[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing your daily [00:05.840 --> 00:08.480] bulletins for the commodities market. [00:08.480 --> 00:21.320] Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.320 --> 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 --> 00:36.760] an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil Texas Crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent Crude $61.98 [00:36.760 --> 00:43.320] an ounce, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple [00:43.320 --> 00:51.440] XRP $0.29, Ethereum $10.10 and Eos is at $2.32 of crypto coin. [00:51.440 --> 00:59.640] Today in history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.640 --> 01:04.560] qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.560 --> 01:06.040] was passed by parliament. [01:06.040 --> 01:09.600] Today in history. [01:09.600 --> 01:14.240] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal [01:14.240 --> 01:18.960] court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered [01:18.960 --> 01:19.960] to vote. [01:19.960 --> 01:25.320] This was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the office of the Texas Secretary of State [01:25.320 --> 01:30.040] and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens [01:30.040 --> 01:33.360] who were registered to vote when obtaining age-arvest 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 --> 01:45.400] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.400 --> 01:50.920] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.920 --> 01:55.280] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.280 --> 01:57.080] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.080 --> 02:01.280] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.280 --> 02:09.040] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:09.040 --> 02:14.440] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.440 --> 02:16.960] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.960 --> 02:20.680] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.680 --> 02:24.280] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.280 --> 02:30.480] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.480 --> 02:35.240] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.240 --> 02:40.200] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.200 --> 02:44.720] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.720 --> 02:47.520] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.520 --> 02:51.520] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:51.520 --> 03:19.520] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:19.520 --> 03:45.520] Thank you very much for watching this video and don't forget to like, share, and subscribe [03:45.520 --> 04:15.360] to the channel. [04:15.360 --> 04:22.360] Howdy Howdy, Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rural Law Radio on this, the 28th day of February [04:22.360 --> 04:23.360] 2019. [04:23.360 --> 04:35.960] Okay, things are going good, we're moving along, and I thought I had the lawyer project [04:35.960 --> 04:41.360] financed and turned out I didn't. [04:41.360 --> 04:42.960] This is a strange world. [04:42.960 --> 04:50.480] I had some guy, said he had all the money in the world, he could support everything, [04:50.480 --> 04:57.040] and you know, somehow the pieces weren't fitting together, so I ran a background on him and [04:57.040 --> 05:02.960] he didn't pass the background, and I couldn't imagine why someone would offer to finance [05:02.960 --> 05:06.720] the entire project. [05:06.720 --> 05:08.240] We didn't have any money. [05:08.240 --> 05:11.680] It didn't make sense. [05:11.680 --> 05:16.840] I did some research and talked to some people who knew what was going on, and apparently [05:16.840 --> 05:24.040] he was trying to get a contract so he became a part of the project, then he would go to [05:24.040 --> 05:32.120] the people he knew and sell investment in it, take the investment and hit the road and [05:32.120 --> 05:40.200] leave us owing the investment back, and there was no money to work with. [05:40.200 --> 05:47.000] But we found him out, I've got a daughter who is tough, she is a hard woman, and she [05:47.000 --> 05:51.920] looked at it and said, Dad, this don't look right, run a background, and I ran a background, [05:51.920 --> 05:52.920] she did not pass. [05:52.920 --> 05:58.440] So I lost that investment, but we've been working to get something else going, and things are [05:58.440 --> 06:01.000] coming together. [06:01.000 --> 06:08.080] It's beginning to look like we've been around in circles for a long time, and I started [06:08.080 --> 06:15.560] out taking this to law firms, and then we went to ICO, and then STO, and then private [06:15.560 --> 06:21.880] sale, and now I'm back to law firms, and I have some good contacts, I'm going to meet [06:21.880 --> 06:23.560] up with them next week. [06:23.560 --> 06:30.200] We may actually have something coming together where we will get this thing up and running. [06:30.200 --> 06:42.000] Okay, we have some callers on the Caller board, but when I came on, I was, the dev was screening [06:42.000 --> 06:49.280] the first time caller, and she just told me to take Max first. [06:49.280 --> 06:56.120] Hello Max, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, what do you have for us today? [06:56.120 --> 07:03.120] Randy Kelton, one of my mentors, and what an honor to be the first call. [07:03.120 --> 07:04.800] Thanks Deb. [07:04.800 --> 07:14.520] Anyway, you probably recall from the last time I called you that I had done some pre-emptive [07:14.520 --> 07:22.800] PIRs to some of the municipalities and stuff around where I live, where I expect to run [07:22.800 --> 07:23.800] into trouble with them. [07:23.800 --> 07:25.800] You remember that? [07:25.800 --> 07:34.480] Yes, and for those who don't know, I hate acronyms, PIR, public information request. [07:34.480 --> 07:39.440] Yes, under 552 government code here in Texas. [07:39.440 --> 07:48.680] Okay, and just a quick note, whenever I do a information request, I never give legal [07:48.680 --> 07:49.680] advice. [07:49.680 --> 08:00.840] So, I don't say that I'm making this request under 552 Texas government code, because what [08:00.840 --> 08:06.280] they'll say is, oh, these don't fall under 552, they fall under government records, under [08:06.280 --> 08:09.680] court records, so you don't get them. [08:09.680 --> 08:13.160] So anymore, I just demand the records. [08:13.160 --> 08:18.560] I'm pretty sure I'm on the side of what would fall under a public information request versus [08:18.560 --> 08:22.880] judicial record, according to my understanding of the 552 government code. [08:22.880 --> 08:23.880] What's going on? [08:23.880 --> 08:24.880] I don't know. [08:24.880 --> 08:25.880] I really wasn't saying that. [08:25.880 --> 08:29.240] I'm saying this as a matter of form. [08:29.240 --> 08:35.160] If you ask for them under court records, they'll say they fall under public records. [08:35.160 --> 08:38.640] If you ask for them under public records, they'll say they fall under court records. [08:38.640 --> 08:40.880] There's some other garbage. [08:40.880 --> 08:44.440] So anymore, I never give them legal advice. [08:44.440 --> 08:46.960] I just say, give them to me. [08:46.960 --> 08:47.960] And whatever. [08:47.960 --> 08:48.960] I gotcha. [08:48.960 --> 08:55.160] Law applies, applies, and I don't give them legal advice, and I wasn't criticizing your [08:55.160 --> 08:56.160] request. [08:56.160 --> 08:59.280] No, you're just trying to help coach me. [08:59.280 --> 09:00.760] I understand that. [09:00.760 --> 09:08.360] Okay, so here is, I've finally sent my response to their clarification. [09:08.360 --> 09:13.480] I know last time you had told me that you can already tell that this is for delay's [09:13.480 --> 09:20.000] sake, and that I should go ahead and file the criminal complaint to the attorney general [09:20.000 --> 09:23.480] because they're delaying for delay's sake. [09:23.480 --> 09:31.160] However, I decided that I'm going to be amenable, and what I'm going to do is I'm going to give [09:31.160 --> 09:36.560] them clarification and kind of dumb it down to where they don't have to do the rest. [09:36.560 --> 09:37.560] Okay, hold on. [09:37.560 --> 09:38.560] Hold on. [09:38.560 --> 09:41.000] These two aren't exclusive. [09:41.000 --> 09:46.960] You give them clarification, but file against them for asking for clarification. [09:46.960 --> 09:49.680] That'll make them crazy. [09:49.680 --> 09:55.960] But isn't that a statutory requirement, or I'm sorry, a statutory right that the government [09:55.960 --> 10:00.240] agency has, you know, they have the right to ask me? [10:00.240 --> 10:08.400] They can only ask for clarification if your request is unclear. [10:08.400 --> 10:13.480] If your request is specific, I was at Williamson County. [10:13.480 --> 10:18.120] I filed a request and demanded to see all records collected and were maintained by the [10:18.120 --> 10:25.440] department that are specifically referenced by article 17.30, Texas Code Procedure. [10:25.440 --> 10:30.440] And they sent this assistant DA out to talk to me. [10:30.440 --> 10:35.880] And you know, I'm a guy, and I appreciate hot babes. [10:35.880 --> 10:38.440] This was a hot babe. [10:38.440 --> 10:40.400] The woman dressed like a harlot. [10:40.400 --> 10:47.120] Yeah, dressed like a, you know, I can appreciate that if I'm in a beer joint or a strip joint. [10:47.120 --> 10:48.120] Right. [10:48.120 --> 10:50.880] But this is an assistant DA. [10:50.880 --> 10:52.760] And I guess they thought I'd be affected by that. [10:52.760 --> 10:58.720] And she said, well, Mr. Calhoun, I don't understand what you're asking for. [10:58.720 --> 11:00.840] Oh, well. [11:00.840 --> 11:01.840] And she asked for clarification. [11:01.840 --> 11:02.840] It's okay. [11:02.840 --> 11:05.200] I can give you clarification. [11:05.200 --> 11:11.360] What I want you to produce for me is exactly what I asked for. [11:11.360 --> 11:16.880] If you don't understand what I asked for, contact the legislature. [11:16.880 --> 11:19.440] They will explain it to you. [11:19.440 --> 11:20.440] Okay. [11:20.440 --> 11:29.440] Point is, they don't get to ask for clarification if your request is clear. [11:29.440 --> 11:37.360] So if they ask for clarification and delay the records for the purpose of that request, [11:37.360 --> 11:43.520] but the request is clear, then it's delay for delay's sake and violation of the act. [11:43.520 --> 11:48.520] You file a criminal complaint against the violation of the act, and you file clarification [11:48.520 --> 11:51.360] if you think it's warranted. [11:51.360 --> 11:54.440] But don't let them get past the criminal complaint. [11:54.440 --> 12:01.400] Yes, they would never be so nice as to give me quarter like that. [12:01.400 --> 12:06.440] But what I'm trying to do is do the, you know, the idea of where you're supposed to [12:06.440 --> 12:10.720] exhaust all legal remedies, you know, before you take things, you know. [12:10.720 --> 12:11.720] Wait a minute. [12:11.720 --> 12:14.120] No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. [12:14.120 --> 12:24.080] If you have knowledge that a crime has been committed, you don't exhaust dirty squat. [12:24.080 --> 12:27.440] And is your duty to give notice? [12:27.440 --> 12:28.440] Okay. [12:28.440 --> 12:31.000] And that's a good thing to part of. [12:31.000 --> 12:36.640] This is kind of like a bar grievance or judicial conduct complaint, a criminal complaint, you [12:36.640 --> 12:37.640] know. [12:37.640 --> 12:39.960] I got notice that this guy committed a crime. [12:39.960 --> 12:40.960] Here's you guys. [12:40.960 --> 12:43.800] Here's my notice, and I'll go on about my business. [12:43.800 --> 12:48.560] Yeah, I have good reason to believe and do believe, and that's sufficient. [12:48.560 --> 12:49.560] Exactly. [12:49.560 --> 12:53.160] And then file it on and let them deal with it. [12:53.160 --> 13:02.520] So I need to be very kind, you know, and understanding that these people aren't, you know, legal [13:02.520 --> 13:03.520] researchers. [13:03.520 --> 13:09.560] So I did, I took the time to write them a letter of clarification. [13:09.560 --> 13:12.880] And even though, yeah, even though, yeah, I probably wasn't, you know, required to, [13:12.880 --> 13:16.120] I could have just construed it as delay for delay's sake. [13:16.120 --> 13:19.640] But what I did is I went ahead and, you know, gave them the whole kit and caboodle. [13:19.640 --> 13:23.520] Now that, that's what we talked about on our last call. [13:23.520 --> 13:30.320] Now, however, what I'm, what I was reading through their municipal charter, their home [13:30.320 --> 13:34.560] rule municipal charter and their municipal code. [13:34.560 --> 13:44.320] And I realized that they had passed on December 18th of 2018 a resolution, or I guess it's [13:44.320 --> 13:50.120] charter amendment to where they are saying that they're going to install a whole bunch [13:50.120 --> 13:57.120] of automatic license plate reading cameras in their, within their, you know, the territorial [13:57.120 --> 14:01.400] boundaries of Jersey Village Municipality. [14:01.400 --> 14:08.440] And so, and I seem to remember something that was that they're not allowed to just run people's [14:08.440 --> 14:15.640] information willy-nilly, there has to be some sort of justifiable reason as to whether they [14:15.640 --> 14:18.680] can run your information period. [14:18.680 --> 14:26.640] So I was thinking that, that what I can kind of do is if they, you know, number one, I [14:26.640 --> 14:27.640] wanted this fight. [14:27.640 --> 14:34.520] So if the automatic license plate reader cameras expedite my fight, you know, then it will [14:34.520 --> 14:36.320] be a boon for me. [14:36.320 --> 14:44.240] But what I was hoping to look into next to Lee is, is to see if them, if their computer [14:44.240 --> 14:51.640] running my information without some establishment of probable cause is, is something they're [14:51.640 --> 14:54.880] not allowed to do. [14:54.880 --> 14:55.880] That makes sense. [14:55.880 --> 14:56.880] Yeah. [14:56.880 --> 15:03.520] It seems I've heard something about that, but it raises a question. [15:03.520 --> 15:12.160] You can't do a criminal history without some kind of cause, but your license plate number [15:12.160 --> 15:13.680] is public. [15:13.680 --> 15:14.680] Yeah. [15:14.680 --> 15:24.240] And under the standing law, whatever you publicly display is public. [15:24.240 --> 15:28.560] However, the information collected. [15:28.560 --> 15:35.880] Now any particular accusation against you is public. [15:35.880 --> 15:44.840] But when accusations against you or, or your criminal history is collected and assembled [15:44.840 --> 15:51.760] into a criminal history, that's not public. [15:51.760 --> 15:59.760] So even though you're prominently displaying your license plate number publicly, using [15:59.760 --> 16:06.520] that license plate number to access a criminal history, that goes to the requirement for [16:06.520 --> 16:10.600] probable cause to access to criminal history. [16:10.600 --> 16:15.160] So I would say they would first have to have probable cause. [16:15.160 --> 16:17.160] Exactly. [16:17.160 --> 16:23.880] So if the city, whether it's done by an automatic license plate reading camera, or it's done [16:23.880 --> 16:31.200] by a physical human being, you know, charged with upholding the law, right? [16:31.200 --> 16:37.760] The automatic reading camera did not commit a crime because it's not a human being and [16:37.760 --> 16:40.840] crimes are all crimes of thought crimes. [16:40.840 --> 16:47.720] Yes, all crimes are against an individual is breathing in a lie. [16:47.720 --> 16:48.720] Right. [16:48.720 --> 16:51.080] There must be mens reyes. [16:51.080 --> 16:59.840] So the computer didn't commit the crime, but the council who voted to install these computers. [16:59.840 --> 17:05.440] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar in today's America. [17:05.440 --> 17:08.440] We live in an us against them society and if we, the people are ever going to have a [17:08.440 --> 17:12.040] free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. 