[00:00.000 --> 00:05.720] The falling of these flashes brought to you by the low star lowdown, providing the jelly [00:05.720 --> 00:13.480] bulletins for the commodities market, today's history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.480 --> 00:21.280] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.280 --> 00:29.080] Markets for Wazeva 6th of February 2019, open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 [00:29.080 --> 00:36.880] an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent crude $61.98 a [00:36.880 --> 00:45.800] barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum [00:45.800 --> 00:51.640] $10.10 and Eos is at $2.32 of crypto coin. [00:51.640 --> 00:59.640] Today in History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.640 --> 01:04.520] qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.520 --> 01:06.000] was passed by Parliament. [01:06.000 --> 01:13.640] Today in History, in recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting [01:13.640 --> 01:18.480] that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally [01:18.480 --> 01:19.840] registered to vote. [01:19.840 --> 01:24.640] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary [01:24.640 --> 01:30.000] of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens [01:30.000 --> 01:33.360] who were registered to vote when obtaining age-arguage license. [01:33.360 --> 01:37.040] Over half of the 95,000 didn't devote, it seems. [01:37.040 --> 01:41.080] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:41.080 --> 01:45.360] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.360 --> 01:50.880] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.880 --> 01:55.240] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.240 --> 01:57.040] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.040 --> 02:01.240] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.240 --> 02:09.000] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:09.000 --> 02:14.400] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.400 --> 02:15.400] an artery. [02:15.400 --> 02:16.920] Vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.920 --> 02:20.640] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.640 --> 02:24.240] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.240 --> 02:30.440] The vape store's smoke and vape DZ has refused to comment. [02:30.440 --> 02:35.200] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.200 --> 02:40.160] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.160 --> 02:44.560] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.560 --> 02:47.480] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.480 --> 02:51.480] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:51.480 --> 03:19.480] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:19.480 --> 03:38.160] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Roodle's Law Radio on this Friday, the 22nd day of [03:38.160 --> 03:42.280] February 2018. [03:42.280 --> 03:44.960] We have the phone lines open. [03:44.960 --> 03:46.560] We all keep them open all night. [03:46.560 --> 03:55.400] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call, 512-646-1984, and let me start out [03:55.400 --> 04:09.680] with a little update on what we're doing with the electronic lawyer project. [04:09.680 --> 04:15.040] We're still working toward getting funding, and it turns out getting funding is really [04:15.040 --> 04:17.240] tough. [04:17.240 --> 04:23.560] Right now, we're in the process of finishing up a questionnaire on the Scrooge Exchange [04:23.560 --> 04:33.040] Commission rulings because there's a special place in the market that we may be able to [04:33.040 --> 04:42.520] serve a need that exists in the market and in the process, get the product in front of [04:42.520 --> 04:49.240] all of those people that we will be asking to invest in the project. [04:49.240 --> 05:00.640] I have been going around the country to different conventions on ICOs and STOs, and ICO is a [05:00.640 --> 05:02.640] initial coin offering. [05:02.640 --> 05:12.480] It's a little too complex to try to explain all that, but an STO is a securities token [05:12.480 --> 05:25.840] offering, and ICO is governed by the SEC, and ICO is not a security and doesn't fall [05:25.840 --> 05:30.480] under the auspices of the SEC. [05:30.480 --> 05:41.280] A STO is a security token, and it is a security, and it is regulated by the Securities Exchange [05:41.280 --> 05:43.600] Commission. [05:43.600 --> 05:56.640] The SEC regulations are so vague and ambiguous that no one can really tell if they are ever [05:56.640 --> 05:59.200] in compliance. [05:59.200 --> 06:05.400] Now, I'm saying that from the perspective of someone who has been going through the [06:05.400 --> 06:20.080] SEC codes in minute detail, I find them to be absolutely unconstitutional. [06:20.080 --> 06:27.280] No reasonable person of ordinary prudence can read these codes and understand what the [06:27.280 --> 06:31.120] requirements are. [06:31.120 --> 06:39.960] Even if they could understand what the requirements intend to be, the requirements are written [06:39.960 --> 06:47.560] so that the SEC can always ignore them. [06:47.560 --> 06:54.040] They can always decide that no matter what you've done, no matter how much attention [06:54.040 --> 07:00.200] you've paid to detail, the SEC can arbitrarily and capriciously decide that they don't believe [07:00.200 --> 07:06.240] that what you've done is sufficient, and then they can initiate an investigation if the [07:06.240 --> 07:09.840] SEC initiates an investigation. [07:09.840 --> 07:11.920] You are shut down. [07:11.920 --> 07:17.280] You cannot sell securities while you're under investigation. [07:17.280 --> 07:23.560] That is unconstitutional on its face and goes to pains and penalties, which is forbidden [07:23.560 --> 07:26.560] by Constitution. [07:26.560 --> 07:34.640] Even if that weren't enough, the codes themselves are written so that they don't meet the requirements [07:34.640 --> 07:38.400] of the Statutory Construction Act. [07:38.400 --> 07:44.800] Well, with that said, I can't find a federal Statutory Construction Act, but what I can [07:44.800 --> 07:46.680] find, there is a state one. [07:46.680 --> 07:52.240] Texas has a gray one, but we do have the Rehnquist Court. [07:52.240 --> 08:04.080] The Rehnquist Court set out conditions on how to evaluate statutes, and that effectively [08:04.080 --> 08:09.840] established his Statutory Construction Standards. [08:09.840 --> 08:15.920] There is no way the SEC code will meet the Statutory Construction Standards. [08:15.920 --> 08:21.360] Not only will they not meet it, they don't even come close. [08:21.360 --> 08:31.040] It's as if the SEC wrote the Code of Federal Regulations. [08:31.040 --> 08:38.760] What I'm working from are the Code of Federal Regulations, and that needs some explanation. [08:38.760 --> 08:47.000] We have the Statutes, but when you have Statutes in a given area, and there is a governmental [08:47.000 --> 08:56.120] agency that has been created to enforce the Statutes in that particular area, like the [08:56.120 --> 09:08.040] EPA, the FCC, and the SEC, and a number of other of these letter bureaucracies, all of [09:08.040 --> 09:14.480] these enforcement agencies produce codes of federal regulation. [09:14.480 --> 09:23.080] These codes of federal regulation are intended to define how the Statutes are enforced. [09:23.080 --> 09:36.040] Well, the federal Statutes under the Exchange Act are difficult enough. [09:36.040 --> 09:39.640] They're complex and convoluted. [09:39.640 --> 09:46.720] But they are, for the most part, specific in their requirements. [09:46.720 --> 09:53.400] The SEC created a Code of Federal Regulations, and what the case law has said, that if an [09:53.400 --> 10:03.120] agency that has been created for the purpose of enforcing the Statutes in a given area [10:03.120 --> 10:09.360] makes a determination concerning the Statutes and the application of the Statutes in that [10:09.360 --> 10:13.360] area, the courts cannot interrupt that. [10:13.360 --> 10:19.920] They cannot usurp that determination by the agency, because it is the agency that has [10:19.920 --> 10:23.000] the expertise in that particular area. [10:23.000 --> 10:30.600] So a district judge who has no specific expertise, say, in securities and exchange, cannot come [10:30.600 --> 10:39.760] in and overrule the SEC's determination, because they're supposedly the experts. [10:39.760 --> 10:47.400] But when you look at the codes carefully, it is clear that the SEC has written their [10:47.400 --> 10:56.360] codes so that the SEC can enforce them pretty much at their caprice. [10:56.360 --> 11:05.640] And this looks to me like a situation created by lobbyists. [11:05.640 --> 11:14.440] I once was called in to evaluate a case in Waco, a company that bought insurance policies. [11:14.440 --> 11:24.960] If you buy life insurance, you buy it to protect your children and your heirs from bad things [11:24.960 --> 11:33.440] happening to you, but people get older, their income decreases, their kids grow up, they [11:33.440 --> 11:41.280] no longer need your insurance, your health insurance, your life insurance. [11:41.280 --> 11:43.640] And it gets harder for you to pay that life insurance. [11:43.640 --> 11:49.040] So generally the first thing that a person will drop when they get retired, their income [11:49.040 --> 11:53.240] drops, is their life insurance. [11:53.240 --> 11:57.320] The insurance companies, this is part of their calculation. [11:57.320 --> 12:01.320] They expect people to pay for life insurance most of their lives, and then when they get [12:01.320 --> 12:09.000] to the point where they're likely to die and the insurance company has to pay the premium, [12:09.000 --> 12:12.440] well, they run out of money to pay for it and they drop it. [12:12.440 --> 12:16.560] So this guy went in and bought the insurance policy. [12:16.560 --> 12:22.280] He paid them a lump sum and then paid them every month a certain amount, as long as they [12:22.280 --> 12:27.160] lived and then when they died, he became the beneficiary on the insurance policy. [12:27.160 --> 12:33.120] Well, this disrupted the insurance policy's calculations. [12:33.120 --> 12:37.800] So they went to the SEC and got the SEC to put this guy a business. [12:37.800 --> 12:40.280] They bankrupted this guy. [12:40.280 --> 12:45.840] And he had already been sued by the state of Texas, and the state of Texas determined [12:45.840 --> 12:48.760] that what he was doing was not selling securities. [12:48.760 --> 12:54.320] Well, the insurance lobby didn't care and neither did the DSEC. [12:54.320 --> 12:55.480] They went after him anyway. [12:55.480 --> 12:58.440] Well, they came to me and I did an evaluation. [12:58.440 --> 13:02.360] There were three people named in the suit. [13:02.360 --> 13:08.080] In my evaluation, I told them that this was Res Judicata. [13:08.080 --> 13:13.160] This had already been determined by the state that they were not selling a security and [13:13.160 --> 13:18.120] the Fed under the Rooker-Fellman Act had no power to overrule it. [13:18.120 --> 13:22.000] So you should file a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [13:22.000 --> 13:25.040] Two of them filed a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [13:25.040 --> 13:29.320] The SEC dropped the case against them immediately. [13:29.320 --> 13:35.040] The main guy, his lawyer, was bought and paid for. [13:35.040 --> 13:41.040] I stood in front of his lawyer and told the guy, this lawyer is bought and paid for. [13:41.040 --> 13:42.040] He's lying to you. [13:42.040 --> 13:47.640] He's going to get you bankrupted and he's likely to get you put in jail if you listen [13:47.640 --> 13:48.640] to him. [13:48.640 --> 13:53.880] And the lawyer jumped up from the table like he was going to take a poke at me. [13:53.880 --> 13:54.880] Bad idea. [13:54.880 --> 14:01.120] Well, they decided not to do that, but the guy followed him anyway and they put him [14:01.120 --> 14:03.120] out of business. [14:03.120 --> 14:09.240] The codes appear to be written for that purpose. [14:09.240 --> 14:16.920] So anyone with a lot of money and a powerful lobby could use the SEC to put anybody out [14:16.920 --> 14:20.480] of business that interferes with them. [14:20.480 --> 14:24.160] And it is my intention to get that fixed. [14:24.160 --> 14:36.880] I'm designing a tool that we can take to an investor or an issue or a developer. [14:36.880 --> 14:47.200] They can go through this tool and it will go to every code, every single requirement [14:47.200 --> 14:55.800] and demonstrate that the issuer addressed that requirement and they can show due diligence. [14:55.800 --> 15:02.160] It won't eliminate the corruption in the SEC, but it will make it extremely difficult for [15:02.160 --> 15:04.320] them. [15:04.320 --> 15:10.680] And we'll try to get the developers to generate these compliance reports so that investors, [15:10.680 --> 15:18.480] when they look into purchasing one of these offerings, they can be relatively certain [15:18.480 --> 15:27.360] that the offering is not in blatant compliance with SEC code and they can have more confidence [15:27.360 --> 15:29.840] in investing in the product. [15:29.840 --> 15:37.200] And the developers themselves will have a very strong argument against any claims by [15:37.200 --> 15:46.800] the SEC based on these questionnaire output reports that will be filed with their application [15:46.800 --> 15:52.720] to the SEC as an affidavit of compliance. [15:52.720 --> 15:59.920] In this market, the market has been horribly suppressed because of the SEC. [15:59.920 --> 16:06.560] If we can eliminate or at least reduce the SEC threat, we may be able to re-energize [16:06.560 --> 16:18.960] the ICO and STO, the blockchain market, if this tool can force the SEC to back off and [16:18.960 --> 16:25.600] allow this market to reinvigorate itself, then all of those investors that benefited [16:25.600 --> 16:30.880] by our product, when we do a private sale, will be more likely to invest in it. [16:30.880 --> 16:33.600] That's where we're at right now. [16:33.600 --> 16:37.920] We're getting close to getting the whole thing put together and the cost of code is so complex [16:37.920 --> 16:43.840] it's cost us to dramatically increase our sophistication in the technology, so it's [16:43.840 --> 16:45.360] been good in that regard. [16:45.360 --> 16:52.240] When we come back, we'll go to call us, we've got Tim in Texas, if you have a question or [16:52.240 --> 16:57.840] a comment, give us a call, our phone lines will be open all night, 512-646-1984, we'll [16:57.840 --> 16:58.840] be right back. [16:58.840 --> 17:04.400] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [17:04.400 --> 17:07.960] In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people are ever [17:07.960 --> 17:12.320] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:12.320 --> 17:15.360] One of those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [17:15.360 --> 17:19.360] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [17:19.360 --> 17:23.240] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [17:23.240 --> 17:25.120] our rights through due process. 