 --> 21:00.200] Okay, who is doing that thing to Google or to Yahoo or YouTube? [21:00.200 --> 21:02.720] Okay, who is doing this to our laws? [21:02.720 --> 21:09.720] Why did they think that me not having my seatbelt on or me not calling 911 in a non-emergency [21:09.720 --> 21:14.680] situation think that should be a crime? [21:14.680 --> 21:21.160] And I'm pretty sure it wasn't just the good people in the suits and skirts and high heels [21:21.160 --> 21:23.320] up there in the legislature. [21:23.320 --> 21:25.560] I'm sure it just wasn't just them. [21:25.560 --> 21:31.480] There was somebody else behind the scenes that thought that me not having my seatbelt [21:31.480 --> 21:37.800] on or wherever the case is thought that that should be a... [21:37.800 --> 21:45.200] I can make an argument for that. [21:45.200 --> 21:54.160] I've known several DPS officers and I find that DPS officers, because they primarily investigate [21:54.160 --> 22:02.120] accidents, I really find that they get real tense when you talk about things like seatbelts [22:02.120 --> 22:07.960] and such because they have pulled so many dead bodies out of cars that they believed [22:07.960 --> 22:13.400] would have been saved if they had had seatbelt on. [22:13.400 --> 22:21.200] So I can understand where someone would take a position that this is so dangerous that [22:21.200 --> 22:27.200] it should be criminal not to do it. [22:27.200 --> 22:31.120] How would you argue against that? [22:31.120 --> 22:42.080] A personal experience, matter of fact, over there in good old Texas where I went, 4, 4 [22:42.080 --> 22:53.680] up, down, 35, this was during the, I think this would be a firestone, firestone defects [22:53.680 --> 23:03.760] on the first, back during the 2000s and the car is going down the road and the tread falls [23:03.760 --> 23:07.120] off and the car goes off the road. [23:07.120 --> 23:17.280] Three people in the car have good old American-made seatbelts on and one that does not. [23:17.280 --> 23:23.000] The one that does not, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, but three people does not have their seatbelt [23:23.000 --> 23:28.320] on and the one that does have his seatbelt on died in this wreck. [23:28.320 --> 23:32.400] That one good person was my friend and we played baseball together there in Austin, [23:32.400 --> 23:37.840] Texas and he died with his seatbelt on and everybody else lived with their seatbelts [23:37.840 --> 23:38.840] off. [23:38.840 --> 23:47.040] So maybe in this one instance and many other instances where seatbelts or not seatbelts [23:47.040 --> 23:53.000] or whatever the case was where people died regardless of their seatbelt. [23:53.000 --> 24:00.040] People are known to be, I once pulled a woman out of a car that was hanging upside down [24:00.040 --> 24:03.560] and she's stuck in her seatbelt and can't get it loose because she's hanging upside [24:03.560 --> 24:13.520] down on it, but then again the car had rolled across the highway in front of me so fast [24:13.520 --> 24:16.120] that the car was a blur. [24:16.120 --> 24:21.080] It was rolling so fast and this is just north of Hillsboro. [24:21.080 --> 24:26.160] It stopped at the bottom of the long slope on the side of the highway there. [24:26.160 --> 24:30.200] When it went across in front of me I just turned and followed it down. [24:30.200 --> 24:35.360] It stopped upside down and by the time it got stopped I was out of my car just about [24:35.360 --> 24:39.840] halfway to it and jerked the door open. [24:39.840 --> 24:42.520] This is one of the reasons I love Texas. [24:42.520 --> 24:47.400] I jerked the door open and the woman's hanging upside down her face been through the windshield [24:47.400 --> 24:54.840] and blood everywhere and glass and she's telling me to get out and leave her, don't touch her. [24:54.840 --> 24:59.920] I figure she's just in shock so I try to get seatbelt loose and I can't. [24:59.920 --> 25:05.160] I turn around to go to my car and get a knife and a guy puts a knife in my hand. [25:05.160 --> 25:10.360] I looked out and I bet there were 50 cars out there. [25:10.360 --> 25:17.760] People running toward me with crowbars, jacks, fire extinguishers, anything I could have [25:17.760 --> 25:19.880] possibly needed. [25:19.880 --> 25:25.000] These people were running at me with with a car upside down, steaming, gas pouring out [25:25.000 --> 25:26.280] of it. [25:26.280 --> 25:31.400] I looked out and saw that and I said, that's why I'm in Texas. [25:31.400 --> 25:32.400] We got her out of there. [25:32.400 --> 25:39.360] We had to cut the seatbelt loose but if she hadn't had the seatbelt on with that car [25:39.360 --> 25:44.840] rolling that fast, she'd probably killed her anyway so it's hard to say. [25:44.840 --> 25:51.080] I probably didn't use a good example but it is questionable. [25:51.080 --> 25:58.520] This seems more of a civil matter than a criminal matter unless you're driving drunk. [25:58.520 --> 26:08.200] DUI should be criminal because you kill other people but if I do something stupid or unconscious [26:08.200 --> 26:16.440] and I'm harmed there by my business, not your business, not your business to make it a crime [26:16.440 --> 26:26.520] for me to be ignorant or careless, so there is an argument that they should be civil issues [26:26.520 --> 26:33.400] but it's clear that the local jurisdictions wanted to make them criminal issues for dollar [26:33.400 --> 26:37.800] flow in Texas, 2016. [26:37.800 --> 26:48.440] There are approximately 8.4 million criminal cases filed in the state of Texas, 7.1 million [26:48.440 --> 26:52.440] were traffic. [26:52.440 --> 26:54.880] That's where the money is. [26:54.880 --> 26:57.360] It's all about dollar flow. [26:57.360 --> 27:14.040] Now this next one, crime and misdemeanor, properly speaking, are synonymous terms. [27:14.040 --> 27:25.160] Though in common usage, crime is made to denote such offenses as are of a deeper and more [27:25.160 --> 27:28.480] atrocious die. [27:28.480 --> 27:46.680] Okay, so this implies that misdemeanor is only incidentally crime because it's more [27:46.680 --> 27:47.680] minor in its nature. [27:47.680 --> 27:56.400] I'm not sure what that really means. [27:56.400 --> 28:01.920] Well the whole point of me bringing that up is because you and Scott were asking who's [28:01.920 --> 28:08.080] doing this and my thing is I want to know why is it that I need to go here and be indicted [28:08.080 --> 28:19.600] because I didn't call 911 and have them call this a crime and so who is doing this? [28:19.600 --> 28:20.600] Well you answered that. [28:20.600 --> 28:24.840] You said the municipal, the local courts wanted these things because they want me to come [28:24.840 --> 28:30.040] in there and make some money. [28:30.040 --> 28:38.400] So it's absolutely appropriate if they're holding you to a final letter of law. [28:38.400 --> 28:45.960] They should be held to the self-same letter. [28:45.960 --> 28:53.960] So you called into a probate court, did you look up the authority of the court in criminal [28:53.960 --> 29:01.280] cases to order you to appear? [29:01.280 --> 29:06.600] I didn't look that specifically up. [29:06.600 --> 29:15.080] What I did look up was the jurisdiction of the court, of the probate court and the jurisdiction [29:15.080 --> 29:18.880] of the probate court had three elements. [29:18.880 --> 29:28.920] The probate court has to be within the count of, the offense has to have taken within the [29:28.920 --> 29:39.040] county and within the town at the same time in order for the probate court to have jurisdiction [29:39.040 --> 29:40.040] over the town. [29:40.040 --> 29:44.760] Hold on, hold on, the town, what town? [29:44.760 --> 29:50.800] The town of the probate court, if it happens outside of the town of the probate court. [29:50.800 --> 29:59.000] So is the probate court like a municipal court? [29:59.000 --> 30:04.360] That is one. [30:04.360 --> 30:05.360] What's your privacy worth? [30:05.360 --> 30:09.280] Well it's hard to put a dollar figure on it but some entrepreneurs want to help people [30:09.280 --> 30:12.840] earn money and marketers pluck their personal data off the web. [30:12.840 --> 30:16.920] I'll get your account for Albright back with details in a moment. [30:16.920 --> 30:18.640] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.640 --> 30:23.040] When you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back again and once your privacy [30:23.040 --> 30:27.240] is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.240 --> 30:32.560] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.560 --> 30:35.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:35.000 --> 30:40.600] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [30:40.600 --> 30:42.320] Yahoo and Bing. [30:42.320 --> 30:45.880] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.880 --> 30:50.480] In these times of vanishing privacy marketers are monitoring our behavior on the internet [30:50.480 --> 30:55.440] aggregating our clicks, taps and swipes to make fortunes but what if you got paid every [30:55.440 --> 30:57.400] time your data was sold? [30:57.400 --> 31:02.160] A startup called Personal thinks it's not only possible but profitable, how? [31:02.160 --> 31:07.480] By creating a web marketplace where people could sell access to their personal information. [31:07.480 --> 31:12.040] Users would upload intimate details of their lives to an online vault and then charge companies [31:12.040 --> 31:15.280] to access the data to market to them directly. [31:15.280 --> 31:20.760] Now I'm all for making privacy vultures pay but fighting for privacy by removing it feels [31:20.760 --> 31:21.760] like the wrong approach. [31:21.760 --> 31:26.760] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:26.760 --> 31:35.760] Did you know there are 3 million edible food plants on earth and none have the nutritional [31:35.760 --> 31:37.320] value of the hemp plant? [31:37.320 --> 31:42.640] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder, it does not contain chemicals or THC, it's [31:42.640 --> 31:45.880] non-GMO and is 100% gluten free. [31:45.880 --> 31:51.120] Hemp protein powder burns fat, fills muscle, contains 53% protein and feeds the body the [31:51.120 --> 31:52.640] nutrients it needs. [31:52.640 --> 32:03.080] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you only at HempUSA.org. [32:03.080 --> 32:05.880] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:05.880 --> 32:09.400] In today's America we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever [32:09.400 --> 32:13.760] going to have a free society then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.760 --> 32:16.560] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [32:16.560 --> 32:20.840] act in our own private capacity and most importantly the right to due process of law. [32:20.840 --> 32:24.680] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.680 --> 32:26.560] our rights through due process. [32:26.560 --> 32:30.040] Former Sheriff's deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with rule of law radio has put together the [32:30.040 --> 32:33.800] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.800 --> 32:36.160] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.160 --> 32:40.160] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:40.160 --> 32:41.160] ordering your copy today. [32:41.160 --> 32:44.680] By ordering now you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.680 --> 32:48.440] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:48.440 --> 32:51.560] Hundreds of research documents and further useful resource material. [32:51.560 --> 32:55.560] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.560 --> 32:59.440] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want to have [32:59.440 --> 33:00.440] to serve. [33:00.440 --> 33:29.240] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:29.240 --> 33:34.280] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio and we're talking to Charles in Georgia [33:34.280 --> 33:37.840] and Charles hadn't said it before, I appreciate you. [33:37.840 --> 33:43.040] I really like it when I got somebody who does his homework. [33:43.040 --> 33:50.280] You are going to become a, we were talking on the break, my producers from Georgia and [33:50.280 --> 34:00.280] you're going to wind up on that list that says do not detain. [34:00.280 --> 34:05.720] That's the list I want to be on, that's the list I'm aiming for. [34:05.720 --> 34:15.640] Okay, where were we moving out, I ran