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[18:57.720 --> 19:10.040] To learn how to stop debt collectors next, please visit ruleoflawradio.com or email [19:10.040 --> 19:23.000] michaelmearris at yahoo.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [19:23.000 --> 19:33.000] To learn how to stop debt collectors next, please visit ruleoflawradio.com or email [19:33.000 --> 19:44.000] michaelmearris at yahoo.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com or email [19:44.000 --> 19:48.000] michaelmearris at yahoo.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com or email [19:48.000 --> 20:05.000] michaelmearris at yahoo.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com or email [20:05.000 --> 20:15.000] michaelmearris at yahoo.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [20:15.000 --> 20:21.320] time Deborah caught me. My bad. I tried to catch you too. I heard the music and I was [20:21.320 --> 20:27.840] like, oh Randy, Randy, wait. Yeah, I'm sorry. We have a suppressor on the system. So if [20:27.840 --> 20:33.480] I'm speaking and you're speaking, the suppressor will push your voice under mine. So I can't [20:33.480 --> 20:39.400] hear yours. And I can't hear the bumper music, so I keep running off the cliff and it gets [20:39.400 --> 20:49.160] me in trouble. Oh well. Okay, we'll apologize to Deborah. But anyway, so okay, Randy, I've [20:49.160 --> 20:55.560] got, you know, the situation where I'm kind of trying to bait Jersey Village into pulling [20:55.560 --> 21:04.600] me over for not having a sticker or an expired sticker, whatever. I scraped it off my windshield. [21:04.600 --> 21:15.400] Okay, let me give you a little bit of info on that one. I once got a ticket for not displaying [21:15.400 --> 21:22.320] my safety sticker. I had it, but I didn't have it on windshield. And when I did the research, [21:22.320 --> 21:29.160] what the law said is it's a crime not to display a safety sticker. Well, that's changed. You [21:29.160 --> 21:37.560] don't have safety stickers anymore. But right, it was not a crime not to have registration. [21:37.560 --> 21:45.640] I'm sorry. It was not a crime not to display registration. It was a crime not to have it. [21:45.640 --> 21:51.520] Yeah, I didn't put mine on the windshield because I had it. So I can get them get them to stop [21:51.520 --> 21:57.120] me for for something they can't cite me over so I can hammer them. So it sounds like you [21:57.120 --> 22:05.720] did the same thing. Yeah, what I'm doing because I found that they're allowed to make an arrest [22:05.720 --> 22:14.440] without warrant under Chapter 543. I think it's 003 002 for for no, no, no, no transportation [22:14.440 --> 22:23.240] code. They're allowed to make an arrest without warrant for for violations of this subtitle [22:23.240 --> 22:30.680] and that subtitle C called the rules of the road. And and and the thing is, is that registration [22:30.680 --> 22:37.440] of motor vehicles is actually not in that sub chapter, that's sub chapter. It's in sub [22:37.440 --> 22:42.840] chapter, sub chapter B, I believe. So in other words, they're not allowed to make a warrant [22:42.840 --> 22:48.520] list. They're not allowed to pull me over for it just because of the sticker itself. [22:48.520 --> 22:59.360] Oh, that is choice. That's one I didn't know. Yeah, because it says only under this subtitle [22:59.360 --> 23:08.480] and that's subtitle C rules of the road, not. I think it's 501 is the section that starts [23:08.480 --> 23:15.240] dealing with motor vehicle registration and it's in sub chapter B. It's so it's sub title [23:15.240 --> 23:21.880] sub chapter, sub title B. Either way, they're outside of the rules of the road, which, you [23:21.880 --> 23:27.520] know, so they're not allowed to make an arrest without warrant based on just the sticker [23:27.520 --> 23:33.960] because the sticker is not, you know, one of the rules. So I have a question. Did you [23:33.960 --> 23:40.520] charge the officer with first degree felony aggravated assault? Oh, no, no, no, no. Randy, [23:40.520 --> 23:48.400] remember all of my stuff is preemptive. These guys, they have no idea who I am. I just happened [23:48.400 --> 23:56.240] to commute through their territorial jurisdiction twice a day by me needing to go to work and [23:56.240 --> 24:03.760] make a living. So what I kind of did is I make sure that I'm not doing something that [24:03.760 --> 24:08.760] they could construe as a transportation code. So they've never pulled you over giving you [24:08.760 --> 24:13.760] a ticket or anything. Nope. I asked them for their records and their certifications first, [24:13.760 --> 24:21.440] remember? Oh, this is good. So you're picking the fight. Exactly. This is the best one to [24:21.440 --> 24:29.960] have. Exactly. So, so I'm kind of trying to thank them by commuting around piloting my [24:29.960 --> 24:36.720] land craft, as I like to say, through their, their, you know, territorial jurisdiction [24:36.720 --> 24:40.960] without that sticker. And I would love for them on my GoPros to say that the reason we [24:40.960 --> 24:45.160] pulled you over is because you're a sticker. You're not displaying a sticker. And I can [24:45.160 --> 24:50.080] prove that that's outside of the subtitle of what you're allowed to arrest without warrant [24:50.080 --> 24:57.360] for under the transportation code under 543 003 through six, I think it is. [24:57.360 --> 25:09.160] So 543, 543.002 says that the officer shall arrest a person for a violation in the code [25:09.160 --> 25:15.280] and take him directly to, take him to the nearest magistrate or take him to a magistrate. [25:15.280 --> 25:23.360] 543.003 authorizes the officer to release the person on their own reconnaissance if [25:23.360 --> 25:32.240] they sign a promise to appear. 5.006 says the promise to appear must be before a magistrate. [25:32.240 --> 25:40.920] Okay. Then go look back at 543.001. It's right at the beginning where it says that things [25:40.920 --> 25:47.400] in this subchapter, the rules of the road, that those items are the ones that a warrant [25:47.400 --> 25:54.400] for us to arrest may be made of. I know it's 543, but I forget the numbers after the decimal, [25:54.400 --> 26:05.240] but I know it's at the very beginning. And it would probably be 001.002, 3, 4, and 5, [26:05.240 --> 26:11.120] go to what the officer does after he's made the stop. [26:11.120 --> 26:16.640] Correct. And what I'm saying is that the stops that he's allowed to make, because it's more [26:16.640 --> 26:24.080] of a broad subject, it's actually, I believe it's 543.001. Like it's right at the beginning. [26:24.080 --> 26:29.720] It says that an arrest may be made without a warrant. Sorry, I don't have a computer [26:29.720 --> 26:36.240] in front of me. An arrest may be made without a warrant or items under this subtitle. And [26:36.240 --> 26:40.960] it's subtitle C rules of the road, which registration stickers are not under. [26:40.960 --> 26:42.960] It's all under. Oh, that is good. [26:42.960 --> 26:56.440] Yes, it does. 543.007. It says a violation of this act is an act of official misconduct. [26:56.440 --> 27:02.400] I know, I know. But for those listening, it's not a penal. [27:02.400 --> 27:09.800] Now, what it says is a violation of this act, this is by the officer. If the officer violates [27:09.800 --> 27:18.220] 001 through 006, that's a class A misdemeanor. And I think it says the officer shall be removed [27:18.220 --> 27:19.720] from office. [27:19.720 --> 27:25.800] Brandy, I suspect that if they pull me over for something that they're not, if they arrest [27:25.800 --> 27:35.160] me at my liberty, you know, while I'm piloting my landcraft to my job, then they are acting [27:35.160 --> 27:39.920] outside of the rules of the road, and they're doing it without a warrant. So they're making [27:39.920 --> 27:50.720] a warrantless arrest, which I think matches the elements of the civil charge of false [27:50.720 --> 27:51.720] arrest. [27:51.720 --> 27:52.720] Absolutely. [27:52.720 --> 28:00.080] But there's a specific statute there that I was surprised to see it there. If an officer [28:00.080 --> 28:09.600] violates 001 through 006, it's a class A misdemeanor official misconduct, and he shall be removed [28:09.600 --> 28:15.160] from office. I've never seen that anywhere in the code ever. [28:15.160 --> 28:26.000] Oh, really? There's a couple of those that conform to whatever official misconduct in [28:26.000 --> 28:27.000] office is. [28:27.000 --> 28:33.480] Because, look, there's misconduct in office, but never have I seen it stipulated that the [28:33.480 --> 28:37.840] officer shall be removed from office. That was a holy macros. [28:37.840 --> 28:49.080] But for my understanding, I could not find official misconduct in the penal code or as [28:49.080 --> 28:56.280] a cause of action. I could only find a civil cause of action for false arrest. [28:56.280 --> 29:04.240] Yes, that is correct. False arrest is one of those things that all jurisdictions have [29:04.240 --> 29:07.080] waived their sovereign immunity for. [29:07.080 --> 29:12.080] Correct. He's acting outside of the scope of his authority. [29:12.080 --> 29:16.080] Well, that one, they don't have it in the first place. [29:16.080 --> 29:17.080] That's what I mean. [29:17.080 --> 29:18.080] That's what I mean. [29:18.080 --> 29:29.080] False arrest is specific in that the jurisdictions have statutorily, specifically, waived their [29:29.080 --> 29:33.600] sovereign immunity for that accusation, so there's no question. [29:33.600 --> 29:44.040] Now, the claim of acting outside of scope, that one is one you have to prove up that [29:44.040 --> 29:51.040] they were outside of scope, but in order to be able to sue, but an accusation, and it's [29:51.040 --> 29:59.360] important we understand this part. It's not what you can prove that determines whether [29:59.360 --> 30:00.360] or not. [30:00.360 --> 30:08.360] Powerpoint is crept into our lives and reached the level of near obsession in corporate America. [30:08.360 --> 30:10.360] Are we going overboard with it? [30:10.360 --> 30:17.360] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with a commentary on how Powerpoint erodes critical thinking. [30:17.360 --> 30:18.360] Next. [30:18.360 --> 30:22.400] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back [30:22.400 --> 30:28.200] again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:28.200 --> 30:34.400] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [30:34.400 --> 30:39.480] it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by startpage.com, the private [30:39.480 --> 30:46.480] search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with start page. [30:46.480 --> 30:52.440] We've all experienced it. Death by Powerpoint. Microsoft's presentation program has turned [30:52.440 --> 30:58.000] countless meetings into mind-numbing boredom. Got a product idea? Do a Powerpoint. Trouble [30:58.000 --> 31:03.120] in the battlefield? Powerpoint again. Ugg. Unless it's creatively spipped up with lots [31:03.120 --> 31:08.440] of pictures, Powerpoint can be the death of a meeting. It relieves the lazy speaker from [31:08.440 --> 31:13.480] having to actually write a thoughtful speech or convey a persuasive argument. Too often, [31:13.480 --> 31:18.520] instead of analysis, we get mind-numbing bullet points. The key is never to put your [31:18.520 --> 31:24.400] speech up on the screen, use lots of pictures, and never, ever, never read from a slide. [31:24.400 --> 31:31.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.400 --> 31:37.660] I lost my son, my uncle, on September 11th, 2000. Most people don't know that a third [31:37.660 --> 31:42.620] the tower fell on September 11th. World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, [31:42.620 --> 31:46.140] was not hit by a plane. 