[00:00.000 --> 00:07.480] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star of Lowdown, providing the [00:07.480 --> 00:14.760] Delhi bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates and the inside [00:14.760 --> 00:23.600] scoop 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 --> 00:41.160] Over $16.68 an ounce, Texas Crude $65.51 a barrel, Bitcoin $6,902.19, Ethereum $420.80, [00:41.160 --> 00:55.520] Bitcoin Cash $652.90 and Finanly Lite Coins $114.34 a crypto coin. [00:55.520 --> 01:01.240] Today in history, the year 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act [01:01.240 --> 01:06.040] of 1968, which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, [01:06.040 --> 01:08.040] religion, sex or national origin. [01:08.040 --> 01:13.200] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:13.200 --> 01:18.320] in public schools, in employment and public accommodations for places of business. [01:18.320 --> 01:28.000] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to have reached new levels after a chemical attack [01:28.000 --> 01:32.280] on civilians in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which [01:32.280 --> 01:36.760] is being blamed on the democratically elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, by the [01:36.760 --> 01:41.480] United States and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified [01:41.480 --> 01:43.360] evidence as of yet. [01:43.360 --> 01:47.200] President Trump tweeted today Wednesday that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down any and [01:47.200 --> 01:51.560] all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice and new [01:51.560 --> 01:52.560] and smart. [01:52.560 --> 01:56.480] Going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing animal who [01:56.480 --> 01:58.600] kills his people and enjoys it. [01:58.600 --> 02:02.640] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [02:02.640 --> 02:06.800] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [02:06.800 --> 02:11.040] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the organization [02:11.040 --> 02:15.000] for the prohibition of chemical weapons to investigate the side of the chemical slaughter. [02:15.000 --> 02:19.400] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [02:19.400 --> 02:24.000] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [02:24.000 --> 02:28.760] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [02:28.760 --> 02:32.520] notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [02:32.520 --> 02:37.880] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakoba posted on Facebook [02:37.880 --> 02:42.200] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government, which [02:42.200 --> 02:47.120] has been fighting terrorists, or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart missile [02:47.120 --> 03:16.120] strike, and then there will be no evidence for international inspectors to look at. [03:47.120 --> 03:55.120] That's what we're going to do, what we're going to do when we come for you, bad boys, [03:55.120 --> 04:11.120] bad boys, what you're going to do, what you're going to do when they come for you. [04:11.120 --> 04:26.120] Bad boys, bad boys, what you're going to do, what you're going to do when they come for [04:26.120 --> 04:27.120] you. [04:27.120 --> 04:32.120] Bad boys, bad boys, what you're going to do, what you're going to do when they come for [04:32.120 --> 04:33.120] you. [04:33.120 --> 04:35.120] Nobody now gives you no break. [04:35.120 --> 04:37.120] For you, it's not a biggie, no break. [04:37.120 --> 04:43.420] I'm gonna give you no break Not even the iconic, I'm gonna give you No break [04:43.420 --> 04:49.440] Bad boys, bad boys what you gonna do, what you gonna do When they come for you? [04:49.460 --> 04:54.660] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do When they come for you? [04:54.660 --> 05:00.200] Bad boys, bad boys what you gonna do, what you gonna do When they come for you? [05:00.220 --> 05:03.300] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [05:03.300 --> 05:13.900] Close to four years now, back a long time ago, I brought up that I was, I had my home [05:13.900 --> 05:21.980] for 35 years and I was foreclosed and evicted and I was fighting back. [05:21.980 --> 05:29.300] I made the mistake of doing a judge in the federal court and a few weeks later I had [05:29.300 --> 05:36.860] an army at my house, swatting, sheriff, San Jose police department, they threw me in jail [05:36.860 --> 05:44.460] and kept me under wraps, no phone calls, some light torture and some other things and while [05:44.460 --> 05:49.580] they kept me like that, they left the guy that claims he bought my house a foreclosure [05:49.580 --> 05:58.100] stale, a Chinese investor who claims he paid 600 and almost $650,000 in cash that each [05:58.100 --> 06:08.500] person has in his pocket and what he is is a money launder and he's paying these judges [06:08.500 --> 06:16.620] and like I said, I made the mistake as I was fighting through that of doing this judge's [06:16.620 --> 06:22.780] federal court because I moved the case to federal court, the state court had no jurisdiction [06:22.780 --> 06:31.540] and the clown of a judge kept making orders and holding hearings about even noticing me, [06:31.540 --> 06:39.180] he was not even assigned to the case and he's done several other criminal acts but it got [06:39.180 --> 06:48.660] a whole lot worse from there and so this week I'm very proud to announce that I have finally [06:48.660 --> 06:58.100] taken your advice and I filed a formal criminal claim to the criminal grand jury of Santa [06:58.100 --> 06:59.100] Clara County. [06:59.100 --> 07:10.980] This particular document is about 18 pages and then the remainder is all the exhibit [07:10.980 --> 07:18.340] and the most resounding exhibit is that the deputy DA that I'm making this criminal claim [07:18.340 --> 07:31.140] again, an email to my one lawyer telling him that they'll let me have a deal and I won't [07:31.140 --> 07:39.900] have to go to jail if I agree to drop all the civil litigation for my house and agree [07:39.900 --> 07:49.820] not to sue this company and this Chinese guy that did all these wrongs to me and so that [07:49.820 --> 07:58.220] makes it very clear to me that these bogus charges are really a thin veil for the district [07:58.220 --> 08:07.340] attorney using his office, abusing the office and using public funds to interfere with a [08:07.340 --> 08:12.340] private civil lawsuit just for starters. [08:12.340 --> 08:20.460] This is a distortion, it's admission is what it is and the dummy put it in writing and [08:20.460 --> 08:32.820] today I also will put in to the, there's an organization, it's a commission, a California [08:32.820 --> 08:41.540] Commission, it's Fair Political Practice Commission and at the first of the year a new law went [08:41.540 --> 08:53.780] in effect to strengthen their administrative powers and so I've also submitted to them [08:53.780 --> 09:04.380] a naming for state court judges, the two deputy DAs, the district attorney and the clerk of [09:04.380 --> 09:05.380] the court. [09:05.380 --> 09:11.220] The clerk of the court because she continues to refuse to give me a copy of the criminal [09:11.220 --> 09:20.740] record file and so on numerous occasions I've gone down and they won't even make the file [09:20.740 --> 09:22.660] available for me to look at. [09:22.660 --> 09:32.580] So that's, she's getting it for a concealment of the record and basically all the other [09:32.580 --> 09:41.060] bad actors, I mean I could go on forever, I mean what they've done to me, you wouldn't [09:41.060 --> 09:49.500] have to say that this happened in Afghanistan or somewhere, this isn't America. [09:49.500 --> 09:58.140] After they destroyed me, had me penniless in the street, I succumbed to a heart attack [09:58.140 --> 10:08.060] and emergency surgery, a stint put in my heart and again doctors prescription, five weeks [10:08.060 --> 10:13.620] after this heart attack the judge was threatening if I didn't come into court that day that [10:13.620 --> 10:15.700] they would throw me in jail. [10:15.700 --> 10:23.820] I went into court and I started to have another heart attack, the judge had left the bench [10:23.820 --> 10:31.100] and been in chambers, they alerted the judge and the paramedics were called in in route [10:31.100 --> 10:35.980] and this judge went back on the bench and continued to prosecute me while I'm having [10:35.980 --> 10:40.180] this heart attack and asking for water and aspirin and they're refusing to give me any [10:40.180 --> 10:46.180] assistance whatsoever and they just ignored it and they, I'm going to go after that judge [10:46.180 --> 10:50.180] for aggravated attempted murder. [10:50.180 --> 10:58.020] The depraved heart assault, okay, try that, we'll look that up in California law, there [10:58.020 --> 11:04.860] has to be something related to that, depraved heart is such a nasty sounding claim. [11:04.860 --> 11:13.580] Okay, they have a depraved heart statute in California, you can certainly call it depraved [11:13.580 --> 11:16.100] heart assault and attempted murder. [11:16.100 --> 11:27.980] Okay, I'm writing that down, but all of this is basically what I'm defending is a false [11:27.980 --> 11:38.500] charge of PC115, the recording of a quick claim deed on a property that was in my name [11:38.500 --> 11:44.340] at the time and that just makes it all the worse for them because I've had more than [11:44.340 --> 11:50.900] 20 lawyers, criminal defense attorneys tell me that you can record a quick claim deed [11:50.900 --> 11:53.620] on any property. [11:53.620 --> 12:02.420] What a quick claim deed is, is a relief of interest if you have any interest in the property. [12:02.420 --> 12:08.940] It does not have any warranty and it purports not to even be the, you're not even saying [12:08.940 --> 12:17.580] you're the owner of the property and so that's a black spot dictionary definition summarized [12:17.580 --> 12:22.980] and for that reason PC115 does not even apply. [12:22.980 --> 12:29.780] And so they've gone along with these bogus charges and basically from the very beginning [12:29.780 --> 12:36.820] when I sued the first judge in federal court everything since has been retaliation. [12:36.820 --> 12:44.540] And I just, I still think that this has got to be a dream, this can't be happening to [12:44.540 --> 12:50.740] me, but it is and I just have to thank you very much for all of the information that [12:50.740 --> 13:04.860] is provided on this call and the support that you've given me because you know at times [13:04.860 --> 13:11.620] how I felt and you sharing your stories, how it has saved my life. [13:11.620 --> 13:20.660] I don't know about that, but I'm hoping that now that you're going to the grand jury that [13:20.660 --> 13:25.380] you'll start getting people's attention because the one thing they don't feel like they can [13:25.380 --> 13:29.220] control is a grand jury. [13:29.220 --> 13:33.820] Now what was the process that you used in trying to get to the grand jury? [13:33.820 --> 13:41.220] Did you initially send the complaint to the grand jury or is there an intermediary? [13:41.220 --> 13:53.420] Well, you're going to love this, these are bound books and what we did was when it was [13:53.420 --> 14:05.340] complete we mailed it by registered mail to presentment is directed to the Santa Clara [14:05.340 --> 14:13.580] County criminal grand jury, care of the district attorney's office and that was registered [14:13.580 --> 14:21.460] mail a couple of days ago and we've now tracked it and someone went to the post office and [14:21.460 --> 14:22.460] picked that up. [14:22.460 --> 14:30.500] We don't have the signature card back yet, but we know they received it and then today [14:30.500 --> 14:38.740] I can serve at the district attorney's window an additional copy and got myself a file stamp [14:38.740 --> 14:39.740] copy. [14:39.740 --> 14:42.340] So they've now been served two ways. [14:42.340 --> 14:50.140] Again, it's being addressed to the grand jury and it's also noted that it's private [14:50.140 --> 14:57.100] and confidential and to be an open by address only and as you know we've discussed all that [14:57.100 --> 15:00.260] and we'll see how this plays out. [15:00.260 --> 15:05.060] Were you able to get the name of the foreman of the grand jury? [15:05.060 --> 15:07.180] I was not. [15:07.180 --> 15:13.980] Okay, go down and look at criminal files. [15:13.980 --> 15:19.620] Look at the last criminal files that were filed in the record. [15:19.620 --> 15:23.620] Find the indictment, form and signature of beyond the indictment. [15:23.620 --> 15:27.380] Are you talking about any case? [15:27.380 --> 15:28.900] It's not mine, right? [15:28.900 --> 15:31.140] Yeah, but the case is not yours. [15:31.140 --> 15:37.140] Yeah, because remember there is no indictment in my case, it's by information. [15:37.140 --> 15:43.180] Okay, well get the latest indictments filed in the court. [15:43.180 --> 15:48.940] Can they prosecute in California on information alone? [15:48.940 --> 15:52.100] And I don't like that at all, I feel it's unconstitutional. [15:52.100 --> 15:54.180] You're giving too much power. [15:54.180 --> 16:02.100] Well, Ted, can California prosecute without an indictment? [16:02.100 --> 16:05.340] Yeah. [16:05.340 --> 16:08.780] Did you have an examining trial? [16:08.780 --> 16:11.780] Yeah. [16:11.780 --> 16:13.980] And they touched those bases. [16:13.980 --> 16:19.700] I would have to look at the law, it doesn't seem congruous with what I've seen in California [16:19.700 --> 16:26.620] law that they can prosecute a felony on a information alone. [16:26.620 --> 16:29.220] Who is the complainant? [16:29.220 --> 16:35.420] Well, there you go, Randy, they don't have a ballot arrest warrant and there's no warrant [16:35.420 --> 16:38.220] complaint from anybody. [16:38.220 --> 16:42.700] Okay, hang on, we're about to go to break. [16:42.700 --> 16:53.180] Randy Kelkin, Louisville Radio, call in number 512-646-1984, so we've got Jeff, Tim and Brett [16:53.180 --> 16:57.780] on the line, we're, call boards are filling up pretty fast, we can only hold five callers, [16:57.780 --> 17:07.900] so if wait till one goes up, it's the 2018 