off to Cliff again, we were talking about, what [34:15.640 --> 34:26.680] was the term, probate court, jurisdiction of probate court? [34:26.680 --> 34:34.000] That was my question, I talked to Robert on the break and he wasn't sure about this. [34:34.000 --> 34:42.880] What you said sounds like probate court means municipal because its jurisdiction is restricted [34:42.880 --> 34:50.960] to a municipal venue, this probate court, this probate in Georgia means something different [34:50.960 --> 34:57.600] than it does in most other places because generally a probate court wouldn't be restricted [34:57.600 --> 35:05.560] to a municipal venue, it would be restricted maybe to a county but not a municipality. [35:05.560 --> 35:17.040] Well, there's some but steps with this thing, this probate court has jurisdiction over things [35:17.040 --> 35:25.720] such as DNA testing and regular things that are associated with probate court, they have [35:25.720 --> 35:35.520] that jurisdiction concurrent with a superior court in that aspect but they do also have [35:35.520 --> 35:50.000] jurisdiction here in Georgia over criminal first appearances and criminal what? [35:50.000 --> 35:57.360] First appearances, first appearances in criminal, so wait a minute, hold on, criminal first [35:57.360 --> 36:09.280] appearance, first appearance is almost always required to be an examining trial. [36:09.280 --> 36:15.200] And when I went through the first appearance yesterday, there was no examining trial, there [36:15.200 --> 36:24.800] was no probable cause of hearing, it was strictly a plea, into a plea. [36:24.800 --> 36:33.160] That is an arraignment hearing, an arraignment hearing is a hearing for the purpose of determining [36:33.160 --> 36:41.560] the identity of the accused and taking a plea, an arraignment hearing is held by the trial [36:41.560 --> 36:51.800] court who has jurisdiction, with the requirement for a preliminary hearing, jurisdiction does [36:51.800 --> 37:00.240] not accrue to the trial court until a magistrate has made a determination of probable cause. [37:00.240 --> 37:07.720] That's going to be a basic requirement that extends from the signing of the first Magna [37:07.720 --> 37:15.880] Carter in 1215 AD in England and it carried over to the United States because the United [37:15.880 --> 37:23.840] States adopted England's legal system and the requirement for an examining trial or [37:23.840 --> 37:32.040] an examination by a neutral magistrate is still in place and Gerstein Pugh applied this [37:32.040 --> 37:38.200] to the states but they didn't dictate to the states how they would hold this preliminary [37:38.200 --> 37:44.240] hearing but however they hold it, they required to make a determination of probable cause. [37:44.240 --> 37:52.680] Have you read the code in Georgia that goes to an examining trial or preliminary hearing? [37:52.680 --> 37:57.400] I use both because in Texas it's called an examining trial but in a lot of other states [37:57.400 --> 38:01.280] it's called a preliminary hearing. [38:01.280 --> 38:19.280] 17-4-40, it says you have to go immediately before a magistrate for a probable cause hearing. [38:19.280 --> 38:20.280] Ta-da! [38:20.280 --> 38:21.280] It's right on. [38:21.280 --> 38:27.360] That's right in line with most of the other states and it goes right back to the Magna [38:27.360 --> 38:28.360] Carter. [38:28.360 --> 38:33.120] It has it twice in the statutes. [38:33.120 --> 38:47.560] Now the 17-4-40 if you're arrested, if you're imprisoned or taken into custody, 17-4-64 [38:47.560 --> 38:54.680] if you're not arrested, if I'm not mistaken, if you're not in custody. [38:54.680 --> 39:00.000] Are they authorized to release you on a signed promise to appear? [39:00.000 --> 39:01.000] Yes. [39:01.000 --> 39:09.000] Does the signed promise to appear state that you promise to appear before a trial judge [39:09.000 --> 39:10.000] or a magistrate? [39:10.000 --> 39:11.000] Not bad. [39:11.000 --> 39:29.120] I'm asking that because in Texas under 543.006 and 14.06 I believe, a 14.06 goes to penal [39:29.120 --> 39:34.680] code 543.006 goes to transportation code. [39:34.680 --> 39:42.160] Both of those allow an officer on citing someone for a misdemeanor to release the person on [39:42.160 --> 39:50.480] a signed promise to appear before some magistrate. [39:50.480 --> 39:56.160] Both of them specify before a magistrate. [39:56.160 --> 40:04.480] You probably have something similar in Georgia because that's the only thing they can do [40:04.480 --> 40:10.400] if the law requires you be brought immediately before a magistrate. [40:10.400 --> 40:17.000] They have to, your promise to appear has to be a promise to appear before a magistrate, [40:17.000 --> 40:19.480] not a trial judge. [40:19.480 --> 40:25.680] Even if ultimately the trial judge would be in the same position that the magistrate [40:25.680 --> 40:32.040] is, say you're taken to the municipality and brought before a municipal judge. [40:32.040 --> 40:36.800] In this case, he doesn't have his municipal judges hat on. [40:36.800 --> 40:43.880] He has his magistrates hat on and until he's put that hat on and made it a determination [40:43.880 --> 40:49.040] of probable cause, the trial judge can have no jurisdiction. [40:49.040 --> 40:57.200] So I suggest tell them subject matter jurisdiction and criminal charges against the judge for [40:57.200 --> 41:01.800] impersonating a public official. [41:01.800 --> 41:08.960] He is a public official, but he is not the public official he represented himself as. [41:08.960 --> 41:11.960] Does that make sense? [41:11.960 --> 41:13.200] It makes all the sense in the world. [41:13.200 --> 41:18.360] I even asked him, I asked him this very specifically. [41:18.360 --> 41:20.560] I said, hey, do you have your magistrate hat on right now? [41:20.560 --> 41:25.800] And he looked at me and he said, no, I am the judge of the probate court. [41:25.800 --> 41:26.800] Perfect. [41:26.800 --> 41:30.360] I asked him, I asked him whether it's being recorded. [41:30.360 --> 41:31.880] He said, yes, this is being recorded. [41:31.880 --> 41:33.680] I said, how can I get a copy of this recording? [41:33.680 --> 41:37.680] He told me I can get it by subpoena. [41:37.680 --> 41:45.720] No, you can get it by a simple request. [41:45.720 --> 41:57.200] All courts shall be public does not require a subpoena. [41:57.200 --> 42:03.760] That's a constitutional requirement, every state has it. [42:03.760 --> 42:06.720] So you're not requesting it under any open records act. [42:06.720 --> 42:14.520] You're requesting it under, there will be a penal statute or a statute in the Code of [42:14.520 --> 42:31.000] Criminal Procedure in Texas, 1.24 Texas, I believe it's penal code says all courts shall [42:31.000 --> 42:32.000] be public. [42:32.000 --> 42:39.240] You're going to have something that mirrors that in Georgia law that states that they're [42:39.240 --> 42:44.760] public and therefore you make a request to the court and they have to produce anything [42:44.760 --> 42:48.200] that is public doesn't require a subpoena. [42:48.200 --> 42:55.880] It doesn't matter, you're the litigant, you can just put in the request, they don't respond [42:55.880 --> 42:58.840] to it, just ding them for it. [42:58.840 --> 43:00.760] Let them make those subtle arguments. [43:00.760 --> 43:07.480] There you go, see that was another thing I was going to ask you. [43:07.480 --> 43:13.800] Okay, look at the procedure for a preliminary hearing or examining trial. [43:13.800 --> 43:23.640] In Texas it says that the court after the examining trial must make a determination [43:23.640 --> 43:29.480] and probable cause and issue an order that states whether the person was released at [43:29.480 --> 43:38.560] their liberty, bound to the court and released on bond or remanded to the jail and then they [43:38.560 --> 43:42.800] must seal all documents had in the hearing across the name to be written across seal [43:42.800 --> 43:46.560] the envelope, forward to the court of jurisdiction. [43:46.560 --> 43:53.200] That transferring of the order to the court of jurisdiction gives the court of jurisdiction [43:53.200 --> 44:01.200] and jurisdiction because they've got a determination of probable cause. [44:01.200 --> 44:04.840] At Capital Coin Nebulion our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination by [44:04.840 --> 44:09.160] delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:09.160 --> 44:13.040] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality [44:13.040 --> 44:14.640] coins and precious metals. [44:14.640 --> 44:18.560] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [44:18.560 --> 44:23.240] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metal stealers [44:23.240 --> 44:24.240] and journalists. [44:24.240 --> 44:27.160] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [44:27.160 --> 44:31.440] In addition, we carry popular young Jebedee products such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and [44:31.440 --> 44:32.440] Pollen Burks. [44:32.440 --> 44:37.320] We also offer One World Way, Mountain House Storeable Foods, Berkey Water Products, ammunition [44:37.320 --> 44:39.480] at 10% above wholesale and more. [44:39.480 --> 44:43.400] We broker metals IRA accounts and we also accept bitcoins as payment. [44:43.400 --> 44:46.400] Call us at 512-646-6440. [44:46.400 --> 44:51.400] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:51.400 --> 44:54.520] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.520 --> 44:59.520] Visit us at CapitalCoinNebulion.com or call 512-646-6440. [44:59.520 --> 45:04.480] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.480 --> 45:11.240] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.240 --> 45:14.240] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.240 --> 45:19.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.040 --> 45:23.240] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.240 --> 45:28.280] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [45:28.280 --> 45:34.880] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.880 --> 45:39.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.360 --> 45:43.720] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.720 --> 45:49.840] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.840 --> 45:52.400] pro se tactics and much more. [45:52.400 --> 46:14.400] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.400 --> 46:27.560] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio and I'm talking to Charles in Georgia. [46:27.560 --> 46:31.960] I probably need to move along pretty quick because we've got three more callers, but [46:31.960 --> 46:37.240] I'm being really detailed here and I'm doing this on purpose. [46:37.240 --> 46:42.720] These are requirements that will extend to most every stain in the union. [46:42.720 --> 46:49.800] The requirement for preliminary hearings is required by the federal constitution. [46:49.800 --> 46:58.680] So every state is going to have some method of meeting the requirements laid down in Gerstein [46:58.680 --> 47:09.680] Pew and it goes to, in order for the trial court to have jurisdiction, there must be [47:09.680 --> 47:13.200] a determination by a magistrate. [47:13.200 --> 47:17.440] Then the magistrate must forward the determination to the trial court. [47:17.440 --> 47:24.320] In Texas, 16.17 says that the judge has to issue this order. [47:24.320 --> 47:36.800] If the judge fails to issue the order within 48 hours, the defendant has a right to discharge. [47:36.800 --> 47:39.640] That is a big deal. [47:39.640 --> 47:45.160] That will put every prosecution in Texas in jeopardy. [47:45.160 --> 47:51.720] You need to look close at the law concerning how this preliminary hearing is to be held [47:51.720 --> 47:52.720] in Georgia. [47:52.720 --> 47:53.720] Got you. [47:53.720 --> 47:56.480] I want to do that. [47:56.480 --> 48:02.280] Now here, exactly what you said, it says in every case of an arrest without a warrant, [48:02.280 --> 48:08.320] the person arrested shall, without delay, convey the offender before the most convenient [48:08.320 --> 48:13.360] judicial officer authorized to receive an affidavit and issue a warrant as provided [48:13.360 --> 48:17.560] for code 174.40. [48:17.560 --> 48:24.120] No such imprisonment shall be legal beyond a reasonable time allowed for this purpose [48:24.120 --> 48:29.360] and any person who is not brought before such judicial officer within 48 hours of the arrest [48:29.360 --> 48:31.760] shall be released. [48:31.760 --> 48:36.920] It