[00:00.000 --> 00:07.840] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lowstar Lowdown, providing retailing [00:07.840 --> 00:15.400] bulletins for the commodities market, today's history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.400 --> 00:23.600] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.600 --> 00:29.600] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 close with gold $1,353.22 an ounce. [00:29.600 --> 00:41.280] Over $16.68 an ounce, Texas Crude $65.51 a barrel, Bitcoin $6,902.19, Ethereum $420.80, [00:41.280 --> 00:55.600] Bitcoin Cash $652.90, and finally Litecoins at $114.34 a crypto coin. [00:55.600 --> 01:01.240] Today in History, the year 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act [01:01.240 --> 01:06.080] of 1968, which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, [01:06.080 --> 01:08.000] religion, sex, or national origin. [01:08.000 --> 01:12.640] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial [01:12.640 --> 01:18.360] segregation in public schools, and employment, and public accommodations for places of business. [01:18.360 --> 01:24.000] Today in History. [01:24.000 --> 01:28.160] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to reach new levels after a chemical attack on [01:28.160 --> 01:32.320] civilians in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which [01:32.320 --> 01:36.760] is being blamed on the democratically elected President of Syria Bashar al-Assad by the [01:36.760 --> 01:41.520] United States and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified [01:41.520 --> 01:43.400] evidence as of yet. [01:43.400 --> 01:46.880] President Trump tweeted today, Wednesday, that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down [01:46.880 --> 01:51.240] any and all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice [01:51.240 --> 01:52.960] and new and smart. [01:52.960 --> 01:56.520] Going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partnered with a gas-killing animal who [01:56.520 --> 01:58.640] kills his people and enjoys it. [01:58.640 --> 02:02.680] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [02:02.680 --> 02:06.880] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [02:06.880 --> 02:11.080] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the organization [02:11.080 --> 02:15.680] for the prohibition of chemical weapons to investigate the sign of the chemical slaughter. [02:15.680 --> 02:19.440] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [02:19.440 --> 02:24.040] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [02:24.040 --> 02:28.840] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [02:28.840 --> 02:32.560] notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [02:32.560 --> 02:37.880] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook [02:37.880 --> 02:42.920] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government which has [02:42.920 --> 02:47.160] been fighting terrorists, or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart missile [02:47.160 --> 02:54.160] strike, and then there will be no evidence for international inspectors to look at. [03:17.160 --> 03:31.160] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Rula Law Radio on this Friday, the 14th day of September [03:31.160 --> 03:35.160] 2018. [03:35.160 --> 03:41.560] And I have the input, turning the phones on, we'll have the phones on all night, our call [03:41.560 --> 03:52.040] in number 512-646-1984, if you have a question or a comment, give us a call, and I'll start [03:52.040 --> 03:58.280] a little bit about what we're doing on the electronic lawyer project. [03:58.280 --> 04:03.080] It's beginning to look like within a month or so we'll be able to secure our first round [04:03.080 --> 04:07.640] of funding and get this thing cranked off. [04:07.640 --> 04:16.000] It's been a long time coming, it's been a lot of work, but the pieces are coming together. [04:16.000 --> 04:22.880] I have taken on some operations manager and we're bringing some other members on to the [04:22.880 --> 04:29.120] team so now it's more than just me working on it. [04:29.120 --> 04:33.720] And so far everybody that's looked at it seems to be pretty excited about it and everybody [04:33.720 --> 04:41.760] in the industry who's looked at it sees it as essentially a major project. [04:41.760 --> 04:49.960] So I'm excited about it, we could start changing everything here relatively soon. [04:49.960 --> 04:56.720] And we have a number of people that are going after the courts pretty good. [04:56.720 --> 05:07.840] We have a guy in Tyler who actually got a judge recused. [05:07.840 --> 05:12.360] And for Proce, that almost never happens. [05:12.360 --> 05:18.800] So that was a good sign and he's the one that first got in contact with the Texas Ranger, [05:18.800 --> 05:21.640] the major on the Texas Rangers. [05:21.640 --> 05:27.440] He filed a complaint locally with the Texas Ranger and the ranger refused to even read [05:27.440 --> 05:29.440] it. [05:29.440 --> 05:38.880] So I sent him to find where the headquarters was for Tyler and the headquarters in Garland, [05:38.880 --> 05:40.520] Texas. [05:40.520 --> 05:47.360] And he contacted Garland trying to get the guy's captain but got the major instead which [05:47.360 --> 05:50.400] was much better. [05:50.400 --> 05:57.240] And now he has the major actually looking into it and contacting the lawyers and really [05:57.240 --> 05:58.600] digging into the details. [05:58.600 --> 06:01.920] So we may actually have someone who will function. [06:01.920 --> 06:09.120] And they've got Scott, Scott's about to go after the same major because Scott is in Garland. [06:09.120 --> 06:16.640] So the office where this major is is close by, I suspect him and the major and Scott will [06:16.640 --> 06:21.520] get to know each other pretty well here in the next coming months. [06:21.520 --> 06:26.880] Okay, our call lines are beginning to build up. [06:26.880 --> 06:33.640] We've got, looks like, oh Barnett in Colorado. [06:33.640 --> 06:37.320] Oh, it did me just lose Barnett. [06:37.320 --> 06:39.760] It just dropped off my board. [06:39.760 --> 06:44.240] Let me give it just a moment to refresh the board, see if he comes back. [06:44.240 --> 06:47.560] Oh, yes, there he is. [06:47.560 --> 06:48.560] Okay. [06:48.560 --> 06:53.040] Am I reading that right, Barnett in Colorado? [06:53.040 --> 06:54.040] Hello, Barnett. [06:54.040 --> 06:55.040] Yes, hi. [06:55.040 --> 07:02.000] Yeah, I called you about three weeks ago about this kid that backed into me at a Wal-Mart. [07:02.000 --> 07:03.000] He works at the Wal-Mart. [07:03.000 --> 07:07.040] I don't have a license or insurance, any of that stuff. [07:07.040 --> 07:11.240] I was revoked for a DUI like 10 years ago. [07:11.240 --> 07:19.880] Anyway, so I've been traveling around in this Honda Accord for about a year and I have not [07:19.880 --> 07:21.280] been pulled over yet. [07:21.280 --> 07:30.960] So in August the first, this kid backed into me at the Wal-Mart and he does, I got nested [07:30.960 --> 07:38.480] in on my car and he did 640 bucks worth of damage to it, which is, you know, it's not [07:38.480 --> 07:39.480] bad. [07:39.480 --> 07:49.800] It's just a front bumper, but, you know, well, okay, as the judge, when I go to court and [07:49.800 --> 07:59.920] I go to see this kid for the damage in my car, is the judge going to say, hey, do you [07:59.920 --> 08:04.720] have a driver's license or insurance, because I know the grandmother's going to say something. [08:04.720 --> 08:07.560] Okay, you were in a Wal-Mart parking lot? [08:07.560 --> 08:08.560] Yeah, exactly. [08:08.560 --> 08:09.560] Yes. [08:09.560 --> 08:14.000] I was waiting to pull into a spot and this kid, I was waiting for this kid to... [08:14.000 --> 08:15.000] Objection-relevant. [08:15.000 --> 08:16.000] Objection-irrelevant? [08:16.000 --> 08:28.000] Yeah, object to it as not relevant, because you were not on a public thoroughfare. [08:28.000 --> 08:33.080] But what if these rules are going to be anybody's, you know, sanctions? [08:33.080 --> 08:35.240] The judges will go over their bounds? [08:35.240 --> 08:37.280] Wait, say that again? [08:37.280 --> 08:43.240] What if the judge rules against me anyway, and on the grounds of, well, you shouldn't [08:43.240 --> 08:46.840] have been out there because you don't have a license or insurance? [08:46.840 --> 08:49.960] Criminal charges against the judge. [08:49.960 --> 08:52.880] How do I do that? [08:52.880 --> 08:56.280] Do I go to the bar? [08:56.280 --> 09:03.440] You go on my website on jurismprudence.website. [09:03.440 --> 09:09.000] Click on the Cherokee County link at the top of the page, and it will take you to a bunch [09:09.000 --> 09:12.480] of folders, and one of them is criminal complaints. [09:12.480 --> 09:18.160] In there, I have a huge affidavit and a whole bunch of criminal complaints. [09:18.160 --> 09:22.320] Do you listen to this show much? [09:22.320 --> 09:23.560] I try to. [09:23.560 --> 09:25.520] I don't like it. [09:25.520 --> 09:29.520] I'm not like an every day, every time that you're on listener, but I... [09:29.520 --> 09:32.920] Oh, now you hurt my feelings. [09:32.920 --> 09:36.520] You mean you're not just sitting, waiting for my show to come? [09:36.520 --> 09:37.920] Oh, I'm crushed. [09:37.920 --> 09:42.680] Okay, reason I ask that question is we talk about this all the time. [09:42.680 --> 09:44.400] How do I file criminal complaints? [09:44.400 --> 09:47.480] We got the whole routine down. [09:47.480 --> 10:00.360] You're in Texas, and in Texas, there's a particular law, Article 2.03, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, [10:00.360 --> 10:09.680] which is exempted out from the normal process for a prosecutor when he's made known that [10:09.680 --> 10:12.520] a crime has been committed. [10:12.520 --> 10:22.960] The normal prosecutor process is listed out in 204, 5, and 6, 203, 2.03 specifically [10:22.960 --> 10:32.600] forbids a prosecuting attorney from exercising prosecutorial discretion when it comes to a [10:32.600 --> 10:36.800] complaint against a public official. [10:36.800 --> 10:42.600] Now we know he's going to do that, so we set him up. [10:42.600 --> 10:51.120] So go on that website, Texas as opposed to other states have a specific complaint form. [10:51.120 --> 10:52.840] It's not like the other states. [10:52.840 --> 10:57.920] The other states' complaint forms look like a motion heading. [10:57.920 --> 11:07.800] You've got the plaintiff in a criminal complaint is the state versus whoever the defendant is [11:07.800 --> 11:13.280] on one side, and you're on a line in the middle, and you've got the jurisdiction on the other, [11:13.280 --> 11:18.800] the court, and then in that box, sometimes you have criminal complaint. [11:18.800 --> 11:28.280] Well, Texas, the law says a complaint in Texas shall run in the name of the state of Texas. [11:28.280 --> 11:33.080] So Texas criminal complaint form starts with in the name of and under the authority of [11:33.080 --> 11:40.720] the state of Texas, and then there is a statement that must be in there. [11:40.720 --> 11:50.960] You must state that you have reason to believe and do believe that this certain person on [11:50.960 --> 11:55.880] this day at this time did this thing or that thing or the other thing, and therefore, I [11:55.880 --> 11:59.240] charge the person with violating this criminal act. [11:59.240 --> 12:01.320] That's basically the format. [12:01.320 --> 12:11.280] A criminal complaint is intended to be filed by a non-lawyer, by a lawyer or a citizen. [12:11.280 --> 12:18.800] So the form of the criminal complaint is not specifically controlling. [12:18.800 --> 12:27.640] If you file a criminal complaint and you don't have all of the elements in the complaint, [12:27.640 --> 12:34.520] if you don't have the heading right or you don't have a reason to believe and do believe, [12:34.520 --> 12:38.600] it does not invalidate the criminal complaint. [12:38.600 --> 12:45.000] A prosecuting attorney, when you file a criminal complaint, there's nothing in the law that [12:45.000 --> 12:51.360] actually directs a complaint to a prosecuting attorney, but it's implied that the prosecutor [12:51.360 --> 12:52.360] will get it. [12:52.360 --> 12:59.080] The prosecutor is simply the lawyer for one of the parties, and in this case, the party [12:59.080 --> 13:07.320] he's the lawyer for is the state, and the litigant who is the state engages his lawyer [13:07.320 --> 13:12.680] and gives him the complaint, while the lawyer is to take the complaint and convert it into [13:12.680 --> 13:15.600] an information. [13:15.600 --> 13:24.920] An information is a document that is in the form of a criminal complaint that is in proper [13:24.920 --> 13:27.680] form. [13:27.680 --> 13:32.840] So it will look like a criminal complaint, except the heading will say information instead [13:32.840 --> 13:35.160] of complaint. [13:35.160 --> 13:40.560] So if you have questions about how to do a complaint, and you can't get on the website [13:40.560 --> 13:51.640] at jurisimprudence.website, get any information and change where it says information to complaint, [13:51.640 --> 13:53.800] and you've got the proper form. [13:53.800 --> 14:02.000] Then you file that complaint with the local grand jury, and where you do that is you just [14:02.000 --> 14:09.200] put it in an envelope, put your complaint and your statement of facts, make up an affidavit, [14:09.200 --> 14:15.520] a statement stating what happened, have it signed, have it signed before a notary, have [14:15.520 --> 14:20.800] it notarized, make 12 copies. [14:20.800 --> 14:26.720] One of them has to be the original, but only one, the rest of them can just be photocopies. [14:26.720 --> 14:31.920] On the original, address it to the foreman of the grand jury, and then grand jury one [14:31.920 --> 14:32.920] through 