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and [17:07.900 --> 17:11.780] gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. [17:11.780 --> 17:15.620] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [17:15.620 --> 17:19.100] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:19.100 --> 17:25.860] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [17:25.860 --> 17:28.660] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:28.660 --> 17:34.740] When you purchase Randy Kelkin's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [17:34.740 --> 17:38.620] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [17:38.620 --> 17:42.500] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [17:42.500 --> 17:47.700] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [17:47.700 --> 17:52.220] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [17:52.220 --> 17:55.420] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:55.420 --> 18:00.900] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [18:00.900 --> 18:06.180] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [18:06.180 --> 18:09.620] Get debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.620 --> 18:13.980] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.980 --> 18:14.980] can win, too. [18:14.980 --> 18:19.820] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.820 --> 18:25.540] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer [18:25.540 --> 18:30.180] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit reports, how to turn the [18:30.180 --> 18:34.380] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.380 --> 18:39.500] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.500 --> 18:41.660] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.660 --> 18:47.180] For more information, please visit ruleoflogradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:47.180 --> 19:07.300] or email Michael Mears at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:17.180 --> 19:25.740] Oh, yes, that beep was music to my ears. [19:25.740 --> 19:30.380] We have been having some technical difficulties. [19:30.380 --> 19:35.420] Whenever they'd figure out what it was, it just kind of sort of fixed itself. [19:35.420 --> 19:38.900] But we're going to take responsibility for fixing it anyway. [19:38.900 --> 19:41.580] Okay, we are here finally. [19:41.580 --> 19:43.420] We shut off the archive. [19:43.420 --> 19:52.940] This is Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio on this, the 28th day of September, 2018. [19:52.940 --> 19:55.820] I am turning on the call boards. [19:55.820 --> 20:00.180] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. [20:00.180 --> 20:05.180] Our call in number is 512-646-1984. [20:05.180 --> 20:06.180] I'll give a second. [20:06.180 --> 20:10.540] I've got a couple of calls I expect to call in. [20:10.540 --> 20:17.700] So Ted, if you're out there, give me a call, I definitely want to finish up that conversation [20:17.700 --> 20:19.900] from last night. [20:19.900 --> 20:27.260] We did have a very good conversation with Laura Pixler. [20:27.260 --> 20:32.820] If you, you know, everybody who's been listening for a while, you've been able to tune in on [20:32.820 --> 20:44.140] the ongoing saga of the great junk car debacle, where the city of Newark is going after one [20:44.140 --> 20:53.500] of its citizens over eight junk vehicles, and this is an auto repair facility. [20:53.500 --> 21:00.540] And they're trying to charge them $80,000. [21:00.540 --> 21:11.940] And finally, the Pixler struggles, and they wanted to fight back and help them make the [21:11.940 --> 21:12.940] record. [21:12.940 --> 21:15.020] In all cases, we made the record. [21:15.020 --> 21:20.100] The lawyers on the other side were sandbagged them at every opportunity to try to, they [21:20.100 --> 21:26.300] gave them the least amount of time they possibly could to respond to things, to try to get [21:26.300 --> 21:29.900] them to miss a deadline. [21:29.900 --> 21:33.180] So we made all the deadlines. [21:33.180 --> 21:40.460] And they wanted to go after these guys to slow them down, to get them to stop doing this, [21:40.460 --> 21:44.220] but have been down this road before, and I knew that. [21:44.220 --> 21:48.660] When you get unscrupulous lawyers, there's nothing you can do to stop them from being [21:48.660 --> 21:49.660] unscrupulous. [21:49.660 --> 21:55.940] So the best thing you can do is assist them in being unscrupulous. [21:55.940 --> 21:57.460] And that's essentially what they did. [21:57.460 --> 22:01.180] And it was hard for them. [22:01.180 --> 22:08.980] And finally, once we got to the point of appeal, everything seemed to come apart for the lawyers [22:08.980 --> 22:11.740] on the other side. [22:11.740 --> 22:17.020] And the city council has now ordered the lawyers to mediation, even though they won everything [22:17.020 --> 22:19.180] in court. [22:19.180 --> 22:23.660] Now it's going to appeal, the city ordered them to mediate. [22:23.660 --> 22:31.860] But their problem is, the pixelers are past the point to where mediation would be of value [22:31.860 --> 22:34.340] to them. [22:34.340 --> 22:38.220] The lawyers have screwed up everything they can. [22:38.220 --> 22:42.460] Now it's the pixelers turn. [22:42.460 --> 22:50.100] But as a native, it sure took the pressure off of them, the citizens of the city are [22:50.100 --> 22:55.220] up in arms at the city for what they've been doing. [22:55.220 --> 22:58.340] So that's looking really well. [22:58.340 --> 23:02.740] Maybe before the show is over, we'll get a call back in and we can talk about that a [23:02.740 --> 23:03.740] little. [23:03.740 --> 23:07.900] OK, we have Scott in Texas on the line. [23:07.900 --> 23:12.180] He has been going after some local public officials. [23:12.180 --> 23:16.580] OK, Scott, bring us up to speed. [23:16.580 --> 23:18.820] Well, howdy, howdy. [23:18.820 --> 23:27.100] Yes, so today I filed a bunch of paperwork, but I want to kind of go over a few things [23:27.100 --> 23:28.620] to kind of catch everybody up. [23:28.620 --> 23:37.380] So I filed a lot of lawsuits and filed criminal complaints and all this stuff. [23:37.380 --> 23:47.540] So what I wound up doing today is I've been creating these criminal complaints on the Dallas [23:47.540 --> 23:50.700] and Rockwall County District Attorney. [23:50.700 --> 23:52.740] So I called the Texas Rangers. [23:52.740 --> 23:57.180] I wanted to have a meeting with them first because I was given this a little bit of time [23:57.180 --> 24:06.700] to cure because I put in, prior to, I put in criminal complaints to the grand jury and [24:06.700 --> 24:12.620] attached a cover letter, sent a cover letter with it and all this stuff, wanting informants [24:12.620 --> 24:16.260] to initial the cover page and send it back to me. [24:16.260 --> 24:23.740] Well, I never got any response back from that and that was done on August 22nd, I believe, [24:23.740 --> 24:24.740] or something like that. [24:24.740 --> 24:25.740] I can't remember exactly. [24:25.740 --> 24:31.820] But anyhow, it's been over a month and I never got any response back. [24:31.820 --> 24:37.900] Well, I waited a few weeks and then sent a follow-up letter as an information request [24:37.900 --> 24:45.580] to the foreman asking to, as an information request, to see if he actually got the criminal [24:45.580 --> 24:48.700] complaint, never got a letter back on that. [24:48.700 --> 24:55.420] Okay, now I know that the DEA has taken my criminal complaints and went and flushed them [24:55.420 --> 24:57.420] down the commode. [24:57.420 --> 25:04.340] So I created criminal complaints on the District Attorneys, Rockwall and Dallas, and I went [25:04.340 --> 25:09.380] to go meet with the Rangers, I guess it was yesterday or the day before. [25:09.380 --> 25:12.020] I think it was Thursday. [25:12.020 --> 25:21.780] So I went into the Rangers office about 8.05 in the morning and the major, Major Casper, [25:21.780 --> 25:29.620] he wasn't in, and so there was a DPS officer there and she was like, can I help you and [25:29.620 --> 25:30.620] the secretary? [25:30.620 --> 25:34.460] I said, yeah, I'm here to give a criminal, I need to see the major and give them some [25:34.460 --> 25:35.460] criminal complaints. [25:35.460 --> 25:39.740] And she said, oh, well, you're supposed to give those to police. [25:39.740 --> 25:42.980] And I said, yeah, that don't work. [25:42.980 --> 25:47.340] And I said, these are, I'm submitting these to the public integrity unit because the Rangers [25:47.340 --> 25:49.980] have a public integrity unit. [25:49.980 --> 25:54.740] And she was kind of taken aback by that a little bit. [25:54.740 --> 26:01.860] And so the secretary there said, well, all the Rangers are gone, you can talk to the [26:01.860 --> 26:02.860] secretary. [26:02.860 --> 26:04.980] I said, that's fine, I'll just give them to her. [26:04.980 --> 26:07.900] So I had full intention of just handing them off to the secretary. [26:07.900 --> 26:13.060] They got her on the phone and I'm talking to her for about 10 seconds. [26:13.060 --> 26:14.980] She was real quick to get off the phone. [26:14.980 --> 26:20.220] She said, oh, I found a ranger, she's going to come up here and talk to you. [26:20.220 --> 26:29.140] So this ranger come up, Simmons, Sergeant Simmons, and she said, can I help you? [26:29.140 --> 26:32.660] I said, yeah, I need to give you these criminal complaints. [26:32.660 --> 26:34.900] And she didn't want to touch them. [26:34.900 --> 26:36.820] And she said, well, what's this about? [26:36.820 --> 26:43.700] I said, these are criminal complaints on district attorneys and, you know, I'm submitting these [26:43.700 --> 26:46.260] to the public integrity unit. [26:46.260 --> 26:50.140] And she kind of started getting a little bit nervous there for a second. [26:50.140 --> 26:56.300] She goes, well, hang on, I'll be right back after we talk for a couple of minutes. [26:56.300 --> 26:59.140] And she wouldn't take the criminal complaints at first. [26:59.140 --> 27:00.140] And she goes, well, I can't take them. [27:00.140 --> 27:02.060] I said, oh, sure you can. [27:02.060 --> 27:03.820] And she didn't want to touch them at first. [27:03.820 --> 27:11.100] So she runs back to the office and goes and gets this name for Major Scotty Shriver of [27:11.100 --> 27:13.740] the PIU unit. [27:13.740 --> 27:19.140] And she comes back up and then she says, well, what are these criminal complaints about? [27:19.140 --> 27:23.180] So I pulled them out of my coat pocket and I started to hand them to her. [27:23.180 --> 27:26.460] And I kind of took them back a little bit and then she says, well, let me see them. [27:26.460 --> 27:30.380] So now she touched them and now she's reading them. [27:30.380 --> 27:34.340] And I said, well, what is the actual complaint on? [27:34.340 --> 27:39.740] I said, because the Dallas and Rockwell District attorneys are denying me access to the grand [27:39.740 --> 27:40.740] jury. [27:40.740 --> 27:45.820] Now, all their faces just kind of dropped and everybody started getting real nervous and [27:45.820 --> 27:47.340] I'm not saying much at all. [27:47.340 --> 27:50.420] I'm kind of looking pretty stone face. [27:50.420 --> 27:58.100] And I was kind of, you know, not rude or anything, but I was real stern about everything [27:58.100 --> 27:59.980] and stoic. [27:59.980 --> 28:05.580] And so she said, well, you know, I can't take these because that'd be a conflict of interest [28:05.580 --> 28:07.380] and all this other stuff. [28:07.380 --> 28:11.900] And so she's sitting there reading them, then she hands them back to me and hands me Scotty [28:11.900 --> 28:16.340] Shriver, Major Scotty Shriver's number. [28:16.340 --> 28:24.660] And the actual address for them will be the Texas Rangers Division, 6100 Guadalupe Street, [28:24.660 --> 28:28.940] Austin, Texas, 78752. [28:28.940 --> 28:37.820] And I should have had his email pulled up here already, but so anyhow, I said, okay, fine. [28:37.820 --> 28:44.420] So I took off out of there and then came home and I immediately wrote a criminal complaint [28:44.420 --> 28:54.580] on her and the director of BPS for official oppression failure to perform their duty. [28:54.580 --> 29:01.180] And I mailed those off to the major that I originally went to go see. [29:01.180 --> 29:09.580] Well also, when I got home, I submitted those criminal, oh, that was another thing she said. [29:09.580 --> 29:12.580] She goes, well, you know, you can submit these criminal complaints through the website. [29:12.580 --> 29:15.780] And I said, yeah, I've done that, that don't work. [29:15.780 --> 29:22.660] I did that about a month ago and I haven't received any information back on anything. [29:22.660 --> 29:25.700] So I kind of shut her down on that, you know. [29:25.700 --> 29:36.180] And so now I'm just sitting there writing these criminal complaints up on the director [29:36.180 --> 29:43.260] and the sergeant that was there. [29:43.260 --> 29:50.020] And so now that I have all those submitted, then I wrote that information request back [29:50.020 --> 30:02.220] to God each driver and asking for, asking as an information request what had happened. [30:02.220 --> 30:04.420] Coffee might not be so bad after all. [30:04.420 --> 30:09.100] In fact, researchers say drinking a cup of Joe every day can help keep the doctor away. [30:09.100 --> 30:12.980] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment to talk about the health benefits [30:12.980 --> 30:14.500] of coffee. [30:14.500 --> 30:16.460] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.460 --> 30:20.060] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.060 --> 30:24.860] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. 