doesn't say shall be, the case shall be dismissed as it says that the arrested shall [48:36.920 --> 48:38.480] be just released. [48:38.480 --> 48:39.480] Okay. [48:39.480 --> 48:45.200] Ken and I have had a discussion about what discharge means. [48:45.200 --> 48:54.920] Does discharge mean that the case is dismissed or does it mean that the person is discharged [48:54.920 --> 48:58.160] from custody? [48:58.160 --> 49:06.160] So they could actually be the same, but you see that the statutes in all the states seem [49:06.160 --> 49:09.040] to be real similar in this regard. [49:09.040 --> 49:13.840] I would definitely go after that probate judge. [49:13.840 --> 49:14.840] Got you. [49:14.840 --> 49:21.120] See how he likes it when you turn the tables on him. [49:21.120 --> 49:24.920] Okay, I do appreciate you, Charles. [49:24.920 --> 49:31.480] You're the reason that we do this show and I couldn't be more pleased. [49:31.480 --> 49:33.960] Call me before he's deaf in Idaho. [49:33.960 --> 49:40.720] When he first called in, he was real tentative, had no idea of all of what the law said and [49:40.720 --> 49:46.360] I suggested that he go read the law and he comes back and the guy knows exactly what [49:46.360 --> 49:47.360] he's doing. [49:47.360 --> 49:53.080] I talked to you about, you're out of Michigan and you're talking about Georgia law and you [49:53.080 --> 49:59.000] know Georgia law more better than most people I've talked to from Georgia. [49:59.000 --> 50:02.520] This is how we're going to take the country back. [50:02.520 --> 50:11.400] Here at the grassroots, if you talk to other truck drivers, you need to turn them on to [50:11.400 --> 50:13.840] this. [50:13.840 --> 50:23.200] It's probably the truck drivers who have the, who are in a position to affect this nationwide [50:23.200 --> 50:28.840] because they move all over. [50:28.840 --> 50:33.640] How many truck drivers is it going to take to wind up a state to where you're winding [50:33.640 --> 50:47.360] up Georgia to get these DPS, these highway patrols afraid to ride them tickets? [50:47.360 --> 50:51.960] Have you filed a professional conduct complaint against the sheriff's deputy? [50:51.960 --> 50:59.040] I sent it to what they called today, actually, because I had to write it up today, to what [50:59.040 --> 51:07.400] they called post, police to officers, standard of training, fear. [51:07.400 --> 51:10.640] I talked to some people and said, well, that's probably not going to do much, this, that, [51:10.640 --> 51:11.640] and the other. [51:11.640 --> 51:12.640] Okay, well, here's the thing. [51:12.640 --> 51:14.440] I'm going to write that letter. [51:14.440 --> 51:20.280] I mean, I've already sent that letter today, but the thing is, now I need to somehow find [51:20.280 --> 51:27.560] out who is the insurance company or who is the authority behind the police officers [51:27.560 --> 51:30.040] of standard training. [51:30.040 --> 51:32.960] I was picking on Scott earlier. [51:32.960 --> 51:38.560] I kind of worked him over and I think I heard his feelings. [51:38.560 --> 51:49.680] However, Scott kicks, but he filed a whole stack of professional conduct complaints with [51:49.680 --> 51:57.120] the T-Close, Texas Commission on Law Enforcement. [51:57.120 --> 52:03.880] They all went to this sergeant, so he talked to the sergeant and the sergeant just blew [52:03.880 --> 52:09.360] everything off, and then he talked to the captain and the captain blew everything off, [52:09.360 --> 52:14.480] so he filed a whole stack of criminal charges against both of them. [52:14.480 --> 52:22.520] These are the guys with the State Standards Commission, and he's filing against them because [52:22.520 --> 52:30.360] they are certified peace officers, and he sent them the complaints, which included a [52:30.360 --> 52:35.720] verified criminal affidavit, so they had it made known to them that a crime has been committed [52:35.720 --> 52:41.680] and they took no action, he filed against them. [52:41.680 --> 52:47.520] It's going to get them all excited. [52:47.520 --> 52:52.520] Just a suggestion to look into what these guys do, and for those guys who says it won't [52:52.520 --> 53:00.280] make any difference, remind them that these guys have an insurance agent, and the insurance [53:00.280 --> 53:09.200] agent is just sitting there waiting for a complaint to come in so he can raise his rates. [53:09.200 --> 53:16.880] At the end of the day, it's all about the money, and they're never going to come and [53:16.880 --> 53:17.880] tell you. [53:17.880 --> 53:23.760] You know, when you stung me with that complaint, it really clobbered me, and it's the last [53:23.760 --> 53:30.120] thing they're going to do, so don't expect them to let you know how bad you hurt them. [53:30.120 --> 53:38.360] Just know they did, know that you did, and I'm going to be interested in following your [53:38.360 --> 53:39.360] case, Charles. [53:39.360 --> 53:45.360] I think you're about at the point where it's going to start to get a lot of fun for you. [53:45.360 --> 53:57.840] Well, I'm going to send you an email regarding this next step. [53:57.840 --> 54:05.160] Have you filled out the information on my trafficticket.website? [54:05.160 --> 54:16.400] The motion in Limony, the discovery, the Brady motion, the mother hubric motion that [54:16.400 --> 54:22.600] demand the preservation of rights, there are a number of them that will apply to Georgia. [54:22.600 --> 54:29.040] If you have, then you can look at the ones that don't go specifically to Texas. [54:29.040 --> 54:34.640] There are a lot of general motions, and here's the deal. [54:34.640 --> 54:38.960] They're going to go to the trial court, and they're going to blow those off, and then [54:38.960 --> 54:45.280] you get to file criminally against the judge for failing to properly apply the law to the [54:45.280 --> 54:46.280] facts. [54:46.280 --> 54:50.280] They're not going to see that coming. [54:50.280 --> 54:54.840] Do you see the conduct, bar grievances? [54:54.840 --> 55:03.080] I haven't filed it yet, but I went and filled everything out because they haven't sent me [55:03.080 --> 55:11.240] a date for this trial court yet, and I haven't, well, like I said, I haven't heard anything [55:11.240 --> 55:12.240] from them yet. [55:12.240 --> 55:13.240] They don't have my phone number. [55:13.240 --> 55:14.240] I refuse to give out a phone number. [55:14.240 --> 55:18.400] They have to mail me anything if they're going to contact me, so. [55:18.400 --> 55:19.400] Perfect. [55:19.400 --> 55:23.920] Send them, go ahead and send these documents in so they have them. [55:23.920 --> 55:28.360] You don't want them to play games with the trial date, because what they might do if [55:28.360 --> 55:33.360] they don't want you to show up is they'll send the notice to the wrong address, and [55:33.360 --> 55:37.720] then they'll charge you with failure to appear. [55:37.720 --> 55:42.720] You get your motions in there, and they can't have a trial or anything else until they've [55:42.720 --> 55:45.120] had a motion hearing. [55:45.120 --> 55:52.880] Just make sure that's in timely, and what you want is you want to get these in there [55:52.880 --> 56:00.440] timely, and then have them not respond to them, because when they don't respond to them [56:00.440 --> 56:06.280] and then you go to court, and the prosecutor opens his mouth to you and checked, that the [56:06.280 --> 56:13.120] prosecutor was given notice of your arguments by written motion, and the prosecutor failed [56:13.120 --> 56:15.400] to respond to those written motions. [56:15.400 --> 56:20.160] Therefore, the prosecutor is subject to collateral restoppel. [56:20.160 --> 56:27.000] He cannot bring an argument in support of those motions into this court. [56:27.000 --> 56:33.880] That's not going to make them happy, and I've got the case law on that, and you can ask [56:33.880 --> 56:36.680] for it when they don't respond to your motions. [56:36.680 --> 56:42.200] You get them in, give them 30 days to respond when they don't respond within 30 days. [56:42.200 --> 56:45.800] The prosecutor is going to say, he doesn't have a duty to respond, and you're going [56:45.800 --> 56:47.640] to say that's right. [56:47.640 --> 56:51.880] You cannot respond if you want to, but you wait for 30 days, and then you file for summary [56:51.880 --> 56:57.560] judgment because you maintain that the failure on the part of the prosecutor to respond and [56:57.560 --> 57:07.040] object to your facts and law amounts as a formal judicial admission, and now he's subject [57:07.040 --> 57:08.360] to collateral restoppel. [57:08.360 --> 57:12.320] He cannot argue against them, so you have a right to summary judgment. [57:12.320 --> 57:16.360] See how that works for him. [57:16.360 --> 57:25.520] Okay, so I'm going to file that, get that out there on Monday, if that'll work. [57:25.520 --> 57:29.880] Get that to him, and in my email, I'll send you back some documents I have. [57:29.880 --> 57:34.880] If I don't have them written, I'll write up an argument for you on that issue, on their [57:34.880 --> 57:40.720] failure to respond, because I need one written up for that anyway, and I'll get that through [57:40.720 --> 57:41.720] you. [57:41.720 --> 57:42.720] Great. [57:42.720 --> 57:43.720] Thank you very much. [57:43.720 --> 57:47.920] And like I said again, thank you for everything that you do over there at Logos. [57:47.920 --> 57:55.200] Okay, thank you, and I would really like you to get our name out to other truck drivers. [57:55.200 --> 58:02.200] Probably the most powerful influence we're going to have is through the truck drivers. [58:02.200 --> 58:06.360] We start giving them the tools to fight these guys, it'll spread all over the United States [58:06.360 --> 58:07.360] quickly. [58:07.360 --> 58:08.360] I sure will. [58:08.360 --> 58:09.360] I sure will. [58:09.360 --> 58:11.360] Thank you very much. [58:11.360 --> 58:12.960] Okay, thank you Charles. [58:12.960 --> 58:15.760] Okay, now we're going to Ken in New York. [58:15.760 --> 58:17.080] Hello, Ken. [58:17.080 --> 58:20.000] What do you have for us today? [58:20.000 --> 58:24.440] I have a couple things, because I hear the music. [58:24.440 --> 58:30.840] Yeah, you've got 20 seconds to state your case, or you're done. [58:30.840 --> 58:33.840] Okay, okay, maybe not. [58:33.840 --> 58:37.200] Let's go on to break, and we'll pick you up on the other side. [58:37.200 --> 58:45.240] This is Randy Kelton, a rule of law radio, called at number 512-646-1984. [58:45.240 --> 58:50.320] We'll be right back. [58:50.320 --> 58:54.480] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.480 --> 58:59.640] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.640 --> 59:01.000] can really help. [59:01.000 --> 59:05.440] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.440 --> 59:06.440] today. [59:06.440 --> 59:10.360] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.360 --> 59:13.480] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.480 --> 59:18.760] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.760 --> 59:23.000] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:23.000 --> 59:27.960] of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.960 --> 59:32.960] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.960 --> 59:45.720] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [59:45.720 --> 59:48.760] us online at bfa.org. [59:48.760 --> 01:00:06.360] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:06.360 --> 01:00:23.600] Today's history, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:23.600 --> 01:00:31.880] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 close with gold $1,353.22 an ounce, silver $16.68 an ounce, [01:00:31.880 --> 01:00:41.640] prices crude $65.51 a barrel, bitcoins at $6,902.19, ethereum at $420.80, bitcoin cash [01:00:41.640 --> 01:00:55.640] at $652.90, and finally light coins at $114.34, a crypto coin. [01:00:55.640 --> 01:01:02.680] Today's history, the year 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968, [01:01:02.680 --> 01:01:07.480] which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, religion, sex, or national [01:01:07.480 --> 01:01:08.480] origin. [01:01:08.480 --> 01:01:13.200] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:01:13.200 --> 01:01:18.360] in public schools, in employment, and public accommodations for places of business. [01:01:18.360 --> 01:01:24.000] Today's history. [01:01:24.000 --> 01:01:28.160] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to reach new levels after a chemical