11. [14:32.920 --> 14:41.960] Put them all in an envelope, and put a letter on top of it or postcard with a return stamp [14:41.960 --> 14:46.720] on it, and ask the foreman to initial this postcard and return it to you so you know [14:46.720 --> 14:54.720] that the foreman actually received it because you tend to have trouble with prosecutors [14:54.720 --> 14:58.960] hiding complaints against public officials from grand juris. [14:58.960 --> 15:04.080] You stick that in the envelope, and you mail it to the district attorney's office addressed [15:04.080 --> 15:08.720] to foreman of the grand jury. [15:08.720 --> 15:14.360] Then you wait a week because the prosecutor's going to get that, he's going to open it, [15:14.360 --> 15:19.400] and he's going to throw it in the trash. [15:19.400 --> 15:26.160] The reason for the postcard, if you don't get that postcard back within a week, or if [15:26.160 --> 15:33.160] you're in a small county, if you don't get that postcard back, oh wait, I said you were [15:33.160 --> 15:37.480] in Texas, you're in Colorado. [15:37.480 --> 15:40.280] My bad, I'm talking about Texas law. [15:40.280 --> 15:49.160] I'm not sure if there is the exact same statute in Colorado, but it doesn't make any difference. [15:49.160 --> 15:59.840] If you mail something to a specific person, and someone other than that specific person [15:59.840 --> 16:10.000] intercepts that mail, well that's a felony in the Fed, I think it's 1343 or 1334, I believe [16:10.000 --> 16:16.760] a 43, something like that, it's a mail fraud, or interfering with a public mail. [16:16.760 --> 16:22.480] But it's also shielding from prosecution, if the prosecutor doesn't give it to the grand [16:22.480 --> 16:23.480] jury. [16:23.480 --> 16:29.040] Hang on, we're about to go to break. [16:29.040 --> 16:32.440] This is one of my favorite subjects, so I'll spend a little time on it. [16:32.440 --> 16:39.360] Randy Kelton, we have a lot of radio, our call in number 512-646-1984, we'll have the [16:39.360 --> 16:44.240] phone lines open all night, so it's a four hour show, so if you have a question or comment, [16:44.240 --> 16:51.240] give us a call, we'll be right back. [16:51.240 --> 17:10.320] It's the 2018 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser and Gun Giveaway, sponsored by Central Texas [17:10.320 --> 17:11.320] Gun Works. [17:11.320 --> 17:15.440] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [17:15.440 --> 17:18.920] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:18.920 --> 17:25.680] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [17:25.680 --> 17:28.480] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:28.480 --> 17:34.560] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [17:34.560 --> 17:38.440] Purchase Eddie Craig's Traffic Seminar and get 10 chances to win. [17:38.440 --> 17:42.960] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:42.960 --> 17:47.560] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [17:47.560 --> 17:52.080] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [17:52.080 --> 17:55.280] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:55.280 --> 18:00.720] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [18:00.720 --> 18:06.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [18:06.000 --> 18:09.440] Get debt collectors now with the Michael Mirrors Proven Method. [18:09.440 --> 18:13.800] Michael Mirrors has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [18:13.800 --> 18:14.800] can win, too. [18:14.800 --> 18:19.600] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.600 --> 18:25.360] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons, how to answer [18:25.360 --> 18:30.000] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the [18:30.000 --> 18:34.200] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.200 --> 18:39.320] The Michael Mirrors Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.320 --> 18:41.480] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.480 --> 18:47.000] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirrors banner [18:47.000 --> 18:49.960] or email michaelmirrors at yahoo.com. [18:49.960 --> 18:59.560] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [18:59.560 --> 19:00.560] next. [19:00.560 --> 19:12.240] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetworks.com Okay, we are [19:12.240 --> 19:13.240] back. [19:13.240 --> 19:21.520] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio on this, the 14th day of September 2018, and we're talking [19:21.520 --> 19:27.120] to Barrett and Colorado and Barrett before I go any farther. [19:27.120 --> 19:30.880] Here's a question I need to ask. [19:30.880 --> 19:34.600] How badly do you want to have this fight? [19:34.600 --> 19:42.400] Well, first of all, I'm wondering if the judge is likely to do something like this, like [19:42.400 --> 19:47.880] say, well, you don't have a license or insurance, you didn't have any business being out in [19:47.880 --> 19:48.880] the street. [19:48.880 --> 19:52.720] I don't think that he or he or whatever will pull this. [19:52.720 --> 19:54.920] Hold on, hold on. [19:54.920 --> 19:57.920] Was there a police officer called? [19:57.920 --> 20:04.360] No, no, there wasn't because I told the kid, because I've got this kid's full name, I've [20:04.360 --> 20:09.200] got his full name, correct spelling, I've got his date of birth. [20:09.200 --> 20:14.560] You probably don't have any problems because no one's ever asked you for your license. [20:14.560 --> 20:20.200] Your license never came up and it doesn't have anything to do with this case. [20:20.200 --> 20:28.840] So it's unlikely that will come up, if it does come up, then you have to ask yourself, [20:28.840 --> 20:31.560] do you want to have this fight? [20:31.560 --> 20:39.760] We've got Scott on the line, I'm going to bring Scott in to tell you what's involved [20:39.760 --> 20:41.800] in this fight. [20:41.800 --> 20:54.360] If you start the fight, it could get, and I'm reluctant to, you know, this is what [20:54.360 --> 20:58.920] we do, this is what they show us about, how to go after these guys, how to beat them up, [20:58.920 --> 21:05.320] but I don't want to send somebody out to have this fight when they're vulnerable. [21:05.320 --> 21:11.240] And if you don't have a license and you're driving around without one, and you're not [21:11.240 --> 21:22.000] driving around without one because you choose to, then you might not want to poke the bear. [21:22.000 --> 21:23.000] Right. [21:23.000 --> 21:27.880] Yeah, I'm done, that's also what I'm thinking about. [21:27.880 --> 21:37.000] So, how much are you willing to risk to get this kid to pay for your bumper? [21:37.000 --> 21:44.240] Yeah, I was thinking about that too, because this is a really small town, and I'm thinking [21:44.240 --> 21:51.880] you know, this might draw some attention, maybe if she or he does say, well, you needed [21:51.880 --> 21:56.880] to have a driver's license for, you know, for being a parking lot or whatever. [21:56.880 --> 22:02.800] Maybe I won't want to pick up the fight right there, because it might draw too much attention [22:02.800 --> 22:07.440] and right now I can't get my license, even if I wanted to, because I'm going to vote, [22:07.440 --> 22:10.360] because of a DUI I got ten years ago, in 2009. [22:10.360 --> 22:13.880] Okay, is there only one DUI? [22:13.880 --> 22:18.880] No, no, I've been getting them since 1987. [22:18.880 --> 22:26.800] Oh, okay, because if there was only one, you could get a hardship license, but if there's [22:26.800 --> 22:32.360] more than one, then that's not an option. [22:32.360 --> 22:40.080] So, my suggestion, don't poke this bear. [22:40.080 --> 22:47.760] There are people out there that are doing what I want to see people do, take it on. [22:47.760 --> 22:54.240] For Scott, it's one of them, Scott, will you kind of give Barrett an idea of what he's [22:54.240 --> 22:57.280] getting into if he goes after these people? [22:57.280 --> 23:01.080] Well, can you hear me? [23:01.080 --> 23:02.080] We can hear you. [23:02.080 --> 23:05.200] Okay, okay, okay, because I was getting a little feedback. [23:05.200 --> 23:11.760] Yeah, once you start this, you know, you're going to really start getting involved with [23:11.760 --> 23:12.760] a lot of stuff. [23:12.760 --> 23:20.720] Ironically, I don't know what town in Colorado you live in, but I have a buddy. [23:20.720 --> 23:21.720] What town? [23:21.720 --> 23:26.080] Cortez, Little, about 5,000 people here. [23:26.080 --> 23:32.720] Okay, well, I have a buddy that's in Boulder, Colorado, and I've been teaching, I taught [23:32.720 --> 23:37.520] him a lot of this stuff a couple years ago when I was really getting into it, and he's [23:37.520 --> 23:45.880] a pretty smart fellow, he's an ex-Marine, and he's a pilot, and so once I was telling [23:45.880 --> 23:51.880] him what we're doing down here and, you know, how we're, you know, the big thing that was [23:51.880 --> 23:54.040] going around is the right to travel. [23:54.040 --> 24:00.160] Well, he took the talents off his car and went before, he got a ticket and went before [24:00.160 --> 24:07.680] the judge, the judge cleaned out the courtroom and told him, you absolutely do have a right [24:07.680 --> 24:17.920] to travel and put some kind of thing on his license to where the cops don't pull him over [24:17.920 --> 24:23.520] at all now, and in fact, one time he got pulled over by a cop just to ask him how did he get [24:23.520 --> 24:32.040] this on his license where a judge actually put that restriction on that they could only [24:32.040 --> 24:37.600] pull him over if they caught him in the commission of a felony, and I've been waiting to get [24:37.600 --> 24:45.360] that document from this guy, from a buddy, Matt, and I haven't seen it yet, but he swears [24:45.360 --> 24:51.720] up and down, and he was so excited about it, he went around and started teaching several [24:51.720 --> 24:57.960] other people about it, including his own brother, and so it just happens to be a judge that [24:57.960 --> 25:07.160] was from Texas and he's up there now in Colorado, and from what I understand, he's applying [25:07.160 --> 25:11.120] the law as it is written when it comes to that. [25:11.120 --> 25:17.600] Now, he's real fortunate, and I've got to tell you this one, Randy, Stephen out here [25:17.600 --> 25:27.720] in Rockwall, he just went to court today over in Hunt County, and he was going after, he [25:27.720 --> 25:32.640] was going to fight it all the way, and the prosecutor dismissed it immediately, and the [25:32.640 --> 25:37.560] judge signed off, and he texted me and said, man, I just got out of court, they dismissed [25:37.560 --> 25:45.840] it all, because we've been wearing these people out around here, and going after them [25:45.840 --> 25:53.520] is the only way that you're going to get back any kind of satisfaction for what they've [25:53.520 --> 25:55.480] done to you for a long time now. [25:55.480 --> 26:00.520] Driving drunk is a crime, so you don't want to do it anymore at all. [26:00.520 --> 26:13.200] I get that, I get that, but speeding down the road going 65 and a 45, that's not illegal, [26:13.200 --> 26:18.680] and they want to convince everybody it is, but people don't know the code, and just to [26:18.680 --> 26:24.920] give you an example here in Texas, speed signs, because everybody says, oh, you're speeding, [26:24.920 --> 26:31.440] you're violating that sign on the side of the road, the code for speed signs is 201.904, [26:31.440 --> 26:36.760] I haven't memorized, the Texas Department of Transportation shall erect and maintain [26:36.760 --> 26:42.920] signs on the side of the road for the sole purpose of regulating commercial motor vehicles, [26:42.920 --> 26:50.680] truck tractors, truck tractor trailers, for hauling goods or services or people, aka buses. [26:50.680 --> 26:56.680] Never mention car, never mention the pickup, only commercial vehicle, but that's the thing [26:56.680 --> 27:02.720] about once you start studying this stuff, and it's, you don't learn this stuff overnight, [27:02.720 --> 27:09.440] I'm going to tell you straight up, you're not going to learn it overnight, and even [27:09.440 --> 27:15.600] after a year, just to start learning how to write the documents, Randy taught me a lot, [27:15.600 --> 27:22.880] but he gave me that one that, what was the big one that you have that, when I read that, [27:22.880 --> 27:30.560] I had to read it three times, but once I read it, you could get a feeling for the flow on [27:30.560 --> 27:34.040] how to start putting these things together. [27:34.040 --> 27:36.800] Are you talking about criminal complaints? [27:36.800 --> 27:39.800] No, no, no, no, it was that... [27:39.800 --> 27:41.800] The habeas corpus? [27:41.800 --> 27:51.000] Yeah, the habeas, that's it, and so he has a really long habeas corpus on that site, [27:51.000 --> 27:58.200] and I highly recommend that you go read it, and don't read it once, don't read it twice, [27:58.200 --> 28:07.360] read it three, maybe even four times, until it will sink, and once you start to understand [28:07.360 --> 28:12.760] it, and then you can start to see the pattern, the pattern will emerge, you just have to [28:12.760 --> 28:16.040] really pay attention, and once you get it, boom. [28:16.040 --> 28:22.840] Now, once you start to go after these people, it's a long, arduous fight, because here in [28:22.840 --> 28:32.920] Texas, they're as crooked as a dog's hind leg, okay, and to get any room in Colorado, [28:32.920 --> 28:33.920] you can't. [28:33.920 --> 28:40.080] I mean, we're having to fight these guys to the nail, but just like Steven today, he [28:40.080 --> 28:45.960] got one dismiss, and I was really impressed, because I've been showing him a lie. [28:45.960 --> 28:52.760] Hold on a second, this is the pattern we've seen. [28:52.760 --> 28:58.240] When you go after them, they will fight you tooth and nail, they'll do every stupid ignorant [28:58.240 --> 29:04.000] thing they can, and you go back after them, they'll still keep fighting you, and when [29:04.000 --> 29:10.200] you're done, and somebody else comes in behind you, they'll do just like they did today, [29:10.200 --> 29:17.240] and say, we do not want to go there again, so think while you're in the fight that you're [29:17.240 --> 29:27.720] not having an effect, you are, because, well, Scott, how many bar grievances did you file? [29:27.720 --> 29:33.560] I filed so many, I brought them over and showed Randy, and the stack must have been ever bit [29:33.560 --> 29:41.080] of four inches thick, at the least amount, and I still had some over here, I bar grieved [29:41.080 --> 29:49.120] district attorneys into the stone age, and judicial conducts on judges, I sent so many [29:49.120 --> 29:55.200] of them, I got tons of them things back, and they would have smartened up and said, you [29:55.200 --> 30:02.240] know what, just get out of here and dismiss, and they still... [30:02.240 --> 30:06.480] Did you spend the entire day watching store surveillance videos, if you didn't have to? [30:06.480 --> 30:11.240] I didn't think so, but some people apparently would, and they'll even pay for the privilege. [30:11.240 --> 30:17.