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When you gonna stop abuse, you're gonna stop abuse. [33:57.180 --> 34:09.820] Okay, we are back. [34:09.820 --> 34:16.060] Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Max in Texas, and we're [34:16.060 --> 34:17.060] all significant. [34:17.060 --> 34:18.060] Yes, we did. [34:18.060 --> 34:23.060] And this time, yeah, I couldn't hear the bump music, and not from either. [34:23.060 --> 34:30.060] I don't know if it's a beat problem or what, but anyway, yeah, I couldn't even hear the [34:30.060 --> 34:31.060] bump music. [34:31.060 --> 34:37.060] Yeah, it's because I'm talking and it pushes everything down under me. [34:37.060 --> 34:39.060] Okay, where were we? [34:39.060 --> 34:43.060] We had a lively discussion on the break. [34:43.060 --> 34:46.060] So let's track where we're at. [34:46.060 --> 34:47.060] Sure. [34:47.060 --> 34:49.060] Oh, are you wanting me to continue? [34:49.060 --> 34:50.060] Yeah, yeah. [34:50.060 --> 34:54.060] Okay, here's kind of my goal, Randy. [34:54.060 --> 35:04.060] I am using the lack of a sticker on the front of my land craft to basically, you know, as [35:04.060 --> 35:12.580] great to be pulled over for something that I know is in the wrong subtitle of what an [35:12.580 --> 35:18.060] arrest may be made without warrant, you know what I'm saying? [35:18.060 --> 35:26.060] So they have no way of arguing that it was, you know, definitely, you know, not within [35:26.060 --> 35:30.540] the scope of their duties and not within the scope of their abilities, and I can use that [35:30.540 --> 35:36.060] as a civil cause of action for false arrest. [35:36.060 --> 35:41.540] And of course, these guys are already trained that, oh, if someone stickers out, absolutely [35:41.540 --> 35:43.180] you get to pull them over. [35:43.180 --> 35:45.620] And of course, they didn't read that out of the law. [35:45.620 --> 35:48.620] That's what the guy who in the job before then told them how to do it. [35:48.620 --> 35:55.420] That's not the same thing that their oath requires them to do, which is to follow the [35:55.420 --> 35:57.620] law and at least know it. [35:57.620 --> 35:58.620] Exactly. [35:58.620 --> 36:05.620] And this is the best way to go after them is where you set them up. [36:05.620 --> 36:06.620] Yeah. [36:06.620 --> 36:12.940] And when they have nothing to hold over my head, I am coming to them as my public servant, [36:12.940 --> 36:19.460] you know, and, you know, calling them to the principal's office as you'd like to say, [36:19.460 --> 36:20.460] you know. [36:20.460 --> 36:21.460] Exactly. [36:21.460 --> 36:22.460] This is good. [36:22.460 --> 36:24.540] This is how we need to treat them. [36:24.540 --> 36:28.060] This is what we haven't done. [36:28.060 --> 36:35.500] The system is in a mess because you and I haven't forced our public officials to abide [36:35.500 --> 36:43.500] by the law, abide by the most nitpicking portions of the law. [36:43.500 --> 36:51.620] We don't want to wait until an officer has beat a 120-pound, 16-year-old kid half to [36:51.620 --> 36:57.420] death before we stand up and rail in righteous indignation. [36:57.420 --> 37:02.700] We need to stand up when they first step half inch across the legal line. [37:02.700 --> 37:05.700] Exactly. [37:05.700 --> 37:12.220] And right now they're far above the line and, you know, I respect that they have a terrible [37:12.220 --> 37:19.620] job to do but their job is not revenue generation and their purview for all government is to [37:19.620 --> 37:21.580] be for maximum benefit to the public. [37:21.580 --> 37:29.140] And I don't think that they understand this fundamental philosophy of how the Texas Constitution [37:29.140 --> 37:33.100] works and of how a republic works in general. [37:33.100 --> 37:37.700] Yeah, they complain that they have a very hard job. [37:37.700 --> 37:39.980] You know, I understand that. [37:39.980 --> 37:49.260] I was in the military and in a combat zone and it was a hard job. [37:49.260 --> 37:56.100] But that didn't mean I get to chase down civilians and shoot them in the back of the head just [37:56.100 --> 37:58.100] because it was a hard job. [37:58.100 --> 38:04.620] Yeah, and in construing that as maximum benefit to the public, you know, we got you. [38:04.620 --> 38:07.820] I mean, maybe you needed to die, so it was maximum benefit for you. [38:07.820 --> 38:14.660] But when I was in the military and I had people actively shooting at me, I was restricted [38:14.660 --> 38:17.500] in what I could do to them. [38:17.500 --> 38:21.100] If I were to capture one of them, I couldn't just shoot them in the head. [38:21.100 --> 38:22.100] I couldn't do anything. [38:22.100 --> 38:23.100] Just anything I wanted. [38:23.100 --> 38:24.100] I had these rules. [38:24.100 --> 38:28.520] And it did not make any difference how hard my job was. [38:28.520 --> 38:30.020] I had these rules to follow. [38:30.020 --> 38:35.740] And the police wanted to say, because I got a hard job, I can beat your children to death [38:35.740 --> 38:37.660] and you shouldn't complain about it. [38:37.660 --> 38:42.940] Well, guys, if you can't have a hard job, go out there and pick up dead cats and skunks [38:42.940 --> 38:48.180] off the highway where you won't be able to be creating a hazard for my wife and my children. [38:48.180 --> 38:54.060] Randy, you have no idea how many times I tell my family members and stuff of life. [38:54.060 --> 38:59.860] Like, look, if a cop can't be responsible with a firearm, then he needs to go back picking [38:59.860 --> 39:05.100] up skunks and dead cats off the roadway and I use that so much. [39:05.100 --> 39:06.100] And people understand it. [39:06.100 --> 39:11.380] They're like, oh, yeah, for maximum benefit to the public, you don't want some guy out [39:11.380 --> 39:17.140] there who's trigger happy and willing to shoot first and then assess the situation later. [39:17.140 --> 39:20.940] Yes, and we are in the state of Texas. [39:20.940 --> 39:29.380] Texas is the only state that I've ever seen that has this law, 2202-B2A, Texas Beagle [39:29.380 --> 39:30.380] Code. [39:30.380 --> 39:31.380] Oh, yeah. [39:31.380 --> 39:34.900] A salt, that was a salt, I guess. [39:34.900 --> 39:39.140] First degree felony aggravated assault. [39:39.140 --> 39:42.220] While prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [39:42.220 --> 39:50.100] If you are a public official acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity [39:50.100 --> 39:57.260] and you commit simple assault while prominently displaying a deadly weapon, that is a felony [39:57.260 --> 40:02.340] of the first degree, 20 to life. [40:02.340 --> 40:10.620] When our legislators allowed police officers to put a pistol on their hip, they put on [40:10.620 --> 40:14.340] them an incredible responsibility. [40:14.340 --> 40:15.340] Absolutely. [40:15.340 --> 40:22.660] Now, we never want to get a policeman prosecuted for first degree felony aggravated assault [40:22.660 --> 40:29.940] for pulling us over because we have an expired registration or we don't have a registration. [40:29.940 --> 40:36.300] But we want him to know that that is the likelihood and the possibility. [40:36.300 --> 40:39.300] That's the crime he commits. [40:39.300 --> 40:41.300] And that's why I like to file this complaint. [40:41.300 --> 40:44.180] It's an outrageous complaint. [40:44.180 --> 40:47.580] There's no way you'll get an indictment. [40:47.580 --> 40:51.060] Well, maybe. [40:51.060 --> 40:57.460] And the policeman has to look at, this guy is charging me with a first degree felony. [40:57.460 --> 41:04.060] He's going to go to his boss and say, what the heck is going on? [41:04.060 --> 41:11.020] And then they have to go read the code and say, yeah, that's exactly what this goes to. [41:11.020 --> 41:14.540] This is the risk you take. [41:14.540 --> 41:21.300] If you can't handle this hard job, go do something else. [41:21.300 --> 41:22.900] Take that pistol off your hip. [41:22.900 --> 41:29.940] The guys, the elected officials and or appointed officials who were in charge of seeing that [41:29.940 --> 41:35.100] justice is done under the code of criminal procedure that are not doing that anymore. [41:35.100 --> 41:41.660] They're actually, what their goal seems to be is to not damage their conviction rate. [41:41.660 --> 41:48.300] So just like the art of the deal, what they do is they'll get you to try and plea or they'll [41:48.300 --> 41:54.540] indict you or charge you with a much higher, like that's crazy. [41:54.540 --> 41:55.700] There's no way I did that. [41:55.700 --> 42:02.540] So that you're willing to come to the negotiating table, the plea bargaining table, and then [42:02.540 --> 42:07.260] lessen it down and you feel like you've gotten a deal, even though you've done nothing wrong [42:07.260 --> 42:09.060] in the first place. [42:09.060 --> 42:10.560] Exactly. [42:10.560 --> 42:20.380] And in the United States, the United States contains approximately 3% of the world's population. [42:20.380 --> 42:27.620] We house approximately 50% of the world's population of inmates. [42:27.620 --> 42:37.500] By far the worst police state the world has ever seen, much worse than Nazi Germany. [42:37.500 --> 42:44.500] No country has ever incarcerated this higher percentage of their public. [42:44.500 --> 42:45.500] Yeah. [42:45.500 --> 42:52.820] And naturally I scoff when I have to call it the land of the free. [42:52.820 --> 42:57.820] Anyway, okay, let me jump over my issue. [42:57.820 --> 43:01.500] I think I'm headed in the right direction and picking on these specific folks. [43:01.500 --> 43:02.820] I'm not picking on them. [43:02.820 --> 43:05.620] I'm just making sure, hey, do you mind if I search your drawers there? [43:05.620 --> 43:06.620] Do you mind if I search your files? [43:06.620 --> 43:08.380] Let me take a look at that. [43:08.380 --> 43:13.580] And they've got no right to say no because that's my right under 552 government code. [43:13.580 --> 43:17.180] So I don't even need probable cause, guys. [43:17.180 --> 43:22.460] But anyway, so let me jump to something I wanted to thank you for. [43:22.460 --> 43:27.860] My sister called approximately three years ago under my advice. [43:27.860 --> 43:33.060] I told her, you got to talk to Randy Kelton, you know, like this guy, he'll help you understand [43:33.060 --> 43:34.060] it. [43:34.060 --> 43:35.060] Okay, wait, wait. [43:35.060 --> 43:36.060] Hold on. [43:36.060 --> 43:40.860] This will be the first time today that we did not fall off the cliff. [43:40.860 --> 43:46.300] Uh, Debra's back here and I'm watching the clock. [43:46.300 --> 43:47.900] But only because I wasn't talking. [43:47.900 --> 43:52.540] I'm talking, I'm chilling, concentrating on trying to say things right and I don't have [43:52.540 --> 43:54.740] enough attention left over for the clock. [43:54.740 --> 43:55.740] But this time I did. [43:55.740 --> 43:56.740] Don't forget. [43:56.740 --> 43:57.740] Hang on. [43:57.740 --> 43:58.740] We'll be right back. 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[46:23.380 --> 46:28.020] Randy Felton, Denver Stevens, rule of law radio, and I really hated to interrupt you, [46:28.020 --> 46:30.260] Max, because you were going to say something nice. [46:30.260 --> 46:34.580] Yeah, I was about to touch your back, brother. [46:34.580 --> 46:35.580] You deserve it. [46:35.580 --> 46:42.780] And yeah, at least that time we both heard the music, so good job not jumping off the [46:42.780 --> 46:43.780] cliff. [46:43.780 --> 46:49.700] Anyway, yeah, so actually before I get back into my sister's story, let me thank Ralph [46:49.700 --> 46:52.380] out there in Jasper, Texas. [46:52.380 --> 46:59.620] He, on your last show when I called in about my preemptive PIRs, I gave out my email address [46:59.620 --> 47:04.940] towards the end of the call, and he contacted me, and he's been doing the same thing to [47:04.940 --> 47:09.100] his little municipalities over there, and Sheriff's offices over there. [47:09.100 --> 47:11.260] I think it's Jasper County. [47:11.260 --> 47:19.380] And anyway, so I definitely wanted to thank him for, because if we can do this to him [47:19.380 --> 47:26.260] all, then they're going to have a hard time saying that, oh, you didn't know, but anyway, [47:26.260 --> 47:28.260] so let me thank him. [47:28.260 --> 47:34.380] And then as far as my sister goes, she's a resident of California, and she called you [47:34.380 --> 47:39.180] a couple years back on my advice regarding her. [47:39.180 --> 47:45.100] She found out that the apartment complex that she was staying in raised her rent higher [47:45.100 --> 47:48.460] than the amount that we're allowed to under the California administrative code, and she [47:48.460 --> 47:50.820] called them on. [47:50.820 --> 47:55.020] And she was actually proactive enough to go knock on all of her neighbor's doors, let [47:55.020 --> 47:58.300] them know that there's a problem here, you know, you guys want to get together and let's [47:58.300 --> 48:05.460] do something about this, and she ended up finding an attorney who actually did something [48:05.460 --> 48:12.780] about it, you know, and she ended up getting a whole bunch of the residents there of, you [48:12.780 --> 48:19.180] know, settlements, you know, I can't talk about the company name or the amounts, but [48:19.180 --> 48:24.980] anyway, and all that was because she called you and you explained all this stuff to her [48:24.980 --> 48:31.020] beautifully, and now she's been accepted to law school, couldn't afford it, and now she's [48:31.020 --> 48:39.580] going to paralegal school, and so, you know, I can't tell you how much rule of law radio [48:39.580 --> 48:45.700] has improved my family's understanding, my entire family's understanding of how the [48:45.700 --> 48:49.980] laws work, you know, for maximum benefit to the public, but anyway, I just wanted to thank [48:49.980 --> 48:50.980] you about that. [48:50.980 --> 48:52.940] Well, I appreciate that. [48:52.940 --> 48:59.220] We don't get a lot of feedback this way, so it's always nice to hear that what we're [48:59.220 --> 49:04.820] doing is well accepted and does give people remedy. [49:04.820 --> 49:08.140] Yes, it does give remedy. [49:08.140 --> 49:10.820] So that pieces me greatly. [49:10.820 --> 49:17.620] That is our purpose here, is not just to talk about the bad guys and not to whine and complain [49:17.620 --> 49:24.740] and about how bad things are, our purpose is to generate remedy. [49:24.740 --> 49:25.740] Exactly. [49:25.740 --> 49:30.220] So