[00:00.000 --> 00:05.780] The following news flashes brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing for Delhi [00:05.780 --> 00:13.440] bulletins for the commodity market, today in history, news updates and the inside scoop [00:13.440 --> 00:21.240] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.240 --> 00:27.480] Markets for Wednesday, the 6th of February, 2019 opened with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, [00:27.480 --> 00:34.960] silver at $15.77 an ounce, copper at $2.83 an ounce, oil at Texas Crude at $3.66 a barrel, [00:34.960 --> 00:40.280] Brent Crude at $61.98 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin [00:40.280 --> 00:54.040] at $3,401.64, Ripple at XRP at $0.29, Ethereum at $10.10, and Eos at $2.32 a crypto coin. [00:54.040 --> 00:59.600] Today in History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.600 --> 01:04.560] qualifications get the right to vote when the representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.560 --> 01:09.560] was passed by parliament. [01:09.560 --> 01:14.200] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal [01:14.200 --> 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 --> 01:24.600] The lawsuit was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary [01:24.600 --> 01:30.040] of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens [01:30.040 --> 01:33.320] who were registered to vote when obtaining age-arvest license. [01:33.320 --> 01:37.040] Over half of the 95,000 didn't indeed vote, it seems. [01:37.040 --> 01:41.040] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:41.040 --> 01:45.240] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.240 --> 01:50.840] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.840 --> 01:55.240] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.240 --> 01:57.040] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.040 --> 02:01.240] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.240 --> 02:09.000] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:09.000 --> 02:14.360] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.360 --> 02:16.880] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.880 --> 02:20.640] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.640 --> 02:24.240] An x-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.240 --> 02:30.440] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.440 --> 02:35.200] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.200 --> 02:40.160] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.160 --> 02:44.560] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.560 --> 02:47.440] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.440 --> 02:51.440] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:51.440 --> 03:19.440] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:19.440 --> 03:35.440] Thank you very much for watching this video and don't forget to like, share, and subscribe [03:35.440 --> 03:36.440] to the channel. [03:36.440 --> 04:02.440] Thank you very much for watching this video and don't forget to like, share, and subscribe [04:02.440 --> 04:12.440] to the channel. [04:12.440 --> 04:20.760] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Debra Stephens, rule of law radio on this, the 14th day of [04:20.760 --> 04:32.520] March, 2019, and we have the call boards open, the call lines open, they are now, I'll just [04:32.520 --> 04:43.360] turn them open, and we'll be taking calls all night, call in number, 512-646-1984. [04:43.360 --> 04:47.360] I don't believe I had to stop and think about that. [04:47.360 --> 04:55.400] I told my mom that I figured out what the problem is in the Kelton family that causes [04:55.400 --> 05:02.360] this memory issue, but I forgot what it was. [05:02.360 --> 05:07.320] Okay, all of a sudden the call boards are full. [05:07.320 --> 05:16.480] I had an email asking me to set aside time at each program to talk about due process, [05:16.480 --> 05:23.200] and I really do need to do a show every now and then on due process, but I probably need [05:23.200 --> 05:29.880] to do it on a Saturday night because to really effectively go through due process, it took [05:29.880 --> 05:36.800] me eight hours, but I could condense it down to four hours and kind of use that as an archive [05:36.800 --> 05:40.280] so people can pull it down and listen to it. [05:40.280 --> 05:44.800] I've done that before, but it's been a long time, so I probably need to do that, but since [05:44.800 --> 05:50.560] I've got a full board of callers already, tonight is probably not the night. [05:50.560 --> 05:53.280] Okay, I'm going to go to callers. [05:53.280 --> 05:57.560] We're going to Livia in North Carolina. [05:57.560 --> 05:59.680] Hello, Ms. Livia. [05:59.680 --> 06:01.760] Hello, Mr. Kelton. [06:01.760 --> 06:02.920] How are you? [06:02.920 --> 06:05.160] I am good. [06:05.160 --> 06:16.440] You sent me an email where this apparently not-so-smart lawyer did their standard thing [06:16.440 --> 06:21.080] and objected to your request for discovery. [06:21.080 --> 06:25.640] Now, as I understand, Ms. Livia hasn't. [06:25.640 --> 06:33.480] She sued her neighbor over a chain-link fence that he put up in an upscale neighborhood, [06:33.480 --> 06:38.400] and she wasn't happy about it, and couldn't get him to fix it, so she filed an action [06:38.400 --> 06:40.240] against it. [06:40.240 --> 06:46.400] The lawyer previously claimed that he talked to all the neighbors, and no, the neighbors [06:46.400 --> 06:52.000] had a problem with it, and we talked about that on the air, and I said, well, I think [06:52.000 --> 06:55.000] that was the last time we talked, wasn't it, Ms. Livia? [06:55.000 --> 06:56.000] That's right. [06:56.000 --> 06:57.000] Yeah. [06:57.000 --> 07:06.680] And the code, the title restrictions require a certain kind of fence, and this was in violation [07:06.680 --> 07:07.680] of that kind of fence. [07:07.680 --> 07:10.800] It didn't make any difference what the neighbors thought about it, and that's what we talked [07:10.800 --> 07:11.800] about then. [07:11.800 --> 07:20.160] So she put in a request for all the people that he talked to who gave him opinions on [07:20.160 --> 07:26.840] the fence, and he objected to it, objection, as defendants' request is too broad. [07:26.840 --> 07:27.840] Let's see. [07:27.840 --> 07:33.360] Identify the name, address, and phone number of all persons or entities plaintiffs have [07:33.360 --> 07:41.720] corresponded with in regard to their claim that defendants' fence has diminished defendants' [07:41.720 --> 07:42.720] property value. [07:42.720 --> 07:45.520] I think you got that backwards. [07:45.520 --> 07:52.120] I think you're the plaintiff, but that's a nun's pro-tunk, and we got it. [07:52.120 --> 07:53.120] Okay. [07:53.120 --> 07:54.600] He claimed he talked to all these people. [07:54.600 --> 07:57.040] You asked, well, who'd you talk to? [07:57.040 --> 08:02.600] And he says, plaintiffs talk to many friends and family about this issue, none of whom [08:02.600 --> 08:08.560] are material witnesses, nor would they change or have any impact on the material facts of [08:08.560 --> 08:09.560] this action. [08:09.560 --> 08:13.680] Is this guy brain dead or what? [08:13.680 --> 08:22.160] Now, he's the one that brought that issue up that all the friends and neighbors had an [08:22.160 --> 08:30.160] opinion on the fence, and we said exactly what he said, that don't make any difference, [08:30.160 --> 08:32.160] and now he states it. [08:32.160 --> 08:39.160] So this is mine, so all those are mine, those are my statements, and those are my responses [08:39.160 --> 08:41.160] to his interrogatory question. [08:41.160 --> 08:42.160] Oh, wait a minute. [08:42.160 --> 08:43.160] Okay. [08:43.160 --> 08:44.160] This is your response to his? [08:44.160 --> 08:45.160] Yeah, because... [08:45.160 --> 08:46.160] Oh, okay. [08:46.160 --> 08:48.160] I got it backwards then. [08:48.160 --> 08:49.160] Okay. [08:49.160 --> 08:59.160] So he's...didn't he make assertions that other neighbors didn't have a problem with this [08:59.160 --> 09:00.160] fence? [09:00.160 --> 09:07.160] Well, he's going off...he's going to...see, let me just go back. [09:07.160 --> 09:14.160] My complaint is two things, violation, dedistriction, and hence depreciation, potential depreciation [09:14.160 --> 09:15.160] of the property value. [09:15.160 --> 09:22.160] So he's anchoring on the property value depreciation and saying, well, I didn't find the name, [09:22.160 --> 09:26.160] adjutant point above, all persons, entities, places that correspond with regards to their [09:26.160 --> 09:36.160] claim that defendants' fence has diminished places property value. [09:36.160 --> 09:38.160] You know, so there is a mistake about the... [09:38.160 --> 09:39.160] Okay. [09:39.160 --> 09:40.160] That's exactly his answer. [09:40.160 --> 09:41.160] Okay. [09:41.160 --> 09:46.160] So he's saying that the argument is irrelevant. [09:46.160 --> 09:49.160] Did you say that it is relevant? [09:49.160 --> 09:57.840] Didn't we speak to this last time where he had stated that the neighbors did not have [09:57.840 --> 10:04.160] an objection to this fence? [10:04.160 --> 10:07.160] Seems I recall that. [10:07.160 --> 10:16.160] No, so we...he didn't say anything...no, it wasn't exactly...it wasn't exactly that. [10:16.160 --> 10:17.160] Oh, okay. [10:17.160 --> 10:18.160] Can I misunderstood? [10:18.160 --> 10:24.160] That's what I thought we talked about last time that he had stated...you had stated that [10:24.160 --> 10:29.160] this lowered the property value and he had argued that it didn't, that there was no evidence [10:29.160 --> 10:33.160] that it did, that none of the neighbors had a problem with it. [10:33.160 --> 10:38.160] And I thought this was you asking for those neighbors who said they didn't have a problem [10:38.160 --> 10:39.160] with it. [10:39.160 --> 10:46.480] He's fishing for evidence as to who is basically supporting my theory that the property value [10:46.480 --> 10:50.160] has been diminished as a result of the fence. [10:50.160 --> 10:54.160] Have you talked to any real estate agents? [10:54.160 --> 10:56.160] I'm a real estate agent myself. [10:56.160 --> 10:57.160] I just like my sighting. [10:57.160 --> 11:00.160] I just buy a cake, except for my full-time job. [11:00.160 --> 11:01.160] Okay. [11:01.160 --> 11:08.160] Well, you can't...since you're an agent and you're the plaintiff, you can't give that [11:08.160 --> 11:09.160] opinion. [11:09.160 --> 11:17.160] Can you get another agent to render an opinion that would say, yeah, my clients, they would [11:17.160 --> 11:22.160] be affected by this crappy-looking fence next door? [11:22.160 --> 11:23.160] I can. [11:23.160 --> 11:24.160] I still can. [11:24.160 --> 11:29.160] I just didn't want to bring them into the whole thing, but because he is fine to depose [11:29.160 --> 11:34.160] me, we had a summary judgment hearing last Thursday. [11:34.160 --> 11:39.160] And the summary judgment hearing, that was very interesting. [11:39.160 --> 11:47.160] I want to say the judge did a great job of being respectful, but you could see that the [11:47.160 --> 11:52.160] harmony between us and the judge and the harmony between the lawyer and the judge was quite [11:52.160 --> 11:53.160] different. [11:53.160 --> 11:56.160] We were disadvantaged by two things. [11:56.160 --> 12:02.160] Because the defendant had an affidavit, and everything in the affidavit was taken as a [12:02.160 --> 12:03.160] fact. [12:03.160 --> 12:04.160] We didn't have one. [12:04.160 --> 12:09.160] I thought my summary judgment request and everything in there was covered as an affidavit, [12:09.160 --> 12:10.160] but it wasn't. [12:10.160 --> 12:12.160] I should have had my own. [12:12.160 --> 12:14.160] There was one disadvantage. [12:14.160 --> 12:21.160] Number two was that after I presented my case law from the Attlete Court and Supreme Court, [12:21.160 --> 12:29.160] especially as it goes to the adverse possession, the defendant's counsel came up and presented [12:29.160 --> 12:30.160] two cases. [12:30.160 --> 12:34.160] Two cases and said, oh, I have two specific cases. [12:34.160 --> 12:41.160] One for the adverse possession, and there was another one for doctrine of unclean hands. [12:41.160 --> 12:46.160] The fact that we have chickens, right, makes us having unclean hands. [12:46.160 --> 12:50.160] And because we have unclean hands, we don't have the equitable rights to ask to have the [12:50.160 --> 12:54.160] descendants clean their hands when our hands are unclean. [12:54.160 --> 12:58.160] How did he allege that your hands were unclean? [12:58.160 --> 13:00.160] Because we had chickens. [13:00.160 --> 13:04.160] And I explained my chickens were pets, and prior to that court ruling, any animal could be [13:04.160 --> 13:05.160] considered a pet. [13:05.160 --> 13:07.160] But the judge asked me, well, do they lay eggs? [13:07.160 --> 13:09.160] I said, well, of course they do. [13:09.160 --> 13:16.160] He said, well, even though no animals can be used for commercial purposes, just because [13:16.160 --> 13:19.160] they lay eggs, you could consider that the utility. [13:19.160 --> 13:20.160] But he didn't say that. [13:20.160 --> 13:23.160] He just said, you know, I sell eggs, you know. [13:23.160 --> 13:26.160] So that's what I trumped me, or trumped us. [13:26.160 --> 13:32.160] And also, we used to have a no solicitation sign up front, and that was used against us, [13:32.160 --> 13:33.160] too. [13:33.160 --> 13:34.160] Okay, okay, wait a minute. [13:34.160 --> 13:35.160] No solicitation signs. [13:35.160 --> 13:36.160] Unclean hands. [13:36.160 --> 13:39.160] That's trying to unclean hands. [13:39.160 --> 13:40.160] That's... [13:40.160 --> 13:43.160] Okay, you need to research unclean hands. [13:43.160 --> 13:47.160] I don't believe that will go to unclean hands. [13:47.160 --> 13:53.160] Behringer v. Hoffman is the case he brought out, and said, I have a specific case for [13:53.160 --> 13:54.160] that. [13:54.160 --> 13:56.160] Interestingly, I didn't know what it was until I came home. [13:56.160 --> 13:58.160] I looked at it, like, I cannot find this case anywhere. [13:58.160 --> 14:01.160] Then I found out that this case is unpublished. [14:01.160 --> 14:03.160] It's an unpublished, apolitical opinion. [14:03.160 --> 14:07.160] He never said in the hearings that the case was unpublished. [14:07.160 --> 14:14.160] And for North Carolina apolitical ruling, procedure number 30E... [14:14.160 --> 14:18.160] It requires an attorney to present... [14:18.160 --> 14:26.160] When he presents an unpublished case, they're supposed to declare or make it a known... [14:26.160 --> 14:28.160] Unpublished opinion. [14:28.160 --> 14:35.160] You need to bar grieve him for failure to speak with candor to the court. [14:35.160 --> 14:36.160] Okay. [14:36.160 --> 14:37.160] That's a nice way. [14:37.160 --> 14:41.160] That's a legal way of saying he lied like a dog. [14:41.160 --> 14:43.160] He lied by omission. [14:43.160 --> 14:52.160] He presented the case as if it were controlling case law when it was merely advisory. [14:52.160 --> 14:53.160] Exactly. [14:53.160 --> 14:55.160] He did not say anything about it. [14:55.160 --> 15:00.160] And he did second time with the adverse possession, saying, oh, have a specific case to that effect. [15:00.160 --> 15:01.160] And same thing. [15:01.160 --> 15:03.160] And again, he gave it to us. [15:03.160 --> 15:04.160] Like, I didn't think... [15:04.160 --> 15:06.160] And that was all the cases in North Carolina. [15:06.160 --> 15:08.160] Like, how is this the same thing? [15:08.160 --> 15:09.160] It was unpublished. [15:09.160 --> 15:10.160] He never said it was unpublished. [15:10.160 --> 15:13.160] And just went with it as if it was a controlling opinion. [15:13.160 --> 15:15.160] And the judge just took it. [15:15.160 --> 15:17.160] He's like, oh, you know, he paid more attention to the lawyer. [15:17.160 --> 15:23.160] He did a better job presenting because he can't, you know, just like he said, they practiced it and they know how it's come about. [15:23.160 --> 15:25.160] And