[00:00.000 --> 00:05.840] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing the daily [00:05.840 --> 00:13.520] fuller sense for the commodity market, today's history, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.520 --> 00:21.320] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.320 --> 00:29.080] Markets for Wazeva 6th of February 2019 open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver $15.77 [00:29.080 --> 00:36.760] an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, brand crude $61.98 a [00:36.760 --> 00:45.640] barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple XRP $0.29, Ethereum [00:45.640 --> 00:51.640] $10.10 and Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [00:51.640 --> 00:59.640] Today in History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [00:59.640 --> 01:04.520] qualifications get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:04.520 --> 01:06.040] was passed by Parliament. [01:06.040 --> 01:13.640] Today in History, in recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting [01:13.640 --> 01:18.480] that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally [01:18.480 --> 01:19.840] registered to vote. [01:19.840 --> 01:24.640] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary [01:24.640 --> 01:30.000] of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety which sought to identify non-U.S. citizens [01:30.000 --> 01:33.360] who were registered to vote when obtaining age-arvest license. [01:33.360 --> 01:37.040] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:37.040 --> 01:41.120] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:41.120 --> 01:45.360] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:45.360 --> 01:50.880] Apparently around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:50.880 --> 01:55.240] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:55.240 --> 01:57.040] with proof of eligibility. [01:57.040 --> 02:01.240] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [02:01.240 --> 02:09.000] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [02:09.000 --> 02:14.400] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his neck after [02:14.400 --> 02:16.960] a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [02:16.960 --> 02:20.680] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [02:20.680 --> 02:24.280] An x-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [02:24.280 --> 02:30.480] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [02:30.480 --> 02:35.240] First-edition anchorwoman Kristin Diaz interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [02:35.240 --> 02:40.200] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [02:40.200 --> 02:44.640] Conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [02:44.640 --> 02:47.480] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [02:47.480 --> 02:50.480] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [02:50.480 --> 03:16.480] This is Rick Brody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [03:16.480 --> 03:27.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rue La Radio, and we're talking to Robinson in Washington, [03:27.080 --> 03:29.600] and we were talking about elements. [03:29.600 --> 03:31.080] Every claim has elements. [03:31.080 --> 03:40.760] Yeah, you just made out the elements of a complaint there, and it was like 11 elements. [03:40.760 --> 03:47.320] The amount of elements determines how long the complaint can be, because you have to [03:47.320 --> 03:48.320] plead all the elements, right? [03:48.320 --> 03:49.320] Right. [03:49.320 --> 03:50.320] You have to plead all the elements. [03:50.320 --> 04:00.560] Like, if you're accused of a crime, and the complaint does not plead, does not claim all [04:00.560 --> 04:06.400] of the elements of the crime, then the complaint is insufficient, you move strike. [04:06.400 --> 04:12.000] If you're in court, the prosecution has to prove every element. [04:12.000 --> 04:16.440] Yeah, I want to get back to that, too, but I want to move on to something else real quick. [04:16.440 --> 04:18.200] I don't understand this. [04:18.200 --> 04:19.560] What is actually the claim? [04:19.560 --> 04:24.880] Is the claim, you hit me, or is the claim, you hit me, and because you hit me, you hurt [04:24.880 --> 04:25.880] me? [04:25.880 --> 04:26.880] Yes. [04:26.880 --> 04:33.840] Okay, if you're speaking to a tort, a tort is as opposed to a cause of action. [04:33.840 --> 04:39.640] A cause of action always goes to a contractual agreement, or arrangement. [04:39.640 --> 04:47.320] Not necessarily a physical contract, it can be an implied contract. [04:47.320 --> 04:52.640] Government agent harm you, whether they're under contract with the government, and part [04:52.640 --> 04:56.520] of the government's not harmed, the contract's not to harm you. [04:56.520 --> 05:00.920] You're driving down the street, some guys operate in the back hole, and he picks it [05:00.920 --> 05:05.720] up and swings it around and puts it through the side of your window as you're passing. [05:05.720 --> 05:08.680] You have no contract with this person. [05:08.680 --> 05:12.200] He created a tort against you. [05:12.200 --> 05:19.640] He must have taken some act, or failed to take some act that he should have taken and [05:19.640 --> 05:26.080] created a hazardous condition that subsequently harmed you. [05:26.080 --> 05:30.880] In this case, that's where they say there has to be harm. [05:30.880 --> 05:33.400] It doesn't necessarily have to be a contract. [05:33.400 --> 05:37.600] If he harms you without a contract, now you see that rings in tort. [05:37.600 --> 05:43.560] If you have a contract and he violates the contract, that rings in cause of action. [05:43.560 --> 05:50.240] There's a defined cause of action for almost everything you can think of. [05:50.240 --> 05:51.240] Yes. [05:51.240 --> 05:52.240] Yes. [05:52.240 --> 05:55.200] They have a book at the Law Library called Cause of Action. [05:55.200 --> 06:02.720] It has thousands of them in there, and it's kind of hard to pick which one because... [06:02.720 --> 06:03.720] You pick it by the elements. [06:03.720 --> 06:06.720] Pick it by the elements. [06:06.720 --> 06:12.400] You have to be able to show each of the elements and any cause of action that contains all [06:12.400 --> 06:18.800] of the elements of your issue and no elements that are not in your issue. [06:18.800 --> 06:19.800] Okay. [06:19.800 --> 06:22.800] So let me ask you this question here. [06:22.800 --> 06:27.800] I'm looking at a speeding citation for my state, RCW46.61.400. [06:27.800 --> 06:34.560] I want to kind of read it out to you and... [06:34.560 --> 06:40.440] Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, hold on, hold on, speeding before we [06:40.440 --> 06:48.720] go to the elements, who can be charged with speeding and under what circumstances? [06:48.720 --> 06:54.400] Well, I'm hearing here from this citation, one that has of us can... [06:54.400 --> 06:55.400] Hold on, hold on. [06:55.400 --> 06:56.400] We're not... [06:56.400 --> 06:59.880] What you're doing right now is going to the merits. [06:59.880 --> 07:04.920] First thing we always want to go to is the jurisdiction. [07:04.920 --> 07:16.720] In Texas, we have this statute that says, speed sides shall be for the purpose of controlling [07:16.720 --> 07:22.480] commercial traffic. [07:22.480 --> 07:24.980] That's pretty clear. [07:24.980 --> 07:26.480] So if you were... [07:26.480 --> 07:35.920] If one of the elements of the claim is not the individual was operating a motor vehicle [07:35.920 --> 07:44.800] in commerce, that's an element to establish the commerce portion of the speed limit requirement. [07:44.800 --> 07:46.800] Yeah. [07:46.800 --> 07:54.560] But an angle that I was looking at, though, was if it says that you have to have a collision [07:54.560 --> 08:00.440] to be in violation of the code, and you did a discovery to the prosecutor after for evidence [08:00.440 --> 08:08.840] of a collision or hazardous condition, and he does not respond, what or says, I don't [08:08.840 --> 08:13.800] have any, what would be your next step to go? [08:13.800 --> 08:21.200] The motion to strike, the motion to strike the complaint is insufficient to fail to state [08:21.200 --> 08:22.200] all the elements. [08:22.200 --> 08:27.760] Well, that happens every time they issue a citation because they only issue and it says [08:27.760 --> 08:31.480] you violated RCW XYZ, right? [08:31.480 --> 08:32.480] Yeah. [08:32.480 --> 08:36.720] And they make any claim they want to. [08:36.720 --> 08:43.920] If you don't oppose the claim, then you provide judicial admission. [08:43.920 --> 08:55.520] We have a case, Walker V. Packer in Texas that says, any claims in the live pleadings [08:55.520 --> 09:05.440] not opposed by the opposition are construed to grant judicial notice, I'm sorry, judicial [09:05.440 --> 09:08.080] admission. [09:08.080 --> 09:14.120] So if I make a claim against you and you don't refute that claim, you admit the claim. [09:14.120 --> 09:17.440] It doesn't matter if the claim is horsemen or where. [09:17.440 --> 09:18.440] Yeah. [09:18.440 --> 09:22.440] But the only thing about it is, how can you commit a claim that's not even written down? [09:22.440 --> 09:26.360] I mean, you're not claiming it if you don't write it down. [09:26.360 --> 09:27.600] No, I'm okay. [09:27.600 --> 09:30.120] I can go in and put down anything I want to. [09:30.120 --> 09:35.320] Your Honor, I want this guy prosecuted for standing on his head, quacking like a chicken. [09:35.320 --> 09:42.800] And if you don't oppose it, then hold you for standing on your head, quacking like a [09:42.800 --> 09:43.800] chicken. [09:43.800 --> 09:45.200] Hey, what about this? [09:45.200 --> 09:53.800] Would the whoever was the defendant have a right to have the citation dismissed on [09:53.800 --> 09:58.080] his face because it doesn't list all the elements? [09:58.080 --> 10:01.800] That is the first charge that should be there. [10:01.800 --> 10:05.320] Well, the first one should be subject matter jurisdiction. [10:05.320 --> 10:08.800] Who the heck are you and what authority do you have to do this? [10:08.800 --> 10:13.960] If they get past that, like in Texas, if he's Highway Patrol, then he has authority to [10:13.960 --> 10:17.200] enforce this body of law. [10:17.200 --> 10:18.200] Okay. [10:18.200 --> 10:24.920] Then the next thing is the citation fails to state all the elements of the crime and [10:24.920 --> 10:31.760] therefore is insufficient on its face to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. [10:31.760 --> 10:32.760] Yeah. [10:32.760 --> 10:37.800] Now, I guess in a lot of cases, and this has never happened to me, and I'm just throwing [10:37.800 --> 10:42.600] this out there that whoever is the trial or fact or whatever, let's go to say, we're [10:42.600 --> 10:46.040] just here to take your plea, sir. [10:46.040 --> 10:47.040] That's all we're here. [10:47.040 --> 10:50.440] We're not here to talk about anything else that can be done after the fact. [10:50.440 --> 10:52.680] You know, where do you go with it? [10:52.680 --> 10:53.680] Okay. [10:53.680 --> 11:02.520] You need to read the criminal procedure code on first appearance. [11:02.520 --> 11:08.880] In Texas and in most every state, when you're accused of a crime, your first appearance [11:08.880 --> 11:15.280] must be before a magistrate by statute. [11:15.280 --> 11:16.280] They don't do that. [11:16.280 --> 11:24.800] I was in Highland Park, it's the most exclusive North suburb of Dallas. [11:24.800 --> 11:30.880] And so these guys are everybody that comes in there for the most part is pretty wealthy, [11:30.880 --> 11:34.760] so they can't pull many shenanigans in there. [11:34.760 --> 11:41.680] So I go in and the prosecutor calls me up and I said, no, no, no, you don't want to [11:41.680 --> 11:42.680] talk to me. [11:42.680 --> 11:46.480] I said, I don't know, no, you do not want to talk to me. [11:46.480 --> 11:51.240] The judge wants to talk to me and the prosecutor said, oh, okay. [11:51.240 --> 11:54.880] So I wait and the judge calls me up and he said, you're Randall Colton. [11:54.880 --> 11:55.880] I said, yes, I am. [11:55.880 --> 12:05.000] Mr. Colton, now you're charged with speeding and with, oh, something, oh, no registration. [12:05.000 --> 12:06.000] How do you play? [12:06.000 --> 12:08.520] Oh, judge, I'm not here to play. [12:08.520 --> 12:15.560] I'm here for an examining trial, but Mr. Colton, this is a misdemeanor. [12:15.560 --> 12:18.600] You don't have a right to examining trial. [12:18.600 --> 12:19.600] So what? [12:19.600 --> 12:27.120] What's that got to do with it, he said, well, Mr. Colton, if you don't have a right to examining [12:27.120 --> 12:31.040] trial, I can't give you one. [12:31.040 --> 12:33.240] Where'd you come up with that? [12:33.240 --> 12:35.600] Did you just make that up? [12:35.600 --> 12:42.960] The judge is looking at me confused, but they're not accustomed to someone starting at the [12:42.960 --> 12:43.960] beginning. [12:43.960 --> 12:48.360] You think they got that, though, requirement in every state, that examining trial? [12:48.360 --> 12:49.360] Yes. [12:49.360 --> 12:57.320] Gerstein Pew makes everybody have to have it. [12:57.320 --> 13:04.160] This comes from the Magna Carta first signed 1215 AD. [13:04.160 --> 13:10.680] It's been in our law for 800 years and has served us well. [13:10.680 --> 13:17.600] It was never intended that a policeman have the power to arrest and imprison. [13:17.600 --> 13:26.240] While the policeman was given the power to arrest a free man, he was not given the power [13:26.240 --> 13:28.000] to imprison that free man. [13:28.000 --> 13:34.240] He must take that free man to the nearest magistrate and explain himself, and that's [13:34.240 --> 13:41.800] why you find magistrates' offices spread around the county, because at the time, we didn't [13:41.800 --> 13:49.040] have automobiles, and they wanted a magistrate within a day's ride of any place in the county. [13:49.040 --> 13:55.160] And if you look at counties, the bigger the county, the more they have, so that they would [13:55.160 --> 13:59.080] have one within a day's ride of any spot in the county. [13:59.080 --> 14:04.120] If the person is arrested, they're taken directly to that magistrate. [14:04.120 --> 14:06.960] The officer explains himself. [14:06.960 --> 14:12.680] The magistrate determines if the guy goes to jail or not, not the policeman. [14:12.680 --> 14:16.240] It was a great tool. [14:16.240 --> 14:21.120] It helped to keep the public from having reason to fear the police. [14:21.120 --> 14:27.240] They might have to fear that magistrate, but they elected that magistrate. [14:27.240 --> 14:34.760] So he had a reason to weigh the facts carefully, and the magistrate didn't have a dog in the [14:34.760 --> 14:35.760] hunt. [14:35.760 --> 14:39.720] He didn't care if you're a guilty or not, and it wasn't his job. [14:39.720 --> 14:46.000] The policeman's one