anyway, I definitely wanted to throw that at you. [49:30.220 --> 49:34.260] This next thing with the automatic license plate rear cameras that Jersey Village is [49:34.260 --> 49:39.380] installing, I'll look into that because I can swear that I heard something about that [49:39.380 --> 49:44.340] they're not allowed to just, you know, a computer is not allowed to, or a person is not just [49:44.340 --> 49:48.620] allowed to run your license plate and all that kind of crap in their car, their first [49:48.620 --> 49:51.580] must have to be probable cause before you, and that occurs. [49:51.580 --> 49:58.940] So I'll look more into that and see if that's true, and then heck, I still have plenty of [49:58.940 --> 49:59.940] time. [49:59.940 --> 50:07.780] Heck, I had 61 days to respond to their response for clarification, so, you know, it's funny [50:07.780 --> 50:14.900] because when you find a statute that's a remedy for the people, it's less a herd of nobody's [50:14.900 --> 50:19.220] ever heard of it really, it seems like you just, you got to go read the codes and find [50:19.220 --> 50:20.220] it. [50:20.220 --> 50:21.220] Exactly. [50:21.220 --> 50:22.220] You know. [50:22.220 --> 50:29.140] 2202B2A, first degree felony aggravated assault for the official. [50:29.140 --> 50:38.540] 2202B2B is assault against a public official with a deadly weapon, or while you're displaying [50:38.540 --> 50:39.540] a deadly weapon. [50:39.540 --> 50:45.260] When I did a search on that, I got 30,000 hits and that was the maximum amount. [50:45.260 --> 50:52.620] When I did a search on a complaint against a public official, I got zero. [50:52.620 --> 50:57.420] Yes, that, I tell people about that all the time. [50:57.420 --> 51:02.700] Don't you understand that the statutes that are there to protect the people are the ones [51:02.700 --> 51:07.380] that never have any prosecutions under them, but the ones to protect them and the ones [51:07.380 --> 51:13.660] that they can misconstrue and use to gain conviction and to keep their 98.6 conviction [51:13.660 --> 51:21.380] rate, that is the problem, you know what I'm saying, that is where we're having a disconnect [51:21.380 --> 51:22.380] here. [51:22.380 --> 51:30.380] All right, I have to correct an error, not 98.6, 99.6. [51:30.380 --> 51:37.500] Oh, my God, well, hey, it's better than football because people are shocked. [51:37.500 --> 51:39.500] Grounds up to 100. [51:39.500 --> 51:40.500] Yes. [51:40.500 --> 51:48.700] Isn't that incredible that 100% of the time, almost 100% of the time, a person accused [51:48.700 --> 51:52.980] is actually found guilty, but does that not, I mean, think about that. [51:52.980 --> 51:56.060] Have you ever, you know, accused somebody of taking something out of your wallet and [51:56.060 --> 51:58.300] then you find it later and feel sheepish? [51:58.300 --> 52:03.980] You're saying that that never occurs when they falsely indict somebody, I find that [52:03.980 --> 52:04.980] hard to believe. [52:04.980 --> 52:09.860] And I think that it has to do with plea bargain, and if I was a king for a day, plea bargains [52:09.860 --> 52:13.900] would be made illegal in Texas. [52:13.900 --> 52:21.340] I don't know if they should be legal, but there definitely should be dramatic limits. [52:21.340 --> 52:29.380] It is a hard question, don't know how to fix it, unless you force the police to follow [52:29.380 --> 52:31.420] the letter of the law. [52:31.420 --> 52:32.420] Then... [52:32.420 --> 52:38.740] Look, look, guys, if you're willing to indict me or write a criminal complaint, you know, [52:38.740 --> 52:44.060] under a penalty of perjury and present it to a magistrate and get a case started, you [52:44.060 --> 52:49.420] would better be prepared to, you better have proof, you better plead and prove all of that [52:49.420 --> 52:50.420] stuff. [52:50.420 --> 52:58.180] Well, you better do the same thing when I bring a complaint against you, the police [52:58.180 --> 52:59.180] officer. [52:59.180 --> 53:04.140] That's how come I'm so happy to be on this side of it now, I'm not defending myself in [53:04.140 --> 53:09.860] the traffic ticket, they're defending themselves on their compliance, you know, with 552 government [53:09.860 --> 53:18.260] code, the Texas Open Records Act, so that is a much better remedy for the people versus [53:18.260 --> 53:22.660] the remedies that they picked for themselves that we're all used to, because that's what [53:22.660 --> 53:25.460] they always bring us to court for, you know what I mean? [53:25.460 --> 53:28.860] That's exactly why we do this show, that's what we're hoping to generate. [53:28.860 --> 53:32.100] Okay, I've got a whole board full of callers. [53:32.100 --> 53:37.340] I appreciate you, Max, and I gave you a lot of time because this is my favorite subject, [53:37.340 --> 53:42.700] but I've got a bunch of people on, I need to go and start taking care of their issues. [53:42.700 --> 53:52.860] Okay, guys, and Dib, I know I promised to donate $5 a month in perpetuity, but I lost [53:52.860 --> 53:57.220] my job, but I intend on picking that back up just as soon as possible. [53:57.220 --> 54:00.620] Randy, thank you for your time. [54:00.620 --> 54:01.620] Send me an email. [54:01.620 --> 54:02.620] I'll see you next time. [54:02.620 --> 54:05.740] I want to put together some people who are doing this kind of work. [54:05.740 --> 54:08.060] Send me an email and we'll talk. [54:08.060 --> 54:09.060] Yes, sir. [54:09.060 --> 54:12.060] Okay, thank you, Max. [54:12.060 --> 54:17.740] Okay, now we're going to go to Tim in Texas, Tim has some crawling to do. [54:17.740 --> 54:18.740] Hello, Tim. [54:18.740 --> 54:19.740] Hello, sir. [54:19.740 --> 54:27.820] First brief synopsis so everybody knows who you are or where you're at. [54:27.820 --> 54:35.540] I'm from Newark, Texas, and I've been fighting in the city of Newark for two years, and they [54:35.540 --> 54:40.340] dismissed their claim against me, but they did it without prejudice. [54:40.340 --> 54:43.140] Okay, hold on, hold on. [54:43.140 --> 54:48.180] They came after Tim for some, he has the auto repair place, and they came after him for [54:48.180 --> 54:49.180] junk vehicles. [54:49.180 --> 54:56.300] These vehicles are waiting to be worked on, and not a big fight back and forth. [54:56.300 --> 55:02.260] And essentially, it was the lawyers creating these problems. [55:02.260 --> 55:08.540] The city, one, they sued Tim to collect a bunch of money. [55:08.540 --> 55:12.940] The judge ruled in their favor on everything out of hand. [55:12.940 --> 55:19.780] He filed a petition for rid of mandamus, the court of appeals, clobbered the city. [55:19.780 --> 55:26.100] And then, you know, we talked about this all being political. [55:26.100 --> 55:31.420] And it was clear in this case that the lawyers were creating this mess. [55:31.420 --> 55:37.580] Tim talked to the city, we asked for mediation, they granted mediation, and they talked to [55:37.580 --> 55:45.140] the city, and when the city finally understood what the lawyers had done, they had won everything [55:45.140 --> 55:49.740] in the court, in the trial court, and everything was going to appeal. [55:49.740 --> 55:54.740] They dismissed everything without reservation. [55:54.740 --> 55:59.420] After they won everything, they didn't appeal, they dismissed everything. [55:59.420 --> 56:03.420] And then, Tim had talked to them and said, if you dismiss everything, we will dismiss [56:03.420 --> 56:07.900] everything against you guys, but not the lawyers. [56:07.900 --> 56:12.060] So, you know, we say everything is political. [56:12.060 --> 56:15.820] They treated this as political, they said, these are the lawyers doing the mess, it's [56:15.820 --> 56:20.940] not the city, they're not the bad guys, we're not the bad guys, it's the lawyers. [56:20.940 --> 56:25.780] The city, once they understood what was going on, they bought that story, Tim told them, [56:25.780 --> 56:29.460] if you dismiss your side, we'll dismiss our side. [56:29.460 --> 56:33.100] They dismissed their side without prejudice. [56:33.100 --> 56:40.300] The court had dismissed Tim's claims with prejudice, and they're in the appeals court. [56:40.300 --> 56:46.780] And then the lawyer for the municipal league, after the city ordered their lawyers to dismiss [56:46.780 --> 56:59.020] everything, he filed a motion to dismiss our, Tim's appeal with prejudice, or dismiss the [56:59.020 --> 57:04.620] appeal so that the claim would, Tim's claim would be dismissed with prejudice. [57:04.620 --> 57:09.260] That puts Tim in a position to where, if the city changes their mind, or if the lawyers [57:09.260 --> 57:14.300] talk them into changing their mind, they can come back after Tim, but he has no recourse [57:14.300 --> 57:15.460] for response. [57:15.460 --> 57:19.940] So, Tim's already agreed to dismiss without prejudice. [57:19.940 --> 57:27.780] So, he had to pursue the appeal so he can get the court to remand the case to the trial [57:27.780 --> 57:33.660] court, then he can dismiss, that is dismissed without prejudice, and everybody's happy. [57:33.660 --> 57:39.060] The lawyer just keeps from screwing it up. [57:39.060 --> 57:49.060] So, what happened, the lawyer for the municipal league, filed a motion to dismiss your appeal. [57:49.060 --> 57:50.060] Yes. [57:50.060 --> 57:51.060] Okay. [57:51.060 --> 57:52.060] What happened? [57:52.060 --> 57:59.420] Well, before the conclusion here on his, what he rendered, he said the court below has [57:59.420 --> 58:05.100] granted a non-suit in the underlying case from which this appeal originates, therefore [58:05.100 --> 58:10.220] appellant, which is many counterclaims on appeal, have been rendered moot. [58:10.220 --> 58:11.220] Okay. [58:11.220 --> 58:19.140] So, today, we had to file a response to that, and we did so Monday, late afternoon, and [58:19.140 --> 58:22.940] they received it Tuesday, mid-morning. [58:22.940 --> 58:28.620] And then today, we got this, and it says, we have considered Nourt appellee motion to [58:28.620 --> 58:35.340] live stay and dismiss due to lack of jurisdiction, the motion is denied as moot. [58:35.340 --> 58:40.260] So, it's kind of like they just threw it back in their face. [58:40.260 --> 58:50.340] Generally it takes them three to six months to render a ruling, this took them one day. [58:50.340 --> 58:55.780] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.780 --> 58:58.580] because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.580 --> 59:04.020] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:04.020 --> 59:07.260] the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:07.260 --> 59:08.980] Enter the recovery version. [59:08.980 --> 59:14.940] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:14.940 --> 59:18.660] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.660 --> 59:23.660] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:23.660 --> 59:28.380] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.380 --> 59:33.540] Those for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.540 --> 59:43.940] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.940 --> 59:47.980] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.980 --> 59:49.980] That's freestudybible.com. [59:49.980 --> 59:58.980] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.glogosradionetwork.com. [01:00:20.980 --> 01:00:27.540] Markets for Wednesday the 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, [01:00:27.540 --> 01:00:35.540] silver $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent crude [01:00:35.540 --> 01:00:43.380] $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple [01:00:43.380 --> 01:00:52.380] XRP $0.29, Ethereum $103.10, and EOS is at $2.32 of crypto coin. [01:00:52.380 --> 01:00:59.700] State of history, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [01:00:59.700 --> 01:01:04.620] qualifications get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:01:04.620 --> 01:01:09.620] was passed by Parliament to date in history. [01:01:09.620 --> 01:01:14.300] In recent years, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal [01:01:14.300 --> 01:01:19.020] court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered [01:01:19.020 --> 01:01:20.020] to vote. [01:01:20.020 --> 01:01:24.700] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary [01:01:24.700 --> 01:01:29.580] of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. [01:01:29.580 --> 01:01:33.420] citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining H. Argers license. [01:01:33.420 --> 01:01:37.140] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:01:37.140 --> 01:01:41.180] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:01:41.180 --> 01:01:45.380] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:45.380 --> 01:01:50.940] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:50.940 --> 01:01:55.300] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:01:55.300 --> 01:01:57.140] with proof of eligibility. [01:01:57.140 --> 01:02:01.300] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [01:02:01.300 --> 01:02:09.020] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:09.020 --> 01:02:14.140] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck [01:02:14.140 --> 01:02:16.980] after a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [01:02:16.980 --> 01:02:20.700] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:20.700 --> 01:02:24.300] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [01:02:24.300 --> 01:02:30.500] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [01:02:30.500 --> 01:02:35.300] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [01:02:35.300 --> 01:02:40.260] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [01:02:40.260 --> 01:02:44.740] conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [01:02:44.740 --> 01:02:47.540] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:47.540 --> 01:02:50.940] You can find the interview at kiitv.com. [01:02:50.940 --> 01:03:00.940] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:20.940 --> 01:03:42.980] Okay. [01:03:42.980 --> 01:03:43.980] We are back. [01:03:43.980 --> 01:03:50.920] Randy Kelton, Derbyshaven's Rural Law Radio, and we're