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[18:39.440 --> 18:41.560] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.560 --> 18:47.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner [18:47.120 --> 18:50.040] or email Michael Meares at yahoo.com. [18:50.040 --> 18:57.800] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.800 --> 19:07.800] To learn how to stop debt collectors next, you are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:07.800 --> 19:35.800] from www.logos.com. [19:35.800 --> 19:50.760] Okay, we are back. [19:50.760 --> 20:00.160] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio on this Friday, the 22nd day of February 2019 and phone lines [20:00.160 --> 20:01.160] are open. [20:01.160 --> 20:07.160] All in number 512-646-1984, we're going to Tim in Texas. [20:07.160 --> 20:09.400] Well, you have Tim and Laura. [20:09.400 --> 20:13.320] We're going to Laura and Tim. [20:13.320 --> 20:14.920] Tim always takes a back seat. [20:14.920 --> 20:18.440] Yeah, he gets to be the second one in line here. [20:18.440 --> 20:24.320] I was reading some stuff today and I found these really funny attorney things I thought [20:24.320 --> 20:25.320] you would enjoy. [20:25.320 --> 20:31.720] They're kind of a court reporter's actual, you know, the girl who does all the typing [20:31.720 --> 20:32.720] in the court. [20:32.720 --> 20:39.320] These are things that were actually said in court by attorney and I thought you would [20:39.320 --> 20:40.320] enjoy them. [20:40.320 --> 20:41.320] So, let's start. [20:41.320 --> 20:42.320] Okay, it says attorney. [20:42.320 --> 20:47.560] Now, doctor, isn't it true when a person dies in his sleep, he doesn't know about it [20:47.560 --> 20:49.360] till the next morning? [20:49.360 --> 20:55.600] The witness said, did you actually test the bar exam? [20:55.600 --> 20:56.600] Isn't that great? [20:56.600 --> 20:59.240] Here's another one. [20:59.240 --> 21:03.920] Attorney, the youngest son, the 20-year-old, how old is he? [21:03.920 --> 21:09.480] The witness said he's 20, much like your IQ. [21:09.480 --> 21:14.200] Okay, here's a good one. [21:14.200 --> 21:16.440] She had three children, right? [21:16.440 --> 21:17.960] The witness said yes. [21:17.960 --> 21:20.280] Attorney, how many were boys? [21:20.280 --> 21:22.480] The witness said none. [21:22.480 --> 21:25.240] The attorney said, were there any girls? [21:25.240 --> 21:29.680] The witness said, your honor, I think I need a different attorney. [21:29.680 --> 21:32.240] Can I get an attorney? [21:32.240 --> 21:35.640] I love that one. [21:35.640 --> 21:36.640] Okay. [21:36.640 --> 21:42.200] Attorney, how much, how was your first marriage terminated? [21:42.200 --> 21:50.440] The witness said, by death, the attorney said, and by whose death was it terminated? [21:50.440 --> 21:53.440] The witness said, take a guess. [21:53.440 --> 21:56.360] Wait, the witness said what? [21:56.360 --> 21:57.360] Take a guess. [21:57.360 --> 21:58.360] Take a guess. [21:58.360 --> 21:59.360] Take a guess. [21:59.360 --> 22:03.560] Yeah, whose death terminated the marriage? [22:03.560 --> 22:04.560] Take a guess. [22:04.560 --> 22:07.200] All right, how about this one? [22:07.200 --> 22:10.320] Can you describe the individual, the attorney asked? [22:10.320 --> 22:14.960] The witness said he was about medium-high and had a beer. [22:14.960 --> 22:18.080] Attorney, was it male or female? [22:18.080 --> 22:30.480] The witness said unless the circus was in town, I'm going with male. [22:30.480 --> 22:33.440] Here is my favorite one, and I think it's the last one. [22:33.440 --> 22:35.200] I think you will love this one. [22:35.200 --> 22:36.880] I've never even heard this one before. [22:36.880 --> 22:38.640] I didn't read it to him. [22:38.640 --> 22:44.960] The attorney said, doctor, before you performed the autopsy, did you check for a pulse? [22:44.960 --> 22:45.960] The witness said no. [22:45.960 --> 22:49.640] The attorney said, did you check for blood pressure? [22:49.640 --> 22:51.640] The witness said no. [22:51.640 --> 22:53.640] Did you check for breathing? [22:53.640 --> 22:54.640] No. [22:54.640 --> 23:02.240] So then is it possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy? [23:02.240 --> 23:04.840] The witness said no. [23:04.840 --> 23:07.640] The attorney says, how can you be sure, doctor? [23:07.640 --> 23:18.640] The attorney said because his brain was sitting on my desk in a jar, the attorney said I see. [23:18.640 --> 23:22.640] But could the patient still have been alive? [23:22.640 --> 23:24.640] Never the less. [23:24.640 --> 23:32.640] The witness said, yes, it's possible he could have been alive and practicing law. [23:32.640 --> 23:38.640] Oh, those just made my day. [23:38.640 --> 23:41.640] I thought you were going to say that, Randy. [23:41.640 --> 23:43.640] I think I know some of those lawyers. [23:43.640 --> 23:46.640] Oh, those are good. [23:46.640 --> 23:48.640] I thought you would enjoy them. [23:48.640 --> 23:51.640] It's time to laugh a little bit. [23:51.640 --> 23:53.640] Oh, my goodness. [23:53.640 --> 24:00.640] You had a point in your case that you should be able to. [24:00.640 --> 24:07.640] I'm in the process of finishing up an appeal in the Pixlers case. [24:07.640 --> 24:11.640] This is kind of a remarkable case. [24:11.640 --> 24:18.640] When we get this thing through appeal, then it'll be their turn to come back after these guys. [24:18.640 --> 24:28.640] The Pixlers, by dealing with their case as from the perspective of politics, [24:28.640 --> 24:38.640] was able to get the city to dismiss all of their claims after they had won everything in court. [24:38.640 --> 24:40.640] After the city had won? [24:40.640 --> 24:41.640] Yeah. [24:41.640 --> 24:48.640] Yeah, after the city won everything, thanks, you caught me using a pronoun which I hate. [24:48.640 --> 24:57.640] Right, after the city had won everything in court and it was going to the appeals court, the city dropped everything. [24:57.640 --> 25:00.640] They dropped it without reservation. [25:00.640 --> 25:03.640] They didn't protect themselves in any way. [25:03.640 --> 25:05.640] They just dropped everything. [25:05.640 --> 25:09.640] It was all political. [25:09.640 --> 25:13.640] The law had little of anything to do with it. [25:13.640 --> 25:22.640] So it was a good demonstration of the fact that you have to pay attention a lot more than just the law in the case. [25:22.640 --> 25:26.640] Politics affects everything. [25:26.640 --> 25:39.640] The council's behavior now shows us that they're really showing us a lot of respect. [25:39.640 --> 25:46.640] Laura went to a council meeting last night and they were talking about the drainage. [25:46.640 --> 25:52.640] Newark is by a lake off the Trinity River, a huge lake. [25:52.640 --> 25:55.640] So everything is kind of wet. [25:55.640 --> 25:58.640] The drainage, we don't have any curbs and gutters or that. [25:58.640 --> 26:00.640] We're just a little rural town. [26:00.640 --> 26:03.640] And so we're trying to fix the drainage. [26:03.640 --> 26:05.640] It's messed up. [26:05.640 --> 26:12.640] It just floods people's driveways when they go in and out and stuff because they have culverts, not anything else. [26:12.640 --> 26:24.640] And so they were talking about somebody parking in their yards and driving through the drainage ditches to get there. [26:24.640 --> 26:30.640] And so they said, no, we're not picking on anybody and we're not pointing anyone out or anything. [26:30.640 --> 26:38.640] We're just making an observation because we're trying to deal with the drainage. [26:38.640 --> 26:48.640] And the guy that was the hardest on us in the council was one of the ones being very clear. [26:48.640 --> 26:51.640] They weren't trying to start any trouble. [26:51.640 --> 26:59.640] Wait a minute. You mean they weren't making an example of someone? [26:59.640 --> 27:03.640] Exactly. [27:03.640 --> 27:09.640] The mayor made the mistake of telling someone that they wanted to make an example of the Pixlers. [27:09.640 --> 27:16.640] And one of the council members was there and the other lady, Laura, didn't see him. [27:16.640 --> 27:21.640] And this was in over an alliance off of 35. [27:21.640 --> 27:24.640] And she goes, well, hello. [27:24.640 --> 27:29.640] And Laura looked over and there was one of the council members, actually the mayor pro-tim. [27:29.640 --> 27:32.640] And he didn't say hello, how are you doing or anything. [27:32.640 --> 27:39.640] He said, Mrs. Pixler, how did you like the meeting last night? [27:39.640 --> 27:45.640] Was it to your good that you liked it? [27:45.640 --> 27:52.640] You know, these council members, they, you know, they're ordinary people like us. [27:52.640 --> 27:57.640] Just a persons and they listen to these Scheister lawyers. [27:57.640 --> 28:03.640] And it's very seldom someone takes on the Scheister lawyers. [28:03.640 --> 28:09.640] And to the council's credit, you know, Tim and Laura were talking earlier today, [28:09.640 --> 28:15.640] and we all believe that at one point the council talked to an outside lawyer. [28:15.640 --> 28:21.640] At the last meeting I was at, one of the council members was really struggling [28:21.640 --> 28:27.640] to mediate between the council and the Pixlers. [28:27.640 --> 28:35.640] And I suggested to him that you take a lawyer who doesn't have a dog in this hunt. [28:35.640 --> 28:39.640] And we've accused these lawyers of baritry. [28:39.640 --> 28:41.640] So that tells them coming after them. [28:41.640 --> 28:46.640] So they have an interest in this case. [28:46.640 --> 28:51.640] Go to a lawyer that doesn't have an interest in the case and ask him to evaluate it. [28:51.640 --> 28:55.640] And we believe that's exactly what the council did. [28:55.640 --> 29:02.640] And the lawyer told them, guys, the Pixlers are going to wipe the floor with you. [29:02.640 --> 29:08.640] And that's when they just dropped everything. [29:08.640 --> 29:15.640] And from what you said about this last meeting, I think it's pretty clear [29:15.640 --> 29:21.640] that whatever lawyer they talk to, put fear of God in them. [29:21.640 --> 29:25.640] And told them, you know, this is a horrible mess and you're going to have a lot of trouble. [29:25.640 --> 29:30.640] And now it's going to be really good for the council. [29:30.640 --> 29:36.640] Yeah, the council is, you know, everybody's, here's what people that were on my side [29:36.640 --> 29:41.640] that were helping protest, you know, on my behalf at the council meeting. [29:41.640 --> 29:45.640] They're saying, you know, just drop it, Tim, just, you know, leave well enough alone [29:45.640 --> 29:47.640] that you're just going to stir up a whole bunch more trouble. [29:47.640 --> 29:53.640] And I'm saying, okay, one of the council members, friends of ours, her husband, [29:53.640 --> 30:00.640] got into trouble and was taken to jail. [30:00.640 --> 30:02.640] All aboard. [30:02.640 --> 30:06.640] When mold spread through the dorms of St. Mary's College in Maryland, [30:06.640 --> 30:09.640] the school relocated its students to a cruise ship. [30:09.640 --> 30:14.640] And Dr. Kaepernal braked with an ocean tale of kids sailing through college next. [30:14.640 --> 30:16.640] Privacy is under attack. [30:16.640 --> 30:20.640] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.640 --> 30:25.640] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.640 --> 30:26.640] So protect your rights. [30:26.640 --> 30:30.640] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.640 --> 30:32.640] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.640 --> 30:36.640] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:36.640 --> 30:40.640] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.640 --> 30:43.640] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.640 --> 30:46.640] After tropical storm Irene swept through Maryland, [30:46.640 --> 30:50.640] mold spread like wildfire through the dorms of St. Mary's College. [30:50.640 --> 30:53.640] 250 students had to be relocated. [30:53.640 --> 30:54.640] But where? [30:54.640 --> 30:57.640] Hotels led cost a fortune 20,000 a day. [30:57.640 --> 31:00.640] So St. Mary's President came up with a whale of an idea. [31:00.640 --> 31:03.640] How about putting the students up on a cruise ship? [31:03.640 --> 31:07.640] It just so happened, the Sea Voyager cruise ship was on its way down from Maine, [31:07.640 --> 31:12.640] with the owner's mind docking in Maryland and turning their vessel into a floating dorm? [31:12.640 --> 31:13.640] No problem. [31:13.640 --> 31:16.640] So now the students are enjoying fine onboard dining, [31:16.640 --> 31:19.640] sweet looking sweets, and a breathtaking waterfront view. [31:19.640 --> 31:21.640] Talk about smooth sailing. [31:21.640 --> 31:23.