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back to tell you about video voyeurs. [30:17.120 --> 30:18.680] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.680 --> 30:23.080] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again, and once your privacy [30:23.080 --> 30:28.520] is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too, so protect your rights, say [30:28.520 --> 30:33.840] no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself, privacy, it's worth hanging [30:33.840 --> 30:34.840] on to. [30:34.840 --> 30:39.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:39.120 --> 30:42.640] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.640 --> 30:45.720] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.720 --> 30:50.320] Imagine sitting in the corner of a store, watching people buy the same products day after [30:50.320 --> 30:51.320] boring day. [30:51.320 --> 30:56.760] That's the life of the average security camera, yawn, but a British company called Internet [30:56.760 --> 31:00.280] Eyes gets people to pay to watch these video streams. [31:00.280 --> 31:05.160] They pay around 20 bucks, then members log on to watch UK stores and streets for criminal [31:05.160 --> 31:09.720] activity, hoping to win a monthly prize for being the most eagle-eyed. [31:09.720 --> 31:13.880] The plan is revolting, but it really went sour when members started posting YouTube [31:13.880 --> 31:15.880] videos of the unsuspecting shoppers. [31:15.880 --> 31:20.240] It's what you'd expect from the sort of person who enjoys watching surveillance cameras [31:20.240 --> 31:21.600] in the first place. [31:21.600 --> 31:23.160] Some people really need to get a life. [31:23.160 --> 31:28.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:53.160 --> 32:12.880] We're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.880 --> 32:15.680] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [32:15.680 --> 32:19.920] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.920 --> 32:23.800] Public courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:23.800 --> 32:25.680] our rights through due process. [32:25.680 --> 32:29.160] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.160 --> 32:32.920] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:32.920 --> 32:35.320] is and how to hold courts to the rule law. [32:35.320 --> 32:39.320] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to rulelawradio.com and [32:39.320 --> 32:40.640] ordering your copy today. [32:40.640 --> 32:43.960] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:43.960 --> 32:47.600] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:47.600 --> 32:50.720] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.720 --> 32:54.720] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from rulelawradio.com. [32:54.720 --> 33:03.720] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:03.720 --> 33:22.720] We're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:22.720 --> 33:23.720] Okay we are back. [33:23.720 --> 33:28.920] Randy Kelton, Rule Law Radio and that's Scott. [33:28.920 --> 33:32.320] He ran off the cliff again. [33:32.320 --> 33:33.880] I'm getting good at it. [33:33.880 --> 33:40.040] Yeah, I accused you of that last night and therefore it was all over me, blame me for [33:40.040 --> 33:41.040] it. [33:41.040 --> 33:49.160] Okay, go ahead, you were talking about the bar greasing the prosecutors into the Stone [33:49.160 --> 33:50.160] Age. [33:50.160 --> 33:57.200] Oh yeah, I bar grieve these guys all the way, six ways from Sunday. [33:57.200 --> 34:05.840] I have judicial conducts on judges and oh man gave them a, now here's a real hoot when [34:05.840 --> 34:14.680] you really want to get something going is generally I've had to call 9-1-1 on the cops. [34:14.680 --> 34:21.720] Now that is really interesting and here's another little trick, always here's what you [34:21.720 --> 34:24.120] always got to think about. [34:24.120 --> 34:32.800] You're always looking to set these guys up, okay and so once you get in the mindset of [34:32.800 --> 34:42.360] where you're setting them up, they'll always fall into a trap because you have a certain [34:42.360 --> 34:45.600] place in their playbook, okay. [34:45.600 --> 34:53.360] So just like when you get pulled over by a cop or something or a cop is harassing you [34:53.360 --> 34:59.960] or some, ask them for their ID and you want to see their physical ID, well naturally they're [34:59.960 --> 35:05.920] going to point at their name tag says, you see my name tagged there smarty, I ain't showing [35:05.920 --> 35:09.760] you nothing, that's all you get, well guess what? [35:09.760 --> 35:16.680] Now he's withholding his own information, he's the custodian of his own records and [35:16.680 --> 35:22.680] that's technically tampering with the government document, also obstruction, then you whip [35:22.680 --> 35:28.720] out your phone, call 9-1-1, say I need the sheriff to come out here and arrest this joker [35:28.720 --> 35:35.280] because he's a committed obstruction, wouldn't even show his ID to me. [35:35.280 --> 35:40.600] So you've got to always be thinking ahead on some of this stuff and it's a learning [35:40.600 --> 35:46.200] curve and it's a steep one, I'm not going to lie to you and a lot of times you get real [35:46.200 --> 35:51.920] nervous and you'll even get kind of scared, so because especially when they kind of start [35:51.920 --> 35:56.560] ganging up on you and I had that happen, I've had a cop just damn near threatening to shoot [35:56.560 --> 36:03.440] me in the head over in Mesquite, you know he made the allegation of a person could get [36:03.440 --> 36:11.800] shot in the head, well I got criminal charges on him and I'm fixing to go be visiting the [36:11.800 --> 36:17.640] Texas Rangers and were you bringing it, talking about me saying that I'm fixing to be on first [36:17.640 --> 36:20.000] name basis with the Texas Rangers? [36:20.000 --> 36:28.840] Yeah I was, well guess what, I called him today and I already made contact with the [36:28.840 --> 36:34.640] man and he didn't, he wasn't there, I talked to his secretary, she was real nice, I said [36:34.640 --> 36:39.480] well I didn't figure I'd get to talk to him today you know because it's Friday afternoon [36:39.480 --> 36:44.040] and all, so why don't you just tell him you know he can call me, she said well I haven't [36:44.040 --> 36:49.000] called you back, I said yeah just tell him to call me next week you know and we'll set [36:49.000 --> 36:55.320] up a time, well I took off and went to the gym and a lieutenant called and left a message [36:55.320 --> 37:04.120] saying he had gotten word that he needed to call me, so obviously the major put in a call [37:04.120 --> 37:09.240] to the lieutenant saying to call this guy and find out what's going on, he's running [37:09.240 --> 37:16.160] interference already, well my business is not with the lieutenant, it's with the major [37:16.160 --> 37:21.960] and so I'm going straight to the major and I'm going to talk to them and I'm going to [37:21.960 --> 37:31.160] start presenting criminal complaints for police chiefs that refuse to answer information [37:31.160 --> 37:36.160] request and that's another thing you got to start doing, they start doing information [37:36.160 --> 37:40.800] request on their authority and stuff like this and it's like I say this is all learning [37:40.800 --> 37:46.640] curve, I've been working at this for damn near five years and I've been under Randy's [37:46.640 --> 37:54.160] wing for quite some time and I do tune in almost every time the show is on, I recommend [37:54.160 --> 37:58.000] you do the same thing because you're going to pick up little nuggets here and there and [37:58.000 --> 38:05.240] that's the whole thing, so be paying attention and just start thinking about how you want [38:05.240 --> 38:12.120] to craft some of this stuff, now you going after some boy because he ran into your car, [38:12.120 --> 38:17.320] well you know what, it'll be a good learning curve for you and I'm not going to tell you [38:17.320 --> 38:21.760] not to do it, I'm not going to tell you to do it, you just do whatever you think you [38:21.760 --> 38:22.760] need to do. [38:22.760 --> 38:29.720] I'm kind of reluctant because this is a small town and it's like the cops, they know everybody [38:29.720 --> 38:34.440] and it's like I don't want to be known because I do drive travel around in this town. [38:34.440 --> 38:41.040] Well, you're going to have to deal with that sooner or later, you're going to run into [38:41.040 --> 38:47.840] them or they're going to run into you, so I mean you're obviously in a small town, [38:47.840 --> 38:51.200] you don't think they don't see you already if it's that small? [38:51.200 --> 38:53.880] I'm pretty sure they probably do. [38:53.880 --> 39:00.640] They never stopped him, they may not have run his license and may not realize he doesn't [39:00.640 --> 39:10.400] have one yet, so it might not be a good idea to poke the bear when you're vulnerable. [39:10.400 --> 39:16.840] Well and the only reason you're vulnerable is because you don't know what you're doing [39:16.840 --> 39:21.200] and if you go out there and start poking the bear and you have no clue what you're doing [39:21.200 --> 39:26.400] and you're not prepared to go all the way because you're not educated on this stuff, [39:26.400 --> 39:33.400] you're going to step off in a hole you ain't going to get out of. [39:33.400 --> 39:40.520] I kind of want to know where to start, there's a man in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, I've known [39:40.520 --> 39:46.880] about him for about 10 years, he's got this plate and it says, it has his name on the [39:46.880 --> 39:53.200] back of it, Deloitte, Deloitte is his name and below that there's a number, about a 15 [39:53.200 --> 39:55.760] digit number, below that. [39:55.760 --> 40:01.480] I think his name is Deloitte Scott, he re-broadcasts our show in Coeur d'Alene. [40:01.480 --> 40:07.080] Yeah he does, he does and I've talked to him before but he said that he paid like a thousand [40:07.080 --> 40:12.120] dollars for this information and he wanted me to give him a couple hundred, three, four [40:12.120 --> 40:16.080] hundred bucks or something for that information, I just said, I want that plate, I want to [40:16.080 --> 40:23.800] get that plate and I was just like, man, wait a minute, hold on, it had a number on it, [40:23.800 --> 40:27.720] about eight digit number? [40:27.720 --> 40:33.880] It was like a 16 digit number below his name, it was like a government issued plate but [40:33.880 --> 40:36.720] it wasn't metal, it was like plastic or something. [40:36.720 --> 40:47.440] Okay the only number I can imagine that would have any significance would be a DOT number [40:47.440 --> 40:56.240] and you can go on the DOT website and register under DOT. [40:56.240 --> 41:05.240] You can register as a private operator not in commerce and as a private operator not [41:05.240 --> 41:08.960] in commerce, you don't need a license. [41:08.960 --> 41:13.480] Well how can I do this, where do I, how much is it going to cost me, should I buy the, [41:13.480 --> 41:20.440] No, remember it doesn't cost you anything, you just go in there and fill it out, however, [41:20.440 --> 41:24.400] if you, do you have plates on your car? [41:24.400 --> 41:34.520] I do, I have my original Arizona plates and they're good until 2020, okay, they're good [41:34.520 --> 41:38.760] for about a year and a half now, they're good for about a year and a half now, I would suggest [41:38.760 --> 41:50.440] do not poke, do not poke despair, don't put a DOT number, don't put a plate with a DOT [41:50.440 --> 41:59.480] number on it because regardless of the rights you have, if they pull you over, if you put [41:59.480 --> 42:06.920] something on your vehicle that gets their attention, they're likely to pull you over [42:06.920 --> 42:13.720] and when they do, they're going to land on you like a ton of bricks. [42:13.720 --> 42:24.760] Good chance you'll go to jail and I don't want people going to jail and I would be remiss [42:24.760 --> 42:32.200] to ask you to help me achieve my agenda, if in doing so you would risk your liberty. [42:32.200 --> 42:37.960] But should I go ahead and attempt to take this kid to court and hope that the judge [42:37.960 --> 42:44.480] doesn't say, well, you should have had a license and I would suggest you take him to court [42:44.480 --> 42:53.400] and ask him $4,000 and then call him up and say, look, I don't really want to go to court [42:53.400 --> 42:58.480] and most cases are settled out of court. [42:58.480 --> 43:06.000] If you'll just send me $600, I'll drop this and we all go home. [43:06.000 --> 43:12.960] Good chance he'll change you to $600 rather than having to go to court with you and get [43:12.960 --> 43:19.840] an attorney because he's probably going to be as ignorant of the law and the procedures [43:19.840 --> 43:20.840] as you are. [43:20.840 --> 43:27.360] He's going to have to look at going and hiring a lawyer and ask her to cost him $15,000. [43:27.360 --> 43:33.560] So he's going to feel like he doesn't have a chance in court and good chance you'll get [43:33.560 --> 43:41.760] him to make a deal and everybody goes home and nobody goes to court. [43:41.760 --> 43:47.680] If you do have to go to court, you can move to court to rule on your pleadings and object [43:47.680 --> 43:48.680] or an argument. [43:48.680 --> 43:53.320] That probably won't work in a JP court, but it's unlikely they're going to ask you for [43:53.320 --> 44:01.240] a driver's license because in this case, it's really not relevant. [44:01.240 --> 44:04.760] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.760 --> 44:09.160] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:09.160 --> 44:13.040] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality [44:13.040 --> 44:14.640] coins and precious metals. 