attack on [01:01:28.160 --> 01:01:32.320] civilians in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which [01:01:32.320 --> 01:01:36.760] is being blamed on the democratically elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, by the [01:01:36.760 --> 01:01:41.520] United States, and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified [01:01:41.520 --> 01:01:43.400] evidence as of yet. [01:01:43.400 --> 01:01:46.880] President Trump tweeted today, Wednesday, that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down [01:01:46.880 --> 01:01:51.240] any and all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice [01:01:51.240 --> 01:01:52.960] and new and smart. [01:01:52.960 --> 01:01:56.880] And on a warn, Russia, that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing animal who kills [01:01:56.880 --> 01:01:58.640] his people and enjoys it. [01:01:58.640 --> 01:02:02.680] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [01:02:02.680 --> 01:02:06.880] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [01:02:06.880 --> 01:02:11.080] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the organization [01:02:11.080 --> 01:02:15.760] for the prohibition of chemical weapons to investigate the sign of the chemical slaughter. [01:02:15.760 --> 01:02:19.440] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [01:02:19.440 --> 01:02:24.040] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [01:02:24.040 --> 01:02:28.840] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [01:02:28.840 --> 01:02:32.560] notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [01:02:32.560 --> 01:02:37.920] No surprise, then, why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook [01:02:37.920 --> 01:02:42.240] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government, which [01:02:42.240 --> 01:02:44.440] has been fighting terrorists. [01:02:44.440 --> 01:02:48.280] Or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart missile strike, and then there will [01:02:48.280 --> 01:02:55.280] be no evidence for international inspectors to look at? [01:03:18.280 --> 01:03:28.280] Okay, we are back. [01:03:28.280 --> 01:03:32.280] Randy Kelton, Reuters Live Radio, and we're talking to Ken in New York. [01:03:32.280 --> 01:03:33.280] Okay. [01:03:33.280 --> 01:03:34.280] Go ahead, Ken. [01:03:34.280 --> 01:03:35.280] Okay. [01:03:35.280 --> 01:03:36.280] I made it. [01:03:36.280 --> 01:03:44.000] I wanted to make another donation for this year, and I did the path of the book, and [01:03:44.000 --> 01:03:47.640] I just wanted to let everybody know that if you want to make a donation, why not take [01:03:47.640 --> 01:03:53.640] a freebie and take your book and then give it to somebody else, which is what I did. [01:03:53.640 --> 01:03:58.400] Since I live in a people state in New York, I can't participate in your drawing for the [01:03:58.400 --> 01:03:59.400] particle beam weapon. [01:03:59.400 --> 01:04:04.120] That would have really come in. [01:04:04.120 --> 01:04:08.520] I wish we had the particle beam weapon. [01:04:08.520 --> 01:04:14.640] Is the drawing good in Virginia because my friend travels between Maryland and Virginia, [01:04:14.640 --> 01:04:19.160] and I know Maryland could be a problem, but I don't think Virginia is a problem for anybody. [01:04:19.160 --> 01:04:21.160] Yes, the drawing will continue. [01:04:21.160 --> 01:04:28.200] I'll have to talk to Deb to see what's up this year in the drawing, but we will have [01:04:28.200 --> 01:04:30.520] it this year. [01:04:30.520 --> 01:04:42.400] We are trying to get a specific piece of property from which we can transmit. [01:04:42.400 --> 01:04:49.520] We have beat the snot out of the FCC. [01:04:49.520 --> 01:04:59.120] Probably only we were being re-broadcast on a micro broadcaster, and the FCC comes after [01:04:59.120 --> 01:05:03.320] micro broadcasters because they don't have to be licensed. [01:05:03.320 --> 01:05:11.680] They came after us, and Deborah beat the snot out of them, so now they've ducked and ran [01:05:11.680 --> 01:05:19.720] for cover, and they leave us alone, and we're trying to secure a piece of property in Austin, [01:05:19.720 --> 01:05:27.480] which is insanely expensive, and we've got people who are sympathetic to our cause who [01:05:27.480 --> 01:05:31.560] are going to give us a great price on some property that we can erect it. [01:05:31.560 --> 01:05:36.680] We have someone who will erect a tower and broadcast our signal, and we need enough to [01:05:36.680 --> 01:05:41.520] be able to pay the payment on this property. [01:05:41.520 --> 01:05:48.160] So we're trying to get the- You're saying by owning the property you can circumvent [01:05:48.160 --> 01:05:50.320] the problem you're having with the FCC? [01:05:50.320 --> 01:05:52.760] Oh, no, we're not having them. [01:05:52.760 --> 01:05:54.280] We've already kicked their behinds. [01:05:54.280 --> 01:06:03.120] Actually, I say we, Deborah, and Harman Taylor, so we have someone who will erect a tower [01:06:03.120 --> 01:06:10.520] and broadcast our signals, but we have to get the property first, and we're doing this [01:06:10.520 --> 01:06:12.200] on a shoestring. [01:06:12.200 --> 01:06:21.520] I generally, personally, and I do this show, but I generally invest into the donate to [01:06:21.520 --> 01:06:29.840] the show about $5,000 a year, and we have other broadcasters who do the same thing. [01:06:29.840 --> 01:06:33.600] We do this because it's important to us. [01:06:33.600 --> 01:06:37.400] This is my passion. [01:06:37.400 --> 01:06:45.520] We make- None of the broadcasters on this network make anything from doing the broadcasts, [01:06:45.520 --> 01:06:50.840] and you notice we're not commercially oriented, and that's kind of a problem. [01:06:50.840 --> 01:06:56.920] We don't harass everybody with a budget, a commercial orientation, the primary purpose [01:06:56.920 --> 01:07:03.400] is to disseminate information, but it becomes a struggle, and sometimes it gets more difficult [01:07:03.400 --> 01:07:05.560] than others, and we're in kind of a tight spot. [01:07:05.560 --> 01:07:13.040] And we're trying to get people to guarantee us so much more. [01:07:13.040 --> 01:07:15.960] We need $1,000 a month. [01:07:15.960 --> 01:07:23.320] If we can get that at $10 a piece, at $25 a piece, whatever, just so we can get a consistent [01:07:23.320 --> 01:07:31.240] small amount, and we build up enough that we can cover this cost, we can become a permanent [01:07:31.240 --> 01:07:32.240] fixture. [01:07:32.240 --> 01:07:38.680] We broadcast our broadcast location in Austin, and Austin is the heart of legal reform in [01:07:38.680 --> 01:07:51.040] the country, and we were the primary broadcaster, and along with Alex Jones, he's also an Austin, [01:07:51.040 --> 01:07:59.120] but even Alex Jones would be on this broadcast if we'd be getting back up. [01:07:59.120 --> 01:08:05.240] So we need this back up because it is the heart, and we're struggling to get things [01:08:05.240 --> 01:08:06.240] going. [01:08:06.240 --> 01:08:13.960] Anybody who can agree $5, $10 a month, just a small amount. [01:08:13.960 --> 01:08:22.240] We have enough people who benefit from the show that that would be, and we could get [01:08:22.240 --> 01:08:27.600] this thing going and keep it going for a relatively minor amount. [01:08:27.600 --> 01:08:31.680] So I didn't intend to be promoting for money. [01:08:31.680 --> 01:08:35.280] We hate begging for money. [01:08:35.280 --> 01:08:43.200] I put in all of that, can, and if I get financed on my project, I'll fund this thing, but until [01:08:43.200 --> 01:08:45.880] I can, we need this thing kept going. [01:08:45.880 --> 01:08:52.720] So anybody who can help us out, let's go ahead, Ken. [01:08:52.720 --> 01:08:54.720] Sorry, yeah, finish it. [01:08:54.720 --> 01:08:55.720] Finish it. [01:08:55.720 --> 01:08:56.720] What? [01:08:56.720 --> 01:08:57.720] I'm done. [01:08:57.720 --> 01:09:02.800] That's just, we hate doing this part, you know, we hate having to ask for money, but... [01:09:02.800 --> 01:09:08.000] You know, when you eat at the table, you ought to pay the bill once in a while. [01:09:08.000 --> 01:09:12.240] Yeah, and we're not asking for a lot. [01:09:12.240 --> 01:09:18.240] We have enough listeners that just a little bit from each one would cover this thing. [01:09:18.240 --> 01:09:24.000] Are you aware that there's an underused shortwave station in the northeast here? [01:09:24.000 --> 01:09:28.200] I think it's a 50,000 watt. [01:09:28.200 --> 01:09:30.600] I'm not sure. [01:09:30.600 --> 01:09:38.360] In the northeast, I do a show every Monday night with Pastor Massage on Truth Radio Network, [01:09:38.360 --> 01:09:40.600] and they go out over shortwave. [01:09:40.600 --> 01:09:46.680] This is, there's one up that covers a good portion in the United States that's called [01:09:46.680 --> 01:09:51.520] DCQ, and they're in Maine. [01:09:51.520 --> 01:09:56.960] And they have some really good rates, they had some issues. [01:09:56.960 --> 01:10:01.600] It's basically a bunch of engineers that do their own trans... [01:10:01.600 --> 01:10:08.640] They work on their own transmitter, all of that sort of thing, they do their own maintenance. [01:10:08.640 --> 01:10:12.000] Can you link us to them? [01:10:12.000 --> 01:10:19.760] We very much like to get out on shortwave, it's just a cost, you know, I put in all I [01:10:19.760 --> 01:10:25.760] can every year, we have other people who do, but it's a struggle. [01:10:25.760 --> 01:10:29.080] It costs a lot to keep this on the air. [01:10:29.080 --> 01:10:35.920] And our equipment that we use, Deborah, you know, I'm an electrical engineer, and Deborah [01:10:35.920 --> 01:10:38.040] and I started this network. [01:10:38.040 --> 01:10:47.800] Actually, we picked it up, KTPRN went down and we picked it up from them. [01:10:47.800 --> 01:10:53.560] And Deborah wrote the software herself for this network. [01:10:53.560 --> 01:10:57.960] I'm an electrical engineer, and I watched what she did, and I was astounded. [01:10:57.960 --> 01:11:05.920] She drives a good for the bandwidth, you have a very good quality audio. [01:11:05.920 --> 01:11:10.880] See, we have the best audio. [01:11:10.880 --> 01:11:14.920] Deborah has ears you would not believe. [01:11:14.920 --> 01:11:24.920] She can hear so well, she can hear what I was thinking before I thought it, that holds [01:11:24.920 --> 01:11:28.160] me responsible for it. [01:11:28.160 --> 01:11:35.200] I've been in restaurants where a baby would cry out, and she would grab both ears with [01:11:35.200 --> 01:11:39.240] her hands because it hurt her ears so bad. [01:11:39.240 --> 01:11:48.040] See her stuff that normal humans can't hear, and she produces absolutely immaculate audio. [01:11:48.040 --> 01:11:57.120] GCN network is what Alex Jones is on, and GCN are pikers compared to what Deborah produces. [01:11:57.120 --> 01:11:59.880] And she does this on an absolute shoe string. [01:11:59.880 --> 01:12:08.160] When we go to break and come out of break, when this thing goes to break, this is a standard [01:12:08.160 --> 01:12:12.320] pattern for radio stations around the country. [01:12:12.320 --> 01:12:16.880] We go to break within a tenth of a second. [01:12:16.880 --> 01:12:20.000] Everything is absolutely precisely timed. [01:12:20.000 --> 01:12:26.360] She spent two or three years working on this to get it down, all day, every day. [01:12:26.360 --> 01:12:30.520] It was amazing how much work she put into this. [01:12:30.520 --> 01:12:37.680] And the whole time we've been doing this, she struggles to keep this on the air. [01:12:37.680 --> 01:12:45.600] Well, they have two stations, they have several frequencies that they use, and they have a [01:12:45.600 --> 01:12:49.520] propagation map, so you can see where the reach is. [01:12:49.520 --> 01:12:59.760] And I think they're very reasonably priced, and they have a 500 watt AM station in the [01:12:59.760 --> 01:13:04.760] Hudson Valley of New York, which is to be fairly well-heeled. [01:13:04.760 --> 01:13:09.760] Yeah, good location, the Hudson Valley is a really good location. [01:13:09.760 --> 01:13:20.760] Only 500 watts, apparently, it does pretty well, but you might want to contact them. [01:13:20.760 --> 01:13:25.080] I've heard some really reasonable, reasonable rates. [01:13:25.080 --> 01:13:30.240] Send me a link to them, send me a contact information for them. [01:13:30.240 --> 01:13:35.680] They used to be pirates at one time, a long time ago, they actually had a ship floating [01:13:35.680 --> 