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:23.640 --> 31:45.640] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:53.640 --> 31:54.640] My son. [31:54.640 --> 31:55.640] My uncle. [31:55.640 --> 31:56.640] My nephew. [31:56.640 --> 31:57.640] My son. [31:57.640 --> 31:58.640] Go to buildingwatch.org. [31:58.640 --> 31:59.640] Why it fell? [31:59.640 --> 32:00.640] Why it matters. [32:00.640 --> 32:29.640] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:29.640 --> 32:31.640] Thank you so much for joining us. [32:59.640 --> 33:01.640] We're getting about chemtrails. [33:01.640 --> 33:10.640] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:10.640 --> 33:17.640] Yeah, I got the warrant. [33:17.640 --> 33:28.640] And I'm going to solve them to the head of the government then, prosecute them. [33:28.640 --> 33:29.640] Okay. [33:29.640 --> 33:30.640] We are back. [33:30.640 --> 33:33.640] Randy Hilton, Ruebler Radio, and we're talking to Tim in Texas. [33:33.640 --> 33:37.640] Tim, you just ran off the cliff. [33:37.640 --> 33:38.640] Okay. [33:38.640 --> 33:40.640] We can't hear you because I didn't unmute you. [33:40.640 --> 33:41.640] Okay. [33:41.640 --> 33:43.640] I said, yeah, I was sitting there talking to Laura. [33:43.640 --> 33:47.640] I said, I think I hear music. [33:47.640 --> 33:48.640] Okay. [33:48.640 --> 33:49.640] Where were you? [33:49.640 --> 33:51.640] Anyway, I don't know. [33:51.640 --> 33:53.640] I don't even know where we stopped at. [33:53.640 --> 33:59.640] We were talking about standing up to these guys. [33:59.640 --> 34:07.640] You know, we want to vilify the council, but the council really weren't the bad guys here. [34:07.640 --> 34:12.640] There were just ordinary people trying to do what they believed was right based on what [34:12.640 --> 34:14.640] they were being told. [34:14.640 --> 34:23.640] Well, but you got to give a little bit of a blame to them because most people, even my friends, [34:23.640 --> 34:27.640] even though they're not saying it, they're probably going, you know, Tim probably brought [34:27.640 --> 34:30.640] a lot of this onto itself. [34:30.640 --> 34:34.640] The reason why I say that is because they're like, leave well enough alone. [34:34.640 --> 34:36.640] I'm like, no, you don't understand. [34:36.640 --> 34:40.640] Without prejudice means they can come back tomorrow if they want. [34:40.640 --> 34:46.640] If the attorneys convince them that it's in their best interest to come after me, they [34:46.640 --> 34:50.640] can do it, but I don't want them to. [34:50.640 --> 34:57.640] And so that's why we're even pursuing anything at the moment is not to really get even with [34:57.640 --> 35:00.640] the council because like you said, they were influenced. [35:00.640 --> 35:06.640] And you know, the one thing that the council will have to say is that during all these [35:06.640 --> 35:11.640] years, Facebook, because we got this little local Facebook page, anything that was being [35:11.640 --> 35:16.640] said, that I wasn't the one who was saying that we need to get a whole new group in there [35:16.640 --> 35:22.640] because I understand my wife is on council three terms, six years. [35:22.640 --> 35:27.640] So you got to get on there and people have to be willing to listen. [35:27.640 --> 35:34.640] And then, you know, it's best if they ask someone who's got some experience and say, [35:34.640 --> 35:40.640] you handle this because anybody can get on there and just a little bit of power go to [35:40.640 --> 35:46.640] their head and maybe they get, they feel like they got embarrassed or insulted in public [35:46.640 --> 35:52.640] or something and they can start coming after you for anything. [35:52.640 --> 35:59.640] It may not be legal in the eyes of the law, but unless you know how to defend yourself, [35:59.640 --> 36:01.640] you're out of luck. [36:01.640 --> 36:08.640] And that's what the city administrator was able to do was to convince the council that [36:08.640 --> 36:15.640] we were bad guys and that we were not good for the city and we need to be, you know, [36:15.640 --> 36:17.640] the city needs to be rid of us. [36:17.640 --> 36:19.640] But now she's gone. [36:19.640 --> 36:21.640] She doesn't have a job. [36:21.640 --> 36:24.640] And but it wasn't because of us. [36:24.640 --> 36:31.640] It was something else that she did in subordination to the council. [36:31.640 --> 36:33.640] But she'd been doing it the whole time. [36:33.640 --> 36:35.640] That's the thing about it. [36:35.640 --> 36:38.640] When she didn't get her way, she would throw a fit. [36:38.640 --> 36:42.640] Well, the mayor is her immediate supervisor. [36:42.640 --> 36:48.640] Well, they didn't want to be left with doing her job, so they would always fold to her. [36:48.640 --> 36:55.640] And I guess this last episode, just was too much, she had actually lied to them twice [36:55.640 --> 37:02.640] about very important things and, you know, you don't have a choice but to let them go [37:02.640 --> 37:04.640] to the public. [37:04.640 --> 37:06.640] We know about it. [37:06.640 --> 37:09.640] And a lot of people were saying, you know, hang her. [37:09.640 --> 37:12.640] Not actually hang her, but you know what I mean. [37:12.640 --> 37:16.640] But I got a question for you about my case. [37:16.640 --> 37:24.640] In the municipal court, when they did the, you call it improper, the improper administrative hearing. [37:24.640 --> 37:26.640] Okay. [37:26.640 --> 37:33.640] But it wasn't legal in our town because it was never adopted into the ordinance. [37:33.640 --> 37:34.640] Hold on. [37:34.640 --> 37:37.640] Let me give a quick background on that. [37:37.640 --> 37:46.640] They charged him under the municipal ordinances for junk vehicles. [37:46.640 --> 37:53.640] He has an auto repair place and he's going to have vehicles that don't run. [37:53.640 --> 37:59.640] There is an exclusion for that for junk yards and what's the other one? [37:59.640 --> 38:03.640] The used car sales. [38:03.640 --> 38:09.640] They can have vehicles that meet the criteria of a junk vehicle. [38:09.640 --> 38:11.640] They have an exclusion. [38:11.640 --> 38:14.640] But for some reason, repair shops don't. [38:14.640 --> 38:21.640] So they came after him and filed criminally against him under the city ordinances. [38:21.640 --> 38:33.640] But when he went to court, the, they changed the prosecution from a criminal prosecution to an administrative prosecution. [38:33.640 --> 38:36.640] And there are different rules for that. [38:36.640 --> 38:44.640] The problem is, is, is bad enough that they changed it in midstream. [38:44.640 --> 38:54.640] And then Scheister Lawyer violated the American Bar Association standards for the prosecution function [38:54.640 --> 39:04.640] and asked him if he would like a hearing to determine the, whether or not the vehicles met the criteria of a junk vehicle. [39:04.640 --> 39:09.640] And he said, okay, I didn't know, you know, that would have been dispositive if they had rules that they're not junk vehicles. [39:09.640 --> 39:11.640] In the case that had been over. [39:11.640 --> 39:13.640] So it was reasonable to him. [39:13.640 --> 39:15.640] He agreed to that. [39:15.640 --> 39:19.640] But then they changed it to an administrative process. [39:19.640 --> 39:33.640] And it turned out that there was a special filing the city had to do in order to be able to handle this with a administrative process and they never made that filing. [39:33.640 --> 39:40.640] They had made the filing in a different circumstance and that was with unsafe buildings. [39:40.640 --> 39:44.640] They didn't make the filing for junk vehicles. [39:44.640 --> 39:49.640] So they weren't allowed to adjudicate in that manner. [39:49.640 --> 39:56.640] And that's what the Court of Appeals overturned with Tim Fowler of Mandamus. [39:56.640 --> 40:06.640] Rit of Mandamus in Texas, 12% of the Ritz filed are actually picked up by the Court of Appeals. [40:06.640 --> 40:16.640] You know, the Court of Appeals is not, they're not required to hear an appeal. [40:16.640 --> 40:19.640] It's to their discretion. [40:19.640 --> 40:29.640] So 86% or 88% the Court of Appeals refuses to hear on Mandamus. [40:29.640 --> 40:35.640] Of the 12%, they do hear 2% are ruled in favor of the filer. [40:35.640 --> 40:39.640] In this case, the filer was a pro se. [40:39.640 --> 40:46.640] And I would hazard to speculate that that has probably never happened before. [40:46.640 --> 41:02.640] And then the Court of Appeals, instead of doing what Tim requested in the Mandamus, which was to reverse remand. [41:02.640 --> 41:10.640] Because they dismissed with prejudice a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [41:10.640 --> 41:19.640] Instead of doing what Tim actually asked for, they dismissed the claim altogether out of hand. [41:19.640 --> 41:24.640] And at the time when it happened, Tim and Laura didn't realize how profound that was. [41:24.640 --> 41:27.640] That was a holy mackerel. [41:27.640 --> 41:30.640] This kind of thing never happens. [41:30.640 --> 41:38.640] But what these Syster lawyers had done, and Tim at every step set the record. [41:38.640 --> 41:43.640] You talk to Tim Magnuson, he's always saying set the record. [41:43.640 --> 41:48.640] Doesn't matter what the Court does, all you're there for is to set the record for appeal. [41:48.640 --> 41:52.640] And at every step, Tim set the record for appeal. [41:52.640 --> 42:04.640] And at every step, he wanted to go after them and defend himself to the public around him and suggested it wasn't, you know, we need to look at this politically. [42:04.640 --> 42:06.640] So he listened. [42:06.640 --> 42:10.640] He was very politically careful. [42:10.640 --> 42:17.640] And at the end of the day, it was the politics that won out. [42:17.640 --> 42:23.640] Because what the lawyers did was so profoundly improper, but anyway, I digress. [42:23.640 --> 42:35.640] So the way they went after him, they went after him criminally originally, they switched it to an administrative procedure, and then the administrative procedure got tossed. [42:35.640 --> 42:37.640] Okay, I'll shut up now. [42:37.640 --> 42:48.640] Okay, we, okay, the process of the administrative hearing that is you have 31 days to ask for an appeal. [42:48.640 --> 42:53.640] You have 60 days to pay the fine. [42:53.640 --> 43:00.640] My fine was $8,000, but you have 31 days to ask for an appeal, which would go before the municipal judge. [43:00.640 --> 43:07.640] Okay, on the 29th day, we filed a challenged subject matter jurisdiction and they ignored it. [43:07.640 --> 43:11.640] So the attorneys ignored it and the judge ignored it. [43:11.640 --> 43:18.640] And I think it's because they didn't realize that their administrative hearing was hogwash. [43:18.640 --> 43:21.640] It was, it didn't have any standing. [43:21.640 --> 43:23.640] And so that's why they ignored it. [43:23.640 --> 43:32.640] But because they ignored it and they did not check into it, I can come after that judge. [43:32.640 --> 43:35.640] He is, that's his court. [43:35.640 --> 43:39.640] It is the judges, it's responsibility. [43:39.640 --> 43:51.640] Before he starts passing judgment on litigants, it's his duty to determine whether or not he has power to pass that judgment. [43:51.640 --> 43:55.640] That's my point. And we've never filed on him. [43:55.640 --> 44:00.640] Yeah, it's not the prosecutor's place to determine jurisdiction. [44:00.640 --> 44:08.640] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. 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[44:45.640 --> 44:50.640] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:50.640 --> 44:54.640] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.640 --> 44:59.640] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [44:59.640 --> 45:03.640] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.640 --> 45:13.640] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [45:13.640 --> 45:15.640] step by step. [45:15.640 --> 45:18.640] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.640 --> 45:22.640] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.640 --> 45:27.640] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.640 --> 45:33.640] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.640 --> 45:42.640] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.640 --> 45:51.640] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. [45:51.640 --> 45:55.640] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.640 --> 46:14.640] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:14.640 --> 46:29.640] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:29.640 --> 46:34.640] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm wishing for. [46:34.640 --> 46:40.640] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton [46:40.640 --> 46:46.640] I'm just here making my livin' pushin' button [46:46.640 --> 46:52.640] I get my message that I'll do anyone in the shoutin' distance [46:52.640 --> 46:58.640] I vote for bravery and against slavery, showin' resistance [46:58.640 --> 47:01.640] First I'm frolin', then I'm walkin' [47:01.640 --> 47:08.640] Then I start struttin', just so glad to make my livin' pushin' button [47:08.640 --> 47:14.