he, the lawyer, he did a really good job of... [15:25.160 --> 15:31.160] He was going off the affidavit of the defendant, took everything the defendant said, like any little negative thing, [15:31.160 --> 15:35.160] but it was true or not, it was considered a fact because he wasn't in the affidavit. [15:35.160 --> 15:38.160] And he presented that in a very negative... [15:38.160 --> 15:39.160] You can fix that. [15:39.160 --> 15:41.160] Negative case against... [15:41.160 --> 15:43.160] Yeah, yeah, and we can fix it. [15:43.160 --> 15:51.160] File an amended motion for summary judgment. [15:51.160 --> 15:57.160] Let me just do this again. [15:57.160 --> 16:00.160] I can file an affidavit of my own too, even though it's just... [16:00.160 --> 16:07.160] File an amended motion for summary judgment with the affidavit and everything you need. [16:07.160 --> 16:09.160] Okay, okay. [16:09.160 --> 16:11.160] That's part of what that's for. [16:11.160 --> 16:13.160] This is a civil case. [16:13.160 --> 16:20.160] And in civil cases, they don't like someone to win by bushwhack. [16:20.160 --> 16:31.160] So since the lawyer quoted case law that was not controlling and presented as if it was controlling, [16:31.160 --> 16:36.160] that's grounds for a motion for reconsideration. [16:36.160 --> 16:41.160] But instead of a motion for reconsideration, just file an amended pleading. [16:41.160 --> 16:46.160] You know, the criticism of the court and opposing counsel are well taken. [16:46.160 --> 16:49.160] So we're filing this amended motion for summary judgment. [16:49.160 --> 16:50.160] Hang on. [16:50.160 --> 16:51.160] Going to break. [16:51.160 --> 16:52.160] Randy Kelton. [16:52.160 --> 16:53.160] Derby Stevens. [16:53.160 --> 17:01.160] Rule of Law Radio, we'll be right back. [17:01.160 --> 17:05.160] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic similar. [17:05.160 --> 17:09.160] In America, we live in an us against them society, and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [17:09.160 --> 17:12.160] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [17:12.160 --> 17:15.160] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [17:15.160 --> 17:19.160] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [17:19.160 --> 17:25.160] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [17:25.160 --> 17:30.160] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [17:30.160 --> 17:34.160] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [17:34.160 --> 17:38.160] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [17:38.160 --> 17:40.160] and ordering your copy today. 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[19:05.160 --> 19:09.160] LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:09.160 --> 19:14.160] Logos Radio Network [19:39.160 --> 19:51.160] The judge is there to find the most mutual legal remedy. [19:51.160 --> 19:54.160] He wants this. They don't like surprise. [19:54.160 --> 19:57.160] They don't like it when someone doesn't get to present their side. [19:57.160 --> 19:59.160] That's what the judge does. [19:59.160 --> 20:04.160] He takes the facts and all on one side, the facts and all on the other side, [20:04.160 --> 20:11.160] and then he puts them together and tries to find the best remedy. [20:11.160 --> 20:17.160] So he doesn't like it when someone comes in and doesn't bring them everything he needs. [20:17.160 --> 20:23.160] So when they do the hearing, everything the judge is doing is instruction. [20:23.160 --> 20:28.160] When you go to a hearing and your motion or pleading is deficient, [20:28.160 --> 20:31.160] don't get too excited about that. [20:31.160 --> 20:38.160] Because when the judge rules, if he doesn't dismiss something with prejudice, [20:38.160 --> 20:41.160] then you can come back in and find an amendment. [20:41.160 --> 20:44.160] And in motions you can always find an amendment. [20:44.160 --> 20:50.160] So when I do that, I always start out with the court [20:50.160 --> 20:56.160] and opposing counsel's criticisms are well taken. [20:56.160 --> 21:03.160] Therefore, I'm filing this amended pleading to correct deficiencies of the proceeding document. [21:03.160 --> 21:07.160] When you file an amendment, the original one is gone. [21:07.160 --> 21:11.160] So nothing in the original counts anymore. [21:11.160 --> 21:15.160] So everything you want, you have to put in the second one. [21:15.160 --> 21:20.160] I've actually seen documents where a lawyer filed an amended pleading [21:20.160 --> 21:25.160] and he only put in what he wanted to change and left out everything else. [21:25.160 --> 21:33.160] So when you file an amended, the original is the judge can no longer see it. [21:33.160 --> 21:36.160] Everything has to be in the second one. [21:36.160 --> 21:41.160] So take the second one, keep everything that's important, [21:41.160 --> 21:44.160] and just change what needs to be changed and file it as amended. [21:44.160 --> 21:46.160] Does that make sense? [21:46.160 --> 21:51.160] Well, when you say pleading, I'm thinking complaints, answers to complaints. [21:51.160 --> 21:58.160] When you say motion, I'm thinking motion puts on a judgment. [21:58.160 --> 22:03.160] Okay, what you could do first is a motion for reconsideration [22:03.160 --> 22:14.160] by showing that the case law cited by the lawyer is not controlling case law. [22:14.160 --> 22:15.160] It was that. [22:15.160 --> 22:19.160] And let me just often one more think that he also misconstrued what the case said. [22:19.160 --> 22:24.160] The doctor on clean hands, the trial court and the athletic court have held [22:24.160 --> 22:27.160] that the both parties had to clean their hands. [22:27.160 --> 22:30.160] He didn't say that in the hearing. [22:30.160 --> 22:36.160] He said that it kind of discounts my request because my hands are unclean [22:36.160 --> 22:42.160] rather than saying that, oh, you know, we have to clean our hands before they can. [22:42.160 --> 22:47.160] What he's saying is just because you don't have clean hands, [22:47.160 --> 22:51.160] that doesn't make it all right for the other side to have clean hands. [22:51.160 --> 22:59.160] Both sides should clean their hands, but you don't have to clean your hands unless it's pled. [22:59.160 --> 23:03.160] That had to come in a counterclaim. [23:03.160 --> 23:06.160] And he made no counterclaim. [23:06.160 --> 23:10.160] He just made an argument. [23:10.160 --> 23:14.160] So your unclean hands is not before the court. [23:14.160 --> 23:25.160] That should get an objection that he brought this into the court at the last moment as a surprise. [23:25.160 --> 23:27.160] Well, he did kind of claim that we have chickens. [23:27.160 --> 23:29.160] He also kind of claimed that we have signs. [23:29.160 --> 23:31.160] So he did kind of claim those. [23:31.160 --> 23:32.160] Those were kind of claims. [23:32.160 --> 23:37.160] Those are the first thing that was the signs and the chickens is what all they had to [23:37.160 --> 23:38.160] come to claim with. [23:38.160 --> 23:43.160] And then we had animals, which was the chickens. [23:43.160 --> 23:48.160] Did he file an action to force you to get rid of the chickens in the signs? [23:48.160 --> 23:49.160] No. [23:49.160 --> 23:52.160] Did he just claim that you had them? [23:52.160 --> 23:53.160] Exactly. [23:53.160 --> 23:57.160] Because we don't have the right to ask for them not to have the fence because we have [23:57.160 --> 23:59.160] unclean hands, which is not what the case said. [23:59.160 --> 24:02.160] The case said that both parties were required to clean their hands. [24:02.160 --> 24:04.160] And that's the trial for all of them to do. [24:04.160 --> 24:08.160] And I even said in the hearing, I said, you know, the chickens we have four, my kids are [24:08.160 --> 24:09.160] already going out. [24:09.160 --> 24:11.160] I'm willing to donate them to somebody else. [24:11.160 --> 24:13.160] I'm willing to, you know, to give up the chickens. [24:13.160 --> 24:14.160] We don't even have the signs. [24:14.160 --> 24:15.160] We took the signs down. [24:15.160 --> 24:17.160] But I didn't put it in the affidavit. [24:17.160 --> 24:20.160] So it wasn't considered a fact because it was not affidavit. [24:20.160 --> 24:21.160] Okay. [24:21.160 --> 24:24.160] So that's what your amended pleading would be for. [24:24.160 --> 24:28.160] Just put all that in the amended pleading. [24:28.160 --> 24:36.160] And raise the issue that there was no, nothing pled to the court about your chickens and [24:36.160 --> 24:41.160] signs other than that you had them. [24:41.160 --> 24:49.160] The opposing party did not follow a request that the court ruled that you have unclean [24:49.160 --> 24:52.160] hands and you must remove the chickens. [24:52.160 --> 24:59.160] So they're irrelevant. [24:59.160 --> 25:00.160] Okay. [25:00.160 --> 25:01.160] Okay. [25:01.160 --> 25:05.160] If he wanted, if he wanted the chickens gone, he could have asked for it, but he didn't. [25:05.160 --> 25:13.160] What he wanted was both parties to be able to ignore the deductions. [25:13.160 --> 25:14.160] Correct. [25:14.160 --> 25:23.160] And, you know, even if we bring it back to the court from just how I sense the judge, [25:23.160 --> 25:28.160] he, you know, at the very end, he would, he denied all my requests. [25:28.160 --> 25:35.160] But he did affirm and grant his request to compel me for discovery. [25:35.160 --> 25:40.160] And his, his answer to that, the judge's answer to that was, okay, yeah. [25:40.160 --> 25:45.160] In the context of summary judgment, all the material issues are known. [25:45.160 --> 25:50.160] But in the bigger context of the entire case, he can continue discovery. [25:50.160 --> 25:55.160] So he denied my motion to sanction him for a privileged discovery request. [25:55.160 --> 26:02.160] He denied that and he granted the defendant's counsel for continuing, for compel me to [26:02.160 --> 26:05.160] answer questions in more detail. [26:05.160 --> 26:07.160] And that's why I'm answering these questions in more detail. [26:07.160 --> 26:09.160] Hence my email, I send you. [26:09.160 --> 26:13.160] So, you know, ask people, list of realtors that he could depose. [26:13.160 --> 26:20.160] So get a realtor to look at it and say, yeah, if I brought a client here and they saw that [26:20.160 --> 26:27.160] nasty looking fence, they would not be happy and it would affect what I could get as [26:27.160 --> 26:29.160] toward fair market value. [26:29.160 --> 26:31.160] That's all you need. [26:31.160 --> 26:33.160] Okay, yeah, that's true. [26:33.160 --> 26:34.160] All right. [26:34.160 --> 26:37.160] I just didn't want to bring out people into the whole thing, but I have, I have a couple [26:37.160 --> 26:38.160] that would probably do it. [26:38.160 --> 26:39.160] I just didn't want them to do it. [26:39.160 --> 26:46.160] And amend all the issues, you know, challenge that case law, ask for sanctions for the bad [26:46.160 --> 26:48.160] case law. [26:48.160 --> 26:53.160] And what discovery has he requested from you? [26:53.160 --> 26:59.160] It was basically I already answered the interrogaries and he wanted, he felt that the answers were [26:59.160 --> 27:00.160] incomplete. [27:00.160 --> 27:06.160] Like he wanted a list of, you know, realtors or he wanted an answer on whether the disputed [27:06.160 --> 27:09.160] land area was in a war on CDs. [27:09.160 --> 27:15.160] And my answer was that it's in the public record and you can, you can, it's available [27:15.160 --> 27:18.160] for everybody. [27:18.160 --> 27:20.160] Yeah, he has equal access. [27:20.160 --> 27:25.160] But the judge still, still overruled and said that he should answer, he should answer the [27:25.160 --> 27:26.160] questions. [27:26.160 --> 27:30.160] Yeah, just send him a warranty deed to the property. [27:30.160 --> 27:33.160] You can get that from the public record. [27:33.160 --> 27:34.160] He actually has it. [27:34.160 --> 27:37.160] He was just, basically, let me just add one more thing. [27:37.160 --> 27:39.160] North Carolina on adverse possession. [27:39.160 --> 27:45.160] Basically, you know, with headless drug, by the way, we have this encouragement right [27:45.160 --> 27:49.160] onto the defendant's property and it's only few square feet. [27:49.160 --> 27:54.160] If you just look at the part of the asphalt portion, it couldn't be more than maybe five, [27:54.160 --> 27:56.160] maybe seven, eight square feet. [27:56.160 --> 27:59.160] It's a particular small amount, right? [27:59.160 --> 28:01.160] There you go, small amount. [28:01.160 --> 28:10.160] North Carolina's position on adverse possession is that if you have successive owners, if [28:10.160 --> 28:15.160] you don't have just one person who has adverse possession for 20 years, if you have successive [28:15.160 --> 28:19.160] owners, you can tag the possession of prior owners. [28:19.160 --> 28:27.160] But the tagging or the requirement is that a disputed land area is mentioned in a warranty [28:27.160 --> 28:28.160] deed. [28:28.160 --> 28:32.160] If it's not mentioned in a warranty deed, then it's pretty much disregarded. [28:32.160 --> 28:39.160] It's like, okay, you don't have privity because you have not mentioned in a warranty deed. [28:39.160 --> 28:41.160] So North Carolina's pretty strict about it. [28:41.160 --> 28:44.160] That's kind of what the cases have said. [28:44.160 --> 28:47.160] They're probably one of the strictest in the whole country on that. [28:47.160 --> 28:55.160] And it just makes it really hard because, again, it's been put in by the builders 22 [28:55.160 --> 28:56.160] years ago. [28:56.160 --> 28:58.160] And that's who installed it. [28:58.160 --> 28:59.160] We had nothing to do with it. [28:59.160 --> 29:00.160] We didn't want to study by his land. [29:00.160 --> 29:05.160] We actually think he's just offering them whatever probably is the more worth the [29:05.160 --> 29:08.160] minute, more than $100, the little piece of land. [29:08.160 --> 29:10.160] It's just ridiculous, right? [29:10.160 --> 29:11.160] Yes. [29:11.160 --> 29:12.160] It's ridiculous. [29:12.160 --> 29:13.160] Okay. [29:13.160 --> 29:18.160] That's probably the judge's likely to rule against that anyway because he'll recognize [29:18.160 --> 29:20.160] it as frivolous. [29:20.160 --> 29:21.160] Yeah. [29:21.160 --> 29:22.160] Yeah. [29:22.160 --> 29:25.160] He did not because they were asking if they can. [29:25.160 --> 29:32.160] So, actually, his request was plaintiffs remove the driveway encroachment on the [29:32.160 --> 29:35.160] finance property and the judge denied it. [29:35.160 --> 29:42.160] And then the judge asked the attorney at the very end, you know, he denied everything, [29:42.160 --> 29:45.160] the only thing he granted was the motions to compel. [29:45.160 --> 29:49.160] He asked the attorney to normal case, right? [29:49.160 --> 29:51.160] That was after the attorney to write up the order. [29:51.160 --> 29:55.160] The attorney didn't say it to me and he said, yeah, you're okay with that. [29:55.160 --> 29:56.160] And I said, listen, you're adding into it. [29:56.160 --> 30:01.160] He was adding new language where he was saying that. [30:01.160 --> 30:08.160] PowerPoint is crept into our lives and reached the level of near obsession in corporate America. [30:08.160 --> 30:10.160] Are we going overboard with it? [30:10.160 --> 30:15.160] I've got your Catherine Albrecht back with a commentary on how PowerPoint erodes critical [30:15.160 --> 30:16.160] thinking. [30:16.160 --> 30:17.160] Next. [30:17.160 --> 30:19.160] Privacy is under attack. [30:19.160 --> 30:23.160] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:23.160 --> 30:28.160] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:28.160 --> 30:29.160] So protect your rights. [30:29.160 --> 30:33.160] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:33.160 --> 30:34.160] Privacy. [30:34.160 --> 30:35.160] It's worth hanging onto. [30:35.160 --> 30:41.160] This message is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to [30:41.160 --> 30:43.160] Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:43.160 --> 30:46.160] Start over with Start Page. [30:46.160 --> 30:50.160] We've