who arrested you, he's got a dog in the hunt. [14:46.000 --> 14:50.240] And the prosecutor, he's got a dog in the hunt, but the magistrate doesn't. [14:50.240 --> 14:52.720] He's a neutral arbiter. [14:52.720 --> 14:58.960] He's to listen to both sides and determine whether or not you should stand and answer. [14:58.960 --> 15:01.840] This was basic due process. [15:01.840 --> 15:10.520] And that's what I told the judge, 14.03, 14.01, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure authorizes [15:10.520 --> 15:14.720] a police officer to arrest someone for an onsite offense. [15:14.720 --> 15:20.880] Do you know three commands that officers take that person directly to the nearest magistrate? [15:20.880 --> 15:25.340] That is a statutory requirement. [15:25.340 --> 15:30.400] It does not go to whether or not I have a right to an examining trial. [15:30.400 --> 15:37.560] It goes to the duty of the officers to take me to one, and that goes to due process. [15:37.560 --> 15:41.880] And due process is something I have a right to. [15:41.880 --> 15:47.960] And after the hearing the judge told me that he represents criminal clients in his day [15:47.960 --> 15:56.840] job, and we've been trying to get examining trials for our clients, I could use this argument. [15:56.840 --> 16:02.600] So we start at the beginning. [16:02.600 --> 16:09.720] Every code will be this way they have to because of the federal requirement. [16:09.720 --> 16:16.040] Prearrest must be followed by taking the person directly to the nearest magistrate. [16:16.040 --> 16:18.440] This is extremely well established in code. [16:18.440 --> 16:27.960] Go to jurisimprudence.website and add a bunch of frogs on there. [16:27.960 --> 16:30.880] I call this the frog farm conspiracy. [16:30.880 --> 16:35.880] Top frog on the left is a habeas corpus. [16:35.880 --> 16:39.480] I wrote it for a kid in Conroe. [16:39.480 --> 16:43.240] Remember the Republic of Texas doing that stupid stuff they do, and he had spent three [16:43.240 --> 16:45.040] weeks in jail. [16:45.040 --> 16:49.520] And the President and the Attorney General of the Republic of Texas came to me and asked [16:49.520 --> 16:51.600] me if I could do something to get him out. [16:51.600 --> 16:53.960] So I wrote this habeas for him and went down there and filed it. [16:53.960 --> 16:56.240] We got him out. [16:56.240 --> 16:59.480] But it is a treatment of due process. [16:59.480 --> 17:04.240] Rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [17:04.240 --> 17:06.680] In today's America we live in a us against them society. [17:06.680 --> 17:10.360] If we the people are ever going to have a free society then we are going to have to stand [17:10.360 --> 17:11.960] and defend our own rights. [17:11.960 --> 17:14.760] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place. [17:14.760 --> 17:18.360] The right to act in our own private capacity and most importantly the right to due process [17:18.360 --> 17:19.360] of law. [17:19.360 --> 17:23.120] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [17:23.120 --> 17:25.000] our rights through due process. [17:25.000 --> 17:28.480] Former sheriff's deputy Teddy Craig in conjunction with rule of law radio has put together the [17:28.480 --> 17:32.240] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [17:32.240 --> 17:34.640] is and how to hold courts to rule of law. [17:34.640 --> 17:38.680] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [17:38.680 --> 17:40.000] ordering your copy today. [17:40.000 --> 17:43.200] By ordering now you will receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation Code [17:43.200 --> 17:44.520] The Law Versus the Lie. [17:44.520 --> 17:47.040] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [17:47.040 --> 17:50.080] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [17:50.080 --> 17:54.040] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [17:54.040 --> 18:00.640] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:00.640 --> 18:05.720] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? [18:05.720 --> 18:09.400] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.400 --> 18:13.800] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.800 --> 18:14.800] can win two. [18:14.800 --> 18:19.680] You'll get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.680 --> 18:20.680] civil rights statutes. [18:20.680 --> 18:24.920] What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons. [18:24.920 --> 18:26.920] How to answer letters and phone calls. [18:26.920 --> 18:29.520] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [18:29.520 --> 18:34.200] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.200 --> 18:39.320] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.320 --> 18:41.440] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.440 --> 18:47.000] For more information please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:47.000 --> 18:49.920] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:49.920 --> 18:57.680] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [18:57.680 --> 19:07.680] To learn how to stop debt collectors next you are listening to the Logos Radio Network [19:07.680 --> 19:08.680] LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:08.680 --> 19:18.680] Well don't let nothing get to you, only the father can do it for you, don't let bad mind [19:18.680 --> 19:21.680] people hurt you. [19:21.680 --> 19:34.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, ruleoflawradio and we're talking to Robinson in Washington. [19:34.080 --> 19:42.400] The reason I'm going to this place is this is the place almost nobody goes to. [19:42.400 --> 19:45.880] And the courts are really not used to dealing with this. [19:45.880 --> 19:53.360] They're accustomed to people coming in and arguing the merits of the case. [19:53.360 --> 20:01.840] And the best way to befuddle the court is take them to due process, take them to jurisdiction. [20:01.840 --> 20:07.080] They don't get this argued off and they don't know how to argue it and they're there running [20:07.080 --> 20:11.040] this well oiled machine. [20:11.040 --> 20:15.920] They've got all of these dollars to collect and they don't want anything to interfere [20:15.920 --> 20:22.760] with the efficiency of their fund generating tool. [20:22.760 --> 20:25.880] So when you come in there and start throwing these curves at them they don't know how to [20:25.880 --> 20:28.880] deal with them. [20:28.880 --> 20:30.440] And they generally deal badly. [20:30.440 --> 20:33.440] I want to throw something at you. [20:33.440 --> 20:41.640] Do you understand this principle, I guess, if there's actually no injury, there is no [20:41.640 --> 20:45.320] cause of action and the state has no right, so how can they deal with it? [20:45.320 --> 20:56.960] That is a patriot mythology misinterpretation of circumstance. [20:56.960 --> 21:05.560] When it comes to penal laws, Texas has a specific statute most every other state does that says [21:05.560 --> 21:14.000] that when a penal law of the state is violated, the state is the injured party. [21:14.000 --> 21:22.200] If your due process rights are violated, you do not have to show harm. [21:22.200 --> 21:30.200] That is harm per se and the courts have held that a violation of a penal law is harm per [21:30.200 --> 21:36.040] se, harm on its face and you do not have to show an injured party. [21:36.040 --> 21:42.800] I know there are a lot of guys out there claiming that but they made it up. [21:42.800 --> 21:53.240] They tried to take contract law and apply contract law to tort law. [21:53.240 --> 21:58.120] Criminal is not exactly tort but it's close. [21:58.120 --> 22:05.000] The injured party issue does not arise in criminal. [22:05.000 --> 22:10.480] It may arise if you sue the party who injured you while committing the crime but it doesn't [22:10.480 --> 22:12.800] go to the crime itself. [22:12.800 --> 22:20.560] I mean, if it is a crime, somebody is going to be harmed at some point. [22:20.560 --> 22:21.560] The reason for the criminal... [22:21.560 --> 22:25.600] On the outside bound, somehow somebody is going to be harmed, whether it is indirectly [22:25.600 --> 22:27.480] or directly, right? [22:27.480 --> 22:33.320] No, the intent of the penal laws is to prevent harm. [22:33.320 --> 22:38.840] They are there to make sure harm does not occur in the first place so to say that the [22:38.840 --> 22:45.280] only way you could enforce the penal law is after the harm had occurred it would negate [22:45.280 --> 22:48.080] the purpose of the law in the first place. [22:48.080 --> 22:52.960] Well, I mean, you have not been in violation until you actually break the law. [22:52.960 --> 22:53.960] You are not in violation. [22:53.960 --> 23:02.480] But once you violate the law, the court does not have to show harm. [23:02.480 --> 23:05.880] A violation of a penal law is harm per se. [23:05.880 --> 23:08.960] Just like a violation of your due process. [23:08.960 --> 23:13.880] What about in these administrative situations like traffic and all that? [23:13.880 --> 23:29.400] Well, if the actors fail to provide you with due process, if they fail to perform all of [23:29.400 --> 23:34.480] the duties they are required to perform, or if they exert or purport to exert an authority [23:34.480 --> 23:37.440] they do not have, that is harm per se. [23:37.440 --> 23:44.160] You are harmed on its face because it is your right and they damage you in your right. [23:44.160 --> 23:47.960] The state takes a similar position. [23:47.960 --> 23:55.320] When you violate one of our state laws, the state is harmed similarly as a matter of law. [23:55.320 --> 23:57.880] So the state does not have to show harm. [23:57.880 --> 24:03.000] I know, but basically the state is whoever the prosecutor is or whoever the policeman [24:03.000 --> 24:06.640] is or whoever it is, right? [24:06.640 --> 24:11.160] That is basically the state because who they say they can represent, they can never bring [24:11.160 --> 24:12.160] them into the courtroom. [24:12.160 --> 24:18.680] I mean, there is a maximum law which says that that which does not appear does not exist. [24:18.680 --> 24:24.120] And the statement of counsel can't be accepted as true or anything like that. [24:24.120 --> 24:26.880] Then anything they say can't be accepted in the record. [24:26.880 --> 24:35.440] Well, if they have a criminal complaint, the criminal complaint is taken as an affidavit, [24:35.440 --> 24:46.080] when a police officer signs a citation, the courts presume that citation to be signed [24:46.080 --> 24:53.840] under oath and the policeman is held responsible as if it were signed before a notary. [24:53.840 --> 25:00.800] So when the policeman finds the complaint, that invokes the jurisdiction. [25:00.800 --> 25:04.240] Did I answer the right question? [25:04.240 --> 25:05.240] Yeah. [25:05.240 --> 25:07.560] But what about you? [25:07.560 --> 25:12.200] What have you put your affidavit in with your own complaint? [25:12.200 --> 25:20.600] Exactly the same because a police officer does not file a criminal accusation in his [25:20.600 --> 25:24.880] capacity as a police officer. [25:24.880 --> 25:36.720] He files a criminal accusation in his capacity as a credible person, in his personal capacity. [25:36.720 --> 25:42.760] That's why he can be held personally liable for aggravated perjury. [25:42.760 --> 25:48.720] There's no special provision for policemen to file criminal complaints. [25:48.720 --> 25:53.360] Criminal complaints are intended to be filed by ordinary citizens and helping a guy in [25:53.360 --> 25:54.360] Georgia. [25:54.360 --> 25:59.720] Now holy mackerel, I can't believe what I found in Georgia. [25:59.720 --> 26:03.240] Oh, this is incredible. [26:03.240 --> 26:11.480] If you in Georgia, you can issue a warrant. [26:11.480 --> 26:17.280] When you file a criminal complaint, you file a petition for a warrant. [26:17.280 --> 26:26.440] You file it with the judge and it says the court shall compel the accused to come before [26:26.440 --> 26:27.440] the court. [26:27.440 --> 26:28.440] Wow. [26:28.440 --> 26:34.960] We're going to file against the judge. [26:34.960 --> 26:42.960] I've never seen that before and all the people I've talked to in Georgia, nobody seemed to [26:42.960 --> 26:44.960] be aware of it. [26:44.960 --> 26:51.280] I'm helping this guy and the city is really jerking him around and he wants to go back [26:51.280 --> 26:54.840] after him and he went to talk to him to file criminal complaints and I said, oh, you're [26:54.840 --> 26:57.200] going to file a warrant. [26:57.200 --> 26:59.240] So he sent me a copy of it. [26:59.240 --> 27:05.600] Oh, man, I was jumping up and down and clamping my hands. [27:05.600 --> 27:11.800] It referenced the code and I looked up the codes and the code is very clear. [27:11.800 --> 27:21.320] When you file a warrant application, the court shall compel the accused to appear. [27:21.320 --> 27:30.480] So filing against the mayor and the city manager and the chief of police and the fire marshal [27:30.480 --> 27:36.320] and the code inspector, everybody, this guy has two properties. [27:36.320 --> 27:44.080] They're connected to one huge building, actually two buildings that were built together. [27:44.080 --> 27:48.480] The one address for 82 is the one he's using. [27:48.480 --> 27:51.840] He's got storage units about 30,000 square feet. [27:51.840 --> 27:53.240] It's all fine. [27:53.240 --> 27:58.080] The other one has 12,000 square feet and it's not being used and the sprinkler doesn't [27:58.080 --> 27:59.080] work. [27:59.080 --> 28:05.120] The city wanted to take his property and use it in an expansion project so they came in [28:05.120 --> 28:10.040] there and locked him out of his property because the sprinkler system in the other building [28:10.040 --> 28:12.320] wasn't working. [28:12.320 --> 28:18.240] And they called the property 462-482, but it wasn't. [28:18.240 --> 28:22.000] They were two separate properties. [28:22.000 --> 28:23.000] Oops. [28:23.000 --> 28:31.480] When he filed, I wrote him an opposition that he filed in the court, they dropped all the [28:31.480 --> 28:32.480] charges immediately. [28:32.480 --> 28:33.480] Oh, wow. [28:33.480 --> 28:41.920] Sorry, bubba, that bill's already been rung, so now I'm putting together a criminal complaint [28:41.920 --> 28:48.960] and he goes down and finds out that he issued a petition for a warrant and the judge can't [28:48.960 --> 28:53.400] just sign it or not sign it. [28:53.400 --> 28:57.280] He has to order the person to come before the court. [28:57.280 --> 28:58.280] Wow. [28:58.280 --> 29:01.280] Oh, can we beat him up in Georgia? [29:01.280 --> 29:03.640] He's a citizen judge. [29:03.640 --> 29:12.360] But it's, okay, point is that demonstrates the point that you have the same power the [29:12.360 --> 29:16.000] police officer does to file complaints. [29:16.000 --> 29:23.760] Not only do you have the power to do it, you have a statutory duty to report crime. [29:23.760 --> 29:24.920] Right. [29:24.920 --> 29:31.360] And when you do that statutory duty, you become a protected class. [29:31.360 --> 29:35.800] If you heard Ted Scarlett earlier, I've been a long time trying to get him to start going [29:35.800 --> 29:36.800] after him criminally. [29:36.800 --> 29:40.640] He finally did and all of a sudden he's got them doing a dance. [29:40.640 --> 29:41.640] Yeah. [29:41.640 --> 29:44.200] Hey, we're about to go to break. [29:44.200 --> 29:51.480] Randy Kelton, wills our radio, not falling off the cliff this time. [29:51.480 --> 29:55.520] Call in number 512-646-1984. [29:55.520 --> 30:00.280] We'll be right back. [30:00.280 --> 30:05.320] What's your privacy worth? [30:05.320 --> 30:09.240] Well, it's hard to put a dollar figure on it, but some entrepreneurs want to help people [30:09.240 --> 30:12.760] earn money when marketers pluck their personal data off the web. [30:12.760 --> 30:16.