[00:00.000 --> 00:29.640] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 close with gold $1,353.22 an ounce. [00:29.640 --> 00:32.000] Silver $16.68 an ounce. [00:32.000 --> 00:35.080] Texas Crude $65.51 a barrel. [00:35.080 --> 00:38.400] Bitcoins at $6,902.19. [00:38.400 --> 00:41.240] Ethereum at $420.80. [00:41.240 --> 00:44.200] Bitcoin Cash at $652.90. [00:44.200 --> 00:55.680] And finally Litecoins at $114.34 a crypto coin. [00:55.680 --> 00:58.880] Today in history, the year 1968. [00:58.880 --> 01:02.920] President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1968, [01:02.920 --> 01:04.560] which prohibited private businesses [01:04.560 --> 01:07.280] from discriminating based on race, color, religion, sex, [01:07.280 --> 01:08.880] or national origin. [01:08.880 --> 01:10.760] It also prohibited unequal application [01:10.760 --> 01:13.600] of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:13.600 --> 01:15.680] in public schools, and employment, [01:15.680 --> 01:18.520] and public accommodations for places of business. [01:18.520 --> 01:19.360] Today in history. [01:24.240 --> 01:26.160] In recent news, tensions in Syria [01:26.160 --> 01:28.480] seem to reach new levels after a chemical attack [01:28.480 --> 01:31.200] on civilians in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead [01:31.200 --> 01:32.240] and many injured. [01:32.240 --> 01:34.280] An attack which is being blamed on the democratically [01:34.280 --> 01:36.960] elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, [01:36.960 --> 01:39.720] by the United States, and on Israel by Russia. [01:39.720 --> 01:42.480] Either accusatory narrative without any verified evidence [01:42.480 --> 01:43.560] as of yet. [01:43.560 --> 01:45.280] President Trump tweeted today Wednesday [01:45.280 --> 01:48.360] that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down any and all missiles [01:48.360 --> 01:50.440] fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, [01:50.440 --> 01:53.280] because they will be coming in nice and new and smart. [01:53.280 --> 01:55.560] Going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners [01:55.560 --> 01:57.960] with a gas-killing animal who kills his people [01:57.960 --> 01:58.880] and enjoys it. [01:58.880 --> 02:00.720] Many in the last, including President Trump, [02:00.720 --> 02:04.240] have been quick to conclude that this chemical attack must [02:04.240 --> 02:07.000] have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [02:07.000 --> 02:08.520] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, [02:08.520 --> 02:10.680] have given approval since yesterday [02:10.680 --> 02:13.480] for the organization for the prohibition of chemical weapons [02:13.480 --> 02:16.120] to investigate the side of the chemical slaughter. [02:16.120 --> 02:18.680] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support [02:18.680 --> 02:20.840] during Syria's seven-year civil war, [02:20.840 --> 02:23.320] a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria [02:23.320 --> 02:26.200] and anti-Assad Syrian rebels that are openly [02:26.200 --> 02:28.200] being funded by Western governments, [02:28.200 --> 02:30.080] with ISIS being one of the more notorious [02:30.080 --> 02:33.080] swimmer groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [02:33.080 --> 02:36.400] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman [02:36.400 --> 02:39.480] Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook that smart missiles [02:39.480 --> 02:41.400] should be fired at terrorists and not [02:41.400 --> 02:45.000] at a legitimate government, which has been fighting terrorists. [02:45.000 --> 02:46.840] Or is this a trick to destroy all traces [02:46.840 --> 02:48.360] with a smart missile strike? [02:48.360 --> 02:50.560] And then there will be no evidence for international [02:50.560 --> 02:53.920] inspectors to look at. [02:53.920 --> 02:57.520] This was Kirk Brody with your lowdown for April 11, 2018. [02:57.520 --> 03:25.240] OK, howdy, howdy. [03:25.240 --> 03:28.800] Randy Kelton, ruler of our radio on this Friday, [03:28.800 --> 03:34.280] the 13th of July, 2018. [03:34.280 --> 03:37.760] Yesterday we had a little problem with our collar boards. [03:37.760 --> 03:40.760] We got that straightened out today. [03:40.760 --> 03:44.600] And we're going to have our collar boards open all night. [03:44.600 --> 03:49.440] I called in numbers 512-646-1984. [03:49.440 --> 03:50.520] So the collar boards are on. [03:50.520 --> 03:53.840] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [03:53.840 --> 03:56.000] And anybody who didn't get to last night, [03:56.000 --> 03:58.920] will try to take you first tonight. [03:58.920 --> 04:02.360] So I'm going to start out with things [04:02.360 --> 04:07.320] are happening with the electronic lawyer. [04:07.320 --> 04:09.520] I can't really speak to all of it, [04:09.520 --> 04:17.320] but we are on the verge of launching the product that [04:17.320 --> 04:20.880] could change everything. [04:20.880 --> 04:27.800] We've been 10 years developing this procedure and process. [04:27.800 --> 04:31.400] And now we're showing it to some investors. [04:31.400 --> 04:34.040] And we've got a number of investors [04:34.040 --> 04:39.040] who are really excited about it. [04:39.040 --> 04:43.400] And they're talking about being able to raise [04:43.400 --> 04:46.040] an insane amount of money to get this thing started. [04:46.040 --> 04:58.080] It's not exactly what people would expect in a program that [04:58.080 --> 05:01.720] will ultimately have the effect of being [05:01.720 --> 05:05.720] the Uber of the taxi company. [05:05.720 --> 05:08.480] If you've been listening to my show for a long time, [05:08.480 --> 05:12.360] you know I've been saying that it was my intent [05:12.360 --> 05:15.600] to eliminate the profession of lawyer [05:15.600 --> 05:19.040] and get lawyers to pay me to do it. [05:19.040 --> 05:23.440] And that's exactly what this will do. [05:23.440 --> 05:26.600] Even if lawyers know what it's doing, [05:26.600 --> 05:29.920] they'll still have to use the tool. [05:29.920 --> 05:33.960] So with that said, we're not launching the project [05:33.960 --> 05:39.600] as adversarial to lawyers, but as an assistant to lawyers. [05:39.600 --> 05:43.600] And that's exactly what it is. [05:43.600 --> 05:46.000] But lawyers are running into the same thing [05:46.000 --> 05:47.000] truck drivers are. [05:47.000 --> 05:50.520] And cab drivers are experiencing right now. [05:50.520 --> 05:58.200] And I've just heard a report about jobs that are no longer [05:58.200 --> 05:59.080] available. [05:59.080 --> 06:03.440] And since the beginning of the last century, [06:03.440 --> 06:08.960] 70% of all the jobs that existed at that time are gone. [06:08.960 --> 06:11.360] 70%. [06:11.360 --> 06:17.800] And they expect those who are looking toward the future [06:17.800 --> 06:22.520] expect that more than that will disappear in this century [06:22.520 --> 06:25.280] because of technology. [06:25.280 --> 06:28.800] And for all of the complaining people [06:28.800 --> 06:32.880] did about the industrial revolution [06:32.880 --> 06:38.320] and in the technical revolution about it eliminating jobs, [06:38.320 --> 06:40.480] just don't know such thing. [06:40.480 --> 06:45.080] As a matter of fact, it's created jobs. [06:45.080 --> 06:49.840] The net outcome is that there were more jobs for everyone. [06:49.840 --> 06:54.880] It's just that some jobs are no longer there. [06:54.880 --> 06:57.400] I had a brother-in-law who was a machinist. [06:57.400 --> 06:59.320] He was a good machinist. [06:59.320 --> 07:09.280] When C&C computer-aided lays and mills come along, [07:09.280 --> 07:12.520] he was a specialist. [07:12.520 --> 07:15.080] He was a machinist. [07:15.080 --> 07:17.920] He wasn't going to have anything to do with that automated [07:17.920 --> 07:18.520] garbage. [07:18.520 --> 07:24.400] Well, he ended his life as a pizza delivery guy [07:24.400 --> 07:29.240] because for all his knowledge in machining, [07:29.240 --> 07:32.000] nobody needed it. [07:32.000 --> 07:40.240] And I'm looking at 20 years, oh, we'll still have lawyers [07:40.240 --> 07:43.400] around and they'll be needed. [07:43.400 --> 07:46.600] But very few. [07:46.600 --> 07:48.080] You know, with the taxi companies, [07:48.080 --> 07:51.560] Uber is taking the place around of the taxi drivers. [07:51.560 --> 07:55.640] But within five to seven years, the Uber drivers [07:55.640 --> 07:56.880] will no longer be needed. [07:56.880 --> 08:01.560] Car dealers and used car dealers should be out of business. [08:01.560 --> 08:06.520] There will be no need to own a car. [08:06.520 --> 08:10.320] When you can tap on your cell phone and order a car, [08:10.320 --> 08:13.000] and a car will drive up out front of your house [08:13.000 --> 08:15.560] and you get in it and you tell the car where you want to go. [08:15.560 --> 08:17.600] And it will either drive where you want to go [08:17.600 --> 08:20.600] or it'll rise up and fly to where you want to go. [08:20.600 --> 08:24.760] Set down, you get out and release the car. [08:24.760 --> 08:30.640] You get out and release the vehicle back into the fleet. [08:30.640 --> 08:33.920] And it simply joins the swarm. [08:33.920 --> 08:39.160] There will be a few companies who buy all the vehicles. [08:39.160 --> 08:41.680] There won't be a need for us to buy vehicles. [08:41.680 --> 08:44.560] Unless we're way out in the country like I am here, [08:44.560 --> 08:46.840] there will still be some people that will want their own. [08:46.840 --> 08:49.640] But they won't even need to drive them. [08:49.640 --> 08:54.960] And the whole industry will be changing dramatically. [08:54.960 --> 09:02.360] In the legal industry, this will cause a profound change [09:02.360 --> 09:05.360] in the way law is done. [09:05.360 --> 09:14.240] Law will become a checklist. [09:14.240 --> 09:21.440] You know, I'm an engineer and we look at statutes as tech manuals. [09:21.440 --> 09:23.680] And tech manuals are something that you follow. [09:23.680 --> 09:25.520] You walk right down the line. [09:25.520 --> 09:29.800] The law has not been sophisticated enough [09:29.800 --> 09:34.440] so that it could be followed directly. [09:34.440 --> 09:36.200] Because you couldn't get it all of it, [09:36.200 --> 09:39.680] we had to guess it a bunch of it. [09:39.680 --> 09:44.760] Well, this tool will essentially eliminate the guesswork [09:44.760 --> 09:49.560] and make law available to everybody. [09:49.560 --> 09:52.280] And it won't take long to do it. [09:52.280 --> 09:58.640] OK, so great progress in that regard. [09:58.640 --> 10:00.760] Things are getting closer. [10:00.760 --> 10:02.200] We do have a caller. [10:02.200 --> 10:05.160] We'll go ahead and start because Tina was on last night [10:05.160 --> 10:07.560] and couldn't get to her. [10:07.560 --> 10:09.720] OK, hello, Tina. [10:09.720 --> 10:13.360] What do you have for us today? [10:13.360 --> 10:15.960] Well, a couple of things. [10:15.960 --> 10:18.360] I enjoyed your show last night. [10:18.360 --> 10:22.200] And I'm excited at the prospect of what you've got going. [10:22.200 --> 10:24.400] A couple of questions about it. [10:24.400 --> 10:28.600] Will it be able to be used in any state? [10:28.600 --> 10:30.320] And do you just plug in your state [10:30.320 --> 10:32.280] and the right forms and everything come up? [10:32.280 --> 10:33.760] Wait, wait, hold on, Tina. [10:33.760 --> 10:35.760] Move the mic a little away from your mouth. [10:35.760 --> 10:38.440] Your mic's destroying. [10:38.440 --> 10:42.720] OK, hold on one second. [10:42.720 --> 10:45.240] Is that better? [10:45.240 --> 10:46.920] Oh, yes, that's much better. [10:46.920 --> 10:49.080] Yes, OK, wonderful. [10:49.080 --> 10:53.040] So this will be state-specific, and you'll [10:53.040 --> 10:57.040] be able to do a drop down menu, plug in your state. [10:57.040 --> 11:02.480] Oh, yes, we're getting funding to model [11:02.480 --> 11:05.800] the entire body of law. [11:05.800 --> 11:16.000] Once we have the corpus juis modeled for one state, [11:16.000 --> 11:24.040] we have 95% of all of the law modeled for all of the states, [11:24.040 --> 11:28.280] because laws govern human behavior. [11:28.280 --> 11:32.080] And human beings, if God created human beings, [11:32.080 --> 11:34.680] He created us flawed. [11:34.680 --> 11:38.880] And He created us consistently flawed. [11:38.880 --> 11:41.280] So no matter where you go, the laws [11:41.280 --> 11:47.760] we need to govern human frailty are essentially the same, [11:47.760 --> 11:52.200] not just in the United States, but in every country. [11:52.200 --> 11:55.720] There are laws in countries that are purely political, [11:55.720 --> 11:58.120] and those will be somewhat different. [11:58.120 --> 12:03.960] But the vast majority of law is there to control human behavior, [12:03.960 --> 12:12.280] there to address the weaknesses in human civility. [12:12.280 --> 12:16.720] And those weaknesses are the same everywhere. [12:16.720 --> 12:19.960] Murder is murder no matter where you come across it. [12:19.960 --> 12:22.440] In the legal left turn, it is a legal left turn [12:22.440 --> 12:24.600] no matter what country you're in. [12:24.600 --> 12:28.480] So once we have the body of law modeled, [12:28.480 --> 12:32.360] then we can very quickly take the other states [12:32.360 --> 12:36.240] and go in and add in the peculiarities, which [12:36.240 --> 12:42.280] won't be many, and change the code designations, [12:42.280 --> 12:46.200] and switch out some of the case law. [12:46.200 --> 12:50.480] My finance guys think this is going [12:50.480 --> 12:57.400] to be an incredibly massive project. [12:57.400 --> 13:01.680] It won't be near as difficult as they believe. [13:01.680 --> 13:04.120] That's because they're looking at it from the outside. [13:04.120 --> 13:07.000] It's kind of like walking up to an automobile, [13:07.000 --> 13:11.040] a brand new, highly technical, highly sophisticated [13:11.040 --> 13:14.920] automobile, open the hood and look down in there. [13:14.920 --> 13:18.480] Now, I'm a pretty good mechanic. [13:18.480 --> 13:23.560] I'm good enough that I know better than to do that. [13:23.560 --> 13:25.360] If I open that hood and look down in there, [13:25.360 --> 13:28.520] all I'll do is get confused. [13:28.520 --> 13:31.080] I do not want to see under that hood [13:31.080 --> 13:34.640] until I talk to the person owns the vehicle. [13:34.640 --> 13:37.160] And I ask them, what did it do? [13:37.160 --> 13:41.560] And they start giving me symptoms of what it did. [13:41.560 --> 13:45.480] And each symptom helps me to eliminate a whole bunch of stuff [13:45.480 --> 13:48.400] I don't have to look at. [13:48.400 --> 13:51.320] So when I open that hood and all that stuff is under there, [13:51.320 --> 13:53.800] I don't see all that stuff. [13:53.800 --> 13:57.080] I'm looking for one spot. [13:57.080 --> 14:01.840] And this is what this tool will do for law. [14:01.840 --> 14:06.200] It will allow someone to either go through a questionnaire [14:06.200 --> 14:07.320] or a checklist. [14:07.320 --> 14:10.080] If the person is a professional, they [14:10.080 --> 14:11.720] don't need to be asked all these questions. [14:11.720 --> 14:14.480] They can walk down a checklist. [14:14.480 --> 14:19.880] The checklist will be absolutely thorough. [14:19.880 --> 14:23.280] It will miss nothing. [14:23.280 --> 14:29.040] So people look at the law and they [14:29.040 --> 14:31.480] think the law is incredibly complex. [14:31.480 --> 14:33.560] No, it isn't. [14:33.560 --> 14:40.280] Every statute has a set of elements. [14:40.280 --> 14:45.600] Now, for each element, there is potentially an infinite number [14:45.600 --> 14:49.800] of fact sets that can get you to that element. [14:49.800 --> 14:52.040] But once you get to the element, it [14:52.040 --> 14:55.640] doesn't matter how you got there. [14:55.640 --> 14:59.120] Once you get to the elements of murder, [14:59.120 --> 15:00.520] it doesn't matter how you got there. [15:00.520 --> 15:05.240] The elements are always the same. [15:05.240 --> 15:10.240] And this is one of the methods that we pulled out [15:10.240 --> 15:12.840] from the processes. [15:12.840 --> 15:17.760] We are separating the fact set from the argument [15:17.760 --> 15:20.400] on the elements and the issues. [15:20.400 --> 15:23.480] We argue the elements and issues independent of the fact [15:23.480 --> 15:26.480] set that got us there. [15:26.480 --> 15:28.160] It's not as hard as it seems. [15:28.160 --> 15:30.440] Most of the time when lawyers argue elements, [15:30.440 --> 15:37.600] they argue them from within the context of the fact set. [15:37.600 --> 15:42.240] And we're just changing up a little bit about the way [15:42.240 --> 15:47.640] you outro an intro, the way you outro from the fact set [15:47.640 --> 15:50.360] an intro into the argument. [15:50.360 --> 15:53.280] Just takes a little creative thought [15:53.280 --> 15:56.560] to write that so that it's separate. [15:56.560 --> 16:03.080] And once we have the codes, the legal elements, [16:03.080 --> 16:05.880] and then the case law that applies [16:05.880 --> 16:09.320] to each of those legal elements, and then [16:09.320 --> 16:14.640] the fine-tuned case law that goes to legal points [16:14.640 --> 16:16.160] within each of those elements. [16:16.160 --> 16:19.440] Once we have that lined out, it's [16:19.440 --> 16:23.240] not near as complex as it appears. [16:23.240 --> 16:28.120] For any one issue, there may be 1,000 cases, [16:28.120 --> 16:30.680] but only three or four matter. [16:30.680 --> 16:35.640] And one of the things we talk about is lexis-nexis. [16:35.640 --> 16:37.800] Lexis-nexis is the elephant in the corner. [16:37.800 --> 16:42.800] That's by far the biggest legal search engine in the world. [16:45.440 --> 16:51.320] Well, they gave us the ability to search [16:51.320 --> 16:54.880] all of the cases that are out there for the case that we need. [16:54.880 --> 16:58.320] Now, on the surface, it appears as though that would [16:58.320 --> 17:03.240] have dramatically eased the problem with finding [17:03.240 --> 17:07.720] relevant. [17:07.720 --> 17:12.040] It's the 2018 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun [17:12.040 --> 17:15.480] giveaway sponsored by Central Texas Gunworks. [17:15.480 --> 17:19.160] Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter to win. [17:19.160 --> 17:22.720] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:22.720 --> 17:26.480] From Central Texas Gunworks, the grand prize up for grabs [17:26.480 --> 17:29.480] is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. [17:29.480 --> 17:32.320] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:32.320 --> 17:36.080] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, [17:36.080 --> 17:38.160] you get four chances to win. [17:38.160 --> 17:40.200] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar [17:40.200 --> 17:42.280] and get 10 chances to win. [17:42.280 --> 17:46.840] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:46.840 --> 17:49.600] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, [17:49.600 --> 17:52.400] support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing you [17:52.400 --> 17:55.960] the best quality programming on talk radio today. [17:55.960 --> 17:59.200] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:59.200 --> 18:04.720] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [18:04.720 --> 18:07.800] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, [18:07.800 --> 18:09.760] letters, or even lawsuits? [18:09.760 --> 18:12.960] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris Proven [18:12.960 --> 18:13.560] Method. [18:13.560 --> 18:16.320] Michael Mearris has won six cases in federal court [18:16.320 --> 18:19.200] against debt collectors, and now you can win, too. [18:19.200 --> 18:21.960] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English [18:21.960 --> 18:24.560] on how to win in court using federal civil rights [18:24.560 --> 18:25.360] statutes. [18:25.360 --> 18:29.080] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [18:29.080 --> 18:31.120] How to answer letters and phone calls? [18:31.120 --> 18:33.720] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [18:33.720 --> 18:35.680] How to turn the financial tables on them [18:35.680 --> 18:38.440] and make them pay you to go away? [18:38.440 --> 18:41.320] The Michael Mearris Proven Method is the solution [18:41.320 --> 18:43.280] for how to stop debt collectors. [18:43.280 --> 18:45.680] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:45.680 --> 18:49.080] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [18:49.080 --> 18:51.360] and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner, [18:51.360 --> 18:54.160] or email MichaelMearris at yahoo.com. [18:54.160 --> 18:57.160] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email [18:57.160 --> 19:01.960] m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-m at yahoo.com [19:01.960 --> 19:05.560] to learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:05.560 --> 19:10.040] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [19:10.040 --> 19:14.040] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:14.040 --> 19:16.040] Really? [19:16.040 --> 19:31.720] Okay, we are back. [19:31.720 --> 19:34.920] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio on this Friday, [19:34.920 --> 19:39.560] the 13th day of July, 2018. [19:39.560 --> 19:43.840] And we're talking to Tina in California, [19:43.840 --> 19:48.880] and we just fell off the cliff again. [19:48.880 --> 19:51.280] Okay, I had to do some running around on the break. [19:51.280 --> 19:55.840] My producer's not here, so I'm having to run the show myself, [19:55.840 --> 20:01.360] and I don't multitask as well as I used to. [20:01.360 --> 20:04.200] Anyway, where were we? [20:04.200 --> 20:07.040] Lost my place, Tina. [20:07.040 --> 20:11.240] We were talking about the Lexus Nexus and how you were... [20:11.240 --> 20:13.760] Oh, okay, okay, okay, got it, got it, got it. [20:13.760 --> 20:14.680] Lexus Nexus. [20:14.680 --> 20:20.440] Okay, 800 years ago, when they passed the Magna Carta, [20:20.440 --> 20:24.400] someone would go into court, and there would be a scribe there. [20:24.400 --> 20:28.480] And a scribe would take down the proceedings of the court. [20:28.480 --> 20:31.720] And those scribes turned into court reporters. [20:31.720 --> 20:35.200] And they would write down the proceedings of the court, [20:35.200 --> 20:38.520] and each of the issues that were brought in the case, [20:38.520 --> 20:42.960] the scribe would give a keyword to. [20:42.960 --> 20:47.280] And then once he was done, he would go to a legal encyclopedia [20:47.280 --> 20:52.440] and add this case to each location in the encyclopedia [20:52.440 --> 20:55.680] where there was a matching keyword. [20:55.680 --> 21:00.200] And then about every two years in the last 50 years, [21:00.200 --> 21:04.040] before that it took longer, but in the last 50 years or so, [21:04.040 --> 21:08.720] they would publish a set of legal encyclopedias, [21:08.720 --> 21:12.360] American jurisprudence being the most well-known one, [21:12.360 --> 21:14.800] but there were a number of them. [21:14.800 --> 21:19.520] And they would have keywords, and you could go to the front [21:19.520 --> 21:22.080] of the encyclopedia, look up your keyword, [21:22.080 --> 21:23.360] and you'd give your page. [21:23.360 --> 21:27.600] You go to that page, and you would have a set [21:27.600 --> 21:33.880] of published cases relative to that keyword. [21:33.880 --> 21:38.120] You generally, there'd be maybe half a dozen or a dozen or so. [21:38.120 --> 21:41.360] And when the encyclopedia was printed, [21:41.360 --> 21:47.600] this became the standard controlling case law. [21:47.600 --> 21:51.400] So a lawyer could go to a single case law, a single keyword, [21:51.400 --> 21:56.440] and he could find all the common case law relative [21:56.440 --> 21:58.080] to that keyword. [21:58.080 --> 22:02.720] Okay, you're making a lot of noise in the background, Tina. [22:02.720 --> 22:06.000] You'd be surprised how what's minor noise is there, [22:06.000 --> 22:08.480] just booms through the microphone. [22:08.480 --> 22:12.560] Anyway, along comes Nexus. [22:12.560 --> 22:16.480] And Nexus Nexus is saying, well, you don't have to depend [22:16.480 --> 22:22.320] on that antiquated encyclopedia who only gives you a small portion [22:22.320 --> 22:26.480] of the actual cases that are out there. [22:26.480 --> 22:34.360] You can use our whiz-bang magic tool, put in your own keywords, [22:34.360 --> 22:38.480] and find the cases that fit your keywords. [22:38.480 --> 22:42.560] Well, that sounded pretty good on the surface, [22:42.560 --> 22:47.880] and it pretty well put the encyclopedias out of business. [22:47.880 --> 22:50.080] But what actually wound up happening, [22:50.080 --> 22:54.960] instead of having a set of controlling law, [22:54.960 --> 22:58.160] now you had lawyers who could run a keyword search, [22:58.160 --> 23:03.280] and instead of getting a 15 or 20 cases, [23:03.280 --> 23:07.440] they would get 10,000 hits. [23:07.440 --> 23:11.680] Some of those cases would be on point, some of them would not. [23:11.680 --> 23:14.440] You talk to any lawyer and ask them, [23:14.440 --> 23:23.720] when you have a new case that goes to an issue that's not common, [23:23.720 --> 23:27.640] how many cases do you have to go through before you find [23:27.640 --> 23:30.560] that first case on point? [23:30.560 --> 23:33.160] And they will tell you between 50 and 100. [23:33.160 --> 23:35.520] Every time. [23:35.520 --> 23:40.000] You go to Lexus, you put in this keyword, you get 10,000 hits, [23:40.000 --> 23:47.120] so you scratch your head, and you try to think, okay, [23:47.120 --> 23:51.080] if I had a case that goes to this particular issue, [23:51.080 --> 24:00.000] what peculiar or unusual strings of words would I tend [24:00.000 --> 24:03.160] to find in that case? [24:03.160 --> 24:06.640] And then you try to find a set of words [24:06.640 --> 24:12.440] that will give you a case that's on the point you want. [24:12.440 --> 24:17.160] That's like shooting at the case law with a splatter gun. [24:17.160 --> 24:19.600] Instead of making things better for the lawyers, [24:19.600 --> 24:22.040] it made it far, far worse. [24:22.040 --> 24:23.840] I asked the second in command [24:23.840 --> 24:26.720] of the North Carolina State Bar Association, [24:26.720 --> 24:29.520] we were talking about this issue. [24:29.520 --> 24:34.760] And I asked her, have you ever written a complex motion [24:34.760 --> 24:40.200] or pleading or a brief or pleading and filed it [24:40.200 --> 24:43.800] with the court confident that the lawyer [24:43.800 --> 24:48.320] on the other side didn't find some case law that you missed [24:48.320 --> 24:52.840] and is not going to come into court and wipe the floor with you? [24:52.840 --> 24:58.680] And she said the same thing every other lawyer has, not once. [24:58.680 --> 25:02.720] It's the lawyer's terror that the other side is going [25:02.720 --> 25:04.880] to find a piece of case law that you missed [25:04.880 --> 25:09.000] in the 10,000 hits you got on Lexus. [25:09.000 --> 25:11.600] When all we had were legal encyclopedies, [25:11.600 --> 25:13.440] we didn't have that problem [25:13.440 --> 25:15.640] because we had a fixed set of case law. [25:15.640 --> 25:25.480] So what we're going to do is, okay, so what we're doing is, [25:25.480 --> 25:31.800] we have this map that we designed for the purpose [25:31.800 --> 25:36.080] of extracting the details of the case. [25:36.080 --> 25:38.880] And we don't just extract all the details [25:38.880 --> 25:43.360] because in any given occurrence in the real world, [25:43.360 --> 25:48.720] there are almost an infinite number of variables. [25:48.720 --> 25:54.560] When a person sits down in front of a lawyer, [25:54.560 --> 25:58.880] the person knows part of what happens. [25:58.880 --> 26:00.760] They know what they paid attention [26:00.760 --> 26:04.840] to what they perceived to be important. [26:04.840 --> 26:07.880] The lawyer knows what is important, [26:07.880 --> 26:09.800] but he doesn't know what happened. [26:09.800 --> 26:13.120] So he doesn't know what to ask the person. [26:13.120 --> 26:14.640] So he has the person tell the story. [26:14.640 --> 26:16.480] Well, the person knows the story, [26:16.480 --> 26:18.720] but they don't know what the lawyer needs. [26:18.720 --> 26:22.120] And they have this huge gap between one another. [26:22.120 --> 26:27.440] So we've developed a highly detailed questionnaire [26:27.440 --> 26:32.200] that will not exactly walk down the facts. [26:32.200 --> 26:36.000] It will walk down the legal elements. [26:36.000 --> 26:38.520] The end of the day, that's all the lawyer cares about. [26:38.520 --> 26:42.320] If you're in litigation, that's all you care about. [26:42.320 --> 26:47.000] It's the facts as they relate to legal elements. [26:47.000 --> 26:52.000] And we make a map of all of these facts as they link together. [26:52.000 --> 26:56.360] And everywhere we come across a particular legal element, [26:56.360 --> 26:58.920] we put in a folder where the lawyer can drop case law [26:58.920 --> 27:02.400] into that folder on that element. [27:02.400 --> 27:04.640] And instead of a lawyer having to go to Lexus [27:04.640 --> 27:09.280] and dig through 10,000 hits, looking for the first case [27:09.280 --> 27:13.880] on point, they go to the questionnaire map [27:13.880 --> 27:17.480] and follow a line of questioning right to the point. [27:17.480 --> 27:20.880] There's all the case law. [27:20.880 --> 27:25.920] We will make law absolutely consistent. [27:25.920 --> 27:29.920] And will that be easy for laypeople like me [27:29.920 --> 27:33.080] and others to follow also? [27:33.080 --> 27:36.120] Yes, here's the deal. [27:36.120 --> 27:39.960] The tool will capture all of the elements. [27:39.960 --> 27:43.680] And this is what a lawyer likes. [27:43.680 --> 27:45.720] If you're a pro say and you go into court [27:45.720 --> 27:48.440] and you screw things up, you'll annoy the judge. [27:48.440 --> 27:51.480] But there's not much you can do about it other than get upset [27:51.480 --> 27:55.480] and rule against you, which you expect to rule against you anyway. [27:55.480 --> 28:00.200] A lawyer, on the other hand, their lawyer didn't counsel. [28:00.200 --> 28:05.080] They're not allowed to mis-argue issues [28:05.080 --> 28:09.360] or miss an important point. [28:09.360 --> 28:11.200] That they can get sanctioned by the judge. [28:11.200 --> 28:13.960] They can get sued by their own client. [28:13.960 --> 28:16.960] If a lawyer misses something in a case and he wins, [28:16.960 --> 28:19.360] if he didn't win as much as he would have won had he found [28:19.360 --> 28:22.920] that issue, he can be sued for the difference. [28:22.920 --> 28:24.840] So lawyers are kind of walking in the court [28:24.840 --> 28:27.400] on the head of a pen. [28:27.400 --> 28:31.200] And when I explain to a lawyer what I do, [28:31.200 --> 28:33.440] and when I do this radio show, and I have people calling them [28:33.440 --> 28:35.400] with all these great ideas. [28:35.400 --> 28:38.280] And then tomorrow somebody calls in with another [28:38.280 --> 28:39.240] and the next day another. [28:39.240 --> 28:42.360] And I can't keep track of all of these. [28:42.360 --> 28:45.240] So I started putting together a method [28:45.240 --> 28:49.440] for keeping track of all of these different issues. [28:49.440 --> 28:51.760] And the only way I could do it was build a questionnaire [28:51.760 --> 28:53.840] that pointed toward those issues. [28:53.840 --> 28:55.840] And then somebody called in one day and asked me [28:55.840 --> 28:58.440] if I knew what a Frank's hearing was. [28:58.440 --> 29:00.280] And I said, yeah, I've heard of it, [29:00.280 --> 29:03.480] but I don't remember what it is. [29:03.480 --> 29:10.640] So after the show, I went online and did some search [29:10.640 --> 29:14.000] and looked up Frank's hearing. [29:14.000 --> 29:16.440] And when I saw what it was, I said, holy mackerel, [29:16.440 --> 29:18.320] how could I ever have forgotten that? [29:18.320 --> 29:20.200] And the lawyer sitting there thinking, [29:20.200 --> 29:22.120] what the heck's a Frank's hearing? [29:22.120 --> 29:25.960] I have never had a lawyer who knew what it was. [29:25.960 --> 29:30.880] It is a hearing to determine the veracity of a police officer [29:30.880 --> 29:34.840] who testified before a magistrate to secure a warrant. [29:34.840 --> 29:37.280] You get to subpoena a judge. [29:37.280 --> 29:40.960] When you subpoena the judge, everybody goes wacko. [29:40.960 --> 29:43.040] They hate that. [29:43.040 --> 29:45.920] The lawyer, when he hears what it is, [29:45.920 --> 29:48.680] he thinks, I have always missed that. [29:48.680 --> 29:51.720] I didn't even know that existed. [29:51.720 --> 29:55.360] And how many issues out there like that [29:55.360 --> 29:57.880] that I don't know exist in every one of them's [29:57.880 --> 30:00.440] potentially illegal? [30:00.440 --> 30:03.560] Cell phones are an indispensable part of modern life. [30:03.560 --> 30:07.280] Nearly 90% of adults and 3 quarters of teens now have one. [30:07.280 --> 30:09.240] But are cell phones really safe? [30:09.240 --> 30:10.680] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht, and I'll [30:10.680 --> 30:12.480] be right back with the