all experienced it, death by PowerPoint. [30:50.160 --> 30:55.160] Microsoft's presentation program has turned countless meetings into mind-numbing boredom. [30:55.160 --> 30:56.160] Got a product idea? [30:56.160 --> 30:57.160] Do a PowerPoint. [30:57.160 --> 30:58.160] Trouble in the battlefield? [30:58.160 --> 30:59.160] PowerPoint again. [30:59.160 --> 31:00.160] Ugg. [31:00.160 --> 31:05.160] Unless it's creatively spipped up with lots of pictures, PowerPoint can be the death of [31:05.160 --> 31:06.160] a meeting. [31:06.160 --> 31:11.160] It relieves the lazy speaker from having to actually write a thoughtful speech or convey a persuasive [31:11.160 --> 31:12.160] argument. [31:12.160 --> 31:16.160] Too often, instead of analysis, we get mind-numbing bullet points. [31:16.160 --> 31:20.160] The key is never to put your speech up on the screen. [31:20.160 --> 31:24.160] Use lots of pictures and never, ever, never read from a slide. [31:24.160 --> 31:31.160] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.160 --> 31:32.160] I lost my son. [31:32.160 --> 31:33.160] My uncle. [31:33.160 --> 31:34.160] My uncle. [31:34.160 --> 31:35.160] On September 11, 2001. [31:35.160 --> 31:39.160] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:39.160 --> 31:43.160] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:43.160 --> 31:47.160] I will be official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. [31:47.160 --> 31:52.160] Over 1,200 architects and engineers looked into the evidence and believed there is more [31:52.160 --> 31:53.160] to the story. [31:53.160 --> 31:54.160] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.160 --> 31:55.160] My uncle. [31:55.160 --> 31:56.160] My nephew. [31:56.160 --> 31:57.160] My son. [31:57.160 --> 31:58.160] Go to building what.org. [31:58.160 --> 32:01.160] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.160 --> 32:03.160] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:03.160 --> 32:06.160] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:06.160 --> 32:10.160] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting [32:10.160 --> 32:11.160] them to pay for it. [32:11.160 --> 32:14.160] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:14.160 --> 32:18.160] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [32:18.160 --> 32:21.160] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:21.160 --> 32:25.160] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [32:25.160 --> 32:26.160] zero complaints. [32:26.160 --> 32:31.160] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the [32:31.160 --> 32:32.160] first time. [32:32.160 --> 32:39.160] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:39.160 --> 32:41.160] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. [32:41.160 --> 32:46.160] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [32:46.160 --> 32:51.160] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:51.160 --> 32:57.160] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:57.160 --> 32:59.160] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:59.160 --> 33:02.160] We're not actually kidding about chemtrails. [33:29.160 --> 33:40.160] Okay, we are back. [33:40.160 --> 33:42.160] Libby, we do need to wrap this up. [33:42.160 --> 33:45.160] I got a board full of callers. [33:45.160 --> 33:46.160] Thank you, Brandy. [33:46.160 --> 33:47.160] I will let you go. [33:47.160 --> 33:49.160] I appreciate all the help. [33:49.160 --> 33:55.160] Okay, but look at putting together an amended motion for summary judgment. [33:55.160 --> 33:58.160] And I have to have another hearing now for that too, right? [33:58.160 --> 34:00.160] Wait, say that again? [34:00.160 --> 34:02.160] I would have to have another hearing, right? [34:02.160 --> 34:06.160] Yeah, you just follow the amended and then set another hearing for it. [34:06.160 --> 34:09.160] And make sure you bargreeze the lawyer. [34:09.160 --> 34:12.160] I would do bargreeze him once. [34:12.160 --> 34:13.160] Good, thank you. [34:13.160 --> 34:17.160] That's really making him happy. [34:17.160 --> 34:23.160] You might wind up with a new attorney because he may quit. [34:23.160 --> 34:32.160] I can tell you, hands up for the attorney because he's so devoted to this client that he'll break rule, [34:32.160 --> 34:37.160] which completely just, and there's nothing special about them. [34:37.160 --> 34:39.160] It just completely amazes me. [34:39.160 --> 34:44.160] I mean, he's just completely just over the board. [34:44.160 --> 34:50.160] When this is over and you need a lawyer next time, go get this guy. [34:50.160 --> 34:57.160] I don't know if he's going to hire me since I bargreeze him, but I would love to because he goes just way overboard. [34:57.160 --> 34:59.160] As a realtor, I would never do that. [34:59.160 --> 35:06.160] I would be the special of the opposing party that I'm working with, but no, this guy is just ruthless. [35:06.160 --> 35:11.160] If I thought that, then I'd like to screw around with him. [35:11.160 --> 35:17.160] I would tell him, next time I need an attorney, I'm going to come to you. [35:17.160 --> 35:20.160] You really fight for your clients. [35:20.160 --> 35:22.160] You like you. [35:22.160 --> 35:26.160] It's harder to screw you around. [35:26.160 --> 35:28.160] Yeah, exactly. [35:28.160 --> 35:33.160] If you drop the case without prejudice, we can always bring it back, right? [35:33.160 --> 35:35.160] Yeah. [35:35.160 --> 35:36.160] Okay. [35:36.160 --> 35:39.160] Without prejudice, you can come back and refile. [35:39.160 --> 35:40.160] Refile. [35:40.160 --> 35:47.160] Just basically clean it up. [35:47.160 --> 35:50.160] This is kind of intended. [35:50.160 --> 35:54.160] The judge in the hearing, he tells both parties, I have people complaining, [35:54.160 --> 35:57.160] oh, the judge was giving the other side legal advice. [35:57.160 --> 35:59.160] Yeah, that's what they do. [35:59.160 --> 36:02.160] They give both sides legal advice. [36:02.160 --> 36:08.160] This is what you didn't give me so I can give you a good ruling. [36:08.160 --> 36:14.160] And he's telling you that so that you can amend your pleadings to give him what he needs. [36:14.160 --> 36:16.160] Okay, okay. [36:16.160 --> 36:19.160] I don't have to do that, but that would be like last resort, [36:19.160 --> 36:22.160] like drop it and just come back to life later. [36:22.160 --> 36:33.160] And I always put that qualification in the front that opposing counsel and the court's criticisms are well taken. [36:33.160 --> 36:40.160] That tells the judge you're paying attention and you're not just there to have a fight that you're trying to find an equitable answer. [36:40.160 --> 36:47.160] It diffuses a lot of the attention the judge has because you're prosaic. [36:47.160 --> 36:51.160] You stroke both sides and then you're not such a bad guy even though you're prosaic. [36:51.160 --> 36:57.160] They think all prosaic are attack dogs. [36:57.160 --> 36:59.160] They do not. [36:59.160 --> 37:04.160] He actually complimented me and my husband because we did a really good job of being prosaic. [37:04.160 --> 37:06.160] He actually said at the end, I'm very impressed. [37:06.160 --> 37:08.160] You guys did a fantastic job. [37:08.160 --> 37:10.160] So we did and we were respectful. [37:10.160 --> 37:18.160] The only thing I messed up one time I said judge and then he said his name, not saying honor, because that I really happen to say honor. [37:18.160 --> 37:19.160] No, no, no. [37:19.160 --> 37:25.160] There's new rules down that the courts are downplaying that. [37:25.160 --> 37:32.160] If you say judge, that's fine. In pleadings, they're saying don't put the honorable judge so-and-so. [37:32.160 --> 37:35.160] Just put judge so-and-so. [37:35.160 --> 37:36.160] So they're not. [37:36.160 --> 37:38.160] They don't get excited about that. [37:38.160 --> 37:39.160] Okay, good. [37:39.160 --> 37:43.160] Because my hand goes to the judge and I go, oh. [37:43.160 --> 37:45.160] That is not going to take that person. [37:45.160 --> 37:48.160] The whole meeting was more like a business meeting. [37:48.160 --> 37:49.160] Everybody was very friendly. [37:49.160 --> 37:53.160] Even the chancellor, even though he said all the negative things, it was very friendly. [37:53.160 --> 37:56.160] It went overall, it was a good mood, you know? [37:56.160 --> 37:57.160] Okay, good. [37:57.160 --> 37:58.160] Okay, good. [37:58.160 --> 38:02.160] Listen, everybody who's listening, this is what I'm trying to get people to understand. [38:02.160 --> 38:12.160] When you are prosecuted for traffic, the judges and the prosecutors are just horrendous jerks. [38:12.160 --> 38:17.160] When you're in the JP courts and the municipal courts, they're horrible. [38:17.160 --> 38:26.160] But when you move up above that into the higher courts, the county courts and district courts, you get pros. [38:26.160 --> 38:30.160] They're professionals and they treat you much different. [38:30.160 --> 38:34.160] The county court's not as good because it gets a lot of the crazies still. [38:34.160 --> 38:43.160] The district court, when you come to the district court with a civil issue, they're generally very civil. [38:43.160 --> 38:44.160] Yeah. [38:44.160 --> 38:47.160] This is all business. There's nothing personal here. [38:47.160 --> 38:52.160] The judge, he's here trying to find an equitable solution for both sides. [38:52.160 --> 38:59.160] So if you're tuned to be a little bit afraid of the courts, that's because you've been in the traffic courts. [38:59.160 --> 39:04.160] When you get above the traffic courts, it's a whole other animal. [39:04.160 --> 39:08.160] And even when you get up there, the judges have to be careful. [39:08.160 --> 39:15.160] I get a nasty judge in a higher jurisdiction and I was in Conroe, Texas, and I filed a habeas corpus. [39:15.160 --> 39:21.160] And they told me the judge has given it to Montgomery with some meanest judge in the district. [39:21.160 --> 39:29.160] I go into the courtroom and they were having a murder trial and finished interviewing a witness, sent out the jury, [39:29.160 --> 39:32.160] and the judge said, are you Randall Kelton? [39:32.160 --> 39:33.160] Yes, I am. [39:33.160 --> 39:35.160] Did you file this habeas corpus? [39:35.160 --> 39:36.160] Yes. [39:36.160 --> 39:38.160] I did. [39:38.160 --> 39:41.160] Mr. Kelton, are you an attorney? Oh, no judge. [39:41.160 --> 39:44.160] I sleep well at night and keep my hands in my own pockets. [39:44.160 --> 39:46.160] Thank you very much. [39:46.160 --> 39:49.160] Oh, he didn't take that well. [39:49.160 --> 39:53.160] He said, since you're not an attorney, I'm not going to accept this habeas. [39:53.160 --> 39:56.160] I turned to the bailiff. Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? [39:56.160 --> 39:58.160] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. [39:58.160 --> 40:01.160] Arrest that judge. [40:01.160 --> 40:05.160] And when I said that, the judge shut his mouth. [40:05.160 --> 40:07.160] And the bailiff wouldn't arrest the judge. [40:07.160 --> 40:14.160] The judge finally said, Mr. Bailiff, if Mr. Kelton doesn't leave my courtroom, you're to arrest him. [40:14.160 --> 40:17.160] I said, with all due respect, Your Honor, that's cheating. [40:17.160 --> 40:20.160] And you picked up the gavel and held it up. [40:20.160 --> 40:23.160] He said, maybe, but I got the gavel. [40:23.160 --> 40:25.160] Good point. [40:25.160 --> 40:27.160] And I left. [40:27.160 --> 40:34.160] But when I filed my habeas with the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which is the highest court in Texas for criminal, [40:34.160 --> 40:42.160] I charged the judge with official misconduct, with official oppression, class A misdemeanor, and asked them to indict him. [40:42.160 --> 40:45.160] You want to play hardball, Bubba? [40:45.160 --> 40:48.160] We'll take you to the deep end of the pool. [40:48.160 --> 40:50.160] And this is the highest court in Texas. [40:50.160 --> 41:01.160] Now, I didn't get him indicted, but I got to waive his bad behavior before the nine highest judges in Texas [41:01.160 --> 41:05.160] and gave him a real black eye. [41:05.160 --> 41:20.160] When I do the presentment on due process, we'll talk about how you will never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [41:20.160 --> 41:23.160] You win your case, you have the politics on your side. [41:23.160 --> 41:25.160] And that went to politics. [41:25.160 --> 41:32.160] I wound up getting all of the highest judges in Texas presented to a grand jury with that presentment. [41:32.160 --> 41:34.160] That was big time political. [41:34.160 --> 41:35.160] Okay. [41:35.160 --> 41:37.160] I do need to move along. [41:37.160 --> 41:38.160] I'll let you go. [41:38.160 --> 41:50.160] I just want to add one more thing, but it's really helped to go to the court before that and see how the whole, the atmosphere in the court is and how the whole thing is being handled. [41:50.160 --> 41:56.160] It really helped me out and also to see the lawyers sweat because some of them did and what they were shaking. [41:56.160 --> 42:05.160] It helped to see that, that some people come really nervous into the court and just to see the whole mood of the hearing before mine was there. [42:05.160 --> 42:08.160] I really have just an advice for everybody else who's going to court. [42:08.160 --> 42:09.160] Check it out before. [42:09.160 --> 42:13.160] Don't go there first because it really kind of relaxes you when you go the next day. [42:13.160 --> 42:14.160] Absolutely. [42:14.160 --> 42:21.160] If you watch what goes on, it will make it easier for you to go in and present your case. [42:21.160 --> 42:26.160] Once you've watched how things work, you get a good feel for how things go. [42:26.160 --> 42:34.160] And mainly you'll see that the judges are not generals up there ordering everybody around. [42:34.160 --> 42:39.160] This is all business and the judge is just a mediator between the two parties. [42:39.160 --> 42:47.160] It's not as hard as lawyers lead us to believe to represent yourself in court. [42:47.160 --> 42:54.160] With that said, legally it takes a lot of research, a lot of work because it is very technical. [42:54.160 --> 42:59.160] But it should not be something that would frighten you. [42:59.160 --> 43:00.160] Exactly. [43:00.160 --> 43:01.160] I totally agree. [43:01.160 --> 43:02.160] That's a huge help. [43:02.160 --> 43:03.160] Thank you so much, Andy. [43:03.160 --> 43:04.160] I have to go. [43:04.160 --> 43:05.160] Okay. [43:05.160 --> 43:08.160] Keep us up to date on how this is going. [43:08.160 --> 43:09.160] Thank you. [43:09.160 --> 43:10.160] Okay. [43:10.160 --> 43:11.160] Thank you, Olivia. [43:11.160 --> 43:17.160] Now we're going to go to James and Carla in Illinois. [43:17.160 --> 43:19.160] They are first time callers. [43:19.160 --> 43:21.160] Hello, this is Randy Kelton. [43:21.160 --> 43:24.160] What do you have for us today? [43:24.160 --> 43:27.160] Well, Mr. Kelton, my name is Carla Walters. [43:27.160 --> 43:31.160] My husband is James Walters and we live in the state of Illinois. [43:31.160 --> 43:38.160] We happen to see your program on the website and thought we would give you our story. [43:38.160 --> 43:43.160] First of all, let me say that we have been fighting this case for 12 years in court of [43:43.160 --> 43:44.160] false foreclosure. [43:44.160 --> 43:46.160] It's a fraud. [43:46.160 --> 43:52.160] We were first victims of a group called Operation Home Record, which was prosecuted in eastern [43:52.160 --> 43:57.160] California successfully between 2006 and 2008. [43:57.160 --> 43:58.160] Hang on. [43:58.160 --> 44:01.160] We've got to go to break, be right back. [44:01.160 --> 44:04.160] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.160 --> 44:09.160] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. 