01:13:36.680] out. [01:13:36.680 --> 01:13:52.400] And I like these guys, we can show them how to do micros in the US and keep the SEC away [01:13:52.400 --> 01:13:53.400] from them. [01:13:53.400 --> 01:13:58.400] Well, they've been around this stuff for a long, long time. [01:13:58.400 --> 01:14:02.160] We've been talking about 50 years. [01:14:02.160 --> 01:14:10.480] Debra went into the federal court and wiped the floor with the US attorney. [01:14:10.480 --> 01:14:13.240] We don't see these guys anymore. [01:14:13.240 --> 01:14:16.640] They don't want to see us, they don't want to talk to us, they don't want nothing to [01:14:16.640 --> 01:14:20.160] do with us, because we wiped the floor with them. [01:14:20.160 --> 01:14:24.720] Harman Taylor, he used to be a lawyer and gave up his bar card. [01:14:24.720 --> 01:14:36.840] And he's helped with this issue and he's got the FCC in a position where they can't [01:14:36.840 --> 01:14:40.160] get to us. [01:14:40.160 --> 01:14:48.320] It cost us $20,000 to get all this worked out, but we got it worked out. [01:14:48.320 --> 01:14:52.680] And it didn't exactly cost us, because our listeners helped us cover all of this and [01:14:52.680 --> 01:14:57.320] finds that they assessed against us, we didn't argue issues right. [01:14:57.320 --> 01:15:02.560] And then we got our issues straightened out, so now we know how to take them on, but now [01:15:02.560 --> 01:15:05.880] they're not touching us, they're staying away from us. [01:15:05.880 --> 01:15:13.640] So if this company wants to put in micros, we can show them how to do it and how to keep [01:15:13.640 --> 01:15:14.640] the FCC at bay. [01:15:14.640 --> 01:15:20.880] I'll send you the contact information and the name of the person to contact, and I'll [01:15:20.880 --> 01:15:26.160] give you the frequency you can, if you want, they can listen and I call them Saturdays. [01:15:26.160 --> 01:15:31.720] It's like technical, they talk about, they're all like engineers, you know. [01:15:31.720 --> 01:15:38.280] Well, Deborah has already engineered our network so that we should be able to plug right into [01:15:38.280 --> 01:15:39.280] theirs. [01:15:39.280 --> 01:15:40.280] Oh yeah. [01:15:40.280 --> 01:15:41.280] Yeah. [01:15:41.280 --> 01:15:48.800] The, originally, when I was listening to you and Scott, the comment I wanted to make [01:15:48.800 --> 01:15:56.200] was, you're focusing on helping, you're like a center of information where you're reaching [01:15:56.200 --> 01:16:02.040] out and you're helping people, and if you actually had to pay attention to everything [01:16:02.040 --> 01:16:06.160] that was going on, I don't think you'd get anything done. [01:16:06.160 --> 01:16:14.960] No, I've, probably, where I can listen to other sources, it does, I can, I hear all [01:16:14.960 --> 01:16:21.000] of these things, and I believe a lot of it, but, you know, I don't go proselytizing unless [01:16:21.000 --> 01:16:27.120] I'll talk to somebody, and if they're interested, I'll go a little further, if they're not, [01:16:27.120 --> 01:16:32.360] you do what they do in the Bible, you know, where you dust off your sandals and you move [01:16:32.360 --> 01:16:35.800] on to the next one. [01:16:35.800 --> 01:16:43.720] Exactly, and there's so many things out there, and I spent all these years and I get a lot [01:16:43.720 --> 01:16:49.840] of vague and general information, and when I start boring down to the details, it kind [01:16:49.840 --> 01:16:52.240] of peters out, so I'm a little bit skeptical. [01:16:52.240 --> 01:17:00.200] Hang on, about to go to break, Randy Kelton, Real Law Radio, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.200 --> 01:17:01.200] I love logos. [01:17:01.200 --> 01:17:04.720] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:17:04.720 --> 01:17:07.360] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:17:07.360 --> 01:17:08.560] I need my truth fix. [01:17:08.560 --> 01:17:13.280] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:17:13.280 --> 01:17:17.040] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't [01:17:17.040 --> 01:17:20.400] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:17:20.400 --> 01:17:21.960] How can I help logos? [01:17:21.960 --> 01:17:23.840] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:17:23.840 --> 01:17:28.240] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies [01:17:28.240 --> 01:17:29.240] or holiday gifts. [01:17:29.240 --> 01:17:31.480] The first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:17:31.480 --> 01:17:37.600] Now, go to LogosRadioDeckwork.com, tick on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:17:37.600 --> 01:17:43.120] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:17:43.120 --> 01:17:44.120] Do I pay extra? [01:17:44.120 --> 01:17:45.120] No. [01:17:45.120 --> 01:17:47.120] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:17:47.120 --> 01:17:48.120] No. [01:17:48.120 --> 01:17:49.120] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:17:49.120 --> 01:17:50.120] No. [01:17:50.120 --> 01:17:51.120] I mean, yes. [01:17:51.120 --> 01:17:52.120] Wow. [01:17:52.120 --> 01:17:54.120] Giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:17:54.120 --> 01:17:55.120] This is perfect. [01:17:55.120 --> 01:17:56.120] Thank you so much. [01:17:56.120 --> 01:17:57.120] We are welcome. [01:17:57.120 --> 01:17:59.120] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:17:59.120 --> 01:18:05.120] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:18:05.120 --> 01:18:09.120] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven Method. [01:18:09.120 --> 01:18:14.120] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can [01:18:14.120 --> 01:18:15.120] win two. [01:18:15.120 --> 01:18:19.620] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:18:19.620 --> 01:18:25.120] civil rights statute, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:18:25.120 --> 01:18:30.120] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:18:30.120 --> 01:18:34.120] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:18:34.120 --> 01:18:39.120] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:18:39.120 --> 01:18:41.120] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:18:41.120 --> 01:18:47.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner [01:18:47.120 --> 01:18:50.120] or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [01:18:50.120 --> 01:19:00.120] 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 now. [01:19:00.120 --> 01:19:07.120] This is The Logos Radio Network. [01:19:30.120 --> 01:19:58.120] If I can't get everything I want, if I can't get everything I need, if I can't get everything [01:19:58.120 --> 01:20:06.120] I need. [01:20:06.120 --> 01:20:18.120] We are back. [01:20:18.120 --> 01:20:24.120] We're talking to Ken in New York. [01:20:24.120 --> 01:20:33.120] I'd like to get out on shortwave, but we need more funding to be able to do that, so we're [01:20:33.120 --> 01:20:35.120] struggling with that issue. [01:20:35.120 --> 01:20:39.120] Okay, what do you have for us? [01:20:39.120 --> 01:20:43.120] The COG thing is called continuity government. [01:20:43.120 --> 01:20:46.120] That one I've heard something about. [01:20:46.120 --> 01:20:51.120] And basically, somewhere along Congress has approved money. [01:20:51.120 --> 01:20:58.120] Somebody convinced Congress that if a mushroom cloud went off someplace and government ended [01:20:58.120 --> 01:21:04.120] in Washington, D.C., well, how could we do without government? [01:21:04.120 --> 01:21:07.120] We have to have something to take its place. [01:21:07.120 --> 01:21:09.120] And that's what that's supposed to be about. [01:21:09.120 --> 01:21:15.120] And I think this senior executive service is probably like every other part of government. [01:21:15.120 --> 01:21:23.120] It's a bunch of managers that are really great at making reports and giving presentations. [01:21:23.120 --> 01:21:29.120] And no probability that it's just another boondoggle. [01:21:29.120 --> 01:21:35.120] Whereas these are people that would basically be on a bread line somewhere if they weren't [01:21:35.120 --> 01:21:38.120] making $200,000 a year. [01:21:38.120 --> 01:21:45.120] I've heard these things referenced so many years. [01:21:45.120 --> 01:21:50.120] And when I look into them, that's what they turn out to be, just a bunch of government [01:21:50.120 --> 01:21:51.120] hocus pocus. [01:21:51.120 --> 01:21:54.120] That's why I wasn't too concerned about it. [01:21:54.120 --> 01:21:59.120] A lot of people in the Patriot movement look at these things and they assume that there's [01:21:59.120 --> 01:22:03.120] some kind of secret government agency that controls everything. [01:22:03.120 --> 01:22:06.120] And I don't get impressed by that. [01:22:06.120 --> 01:22:12.120] That's why I give Scott such a hard time. [01:22:12.120 --> 01:22:18.120] I think I believe that this one is real, but it doesn't mean that it's going to turn out [01:22:18.120 --> 01:22:22.120] to anything or it's going to be useful. [01:22:22.120 --> 01:22:27.120] I don't doubt that all of them are real. [01:22:27.120 --> 01:22:34.120] They're almost certainly real, but that doesn't mean they have any real influence. [01:22:34.120 --> 01:22:45.120] So the whole idea of what I was doing with Scott was let's stop complaining about all [01:22:45.120 --> 01:22:52.120] of the potential problems out there and let's start talking about what can we do today to [01:22:52.120 --> 01:22:54.120] change things. [01:22:54.120 --> 01:23:00.120] I don't care about how many bugaboos I have out there against me. [01:23:00.120 --> 01:23:02.120] How many enemies I got. [01:23:02.120 --> 01:23:08.120] What can I do to overcome all of them until we start thinking in that context? [01:23:08.120 --> 01:23:16.120] If we start wallowing in our concern for all of our enemies out there, we'll never get [01:23:16.120 --> 01:23:17.120] anywhere. [01:23:17.120 --> 01:23:18.120] You lose focus. [01:23:18.120 --> 01:23:23.120] And I believe that charity begins at home. [01:23:23.120 --> 01:23:31.120] You try to make plans and take care of yourself in the event of something. [01:23:31.120 --> 01:23:32.120] Okay. [01:23:32.120 --> 01:23:34.120] Do you have anything else for us? [01:23:34.120 --> 01:23:35.120] Yeah. [01:23:35.120 --> 01:23:40.120] I think it was Charles mentioned something about having a problem with using 911 for [01:23:40.120 --> 01:23:41.120] a non-emergency. [01:23:41.120 --> 01:23:43.120] Was that the case? [01:23:43.120 --> 01:23:50.120] I don't remember him addressing that, but here in Texas, if I want to call the Sheriff's [01:23:50.120 --> 01:23:54.120] Department, almost always they refer to 911. [01:23:54.120 --> 01:23:55.120] Right. [01:23:55.120 --> 01:23:59.120] What I did was a while back I was having a problem with a restaurant that opened about [01:23:59.120 --> 01:24:04.120] 150 feet from me and they decided they were going to have a South American restaurant. [01:24:04.120 --> 01:24:06.120] And they were on the weekends. [01:24:06.120 --> 01:24:10.120] They're really an after-hour club, but they're not really a restaurant. [01:24:10.120 --> 01:24:14.120] They're making terrible, really loud amplifier running. [01:24:14.120 --> 01:24:17.120] And I called the cops on them six times. [01:24:17.120 --> 01:24:23.120] But what I did each time is I called, the first time I called the local number to precinct [01:24:23.120 --> 01:24:26.120] and the precinct said, well, you're not going to get a card down unless you call 911. [01:24:26.120 --> 01:24:27.120] I said, thank you. [01:24:27.120 --> 01:24:35.120] So I called 911 up and the first thing I said is, on the advice to the 7th precinct, I'm [01:24:35.120 --> 01:24:36.120] calling you. [01:24:36.120 --> 01:24:41.120] I told them it was a non-emergency, but on the advice to the 7th precinct, they told [01:24:41.120 --> 01:24:45.120] me to call 911 when they get a card down here. [01:24:45.120 --> 01:24:47.120] So you make it. [01:24:47.120 --> 01:24:48.120] That's perfect. [01:24:48.120 --> 01:24:49.120] That's perfect. [01:24:49.120 --> 01:24:50.120] You're covered. [01:24:50.120 --> 01:24:51.120] Yes. [01:24:51.120 --> 01:24:54.120] They didn't tell me to do this. [01:24:54.120 --> 01:24:57.120] I just thought of the wheels turning in my head. [01:24:57.120 --> 01:25:00.120] And I thought, you know, I know it's a crime to call 911 for non-emergency. [01:25:00.120 --> 01:25:05.120] So I don't know whether my local preacher was trying to set me up or not. [01:25:05.120 --> 01:25:11.120] Actually, I'm