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Tim in Texas. [47:14.640 --> 47:18.640] Okay, go ahead Tim. Oh, I was talking. [47:18.640 --> 47:27.640] Well, we were talking about the jurisdiction with the judge not doing his job [47:27.640 --> 47:30.640] and actually looking at what I had filed. [47:30.640 --> 47:34.640] So like he just ignored it, and I think he did so because, like he said, [47:34.640 --> 47:39.640] he thought the administrative hearing was up to snuff, but it was not. [47:39.640 --> 47:45.640] And so because of that, and even if it was up to snuff, okay, [47:45.640 --> 47:50.640] the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction should have gotten his attention, [47:50.640 --> 47:52.640] but it didn't get his attention. [47:52.640 --> 47:56.640] And then when they took us to civil court and district court, [47:56.640 --> 48:00.640] that's what I turned in and the district judge said it's too late. [48:00.640 --> 48:05.640] But he should have known that law says it's never too late [48:05.640 --> 48:08.640] to file a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. [48:08.640 --> 48:13.640] If the court does not have subject matter jurisdiction, [48:13.640 --> 48:17.640] it can never accrue subject matter jurisdiction. [48:17.640 --> 48:20.640] You know in the legal reform area, there was a while there, [48:20.640 --> 48:25.640] we had a lot of the patriot mythologists saying that you could grant the court jurisdiction. [48:25.640 --> 48:33.640] And they misunderstood the difference between in personum and subject matter. [48:33.640 --> 48:37.640] You can waive in personum jurisdiction, [48:37.640 --> 48:44.640] where the court would normally not have jurisdiction over your person. [48:44.640 --> 48:48.640] You know, one of the arguments we make is in the traffic area. [48:48.640 --> 48:56.640] They say the court has jurisdiction over the subject matter, [48:56.640 --> 49:01.640] but they don't have jurisdiction over the person, [49:01.640 --> 49:09.640] because the citation, the complaint did not show one of the essential elements of the crime, [49:09.640 --> 49:16.640] and that is that the individual was subject to the particular statutory scheme, [49:16.640 --> 49:23.640] including the transportation code, in that they were not shown to be operating in commerce. [49:23.640 --> 49:27.640] So that's an in personum jurisdiction claim. [49:27.640 --> 49:29.640] You have subject matter jurisdiction. [49:29.640 --> 49:31.640] I've had one court said, well, this is ridiculous. [49:31.640 --> 49:34.640] Of course I have subject matter jurisdiction, [49:34.640 --> 49:36.640] because it was a justice piece, [49:36.640 --> 49:41.640] and a justice piece had jurisdiction over these kinds of cases. [49:41.640 --> 49:48.640] My argument was that, yes, you have general subject matter jurisdiction over this type of case. [49:48.640 --> 49:58.640] However, the plaintiff lacked the legal capacity to invoke that subject matter jurisdiction. [49:58.640 --> 50:01.640] So therefore you couldn't exercise the jurisdiction, [50:01.640 --> 50:04.640] and this is what the courts say you can't. [50:04.640 --> 50:10.640] Come and invoke the authority of the court unless you have an injury. [50:10.640 --> 50:13.640] A harm of some type. [50:13.640 --> 50:19.640] So even though the court has jurisdiction, you can't invoke it, [50:19.640 --> 50:22.640] where someone's trying to foreclose, [50:22.640 --> 50:29.640] and they have no evidence to indicate that they have any interest in the property whatsoever. [50:29.640 --> 50:37.640] Our argument was to elect the standing and the legal capacity to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction. [50:37.640 --> 50:41.640] Okay, that's my short primer on subject matter jurisdiction. [50:41.640 --> 50:47.640] This court thought it had subject matter jurisdiction. [50:47.640 --> 50:50.640] We argued that it didn't, and the court was sure, [50:50.640 --> 50:53.640] you know, I'm a municipal court, this is a municipal ordinance. [50:53.640 --> 50:56.640] Of course I have subject matter jurisdiction. [50:56.640 --> 51:02.640] I think the lawyer did not understand subject matter jurisdiction, [51:02.640 --> 51:04.640] and that's not surprising. [51:04.640 --> 51:09.640] Subject matter jurisdiction is something most lawyers never go to. [51:09.640 --> 51:15.640] It tends to be only proceeds that go to that, because lawyers only do what lawyers do. [51:15.640 --> 51:18.640] They don't do unusual stuff like this. [51:18.640 --> 51:24.640] One lawyer tends not to do something the other lawyer's not going to know about, [51:24.640 --> 51:27.640] or understand how to handle, [51:27.640 --> 51:33.640] because the lawyer doesn't want the other guy doing that to him. [51:33.640 --> 51:40.640] The biggest terror lawyers have is missing something. [51:40.640 --> 51:47.640] It's coming into court and missing a case law, missing a precedent. [51:47.640 --> 51:52.640] So if they go into court with a client, and even if they win, [51:52.640 --> 52:01.640] if they missed something that would allow their client to win more in the final claim, [52:01.640 --> 52:05.640] the client can sue the lawyer for what they didn't win. [52:05.640 --> 52:10.640] And judges can sanction lawyers at the drop of the hat, [52:10.640 --> 52:16.640] and the thing that will get them sanctioned most is missing an important element. [52:16.640 --> 52:21.640] You and I, we're just eating our old proceeds, and we can screw up all we want to. [52:21.640 --> 52:28.640] But when that lawyer gets that bar card, that lawyer does not have that option. [52:28.640 --> 52:33.640] They can't miss anything because they become learned counsel. [52:33.640 --> 52:37.640] But lawyers know they don't know squat. [52:37.640 --> 52:43.640] So all these lawyers tend to have their snouts in the same trough. [52:43.640 --> 52:53.640] And one lawyer is not going to do something to another lawyer that will cause that lawyer major misery. [52:53.640 --> 52:59.640] Because if he does, he's likely to get the same thing done to himself. [52:59.640 --> 53:08.640] And what the upshot of all that is, you cannot expect your lawyer to come into court [53:08.640 --> 53:12.640] and vigorously adjudicate your case. [53:12.640 --> 53:19.640] Not if there's a chance it will annoy their fellow lawyers or the court. [53:19.640 --> 53:23.640] You have to make sure you do that yourself. [53:23.640 --> 53:28.640] This project we're working on is a way to bring all these issues to the court [53:28.640 --> 53:35.640] in a way that the lawyer is given plausible deniability, and he's actually able to adjudicate them. [53:35.640 --> 53:45.640] But oftentimes, the point of this is, lawyers only know about what lawyers do. [53:45.640 --> 53:51.640] My prosecuting attorney, when he warned me about the illegal practice of law [53:51.640 --> 53:54.640] and I quoted the statute to him, he had to go look it up. [53:54.640 --> 53:57.640] He said, Greg, you'll be ashamed of yourself. [53:57.640 --> 54:01.640] When was the last time you read the penal code or the code criminal procedure? [54:01.640 --> 54:04.640] He said, I don't know that I've ever read the whole thing. [54:04.640 --> 54:07.640] Now, this is a prosecutor. [54:07.640 --> 54:10.640] I said, Greg, that's pitiful. [54:10.640 --> 54:16.640] He said, I know, I don't think I know a single lawyer who's ever read the whole thing. [54:16.640 --> 54:20.640] And I read it a couple of times. [54:20.640 --> 54:24.640] This is what we get with lawyers. [54:24.640 --> 54:26.640] They really don't know. [54:26.640 --> 54:31.640] So when you go into court, don't assume that judge knows what he's doing. [54:31.640 --> 54:33.640] Knows the law. [54:33.640 --> 54:35.640] He only knows what everybody does. [54:35.640 --> 54:37.640] Okay, enough of my diatribe on that. [54:37.640 --> 54:41.640] Okay, that's fine. But still, I have a question. [54:41.640 --> 54:45.640] We filed criminal charges of baritry against the attorney. [54:45.640 --> 54:51.640] And then we filed also against, I think, her boss, the administrative board, [54:51.640 --> 54:57.640] and one other, the judge before Greg Lauer. [54:57.640 --> 55:00.640] And that's been almost two years. [55:00.640 --> 55:03.640] No, it's been a year and a half since we filed. [55:03.640 --> 55:12.640] Okay, since the appeals court said that the administrative hearing was bogus, [55:12.640 --> 55:19.640] can we say, Greg, did you realize this and hand it to him or send it to him, [55:19.640 --> 55:24.640] certified registered mail, and say, you need to see this? [55:24.640 --> 55:30.640] And then if he sees it and then he still refuses to take it before the grand jury, [55:30.640 --> 55:37.640] because we gave him a nice file, if he doesn't take it before them, [55:37.640 --> 55:43.640] then could we do something or is it to our benefit? [55:43.640 --> 55:47.640] That's an interesting question to your benefit. [55:47.640 --> 55:57.640] And I want to say criminal charges are never filed for your benefit. [55:57.640 --> 56:00.640] They're filed because it is your duty. [56:00.640 --> 56:02.640] Okay. [56:02.640 --> 56:07.640] Well, what I'm saying is that would it be, would it hurt me? [56:07.640 --> 56:17.640] Because the thing that we started out here turns out that that's what was found by the appeals court. [56:17.640 --> 56:23.640] And they forced the judge to overturn the original $8,000 fine, [56:23.640 --> 56:26.640] which is what they took me to court for. [56:26.640 --> 56:28.640] So here's something... [56:28.640 --> 56:32.640] They gave the judge the opportunity to overturn that and he refused. [56:32.640 --> 56:34.640] Well, if he had a... [56:34.640 --> 56:37.640] They threw out the original prosecution. [56:37.640 --> 56:47.640] Now, we filed a mandamus and asked him to force the judge to file a findings of acting conclusions at law. [56:47.640 --> 56:54.640] That's what we asked him for, because he refused to show how he came to the ruling that he did. [56:54.640 --> 56:59.640] So we asked the court of appeals for a mandamus to order him to provide that [56:59.640 --> 57:03.640] because you had the option of an interlocutory appeal. [57:03.640 --> 57:08.640] A subject matter jurisdiction challenge is dispositive. [57:08.640 --> 57:12.640] If it's ruled in your favor, it disposes of the case. [57:12.640 --> 57:17.640] A dispositive motion is subject to interlocutory appeal. [57:17.640 --> 57:23.640] If a proper ruling in this particular motion would eliminate the case under judicial economy, [57:23.640 --> 57:30.640] you should not have to adjudicate the entire case if this ruling would eliminate it. [57:30.640 --> 57:35.640] So anytime you run into something like that, then it generally goes to interlocutory appeal, [57:35.640 --> 57:45.640] meaning that you can file an appeal on that issue before the entire case is finished. [57:45.640 --> 57:50.640] So we can't file an interlocutory appeal. [57:50.640 --> 57:54.640] If we don't know why the judge rendered the ruling that he did. [57:54.640 --> 57:58.640] And he still to this day has not done so. [57:58.640 --> 58:04.640] We all know what he did. He just did it with a hand. [58:04.640 --> 58:11.640] But the court instead of asking him to file the findings of fact, they just dismissed the case altogether, [58:11.640 --> 58:13.640] and that almost never happens. [58:13.640 --> 58:18.640] Okay, so with this appeals brief, will they request the judge to do the findings of facts? [58:18.640 --> 58:24.640] No, they've already ruled. It's a done deal. [58:24.640 --> 58:28.640] Okay, but still I don't know exactly why. [58:28.640 --> 58:33.640] We can use that against him because we filed against him too for official oppression. [58:33.640 --> 58:38.640] Yes, the ruling establishes the fact. [58:38.640 --> 58:45.640] I'm saying that Greg Lyring probably needs to be notified of the fact. He probably already knows. [58:45.640 --> 58:49.640] You better believe he already knows. [58:49.640 --> 58:53.640] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.640 --> 59:00.640] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.640 --> 59:05.640] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.640 --> 59:12.640] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.640 --> 59:17.640] The free books are a three volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.640 --> 59:27.640] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.640 --> 59:40.640] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.640 --> 59:49.640] That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.640 --> 59:59.640] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.640 --> 01:00:07.640] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing your daily bulletins for the Commodity Market. [01:00:07.640 --> 01:00:20.640] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.640 --> 01:00:31.640] Markets for Wednesday the 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, [01:00:31.640 --> 01:00:42.640] oil Texas Crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent Crude $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, [01:00:42.640 --> 01:00:53.640] Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum $10.10 and Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [01:00:53.640 --> 01:01:05.640] Today in history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by Parliament. [01:01:05.640 --> 01:01:08.640] Today in history. [01:01:08.640 --> 01:01:26.640] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. [01:01:26.640 --> 01:01:45.640] This lawsuit sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining a driver's license. Over half of the 95,000 didn't indeed vote it seems. However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:45.640 --> 01:01:56.640] Only around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. [01:01:56.640 --> 01:02:08.640] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:08.640 --> 