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albright, back with details in a moment. [30:16.880 --> 30:18.600] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.600 --> 30:22.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.200 --> 30:27.200] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.200 --> 30:28.720] So protect your rights. [30:28.720 --> 30:32.320] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.320 --> 30:34.960] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.960 --> 30:40.560] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [30:40.560 --> 30:42.280] Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.280 --> 30:44.600] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.600 --> 30:50.880] In these times of vanishing privacy, marketers are monitoring our behavior on the Internet, [30:50.880 --> 30:54.160] aggregating our clicks, taps, and swipes to make fortunes. [30:54.160 --> 30:57.320] But what if you got paid every time your data was sold? [30:57.320 --> 31:02.080] A startup called Personal thinks it's not only possible, but profitable, how? [31:02.080 --> 31:07.400] By creating a web marketplace where people could sell access to their personal information. [31:07.400 --> 31:11.960] Users would upload intimate details of their lives to an online vault and then charge companies [31:11.960 --> 31:14.960] to access the data to market to them directly. [31:14.960 --> 31:20.640] Now, I'm all for making privacy vultures pay, but fighting for privacy by removing it feels [31:20.640 --> 31:21.640] like the wrong approach. [31:21.640 --> 31:31.240] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:31.240 --> 31:32.240] I lost my son. [31:32.240 --> 31:33.240] My uncle. [31:33.240 --> 31:34.240] My uncle. [31:34.240 --> 31:35.240] My uncle. [31:35.240 --> 31:36.240] My uncle. [31:36.240 --> 31:37.240] My uncle. [31:37.240 --> 31:38.240] My uncle. [31:38.240 --> 31:39.240] My uncle. [31:39.240 --> 31:40.240] My uncle. [31:40.240 --> 31:41.240] My uncle. [31:41.240 --> 31:43.280] My father's story's skyspruch was not hit by a plane. [31:43.280 --> 31:47.640] I will be official explanation is this fire broughtdown building seven. [31:47.640 --> 31:51.480] Over one thousand two hundred architects and engineers have looked into the evidence. [31:51.480 --> 31:53.360] And believed there's more to the story. [31:53.360 --> 31:54.760] Bring justice to my son. [31:54.760 --> 31:55.760] My uncle. [31:55.760 --> 31:56.760] My nephew. [31:56.760 --> 31:57.760] My son. [31:57.760 --> 31:58.760] Go to building what.org. [31:58.760 --> 32:01.240] Why it fell, why it mattered, and what you can do. [32:01.240 --> 32:03.600] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. [32:03.600 --> 32:07.000] Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [32:07.000 --> 32:09.760] Come on we all know the government caused it with their Tim Trells. [32:09.760 --> 32:11.560] But good luck getting them to pay for it. [32:11.560 --> 32:15.200] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [32:15.200 --> 32:19.000] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for [32:19.000 --> 32:21.760] you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [32:21.760 --> 32:26.040] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with [32:26.040 --> 32:27.360] zero complaints. [32:27.360 --> 32:31.560] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right [32:31.560 --> 32:32.760] the first time. [32:32.760 --> 32:39.320] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:39.320 --> 32:43.840] Send the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio [32:43.840 --> 32:46.080] Network to help continue this programming. [32:46.080 --> 32:51.200] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [32:51.200 --> 32:57.240] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [32:57.240 --> 32:59.280] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [32:59.280 --> 33:01.800] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [33:01.800 --> 33:13.360] Live, free speech radio, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:13.360 --> 33:21.520] Okay, we are back. [33:21.520 --> 33:28.640] Randy Kelton, Rue de la Radio on this Friday, the fifth day of April, 2019, and we're talking [33:28.640 --> 33:31.960] to Robinson in Washington. [33:31.960 --> 33:37.320] And I'm spending a lot of time on this, Robinson, because this is one of my favorite subjects. [33:37.320 --> 33:46.480] This is exactly the way I like to address these, because we're avoiding the standard [33:46.480 --> 33:48.880] traps everybody falls into. [33:48.880 --> 33:54.880] Let's go over these people where they live and give them something to dance with. [33:54.880 --> 33:57.920] Hey, Randy, let me cut you off. [33:57.920 --> 34:02.440] Let's go back to the challenge in the jurisdiction on the traffic deal. [34:02.440 --> 34:05.480] What's the angle on that? [34:05.480 --> 34:18.520] The citation fails to establish, fails to plea all of the elements of the crime. [34:18.520 --> 34:22.360] As a rule in every state, the first element is commerce. [34:22.360 --> 34:33.280] Actually, the first element is the authority of the officer to enforce the statutory scheme [34:33.280 --> 34:35.800] that comes into question often. [34:35.800 --> 34:40.600] And what would be his limitations? [34:40.600 --> 34:49.560] If he is a highway patrol or a state officer, they generally have authority to enforce [34:49.560 --> 34:54.480] the transportation codes. [34:54.480 --> 34:57.560] And generally, that is all. [34:57.560 --> 35:07.600] Now in Arizona and Georgia that I know of offhand, the peace officers have been authorized [35:07.600 --> 35:10.920] to enforce the transportation code. [35:10.920 --> 35:20.240] But in Illinois, Tennessee, Texas, and the majority of states, the state police were [35:20.240 --> 35:25.080] created for that purpose. [35:25.080 --> 35:31.960] Because when they instituted the commercial transportation rules, they were primarily [35:31.960 --> 35:41.040] for trucks, because in the 30s and 40s, they started to build bigger and bigger trucks. [35:41.040 --> 35:42.560] And these trucks were a hazard. [35:42.560 --> 35:47.760] They had horrible braking systems, the people driving them had no idea what they were doing. [35:47.760 --> 35:51.680] They were slaughtering people, but that wasn't a problem. [35:51.680 --> 35:55.080] Wiping out a few people at once, that's a big deal. [35:55.080 --> 35:59.400] The problem was they were damaging the roads and bridges. [35:59.400 --> 36:04.760] So they needed a way to get control of this, and they passed this commercial transportation [36:04.760 --> 36:05.760] code. [36:05.760 --> 36:08.680] Most of them were passed after World War II. [36:08.680 --> 36:10.560] We had just fought a war. [36:10.560 --> 36:13.160] It was Truman who got most of this done. [36:13.160 --> 36:18.240] Truman was a road builder before he got into politics. [36:18.240 --> 36:22.000] And he was horrified at the way they built roads. [36:22.000 --> 36:27.800] He complained that they built roads the same way they built them for a thousand years. [36:27.800 --> 36:30.160] They were built for horse and buggies. [36:30.160 --> 36:35.200] Ninety-degree corners are a hazard for 3,000-pound automobiles. [36:35.200 --> 36:41.000] He is the one that commissioned the design of the interstate roadway system, with clover [36:41.000 --> 36:44.040] leaves and blends in and blends out. [36:44.040 --> 36:45.320] He designed that. [36:45.320 --> 36:49.560] He was horrified that 50,000 people a year are being killed on the highways. [36:49.560 --> 36:51.920] That was more than what killed in the wars. [36:51.920 --> 36:54.480] So he tried to fix that. [36:54.480 --> 36:58.320] But we had just fought a war for our freedom. [36:58.320 --> 37:04.360] We were not about to allow the government to take these cars we were just getting to [37:04.360 --> 37:10.560] the point we could afford and have fun with and have them interfere with our fun. [37:10.560 --> 37:15.120] So they passed these codes only for commercial vehicles. [37:15.120 --> 37:20.160] And then went to the sheriff and said, okay, guys, we got this whole new set of code we [37:20.160 --> 37:22.680] want you to enforce. [37:22.680 --> 37:24.920] The sheriff told them to go scratch. [37:24.920 --> 37:29.040] We don't have funds to enforce that whole new set of code. [37:29.040 --> 37:34.880] You either got to come up with more money in our budget or you have to come up with some [37:34.880 --> 37:36.680] other solution. [37:36.680 --> 37:44.560] So the solution they came up with was hiring, creating a state police for that purpose. [37:44.560 --> 37:50.600] In the state of Illinois, the state police is called the Secretary of State Police. [37:50.600 --> 38:01.760] And the code says only the Secretary of State may enforce the commercial traffic laws. [38:01.760 --> 38:03.880] Very, very clear. [38:03.880 --> 38:12.280] A municipal court can hear a commercial traffic accusation, but it has to be written by a [38:12.280 --> 38:13.760] state police officer. [38:13.760 --> 38:22.680] So the first thing you want to test, does this officer have general authority to enforce [38:22.680 --> 38:25.760] this statutory scheme? [38:25.760 --> 38:37.440] Second, at the time of the alleged infraction, is it alleged that I fell within that statutory [38:37.440 --> 38:39.960] scheme? [38:39.960 --> 38:48.480] There must be facts establishing that I fall within the statutory scheme, goes to commerce. [38:48.480 --> 38:51.840] The first one goes to the authority of the officer to enforce it. [38:51.840 --> 38:57.160] If he has authority to enforce it, does he have authority to enforce it against me? [38:57.160 --> 39:07.080] Then the third one is the complaint sufficient to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction [39:07.080 --> 39:08.640] of the court. [39:08.640 --> 39:12.360] Does it plea every element? [39:12.360 --> 39:16.360] It must plea his authority. [39:16.360 --> 39:19.160] It must plea commerce in all of us. [39:19.160 --> 39:20.160] Okay, go ahead. [39:20.160 --> 39:23.720] Can you kind of explain that subject matter or jurisdiction? [39:23.720 --> 39:28.880] I kind of understand personality is once you serve being you're kind of within the jurisdiction [39:28.880 --> 39:29.880] of someone. [39:29.880 --> 39:35.240] But what is that subject matter all about because I hear that, well, I've read that it can never [39:35.240 --> 39:36.240] be waived. [39:36.240 --> 39:37.240] Right. [39:37.240 --> 39:43.360] The judge is, okay, I tell you what, you got this ticket. [39:43.360 --> 39:48.440] How about you appoint me to be the judge in this case? [39:48.440 --> 39:54.920] And I will hear the traffic ticket case for you. [39:54.920 --> 39:58.640] You cannot make me the judge, period. [39:58.640 --> 40:04.400] I either have that authority or I do not. [40:04.400 --> 40:10.760] If I do not have that authority, you cannot give it to me. [40:10.760 --> 40:14.920] It has to be bestowed by statute. [40:14.920 --> 40:24.280] So once I have that authority, say I am the judge, I'm the proper judge in this case. [40:24.280 --> 40:35.240] Now in order for there to be a case, the pleading must be sufficient to invoke my jurisdiction. [40:35.240 --> 40:41.360] And I've had judges that did not understand this distinction. [40:41.360 --> 40:44.160] He said, of course I have subject matter jurisdiction. [40:44.160 --> 40:49.280] I have subject matter jurisdiction over all crimes of this nature in this county. [40:49.280 --> 40:51.280] Yes, you do. [40:51.280 --> 40:52.280] Yeah. [40:52.280 --> 40:59.200] And plaintiff lack the legal capacity to invoke that subject matter jurisdiction. [40:59.200 --> 41:10.080] And that's the part they didn't really understand, that the police officer, say I try to sue [41:10.080 --> 41:11.080] you. [41:11.080 --> 41:12.080] Yeah. [41:12.080 --> 41:16.560] And I try to sue you for standing on your head and squawking like a chicken. [41:16.560 --> 41:24.360] And the court's going to say you can't invoke my subject matter jurisdiction for that because [41:24.360 --> 41:31.160] that is not a crime that falls within my subject matter jurisdiction. [41:31.160 --> 41:37.040] Or I want to sue you for theft. [41:37.040 --> 41:39.200] And the judge says, well, what do you, what do you steal? [41:39.200 --> 41:40.200] I don't know. [41:40.200 --> 41:42.400] Well, where do you steal it from? [41:42.400 --> 41:44.400] I don't know. [41:44.400 --> 41:51.120] Well, you can't invoke my subject matter jurisdiction unless you can establish the elements of a [41:51.120 --> 41:54.440] crime. [41:54.440 --> 41:58.440] Once you can establish an element of a crime, you don't have to prove it. [41:58.440 --> 42:01.000] You just have to plead it. [42:01.000 --> 42:02.120] Right. [42:02.120 --> 42:05.760] That will invoke my jurisdiction. [42:05.760 --> 42:12.040] The ticket doesn't plead all the elements. [42:12.040 --> 42:15.840] And most people don't know to challenge that. [42:15.840 --> 42:20.240] Once we start effectively challenging that, then just put that part in the ticket. [42:20.240 --> 42:24.360] Now it starts checking it, and then they'll get that part covered. [42:24.360 --> 42:28.320] But right now they don't. [42:28.320 --> 42:34.440] Another angle I want to throw at you is, you know, we were talking about if a guy who doesn't [42:34.440 --> 42:39.520] know about challenging jurisdiction, he wanted to talk about the merits of the case, right? [42:39.520 --> 42:46.000] And the guy wrote the citation, he said you were going $95 and $60 hours on, it was Sunday, [42:46.000 --> 42:47.000] whatever. [42:47.000 --> 42:51.960] And the temperature was 90 degrees and the roles were dry and clear. [42:51.960 --> 42:52.960] Right? [42:52.960 --> 42:56.120] And he put that little statement in the citation. [42:56.120 --> 43:01.200] And the officer, the judge has the citation, you go to court, and you say, hey, you bring [43:01.200 --> 43:07.520] in the case, you know what I'm talking about, the section, it says, it says here that the [43:07.520 --> 43:12.160] roles have to be hazardous, you have to dismiss that, is that a way to go about that during [43:12.160 --> 43:13.160] an arraignment? [43:13.160 --> 43:26.440] Oh yeah, the speeding statute, there is no hard and fast speed limit. [43:26.440 --> 43:29.920] The speeds are what is reasonable and prudent. [43:29.920 --> 43:36.160] In order to charge someone with speeding, they have to show that the speed was not reasonable [43:36.160 --> 43:37.640] or prudent. [43:37.640 --> 43:43.720] The courts want to avoid that part and they ignore it. [43:43.720 --> 43:51.000] And also states have to be involved in the collision. [43:51.000 --> 43:56.800] There are some states that require a collision, Texas does not. [43:56.800 --> 43:59.960] Texas just requires prima facie evidence. [43:59.960 --> 44:04.760] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination [44:04.760 --> 44:08.800] by delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:08.800 --> 44:12.680] We provide a wide assortment of your favorite products featuring a great selection of high [44:12.680 --> 44:14.680] quality coins and precious metals. [44:14.680 --> 44:18.480] We cater to beginners in coin collecting as well as large transactions for investors. [44:18.480 --> 44:23.280] We believe in educating our customers with resources from top accredited metal dealers [44:23.280 --> 44:24.280] and journalists. [44:24.280 --> 44:27.240] If we don't have what you're looking for, we can find it. [44:27.240 --> 44:31.480] In addition, we carry popular young jeffety products such as Beyond Tangy Pangerine and [44:31.480 --> 44:32.480] Pollen Burst. [44:32.480 --> 44:37.360] We also offer one-world-way, mountain house storeable foods, Berkey water products, ammunition [44:37.360 --> 44:39.520] at 10% above wholesale, and more. [44:39.520 --> 44:43.160] We program metals IRA accounts and we also accept bitcoins as payment. [44:43.160 --> 44:46.480] Call us at 512-646-644-0. [44:46.480 --> 44:51.440] We're located at 7304 Burnett Road, sweet A, about a half mile south of Anderson. [44:51.440 --> 44:54.560] We're open Monday through Friday, 10 to 6, Saturdays, 10 to 2. [44:54.560 --> 45:01.320] Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullion.com or call 512-646-644-0. [45:01.320 --> 45:04.