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[31:01.860 --> 31:06.020] And anyone who's had to pull an all-nighter can tell you that coffee improves alertness [31:06.020 --> 31:07.820] and increases endurance. [31:07.820 --> 31:11.300] Coffee has many perks, but doctors caution against overconsumption. [31:11.300 --> 31:15.700] Two cups a day is generally okay, but more can cause jitters, insomnia, and other health [31:15.700 --> 31:16.700] risks. [31:16.700 --> 31:19.540] As with most things in life, moderation is the key. [31:19.540 --> 31:20.940] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:20.940 --> 31:50.900] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.940 --> 32:02.920] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder seeds and oil can do for you, only at Gis USA.org. [32:02.920 --> 32:04.960] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [32:04.960 --> 32:07.460] In today's America, we live in a us against them society. [32:07.460 --> 32:11.380] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to [32:11.380 --> 32:12.840] stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.840 --> 32:15.980] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [32:15.980 --> 32:20.220] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.220 --> 32:24.220] The courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our [32:24.220 --> 32:25.220] rights through due process. [32:25.220 --> 32:29.420] Former sheriff's deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.420 --> 32:33.180] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.180 --> 32:35.580] is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. 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[33:20.020 --> 33:32.460] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 28th day of September [33:32.460 --> 33:39.060] 2018, and Scott, you scoundrel, you ran off the cliff again. [33:39.060 --> 33:40.060] I sure did. [33:40.060 --> 33:41.060] I'm getting good at that. [33:41.060 --> 33:42.060] Yeah, you are. [33:42.060 --> 33:47.060] You're going to get me blamed for it, just because I'm supposed to be watching the clock. [33:47.060 --> 33:52.940] Well, you know, everything's so interesting, it's compelling. [33:52.940 --> 33:54.940] You just lost track of everything. [33:54.940 --> 33:58.700] I was enthralled with your eloquent oratory. [33:58.700 --> 34:01.180] Okay, orate, Bubba. [34:01.180 --> 34:17.700] Okay, so Scotty Shriver's email address down there, dpsaskotty.shriver, s-h-i-v-e-r-e-p-s.t-e-x-a-s.gov. [34:17.700 --> 34:23.700] So that's where you will send all your criminal complaints against public officials to the [34:23.700 --> 34:25.700] PIU unit. [34:25.700 --> 34:34.140] Now, I haven't heard Diddly Squat out of these people for over a month, and yesterday when [34:34.140 --> 34:43.260] I submitted an information request asking via email to find out what was going on with [34:43.260 --> 34:49.820] that, suddenly I got a response today from the rangers, and it said basically that it [34:49.820 --> 34:54.540] was still under review and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, well, that's been a month [34:54.540 --> 35:00.380] that's been under review, so okay, whatever, because I sent the information request in [35:00.380 --> 35:05.380] a hard copy as well to back it up, and I'm not waiting any time. [35:05.380 --> 35:11.260] I sent everything one day, and then the next day sent the information request just chasing [35:11.260 --> 35:16.620] it, so they don't have no time to really sit and figure on it. [35:16.620 --> 35:20.220] One other thing to consider. [35:20.220 --> 35:28.140] When you sent those criminal complaints in, you sent them verified criminal affidavits. [35:28.140 --> 35:32.580] You did not file a voluntary statement. [35:32.580 --> 35:37.420] You filed verified criminal affidavits in your capacity as a credible person in the state [35:37.420 --> 35:39.460] of Texas. [35:39.460 --> 35:49.500] This officer has no power to usurp your authority, so they can evaluate all they want to, but [35:49.500 --> 35:54.540] if they don't deliver that to present that to some magistrate in accordance with Article [35:54.540 --> 36:03.860] 2.13, and I would say if they don't do it immediately, then they are should be accused [36:03.860 --> 36:09.620] from prosecution in violation of 3805 Penal Code, and that's the felony in the state of [36:09.620 --> 36:10.620] Texas. [36:10.620 --> 36:17.780] That's exactly right, and they're all verified and no to rise. [36:17.780 --> 36:22.020] So that way, there is no wiggle room for them. [36:22.020 --> 36:28.060] Even the ones that I sent on the sergeant and the director are all verified criminal [36:28.060 --> 36:33.500] complaints, and they're going to be hitting the major's office probably Tuesday next [36:33.500 --> 36:34.500] week. [36:34.500 --> 36:40.780] So he'll get those, and he'll be wondering what is going on. [36:40.780 --> 36:49.700] Well, now then, we've been having so much problems with this grand jury stuff, I went [36:49.700 --> 36:56.380] about two years ago, I filed a criminal complaint, well I filed, yeah, a criminal complaint with [36:56.380 --> 37:02.060] the Tarrant County Grand Jury, and the foreman of the grand jury stood down and said, oh, [37:02.060 --> 37:07.500] you need to take these to the venue in your location, we just really can't help you. [37:07.500 --> 37:14.300] So today, I created a criminal complaint on the foreman of the Tarrant County Grand Jury, [37:14.300 --> 37:19.900] and called up over at Wise County, and spoke to the lady over there, and she said, oh, [37:19.900 --> 37:25.020] well you need to send this attention to the district attorney, your buddy, I forgot his [37:25.020 --> 37:26.020] name now. [37:26.020 --> 37:27.020] Hey, Greg. [37:27.020 --> 37:28.020] All right. [37:28.020 --> 37:29.020] Yeah, Greg Lowry. [37:29.020 --> 37:35.820] So I made a detention to him, and sent the criminal complaint to the foreman of the grand [37:35.820 --> 37:42.300] jury on a foreman of the grand jury, and when they opened that puppy up, then they're going [37:42.300 --> 37:48.220] to have a little bit of a problem, and that's going to be another conundrum for him to kind [37:48.220 --> 37:52.300] of figure out, and see what happens on that deal. [37:52.300 --> 38:03.140] Yeah, that puts the prosecutor in a spot, he's going to say, well, we don't have venue, [38:03.140 --> 38:10.420] but your allegation is that the foreman of the grand jury said, we don't have venue. [38:10.420 --> 38:18.260] So he pretty well knows what you'll do if the grand jury doesn't hear these. [38:18.260 --> 38:22.060] You'll fall on the foreman somewhere else. [38:22.060 --> 38:25.620] So this makes for an interesting conundrum. [38:25.620 --> 38:26.620] Exactly. [38:26.620 --> 38:36.620] And so now I had received a, because I followed these lawsuits with a bunch of, on a bunch [38:36.620 --> 38:42.260] of public officials, judges and cops and stuff, and I had to spend, and then I had to appeal [38:42.260 --> 38:43.260] some of them. [38:43.260 --> 38:50.220] Well, about a week or so back, one of the appeals was denied, and so now I was writing [38:50.220 --> 38:55.500] up this motion for reconsidering in bank, and then attach a bunch of criminal complaints [38:55.500 --> 39:00.540] to them with that, so that the appeals court has to look at that. [39:00.540 --> 39:08.660] Well, today, I also got another one, the appeals court denied the appeals saying, oh, I didn't [39:08.660 --> 39:14.060] pay their money and stuff, and of course, when I first filed them all, filed them all [39:14.060 --> 39:19.300] with the poppers after David, and they let all that stuff go right on the end. [39:19.300 --> 39:25.380] Well, so today, I got another one back from the appeals court that they denied it on my [39:25.380 --> 39:36.220] quizling judge over in Mesquite, and so now I've already wrote it up for another motion [39:36.220 --> 39:43.460] for reconsideration, and then I'll attach the same criminal complaint that I was going [39:43.460 --> 39:49.300] to attach on that Mesquite cop on the Mesquite judge and send all that little package over [39:49.300 --> 39:56.780] to them so that the appellate court judges will have all these criminal complaints before [39:56.780 --> 40:03.580] them, and so what are they going to do with all that stuff then? [40:03.580 --> 40:08.900] We kind of know what they're going to do, but they're going to ignore them, and they're [40:08.900 --> 40:18.140] going to think that those are just attachments, but we're going to think that we've invoked [40:18.140 --> 40:24.380] the judge's duty as a magistrate to see how that works out for them. [40:24.380 --> 40:31.980] Right, because then I'll file criminal complaints on each one of the appellate court judges [40:31.980 --> 40:40.220] and send that up to the Texas Supreme Court, and then they can stand down, which they probably [40:40.220 --> 40:48.500] will, and then that's exhausted all the remedies, so then I'll be able to file criminal charges [40:48.500 --> 40:54.860] on the Texas Supreme Court judges and give them to the FBI, the FAC, and the FBI to start [40:54.860 --> 40:57.300] working the chain up on that. [40:57.300 --> 41:05.020] Well, also, I had filed a bunch of judicial conducts on all these judges with the State [41:05.020 --> 41:10.540] Commission on Judicial Conduct, well, naturally, they all wrote back saying, oh, well, this [41:10.540 --> 41:14.540] doesn't rise to the level of occasion to warrant any blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. [41:14.540 --> 41:20.140] Well, that was done a long time ago, so I sent an information request. [41:20.140 --> 41:22.300] I did a data dump basically today. [41:22.300 --> 41:29.980] I was just mailing out all kinds of stuff, and so I sent an information request for the [41:29.980 --> 41:37.100] Examining Order on what did they do with all those criminal complaints on all these judges. [41:37.100 --> 41:44.420] So as soon as 15 days rolls around, and I haven't gotten a response back on that, then [41:44.420 --> 41:52.220] I'm going to file criminally on every one of those judges in the Judicial Commission with [41:52.220 --> 41:55.220] the Texas Supreme Court. [41:55.220 --> 42:00.940] Well, in the meantime, I think I'm going to once figure out what's going to happen over [42:00.940 --> 42:07.220] there with Wise County and what they're going to do, and then I can start submitting criminal [42:07.220 --> 42:12.700] complaints to the grand jury over in Wise County, and maybe we can get the door kicked [42:12.700 --> 42:19.460] open and actually get some of these people before grand jury, because that's my intention [42:19.460 --> 42:25.700] is to put some of these judges in jail, and I'm not going to arrest them until some of [42:25.700 --> 42:34.180] these judges go to jail for violating every law known to mankind, and their good old railroad [42:34.180 --> 42:39.820] fashion that they've been giving all of us, it's time we give it back to them. [42:39.820 --> 42:45.580] So that's kind of what's going on at this point right now. [42:45.580 --> 42:50.900] So that's kind of how the cow ate the cabbage. [42:50.900 --> 42:55.740] You sound pretty emphatic, and this is what I like to hear. [42:55.740 --> 43:01.020] This should get really interesting, because if you're an appellate court judge, you have [43:01.020 --> 43:05.420] a lot of people who want to take your position. [43:05.420 --> 43:09.220] The higher up you are in the pecking order, the more people you've got below you that [43:09.220 --> 43:11.460] want your position. [43:11.460 --> 43:20.300] So what Scott's creating is cannon fodder for this judge's next political opponent, [43:20.300 --> 43:25.540] when they next run for office, this is what they're going to see, or something that one [43:25.540 --> 43:31.940] of their opponents can use to actually get them indicted, because politicians are really [43:31.940 --> 43:33.980] scoundrels and they know that. [43:33.980 --> 43:36.020] Hang on, about to go to break. [43:36.020 --> 43:42.500] Randy Kelton, we have a radio, a call-in number, 512-646-1984. [43:42.500 --> 43:45.300] Call boards are open, we'll keep them open all night. [43:45.300 --> 43:53.340] So if you have a question or a comment, give us a call, and you might check out our Logos [43:53.340 --> 43:55.100] Radio Network website. [43:55.100 --> 44:01.180] We have our fundraiser going, and we sure could use your help, and we'll be right back. [44:01.180 --> 44:04.740] At Capital Corn and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.740 --> 44:08.780] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:08.780 --> 44:13.020] We provide a wide assortment of favorite products featuring a great selection of high quality [44:13.020 --> 44:14.620] coins and precious metals. [44:14.620 --> 44:18.460] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. 