01:02:16.640] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [01:02:16.640 --> 01:02:29.640] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. The vape store, smoke and vape DZ has refused to comment. [01:02:29.640 --> 01:02:46.640] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:46.640 --> 01:02:51.640] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [01:02:51.640 --> 01:03:00.640] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:21.640 --> 01:03:45.640] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with Law Radio and we're talking to Tim in Texas. Go ahead, Tim. [01:03:45.640 --> 01:04:12.640] Okay, Laura had a good question. She said, if we bring this back up for the criminal for the official oppression and then for the baritry charges to the others, can the judge bring up the fact that the sanctions that the other judge sanctioned before for the two attorneys came out to be $2,800 and I did not pay? [01:04:12.640 --> 01:04:15.640] Do I still owe that? [01:04:15.640 --> 01:04:23.640] That is a question I considered today. I really don't know. [01:04:23.640 --> 01:04:37.640] I suspect not because since the, well, I don't know, this was a judicial determination that's really separate from the case. [01:04:37.640 --> 01:04:42.640] Yeah, because we filed twice against Brock Smith, both times it was found. [01:04:42.640 --> 01:04:45.640] No, you didn't. You filed once against the... [01:04:45.640 --> 01:04:47.640] No, we didn't. We did it twice. [01:04:47.640 --> 01:04:49.640] Okay. [01:04:49.640 --> 01:04:56.640] Wait, the first filing was not against Brock Smith. It was against the visiting judge. [01:04:56.640 --> 01:05:09.640] We filed twice. Once. The judge in Tarrant County, the head judge over the Eighth District, he came down. The second time, the judge from Denton County, who was one of his... [01:05:09.640 --> 01:05:11.640] Shipman, yeah. [01:05:11.640 --> 01:05:15.640] So twice we filed against him. [01:05:15.640 --> 01:05:19.640] Yeah, Shipman. Shipman may have remembered who I was. Maybe that's the reason. [01:05:19.640 --> 01:05:31.640] Well, Shipman's the one that sanctioned us. And so I guess if they tried to collect it, then we could, you know, make a payment plan with him or something. [01:05:31.640 --> 01:05:37.640] But would it be, you know, my point is, did Brock Smith... [01:05:37.640 --> 01:05:44.640] I mean, it's like everybody just stay quiet and maybe he'll miss it until the statute of limitations come up. [01:05:44.640 --> 01:05:48.640] Is there a statute of limitations on criminal charges? [01:05:48.640 --> 01:05:50.640] Yes. [01:05:50.640 --> 01:05:52.640] Two years? [01:05:52.640 --> 01:05:55.640] Generally two years. But you already filed. [01:05:55.640 --> 01:05:57.640] Well, I've already filed. [01:05:57.640 --> 01:05:59.640] Clock stopped. [01:05:59.640 --> 01:06:11.640] Okay. So they have not... Because the District Attorney has not done anything. You think we... It's still our duty... [01:06:11.640 --> 01:06:18.640] It's not the District Attorney that stops the clock. It's the filing. [01:06:18.640 --> 01:06:23.640] You filed with the grand jury, the statute of limitation clock stops. [01:06:23.640 --> 01:06:31.640] Now the clock starts on adjudication. [01:06:31.640 --> 01:06:35.640] And this is kind of a gray area. There's some areas that haven't been addressed. [01:06:35.640 --> 01:06:44.640] Once you filed a criminal complaint, how long does the prosecution have to bring the charge? [01:06:44.640 --> 01:06:46.640] Right. [01:06:46.640 --> 01:06:49.640] Because it can't sit forever. [01:06:49.640 --> 01:06:54.640] So I probably just need to go up there and see if I can talk to him. [01:06:54.640 --> 01:07:00.640] No, no. Try never to sit down in front of them. Do everything in writing. [01:07:00.640 --> 01:07:02.640] Okay. [01:07:02.640 --> 01:07:18.640] You said face to face means nothing. But then again, if there were a prosecutor that would do the right thing, it is Greg Lowry. [01:07:18.640 --> 01:07:20.640] Yeah. Well... [01:07:20.640 --> 01:07:32.640] I can tell you personally, I have knowledge that Greg Lowry has put his career on the line to do the right thing. [01:07:32.640 --> 01:07:33.640] Yeah. [01:07:33.640 --> 01:07:37.640] And only to do the right thing because it was right. [01:07:37.640 --> 01:07:44.640] And for a lawyer to do the right thing because it was right, that's almost a contradiction of terms. [01:07:44.640 --> 01:07:53.640] Well, see, because we're talking about the Bar Association here. These are his comrades that I'm coming against. [01:07:53.640 --> 01:07:57.640] Yeah. And this is someone that Greg Lowry considered as a mentor. [01:07:57.640 --> 01:07:58.640] Yeah. [01:07:58.640 --> 01:08:06.640] But even so, he does have his moral center in the right place. [01:08:06.640 --> 01:08:20.640] I could put him on a dime, but if you press him, you could probably get him to step up on that dime. [01:08:20.640 --> 01:08:26.640] If not, I would cut him no slack. [01:08:26.640 --> 01:08:27.640] Yeah. [01:08:27.640 --> 01:08:39.640] I'm one that I have a lot of respect for. And I personally like. But that's different. [01:08:39.640 --> 01:08:49.640] This is his job. And if he's going to stay a good prosecutor, he doesn't get to do what he wants to because it's easier for him. [01:08:49.640 --> 01:09:01.640] Well, all of this could have been stopped when we filed the first challenge to subject matter jurisdiction. They could have looked into their laws, made sure everything was nice and tidy, but they didn't. [01:09:01.640 --> 01:09:05.640] And they continued on and they came after me with guns placed. [01:09:05.640 --> 01:09:09.640] And they felt like they would be protected. [01:09:09.640 --> 01:09:10.640] Yes. [01:09:10.640 --> 01:09:18.640] If Greg Lowry chooses to try to protect a judge, he should get stung for it. [01:09:18.640 --> 01:09:19.640] Okay. [01:09:19.640 --> 01:09:29.640] So I need to send him a registered letter asking him specific questions. Is there and just just I'm not going to take your word for it. I want to get it from out of his mouth. [01:09:29.640 --> 01:09:35.640] Is there a statutory limit after I have filed charges? [01:09:35.640 --> 01:09:41.640] You can't. He has no duty to respond to that. [01:09:41.640 --> 01:09:46.640] We need to craft something that goes to his duty. [01:09:46.640 --> 01:09:47.640] Okay. [01:09:47.640 --> 01:09:54.640] You might ask him for a showing of cause for the delay. [01:09:54.640 --> 01:10:05.640] You might ask him if this has been presented to a grand jury and to which grand jury was it presented. [01:10:05.640 --> 01:10:11.640] And is that grand jury still in panel? [01:10:11.640 --> 01:10:26.640] If it's not, then you go to the clerk or you go, you can look in the records and find the name of the former of the grand jury. [01:10:26.640 --> 01:10:32.640] Or you can file an action to subpoena the grand jury. [01:10:32.640 --> 01:10:38.640] Now, once had Barry Green, he was a district attorney. [01:10:38.640 --> 01:10:46.640] He filed criminal charges against the former of the grand jury and he said, Oh, Mr. Kelton, please don't mess with my grand jury. [01:10:46.640 --> 01:10:50.640] They're hard enough to see as it is. [01:10:50.640 --> 01:10:59.640] So you look at what grand jury was in panel when you filed this complaint. [01:10:59.640 --> 01:11:11.640] And since Greg Lowry was commanded under law to under 2.03 code of criminal procedure to give that to the grand jury, you assume that that's what occurred. [01:11:11.640 --> 01:11:28.640] And since you have no evidence that the grand jury actually heard or actually investigated into the complaint, then you presume they did not [01:11:28.640 --> 01:11:32.640] and file against every one of the grand jury members. [01:11:32.640 --> 01:11:34.640] Oh boy, they'd be upset. [01:11:34.640 --> 01:11:36.640] Let them. [01:11:36.640 --> 01:11:43.640] You don't even have to know who they are. Just grand jury one through 12. [01:11:43.640 --> 01:11:47.640] Well, and well, they have an easy option. [01:11:47.640 --> 01:11:53.640] They can come into the court and say, Oh yeah, we consider this and we know build it. [01:11:53.640 --> 01:12:01.640] Okay, but if they didn't, you know, what you're likely to find is they're going to say, We don't know anything about this. [01:12:01.640 --> 01:12:03.640] We ever saw this thing. [01:12:03.640 --> 01:12:04.640] Right. [01:12:04.640 --> 01:12:06.640] And that's probably what's going to happen. [01:12:06.640 --> 01:12:07.640] Then it goes back. [01:12:07.640 --> 01:12:10.640] Now you're right back to Greg Lowry. [01:12:10.640 --> 01:12:12.640] Yes. [01:12:12.640 --> 01:12:16.640] So this could really stir the pot. [01:12:16.640 --> 01:12:18.640] Yes. [01:12:18.640 --> 01:12:21.640] Okay. [01:12:21.640 --> 01:12:25.640] And it should. This has nothing to do with your civil case. [01:12:25.640 --> 01:12:26.640] Okay. [01:12:26.640 --> 01:12:31.640] This has to do with your duty as a citizen to report crime. [01:12:31.640 --> 01:12:34.640] Right. [01:12:34.640 --> 01:12:43.640] Well, I've got people already telling me that like you, like I said earlier, just, you know, let dead dogs lay or sleeping dogs lay. [01:12:43.640 --> 01:12:46.640] You should tell them, Are you kidding? [01:12:46.640 --> 01:12:50.640] So if somebody robs your house and beats you half to death. [01:12:50.640 --> 01:12:53.640] Oh, well, it's over. [01:12:53.640 --> 01:12:55.640] Just let it be. [01:12:55.640 --> 01:12:56.640] Yeah. [01:12:56.640 --> 01:12:58.640] Well, they didn't go through what I went through. [01:12:58.640 --> 01:13:05.640] They were, in fact, most of my friends didn't even know we were going through it until about a year into it. [01:13:05.640 --> 01:13:08.640] And then they were like, Oh, poor you. [01:13:08.640 --> 01:13:10.640] I mean, it's as far as it got, you know, really. [01:13:10.640 --> 01:13:15.640] But we did have some actually step out and protest at city hall. [01:13:15.640 --> 01:13:16.640] And that's, [01:13:16.640 --> 01:13:19.640] No, wait a minute, Jim. [01:13:19.640 --> 01:13:21.640] Some. [01:13:21.640 --> 01:13:27.640] I was absolutely amazed at the people who stood up. [01:13:27.640 --> 01:13:33.640] I got a lot of friends, Randy, but this was just a very small amount of my friends. [01:13:33.640 --> 01:13:37.640] You have, you have some real friends. [01:13:37.640 --> 01:13:38.640] Oh, yeah. [01:13:38.640 --> 01:13:40.640] I got a list of real friends. [01:13:40.640 --> 01:13:42.640] It's very, very short. [01:13:42.640 --> 01:13:44.640] Yes. [01:13:44.640 --> 01:13:57.640] So what, what occurred with the pixels, you know, they're going through this, the city, his friends raised $80,000 for his benefit. [01:13:57.640 --> 01:14:01.640] I mean, these weren't people that just come and said, Oh, wow, this is awful. [01:14:01.640 --> 01:14:02.640] They shouldn't pick. [01:14:02.640 --> 01:14:06.640] When it came time to standing up, these people stood up. [01:14:06.640 --> 01:14:07.640] Yeah. [01:14:07.640 --> 01:14:12.640] I spent 27 days in jail in solitary confinement. [01:14:12.640 --> 01:14:18.640] And we put out over the radio to get enough bond money to get me out of jail. [01:14:18.640 --> 01:14:23.640] And it took three weeks to get $5,000. [01:14:23.640 --> 01:14:26.640] And my listeners came through. [01:14:26.640 --> 01:14:29.640] They got me that and got me out of jail. [01:14:29.640 --> 01:14:44.640] Jim got $80,000 from his neighbors. [01:14:44.640 --> 01:14:49.640] And then we had several people from our church, which is not in this town. [01:14:49.640 --> 01:14:57.640] And then I'm not sure we had anybody in the town that came up with the money except for the one lady. [01:14:57.640 --> 01:14:59.640] But it was $54,000. [01:14:59.640 --> 01:15:02.640] Well, now we've been paying her back. [01:15:02.640 --> 01:15:05.640] You know, so as we get money, then we give it to her. [01:15:05.640 --> 01:15:07.640] So we're still are behind. [01:15:07.640 --> 01:15:11.640] We've got to still pay her some more, but we're getting caught up. [01:15:11.640 --> 01:15:14.640] And that's incredible. [01:15:14.640 --> 01:15:16.640] Yeah. [01:15:16.640 --> 01:15:24.640] So how many people get to the opportunity to find out who their friends really are? [01:15:24.640 --> 01:15:31.640] You know, I once hit the back of a Park Semi at 70 miles an hour. [01:15:31.640 --> 01:15:39.640] It wasn't my fault as I was sound asleep at the time. [01:15:39.640 --> 01:15:43.640] That Park Semi jumped right out in front of me. [01:15:43.640 --> 01:15:47.640] But I found out who my friends were. [01:15:47.640 --> 01:15:53.640] And they turned out to be people I didn't expect. [01:15:53.640 --> 01:15:56.640] There was somebody who lives around where I do. [01:15:56.640 --> 01:16:05.640] There was a guy between Azul and Boyd who had a secondhand shop outlet. [01:16:05.640 --> 01:16:09.640] He bought equipment from GD. [01:16:09.640 --> 01:16:13.640] When they would get a new contract in, they would get all new equipment. [01:16:13.640 --> 01:16:15.640] They'd sell him the old stuff. [01:16:15.640 --> 01:16:19.640] And then when the contract ran out and it ran out of money, they'd come buy all this stuff back. [01:16:19.640 --> 01:16:23.640] That's how he made his money. [01:16:23.640 --> 01:16:25.640] I knew him. [01:16:25.640 --> 01:16:27.640] I went down and talked to him. [01:16:27.640 --> 01:16:29.640] We were acquaintances. [01:16:29.640 --> 01:16:34.640] But when I got hurt, he came to my house and gave my wife money. [01:16:34.640 --> 01:16:43.640] He told her to tell me that if I needed anything, come to him. [01:16:43.640 --> 01:16:51.640] Well, I get out of the hospital after several months and I'm in a cast from my hip to my foot. [01:16:51.640 --> 01:16:57.640] And the guy I sold my business to came to me in the hospital and told me, [01:16:57.640 --> 01:16:59.640] oh, you know that money you gave me. [01:16:59.640 --> 01:17:04.640] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.640 --> 01:17:08.640] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. 