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.520 --> 45:11.280] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.280 --> 45:14.800] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.800 --> 45:19.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.040 --> 45:23.200] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.200 --> 45:28.160] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.160 --> 45:34.840] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.840 --> 45:39.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.360 --> 45:43.680] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.680 --> 45:49.880] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.880 --> 45:52.400] prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.400 --> 46:01.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.400 --> 46:39.760] I'm not going to stay much longer, Randy, but thank you so much for talking with me. [46:39.760 --> 46:44.520] I do enjoy these kinds of treatments. [46:44.520 --> 46:51.600] When we were going out, there was one thing I had in my mind that I wanted to address. [46:51.600 --> 47:05.840] Any time we start talking about these specifics, these specifics go to an often-unstated presupposition. [47:05.840 --> 47:13.840] That presupposition is that you can't expect to win your case if you have the law and the [47:13.840 --> 47:17.520] facts on your side. [47:17.520 --> 47:23.440] It's just not that way, it never has been that way. [47:23.440 --> 47:27.960] The government wants you to believe that it is that way, and they certainly teach that [47:27.960 --> 47:30.240] in the schools. [47:30.240 --> 47:35.240] But in the real world we live in, you will only win your case if you have the politics [47:35.240 --> 47:41.120] on your side, and I'm not speaking in hyperbole. [47:41.120 --> 47:47.440] You really will only win it if you have the politics on your side, and this is all about [47:47.440 --> 47:49.320] creating politics. [47:49.320 --> 47:58.880] We use these claims we bring before the court so that we can get the court to rule improperly. [47:58.880 --> 48:06.360] When the court rules improperly, then we can go after them politically, like I have this [48:06.360 --> 48:07.360] traffic site. [48:07.360 --> 48:12.880] If you get a ticket, a traffic ticket, go to trafficticket.website, fill in the traffic [48:12.880 --> 48:18.240] ticket information, it will spit you out a whole bunch of documents. [48:18.240 --> 48:24.720] You read them if you want to, if you're not in Texas or some that goes specific to Texas, [48:24.720 --> 48:26.720] and most of them don't. [48:26.720 --> 48:29.160] You just sign them and send them. [48:29.160 --> 48:33.480] You don't care what's in them, because the court's going to get them, they don't care [48:33.480 --> 48:34.480] what's in them. [48:34.480 --> 48:40.920] They're going to blow them off, so they're just there to collect money. [48:40.920 --> 48:48.160] What they don't realize is we hope they blow them off, that's the whole point, because [48:48.160 --> 48:57.200] now we get to go directly after the courts, criminally and civilly, for failing to perform [48:57.200 --> 49:01.400] duty that required to perform in the process, not a citizen, pull three axes to a drawing [49:01.400 --> 49:02.400] of a right. [49:02.400 --> 49:09.800] A judge, we have some great case law for Texas, and this is so right. [49:09.800 --> 49:15.640] That every state is going to have something similar. [49:15.640 --> 49:25.680] We have case law that says, a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to [49:25.680 --> 49:27.480] the facts. [49:27.480 --> 49:37.200] A failure to do so is a breach of discretion, I'm sorry, an abuse of discretion. [49:37.200 --> 49:42.360] An abuse of discretion that denies a citizen in the full and free access to a drawing of [49:42.360 --> 49:45.320] a right is a crime in every state. [49:45.320 --> 49:53.600] Let me ask you this, in a case that we're talking about right now, where you go before [49:53.600 --> 50:00.440] the court and they offer no proof that the officer has any authority to monitor traffic [50:00.440 --> 50:05.800] or something like that, and the judge continues and just runs you over and says, I'm going [50:05.800 --> 50:10.800] to take your plea and we're going, is that like an obvious situation of misconduct, you [50:10.800 --> 50:11.800] would say? [50:11.800 --> 50:14.320] That's about as obvious as it gets. [50:14.320 --> 50:21.880] Mr. Baylis, arrest that judge. [50:21.880 --> 50:27.000] If you haven't done that in court, you haven't lived. [50:27.000 --> 50:30.720] First time you do that, you will get a big surprise. [50:30.720 --> 50:36.760] You will notice that it gets very quiet in the court all of a sudden. [50:36.760 --> 50:44.320] The judge, no matter how bad an attitude he has, all of a sudden he shuts up. [50:44.320 --> 50:50.940] That becomes an oops, because now you're talking to the bailiff making criminal accusations [50:50.940 --> 50:58.000] against the judge, one word out of the judge, that's obstruction of witness tampering. [50:58.000 --> 50:59.840] He knows it. [50:59.840 --> 51:04.760] But I don't suggest you do that unless you're comfortable with it and willing to go to jail [51:04.760 --> 51:07.760] if you need to. [51:07.760 --> 51:12.040] Basically my thinking is, I just want to give the lay guy, if somebody asks me a question, [51:12.040 --> 51:16.680] what would you do in a situation where I got a speaking ticket or whatever and I had to [51:16.680 --> 51:17.880] go to court tomorrow? [51:17.880 --> 51:21.640] I would hope to be able to give them some basic information. [51:21.640 --> 51:27.280] Hey, maybe take this thing right here and challenge this and maybe just the case. [51:27.280 --> 51:32.880] First, send them to my traffic site. [51:32.880 --> 51:36.800] The things they need to do, it's hard to do that very quickly. [51:36.800 --> 51:40.920] You need to file a special appearance. [51:40.920 --> 51:50.600] You need to file a motion for speedy trial, a demand for a jury, a non-waver of rights, [51:50.600 --> 51:56.560] that's my mother Hubbard motion, a Brady motion, a motion in limony. [51:56.560 --> 52:04.920] There are some motions that should be filed in every single criminal accusation no matter [52:04.920 --> 52:07.400] what it is. [52:07.400 --> 52:11.280] But you can't ask a guy with a ticket, don't know anything about law to make up all these [52:11.280 --> 52:12.280] motions. [52:12.280 --> 52:17.400] Just go to this site, fill in the information, and spit the document out, complete it, all [52:17.400 --> 52:19.080] you got to do is sign it and send it. [52:19.080 --> 52:22.680] Here you go, judge. [52:22.680 --> 52:26.880] At the very least, that's going to get you a much better deal. [52:26.880 --> 52:29.000] Hey, what about this angle? [52:29.000 --> 52:32.720] Going in for the arraignment and always ask for a continuum of like 90 days or something [52:32.720 --> 52:35.360] crazy, I'm out like that. [52:35.360 --> 52:41.400] Okay, arraignment brings up an issue. [52:41.400 --> 52:48.200] And the first hearing is required to be an examining trial, not an arraignment. [52:48.200 --> 52:50.160] Oh yeah, you said that. [52:50.160 --> 52:52.080] You said that. [52:52.080 --> 53:00.600] An arraignment is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused [53:00.600 --> 53:12.080] and taking a plea and may only be performed by a judge who has subject matter jurisdiction. [53:12.080 --> 53:20.080] The way the judge gets subject matter jurisdiction is based on an order by a magistrate after [53:20.080 --> 53:23.200] a preliminary hearing. [53:23.200 --> 53:29.560] If there is no order, there has been no preliminary hearing, the judge does not have subject matter [53:29.560 --> 53:30.560] jurisdiction. [53:30.560 --> 53:33.560] Wow, that's some powerful information. [53:33.560 --> 53:36.440] Yeah, and it's straightforward. [53:36.440 --> 53:38.960] This has been in law for 800 years. [53:38.960 --> 53:43.560] I mean, it's not like we pull some rabbit out of our hat. [53:43.560 --> 53:48.960] So, I could just look up my state code and say examining trials and I could see something? [53:48.960 --> 53:53.520] Yes, most states call it preliminary hearing. [53:53.520 --> 53:58.720] That's what Gerstein Pugh, the federal controlling case calls it. [53:58.720 --> 54:11.640] Go to Jurisimprudence.website, top frog on the left and just go through that habeas. [54:11.640 --> 54:13.880] That will give you a primer. [54:13.880 --> 54:15.640] Give me any arrest. [54:15.640 --> 54:23.400] I'll give you 19 felony and misdemeanor charges against everybody involved. [54:23.400 --> 54:27.000] They will not believe what we do to them. [54:27.000 --> 54:32.320] Okay, man, that's taken up enough of your time. [54:32.320 --> 54:33.320] Thank you very much. [54:33.320 --> 54:34.320] Thank you very much. [54:34.320 --> 54:35.320] Okay, don't be a stranger. [54:35.320 --> 54:36.320] I won't. [54:36.320 --> 54:37.320] Have a good rest of the night. [54:37.320 --> 54:38.320] Thanks a lot. [54:38.320 --> 54:39.320] Okay. [54:39.320 --> 54:40.320] Thank you, Robinson. [54:40.320 --> 54:44.320] Now we're going to John in New York. [54:44.320 --> 54:45.320] John? [54:45.320 --> 54:47.440] What do you have for us today? [54:47.440 --> 54:49.640] Well, it's not what I get. [54:49.640 --> 54:50.640] It's what you've got. [54:50.640 --> 54:57.800] Before we begin, I just want to let you know that I want to accept the blame ahead of time. [54:57.800 --> 55:01.400] If you fall off the cliff during this call, you're covered. [55:01.400 --> 55:02.400] I'm covered. [55:02.400 --> 55:03.400] Oh, good. [55:03.400 --> 55:04.400] I got plausible deniability. [55:04.400 --> 55:07.080] It's all John's fault. [55:07.080 --> 55:09.400] Guys love to have some place to put the blame. [55:09.400 --> 55:11.640] And you know, that's what we've got wives for. [55:11.640 --> 55:14.320] But mine's gotten a little sensitive about that. [55:14.320 --> 55:15.320] Oh, absolutely. [55:15.320 --> 55:18.320] As soon as the blame me. [55:18.320 --> 55:19.320] Yeah. [55:19.320 --> 55:24.320] I have yes or no and two false questions. [55:24.320 --> 55:28.440] In New York traffic court, do you have a right to a jury trial? [55:28.440 --> 55:34.440] And does the judge have an obligation to apprise you of that right in New York state? [55:34.440 --> 55:35.440] Okay. [55:35.440 --> 55:41.600] You're asking me if you have a right to a jury trial in New York, or are you saying [55:41.600 --> 55:42.600] you do? [55:42.600 --> 55:44.600] No, I'm asking. [55:44.600 --> 55:49.240] I'm asking in New York, in traffic court, do you have a right to a jury trial? [55:49.240 --> 55:51.760] I think you do, but I'm not certain. [55:51.760 --> 55:54.120] I would have to check. [55:54.120 --> 56:01.320] Just do a search for traffic citation, New York, jury trial, and it'll tell you. [56:01.320 --> 56:04.400] And does the judge have an obligation to apprise you of that fact? [56:04.400 --> 56:07.440] When you first order for the hearing? [56:07.440 --> 56:09.720] Not that I know of. [56:09.720 --> 56:15.160] The judge has a duty to apprise you of certain facts, and that is that you have a right to [56:15.160 --> 56:16.160] remain silent. [56:16.160 --> 56:22.720] But as far as I know, that's the only right he has a duty to apprise you of. [56:22.720 --> 56:23.720] What if he doesn't do that? [56:23.720 --> 56:26.640] What if he didn't apprise you of your right to remain silent? [56:26.640 --> 56:27.640] Because he did. [56:27.640 --> 56:28.640] Okay. [56:28.640 --> 56:37.440] The only thing that goes to is if the court then tries to use, or if the prosecution attempts [56:37.440 --> 56:46.720] to use information gathered from you prior to being read your rights, then that can be [56:46.720 --> 56:48.720] stricken under Miranda. [56:48.720 --> 56:49.720] Okay. [56:49.720 --> 56:57.440] In New York, an attorney told me with traffic ticket cases, there's no right to a preliminary [56:57.440 --> 56:58.440] hearing. [56:58.440 --> 56:59.440] They have scrubbed that. [56:59.440 --> 57:00.440] Is that false? [57:00.440 --> 57:01.440] Yes. [57:01.440 --> 57:08.120] So, even with traffic tickets in New York State, there has to be a preliminary hearing? [57:08.120 --> 57:10.440] Well, I said yes. [57:10.440 --> 57:15.160] Are traffic tickets in New York State treated as criminal acts? [57:15.160 --> 57:17.160] Yes. [57:17.160 --> 57:22.240] We treat traffic violations as a criminal court. [57:22.240 --> 57:27.800] Then for every criminal accusation, you have a right to a preliminary hearing. [57:27.800 --> 57:30.480] That's Christine Pugh. [57:30.480 --> 57:38.480] Every state, for the most part, has stopped holding examining trials