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[44:54.580 --> 45:01.180] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-644-0. [45:01.180 --> 45:04.340] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.340 --> 45:11.100] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.100 --> 45:14.500] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.500 --> 45:18.900] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.900 --> 45:22.940] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.940 --> 45:27.980] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.980 --> 45:34.540] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.540 --> 45:40.020] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [45:40.020 --> 45:43.460] and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.460 --> 45:49.660] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.660 --> 45:52.300] prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.300 --> 45:56.500] Please visit ruleoflongradio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.500 --> 46:00.500] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:26.500 --> 46:33.500] Okay, we are back. [46:33.500 --> 46:41.380] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio on this Friday, the 28th day of September, 2018, and we're [46:41.380 --> 46:45.380] talking to Scott in Texas. [46:45.380 --> 46:48.260] Okay, Scott. [46:48.260 --> 46:51.780] I was talking to Jay Goodbrand today, your buddy. [46:51.780 --> 46:54.140] Oh, he wanted me to give you a message. [46:54.140 --> 46:59.140] I can't say the exact word, but it kind of goes with folder-dash. [46:59.140 --> 47:02.140] So he wanted to say hi to you. [47:02.140 --> 47:05.140] Yeah, Jay's a hoot. [47:05.140 --> 47:07.140] Oh, he's a character. [47:07.140 --> 47:13.460] In fact, I was telling him about all this stuff, and he said, you know, you basically [47:13.460 --> 47:20.420] have got these guys wrapped up in RICO straight up, and he said, you know, you need to charge [47:20.420 --> 47:21.420] him with corruption. [47:21.420 --> 47:24.420] I said, Jay, there's no law for corruption. [47:24.420 --> 47:30.740] He goes, oh, wait a minute, President Trump signed that executive order when he was talking [47:30.740 --> 47:39.900] about seizing all everybody's assets and, you know, doing all this child smuggling and [47:39.900 --> 47:40.900] all that stuff. [47:40.900 --> 47:46.020] But one of the very last words that he wrote in that EO was corruption. [47:46.020 --> 47:54.860] He said, now you actually do have an order and law that names corruption. [47:54.860 --> 48:00.740] So I was going to run that last year and see what you thought, because if we could talk [48:00.740 --> 48:01.740] to you... [48:01.740 --> 48:11.740] Okay, I haven't read that, but executive orders only apply to the executives. [48:11.740 --> 48:17.980] But it does apply to the police agencies that are part of the executive branch and that [48:17.980 --> 48:21.100] will be the FBI. [48:21.100 --> 48:24.220] So I'd have to read what the order says. [48:24.220 --> 48:29.900] A lot of times those orders are so vague in general that you can't pull anything specific [48:29.900 --> 48:39.500] out of it, especially the kind of stuff they're doing when they're electioneering and just [48:39.500 --> 48:43.700] trying to get populist opinion, but I would certainly like to see that executive order. [48:43.700 --> 48:46.100] Do you know what the number of it is? [48:46.100 --> 48:50.940] I do not, but I could find it over the weekend. [48:50.940 --> 48:59.700] And because I've heard about it, I've heard a lot of it, but I don't have the actual order [48:59.700 --> 49:04.940] in a PDF or anything, so I couldn't tell you definitively what it says or anything like [49:04.940 --> 49:05.940] that. [49:05.940 --> 49:11.540] But that was an interesting concept, you know, if we were able to use something like that. [49:11.540 --> 49:19.060] Now, if it only applies to the Fed, then, you know, that limits the cops, but his contention [49:19.060 --> 49:24.140] was all the cops are in the executive branch all the way down the state level, you know? [49:24.140 --> 49:25.140] So... [49:25.140 --> 49:30.060] Yeah, but they're in the state executive branch, not in the Fed. [49:30.060 --> 49:37.980] So the federal executive orders don't trickle down to local police. [49:37.980 --> 49:38.980] Okay. [49:38.980 --> 49:46.660] Well, I can say I was just catching him up mainly on a bunch of this stuff going on and [49:46.660 --> 49:54.460] what we've been doing around here, and so he was really impressed, and he's been saying [49:54.460 --> 50:00.260] that, you know, because he's over in South Carolina, but just kind of monitoring from [50:00.260 --> 50:08.460] afar, he's starting to hear through the grapevine that the worm has turned on a lot of things. [50:08.460 --> 50:14.460] And he's kind of impressed with some of the things that's been going on already. [50:14.460 --> 50:19.380] And of course, you know, what President Trump has been doing, that's been real good. [50:19.380 --> 50:25.420] He's attacking them from up top, and we're coming down from the basically as ankle biters [50:25.420 --> 50:28.940] working our way up the leg from the bottom up. [50:28.940 --> 50:35.020] So I guess we'll all meet right in the middle where the hit them right between the nuts. [50:35.020 --> 50:43.740] Well, if these guys are paying attention, they will recognize that we're putting together [50:43.740 --> 50:53.380] the basis, the groundwork for really hefty lawsuit against the state of Texas, do process [50:53.380 --> 51:02.660] lawsuit against the state of Texas itself, because the actions we're complaining of are [51:02.660 --> 51:13.060] so pervasive that they are essentially endemic, that they are a part of the system, and makes [51:13.060 --> 51:19.820] no difference how entrenched in the system a policy is. [51:19.820 --> 51:26.660] If the policy is not backed in law, it may carry the appearance of law, but it does never [51:26.660 --> 51:29.860] will accrue the force of law. [51:29.860 --> 51:35.940] And all of their practices are under the color of law. [51:35.940 --> 51:42.580] Every step from arrest to trial is presently practiced in state of Texas is not only wrong. [51:42.580 --> 51:48.020] It is very specifically against particular law. [51:48.020 --> 51:49.020] Every step. [51:49.020 --> 51:52.380] They're just accustomed to do it, they're accustomed to getting away with it. [51:52.380 --> 51:57.860] They are not accustomed to somebody coming at them the way you are. [51:57.860 --> 52:07.460] They've seen it before with me a little bit, but not enough to really get things changed. [52:07.460 --> 52:13.940] But if we can get several people doing it, if, you know, I've got a couple people around [52:13.940 --> 52:21.700] doing it, if they can get others to start doing it, we could reach a tipping point to [52:21.700 --> 52:32.380] where these judges will be afraid to not follow law because they'll be more afraid of the [52:32.380 --> 52:41.300] ordinary citizen out there than they are the other public officials or the officials who [52:41.300 --> 52:47.740] would be upset at them, for instance, judges upset at lawyers. [52:47.740 --> 52:55.460] We put the lawyer in a position such that he's more afraid of us than he is the judge. [52:55.460 --> 53:02.680] They must start getting liberty and, you know, my ultimate outcome that I've always held [53:02.680 --> 53:11.380] all these years is to put every judge in the country in a position such that when they step [53:11.380 --> 53:16.980] up behind the bench and look out across the bar at the gallery, I want them wondering [53:16.980 --> 53:22.980] which one, which one of those gowns are sitting out there and waiting for me to render a ruling [53:22.980 --> 53:27.580] so they can run down to the grand jury and try to get me inside it. [53:27.580 --> 53:32.300] And now we're running down to other grand juries. [53:32.300 --> 53:41.820] The grand juries outside this judge's jurisdiction, the judges and grand juries in counties that [53:41.820 --> 53:48.940] don't care about your county, don't care about your politics, not influenced by your politics [53:48.940 --> 53:49.940] at all. [53:49.940 --> 53:56.900] This should get interesting, and it'll be interesting to see how Greg and Lindy, Lindy [53:56.900 --> 54:05.100] is Greg's assistant prosecutor and she is really sharp. [54:05.100 --> 54:15.020] It will be interesting to see how she argues grand jury venue because I have seen absolutely [54:15.020 --> 54:24.180] nothing on grand jury venue and looked for it, found nothing. [54:24.180 --> 54:31.940] So the thing is, the grand jury is commanded to examine into all crimes subject to indictment [54:31.940 --> 54:38.020] that come to their knowledge by way of the grand jury, any member of the grand jury, [54:38.020 --> 54:44.740] the prosecuting attorney, or any other credible person. [54:44.740 --> 54:50.220] So when a prosecutor or a public official says, well, you can't take that directly to [54:50.220 --> 54:56.180] the grand jury, I say, where'd you come up with that? [54:56.180 --> 54:58.460] Did you just make that up? [54:58.460 --> 54:59.780] I was waiting for it. [54:59.780 --> 55:02.460] Did you just make that up? [55:02.460 --> 55:06.180] Yeah, I can't find that in law. [55:06.180 --> 55:14.220] I mean, I appreciate prosecuting attorneys giving me unsolicited legal advice, but I want to [55:14.220 --> 55:15.220] see that. [55:15.220 --> 55:18.460] You know, on this show, we have a rule. [55:18.460 --> 55:24.820] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [55:24.820 --> 55:31.140] You only make proactive statements of law out of the mouth of the legislature or the [55:31.140 --> 55:34.580] courts in the form of case law. [55:34.580 --> 55:39.340] So where is chapter inverse bubble? [55:39.340 --> 55:44.140] Because if you are a public official and you are exerting an authority that you do not [55:44.140 --> 55:54.300] expressly have, and in the process, you're denying me in a right that is not specifically [55:54.300 --> 56:00.860] restricted by statute, then you commit to class A misdemeanor. [56:00.860 --> 56:06.700] You're denying me in due process while acting under the color of your authority, color meaning [56:06.700 --> 56:11.180] pretext, that's class A misdemeanor in Texas. [56:11.180 --> 56:18.100] But if your action is for the purpose of shielding another from prosecution, why that's felon [56:18.100 --> 56:28.580] and 38.05 Texas penal code, and if you say anything to me, like, oh, wow, you better be [56:28.580 --> 56:39.460] careful, you could get in a lot of trouble and witness tampering 30605 obstruction 30606. [56:39.460 --> 56:43.420] Come on, guys, let's dance. [56:43.420 --> 56:46.620] And there's a thing about grand juries. [56:46.620 --> 56:52.220] The odds are we won't get our complaints before a grand jury. [56:52.220 --> 57:02.740] And even if we do, the odds are the grand jury is not going to indict a public official. [57:02.740 --> 57:06.260] But what are those odds? [57:06.260 --> 57:09.620] Who here would like to play Russian roulette? [57:09.620 --> 57:16.420] You know, who wants to take the first pull of the trigger? [57:16.420 --> 57:23.420] And grand juries, they're playing Russian roulette with the careers of these public officials. [57:23.420 --> 57:29.300] So while they're not going to tell you how much it frightens them, I can guarantee you [57:29.300 --> 57:36.460] we've had enough experience with these guys to tell it terrifies them. [57:36.460 --> 57:41.580] And you can pretty well tell by the look on these rangers' faces when you're not dancing [57:41.580 --> 57:47.580] with these guys, but you've got answers to everything they come up with. [57:47.580 --> 57:54.900] And from what you said, it sounded like they were all wishing they were somewhere else. [57:54.900 --> 57:59.540] And that's when you know you've got them squirming, because these guys know what they're doing [57:59.540 --> 58:01.040] is wrong. [58:01.040 --> 58:04.420] But they're trapped in a system they didn't create. [58:04.420 --> 58:09.100] And you come down there and start putting your finger on what's wrong, it terrifies them, [58:09.100 --> 58:14.980] especially police and lower-level officials, because they're terrified of these judges. [58:14.980 --> 58:17.140] Everybody, including prosecutors, is terrified of these judges. [58:17.140 --> 58:22.500] So the more heat we can put on them, the more likely they are to change their behavior. [58:22.500 --> 58:29.380] Going on, about to go to break, Randy Kelton, Ruth of Law Radio on this Friday, the 28th [58:29.380 --> 58:32.380] day of September 2018. [58:32.380 --> 58:36.620] Our call lines are open, we have some empty spaces, we have a question or comment, give [58:36.620 --> 58:43.340] us a call, 512-646-1984, and this is top of the hour, it's a good time to go to Lobos [58:43.340 --> 58:48.460] Radio Network and check out our gun giveaway and our products there and help support this [58:48.460 --> 58:49.460] network. [58:49.460 --> 58:54.340] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.340 --> 58:59.580] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.580 --> 59:00.900] can really help. [59:00.900 --> 59:05.380] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.380 --> 59:06.380] today. [59:06.380 --> 59:10.260] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.260 --> 59:13.380] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.380 --> 59:18.620] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.620 --> 59:22.900] Chapter by Chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life, clearly presents God's plan [59:22.900 --> 59:27.820] of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.820 --> 59:32.860] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.860 --> 59:45.620] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102 or visit [59:45.620 --> 59:50.900] us online at bfa.org. [59:50.900 --> 59:54.900] Live Free Speech Radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:54.900 --> 01:00:07.900] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing your daily [01:00:07.900 --> 01:00:15.580] bulletins for the Commodities Market, Today in History, News Updates and the Inside Scoop [01:00:15.580 --> 01:00:23.660] into the Tides of the Alternative. [01:00:23.660 --> 01:00:31.140] Markets for the 11th of April 2018, closed with gold $1,353.22 in ounce, silver $16.68 [01:00:31.140 --> 01:00:41.380] in ounce, taxes crude $65.51 in barrel, bitcoins at $6,902.19, ethereum at $420.80, bitcoin [01:00:41.380 --> 01:00:55.580] cash at $652.90, and finally light coins at $114.34, a crypto coin. [01:00:55.580 --> 01:01:01.300] Today in History, the year 1968, President Lyndon M. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act [01:01:01.300 --> 01:01:06.260] of 1968, which prohibited private businesses from discriminating based on race, color, [01:01:06.260 --> 01:01:08.100] religion, sex, or national origin. [01:01:08.100 --> 01:01:13.260] It also prohibited unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation [01:01:13.260 --> 01:01:18.420] in public schools, and employment, and public accommodations for places of business. [01:01:18.420 --> 01:01:28.060] In recent news, tensions in Syria seem to have reached new levels after a chemical attack [01:01:28.060 --> 01:01:32.340] on civilians in the city of Douma, which left 40 dead and many injured, an attack which [01:01:32.340 --> 01:01:36.780] is being blamed on the democratically elected president of Syria, Bashar al-Assad, by the [01:01:36.780 --> 01:01:41.540] United States and on Israel by Russia, either accusatory narrative without any verified [01:01:41.540 --> 01:01:43.420] evidence as of yet. [01:01:43.420 --> 01:01:47.260] President Trump tweeted today Wednesday that if, quote, Russia vows to shoot down any and [01:01:47.260 --> 01:01:51.620] all missiles fired at Syria, get ready, Russia, because they will be coming in nice and new [01:01:51.620 --> 01:01:52.980] and smart. [01:01:52.980 --> 01:01:56.540] Going on to warn Russia that you shouldn't be partners with a gas-killing animal who [01:01:56.540 --> 01:01:58.700] kills its people and enjoys it. [01:01:58.700 --> 01:02:02.700] Many in the West, including President Trump, have been quick to conclude that this chemical [01:02:02.700 --> 01:02:06.860] attack must have been conducted by Assad and his forces. [01:02:06.860 --> 01:02:11.140] Syria and Russia, on the other hand, have given approval since yesterday for the Organization [01:02:11.140 --> 01:02:15.660] for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to investigate the side of the chemical slaughter. [01:02:15.660 --> 01:02:19.460] Assad has been successful in maintaining rule and support during Syria's seven-year civil [01:02:19.460 --> 01:02:24.060] war, a civil war that is being fought by the government of Syria and anti-Assad Syrian [01:02:24.060 --> 01:02:28.860] rebels that are openly being funded by Western governments, with ISIS being one of the more [01:02:28.860 --> 01:02:32.580] notorious splinter groups of the American-backed Syrian rebels. [01:02:32.580 --> 01:02:37.900] No surprise then why Russian Foreign Minister Spokeswoman Maria Zakhova posted on Facebook [01:02:37.900 --> 01:02:42.260] that smart missiles should be fired at terrorists and not at a legitimate government, which [01:02:42.260 --> 01:02:46.820] has been fighting terrorists, or is this a trick to destroy all traces with a smart [01:02:46.820 --> 01:02:51.940] missile strike, and then there will be no evidence for international inspectors to look at. [01:02:51.940 --> 01:03:01.940] This was Brick Roadie with your lowdown for April 11, 2018. [01:03:01.940 --> 01:03:21.940] Okay, we are back. [01:03:21.940 --> 01:03:22.940] Randy Kelton. [01:03:22.940 --> 01:03:25.740] We're on the radio and we're talking to Scott in Texas. [01:03:25.740 --> 01:03:28.180] Okay, Scott, do you have anything else for us? [01:03:28.180 --> 01:03:35.300] No, I guess that's plenty enough for right now, so I will come back next week to give [01:03:35.300 --> 01:03:39.180] you an update when I fall more junk on these people. [01:03:39.180 --> 01:03:40.180] Good. [01:03:40.180 --> 01:03:45.300] Keep turning the screws on them, and it'll be interesting to see what Greg Lowery does [01:03:45.300 --> 01:03:47.620] with these complaints. [01:03:47.620 --> 01:03:52.420] I know he's going to know I've sicked you on him, but life is tough. [01:03:52.420 --> 01:03:58.220] It'll be good for him because now he knows I've got other people coming at him. [01:03:58.220 --> 01:04:01.420] It may give him an incentive to do the right thing. [01:04:01.420 --> 01:04:14.380] I am about to file a petition for Rida habeas corpus in which I will include a request that [01:04:14.380 --> 01:04:20.300] the court order the district attorney to act in accordance with Article 2.13. [01:04:20.300 --> 01:04:22.620] I have that argument written up. [01:04:22.620 --> 01:04:28.300] Send me an email, Scott, and remind me to send that argument to you so that you can [01:04:28.300 --> 01:04:37.620] include it in your habeas to these guys. [01:04:37.620 --> 01:04:40.620] You might want to try a habeas. [01:04:40.620 --> 01:04:44.340] Well, let's see what they do first. [01:04:44.340 --> 01:04:46.860] I'll send you the habeas. [01:04:46.860 --> 01:04:47.860] Okay. [01:04:47.860 --> 01:04:54.740] And then so you have all the structure, and then I'll kind of explain to you some of the [01:04:54.740 --> 01:04:55.740] details. [01:04:55.740 --> 01:05:02.020] It's real tedious in getting everything right to file with these guys, especially for T-File. [01:05:02.020 --> 01:05:09.380] We kind of got that down so that we get a form down. [01:05:09.380 --> 01:05:15.580] If we get one Court of Appeals to order the district attorney to act in accordance with [01:05:15.580 --> 01:05:21.100] Article 2.03 and give any complaints against public officials to the grand jury, then we [01:05:21.100 --> 01:05:24.340] can use that as precedent and use it everywhere. [01:05:24.340 --> 01:05:29.500] And then really pry these prosecutors off the die. [01:05:29.500 --> 01:05:30.500] Okay. [01:05:30.500 --> 01:05:31.500] Thank you, Scott. [01:05:31.500 --> 01:05:32.500] Okay, Bob. [01:05:32.500 --> 01:05:38.500] Now we're going to go to Tim in Texas to see. [01:05:38.500 --> 01:05:40.500] There you go. [01:05:40.500 --> 01:05:41.500] Hello, Tim. [01:05:41.500 --> 01:05:43.500] Hey, how are you doing? [01:05:43.500 --> 01:05:45.700] Doing good. [01:05:45.700 --> 01:05:49.660] Hey, what's the stuff where's you out, you know that? [01:05:49.660 --> 01:05:53.500] Well, we talked to Laura yesterday for quite a while. [01:05:53.500 --> 01:05:54.500] Yeah. [01:05:54.500 --> 01:05:57.260] And but today's the new show. [01:05:57.260 --> 01:06:01.580] We have a lot of people today that doesn't listen to the shows. [01:06:01.580 --> 01:06:07.220] I think this is real important for people here because everybody's been listening to [01:06:07.220 --> 01:06:10.140] you and Laura's struggle. [01:06:10.140 --> 01:06:16.380] And I know they can hear the stress in your voice and we talk about how the courts and [01:06:16.380 --> 01:06:22.180] prosecutors and opposing counsel, especially when they have pros and litigants, do everything [01:06:22.180 --> 01:06:24.700] they can to wear them down. [01:06:24.700 --> 01:06:25.700] Yeah. [01:06:25.700 --> 01:06:34.820] And the trick is don't give them cannon fodder by raising issues against them and raising [01:06:34.820 --> 01:06:37.940] arguments that they can turn against you. [01:06:37.940 --> 01:06:38.940] Yeah. [01:06:38.940 --> 01:06:42.140] And never interfere with somebody when they're screwing up. [01:06:42.140 --> 01:06:43.140] Right. [01:06:43.140 --> 01:06:46.140] I mean, how many times do we talk about that, Tim? [01:06:46.140 --> 01:06:47.140] Oh, yeah. [01:06:47.140 --> 01:06:53.420] Yeah, you've told me that a whole lot of times just to hold off, hold off, because you never [01:06:53.420 --> 01:06:57.220] interfere when they're screwing up. [01:06:57.220 --> 01:07:07.260] It finally got to the point that we were in the 2% to get a petition for rid of mandamus [01:07:07.260 --> 01:07:14.980] ruled on in our favor and we got it from a pro say. [01:07:14.980 --> 01:07:20.580] That means that this court looked at this and said, what these guys are doing is just [01:07:20.580 --> 01:07:24.700] too bad for us to let it go. [01:07:24.700 --> 01:07:29.700] Well, see, what for me was even better. [01:07:29.700 --> 01:07:40.940] They could not bring themselves to rule positively on arguments by a pro say. [01:07:40.940 --> 01:07:53.380] So they found their own issue of really nitpicking issue and ruled on the issue they found because [01:07:53.380 --> 01:07:59.100] they just couldn't bring themselves to rule on a pro say's argument. [01:07:59.100 --> 01:08:04.700] But at the end of the day, they ruled against them anyway. [01:08:04.700 --> 01:08:11.180] And now they're at, right up to the last, they've done the worst they can do. [01:08:11.180 --> 01:08:18.180] And how long won't happen the other day at the city council meeting? [01:08:18.180 --> 01:08:24.500] Well, we have a lot of people know me because I've got a little local automotive repair [01:08:24.500 --> 01:08:26.380] shop here. [01:08:26.380 --> 01:08:30.740] And so, but nobody, you know, everybody's busy with their own lives. [01:08:30.740 --> 01:08:35.540] So they didn't really know to the extent of what was going on. [01:08:35.540 --> 01:08:48.180] And so I had one lady the other night last week that said, she said, she says, she private [01:08:48.180 --> 01:08:49.540] messaged me on Facebook. [01:08:49.540 --> 01:08:55.620] She said, and I barely know this lady, I've met her one time and she owns a sign company [01:08:55.620 --> 01:08:57.580] up in Decatur. [01:08:57.580 --> 01:09:05.340] And she said, just so that you understand that you have people in your corner. [01:09:05.340 --> 01:09:11.100] And she showed me a chat that she had with, there's only one spokesman for the city council [01:09:11.100 --> 01:09:12.900] that's actually speaking to the people. [01:09:12.900 --> 01:09:14.940] The rest of them are just, they're silent. [01:09:14.940 --> 01:09:17.420] They got one guy talking. [01:09:17.420 --> 01:09:23.780] And so she had a little conversation with him and she offered to pay $5,000 of my fine. [01:09:23.780 --> 01:09:27.740] And of course, my fine is $80,000. [01:09:27.740 --> 01:09:36.700] And the fine is really not, it's supposedly $1,000 a day for 80 days of being in direct [01:09:36.700 --> 01:09:40.540] violation of an injunction, a temporary injunction. [01:09:40.540 --> 01:09:46.500] And so when I saw that she had offered to pay $5,000, I thought, wow, that's kind. [01:09:46.500 --> 01:09:52.500] So someone else got an email from someone said, listen, you guys can talk on Facebook [01:09:52.500 --> 01:09:59.980] all you want to back and forth about how bad the city is, but until you put some leg muscle [01:09:59.980 --> 01:10:03.700] to it and get out there and protest, she says, they're not going to do anything, they're [01:10:03.700 --> 01:10:05.700] just going to ignore you. [01:10:05.700 --> 01:10:15.380] So they got her to make up about 20 signs and about 40 people showed up. [01:10:15.380 --> 01:10:22.460] And they stood outside and protested at the council meeting, it was a special session [01:10:22.460 --> 01:10:25.700] and they weren't going to allow anyone to speak, they were just going to go into the [01:10:25.700 --> 01:10:31.020] back after they did the allegiance and pledge and prayer. [01:10:31.020 --> 01:10:32.900] And that's what they did. [01:10:32.900 --> 01:10:37.340] And when they came out, they had two items, one was the city administrator, she's the [01:10:37.340 --> 01:10:43.500] one who started all of this, she's the one that influenced the council, but I'll say [01:10:43.500 --> 01:10:49.300] it's the council's fault, okay, because they relied so heavily on her decisions. [01:10:49.300 --> 01:10:57.980] And this was the woman that was in and out of mental health care. [01:10:57.980 --> 01:11:04.740] But that's what they said, yeah, and we're like, okay, I didn't know that. [01:11:04.740 --> 01:11:10.660] But I think it's because of the stress that she's been under because she knows that everything [01:11:10.660 --> 01:11:21.180] that she did to us, secretly, lying, she knows, she's in the wrong, and we've held it together. [01:11:21.180 --> 01:11:24.420] I haven't gone up there and yelled at her or anything. [01:11:24.420 --> 01:11:30.580] In fact, I've stayed as far away from city halls as I possibly can and not said a word [01:11:30.580 --> 01:11:35.860] to her because I don't want it to be construed that I threatened her because she did accuse [01:11:35.860 --> 01:11:37.860] me of that. [01:11:37.860 --> 01:11:44.540] But anyway, the point being is that these people stood up for us and the council came [01:11:44.540 --> 01:11:52.380] out after talking to the attorney and said that they were going to move to mediation [01:11:52.380 --> 01:11:55.380] with the pixelated litigation, that's me. [01:11:55.380 --> 01:12:02.860] So actually yesterday about 430 got an email from the attorney said that the city council [01:12:02.860 --> 01:12:08.940] wants us to move to litigation, are you up to, not litigation, mediation, are you up [01:12:08.940 --> 01:12:10.860] to mediation within the next 30 days? [01:12:10.860 --> 01:12:15.220] And of course, I have not answered him and he can't see whether I've gotten his email [01:12:15.220 --> 01:12:16.740] or not. [01:12:16.740 --> 01:12:23.300] So I'm just going to wait till the weekend's over and then I'll call and talk to him and [01:12:23.300 --> 01:12:25.820] say I'm still real tired. [01:12:25.820 --> 01:12:29.940] Hold on, hold on. [01:12:29.940 --> 01:12:34.380] So don't do not call him and talk to him. [01:12:34.380 --> 01:12:36.420] Don't call and talk to him. [01:12:36.420 --> 01:12:40.140] Absolutely do not let him engage you in conversation. [01:12:40.140 --> 01:12:47.060] Ever, even if you've got it recorded, do not let him engage you in conversation. [01:12:47.060 --> 01:12:54.940] He is a lawyer, he is, he is, go ahead. [01:12:54.940 --> 01:12:58.260] Should I just email him back? [01:12:58.260 --> 01:13:03.900] Any email or if he wants to send you a letter, he can send you a letter. [01:13:03.900 --> 01:13:09.860] But you know, I always tell these guys, I don't talk to prosecuting attorneys. [01:13:09.860 --> 01:13:12.140] I don't have phone conversations. [01:13:12.140 --> 01:13:18.700] The only time I have a phone conversation is to set an appointment and nothing else. [01:13:18.700 --> 01:13:25.820] We have no substantive content on the phone, period. [01:13:25.820 --> 01:13:33.140] They are very good at manipulating you and coaxing you into saying something they can [01:13:33.140 --> 01:13:35.980] use against you. [01:13:35.980 --> 01:13:43.460] And this will take one of their primary tools away from them. [01:13:43.460 --> 01:13:47.300] They cannot say Tim said this, Tim said that. [01:13:47.300 --> 01:13:53.780] He shouted at me, he was gruff and aggressive, blah, blah, blah. [01:13:53.780 --> 01:13:54.780] They can't do anything. [01:13:54.780 --> 01:13:58.020] And I knew that when everything's an email. [01:13:58.020 --> 01:13:59.020] Getting. [01:13:59.020 --> 01:14:00.020] So. [01:14:00.020 --> 01:14:01.020] All right. [01:14:01.020 --> 01:14:02.020] Well, that's. [01:14:02.020 --> 01:14:04.300] Take as much away from him as you can. [01:14:04.300 --> 01:14:05.300] Yes. [01:14:05.300 --> 01:14:06.300] Okay. [01:14:06.300 --> 01:14:13.400] Well, so where we're at right now is Thursday. [01:14:13.400 --> 01:14:18.760] They're going to have another meeting concerning the city administrator. [01:14:18.760 --> 01:14:24.360] And it, you know, to me, it looks like they're probably going to let her go. [01:14:24.360 --> 01:14:31.320] Hopefully, someone else who's pretty sharp, actually a couple of women have been in, I [01:14:31.320 --> 01:14:37.860] guess, human resources so they know how to legally fire people and without them getting [01:14:37.860 --> 01:14:45.000] any lawsuit against the city said that, you know, you don't even give her her last paycheck [01:14:45.000 --> 01:14:52.440] until she comes and signs a paper that says that she will not sue the city, but I don't [01:14:52.440 --> 01:14:57.960] know if that would work or not, but that's what they said, but they haven't made that [01:14:57.960 --> 01:14:58.960] decision. [01:14:58.960 --> 01:15:04.920] But in the back, way in the back of my mind, I can see these guys