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[01:17:40.640 --> 01:17:46.640] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, [01:17:46.640 --> 01:17:49.640] or email michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.640 --> 01:17:57.640] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.640 --> 01:17:59.640] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.640 --> 01:18:04.640] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.640 --> 01:18:08.640] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fake. [01:18:08.640 --> 01:18:13.640] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.640 --> 01:18:18.640] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give [01:18:18.640 --> 01:18:21.640] because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [01:18:21.640 --> 01:18:23.640] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.640 --> 01:18:26.640] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:26.640 --> 01:18:29.640] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.640 --> 01:18:31.640] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.640 --> 01:18:34.640] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:18:34.640 --> 01:18:37.640] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.640 --> 01:18:43.640] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.640 --> 01:18:44.640] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.640 --> 01:18:45.640] No. [01:18:45.640 --> 01:18:47.640] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.640 --> 01:18:48.640] No. [01:18:48.640 --> 01:18:49.640] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.640 --> 01:18:50.640] No. [01:18:50.640 --> 01:18:51.640] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.640 --> 01:18:55.640] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:18:55.640 --> 01:18:56.640] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.640 --> 01:18:57.640] We are... [01:18:57.640 --> 01:18:58.640] Logos! [01:18:58.640 --> 01:19:00.640] Happy Holidays, Logos! [01:19:00.640 --> 01:19:10.640] The logos, the logos radio, net, radio, net, radio, net, radio, net. [01:19:10.640 --> 01:19:36.640] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton with our radio and we are talking to Tim in Texas, and this is a good spot to talk about perspectives. [01:19:36.640 --> 01:19:43.640] You know when bad things happen, we tend to think that the world is about to end. [01:19:43.640 --> 01:19:58.640] Back in 1981, I had sold my business to another fellow and he couldn't pay for it so we went into partners together so I could get my money back. [01:19:58.640 --> 01:20:09.640] We worked on a railroad train that had leaked crude oil onto the safety appliances and they couldn't move that train until they cleaned the appliances. [01:20:09.640 --> 01:20:12.640] The handrails, the walkways and such. [01:20:12.640 --> 01:20:24.640] And the train was time sensitive because everything is under heat and pressure and they had to keep and run steam through all of these cars to keep all of that crude hot so they could get it out. [01:20:24.640 --> 01:20:33.640] And so we worked 36 hours straight to get the train where they could move it and then my business partner gave me something to help me stay awake. [01:20:33.640 --> 01:20:36.640] He didn't tell me what happens when you come off of it. [01:20:36.640 --> 01:20:40.640] I came off of it halfway home at 70 miles an hour. [01:20:40.640 --> 01:20:42.640] Get the back of a park semi. [01:20:42.640 --> 01:20:55.640] And darn near killed me. I came to on the side of the highway. I can hear and I can feel but I can't see or talk or move. [01:20:55.640 --> 01:21:04.640] And somebody's asked me if I've been drinking and I try to tell them no but when I tried to talk it's like I sunk down in this well. [01:21:04.640 --> 01:21:07.640] And then when I stopped and I'd rise back up. [01:21:07.640 --> 01:21:08.640] He asked me about three times. [01:21:08.640 --> 01:21:10.640] The third time I thought heck with this. [01:21:10.640 --> 01:21:15.640] And then I feel hands on me and movement and I hear helicopter props. [01:21:15.640 --> 01:21:19.640] And I think oh crap I've been hit. [01:21:19.640 --> 01:21:23.640] You know I'm confused. [01:21:23.640 --> 01:21:25.640] I think I'm back in Vietnam. [01:21:25.640 --> 01:21:33.640] They feel movement and hands on me and then I hear the helicopter props getting louder. [01:21:33.640 --> 01:21:38.640] And then one guy says to the other one watch out for this one. [01:21:38.640 --> 01:21:41.640] I don't think he's going to make it. [01:21:41.640 --> 01:21:45.640] And we used to put 1015 guys in one helicopter. [01:21:45.640 --> 01:21:50.640] And this was bad times. [01:21:50.640 --> 01:21:57.640] And I can feel them slide me into the helicopter and as the helicopter rises off the old Z. [01:21:57.640 --> 01:22:05.640] I can feel myself sinking down and I'm thinking which one which one's not going to make it. [01:22:05.640 --> 01:22:09.640] And I come to a hospital really bad time. [01:22:09.640 --> 01:22:13.640] Three days later I came out of a coma. [01:22:13.640 --> 01:22:19.640] And when I opened my eyes my wife was looking down at me and she said I don't know what we're going to do. [01:22:19.640 --> 01:22:20.640] Who's going to cut off the phone. [01:22:20.640 --> 01:22:21.640] I can't be in the building. [01:22:21.640 --> 01:22:22.640] I don't know what's going to happen. [01:22:22.640 --> 01:22:27.640] And I looked around and I said am I going to die. [01:22:27.640 --> 01:22:31.640] And he assured me that I wasn't. [01:22:31.640 --> 01:22:38.640] Then my business partner came to me and told me oh you know that money you gave me to get insurance on the truck. [01:22:38.640 --> 01:22:40.640] I said I'm not going to want to hear this am I. [01:22:40.640 --> 01:22:42.640] He said no. [01:22:42.640 --> 01:22:44.640] No insurance. [01:22:44.640 --> 01:22:45.640] No money. [01:22:45.640 --> 01:22:48.640] No way to make any money. [01:22:48.640 --> 01:22:51.640] I got two kids and a wife to support. [01:22:51.640 --> 01:22:56.640] I've got a cast from my hip to my ankle. [01:22:56.640 --> 01:23:01.640] You know that was one of the low points of my life. [01:23:01.640 --> 01:23:07.640] But here I am 30 years down the road. [01:23:07.640 --> 01:23:13.640] I never missed one meal. [01:23:13.640 --> 01:23:16.640] My kids never missed one meal. [01:23:16.640 --> 01:23:23.640] Life has a way of filling in the gaps. [01:23:23.640 --> 01:23:26.640] No matter how bad you think it is. [01:23:26.640 --> 01:23:29.640] If you just keep stroking. [01:23:29.640 --> 01:23:33.640] Life has a way of filling in those gaps. [01:23:33.640 --> 01:23:38.640] And you know Tim and Laura had this all this happened to them and they were horrible. [01:23:38.640 --> 01:23:42.640] You know they were terrified about all this stuff that's coming but they kept stroking. [01:23:42.640 --> 01:23:44.640] They never they never give up. [01:23:44.640 --> 01:23:47.640] They never laid down and rolled over. [01:23:47.640 --> 01:23:58.640] And at the end of the day this may well have been one of the most valuable experiences they get to have together. [01:23:58.640 --> 01:24:02.640] They both got to go through this together and neither one of them backed up. [01:24:02.640 --> 01:24:06.640] Neither one of them laid down and rolled over. [01:24:06.640 --> 01:24:10.640] They got to find out who they were and what they were made of. [01:24:10.640 --> 01:24:13.640] Most people seldom get a chance to find that out. [01:24:13.640 --> 01:24:17.640] So the point is more of the story. [01:24:17.640 --> 01:24:20.640] No matter how bad you think things are. [01:24:20.640 --> 01:24:22.640] Don't worry. [01:24:22.640 --> 01:24:24.640] It'll get worse. [01:24:24.640 --> 01:24:27.640] Now it gets better. [01:24:27.640 --> 01:24:30.640] Life just keeps going and life has a way to. [01:24:30.640 --> 01:24:34.640] As long as you keep stroking as long as you keep working at it. [01:24:34.640 --> 01:24:41.640] Things fall into place and at this time Bo Freeman. [01:24:41.640 --> 01:24:46.640] He was, I had about five people that stood up. [01:24:46.640 --> 01:24:52.640] And he told my, Bo Freeman told my wife when he gets where he can, if he needs anything come down. [01:24:52.640 --> 01:24:53.640] Have him talk to me. [01:24:53.640 --> 01:24:54.640] So I did. [01:24:54.640 --> 01:24:55.640] Went and talked to him. [01:24:55.640 --> 01:24:58.640] He said go out there and look in my yard. [01:24:58.640 --> 01:25:03.640] If you find anything you can use, take it. [01:25:03.640 --> 01:25:07.640] Pay me when you can if you can. [01:25:07.640 --> 01:25:12.640] I've got a huge pump that was too big for what I needed, but I got it to work. [01:25:12.640 --> 01:25:15.640] And it got me back in business. [01:25:15.640 --> 01:25:21.640] And a year and a half later I went in and finally finished paying him off. [01:25:21.640 --> 01:25:27.640] Never once did he ask me for a penny. [01:25:27.640 --> 01:25:33.640] These are, these are people that when things get difficult, you need to know who they are. [01:25:33.640 --> 01:25:39.640] If Bo Freeman ever asked me for anything, I would be there. [01:25:39.640 --> 01:25:44.640] I wish I had more than three people on my list. [01:25:44.640 --> 01:25:48.640] Well, I'm 69 years old and I got three people on my list. [01:25:48.640 --> 01:25:50.640] That's pitiful. [01:25:50.640 --> 01:25:52.640] Yeah. [01:25:52.640 --> 01:25:56.640] Well, you guys, you got a bunch of people in your list. [01:25:56.640 --> 01:26:00.640] Well, you know, I think it's because of my wife. [01:26:00.640 --> 01:26:04.640] You know, I think it's because, you know, they all love her. [01:26:04.640 --> 01:26:07.640] Anybody that ever met her, you know, they all love her. [01:26:07.640 --> 01:26:11.640] And she's not a threat to anyone. [01:26:11.640 --> 01:26:16.640] And they understand what she has to put up with. [01:26:16.640 --> 01:26:23.640] Well, you know, she's dedicated. [01:26:23.640 --> 01:26:35.640] But anyway, I'm just, maybe that's something we need to think about in the near future when you're not so busy. [01:26:35.640 --> 01:26:37.640] I don't know when that's going to be. [01:26:37.640 --> 01:26:40.640] Good luck on that one. [01:26:40.640 --> 01:26:44.640] But yeah, I think you do need to go after the criminal side. [01:26:44.640 --> 01:26:45.640] Yeah. [01:26:45.640 --> 01:26:47.640] That's your, that's your duty. [01:26:47.640 --> 01:26:51.640] And that has nothing to do with whether it's good for you or bad for you. [01:26:51.640 --> 01:26:54.640] That is your job. [01:26:54.640 --> 01:27:04.640] And then you remember when we told you that the TML attorney emailed us back when we asked if it was okay for them to, [01:27:04.640 --> 01:27:07.640] if for us to, you know, do the, what was it? [01:27:07.640 --> 01:27:09.640] Oh, the stay. [01:27:09.640 --> 01:27:11.640] And they denied it. [01:27:11.640 --> 01:27:19.640] And he sent an email back to me saying that we'd already been sanctioned once and that he might get sanctioned again. [01:27:19.640 --> 01:27:24.640] So we could probably do a bar grievance against him for that, couldn't we? [01:27:24.640 --> 01:27:25.640] Absolutely. [01:27:25.640 --> 01:27:28.640] Now's the time to start filing bar grievances. [01:27:28.640 --> 01:27:29.640] Yes. [01:27:29.640 --> 01:27:37.640] We just need to determine which ones we have filed, if we've kept copies, and then to figure out which ones we need to file. [01:27:37.640 --> 01:27:47.640] Because even though I don't understand it, I'll take your word for it because it seems to put pressure where they don't like pressure. [01:27:47.640 --> 01:27:52.640] But it also seems to make it to where they start looking for something that they can come after you for. [01:27:52.640 --> 01:27:55.640] Because it's like, Ted for TAT. [01:27:55.640 --> 01:27:58.640] Yeah, talk to Scott Richardson. [01:27:58.640 --> 01:28:04.640] Scott, do what? [01:28:04.640 --> 01:28:13.640] I talked to him just the other day and he said that he came up with one of the civil procedures or federal procedures. [01:28:13.640 --> 01:28:24.640] And he saw that we're A and B contradicted themselves and said that the attorneys can lie to everybody except Congress, basically. [01:28:24.640 --> 01:28:28.640] And he said when he saw that, he said he just lost all heart. [01:28:28.640 --> 01:28:31.640] Yeah, he called in about that. [01:28:31.640 --> 01:28:33.640] We need to look at that. [01:28:33.640 --> 01:28:42.640] The fact that they can lie to the court, I don't see how that makes lying to the court may not mind. [01:28:42.640 --> 01:28:44.640] But it's still a crime. [01:28:44.640 --> 01:28:45.640] Yeah. [01:28:45.640 --> 01:28:48.640] Yeah, because if we're under oath, aren't they under oath? [01:28:48.640 --> 01:28:55.640] I mean, does an attorney get, does he have to raise his hand and say under the oath? [01:28:55.640 --> 01:28:58.640] He is presumed to be under oath. [01:28:58.640 --> 01:29:00.640] Presumes. [01:29:00.640 --> 01:29:02.640] So that means that he is. [01:29:02.640 --> 01:29:06.640] Just like when a police officer signs a ticket. [01:29:06.640 --> 01:29:13.640] He doesn't sign it in front of a magistrate, but it is presumed under oath. [01:29:13.640 --> 01:29:15.640] Okay. [01:29:15.640 --> 01:29:20.640] Well, we just got a lot of stuff to look at and, and I'm sure my friends will be like, no, just look. [01:29:20.640 --> 01:29:26.640] Okay, hold on referencing Scott and bar grievances. [01:29:26.640 --> 