facts. [30:12.480 --> 30:15.080] Google is watching you, recording everything [30:15.080 --> 30:17.920] you've ever searched for, and creating a massive database [30:17.920 --> 30:19.720] of your personal information. [30:19.720 --> 30:20.640] That's creepy. [30:20.640 --> 30:22.560] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:22.560 --> 30:25.720] StartPage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:25.720 --> 30:28.520] StartPage.com doesn't store your IP address, [30:28.520 --> 30:31.120] make a record of your searches, or use tracking cookies, [30:31.120 --> 30:32.720] and their third party certified. [30:32.720 --> 30:35.240] If you don't like big brothers spying on you, [30:35.240 --> 30:37.120] start over with StartPage. [30:37.120 --> 30:39.640] Great search results and total privacy. [30:39.640 --> 30:43.320] StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [30:43.320 --> 30:46.160] Americans don't hear much about cell phone health risks, [30:46.160 --> 30:48.480] but researchers in Europe have linked the devices [30:48.480 --> 30:51.160] to brain tumors, DNA damage, sperm death, [30:51.160 --> 30:53.160] and early onset Alzheimer's. [30:53.160 --> 30:55.840] You can minimize your risk by knowing your mobile phone [30:55.840 --> 30:59.160] emits a basketball-sized sphere of EMF radiation. [30:59.160 --> 31:01.320] Picture a basketball with your phone in the middle, [31:01.320 --> 31:03.400] then keep that sphere away from your brain [31:03.400 --> 31:04.920] and reproductive organs. [31:04.920 --> 31:06.920] Don't hold it near your head or in your pocket, [31:06.920 --> 31:09.280] and use the speaker phone, or get a corded headset, [31:09.280 --> 31:10.680] or a Bluetooth headset. [31:10.680 --> 31:12.120] And before you buy your next phone, [31:12.120 --> 31:16.040] check its SAR rating to see how much exposure you're getting. [31:16.040 --> 31:18.240] Obviously, the less, the better. [31:18.240 --> 31:19.720] This is Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:19.720 --> 31:22.800] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:31.160 --> 31:34.240] Did you know there are 3 million edible food plants on Earth, [31:34.240 --> 31:37.160] and none have the nutritional value of the hemp plant? [31:37.160 --> 31:40.120] HempUSA.org offers you hemp protein powder. [31:40.120 --> 31:42.320] It does not contain chemicals or THC. [31:42.320 --> 31:45.640] It's non-GMO, and is 100% gluten-free. [31:45.640 --> 31:47.280] Hemp protein powder burns fat, [31:47.280 --> 31:49.880] builds muscle, contains 53% protein, [31:49.880 --> 31:52.280] and feeds the body the nutrients it needs. [31:52.280 --> 31:56.720] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds [31:56.720 --> 32:00.960] and oil can do for you, only at HempUSA.org. [32:02.760 --> 32:04.320] Rool of Law Radio is proud to offer [32:04.320 --> 32:05.920] the Rool of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:05.920 --> 32:08.280] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [32:08.280 --> 32:10.560] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.560 --> 32:13.440] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:13.440 --> 32:16.160] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:16.160 --> 32:17.840] the right to act in our own private capacity, [32:17.840 --> 32:20.440] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.440 --> 32:22.920] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [32:22.920 --> 32:26.280] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:26.280 --> 32:27.840] Former Sheriff's Deputy Katie Craig, [32:27.840 --> 32:29.280] in conjunction with Rool of Law Radio, [32:29.280 --> 32:31.800] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.800 --> 32:34.080] that will help you understand what due process is [32:34.080 --> 32:36.040] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:36.040 --> 32:38.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [32:38.120 --> 32:41.400] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [32:41.400 --> 32:43.400] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [32:43.400 --> 32:46.000] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [32:46.000 --> 32:48.440] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [32:48.440 --> 32:49.760] hundreds of research documents, [32:49.760 --> 32:51.440] and other useful resource material. [32:51.440 --> 32:52.640] Learn how to fight for your rights [32:52.640 --> 32:55.360] with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:55.360 --> 32:57.480] Order your copy today, and together we can have [32:57.480 --> 33:04.480] the free society we all want and deserve. [33:04.480 --> 33:08.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [33:08.000 --> 33:17.000] at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:17.000 --> 33:19.000] Okay, we are back. [33:19.000 --> 33:20.600] We're Andy Kelton, [33:20.600 --> 33:27.840] Rool of Law Radio on this Friday, the 13th day of July 2018, [33:27.840 --> 33:30.840] and we're talking to Tina in California, [33:30.840 --> 33:33.920] and we're talking about lawyers [33:33.920 --> 33:38.040] and how this project will change things. [33:38.040 --> 33:39.800] So we have all of these issues. [33:39.800 --> 33:42.120] The lawyers know they're out there, [33:42.120 --> 33:45.400] and they know that they don't know what they are. [33:45.400 --> 33:47.080] They know some of them, [33:47.080 --> 33:49.120] but there are always issues out there [33:49.120 --> 33:50.360] the lawyer doesn't know about, [33:50.360 --> 33:51.680] and they're always terrified [33:51.680 --> 33:55.320] that one of these issues is going to come up in court [33:55.320 --> 34:01.120] and haunt them, cause them major difficulties. [34:01.120 --> 34:05.600] I had a book by a guy who was a lawyer, [34:05.600 --> 34:07.720] and he got out of the study in law, [34:07.720 --> 34:09.840] he went back to school and became a psychiatrist, [34:09.840 --> 34:12.400] and he only treats lawyers. [34:12.400 --> 34:15.920] He says, all lawyers have anxiety issues, [34:15.920 --> 34:17.720] and they never get better. [34:17.720 --> 34:19.720] So they're great clients. [34:19.720 --> 34:21.360] But one of the things he talked about [34:21.360 --> 34:24.080] was the imposter syndrome. [34:24.080 --> 34:26.240] Lawyers don't know what they're doing. [34:26.240 --> 34:29.120] They know they don't know what they're doing, [34:29.120 --> 34:30.560] but they cannot let you know [34:30.560 --> 34:33.200] that they don't know what they're doing. [34:33.200 --> 34:34.280] You know, you can go into court [34:34.280 --> 34:37.000] and make mistakes, the lawyer cannot. [34:37.000 --> 34:41.000] He can be sanctioned, he can be sued by his own client. [34:41.000 --> 34:43.320] So lawyers are always walking on the head of a pen. [34:43.320 --> 34:47.840] They need a way to know they have not missed anything. [34:47.840 --> 34:49.680] That is their biggest fear. [34:49.680 --> 34:51.440] They can argue anything that comes up. [34:51.440 --> 34:53.000] That's what they're taught in law school, [34:53.000 --> 34:55.200] how to argue legal issues. [34:55.200 --> 34:58.760] But they're not taught how to find all the issues. [34:58.760 --> 35:01.960] So we developed this highly technical [35:01.960 --> 35:04.240] and detailed questionnaire [35:04.240 --> 35:06.520] that will isolate out all the issues. [35:06.520 --> 35:09.000] And then we make this available to the lawyer. [35:09.000 --> 35:11.600] And we have the lawyers look at it and say, [35:11.600 --> 35:14.960] okay, if we've missed anything, [35:14.960 --> 35:19.960] give us the questions, give us the issues we have missed. [35:20.400 --> 35:22.200] And we'll open up the questionnaire [35:22.200 --> 35:24.120] and stick those issues in there. [35:24.120 --> 35:28.040] And before very long, we will have a tool [35:28.040 --> 35:31.000] that simply will not miss anything. [35:31.000 --> 35:34.720] If it misses something, it is so obscure [35:34.720 --> 35:36.680] that the lawyer could not have been expected, [35:36.680 --> 35:38.800] reasonably expected to find it. [35:38.800 --> 35:43.280] Or client lied to him, in which case, [35:43.280 --> 35:46.800] or in either case, the lawyer would have plausible [35:46.800 --> 35:49.600] the liability, he doesn't have to worry [35:49.600 --> 35:51.400] about getting sanctioned or sued. [35:53.040 --> 35:57.520] So it is in their best interest [35:57.520 --> 36:01.480] to put into the system every issue, [36:01.480 --> 36:04.560] no matter how obscure or arcane it is. [36:04.560 --> 36:06.520] And we'll set it in the system [36:06.520 --> 36:11.120] and set a set of questions that will point directly to it. [36:11.120 --> 36:13.360] That way it never gets missed again. [36:13.360 --> 36:16.760] And then we create a research repository [36:17.680 --> 36:20.040] where they can save all the relevant case law. [36:20.040 --> 36:22.520] And we have a location to save case law [36:22.520 --> 36:27.520] at each question or legal point in the questionnaire. [36:29.960 --> 36:34.120] So now they have a place where they can make sure [36:34.120 --> 36:35.920] they never miss anything. [36:37.360 --> 36:40.960] And they can save all of their case law at any given point. [36:40.960 --> 36:44.760] So the next time they come across this legal point [36:44.760 --> 36:49.200] or a legal point that another lawyer has come across [36:49.200 --> 36:52.920] and had to spend a lot of time and money researching out, [36:52.920 --> 36:56.240] then he's dropped it in the system. [36:56.240 --> 36:59.480] And the reason he would do that is [36:59.480 --> 37:01.240] because lawyers don't like to argue [37:01.240 --> 37:03.560] issues they're not familiar with. [37:03.560 --> 37:06.280] So he'll drop this in the system [37:06.280 --> 37:09.840] so that another lawyer in looking for this obscure point [37:09.840 --> 37:11.920] finds a lawyer who's already addressed it. [37:12.880 --> 37:15.680] So instead of the lawyer addressing himself, [37:15.680 --> 37:19.600] he brings this client into the case to address that for him. [37:19.600 --> 37:23.120] 50% of a lawyer's business is referral between lawyers. [37:24.120 --> 37:27.600] So it's very much in their best interest [37:27.600 --> 37:30.160] to put their obscure case law in there [37:30.160 --> 37:32.360] so they can get other lawyers to hire them. [37:33.320 --> 37:38.320] And before long, we'll have a repository [37:38.320 --> 37:41.040] that is maintained by lawyers [37:42.960 --> 37:45.040] so that we have all the latest case law, [37:45.040 --> 37:46.520] all the latest rulings. [37:46.520 --> 37:48.520] We'll even have a section in there [37:48.520 --> 37:53.040] where lawyers can rate judges. [37:54.080 --> 37:57.320] You go before a judge and you have no idea [37:57.320 --> 37:59.000] what you're dealing with. [37:59.000 --> 38:00.920] For the most part, the lawyer does. [38:00.920 --> 38:04.120] Ken Magsson talks about, read the rules. [38:04.120 --> 38:09.120] There are, but read the rules of civil procedure, [38:09.520 --> 38:11.280] read the rules of evidence, [38:12.160 --> 38:14.680] read the rules of appellate procedure, [38:14.680 --> 38:17.080] read the local rules, [38:17.080 --> 38:21.600] read the specific rules that each court puts out, [38:22.880 --> 38:26.720] and then go try to find out those pesky unwritten rules [38:26.720 --> 38:28.480] that only the lawyers that practice [38:28.480 --> 38:30.360] before the judge know about. [38:30.360 --> 38:35.360] Each judge has their own idiosyncrasies, [38:36.280 --> 38:39.040] things they will tolerate, things they will not, [38:40.040 --> 38:43.240] ways in which they want things done in their court, [38:43.240 --> 38:46.240] and they expect you to know what that is. [38:47.920 --> 38:49.080] That's a problem. [38:49.080 --> 38:50.920] If you're new to a jurisdiction, [38:50.920 --> 38:53.480] never been before this judge before, [38:53.480 --> 38:56.080] you'll be able to go to our tools, [38:56.080 --> 38:58.080] look up this judge, [38:58.080 --> 39:00.680] and see comments other lawyers have put in [39:00.680 --> 39:01.880] about this judge. [39:03.080 --> 39:06.440] They'll warn you about what to do, what not to do, [39:06.440 --> 39:07.720] how to get emotions, [39:07.720 --> 39:10.240] what kind of emotions not to put in front of this judge. [39:10.240 --> 39:14.240] He's gonna throw you out and possibly sanction you. [39:14.240 --> 39:16.480] They really have some strange idiosyncrasies. [39:16.480 --> 39:20.840] And once we get all this in there, [39:20.840 --> 39:23.760] then we make it available to the process. [39:23.760 --> 39:28.760] Because the tool also indicates every legal issue, [39:31.520 --> 39:33.840] then it creates motions and pleadings [39:33.840 --> 39:35.360] to address those issues. [39:36.360 --> 39:40.200] And all you have to do is go to the legal point. [39:40.200 --> 39:41.520] You fill out the questionnaire [39:41.520 --> 39:43.800] and it'll isolate all your issues. [39:43.800 --> 39:45.920] And then we have a button. [39:45.920 --> 39:48.280] You can click to download all of the emotions [39:48.280 --> 39:53.800] and pleadings written for your case directly on point. [39:53.800 --> 39:55.920] So what do you need a lawyer for? [39:57.840 --> 40:00.440] You've got everything the lawyer would do. [40:01.880 --> 40:04.160] Now I wish I had it now. [40:04.160 --> 40:07.880] I know, and I have been struggling for 10 years [40:07.880 --> 40:09.120] to get this ready. [40:09.120 --> 40:11.560] And I have people that want me to take on their cases [40:11.560 --> 40:13.200] and help them with their cases. [40:13.200 --> 40:17.600] And I want to, but I just can't allow myself [40:17.600 --> 40:20.360] to get that distracted right now [40:20.360 --> 40:25.040] because every time I step away from this project, [40:25.040 --> 40:29.280] I delay its implementation for everybody. [40:30.280 --> 40:32.680] Once I have this implemented, [40:33.800 --> 40:36.440] then you won't need me. [40:37.440 --> 40:38.840] You won't need the lawyer. [40:39.720 --> 40:42.040] You will have a detailed methodology [40:42.040 --> 40:43.160] for all of your cases. [40:43.160 --> 40:47.840] And there's more that we're adding to this. [40:47.840 --> 40:51.960] The bodies of law are extremely well structured. [40:53.200 --> 40:57.400] They're not well adjudicated, but they're well structured. [40:57.400 --> 41:02.160] Just about every remedy you can imagine is in there. [41:02.160 --> 41:04.160] All you have to do is be able to find it. [41:05.400 --> 41:08.520] This tool will make it so that you can find it. [41:09.520 --> 41:11.400] Find all the case law relating to it. [41:11.400 --> 41:14.600] Find out exactly how to address these issues. [41:14.600 --> 41:16.440] You as a procé can do that. [41:17.760 --> 41:19.920] The only other advantage of a lawyer [41:19.920 --> 41:22.360] is they can go into court [41:22.360 --> 41:25.360] and argue these legal issues orally. [41:25.360 --> 41:30.360] And we suggest a procé's never, ever do oral argument. [41:31.160 --> 41:33.520] Always object to oral argument. [41:33.520 --> 41:40.520] Don't even think that you're up to sparring with these lawyers. [41:40.520 --> 41:42.520] They are wordsmiths. [41:42.520 --> 41:46.520] They will take everything you can say and twist it and turn it. [41:46.520 --> 41:49.520] They know they have the judge on their side. [41:49.520 --> 41:51.520] Everything's against you. [41:51.520 --> 41:54.520] The worst thing you can do is walk into that court [41:54.520 --> 41:57.520] and talk to that judge and that prosecutor [41:57.520 --> 41:59.520] or your lawyer on the other side. [41:59.520 --> 42:06.520] I just had Tim go to a motion to disqualify a judge. [42:06.520 --> 42:10.520] And the judge asked him if he wanted to argue these, [42:10.520 --> 42:12.520] orally argue these emotions, [42:12.520 --> 42:14.520] and he said no, your honor. [42:14.520 --> 42:17.520] I think it would waste the court's time, [42:17.520 --> 42:19.520] as I am just a procé, [42:19.520 --> 42:22.520] and clearly I am not sophisticated enough [42:22.520 --> 42:26.520] to spar with this opposing counsel here. [42:26.520 --> 42:30.520] And the judge looked at him and smiled with this. [42:30.520 --> 42:34.520] The smile said, you're smarter than you look. [42:35.520 --> 42:39.520] And the judge understood the other lawyer would turn to pieces [42:39.520 --> 42:41.520] because he knows all the dirty tricks. [42:41.520 --> 42:46.520] So we advise them not to argue the motions. [42:46.520 --> 42:48.520] He's going to a municipal court [42:48.520 --> 42:52.520] and the judge told him that he has to argue the motion [42:52.520 --> 42:54.520] or the judge can't ruin his favor. [42:54.520 --> 42:58.520] And Tim's going to tell him, not going to happen. [42:58.520 --> 43:01.520] I'll just address this on appeal. [43:02.520 --> 43:04.520] I stand on my motions, [43:04.520 --> 43:07.520] and the judge is frustrated because he wants Tim [43:07.520 --> 43:10.520] to get up in front of that other lawyer [43:10.520 --> 43:13.520] and spar with the other lawyer so the judge can rule against him. [43:14.520 --> 43:18.520] He knows it, and he knows now that Tim knows it, [43:18.520 --> 43:20.520] and he's not going to be able to do it. [43:20.520 --> 43:22.520] Hang on, about to go to break. [43:22.520 --> 43:25.520] Randy Kalkin, root of Law Radio, [43:25.520 --> 43:29.520] our call in number 512-646-1984. [43:29.520 --> 43:31.520] We'll be right back. [43:32.520 --> 43:35.520] Well, we'll be back in about 20 seconds. [43:35.520 --> 43:39.520] The one time I didn't fall off the cliff today, [43:39.520 --> 43:42.520] I ran my segue out too early. [43:42.520 --> 43:45.520] Deborah is going to skin my hide when she gets back. [43:45.520 --> 43:48.520] If I'm still alive after this break, [43:48.520 --> 43:52.520] we'll be back in a couple minutes. [44:18.520 --> 44:22.520] We believe in educating our customers with resources [44:22.520 --> 44:25.520] from top accredited metal stealers and journalists. [44:25.520 --> 44:28.520] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [44:28.520 --> 44:31.520] In addition, we carry popular young Jebedee products, [44:31.520 --> 44:34.520] such as Beyond Tangy Tangerine and Pollen Burst. [44:34.520 --> 44:36.520] We also offer one-world-way, [44:36.520 --> 44:38.520] Mountain House storeable foods, [44:38.520 --> 44:39.520] Berkey water products, [44:39.520 --> 44:41.520] ammunition at 10% above wholesale, and more. [44:41.520 --> 44:43.520] We broker metals IRA accounts, [44:43.520 --> 44:45.520] and we also accept bitcoins as payment. [44:45.520 --> 44:48.520] Call us at 512-646-644-0. [44:48.520 --> 44:51.520] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, [44:51.520 --> 44:54.520] 3A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:54.520 --> 44:57.520] We're open Monday through Friday, 10-6, Saturdays, 10-2. [44:57.520 --> 44:59.520] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com [44:59.520 --> 45:02.520] or call 512-646-644-0. [45:03.520 --> 45:06.