for traffic issues. [57:38.480 --> 57:39.480] It is illegal. [57:39.480 --> 57:43.000] Now, what can you do about it? [57:43.000 --> 57:44.000] What can you do about it? [57:44.000 --> 57:48.320] Do you have to assert your right at the time, and if you don't bring it up, can you bring [57:48.320 --> 57:49.320] it up later? [57:49.320 --> 57:52.600] If you bring it up in second court? [57:52.600 --> 57:56.720] A preliminary hearing goes to subject matter jurisdiction. [57:56.720 --> 58:04.240] Subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any time, no matter how remote in history. [58:04.240 --> 58:15.600] If the judge did not have subject matter jurisdiction, it never ever accrues, and it cannot be waived. [58:15.600 --> 58:20.720] The only way it's tacitly waived is if nobody brings it up. [58:20.720 --> 58:21.720] All right. [58:21.720 --> 58:26.720] In New York State, when you give a traffic citation, you get a ticket. [58:26.720 --> 58:31.800] You are summoned to court on a particular date, and at that time, you plead guilty or [58:31.800 --> 58:32.800] not guilty. [58:32.800 --> 58:34.920] Is that a preliminary hearing? [58:34.920 --> 58:35.920] No. [58:35.920 --> 58:38.760] Oh, so they violated. [58:38.760 --> 58:41.720] In New York State, they violated all the time. [58:41.720 --> 58:43.200] That's in Rainmuth. [58:43.200 --> 58:45.200] Oh, okay. [58:45.200 --> 58:50.200] So what do you do about it in New York State again? [58:50.200 --> 58:54.360] Would you like to make more indefinite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.360 --> 58:59.560] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.560 --> 59:00.880] can really help. [59:00.880 --> 59:05.360] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.360 --> 59:06.360] today. [59:06.360 --> 59:10.240] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.240 --> 59:13.360] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.360 --> 59:18.600] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.600 --> 59:22.880] Chapter by Chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life, clearly presents God's plan [59:22.880 --> 59:27.840] of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.840 --> 59:32.840] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.840 --> 59:45.600] Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [59:45.600 --> 59:52.600] us online at bfa.org. [59:52.600 --> 01:00:00.600] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at www.logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.600 --> 01:00:05.840] To follow in these flashes brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing the Delhi [01:00:05.840 --> 01:00:13.360] Fullerton's for the commodity market, Today's History, News Updates, and the Inside Scoop [01:00:13.360 --> 01:00:21.240] into the Tides of the Alternative. [01:00:21.240 --> 01:00:27.600] Markets for Wednesday, 6th of February, 2019, open with gold at $1,313.70 an ounce, silver [01:00:27.600 --> 01:00:36.600] $15.77 an ounce, copper $2.83 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $3.66 a barrel, brand crude $61.98 [01:00:36.600 --> 01:00:43.600] a barrel, and cryptos in order of market capitalization, Bitcoin $3,401.64, Ripple [01:00:43.600 --> 01:00:54.200] XRP $0.29, Ethereum $103.10, and Eos is at $2.32 a crypto coin. [01:00:54.200 --> 01:00:59.600] Today's History, the year 1918, British women over the age of 30 who meet minimum property [01:00:59.600 --> 01:01:04.560] qualifications get the right to vote when the Representation of the People Act of 1918 [01:01:04.560 --> 01:01:06.040] was passed by Parliament. [01:01:06.040 --> 01:01:13.600] Today's History, in recent news, several Texas-based organizations filed a lawsuit today requesting [01:01:13.600 --> 01:01:18.440] that a federal court stop the state from flagging about 95,000 people as potentially illegally [01:01:18.440 --> 01:01:19.800] registered to vote. [01:01:19.800 --> 01:01:24.600] The list was compiled after an 11-month-long investigation by the Office of the Texas Secretary [01:01:24.600 --> 01:01:29.400] of State and the Texas Department of Public Safety, which sought to identify non-U.S. [01:01:29.400 --> 01:01:33.320] citizens who were registered to vote when obtaining major arbitrage license. [01:01:33.320 --> 01:01:37.040] Over half of the 95,000 did indeed vote, it seems. [01:01:37.040 --> 01:01:41.040] However, further controversy was raised when it became clear that some of the names were [01:01:41.040 --> 01:01:45.240] not in fact belonging to those who were non-citizens and registered. [01:01:45.240 --> 01:01:50.840] Apparently, around 25% of all Latino immigrants become naturalized, gaining the right to vote. [01:01:50.840 --> 01:01:55.200] Registered voters who receive letters querying their citizenship have 30 days to respond [01:01:55.200 --> 01:01:57.000] with proof of eligibility. [01:01:57.000 --> 01:02:01.200] Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and David Whitley, the Texas Secretary of State, have [01:02:01.200 --> 01:02:08.920] yet to officially comment regarding this list and any updates pertaining to it. [01:02:08.920 --> 01:02:13.640] A Texas man of only 24 years old, William Brown, died from a severed artery in his [01:02:13.640 --> 01:02:16.880] neck after a vape pen exploded while he was using it. [01:02:16.880 --> 01:02:20.600] It apparently happened in the parking lot of the vape shop where he got it. [01:02:20.600 --> 01:02:24.200] An X-ray revealed that a piece of metal was embedded in his brainstem. [01:02:24.200 --> 01:02:30.360] The vape store, Smoke and Vape DZ, has refused to comment. [01:02:30.360 --> 01:02:35.200] First edition anchorwoman, Kristen Diaz, interviewed Aislin Campbell, the executive director of [01:02:35.200 --> 01:02:40.120] Grow Local, South Texas, concerning the upcoming Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association [01:02:40.120 --> 01:02:44.600] conference, which will be taking place at the Corpus Christi Omni Hotel from February [01:02:44.600 --> 01:02:47.400] 14th to 16th, 6 to 9 p.m. [01:02:47.400 --> 01:02:50.800] You can find the interview at kiiitv.com. [01:02:50.800 --> 01:03:20.720] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for February 6th, 2019. [01:03:20.720 --> 01:03:21.720] Okay. [01:03:21.720 --> 01:03:22.720] We are back. [01:03:22.720 --> 01:03:23.720] Randy Kelton, Wheel of the Radio. [01:03:23.720 --> 01:03:26.280] We're talking to John in New York. [01:03:26.280 --> 01:03:31.920] John, I don't believe you pushed me right off the cliff. [01:03:31.920 --> 01:03:37.920] I spent half the break in freefall. [01:03:37.920 --> 01:03:39.920] I admit it. [01:03:39.920 --> 01:03:40.920] Okay. [01:03:40.920 --> 01:03:41.920] Where were we? [01:03:41.920 --> 01:03:42.920] Okay. [01:03:42.920 --> 01:03:50.560] So, in other words, in New York state, you have a right, okay. [01:03:50.560 --> 01:03:56.520] We were talking about, oh, how can you charge the cop with anything and what can you charge [01:03:56.520 --> 01:04:01.120] the judge with for that a failure of due process, isn't it? [01:04:01.120 --> 01:04:02.840] They did not do... [01:04:02.840 --> 01:04:03.840] Official misconduct. [01:04:03.840 --> 01:04:06.840] Oh, not due process. [01:04:06.840 --> 01:04:12.080] Oh, and that'll be so much fun when you start charging the judges criminally. [01:04:12.080 --> 01:04:16.440] Oh, will they ever get unhappy? [01:04:16.440 --> 01:04:18.160] No preliminary hearing. [01:04:18.160 --> 01:04:22.120] The attorney told me there's no such thing as a preliminary hearing in New York, but [01:04:22.120 --> 01:04:23.760] that's false. [01:04:23.760 --> 01:04:24.760] That is false. [01:04:24.760 --> 01:04:36.200] Gerstein Pew, go to yoursemprudence.website and go through that pavious. [01:04:36.200 --> 01:04:44.200] It's written in Texas law, but the primary case law is all federal. [01:04:44.200 --> 01:04:51.440] Gerstein Pew, the city of Riverside v. McLaughlin, it's been a long time since I read it, but [01:04:51.440 --> 01:04:55.800] there's two or three more and they're all federal. [01:04:55.800 --> 01:04:57.800] This is a due process requirement. [01:04:57.800 --> 01:05:06.000] They're going to say you don't have a right to one and that's a dodge because it's irrelevant [01:05:06.000 --> 01:05:08.960] whether you have a right to it or not. [01:05:08.960 --> 01:05:15.000] They have a statutory duty to do it and if they don't do it, then they've denied you [01:05:15.000 --> 01:05:20.200] due process and due process is something you have a right to. [01:05:20.200 --> 01:05:24.080] Okay, so they violated your right. [01:05:24.080 --> 01:05:25.280] Is there case law? [01:05:25.280 --> 01:05:30.520] Were you telling me just now that there's case law that's supported federal case law? [01:05:30.520 --> 01:05:33.760] Gerstein Pew, go to that pavious. [01:05:33.760 --> 01:05:34.760] It's all in there. [01:05:34.760 --> 01:05:36.760] Okay, say it again. [01:05:36.760 --> 01:05:37.760] Gerstein? [01:05:37.760 --> 01:05:38.760] Gerstein. [01:05:38.760 --> 01:05:47.360] It's G-U-R-S-S-T-I-N, I'm sorry, G-U-R-S-H-S-T-E-I-N, P-U-G-H. [01:05:47.360 --> 01:05:52.160] Okay, G-U-S-T-I-N, don't go there. [01:05:52.160 --> 01:05:58.840] Just go to jurismprudence.website, click on top frog on the left and it'll take you [01:05:58.840 --> 01:05:59.840] right to it. [01:05:59.840 --> 01:06:02.840] It has all the primary quotations out of its whole thing. [01:06:02.840 --> 01:06:04.520] So what do I look for? [01:06:04.520 --> 01:06:06.520] What's the heading? [01:06:06.520 --> 01:06:08.880] Gerstein Pew. [01:06:08.880 --> 01:06:14.520] Oh, and spell it again, just spell it one more time. [01:06:14.520 --> 01:06:23.280] G-E-R-S-H-S-T-I-E-N, just, or P-U-G-H, just do a, open this document, do a search for [01:06:23.280 --> 01:06:25.920] P-U-G-H, it'll take you right to it. [01:06:25.920 --> 01:06:27.080] Okay, got ya. [01:06:27.080 --> 01:06:32.920] Okay, then yes or no answer on this one. [01:06:32.920 --> 01:06:37.400] Remember a couple of weeks ago when a woman called with a wrongful foreclosure, I can't [01:06:37.400 --> 01:06:44.760] remember her name, I think it was Carla something, oh, Carla Walters, that's it, she has the [01:06:44.760 --> 01:06:50.280] mortgage paper that proves that the note was paid in full from the bank and she was [01:06:50.280 --> 01:06:54.840] wrongly evicted if I remember her saying that right on the air with you. [01:06:54.840 --> 01:07:01.960] Okay, and we did not, we weren't able to get to all of that. [01:07:01.960 --> 01:07:13.280] Getting a paper to saying that the mortgage was paid in full is not necessarily vindication [01:07:13.280 --> 01:07:23.440] because if the lender sold the mortgage to someone else, then the proper procedure is [01:07:23.440 --> 01:07:35.840] for the purchaser to pay off the original lender and the original lender will give the [01:07:35.840 --> 01:07:40.160] purchaser a release of claim. [01:07:40.160 --> 01:07:46.040] So there will be a notice in there that the original lender was paid in full. [01:07:46.040 --> 01:07:52.640] But that doesn't say that the original lender was paid in full by the borrower. [01:07:52.640 --> 01:08:01.120] It nearly means that the original lender sold the indebtedness to a third party and I wasn't [01:08:01.120 --> 01:08:04.480] able to get to that on the air. [01:08:04.480 --> 01:08:05.480] That was the caveat. [01:08:05.480 --> 01:08:13.360] Okay, how about this, if she really does have all the paperwork to prove the bank's filings [01:08:13.360 --> 01:08:20.440] in the court were false and forged and if she does have the right paperwork, what can [01:08:20.440 --> 01:08:26.440] she do? [01:08:26.440 --> 01:08:34.720] I think a declaratory judgment would be the best methodology because anything else in [01:08:34.720 --> 01:08:39.480] a mortgage case, the judges are for the most part bought and paid for. [01:08:39.480 --> 01:08:47.120] If you file a suit on a mortgage issue, the other side is going to file a Rule 12B6 motion [01:08:47.120 --> 01:08:53.880] to dismiss the favorite state of claim and the judge is going to dismiss it out of hand. [01:08:53.880 --> 01:08:55.120] What would she do? [01:08:55.120 --> 01:08:58.280] What would that woman do, in your opinion, in filing? [01:08:58.280 --> 01:09:05.200] File a declaratory judgment because a declaratory judgment is not subject to 12B6. [01:09:05.200 --> 01:09:08.320] What is she going to do filing it? [01:09:08.320 --> 01:09:09.840] What is she going to file it on? [01:09:09.840 --> 01:09:12.000] What's the principle? [01:09:12.000 --> 01:09:19.800] You're asking me to give you details on a third party suit if she has paid off the mortgage [01:09:19.800 --> 01:09:34.360] or if the entity claiming standing to enforce the mortgage has issued a statement asserting [01:09:34.360 --> 01:09:41.880] that the mortgage was paid off in full, then you can challenge the standing of that party [01:09:41.880 --> 01:09:47.440] in a declaratory judgment suit. [01:09:47.440 --> 01:09:56.720] Ask the court to rule that here is the mortgage establishing the claim. [01:09:56.720 --> 01:10:03.280] Here is a document issued by the party releasing the claim. [01:10:03.280 --> 01:10:12.600] Therefore, this party cannot make this claim and ask the court to rule that. [01:10:12.600 --> 01:10:15.440] And that's the whole sum and substance of how she would do it? [01:10:15.440 --> 01:10:16.440] Yes. [01:10:16.440 --> 01:10:21.840] Now, once she gets to that ruling, that's resduticata. [01:10:21.840 --> 01:10:31.680] That can't be revisited, so now you go to the civil court and sue for wrongful foreclosure. [01:10:31.680 --> 01:10:36.200] The fact that they didn't have standing has already been determined by the court. [01:10:36.200 --> 01:10:37.200] Okay. [01:10:37.200 --> 01:10:40.040] Next, true or false? [01:10:40.040 --> 01:10:43.080] I read this about car insurance. [01:10:43.080 --> 01:10:44.080] True or false? [01:10:44.080 --> 01:10:50.560] We'll say that it costs your insurance, it costs you about $600 or $700 a year for your [01:10:50.560 --> 01:10:51.560] car insurance. [01:10:51.560 --> 01:10:52.560] That sound about right? [01:10:52.560 --> 01:10:53.560] Yes. [01:10:53.560 --> 01:10:56.120] If you just get liability, yes. [01:10:56.120 --> 01:10:57.120] Okay. [01:10:57.120 --> 01:11:00.160] It's my understanding, true or false. [01:11:00.160 --> 01:11:07.120] The state gets about two-thirds of that money and the insurance company only gets about one-third. [01:11:07.120 --> 01:11:08.120] Never heard that. [01:11:08.120 --> 01:11:10.680] Don't know anything about that. [01:11:10.680 --> 01:11:17.600] And that's the reason why car insurance is mandatory, the real reason, according to what [01:11:17.600 --> 01:11:19.600] I heard. [01:11:19.600 --> 01:11:22.280] I've never heard that. [01:11:22.280 --> 01:11:23.280] Okay. [01:11:23.280 --> 01:11:31.960] I've never heard that the insurance companies have to remit anything to the state. [01:11:31.960 --> 01:11:36.600] That is, that's