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[44:43.160 --> 44:46.160] Call us at 512-646-6440. [44:46.160 --> 44:51.160] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, Suite A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:51.160 --> 44:54.160] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.160 --> 44:59.160] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-6440. [44:59.160 --> 45:04.160] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.160 --> 45:10.160] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD [45:10.160 --> 45:15.160] course that will show you how, in 24 hours, you step by step. [45:15.160 --> 45:19.160] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.160 --> 45:23.160] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.160 --> 45:28.160] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.160 --> 45:34.160] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.160 --> 45:39.160] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.160 --> 45:43.160] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.160 --> 45:49.160] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.160 --> 45:55.160] process tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [45:55.160 --> 46:20.160] and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:25.160 --> 46:41.160] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton with our radio, and I got so excited. [46:41.160 --> 46:46.160] We got a new caller that I wasn't paying too much attention to the clock, [46:46.160 --> 46:48.160] and my producer had to warn me. [46:48.160 --> 46:52.160] I tend to fall off the cliff on occasion, and I get in trouble over that. [46:52.160 --> 47:00.160] I get too excited. Okay, foreclosure issue. How long have you been fighting this? [47:00.160 --> 47:04.160] Since 2005. [47:04.160 --> 47:08.160] Wow. Okay. [47:08.160 --> 47:13.160] Successfully until yesterday when they illegally evicted us. [47:13.160 --> 47:15.160] Oh, they did evict you. [47:15.160 --> 47:23.160] Okay. What claims have you made? [47:23.160 --> 47:29.160] Well, first of all, I have proof that we own the house and the bank doesn't. [47:29.160 --> 47:34.160] Second of all, we originally belonged to the criminal part of this case, [47:34.160 --> 47:38.160] which was fought in Eastern California. As we know, we're in Illinois. [47:38.160 --> 47:46.160] We were one of 300 victims. This case was entitled by the FBI, IRS, and U.S. Attorney General Robert's [47:46.160 --> 47:53.160] Operation Home Wrecker. It had 18 defendants, between 16 and 18 defendants, [47:53.160 --> 48:01.160] 16,000 pages of paperwork. It was fought from 2008 to 2014. [48:01.160 --> 48:08.160] All the criminals went to jail. The two main perpetrators, the brothers, went for 35 years apiece, [48:08.160 --> 48:14.160] and restitution was ordered for the 300 victims, of which we are one, across the country. [48:14.160 --> 48:20.160] They were only interested in going after childhood and the individuals that he was representing. [48:20.160 --> 48:23.160] They didn't go after the banks. They didn't go after the title companies. [48:23.160 --> 48:27.160] They didn't go after the straw buyers. But this is all connected into it. [48:27.160 --> 48:31.160] At the same time that this happened, and they sent a letter to us, [48:31.160 --> 48:35.160] you know, you have restitution, you're a victim in this case, et cetera, [48:35.160 --> 48:40.160] we were fighting the civil part of this case in Illinois. [48:40.160 --> 48:45.160] The civil part of this case was being carried on by Deutsche Bank, Chase Bank, and Long Beach Mortgage, [48:45.160 --> 48:51.160] who were tied into this between the straw buyers, Long Beach being tied into it through Childshead [48:51.160 --> 48:57.160] and his individuals, and then Chase Bank and Deutsche Bank being tied into it by City Corp [48:57.160 --> 49:03.160] and City Bank and Countrywide. So I have all of this. So I have all this proof. [49:03.160 --> 49:08.160] I have the government on my side. They have been fighting this royally, [49:08.160 --> 49:12.160] presenting documents in court with and without attorneys. [49:12.160 --> 49:17.160] In other words, I had attorneys representing me, and I had to do pro-state on top of it, [49:17.160 --> 49:24.160] all the way up until 2013, every judge that we stepped in front of, [49:24.160 --> 49:28.160] no matter who they sent for their attorneys, the attorneys either quit [49:28.160 --> 49:32.160] when the judge said, I'm not going to foreclose. I'm not going to summer judgment. [49:32.160 --> 49:35.160] You can't evict these people. There's a fraud going on here. [49:35.160 --> 49:41.160] They would step up and send more lawyers after us. Then they started playing dirty. [49:41.160 --> 49:49.160] In 2013, they started sending people over to our house to physically violate us, [49:49.160 --> 49:55.160] actually mess with our utilities, actually turn around and threaten us with bodily harm, [49:55.160 --> 49:59.160] actually break into our cars, break into our house, [49:59.160 --> 50:04.160] steal my husband's wallet for a year and a half so they could get information, [50:04.160 --> 50:08.160] threaten us on the phone, threaten us in court. It was unbelievable. [50:08.160 --> 50:11.160] Have you taken this to the feds? [50:11.160 --> 50:14.160] It's in the internet with our reputation and everything. It's just like a Tom Clancy novel. [50:14.160 --> 50:19.160] So they started doing that. Okay, we had no lights in October, [50:19.160 --> 50:24.160] and they tried to do an illegal sheriff's sale. That was stopped immediately [50:24.160 --> 50:29.160] because I contacted my attorney after talking to my representative in Eastern California [50:29.160 --> 50:33.160] from the U.S. Attorney General's Office who fought Operation Homewrecker, [50:33.160 --> 50:38.160] and she said, that's a fraud. They can't do that. That's illegal. [50:38.160 --> 50:41.160] So I went to go straighten that out and the judge did it. [50:41.160 --> 50:44.160] Then they tried to throw my husband out of the house. [50:44.160 --> 50:49.160] My husband not only has the legal right to be in the house with me, he is my husband, [50:49.160 --> 50:53.160] but he's also on every piece of documentation. He, my ex-husband, and myself. [50:53.160 --> 50:57.160] We are all on paperwork from this court case going through. [50:57.160 --> 51:03.160] So we have all of that. All right. So then I'm going to the appellate court [51:03.160 --> 51:07.160] and I'm trying to present my paperwork all from the government. [51:07.160 --> 51:09.160] The opposing counsel pops up and says, [51:09.160 --> 51:13.160] oh, Your Honor, this is a no-win void because it's hearsay. [51:13.160 --> 51:16.160] These people are alleging they were victim. [51:16.160 --> 51:20.160] There's no alleging when you're standing there with documents from the FBI that says, [51:20.160 --> 51:26.160] Mr. and Mrs. Watkins and Mr. Walters and Mrs. Walters, which is all the same party, [51:26.160 --> 51:30.160] you are all considered to be victims of Operation Homewrecker, [51:30.160 --> 51:33.160] which we are representing in Eastern California. [51:33.160 --> 51:39.160] And we're trying to get restitution for you along with the other victims across the United States. [51:39.160 --> 51:41.160] And this is what we have decided to do. [51:41.160 --> 51:44.160] Okay. Okay. Stop here. [51:44.160 --> 51:46.160] And they want to throw all this out. [51:46.160 --> 51:48.160] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You are... [51:48.160 --> 51:50.160] You have buried me. [51:50.160 --> 51:52.160] So I go to court. My lawyer goes to court. [51:52.160 --> 51:54.160] Wait a minute. Wait a minute. [51:54.160 --> 51:58.160] A jury trial. And these idiots pop up and say, [51:58.160 --> 52:01.160] oh, you can't have a jury trial. You're not allowed to do that. [52:01.160 --> 52:03.160] It says so right on the paper. [52:03.160 --> 52:06.160] Stop. Stop. You're allowed to do that. [52:06.160 --> 52:08.160] Stop. Yes. [52:08.160 --> 52:10.160] I'm buried here. [52:10.160 --> 52:14.160] I got facts on top of facts on top of facts on top of facts. [52:14.160 --> 52:18.160] Have you written up a timeline? [52:18.160 --> 52:21.160] Absolutely. Total timeline. [52:21.160 --> 52:25.160] Send me that timeline. [52:25.160 --> 52:29.160] What happens when you're in these circumstances? [52:29.160 --> 52:33.160] You tend to move from one emotional high point to the next. [52:33.160 --> 52:37.160] They did this bad thing. They did this bad thing. They did this bad thing. [52:37.160 --> 52:40.160] And while you're stating these, I'm thinking, [52:40.160 --> 52:45.160] I got all of these remedies and solutions I can stick in between this. [52:45.160 --> 52:48.160] You're moving so fast, I can't keep up with them. [52:48.160 --> 52:51.160] And this is what happens when you've been in a fight for a long time. [52:51.160 --> 52:56.160] Much out as fast as I could so you wouldn't think that I wasn't doing something. [52:56.160 --> 52:59.160] I understand that. I do appreciate that. [52:59.160 --> 53:03.160] This is way too complex to do on one show. [53:03.160 --> 53:10.160] If you can send me a timeline, send it to randy at ruleoflawradio.com. [53:10.160 --> 53:15.160] Let me write that down. Randy at what was it? [53:15.160 --> 53:23.160] Rule. Are you LE of law or radio.com? [53:23.160 --> 53:26.160] Rule of law or rule at law? [53:26.160 --> 53:28.160] Rule of law. [53:28.160 --> 53:32.160] Got you. Ruleoflaw.com. Is that all one word? [53:32.160 --> 53:35.160] No. Ruleoflawradio.com. [53:35.160 --> 53:38.160] Radio. Okay. Is that one word? [53:38.160 --> 53:41.160] Yes. One word. All lowercase. [53:41.160 --> 53:44.160] Got you. Lowercase, all one word. [53:44.160 --> 53:46.160] Give me the timeline. [53:46.160 --> 53:51.160] I have all sorts of things you can use on them. [53:51.160 --> 53:59.160] But since you're this far down the road, the fact that you have residue to cut off, [53:59.160 --> 54:06.160] when the lawyer objected claiming that you were stating hearsay, did you bar grieve him? [54:06.160 --> 54:08.160] Yes. [54:08.160 --> 54:11.160] Good. All right. [54:11.160 --> 54:14.160] A woman after my own heart. [54:14.160 --> 54:20.160] A judge was when the judge blew me off and told me that everything that I was trying to present, [54:20.160 --> 54:23.160] which was legal documents, was null and void. [54:23.160 --> 54:26.160] And she only listened to the opposing counsel. [54:26.160 --> 54:28.160] Okay. Hold on. [54:28.160 --> 54:34.160] My case was still in court and they were trying to say I was in for closure in 2013. [54:34.160 --> 54:38.160] Hold on. Run in too fast. [54:38.160 --> 54:40.160] I know. [54:40.160 --> 54:42.160] Walker V. Packer. Let's see. [54:42.160 --> 54:45.160] Walker V. Packer. Write that down. [54:45.160 --> 54:47.160] Walker V. Packer. [54:47.160 --> 54:50.160] Walker V. Packer. Texas. [54:50.160 --> 54:54.160] Look that one up. And this is the way I do case law. [54:54.160 --> 54:57.160] That's a Texas case. Piss circuit case. [54:57.160 --> 55:02.160] Do Walker V. Packer, Illinois. [55:02.160 --> 55:07.160] And see if you can find an Illinois case that references Walker V. Packer. [55:07.160 --> 55:20.160] Walker V. Packer says, a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts of failure to do so as an abusive discretion. [55:20.160 --> 55:31.160] And the way I read the codes, an abusive discretion, where it has the effect of denying a citizen in full free access to or enjoying the right, [55:31.160 --> 55:33.160] that's a crime in every state. [55:33.160 --> 55:35.160] I agree. [55:35.160 --> 55:39.160] I don't want to have her disbarred. She's not even a legal judge. [55:39.160 --> 55:41.160] File criminally against her. [55:41.160 --> 55:42.160] The system and everything else. [55:42.160 --> 55:44.160] Oh, this is so criminal. [55:44.160 --> 55:50.160] File criminally against her. I'm going to a place you probably haven't been to. [55:50.160 --> 55:58.160] There's a remedy that I've been doing this show for a number of years now, about 12 or 13 years now. [55:58.160 --> 56:06.160] It is my job here not to just complain. [56:06.160 --> 56:10.160] Alex Jones, he tells you about what all the problems are. [56:10.160 --> 56:13.160] And he'll tell you very quickly, I'm just telling you what the problems are. [56:13.160 --> 56:15.160] I don't have the solutions. [56:15.160 --> 56:18.160] Well, it's our job to find solutions. [56:18.160 --> 56:25.160] And I've tried to find a way to craft a set of solutions that people can use. [56:25.160 --> 56:36.160] And one of the things I've tried to do is get around the unstated presuppositions that we tend to operate from. [56:36.160 --> 56:39.160] We tend to think the judge controls the court. [56:39.160 --> 56:42.160] No, he doesn't. [56:42.160 --> 56:47.160] We tend to think the judge is the most powerful person in the court. [56:47.160 --> 56:50.160] No, he's not. [56:50.160 --> 56:55.160] The most powerful person in the court is you. [56:55.160 --> 57:00.160] And the reason you're the most powerful person in the court is because you're not a judge. [57:00.160 --> 57:06.160] You're not a prosecutor. You're not a lawyer, a clerk, a bailiff. [57:06.160 --> 57:11.160] They're all public officials, public servants. [57:11.160 --> 57:15.160] They're the servants. You are the master. [57:15.160 --> 57:19.160] When you walk into that courthouse, you should have two hats with you. [57:19.160 --> 57:23.160] One is a litigant's hat. You walk into that litigant's hat on. [57:23.160 --> 57:29.160] But the first time one of your public officials steps half inch across one of your legal lines, [57:29.160 --> 57:36.160] you take off that litigant's hat, you put on your master's hat, and we're going to fight. [57:36.160 --> 57:42.160] I told a story earlier about the judge in Montgomery County. [57:42.160 --> 57:49.160] In Montgomery County, what is the county for Corsican is... [57:49.160 --> 57:56.160] Anyway, I presented a habeas corpus, and he refused to accept it because I wasn't a lawyer. [57:56.160 --> 58:06.160] In 11.051, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says a writ of habeas corpus may be filed by the accused, [58:06.160 --> 58:12.160] the accused counsel, or any credible person. [58:12.160 --> 58:14.160] And I was that credible person. [58:14.160 --> 58:20.160] A credible person is defined as anyone over the age of 18 and never been convicted of a felony. [58:20.160 --> 58:22.160] Right. [58:22.160 --> 58:26.160] He refused to hear the complaint because I was not a lawyer. [58:26.160 --> 58:30.160] He exerted or purported to exert an authority he does not expressly have, [58:30.160 --> 58:33.160] and in the process did not mean full free access to enjoyment. [58:33.160 --> 58:37.160] That's crime in every state, even if he's a judge. [58:37.160 --> 58:40.160] That's why I asked the bailiff to arrest him. [58:40.160 --> 58:45.160] And that's why he kept his mouth shut as long as I was talking to the bailiff. [58:45.160 --> 58:50.160] One word out of him, witness tampering. [58:50.160 --> 58:58.160] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.160 --> 59:06.160] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.160 --> 59:09.160] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.160 --> 59:13.160] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:13.160 --> 59:18.160] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.160 --> 59:22.160] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [59:22.160 --> 59:27.160] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:27.160 --> 59:33.160] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.160 --> 59:43.160] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.160 --> 59:47.160] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.160 --> 59:50.160] That's freestudybible.com. [59:50.160 --> 01:00:00.160] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:20.160 --> 01:00:27.160] Markets for Wednesday the 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, [01:00:27.160 --> 01:00:31.160] silver $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, [01:00:31.160 --> 01:00:37.160] oil, Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, Brent crude $61.98 a barrel, [01:00:37.160 --> 01:00:42.160] and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, [01:00:42.160 --> 01:00:50.160] Ripple, XRP $0.29, Ethereum $10.10 and EOS is at $2.32 of crypto coin. [01:00:50.160 --> 01:01:00.160] History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property qualifications [01:01:00.160 --> 01:01:06.160] get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 was passed by Parliament to date in history. [01:01:06.160 --> 01:01:14.160] In recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting that a federal court [01:01:14.160 --> 01:01:19.160] stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally registered to vote. [01:01:19.160 --> 01:01:25.160] The list was compiled after an 11-month long investigation by the office of the Texas Secretary of State [01:01:25.160 --> 01:01:31.160] and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens who were registered to vote [01:01:31.160 --> 01:01:36.160] when obtaining a driver's license. Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:01:36.160 --> 01:01:42.160] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were not, in fact, [01:01:42.160 --> 01:01:45.160] belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:45.160 --> 01:01:50.160] Apparently, around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:50.160 --> 01:01:56.160] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond with proof of eligibility. [01:01:56.160 --> 01:02:02.160] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have yet to officially comment [01:02:02.160 --> 01:02:05.160] regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:05.160 --> 01:02:15.160] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after a vape pen exploded [01:02:15.160 --> 01:02:20.160] while he was using it. It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:20.160 --> 01:02:23.160] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [01:02:23.160 --> 01:02:28.160] The vape store's smoke and vape DZ has refused to comment. [01:02:28.160 --> 01:02:35.160] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of Grow Local, [01:02:35.160 --> 01:02:40.160] South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association Conference, [01:02:40.160 --> 01:02:47.160] which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:47.160 --> 01:02:51.160] You can find the interview at kiitv.com. [01:02:51.160 --> 01:02:58.160] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:02:58.160 --> 01:03:25.160] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rood of Law Radio on this Thursday, [01:03:25.160 --> 01:03:35.160] the 14th day of March 2019, and we're talking to James and Carly in Illinois. [01:03:35.160 --> 01:03:37.160] Yes, sir. [01:03:37.160 --> 01:03:45.160] What I'm going to is, here on Rood of Law Radio, we tend to live in a different place. [01:03:45.160 --> 01:03:54.160] There is this notion that the judges and the courts, they have some kind of power. [01:03:54.160 --> 01:03:58.160] And that's an illusion. They don't have squat. [01:03:58.160 --> 01:04:03.160] The only one with real power is you. [01:04:03.160 --> 01:04:11.160] There's one thing they don't want us to understand, and that's the criminal side. [01:04:11.160 --> 01:04:17.160] I was just looking in Georgia Law today, and I was pulled up to Georgia Grand Jury Handbook, [01:04:17.160 --> 01:04:24.160] and it said, everything for the Grand Jury is secret. I thought horse manure. [01:04:24.160 --> 01:04:26.160] So I went and looked up the coat. [01:04:26.160 --> 01:04:28.160] My father would have loved that. [01:04:28.160 --> 01:04:35.160] Yeah, the only thing secret before the Grand Jury is their deliberations. [01:04:35.160 --> 01:04:40.160] So I'm going to go to Georgia, go to the Grand Jury Room. [01:04:40.160 --> 01:04:46.160] One of the Grand Jury's probably in Atlanta, and I want to sit in on the presentment. [01:04:46.160 --> 01:04:50.160] And they're going to say, you can't sit in on the presentment. [01:04:50.160 --> 01:04:55.160] Oh, I can't? Well, I'm going to go in there anyway. [01:04:55.160 --> 01:05:03.160] I had one in Baylor, North Carolina tell me, you ain't going to see the Grand Jury. [01:05:03.160 --> 01:05:07.160] And I said, Mr. Baylor, I see you're wearing a pistol. [01:05:07.160 --> 01:05:11.160] Yes, I am. Tell me, is that pistol loaded? Yes, it is. [01:05:11.160 --> 01:05:17.160] If I tried to go in there and observe the Grand Jury proceedings, are you going to pull that pistol on me? [01:05:17.160 --> 01:05:21.160] He said, well, if I have to, I don't work. [01:05:21.160 --> 01:05:24.160] Aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. [01:05:24.160 --> 01:05:30.160] I took out my phone call 911, asked the sheriff to come out and arrest the bailiff. [01:05:30.160 --> 01:05:32.160] Oh, I love it. I love it. [01:05:32.160 --> 01:05:37.160] You haven't lived until you've asked the bailiff to arrest a judge. [01:05:37.160 --> 01:05:41.160] He came to evict us and treated us like we were criminals number one. [01:05:41.160 --> 01:05:44.160] First thing the cop asked me, he said, this is your eviction. [01:05:44.160 --> 01:05:47.160] Are you going to jump up and shoot me or kill me or stamp me? [01:05:47.160 --> 01:05:49.160] And I'm looking at him and I'm like, no. [01:05:49.160 --> 01:05:51.160] And he's like, where? Who is in the other room? [01:05:51.160 --> 01:05:52.160] And I said, my husband. [01:05:52.160 --> 01:05:53.160] He said, what are you doing? [01:05:53.160 --> 01:05:54.160] I said, he's sleeping. [01:05:54.160 --> 01:05:57.160] He says, you get up, get your shoes, get your head, get your shoes, get your bed. [01:05:57.160 --> 01:06:01.160] He didn't care that I have cats in the house that are terrified right now. [01:06:01.160 --> 01:06:05.160] They haven't had food or water since yesterday when I did it before they locked this out. [01:06:05.160 --> 01:06:07.160] Wouldn't let me get my purse. Wouldn't let me get my makeup. [01:06:07.160 --> 01:06:10.160] Wouldn't let me get my wallet, my keys. [01:06:10.160 --> 01:06:11.160] Wouldn't let me get my gloves. [01:06:11.160 --> 01:06:12.160] It was cold out. [01:06:12.160 --> 01:06:13.160] Okay. [01:06:13.160 --> 01:06:16.160] It's like you were the big criminal of everything. [01:06:16.160 --> 01:06:19.160] I would have loved to have had you kick this behind. [01:06:19.160 --> 01:06:22.160] Darin, I wish I could have got you two days ago. [01:06:22.160 --> 01:06:24.160] Have you ever filed bankruptcy? [01:06:24.160 --> 01:06:26.160] No. No. [01:06:26.160 --> 01:06:32.160] That would be the biggest disaster that I could do right now because this case is so big. [01:06:32.160 --> 01:06:43.160] If you're being closed on your credit's trash, bankruptcy will stop them in their tracks. [01:06:43.160 --> 01:06:47.160] I've had them taking stuff out of the building. [01:06:47.160 --> 01:06:52.160] The guy threatened to shoot the guy's dogs if he didn't tie them up. [01:06:52.160 --> 01:06:57.160] He went that morning to the bankruptcy court and filed bankruptcy. [01:06:57.160 --> 01:07:00.160] He'd come back and they're taking stuff out of his house. [01:07:00.160 --> 01:07:04.160] They called me and I called the bankruptcy court and told them what they're doing. [01:07:04.160 --> 01:07:10.160] He called the sheriff and I guess the sheriff called his constable because all of a sudden [01:07:10.160 --> 01:07:15.160] the constable told everybody to drop everything and they got the heck out of there. [01:07:15.160 --> 01:07:22.160] Then they went to the bankruptcy court and the bankruptcy court wanted to know who decided [01:07:22.160 --> 01:07:28.160] they could ignore my automatic stay. [01:07:28.160 --> 01:07:31.160] Everybody was dancing around on tippy toes. [01:07:31.160 --> 01:07:36.160] Bankruptcy gets your automatic stay, gets you back in court. [01:07:36.160 --> 01:07:44.160] But since they've already done the eviction, I'd have to look at how to go back after this. [01:07:44.160 --> 01:07:46.160] Well, everything is illegal. [01:07:46.160 --> 01:07:48.160] It's all based in fraud. [01:07:48.160 --> 01:07:50.160] I have enough agencies. [01:07:50.160 --> 01:07:53.160] Have you filed any criminal complaints? [01:07:53.160 --> 01:07:58.160] I have tried to do everything the best I can, been toward it in every way, especially when [01:07:58.160 --> 01:07:59.160] a judge says... [01:07:59.160 --> 01:08:00.160] That's okay. [01:08:00.160 --> 01:08:01.160] Okay, hold on. [01:08:01.160 --> 01:08:02.160] Hold on. [01:08:02.160 --> 01:08:03.160] We've got some rules here. [01:08:03.160 --> 01:08:04.160] But first you do these people. [01:08:04.160 --> 01:08:05.160] Okay, hold on. [01:08:05.160 --> 01:08:06.160] Hold on. [01:08:06.160 --> 01:08:07.160] I understand these guys. [01:08:07.160 --> 01:08:09.160] I grew up in Chicago. [01:08:09.160 --> 01:08:10.160] Good. [01:08:10.160 --> 01:08:15.160] I consider Illinois one of the most corrupt states in the union. [01:08:15.160 --> 01:08:16.160] Yes, it is. [01:08:16.160 --> 01:08:17.160] It is. [01:08:17.160 --> 01:08:18.160] It is. [01:08:18.160 --> 01:08:19.160] It's very corrupt. [01:08:19.160 --> 01:08:20.160] Now I know how to take them on. [01:08:20.160 --> 01:08:26.160] See, I have a set of rules, and one of the rules is never ask a public official to do [01:08:26.160 --> 01:08:31.160] anything that you actually want him to do. [01:08:31.160 --> 01:08:33.160] True, okay. [01:08:33.160 --> 01:08:40.160] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not compel him [01:08:40.160 --> 01:08:41.160] to do. [01:08:41.160 --> 01:08:45.160] So when he doesn't do it, then you get to land on him. [01:08:45.160 --> 01:08:51.160] So a Bush whacked the head criminal district judge in Travis County in Austin, Texas, [01:08:51.160 --> 01:08:55.160] with criminal complaints against the district attorney. [01:08:55.160 --> 01:08:57.160] And he's trying to duck and dodge. [01:08:57.160 --> 01:09:01.160] And the way I do it is I go in when they're having motion hearings, and I call the bailiff [01:09:01.160 --> 01:09:02.160] over. [01:09:02.160 --> 01:09:08.160] I'm in a nice three-piece suit, and I've got a red folder in my hand, and I call the [01:09:08.160 --> 01:09:09.160] bailiff over. [01:09:09.160 --> 01:09:10.160] You, come here. [01:09:10.160 --> 01:09:11.160] They hate me so much. [01:09:11.160 --> 01:09:14.160] They're used to lawyers being those meek little mouses. [01:09:14.160 --> 01:09:16.160] The bailiff comes over and says, can I help you? [01:09:16.160 --> 01:09:18.160] I tell him my name because I don't want any questions. [01:09:18.160 --> 01:09:20.160] That's the only question he can ask. [01:09:20.160 --> 01:09:21.160] So my name is Randall Kelton. [01:09:21.160 --> 01:09:24.160] It struck the judge that I have business with the court. [01:09:24.160 --> 01:09:27.160] He said, may I tell him the judge's nature of the business? [01:09:27.160 --> 01:09:28.160] No, you may not. [01:09:28.160 --> 01:09:30.160] I have business with the court. [01:09:30.160 --> 01:09:31.160] It's none of yours. [01:09:31.160 --> 01:09:32.160] You're dismissed. [01:09:32.160 --> 01:09:33.160] And I kind of put my fingers at it. [01:09:33.160 --> 01:09:35.160] Now he's really furious. [01:09:35.160 --> 01:09:39.160] He runs up to the judge and whispers in his ear. [01:09:39.160 --> 01:09:44.160] I know he said, just some jackass out here that says he got business with the court and [01:09:44.160 --> 01:09:45.160] won't tell me what it is. [01:09:45.160 --> 01:09:47.160] So now I've got the judge's attention. [01:09:47.160 --> 01:09:49.160] He finishes his motion hearings. [01:09:49.160 --> 01:09:50.160] He looks out. [01:09:50.160 --> 01:09:51.160] Mr. Kelton. [01:09:51.160 --> 01:09:52.160] Yes, Your Honor. [01:09:52.160 --> 01:09:55.160] I said, I understand you have business with this court. [01:09:55.160 --> 01:09:56.160] Yes, I do. [01:09:56.160 --> 01:09:58.160] And I held up this red folder. [01:09:58.160 --> 01:09:59.160] May I approach? [01:09:59.160 --> 01:10:01.160] That means, can I give you this folder? [01:10:01.160 --> 01:10:03.160] Generally, they send the bailiff to get it. [01:10:03.160 --> 01:10:05.160] But in this case, he said, well, come on up. [01:10:05.160 --> 01:10:08.160] He was having insurance right at his bench. [01:10:08.160 --> 01:10:12.160] He was actually a really pleasant individual. [01:10:12.160 --> 01:10:14.160] I set the folder on his desk. [01:10:14.160 --> 01:10:16.160] He opened it up. [01:10:16.160 --> 01:10:22.160] Criminal charges against the district clerk for failing to give criminal charges against [01:10:22.160 --> 01:10:27.160] the district attorney to the grand jury. [01:10:27.160 --> 01:10:34.160] Because the district attorney refused to give criminal complaints against all the highest [01:10:34.160 --> 01:10:37.160] judges in Texas to the grand jury. [01:10:37.160 --> 01:10:38.160] Oh, my God. [01:10:38.160 --> 01:10:45.160] He looked at that and I could tell he could see his whole career passing before his eyes. [01:10:45.160 --> 01:10:51.160] And he told me, well, Mr. Kelton, these are criminal complaints and said, I'm a district [01:10:51.160 --> 01:10:55.160] judge and district judges don't take criminal complaints and drive us counting. [01:10:55.160 --> 01:11:00.160] I said, well, Your Honor, I'm not here to invoke your duty as a district judge. [01:11:00.160 --> 01:11:05.160] I'm here to invoke your duty as a magistrate and that's a duty from which you may not [01:11:05.160 --> 01:11:07.160] believe yourself. [01:11:07.160 --> 01:11:11.160] He sat back in his seat and I know what he was thinking. [01:11:11.160 --> 01:11:17.160] If I have my bailiff shoot this guy, can I get away with it? [01:11:17.160 --> 01:11:21.160] He said, well, come on, Mr. Kelton, you need to take this to JP. [01:11:21.160 --> 01:11:24.160] When I was a judge for this piece, I took criminal complaints. [01:11:24.160 --> 01:11:25.160] I said, try that judge. [01:11:25.160 --> 01:11:28.160] He gave him to Judge Evans across the street here. [01:11:28.160 --> 01:11:29.160] He was in the county court house. [01:11:29.160 --> 01:11:31.160] I was in the district. [01:11:31.160 --> 01:11:34.160] And he refused to take him. [01:11:34.160 --> 01:11:38.160] Well, you need to file your complaints with the sheriff. [01:11:38.160 --> 01:11:39.160] He did that too. [01:11:39.160 --> 01:11:42.160] He threw him in a trash. [01:11:42.160 --> 01:11:45.160] Mr. Kelton, you should file an appeal. [01:11:45.160 --> 01:11:48.160] Oh, Judge, don't ask me to appeal. [01:11:48.160 --> 01:11:54.160] You go before a corrupt judge and he renders a bogus decision and they say, oh, that's [01:11:54.160 --> 01:11:55.160] okay. [01:11:55.160 --> 01:11:59.160] You can go before a whole panel of corrupt judges and they'll really screw your royals. [01:11:59.160 --> 01:12:03.160] He kind of laughed and said, oh, Mr. Kelton, I don't think it's quite that bad. [01:12:03.160 --> 01:12:06.160] I said, that's because you're not pro se. [01:12:06.160 --> 01:12:08.160] I got a better idea. [01:12:08.160 --> 01:12:11.160] I'll appeal to the grand jury. [01:12:11.160 --> 01:12:13.160] Mr. Kelton, you can't appeal to the grand jury. [01:12:13.160 --> 01:12:14.160] Here I can. [01:12:14.160 --> 01:12:21.160] I can appeal to the grand jury to indict the sheriff for 3805 penal code shielding from [01:12:21.160 --> 01:12:23.160] prosecution. [01:12:23.160 --> 01:12:32.160] He sat back in his seat and he clearly did a reassessment. [01:12:32.160 --> 01:12:35.160] That's my point. [01:12:35.160 --> 01:12:44.160] The one thing they don't want you to know is that you are the baddest motor scooter in [01:12:44.160 --> 01:12:45.160] the building. [01:12:45.160 --> 01:12:47.160] Oh, I like that. [01:12:47.160 --> 01:12:49.160] Where have you been all my life? [01:12:49.160 --> 01:12:52.160] You are the only one who can do that. [01:12:52.160 --> 01:12:54.160] I was at a court. [01:12:54.160 --> 01:12:56.160] A kid I gave a hit in my habeas too. [01:12:56.160 --> 01:13:01.160] He was arguing and he kept asking me questions. [01:13:01.160 --> 01:13:07.160] When they got toward the end of the trial, the judge said, who is he? [01:13:07.160 --> 01:13:10.160] Oh, he's the one who wrote the habeas. [01:13:10.160 --> 01:13:13.160] He said, oh, okay, it turned out this