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:06.520 --> 45:10.520] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [45:10.520 --> 45:13.520] the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course [45:13.520 --> 45:16.520] that will show you how in 24 hours, [45:16.520 --> 45:18.520] step by step. [45:18.520 --> 45:21.520] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:21.520 --> 45:23.520] If you don't have a lawyer, [45:23.520 --> 45:25.520] know what you should do for yourself. [45:25.520 --> 45:28.520] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, [45:28.520 --> 45:30.520] and now you can too. [45:30.520 --> 45:33.520] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:33.520 --> 45:36.520] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:36.520 --> 45:38.520] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [45:38.520 --> 45:41.520] you can learn what everyone should understand [45:41.520 --> 45:43.520] about the principles and practices [45:43.520 --> 45:45.520] that control our American courts. [45:45.520 --> 45:47.520] You'll receive our audio classroom, [45:47.520 --> 45:49.520] video seminar, tutorials, [45:49.520 --> 45:51.520] forms for civil cases, [45:51.520 --> 45:54.520] prosay tactics, and much more. [45:54.520 --> 45:57.520] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [45:57.520 --> 45:59.520] and click on the banner. [45:59.520 --> 46:12.520] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:30.520 --> 46:33.520] Okay, we are back. [46:33.520 --> 46:35.520] Randy Kelton of Rule of Law Radio [46:35.520 --> 46:38.520] on this Friday, the 13th day of July, [46:38.520 --> 46:41.520] 2018, [46:41.520 --> 46:45.520] and we're talking to Tina in California. [46:45.520 --> 46:50.520] I spent three segments talking about lawyers, [46:50.520 --> 46:53.520] and I think people get the idea. [46:53.520 --> 46:56.520] The practice of law is not like we're led to believe it is. [46:56.520 --> 46:58.520] Lawyers have weaknesses [46:58.520 --> 47:01.520] that they don't want us to know about. [47:01.520 --> 47:05.520] And one of the weaknesses is finding the right case law. [47:05.520 --> 47:08.520] And so they are motivated [47:08.520 --> 47:11.520] to help organize all the case law. [47:11.520 --> 47:13.520] And once they do, the prosay can use it [47:13.520 --> 47:16.520] to just as great effect as the lawyer can. [47:16.520 --> 47:18.520] Okay, Tina. [47:18.520 --> 47:19.520] Okay. [47:19.520 --> 47:21.520] Let's go to your real interest today. [47:21.520 --> 47:22.520] Question. [47:22.520 --> 47:23.520] Yeah. [47:23.520 --> 47:27.520] Well, you've given me one tip about doing oral arguments. [47:27.520 --> 47:29.520] So that's a really great tip, [47:29.520 --> 47:33.520] because I'm going to be having to go it alone now. [47:33.520 --> 47:38.520] You were going to do financial accounting on my loan. [47:38.520 --> 47:41.520] I don't know if you have time to do that yet. [47:41.520 --> 47:49.520] Send me an email and put accounting in capital letters in the email. [47:49.520 --> 47:51.520] And that will remind me to get that done, [47:51.520 --> 47:55.520] and I'll have to put it aside a few hours to do that. [47:55.520 --> 47:58.520] It takes about four or five hours to do that. [47:58.520 --> 48:01.520] And I'll get that cranked out for you. [48:01.520 --> 48:04.520] As you know, I sent you an email that I lost my appeal [48:04.520 --> 48:07.520] at the California Supreme Court. [48:07.520 --> 48:09.520] Yes, I heard that. [48:09.520 --> 48:15.520] So pretty crushing, but not the unexpected. [48:15.520 --> 48:19.520] Have they, in your opinion, [48:19.520 --> 48:24.520] failed to properly apply the law to the facts [48:24.520 --> 48:30.520] and by so doing, denied you in the phone-free access tour [48:30.520 --> 48:32.520] enjoyment of a right, [48:32.520 --> 48:37.520] primarily specifically the right to the due course of the laws? [48:37.520 --> 48:41.520] In my opinion, they have, but then I'm, you know, [48:41.520 --> 48:48.520] then your opinion is sufficient to get you in the federal courts. [48:48.520 --> 48:49.520] Okay. [48:49.520 --> 48:53.520] So I'm in the federal courts for a breach of due process. [48:53.520 --> 48:57.520] And how do I get, if the state court, [48:57.520 --> 49:01.520] they basically, they tell a court in the Supreme Court [49:01.520 --> 49:03.520] that everything's barred by residue to carter. [49:03.520 --> 49:07.520] Even things that happened after the last filing, [49:07.520 --> 49:10.520] and they all just focus on, it's all barred by residue to carter. [49:10.520 --> 49:12.520] So in my mind, they're saying, [49:12.520 --> 49:15.520] the bank can come in and rob you to your home. [49:15.520 --> 49:17.520] They can rob you and they can rape you. [49:17.520 --> 49:19.520] And they get away on the technicality [49:19.520 --> 49:21.520] because they hide the evidence [49:21.520 --> 49:24.520] and they're very good at it and there's no discovery. [49:24.520 --> 49:27.520] So they can come back to the same property, [49:27.520 --> 49:29.520] same person and continue to rob and rape you [49:29.520 --> 49:32.520] because it's the same party, the same property, [49:32.520 --> 49:34.520] which is what they always claim. [49:34.520 --> 49:36.520] So everything's barred by residue. [49:36.520 --> 49:37.520] Okay. [49:37.520 --> 49:43.520] That is exactly the argument to bring to the Fed. [49:43.520 --> 49:44.520] Okay. [49:44.520 --> 49:46.520] Bring that argument to the Fed. [49:46.520 --> 49:50.520] They're not just doing it to you, they're doing it to everybody. [49:50.520 --> 49:53.520] They're doing it to me multiple times, even after and they took... [49:53.520 --> 49:54.520] Okay, okay. [49:54.520 --> 49:55.520] Got that. [49:55.520 --> 49:56.520] Write that up. [49:56.520 --> 50:00.520] Write up what you feel they've done wrong [50:00.520 --> 50:03.520] and file that as 4-2 U.S. Code 1983 suit [50:03.520 --> 50:06.520] against the judges in the state of California. [50:06.520 --> 50:07.520] Uh-oh. [50:07.520 --> 50:08.520] U.S. Code, what was that? [50:08.520 --> 50:09.520] You spoke so fast. [50:09.520 --> 50:10.520] I couldn't write it. [50:10.520 --> 50:11.520] Okay. [50:11.520 --> 50:17.520] 4-2 U.S. Code, yeah, 1983. [50:17.520 --> 50:21.520] That is the second half of the Ku Klux Klan Act. [50:21.520 --> 50:25.520] The first half is 18 U.S. Code 242, [50:25.520 --> 50:29.520] which makes it a crime for a public official [50:29.520 --> 50:31.520] to fail to perform a duty he's required to perform [50:31.520 --> 50:34.520] in the process to now uniform free access to enjoyment. [50:34.520 --> 50:35.520] Right. [50:35.520 --> 50:43.520] Well, if the judge failed to properly apply the law to the facts [50:43.520 --> 50:48.520] and by so doing denied you in full free access to enjoyment [50:48.520 --> 50:54.520] right, that's crime in the fat because it denies you due process [50:54.520 --> 50:59.520] and you have a constitutional right to due process. [50:59.520 --> 51:07.520] And under 4-2 U.S. Code 1983, you can sue him for that act. [51:07.520 --> 51:09.520] Okay. [51:09.520 --> 51:13.520] Even though they say judges have judicial immunity for wrongful, [51:13.520 --> 51:18.520] you know, for, you know, cases that they... [51:18.520 --> 51:21.520] That's why you sue the state of Texas. [51:21.520 --> 51:23.520] I'm sorry, the state of California. [51:23.520 --> 51:24.520] Yes. [51:24.520 --> 51:27.520] Okay. [51:27.520 --> 51:28.520] Okay. [51:28.520 --> 51:32.520] And how do you pick out, how do you read what they've said [51:32.520 --> 51:34.520] in answers and pick out what they didn't, [51:34.520 --> 51:38.520] how they didn't apply the law properly or just your opinion [51:38.520 --> 51:41.520] that they didn't apply the law? [51:41.520 --> 51:42.520] It will. [51:42.520 --> 51:48.520] It needs to be your opinion expressed in the verbiage of the court. [51:48.520 --> 51:54.520] You need case law and support of your position. [51:54.520 --> 51:55.520] Okay. [51:55.520 --> 52:00.520] But to ask me generally how you address this issue, [52:00.520 --> 52:03.520] I have no idea unless I actually saw the issues. [52:03.520 --> 52:05.520] What did they do? [52:05.520 --> 52:07.520] What did the law say they should have done? [52:07.520 --> 52:10.520] And how did the fact that they did not do what the law said [52:10.520 --> 52:13.520] they should have done harm you? [52:13.520 --> 52:15.520] That's what you argue. [52:15.520 --> 52:21.520] Let me give you one simple example to see if I'm on the right track then. [52:21.520 --> 52:26.520] They gave me an amount that was the total due and owing, [52:26.520 --> 52:29.520] including other charges in the notice of trustee sale. [52:29.520 --> 52:32.520] I don't know where they pulled the figure from, you know, [52:32.520 --> 52:34.520] which butthole to be blunt. [52:34.520 --> 52:37.520] But I thought I like that figure. [52:37.520 --> 52:39.520] I'll go pay that off. [52:39.520 --> 52:42.520] And I got a private lender who agreed to purchase the property [52:42.520 --> 52:44.520] and refinance it back to me. [52:44.520 --> 52:49.520] Put in a full price offer, including interest up to the day of closing. [52:49.520 --> 52:51.520] No contingencies, nothing. [52:51.520 --> 52:53.520] They refused it. [52:53.520 --> 52:58.520] Now that to me under the case law I've read is full tender. [52:58.520 --> 53:08.520] A tender of the amount due unjustly refused is discharge of the amount tender. [53:08.520 --> 53:16.520] And the judges are all ignoring all that and they're saying I didn't tender. [53:16.520 --> 53:19.520] It doesn't matter if that's Sally the Queen of England or, you know, [53:19.520 --> 53:25.520] the President of the United States gives them the money as long as they get the money, right? [53:25.520 --> 53:27.520] Right. [53:27.520 --> 53:32.520] So if I've tended and the judges all ignore it and don't even address the issue [53:32.520 --> 53:35.520] and they don't say, okay, that's enough. [53:35.520 --> 53:36.520] That's enough. [53:36.520 --> 53:37.520] Hold on. [53:37.520 --> 53:42.520] The judge did not address the issue. [53:42.520 --> 53:44.520] That's your due process violation. [53:44.520 --> 53:45.520] That's criminal. [53:45.520 --> 53:47.520] Okay. [53:47.520 --> 53:54.520] The judge has a duty to properly apply the law to the facts. [53:54.520 --> 54:00.520] A failure to do so is an abuse of discretion subject to extraordinary writ. [54:00.520 --> 54:03.520] Jocelyn v. Chambers. [54:03.520 --> 54:09.520] Jocelyn v. Chambers is a Texas state case, but if you run Jocelyn v. Chambers, [54:09.520 --> 54:15.520] you should be able to find California cases that go to the same issue. [54:15.520 --> 54:24.520] If the judge fails to perform a duty, he's required to perform it in the process, not as useful for access to a drug right that's a crime in every state. [54:24.520 --> 54:27.520] And this is a great issue to bring to the feds. [54:27.520 --> 54:36.520] Does a judge have immunity from criminal acts committed on the bench? [54:36.520 --> 54:45.520] Are crimes committed from the bench within the scope of the authority of the judge? [54:45.520 --> 54:55.520] The case law is trying to say that it is within scope, that they can't be sued even if they commit crimes from the bench. [54:55.520 --> 54:59.520] And that is horse manure. [54:59.520 --> 55:04.520] It absolutely needs to be challenged. [55:04.520 --> 55:05.520] Okay. [55:05.520 --> 55:08.520] You filed a claim. [55:08.520 --> 55:11.520] The judge refused to adjudicate the claim. [55:11.520 --> 55:15.520] He denied you the right to access to the courts. [55:15.520 --> 55:20.520] File criminally against the judge and sue the state. [55:20.520 --> 55:26.520] I'd suggest you sue the judge personally and let the judge claim he has immunity. [55:26.520 --> 55:39.520] The judge claimed that the judge does not have immunity for criminal acts committed by himself no matter where they're committed, even if they're committed from the bench. [55:39.520 --> 55:47.520] The state has no power to indemnify a judge from criminal violations of law. [55:47.520 --> 55:50.520] If we're going to fix the problem, that's how we're going to fix it. [55:50.520 --> 55:53.520] We're going to have to take the judges to task. [55:53.520 --> 55:58.520] The judges say, if you don't like my ruling, you can always appeal it. [55:58.520 --> 56:01.520] And I tell the judges, yes, I can. [56:01.520 --> 56:06.520] I can appeal it to a grand jury and ask them to indict you're behind. [56:06.520 --> 56:08.520] We see how that works for you. [56:08.520 --> 56:10.520] And I've done that before. [56:10.520 --> 56:11.520] File this state court. [56:11.520 --> 56:13.520] I go to fed court for this. [56:13.520 --> 56:16.520] And file against the court in the federal court. [56:16.520 --> 56:33.520] Two years ago, 1983 suit and ask for a stay of all action in this case or ask them to ask for a stay against the plaintiff from moving against your property until these federal due process claims are adjudicated. [56:33.520 --> 56:34.520] It's gone. [56:34.520 --> 56:36.520] Property is gone. [56:36.520 --> 56:37.520] Two years gone. [56:37.520 --> 56:38.520] Okay. [56:38.520 --> 56:41.520] And you don't have to ask for restraining order. [56:41.520 --> 56:44.520] You can just sue them for three times the value of the property. [56:44.520 --> 56:48.520] So the judge for three times the value of the property. [56:48.520 --> 56:50.520] Okay. [56:50.520 --> 56:52.520] Good because he's a little quick. [56:52.520 --> 56:55.520] By the way, just a little tip because I'm going to let other people talk. [56:55.520 --> 57:08.520] If they want to know about judges, there is a thing called the robing room.com doesn't give you a huge amount, but it does give you a certain judges. [57:08.520 --> 57:14.520] File something there and put some information. [57:14.520 --> 57:19.520] You will see, you know, whether it's an attorney that's done it or pro say or whatever. [57:19.520 --> 57:20.520] Okay. [57:20.520 --> 57:22.520] What, what is the name of it again? [57:22.520 --> 57:23.520] The roving room. [57:23.520 --> 57:25.520] Roving room. [57:25.520 --> 57:26.520] Yes. [57:26.520 --> 57:27.520] Okay. [57:27.520 --> 57:32.520] Spell it for me and then are. [57:32.520 --> 57:33.520] No, no, hold on. [57:33.520 --> 57:34.520] Hold on. [57:34.520 --> 57:35.520] Something's wrong. [57:35.520 --> 57:37.520] I'm not hearing your first, the first letter you're saying. [57:37.520 --> 57:38.520] Just get in the