talking to Tim in Texas and Frank [01:03:50.920 --> 01:03:51.920] Lee. [01:03:51.920 --> 01:04:01.140] This is one of my most satisfying cases because we talk about the fact that you never expect [01:04:01.140 --> 01:04:07.020] to win your case in the trial court, that your only purpose in the trial court is setting [01:04:07.020 --> 01:04:10.220] the record for appeal. [01:04:10.220 --> 01:04:17.860] It was hard for Tim and Laura not to jump in there and try to defend themselves and [01:04:17.860 --> 01:04:23.300] explain their position while we were in the trial court. [01:04:23.300 --> 01:04:27.140] We were following the rules that we've made up over the years, and one of them was never [01:04:27.140 --> 01:04:31.940] interfere with someone when they're screwed up. [01:04:31.940 --> 01:04:38.260] These lawyers were doing one outrageous thing after another, and Tim wanted to go to all [01:04:38.260 --> 01:04:43.460] of his friends and neighbors in town and explain to them that what these guys were doing was [01:04:43.460 --> 01:04:44.460] wrong. [01:04:44.460 --> 01:04:48.860] I kept telling them, never interfere with someone when they're screwed up, and it was [01:04:48.860 --> 01:04:51.020] hard for them, but they did that. [01:04:51.020 --> 01:04:57.260] They followed the rules, and then once we got to the court of appeals, everything turned [01:04:57.260 --> 01:05:01.260] around on them, on the lawyers. [01:05:01.260 --> 01:05:09.260] Now the lawyers are in a really bad position. [01:05:09.260 --> 01:05:20.860] And now, this last one, the court took one day to render a ruling, has that ever happened [01:05:20.860 --> 01:05:21.860] before? [01:05:21.860 --> 01:05:27.260] They took two days, almost three. [01:05:27.260 --> 01:05:33.500] Oh, no, they rendered the ruling, and they had to get time to get the ruling filed and [01:05:33.500 --> 01:05:36.620] get it back to you. [01:05:36.620 --> 01:05:45.780] You filed it Monday, and Thursday you've already got the ruling. [01:05:45.780 --> 01:05:49.180] This almost doesn't happen. [01:05:49.180 --> 01:05:50.180] Okay. [01:05:50.180 --> 01:05:55.980] Well, this is my first rodeo. [01:05:55.980 --> 01:06:02.620] I'm a kid, 16-year-old kid that forgot to put my tag on my license plate when they were [01:06:02.620 --> 01:06:08.020] doing the little sticker on the Texas license plate, and it was in my glove box. [01:06:08.020 --> 01:06:09.380] I forgot to put it on there. [01:06:09.380 --> 01:06:12.220] It already paid for it, and went for the judge and told him that. [01:06:12.220 --> 01:06:16.340] He said, well, pay the fine, and you'll remember to do it next time. [01:06:16.340 --> 01:06:22.700] So that's just how law works, you know? [01:06:22.700 --> 01:06:32.460] So this one is especially satisfying, and Tim has set up the lawyers, and I took it [01:06:32.460 --> 01:06:42.980] that the Texas Municipal League, in filing this motion, they knew that Tim and Laura [01:06:42.980 --> 01:06:52.660] were preparing to come straight for them, and they felt like they had to do something. [01:06:52.660 --> 01:07:00.580] So they did something really stupid, and they gave Tim and Laura more stuff to throw at [01:07:00.580 --> 01:07:01.580] them. [01:07:01.580 --> 01:07:09.980] Well, if I could remind you of something, when I sent the, I can't remember what you [01:07:09.980 --> 01:07:19.620] called it, I had to inform everyone that we were going to file the appeal on, or the motion [01:07:19.620 --> 01:07:20.620] to stay. [01:07:20.620 --> 01:07:26.300] That's what it was, and they sent back the TML attorneys, everybody denied it except [01:07:26.300 --> 01:07:27.300] one lady. [01:07:27.300 --> 01:07:35.900] Then the TML attorneys sent me a brief back, or an email back saying that this is ignorant, [01:07:35.900 --> 01:07:44.020] they're going to deny it, and you've already been sanctioned once, and we may ask for sanctions [01:07:44.020 --> 01:07:45.020] again. [01:07:45.020 --> 01:07:51.860] It was really rude, and I've got the email somewhere, so you had mentioned something [01:07:51.860 --> 01:07:57.220] about asking for sanctions, and this appeals brief. [01:07:57.220 --> 01:08:02.500] So I thought, well, the two things that we could do it on, one is that email that the [01:08:02.500 --> 01:08:10.140] TML attorney himself, Mr. Krueger, sent to me, and then the other one was causing us [01:08:10.140 --> 01:08:18.900] to have to file an answer to their moot request by causing us more work, because that's what [01:08:18.900 --> 01:08:25.020] they sanctioned us for, was causing more work and delaying the process. [01:08:25.020 --> 01:08:36.260] So that's well founded, but these guys know that they've got a serious lawsuit coming [01:08:36.260 --> 01:08:44.060] at them, and I think this was just them striking out. [01:08:44.060 --> 01:08:47.980] You have thwarted them at every turn. [01:08:47.980 --> 01:08:52.980] They did all the rotten stuff they could do, and you stood back and let them do it, and [01:08:52.980 --> 01:08:57.060] then once they got done, you hammered them. [01:08:57.060 --> 01:09:01.180] Tim filed a petition for rid of mandamus. [01:09:01.180 --> 01:09:07.540] In Texas, the court has the option of hearing it or not hearing it. [01:09:07.540 --> 01:09:14.220] They pick up approximately 12% of the mandamus' file. [01:09:14.220 --> 01:09:22.780] In this case, oh, I'm sorry, and they approve approximately 2%. [01:09:22.780 --> 01:09:28.220] In this case, they picked it up and approved it, and it was a pro-safe filing. [01:09:28.220 --> 01:09:32.340] I don't know if that's ever happened before. [01:09:32.340 --> 01:09:40.740] This was when we got the ruling back, when I saw the ruling, I was absolutely astounded. [01:09:40.740 --> 01:09:46.420] The court of appeals didn't do what we asked them to. [01:09:46.420 --> 01:09:54.340] We asked them to reverse the ruling, denying Tim's claim with prejudice. [01:09:54.340 --> 01:09:57.980] They didn't do that. [01:09:57.980 --> 01:10:08.420] They dismissed the claim outright, claiming that the city never had subject matter jurisdiction. [01:10:08.420 --> 01:10:16.380] Well, that was exactly the argument Tim brought in the first place, and the court of appeals [01:10:16.380 --> 01:10:21.180] instead of reversing and remanding the decision, actually, I'm sorry, what we asked them for [01:10:21.180 --> 01:10:25.420] is to order the judge to provide findings of fact and conclusions of law. [01:10:25.420 --> 01:10:27.940] They didn't do that. [01:10:27.940 --> 01:10:31.020] They just dismissed it outright. [01:10:31.020 --> 01:10:38.060] That should have been fair warning to the city that this is not going to go well for [01:10:38.060 --> 01:10:43.420] you when you get in the appeals court, but these lawyers, they just couldn't stop being [01:10:43.420 --> 01:10:45.780] jerks. [01:10:45.780 --> 01:10:53.260] They just had to act as obnoxious as they could, because Tim was a pro se, and he was [01:10:53.260 --> 01:10:59.940] picking their behinds, and they're trying to save face by doing all the stupid stuff [01:10:59.940 --> 01:11:01.900] they can do. [01:11:01.900 --> 01:11:11.940] And then the, well, you wouldn't make this a no no no no, this was the dumbest document [01:11:11.940 --> 01:11:21.380] file so far, and the court of appeals didn't just deny it, they insulted them in denying [01:11:21.380 --> 01:11:22.380] it. [01:11:22.380 --> 01:11:23.380] Right. [01:11:23.380 --> 01:11:31.580] Well, if we do what, if we wait to get the ruling after our appeals brief from the appeals [01:11:31.580 --> 01:11:42.900] court to see if they rule against the attorneys alone, or will it just simply say city of [01:11:42.900 --> 01:11:43.900] Newark? [01:11:43.900 --> 01:11:45.420] It'll be city of Newark. [01:11:45.420 --> 01:11:48.620] We're not making any claims at this point against the attorneys. [01:11:48.620 --> 01:11:49.620] Okay. [01:11:49.620 --> 01:11:50.620] All right. [01:11:50.620 --> 01:11:51.620] So. [01:11:51.620 --> 01:11:52.620] Okay. [01:11:52.620 --> 01:11:58.740] The judge in the case dismissed the case with prejudice, dismissed Tim's claims when [01:11:58.740 --> 01:12:02.300] he claimed that the city did not have subject matter jurisdiction. [01:12:02.300 --> 01:12:05.140] He dismissed the claims with prejudice. [01:12:05.140 --> 01:12:11.660] We asked for findings of fact to show how the judge applied the law to the facts. [01:12:11.660 --> 01:12:13.140] The judge refused. [01:12:13.140 --> 01:12:16.340] We asked the court to order him to in the mandamus. [01:12:16.340 --> 01:12:22.780] Instead of ordering him to produce the facts, the court of appeals dismissed the claim by [01:12:22.780 --> 01:12:28.260] the city claiming they didn't have subject matter jurisdiction, exactly what we claimed. [01:12:28.260 --> 01:12:35.940] So in the appellate, at the appellate level, appealing the dismissal with prejudice is [01:12:35.940 --> 01:12:40.740] already, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is already a done deal because the courts [01:12:40.740 --> 01:12:46.060] already ruled that they didn't have subject matter jurisdiction. [01:12:46.060 --> 01:12:49.340] So the appeal is essentially a done deal. [01:12:49.340 --> 01:12:50.580] It's rez judicata. [01:12:50.580 --> 01:12:58.980] Now, personal complaints that we have against the judge and the attorney, two different [01:12:58.980 --> 01:13:10.260] claims, once for a thank them official misconduct, or anyway, we're going to wait to see exactly [01:13:10.260 --> 01:13:16.220] what the appeals court rules after our appeals briefs, right? [01:13:16.220 --> 01:13:17.220] And then we can. [01:13:17.220 --> 01:13:18.220] Yes. [01:13:18.220 --> 01:13:32.100] Because what keeps you in court is not what you can prove on the original petition. [01:13:32.100 --> 01:13:38.060] What keeps you in court is the claim that you make. [01:13:38.060 --> 01:13:48.060] If Tim had filed claims against public officials for actions committed while acting in within [01:13:48.060 --> 01:13:56.340] the scope of their authority, then they would have immunity, and the case would be thrown [01:13:56.340 --> 01:13:57.340] out. [01:13:57.340 --> 01:13:58.340] Right. [01:13:58.340 --> 01:14:07.780] But we were very careful in that the claim that we made was that the officials acted [01:14:07.780 --> 01:14:13.180] outside the scope of their authority, right? [01:14:13.180 --> 01:14:18.620] And in that case, they don't have any immunity. [01:14:18.620 --> 01:14:24.660] So the court has to first make a determination on whether or not they were acting within [01:14:24.660 --> 01:14:27.140] scope. [01:14:27.140 --> 01:14:28.140] Then they can dismiss. [01:14:28.140 --> 01:14:32.820] Well, the court just dismissed out of hand. [01:14:32.820 --> 01:14:38.540] And so what keeps you in court is not whether we could prove up that they acted outside of [01:14:38.540 --> 01:14:44.100] scope, but that our claim was that they acted outside of scope. [01:14:44.100 --> 01:14:45.100] Right. [01:14:45.100 --> 01:14:47.780] And that had to be proved up in court. [01:14:47.780 --> 01:14:51.100] It couldn't be dismissed out of hand. [01:14:51.100 --> 01:14:59.220] And also, to bring, you know, during this whole thing before the judge ruled and dismissed [01:14:59.220 --> 01:15:06.140] our counterclaim and then ruled against us, the lead attorney for the law firm for the [01:15:06.140 --> 01:15:12.500] city also instructed the code enforcement officer to come after me for a vehicle that [01:15:12.500 --> 01:15:22.260] had been previously named in a suit, but one which I had brought up to compliance, okay, [01:15:22.260 --> 01:15:23.860] I had gotten it licensed. [01:15:23.860 --> 01:15:24.860] Okay. [01:15:24.860 --> 01:15:33.500] And the reason Tim says that is because the complaint itself stated that the compliance [01:15:33.500 --> 01:15:36.820] officer was acting at direction of counsel. [01:15:36.820 --> 01:15:37.820] Yes. [01:15:37.820 --> 01:15:43.940] And so when I read that, I said, this guy didn't want to do this. [01:15:43.940 --> 01:15:52.020] So so the thing about it is they brought me into court twice for pretrial hearings. [01:15:52.020 --> 01:15:56.380] And I remember the judge telling me, I could bring you in here as many times as I want [01:15:56.380 --> 01:16:00.180] to because I told him, I said, listen, I've already been in here and I've already told [01:16:00.180 --> 01:16:04.740] you my stances, you know, so, you know, he said, well, I could bring you in here as many [01:16:04.740 --> 01:16:07.020] times as I want to. [01:16:07.020 --> 01:16:13.980] And of course, you could see that the prosecutor's attorney was a little nervous and the police [01:16:13.980 --> 01:16:19.420] officer that I had filed P-close complaint against already was not bothering me. [01:16:19.420 --> 01:16:23.780] So I could tell things were turning a little bit. [01:16:23.780 --> 01:16:32.060] And then when my case was over in the district court, they dismissed all charges against [01:16:32.060 --> 01:16:37.020] me because they saw it coming back at them. [01:16:37.020 --> 01:16:40.500] And if they felt like it was coming back at them, they were right. [01:16:40.500 --> 01:16:41.500] It is. [01:16:41.500 --> 01:16:42.500] Hang on. [01:16:42.500 --> 01:16:50.780] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, rule of our radio, a call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:50.780 --> 01:17:00.380] He'll be right back. [01:17:00.380 --> 01:17:05.660] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.660 --> 01:17:09.340] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Maris proven method. [01:17:09.340 --> 01:17:13.500] Michael Maris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:17:13.500 --> 01:17:14.500] can win two. 