going, we can't do without [01:15:04.920 --> 01:15:05.920] her. [01:15:05.920 --> 01:15:06.920] What are we going to do? [01:15:06.920 --> 01:15:12.720] Because they already know that her assistant is not up to board on any of this stuff. [01:15:12.720 --> 01:15:17.160] She's not the city administrator. [01:15:17.160 --> 01:15:24.120] So I could see them very well reinstating her under certain status. [01:15:24.120 --> 01:15:32.000] I hope not, because if they do, people are going to come unglued. [01:15:32.000 --> 01:15:38.880] They've already said, if you hire that lady back or reinstate her at her job, you ain't [01:15:38.880 --> 01:15:40.440] seeing protest yet. [01:15:40.440 --> 01:15:45.200] So they're pretty upset because they know what she did. [01:15:45.200 --> 01:15:52.000] One thing to put that protest in its perspective, at the last city council election, Tim, how [01:15:52.000 --> 01:15:54.720] many people actually voted? [01:15:54.720 --> 01:16:03.320] A hundred and, I think a hundred and four to a hundred and five. [01:16:03.320 --> 01:16:10.240] And our friend who was on council, he got 52 votes and the guy against him got 54. [01:16:10.240 --> 01:16:11.240] Okay. [01:16:11.240 --> 01:16:14.720] That was, I was thinking there were 50 votes and I thought that was kind of low. [01:16:14.720 --> 01:16:15.720] That's what I said last night. [01:16:15.720 --> 01:16:16.720] So there's a hundred. [01:16:16.720 --> 01:16:19.720] That sounds low, but that's better. [01:16:19.720 --> 01:16:29.640] In perspective, my wife got elected with 164 votes when she ran and her opposition got, [01:16:29.640 --> 01:16:30.640] I think, 43. [01:16:30.640 --> 01:16:36.240] So that was at one time over 200 people, but there's been a lot of people that have passed [01:16:36.240 --> 01:16:41.880] away or sold their homes and moved and sold them to other people. [01:16:41.880 --> 01:16:45.760] So they don't know us because I was here as a keeper. [01:16:45.760 --> 01:16:46.760] Hang on. [01:16:46.760 --> 01:16:47.760] We'll have to go to break. [01:16:47.760 --> 01:16:48.760] Randy Kelsen. [01:16:48.760 --> 01:16:49.760] We're really low radio. [01:16:49.760 --> 01:16:53.760] Call it number 512-646-1984. [01:16:53.760 --> 01:17:00.280] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.280 --> 01:17:10.240] It's the 2018 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas [01:17:10.240 --> 01:17:11.240] Gun Works. [01:17:11.240 --> 01:17:15.360] Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter to win. [01:17:15.360 --> 01:17:18.840] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:17:18.840 --> 01:17:25.600] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:17:25.600 --> 01:17:28.400] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [01:17:28.400 --> 01:17:34.480] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:17:34.480 --> 01:17:38.360] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:17:38.360 --> 01:17:42.880] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:17:42.880 --> 01:17:47.480] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [01:17:47.480 --> 01:17:52.000] keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [01:17:52.000 --> 01:17:55.200] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [01:17:55.200 --> 01:18:00.440] Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:18:00.440 --> 01:18:01.440] I love logos. [01:18:01.440 --> 01:18:05.000] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:05.000 --> 01:18:07.600] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.600 --> 01:18:08.800] I need my truth fix. [01:18:08.800 --> 01:18:10.800] I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:10.800 --> 01:18:13.520] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.520 --> 01:18:17.240] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [01:18:17.240 --> 01:18:20.640] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.640 --> 01:18:22.200] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.200 --> 01:18:24.120] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.120 --> 01:18:27.240] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.240 --> 01:18:31.640] With order and your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.640 --> 01:18:35.040] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. [01:18:35.040 --> 01:18:37.840] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.840 --> 01:18:43.680] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.680 --> 01:18:44.680] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.680 --> 01:18:45.680] No. [01:18:45.680 --> 01:18:47.320] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.320 --> 01:18:48.320] No. [01:18:48.320 --> 01:18:49.320] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.320 --> 01:18:50.320] No. [01:18:50.320 --> 01:18:51.320] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.320 --> 01:18:52.320] Wow. [01:18:52.320 --> 01:18:56.160] Giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:18:56.160 --> 01:18:57.160] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.160 --> 01:18:58.160] You're welcome. [01:18:58.160 --> 01:18:59.160] Happy holidays, logos. [01:18:59.160 --> 01:19:11.200] This is the logos, logos, radio, net, radio, net, radio, [01:19:11.200 --> 01:19:30.280] Okay, we are back. [01:19:30.280 --> 01:19:40.760] Randy Kelton on this 28th day of September, 2018, and we're talking to Tim in Texas. [01:19:40.760 --> 01:19:49.240] And one calculation that politicians normally use. [01:19:49.240 --> 01:19:55.120] One person strongly on your side equals 15 votes. [01:19:55.120 --> 01:19:58.400] One person against you equals 15 votes. [01:19:58.400 --> 01:20:04.840] You got one person, you got 14 people who are apathetic and are easily swayed by one [01:20:04.840 --> 01:20:06.840] person's opinion. [01:20:06.840 --> 01:20:14.520] They got 40 people to actually get up out of their house and come down there and show [01:20:14.520 --> 01:20:15.520] support. [01:20:15.520 --> 01:20:16.520] That was remarkable. [01:20:16.520 --> 01:20:24.560] I talked to Laura about this last night and probably more than anything else, the city [01:20:24.560 --> 01:20:34.880] demonstrated to Tim and Laura that they really got friends. [01:20:34.880 --> 01:20:42.360] This is probably a present you could not have gotten any other way. [01:20:42.360 --> 01:20:48.880] I've spoken on the show before that you never really know someone until you've been in a [01:20:48.880 --> 01:20:53.000] tight spot with them. [01:20:53.000 --> 01:21:02.480] When they put me in jail in Cherokee County, the jailers could not have been nicer to me. [01:21:02.480 --> 01:21:09.080] They treated me like a celebrity, primarily because when they came to give me my mail, [01:21:09.080 --> 01:21:12.080] they couldn't put it all through the slot. [01:21:12.080 --> 01:21:15.440] Sometimes they had to open the door and set the box inside. [01:21:15.440 --> 01:21:17.840] I was in solitary confinement the whole time. [01:21:17.840 --> 01:21:25.160] There was so much mail I had to put the box inside and they asked me if I would ask people [01:21:25.160 --> 01:21:30.200] to stop calling down there checking on me. [01:21:30.200 --> 01:21:34.240] I said no. [01:21:34.240 --> 01:21:42.720] People were calling down, you're not beating him up back there, just rah rah rah rah. [01:21:42.720 --> 01:21:45.520] That's when you find out, when you're in a spot. [01:21:45.520 --> 01:21:52.120] I had people come to my assistance that I did not expect and that part of it made the [01:21:52.120 --> 01:21:55.480] whole experience worth it. [01:21:55.480 --> 01:22:01.440] I do this show and I get very little feedback from people. [01:22:01.440 --> 01:22:08.800] You don't really know and then something happens and everybody really stood up. [01:22:08.800 --> 01:22:11.400] It's what keeps me doing this show. [01:22:11.400 --> 01:22:18.720] I know people care and for Tim and Lord to get that many people to come out and rail [01:22:18.720 --> 01:22:24.160] in righteousness and indignation was an incredible blessing. [01:22:24.160 --> 01:22:29.680] It was a demonstration to the city council. [01:22:29.680 --> 01:22:32.840] How long before the next election? [01:22:32.840 --> 01:22:33.840] May. [01:22:33.840 --> 01:22:40.480] Okay, that's not enough time for this to blow over. [01:22:40.480 --> 01:22:43.800] How many people are up for election? [01:22:43.800 --> 01:22:44.800] Four. [01:22:44.800 --> 01:22:47.840] These three council seats and the mayor. [01:22:47.840 --> 01:22:52.240] Good chance that the next election they'll get flushed. [01:22:52.240 --> 01:23:00.200] Here's the thing about it, there's not a lot of people that want a council seat. [01:23:00.200 --> 01:23:04.240] The ones that you get, that's what I've been trying to tell people. [01:23:04.240 --> 01:23:11.000] We don't necessarily want to see these guys seats taken from them. [01:23:11.000 --> 01:23:12.680] We just want to see them behave. [01:23:12.680 --> 01:23:18.760] We know there's one guy that influences the rest of the council and he's the reason why [01:23:18.760 --> 01:23:22.800] the council is in the mess they're in because of his attitude. [01:23:22.800 --> 01:23:28.360] He came in and he's a contractor and he knows everything and he can do this. [01:23:28.360 --> 01:23:29.360] He can do this. [01:23:29.360 --> 01:23:39.640] Well, under their intelligent expertise, they blew $180,000, $50,000 on a grant, a $500,000 [01:23:39.640 --> 01:23:45.560] grant that they were supposed to get, but it was going to cost like $1.1 million so [01:23:45.560 --> 01:23:52.480] the citizens were going to have to come up with another $500,000 anywhere from $300,000 [01:23:52.480 --> 01:24:00.480] to $500,000 to redo this gymnasium, this old school gymnasium that's still standing, [01:24:00.480 --> 01:24:04.480] but it's real disrepair. [01:24:04.480 --> 01:24:05.480] But nobody wants it. [01:24:05.480 --> 01:24:09.120] They're like, we don't want that bills or roads are terrible. [01:24:09.120 --> 01:24:11.080] We don't want that. [01:24:11.080 --> 01:24:14.320] We had to pay $50,000 to a grant writer to do it. [01:24:14.320 --> 01:24:20.960] There's $50,000 out and then they spent $80,000 on this old house called the Hovey House. [01:24:20.960 --> 01:24:28.280] This house was brought in in three pieces about 80 years ago and it sits next to an [01:24:28.280 --> 01:24:32.120] old park and they thought, oh, this is a great idea. [01:24:32.120 --> 01:24:37.560] The reason why they purchased it is because the lady who had came in and bought a bunch [01:24:37.560 --> 01:24:42.080] of property, they were afraid that she would buy it. [01:24:42.080 --> 01:24:43.800] She's not stupid. [01:24:43.800 --> 01:24:47.840] He wasn't going to give $80,000 for that, but the city did. [01:24:47.840 --> 01:24:52.400] So now they were going to give it to a fella to move it three blocks and it was going to [01:24:52.400 --> 01:24:56.280] cost over $50,000 just to move it. [01:24:56.280 --> 01:25:00.000] That's just moving it and then he was going to have to restore it. [01:25:00.000 --> 01:25:04.640] He was like, I don't want that house and so now they're stuck with this house and the [01:25:04.640 --> 01:25:11.400] estimates that they got on redoing it, completely repress duration, it's $200,000. [01:25:11.400 --> 01:25:16.520] They could have built a brand new house for $100,000 that would make this house look [01:25:16.520 --> 01:25:21.160] a whole lot like it is, it's a piece of junk. [01:25:21.160 --> 01:25:28.520] Then they spent another $50,000 on this nice cement curved, it looks like a curved road, [01:25:28.520 --> 01:25:35.640] but it's a drainage ditch between the mayor's house and his neighbor on private property. [01:25:35.640 --> 01:25:43.200] They had to surrender the property by deed to a title company to the city of Newark in [01:25:43.200 --> 01:25:51.040] order to do the drainage, but still, you're not supposed to go and spend $50,000 on private [01:25:51.040 --> 01:25:52.040] property. [01:25:52.040 --> 01:26:00.000] Now, if it's public property, then it's your responsibility to take care of it. [01:26:00.000 --> 01:26:04.320] People are looking at stuff like that and they're saying, okay, that's $180,000 at these [01:26:04.320 --> 01:26:11.160] experts, blue and if they hadn't have done that, we would have a really big stash in [01:26:11.160 --> 01:26:19.920] our city savings account to spend towards improvements in our city. [01:26:19.920 --> 01:26:28.240] My road, I've lived here 25 years, is not paved, it's gravel and when it rains, it has [01:26:28.240 --> 01:26:32.960] big chug holes in it and our cars are always a mess. [01:26:32.960 --> 01:26:38.520] These guys have made some really poor decisions, but I try to tell people, I said the reason [01:26:38.520 --> 01:26:43.440] why they make these decisions is because every council meeting, when they look out there, [01:26:43.440 --> 01:26:48.880] they see the same two or three people out there in the audience and the rest of the [01:26:48.880 --> 01:26:51.360] people, there's nobody else there. [01:26:51.360 --> 01:26:55.120] So they do whatever they want, they think, oh great, this is all ours, we can do whatever [01:26:55.120 --> 01:27:00.640] we want, but we're watching, we're just not there to watch, so we're going to have to [01:27:00.640 --> 01:27:06.880] start making ourselves known and I said, let's work with these guys, let's don't make them, [01:27:06.880 --> 01:27:13.720] let's get past this bump in the road and let's say, hey, let's all work together. [01:27:13.720 --> 01:27:20.920] There are some saying, let's hang them, not quite that bad, but that's the point. [01:27:20.920 --> 01:27:27.320] If someone's willing to give up their time, it's either one of two things, they see something [01:27:27.320 --> 01:27:32.560] that they want and so they're going to manipulate the system or they really do want to improve [01:27:32.560 --> 01:27:40.760] their city, but they have to do it on the consensus of the people, what the people want [01:27:40.760 --> 01:27:47.480] is what should go and if you move here from one of the nicer areas like Trophy Club and [01:27:47.480 --> 01:27:53.840] purchase a house up there and it's called Thousand Oaks, it's a nice area, it's the [01:27:53.840 --> 01:27:56.320] nice side of town up Newark. [01:27:56.320 --> 01:28:05.120] Here