second. [57:38.520 --> 57:43.520] Move the mic a little bit away from your mouth. [57:43.520 --> 57:44.520] Okay. [57:44.520 --> 57:55.520] It's T H E robing room R O B I N G dot com. [57:55.520 --> 57:59.520] And I will send you an email on it. [57:59.520 --> 58:00.520] Okay. [58:00.520 --> 58:02.520] Roving like the judges ropes. [58:02.520 --> 58:03.520] Okay. [58:03.520 --> 58:04.520] Got it. [58:04.520 --> 58:06.520] Send me a link to that. [58:06.520 --> 58:12.520] And I'll, I'll send you a link and I'll send you an example of what they wrote about might [58:12.520 --> 58:14.520] the judge that I will be doing. [58:14.520 --> 58:20.520] And then do something tonight that I think you should share with everybody on this call. [58:20.520 --> 58:25.520] It's by, you know, the attorney that's fighting judicial corruption. [58:25.520 --> 58:26.520] Okay. [58:26.520 --> 58:27.520] Hold on. [58:27.520 --> 58:29.520] We're about to go to break the disciplinary action. [58:29.520 --> 58:30.520] Okay. [58:30.520 --> 58:31.520] Okay. [58:31.520 --> 58:32.520] Randy Kelsen. [58:32.520 --> 58:33.520] Yeah. [58:33.520 --> 58:37.520] I call it number five, one, two, six, four, six, 1984. [58:37.520 --> 58:49.520] We'll be right back. [58:49.520 --> 58:53.520] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.520 --> 58:58.800] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:58.800 --> 59:00.120] can really help. [59:00.120 --> 59:04.480] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:04.480 --> 59:05.480] today. [59:05.480 --> 59:09.520] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:09.520 --> 59:12.640] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.640 --> 59:17.920] The free books are a three volume set called basic elements of the Christian life. [59:17.920 --> 59:22.200] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan [59:22.200 --> 59:27.120] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.120 --> 59:32.160] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian [59:32.160 --> 59:50.120] life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.120 --> 01:00:03.000] We're live free speech radio logos, radio network.com. [01:00:03.000 --> 01:00:07.800] The following is flash is brought to you by the low star lowdowns, providing your belly [01:00:07.800 --> 01:00:10.120] bulletins for the commodity market. [01:00:10.120 --> 01:00:19.640] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:19.640 --> 01:00:31.880] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 close with gold $1,353.22 in ounce, silver $16.68 in ounce, [01:00:31.880 --> 01:00:41.760] Texas crude $65.51 of barrel, bitcoins at $6,902.19, ethereum $420.80, bitcoin cash [01:00:41.760 --> 01:00:55.720] $652.90, and finally light coins at $114.34, a crypto coin. [01:00:55.720 --> 01:01:01.160] Today in history, the year 1968, President Lyndon M. Johnson signed the Civil Rights [01:01:01.160 --> 01:01:06.480] Act of 1968, which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, [01:01:06.480 --> 01:01:08.280] religion, sex, or national origin. [01:01:08.280 --> 01:01:13.440] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:01:13.440 --> 01:01:18.520] in public schools, and employment, and public accommodations for places of business. [01:01:18.520 --> 01:01:27.480] Today in history, in recent news, tensions in Syria seem to have reached new levels after [01:01:27.480 --> 01:01:31.800] a chemical attack on civilians in the city of Duma, which left 40 dead and many injured, [01:01:31.800 --> 01:01:36.920] an attack which is being blamed on the democratically elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, [01:01:36.920 --> 01:01:41.840] by the United States, and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified [01:01:41.840 --> 01:01:43.720] evidence as of yet. [01:01:43.720 --> 01:01:47.200] President Trump tweeted today, Wednesday, that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down [01:01:47.200 --> 01:01:51.600] any and all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice [01:01:51.600 --> 01:01:56.200] and new and smart, going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing [01:01:56.200 --> 01:01:59.000] animal who kills its people and enjoys it. [01:01:59.000 --> 01:02:03.080] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [01:02:03.080 --> 01:02:07.240] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [01:02:07.240 --> 01:02:11.520] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the Organization [01:02:11.520 --> 01:02:16.200] for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to investigate the side of the chemical slaughter. [01:02:16.200 --> 01:02:19.880] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [01:02:19.880 --> 01:02:24.480] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [01:02:24.480 --> 01:02:29.280] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [01:02:29.280 --> 01:02:33.040] notorious swimmer groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [01:02:33.040 --> 01:02:38.400] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook [01:02:38.400 --> 01:02:42.720] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government, which [01:02:42.720 --> 01:02:44.960] has been fighting terrorists. [01:02:44.960 --> 01:02:48.800] Or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart missile strike, and then there will [01:02:48.800 --> 01:02:52.720] be no evidence for international inspectors to look at? [01:02:52.720 --> 01:03:19.120] This was Kurt Brody with your lowdown for April 11, 2018. [01:03:19.120 --> 01:03:23.600] Okay, we are back, okay, Tina, do we have anything else for you? [01:03:23.600 --> 01:03:30.200] So, yeah, I was just telling you to read the thing I sent you earlier about the attorney [01:03:30.200 --> 01:03:39.320] that the court of discipline, because he feels a knife deal and when you read it, it's because [01:03:39.320 --> 01:03:45.120] he's been writing about judicial corruption and they have recently, well, three months [01:03:45.120 --> 01:03:51.080] ago, given him some discipline, and if you read what I sent you, I think you'll want [01:03:51.080 --> 01:03:56.480] to share it as to why the attorneys are afraid to go against the judges. [01:03:56.480 --> 01:04:04.760] Yes, and this is part of what we're doing with this tool we're building is we give [01:04:04.760 --> 01:04:13.880] them a way of letting everybody know about what's going on with the judges without personally [01:04:13.880 --> 01:04:21.240] being in front of the judges' guns themselves. [01:04:21.240 --> 01:04:30.520] The process can do this, and the judge, he don't like it too bad. [01:04:30.520 --> 01:04:36.120] In another show, I'll get into the methods we have for protecting our attorneys from [01:04:36.120 --> 01:04:39.120] the judges. [01:04:39.120 --> 01:04:42.400] How to give a judge a lawyer a plausible deniability. [01:04:42.400 --> 01:04:45.000] Okay, do you have anything else for us? [01:04:45.000 --> 01:04:46.000] Thank you very much. [01:04:46.000 --> 01:04:47.000] Okay, thank you. [01:04:47.000 --> 01:04:50.640] I've got lots of things, but great, thank you. [01:04:50.640 --> 01:04:53.160] Okay, thank you, Tina. [01:04:53.160 --> 01:04:55.880] Now we're going to go to James in Texas. [01:04:55.880 --> 01:04:56.880] Hello, James. [01:04:56.880 --> 01:04:57.880] Hello. [01:04:57.880 --> 01:04:58.880] Hello. [01:04:58.880 --> 01:05:05.560] You were going to tell us, you spoke last night, and tonight you were going to tell [01:05:05.560 --> 01:05:08.000] us the rest of the story. [01:05:08.000 --> 01:05:14.280] Yes, sir, I figured that you would get a kick out of this. [01:05:14.280 --> 01:05:23.840] I made my initial appearance on this speeding ticket I got in a JP court, walked in with [01:05:23.840 --> 01:05:30.560] three motions to enter into the record, and the court clerk looked at me like I had three [01:05:30.560 --> 01:05:40.200] heads, had never seen or heard anything like that in her life. [01:05:40.200 --> 01:05:45.880] And so I just kind of looked at her and she said, you know, normally what happens is you [01:05:45.880 --> 01:05:50.240] enter a plea, and I said, ma'am, I'm not here to enter a plea. [01:05:50.240 --> 01:05:57.640] I've never been given a proper notice, blah, blah, blah, and I got another dumb founded [01:05:57.640 --> 01:05:58.640] book. [01:05:58.640 --> 01:06:03.960] This went on for four or five minutes, and she finally said again something about entering [01:06:03.960 --> 01:06:10.120] a plea and meeting with the county attorney, I said, and having a talk with the county, [01:06:10.120 --> 01:06:13.200] I said, it's going to be a very short talk. [01:06:13.200 --> 01:06:20.480] My first appearance is supposed to be before a magistrate, not a prosecutor and attorney. [01:06:20.480 --> 01:06:26.160] And she finally went in and got the judge out of a meeting, and he came out. [01:06:26.160 --> 01:06:32.320] He's about, I don't know, maybe five, seven, a video of Banny Rooster, I'm about six, [01:06:32.320 --> 01:06:33.320] three. [01:06:33.320 --> 01:06:38.800] Come out, and he was perfectly pleasant at first, and he just asked me, you know, I understand [01:06:38.800 --> 01:06:43.240] you're not wanting to enter a plea, or you're refusing to enter a plea, I said, no, sir, [01:06:43.240 --> 01:06:44.240] I'm not. [01:06:44.240 --> 01:06:47.240] I'm declining until I've been given proper notice. [01:06:47.240 --> 01:06:48.800] And he said, well, you got it. [01:06:48.800 --> 01:06:53.120] I said, you know, I've never been given a complaint or a charge, and he said, well, [01:06:53.120 --> 01:06:58.880] you got a citation, right, that, yes, sir, well, that's the complaint right there, that [01:06:58.880 --> 01:07:05.960] no, sir, it doesn't meet the criteria for a complaint, much less the charging instrument. [01:07:05.960 --> 01:07:09.600] And he finally said, well, you know, I'm not an attorney, and you're not, either one [01:07:09.600 --> 01:07:13.960] or two, just hire an attorney, I said, that's not going to happen. [01:07:13.960 --> 01:07:18.800] And anyway, it went downhill from there. [01:07:18.800 --> 01:07:26.040] He wasn't wanting to, he had one of my motions, motion, special parents motion, in his hand, [01:07:26.040 --> 01:07:31.440] and he finally, he finally told me, he said, you know what, I'll take it into consideration, [01:07:31.440 --> 01:07:34.400] and I will forward it to the county attorney. [01:07:34.400 --> 01:07:38.800] And I went, well, okay, I said, I've got two more motions, would you like a copy of [01:07:38.800 --> 01:07:39.800] each of those? [01:07:39.800 --> 01:07:45.040] He said, sure, I'll take them into consideration, and get them to the county. [01:07:45.040 --> 01:07:46.040] Okay. [01:07:46.040 --> 01:07:51.520] So I gave him the other two, and he told me twice, and I'm recording everything, I don't [01:07:51.520 --> 01:07:59.160] see people on traffic citations, it just told me that, to me, that's a task of admission [01:07:59.160 --> 01:08:01.360] that he's committing felonies. [01:08:01.360 --> 01:08:07.360] No official question, class A, Mr. Peter. [01:08:07.360 --> 01:08:13.960] Oh, okay, okay, well, close enough, three of them should have amounted to an athelonie. [01:08:13.960 --> 01:08:19.440] Well, and I would think abuse of official capacity as well as the official oppression. [01:08:19.440 --> 01:08:28.120] Yeah, that's a few, the abuse of official capacity is, if the abuse of official capacity [01:08:28.120 --> 01:08:33.080] involves the misuse of public funds, it's official misconduct. [01:08:33.080 --> 01:08:39.680] If it involves the denial of a citizen and the pull and free access to or enjoyment of [01:08:39.680 --> 01:08:46.520] a right, it's official oppression, and this distinction, so far as I can tell, is only [01:08:46.520 --> 01:08:48.880] made in Texas. [01:08:48.880 --> 01:08:56.440] Every other state calls either one of those acts official misconduct, but in your case, [01:08:56.440 --> 01:09:04.600] it's official oppression, and when a judge comes out, if that ever happens again, you [01:09:04.600 --> 01:09:07.440] don't talk to the judge. [01:09:07.440 --> 01:09:10.240] I'm not here to have idle conversation with you. [01:09:10.240 --> 01:09:14.040] I'm not here to have a negotiation with you. [01:09:14.040 --> 01:09:22.880] If you're not going to invoke or to convene an examining trial, we don't have anything [01:09:22.880 --> 01:09:23.880] to say. [01:09:23.880 --> 01:09:31.960] If he's going to try to get you to say something that he can use to claim that you threatened [01:09:31.960 --> 01:09:37.400] him, that you were agitated and threatened him. [01:09:37.400 --> 01:09:45.800] When I drove all the way down to Texas, 600 or 700 miles, to Cumbie, Texas, to appear [01:09:45.800 --> 01:09:52.680] before we magistrate the way I had agreed to in my, when I signed the ticket, and they [01:09:52.680 --> 01:09:57.480] didn't have a judge in the building, we'll go get one, but they're not available. [01:09:57.480 --> 01:10:02.560] So, well, you're the mayor, you can do it, well, why don't we think about it? [01:10:02.560 --> 01:10:09.360] Your problem, not my problem, they wouldn't want to get a prosecutor, no, I don't talk [01:10:09.360 --> 01:10:10.360] to prosecutors. [01:10:10.360 --> 01:10:15.760] Well, I'm not a lawyer and the judge is not here, so I really don't know what to do. [01:10:15.760 --> 01:10:19.400] I've already called the lawyer, I said, if you're going to have me talk to the prosecutor, [01:10:19.400 --> 01:10:21.520] I need a bailiff present. [01:10:21.520 --> 01:10:23.960] Well, why do you need a bailiff? [01:10:23.960 --> 01:10:33.120] Well, when I talk to prosecutors, they tend to get agitated, and I don't want the prosecutor [01:10:33.120 --> 01:10:40.320] making unfortunate statements or taking unfortunate actions. [01:10:40.320 --> 01:10:44.280] I may have to ask that bailiff to arrest the prosecutor. [01:10:44.280 --> 01:10:51.040] She said, well, I don't know if we can do that, oh, so mayor, you'll love this. [01:10:51.040 --> 01:10:54.480] Have you ever seen a policeman do a chicken dance? [01:10:54.480 --> 01:10:55.480] What? [01:10:55.480 --> 01:10:56.480] A chicken dance? [01:10:56.480 --> 01:11:02.920] When you ask a policeman to arrest another policeman or a public official, they start [01:11:02.920 --> 01:11:08.560] shifting from one foot to the other and trying to talk me out of it, and I call that the [01:11:08.560 --> 01:11:11.160] little chicken dance. [01:11:11.160 --> 01:11:18.360] So, she's not sure if I'm joking or not, but she calls a policeman in, and when I ask [01:11:18.360 --> 01:11:25.640] the policeman to arrest the mayor and the prosecutor, they all say, well, Mr. Kelton, [01:11:25.640 --> 01:11:27.280] I don't know if I can arrest him. [01:11:27.280 --> 01:11:30.400] Here again, just throw it across someone and drag them off the jail. [01:11:30.400 --> 01:11:31.800] Heck, you don't have far to go. [01:11:31.800 --> 01:11:33.920] It's just halfway across the county there. [01:11:33.920 --> 01:11:39.520] And he's doing this, and I looked over at the mayor, and I smiled and pointed at the [01:11:39.520 --> 01:11:40.520] policeman. [01:11:40.520 --> 01:11:44.600] She ducked her head and turned and walked away. [01:11:44.600 --> 01:11:48.520] Oh, that was so much fun. [01:11:48.520 --> 01:11:52.160] But this is what irritated me. [01:11:52.160 --> 01:11:56.440] He would not allow me to enter my motions into the record. [01:11:56.440 --> 01:11:57.440] What? [01:11:57.440 --> 01:11:58.440] He would just take them in. [01:11:58.440 --> 01:11:59.440] Yeah. [01:11:59.440 --> 01:12:03.320] He said, I'll take them into consideration. [01:12:03.320 --> 01:12:06.440] They're filed into the record. [01:12:06.440 --> 01:12:14.480] Once you put a motion or pleading into the hand of the judge, it is in the record. [01:12:14.480 --> 01:12:22.120] Well, it went on for a little bit longer, and when he turned and looked at me again, [01:12:22.120 --> 01:12:28.760] and I asked him, I said, well, would you have the clerks stamp my copy so that I have proof [01:12:28.760 --> 01:12:32.120] that I've peered on my promise to a beer, and he said, we're not going to stamp anything [01:12:32.120 --> 01:12:33.120] for me. [01:12:33.120 --> 01:12:36.720] That's 9-1-1 call. [01:12:36.720 --> 01:12:37.720] Every time. [01:12:37.720 --> 01:12:39.920] That would be a 9-1-1 call. [01:12:39.920 --> 01:12:45.480] Well, and I thought I kept my temper better than I did, but when I went back and listened [01:12:45.480 --> 01:12:49.040] to the recording, at that point I told him, apparently you don't know how to do your job [01:12:49.040 --> 01:12:50.540] very well. [01:12:50.540 --> 01:12:51.540] And anyway, it went on. [01:12:51.540 --> 01:12:55.280] He said, you're trying to get me to do something I