private contract. [01:11:36.600 --> 01:11:40.280] Well, it's my understanding that there's monkey shines. [01:11:40.280 --> 01:11:43.360] Now, I didn't have time to research it. [01:11:43.360 --> 01:11:46.000] I just read that and I was wondering about it. [01:11:46.000 --> 01:11:47.000] Okay. [01:11:47.000 --> 01:11:49.800] And here's my last question. [01:11:49.800 --> 01:11:56.920] A public transit bus driver is exceedingly abusive, especially to poor senior citizens. [01:11:56.920 --> 01:12:01.720] And I mean, this is really out of control. [01:12:01.720 --> 01:12:04.960] How can I find out who ensures the public transit? [01:12:04.960 --> 01:12:09.880] Because the bus driver, in my estimation, is unsafe and needs to be reported to the insurance [01:12:09.880 --> 01:12:10.880] carrier. [01:12:10.880 --> 01:12:14.720] Whether he's unsafe or not, that's older abuse. [01:12:14.720 --> 01:12:16.880] We have statutes forbidding that. [01:12:16.880 --> 01:12:17.880] Okay. [01:12:17.880 --> 01:12:19.720] Tell me about that. [01:12:19.720 --> 01:12:24.200] Well, just look up, we have a federal statute for elder abuse. [01:12:24.200 --> 01:12:30.080] If anybody does anything improper to me, I'm over 65. [01:12:30.080 --> 01:12:35.840] I can claim elder abuse and it enhances the accusation. [01:12:35.840 --> 01:12:41.680] You have a bus driver here who is abusive to elders and the elders, because they're elders, [01:12:41.680 --> 01:12:43.160] can't protect themselves. [01:12:43.160 --> 01:12:50.520] That's why the law was passed that it enhances the severity of whatever the guy's doing. [01:12:50.520 --> 01:12:57.880] If he's committing assault, simple assault, then the simple assault gets enhanced. [01:12:57.880 --> 01:12:58.880] All right. [01:12:58.880 --> 01:13:02.960] Now, abusive or threatening language, that's simple assault. [01:13:02.960 --> 01:13:03.960] Okay. [01:13:03.960 --> 01:13:04.960] No, it's not. [01:13:04.960 --> 01:13:07.080] It's not physical assault. [01:13:07.080 --> 01:13:08.080] For example. [01:13:08.080 --> 01:13:10.720] It doesn't have to be. [01:13:10.720 --> 01:13:13.320] abusive or threatening language. [01:13:13.320 --> 01:13:14.480] Okay. [01:13:14.480 --> 01:13:19.200] She yells at the elders when they get on the bus because they're taking too long, coming [01:13:19.200 --> 01:13:23.760] up the steps, or they're on the wrong side of the street and they take too long to get [01:13:23.760 --> 01:13:32.720] to the bus, or they have a walker, oh, here comes another bad guy, a walker, and she is [01:13:32.720 --> 01:13:33.720] abusive. [01:13:33.720 --> 01:13:35.720] That's a simple assault. [01:13:35.720 --> 01:13:36.720] Okay. [01:13:36.720 --> 01:13:37.720] That's a crime. [01:13:37.720 --> 01:13:39.960] That's a crime in every state. [01:13:39.960 --> 01:13:40.960] Okay. [01:13:40.960 --> 01:13:44.000] So even verbal assault is simple assault. [01:13:44.000 --> 01:13:45.800] Absolutely. [01:13:45.800 --> 01:13:56.160] And being with the elder abuse enhancement, dental interjob, so go to the bus company [01:13:56.160 --> 01:13:57.160] first. [01:13:57.160 --> 01:13:58.160] Right. [01:13:58.160 --> 01:14:02.480] And file a notice of tort with the bus company. [01:14:02.480 --> 01:14:03.480] Okay. [01:14:03.480 --> 01:14:04.480] A notice of tort. [01:14:04.480 --> 01:14:08.120] Is that a plain piece of paper with my complaint on it? [01:14:08.120 --> 01:14:10.240] Yeah, a notice of tort. [01:14:10.240 --> 01:14:18.000] The courts ask that you not use the court as the remedy of first resort. [01:14:18.000 --> 01:14:25.280] They ask you to exert administrative remedies first. [01:14:25.280 --> 01:14:32.080] And the primary remedy, the only one they require is notice and opportunity under the [01:14:32.080 --> 01:14:34.840] commercial code. [01:14:34.840 --> 01:14:38.400] Notice of harm and opportunity to cure. [01:14:38.400 --> 01:14:45.320] So you send a notice of harm to the whoever the chairman of the board of the bus company [01:14:45.320 --> 01:14:54.920] is, or, better idea, call down to the bus company and tell them that you're working [01:14:54.920 --> 01:15:03.000] with your granddaughter and she's doing a paper for school on high level officials. [01:15:03.000 --> 01:15:09.240] And if you want to talk, if you want to get in touch with whoever runs the bus company [01:15:09.240 --> 01:15:17.120] and you want to interview them for this paper she's writing for school, oh, sure. [01:15:17.120 --> 01:15:18.120] No problem. [01:15:18.120 --> 01:15:24.280] They'll give you the, that executive secretary and you get that executive secretary and crawl [01:15:24.280 --> 01:15:25.720] down her throat. [01:15:25.720 --> 01:15:32.480] You want to know what that guy's doing, sending his drivers out here to be abusive to the [01:15:32.480 --> 01:15:35.400] elderly. [01:15:35.400 --> 01:15:43.560] And now, the president of a company, he is restricted by politics. [01:15:43.560 --> 01:15:48.120] He needs to be careful how he handles himself. [01:15:48.120 --> 01:15:50.920] He needs to be diplomatic. [01:15:50.920 --> 01:15:53.520] His secretary does not. [01:15:53.520 --> 01:16:01.840] Generally, the president or the chairman's secretary is probably the most powerful person [01:16:01.840 --> 01:16:07.720] in the company because he can chew anybody out with impunity. [01:16:07.720 --> 01:16:17.520] So you get her and chew her out, she's going to go to the boss and feel his earful and [01:16:17.520 --> 01:16:25.400] good chance that driver will wind up sweeping out the barn, the bus garage and not getting [01:16:25.400 --> 01:16:28.520] in front of people. [01:16:28.520 --> 01:16:34.960] As a rule, upper management doesn't know what's going on on the bottom. [01:16:34.960 --> 01:16:39.800] And lower management is not going to tell upper management that I didn't do a good job [01:16:39.800 --> 01:16:43.000] managing my people, so upper management never hears about it. [01:16:43.000 --> 01:16:46.080] A few time, okay, we're about to go to break. [01:16:46.080 --> 01:16:54.360] I got a great story about this when we come back about the chairman of the board of Centel. [01:16:54.360 --> 01:17:00.360] And to help move our radio, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.360 --> 01:17:05.640] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.640 --> 01:17:09.320] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meyers proven method. [01:17:09.320 --> 01:17:13.480] Michael Meyers has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:17:13.480 --> 01:17:14.480] can win two. [01:17:14.480 --> 01:17:19.320] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:17:19.320 --> 01:17:20.960] civil rights statute. [01:17:20.960 --> 01:17:25.920] What to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and phone [01:17:25.920 --> 01:17:30.120] calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial [01:17:30.120 --> 01:17:33.880] tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.880 --> 01:17:39.000] The Michael Meyers proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:39.000 --> 01:17:40.960] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.960 --> 01:17:46.680] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meyers banner [01:17:46.680 --> 01:17:49.680] or email Michael Meyers at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.680 --> 01:17:57.400] It's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. 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[01:19:13.480 --> 01:19:33.600] Okay, we are back. [01:19:33.600 --> 01:19:42.640] Randy Kelton, Rural Ball Radio on this Friday, the fifth day of April, 2019, and we're talking [01:19:42.640 --> 01:19:45.120] to John in New York. [01:19:45.120 --> 01:19:46.760] John got a great story. [01:19:46.760 --> 01:19:50.160] A friend of mine moved to Texas from Colorado. [01:19:50.160 --> 01:19:53.160] This was a number of years ago. [01:19:53.160 --> 01:19:57.040] Out in the country where he moved to, they still had party lines. [01:19:57.040 --> 01:20:02.040] It was way past the time that those should have been gone. [01:20:02.040 --> 01:20:06.920] In order to, he had a business, so he wanted a private line, so he had to put in 200 feet [01:20:06.920 --> 01:20:09.400] of underground cable before they had hooked it up. [01:20:09.400 --> 01:20:12.960] When they hooked it up, they hooked him up to a six-party line. [01:20:12.960 --> 01:20:15.080] He was furious. [01:20:15.080 --> 01:20:23.880] So, I happen to know that the headquarters for Sintel Telephone was not in Colleen like [01:20:23.880 --> 01:20:30.120] they told everybody, but he's actually in Chicago, so I called Chicago and pulled the [01:20:30.120 --> 01:20:37.320] high school routine on him to ask to get the number for the president of the company. [01:20:37.320 --> 01:20:42.040] Then they gave me the number, and I hung up, and I called back and asked for the president [01:20:42.040 --> 01:20:51.400] by name and got his secretary, and when I asked for him by name, I did it really gruff. [01:20:51.400 --> 01:20:52.640] And she said, well, he's not in. [01:20:52.640 --> 01:20:54.320] I said, well, who is he? [01:20:54.320 --> 01:20:55.640] I said, who else is he? [01:20:55.640 --> 01:20:57.120] And so, well, Mr. Rice is in. [01:20:57.120 --> 01:20:58.360] Well, who is he? [01:20:58.360 --> 01:21:01.360] Well, he's the chairman of the board. [01:21:01.360 --> 01:21:04.160] Oh, he'll do. [01:21:04.160 --> 01:21:08.880] And I turned to Mark, and I said, Mark, this guy's name's Rice. [01:21:08.880 --> 01:21:09.880] He's in Chicago. [01:21:09.880 --> 01:21:10.880] He can help you. [01:21:10.880 --> 01:21:13.120] And Mark is furious. [01:21:13.120 --> 01:21:19.840] He grabbed the phone out of my hand, how, Rice, said, look, I paid you guys for a private [01:21:19.840 --> 01:21:22.960] line, and you put me on a six-party line. [01:21:22.960 --> 01:21:27.320] I'm going to have my private line if I have to come up to Chicago and kick your behind [01:21:27.320 --> 01:21:28.320] a catch. [01:21:28.320 --> 01:21:30.320] He slammed the phone down. [01:21:30.320 --> 01:21:35.600] That's it, it's hard, Mark, do you know who that was? [01:21:35.600 --> 01:21:38.160] Well, it was a Rice guy. [01:21:38.160 --> 01:21:44.440] He was the chairman of the board, and Mark said, ooh, I'll never get a phone now. [01:21:44.440 --> 01:21:51.840] 30 minutes later, he got a call from a Mr. Whitney, executive vice president of that [01:21:51.840 --> 01:21:54.640] five-state area. [01:21:54.640 --> 01:22:02.200] Mr. Masaral, about your private line, will tomorrow noon be soon enough? [01:22:02.200 --> 01:22:07.360] I came out that the next day, and I bet they had 200 guys out there. [01:22:07.360 --> 01:22:11.520] They had backhoes, ditch witches, up poles. [01:22:11.520 --> 01:22:14.240] It looked like an army out there. [01:22:14.240 --> 01:22:21.840] Two years later, I saw the head maintenance guy, Dick Stone, and we'd had a tornado, and [01:22:21.840 --> 01:22:25.280] they had people come in from other areas to help them. [01:22:25.280 --> 01:22:29.360] I walked out of my house, and he called me over and said, I got this guy down here from [01:22:29.360 --> 01:22:30.360] Jacksonboro. [01:22:30.360 --> 01:22:31.360] That's about 60 miles away. [01:22:31.360 --> 01:22:33.480] He said, I want to introduce you to him. [01:22:33.480 --> 01:22:37.480] He calls the guy over, and he said, hey, you know who this guy is? [01:22:37.480 --> 01:22:39.920] The guy said, no, I don't know who that is. [01:22:39.920 --> 01:22:43.200] This is the guy that called the chairman of the board. [01:22:43.200 --> 01:22:50.640] Two years later, and this other guy said, ooh, he backed away. [01:22:50.640 --> 01:22:57.760] They had the top level of companies never know what's going on on the bottom. [01:22:57.760 --> 01:23:02.200] Low-level management never tells high-level management when low-level management screws [01:23:02.200 --> 01:23:04.960] up. [01:23:04.960 --> 01:23:09.200] You're not in that company, so you don't care about management. [01:23:09.200 --> 01:23:15.040] You owe it to the guy running the company to let him know what's happening. [01:23:15.040 --> 01:23:23.040] It gives him opportunity to shake up management and make sure they keep things running straight. [01:23:23.040 --> 01:23:28.640] It's what we owe to other people who get out there and get things done and make things [01:23:28.640 --> 01:23:29.640] happen. [01:23:29.640 --> 01:23:33.320] We owe it to them to give them good information. [01:23:33.320 --> 01:23:35.600] So call headquarters. [01:23:35.600 --> 01:23:41.920] Con them to find out who the head guy is, and then call his office directly. [01:23:41.920 --> 01:23:49.480] Chew out his secretary, don't chew him out, chew out his secretary. [01:23:49.480 --> 01:23:55.440] What happens if the bus driver, number one, has been with the company for years, and the [01:23:55.440 --> 01:23:58.840] complaints have been coming thick and fast for years. [01:23:58.840 --> 01:24:04.440] The bus drivers, whenever you mention her name, they roll their eyes, and they laugh, [01:24:04.440 --> 01:24:10.920] and they say, oh yeah, her, and the customers all know, and this has been going on for a [01:24:10.920 --> 01:24:11.920] long time. [01:24:11.920 --> 01:24:16.280] The one that doesn't know is the company president. [01:24:16.280 --> 01:24:21.520] I assure you, upper level management is not going to be your understanding. [01:24:21.520 --> 01:24:28.600] Well, they give her all kinds of prizes every year and awards, and she is black, and they're [01:24:28.600 --> 01:24:35.040] scared to disappear, I am sure, because she's a troublemaker, and she's black, and she will [01:24:35.040 --> 01:24:36.040] make troubles. [01:24:36.040 --> 01:24:41.080] Okay, what you're saying is, oh, it won't do any good to do anything, because they're [01:24:41.080 --> 01:24:46.280] just, no, go to, no, no, no, no, I'm just telling you why she's still with the company, [01:24:46.280 --> 01:24:47.840] and what do I want to do? [01:24:47.840 --> 01:24:54.080] That's because low level management is afraid of her, and president is not afraid of her. [01:24:54.080 --> 01:24:56.640] President's afraid of you. [01:24:56.640 --> 01:25:02.520] President's afraid of you going to the mayor, and getting the mayor to call him and say, [01:25:02.520 --> 01:25:07.240] what is going on here, you've got a bus driver out here abusing my voters. [01:25:07.240 --> 01:25:09.760] Okay, that's what I plan to do. [01:25:09.760 --> 01:25:14.880] I have a long list of companies and agencies that I want to send the same letter that I [01:25:14.880 --> 01:25:21.480] send to the CEO of the bus corporation, and for example, Office for the Aging, Office [01:25:21.480 --> 01:25:27.680] for Disabilities, AARP, I want to send letters to the mayor. [01:25:27.680 --> 01:25:29.200] Those guys aren't going to have time. [01:25:29.200 --> 01:25:36.680] The way to fix this is go to corporate in the bus company, go to those guys and crawl [01:25:36.680 --> 01:25:40.040] down