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[01:17:49.660 --> 01:17:58.700] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [01:17:58.700 --> 01:17:59.700] collectors now. [01:17:59.700 --> 01:18:00.700] Dang, Cookie. [01:18:00.700 --> 01:18:01.700] Cookie? [01:18:01.700 --> 01:18:02.700] I love cookies. [01:18:02.700 --> 01:18:04.700] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [01:18:04.700 --> 01:18:06.700] No, these are yucky cookies. [01:18:06.700 --> 01:18:07.700] Cookie? [01:18:07.700 --> 01:18:08.700] Yucky? [01:18:08.700 --> 01:18:09.700] No, no bad cookies. [01:18:09.700 --> 01:18:12.700] You can't even eat these cookies, these are cyber cookies. [01:18:12.700 --> 01:18:13.700] No candy? [01:18:13.700 --> 01:18:16.700] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:18:16.700 --> 01:18:17.700] These have apples. [01:18:17.700 --> 01:18:18.700] Really? [01:18:18.700 --> 01:18:21.700] Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:18:21.700 --> 01:18:22.700] Yummy apple. [01:18:22.700 --> 01:18:26.700] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [01:18:26.700 --> 01:18:32.700] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:18:32.700 --> 01:18:34.700] Bye-bye, yucky cookies. [01:18:34.700 --> 01:18:40.700] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand [01:18:40.700 --> 01:18:46.700] side, bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [01:18:46.700 --> 01:18:47.700] new cookie. [01:18:47.700 --> 01:18:48.700] New cookies? [01:18:48.700 --> 01:18:49.700] For me? [01:18:49.700 --> 01:18:51.700] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:18:51.700 --> 01:18:56.700] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this [01:18:56.700 --> 01:18:57.700] radio network too. [01:18:57.700 --> 01:18:58.700] These are cookies. [01:18:58.700 --> 01:19:27.700] These are classified. [01:19:27.700 --> 01:19:40.700] Okay, we are back. [01:19:40.700 --> 01:19:47.700] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens rules our radio on this, the 28th day of February, 2019, and [01:19:47.700 --> 01:19:49.700] we're talking to Tim in Texas. [01:19:49.700 --> 01:19:53.700] Yeah, you've got other collars you need to go to. [01:19:53.700 --> 01:19:57.700] I was about to say that, but I really am pleased with this. [01:19:57.700 --> 01:20:04.700] It's kind of a vindication that if you just hang in there, they count on you knuckling [01:20:04.700 --> 01:20:06.700] under early on. [01:20:06.700 --> 01:20:09.700] When you hang in there, it gets bad for them. [01:20:09.700 --> 01:20:17.700] This is a continuing saga because Tim and Laura are about to be in Max's position. [01:20:17.700 --> 01:20:20.700] Max is going after them just for the fun of it. [01:20:20.700 --> 01:20:26.700] But Tim and Laura are about to be in the position to where they're the ones picking the fight. [01:20:26.700 --> 01:20:29.700] And the other side is the defendant. [01:20:29.700 --> 01:20:34.700] They wind up on the other end, and this time it's a law firm who has already demonstrated [01:20:34.700 --> 01:20:36.700] their lack of competence. [01:20:36.700 --> 01:20:43.700] Yeah, well, you know, you can't say that the council was not a little bit to blame because [01:20:43.700 --> 01:20:51.700] they were just trying to be vindictive. [01:20:51.700 --> 01:20:55.700] Okay, yeah, we can say that. [01:20:55.700 --> 01:20:59.700] We pick our battles real careful. [01:20:59.700 --> 01:21:01.700] Okay, all right. [01:21:01.700 --> 01:21:03.700] All right, well, have a good evening. [01:21:03.700 --> 01:21:05.700] Okay, thank you, Tim. [01:21:05.700 --> 01:21:06.700] All right. [01:21:06.700 --> 01:21:14.700] Now we're going to go to Brian in California. [01:21:14.700 --> 01:21:15.700] Hi, Randy. [01:21:15.700 --> 01:21:17.700] Thanks for checking my call. [01:21:17.700 --> 01:21:18.700] You are welcome. [01:21:18.700 --> 01:21:20.700] What do you have for us today? [01:21:20.700 --> 01:21:26.700] I wanted to ask you a question about a traffic ticket that I got too long ago. [01:21:26.700 --> 01:21:34.700] I was pulled over for speeding and when the cop was talking to me, he didn't like that. [01:21:34.700 --> 01:21:38.700] I didn't want to roll my window down all the way except arguing that point. [01:21:38.700 --> 01:21:41.700] And I said, you know, I can hear you just fine. [01:21:41.700 --> 01:21:45.700] It gives us enough room to pass papers back and forth and stuff like that. [01:21:45.700 --> 01:21:53.700] And he started asking me about the tinted windows on my car and said that he was going to cite me for that. [01:21:53.700 --> 01:22:02.700] And he said that he could stand there all day and just rack up the citations, rack up the offenses if I didn't cooperate. [01:22:02.700 --> 01:22:06.700] Did you call 911? [01:22:06.700 --> 01:22:07.700] No, I didn't. [01:22:07.700 --> 01:22:09.700] I probably should have. [01:22:09.700 --> 01:22:12.700] That is so much fun. [01:22:12.700 --> 01:22:18.700] It adjusts their attitude very quickly. [01:22:18.700 --> 01:22:19.700] Okay, go ahead. [01:22:19.700 --> 01:22:21.700] I interrupted. [01:22:21.700 --> 01:22:26.700] So he wound up giving me a ticket for both the speeding and the tinted windows. [01:22:26.700 --> 01:22:32.700] And I have not appeared in court yet. [01:22:32.700 --> 01:22:46.700] My day already passed, but I received a notice that civil assessment can be taken against me if I don't either pay the ticket in full with penalties and all that, [01:22:46.700 --> 01:22:51.700] or, you know, get on the calendar for a court date. [01:22:51.700 --> 01:22:57.700] Go to trafficticket.website. [01:22:57.700 --> 01:22:59.700] Put in your ticket information. [01:22:59.700 --> 01:23:03.700] It will download you a bunch of documents. [01:23:03.700 --> 01:23:09.700] Sign those documents and file them in the court. [01:23:09.700 --> 01:23:26.700] It will only download the ones that are generic. It will download a Brady motion, discovery, an unlimited motion, a demand for preliminary hearing, just a whole bunch of stuff. [01:23:26.700 --> 01:23:35.700] And it's designed for the purpose of ensuring that the court ignores them. [01:23:35.700 --> 01:23:36.700] Okay. [01:23:36.700 --> 01:23:43.700] You see, the court gets all this stuff and they think you care about this stuff. [01:23:43.700 --> 01:23:45.700] You don't. [01:23:45.700 --> 01:23:50.700] You never ask public officials to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:23:50.700 --> 01:23:55.700] So he filed all these motions and they ignore them. [01:23:55.700 --> 01:24:01.700] And when they ignore them, then you file a criminal against the judge, a criminal against the prosecuting attorney. [01:24:01.700 --> 01:24:05.700] You start ratcheting up the heat. [01:24:05.700 --> 01:24:08.700] You can play with their traffic ticket if they want to. [01:24:08.700 --> 01:24:15.700] You start going after them for a lot bigger issues. [01:24:15.700 --> 01:24:21.700] If you're going to have to fight them, better to fight them on your terms than their terms. [01:24:21.700 --> 01:24:22.700] Right. [01:24:22.700 --> 01:24:25.700] What was the website again? [01:24:25.700 --> 01:24:29.700] So, trafficticket.website. [01:24:29.700 --> 01:24:39.700] And if I can get people knowledgeable in the codes in the different states, I want to upgrade each of these questionnaires for each of the states. [01:24:39.700 --> 01:24:41.700] But I'm too busy with other things. [01:24:41.700 --> 01:24:44.700] I don't have time for it. [01:24:44.700 --> 01:24:56.700] But if I could find some people who've done the research, I will take their documentation, incorporate it into the system and then give them an override of what this produces when people use it. [01:24:56.700 --> 01:24:59.700] Right now, I'm not charging anything, so there's no where we're at. [01:24:59.700 --> 01:25:02.700] I'll just give it away to everybody. [01:25:02.700 --> 01:25:08.700] This is a way to, we can literally shut down traffic enforcement. [01:25:08.700 --> 01:25:22.700] When the police officer starts getting professional conduct complaints as a matter of course, and criminal complaints as a matter of course, and the judge, judicial conduct complaints and bar grievances against the lawyer, [01:25:22.700 --> 01:25:26.700] they don't have anybody that will enforce these traffic tickets. [01:25:26.700 --> 01:25:29.700] I can't afford to. [01:25:29.700 --> 01:25:30.700] Right. [01:25:30.700 --> 01:25:33.700] Well, you filed a bar grievance against the lawyer. [01:25:33.700 --> 01:25:37.700] It goes on these records forever. [01:25:37.700 --> 01:25:40.700] It never goes away. [01:25:40.700 --> 01:25:45.700] The fact that it's ruled, you know, the bar throws them all out. [01:25:45.700 --> 01:25:47.700] And everybody knows that. [01:25:47.700 --> 01:25:53.700] So nobody cares what you filed for, just the fact that you filed. [01:25:53.700 --> 01:25:59.700] Let's say this law firm hires this lawyer and the lawyer has four bar grievances against him. [01:25:59.700 --> 01:26:07.700] And the lawyer doesn't win as much in court as the client seems to think they should. [01:26:07.700 --> 01:26:14.700] Instead of the law firm for giving him this incompetent lawyer that's got all these bar grievances against him. [01:26:14.700 --> 01:26:17.700] So you get three or four bar grievances against you. [01:26:17.700 --> 01:26:20.700] There's no law firm going to pick you up. [01:26:20.700 --> 01:26:24.700] You become a liability. [01:26:24.700 --> 01:26:33.700] Really damages their ability to practice in their field. [01:26:33.700 --> 01:26:36.700] We have a lot of power if we just start using it. [01:26:36.700 --> 01:26:44.700] So I want to get the tool together to where you don't have to decide whether or not a bar grievance is indicated. [01:26:44.700 --> 01:26:49.700] You just answer the questions systems spit out the bar grievance. [01:26:49.700 --> 01:26:55.700] If the judge fails to rule on every element in one of these motions, [01:26:55.700 --> 01:27:02.700] the system will produce a criminal complaint against the judge for each element. [01:27:02.700 --> 01:27:05.700] It's ended to the grand jury. [01:27:05.700 --> 01:27:07.700] Judicial conduct complaint for each element. [01:27:07.700 --> 01:27:11.700] Just as a matter of course, they just automatically spit some out. [01:27:11.700 --> 01:27:15.700] Just sign them and send them. [01:27:15.700 --> 01:27:19.700] What can I expect to happen after I file these? [01:27:19.700 --> 01:27:22.700] Am I just never going to hear from them again most likely? [01:27:22.700 --> 01:27:27.700] That's their primary way of doing things. [01:27:27.700 --> 01:27:29.700] They just stop doing anything. [01:27:29.700 --> 01:27:36.700] 90% of the time when someone comes after them and they stop prosecution, [01:27:36.700 --> 01:27:41.700] the other person just goes away and that's what they'll count on. [01:27:41.700 --> 01:27:49.700] Addressing the elements of the charge will get you convicted every time. [01:27:49.700 --> 01:27:55.700] Because it goes to the discretion of the judge. [01:27:55.700 --> 01:28:00.700] The judge gets to decide who he believes and who he does not believe [01:28:00.700 --> 01:28:04.700] and he will always believe the police officer. [01:28:04.700 --> 01:28:06.700] So we don't want to go to the merits. [01:28:06.700 --> 01:28:08.700] We don't care about the merits. [01:28:08.700 --> 01:28:13.700] We go to the procedure. [01:28:13.700 --> 01:28:16.700] If you have them dead bang, they'll be chill on procedure. [01:28:16.700 --> 01:28:18.700] That's what they do. [01:28:18.700 --> 01:28:22.700] So let's turn that back on. [01:28:22.700 --> 01:28:25.700] After them on procedure first. [01:28:25.700 --> 01:28:28.700] You've got a 20-page discovery motion in there. [01:28:28.700 --> 01:28:30.700] A 30-page motion in lemony. [01:28:30.700 --> 01:28:39.700] A motion in lemony is a motion that goes to all the questions they can't ask in court. [01:28:39.700 --> 01:28:42.700] You've got a demand for preliminary hearing. [01:28:42.700 --> 01:28:44.700] That's a federal requirement. [01:28:44.700 --> 01:28:48.700] That could get them in the federal courts. [01:28:48.700 --> 01:28:53.700] They never hold a preliminary hearing on a traffic citation. [01:28:53.700 --> 01:28:56.700] It costs them too much money. [01:28:56.700 --> 01:29:05.700] It's all about the money. [01:29:05.700 --> 01:29:07.700] You take it to them. [01:29:07.700 --> 01:29:12.700] I don't even like to talk about the merits because they're making a difference. [01:29:12.700 --> 01:29:18.700] Whatever the policeman says, the court's going to accept it out of hand no matter how ridiculous it is. [01:29:18.700 --> 01:29:20.700] They don't care. [01:29:20.700 --> 01:29:22.700] They're just there to collect money. [01:29:22.700 --> 01:29:30.700] So if we're going to beat them, we make it more costly to prosecute than to leave us alone. [01:29:30.700 --> 01:29:32.700] Right. [01:29:32.700 --> 01:29:33.700] Hang on. [01:29:33.700 --> 01:29:34.700] Hang on. [01:29:34.700 --> 01:29:35.700] About to go to break. [01:29:35.700 --> 01:29:36.700] Randy Kelton. [01:29:36.700 --> 01:29:44.700] Our radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. Tina, John, we'll try to get to both of you. [01:29:44.700 --> 01:30:01.700] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.700 --> 01:30:03.700] Didn't get to it quite quick enough. [01:30:03.700 --> 01:30:07.700] This vital mineral fights cancer, fatigue, and high blood pressure. [01:30:07.700 --> 01:30:11.700] Plus, it does wonders for your thyroid, liver, and immune system. [01:30:11.700 --> 01:30:13.700] I got to Katherine Albright in a moment. [01:30:13.700 --> 01:30:17.700] I didn't see that while I'm trying to bring my screen up and get to the right place [01:30:17.700 --> 01:30:19.700] to the time I got to it. [01:30:19.700 --> 01:30:21.700] We just owe the loans. [01:30:21.700 --> 01:30:23.700] You'll never get it back again. [01:30:23.700 --> 01:30:25.700] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find... [01:30:25.700 --> 01:30:27.700] Okay, it's been a good show. [01:30:27.700 --> 01:30:29.700] So protect your rights. [01:30:29.700 --> 01:30:31.700] Say no to surveillance. [01:30:31.700 --> 01:30:33.700] Free callers. [01:30:33.700 --> 01:31:01.700] It's worth hanging on to. [01:31:01.700 --> 01:31:04.700] Iodine is found in seafood, egg yolks, meat, and milk. [01:31:04.700 --> 01:31:06.700] And it's added to iodized salts. [01:31:06.700 --> 01:31:08.700] Vegetarians can get it through seaweed. [01:31:08.700 --> 01:31:11.700] But because the body does not make iodine, [01:31:11.700 --> 01:31:14.700] experts say up to three-quarters of us may be deficient. [01:31:14.700 --> 