don't want to do, and I said, no, sir, I'm [01:12:55.280 --> 01:12:56.280] not. [01:12:56.280 --> 01:12:59.160] I'm just trying to get you to follow the code criminal procedures. [01:12:59.160 --> 01:13:01.880] I just want my copy stamped. [01:13:01.880 --> 01:13:02.880] That's all. [01:13:02.880 --> 01:13:07.760] It went on, and that's when he told me the second time that he did not see people on [01:13:07.760 --> 01:13:13.760] track citations, and I just said, okay, y'all have a nice day, and I left. [01:13:13.760 --> 01:13:20.000] Well, I went back to next week, and what's bad, I got another ticket the next day, and [01:13:20.000 --> 01:13:23.640] I'll find it in the same place. [01:13:23.640 --> 01:13:27.560] You can accuse them of retaliation on the second ticket. [01:13:27.560 --> 01:13:34.160] Well, listen, but the first one was a sheriff's deputy, I'm here in Angelina County. [01:13:34.160 --> 01:13:36.640] The second one was BPS. [01:13:36.640 --> 01:13:46.080] The first ticket is invalid on its face, you know, pursuant, what is it, a 708.105. [01:13:46.080 --> 01:13:53.120] And read 708.105, I don't have that one in my head. [01:13:53.120 --> 01:14:00.640] I have 701.001, a 701.001, but not a citation issued for an offense under traffic law of [01:14:00.640 --> 01:14:08.520] the state or political subdivision, must include in type larger than any other type on a citation, [01:14:08.520 --> 01:14:13.680] and it's the statement about the surcharge stuff, okay? [01:14:13.680 --> 01:14:19.120] There are 13 different places where the typeface is bigger than that statement. [01:14:19.120 --> 01:14:20.120] So... [01:14:20.120 --> 01:14:21.120] That's good. [01:14:21.120 --> 01:14:25.640] Okay, you have a better one. [01:14:25.640 --> 01:14:30.520] You need to make up an information request, or have you been to my traffic site? [01:14:30.520 --> 01:14:35.880] I have no, sir, but I've got the traffic seminar, and... [01:14:35.880 --> 01:14:42.400] No, no, no, no, no, go to the traffic site, put in your ticket information, and it will [01:14:42.400 --> 01:14:46.640] download you about 150 pages of documentation to file. [01:14:46.640 --> 01:14:52.680] Now, it will have a first appearance, which you likely won't need, and since this is a [01:14:52.680 --> 01:14:58.040] county sheriff's deputy, it's perfect. [01:14:58.040 --> 01:15:06.240] It includes a couple of information requests for any records of the appointment of this [01:15:06.240 --> 01:15:11.280] officer as a traffic control officer by the county commissioner's court. [01:15:11.280 --> 01:15:18.640] That goes to the county commissioner's court, and there could send you a response saying [01:15:18.640 --> 01:15:22.520] they don't know what you're talking about. [01:15:22.520 --> 01:15:31.320] 701.001 authorizes the county commissioner's court to appoint up to five deputies in a [01:15:31.320 --> 01:15:37.320] county under two million to act as traffic control officers. [01:15:37.320 --> 01:15:42.880] The county commissioner's court must pay those officers, and under 701.003, they have [01:15:42.880 --> 01:15:44.200] to be riding a motorcycle. [01:15:44.200 --> 01:15:47.040] Is this a cop riding a motorcycle? [01:15:47.040 --> 01:15:51.160] No, sir, he wouldn't have known. [01:15:51.160 --> 01:15:56.440] It is, right there in the code, crystal clear. [01:15:56.440 --> 01:16:03.720] I've read it probably before, but I've forgotten that one, but I did send the PIR into DPS [01:16:03.720 --> 01:16:07.880] and got back that he has not been through the training that he has to be. [01:16:07.880 --> 01:16:11.720] Of course, this county doesn't meet the criteria for it anyway, in our... [01:16:11.720 --> 01:16:15.960] No, no, no, hold on, hold on, you're going to the wrong issue. [01:16:15.960 --> 01:16:25.240] What you're going to is it's Ministry of Code 413. [01:16:25.240 --> 01:16:36.520] All that does is allow a sheriff's deputy or one municipal police officer to do DOT inspections. [01:16:36.520 --> 01:16:37.520] That's it. [01:16:37.520 --> 01:16:38.520] Okay. [01:16:38.520 --> 01:16:43.160] So, if he didn't do a DOT inspection, that really doesn't apply. [01:16:43.160 --> 01:16:51.800] 701.001 does, and it goes to what Eddie says and what's not included is ex-coded. [01:16:51.800 --> 01:16:58.520] The Ministry of Code authorizes Department of Public Safety or Highway Patrol to enforce [01:16:58.520 --> 01:17:05.320] text transportation code, and then text transportation code. [01:17:05.320 --> 01:17:14.200] It's the 2018 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser and Gun Giveaway, sponsored by Central Texas [01:17:14.200 --> 01:17:15.200] Gun Works. 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[01:19:11.440 --> 01:19:14.080] Logos Radio Network. [01:19:14.080 --> 01:19:34.480] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with our radio. [01:19:34.480 --> 01:19:39.880] We're talking to James in Texas, and... [01:19:39.880 --> 01:19:42.800] But what is your... [01:19:42.800 --> 01:19:47.600] Go over here and say that again. [01:19:47.600 --> 01:19:50.440] You asked if I had been to your traffic site. [01:19:50.440 --> 01:19:51.440] Oh, okay. [01:19:51.440 --> 01:19:52.440] Okay. [01:19:52.440 --> 01:19:53.440] Okay. [01:19:53.440 --> 01:19:54.440] www.trafficticket.website. [01:19:54.440 --> 01:19:55.440] Okay. [01:19:55.440 --> 01:19:56.440] And you go to... [01:19:56.440 --> 01:20:06.160] There's a link to the page where you put in all your ticket information. [01:20:06.160 --> 01:20:12.320] You hit submit, and it takes you to another page, and it lists all these documents. [01:20:12.320 --> 01:20:19.120] Well, this thing, this tool doesn't keep any information about you. [01:20:19.120 --> 01:20:26.640] It's all in live memory, so you have to download it all at once, because if you move off the [01:20:26.640 --> 01:20:30.760] page, then it forgets everything, and you have to refill it out again. [01:20:30.760 --> 01:20:33.600] So download all those documents, and read through them. [01:20:33.600 --> 01:20:39.320] I think you'll find them interesting, especially the Subject Metaduristics and Challenge. [01:20:39.320 --> 01:20:49.440] It's about a half a ream of paper, and okay, okay, here's the deal. [01:20:49.440 --> 01:21:00.880] I've got case law that says that if a party fails to oppose the assertions in the live [01:21:00.880 --> 01:21:11.320] pleadings before the court, then they provide formal judicial notice, I'm sorry, formal [01:21:11.320 --> 01:21:14.160] judicial admission. [01:21:14.160 --> 01:21:17.600] So the prosecutors, they're not even going to look at anything until they get to the [01:21:17.600 --> 01:21:18.600] court. [01:21:18.600 --> 01:21:22.920] They come to the court this day, and they look at the tickets, they go, and they probably [01:21:22.920 --> 01:21:26.440] won't even know all of these motions and pleadings are in there. [01:21:26.440 --> 01:21:29.920] And then when they get them, then they're going to want to take some time and look [01:21:29.920 --> 01:21:35.520] at them, and then come back and argue, and say, absolutely not. [01:21:35.520 --> 01:21:42.160] This prosecutor had not, these were timely filed, the prosecutor had opportunity to file [01:21:42.160 --> 01:21:50.200] a response he failed to do so, and therefore, I think it's Packer v. Something, Packer [01:21:50.200 --> 01:21:53.120] v. Packer, I believe. [01:21:53.120 --> 01:21:59.400] He is judicially stopped, because I can send you the code, the case law. [01:21:59.400 --> 01:22:05.200] One of them says that if you don't oppose the facts in the live pleadings, you provide [01:22:05.200 --> 01:22:07.720] formal judicial admission. [01:22:07.720 --> 01:22:17.800] The second one says that if you fail to oppose something in the pleadings, then you may not [01:22:17.800 --> 01:22:25.560] come to the court and argue those issues in court, collateral estoppel. [01:22:25.560 --> 01:22:29.240] The lawyer's not a judge, you give him an education. [01:22:29.240 --> 01:22:34.080] And then there's another one that says, Jock will envy chambers. [01:22:34.080 --> 01:22:41.440] A judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [01:22:41.440 --> 01:22:52.960] A failure to do so is a abuse of process subject to extraordinary, abuse of process where abuse [01:22:52.960 --> 01:22:59.400] of process denies the citizen full free access to or enjoyment right, specifically the right [01:22:59.400 --> 01:23:09.320] to do process, is a crime in the state of Texas, of course, I say misdemeanor. [01:23:09.320 --> 01:23:12.320] All of these motions are set up. [01:23:12.320 --> 01:23:15.680] You're going to go into court, and the court's going to blow them off. [01:23:15.680 --> 01:23:19.160] Then you ask the plaintiffs to arrest the judge. [01:23:19.160 --> 01:23:27.840] Yeah, and I'm curious to see when we do go to court, if he dismisses my motion or denies [01:23:27.840 --> 01:23:31.920] my motion for an impartial trial. [01:23:31.920 --> 01:23:35.920] That'll be interesting if he does that, you know. [01:23:35.920 --> 01:23:42.360] But anyway, the second time I went back to see the court record, I took in a demand for [01:23:42.360 --> 01:23:47.120] access to the public record. [01:23:47.120 --> 01:23:54.840] There was the court record that was there that day as a younger lady, the one that looked [01:23:54.840 --> 01:24:01.720] at me with a deer in a headlight sluit, older ladies, which I've been in there before, and [01:24:01.720 --> 01:24:02.880] I've seen both of them. [01:24:02.880 --> 01:24:05.200] She was there the second time. [01:24:05.200 --> 01:24:12.560] When I went in, she immediately, apparently the judge had a conversation about me. [01:24:12.560 --> 01:24:18.200] She immediately come up over the door, asked if she could help me, and I told her, I said, [01:24:18.200 --> 01:24:23.280] you know, I'm here to look at the court record, and gave them the demand, and I said, public [01:24:23.280 --> 01:24:30.080] information request, and apparently the judge heard that and heard my voice, and he come [01:24:30.080 --> 01:24:35.440] out and we had an entirely different conversation that day. [01:24:35.440 --> 01:24:43.440] He did everything but get down on his knees and kiss my behind. [01:24:43.440 --> 01:24:49.240] And I don't know this for a fact, but because I haven't seen the county attorney yet, but [01:24:49.240 --> 01:24:55.600] I'm sure he went to the county attorney, cussing me like a satyr, and telling him what he's [01:24:55.600 --> 01:25:01.960] done with me, and I'm sure the county attorney ready mowed the ride act. [01:25:01.960 --> 01:25:14.440] But we had a really good conversation that day, and he made one point of saying something [01:25:14.440 --> 01:25:20.520] about the trespals, and I rebutted it, and he said, look, I'm not going to argue with [01:25:20.520 --> 01:25:21.520] you. [01:25:21.520 --> 01:25:24.800] And I said, judge, we're not arguing today. [01:25:24.800 --> 01:25:26.640] I said, we're having a conversation. [01:25:26.640 --> 01:25:32.120] He said, well, I said, you know, last week we argued. [01:25:32.120 --> 01:25:38.080] I said, today, you expressed your point of view, I expressed my point of view, which [01:25:38.080 --> 01:25:39.080] was different. [01:25:39.080 --> 01:25:40.080] This is a conversation. [01:25:40.080 --> 01:25:41.080] This is not an argument. [01:25:41.080 --> 01:25:45.080] And he said, yeah, at least you hadn't told me, I don't know how to do my job. [01:25:45.080 --> 01:25:49.680] And I said, you know what, oh, you're in a posthumous, but I shouldn't have said that. [01:25:49.680 --> 01:25:57.640] I said, I just chalked it up until we both had a bad day, and I'm over if you can get [01:25:57.640 --> 01:25:58.640] over it. [01:25:58.640 --> 01:25:59.640] Okay. [01:25:59.640 --> 01:26:05.080] You know, but he told me, he said, anytime you need something done, he said, you come [01:26:05.080 --> 01:26:08.720] in here, we'll stamp your copies, we'll get it put into the court record. [01:26:08.720 --> 01:26:11.240] I mean, he went on and on. [01:26:11.240 --> 01:26:17.440] Yeah, he absolutely got read the ride act, if that was a crime on his part. [01:26:17.440 --> 01:26:23.440] Come to find out, he was a game warden for 32 years. [01:26:23.440 --> 01:26:25.440] Wait, he was a what? [01:26:25.440 --> 01:26:28.440] That's where the arrogant game warden. [01:26:28.440 --> 01:26:29.440] Oh. [01:26:29.440 --> 01:26:36.440] This is a JP court, so he was a game warden for 32 years, and you know, those guys, I [01:26:36.440 --> 01:26:41.440] kind of understand they've got the, you're dealing with people with guns when you're [01:26:41.440 --> 01:26:42.440] out in the woods. [01:26:42.440 --> 01:26:49.240] You got to get your bluff in, you got to be, you know, got to get the intimidation factor [01:26:49.240 --> 01:26:50.240] thing going. [01:26:50.240 --> 01:26:51.240] So that's where he came from. [01:26:51.240 --> 01:26:55.760] But we hit, like I said, we had a perfectly pleasant conversation. [01:26:55.760 --> 01:27:00.200] I don't know how pleasant it's going to be when I file criminal charges on him, but [01:27:00.200 --> 01:27:05.080] that's beside the point. [01:27:05.080 --> 01:27:12.360] But you know, he told me, you know, we'll get your stuff, and he said, I'll run a copy [01:27:12.360 --> 01:27:16.960] of the motion and get it to the county attorney, and I told him, I said, you won't have to [01:27:16.960 --> 01:27:17.960] do all that. [01:27:17.960 --> 01:27:24.840] I'll have a copy with a court record for the prosecutor, and I said, I'll have two more [01:27:24.840 --> 01:27:25.840] copies. [01:27:25.840 --> 01:27:26.840] I won't take it. [01:27:26.840 --> 01:27:31.920] He said, we'll get it done, blah, blah, blah, and went on and on, and I said, you're not [01:27:31.920 --> 01:27:32.920] going to believe this. [01:27:32.920 --> 01:27:38.920] I got, got ready to go, and I said, when I come in here last week, I said, the next day [01:27:38.920 --> 01:27:40.440] I got another speeding ticket. [01:27:40.440 --> 01:27:42.800] He said, well, we'll call it to them. [01:27:42.800 --> 01:27:49.680] I said, yours, and he said, well, you want me to make copies of those motions that you [01:27:49.680 --> 01:27:55.160] entered into this one, and we'll put them in the other, and I said, no, sir, no. [01:27:55.160 --> 01:28:01.880] I'm going to have different issues to raise on that citation, and I said, I'll be back, [01:28:01.880 --> 01:28:06.960] and I'll enter some more motions in, but it was just a night and day difference, and [01:28:06.960 --> 01:28:19.440] so I figured somebody jumped inside, you know, so, anyway, Saturday I got a nice little, [01:28:19.440 --> 01:28:28.480] it's not gold plated or anything, but I got a nice invitation to court on the 24th, it's [01:28:28.480 --> 01:28:37.520] a typical form letter, but it says, please have all documents, evidence, et cetera, with [01:28:37.520 --> 01:28:42.920] you at the time of this hearing to present to the court to support your claim. [01:28:42.920 --> 01:28:50.640] So I guess they want me to tell them exactly how I'm going to contest this. [01:28:50.640 --> 01:28:54.080] Send them a request for clarification. [01:28:54.080 --> 01:29:01.720] Well, to me, it's just, of course, I'm not going to take any evidence I have in. [01:29:01.720 --> 01:29:08.400] That's why you need to ask for a request for clarification, if it's a motion hearing. [01:29:08.400 --> 01:29:09.400] Okay. [01:29:09.400 --> 01:29:12.200] Then it's time to address the motions. [01:29:12.200 --> 01:29:20.320] Yeah, because it does not say anywhere, wait a minute, no, at the bottom it does say all, [01:29:20.320 --> 01:29:28.680] no, that's talking about motions for contingent, it doesn't say anything about whether this [01:29:28.680 --> 01:29:33.640] is a motion hearing or whatever, so I will, I will do that tomorrow. [01:29:33.640 --> 01:29:41.080] And when you write the motion, look up 28.01, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:29:41.080 --> 01:29:48.240] That lists all of the things that a judge can order you to come to court for. [01:29:48.240 --> 01:29:56.240] The very first one is an arraignment hearing, and then go to 26.01, the arraignment hearings. [01:29:56.240 --> 01:29:58.240] Hold on, be right back. [01:29:58.240 --> 01:29:59.240] Okay. [01:29:59.240 --> 01:30:03.040] Are you a Facebook fiasco just waiting to happen? [01:30:03.040 --> 01:30:06.640] There's a downside to posting everything on your social networks, and it just might leave [01:30:06.640 --> 01:30:07.640] you with sitting duck. [01:30:07.640 --> 01:30:11.480] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright, and I'll tell you more in just a moment. [01:30:11.480 --> 01:30:16.840] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [01:30:16.840 --> 01:30:18.880] of your personal information. [01:30:18.880 --> 01:30:19.880] That's creepy. [01:30:19.880 --> 01:30:21.920] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:21.920 --> 01:30:25.080] StartPage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:25.080 --> 01:30:29.200] StartPage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking [01:30:29.200 --> 01:30:31.480] cookies, and their third party certified. [01:30:31.480 --> 01:30:35.960] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with StartPage. [01:30:35.960 --> 01:30:38.600] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:38.600 --> 01:30:42.120] StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:42.120 --> 01:30:45.600] Social networking sites may seem like a good way to keep up with friends, relatives and [01:30:45.600 --> 01:30:48.920] colleagues, but beware, enemies are watching too. [01:30:48.920 --> 01:30:53.520] Citizens of Nashua, New Hampshire learn this the hard way when the Facebook bandits timed [01:30:53.520 --> 01:30:56.640] break-ins based on their victim's Facebook posts. [01:30:56.640 --> 01:31:01.080] Local police reported that 50 homes were broken into by tech-savvy criminals. [01:31:01.080 --> 01:31:05.160] They used Facebook posts to see when victims would be away from home, and they timed their [01:31:05.160 --> 01:31:06.560] strikes accordingly. [01:31:06.560 --> 01:31:10.880] To avoid falling prey to Facebook bandits, or worse, use this rule of thumb. [01:31:10.880 --> 01:31:14.240] If you wouldn't reveal your activities and whereabouts to hardened criminals or total [01:31:14.240 --> 01:31:17.320] strangers, you shouldn't put them on your social network page either. [01:31:17.320 --> 01:31:30.