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[44:51.440 --> 44:54.440] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.440 --> 44:59.440] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-644-0. [44:59.440 --> 45:04.440] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.440 --> 45:10.440] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD [45:10.440 --> 45:15.440] course that will show you how, in 24 hours, you death by step. [45:15.440 --> 45:19.440] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.440 --> 45:23.440] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.440 --> 45:28.440] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.440 --> 45:34.440] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.440 --> 45:39.440] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.440 --> 45:43.440] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.440 --> 45:49.440] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.440 --> 45:52.440] prose tactics, and much more. [45:52.440 --> 45:56.440] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.440 --> 46:20.440] Our courts hold free 866-LAW-EASY. [46:20.440 --> 46:22.440] Okay, we are back. [46:22.440 --> 46:29.440] I'm Randy Kelton, the rule of law radio, and we're talking to Barrett and Scott. [46:29.440 --> 46:34.440] So, Barrett, I'm going to suggest just to see if you can... [46:34.440 --> 46:40.440] You might do this with a tort letter and never get to court. [46:40.440 --> 46:50.440] The courts request that you not use the court as the remedy of first resort, [46:50.440 --> 46:54.440] but rather use the court as the remedy of last resort. [46:54.440 --> 47:03.440] They ask you to exercise administrative remedy before you come to the court. [47:03.440 --> 47:10.440] And the remedy, the general standard remedy is notice an opportunity. [47:10.440 --> 47:14.440] You send a letter and give notice that you've been harmed. [47:14.440 --> 47:18.440] You give notice that you've been harmed in this amount. [47:18.440 --> 47:23.440] And tell them, make me hold you be sued. [47:23.440 --> 47:30.440] So, you charge them for the damage to your vehicle and the time it took you to have the vehicle fixed [47:30.440 --> 47:33.440] and the time you spent without a vehicle. [47:33.440 --> 47:37.440] So, you ask for more money than you want. [47:37.440 --> 47:38.440] And then you... [47:38.440 --> 47:39.440] Okay, here's... [47:39.440 --> 47:41.440] I don't have an address on this kid. [47:41.440 --> 47:46.440] I've got his full name, his date of birth, his social security number, his phone number. [47:46.440 --> 47:52.440] He wasn't getting his address, but I didn't think I was going to have to sue this kid, go after him. [47:52.440 --> 47:54.440] So, but... [47:54.440 --> 48:02.440] But in a Walmart employee, Walmart parking lot, sue Walmart. [48:02.440 --> 48:05.440] Send the tort letter to Walmart. [48:05.440 --> 48:08.440] How long ago was this? [48:08.440 --> 48:12.440] This happened on August 1st at about three o'clock in the afternoon. [48:12.440 --> 48:14.440] So, the kids probably still working there. [48:14.440 --> 48:20.440] So, send a notice to Walmart of your intent to sue. [48:20.440 --> 48:23.440] Or have you ever seen the kid in there since then? [48:23.440 --> 48:26.440] First, if they'll give me his address. [48:26.440 --> 48:29.440] Wait, say that again? [48:29.440 --> 48:32.440] Well, shouldn't I just ask them first if they'll give me... [48:32.440 --> 48:34.440] If Walmart will give me this kid's address? [48:34.440 --> 48:35.440] That's what I was going to say. [48:35.440 --> 48:39.440] If you've seen him in there, you might be able to just go hand it to him. [48:39.440 --> 48:46.440] Or you could go to the service department and tell them that you're in an accident and one of your employees backed into my car. [48:46.440 --> 48:49.440] And I need an address so I can serve him. [48:49.440 --> 48:55.440] And I need an address for Walmart so I can serve Walmart. [48:55.440 --> 49:03.440] When you tell them you're going to serve Walmart, they're going to get a lot more easy to get along with. [49:03.440 --> 49:06.440] And yeah, they might just give it to you. [49:06.440 --> 49:09.440] Or ask them if you can serve him here. [49:09.440 --> 49:16.440] And I don't have his personal address, but if I can get the letter to him, a notice to him here, [49:16.440 --> 49:21.440] that would be just as fine in case you don't want to give out his personal address. [49:21.440 --> 49:25.440] And record it. [49:25.440 --> 49:29.440] But if you tell them that you're accusing Walmart as well, [49:29.440 --> 49:39.440] then they will probably want to get the liability onto this kid and off Walmart and not want Walmart to be sued. [49:39.440 --> 49:42.440] But only do that if they're reluctant. [49:42.440 --> 49:50.440] You know, ask for his address first so you can send him this notice that the amount of damages and if they are reluctant, [49:50.440 --> 49:57.440] then you ask them for the lawyers for Walmart because you want to send them one as well. [49:57.440 --> 50:00.440] And they might get a little easier to get along with. [50:00.440 --> 50:05.440] You might be able to do this without going to court. [50:05.440 --> 50:07.440] Ask for their lawyers. [50:07.440 --> 50:08.440] Yeah. [50:08.440 --> 50:09.440] Okay. [50:09.440 --> 50:15.440] See, you know, if I can't get hold of this kid, then it's one of your employees in your parking lot, [50:15.440 --> 50:19.440] so then I'll serve Walmart instead. [50:19.440 --> 50:23.440] And they'll say, oh, wait a minute, wait a minute, let me get a manager. [50:23.440 --> 50:26.440] I think we can help. [50:26.440 --> 50:27.440] Okay. [50:27.440 --> 50:30.440] Well, thank you. [50:30.440 --> 50:31.440] Okay. [50:31.440 --> 50:32.440] Thank you, Barrett. [50:32.440 --> 50:34.440] And be careful. [50:34.440 --> 50:36.440] It can get rough out there. [50:36.440 --> 50:37.440] Okay. [50:37.440 --> 50:39.440] Now we're going to go to Scott. [50:39.440 --> 50:44.440] Okay, Scott, what have you been up to? [50:44.440 --> 50:57.440] Well, I could say I made a first contact with the ranger today and I just was kind of putting a little feeler out there, telling them I want to have a meeting with them next week. [50:57.440 --> 51:13.440] And what I want to do is go ahead and give them a criminal complaint on a police chief that was withholding an information request and see exactly what he's going to do. [51:13.440 --> 51:16.440] And just kind of feeling out a little bit. [51:16.440 --> 51:32.440] But ultimately my main goal is if I can get before him, I want to really just kind of have a heart to heart with him and just say, you know, there's going to be some people that are, you know, we're in this movement to try to do some legal reform. [51:32.440 --> 51:47.440] And, you know, they're probably going to send some criminal complaints directly to you and you're going to wind up throwing them in the trash and then they're going to file criminal complaints on you and they're just going to run it up the flagpole. [51:47.440 --> 51:51.440] Let me make a suggestion. [51:51.440 --> 52:09.440] You might say that when the legislature gave the public integrity unit to the Texas Rangers, that you thought that this was the best idea they could have come up with. [52:09.440 --> 52:19.440] Because Texas Rangers are, as far as you're concerned, the elite policing agency in the state of Texas. [52:19.440 --> 52:29.440] Then they tied your hands by forcing you to have to go to a prosecuting attorney to get their permission so you could do your job. [52:29.440 --> 52:33.440] We think that's a problem and we want to fix it. [52:33.440 --> 52:39.440] We want the Texas Rangers to be out from under the thumb of prosecuting attorneys. [52:39.440 --> 52:43.440] And this is how we're going to do it. [52:43.440 --> 52:55.440] We're filing criminal complaints against public officials with prosecuting attorneys and the prosecuting attorneys are shielding those complaints from the grand jury. [52:55.440 --> 53:00.440] Even though the law commands them to give it to the grand jury, they're not doing it. [53:00.440 --> 53:07.440] So then we'll come to you with criminal complaints against the prosecuting attorney. [53:07.440 --> 53:11.440] And we want to see what you do with it. [53:11.440 --> 53:25.440] Now, you're going to take that criminal complaint against prosecuting attorney to the prosecuting attorney and ask him if you can investigate the prosecutor himself. [53:25.440 --> 53:30.440] If you do that, we'll consider that criminal conspiracy to commit. [53:30.440 --> 53:49.440] And criminal complaints of that nature have already been filed in Wise County against the Texas Ranger who took complaints against a district judge to a district attorney instead of to a grand jury or to some magistrate the way the law commands him to do. [53:49.440 --> 53:53.440] So ask him, what are you going to do? [53:53.440 --> 53:55.440] Are you going to file a protocol? [53:55.440 --> 54:01.440] Because if you file a protocol, then we'll be filing against you personally. [54:01.440 --> 54:04.440] And we would rather not do that. [54:04.440 --> 54:08.440] And the major is going to have the colonels here. [54:08.440 --> 54:19.440] And the colonel is not going to want you coming after him with dead bang black letter law. [54:19.440 --> 54:26.440] So tell him why you're here and see what he says. [54:26.440 --> 54:29.440] That's exactly what I was getting to. [54:29.440 --> 54:30.440] You put it perfectly. [54:30.440 --> 54:43.440] In fact, you even put it a little bit better because once we blame everything on the legislature and say, oh, well, the other legislature gave you this access to do so. [54:43.440 --> 54:44.440] But hold on. [54:44.440 --> 54:48.440] It wasn't the legislature that did that. [54:48.440 --> 55:02.440] The legislature gave it to the Rangers and directed the Rangers or the Department of Public Safety to develop a protocol. [55:02.440 --> 55:06.440] And it was the Rangers who developed this protocol. [55:06.440 --> 55:08.440] And here's the reason. [55:08.440 --> 55:29.440] Prior to this, a Texas Ranger could only investigate if he could not take a criminal complaint against a public official or investigate a complaint against a public official without the express written permission of the Director of the Department of Public Safety himself. [55:29.440 --> 55:46.440] They had this under political control and when the legislature gave exclusive power to investigate public officials to the Texas Rangers, they told the DPS to develop a protocol. [55:46.440 --> 55:53.440] Well, it looked like they were going to lose political control. [55:53.440 --> 56:00.440] So they came up with this scheme since the Ranger was given direct authority. [56:00.440 --> 56:05.440] The Director could no longer prevent them from doing their job. [56:05.440 --> 56:09.440] There's actually law to prevent him from doing that. [56:09.440 --> 56:17.440] So they came up with another scheme so they could regain political control of prosecutions. [56:17.440 --> 56:23.440] And explain that to the Rangers. This is all the doing of the DPS. [56:23.440 --> 56:26.440] And the DPS could change this. [56:26.440 --> 56:28.440] This is not law. [56:28.440 --> 56:39.440] This is protocol put in place by the DPS that will get you prosecuted if you follow that protocol. [56:39.440 --> 56:58.440] Okay, now I see. I didn't realize that was that was procedure that the DPS is supposed to create to be able to do their job as a legislature to deem them to give them authority to do. [56:58.440 --> 57:03.440] Yeah, and you can explain to him, we understand that these were the higher ups. [57:03.440 --> 57:13.440] These were guys trying to maintain political control. So they put you guys in front of the bus. [57:13.440 --> 57:20.440] That's perfect. That is absolutely perfect. That was the whole thing I wanted to do. [57:20.440 --> 57:23.440] I didn't want to go in there and pick a fight with the Ranger. [57:23.440 --> 57:34.440] I wanted to go in there and show him this is what you have the authority to do. And I want to make sure that you do it according to the authority. [57:34.440 --> 57:44.440] Now, if you have to create a procedure to do this, well, by all means, that is what you were granted authority to do. [57:44.440 --> 57:57.440] Now, where is this procedure and how are you going to follow this or are you going to create something that's going to actually adhere to what the legislature granted you the authority to do? [57:57.440 --> 58:05.440] That's what we need. You need to give the major plausible deniability. [58:05.440 --> 58:15.440] If he has plausible deniability, he can move ahead for the purpose of protecting his Rangers. That's his job. [58:15.440 --> 58:20.440] He's their major. He's there to look out after them. [58:20.440 --> 58:31.440] And when you demonstrate that the higher ups are putting all of his Rangers in professional jeopardy, now you've put him on a political dime. [58:31.440 --> 58:40.440] Are you going to throw your Rangers under the bus or are you going to put the pressure on the colonels? [58:40.440 --> 58:42.440] That's perfect. [58:42.440 --> 58:49.440] Hang on. Not to go to break. Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. [58:49.440 --> 58:53.440] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.440 --> 59:01.440] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.440 --> 59:06.440] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:06.440 --> 59:13.440] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.440 --> 59:18.440] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.440 --> 59:27.440] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.440 --> 59:40.440] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.440 --> 59:49.440] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.440 --> 59:59.440] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.440 --> 01:00:10.440] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown, providing your daily bulletins for the commodity market. [01:00:10.440 --> 01:00:22.440] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:22.440 --> 01:00:34.440] Markets for the 11th of April 2018 close with gold $1,353.22 an ounce, silver $16.68 an ounce, Texas crude $65.51 a barrel, [01:00:34.440 --> 01:00:48.440] bitcoins at $6,902.19, ethereum at $420.80, bitcoin cash at $652.90, and finally light coins at $114.34 a crypto coin. [01:00:48.440 --> 01:01:01.440] Today in history, the year 1968, President Lyndon M. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968, [01:01:01.440 --> 01:01:07.440] which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin. [01:01:07.440 --> 01:01:13.440] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation in public schools, [01:01:13.440 --> 01:01:18.440] in employment and public accommodations for places of business. [01:01:18.440 --> 01:01:23.440] Today in history. [01:01:23.440 --> 01:01:29.440] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to have reached new levels after a chemical attack on civilians in the city of Douma, [01:01:29.440 --> 01:01:34.440] which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which is being blamed on the democratically elected president of Syria, [01:01:34.440 --> 01:01:42.440] Bashar al-Assad, by the United States and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified evidence as of yet. [01:01:42.440 --> 01:01:48.440] President Trump tweeted today, Wednesday, that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down any and all missiles fired at Syria, [01:01:48.440 --> 01:01:52.440] get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice and new and smart. [01:01:52.440 --> 01:01:58.440] Going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing animal who kills his people and enjoys it. [01:01:58.440 --> 01:02:06.440] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [01:02:06.440 --> 01:02:15.440] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the organization for the prohibition of chemical weapons to investigate the side of the chemical slaughter. [01:02:15.440 --> 01:02:20.440] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil war, [01:02:20.440 --> 01:02:27.440] a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, [01:02:27.440 --> 01:02:32.440] with ISIS being one of the more notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [01:02:32.440 --> 01:02:40.440] No surprise, then, why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists [01:02:40.440 --> 01:02:44.440] and not at a legitimate government, which has been fighting terrorists. [01:02:44.440 --> 01:02:51.440] Or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart missile strike, and then there will be no evidence for international inspectors to look at? [01:02:51.440 --> 01:03:15.440] This was Brooke Rody with your lowdown for April 11, 2018. [01:03:15.440 --> 01:03:22.440] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Reel of Law Radio, and we went out on a really high note. [01:03:22.440 --> 01:03:28.440] You were saying how I was absolutely perfect in every way. Something like that. [01:03:28.440 --> 01:03:37.440] Yeah, it was something like that. I thought you'd fall off the cliff and you made it too, so yeah, you actually were on a roll that time. [01:03:37.440 --> 01:03:41.440] Thank you for sucking me and trying to get me to fall off the cliff. [01:03:41.440 --> 01:03:52.440] Yeah, well, no, but what you were stating was absolutely correct, and it's perfect because this is exactly... [01:03:52.440 --> 01:04:04.440] I've read Trump's part of the deal. I don't know if you've read it yet, but the only thing that I really gleaned out of that was Trump is always talking up everything. [01:04:04.440 --> 01:04:14.440] If you notice, he's always talking highly positive about everything, and he only mentions a negative when it can be used as a positive, [01:04:14.440 --> 01:04:21.440] and that's what I've been using over the past few weeks now is just kind of going after everything in a super positive light, [01:04:21.440 --> 01:04:29.440] edifying everybody and kind of buttering their bread, just like I did you, and see how well it worked. [01:04:29.440 --> 01:04:34.440] Hey, are you saying you were manipulating me? [01:04:34.440 --> 01:04:40.440] I think I just did, but that's the whole thing. [01:04:40.440 --> 01:04:45.440] You wanted to manipulate me by implying that I'm perfect. That worked. [01:04:45.440 --> 01:04:51.440] Yeah, and it worked. You fell for it hook, line, and stinker. [01:04:51.440 --> 01:05:03.440] You know, I've been dealing with these guys a long time, and what I found is, if you will craft your position such that you say, [01:05:03.440 --> 01:05:17.440] yeah, I know I'm going to have to kick your behind. I hate to have to kick your behind, but I'm going to kick your behind in order to make your life better at the end of the day. [01:05:17.440 --> 01:05:28.440] You put them in a position to where it's hard for them to vilify you or to villainize you. [01:05:28.440 --> 01:05:37.440] You know, you've been there with me, and I always joke with these guys, and I'm always upbeat, and then I hammer them. [01:05:37.440 --> 01:05:51.440] Well, it's hard for them to say that I'm angry or agitated, a troublemaker, because they can't get me to react negatively to them. [01:05:51.440 --> 01:06:05.440] And Scott, I think you're getting it. You're realizing how easy that is to do once you realize that they're trying to spin you in a negative light. [01:06:05.440 --> 01:06:11.440] And when you take that spin and turn it back on them, they just don't know how to deal with it. [01:06:11.440 --> 01:06:25.440] And always think, how do I give my victim plausible deniability? How do I give him a way out that leads me toward my intended outcome? [01:06:25.440 --> 01:06:36.440] No, sitting in with you when you went to court a few times, it was really a good learning curve in a lot of ways. [01:06:36.440 --> 01:06:47.440] And I picked that up, and I used it, because when I went to court the last time here in Garland, even though they gave me the traditional railroad, [01:06:47.440 --> 01:06:57.440] they were so impressed that they were saying how nice I was and how professional and all this other stuff. [01:06:57.440 --> 01:07:07.440] And it was the best court appearance I ever had, and trust me, I had some ugly one. [01:07:07.440 --> 01:07:19.440] I mean, ugly one. But I'm using that now, and here's the thing I'm always doing, and I learned this, too, along the way, [01:07:19.440 --> 01:07:26.440] was how to diffuse things, and now what I'm getting real good at is flipping the conversation back on them. [01:07:26.440 --> 01:07:37.440] And that's what I've been practicing over the last, probably almost a year now is taking a conversation and flipping that conversation back, [01:07:37.440 --> 01:07:49.440] and that's really helped, too. So there's a lot of things that you have to kind of learn and use and adjust on the fly, [01:07:49.440 --> 01:07:58.440] but you always maintain that certain amount of professionalism, and so you're always calm. [01:07:58.440 --> 01:08:06.440] And that was one of the things that I noticed about you is how calm you were in all these situations. [01:08:06.440 --> 01:08:16.440] I mean, you would never get rattled, you'd never get excited. In fact, you would crack jokes at them, and that really not only did it diffuse them, [01:08:16.440 --> 01:08:24.440] it also, they didn't know how to react to some of it, even if it was corny, and it all was even funny. [01:08:24.440 --> 01:08:31.440] But, you know, they couldn't really laugh, even though they wanted to laugh, and so, oh, it just takes everything and just throws out to win it, [01:08:31.440 --> 01:08:35.440] because the last time we were at your deal over at Holland Park, I'm waving to the judge, [01:08:35.440 --> 01:08:52.440] Bob, he's waving back. I'm like, wow, this is cool. Yeah, that was when I asked the judge to arrest the prosecuting attorney for not providing discovery within 20 days of trial. [01:08:52.440 --> 01:08:59.440] Oh, and the looks on their faces when I did that was absolutely priceless. [01:08:59.440 --> 01:09:11.440] And then the prosecutor went out and checked the record, and I had somehow omitted that file when I filed my documents with the court. [01:09:11.440 --> 01:09:22.440] So he showed it to me, and they reconvened the court, and I stood up and said, your honor, I come before the court red faced. [01:09:22.440 --> 01:09:33.440] He said, what? Well, it seems I made this minor little blunder. [01:09:33.440 --> 01:09:44.440] So what it does is it lets them know that you're not the least bit intimidated by these guys. [01:09:44.440 --> 01:10:04.440] There's nothing they can throw at you that you're worried about. The judge told me that if he wanted me to bring in proof that I had registered my vehicle, [01:10:04.440 --> 01:10:14.440] and I said, well, I don't want to. Well, Mr. Kelton, if you do that, I will dismiss the case. I know, but I don't want you to dismiss it. [01:10:14.440 --> 01:10:26.440] Well, why not? I said, I want to appeal it. Oh, Mr. Kelton. So I went ahead and let him dismiss that and kept a speeding one. [01:10:26.440 --> 01:10:35.440] He told me if I would agree to something, they would drop all the charges and charge me a minor amount, and I refused, and they couldn't believe it, [01:10:35.440 --> 01:10:44.440] until they realized that I'm setting you guys up for appeal. I said, I'm just using you to get past you to the appellate court. [01:10:44.440 --> 01:11:02.440] And I have found that that neutralizes them more than anything I've ever done. I was in Johnson County and wanted to see the morning registration hearings. [01:11:02.440 --> 01:11:16.440] And they sent to this reception and said, well, you can't see those. I said, ma'am, don't tell me that. I said, well, I have to tell you this. And no, no, no, no, no. Get your boss to tell me that. [01:11:16.440 --> 01:11:28.440] I'm going to take somebody to the grand jury over this, and I do not want it to be you. Oh, okay. So she went and got this lieutenant. [01:11:28.440 --> 01:11:36.440] And he said, well, you can't see that. It's held deep in the jail. That's no problem. Hold it somewhere else. I want to watch. [01:11:36.440 --> 01:11:43.440] Well, let me go talk to his judge. He went and talked to the judge. He came back and he said, the judge said it's her court and you're not coming in it. [01:11:43.440 --> 01:11:48.440] I said, Lieutenant, I need you to instruct that judge that she is mistaken. [01:11:48.440 --> 01:11:58.440] That it is my court. And I very generously allow her to administer it according to my law. And my law says it's a public court. [01:11:58.440 --> 01:12:05.440] And he said, well, she's not going to let you in the court. I said, well, then I need you to go back there and arrest her. [01:12:05.440 --> 01:12:13.440] What? I can't arrest the magistrate? Sure can. Just go back there and go to Cus owner and drag her off the jail. [01:12:13.440 --> 01:12:18.440] Heck, you don't have far to go. You're already in it. Oh, I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:12:18.440 --> 01:12:23.440] Oh, so you're going to seal the judge from prosecution? Well, I'm not going to arrest the judge. [01:12:23.440 --> 01:12:33.440] I said, well, in that case, I'm likely to be making some really ugly sounding criminal complaints against you, but don't take a personal law. [01:12:33.440 --> 01:12:41.440] I don't have anything against you. And I'm not even after you. You're going to file criminal charges against me and you're not after me? [01:12:41.440 --> 01:12:50.440] Well, who are you after? I said, I'm after the district attorney. Well, then why are you going to file against me? [01:12:50.440 --> 01:13:04.440] Oh, well, you're convenient. So what do you do when a guy tells you he's going to file against you criminally so that he can get to somebody else? [01:13:04.440 --> 01:13:12.440] How are you going to reason with this guy? He don't care about you. He's using you for cannon fodder. [01:13:12.440 --> 01:13:23.440] The look on this lieutenant's face is absolutely priceless. Don't take it personal. And he's probably said that to a thousand guys he's arrested. [01:13:23.440 --> 01:13:35.440] Oh, you know it. And that was kind of one of the things that I was when I was in that courtroom there in Garland. I said, you know, I was after it was all over. [01:13:35.440 --> 