judge. [01:13:13.160 --> 01:13:21.160] The judge before him had retired and he was appointed. [01:13:21.160 --> 01:13:24.160] It was his first day on the bench. [01:13:24.160 --> 01:13:30.160] When the hearing was over, I went up to the judge and I said, your honor, I have some [01:13:30.160 --> 01:13:32.160] documents I would like you to look at. [01:13:32.160 --> 01:13:34.160] He said, well, sure. [01:13:34.160 --> 01:13:36.160] I did them to him. [01:13:36.160 --> 01:13:40.160] They were criminal complaints against the judge across the hall. [01:13:40.160 --> 01:13:42.160] Oh, my goodness. [01:13:42.160 --> 01:13:46.160] He looked down and he said, I mentioned you had criminal papers for the other judge. [01:13:46.160 --> 01:13:47.160] I love it. [01:13:47.160 --> 01:13:51.160] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, these are criminal complaints. [01:13:51.160 --> 01:13:54.160] I said, yes, your honor, they are. [01:13:54.160 --> 01:13:59.160] He said, Mr. Kelton, did you know this is my first day on the bench? [01:13:59.160 --> 01:14:01.160] Yes, your honor, I did. [01:14:01.160 --> 01:14:09.160] And I wanted to welcome you to the deep end of the pool. [01:14:09.160 --> 01:14:12.160] He got a chuckle out of that, but they weren't verified. [01:14:12.160 --> 01:14:15.160] So I really wasn't putting him on the hook. [01:14:15.160 --> 01:14:18.160] But that was a hook he was liable to. [01:14:18.160 --> 01:14:25.160] Every judge in every state is a magistrate. [01:14:25.160 --> 01:14:34.160] Magistrates were put in place in 1215 AD when the Dukes drug King John down to the river [01:14:34.160 --> 01:14:36.160] Thames and threatened to cut his head off. [01:14:36.160 --> 01:14:42.160] If he didn't sign the Magna Carta like he told him, he would if they helped him defeat [01:14:42.160 --> 01:14:44.160] an invasion by the French. [01:14:44.160 --> 01:14:47.160] They repelled the invasion. [01:14:47.160 --> 01:14:49.160] He refused to sign. [01:14:49.160 --> 01:14:52.160] They drug him down to the river and threatened to cut his head off. [01:14:52.160 --> 01:14:54.160] He signed the Magna Carta. [01:14:54.160 --> 01:14:59.160] The Magna Carta put magistrates in place. [01:14:59.160 --> 01:15:05.160] Notice magistrates are spread around the county. [01:15:05.160 --> 01:15:13.160] The reason they're spread around the county is at the time, travel was mostly horseback. [01:15:13.160 --> 01:15:20.160] And they wanted a magistrate within a day's travel of any point in the county. [01:15:20.160 --> 01:15:29.160] If an officer arrests someone for any reason, they were to take them directly to the nearest [01:15:29.160 --> 01:15:33.160] magistrate and explain themselves. [01:15:33.160 --> 01:15:37.160] And it's not because they didn't trust the police. [01:15:37.160 --> 01:15:41.160] But they didn't want the public to fear the police. [01:15:41.160 --> 01:15:47.160] They did not want the policeman to have the key to the jailhouse door. [01:15:47.160 --> 01:15:52.160] He could arrest someone, but he could not put them in jail. [01:15:52.160 --> 01:15:56.160] He had to take them to a magistrate and explain himself. [01:15:56.160 --> 01:16:01.160] And the magistrate decided if they went to jail or not. [01:16:01.160 --> 01:16:04.160] That's the way it's supposed to be. [01:16:04.160 --> 01:16:09.160] Every judge in the United States is a magistrate. [01:16:09.160 --> 01:16:12.160] Every mayor is a magistrate. [01:16:12.160 --> 01:16:14.160] Yes, sir. [01:16:14.160 --> 01:16:21.160] And that is a duty for which they may not heal themselves. [01:16:21.160 --> 01:16:26.160] Right now, that is almost never done. [01:16:26.160 --> 01:16:34.160] If they arrest someone for a horrible crime, they'll take them to a magistrate just to make sure they covered all the bases. [01:16:34.160 --> 01:16:37.160] But right now, they arrest everybody and take them straight to jail. [01:16:37.160 --> 01:16:39.160] That's a battle I'm fighting. [01:16:39.160 --> 01:16:41.160] My whole purpose here is to fight that battle. [01:16:41.160 --> 01:16:45.160] We'll talk more about it on the other side. This is Randy Kelton. [01:16:45.160 --> 01:16:48.160] Denver Stevens, Rueville Radio, our call-in number. [01:16:48.160 --> 01:16:50.160] No, I'm not going to give that to the call-in number. [01:16:50.160 --> 01:16:53.160] We've got a full board of callers and probably won't get to everybody. [01:16:53.160 --> 01:17:00.160] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.160 --> 01:17:05.160] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.160 --> 01:17:09.160] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [01:17:09.160 --> 01:17:14.160] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:17:14.160 --> 01:17:20.160] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:20.160 --> 01:17:24.160] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [01:17:24.160 --> 01:17:26.160] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:17:26.160 --> 01:17:29.160] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [01:17:29.160 --> 01:17:33.160] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:17:33.160 --> 01:17:38.160] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.160 --> 01:17:41.160] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:41.160 --> 01:17:46.160] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, [01:17:46.160 --> 01:17:49.160] or email michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.160 --> 01:17:57.160] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.160 --> 01:18:00.160] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.160 --> 01:18:01.160] Thanks, Cookie. [01:18:01.160 --> 01:18:02.160] Cookie? [01:18:02.160 --> 01:18:03.160] We love cookies. [01:18:03.160 --> 01:18:04.160] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [01:18:04.160 --> 01:18:06.160] No, these are Yucky Cookie. [01:18:06.160 --> 01:18:09.160] Cookie? Yucky? No, no bad cookies. [01:18:09.160 --> 01:18:12.160] You can't even eat these cookies. These are cyber cookies. [01:18:12.160 --> 01:18:13.160] No, can you eat? [01:18:13.160 --> 01:18:17.160] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [01:18:17.160 --> 01:18:18.160] These have apples. [01:18:18.160 --> 01:18:20.160] Really? Oh, that's an actual apple. [01:18:20.160 --> 01:18:22.160] Hmm, yummy apple. [01:18:22.160 --> 01:18:26.160] I'm going to throw away these Yucky Cookies in the trash. [01:18:26.160 --> 01:18:32.160] I click control, shift, delete, and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [01:18:32.160 --> 01:18:34.160] Bye-bye, Yucky Cookies. [01:18:34.160 --> 01:18:40.160] Now, I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right-hand side, [01:18:40.160 --> 01:18:47.160] bookmark the link, and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy new cookie. [01:18:47.160 --> 01:18:49.160] No cookies? For me? [01:18:49.160 --> 01:18:51.160] Consider it an early Christmas present. [01:18:51.160 --> 01:18:57.160] And every time I order on Amazon, I go through this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [01:18:57.160 --> 01:18:58.160] These are cookies. [01:18:58.160 --> 01:19:00.160] These are classified. [01:19:00.160 --> 01:19:07.160] This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:31.160 --> 01:19:33.160] Okay, we are back. [01:19:33.160 --> 01:19:38.160] Randy Carlson, Denver Stevens, Rural Law Radio, and Carla. [01:19:38.160 --> 01:19:43.160] My producer is just chastising me about this. [01:19:43.160 --> 01:19:49.160] I'm going to places that are not specific to foreclosure. [01:19:49.160 --> 01:19:59.160] And the reason I'm going here is at the point you are in the foreclosure, it will take a different approach. [01:19:59.160 --> 01:20:09.160] If you want to get your timeline, I'll have a good idea of what amounts to rescue the caught in your case. [01:20:09.160 --> 01:20:12.160] But it would take too long in this short show. [01:20:12.160 --> 01:20:13.160] This is my two-hour night. [01:20:13.160 --> 01:20:15.160] Tomorrow I do four hours. [01:20:15.160 --> 01:20:16.160] So it would take too long. [01:20:16.160 --> 01:20:17.160] You want me to call that guy? [01:20:17.160 --> 01:20:20.160] I will, but you know, I'll try to get your timeline. [01:20:20.160 --> 01:20:23.160] Yeah, I wanted to give you an idea of where we live. [01:20:23.160 --> 01:20:28.160] There is a whole other way of going after these guys. [01:20:28.160 --> 01:20:30.160] You know, I'm a combat veteran. [01:20:30.160 --> 01:20:38.160] And one of the things I learned in combat, best defense, good aggressive offense. [01:20:38.160 --> 01:20:43.160] You want to start a fight with me, I will give you one. [01:20:43.160 --> 01:20:46.160] But I am very strategic. [01:20:46.160 --> 01:20:50.160] I only fight the battles I have to. [01:20:50.160 --> 01:20:56.160] You can't goad me into fighting a battle that doesn't matter. [01:20:56.160 --> 01:21:00.160] And when I come after you, I am meticulous. [01:21:00.160 --> 01:21:04.160] And in combat, you can't screw up at one time. [01:21:04.160 --> 01:21:06.160] You don't get another shot. [01:21:06.160 --> 01:21:11.160] Don't get into a fight unless you have an exit strategy. [01:21:11.160 --> 01:21:17.160] Try not to get into a fight that if you win it, it's not sudden death. [01:21:17.160 --> 01:21:23.160] You want to be able to, you know, sometimes I get them in a fight just to distract them. [01:21:23.160 --> 01:21:28.160] The best fights to have are the fights you pick. [01:21:28.160 --> 01:21:35.160] And when you start picking criminal fights with them, you get into this area. [01:21:35.160 --> 01:21:42.160] See, one of the rules is, one of the things to understand is you will never win your case. [01:21:42.160 --> 01:21:47.160] Simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [01:21:47.160 --> 01:21:49.160] To think so is naive. [01:21:49.160 --> 01:21:56.160] It's not that way now, never has been that way since we've had human beings as judges. [01:21:56.160 --> 01:22:01.160] You will win your case if you have the politics on your side. [01:22:01.160 --> 01:22:06.160] And all politics is local. [01:22:06.160 --> 01:22:10.160] What we do here, I do criminal, I go after them criminally. [01:22:10.160 --> 01:22:18.160] But I only go after them criminally in order to create political cannon fodder. [01:22:18.160 --> 01:22:26.160] I got all the highest judges in Texas, all nine of the judges of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. [01:22:26.160 --> 01:22:32.160] In Texas we've got two high courts, Supreme Court for Civil, Criminal Appeals for Criminal. [01:22:32.160 --> 01:22:36.160] I had them all put in front of a grand jury. [01:22:36.160 --> 01:22:47.160] And I thought it was my eloquent oratory and all the critical maneuvers I pulled on them is none of that garbage. [01:22:47.160 --> 01:22:59.160] Prosecuting attorney Ron Earl, 25-year prosecutor, he's the guy that prosecuted Tom DeLay. [01:22:59.160 --> 01:23:03.160] Nobody ever accused Tom DeLay of a crime. [01:23:03.160 --> 01:23:14.160] Speaker of the United States House of Representatives at local DA took him out of office and nobody ever accused him of a crime. [01:23:14.160 --> 01:23:20.160] I filed a habeas in his case. They threw me out of the courtroom. [01:23:20.160 --> 01:23:30.160] This lawyer, 25-year prosecutor, Democrat, not running for office again. [01:23:30.160 --> 01:23:35.160] All nine of these judges are Republicans. [01:23:35.160 --> 01:23:46.160] That lowdown scoundrel took my complaints and used them as cannon fodder to try to take out one of his political enemies or nine of his political enemies. [01:23:46.160 --> 01:23:51.160] He tried to take them with him. That was a valuable lesson for me. [01:23:51.160 --> 01:23:53.160] Oh yeah. [01:23:53.160 --> 01:23:59.160] Everything is political. They will never be afraid of you. [01:23:59.160 --> 01:24:07.160] What they will be afraid of and the higher up they are in the peck and order, the more they are afraid of it. [01:24:07.160 --> 01:24:14.160] They're afraid of the political cannon fodder you can create for their political opponents. [01:24:14.160 --> 01:24:17.160] That's how we win the cases. [01:24:17.160 --> 01:24:23.160] I go in and file a criminal complaint with a police officer. [01:24:23.160 --> 01:24:34.160] He does his little song and dance. He says, well, you've got to fill out this voluntary statement. [01:24:34.160 --> 01:24:39.160] When I give him the voluntary statement, I always have a verified criminal affidavit behind it. [01:24:39.160 --> 01:24:41.160] I hand it to him. [01:24:41.160 --> 01:24:53.160] I forget one of these little West Texas town and I hand this guy the statement and he sees the page under it. [01:24:53.160 --> 01:24:55.160] What's this? He takes it out. [01:24:55.160 --> 01:25:03.160] It's a verified criminal affidavit against the county attorney for not taking my criminal complaints against the district attorney. [01:25:03.160 --> 01:25:05.160] Well, I can take this. [01:25:05.160 --> 01:25:07.160] Sorry, Bubba. [01:25:07.160 --> 01:25:09.160] You got it. [01:25:09.160 --> 01:25:11.160] Well, I'll just sort in the trash. [01:25:11.160 --> 01:25:13.160] We'll knock yourself out. [01:25:13.160 --> 01:25:15.160] We'll see how that works out for you. [01:25:15.160 --> 01:25:17.160] Yeah, good job. [01:25:17.160 --> 01:25:19.160] Yeah, that's good. [01:25:19.160 --> 01:25:21.160] Never ask them to do anything you want them to do. [01:25:21.160 --> 01:25:25.160] Go ahead and throw that in the trash. Wonderful. [01:25:25.160 --> 01:25:33.160] Then I went to a local JP and filed criminal charges against the police officer. [01:25:33.160 --> 01:25:41.160] When the JP refused to hold an examining trial, I went to the district attorney and filed criminal charges against the JP. [01:25:41.160 --> 01:25:49.160] When the JP, I mean, when the district attorney wouldn't take my complaints, I went to the district judge and filed against the district attorney. [01:25:49.160 --> 01:25:55.160] And then to the attorney general, Chief Justice of the Supreme. [01:25:55.160 --> 01:25:59.160] Please come here and do this. I need somebody to kick ass here. [01:25:59.160 --> 01:26:07.160] Don't pay any attention to that crap about them throwing me in jail in Williamson County. [01:26:07.160 --> 01:26:15.160] And don't even pay attention to the Cherokee County debacle. [01:26:15.160 --> 01:26:23.160] They convicted me to a year in prison for filing criminal charges against the judge who prosecuted me. [01:26:23.160 --> 01:26:31.160] Oh, of course. Naturally. They did false things to my husband, too. You and he have so much in common besides the fact that he's a southerner. [01:26:31.160 --> 01:26:37.160] And I had a southern father and I had a European mother, so we all speak the same language. [01:26:37.160 --> 01:26:41.160] Well, we can work together because I am multilingual. [01:26:41.160 --> 01:26:43.160] And that works, too. [01:26:43.160 --> 01:26:45.160] Yeah, I speak Yankee. And English. [01:26:45.160 --> 01:26:51.160] I speak Hillbilly. I'm in Tennessee right now. And I speak Redneck. [01:26:51.160 --> 01:26:59.160] Okay. But you look all this stuff about me. I'm not asking... [01:26:59.160 --> 01:27:03.160] I never asked anybody to do anything I haven't done. [01:27:03.160 --> 01:27:05.160] That's true. Now neither one of us do that. [01:27:05.160 --> 01:27:13.160] And my husband doesn't back down from a fight. And the representative in Eastern California from the FBI gave me documents. [01:27:13.160 --> 01:27:18.160] He said, Carla, I want you to go to court and beat those banks back. [01:27:18.160 --> 01:27:23.160] I had to sit here month after month after month dealing with this case against Operation Homewrecker. [01:27:23.160 --> 01:27:28.160] You are one of the victims of this case and you're still being victimized in the civil case. [01:27:28.160 --> 01:27:33.160] You have been fighting so long, I want you to take all these documents and pull them all down. [01:27:33.160 --> 01:27:35.160] I'm cheering you on. [01:27:35.160 --> 01:27:43.160] Yes. Okay. We start going after him cramily. What happens is you start at the bottom and you involve everybody. [01:27:43.160 --> 01:27:48.160] I tell people, I got this little invisible tar baby. [01:27:48.160 --> 01:27:54.160] And I put it, set it in the palm of my hand, hold my hand out with this little tar baby in it. [01:27:54.160 --> 01:27:59.160] I go to a public official and I say, here, I got this little invisible tar baby. [01:27:59.160 --> 01:28:06.160] Y'all want to touch it? Here. Go ahead. Touch it. Touch it. [01:28:06.160 --> 01:28:13.160] Well, I'm just outside of Fort Worth in Lake Worth, Texas. [01:28:13.160 --> 01:28:20.160] I go to the JP and ask to see some files and the clerks give me a little hard time then they bring me the files. [01:28:20.160 --> 01:28:26.160] I'm looking at the files and JP come out and said, Mr. Kelton, she knew me really well. [01:28:26.160 --> 01:28:31.160] Mr. Kelton, you can't look at those. You're a security risk. [01:28:31.160 --> 01:28:38.160] Oh, I'm a security risk, you just are. I can't look at these notes. I close the file and sleep back across the table to her. [01:28:38.160 --> 01:28:44.160] Well, they're all behind bulletproof crack glass. Well, a bailiff had kind of sidled up beside us. [01:28:44.160 --> 01:28:50.160] I said, Mr. Bailiff, did you hear that? Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. Arrest that woman. [01:28:50.160 --> 01:28:59.160] Well, I can't arrest her. This is her court. Oh, no, no, no. Mr. Bailiff, you are mistaken. This is my court. [01:28:59.160 --> 01:29:08.160] And I very generously allow her to administer it according to my law and she just breached one of them. Arrest her. [01:29:08.160 --> 01:29:13.160] Oh, Mr. Kelton, I got administered the court. How about if I take you to my boss? [01:29:13.160 --> 01:29:21.160] Okay, so we go downstairs. He takes me to the elected constable. He introduces me to him. He says, what can I do for you? [01:29:21.160 --> 01:29:29.160] I need you to arrest him. Why do I arrest him? Because he won't take his chicken suit off. He wouldn't arrest a judge. [01:29:29.160 --> 01:29:37.160] Well, this guy refused to act. So I went across the street to the sheriff's department and asked for a sheriff's deputy to arrest the constable. [01:29:37.160 --> 01:29:44.160] And while I'm waiting for a sheriff's deputy, the constable came by and said, Mr. Kelton, if you want me to, I will take this to the prosecutor's jury. [01:29:44.160 --> 01:29:53.160] I said, oh, no, no, no, no. I'll get to him, but I haven't got everybody to touch my car baby yet. I got you two and I got your Bailiff two and a judge. [01:29:53.160 --> 01:29:59.160] And now I want to get the sheriff two. Then I'll go to the prosecutor. Hang on. Be right back. [01:30:04.160 --> 01:30:11.160] This vital mineral fights cancer, fatigue, and high blood pressure. Plus, it does wonders for your thyroid, liver, and immune system. [01:30:11.160 --> 01:30:17.160] And Dr. Catherine Albright, in a moment, I'll let you know what this important, healthy nutrient is. [01:30:17.160 --> 01:30:27.160] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.160 --> 01:30:35.160] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.160 --> 01:30:46.160] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.160 --> 01:30:54.160] When you think of nutritional deficiencies, you probably think of third world countries, or maybe you think of iron, folic acid, or vitamin C. [01:30:54.160 --> 01:31:01.160] But nutrition is saying many of us don't get enough iodine, a trace mineral that's essential for thyroid and immune function. [01:31:01.160 --> 01:31:09.160] Iodine is found in seafood, egg yolks, meat, and milk, and it's added to iodized salt. Vegetarians can get it through seaweed. [01:31:09.160 --> 01:31:19.160] But because the body does not make iodine, experts say up to three-quarters of us may be deficient, and that can lead to weight gain, depression, and even cancer. [01:31:19.160 --> 01:31:24.160] So put the eye back into iodine and check with your doctor to make sure you're getting enough. [01:31:24.160 --> 01:31:31.160] Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.160 --> 01:31:37.160] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:37.160 --> 01:31:44.160] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.160 --> 01:31:49.160] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:49.160 --> 01:31:51.160] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.160 --> 01:31:52.160] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.160 --> 01:31:53.160] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.160 --> 01:31:54.160] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.160 --> 01:31:56.160] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:56.160 --> 01:31:58.160] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.160 --> 01:32:02.160] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.160 --> 01:32:06.160] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:06.160 --> 01:32:13.160] In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.160 --> 01:32:20.160] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.160 --> 01:32:26.160] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.160 --> 01:32:36.160] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.160 --> 01:32:41.160] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.160 --> 01:32:51.160] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.160 --> 01:32:55.160] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.160 --> 01:33:12.160] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:25.160 --> 01:33:44.160] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and I have a board full of callers. [01:33:44.160 --> 01:33:52.160] I want to spend more time with you because, Carla, we are talking about my favorite subject. [01:33:52.160 --> 01:33:59.160] I've been doing this, I've been researching law and procedure for over 30 years. [01:33:59.160 --> 01:34:04.160] And in that time, I found something horribly wrong with the system. [01:34:04.160 --> 01:34:10.160] And it took me, it spent 15 years crafting a remedy. [01:34:10.160 --> 01:34:16.160] And I'm hoping to get you to be part of my remedy. [01:34:16.160 --> 01:34:23.160] Oh, please, I can help you so much, I've got so much to do. [01:34:23.160 --> 01:34:29.160] We can change everything. But what I'm doing is way too complex and involved for me to explain in a very short time. [01:34:29.160 --> 01:34:32.160] Can you call back tomorrow night? [01:34:32.160 --> 01:34:35.160] Absolutely. What time would you like us to call back? [01:34:35.160 --> 01:34:40.160] Call in at eight o'clock. I do a four-hour show tomorrow night, so I'll have more time. [01:34:40.160 --> 01:34:42.160] Absolutely. [01:34:42.160 --> 01:34:49.160] And I've got another new caller. That's why I've got Mark in Wisconsin. [01:34:49.160 --> 01:34:53.160] And you know those guys in Wisconsin are all about your Yankees. [01:34:53.160 --> 01:34:57.160] Yeah, Mark's been a long time listener. [01:34:57.160 --> 01:35:01.160] He used to broadcast us out of Madison years ago. [01:35:01.160 --> 01:35:07.160] But I've got a new caller in Texas I'd like to take. [01:35:07.160 --> 01:35:12.160] And if you'll call in tomorrow, yours is much more complex. If you'll send me a timeline. [01:35:12.160 --> 01:35:17.160] I want to look at it, because I'm going to look at it from the perspective of, [01:35:17.160 --> 01:35:22.160] well, what can we use to boot them into behind? [01:35:22.160 --> 01:35:26.160] Do you know what happens when you file a bar grievance against the lawyer? [01:35:26.160 --> 01:35:35.160] What can you tell me that I can do right now to get back into my house and get my papers and documents and things like this? [01:35:35.160 --> 01:35:41.160] Because with all the times they tried to break in, I have enough papers literally to bury them six times over. [01:35:41.160 --> 01:35:45.160] Yeah, make sure you've got all your documentation. That's most important. [01:35:45.160 --> 01:35:50.160] You should have it all scanned in and on the web somewhere. [01:35:50.160 --> 01:35:52.160] Yeah, let me guess. [01:35:52.160 --> 01:35:55.160] If you don't, I can help you do that. [01:35:55.160 --> 01:35:56.160] I need it. [01:35:56.160 --> 01:35:59.160] I got space I can post it up on. [01:35:59.160 --> 01:36:05.160] Oh, that'd be wonderful. Don't kick their butt, because boy, I have been doing everything and I have been filing the law. [01:36:05.160 --> 01:36:10.160] I was going to say the funniest thing was when a lawyer said to me the first time I was doing pro se. [01:36:10.160 --> 01:36:14.160] And I came up with all the documents and everything else and the judge looked at me and he said, [01:36:14.160 --> 01:36:21.160] yes, I see the file right here and I agree with you 100% and no, they cannot do summary judgment and no, I'm not going to let them move for closure. [01:36:21.160 --> 01:36:30.160] And no, Mr. So-and-So lawyer, whatever, I'm not doing this and the lawyer dragged out immediately from all this fraud and this other lawyer turned to me and said, [01:36:30.160 --> 01:36:34.160] you're really great. How long have you been practicing law? [01:36:34.160 --> 01:36:41.160] We'll talk about that tomorrow. There's things lawyers don't know and can't do. [01:36:41.160 --> 01:36:46.160] You have powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal attorneys. [01:36:46.160 --> 01:36:49.160] Oh, man. Oh, I love you. Yes, please. [01:36:49.160 --> 01:37:00.160] What I was going to tell you about bar grievances, if you file a bar grievance against the lawyer, the bar association is going to get that grievance and they're going to throw it in the trash. [01:37:00.160 --> 01:37:01.160] Yes, thank you. [01:37:01.160 --> 01:37:10.160] They're going to send you this letter. It said we examined into your accusation and we find no, I should have this memorized. [01:37:10.160 --> 01:37:12.160] Sounds for your argument, yes. [01:37:12.160 --> 01:37:22.160] Yeah, they're always the same thing and that's a good thing. The reason it's a good thing is they all have an insurance carrier. [01:37:22.160 --> 01:37:35.160] There's an emissions policy and that there's an emissions policy company has an agent and it is his duty, his job, to charge his client as much as he can and avoid any claims. [01:37:35.160 --> 01:37:42.160] So how is the insurance company to gauge their level of risk? By valid bar grievances? [01:37:42.160 --> 01:37:45.160] Heck, they throw them all in the trash. [01:37:45.160 --> 01:37:51.160] By the numbers. One bar grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. [01:37:51.160 --> 01:37:56.160] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, if you've been practicing 20 years, they'll cancel. [01:37:56.160 --> 01:38:01.160] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance and it starts at like 20. [01:38:01.160 --> 01:38:09.160] Your insurance starts at about 25 grand a year. You have some crazy and there's nothing to do about it. [01:38:09.160 --> 01:38:15.160] If they say a word about it, you're bargaining them for that because they're forbidden to. [01:38:15.160 --> 01:38:27.160] It's like you go into court and you get behind your table and the lawyer goes behind his table and you walk over there and you kick him right in the square and he's behind and he's got a standard neck like you didn't do it. [01:38:27.160 --> 01:38:35.160] Oh, that is so much fun. I have one guy that the bar asked him to stop sending written complaints. [01:38:35.160 --> 01:38:40.160] He gave me a stack of written complaints, three inches high. [01:38:40.160 --> 01:38:49.160] Because they've taken too many people to go through all, he asked them to send them all in electronic format. [01:38:49.160 --> 01:39:00.160] He coined the term barg, grieve them into the stone age. Okay, let me take Taylor from Texas and call it tomorrow night. [01:39:00.160 --> 01:39:02.160] Thank you. Oh, God, yes. [01:39:02.160 --> 01:39:07.160] Send me that timeline and we'll have a lot more to talk about. [01:39:07.160 --> 01:39:12.160] I will try to get it through the email, but sometimes I have trouble with that. [01:39:12.160 --> 01:39:15.160] So if there's another way, I can do it by text or whatever through that. [01:39:15.160 --> 01:39:20.160] Skype, look up Rood of Law radio on Skype. You can send it to me there. [01:39:20.160 --> 01:39:24.160] Just zip it and you put big files in Skype. [01:39:24.160 --> 01:39:29.160] You are terrific. Thank you so much for listening to us. [01:39:29.160 --> 01:39:35.160] I feel like I've been shouting in the wind for 12 years, the deaf ears falling in the courtroom. [01:39:35.160 --> 01:39:40.160] And I finally got somebody who's like, I'm a little kickass and I've been waiting for that. [01:39:40.160 --> 01:39:47.160] I've helped over 700 people file federal lawsuits so I'm close here, so I'm familiar with the area. [01:39:47.160 --> 01:39:56.160] I want my home back, but more than that, I want everything they took from us, our dignity, our history, our background, [01:39:56.160 --> 01:40:02.160] the ability to be able to go to work without having people look at you funny, you know, our health and everything else. [01:40:02.160 --> 01:40:06.160] I've wanted it in the hospital twice thanks to the dirty tricks that these lawyers do. [01:40:06.160 --> 01:40:11.160] When they split my house and I slipped and fell and wound up in a hospital [01:40:11.160 --> 01:40:15.160] because I cracked my head on ice in my own house in my bathroom. [01:40:15.160 --> 01:40:20.160] I slipped and fell and hit my head on the bathroom sink. I want to kill them, okay? [01:40:20.160 --> 01:40:27.160] Okay, well, I will show you how to do legal combat. [01:40:27.160 --> 01:40:29.160] That sounds like fun. [01:40:29.160 --> 01:40:39.160] I'm good at it, and I will show you how to be the thorn in their sights that they can't do anything about. [01:40:39.160 --> 01:40:45.160] You have to smile at me while I'm gigging on big time. [01:40:45.160 --> 01:40:53.160] Okay, let's talk tomorrow night. Thank you for calling, and we're going to go to Taylor in Texas. [01:40:53.160 --> 01:40:56.160] Hello, Taylor. [01:40:56.160 --> 01:40:59.160] Can you hear me? Now I can hear you. [01:40:59.160 --> 01:41:03.160] All right, glad to be talking to you. Thanks for taking my call. [01:41:03.160 --> 01:41:06.160] What do you have for us today? [01:41:06.160 --> 01:41:14.160] Well, I have three questions. I'll start with the first, and you can let me know if there's time for the second beyond. Is that fair? [01:41:14.160 --> 01:41:16.160] Okay. [01:41:16.160 --> 01:41:31.160] Okay, so first, in context of Pareto's law, I'm brand new to the study of law, so as green to get, I'd like to know, in your opinion, where ought I direct my efforts to get the maximum value for my time studying law as pro se? [01:41:31.160 --> 01:41:39.160] In other words, how ought I structure my time or my study of law to be as legally legal as possible in my town of Abilene? [01:41:39.160 --> 01:41:44.160] Okay, first thing to do is go down to the district court. [01:41:44.160 --> 01:41:51.160] Go to the clerk's office and ask the clerk, what cases do you have? [01:41:51.160 --> 01:42:00.160] Now, smooth the clerks. I tell people, never screw with the clerks. The clerks do not have a dog in the hunt. [01:42:00.160 --> 01:42:04.160] No matter what the courts are doing to you, the clerks don't have anything to do with that. [01:42:04.160 --> 01:42:10.160] And if you're present with the clerks, they'll bend over backwards to help you. Tell them. [01:42:10.160 --> 01:42:20.160] Your research in law, what are the most contentious cases that you've had through this court in the last few years? [01:42:20.160 --> 01:42:25.160] And pull me some of those. Essentially, give me the biggest ones. [01:42:25.160 --> 01:42:29.160] When I first started doing legal research, that's how I did it. [01:42:29.160 --> 01:42:35.160] That's where I found my motion in limony. Do you know what a motion in limony is? [01:42:35.160 --> 01:42:37.160] I don't. [01:42:37.160 --> 01:42:43.160] Yeah, I saw that and said, what in the heck is a motion in limony? So I pulled it out. [01:42:43.160 --> 01:42:49.160] 25 pages of questions the other side can't ask. [01:42:49.160 --> 01:42:54.160] I'm in court before this judge hates me, and we're going through the motion in limony, [01:42:54.160 --> 01:43:03.160] and I've objected to the presentation of any evidence concerning any hypnotic inductions. [01:43:03.160 --> 01:43:08.160] And the judge said, well, Mr. Coffin, were you hypnotized? Well, I don't know, judge. [01:43:08.160 --> 01:43:12.160] You know how they make you forget that kind of stuff? Ask him. [01:43:12.160 --> 01:43:17.160] I left a prosecutor. The judge was furious. [01:43:17.160 --> 01:43:19.160] Not who cares. [01:43:19.160 --> 01:43:28.160] You will find, instead of trying to study the philosophy and all this case law research crap, [01:43:28.160 --> 01:43:33.160] look at what the courts actually do. Go look at the biggest, most hard fought files, [01:43:33.160 --> 01:43:37.160] but the guys with a lot of money, they can pay the lawyers to fight hard. [01:43:37.160 --> 01:43:42.160] You will find cladings and motions you wouldn't believe. [01:43:42.160 --> 01:43:45.160] Best education you can get quickly on. [01:43:45.160 --> 01:43:50.160] We're about to go to break. I'll talk about litigation guides when we come back. [01:43:50.160 --> 01:44:00.160] Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens, rule of law radio, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.160 --> 01:44:06.160] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.160 --> 01:44:11.160] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.160 --> 01:44:17.160] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.160 --> 01:44:22.160] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:22.160 --> 01:44:25.160] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.160 --> 01:44:31.160] Logo Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.160 --> 01:44:40.160] We have come to trust Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. 