we're over 100 years old here, so we're older than the lake that they built, Eagle [01:28:05.120 --> 01:28:13.280] Mountain Lake, the city is, so if we can all be one town, then we can get through this [01:28:13.280 --> 01:28:19.840] and then have a nice place to live, keep it small and then just work with what we have, [01:28:19.840 --> 01:28:20.840] that's all we need. [01:28:20.840 --> 01:28:26.440] We don't need an expansion, we don't need to get bigger, they say, well, if we don't, [01:28:26.440 --> 01:28:32.520] Fort Worth's going to come and swallow us up and I said, so, they got better infrastructure [01:28:32.520 --> 01:28:35.680] than we do, they have a bigger tax base, what's wrong with that? [01:28:35.680 --> 01:28:41.400] Oh, your taxes will go up, no it won't, they think their taxes will go up, they will not [01:28:41.400 --> 01:28:48.560] go up, now the counties area will because they don't have a city tax, but the city here, [01:28:48.560 --> 01:28:53.520] it's the city, our taxes will not go up, they'll just improve what we have. [01:28:53.520 --> 01:29:00.280] It may take 20 or 30 years to get it completed, but anyway, the point is, is that we got to [01:29:00.280 --> 01:29:09.200] get past this struggle and extend a hand and say, listen, we want to work with you guys [01:29:09.200 --> 01:29:17.200] and their kids go to school with people's kids on this side of the tracks, so it's just [01:29:17.200 --> 01:29:22.000] better to try to do it that way than to fight with them, does that make sense? [01:29:22.000 --> 01:29:25.200] That is so gracious. [01:29:25.200 --> 01:29:27.040] Well, they're not. [01:29:27.040 --> 01:29:31.280] You have just ruined all of my son. [01:29:31.280 --> 01:29:41.640] Well, I didn't say we weren't going to still go after the ones that have problems, like [01:29:41.640 --> 01:29:42.640] the attorneys. [01:29:42.640 --> 01:29:53.840] Okay, hang on, got to go to break, Randy Kelton, Rue La Radio, are calling number 512-646-1984, [01:29:53.840 --> 01:29:55.840] we'll be right back. [01:29:55.840 --> 01:30:04.600] Turnabout is fair play, unless you're videotaping the cops. [01:30:04.600 --> 01:30:09.280] While police can freely film the public, citizens doing the same could wind up in handcuffs. [01:30:09.280 --> 01:30:14.600] I'm Dr. Kathryn Albrecht and I'll tell you more about policing the police in just a moment. [01:30:14.600 --> 01:30:19.920] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [01:30:19.920 --> 01:30:22.000] of your personal information. [01:30:22.000 --> 01:30:23.000] That's creepy. [01:30:23.000 --> 01:30:25.000] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:25.000 --> 01:30:28.120] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:28.120 --> 01:30:32.280] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking [01:30:32.280 --> 01:30:34.520] cookies and their third party certified. [01:30:34.520 --> 01:30:39.000] If you don't like big brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [01:30:39.000 --> 01:30:41.560] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:41.560 --> 01:30:44.440] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:44.440 --> 01:30:47.640] Filming the police could land you in the slammer. [01:30:47.640 --> 01:30:49.840] Case in point, Anthony Gruber. [01:30:49.840 --> 01:30:55.320] Arrested after posting footage of his speeding citation on YouTube, he faced a 16-year prison [01:30:55.320 --> 01:30:57.320] term for wiretapping. [01:30:57.320 --> 01:31:01.760] His footage featured a plainclothes state trooper jumping out of an unmarked car, screaming [01:31:01.760 --> 01:31:05.400] at Gruber and brandishing a gun before identifying himself. [01:31:05.400 --> 01:31:09.080] Gruber spent 26 hours in jail and had his computer seized. [01:31:09.080 --> 01:31:13.000] While his case was later thrown out of Maryland court, the geographers and other states could [01:31:13.000 --> 01:31:14.000] be convicted. [01:31:14.000 --> 01:31:17.920] Documenting police practices empowers the people and should be legal. [01:31:17.920 --> 01:31:19.760] I say let the cameras roll. [01:31:19.760 --> 01:31:22.560] It might just put the civil back in civil servant. [01:31:22.560 --> 01:31:23.960] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:23.960 --> 01:31:30.880] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.880 --> 01:31:36.240] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.240 --> 01:31:38.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.240 --> 01:31:43.320] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.320 --> 01:31:47.320] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives to thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.320 --> 01:31:48.320] force responders. [01:31:48.320 --> 01:31:52.560] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correction officer, [01:31:52.560 --> 01:31:57.280] I'm an Air Force pilot, I'm a father who lost his son, we're Americans and we deserve [01:31:57.280 --> 01:31:58.280] the truth. [01:31:58.280 --> 01:32:01.120] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.120 --> 01:32:03.240] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [01:32:03.240 --> 01:32:06.400] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? 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[01:32:32.280 --> 01:32:40.920] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com, mention the crypto show and get $100 off, [01:32:40.920 --> 01:32:45.560] and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:45.560 --> 01:32:50.680] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:50.680 --> 01:32:56.760] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:56.760 --> 01:33:03.200] These counts are based on full roof replacement, I mean I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:03.200 --> 01:33:04.760] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.760 --> 01:33:34.040] You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com Okay, we are back. [01:33:34.040 --> 01:33:40.360] Andy Kelton from Rule of Law Radio and I apologize, I'm having some voice issues today. [01:33:40.360 --> 01:33:43.040] We're talking to Tim in Texas. [01:33:43.040 --> 01:33:48.040] Okay, let's talk about where we're at. [01:33:48.040 --> 01:33:54.360] Most people who are listening to the show have pretty well heard the saga and they've [01:33:54.360 --> 01:33:58.000] heard your stress all of this time. [01:33:58.000 --> 01:34:03.800] But you guys held out, you held out until they screwed up just about all they could. [01:34:03.800 --> 01:34:12.040] And now that the worm is about to turn, some issues came up so that the public pretty well [01:34:12.040 --> 01:34:14.400] found out what was going on. [01:34:14.400 --> 01:34:20.520] And oh yeah, there was a local newspaper reporter that came by. [01:34:20.520 --> 01:34:22.320] Will you tell about that one? [01:34:22.320 --> 01:34:30.800] Yeah, he was at the meeting and he saw, well he heard about what was going on and so he [01:34:30.800 --> 01:34:34.640] wrote an article but it was inaccurate so somebody called him and said, hey, you know, [01:34:34.640 --> 01:34:37.000] you kind of got it wrong, you know. [01:34:37.000 --> 01:34:44.440] So he was at the next meeting and he saw all the protesters and so he wrote another article [01:34:44.440 --> 01:34:52.840] and before he actually released the article, last night he met with my wife at a couple's [01:34:52.840 --> 01:34:56.960] house up in Thousand Oaks, that's friends of ours. [01:34:56.960 --> 01:35:05.720] And she took every piece of paper, every email between us and the city, police report, filed [01:35:05.720 --> 01:35:08.840] against us by the city administrator, everything. [01:35:08.840 --> 01:35:14.880] And just began to go through them chronologically and she had everything filed and said he got [01:35:14.880 --> 01:35:23.640] about 4% through it and he went, oh my God, he said, I've never seen anything so organized. [01:35:23.640 --> 01:35:25.320] She goes, this is not even organized. [01:35:25.320 --> 01:35:28.040] She said, this is just the best I could do. [01:35:28.040 --> 01:35:32.200] Should they were throwing things so fast at us, we were just barely keeping up. [01:35:32.200 --> 01:35:37.040] She said, you don't understand, we had to stay up past the night trying to prepare documents [01:35:37.040 --> 01:35:44.800] to get them filed in time because they would send to us on like a Friday evening at five [01:35:44.800 --> 01:35:53.720] o'clock saying that we had to be at court on a Tuesday for something so it was not good. [01:35:53.720 --> 01:35:59.480] But he looked at it all and he said, I don't know how I'm going to get all of this in an [01:35:59.480 --> 01:36:06.400] article until someone suggested maybe a two or three part series. [01:36:06.400 --> 01:36:10.720] So he says, this is real. [01:36:10.720 --> 01:36:13.720] He said, this is not just being fabricated, this is real. [01:36:13.720 --> 01:36:20.480] And he said also, one thing that this tells me, seeing all those people there last night, [01:36:20.480 --> 01:36:25.720] he said, shows me that you've got, he said, this stuff doesn't happen. [01:36:25.720 --> 01:36:26.720] This never happens. [01:36:26.720 --> 01:36:32.160] And he says, you've got people behind you here that know the story better than I do. [01:36:32.160 --> 01:36:39.360] And so we'll have to see, he's a young guy, Laura says young, he's like 29, she thinks. [01:36:39.360 --> 01:36:41.480] I guess that's young. [01:36:41.480 --> 01:36:50.440] But I'm thinking to myself, well, I hope that whatever he does, his editor is with him [01:36:50.440 --> 01:36:53.000] on it and they just tell the truth. [01:36:53.000 --> 01:36:54.800] That's all they have to do. [01:36:54.800 --> 01:36:56.320] And they don't have to be one sided. [01:36:56.320 --> 01:37:02.480] They can get, said the attorneys had sent some information to him. [01:37:02.480 --> 01:37:08.120] But my wife, he was taking pictures of documents and stuff and she said, no, you can take pictures [01:37:08.120 --> 01:37:09.120] of anything you want. [01:37:09.120 --> 01:37:11.840] She said, it's all public record anyway. [01:37:11.840 --> 01:37:18.040] So she just had it organized so that he could see piece by piece what they had been doing [01:37:18.040 --> 01:37:19.920] to us. [01:37:19.920 --> 01:37:26.800] So now the only question is, for us, is where to go from here? [01:37:26.800 --> 01:37:29.240] Okay. [01:37:29.240 --> 01:37:41.520] When the court of appeals granted the mandamus and rendered the original adjudication void, [01:37:41.520 --> 01:37:49.400] if the lawyers had any sense, they would have dropped everything because the $80,000 amount [01:37:49.400 --> 01:37:58.160] they charged for a continuing violation was based on the adjudication of a violation. [01:37:58.160 --> 01:38:01.800] But that adjudication was thrown out. [01:38:01.800 --> 01:38:07.680] So there never was a presumption of guilt on which to base the $80,000. [01:38:07.680 --> 01:38:14.200] If they had any sense, that had dropped everything right then. [01:38:14.200 --> 01:38:22.040] But being the arrogant lawyers that they are dealing with a pro se, they figured they [01:38:22.040 --> 01:38:27.840] had an easy mark here when they got a mandamus against them, that should have told them this [01:38:27.840 --> 01:38:29.840] is not going to be an easy mark. [01:38:29.840 --> 01:38:41.920] But when I saw the mandamus, the first thing that struck me is baritry, is resjudicata. [01:38:41.920 --> 01:38:50.040] The ones to go after and the strategy I'm looking at is we villainize the lawyers and [01:38:50.040 --> 01:38:52.240] leave the city out of it. [01:38:52.240 --> 01:38:56.280] That was a strategy from the beginning. [01:38:56.280 --> 01:39:06.160] When they came after Tim and Laura, they came to me and put together a subject matter jurisdiction [01:39:06.160 --> 01:39:09.520] challenge and a counter complaint. [01:39:09.520 --> 01:39:17.600] And the counter complaint made a claim against the city in the form of a petition for declaratory [01:39:17.600 --> 01:39:19.480] judgment. [01:39:19.480 --> 01:39:23.720] So we didn't ask for any damages against the city. [01:39:23.720 --> 01:39:28.760] And that was, you know, we talked about that, that was a specific strategy. [01:39:28.760 --> 01:39:31.600] Don't go after the city directly. [01:39:31.600 --> 01:39:37.080] Go after the actors, the lawyers and the administrative board. [01:39:37.080 --> 01:39:39.560] So that's what we did. [01:39:39.560 --> 01:39:41.840] And we asked for no damages from the city. [01:39:41.840 --> 01:39:52.040] We merely asked the court to render a ruling as to whether or not a municipality could [01:39:52.040 --> 01:39:54.880] write law. [01:39:54.880 --> 01:40:00.600] We alleged that the Constitution authorized the legislature to write law. [01:40:00.600 --> 01:40:05.240] And the legislature authorized the cities to write ordinances. [01:40:05.240 --> 01:40:11.240] They don't call them laws, they call them ordinances. [01:40:11.240 --> 01:40:18.520] And they called them ordinances because the Constitution authorized the legislature to [01:40:18.520 --> 01:40:25.760] write law, but they did not authorize the legislature to delegate that authority. [01:40:25.760 --> 01:40:29.320] They only authorized the legislature. [01:40:29.320 --> 01:40:34.120] So the legislature could not delegate an authority to write law, so they just delegated [01:40:34.120 --> 01:40:36.560] an authority to write an ordinance. [01:40:36.560 --> 01:40:42.960] And it was our contention that the municipality is a corporation and the ordinances are in [01:40:42.960 --> 01:40:46.080] the form of a corporate rule. [01:40:46.080 --> 01:40:52.400] So the only ones that the ordinances could apply to would be employees of the members [01:40:52.400 --> 01:40:58.680] or employees of the corporation or officers or employees of the corporation or someone [01:40:58.680 --> 01:41:06.480] in contractual privity with the corporation who had agreed to this rule structure. [01:41:06.480 --> 01:41:13.200] If they tried to apply these rules to the general public, they became law. [01:41:13.200 --> 01:41:15.680] And they can't pass law. [01:41:15.680 --> 01:41:22.840] Now the legislature could have passed into law a set of rules for municipalities and [01:41:22.840 --> 01:41:26.520] call