01:13:43.440] I said, judge, you know, that city attorney, he has his opinion about the law and you have your opinion about the law. [01:13:43.440 --> 01:14:04.440] Well, I have my opinion, too. But when I bring my brief up here and I submit it and I can't get any remedy in the law, I said, this whole thing is basically, you know, I can file for an appeal and then I can get, you know, ruled against on the appeal. [01:14:04.440 --> 01:14:22.440] I said, everything that I'm doing here is to get it all back to the legislator and get it right before the legislature because they're the ones that created all this mess by being so vague in the way the law is written. [01:14:22.440 --> 01:14:34.440] And he couldn't believe I said that. That's when he popped off about the legislators calling all the judges down and having these laws and they don't even know how they get to it. [01:14:34.440 --> 01:14:46.440] And I was like, okay. And I asked him how to fix it. He said, it's going to take more people like you. And I'm like, oh my goodness, I couldn't believe the man said that. [01:14:46.440 --> 01:14:52.440] Yes, I've heard exactly that. I heard exactly the same thing one time. [01:14:52.440 --> 01:14:59.440] In all its time, I've heard that once. So I'm surprised that a judge actually said that to you. I had a prosecutor say that to me. [01:14:59.440 --> 01:15:13.440] Well, I'm arguing with him in his office and he stopped. He stopped. He got up, went and closed the door, came back, sat down. He said, Mr. Kelton, if you repeat this, I will swear I didn't say it, but don't stop. [01:15:13.440 --> 01:15:27.440] He said I was a prosecutor in Tarrant County for five years and I just could not do it anymore. I couldn't get up in the morning and look myself in the eye in the mirror. [01:15:27.440 --> 01:15:38.440] So he quit and came here where he could pretty well follow, not be quite so corrupt. And he said, you may be the only one who can fix it. So don't stop. [01:15:38.440 --> 01:15:51.440] Then he got up, went and opened the door, come back, sat down, started arguing with me again. That was revealing because clearly he felt trapped in the system and that's what I heard from your judge. [01:15:51.440 --> 01:16:00.440] He felt trapped in the system he didn't create and he can't fix it. It takes some people like us outside the system. [01:16:00.440 --> 01:16:13.440] If we can get a few more like you, Scott, David will fight us tooth and nail to the bitter end. But when the next guy comes along, he's likely to get his case thrown out. [01:16:13.440 --> 01:16:23.440] When it looks like he's going to take them on and do a Scott Richardson on them, they're likely to just toss the case because they're not going to want to go there. [01:16:23.440 --> 01:16:38.440] He's going on, about to go to break. Randy Kelsen, we have a lot of radio. I call it number 512-646-1984. Scott, Michigan, Tim, I see you there. We will get to everybody. We'll be right back. [01:16:53.440 --> 01:16:55.440] Hmm. [01:17:24.440 --> 01:17:33.440] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. When you purchase Randy Kelsen's ebook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:17:33.440 --> 01:17:42.440] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. 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[01:19:27.440 --> 01:19:34.440] Well, you ain't gonna fool me with that. [01:19:34.440 --> 01:19:46.440] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelsen, Bruseau Radio, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. Okay, Scott, do you have any more for us? [01:19:46.440 --> 01:19:55.440] No, sir. I'm gonna get off this. You can get to everybody else and y'all have a good evening. I'll talk to you Sunday, Randy. [01:19:55.440 --> 01:20:02.440] Thank you, Scott. Okay, now we're gonna go to Scott. Scott in Michigan. Hello, Scott. [01:20:02.440 --> 01:20:04.440] How's it going? [01:20:04.440 --> 01:20:08.440] It's going good. What do you have for us today? [01:20:08.440 --> 01:20:20.440] Well, I've been reading more about the judicial corruption in Michigan and how there's no standards for judges to report their, there's no financial disclosure, [01:20:20.440 --> 01:20:29.440] and there's no procedures or sanctions to stop judges from having conflicts of interest for their employment after they're a judge. [01:20:29.440 --> 01:20:40.440] And when I read those two things, I thought to myself, you know, that could be stretched to be a good enough reason to get any judge in the state recused. [01:20:40.440 --> 01:21:04.440] Yeah, but when the whole state's corrupt, you'd have to take them out to the Fed. How can you use this lack of structure to demonstrate an ongoing pattern of abuse by denial of due process? [01:21:04.440 --> 01:21:10.440] I see. That's what my burden would be, if thankfully. [01:21:10.440 --> 01:21:22.440] It would seem like all you would have to show that there is a consistent pattern of judges denying due process, and due process goes straight to federal constitution. [01:21:22.440 --> 01:21:23.440] Yep. [01:21:23.440 --> 01:21:35.440] 18 U.S. Code 242. If you start pulling these judges out of the state into the Fed, that's going to make them unhappy. [01:21:35.440 --> 01:21:50.440] And any time they fail to protect or provide due access to a right, that's due process violation, and that can go straight to the Fed. [01:21:50.440 --> 01:21:53.440] So that's what we're doing in Texas. [01:21:53.440 --> 01:22:03.440] Just sort of an opening question for you there, but the good news is I now have four prosecutors have been involved in my case now. [01:22:03.440 --> 01:22:12.440] And so there's four ways to go around now with the bar grievances, and especially against the head prosecutor. [01:22:12.440 --> 01:22:15.440] Oh, they'll love that. [01:22:15.440 --> 01:22:22.440] Okay. Are you in the Minutes Court or County? [01:22:22.440 --> 01:22:30.440] My question is your judge necessarily a lawyer? [01:22:30.440 --> 01:22:35.440] He seems like he's, I looked him up a little bit. He's a career judge. I mean, he's been doing it a long time. [01:22:35.440 --> 01:22:45.440] Okay. Okay. In Texas and in most states, you have inferior courts and then you have superior courts. [01:22:45.440 --> 01:22:52.440] An inferior court is a court that can be provided over, presided over by a nonlawyer. [01:22:52.440 --> 01:22:58.440] JP courts and municipal courts in most states fall into this category. [01:22:58.440 --> 01:23:07.440] County, district, and other courts where the lawyer, where the judge must first be a lawyer, [01:23:07.440 --> 01:23:17.440] there generally the judge in that case is not still a practicing lawyer. [01:23:17.440 --> 01:23:25.440] When they get elected to that position, they cease their practice. That's to avoid conflicts of interest. [01:23:25.440 --> 01:23:34.440] But often a JP or a municipal court judge will still have a bar card. [01:23:34.440 --> 01:23:40.440] And that's where I was going. If there are lower level judges, you can, you can judicial conduct complain them, [01:23:40.440 --> 01:23:43.440] and you can also file against your bar card. [01:23:43.440 --> 01:23:53.440] You know, actually that's a really good point. One of the things that I got with the magistrate signature on it also had his P number after his signature. [01:23:53.440 --> 01:23:58.440] So that, yeah, that would show that the magistrate is still a bar member. [01:23:58.440 --> 01:24:04.440] And bar grievance. That'll get him real unhappy. [01:24:04.440 --> 01:24:11.440] Specifically for what conflict of interest of being a bar member and a judge? [01:24:11.440 --> 01:24:28.440] No, for if he commits an act that if he were an attorney would be a violation of the, what do they call them in Michigan? [01:24:28.440 --> 01:24:31.440] Here they call them bar standards. [01:24:31.440 --> 01:24:35.440] And in judicial they call them canons, canons of ethics. [01:24:35.440 --> 01:24:52.440] But if he violates the standard, does something as a judge, you can maintain that his position, his capacity as a lawyer is the reason he's a judge, [01:24:52.440 --> 01:24:54.440] whether it is or not. [01:24:54.440 --> 01:25:01.440] And just bar grieve in claiming that he committed an act that if he was a lawyer would have been in violation of the standard. [01:25:01.440 --> 01:25:04.440] And since he has a bar card, he's violating the standard. [01:25:04.440 --> 01:25:09.440] Now they're going to say, well, you can't do this, blah, blah, blah. [01:25:09.440 --> 01:25:13.440] But they're going to trash your complaint anyway. [01:25:13.440 --> 01:25:16.440] But the insurance company's not. [01:25:16.440 --> 01:25:32.440] And if we give the insurance company something that has the appearance of a valid allegation of wrongful behavior, they're going to look at that and say this creates a liability for us. [01:25:32.440 --> 01:25:41.440] If this lawyer is committing these kinds of acts in his capacity as a judge, when he gets out here as a lawyer, he's likely to commit the same kind of act. [01:25:41.440 --> 01:25:44.440] So the mark against him. [01:25:44.440 --> 01:25:47.440] Any ethics violation is going to play big in that way. [01:25:47.440 --> 01:25:49.440] That makes sense. [01:25:49.440 --> 01:25:56.440] And so, you know, all of the insurance guy, all he wants is an excuse. [01:25:56.440 --> 01:25:59.440] He wants to raise the premiums. [01:25:59.440 --> 01:26:02.440] And all he's looking for, give me an excuse. [01:26:02.440 --> 01:26:04.440] Good one, bad one, he doesn't care. [01:26:04.440 --> 01:26:06.440] He just wants an excuse. [01:26:06.440 --> 01:26:09.440] He's in it for the money. [01:26:09.440 --> 01:26:13.440] And that's not something the lawyers can control. [01:26:13.440 --> 01:26:15.440] And that's what makes him crazy. [01:26:15.440 --> 01:26:19.440] They can't even complain to you about it. [01:26:19.440 --> 01:26:23.440] Because they do that to grieve him for that. [01:26:23.440 --> 01:26:24.440] I don't. [01:26:24.440 --> 01:26:26.440] So symptomatic of Michigan, go ahead. [01:26:26.440 --> 01:26:30.440] They use every dirty trick they can. [01:26:30.440 --> 01:26:36.440] They use the politics and the influence they have against you. [01:26:36.440 --> 01:26:39.440] And they're not the least bit bashful about it. [01:26:39.440 --> 01:26:46.440] So we should not be the least bit bashful about turning the tables on. [01:26:46.440 --> 01:27:01.440] I don't know if it's symptomatic of Michigan's corruption in general, but it looks like in Michigan, the malpractice insurance doesn't react in the same way as severely. [01:27:01.440 --> 01:27:09.440] Like basically in Michigan, it says your malpractice insurance will go up a little bit if you get a bar agreement. [01:27:09.440 --> 01:27:14.440] It's not talking about doubling or tripling or canceling or anything like that. [01:27:14.440 --> 01:27:23.440] Well, as I understand, there are nine primary underwriters for errors in emissions policies in the United States. [01:27:23.440 --> 01:27:28.440] All of those are underwritten by Lloyds of London. [01:27:28.440 --> 01:27:31.440] They all have essentially the same requirements. [01:27:31.440 --> 01:27:33.440] They may vary somewhat. [01:27:33.440 --> 01:27:51.440] But if you're insuring someone and you get two or three complaints against them indicating that they've acted improperly, you have to elevate your risk level. [01:27:51.440 --> 01:27:58.440] Now, who's telling you that they're not doubling or tripling? [01:27:58.440 --> 01:28:08.440] This was just like integrity reporting websites or advice for lawyers who have bar grievances, what will happen. [01:28:08.440 --> 01:28:13.440] You should try calling an errors in emissions policy. [01:28:13.440 --> 01:28:17.440] Someone who provides policies and asks them what they do. [01:28:17.440 --> 01:28:23.440] Find out what puts them over the edge. [01:28:23.440 --> 01:28:32.440] Yeah, that would be like going into the fox in the henhouse to see how to do the damage. [01:28:32.440 --> 01:28:41.440] Yeah, well, the insurance carrier, he wants to charge that lawyer as much as he can. [01:28:41.440 --> 01:28:45.440] And he wants to avoid any claims against him. [01:28:45.440 --> 01:28:49.440] That's his job to make as much profit as possible. [01:28:49.440 --> 01:29:03.440] And so you might tell him you have a friend who was a lawyer and he got a couple of bar grievances and say he's from Illinois and he come to Michigan. [01:29:03.440 --> 01:29:12.440] And he was looking at coming to Michigan and he wanted to know how much that would affect his errors and emissions policies in Michigan. [01:29:12.440 --> 01:29:13.440] And these guys want to sell insurance. [01:29:13.440 --> 01:29:18.440] They'd be glad to tell you. [01:29:18.440 --> 01:29:22.440] Did you say errors and emissions policy? [01:29:22.440 --> 01:29:24.440] Yes. [01:29:24.440 --> 01:29:26.440] Errors and omissions? [01:29:26.440 --> 01:29:30.440] Yes, that's what malpractice is sometimes called. [01:29:30.440 --> 01:29:31.440] Okay, good. [01:29:31.440 --> 01:29:33.440] I didn't know that. [01:29:33.440 --> 01:29:41.440] Errors and emissions will always be, malpractice insurance will always be in errors and emissions policies. [01:29:41.440 --> 01:29:43.440] So sometimes they call it errors and emissions. [01:29:43.440 --> 01:29:46.440] Sometimes they'll call it malpractice. [01:29:46.440 --> 01:29:48.440] Okay, hang on, about to go to break. [01:29:48.440 --> 01:29:49.440] Brandy Kelton. [01:29:49.440 --> 01:29:50.440] We're going to the law radio. [01:29:50.440 --> 01:29:54.440] Our call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:54.440 --> 01:30:17.440] We'll be right back. [01:30:17.440 --> 01:30:42.440] This message is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.440 --> 01:30:46.440] Start over with Start Page. [01:30:46.440 --> 01:30:48.440] We've all experienced it. [01:30:48.440 --> 01:30:50.440] Death by PowerPoint. [01:30:50.440 --> 01:30:55.440] Microsoft's presentation program has turned countless meetings into mind-numbing boredom. [01:30:55.440 --> 01:30:56.440] Got a product idea? [01:30:56.440 --> 01:30:57.440] Do a PowerPoint. [01:30:57.440 --> 01:30:58.440] Trouble in the battlefield? [01:30:58.440 --> 01:31:00.440] PowerPoint again. [01:31:00.440 --> 01:31:01.440] UG. [01:31:01.440 --> 01:31:06.440] Unless it's creatively spiffed up with lots of pictures, PowerPoint can be the death of a meeting. [01:31:06.440 --> 01:31:12.440] It relieves the lazy speaker from having to actually write a thoughtful speech or convey a persuasive argument. [01:31:12.440 --> 01:31:16.440] Too often, instead of analysis, we get mind-numbing bullet points. [01:31:16.440 --> 01:31:19.440] The key is never to put your speech up on the screen. [01:31:19.440 --> 01:31:24.440] Use lots of pictures and never, ever, never read from a slide. [01:31:24.440 --> 01:31:31.440] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.440 --> 01:31:36.440] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.440 --> 01:31:38.440] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.440 --> 01:31:43.440] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.440 --> 01:31:46.440] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.440 --> 01:31:49.440] Thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [01:31:49.440 --> 01:31:50.440] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. 