01:31:18.700] And that can lead to weight gain, depression, and even cancer. [01:31:18.700 --> 01:31:23.700] So put the eye back into iodine and check with your doctor to make sure you're getting enough. [01:31:23.700 --> 01:31:30.700] I'm Dr. Katherine Albright for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.700 --> 01:31:36.700] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.700 --> 01:31:38.700] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.700 --> 01:31:43.700] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.700 --> 01:31:46.700] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.700 --> 01:31:49.700] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.700 --> 01:31:50.700] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.700 --> 01:31:51.700] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.700 --> 01:31:52.700] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.700 --> 01:31:53.700] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.700 --> 01:31:55.700] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.700 --> 01:31:56.700] We were Americans. [01:31:56.700 --> 01:31:58.700] And we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.700 --> 01:32:01.700] So go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:28.700 --> 01:32:31.700] The rule of law radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.700 --> 01:32:35.700] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.700 --> 01:32:39.700] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [01:32:39.700 --> 01:32:41.700] and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.700 --> 01:32:44.700] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.700 --> 01:32:48.700] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.700 --> 01:32:51.700] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.700 --> 01:32:55.700] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.700 --> 01:32:58.700] So go to RememberBuilding7.org and order your copy today. [01:32:58.700 --> 01:33:01.700] And together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:01.700 --> 01:33:05.700] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:33:05.700 --> 01:33:32.700] LogosRadioMetwork.com [01:33:32.700 --> 01:33:35.700] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton. [01:33:35.700 --> 01:33:38.700] Randy Kelton, Deb Stevens, rule of law radio. [01:33:38.700 --> 01:33:42.700] And we're talking to Brian in California. [01:33:42.700 --> 01:33:45.700] Okay, Brian. [01:33:45.700 --> 01:33:51.700] Before we were sending you to trafficticket.website [01:33:51.700 --> 01:33:53.700] to send them a whole bunch of stuff. [01:33:53.700 --> 01:33:57.700] When you are required to appear, always appear. [01:33:57.700 --> 01:34:03.700] If you don't appear, you lose a lot of your leverage. [01:34:03.700 --> 01:34:05.700] Right. [01:34:05.700 --> 01:34:07.700] Then you give them a bigger claim against you. [01:34:07.700 --> 01:34:11.700] You want to turn the tables on them. [01:34:11.700 --> 01:34:17.700] So get these documents, sign them, file them with the court, [01:34:17.700 --> 01:34:21.700] and then wait for the court to respond. [01:34:21.700 --> 01:34:23.700] Okay. [01:34:23.700 --> 01:34:28.700] You have anything else? [01:34:28.700 --> 01:34:30.700] No, that's it. [01:34:30.700 --> 01:34:32.700] Okay, thank you, Brian. [01:34:32.700 --> 01:34:36.700] Okay, now we're going to Tina in California. [01:34:36.700 --> 01:34:38.700] Hello, Tina. [01:34:38.700 --> 01:34:40.700] Hi, Randy. How are you? [01:34:40.700 --> 01:34:41.700] I am good. [01:34:41.700 --> 01:34:45.700] Did you get my email with my spreadsheet in it? [01:34:45.700 --> 01:34:47.700] No. [01:34:47.700 --> 01:34:48.700] I found them. [01:34:48.700 --> 01:34:50.700] I knew I had to have them somewhere. [01:34:50.700 --> 01:34:54.700] And I found them buried in the wrong place. [01:34:54.700 --> 01:34:58.700] And they didn't wind up getting deleted. [01:34:58.700 --> 01:35:02.700] So I was able to recover a tremendous amount of work. [01:35:02.700 --> 01:35:05.700] And you were able to do my accounting? [01:35:05.700 --> 01:35:07.700] Yes. [01:35:07.700 --> 01:35:09.700] Oh, my gosh. [01:35:09.700 --> 01:35:11.700] That's the spreadsheet I sent you. [01:35:11.700 --> 01:35:14.700] Well, I didn't get it. When did you send it? [01:35:14.700 --> 01:35:17.700] Yesterday or day before. [01:35:17.700 --> 01:35:23.700] I'm just looking here. [01:35:23.700 --> 01:35:26.700] Unless it got buried in... [01:35:26.700 --> 01:35:28.700] No, no, don't see it. [01:35:28.700 --> 01:35:35.700] Okay, this is a spreadsheet that took me about six months to create it. [01:35:35.700 --> 01:35:43.700] You put in your information and it will run a set of calculations [01:35:43.700 --> 01:35:50.700] and generally give you a claim of two to three times the amount of the original mortgage [01:35:50.700 --> 01:35:53.700] as a claim against the lender. [01:35:53.700 --> 01:36:00.700] Now, the trick of this is, is not what gets you into court [01:36:00.700 --> 01:36:02.700] and costs the other side a lot of money, [01:36:02.700 --> 01:36:08.700] is not whether or not you can conclusively prove your claims. [01:36:08.700 --> 01:36:13.700] What gets you into court is whether or not you have something [01:36:13.700 --> 01:36:18.700] that you can allege in support of your claims. [01:36:18.700 --> 01:36:24.700] So we take the amounts on the original mortgage [01:36:24.700 --> 01:36:30.700] and compare those to the amounts on the truth and lending statement. [01:36:30.700 --> 01:36:34.700] They're never the same. They never match. [01:36:34.700 --> 01:36:40.700] And then we take the amounts the bank is claiming that you owe [01:36:40.700 --> 01:36:45.700] and then we run an amortization on the mortgage [01:36:45.700 --> 01:36:47.700] to show all the payments that you've made, [01:36:47.700 --> 01:36:54.700] what you should actually owe at this time compared to what they claim that you owe. [01:36:54.700 --> 01:36:58.700] And if what they claim you owe is greater than what our calculation shows [01:36:58.700 --> 01:37:00.700] that you should actually owe, [01:37:00.700 --> 01:37:11.700] then we file a claim against the mortgage or for three times the amount they're claiming. [01:37:11.700 --> 01:37:19.700] Then we look at all of the fees charged on the HUD-1 settlement statement. [01:37:19.700 --> 01:37:23.700] Here's the problem they have with those. [01:37:23.700 --> 01:37:27.700] When you were set down at the settlement table [01:37:27.700 --> 01:37:30.700] and they put this HUD-1 settlement statement in front of you [01:37:30.700 --> 01:37:33.700] and had all these fees they were charging, [01:37:33.700 --> 01:37:39.700] did they give you documentation to show that the fees that were charged [01:37:39.700 --> 01:37:43.700] were for services actually rendered, [01:37:43.700 --> 01:37:50.700] that they were fees that were not otherwise forbidden to be charged, [01:37:50.700 --> 01:37:55.700] that they were for services that were necessary, [01:37:55.700 --> 01:38:00.700] that the amounts charged were reasonable [01:38:00.700 --> 01:38:14.700] and that the vendor, that the bank did not take a percentage over the amount of the actual claim. [01:38:14.700 --> 01:38:20.700] Now that goes to the Credit Collections Practices Act. [01:38:20.700 --> 01:38:23.700] They forbid you to do those things. [01:38:23.700 --> 01:38:29.700] So you didn't get any documentation to show that they hadn't done those things. [01:38:29.700 --> 01:38:33.700] So we presume they did all of those things [01:38:33.700 --> 01:38:39.700] and that all of the fees on the HUD-1 settlement statement were fraudulent [01:38:39.700 --> 01:38:44.700] and demand that they prove each one up. [01:38:44.700 --> 01:38:50.700] And we've helped over 700 people file federal lawsuits using this tool. [01:38:50.700 --> 01:38:57.700] Tina, guess how many banks proved up the figures that they claimed [01:38:57.700 --> 01:39:00.700] in their foreclosure documents? [01:39:00.700 --> 01:39:02.700] It's a really easy number. [01:39:02.700 --> 01:39:05.700] Exactly. [01:39:05.700 --> 01:39:11.700] Guess how many individual charges they proved up? [01:39:11.700 --> 01:39:13.700] Zero. [01:39:13.700 --> 01:39:17.700] Exactly. Even the ones that could absolutely prove. [01:39:17.700 --> 01:39:20.700] They did not dare. [01:39:20.700 --> 01:39:25.700] The reason they didn't dare is because all of them had fraudulent claims on them. [01:39:25.700 --> 01:39:32.700] If they proved up one, then they would have to prove up all of them. [01:39:32.700 --> 01:39:35.700] So see, they didn't prove up any. [01:39:35.700 --> 01:39:39.700] They knew they had the courts bought and paid for. [01:39:39.700 --> 01:39:43.700] So the courts are going to rule in their favor no matter what. [01:39:43.700 --> 01:39:47.700] Okay, we understand that. [01:39:47.700 --> 01:39:49.700] I'm an engineer. [01:39:49.700 --> 01:39:51.700] I'm not a lawyer. [01:39:51.700 --> 01:39:54.700] For me, that's just parameters. [01:39:54.700 --> 01:40:00.700] At the end of the day, how do we cost them more to fight us [01:40:00.700 --> 01:40:04.700] than to make us a deal so we can all go home and be happy? [01:40:04.700 --> 01:40:06.700] And that's what this was for. [01:40:06.700 --> 01:40:12.700] So here, yours has already been foreclosed on, so we run these calculations [01:40:12.700 --> 01:40:19.700] and we go back and sue the bank for claiming that they defrauded you. [01:40:19.700 --> 01:40:24.700] And the only reason that you got into foreclosure was because they overcharged you. [01:40:24.700 --> 01:40:26.700] They hadn't overcharged you. [01:40:26.700 --> 01:40:28.700] You would have never got into foreclosure. [01:40:28.700 --> 01:40:32.700] Now, they've already foreclosed on the property and took it. [01:40:32.700 --> 01:40:41.700] Now they're looking at what happens if the judges get in trouble for being bought and paid for [01:40:41.700 --> 01:40:45.700] and actually start ruling in accordance with law. [01:40:45.700 --> 01:40:48.700] This is going to cost us a lot of money. [01:40:48.700 --> 01:40:53.700] So at the end of the day, it's all about the money. [01:40:53.700 --> 01:41:01.700] So you put them in a position to where you can leverage them in to making you a deal. [01:41:01.700 --> 01:41:10.700] Do not expect to win in a trial court when the federal courts and the state courts are bought and paid for. [01:41:10.700 --> 01:41:14.700] Okay, maybe they're not bought and paid for. [01:41:14.700 --> 01:41:26.700] But in over 700 federal lawsuits, the courts never ruled in our favor in anything. [01:41:26.700 --> 01:41:32.700] So maybe they're not bought and paid for, but it sure looks like they are [01:41:32.700 --> 01:41:36.700] and it behooves you to conduct yourself as if they are. [01:41:36.700 --> 01:41:39.700] That becomes simply a parameter. [01:41:39.700 --> 01:41:48.700] It doesn't mean you can't win, but it points at how you can win and where you can win. [01:41:48.700 --> 01:41:55.700] You can't necessarily win in the trial court, but you can win based on the money. [01:41:55.700 --> 01:42:01.700] If it's going to cost them way more to win the case than it would cost them to deal out, [01:42:01.700 --> 01:42:05.700] then the calculation is to deal out. [01:42:05.700 --> 01:42:15.700] So we make a huge claim against them, take them to court and say, let's make a deal. [01:42:15.700 --> 01:42:20.700] And if they give you half of what it cost them for attorney fees, they win. [01:42:20.700 --> 01:42:22.700] And so are you. [01:42:22.700 --> 01:42:29.700] Okay, if you check through your junk mail to make sure it wasn't bumped out. [01:42:29.700 --> 01:42:35.700] If you haven't got it, send me an email and I will get you another copy, fill that out. [01:42:35.700 --> 01:42:39.700] I will run the calculation on and send it back to you. [01:42:39.700 --> 01:42:41.700] Okay, I will do that. [01:42:41.700 --> 01:42:46.700] This kind of goes a little bit actually to what my question was tonight too. [01:42:46.700 --> 01:42:49.700] So this is good. [01:42:49.700 --> 01:42:56.700] You know, I've been trying to get Deb to help me help that guy. [01:42:56.700 --> 01:42:59.700] And I finally got a hang of everything. [01:42:59.700 --> 01:43:01.700] She was really wonderful, Deb. [01:43:01.700 --> 01:43:02.700] You are amazing. [01:43:02.700 --> 01:43:04.700] And those calls are great. [01:43:04.700 --> 01:43:06.700] But I have a quick question. [01:43:06.700 --> 01:43:10.700] Why is it because Deb says that I need to ask you this? [01:43:10.700 --> 01:43:21.700] Why is it that when under the FDCPA and FDRA and all that, the credit card companies are required to give you an accounting if you request it? [01:43:21.700 --> 01:43:34.700] Why is the same not true in a mortgage case when they give you multiple different amounts to you and you don't know which one's true and they refuse absolutely to give you an accounting? [01:43:34.700 --> 01:43:39.700] Under standard law, they're required to. [01:43:39.700 --> 01:43:41.700] But they're bought and paid for. [01:43:41.700 --> 01:43:44.700] The courts don't care. [01:43:44.700 --> 01:43:47.700] The courts are corrupt. [01:43:47.700 --> 01:43:51.700] I think we're back to run off the cliff. [01:43:51.700 --> 01:43:53.700] Oh, that'll get me in trouble. [01:43:53.700 --> 01:43:54.700] We'll be right back. [01:43:54.700 --> 01:43:55.700] Yes. [01:43:55.700 --> 01:43:56.700] Okay. [01:43:56.700 --> 01:44:25.700] Thank you. [01:44:25.700 --> 01:44:31.700] The Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.700 --> 01:44:34.700] We have come to trust Jungevity so much. [01:44:34.700 --> 01:44:39.700] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.700 --> 01:44:47.700] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.700 --> 01:44:58.700] As you realize the benefits of Jungevity, you may want to join us as a distributor. You can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:44:58.700 --> 01:45:27.700] Order now. [01:45:28.700 --> 01:45:34.700] This documentary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.700 --> 01:45:43.700] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.700 --> 01:45:52.700] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.700 --> 01:46:08.700] Visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:08.700 --> 01:46:34.700] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Tina, and it's pretty simple. [01:46:34.700 --> 01:46:43.700] The courts have bought and paid for. They're corrupt. Okay, maybe they're not corrupt, but it behooves you to treat them as if they are corrupt. [01:46:43.700 --> 01:46:49.700] If the court happens to rule in your favor, well, that's great. That's a freebie. [01:46:49.700 --> 01:47:02.700] But we should conduct ourselves as if the court's going to rule against us, no matter what, and find a way to win in the end, even with the court's ruling against us. [01:47:02.700 --> 01:47:22.700] And we do have ways of doing that. You bar grieve the lawyer every time he moves, you follow him, you conduct complaints against the judge, and you hold him in court and just beat him up and badger him until the judge orders the other side to make a deal with you to get you to stop beating up the judge. [01:47:22.700 --> 01:47:31.700] There are other ways of doing this. Does that make sense? Oh, hold on. I don't have you unmuted. There you go. Okay. [01:47:31.700 --> 01:47:36.700] Oh, yep. I'm definitely doing that part of the bar grieving and everything. [01:47:36.700 --> 01:47:48.700] Good. Now you can resume with this and you look at holding them up in court another four or five years and cost them several hundred thousand dollars to fight this suit. [01:47:48.700 --> 01:48:00.700] And will they be able to say, well, this has been adjudicated and it's the same lawsuit and so you're a vexatious litigant. [01:48:00.700 --> 01:48:05.700] Have you been declared a vexatious litigant? No, but they tried once. [01:48:05.700 --> 01:48:16.700] Okay. Well, they didn't get it done. Along with this, you can file for a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:48:16.700 --> 01:48:35.700] And generally we can look at the filings in, I think the code in California is 1214 or 2114. It's the one that says that any claim against real property, not property acknowledged or proven filed in the record is voided to the holder. [01:48:35.700 --> 01:48:49.700] So you say, okay, they got this assignment filed in the record, but this assignment was filed by a company that went out of business two years before this was filed. [01:48:49.700 --> 01:49:00.700] So either it was filed by a dead guy or it was filed improperly and you asked the court to make a declaratory judgment on the validity of this filing. [01:49:00.700 --> 01:49:09.700] That cannot be dismissed under a Rule 12b6 motion to dismiss for failure state of claim. [01:49:09.700 --> 01:49:14.700] That sticks you in the court. [01:49:14.700 --> 01:49:35.700] And then the court will dismiss your fraud claims no matter what they are, but be new appeal. And the last one I did that for, we kept them in court six years in California until it was six years before the Supreme did not absurd. [01:49:35.700 --> 01:49:40.700] And it cost them a fortune. [01:49:40.700 --> 01:49:50.700] So if you make the filing, very good chance they'll recognize the documentation because we filed so many of them. [01:49:50.700 --> 01:49:58.700] And they will know they recognize this documentation. This guy's going to, all he's going to do is keep us in court and beat us up. [01:49:58.700 --> 01:50:06.700] So you go to him and say, let's make a deal. And you won't have to pay all these attorney fees. That's the best way you can win. [01:50:06.700 --> 01:50:08.700] Yeah. [01:50:08.700 --> 01:50:15.700] Don't expect to win with the judgment in your favor. Not an option, especially in California. [01:50:15.700 --> 01:50:19.700] Yes, as I found out. [01:50:19.700 --> 01:50:23.700] Okay. I've got a couple more callers. Do you have anything else, Tina? [01:50:23.700 --> 01:50:27.700] No, no, I can bring that in the next thing up tomorrow. That's no problem at all. [01:50:27.700 --> 01:50:37.700] Okay. Thank you. Okay. Now we're going to go to John in New York. John, what do you have for us? [01:50:37.700 --> 01:50:45.700] Hello, John. I think John fell asleep. He's old like me and we have to nap. [01:50:45.700 --> 01:50:52.700] Okay. So sorry, John, if you really want to do something, call us tomorrow night. We'll try to get to you. [01:50:52.700 --> 01:50:57.700] Going to Tyler in Wyoming. Hello, Tyler. [01:50:57.700 --> 01:50:59.700] Randy, how you been? [01:50:59.700 --> 01:51:02.700] Doing good. What do you have for us today? [01:51:02.700 --> 01:51:10.700] Good. I haven't talked in a while. I agreed with John the courts or the crux of the courts that it's a problem. [01:51:10.700 --> 01:51:17.700] How even if it's traffic, if it shows, whatever traffic they're playing into, and though they don't have any jurisdiction, [01:51:17.700 --> 01:51:22.700] cause of action, you could go on and on. I think our only hope, maybe, is for the jury. [01:51:22.700 --> 01:51:30.700] We don't bring back the jury in as many cases as we can, but then the problem is the judge won't allow the jury to see the law. [01:51:30.700 --> 01:51:38.700] Okay. There's a whole way to do this. If you've researched out some of the traffic law in Wyoming, [01:51:38.700 --> 01:51:43.700] give me that research and I'll put together a set of documents. [01:51:43.700 --> 01:51:48.700] I've got a set of generic documents that go to federal due process. [01:51:48.700 --> 01:52:01.700] A Brady motion, a criminal discovery motion, and a limited motion, motion for preliminary injunction, these are all supported by federal law. [01:52:01.700 --> 01:52:04.700] And a couple others. [01:52:04.700 --> 01:52:11.700] And get me some research specific to Wyoming law and I'll add those to it. [01:52:11.700 --> 01:52:18.700] And then you just go online, put in your ticket information and spit you out this stack of documents. [01:52:18.700 --> 01:52:20.700] You just sign them and send them. [01:52:20.700 --> 01:52:29.700] File with the court and the whole idea is to get the court to ignore them. [01:52:29.700 --> 01:52:36.700] Never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:52:36.700 --> 01:52:45.700] So when the court ignores it, then you file criminally against the court for denying you due process. [01:52:45.700 --> 01:52:48.700] Walker v. Packer. [01:52:48.700 --> 01:52:53.700] The court has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [01:52:53.700 --> 01:53:05.700] Failure to do so is an abuse of discretion and an abuse of discretion that denies you in full and free access to your enjoyment of rights, crime, and every state. [01:53:05.700 --> 01:53:09.700] Follows the Google Skyne Act. [01:53:09.700 --> 01:53:12.700] So then you go to that first hearing. [01:53:12.700 --> 01:53:14.700] The judge just blows off everything. [01:53:14.700 --> 01:53:23.700] Then I'm about to bring up the secondary part of the traffic side. [01:53:23.700 --> 01:53:24.700] I don't have that up yet. [01:53:24.700 --> 01:53:27.700] I've got it built, but I don't have it implemented. [01:53:27.700 --> 01:53:31.700] And I've pretty well decided to go ahead and implement the traffic side. [01:53:31.700 --> 01:53:35.700] So you found that first stack of documents. [01:53:35.700 --> 01:53:38.700] You go into court, they blow off everything. [01:53:38.700 --> 01:53:46.700] You go home, you go back to the questionnaire, and it goes through all these issues. [01:53:46.700 --> 01:53:49.700] Did the judge rule on this issue in this motion? [01:53:49.700 --> 01:53:55.700] On no criminal complaint, did the judge rule on this issue in this motion? [01:53:55.700 --> 01:53:56.700] No. [01:53:56.700 --> 01:53:57.700] Another criminal complaint. [01:53:57.700 --> 01:54:06.700] Did the prosecuting attorney notify the judge that he was not ruling on an issue brought before the court? [01:54:06.700 --> 01:54:07.700] No. [01:54:07.700 --> 01:54:12.700] Bar grievance against the prosecutor. [01:54:12.700 --> 01:54:15.700] You go to court, they blow everything off. [01:54:15.700 --> 01:54:23.700] You go home, you come back to court the next day, and you file a bigger stack of documents than you did the first time. [01:54:23.700 --> 01:54:29.700] Criminal complaints, bar grievances, everything you can think of. [01:54:29.700 --> 01:54:34.700] You go shut them down. [01:54:34.700 --> 01:54:41.700] All of a sudden, it's completely out of the traffic court and into the higher courts on due process. [01:54:41.700 --> 01:54:56.700] Criminal charges against them, just a barrage of actions against them, and all of them filed in accordance with their law. [01:54:56.700 --> 01:55:01.700] I do a show on Mondays with Pastor Massad, and he has a saying. [01:55:01.700 --> 01:55:08.700] He says, where the most pro-government show on radio. [01:55:08.700 --> 01:55:16.700] What he means by that is we are pro-good government. [01:55:16.700 --> 01:55:28.700] We absolutely support the proper actions of government, and we object to any abuse of the government to authority. [01:55:28.700 --> 01:55:31.700] So we're pro-government, we just want it done right. [01:55:31.700 --> 01:55:32.700] And that's what this is. [01:55:32.700 --> 01:55:37.700] The radio station title, we believe in the rule of law and we try to hold them to it. [01:55:37.700 --> 01:55:39.700] Yeah, and that's all. [01:55:39.700 --> 01:55:41.700] We don't do any patriot mythology. [01:55:41.700 --> 01:55:43.700] We don't make any of this stuff up. [01:55:43.700 --> 01:55:45.700] Don't blame me. [01:55:45.700 --> 01:55:47.700] I didn't write the code. [01:55:47.700 --> 01:55:48.700] I just read it. [01:55:48.700 --> 01:55:52.700] If it makes you uncomfortable, deal with it. [01:55:52.700 --> 01:55:54.700] Well, just one quick question, Randy. [01:55:54.700 --> 01:55:59.700] I wanted to take this a step further and maybe go on the offense in his life. [01:55:59.700 --> 01:56:06.700] We're kind of getting tired of getting stopped and going into court, although we are maybe putting the proboscis through them a little bit. [01:56:06.700 --> 01:56:09.700] But it seems like they're never in the process that I take it to get. [01:56:09.700 --> 01:56:15.700] Every time they get you to not have a, you know, they consider it being proper registration or whatever it's fired. [01:56:15.700 --> 01:56:19.700] Okay, did you listen to the beginning of the show and hear Max? [01:56:19.700 --> 01:56:21.700] No, I missed the beginning of the show. [01:56:21.700 --> 01:56:23.700] Okay, listen to the archive. [01:56:23.700 --> 01:56:27.700] Max went into a town that he passes through. [01:56:27.700 --> 01:56:29.700] They've never ticketed him or anything. [01:56:29.700 --> 01:56:32.700] He scraped the sticker off his windshield. [01:56:32.700 --> 01:56:41.700] He's paid for his registration, but he's scraped the sticker off the windshield because he wants them to stop him for not having that. [01:56:41.700 --> 01:56:49.700] And when he's researched the code and says, the code says you can't be stopped for that reason. [01:56:49.700 --> 01:56:50.700] But these cops don't know that. [01:56:50.700 --> 01:56:51.700] They don't care. [01:56:51.700 --> 01:56:52.700] They'll stop you anyway. [01:56:52.700 --> 01:56:56.700] He's doing that so he can pick a fight with them. [01:56:56.700 --> 01:57:00.700] Best fight to have is the one you pick. [01:57:00.700 --> 01:57:03.700] He set him up so he can go after him. [01:57:03.700 --> 01:57:07.700] The license plate as you talked about the registration there? [01:57:07.700 --> 01:57:08.700] Now, this is a sticker. [01:57:08.700 --> 01:57:12.700] He's got a plate on it, but the registration sticker. [01:57:12.700 --> 01:57:18.700] The code says in Texas that you must have registration. [01:57:18.700 --> 01:57:23.700] It does not say it's a crime not to display it. [01:57:23.700 --> 01:57:28.700] But a policeman will see that as probable cause to believe you don't have it. [01:57:28.700 --> 01:57:36.700] However, he's got this computer and the computer will tell him that you do have it. [01:57:36.700 --> 01:57:45.700] So if he stops you because you don't have it on there, he has access to information to show whether you have it or not. [01:57:45.700 --> 01:57:48.700] So if he comes to you and says, is this vehicle registered? [01:57:48.700 --> 01:57:54.700] You say, you have equal access to that information as I do. [01:57:54.700 --> 01:57:57.700] I told one, go check your computer. [01:57:57.700 --> 01:57:59.700] We don't do that. [01:57:59.700 --> 01:58:04.700] I said, Bubba, you're going to want to do that because if you don't, [01:58:04.700 --> 01:58:10.700] I will give you a romp through the legal system you will not believe. [01:58:10.700 --> 01:58:12.700] Oh, is that right, Mr. Kelt? [01:58:12.700 --> 01:58:13.700] Yes, it is. [01:58:13.700 --> 01:58:18.700] He wrote me a ticket and I got before the judge and I said, Judge Headman. [01:58:18.700 --> 01:58:22.700] I seem to remember a Judge Headman in Azel, Texas, [01:58:22.700 --> 01:58:25.700] but I don't remember him having that much gray hair. [01:58:25.700 --> 01:58:28.700] And the judge looked at me and said, yes, Mr. Kelt, [01:58:28.700 --> 01:58:32.700] and I don't remember your belly being that big, too gray. [01:58:32.700 --> 01:58:38.700] But he dismissed the case immediately when I asked him to arrest himself. [01:58:38.700 --> 01:58:40.700] He wouldn't do it. [01:58:40.700 --> 01:58:41.700] Hang on, we're out of time. [01:58:41.700 --> 01:58:44.700] Call back tomorrow when we've got a little more time. [01:58:44.700 --> 01:58:49.700] Randy Kelt and Debra Stevens, Rural Law Radio, good night. [01:58:49.700 --> 01:58:55.700] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called [01:58:55.700 --> 01:58:57.700] the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.700 --> 01:59:01.700] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes [01:59:01.700 --> 01:59:04.700] that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:04.700 --> 01:59:08.700] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.700 --> 01:59:11.700] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.700 --> 01:59:16.700] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 [01:59:16.700 --> 01:59:20.700] or visit us online at bfa.org. 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