not sure that it is. [01:25:11.120 --> 01:25:17.120] Emergency is subjective. [01:25:17.120 --> 01:25:20.120] What constitutes an emergency? [01:25:20.120 --> 01:25:29.120] If I need to get a hold of the police quickly, do I have to do some song and dance and salsa [01:25:29.120 --> 01:25:34.120] down in your pants and try to find a number or can I just call 911? [01:25:34.120 --> 01:25:42.120] Well, the solution in the end was not having the police come down because after a while [01:25:42.120 --> 01:25:43.120] they started getting tired of it. [01:25:43.120 --> 01:25:47.120] But one of the older police went over and told them to just close up and go home and [01:25:47.120 --> 01:25:48.120] they did it. [01:25:48.120 --> 01:25:51.120] And he actually didn't have the right to do that, as I understand it. [01:25:51.120 --> 01:25:58.120] But eventually, I contacted my local legislator and I said, look, these guys have a license, [01:25:58.120 --> 01:25:59.120] don't they? [01:25:59.120 --> 01:26:00.120] They have a business license. [01:26:00.120 --> 01:26:02.120] They got a liquor license. [01:26:02.120 --> 01:26:07.120] The next time the police came down, they came down with the public safety, which is a code [01:26:07.120 --> 01:26:08.120] enforcement for the town. [01:26:08.120 --> 01:26:13.120] And the guy was over my house the next day knocking on my door, begging me not to give [01:26:13.120 --> 01:26:14.120] him. [01:26:14.120 --> 01:26:15.120] I said, I don't want any trouble. [01:26:15.120 --> 01:26:19.120] You give me his phone number and I just call him up whenever it starts to bother me. [01:26:19.120 --> 01:26:22.120] That's how I solve the problem. [01:26:22.120 --> 01:26:27.120] At the end of the day, everything is political. [01:26:27.120 --> 01:26:28.120] Political. [01:26:28.120 --> 01:26:29.120] Good night. [01:26:29.120 --> 01:26:30.120] Good night, Ken. [01:26:30.120 --> 01:26:31.120] Thank you. [01:26:31.120 --> 01:26:36.120] I'll send you an email with the contact. [01:26:36.120 --> 01:26:37.120] Okay. [01:26:37.120 --> 01:26:38.120] Thank you. [01:26:38.120 --> 01:26:39.120] Okay. [01:26:39.120 --> 01:26:46.120] Now we're going to Carlos in Texas, hello, Carlos. [01:26:46.120 --> 01:26:51.120] What do you have for us today? [01:26:51.120 --> 01:26:52.120] My name? [01:26:52.120 --> 01:26:53.120] Yes. [01:26:53.120 --> 01:26:54.120] I'm here. [01:26:54.120 --> 01:26:55.120] What do you have for us? [01:26:55.120 --> 01:26:56.120] I'm sorry. [01:26:56.120 --> 01:26:58.120] I just hadn't been on the screen. [01:26:58.120 --> 01:27:00.120] So I don't know if you were referring to. [01:27:00.120 --> 01:27:01.120] Yeah. [01:27:01.120 --> 01:27:02.120] Okay. [01:27:02.120 --> 01:27:08.120] My call screener, my producer, he dropped off at 11 o'clock. [01:27:08.120 --> 01:27:11.120] I'm producing the board and I can't screen you. [01:27:11.120 --> 01:27:19.120] So no dirty talking. [01:27:19.120 --> 01:27:22.120] There's a whole routine to ever go through. [01:27:22.120 --> 01:27:24.120] I don't know what it is. [01:27:24.120 --> 01:27:28.120] No, what do you call it? [01:27:28.120 --> 01:27:30.120] Hands free. [01:27:30.120 --> 01:27:33.120] No Bluetooth, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. [01:27:33.120 --> 01:27:34.120] Okay. [01:27:34.120 --> 01:27:35.120] Go ahead. [01:27:35.120 --> 01:27:38.120] Yeah, I know. [01:27:38.120 --> 01:27:40.120] I know all the rules. [01:27:40.120 --> 01:27:42.120] Simple question, Randy. [01:27:42.120 --> 01:27:45.120] Actually, let me make a comment first. [01:27:45.120 --> 01:27:49.120] I heard you talking about the funding and the donating and all that stuff. [01:27:49.120 --> 01:27:52.120] And I know you have a lot of listeners. [01:27:52.120 --> 01:27:54.120] I know that for a fact. [01:27:54.120 --> 01:28:02.120] You and when Eddie comes up and is the Monday night shows, I'm pretty sure you have over [01:28:02.120 --> 01:28:04.120] a thousand listeners, man. [01:28:04.120 --> 01:28:12.120] If every one of us would donate $5 a week, you would have $5,000 a week and your radio [01:28:12.120 --> 01:28:15.120] show wouldn't be in such a bind. [01:28:15.120 --> 01:28:20.120] $5 a month would do it. [01:28:20.120 --> 01:28:21.120] Yeah. [01:28:21.120 --> 01:28:22.120] That would take care of us. [01:28:22.120 --> 01:28:26.120] That would keep us on the air and that would get us out there. [01:28:26.120 --> 01:28:34.120] I mean, you give so much benefit to the people that it's unbelievable. [01:28:34.120 --> 01:28:39.120] I hear so many people calling and asking for advice and you helping them more than happy [01:28:39.120 --> 01:28:41.120] to help them out and stuff. [01:28:41.120 --> 01:28:45.120] And it's just something that... [01:28:45.120 --> 01:28:46.120] Okay. [01:28:46.120 --> 01:28:50.120] Well, one thing, we understand that there are a lot of people out there who are really [01:28:50.120 --> 01:28:57.120] struggling and we don't do this to secure donations. [01:28:57.120 --> 01:28:59.120] No, I understand. [01:28:59.120 --> 01:29:00.120] Come on. [01:29:00.120 --> 01:29:06.120] If you're struggling, you don't have money to send us, do not be bashful about calling [01:29:06.120 --> 01:29:07.120] us. [01:29:07.120 --> 01:29:14.120] We're not going to pay any attention to whether you donate to this show or not when we do [01:29:14.120 --> 01:29:15.120] what we can to help you. [01:29:15.120 --> 01:29:17.120] That has nothing to do with it. [01:29:17.120 --> 01:29:20.120] And I believe everybody knows that. [01:29:20.120 --> 01:29:21.120] Everybody knows that. [01:29:21.120 --> 01:29:25.120] But you just have to be considerate about the program. [01:29:25.120 --> 01:29:29.120] I mean, it takes money to stay alive there, too. [01:29:29.120 --> 01:29:31.120] Yeah, and it really doesn't take that much. [01:29:31.120 --> 01:29:33.120] It's a small amount. [01:29:33.120 --> 01:29:39.120] And whenever you can, if you kick a little in, it keeps things going. [01:29:39.120 --> 01:29:48.120] We've been keeping it going for 10 years and just barely by the skin of our teeth. [01:29:48.120 --> 01:29:56.120] And there are a number of us broadcasters that we put in quite a bit of our own to keep [01:29:56.120 --> 01:30:00.120] it going because, you know, we have a passion. [01:30:00.120 --> 01:30:05.120] Hexachlorobenzene is a reproductive toxin you probably don't want to ingest. [01:30:05.120 --> 01:30:09.120] Unfortunately, you probably already have, and there's a good chance you did it today. [01:30:09.120 --> 01:30:38.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albert, and I'll be right back with the toxic truth. [01:30:39.120 --> 01:30:42.120] Let's start over with Start Page. [01:30:42.120 --> 01:30:45.120] The pesticides we eat accumulate in our fat. [01:30:45.120 --> 01:30:48.120] Unfortunately, the same is true with dairy cows. [01:30:48.120 --> 01:30:53.120] The chemicals they eat wind up in their fat, and that flings its way into our butter and cream. [01:30:53.120 --> 01:30:58.120] A recent report by the USDA found that more than 80% of the butter tested contained a [01:30:58.120 --> 01:31:01.120] known carcinogen, a pesticide called DDE. [01:31:01.120 --> 01:31:07.120] And when they tested cream samples, they found not only DDE, but that gasly poison hexachlorobenzene. [01:31:07.120 --> 01:31:11.120] So if you know what's good for you, and now you do, on that shopping list right next to [01:31:11.120 --> 01:31:16.120] the organic fruits and veggies, you just might want to add organic butter and cream. [01:31:16.120 --> 01:31:17.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:17.120 --> 01:31:30.120] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.120 --> 01:31:36.120] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.120 --> 01:31:38.120] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.120 --> 01:31:43.120] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.120 --> 01:31:46.120] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, [01:31:46.120 --> 01:31:49.120] and thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.120 --> 01:31:50.120] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.120 --> 01:31:51.120] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.120 --> 01:31:53.120] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.120 --> 01:31:54.120] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.120 --> 01:31:55.120] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.120 --> 01:31:58.120] We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.120 --> 01:32:01.120] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.120 --> 01:32:03.120] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.120 --> 01:32:06.120] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.120 --> 01:32:09.120] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, [01:32:09.120 --> 01:32:11.120] but good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:11.120 --> 01:32:13.120] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, [01:32:13.120 --> 01:32:14.120] but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.120 --> 01:32:16.120] That's why you have insurance, [01:32:16.120 --> 01:32:21.120] and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:21.120 --> 01:32:26.120] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:26.120 --> 01:32:32.120] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:32.120 --> 01:32:38.120] Call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.120 --> 01:32:40.120] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [01:32:40.120 --> 01:32:45.120] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.120 --> 01:32:50.120] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:50.120 --> 01:32:56.120] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.120 --> 01:32:58.120] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.120 --> 01:33:01.120] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.120 --> 01:33:04.120] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:04.120 --> 01:33:31.120] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:31.120 --> 01:33:37.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton rules our radio, and we're talking to Carlos in Texas. [01:33:37.120 --> 01:33:42.120] Okay, Carlos, what did you have for us today? [01:33:42.120 --> 01:33:48.120] I'm going to go ahead and ask my question here. [01:33:48.120 --> 01:33:55.120] On a, oh gosh, I went blank. [01:33:55.120 --> 01:34:04.120] Okay, my mom is 95, and she tells me that is not going to get better. [01:34:04.120 --> 01:34:05.120] I know. [01:34:05.120 --> 01:34:08.120] Which she can remember to tell me that. [01:34:08.120 --> 01:34:11.120] I'm 47, and I'm going nuts already. [01:34:11.120 --> 01:34:13.120] Oh, you're a baby. [01:34:13.120 --> 01:34:14.120] Yeah. [01:34:14.120 --> 01:34:19.120] Okay, now do you want me to read your question? [01:34:19.120 --> 01:34:32.120] Okay, on a subject matter jurisdiction, you can challenge the subject matter jurisdiction even after a conviction. [01:34:32.120 --> 01:34:33.120] Randy? [01:34:33.120 --> 01:34:42.120] Subject matter jurisdiction may be challenged at any time, no matter how remote in history. [01:34:42.120 --> 01:34:48.120] If the court did not have subject matter jurisdiction, [01:34:48.120 --> 01:34:53.120] everything the court has done is void. [01:34:53.120 --> 01:35:02.120] Okay, I went to your traffic website, and I put in the information. [01:35:02.120 --> 01:35:11.120] I'm not, I'm not too fond about, I mean too informed about that as far as how to violate and all that goes. [01:35:11.120 --> 01:35:18.120] But all I have to do is print it out and then. [01:35:18.120 --> 01:35:20.120] Okay, here's the instructions. [01:35:20.120 --> 01:35:30.120] If the document contains facts from your case, then it must be notarized. [01:35:30.120 --> 01:35:37.120] If the document does not contain facts, it does not need to be notarized. [01:35:37.120 --> 01:35:38.120] That's the rule. [01:35:38.120 --> 01:35:48.120] So in motion and lemony, Brady motion, Mother Hubbard motion, motion to preserve rights. [01:35:48.120 --> 01:35:57.120] Any motion that goes to preserving your rights, they don't require to be notarized. [01:35:57.120 --> 01:36:15.120] If you file a motion like challenge subject matter jurisdiction, that needs to be notarized because it states facts as concerns the, you say the officer here is from this municipality or whatever, and he doesn't have authority. [01:36:15.120 --> 01:36:19.120] That stating facts, it has to be notarized. [01:36:19.120 --> 01:36:31.120] That's