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[01:32:56.440 --> 01:32:59.440] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.440 --> 01:33:02.440] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.440 --> 01:33:09.440] Looking for some truth? You found it. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:09.440 --> 01:33:14.440] Music [01:33:27.440 --> 01:33:33.440] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Scott in Michigan. [01:33:33.440 --> 01:33:41.440] Okay, Scott, what is the disposition of your case at this point? [01:33:41.440 --> 01:33:44.440] Well, getting to the meat and potatoes. [01:33:44.440 --> 01:33:51.440] Had you said before that discovery need not necessarily be a motion that if you ask them for it, they have to give it to you? [01:33:51.440 --> 01:33:57.440] No, no, this is how it works. Discovery is something that's done between the parties. [01:33:57.440 --> 01:34:01.440] You send discovery to opposing counsel. [01:34:01.440 --> 01:34:06.440] Opposing counsel objects to your discovery. [01:34:06.440 --> 01:34:08.440] They object to everything. [01:34:08.440 --> 01:34:13.440] Then you file a motion with the court to compel discovery. [01:34:13.440 --> 01:34:15.440] Then you have a hearing on it. [01:34:15.440 --> 01:34:22.440] So first you have to request discovery from the other side directly, and that request does not go to the court. [01:34:22.440 --> 01:34:35.440] Until the other side files an objection, then you file your discovery request with the court and ask the court to order discovery, or compel discovery. [01:34:35.440 --> 01:34:48.440] Not that they've filed an objection, but I would say certainly the fact that they don't want to answer my emails, don't want to answer my questions puts me at that point where my next step would be to motion the court to compel discovery. [01:34:48.440 --> 01:35:01.440] Yeah, if you have requested it from them, and there's not a specific form, just that you've asked and they've refused to produce it, then you can file a motion to compel. [01:35:01.440 --> 01:35:07.440] Right, yeah, both verbally and by email I've asked for it a couple times, I've not received it, so. [01:35:07.440 --> 01:35:13.440] Okay, it'd probably be better if you put together a written discovery. [01:35:13.440 --> 01:35:18.440] Now, discovery is an art form. [01:35:18.440 --> 01:35:26.440] There are requests for productions, interrogatories, and requests for admissions. [01:35:26.440 --> 01:35:27.440] Okay. [01:35:27.440 --> 01:35:31.440] Admissions is really an art form. [01:35:31.440 --> 01:35:33.440] You can back them in a corner with admissions. [01:35:33.440 --> 01:35:51.440] Now, if you send them a request for admissions, and they don't respond, then they have given formal judicial notice, or formal judicial admission, and they can't change their position later. [01:35:51.440 --> 01:35:56.440] So, judicial admissions are kind of dangerous form. [01:35:56.440 --> 01:36:00.440] But do some research on discovery. [01:36:00.440 --> 01:36:16.440] You are limited in the number of, generally you are limited in the number of requests for admissions that you can ask, and requests for, and interrogatories and questions that you can ask. [01:36:16.440 --> 01:36:26.440] And when you craft questions, you have to craft the question so that only, so that it only asks for one thing. [01:36:26.440 --> 01:36:33.440] If you ask a question that has multiple parts, they're going to call it multifarious and object to it. [01:36:33.440 --> 01:36:37.440] So, look at some, you know, pull down some discovery and look at it. [01:36:37.440 --> 01:36:42.440] Discovery can be really artful. [01:36:42.440 --> 01:36:54.440] The way you ask for things, your interrogatories, you can trap them into corners based on how they answer your interrogatories. [01:36:54.440 --> 01:36:59.440] I like to produce interrogatories that they can't answer. [01:36:59.440 --> 01:37:02.440] If they answer them, they're admitting guilt. [01:37:02.440 --> 01:37:08.440] And then they refuse to answer them, then I move to compelled discovery. [01:37:08.440 --> 01:37:15.440] And without going real deep into the case, admissions are, they're the best part. [01:37:15.440 --> 01:37:19.440] They're the ones that you can be the most artful with. [01:37:19.440 --> 01:37:29.440] If you ask them for a judicial admission, and they deny it, and you subsequently prove that that was true, [01:37:29.440 --> 01:37:36.440] now you can go after them for perjury, and all kinds of things you can hammer them with. [01:37:36.440 --> 01:37:41.440] So, you can have a lot of fun with discovery, make them crazy with discovery. [01:37:41.440 --> 01:37:50.440] Primarily, especially when we file a federal suit, our primary objective with the original petition [01:37:50.440 --> 01:37:59.440] is to get past a Rule 12 motion to dismiss a failure state of claim so that we can get to discovery. [01:37:59.440 --> 01:38:10.440] And toward that point, I've been moving toward filing a petition for declaratory judgment first. [01:38:10.440 --> 01:38:19.440] The petition for declaratory judgment asks the court to rule on the rights of the parties [01:38:19.440 --> 01:38:25.440] and does not ask for any harm of any kind, any damages. [01:38:25.440 --> 01:38:33.440] So, it's not subject to a Rule 12 motion to dismiss and gets you straight to discovery. [01:38:33.440 --> 01:38:39.440] You don't really care so much about the ruling of the court. [01:38:39.440 --> 01:38:42.440] It's kind of a backdoor way of getting to discovery. [01:38:42.440 --> 01:38:45.440] That's where you want to be. [01:38:45.440 --> 01:38:49.440] That's where you make them nuts. [01:38:49.440 --> 01:38:55.440] Or at least most of the cases that I've worked on that way were foreclosure cases. [01:38:55.440 --> 01:39:00.440] And in foreclosure cases, the bank never had the information they needed. [01:39:00.440 --> 01:39:07.440] So, they never wanted to get to discovery. [01:39:07.440 --> 01:39:12.440] All right. Now, when you say be artful about it, do you mean you don't go for the throat [01:39:12.440 --> 01:39:16.440] and say, like, what probable cause did the officer have? [01:39:16.440 --> 01:39:21.440] You are more used to circumlocute the issue more? [01:39:21.440 --> 01:39:29.440] Yes. You look at what constitutes probable cause. [01:39:29.440 --> 01:39:32.440] This has to do with the traffic stop. [01:39:32.440 --> 01:39:43.440] Do you ask questions like, did the officer personally observe the accused committing a crime? [01:39:43.440 --> 01:39:46.440] Okay. You got it, sir. [01:39:46.440 --> 01:39:55.440] So, that will, instead of asking what probable cause did you have, that would be an interrogatory. [01:39:55.440 --> 01:40:03.440] And it's too vague. They can just do a long monologue that at the end of the day doesn't mean anything. [01:40:03.440 --> 01:40:06.440] You have to be real specific. [01:40:06.440 --> 01:40:17.440] And you want to ask questions that are so specific that if they misrepresent the truth, [01:40:17.440 --> 01:40:23.440] the other facts around it will indicate that there's a problem with this answer. [01:40:23.440 --> 01:40:28.440] That's why it's artful. You really have to think about how you craft your discovery. [01:40:28.440 --> 01:40:32.440] That's one of the most powerful tools you have. [01:40:32.440 --> 01:40:41.440] Well, if you wanted to be socratic about it, you'd have to ask yes and no questions to be sure you're making meaningful progress, right? [01:40:41.440 --> 01:40:45.440] That is one way of doing it. [01:40:45.440 --> 01:41:02.440] But sometimes, to say yes or no to that would be difficult because sometimes, if you are pretty sure that the officer is going to testify to a certain thing, [01:41:02.440 --> 01:41:14.440] and you can show that what he's about to testify to is improper, like we have someone now who was in court and the judge threatened him in court. [01:41:14.440 --> 01:41:20.440] Because he filed criminal charges against the judge. [01:41:20.440 --> 01:41:25.440] So, how do you bring that out? How do you trap the judge? [01:41:25.440 --> 01:41:31.440] Well, the first thing is you don't tell him that you've got a recording. [01:41:31.440 --> 01:41:37.440] And then you ask him what occurred in court. [01:41:37.440 --> 01:41:44.440] And give him to tell what occurred in court. Then you charge him with aggravated perjury. [01:41:44.440 --> 01:41:50.440] You file an affidavit saying, this is what happened in court. [01:41:50.440 --> 01:41:55.440] And he's going to object and say, no, that's not what happened in court. [01:41:55.440 --> 01:41:58.440] Now you've got him dead banged. [01:41:58.440 --> 01:42:11.440] Then you, as proof of the veracity of your affidavit, then you filed a recording that the affidavit was a transcript of. [01:42:11.440 --> 01:42:18.440] That's when they lose their lunch. [01:42:18.440 --> 01:42:22.440] So, each case is going to be somewhat different. [01:42:22.440 --> 01:42:29.440] So, how you do your discovery depends on the particular facts of the case. [01:42:29.440 --> 01:42:37.440] But it is artful. It is an art form. You really have to pay attention and know your opponent. [01:42:37.440 --> 01:42:40.440] Understand what their proclivities are. [01:42:40.440 --> 01:42:50.440] And one thing about police officers is they tend to compete with one another to see who's the best test allier. [01:42:50.440 --> 01:42:55.440] So, they're not the least bit. They have no compunction about lying in court. [01:42:55.440 --> 01:43:01.440] And you would think that the judge would be incensed if someone come into his court and lied to him. [01:43:01.440 --> 01:43:03.440] Well, they're not. [01:43:03.440 --> 01:43:10.440] They actually want these officers to lie to them so that they can find you guilty and then go play golf. [01:43:10.440 --> 01:43:15.440] They don't want to be sitting here going through all of these intermeable court cases. [01:43:15.440 --> 01:43:20.440] They want to just get through them, get it done with, go do something else. [01:43:20.440 --> 01:43:26.440] Okay, well, with my case, probable cause is going to be the showstopper. [01:43:26.440 --> 01:43:32.440] I know they don't have it. I know they can't prove that the officer had a probable cause. [01:43:32.440 --> 01:43:36.440] Because I was just driving along safely and he pulled me over to pick at me. [01:43:36.440 --> 01:43:39.440] I was no crime in progress. [01:43:39.440 --> 01:43:48.440] Hold on. We're about to go to break. When we come back, I want to ask about the statement that he made in the complaint. [01:43:48.440 --> 01:44:10.440] Randy Kelton, we'll have our radio or call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:44:18.440 --> 01:44:23.440] We've been talking about this plan for over 80 years and many still don't know what hemp is. [01:44:23.440 --> 01:44:27.440] So now you know hemp is not marijuana and marijuana is not hemp. [01:44:27.440 --> 01:44:30.440] They are different varieties of the same species. 