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.320 --> 01:31:35.720] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:35.720 --> 01:31:37.840] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.840 --> 01:31:42.800] However, 1500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.800 --> 01:31:46.800] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [01:31:46.800 --> 01:31:48.240] force responders have died. [01:31:48.240 --> 01:31:52.080] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correctional, [01:31:52.080 --> 01:31:56.800] I'm an Air Force pilot, I'm a father who lost his son, we're Americans, and we deserve [01:31:56.800 --> 01:31:57.800] the truth. [01:31:57.800 --> 01:32:00.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:00.000 --> 01:32:03.000] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.000 --> 01:32:06.000] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.000 --> 01:32:09.680] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [01:32:09.680 --> 01:32:10.680] them to pay for it. [01:32:10.680 --> 01:32:14.280] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:14.280 --> 01:32:18.080] That's why you have insurance, and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [01:32:18.080 --> 01:32:20.880] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:20.880 --> 01:32:25.160] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [01:32:25.160 --> 01:32:26.480] zero complaints. [01:32:26.480 --> 01:32:30.680] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right [01:32:30.680 --> 01:32:31.920] the first time. [01:32:31.920 --> 01:32:38.480] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:38.480 --> 01:32:43.040] Send the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio [01:32:43.040 --> 01:32:45.280] Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.280 --> 01:32:50.440] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:50.440 --> 01:32:56.480] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.480 --> 01:32:58.480] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.480 --> 01:33:03.000] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.000 --> 01:33:04.240] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.240 --> 01:33:24.680] You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:24.680 --> 01:33:26.280] Okay, we are back. [01:33:26.280 --> 01:33:33.560] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio on this Friday, the 13th day of July 2018, and we're talking [01:33:33.560 --> 01:33:35.600] to John in New York. [01:33:35.600 --> 01:33:38.520] No, we're not talking to John in New York. [01:33:38.520 --> 01:33:40.920] We're talking to James in Texas. [01:33:40.920 --> 01:33:45.600] Looks like we just lost a caller too. [01:33:45.600 --> 01:33:48.680] It looked like a first-time caller. [01:33:48.680 --> 01:33:52.800] Okay, if you dropped off, call back in. [01:33:52.800 --> 01:33:57.560] We do have a couple open slots on the caller board, so if you have a question or comment, [01:33:57.560 --> 01:33:58.560] give us a call. [01:33:58.560 --> 01:33:59.560] 512-646-1984. [01:33:59.560 --> 01:34:00.560] Okay, James. [01:34:00.560 --> 01:34:11.800] And I will try to make it short, but I'm thinking this letter is another crime-simulating legal [01:34:11.800 --> 01:34:12.800] process. [01:34:12.800 --> 01:34:15.120] Just looking at it, but... [01:34:15.120 --> 01:34:28.960] Yeah, abusive process, 32.48 or 46 something in that area, because it doesn't give you... [01:34:28.960 --> 01:34:33.560] But actually, it's not unless you raise an issue. [01:34:33.560 --> 01:34:39.440] The way to perfect this issue is to file a request for clarification. [01:34:39.440 --> 01:34:47.880] I will do that first thing Monday, but anyway, I'll let you go and get to somebody... [01:34:47.880 --> 01:34:48.880] Okay. [01:34:48.880 --> 01:34:49.880] Hold on. [01:34:49.880 --> 01:34:50.880] Things you... [01:34:50.880 --> 01:34:53.880] When is this hearing set for? [01:34:53.880 --> 01:34:54.880] The 24th. [01:34:54.880 --> 01:34:59.080] Each day is the 24th. [01:34:59.080 --> 01:35:00.080] Okay. [01:35:00.080 --> 01:35:03.680] Then get these documents from my site down. [01:35:03.680 --> 01:35:09.200] Do you have a discovery motion in? [01:35:09.200 --> 01:35:10.200] Not yet. [01:35:10.200 --> 01:35:11.200] Okay. [01:35:11.200 --> 01:35:12.400] Download these documents. [01:35:12.400 --> 01:35:14.840] There's a Brady motion in there. [01:35:14.840 --> 01:35:17.000] There's an unlimited motion, unlimited motion in there. [01:35:17.000 --> 01:35:18.480] Get those... [01:35:18.480 --> 01:35:21.440] Get the Brady motion filed. [01:35:21.440 --> 01:35:31.520] Then read 39.14, that's the Michael Morton Act, and in there, it says that the prosecuting [01:35:31.520 --> 01:35:41.080] attorney shall provide all discovery at least 20 days before trial. [01:35:41.080 --> 01:35:43.680] Okay. [01:35:43.680 --> 01:35:54.520] What happens if he doesn't provide all discovery 20 days before trial? [01:35:54.520 --> 01:35:58.520] He failed to perform a duty he was required to perform, and in the process, did not decision [01:35:58.520 --> 01:36:00.520] full pre-access to rejoin it. [01:36:00.520 --> 01:36:01.520] Right. [01:36:01.520 --> 01:36:06.920] You should have seen the judge in the prosecutor in Highland Park when I asked the judge to [01:36:06.920 --> 01:36:09.920] have the prosecutor arrested. [01:36:09.920 --> 01:36:14.680] Oh, was that fun? [01:36:14.680 --> 01:36:23.200] It was in that place because my mom lives in Garland, so I'm familiar with Highland [01:36:23.200 --> 01:36:24.200] Park. [01:36:24.200 --> 01:36:30.840] Of course, I've been in here in East Texas since 1990, and I hate that I didn't know [01:36:30.840 --> 01:36:37.960] about you guys when you were going through your little rigmarole in Jacksonville, because [01:36:37.960 --> 01:36:44.840] that's not 45 minutes or so from me, I'd have been there every day. [01:36:44.840 --> 01:36:46.840] That one was pretty intense. [01:36:46.840 --> 01:36:47.840] Yeah. [01:36:47.840 --> 01:36:52.640] Oh, trust me, I've gone back and listened to the archives, so that's how I know about [01:36:52.640 --> 01:36:53.640] it. [01:36:53.640 --> 01:36:59.360] But what's even more interesting, I live in Lufkin, but I work in an academician, and [01:36:59.360 --> 01:37:09.360] guess where my story is, it's at Eddie Craig's old computer repair shop, and I found that [01:37:09.360 --> 01:37:14.200] out from the landlord. [01:37:14.200 --> 01:37:15.200] That is interesting. [01:37:15.200 --> 01:37:16.200] Uh-huh. [01:37:16.200 --> 01:37:20.200] A small, small world. [01:37:20.200 --> 01:37:23.160] What kind of shop do you have? [01:37:23.160 --> 01:37:34.400] I don't even get me 20-ohms-a-day loan and title loan stores, I hate it, but it's all [01:37:34.400 --> 01:37:40.200] filed for 16 years working on these big wood yard saws, but I can't take the heat anymore, [01:37:40.200 --> 01:37:48.480] so I had to give it up and doing this, but yeah, it was interesting, and what's even [01:37:48.480 --> 01:37:56.360] more interesting, Eddie's sister-in-law, we feed some stray cats at the store, his sister-in-law [01:37:56.360 --> 01:38:02.400] on the days we're not there, Sundays and holidays, whatever, she comes by and feed, [01:38:02.400 --> 01:38:08.800] and I've known her since 91 or 92, Mike's wife, you should feed with her in the eyeball. [01:38:08.800 --> 01:38:13.160] So you're right, he is a very small world. [01:38:13.160 --> 01:38:14.160] Small world. [01:38:14.160 --> 01:38:16.160] We're all connected somehow. [01:38:16.160 --> 01:38:22.040] Okay, James, keep us up to speed on what is going on. [01:38:22.040 --> 01:38:24.360] This is into it. [01:38:24.360 --> 01:38:28.200] We need more guys. [01:38:28.200 --> 01:38:36.720] I have a guy in Tyler who's taking on the courts there in Tyler. [01:38:36.720 --> 01:38:42.280] If you're interested, if you'll send me an email, I'll get it to him because he may need [01:38:42.280 --> 01:38:43.280] a court watcher. [01:38:43.280 --> 01:38:46.720] Yes, sir, I will do that tomorrow. [01:38:46.720 --> 01:38:47.720] Wonderful. [01:38:47.720 --> 01:38:49.960] I'm going to put in the subject. [01:38:49.960 --> 01:38:53.760] Yes, we are in the process of winding the clock. [01:38:53.760 --> 01:38:59.000] We've already filed criminal charges with the Texas Ranger, and then the next thing [01:38:59.000 --> 01:39:04.800] we do is go after the Texas Ranger and the prosecutor, so he's beginning to work the [01:39:04.800 --> 01:39:07.320] process on them. [01:39:07.320 --> 01:39:11.160] So send me an email, I'll get it to him and get you two together. [01:39:11.160 --> 01:39:17.880] What do you want me to put in the subject line so that you might flag it? [01:39:17.880 --> 01:39:21.680] Just put from Tyler. [01:39:21.680 --> 01:39:22.680] Okay. [01:39:22.680 --> 01:39:25.360] All right, I will do that tomorrow. [01:39:25.360 --> 01:39:28.080] I do have one other thing. [01:39:28.080 --> 01:39:34.440] I like your idea of bushwhacking, and so, you know, I'm sure they're going to make me [01:39:34.440 --> 01:39:38.160] meet with this county attorney before anything happens. [01:39:38.160 --> 01:39:39.160] No, no. [01:39:39.160 --> 01:39:42.160] You do not have to meet with the county attorney. [01:39:42.160 --> 01:39:47.840] I tell them I don't talk to a prosecutor attorney. [01:39:47.840 --> 01:39:54.800] Should I try to bushwhack him with a criminal complaint on the judge? [01:39:54.800 --> 01:39:56.880] That would be wonderful. [01:39:56.880 --> 01:40:00.560] That's what I was wanting to ask. [01:40:00.560 --> 01:40:04.640] Okay, in that case, you meet with the prosecutor attorney. [01:40:04.640 --> 01:40:07.680] Oh, yeah, I'm glad you're here. [01:40:07.680 --> 01:40:15.160] I got something for you, and stick that in his hand. [01:40:15.160 --> 01:40:23.360] And I can hand him at the same time, what, I've got it printed out right here, total [01:40:23.360 --> 01:40:32.120] criminal procedure, two point, what is it, 2.03, since he has no discretion. [01:40:32.120 --> 01:40:34.440] Don't give him that. [01:40:34.440 --> 01:40:37.800] Never give fair warning. [01:40:37.800 --> 01:40:43.480] Well, that was my next, okay, that was going to, well, I wasn't going to, I was going to [01:40:43.480 --> 01:40:49.360] leave it under the complaint, giving the complaint, letting him hand it back to me, and if he [01:40:49.360 --> 01:40:55.600] happens to look at that, then he's been given fair warning as far as I'm concerned. [01:40:55.600 --> 01:41:02.640] I'm going to suggest the only time you bring up 2.03 is in your criminal complaint against [01:41:02.640 --> 01:41:04.640] him. [01:41:04.640 --> 01:41:12.400] Okay, that's the only reason I haven't even gone by there to see them yet. [01:41:12.400 --> 01:41:17.600] I wanted to talk to either you or 81 about it and get a recommendation. [01:41:17.600 --> 01:41:22.160] Yeah, Bushwack is so much better. [01:41:22.160 --> 01:41:28.880] Anytime you try to give a public official fair warning, they will always accuse you [01:41:28.880 --> 01:41:33.360] of being agitated and threatening them. [01:41:33.360 --> 01:41:35.240] It's what they do. [01:41:35.240 --> 01:41:37.680] So they don't deserve fair warning. [01:41:37.680 --> 01:41:39.160] He's a learned counsel. [01:41:39.160 --> 01:41:45.360] It must be presumed that he already knows what the law is. [01:41:45.360 --> 01:41:46.360] Gotcha. [01:41:46.360 --> 01:41:47.360] Gotcha. [01:41:47.360 --> 01:41:53.120] You know, oh, and I did forget to say, my first meeting with the judge, when he started [01:41:53.120 --> 01:42:00.080] getting agitated and raising his voice, the county constable came out dressed in black [01:42:00.080 --> 01:42:06.720] jeans, black t-shirt, young sitting there, and he stood across from me and leaned against [01:42:06.720 --> 01:42:09.920] the counter and just stared me dead in the eyes. [01:42:09.920 --> 01:42:12.680] And I just looked at him in his mouth. [01:42:12.680 --> 01:42:16.440] I just looked at him in the eyes. [01:42:16.440 --> 01:42:19.120] I always tell him, I'm glad you're here. [01:42:19.120 --> 01:42:22.480] I may need you. [01:42:22.480 --> 01:42:26.880] I didn't even think about that, because by that time, I was getting a little hot in the [01:42:26.880 --> 01:42:29.440] car or two, and I kind of lost my cool. [01:42:29.440 --> 01:42:36.520] But you're going to do that sometimes, and it's a struggle to get past that. [01:42:36.520 --> 01:42:43.480] But you know, I tell these stories on the air, and what I seldom talk about concerning [01:42:43.480 --> 01:42:46.840] the stories is they're all therapeutic metaphor. [01:42:46.840 --> 01:42:52.840] They're all designed to implant behaviors. [01:42:52.840 --> 01:43:01.400] I'm trying to give you other things you can respond to instead of what these guys are [01:43:01.400 --> 01:43:05.520] accustomed to getting you to respond to. [01:43:05.520 --> 01:43:14.040] When they start getting huffy puffy, they expect you to feel mistreated, to feel unjustly [01:43:14.040 --> 01:43:20.040] mistreated and self-righteous, and respond with self-righteous indignation. [01:43:20.040 --> 01:43:23.440] And they love that, to get to use that against you. [01:43:23.440 --> 01:43:30.440] When I start feeling that, I generally take out my phone and dial 911, and all that feeling [01:43:30.440 --> 01:43:31.440] goes away. [01:43:31.440 --> 01:43:35.600] Hang on, I'm about to go to break. [01:43:35.600 --> 01:43:41.520] Randy Kelton, the rule of law radio, I call in number 512-646-1984. [01:43:41.520 --> 01:44:03.040] We do have a full call board, and we'll try to get to everybody, and we'll be right back. [01:44:03.040 --> 01:44:05.400] Nutritious food is real body armor. 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[01:45:31.400 --> 01:45:37.960] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:37.960 --> 01:45:42.