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[01:46:23.160 --> 01:46:27.160] Something in this world I will never understand [01:46:27.160 --> 01:46:31.160] Something I realize fully [01:46:31.160 --> 01:46:35.160] Somebody's on a police, a police man [01:46:35.160 --> 01:46:39.160] Somebody's on a police, a police [01:46:39.160 --> 01:46:44.160] There's always room at the top of the hill [01:46:44.160 --> 01:46:49.160] I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely left to [01:46:49.160 --> 01:46:53.160] They're wishing it was more than opposition to bills [01:46:53.160 --> 01:46:57.160] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will [01:46:57.160 --> 01:47:01.160] Something in this world will never understand [01:47:01.160 --> 01:47:05.160] Something I realize fully [01:47:05.160 --> 01:47:09.160] Somebody's on a police, a police man [01:47:09.160 --> 01:47:13.160] Somebody's on a police, a police [01:47:13.160 --> 01:47:16.160] I know they will [01:47:16.160 --> 01:47:20.160] They're going to put the bill [01:47:20.160 --> 01:47:23.160] I know they will [01:47:23.160 --> 01:47:26.160] I know they will [01:47:26.160 --> 01:47:29.160] I know they will [01:47:29.160 --> 01:47:32.160] I know they will [01:47:32.160 --> 01:47:34.160] I know they will [01:47:34.160 --> 01:47:40.160] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Taylor in Texas. [01:47:40.160 --> 01:47:46.160] Mark and Tina, I probably won't get to you today. [01:47:46.160 --> 01:47:52.160] Can you call back tomorrow night and Mark, where have you been? [01:47:52.160 --> 01:47:54.160] It's been a long time. [01:47:54.160 --> 01:47:59.160] Call back tomorrow night. These are our first-time callers, so I always want to take them first. [01:47:59.160 --> 01:48:04.160] It's not like we're ignoring you because you're a Yankee. [01:48:04.160 --> 01:48:09.160] Okay, I didn't insult you a minute ago because you're a Yankee, but Yankees should be [01:48:09.160 --> 01:48:13.160] used to that. [01:48:13.160 --> 01:48:18.160] Okay, anyway, we're back to Mark, to Taylor in Texas. [01:48:18.160 --> 01:48:22.160] Taylor, you'll find that I often abuse my callers. [01:48:22.160 --> 01:48:26.160] Yeah, I've been noticing. [01:48:26.160 --> 01:48:31.160] Okay, where were we? I was real busy on the break. [01:48:31.160 --> 01:48:32.160] You were telling me to come down. [01:48:32.160 --> 01:48:35.160] Okay, oh, oh, oh, yeah, okay. I'm sorry, I remember. [01:48:35.160 --> 01:48:44.160] Litigation Guides. The best one in Texas is O'Connor's Litigation Guide. [01:48:44.160 --> 01:48:53.160] And the best way to do this is call a couple of law firms and tell them that you are homeschooling your kids, [01:48:53.160 --> 01:48:57.160] and you wanted to give them a primer on law. [01:48:57.160 --> 01:49:05.160] Do you have any outdated litigation guides? I had a woman in Amarillo do that, [01:49:05.160 --> 01:49:09.160] and she said on the second call, the lawyer said, [01:49:09.160 --> 01:49:15.160] do you have a station wagon or a pickup truck? [01:49:15.160 --> 01:49:21.160] It is what happens. Every two years O'Connor's puts out a new litigation guide. [01:49:21.160 --> 01:49:29.160] Now what the litigation guide is, is it lists all the motions and pleadings you can imagine. [01:49:29.160 --> 01:49:33.160] And it gives you a form for producing that motion or pleading. [01:49:33.160 --> 01:49:37.160] And it gives you standard case law for all these motions and pleadings, [01:49:37.160 --> 01:49:41.160] and this is critically important. [01:49:41.160 --> 01:49:51.160] A friend of mine, he's my civil go-to guy, Tim Magnuson. He's handicapped and he's in a foreclosure issue. [01:49:51.160 --> 01:49:55.160] He specialized in foreclosure and I did, so he called me. [01:49:55.160 --> 01:50:00.160] And he wanted a motion for temporary restraining orders. [01:50:00.160 --> 01:50:03.160] So he wrote one, sent it to me and asked me what I thought. [01:50:03.160 --> 01:50:06.160] And I looked at it and I said, piece of crap, Ken. [01:50:06.160 --> 01:50:08.160] He said, you think you can do better? [01:50:08.160 --> 01:50:13.160] Sure. So I sent him one. He filed it, went to court. [01:50:13.160 --> 01:50:17.160] They didn't expect the lawyer to show up on the other side, but he did. [01:50:17.160 --> 01:50:22.160] They went in, the judge read the motion, granted him the restraining order. [01:50:22.160 --> 01:50:27.160] They come out and the lawyer said, are you an attorney? [01:50:27.160 --> 01:50:32.160] He said, no, but my brother is. He said, did you write this? [01:50:32.160 --> 01:50:39.160] He said, well, I had some help. The lawyer said, this is very good. [01:50:39.160 --> 01:50:45.160] And Ken told me that. I'm thinking, what the heck? [01:50:45.160 --> 01:50:56.160] What I didn't tell Ken right away, I eventually did, was I took O'Connor's forms and filled in the blanks. [01:50:56.160 --> 01:51:03.160] So what happened was, since most everybody uses O'Connor's forms, [01:51:03.160 --> 01:51:07.160] the judge got this motion for a temporary restraining order. [01:51:07.160 --> 01:51:14.160] He saw everything he expected to see exactly where he expected to see it. [01:51:14.160 --> 01:51:20.160] He saw all the case law exactly like everybody else used. [01:51:20.160 --> 01:51:27.160] And the one section, the specific facts of this case, was the only thing he had to look at. [01:51:27.160 --> 01:51:35.160] The only way he could know that a lawyer didn't produce this is he didn't have a lawyer signature on the bottom of it. [01:51:35.160 --> 01:51:38.160] That is really important. [01:51:38.160 --> 01:51:45.160] We've got a lot of pro se researchers out here who do all kinds of innovative stuff. [01:51:45.160 --> 01:51:51.160] And what it says to the judge, amateur, amateur, don't pay attention to this guy. [01:51:51.160 --> 01:52:02.160] You write this really well researched document and it's filled with all kinds of great case law that the judge has never seen before. [01:52:02.160 --> 01:52:06.160] You think that judge is going to read 20 cases? [01:52:06.160 --> 01:52:08.160] He's busy. [01:52:08.160 --> 01:52:10.160] Denied. [01:52:10.160 --> 01:52:12.160] Now that may not be right. [01:52:12.160 --> 01:52:15.160] But that's how it works in the world you and I live in. [01:52:15.160 --> 01:52:24.160] So you get the most used litigation guide and never ever write your motion from scratch. [01:52:24.160 --> 01:52:26.160] Write it from the litigation guide. [01:52:26.160 --> 01:52:27.160] Call these lawyers. [01:52:27.160 --> 01:52:33.160] Every two years a new copy comes out and the lawyer wants to quote the latest law. [01:52:33.160 --> 01:52:35.160] You don't care. [01:52:35.160 --> 01:52:38.160] 90% of the law doesn't change much. [01:52:38.160 --> 01:52:43.160] So all the basic stuff will be the same year to year. [01:52:43.160 --> 01:52:48.160] So you can quickly produce motions and pleadings. [01:52:48.160 --> 01:52:57.160] You have all the basic format there and it is in a format that the judge will look at it and immediately recognize. [01:52:57.160 --> 01:53:02.160] He knows exactly where you got all this because he sees it over and over and over. [01:53:02.160 --> 01:53:04.160] Everybody uses it. [01:53:04.160 --> 01:53:11.160] And it will dramatically reduce your time in producing documentation. [01:53:11.160 --> 01:53:12.160] Great. [01:53:12.160 --> 01:53:16.160] That's the best two pieces I can give you. [01:53:16.160 --> 01:53:23.160] The O'Connor's will tell you for this kind of motion, this is how you argue for it. [01:53:23.160 --> 01:53:25.160] This is the case law in support of it. [01:53:25.160 --> 01:53:27.160] This is how you argue against it. [01:53:27.160 --> 01:53:29.160] This is the case law against it. [01:53:29.160 --> 01:53:34.160] They give you everything you need, at least 95%. [01:53:34.160 --> 01:53:39.160] Then the rest of it, I'm developing a tool for that. [01:53:39.160 --> 01:53:44.160] But to answer your first question, that would be my suggestion. [01:53:44.160 --> 01:53:50.160] First thing to do, right now, if you're just new to this, you don't know the questions to ask. [01:53:50.160 --> 01:53:54.160] So go look in some cases that have been filed. [01:53:54.160 --> 01:53:59.160] And you look through a few cases and you'll begin to see a pattern. [01:53:59.160 --> 01:54:02.160] And you'll get an idea of what you can file. [01:54:02.160 --> 01:54:05.160] You'll come across stuff you'd otherwise never see. [01:54:05.160 --> 01:54:08.160] You don't have to try to memorize all of it. [01:54:08.160 --> 01:54:12.160] You come across this odd ball motion and you think that's cool. [01:54:12.160 --> 01:54:15.160] Five years later, you'll come across that issue and say, [01:54:15.160 --> 01:54:18.160] wait a minute, I remember seeing something like that and you can go back and find it. [01:54:18.160 --> 01:54:21.160] But that'll give you a basic understanding. [01:54:21.160 --> 01:54:26.160] And then when you go to the litigation guide, it's more specific. [01:54:26.160 --> 01:54:33.160] You have to look up motions or pleadings or issues that you're interested in. [01:54:33.160 --> 01:54:37.160] But that will get you way down the road. [01:54:37.160 --> 01:54:38.160] Cool. [01:54:38.160 --> 01:54:39.160] Okay. [01:54:39.160 --> 01:54:40.160] Next question. [01:54:40.160 --> 01:54:41.160] All right. [01:54:41.160 --> 01:54:43.160] Well, you answered my second one. [01:54:43.160 --> 01:54:46.160] So we'll wave that and we'll jump to the last one. [01:54:46.160 --> 01:54:54.160] The issue I'm most passionate about is freedom from the 5G infrastructure being constructed for personal reasons. [01:54:54.160 --> 01:55:00.160] Do you have an idea where I should direct my efforts to be most effective in this field? [01:55:00.160 --> 01:55:01.160] Okay. [01:55:01.160 --> 01:55:05.160] I've heard some rumblings about 5G. [01:55:05.160 --> 01:55:10.160] But tell me what the problem is with 5G. [01:55:10.160 --> 01:55:11.160] Okay. [01:55:11.160 --> 01:55:17.160] Well, you're an engineer, so you honestly might be able to get into the technical weeds more than me. [01:55:17.160 --> 01:55:23.160] But it uses a spectrum of the radio frequency spectrum. [01:55:23.160 --> 01:55:27.160] And it's a millimeter wave spectrum thing. [01:55:27.160 --> 01:55:32.160] So there's a lot of issues with cancer and basically radiation sickness. [01:55:32.160 --> 01:55:36.160] Send me an email. [01:55:36.160 --> 01:55:42.160] I've got someone who specifically researches this area. [01:55:42.160 --> 01:55:47.160] You will very definitely want to talk to him. [01:55:47.160 --> 01:55:48.160] Okay. [01:55:48.160 --> 01:55:49.160] Okay. [01:55:49.160 --> 01:55:57.160] I'm an engineer and this argument concerns me. [01:55:57.160 --> 01:56:07.160] The reason it does is we live in a soup of electromagnetic radiation. [01:56:07.160 --> 01:56:08.160] Right. [01:56:08.160 --> 01:56:17.160] One pulsar will irritate you far more than a cell phone tower down the street. [01:56:17.160 --> 01:56:32.160] We have so much trash coming through our atmosphere from the cosmos that the signals we're producing relative to what is blasted on us on a regular basis is nothing. [01:56:32.160 --> 01:56:36.160] And I know there are a lot of studies. [01:56:36.160 --> 01:56:45.160] This particular individual was a guard in a prison and his guard tower was right under a set of high tension lines. [01:56:45.160 --> 01:56:56.160] And he claims a lot of his physical conditions physical conditions are because of that electromagnetic magnetic radiation from those lines. [01:56:56.160 --> 01:57:08.160] But then there are those who wear magnets because they have been shown to cause health benefits. [01:57:08.160 --> 01:57:17.160] So 5G is as far as I understand about 5G. [01:57:17.160 --> 01:57:22.160] It's just a methodology. [01:57:22.160 --> 01:57:28.160] The signal strength is no greater than 4G or anything else. [01:57:28.160 --> 01:57:35.160] For those who don't understand what we're talking about, this is your internet broadband frequencies. [01:57:35.160 --> 01:57:36.160] Yeah. [01:57:36.160 --> 01:57:41.160] And they're gradually, you know, they're increasing the speed. [01:57:41.160 --> 01:57:47.160] And, you know, there's concern about cell phones causing problems. [01:57:47.160 --> 01:57:53.160] And that I understand because the cell phone is right against your ear. [01:57:53.160 --> 01:57:59.160] Electromagnetic propagation decreases logarithmically with distance. [01:57:59.160 --> 01:58:00.160] Right. [01:58:00.160 --> 01:58:03.160] It's strong, very close, but you get a little ways away. [01:58:03.160 --> 01:58:04.160] It's like a magnet. [01:58:04.160 --> 01:58:05.160] Magnet will show you. [01:58:05.160 --> 01:58:07.160] You get a magnet really close and it's really strong. [01:58:07.160 --> 01:58:09.160] You back up just a little bit. [01:58:09.160 --> 01:58:13.160] It drops off really, really fast. [01:58:13.160 --> 01:58:21.160] What we're transmitting through the air is relative to the background noise. [01:58:21.160 --> 01:58:24.160] It's a real weak signal. [01:58:24.160 --> 01:58:34.160] If you don't have really good filters on your system, then the background noise will swamp anything you try to transmit. [01:58:34.160 --> 01:58:40.160] You've got a capacitor and a resistor and an inductor. [01:58:40.160 --> 01:58:45.160] An inductor knocks down high frequency. [01:58:45.160 --> 01:58:48.160] A capacitor knocks down low frequency. [01:58:48.160 --> 01:58:50.160] So you can develop. [01:58:50.160 --> 01:58:58.160] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.160 --> 01:59:08.160] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.160 --> 01:59:11.160] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.160 --> 01:59:20.160] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.160 --> 01:59:30.160] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.160 --> 01:59:32.160] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.160 --> 01:59:41.160] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.160 --> 01:59:52.160] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:52.160 --> 02:00:11.160] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com.