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Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.440 --> 01:45:43.440] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.440 --> 01:45:56.440] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:56.440 --> 01:46:25.440] Or call toll free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:26.440 --> 01:46:34.440] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelson, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Scott in Michigan. [01:46:34.440 --> 01:46:39.440] Where were we Scott when I went out? I was talking to the producer and I lost where I was. [01:46:39.440 --> 01:46:58.440] Probable cause should be pretty much the B.L. and end of all this case just because I asked the officer during the stop, you know, directly what was your probable cause to pull me over and he said, you know, that he noticed there was a crack in my windshield [01:46:58.440 --> 01:47:15.440] and I told him that my license plate was crooked and I said those aren't crimes and he went to, you know, he escalated verbally and I wasn't going to mess with him because he was threatening jail because he thought my license was suspended when it was not. [01:47:15.440 --> 01:47:25.440] Oh, so did, does he have a statement that indicates anything other than crooked license plates and a crack in the windshield? [01:47:25.440 --> 01:47:35.440] Here's the thing, when I went to the courthouse for my pre-trial conference and met with the prosecutor, she didn't have any of that information handy. [01:47:35.440 --> 01:47:51.440] She said, I haven't seen the police report. I haven't seen your driving record. I mean, I was trying to tell her to dismiss these petty traffic tickets and she just wouldn't do it because she didn't have the sufficient information to do it because she hasn't done any homework on this case [01:47:51.440 --> 01:47:55.440] and she has no idea. She's just trying to, just trying to shoo her me through that. [01:47:55.440 --> 01:47:59.440] Did you bargain for that? [01:47:59.440 --> 01:48:01.440] No, but I'm certainly going to. [01:48:01.440 --> 01:48:19.440] Oh, absolutely bargain for that. She had you, what, what does the law say in Michigan about when the court can order you to appear? [01:48:19.440 --> 01:48:22.440] Okay, let me explain why I asked that question. [01:48:22.440 --> 01:48:25.440] I heard you talking about that in another show. Go ahead, yeah. [01:48:25.440 --> 01:48:35.440] Okay, in Texas, 28.01 lists all of those things the court can order you to come to court for. [01:48:35.440 --> 01:48:56.440] The first one's an arraignment hearing. This is 28.01, but 26.01 says an arraignment hearing may be held in the matter of a felony or a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [01:48:56.440 --> 01:49:05.440] And I read that and said, what the heck? Why on earth would they put that in there? [01:49:05.440 --> 01:49:18.440] They specifically exempted a traffic or a JP court issue. [01:49:18.440 --> 01:49:28.440] Any crime not punishable by imprisonment was not included. So what's not included is excluded. [01:49:28.440 --> 01:49:34.440] So they specifically exempted a JP court or a municipal court from holding an arraignment hearing. [01:49:34.440 --> 01:49:42.440] An arraignment hearing is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and taking a plea. [01:49:42.440 --> 01:49:50.440] And this is pretty consistent across the states. So in 28.01, the first thing's an arraignment hearing. [01:49:50.440 --> 01:49:56.440] And all of the rest of them goes to motions or pleadings filed before the court. [01:49:56.440 --> 01:50:03.440] When you were ordered to court, were there any motions or pleadings before the court? [01:50:03.440 --> 01:50:05.440] No. [01:50:05.440 --> 01:50:09.440] What were you ordered to court for? [01:50:09.440 --> 01:50:17.440] Well, they said it was going to be, it said for arraignment, but actually the judge's clerk came out and tried to take my plea. [01:50:17.440 --> 01:50:22.440] And I told her that I was there to get a continuance so I could ever sit down with the prosecutor. [01:50:22.440 --> 01:50:34.440] And it made me sign my life away on a bond, promising to appear again and meet all these conditions while I was a bond, you know, as if I was a dangerous criminal. [01:50:34.440 --> 01:50:42.440] Okay. So did you charge as a clerk with impersonating a judicial officer? [01:50:42.440 --> 01:50:52.440] No, I was thinking that was going to be the big show. Like if I do have to go to court, that'll be the big show is, okay, you dragged me here and I'll do the chicken dance, guys. [01:50:52.440 --> 01:50:54.440] Yeah. [01:50:54.440 --> 01:50:58.440] I have a deputy come to the courthouse. They don't have bailiffs there. It's a tiny courthouse. [01:50:58.440 --> 01:51:04.440] But I guess I would just prearrange for a deputy to be there to, you know, take a criminal complaint. [01:51:04.440 --> 01:51:17.440] I've done that before. I drove 600 miles from Tennessee to Texas to Cromby, Texas to appear within the state of time limit on the citation. [01:51:17.440 --> 01:51:23.440] Well, they didn't have a judge there. But the mayor was there. [01:51:23.440 --> 01:51:28.440] So I asked the mayor to hold an examining trial and she assured me she didn't know what that was. [01:51:28.440 --> 01:51:33.440] But she had called the prosecutor. The prosecutor's office is not far away and she was on her way over. [01:51:33.440 --> 01:51:36.440] And I said, well, I don't talk to prosecutor attorneys. [01:51:36.440 --> 01:51:41.440] Well, I really need to talk to the prosecutor because I don't really know what's going on. [01:51:41.440 --> 01:51:49.440] And I told her, well, okay, the only way I'll talk to the prosecutor is if you have a bailiff here. [01:51:49.440 --> 01:51:53.440] If you don't have a bailiff, then get me a police officer in here. [01:51:53.440 --> 01:51:56.440] And she said, well, okay, I can do that. [01:51:56.440 --> 01:51:58.440] And she, well, at first she said, well, why? [01:51:58.440 --> 01:52:02.440] I said, well, sometimes prosecutors, when I talk to them, they get real excited. [01:52:02.440 --> 01:52:05.440] And I want to make sure she doesn't lose her composure. [01:52:05.440 --> 01:52:08.440] So she called, she said, okay, she called. [01:52:08.440 --> 01:52:18.440] And while we're waiting, I told her that about how, you know, this is my first rodeo and she said, well, I kind of got that. [01:52:18.440 --> 01:52:20.440] And I said, do you watch this officer? [01:52:20.440 --> 01:52:22.440] You'll find this real interesting. [01:52:22.440 --> 01:52:24.440] You'll get to see this little chicken dance. [01:52:24.440 --> 01:52:25.440] She said, what? [01:52:25.440 --> 01:52:26.440] I said, we watch. [01:52:26.440 --> 01:52:30.440] When I asked the officer to arrest the prosecutor, watch what he does. [01:52:30.440 --> 01:52:38.440] He'll start shifting from one foot to the other and trying to find a way out from under this problem I just gave him. [01:52:38.440 --> 01:52:42.440] Well, the prosecutor shoved up. [01:52:42.440 --> 01:52:49.440] But I wound up asking the officer to arrest the prosecutor and the mayor. [01:52:49.440 --> 01:52:54.440] Oh, it was hilarious. [01:52:54.440 --> 01:53:02.440] And the officer starts doing this, shifting back and forth from one foot to the other, trying to find a way out of it. [01:53:02.440 --> 01:53:07.440] And I turned to the mayor and smiled at her and pointed over at the officer. [01:53:07.440 --> 01:53:15.440] She did not see the humor in that. [01:53:15.440 --> 01:53:18.440] But do you think I should be careful not to arouse suspicion? [01:53:18.440 --> 01:53:24.440] Like if I call and say, you know, I want, can you send a cop to the courthouse to take a criminal complaint? [01:53:24.440 --> 01:53:26.440] Just leave it at that, right? [01:53:26.440 --> 01:53:28.440] Don't say what it's for. [01:53:28.440 --> 01:53:32.440] Okay, however you do this, I have a rule. [01:53:32.440 --> 01:53:35.440] Never give fair warning. [01:53:35.440 --> 01:53:39.440] I guess I'm right. [01:53:39.440 --> 01:53:45.440] Now, calling and asking for a police officer wasn't fair warning. [01:53:45.440 --> 01:53:51.440] That was to make them more on pins and needles, wondering what was going on. [01:53:51.440 --> 01:53:55.440] The more you confuse them, the dumber they act. [01:53:55.440 --> 01:54:02.440] And especially prosecutors, they want to show that they're really smart lawyers and they know all this stuff. [01:54:02.440 --> 01:54:08.440] And the lawyer, when the prosecutor, when she showed up, you know, I told her I'm here for an examining trial, [01:54:08.440 --> 01:54:16.440] she said, well, you can't have an examining trial in a classic, in a misdemeanor. [01:54:16.440 --> 01:54:18.440] I said, where'd you come up with that? [01:54:18.440 --> 01:54:21.440] Oh, you've been reading Troy V. State. [01:54:21.440 --> 01:54:22.440] That's all garbage. [01:54:22.440 --> 01:54:24.440] That's all nonsense. [01:54:24.440 --> 01:54:28.440] You need to read 14.03 takes to go to criminal procedure. [01:54:28.440 --> 01:54:30.440] Well, I don't know about that. [01:54:30.440 --> 01:54:32.440] Well, you should know about that. [01:54:32.440 --> 01:54:33.440] You're the prosecutor and attorney. [01:54:33.440 --> 01:54:35.440] You're learning counsel. [01:54:35.440 --> 01:54:44.440] And now she's getting upset because I'll make her to look dumb in front of her, this police officer and the mayor. [01:54:44.440 --> 01:54:47.440] And the mayor is the one that hires her. [01:54:47.440 --> 01:54:53.440] So I'll make her to look dumb in front of her boss and then she starts acting ignorant. [01:54:53.440 --> 01:54:57.440] And I kind of was able to contain her. [01:54:57.440 --> 01:55:01.440] I've gotten better at containing them when they get angry and frustrated. [01:55:01.440 --> 01:55:06.440] When they get angry and frustrated, if you don't get angry and frustrated back, [01:55:06.440 --> 01:55:08.440] they really don't know what to do. [01:55:08.440 --> 01:55:14.440] And when they don't know what to do, they do stupid stuff. [01:55:14.440 --> 01:55:21.440] When the prosecutor was trying to do stupid stuff, then I pointed over at the police officer. [01:55:21.440 --> 01:55:28.440] I said, now you need to pay real close attention to this and the prosecutor shut her mouth. [01:55:28.440 --> 01:55:31.440] So she knew I set her up. [01:55:31.440 --> 01:55:37.440] Now she knew why I called for the police officer to stick her on the dime. [01:55:37.440 --> 01:55:40.440] And it could not have went better. [01:55:40.440 --> 01:55:44.440] They did everything wrong. [01:55:44.440 --> 01:55:51.440] Then I finished there, went out and got my car and I called 911 and got the sheriff's department. [01:55:51.440 --> 01:55:55.440] And about the time, they said they'd have somebody call me back. [01:55:55.440 --> 01:55:57.440] So I sat there and waited. [01:55:57.440 --> 01:56:04.440] Somebody called me back and just as I answered the phone, this police officer that was in the court pulled up. [01:56:04.440 --> 01:56:07.440] And he pulled up and pointed his car right at my door. [01:56:07.440 --> 01:56:12.440] This is how they do that when they want to look intimidating. [01:56:12.440 --> 01:56:17.440] And he got out and he walked over and I rolled down the window and I said, can you hold on one moment? [01:56:17.440 --> 01:56:19.440] I'm talking to the sheriff here. [01:56:19.440 --> 01:56:20.440] Oops. [01:56:20.440 --> 01:56:21.440] Okay. [01:56:21.440 --> 01:56:30.440] So he's standing there and I told him that I need to send somebody out to arrest the mayor and the prosecutor. [01:56:30.440 --> 01:56:34.440] And hey you, what'd you say your name was? [01:56:34.440 --> 01:56:36.440] Make him tell me. [01:56:36.440 --> 01:56:38.440] And he gave me his name. [01:56:38.440 --> 01:56:44.440] He said, well, the sheriff said, well, Mr. Compton, you really should call the Texas Ranger. [01:56:44.440 --> 01:56:45.440] Oh, no, no, no, no. [01:56:45.440 --> 01:56:47.440] I don't want to call the Texas Ranger yet. [01:56:47.440 --> 01:56:53.440] I'll get to the Texas Ranger, but we'll get him set up first. [01:56:53.440 --> 01:56:58.440] So I want to ask you to come out here and arrest these guys and get you to refuse. [01:56:58.440 --> 01:57:05.440] Then I'll file criminal charges against you with the district attorney and he'll refuse to act on them. [01:57:05.440 --> 01:57:13.440] And then I'll file criminal charges against you and these guys and the prosecuting attorney with the Texas Rangers. [01:57:13.440 --> 01:57:23.440] Because the Texas Rangers has this protocol that says before they can act on a criminal complaint, they have to ask the prosecuting attorney for permission. [01:57:23.440 --> 01:57:30.440] Well, I want to see if your ranger asks the prosecuting attorney for permission to investigate himself. [01:57:30.440 --> 01:57:35.440] Well, that should be interesting. [01:57:35.440 --> 01:57:41.440] Then I got called the sheriff and I said, what can I do for you in the office of what will Mr. Compton? [01:57:41.440 --> 01:57:44.440] Do you have any further business here? [01:57:44.440 --> 01:57:47.440] I said, yeah, maybe. [01:57:47.440 --> 01:57:53.440] And now he's kind of shifting from what he wants to tell me if I don't have any other business that I have to leave. [01:57:53.440 --> 01:58:00.440] But after what I just told the sheriff, he's reluctant to, and I let him stand there a minute. [01:58:00.440 --> 01:58:04.440] And I finally said, can you give me directions to the interstate? [01:58:04.440 --> 01:58:09.440] And you could see him, oh, geez, I'm almost just done. [01:58:09.440 --> 01:58:13.440] So now I'll file criminal charges and stall all of them. [01:58:13.440 --> 01:58:22.440] But when you go in, if you're set up, if you don't get excited [01:58:22.440 --> 01:58:27.440] and, well, I don't know this case, I don't know how to handle it, [01:58:27.440 --> 01:58:34.440] what we started here with was the fact that they called you in for a hearing before prosecuting attorney. [01:58:34.440 --> 01:58:38.440] I'm sorry, before a clerk. [01:58:38.440 --> 01:58:41.440] There's no way a clerk is a judge or a judicial officer. [01:58:41.440 --> 01:58:48.440] Hang on, Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. [01:58:48.440 --> 01:58:50.440] I'm dragging him in. [01:58:50.440 --> 01:58:53.440] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [01:58:53.440 --> 01:58:58.440] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:58.440 --> 01:59:01.440] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:59:01.440 --> 01:59:06.440] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:06.440 --> 01:59:09.440] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:09.440 --> 01:59:13.440] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [01:59:13.440 --> 01:59:18.440] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.440 --> 01:59:22.440] Dr. Kelton profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [01:59:22.440 --> 01:59:28.440] providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.440 --> 01:59:33.440] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.440 --> 01:59:43.440] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102, [01:59:43.440 --> 01:59:50.440] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com.