them ordinances if they wanted to. [01:41:26.520 --> 01:41:33.400] But the legislature did not do that and it was our contention that those ordinances can [01:41:33.400 --> 01:41:39.920] only apply to city employees or people contracted with the city. [01:41:39.920 --> 01:41:41.920] That was the argument we intended to bring. [01:41:41.920 --> 01:41:46.600] That's the only argument we brought against the city. [01:41:46.600 --> 01:41:53.000] We brought baritry charges against the lawyers, first thing, first crack out of the hat. [01:41:53.000 --> 01:41:56.880] We accused them of baritry and baritry fell in Texas. [01:41:56.880 --> 01:42:01.440] And then we made allegations against the administrative board. [01:42:01.440 --> 01:42:06.720] Those are the only ones we made claims against. [01:42:06.720 --> 01:42:14.680] So now the court ruled that the hearing was improper. [01:42:14.680 --> 01:42:28.160] The lawyer, McSwain, in violation of Texas rules of professional conduct 2.09, conferred [01:42:28.160 --> 01:42:36.960] with a pro se defendant 2.09 strictly forbids her to do from doing that. [01:42:36.960 --> 01:42:44.840] McSwain convinced Tim to ask for an administrative hearing, something he didn't know existed [01:42:44.840 --> 01:42:45.840] before that. [01:42:45.840 --> 01:42:49.160] So he told him he could ask for an administrative hearing. [01:42:49.160 --> 01:42:55.800] Well, he didn't know better, he acted in good faith reliance on competent authority and [01:42:55.800 --> 01:43:01.480] agreed to a hearing for a specific purpose, a restricted specific purpose. [01:43:01.480 --> 01:43:09.880] Then the lawyer asked the judge to appoint to authorize this hearing. [01:43:09.880 --> 01:43:16.960] Then the lawyer came to the hearing and presided over the hearing and charged the city for [01:43:16.960 --> 01:43:20.200] presiding over the hearing. [01:43:20.200 --> 01:43:28.120] The court of appeals ruled that the hearing was invalid because it violated law. [01:43:28.120 --> 01:43:36.760] That is baritry by definition, fomenting litigation that the lawyer then gets to represent. [01:43:36.760 --> 01:43:37.760] That's baritry. [01:43:37.760 --> 01:43:43.880] And it's res judicata. [01:43:43.880 --> 01:43:50.600] Now we go after the McSwain and every member of the law firm who had anything to do with [01:43:50.600 --> 01:43:57.600] this case, grand jury for felony baritry, hang on Randy Kelton, we'll be right back. [01:43:57.600 --> 01:44:02.920] Nutritious food is real body armor. [01:44:02.920 --> 01:44:08.280] It builds muscle, burns fat, improves digestion and feeds the entire body the nutrients it [01:44:08.280 --> 01:44:09.280] needs. 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[01:45:28.480 --> 01:45:35.200] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.200 --> 01:45:39.880] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.880 --> 01:45:44.120] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.120 --> 01:45:50.240] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forums for civil cases, [01:45:50.240 --> 01:46:01.240] prosay tactics and much more. Please visit www.lulavlawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:20.240 --> 01:46:34.240] Okay, we are back. [01:46:34.240 --> 01:46:41.280] Randy Kelton, we're talking to Tim in Texas and we're talking about the strategies to [01:46:41.280 --> 01:46:48.440] come and I'm going to be a little careful what I say because by this time it may well [01:46:48.440 --> 01:46:55.160] be that the lawyers on the other side have become aware of who the dirty rod and scoundrel [01:46:55.160 --> 01:46:58.160] in the background is. [01:46:58.160 --> 01:47:11.400] When this original nonsense was going on, the prosay-cutrix, Brett Fountain came up [01:47:11.400 --> 01:47:22.040] with this term. He called the prosecutor a prosay-cutrix. That term sounds just almost [01:47:22.040 --> 01:47:36.640] dirty. I have had so much fun with that. Anyway, the prosay-cutrix, next way. I told Tim that [01:47:36.640 --> 01:47:46.600] she doesn't know who he's been taking advice from, but she's a licensed lawyer. Well, let's [01:47:46.600 --> 01:47:50.320] see how that works out for her, because- [01:47:50.320 --> 01:48:01.320] That's offering me a cut of $4,000. I would only have to pay $4,000 for an invalid decision. [01:48:01.320 --> 01:48:09.920] Now we see how this works out. What I'm looking at, people need someone to villainize. It's [01:48:09.920 --> 01:48:15.560] just the way people are. Especially the council is really responsible for this because they [01:48:15.560 --> 01:48:23.320] had ample opportunity to draw a line and they didn't. Now things are coming back at them [01:48:23.320 --> 01:48:33.840] big time. They need somebody to throw under the bus. They need a villain. It just so happens [01:48:33.840 --> 01:48:41.200] we have one. I actually have a number of them. A bunch of arrogant lawyers. Nobody likes [01:48:41.200 --> 01:48:50.880] lawyers to start with. We're going to try to villainize the lawyers. We filed baritry, [01:48:50.880 --> 01:48:57.720] criminal baritry charges against the lawyer, and I'm making up a very extensive grand jury [01:48:57.720 --> 01:49:07.680] affidavit. It will walk through all of the things that was done. It will quote the statute [01:49:07.680 --> 01:49:16.080] they violated, state all the elements of the crime, then claim that this act was in violation [01:49:16.080 --> 01:49:24.880] of 39.03 Texas penal code. This action was an act of official oppression in violation [01:49:24.880 --> 01:49:33.560] of 39.03 penal code, which reads as follows, then I quote it. They're criminally culpable [01:49:33.560 --> 01:49:43.320] under 7.02, and I quote 7.02. We write this out so anybody can read it and follow the [01:49:43.320 --> 01:49:52.120] steps. It all makes sense. So an eighth grader could read it and understand how we come to [01:49:52.120 --> 01:50:00.680] each accusation that we make. One of the first ones we're going to make is felony baritry [01:50:00.680 --> 01:50:09.800] against the lawyer, against McSwain. Then every lawyer that stepped in behind McSwain [01:50:09.800 --> 01:50:18.520] who acted in furtherance of the acts of baritry McSwain initiated, they become guilty of [01:50:18.520 --> 01:50:28.160] baritry as well. We could wind up not only ending the law firm, we could wind up with [01:50:28.160 --> 01:50:39.760] some of these lawyers in jail. I don't see that as a bad thing. Tim's house is still [01:50:39.760 --> 01:50:51.160] closed. It's been seriously jeopardized. There's a little known aspect of law. If, say you're [01:50:51.160 --> 01:50:56.960] walking across the street and you walk out a little closer in front of me than I like [01:50:56.960 --> 01:51:04.840] and I shower down on the horn, and you've got a really bad heart. It scares you so bad [01:51:04.840 --> 01:51:16.200] you have a heart attack and fall over dead. I've committed manslaughter. I will say I [01:51:16.200 --> 01:51:22.600] had no idea he had a bad heart and they're going to say your problem is is you take him [01:51:22.600 --> 01:51:30.120] like you find him. He had the bad heart and you did something that was unnecessary and [01:51:30.120 --> 01:51:41.960] because of what you did, he died manslaughter. Tim has an issue with seizures and this added [01:51:41.960 --> 01:51:51.640] pressure has caused him two major seizures during the process of what was going on. We're [01:51:51.640 --> 01:52:00.960] going to call that depraved heart assault. Let them argue against it. I'd like the term [01:52:00.960 --> 01:52:11.120] I like depraved heart. Depraved heart assault is a great charge because it sounds so awful. [01:52:11.120 --> 01:52:18.800] It's one of those sticky words that just sticks to the brain and you can't scrape it off. [01:52:18.800 --> 01:52:24.520] So we'll look at charging them with depraved heart assault along with baritry and allege [01:52:24.520 --> 01:52:31.880] that it was their intention to push Tim to the point that he would not be able physically [01:52:31.880 --> 01:52:36.520] to continue to fight against them, then they would win the by default. [01:52:36.520 --> 01:52:45.120] Let me say this. Here's the thing. That's what all attorneys do, but it actually did [01:52:45.120 --> 01:52:49.240] cause a problem here. In other words, they push people to the edge where they just throw [01:52:49.240 --> 01:52:54.480] up their hands and say, hey, it's not worth it fighting that because I'm missing work [01:52:54.480 --> 01:53:00.120] and I'm, you know, this is causing my life. I see people all the time that just give in [01:53:00.120 --> 01:53:06.600] because even though they're right, they give in because the attorneys make them have to [01:53:06.600 --> 01:53:12.960] be at court, miss work, stand before a judge is not going to be sympathetic, then they [01:53:12.960 --> 01:53:20.280] have to pay an attorney whose buddies with this prosecutor or, you know, it's just, [01:53:20.280 --> 01:53:27.560] it's not worth it to them. It just causes stress on their family and you think the amount [01:53:27.560 --> 01:53:35.840] of money these attorneys are making, it's just they're robbing the cities. They're robbing [01:53:35.840 --> 01:53:41.120] the cities, they're robbing the citizens. And if people could get it through their heads, [01:53:41.120 --> 01:53:46.040] we could all work this stuff out a whole lot cheaper. And then if you want to be a jerk [01:53:46.040 --> 01:53:52.880] at the end of the day, then hire an attorney and get on it. But, you know, for the most [01:53:52.880 --> 01:53:59.920] part, we've got to work to where we're not doing that. These guys have a cushy job because [01:53:59.920 --> 01:54:06.080] they argue the same argument over and over against people and they got it down pat. It's [01:54:06.080 --> 01:54:13.640] like a form letter to them. What they don't have down pat is someone that'll come back [01:54:13.640 --> 01:54:23.320] at them, someone that has looked at law from outside their lawyer paradigm. Yeah, someone [01:54:23.320 --> 01:54:30.960] who is not subject to the constraints that lawyers are subject to. No lawyer would ever [01:54:30.960 --> 01:54:42.280] imagine accusing a judge of official oppression for failing to properly apply the law to the [01:54:42.280 --> 01:54:53.000] facts. And we did just exactly that to Judge Brock Smith. And yes, we can say Judge Brock [01:54:53.000 --> 01:54:59.800] Smith's name on the air. We can tell all the bad things he did. Now, he used to have laws [01:54:59.800 --> 01:55:08.040] against that, but Governor of Minnesota, the ex-wrestler, got all that done away with. [01:55:08.040 --> 01:55:15.400] So now we can bring up the bad things the judges do. And Brock Smith, his actions were [01:55:15.400 --> 01:55:22.920] absolutely outrageous. And I personally am going to do everything I can to get him indicted. [01:55:22.920 --> 01:55:30.080] I might not get him indicted. He is very well liked. But I'm going to do everything I can. [01:55:30.080 --> 01:55:35.600] And that makes him the best one because everybody likes him. Yeah, if you can get him back in [01:55:35.600 --> 01:55:43.240] his box though. Oh, he's already in the box. Well, what I'm getting at is that he may take [01:55:43.240 --> 01:55:54.040] this as fair warning and behave. But if he... Sorry, Bubba. That bill's already been wrong [01:55:54.040 --> 01:56:01.600] multiple times. Yeah, but the point is that he has to have a judge who's going to rule [01:56:01.600 --> 01:56:11.920] against him or a group of judges. Okay, let me get to the strategy. I live in a different [01:56:11.920 --> 01:56:19.280] house. I don't live in the house the lawyers and judges live in. And this is stuff that [01:56:19.280 --> 01:56:26.840] they are not accustomed to dealing with. And if you've ever seen a lawyer on the stand, [01:56:26.840 --> 01:56:34.600] lawyers are real good at examining witnesses. But lawyers suck when they're witnesses. So [01:56:34.600 --> 01:56:40.000] we get the lawyer on this... We turn the tables on the lawyer. Every time we've had people [01:56:40.000 --> 01:56:46.800] do this, the lawyers screw up everything. And we have a strategy for coming back at [01:56:46.800 --> 01:56:53.080] these lawyers. First thing we're going to do is charge them criminally. Bar grieve them [01:56:53.080 --> 01:57:01.920] into the stone age to quote Scott Richardson. As I'm building this statement, I'm laying [01:57:01.920 --> 01:57:07.160] into the statement, bar grievances, judicial conduct complaints, criminal complaints, just [01:57:07.160 --> 01:57:13.360] one after the other. When we file judicial conduct complaints, we'll include criminal [01:57:13.360 --> 01:57:20.440] complaints with the judicial conduct complaints. And when the State Commission on Judicial [01:57:20.440 --> 01:57:28.320] Conduct gets those complaints, there are two judges on that panel. Included with the complaint [01:57:28.320 --> 01:57:34.280] will be verified criminal affidavits. When those judges failed hold in examining trials [01:57:34.280 --> 01:57:40.000] and we file against the judges. Failing to perform a duty, they're required to perform [01:57:40.000 --> 01:57:44.480] it in the process, not citizen pool free access to or enjoyment of the right to the [01:57:44.480 --> 01:57:50.600] equal protection of the laws. Try that on guys. You want to protect your buddies without [01:57:50.600 --> 01:57:57.520] this works out for you. When we start burning everybody who tries to help them, then they're [01:57:57.520 --> 01:58:06.480] going to look around and say, Okay, what can we do to stop these guys? Nothing. You are [01:58:06.480 --> 01:58:17.680] the victim. You're merely reporting crime. They can't even frown at you. Once you start [01:58:17.680 --> 01:58:24.320] going after them criminally, it poisons their well. Just like they try to poison your well [01:58:24.320 --> 01:58:30.280] because you're a pro se. So we turn it back on them. We start doing the things no lawyer [01:58:30.280 --> 01:58:36.880] would ever imagine doing. We go after these guys criminally. We've got well three or four [01:58:36.880 --> 01:58:41.400] criminal charges against the district judge so far and we'll show how he's responsible [01:58:41.400 --> 01:58:50.280] with this. Hang on, going to break. Be right back. 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