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [01:45:42.680 --> 01:45:47.040] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:47.040 --> 01:45:53.160] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:53.160 --> 01:45:55.760] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:55.760 --> 01:46:04.760] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:25.760 --> 01:46:32.280] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to James in [01:46:32.280 --> 01:46:33.280] Texas. [01:46:33.280 --> 01:46:40.160] Yeah, Bushwhack is way better, and there's a few things that I address. [01:46:40.160 --> 01:46:47.960] One of the primary things to keep in mind is when you walk into the courtroom or into [01:46:47.960 --> 01:46:55.280] the courthouse, you are the baddest motor scooter in the building, and there's only one reason [01:46:55.280 --> 01:46:59.760] you're the baddest motor scooter in the building, and that's because you're not a judge, you're [01:46:59.760 --> 01:47:03.240] not a prosecutor, a clerk, a bailiff. [01:47:03.240 --> 01:47:06.560] All those people are public servants. [01:47:06.560 --> 01:47:10.760] They are their servants, you are the master. [01:47:10.760 --> 01:47:15.760] You walk into a courthouse, you're wearing, you've got two hats with you. [01:47:15.760 --> 01:47:20.400] You're generally wearing your litigants hat, but when you step up in front of you or one [01:47:20.400 --> 01:47:25.600] of your public servants, and one of those servants steps half-inch across one of your [01:47:25.600 --> 01:47:32.240] legal lines, you take off that litigants hat, you put on that master's hat, and you introduce [01:47:32.240 --> 01:47:35.280] them to legal remedy. [01:47:35.280 --> 01:47:41.080] You do not have to be bashful about it, and you have no duty to withdraw. [01:47:41.080 --> 01:47:47.920] When you step in with that perspective, and with these other tools, never give fair warning [01:47:47.920 --> 01:47:51.000] to Bushwax so much better. [01:47:51.000 --> 01:47:55.560] You ask them to do something that they don't do what you ask them to do, and my favorite [01:47:55.560 --> 01:47:59.560] thing is to call 911. [01:47:59.560 --> 01:48:02.400] And they generally stand there with their mouth hanging open, and they don't believe [01:48:02.400 --> 01:48:10.280] in what's happening, and that's when they realize, that guy set me up for that. [01:48:10.280 --> 01:48:12.720] As a matter of fact, that did. [01:48:12.720 --> 01:48:13.720] How you like it? [01:48:13.720 --> 01:48:14.720] Is it fun? [01:48:14.720 --> 01:48:21.360] Then you get another police officer come down, and you get to watch him do this little chicken [01:48:21.360 --> 01:48:25.000] dance, because now you're the accused. [01:48:25.000 --> 01:48:28.320] He raises his voice in the slightest. [01:48:28.320 --> 01:48:36.720] If he says anything that you can in any way construes a threat, did all 911 again? [01:48:36.720 --> 01:48:39.920] And ask for someone to arrest this guy. [01:48:39.920 --> 01:48:42.440] It digs a big hole for him. [01:48:42.440 --> 01:48:46.160] They have no idea how to deal with you. [01:48:46.160 --> 01:48:52.760] It only takes one round of that, and then it gets around real fast, that this guy's [01:48:52.760 --> 01:48:54.240] just setting us up. [01:48:54.240 --> 01:48:59.720] There's one thing I did that demonstrates that, and had more effect on Tarrant and Dallas [01:48:59.720 --> 01:49:02.640] County than anything else I'd ever done. [01:49:02.640 --> 01:49:07.960] A friend of mine, we were helping people stop foreclosures, and David had a foreclosure [01:49:07.960 --> 01:49:12.000] hearing before the one I was there for. [01:49:12.000 --> 01:49:14.880] And when they started the hearing, I walked up and stood at the bar. [01:49:14.880 --> 01:49:17.360] Finally, the judge looked up and said, Can I help you? [01:49:17.360 --> 01:49:21.160] I said, Yes, Your Honor, my name's Randy Kelton, and I have a hearing deficiency. [01:49:21.160 --> 01:49:23.840] Well, Mr. Kelton, what's wrong with your hearing? [01:49:23.840 --> 01:49:30.320] Oh, Georgia, I was down in Mexico the other day, and I drank too much of cheap tequila, [01:49:30.320 --> 01:49:31.800] and lost my hearing aid. [01:49:31.800 --> 01:49:34.520] Well, I lied to him, had it in my pocket. [01:49:34.520 --> 01:49:36.320] Well, why are you telling me this? [01:49:36.320 --> 01:49:38.640] I said, Do you have accommodation for the hearing impaired? [01:49:38.640 --> 01:49:40.720] No, I do not. [01:49:40.720 --> 01:49:42.960] I see you have a sound system here, will you turn it up? [01:49:42.960 --> 01:49:43.960] No, I will not. [01:49:43.960 --> 01:49:45.960] Well, then will you speak up? [01:49:45.960 --> 01:49:46.960] And he did. [01:49:46.960 --> 01:49:52.080] Told the bailiff, if I didn't sound shut up, he should throw me out of the courtroom. [01:49:52.080 --> 01:49:58.720] Went up and had my hearing, and they started hearing objection. [01:49:58.720 --> 01:50:02.080] I am here at arms link to the court. [01:50:02.080 --> 01:50:04.960] I have a challenge subject matter jurisdiction before the court. [01:50:04.960 --> 01:50:06.920] Yes, Mr. Kelton, you just filed that 20 minutes ago. [01:50:06.920 --> 01:50:07.920] Yes, Your Honor. [01:50:07.920 --> 01:50:08.920] As a matter of fact, I did. [01:50:08.920 --> 01:50:12.440] Well, Mr. Kelton, I am going to deny that motion, so you are going to deny that motion [01:50:12.440 --> 01:50:13.440] without even reading it. [01:50:13.440 --> 01:50:14.440] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I am. [01:50:14.440 --> 01:50:15.440] We are done here. [01:50:15.440 --> 01:50:20.120] Closed my folder, got up, walked to the bar, and pointed at the bailiff, you, come with [01:50:20.120 --> 01:50:21.120] me. [01:50:21.120 --> 01:50:24.920] I get to the door, and these two bailiffs are standing there, and they are looking confused, [01:50:24.920 --> 01:50:30.600] and I said, Well, and the big guy says, Not in, okay, we come outside. [01:50:30.600 --> 01:50:33.960] And he said, What can I do for you, Mr. Kelton? [01:50:33.960 --> 01:50:35.440] You can arrest the judge. [01:50:35.440 --> 01:50:38.680] Well, why would I arrest the judge? [01:50:38.680 --> 01:50:44.120] Well, Mr. Kelton said, Mr. Interficial Oppression Criminal Violation, 39.03 Peelecote. [01:50:44.120 --> 01:50:49.000] He said, Well, in that he denied me full free access to or enjoyment right. [01:50:49.000 --> 01:50:51.680] Well, Mr. Kelton, what right did he deny you in? [01:50:51.680 --> 01:50:56.840] He denied me in my right to accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [01:50:56.840 --> 01:51:01.480] The bailiff said, Well, Mr. Kelton, why didn't you tell them, Judge about the Americans with [01:51:01.480 --> 01:51:03.360] Disabilities Act? [01:51:03.360 --> 01:51:08.520] Heck, if I'd have done that, he might have turned the sound up. [01:51:08.520 --> 01:51:16.360] The bailiff stood there a minute, and his grin started to cross his face. [01:51:16.360 --> 01:51:18.360] Well, you set him up. [01:51:18.360 --> 01:51:20.280] Yes, as a matter of fact, I did. [01:51:20.280 --> 01:51:21.280] Now get in there and arrest him. [01:51:21.280 --> 01:51:23.400] Man, I can't arrest the judge. [01:51:23.400 --> 01:51:24.400] Come on. [01:51:24.400 --> 01:51:31.400] Look at you, big straffling officer, six foot six for you, 350, 400 pounds, 325. [01:51:31.400 --> 01:51:35.480] So look at you, big tough guy. [01:51:35.480 --> 01:51:38.840] Get your chicken suit off and go and arrest that judge, but he ain't taking my chicken [01:51:38.840 --> 01:51:39.840] suit off. [01:51:39.840 --> 01:51:46.840] So he referred me to the city police, they sent a cop and it got real ugly with him. [01:51:46.840 --> 01:51:53.760] And I dismissed him like an errand stepchild and he was so furious, he was shaking. [01:51:53.760 --> 01:51:56.560] Ken Manson called me the next day. [01:51:56.560 --> 01:52:01.880] He said, What were you doing in Mansfield yesterday, minding my business, Ken? [01:52:01.880 --> 01:52:08.560] Well, my brother, his brother was the city attorney for the city of Mansfield. [01:52:08.560 --> 01:52:12.280] My brother said that officer told him that you were agitated. [01:52:12.280 --> 01:52:21.160] I said, Ken, ask your brother to ask that officer if I got agitated before I told him [01:52:21.160 --> 01:52:30.400] to take his chicken suit off or after he said, you said that to him, Ken, I always say that [01:52:30.400 --> 01:52:32.760] to them. [01:52:32.760 --> 01:52:37.880] He said, I told Craig that you have a way of putting them over the edge. [01:52:37.880 --> 01:52:46.480] I saw that bailiff at a political convention a couple of weeks later. [01:52:46.480 --> 01:52:50.360] I came in the door and he looked familiar, but he wasn't in the same uniform, so I didn't [01:52:50.360 --> 01:52:51.720] recognize him. [01:52:51.720 --> 01:52:57.840] He found me in the auditorium and it was during a break where everybody was just kneeling [01:52:57.840 --> 01:52:58.840] around. [01:52:58.840 --> 01:53:04.000] He said, I got some guys that I'd like you to meet, I recognize them, and he takes me [01:53:04.000 --> 01:53:09.360] in this room and he's explaining that these are all bailiffs from around the county and [01:53:09.360 --> 01:53:11.960] they do these gigs to make extra money. [01:53:11.960 --> 01:53:14.040] They run security. [01:53:14.040 --> 01:53:18.280] So I walked in there and he said, Hey, this is the guy that set up the judge and these [01:53:18.280 --> 01:53:21.520] bailiffs, oh man, they come over and shook my hand out. [01:53:21.520 --> 01:53:22.520] It's great. [01:53:22.520 --> 01:53:32.360] I heard from these bailiffs about those judges astounded me. [01:53:32.360 --> 01:53:41.360] These bailiffs hate those judges, give you a different perspective on the bailiffs. [01:53:41.360 --> 01:53:49.200] They know what's going on is crappy and you start putting them on the dime for the judge. [01:53:49.200 --> 01:53:56.880] They're going to get real unhappy and part of what I'm trying to do is demonstrate to [01:53:56.880 --> 01:54:04.200] the bailiffs that you're probably the most powerful guy in the room. [01:54:04.200 --> 01:54:06.080] You're not here working for that judge. [01:54:06.080 --> 01:54:12.000] You're here to keep the peace and it makes no difference who breaches it. [01:54:12.000 --> 01:54:19.480] And Lake Worth, when the judge wouldn't let me see some public records, bailiff had kind [01:54:19.480 --> 01:54:20.480] of come up beside us. [01:54:20.480 --> 01:54:23.520] I said, Mr. She said, you can't look at those, Mr. Kelton. [01:54:23.520 --> 01:54:27.560] You are a security risk. [01:54:27.560 --> 01:54:29.200] Oh, I'm a security risk. [01:54:29.200 --> 01:54:30.760] And they already gave me some. [01:54:30.760 --> 01:54:33.040] I closed and pushed them across the counter. [01:54:33.040 --> 01:54:34.040] Turn to the bailiff. [01:54:34.040 --> 01:54:35.280] I said, Mr. Bayliff, do you hear that? [01:54:35.280 --> 01:54:36.280] Yes, Mr. Kelton. [01:54:36.280 --> 01:54:39.480] I did arrest that woman. [01:54:39.480 --> 01:54:40.480] Why can't arrest her? [01:54:40.480 --> 01:54:43.960] This is her court, with all due respect. [01:54:43.960 --> 01:54:45.920] This is my court. [01:54:45.920 --> 01:54:49.280] And I very generously allow her to administer it according to my law. [01:54:49.280 --> 01:54:51.000] She just broke one of them. [01:54:51.000 --> 01:54:52.000] Arrest her. [01:54:52.000 --> 01:54:53.760] Oh, I can't arrest the judge. [01:54:53.760 --> 01:54:59.960] I have to administer this court after to be the bailiff in this court. [01:54:59.960 --> 01:55:01.960] So I'm kind of tied up right now. [01:55:01.960 --> 01:55:03.560] Let me take you to my boss. [01:55:03.560 --> 01:55:05.760] Well, first I ask him to take his chicken suit off. [01:55:05.760 --> 01:55:07.920] Well, let me take you to my boss. [01:55:07.920 --> 01:55:12.640] Okay, he took me to the elected constable and he said, what can I do for you? [01:55:12.640 --> 01:55:14.440] I need you to arrest him. [01:55:14.440 --> 01:55:20.160] The look on the bailiff's face was priceless. [01:55:20.160 --> 01:55:21.160] He knew me. [01:55:21.160 --> 01:55:22.160] We had talked several times. [01:55:22.160 --> 01:55:23.160] We had a good relationship. [01:55:23.160 --> 01:55:26.600] I need you to arrest him. [01:55:26.600 --> 01:55:27.600] Why would I arrest him? [01:55:27.600 --> 01:55:30.480] Because he won't take his chicken suit off. [01:55:30.480 --> 01:55:33.680] Well, why do you need to take his chicken suit off? [01:55:33.680 --> 01:55:40.360] So he could arrest the judge, and he looked at him and he said, he asked you to arrest [01:55:40.360 --> 01:55:41.360] the judge? [01:55:41.360 --> 01:55:42.360] He said, yeah, he did. [01:55:42.360 --> 01:55:45.240] He said, well, we don't do that. [01:55:45.240 --> 01:55:46.240] Don't do what? [01:55:46.240 --> 01:55:47.240] We don't arrest people. [01:55:47.240 --> 01:55:48.240] We're bailiffs. [01:55:48.240 --> 01:55:51.440] I said, I see you have a pistol on your hip. [01:55:51.440 --> 01:55:54.840] Does that mean you are a certified peace officer in the state of Texas? [01:55:54.840 --> 01:55:55.840] He said, yes, I am. [01:55:55.840 --> 01:55:58.960] Well, in that case, I've given you notice that a crime has been committed. [01:55:58.960 --> 01:55:59.960] Do your job. [01:55:59.960 --> 01:56:00.960] Arrest him. [01:56:00.960 --> 01:56:03.960] It accords to the Article 2.13 Code of Criminal Procedure. [01:56:03.960 --> 01:56:07.840] No, Mr. Kelton, I am not going to arrest my bailiff. [01:56:07.840 --> 01:56:08.840] Oh, OK. [01:56:08.840 --> 01:56:13.480] Well, there's a sheriff's office out here somewhere, isn't there? [01:56:13.480 --> 01:56:14.480] Oh, yeah, that's right. [01:56:14.480 --> 01:56:15.480] Across the street. [01:56:15.480 --> 01:56:16.480] Oh, OK. [01:56:16.480 --> 01:56:17.480] Thank you. [01:56:17.480 --> 01:56:22.840] I go across the street and ask for a deputy to arrest the constable. [01:56:22.840 --> 01:56:27.000] And while I'm waiting for a deputy, the constable showed up and he said, Mr. Kelton, if you [01:56:27.000 --> 01:56:31.440] would like, I will take your complaint to the prosecuting attorney. [01:56:31.440 --> 01:56:36.520] Oh, no, no, no, no, don't do that. [01:56:36.520 --> 01:56:42.720] I will get to the prosecuting attorney, but I haven't gotten everybody to touch my tar [01:56:42.720 --> 01:56:45.080] baby yet. [01:56:45.080 --> 01:56:46.080] He said, you're what? [01:56:46.080 --> 01:56:50.040] I said, I've got this little invisible tar baby. [01:56:50.040 --> 01:56:53.000] I got the judge to touch it. [01:56:53.000 --> 01:56:59.160] And then I got your bailiff to touch it, and then I got you to touch it, and now I'll [01:56:59.160 --> 01:57:01.880] see if I can get the sheriff to touch it. [01:57:01.880 --> 01:57:06.480] And he's not sure if I'm joking or not. [01:57:06.480 --> 01:57:11.000] So he stands awake to this captain come in, and he said, what can I do for you? [01:57:11.000 --> 01:57:12.480] I need you to arrest him. [01:57:12.480 --> 01:57:18.120] And he looked at the bailiff, at the constable, the constable just smiled all over his ass, [01:57:18.120 --> 01:57:20.240] like, you know, what can I do? [01:57:20.240 --> 01:57:23.680] And he refused, and I told him, take his chicken suit off. [01:57:23.680 --> 01:57:24.680] And he refused. [01:57:24.680 --> 01:57:31.880] So I turned to the constable, said, see, he's really accommodating. [01:57:31.880 --> 01:57:37.000] And that has to be for them. [01:57:37.000 --> 01:57:39.160] So difficult. [01:57:39.160 --> 01:57:43.160] What do they do with someone like that? [01:57:43.160 --> 01:57:49.040] Friend of mine got hired on as a jail guard in Wise County, Texas. [01:57:49.040 --> 01:57:54.560] But before she could go to work in the jail, she had to take this course in Benton County [01:57:54.560 --> 01:57:56.920] about how to deal with difficult people. [01:57:56.920 --> 01:57:59.240] And they had someone they used as an example. [01:57:59.240 --> 01:58:03.120] And when they mentioned my name, she said, oh, I know that guy. [01:58:03.120 --> 01:58:08.920] Yeah, he's a really nice guy. [01:58:08.920 --> 01:58:11.320] That's why we're so difficult. [01:58:11.320 --> 01:58:15.360] Because clearly, you are not the least bit afraid of them. [01:58:15.360 --> 01:58:18.920] You're asking them to do the things that you know they're not going to do. [01:58:18.920 --> 01:58:22.800] And as soon as they don't do it, oh, yeah, gotcha. [01:58:22.800 --> 01:58:25.800] And you start stinging them. [01:58:25.800 --> 01:58:26.800] Okay. [01:58:26.800 --> 01:58:30.720] I think we got that horse beat to death. [01:58:30.720 --> 01:58:34.760] Keep us up to speed, James, the one to keep track of how this goes. [01:58:34.760 --> 01:58:41.640] This is Randy Kelton, Rue La Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. [01:58:41.640 --> 01:58:48.720] We'll be right back. [01:58:48.720 --> 01:58:52.520] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [01:58:52.520 --> 01:58:56.960] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:56.960 --> 01:59:02.360] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [01:59:02.360 --> 01:59:05.640] the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:05.640 --> 01:59:07.400] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:07.400 --> 01:59:12.000] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate. [01:59:12.000 --> 01:59:17.080] But the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:17.080 --> 01:59:22.320] Old and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into [01:59:22.320 --> 01:59:26.840] the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:26.840 --> 01:59:32.000] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:32.000 --> 01:59:42.480] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:42.480 --> 01:59:46.560] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. 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