01:29:27.640] Yes, sir. [01:29:27.640 --> 01:29:30.640] He sent me a stack three inches high. [01:29:30.640 --> 01:29:47.640] He had a letter from the bar asking them asking him not to file them in paper because he was filing so many that they had to hire extra people to take care of them to please do it all electronically. [01:29:47.640 --> 01:29:49.640] And nobody came after him for it. [01:29:49.640 --> 01:29:51.640] Right. [01:29:51.640 --> 01:29:55.640] They, they didn't tell him to stop filing them. [01:29:55.640 --> 01:29:57.640] They knew better. [01:29:57.640 --> 01:29:58.640] Right. [01:29:58.640 --> 01:30:00.640] So now there's. [01:30:00.640 --> 01:30:06.640] Drug smugglers have tried everything from submarines to catapults to get illegal drugs into the U.S. [01:30:06.640 --> 01:30:12.640] But their most recent method was so ingenious it only cost them a quarter of shipment under Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:12.640 --> 01:30:15.640] I'll be right back to tell you what it was. [01:30:15.640 --> 01:30:17.640] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.640 --> 01:30:20.640] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:20.640 --> 01:30:25.640] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:25.640 --> 01:30:30.640] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:30.640 --> 01:30:31.640] Privacy. [01:30:31.640 --> 01:30:33.640] It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:33.640 --> 01:30:36.640] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. [01:30:36.640 --> 01:30:40.640] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:40.640 --> 01:30:43.640] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:43.640 --> 01:30:48.640] Mexican drug smugglers are always brainstorming new ways to outsmart the border patrol. [01:30:48.640 --> 01:30:51.640] But the recent exploits were the stuff of legend. [01:30:51.640 --> 01:30:57.640] The traffickers tunneled their way underground to 16-meter parking spaces in Nogales, Arizona, [01:30:57.640 --> 01:31:00.640] and cut careful rectangles in the pavement. [01:31:00.640 --> 01:31:05.640] U.S. accomplices then parked false-bottom cars above the holes, fed the parking meter, [01:31:05.640 --> 01:31:08.640] and stuffed the cars with drugs from below. [01:31:08.640 --> 01:31:14.640] Once the pavement plugs were back in place, the vehicles would cruise quietly away with nobody the wiser. [01:31:14.640 --> 01:31:20.640] Eventually, diligent deputies detained the digging desperados, and that was the end of drive-thru drugs. [01:31:20.640 --> 01:31:25.640] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:51.640 --> 01:31:53.640] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.640 --> 01:31:55.640] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.640 --> 01:31:57.640] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.640 --> 01:32:26.640] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.640 --> 01:32:31.640] Your connection with Rule Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.640 --> 01:32:35.640] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.640 --> 01:32:41.640] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to R drums at www.rulelawradio.com [01:32:41.640 --> 01:32:45.640] and ordering your copy today. 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Thank you. You don't have to be so verbose. [01:34:06.640 --> 01:34:14.640] Okay, thank you Tim. Now we are going to go to Tina in California. Hello Tina. [01:34:14.640 --> 01:34:20.640] Hi Randy, can you hear me? Yes I can. [01:34:20.640 --> 01:34:25.640] Okay, good. Sorry about my voice. I've got flu right now so I'm not feeling too good. [01:34:25.640 --> 01:34:33.640] Do you have any mouthwash? Yeah, I see. [01:34:33.640 --> 01:34:40.640] Do you have any peroxide? Yeah. [01:34:40.640 --> 01:34:45.640] Take your mouthwash. Cut it in half with peroxide. [01:34:45.640 --> 01:34:52.640] Gargle with it every 30 minutes. In short order your flu will be gone. [01:34:52.640 --> 01:35:00.640] The symptoms from flu are the result of bacteria in your mouth. [01:35:00.640 --> 01:35:05.640] They create the toxins, they drain down into your stomach, they get into your system. [01:35:05.640 --> 01:35:11.640] I haven't had a cold or flu in seven or eight years. [01:35:11.640 --> 01:35:18.640] I haven't until this year, my partner, he got it and passed it to me. [01:35:18.640 --> 01:35:24.640] All I did was mix peroxide with my mouthwash, I brushed my teeth with it. [01:35:24.640 --> 01:35:31.640] My grandson, they used it and he said that's the first time his mouth ever really felt clean. [01:35:31.640 --> 01:35:40.640] But if you rinse your mouth with the peroxide, peroxide, H202 as opposed to H20. [01:35:40.640 --> 01:35:44.640] It's in the food grade, hydrogen peroxide. [01:35:44.640 --> 01:35:51.640] Hydrogen peroxide will pass through your skin, you absorb it right in the body, [01:35:51.640 --> 01:35:55.640] and it will throw off that extra oxygen at them. [01:35:55.640 --> 01:35:59.640] It increases the oxygen level of your blood. [01:35:59.640 --> 01:36:07.640] Anything that lives in your blood is anaerobic, hates oxygen, knocks it right out. [01:36:07.640 --> 01:36:12.640] You'll want to go beat up your doctor for having to put up with colds and flu all this time, [01:36:12.640 --> 01:36:17.640] and that's all it took to get rid of it. [01:36:17.640 --> 01:36:21.640] Since I was doing the show, I started getting a little scratchy throat. [01:36:21.640 --> 01:36:26.640] I'll go pour a little in the glass and just gargle with a little bit of it and not spit it out. [01:36:26.640 --> 01:36:32.640] Just leave it in my mouth and in 30 minutes it's gone. [01:36:32.640 --> 01:36:39.640] Okay, what do you have for us? [01:36:39.640 --> 01:36:45.640] You were talking earlier about jurisdiction, subject matter jurisdiction, [01:36:45.640 --> 01:36:52.640] and I remember my attorney said I couldn't challenge that because I bought the case, [01:36:52.640 --> 01:36:57.640] so I automatically gave the judge jurisdiction. [01:36:57.640 --> 01:37:02.640] The lawyer did not understand jurisdiction. [01:37:02.640 --> 01:37:06.640] You're not challenging subject matter jurisdiction of the case, [01:37:06.640 --> 01:37:17.640] you're challenging the jurisdiction of the bank, their authority to enforce a contract. [01:37:17.640 --> 01:37:22.640] Okay, wait a minute, hold on. [01:37:22.640 --> 01:37:25.640] How did you bring jurisdiction issue? [01:37:25.640 --> 01:37:30.640] I didn't because he kept saying I tried to get him to say why can't we challenge this, [01:37:30.640 --> 01:37:34.640] and he said you can't because you bought the case, you're the plaintiff, [01:37:34.640 --> 01:37:40.640] so you can't challenge it because when you're the plaintiff you automatically give jurisdiction to the court. [01:37:40.640 --> 01:37:42.640] He's right. [01:37:42.640 --> 01:37:52.640] You don't automatically, but even if you don't, you're the plaintiff, you chose the venue, [01:37:52.640 --> 01:37:56.640] you can't challenge the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. [01:37:56.640 --> 01:38:01.640] There's another way to challenge the standing of the bank. [01:38:01.640 --> 01:38:10.640] You could have to challenge the standing of the bank to do whatever they're doing. [01:38:10.640 --> 01:38:13.640] But he was right about subject matter jurisdiction. [01:38:13.640 --> 01:38:20.640] Only the defendant can bring the subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:38:20.640 --> 01:38:25.640] And that's because the plaintiff chooses the jurisdiction. [01:38:25.640 --> 01:38:27.640] Yeah. [01:38:27.640 --> 01:38:30.640] You can't choose it and then challenge it. [01:38:30.640 --> 01:38:35.640] Now if you choose it and then the other side removes it to the Fed, [01:38:35.640 --> 01:38:40.640] then you can challenge subject matter jurisdiction of the Fed because you didn't choose the Fed. [01:38:40.640 --> 01:38:42.640] Okay. [01:38:42.640 --> 01:38:45.640] See, I didn't know that and he didn't tell me that when they did move it, [01:38:45.640 --> 01:38:48.640] although we successfully got it moved back to state. [01:38:48.640 --> 01:38:52.640] Anyway, that's a moot point now because that's pretty much over. [01:38:52.640 --> 01:38:58.640] All I've got now is the chance to file all these grievances which I'm working on. [01:38:58.640 --> 01:39:04.640] And I haven't heard back from the Supreme Court when I filed the one against, you know, [01:39:04.640 --> 01:39:09.640] filed my complaint with them against the judge and the attorney. [01:39:09.640 --> 01:39:12.640] I'm still waiting for a response. [01:39:12.640 --> 01:39:15.640] They generally take a while. [01:39:15.640 --> 01:39:19.640] Don't be surprised if they don't act quickly. [01:39:19.640 --> 01:39:21.640] No, I won't be. [01:39:21.640 --> 01:39:27.640] So based on this, though, you know that I did email Deb, by the way, [01:39:27.640 --> 01:39:31.640] but based on what I'm trying to help this 77-year-old, [01:39:31.640 --> 01:39:33.640] he just knew where he could ever go into court. [01:39:33.640 --> 01:39:36.640] He can't remember, you know, what he had for breakfasties. [01:39:36.640 --> 01:39:39.640] It's, you know, it's getting bad. [01:39:39.640 --> 01:39:42.640] And he would just answer yes to anything. [01:39:42.640 --> 01:39:47.640] I mean, he'd give himself up to anything because he doesn't understand. [01:39:47.640 --> 01:39:52.640] Could he, if they took him to court on this credit card debt, [01:39:52.640 --> 01:39:58.640] could he challenge jurisdiction in writing as a defendant to it and win that way [01:39:58.640 --> 01:40:03.640] and not have to say anything and just send paper into court? [01:40:03.640 --> 01:40:08.640] The first thing he needs to do is debt validation letter. [01:40:08.640 --> 01:40:13.640] You really need to, I sent you an email today about getting a hold of Deborah. [01:40:13.640 --> 01:40:16.640] If you get a hold of Michael Marris, [01:40:16.640 --> 01:40:21.640] he'll show you how to make money beating these guys up. [01:40:21.640 --> 01:40:24.640] They never do it right. [01:40:24.640 --> 01:40:27.640] And they know they're not doing it right. [01:40:27.640 --> 01:40:31.640] But they make money not doing it right. [01:40:31.640 --> 01:40:32.640] So they don't care. [01:40:32.640 --> 01:40:37.640] You know, every once while somebody stings them, that's a cost of doing business. [01:40:37.640 --> 01:40:39.640] So you'll be the cost of doing business. [01:40:39.640 --> 01:40:42.640] And Mike Marris can show you how. [01:40:42.640 --> 01:40:49.640] On the Logos Radio Network website, there should be a blue banner. [01:40:49.640 --> 01:40:50.640] Yeah, I couldn't. [01:40:50.640 --> 01:40:53.640] I got on the blue banner and I could not click every time. [01:40:53.640 --> 01:40:59.640] I saw some links to podcasts from 2009, 2010. [01:40:59.640 --> 01:41:02.640] Every time I clicked on one, it says this is not available. [01:41:02.640 --> 01:41:06.640] Send Deborah an email telling her that. [01:41:06.640 --> 01:41:09.640] Deborah at RealVawRadio.com. [01:41:09.640 --> 01:41:12.640] And tell her that these links aren't working. [01:41:12.640 --> 01:41:14.640] She'll fix it. [01:41:14.640 --> 01:41:17.640] Yeah, I did already when I got the email. [01:41:17.640 --> 01:41:18.640] I was listening to the show. [01:41:18.640 --> 01:41:20.640] I went and sent her an email. [01:41:20.640 --> 01:41:24.640] But Mike Marris will show you how to make money going after these guys. [01:41:24.640 --> 01:41:25.640] Well, that'd be good. [01:41:25.640 --> 01:41:28.640] Because then if I can help the guy make money, [01:41:28.640 --> 01:41:32.640] I'm sure he'll turn it back to me so I can pay for Michael Marris' course [01:41:32.640 --> 01:41:35.640] and help other people. [01:41:35.640 --> 01:41:38.640] Michael Marris' course is really well worth it. [01:41:38.640 --> 01:41:40.640] And to help somebody who's got dementia. [01:41:40.640 --> 01:41:42.640] They just want you to pay money upfront. [01:41:42.640 --> 01:41:44.640] Or if you pay me this, I'll help you. [01:41:44.640 --> 01:41:47.640] Well, if I had the money, I would pay. [01:41:47.640 --> 01:41:48.640] But I don't have the money. [01:41:48.640 --> 01:41:51.640] And I can't ask this guy to spend money. [01:41:51.640 --> 01:41:52.640] He doesn't. [01:41:52.640 --> 01:42:01.640] I mean, he's been reamed by this company that just is too long to go into on the air. [01:42:01.640 --> 01:42:05.640] But it's a stock scam and he got persuaded. [01:42:05.640 --> 01:42:09.640] And I think there was some funny business with his broker. [01:42:09.640 --> 01:42:12.640] Oh, go to the SEC. [01:42:12.640 --> 01:42:15.640] Well, I'm writing to the SEC for him. [01:42:15.640 --> 01:42:21.640] You know, I'm writing him a letter and also to the Elder Abuse Financial Network. [01:42:21.640 --> 01:42:23.640] They're the national one. [01:42:23.640 --> 01:42:28.640] And I'm writing about that too because the stock company said to me, [01:42:28.640 --> 01:42:33.640] I sort of, you know, did a little digging and pretended I wanted to buy some of these [01:42:33.640 --> 01:42:41.640] private placement shares, which they're not allowed to sell when their SEC quarterly filings are out of date. [01:42:41.640 --> 01:42:44.640] And they're three terms out of date. [01:42:44.640 --> 01:42:48.640] And they told me, they said, oh, you can't listen to that guy. [01:42:48.640 --> 01:42:50.640] He has Alzheimer's. [01:42:50.640 --> 01:42:54.640] Well, what are you doing selling him stock of his Alzheimer's? [01:42:54.640 --> 01:42:55.640] That's illegal. [01:42:55.640 --> 01:42:58.640] That's elder abuse. [01:42:58.640 --> 01:43:04.640] So I'm in the midst of trying to compose some good letters for him to send. [01:43:04.640 --> 01:43:11.640] Well, the SEC is good because the only purpose of the SEC is to protect guys like him. [01:43:11.640 --> 01:43:13.640] That's what they're there for. [01:43:13.640 --> 01:43:22.640] If you get hold of the SEC and give them a hard time, they get upset and they'll get somebody to go after these guys. [01:43:22.640 --> 01:43:26.640] And, you know, they didn't get his money back. [01:43:26.640 --> 01:43:28.640] Really? [01:43:28.640 --> 01:43:29.640] Yeah, that's what they do. [01:43:29.640 --> 01:43:31.640] Tremendous. [01:43:31.640 --> 01:43:35.640] So your best bet's probably the SEC. [01:43:35.640 --> 01:43:40.640] If they'll go after this, whatever this company is, they won't go after them. [01:43:40.640 --> 01:43:44.640] They got so many that they won't go after one until it becomes a problem. [01:43:44.640 --> 01:43:49.640] So you become a problem. [01:43:49.640 --> 01:43:52.640] Okay, hang on. About to go to break. [01:43:52.640 --> 01:43:54.640] Randy Kelton, Rural Law Radio. [01:43:54.640 --> 01:43:57.640] First time I didn't fall off the cliff today, so I'm getting better. [01:43:57.640 --> 01:44:00.640] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.640 --> 01:44:06.640] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.640 --> 01:44:09.640] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:09.640 --> 01:44:11.640] And it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.640 --> 01:44:17.640] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. 