generally the key. Otherwise, in the T-close complaint against the officer, you state facts against the officer that needs to be notarized. [01:36:31.120 --> 01:36:36.120] If you notarize everything, doesn't hurt anything. [01:36:36.120 --> 01:36:38.120] It doesn't need to be notarized. [01:36:38.120 --> 01:36:41.120] If it is notarized, makes no difference. [01:36:41.120 --> 01:36:49.120] If you don't notarize it, the other side, if they don't like it, they can complain about it. [01:36:49.120 --> 01:36:57.120] So if you miss one that needs to be notarized, and you file it without a notary, then that's fixable. [01:36:57.120 --> 01:37:03.120] The other side, if they don't raise the issue, it doesn't become an issue. [01:37:03.120 --> 01:37:08.120] If they raise an issue, then you can refile a notarized document. [01:37:08.120 --> 01:37:11.120] That's about it. Otherwise, just sign and send. [01:37:11.120 --> 01:37:21.120] What about on a conviction in, like per se, in this case me, I was, my conviction was probated. [01:37:21.120 --> 01:37:24.120] It was a class B misdemeanor. [01:37:24.120 --> 01:37:31.120] It was probated for six months, and this is my big next question. [01:37:31.120 --> 01:37:42.120] If I have not paid any of the money that I agreed, quote unquote, to pay for the alleged offense, [01:37:42.120 --> 01:37:52.120] and my due date for the six months is in June, can I still file my motion, subject matter jurisdiction, [01:37:52.120 --> 01:37:56.120] and does that stop any of that progress? [01:37:56.120 --> 01:38:03.120] Absolutely, you can file a challenge subject matter jurisdiction. [01:38:03.120 --> 01:38:10.120] You can't necessarily, if you've already entered a plea, all of the other ones you can't file, because it's already been adjudicated. [01:38:10.120 --> 01:38:16.120] The only one you can effectively file is the subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:38:16.120 --> 01:38:29.120] And you can move to vacate the order in the case. You get the adjudication vacated, then you can file everything else. [01:38:29.120 --> 01:38:33.120] Move to vacate the order. [01:38:33.120 --> 01:38:37.120] Yeah, based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction. [01:38:37.120 --> 01:38:42.120] What's going to happen when you file it, they're just going to ignore it. [01:38:42.120 --> 01:38:52.120] And when they do, just send me an email letting me know they ignored it, and then we will file a petition for summary judgment. [01:38:52.120 --> 01:39:06.120] Okay, because the last time I tried talking to you, I called in, you took me like two minutes before the show was over, so I had no opportunity to ask you any of the others. [01:39:06.120 --> 01:39:14.120] Send me an email randy at ruleoflouradio.com, I will respond to your emails. [01:39:14.120 --> 01:39:17.120] Randy at ruleoflouradio.com. [01:39:17.120 --> 01:39:19.120] Yeah. [01:39:19.120 --> 01:39:28.120] Okay, I think that'll be the best thing. That way I can try to explain it a little more in detail. [01:39:28.120 --> 01:39:32.120] And then we'll just take it from there. [01:39:32.120 --> 01:39:40.120] Okay. What do you think about a Border Patrol checkpoint? [01:39:40.120 --> 01:39:50.120] Down here in Texas, we have, I live by Boca Chica Beach, and on the way to Boca Chica, you go through the checkpoint. [01:39:50.120 --> 01:39:57.120] They don't stop you or anything, but on the way back from the beach into town, you stop, right? [01:39:57.120 --> 01:40:00.120] They have a Border Patrol checkpoint there. [01:40:00.120 --> 01:40:10.120] Well, I saw this guy, he was just talking to the guy in front of me, and I was waiting in line. [01:40:10.120 --> 01:40:19.120] And he was just talking and talking and talking and talking, and I had already my phone recording. [01:40:19.120 --> 01:40:31.120] And then they were just kind of taking, you know, long, so I picked up my phone and I said, look, we're here, parked, waiting for this guy to finish their talk so that we can go. [01:40:31.120 --> 01:40:35.120] And I recorded that, and then I just sent my phone down again. [01:40:35.120 --> 01:40:45.120] So here we come up, and the first thing that happened was because when the car in front of me took off, he... [01:40:45.120 --> 01:40:54.120] I'm losing you, Carlos. [01:40:54.120 --> 01:40:56.120] You hear me now? [01:40:56.120 --> 01:40:58.120] Yeah, I can hear you. [01:40:58.120 --> 01:41:03.120] Okay. Where did it, where did you lose me there? [01:41:03.120 --> 01:41:09.120] You were, the other car that was talking moved off and you were moving up. [01:41:09.120 --> 01:41:22.120] Okay, I was moving up as the other car starts pulling away, the Border Patrol agent takes out his phone and takes a picture at the license plate. [01:41:22.120 --> 01:41:24.120] And I saw that. [01:41:24.120 --> 01:41:27.120] I didn't record that, but I saw that. [01:41:27.120 --> 01:41:34.120] So when I come up, I come up to the stop and he saw something in my window, and the first thing that I asked him was, [01:41:34.120 --> 01:41:42.120] he didn't ask you something. Why, or what is the reason that you took a picture of that car's license plate? [01:41:42.120 --> 01:41:43.120] And you know how they are. [01:41:43.120 --> 01:41:46.120] I mean, he kind of, he didn't like it. [01:41:46.120 --> 01:41:51.120] He didn't like the fact that I was asking him that, you know, what I have seen. [01:41:51.120 --> 01:41:58.120] So he tells me to pull over, you know, pull over to the side of a van and we move up. [01:41:58.120 --> 01:42:04.120] And then he comes up and says, he wants to question me again, so I bring up the same question again. [01:42:04.120 --> 01:42:15.120] And he kind of got nervous, but he did tell me, he told me that the reason why he took the picture of the license plate was for criminal intelligence. [01:42:15.120 --> 01:42:23.120] I said, well, I'll tell you what, if you had a doubt or suspicion of that car, that guy being involved in some criminal activity, [01:42:23.120 --> 01:42:28.120] you could pull them over and question him here, just like you're questioning me. [01:42:28.120 --> 01:42:30.120] You're repeating my trouble here. [01:42:30.120 --> 01:42:33.120] I have to wait for you to finish your talk and stuff like that. [01:42:33.120 --> 01:42:44.120] So my main point is, are they, I know they don't have any authorization to be taking pictures of private automobile license plates. [01:42:44.120 --> 01:42:48.120] Yeah, there's nothing to prevent them from it. [01:42:48.120 --> 01:42:54.120] But if you have a, if you're in public, you can be photographed. [01:42:54.120 --> 01:43:01.120] Police can do it, you can do it, anybody can do it. [01:43:01.120 --> 01:43:20.120] So the fact that they, but they're an agent, they need to have some type of bright grid or anything like for investigation or what have you. [01:43:20.120 --> 01:43:25.120] I'm pretty sure that they already have the technology that they need for that, wouldn't they? [01:43:25.120 --> 01:43:27.120] I would think so. [01:43:27.120 --> 01:43:34.120] I think that every car that goes through there, they've got a snapshot of the plates. [01:43:34.120 --> 01:43:38.120] But there's nothing to prevent the officer from taking a photograph. [01:43:38.120 --> 01:43:49.120] One of the coolest YouTube videos I saw is this policeman stops someone and they take out their cell phone and stick it right in his face. [01:43:49.120 --> 01:43:56.120] And the cop takes his cell phone out, turns it on and sticks it right in that guy's face. [01:43:56.120 --> 01:43:59.120] Oh, that was so cool. [01:44:27.120 --> 01:44:30.120] They are different varieties of the same species. [01:44:30.120 --> 01:44:39.120] HempUSA.org wants the world to know these basic facts and to help people understand that hemp protein powder is the best kept health secret you need to know about. [01:44:39.120 --> 01:44:48.120] Remember, hemp protein powder contains 53% protein, is gluten free, anti-inflammatory, non-GMO and is loaded with nutrients. [01:44:48.120 --> 01:45:00.120] Call 888-910-4367, 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you only at hempUSA.org. [01:45:19.120 --> 01:45:22.120] First place, up for grabs of Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:45:22.120 --> 01:45:26.120] Second place, Taurus PT-111 G-Cube 9mm Pistol. [01:45:26.120 --> 01:45:28.120] From Defense Distributed. [01:45:28.120 --> 01:45:31.120] Third place, the AR-308 80% lower. [01:45:31.120 --> 01:45:34.120] Fourth place, the AR-15 80% lower. [01:45:34.120 --> 01:45:35.120] From Fatsal's Deli. [01:45:35.120 --> 01:45:38.120] Fifth place, $100 gift card for Fatsal's Deli. [01:45:38.120 --> 01:45:41.120] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:41.120 --> 01:45:43.120] That's the logosradionetwork.com. [01:45:43.120 --> 01:45:48.120] Also, if you purchase Randy Kelton's ebook, Legal101, you get 4 chances to win. [01:45:48.120 --> 01:45:52.120] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar, get 10 chances to win. [01:45:52.120 --> 01:45:55.120] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:45:55.120 --> 01:46:14.120] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:46:25.120 --> 01:46:34.120] Okay, we are back. [01:46:34.120 --> 01:46:38.120] Randy Kelton Reels Law Radio and we're talking to Carlos in Texas. [01:46:38.120 --> 01:46:41.120] Okay, Carlos, he can absolutely take those photos. [01:46:41.120 --> 01:46:48.120] Sometimes we get more argumentative and aggressive and we forget that at the end of the day, [01:46:48.120 --> 01:46:52.120] most of these police officers really want to be good guys. [01:46:52.120 --> 01:46:56.120] And they want to think that they're doing the right thing for the right reasons. [01:46:56.120 --> 01:47:00.120] Most of them, they've only got a couple of jackboots in Texas. [01:47:00.120 --> 01:47:03.120] It's just that they get around a lot. [01:47:03.120 --> 01:47:09.120] So, they're trying to give the police some credit because for the most part, they want to be good guys. [01:47:09.120 --> 01:47:12.120] They're just trapped in a system they didn't create. [01:47:12.120 --> 01:47:21.120] And in this case, if you are in the public, anybody can photograph you all they want to, even the police. [01:47:21.120 --> 01:47:33.120] Yeah, you don't have what do you call it, expectancy of privacy? [01:47:33.120 --> 01:47:34.120] No, you have. [01:47:34.120 --> 01:47:37.120] If you're in the public, you have no expectation of privacy. [01:47:37.120 --> 01:47:45.120] If you're sitting at a table in a restaurant and you're talking quietly to someone else, you have an expectation of privacy. [01:47:45.120 --> 01:47:53.120] But if I'm sitting at the next table and you're talking loud enough that I can hear you, you have no expectation of privacy. [01:47:53.120 --> 01:47:54.120] I can record you. [01:47:54.120 --> 01:47:59.120] If you don't want me recording you, you need to talk so I can't hear you. [01:47:59.120 --> 01:48:05.120] So, yeah, when you're in the public, you have no expectation of privacy. [01:48:05.120 --> 01:48:18.120] And I mean, it was just a curiosity, but the guy felt like I was stepping out of line by asking him that question, I guess. [01:48:18.120 --> 01:48:26.120] So, then he raises the issue that I gave him probable cause to pull me over because of that question. [01:48:26.120 --> 01:48:28.120] I mean, you know, he had nothing. [01:48:28.120 --> 01:48:31.120] Now, that's different. [01:48:31.120 --> 01:48:37.120] You might file a T-close complaint against him. [01:48:37.120 --> 01:48:40.120] Oh, that'll sting him big time. [01:48:40.120 --> 01:48:41.120] Yeah. [01:48:41.120 --> 01:48:45.120] That will teach him manners. [01:48:45.120 --> 01:48:46.120] Exactly. [01:48:46.120 --> 01:48:49.120] That was my whole point. [01:48:49.120 --> 01:49:00.120] And that's why I got so upset because you're pulling me over because I asked you why or what was the reason that you took picture of that license plate? [01:49:00.120 --> 01:49:05.120] You have no probable cause or no reason to pull me over and question me on the side of the road. [01:49:05.120 --> 01:49:07.120] I mean, right there on the checkpoint, right? [01:49:07.120 --> 01:49:12.120] But he pulls me kind of like what they call secondary, but there is no reason for that. [01:49:12.120 --> 01:49:14.120] Yeah, I'm familiar with secondary. [01:49:14.120 --> 01:49:18.120] File his T-close complaint against him. [01:49:18.120 --> 01:49:21.120] That'll break him from sucking eggs. [01:49:21.120 --> 01:49:36.120] And my other question was if I were to file a complaint