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[01:45:42.640 --> 01:45:51.640] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:51.640 --> 01:46:00.640] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:21.640 --> 01:46:30.640] Okay, we are back. [01:46:30.640 --> 01:46:42.640] Randy Kelton, rule of law radio on this, the Friday, the 22nd day of February, 2019, and we're talking to Tina in California. [01:46:42.640 --> 01:46:46.640] Okay, Tina, go ahead. [01:46:46.640 --> 01:46:49.640] You've gone off the cliff. [01:46:49.640 --> 01:46:53.640] I didn't run off the cliff that time, first time. [01:46:53.640 --> 01:46:57.640] What happened? [01:46:57.640 --> 01:47:05.640] We're back on the air. You're supposed to be talking about interesting subjects. [01:47:05.640 --> 01:47:09.640] Okay, I'm back with you. I see you now. [01:47:09.640 --> 01:47:10.640] Okay. [01:47:10.640 --> 01:47:12.640] Can you hear me? [01:47:12.640 --> 01:47:19.640] You're helping the guy who's been sold bogus stocks. [01:47:19.640 --> 01:47:28.640] Yeah, he can't sell them because, like they told him he could, and they won't talk to him. They won't answer his call. [01:47:28.640 --> 01:47:42.640] But I actually found through research that this particular company has been in trouble with the SEC before and was taken to court by them, so this won't be their first go-around. [01:47:42.640 --> 01:47:48.640] Wait a minute. They were taken to court by the SEC. [01:47:48.640 --> 01:47:51.640] Has it been within five years? [01:47:51.640 --> 01:47:54.640] Yes. [01:47:54.640 --> 01:48:05.640] Because almost always, when the SEC takes you to court, you wind up not being able to sell stocks for five years. [01:48:05.640 --> 01:48:10.640] You need to look this company up on the SEC and see if they've been sanctioned. [01:48:10.640 --> 01:48:14.640] Okay, I'll have to read the whole case, Jim. [01:48:14.640 --> 01:48:23.640] Actually, you can go to the SEC site. I think there's a place you can search for their name to see if they've been sanctioned. [01:48:23.640 --> 01:48:34.640] They have a section for enforcement, and you go to that section and run their name and see if they come up. [01:48:34.640 --> 01:48:42.640] Just run their name on the Internet. If they've been sanctioned by the SEC, you'll find it. [01:48:42.640 --> 01:48:51.640] Yeah, the agent for service of process got their letter. We got notice today that they got the letter that I wrote for him, and we sent to them. [01:48:51.640 --> 01:49:08.640] Their offices came back as not at this address, which I think is a violation in California, because you're supposed to have a correct address on file with the Department of Business, whatever it is. [01:49:08.640 --> 01:49:10.640] I can't remember the exact name. [01:49:10.640 --> 01:49:36.640] Wait, go to... I'm going through... I'm building a set of questionnaires, and there are sections in there that go to the disclosures the seller has to make to the purchaser, and there is a whole stack of them. [01:49:36.640 --> 01:49:42.640] Well, they didn't make any to him, obviously, and they didn't make any to me when they tried to sell me the same thing. [01:49:42.640 --> 01:49:57.640] I was just fishing to get information about these people, and they did a really good job, and I can understand how someone with dementia, even if it's early onset, can be fooled. [01:49:57.640 --> 01:50:09.640] Because they told me that when I said, well, I found out that they're behind on their quarterly filings, and they said, oh, no, no, they're not late at all, no, they're not. [01:50:09.640 --> 01:50:25.640] They said, well, I just spoke to my broker today, which I didn't. He was a neighbor who used to be a broker and just retired, and he said that we're not even accredited to purchase these because you have to have $5 million in liquid net worth. [01:50:25.640 --> 01:50:36.640] Oh, no, he's wrong. He's just saying that because he's not getting a commission. So I'll let that say true, what he said. So they were really high pressure. [01:50:36.640 --> 01:50:38.640] Did you record them? [01:50:38.640 --> 01:50:40.640] Yes, I did. [01:50:40.640 --> 01:50:46.640] Oh, good. Did you send the recording to the SEC along with a complaint? [01:50:46.640 --> 01:51:06.640] I'm going to transcribe that and have my neighbor who listened to it because I was at her house and I had to speak up on. I'm going to transcribe it half-plus, sign it as a witness and send it because I'm not supposed to, you know, there's supposed to record without commission in California. [01:51:06.640 --> 01:51:17.640] No, no, no, no. In California, you can record any conversation that you are a party to. [01:51:17.640 --> 01:51:29.640] If I speak to you, you have no, what's the term, expectation of privacy. [01:51:29.640 --> 01:51:39.640] Yes, the only state I know of that you can't record a conversation you're a party to is Pennsylvania. [01:51:39.640 --> 01:51:50.640] You definitely can in California, but I never suggest giving the recording. I always suggest a transcript. [01:51:50.640 --> 01:52:03.640] Just what you're doing. But if they question the veracity of the transcript, then you can say, well, you know that's accurate because you took it from the recording. [01:52:03.640 --> 01:52:13.640] Then they'll wish they hadn't challenged it because now you can, that establishes foundation for the recording. [01:52:13.640 --> 01:52:26.640] If all the transcript is an affidavit and when they challenge the veracity of the affidavit, then you can bring in the recording to support the veracity of the affidavit. [01:52:26.640 --> 01:52:32.640] They open the door for it. And that's always an oops. [01:52:32.640 --> 01:52:33.640] Yes. [01:52:33.640 --> 01:52:36.640] So good, you're doing good. [01:52:36.640 --> 01:52:43.640] Well, I'm trying. I'm learning a lot from this show and I'm trying to help people who are even worse off than me. [01:52:43.640 --> 01:52:55.640] And I've pretty much left everything, but I can help others and I just find it despicable that people will take advantage of seniors like this. It is despicable. [01:52:55.640 --> 01:53:01.640] And unfortunately, there are a lot of those out there. They just need more people like you who go after them. [01:53:01.640 --> 01:53:04.640] And it doesn't take that many. [01:53:04.640 --> 01:53:05.640] No. [01:53:05.640 --> 01:53:14.640] You can take out this company just by getting the right people upset. [01:53:14.640 --> 01:53:21.640] If anybody at the SEC doesn't do what you want them to, then you contact one of the commissioners. There's, I think, four commissioners. [01:53:21.640 --> 01:53:22.640] Okay. [01:53:22.640 --> 01:53:25.640] And just raise cane with the commissioner. [01:53:25.640 --> 01:53:39.640] Then the commissioner, your commissioners feelings, then they're going to start down the line of time it gets to the bottom. Everybody's going to be upset. And they're going to take care of this company to get you to quit harassing them. [01:53:39.640 --> 01:53:41.640] Okay. [01:53:41.640 --> 01:53:44.640] All politics at the end of the day. [01:53:44.640 --> 01:54:04.640] Because I was told by someone just yesterday that I need to file a complaint with the SEC on that accounting issue with that bank that you're helping me try to get because they said that if you can get the SEC to take notice of that, [01:54:04.640 --> 01:54:11.640] they should do an investigation of any accounting fraud from the bank. [01:54:11.640 --> 01:54:14.640] They said that's where you go get them. [01:54:14.640 --> 01:54:16.640] But they said you've got to give them proof. [01:54:16.640 --> 01:54:18.640] And that's what they need. [01:54:18.640 --> 01:54:19.640] Okay. [01:54:19.640 --> 01:54:39.640] In the SEC manual, before they do an investigation, they have to determine whether or not their funds, I'll forget exactly how it says it, but they're limited in their funding. [01:54:39.640 --> 01:54:49.640] They can't just go after something that doesn't show that it will generate enough in fines to cover their cost of going after them. [01:54:49.640 --> 01:54:52.640] Something to keep in mind. [01:54:52.640 --> 01:54:57.640] Have any idea how many sales these people are making? [01:54:57.640 --> 01:55:05.640] You can certainly subpoena that. [01:55:05.640 --> 01:55:15.640] Actually, in the requirements for disclosure, I'll have to look them up. [01:55:15.640 --> 01:55:26.640] It's 13B and 15 of the Spear's Exchange Act. [01:55:26.640 --> 01:55:28.640] Send me an email on that. [01:55:28.640 --> 01:55:40.640] And as I'm going through these questionnaires, I'll start marking out those things that they're required to produce to a purchaser. [01:55:40.640 --> 01:55:46.640] See, if you call them and you're a potential purchaser, there's a whole bunch of stuff that has to give you. [01:55:46.640 --> 01:55:50.640] Oh, they didn't give me anything. [01:55:50.640 --> 01:55:55.640] But first you need to find out how much money they're producing. [01:55:55.640 --> 01:56:06.640] To see if there's enough there to give the SEC reason to go after them. [01:56:06.640 --> 01:56:10.640] They got to show that they can get back their funds through fines. [01:56:10.640 --> 01:56:16.640] Well, can't they get their funds back through going after any assets of the offices of the company? [01:56:16.640 --> 01:56:18.640] Yes. [01:56:18.640 --> 01:56:22.640] Well, I know they've got some assets because I've found them. [01:56:22.640 --> 01:56:25.640] Well, good. That's all they need. They need enough assets. [01:56:25.640 --> 01:56:29.640] They're in the house in Florida. One of them is very nice. [01:56:29.640 --> 01:56:34.640] If you can get them to incriminate themselves enough. [01:56:34.640 --> 01:56:40.640] Oh, Florida. Okay. And in Florida, one time I had a woman call me in for six months, [01:56:40.640 --> 01:56:44.640] asking me if you could record people in Florida. [01:56:44.640 --> 01:56:51.640] And she called in one day and while she's talking, I went on the internet and in 30 seconds pulled up the code that says you could. [01:56:51.640 --> 01:56:56.640] You definitely can't record people in Florida. [01:56:56.640 --> 01:57:01.640] As long as you're a party to the conversation, you can record. [01:57:01.640 --> 01:57:06.640] So you might want to pose as an investor and... [01:57:06.640 --> 01:57:11.640] I posed in California because this was a weird thing. [01:57:11.640 --> 01:57:26.640] This guy's in Ohio. The people who tried to sell him or sold him this are in California where the company is sort of located, but the offices of the company, the main offices are living in Florida. [01:57:26.640 --> 01:57:29.640] Okay. So this is going to be a federal issue? [01:57:29.640 --> 01:57:30.640] Yes. [01:57:30.640 --> 01:57:32.640] That's good. You bring them to the federal courts. [01:57:32.640 --> 01:57:37.640] The federal courts are pretty good about debt collection issues. [01:57:37.640 --> 01:57:43.640] If you have a debt collection issue, you want to take that to the federal courts. That's where you'll win it. [01:57:43.640 --> 01:57:47.640] But this is much more than just a debt collection issue. [01:57:47.640 --> 01:57:48.640] Oh, yes. [01:57:48.640 --> 01:57:50.640] This is a securities issue. [01:57:50.640 --> 01:58:00.640] Yes. But they've got to figure out. They're about to go delinquent on their credit card debt of $50,000 and I've got to figure out how to help them with that. [01:58:00.640 --> 01:58:06.640] Okay. The first thing to do is a debt validation letter. [01:58:06.640 --> 01:58:10.640] And the Michael Mirris stuff will have all that in there. [01:58:10.640 --> 01:58:18.640] Okay. Great. Well, we'll see what Deb says when she gets my email and I'll let you go to other people on the call. [01:58:18.640 --> 01:58:25.640] Thanks always for great information. You know, even if I can't use it now, it's a great learning tool. [01:58:25.640 --> 01:58:36.640] Okay. Well, thank you, Tina. And we're about to go to break. So when we come back on the other side, we'll go to Adam in Texas and Terence in Florida. See you there. [01:58:36.640 --> 01:58:40.640] We'll get to both of you. We still got two hours left. So we've got plenty of time. [01:58:40.640 --> 01:58:44.640] Randy Kelton, we'll go to our radio. We'll be right back. 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