against him, would it be because, you know, I've already looked up the document that they want you to fill out and they ask you. [01:49:36.120 --> 01:49:42.120] The only thing that they don't ask you is for your death certificate, you know, but everything else that's in there. [01:49:42.120 --> 01:49:43.120] Would you live? [01:49:43.120 --> 01:49:44.120] Would you hold your... [01:49:44.120 --> 01:49:46.120] None of their business. [01:49:46.120 --> 01:49:48.120] None of their business. [01:49:48.120 --> 01:49:50.120] Yeah. [01:49:50.120 --> 01:49:57.120] NYB's, what I put in there. [01:49:57.120 --> 01:50:00.120] None of your business. [01:50:00.120 --> 01:50:01.120] Alrighty. [01:50:01.120 --> 01:50:02.120] Okay, Randy. [01:50:02.120 --> 01:50:04.120] Well, I mean, that was it for me. [01:50:04.120 --> 01:50:12.120] I mean, actually, I do have a lot of other questions, but I know we're running out of time and I don't want to start it off and then... [01:50:12.120 --> 01:50:14.120] Yeah, and we got one caller that's been on. [01:50:14.120 --> 01:50:15.120] He just dropped off. [01:50:15.120 --> 01:50:16.120] Tim just dropped off. [01:50:16.120 --> 01:50:18.120] I was going to take you next. [01:50:18.120 --> 01:50:20.120] Okay. [01:50:20.120 --> 01:50:23.120] We've got enough time for one more caller. [01:50:23.120 --> 01:50:25.120] Thank you, Carlos, and don't be such a stranger. [01:50:25.120 --> 01:50:26.120] Thank you. [01:50:26.120 --> 01:50:27.120] Thank you very much. [01:50:27.120 --> 01:50:29.120] I'm going to finish that email, Randy. [01:50:29.120 --> 01:50:31.120] Okay, bye-bye. [01:50:31.120 --> 01:50:35.120] Okay, now we're going to Dave in Texas. [01:50:35.120 --> 01:50:36.120] Hello, Dave. [01:50:36.120 --> 01:50:38.120] Hey, how are you doing, Randy? [01:50:38.120 --> 01:50:39.120] Doing good. [01:50:39.120 --> 01:50:41.120] What do you have for us today? [01:50:41.120 --> 01:50:43.120] What I've got some information from it. [01:50:43.120 --> 01:50:52.120] Legiscan.com, it's bill NHHB1778-FNA local. [01:50:52.120 --> 01:50:58.120] What it is, it was done in February 15th, 2018 by representative... [01:50:58.120 --> 01:50:59.120] Okay, okay, hold on. [01:50:59.120 --> 01:51:03.120] NHHB7218... [01:51:03.120 --> 01:51:05.120] 78. [01:51:05.120 --> 01:51:07.120] 78. [01:51:07.120 --> 01:51:11.120] Yeah, dash FN. [01:51:11.120 --> 01:51:14.120] Dash A dash local. [01:51:14.120 --> 01:51:20.120] That's A dash local, that's unusual. [01:51:20.120 --> 01:51:23.120] Okay, is that a Texas bill? [01:51:23.120 --> 01:51:25.120] No, this is New Hampshire. [01:51:25.120 --> 01:51:28.120] Okay, that's what the NH was, okay. [01:51:28.120 --> 01:51:30.120] Okay, go ahead. [01:51:30.120 --> 01:51:35.120] Okay, it's an act in relation to registration of commercial motor vehicles [01:51:35.120 --> 01:51:37.120] and operator driver's licenses. [01:51:37.120 --> 01:51:41.120] Oh, son, you sent me an email on this. [01:51:41.120 --> 01:51:43.120] Yeah, no, I haven't. [01:51:43.120 --> 01:51:45.120] Maybe somebody did. [01:51:45.120 --> 01:51:46.120] Somebody did. [01:51:46.120 --> 01:51:47.120] Go ahead, this is cool. [01:51:47.120 --> 01:51:49.120] Well, that's good because I'm excited to see that [01:51:49.120 --> 01:51:52.120] because that means that people out here, we're not commercial. [01:51:52.120 --> 01:51:54.120] We don't have to do registration. [01:51:54.120 --> 01:51:56.120] They don't have to do registration to pass this. [01:51:56.120 --> 01:51:57.120] Wait, wait, wait, wait. [01:51:57.120 --> 01:51:59.120] Go ahead and explain the bill so everybody else understands. [01:51:59.120 --> 01:52:03.120] Okay, well, I just caught it today. [01:52:03.120 --> 01:52:08.120] It does, it's a bill to repeal for just regular people like you and I [01:52:08.120 --> 01:52:11.120] that don't, if you're not traveling commercially, [01:52:11.120 --> 01:52:13.120] you don't have to do that. [01:52:13.120 --> 01:52:15.120] And plus you're going to have to furnish a sticker for people put on their car [01:52:15.120 --> 01:52:18.120] to let the police know that they're exempt. [01:52:18.120 --> 01:52:21.120] And that's basically, they don't have to do registration [01:52:21.120 --> 01:52:23.120] and they don't have to have a driver's license. [01:52:23.120 --> 01:52:26.120] So we'll just have to see how that's going to turn out. [01:52:26.120 --> 01:52:30.120] Oh, that is an indication of the sign of the times. [01:52:30.120 --> 01:52:31.120] No kidding. [01:52:31.120 --> 01:52:32.120] I was so glad. [01:52:32.120 --> 01:52:33.120] I couldn't believe it. [01:52:33.120 --> 01:52:36.120] So I looked up to find it more than one place and it's there. [01:52:36.120 --> 01:52:37.120] So. [01:52:37.120 --> 01:52:44.120] And this is an argument I've been bringing that there's a case out of [01:52:44.120 --> 01:52:52.120] Tennessee, a Bonnerview State, and it says that the state has an [01:52:52.120 --> 01:52:56.120] interest, a vested interest in the safety of the public. [01:52:56.120 --> 01:53:04.120] And based on that, they can require that a person who operates a motorized [01:53:04.120 --> 01:53:09.120] conveyance on the highways of the state of Tennessee can be required to [01:53:09.120 --> 01:53:17.120] secure a license for the limited purpose of ensuring competency in [01:53:17.120 --> 01:53:24.120] operating the equipment and knowledge of the rules of the road for that [01:53:24.120 --> 01:53:26.120] limited purpose. [01:53:26.120 --> 01:53:31.120] But it does not presume that you are operating in commerce. [01:53:31.120 --> 01:53:38.120] It's kind of like the requirement that you have a concealed carry license. [01:53:38.120 --> 01:53:42.120] In Texas, in order to carry, to conceal carry, you have to take a [01:53:42.120 --> 01:53:44.120] course in gun safety. [01:53:44.120 --> 01:53:49.120] And the license is not a professional license, but it's a license to [01:53:49.120 --> 01:53:54.120] show that you have demonstrated knowledge and competence and for no [01:53:54.120 --> 01:53:56.120] other purpose. [01:53:56.120 --> 01:54:01.120] So yes, the state can require that we have a license, but only for the [01:54:01.120 --> 01:54:07.120] limited purpose of demonstrating that we have knowledge and competence. [01:54:07.120 --> 01:54:13.120] Not to hold us responsible for operating in commerce when we are not. [01:54:13.120 --> 01:54:16.120] And this bill goes exactly to that. [01:54:16.120 --> 01:54:18.120] Wonderful. [01:54:18.120 --> 01:54:23.120] It indicates that people are paying attention. [01:54:23.120 --> 01:54:26.120] Well, I'd sure like to see this happen in Texas. [01:54:26.120 --> 01:54:29.120] If this thing follows through in New Hampshire, boy, I sure want to push [01:54:29.120 --> 01:54:31.120] that for Texas to do that, too. [01:54:31.120 --> 01:54:32.120] Oh, man. [01:54:32.120 --> 01:54:38.120] That would be perfect because I am about to launch the traffic. [01:54:38.120 --> 01:54:43.120] I'm trying to get funding before I launch it. [01:54:43.120 --> 01:54:47.120] But when I launch it, we're going to shut down traffic in Texas. [01:54:47.120 --> 01:54:51.120] And they're going to have to do something different because the law in [01:54:51.120 --> 01:54:55.120] Texas is abundantly clear. [01:54:55.120 --> 01:55:01.120] You cannot be charged unless there is evidence that you're operating in [01:55:01.120 --> 01:55:03.120] commerce. [01:55:03.120 --> 01:55:11.120] Municipal police officers cannot enforce the traffic law period. [01:55:11.120 --> 01:55:14.120] No authority whatsoever. [01:55:14.120 --> 01:55:19.120] And the Sheriff's Department can only be enforced the traffic laws if they [01:55:19.120 --> 01:55:24.120] have been appointed by the county commissioner's court as a traffic [01:55:24.120 --> 01:55:30.120] control officer and are paid by the county commissioner's court. [01:55:30.120 --> 01:55:33.120] The law is real clear on that. [01:55:33.120 --> 01:55:36.120] So we're going to shut that part down. [01:55:36.120 --> 01:55:42.120] And there's a good chance that a statute of this kind will abuse her. [01:55:42.120 --> 01:55:51.120] What the legislature could have done is passed all it, taken the federal [01:55:51.120 --> 01:55:58.120] model traffic transportation code and passed that as a set of criminal [01:55:58.120 --> 01:56:00.120] statutes. [01:56:00.120 --> 01:56:03.120] But they didn't. [01:56:03.120 --> 01:56:06.120] They left it as a professional conduct code. [01:56:06.120 --> 01:56:11.120] So because they didn't pass it as a set of criminal statutes, now it's left [01:56:11.120 --> 01:56:15.120] as only commerce and they can't enforce it. [01:56:15.120 --> 01:56:19.120] We shut them down. [01:56:19.120 --> 01:56:24.120] So I'm really glad to see New Hampshire live for your die. [01:56:24.120 --> 01:56:27.120] It's the appropriate place. [01:56:27.120 --> 01:56:29.120] Yeah, just one final note on that. [01:56:29.120 --> 01:56:33.120] It's going to cost them over $100 million in the state by doing this [01:56:33.120 --> 01:56:35.120] in fund loss. [01:56:35.120 --> 01:56:41.120] Life is tough, it's an unauthorized tax to start with. [01:56:41.120 --> 01:56:45.120] It's nothing but extortion. [01:56:45.120 --> 01:56:50.120] If they want to tax us, tax us straight up so we can vote on it. [01:56:50.120 --> 01:56:55.120] But don't bypass the requirement to vote on the tax by enforcing a law you [01:56:55.120 --> 01:57:00.120] don't have the power to enforce. [01:57:00.120 --> 01:57:04.120] That's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:57:04.120 --> 01:57:07.120] I know there's not much time left and we'll let you go. [01:57:07.120 --> 01:57:10.120] So I just want to let you know that. [01:57:10.120 --> 01:57:11.120] Okay. [01:57:11.120 --> 01:57:12.120] Thank you, Dave. [01:57:12.120 --> 01:57:13.120] Sure. [01:57:13.120 --> 01:57:14.120] Bye. [01:57:14.120 --> 01:57:15.120] Yeah. [01:57:15.120 --> 01:57:16.120] Okay. [01:57:16.120 --> 01:57:22.120] Thank you all for listening and it's a good time to go to Logos Radio Network [01:57:22.120 --> 01:57:25.120] and help us support this station. [01:57:25.120 --> 01:57:28.120] We've been operating the station. [01:57:28.120 --> 01:57:33.120] Deborah and I picked this station up after WTPRN drop-down. [01:57:33.120 --> 01:57:39.120] We picked it up and Deborah personally wrote all the code for this station. [01:57:39.120 --> 01:57:41.120] It was an incredible feat. [01:57:41.120 --> 01:57:42.120] I watched her. [01:57:42.120 --> 01:57:44.120] I'm an electrical engineer. [01:57:44.120 --> 01:57:48.120] And I watched her do this and I was amazed at what she produced. [01:57:48.120 --> 01:57:53.120] And she's been able to keep this show of the air for the last 10 years and [01:57:53.120 --> 01:57:56.120] absolutely has done this on a shoestring. [01:57:56.120 --> 01:57:59.120] It has been a major struggle. [01:57:59.120 --> 01:58:05.120] And right now we would appreciate any help we can get to keep this thing going. [01:58:05.120 --> 01:58:09.120] Just $5, $10 a month is a minor thing. [01:58:09.120 --> 01:58:12.120] We give a few of our listeners to do that. [01:58:12.120 --> 01:58:18.120] It will go a long ways toward keeping this on the air and allowing us to keep our [01:58:18.120 --> 01:58:23.120] equipment up to date so we can keep bringing this information through you. [01:58:23.120 --> 01:58:26.120] So we appreciate any help we can get. [01:58:26.120 --> 01:58:31.120] We'll be back tomorrow to Monday night with Eddie Craig on his traffic show. [01:58:31.120 --> 01:58:34.120] Deborah and I will be back Thursday. [01:58:34.120 --> 01:58:38.120] And make sure you listen and tell your friends about it. [01:58:38.120 --> 01:58:41.120] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:41.120 --> 01:58:57.120] Bible for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:57.120 --> 01:58:58.120] Recovery Version. [01:58:58.120 --> 01:59:03.120] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:03.120 --> 01:59:08.120] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.120 --> 01:59:11.120] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.120 --> 01:59:20.120] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.120 --> 01:59:26.120] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:26.120 --> 01:59:30.120] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.120 --> 01:59:32.120] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.120 --> 01:59:40.120] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.120 --> 01:59:59.120] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.