their throats. [01:25:40.040 --> 01:25:43.520] It rolls downhill always. [01:25:43.520 --> 01:25:49.600] When the bus gets chewed out, everybody gets chewed out, and the further up it starts, [01:25:49.600 --> 01:25:51.560] the uglier it gets at the bottom. [01:25:51.560 --> 01:25:56.760] All right, shall I send an email to the company president or CEO? [01:25:56.760 --> 01:26:06.080] I wrote the letter in a call down there and read them the riot act, and then follow up [01:26:06.080 --> 01:26:07.080] with an email. [01:26:07.080 --> 01:26:11.360] But first, you want to get the president's secretary. [01:26:11.360 --> 01:26:12.360] Okay, gotcha. [01:26:12.360 --> 01:26:13.360] Ask for her. [01:26:13.360 --> 01:26:14.360] Don't ask for the president. [01:26:14.360 --> 01:26:15.360] Ask for the president's secretary. [01:26:15.360 --> 01:26:20.360] I think they're going to give me her, but I'm going to try. [01:26:20.360 --> 01:26:22.000] I'm going to try to get her. [01:26:22.000 --> 01:26:23.000] You can generally get their secretaries. [01:26:23.000 --> 01:26:24.000] That's pretty easy. [01:26:24.000 --> 01:26:25.000] Okay, good. [01:26:25.000 --> 01:26:31.160] For them, they're hard to get, but the secretary's not. [01:26:31.160 --> 01:26:32.160] Okay. [01:26:32.160 --> 01:26:35.000] And have fun with it. [01:26:35.000 --> 01:26:40.480] Okay, and I'll tell you exactly how it turns out. [01:26:40.480 --> 01:26:43.960] I think you'll be surprised. [01:26:43.960 --> 01:26:50.880] Guys who run companies like this, they need good information, and we owe it to them to [01:26:50.880 --> 01:26:51.880] give them good information. [01:26:51.880 --> 01:26:59.360] I've always run my own business, and nobody ever tells me when my guys are screwing up. [01:26:59.360 --> 01:27:02.520] Okay, but I did notice one thing. [01:27:02.520 --> 01:27:05.520] This bus corporation, I think is shady. [01:27:05.520 --> 01:27:08.080] I think they've got skeletons in the closet. [01:27:08.080 --> 01:27:10.880] I think they do things dirty. [01:27:10.880 --> 01:27:13.160] That's even better. [01:27:13.160 --> 01:27:16.360] The dirtier they are, the more afraid they're going to be. [01:27:16.360 --> 01:27:17.360] Okay. [01:27:17.360 --> 01:27:18.360] Well, maybe. [01:27:18.360 --> 01:27:19.360] All right. [01:27:19.360 --> 01:27:23.520] Question, if you've got time, if you don't have time, we'll do it another time, but what [01:27:23.520 --> 01:27:29.560] is your best defense against driving without a license? [01:27:29.560 --> 01:27:33.200] Now, I just briefly have to say this. [01:27:33.200 --> 01:27:36.240] There's a man on the Internet, his name is Carl Miller. [01:27:36.240 --> 01:27:37.720] You've probably seen him. [01:27:37.720 --> 01:27:40.240] Yeah, I know about Carl Miller. [01:27:40.240 --> 01:27:41.240] Okay. [01:27:41.240 --> 01:27:42.400] Is he for real? [01:27:42.400 --> 01:27:45.760] Because he makes it sound awfully good what he's got. [01:27:45.760 --> 01:27:47.640] I don't know. [01:27:47.640 --> 01:27:54.040] Mr. Mess had referred me to Carl Miller, and I contacted him a time or two, and I got no [01:27:54.040 --> 01:27:55.040] response. [01:27:55.040 --> 01:27:56.040] Okay. [01:27:56.040 --> 01:27:58.480] I've got basically what he has said. [01:27:58.480 --> 01:28:01.560] Tell me, I'll do it very briefly. [01:28:01.560 --> 01:28:08.240] He says, when you have a ticket, you get a ticket for no license, I have the right to [01:28:08.240 --> 01:28:14.680] travel freely on encumbered according to the Supreme Court in Shapiro versus Thompson. [01:28:14.680 --> 01:28:20.000] Your state has erroneously and arbitrarily converted my right into a privilege and issued [01:28:20.000 --> 01:28:23.200] a license or a license plate and charged a fee. [01:28:23.200 --> 01:28:28.480] Murdoch versus Pennsylvania says, no state may convert a secured liberty into a privilege [01:28:28.480 --> 01:28:33.240] and issue a license or license plate and charge a fee for it, and if they do so, shuttle [01:28:33.240 --> 01:28:38.080] towards versus Birmingham, Alabama says, I can ignore that license and engage in the [01:28:38.080 --> 01:28:43.320] right with impunity, and that means you can't punish me, since I have relied on the decisions [01:28:43.320 --> 01:28:49.280] of the U.S. Supreme Court and on constitutional defenses, I have a perfect defense for willfulness, [01:28:49.280 --> 01:28:53.640] I am immune to the prosecution, prosecute, and if this is short. [01:28:53.640 --> 01:28:57.080] Prosecution counsel does not have a cause of action for which relief can be granted. [01:28:57.080 --> 01:29:01.640] I motion for a dismissal with prejudice, for failure to state a cause of action for which [01:29:01.640 --> 01:29:03.640] relief can be granted. [01:29:03.640 --> 01:29:12.920] Objection, Your Honor, the defendant has a right to travel, but that does not mean that [01:29:12.920 --> 01:29:18.040] defendant has a right to travel in any manner which he chooses. [01:29:18.040 --> 01:29:23.200] I doubt that even defendant would object that he does not have a right to drive an M1 tank [01:29:23.200 --> 01:29:27.160] down our highways and destroy them. [01:29:27.160 --> 01:29:35.480] Defendant operates a heavy piece of equipment on our highways and thereby damages them. [01:29:35.480 --> 01:29:43.080] The defendant takes advantage of the taxes others have paid to maintain these roads, [01:29:43.080 --> 01:29:50.880] and he travels on these roads with a piece of equipment that, because of his weight, [01:29:50.880 --> 01:29:54.560] takes special roads to support it. [01:29:54.560 --> 01:30:00.160] So defendant wants to take advantage of the money other people have spent to produce. [01:30:00.160 --> 01:30:05.600] Hexachlorobenzene is a reproductive toxin you probably don't want to ingest. [01:30:05.600 --> 01:30:09.440] Unfortunately, you probably already have, and there's a good chance you did it today. [01:30:09.440 --> 01:30:13.760] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with the toxic truth. [01:30:13.760 --> 01:30:15.360] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:15.360 --> 01:30:18.960] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:18.960 --> 01:30:23.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:23.760 --> 01:30:25.200] So protect your rights. [01:30:25.200 --> 01:30:29.320] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:29.320 --> 01:30:31.500] It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:31.500 --> 01:30:35.840] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:30:35.840 --> 01:30:39.320] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:39.320 --> 01:30:42.400] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:42.400 --> 01:30:45.240] The pesticides we eat accumulate in our fat. [01:30:45.240 --> 01:30:47.960] Unfortunately, the same is true with dairy cows. [01:30:47.960 --> 01:30:52.560] The chemicals they eat wind up in their fat, and that flanks its way into our butter and [01:30:52.560 --> 01:30:53.560] cream. [01:30:53.560 --> 01:30:58.120] A recent report by the USDA found that more than 80% of the butter tested contained a [01:30:58.120 --> 01:31:03.680] known carcinogen, a pesticide called DDE, and when they tested cream samples, they found [01:31:03.680 --> 01:31:06.680] not only DDE, but that ghastly poison hexachlorobenzene. [01:31:06.680 --> 01:31:11.320] So if you know what's good for you, and now you do, on that shopping list right next to [01:31:11.320 --> 01:31:16.080] the organic fruits and veggies, you just might want to add organic butter and cream. [01:31:16.080 --> 01:31:17.560] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. [01:31:17.560 --> 01:31:30.560] For more news and information, at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.560 --> 01:31:35.960] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:35.960 --> 01:31:38.160] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.160 --> 01:31:43.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:47.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives to thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.000 --> 01:31:48.440] force responders who are dying. [01:31:48.440 --> 01:31:52.240] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correctionalist, [01:31:52.240 --> 01:31:57.000] I'm an Air Force pilot, I'm a father who lost his son, we're Americans, and we deserve [01:31:57.000 --> 01:31:58.000] the truth. [01:31:58.000 --> 01:32:02.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.000 --> 01:32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:05.000 --> 01:32:08.520] In today's America, we live in a us against them society, and if we the people are ever [01:32:08.520 --> 01:32:12.280] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:12.280 --> 01:32:15.680] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [01:32:15.680 --> 01:32:19.800] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:19.800 --> 01:32:23.760] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:23.760 --> 01:32:25.560] our rights through due process. [01:32:25.560 --> 01:32:29.120] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:29.120 --> 01:32:32.880] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:32.880 --> 01:32:35.280] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. 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[01:33:04.680 --> 01:33:31.320] LogosRadioNetwork.com Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and I'm on [01:33:31.320 --> 01:33:43.160] roll here, John, that argument would be relevant if I were cited within a state by a federal [01:33:43.160 --> 01:33:45.600] officer. [01:33:45.600 --> 01:33:52.880] The federal right to travel only extends to the right to travel from one state to another [01:33:52.880 --> 01:33:57.680] state without tariff or interference. [01:33:57.680 --> 01:34:03.280] It does not extend to travel within the state. [01:34:03.280 --> 01:34:07.320] Travel within the state is strictly the purview of the state itself. [01:34:07.320 --> 01:34:11.200] Okay, what would I do in the state itself? [01:34:11.200 --> 01:34:16.200] Would there be case law that would reflect in the state itself in the same way that is [01:34:16.200 --> 01:34:17.200] reflecting federal? [01:34:17.200 --> 01:34:18.200] Oh, no. [01:34:18.200 --> 01:34:21.360] No, no, no, no, no. [01:34:21.360 --> 01:34:28.280] The states have, I'm in Tennessee right now and Tennessee has case law that says that [01:34:28.280 --> 01:34:37.960] the state has an inherent right and duty to ensure the safety of the public. [01:34:37.960 --> 01:34:44.960] For the limited purpose of ensuring competency in operating an automobile and knowledge of [01:34:44.960 --> 01:34:54.600] the traffic laws, the states may require a license for the limited purpose of ensuring [01:34:54.600 --> 01:35:00.080] safety and knowledge of the traffic laws. [01:35:00.080 --> 01:35:08.800] Not, but what that means is that you're not, because you have a license, does not necessarily [01:35:08.800 --> 01:35:15.120] give the state probable cost to believe that you're actually operating in commerce. [01:35:15.120 --> 01:35:20.400] Although, secondarily with that license you could, but that's not the reason for issuing [01:35:20.400 --> 01:35:27.680] the license and the requirement to secure one, like requiring a gun license so that [01:35:27.680 --> 01:35:31.080] you can show competency and knowledge on how to use the weapon. [01:35:31.080 --> 01:35:32.080] Okay. [01:35:32.080 --> 01:35:33.080] They can do that. [01:35:33.080 --> 01:35:39.440] Okay, if I understand that, then only when it applies from going from one state to the [01:35:39.440 --> 01:35:43.080] other can you do Murdoch versus Pennsylvania and all that. [01:35:43.080 --> 01:35:44.080] Exactly. [01:35:44.080 --> 01:35:46.320] And that's been addressed a number of times. [01:35:46.320 --> 01:35:48.960] These guys are ignoring that. [01:35:48.960 --> 01:35:55.960] They're trying to take interstate law and convert it to intrastate law and it doesn't [01:35:55.960 --> 01:35:56.960] work. [01:35:56.960 --> 01:35:57.960] Right. [01:35:57.960 --> 01:36:04.520] So, when it comes to traveling between two states, then what I said initially applies, [01:36:04.520 --> 01:36:12.600] but now if you want to get the sufficiency of the traffic ticket, you attack the fact [01:36:12.600 --> 01:36:17.120] that they did not address the element of commerce in that traffic ticket. [01:36:17.120 --> 01:36:24.960] So, in that it's an insufficient charging instrument because they do that. [01:36:24.960 --> 01:36:25.960] Yes. [01:36:25.960 --> 01:36:30.480] Okay, I addressed case law in Tennessee. [01:36:30.480 --> 01:36:32.640] It may be different. [01:36:32.640 --> 01:36:39.360] The case law may be somewhat different in New York, but you have to address state law [01:36:39.360 --> 01:36:43.840] if you're cited within a state by a state actor. [01:36:43.840 --> 01:36:45.960] The feds have nothing to do with it. [01:36:45.960 --> 01:36:47.760] Yes, I got it. [01:36:47.760 --> 01:36:48.760] I got it. [01:36:48.760 --> 01:36:53.880] So, in other words, in New York state, we would say that the ticket is insufficient [01:36:53.880 --> 01:37:01.360] on its face because they did not address the element of commerce. [01:37:01.360 --> 01:37:07.080] They did not establish whether or not I was in commerce or not in commerce. [01:37:07.080 --> 01:37:14.280] The citation did not demonstrate that I fall within the statutory scheme. [01:37:14.280 --> 01:37:17.400] And that would be commerce, transportation, right? [01:37:17.400 --> 01:37:18.400] Exactly. [01:37:18.400 --> 01:37:19.400] Is that a yes? [01:37:19.400 --> 01:37:21.120] Yes, that's a yes. [01:37:21.120 --> 01:37:22.520] Okay, great. [01:37:22.520 --> 01:37:23.520] Thank you very kindly. [01:37:23.520 --> 01:37:25.440] I really appreciate it. [01:37:25.440 --> 01:37:26.440] Thank you, John. [01:37:26.440 --> 01:37:31.520] Okay, now we're going to go to Shane in New York. [01:37:31.520 --> 01:37:32.520] Hello, Shane. [01:37:32.520 --> 01:37:34.520] What do you have for us today? [01:37:34.520 --> 01:37:37.520] I don't know, Annie. [01:37:37.520 --> 01:37:44.240] Dude, better than you, you sound horrible. [01:37:44.240 --> 01:37:49.000] Let me fix my phone. [01:37:49.000 --> 01:37:51.920] You have reported for the maximum time permitted. [01:37:51.920 --> 01:37:54.880] To reply, press 1. [01:37:54.880 --> 01:38:00.560] To erase and rerecord, press 3. [01:38:00.560 --> 01:38:01.560] Are you there, Shane? [01:38:01.560 --> 01:38:05.160] You seem to be having a phone issue. [01:38:05.160 --> 01:38:08.800] Shane is definitely having a phone issue. [01:38:08.800 --> 01:38:10.280] He just crashed. [01:38:10.280 --> 01:38:13.280] We still have Tina on the line. [01:38:13.280 --> 01:38:17.960] Tina, do you have another question for us or comment? [01:38:17.960 --> 01:38:23.960] Yes, I do, based on something that happened, you said tonight. [01:38:23.960 --> 01:38:28.800] One of the things I want to point out... [01:38:28.800 --> 01:38:32.240] Wait, I am having a hard time understanding. [01:38:32.240 --> 01:38:33.240] You sound muffled. [01:38:33.240 --> 01:38:35.240] Hold on one second, then. [01:38:35.240 --> 01:38:37.240] Hold on. [01:38:37.240 --> 01:38:54.040] Well, we just lost Tina, but we got Shane back. [01:38:54.040 --> 01:38:56.520] We're playing musical callers. [01:38:56.520 --> 01:38:58.760] Shane, are you there? [01:38:58.760 --> 01:39:00.760] Yes, I'm sorry about that, Randy. [01:39:00.760 --> 01:39:06.440] Actually, I hit the wrong button. [01:39:06.440 --> 01:39:09.600] I was trying to take the new button off because I didn't want to make any noises in the background. [01:39:09.600 --> 01:39:11.240] I was like, wait, I'll talk to you. [01:39:11.240 --> 01:39:15.680] Hit the wrong button and you saw what happened because I lost you. [01:39:15.680 --> 01:39:21.400] When you dropped, I went to Tina and apparently Tina hit the wrong button because she dropped. [01:39:21.400 --> 01:39:22.400] Okay. [01:39:22.400 --> 01:39:24.720] What do you have for us today? [01:39:24.720 --> 01:39:25.720] Okay. [01:39:25.720 --> 01:39:30.520] I mentioned to you, we had that stay-alisted regarding key bank here. [01:39:30.520 --> 01:39:33.760] I'm way over here in Buffalo. [01:39:33.760 --> 01:39:37.360] Key Bank actually is in charge of the entire town here. [01:39:37.360 --> 01:39:39.680] Key Bank Center where the Buffalo Savers play. [01:39:39.680 --> 01:39:40.680] Key Bank does. [01:39:40.680 --> 01:39:41.680] Key Bank does. [01:39:41.680 --> 01:39:44.880] So they're kind of like the boss here of the town. [01:39:44.880 --> 01:39:50.280] And they're a junior leanhold of regards to bankruptcy proceeding, which is totally unsecured. [01:39:50.280 --> 01:39:55.760] And they came in with a fraudulent BPO we talked about last week on Friday night. [01:39:55.760 --> 01:39:59.800] And they came in and stayed at the home, actually, it's my parents' home. [01:39:59.800 --> 01:40:12.200] I'm trying to help keep their claimants worth $176,000 and we got some bold BPO's that [01:40:12.200 --> 01:40:17.600] we did way back in 2004 and 2005 that was a summer between 305 and 350. [01:40:17.600 --> 01:40:20.240] So they cut the price great in half so they can sell it at auction. [01:40:20.240 --> 01:40:23.680] They're trying to do it quickly. [01:40:23.680 --> 01:40:30.160] But we are in the process of filing a motion for reconsideration and we got a date set [01:40:30.160 --> 01:40:32.920] with the judge for April the 22nd. [01:40:32.920 --> 01:40:35.560] So we already got that all set up. [01:40:35.560 --> 01:40:38.160] That will be filed on Monday. [01:40:38.160 --> 01:40:45.480] And we also have another court hearing Monday afternoon on the objection to their claim on [01:40:45.480 --> 01:40:46.480] top of that. [01:40:46.480 --> 01:40:47.480] Now... [01:40:47.480 --> 01:40:53.960] Did you file for sanctions against them for filing this fraudulent BPO? [01:40:53.960 --> 01:40:58.880] Well, the sanctions would be the adversary complaint that's going to be filed probably [01:40:58.880 --> 01:40:59.880] on Monday too. [01:40:59.880 --> 01:41:01.600] We've been working on that for several weeks. [01:41:01.600 --> 01:41:05.760] But yeah, that's what the adversary proceedings are about. [01:41:05.760 --> 01:41:09.040] We're going to file it lastly, but then they lifted the sentence and now we have something [01:41:09.040 --> 01:41:10.760] else to deal with. [01:41:10.760 --> 01:41:15.280] Did you bar grieve the lawyer for... [01:41:15.280 --> 01:41:19.360] You know what, so I'm glad you brought that up. [01:41:19.360 --> 01:41:21.960] That was one of my questions I was going to ask you. [01:41:21.960 --> 01:41:25.920] Is it premature to do it now or should we wait to see everything unfolds? [01:41:25.920 --> 01:41:26.920] No. [01:41:26.920 --> 01:41:33.920] If you have reason to believe that he filed a false pleading bar grieving, that gives [01:41:33.920 --> 01:41:34.920] him fair warning. [01:41:34.920 --> 01:41:35.920] You want to try that again? [01:41:35.920 --> 01:41:37.800] We'll see how that works for you. [01:41:37.800 --> 01:41:38.800] Okay. [01:41:38.800 --> 01:41:43.360] That's one of the questions I was going to ask you. [01:41:43.360 --> 01:41:48.760] So we did get a date set for April 22nd and here's my question. [01:41:48.760 --> 01:41:55.880] Since that will be filed on Monday, which is April the 8th, that will hopefully stop [01:41:55.880 --> 01:42:00.800] the sale of the property as that's pending in bankruptcy court, isn't that correct? [01:42:00.800 --> 01:42:02.600] I would think so, yes. [01:42:02.600 --> 01:42:15.520] Well, okay, it has been my experience that when, in some 700 federal lawsuits, we request [01:42:15.520 --> 01:42:16.520] a restraining order. [01:42:16.520 --> 01:42:26.560] We never get it, but in all of those lawsuits, we only had one lender move ahead with a foreclosure [01:42:26.560 --> 01:42:37.160] and that was an issue in Colorado where the foreclosing entity had bought this property [01:42:37.160 --> 01:42:45.440] in foreclosure, sold it to this guy, was foreclosing on him and this guy was about to go to prison [01:42:45.440 --> 01:42:51.680] for taking pictures of his girlfriend's daughter. [01:42:51.680 --> 01:42:54.640] So he knew this guy was going away. [01:42:54.640 --> 01:42:59.560] So he went ahead and foreclosed anyway, even though there was a court case. [01:42:59.560 --> 01:43:00.920] That was the only one. [01:43:00.920 --> 01:43:03.400] Everybody else stopped. [01:43:03.400 --> 01:43:10.960] So people are always asking me, if I do this, can I stop the bank from foreclosing and I [01:43:10.960 --> 01:43:21.040] tell them, no, but will you stop the bank from foreclosing almost certainly? [01:43:21.040 --> 01:43:27.000] They are not legally stopped, they are reasonably stopped. [01:43:27.000 --> 01:43:33.960] If they evict your mother while this case is still ongoing and somehow at the end of [01:43:33.960 --> 01:43:43.600] the day they lose, their loss increases logarithmically if they've thrown her out of that property. [01:43:43.600 --> 01:43:51.280] So almost always when there are actions going on, the bank does not proceed. [01:43:51.280 --> 01:44:00.680] Hang on, about to go to break Randy Kelton with our radio, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.680 --> 01:44:05.280] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [01:44:05.280 --> 01:44:06.720] of nutrition. 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[01:45:30.240 --> 01:45:36.360] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:36.360 --> 01:45:41.400] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [01:45:41.400 --> 01:45:45.800] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.800 --> 01:45:52.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:52.000 --> 01:45:54.480] pro-safetych, and much more. [01:45:54.480 --> 01:45:58.640] Please visit LulavLawRadio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:58.640 --> 01:46:22.240] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.240 --> 01:46:23.800] Okay, we are back. [01:46:23.800 --> 01:46:28.760] Randy Kelton, LulavLaw Radio, and we're talking to Shane in New York. [01:46:28.760 --> 01:46:31.200] Okay, go ahead, Shane. [01:46:31.200 --> 01:46:38.480] Oh, I'm sorry, I was talking about what the banks will actually do, and almost never will [01:46:38.480 --> 01:46:45.160] they move ahead, as long as the case is in progress. [01:46:45.160 --> 01:46:52.240] But when somebody asked me, can you statutorily or legally stop them, no. [01:46:52.240 --> 01:46:58.800] Nothing is absolute, but in your case as long as you've been in court with them, it is very [01:46:58.800 --> 01:47:01.200] unlikely that they'll move ahead. [01:47:01.200 --> 01:47:10.120] We had a case in California where I filed, the first suit I filed was my who the heck [01:47:10.120 --> 01:47:11.400] are you suit. [01:47:11.400 --> 01:47:16.840] Don't know who you are, didn't enter into a contract with you, didn't enter into a contract [01:47:16.840 --> 01:47:19.640] with your alleged principal. [01:47:19.640 --> 01:47:29.440] Move up your position, six years later the California Supreme denied our cert. [01:47:29.440 --> 01:47:40.200] So I told him, okay, now we can go back and file against the bank to stop them from foreclosing [01:47:40.200 --> 01:47:44.120] because of statute of limitations. [01:47:44.120 --> 01:47:49.200] See there's an upside to not getting a restraining order. [01:47:49.200 --> 01:47:55.880] If you get a restraining order, the statute of limitations clock stops. [01:47:55.880 --> 01:48:00.880] If you don't get a restraining order, the clock keeps running. [01:48:00.880 --> 01:48:07.680] So they had four years to foreclose, but we ran the clock out for six years. [01:48:07.680 --> 01:48:11.280] Now yes, they were in litigation with us, but there was nothing that stopped them from [01:48:11.280 --> 01:48:18.480] going ahead and foreclosing, other than the risk of losing at the end and compounding the [01:48:18.480 --> 01:48:19.480] claim. [01:48:19.480 --> 01:48:22.680] But that's a risk they take. [01:48:22.680 --> 01:48:27.600] Does that make sense, Shane? [01:48:27.600 --> 01:48:34.960] Hmm, sounds like we lost Shane again. [01:48:34.960 --> 01:48:37.320] Okay, Shane, I can't hear you. [01:48:37.320 --> 01:48:39.160] You might be muted. [01:48:39.160 --> 01:48:42.400] If not, try calling back in. [01:48:42.400 --> 01:48:49.440] Okay, but this is foreclosures the courts have bought and paid for. [01:48:49.440 --> 01:48:56.680] And that's unfortunate, but in the world we live in, that's just the way it is. [01:48:56.680 --> 01:49:01.440] Okay, maybe they're not bought and paid for. [01:49:01.440 --> 01:49:08.840] But if you are in a foreclosure circumstance, you should conduct yourself as if they are. [01:49:08.840 --> 01:49:16.120] You should conduct yourself as if the courts will rule against you out of hand at every [01:49:16.120 --> 01:49:24.960] turn and develop a strategy to win based on those conditions. [01:49:24.960 --> 01:49:28.800] And there's a way to do that. [01:49:28.800 --> 01:49:33.760] When I say that everything's political, that's not necessarily a bad thing. [01:49:33.760 --> 01:49:39.280] It's only a bad thing if you don't understand that everything is political. [01:49:39.280 --> 01:49:44.840] For instance, in the case I mentioned earlier, he stayed in a house for six years that the [01:49:44.840 --> 01:49:51.720] rental on the place was between $3,000 and $3,500 a month. [01:49:51.720 --> 01:49:56.520] And he was in there for six years, paid nothing. [01:49:56.520 --> 01:50:02.760] Now, generally, when I help people foreclosure, what I tell them is the way you beat them [01:50:02.760 --> 01:50:10.040] is you stop the foreclosure, get them in court, and then every month you take at least half [01:50:10.040 --> 01:50:15.600] of what you would pay in a payment and put it in an account. [01:50:15.600 --> 01:50:18.480] Don't touch it. [01:50:18.480 --> 01:50:24.920] Then five or six years down the road, you know, once the first suit was played out in [01:50:24.920 --> 01:50:31.600] this guy's case, I wanted to come back with a second suit, a fraud suit against the bank [01:50:31.600 --> 01:50:38.440] with a really large number, and then ask the court to order mediation. [01:50:38.440 --> 01:50:44.600] Now you will have built up a large lump sum of money. [01:50:44.600 --> 01:50:48.800] In this case, he didn't need to do that because his parents passed away and he inherited a [01:50:48.800 --> 01:50:51.160] million dollars. [01:50:51.160 --> 01:50:54.640] So he had that large sum of money. [01:50:54.640 --> 01:51:00.520] He could have sued the bank and then went and asked the court to order mediation and [01:51:00.520 --> 01:51:03.880] then say, I got this lump of money here. [01:51:03.880 --> 01:51:12.160] I can use this money to keep you in court another five or six years or let's make a [01:51:12.160 --> 01:51:13.160] deal. [01:51:13.160 --> 01:51:19.240] As far as I can tell, that's the only way you can really win in the end. [01:51:19.240 --> 01:51:22.040] Trying to win it straight up is tough. [01:51:22.040 --> 01:51:23.040] Are you there, Shane? [01:51:23.040 --> 01:51:24.040] You know, I'm still here. [01:51:24.040 --> 01:51:25.040] I'm still here. [01:51:25.040 --> 01:51:26.040] Can you hear me? [01:51:26.040 --> 01:51:27.040] Yes, I can. [01:51:27.040 --> 01:51:32.000] Okay, this one last thing I want to tell you really quick is we're getting two brand [01:51:32.000 --> 01:51:34.680] new BPO's over the weekend. [01:51:34.680 --> 01:51:35.680] One already came back. [01:51:35.680 --> 01:51:38.120] Actually, I'm sorry, one more is getting done over the weekend. [01:51:38.120 --> 01:51:40.560] We're going to have two of them attached to the motion for reconsideration. [01:51:40.560 --> 01:51:43.320] You're not going to believe this. [01:51:43.320 --> 01:51:47.600] One of them came in at 305, another one a little bit higher than that one. [01:51:47.600 --> 01:51:51.320] So it boils away to 1A5, the 178. [01:51:51.320 --> 01:51:54.640] But the people that did it was hired by Key Bank. [01:51:54.640 --> 01:51:59.920] You get that realtor company and that agent that did it be liable because here a poor [01:51:59.920 --> 01:52:04.040] elderly couple, my parents, almost got kicked out of the house because of this. [01:52:04.040 --> 01:52:08.800] I'm speculating that the motion's going to be reversed and they're going to reinstate [01:52:08.800 --> 01:52:09.800] the stay. [01:52:09.800 --> 01:52:18.840] Two things, two things, file a complaint against that real estate agent with the real estate [01:52:18.840 --> 01:52:19.840] board. [01:52:19.840 --> 01:52:29.920] The real estate boards really beat these guys up and name the guy in the suit or send him [01:52:29.920 --> 01:52:32.520] a tort letter. [01:52:32.520 --> 01:52:37.160] It could be that he didn't actually do this. [01:52:37.160 --> 01:52:38.320] You don't know what he did. [01:52:38.320 --> 01:52:45.840] You just know what this lawyer said he did and this is a contentious lawsuit. [01:52:45.840 --> 01:52:51.520] A realtor would be out of his mind to do something unscrupulous like this and think [01:52:51.520 --> 01:52:56.840] that this is a suit that you're fighting. [01:52:56.840 --> 01:53:04.040] Ninety-something percent of all the foreclosures go on adjudicated, unresistive. [01:53:04.040 --> 01:53:05.040] People just move out. [01:53:05.040 --> 01:53:11.680] When somebody fights back, these guys said, if I was a real estate agent, I wouldn't touch [01:53:11.680 --> 01:53:14.760] that with a 10-foot pole. [01:53:14.760 --> 01:53:20.040] It may be that the real estate agent didn't do this. [01:53:20.040 --> 01:53:26.920] You might be able to get the real estate agent to throw the lawyer on the bus. [01:53:26.920 --> 01:53:27.920] They might not. [01:53:27.920 --> 01:53:28.920] Okay, I see what you're saying. [01:53:28.920 --> 01:53:32.960] Lastly, I want to tell you that another reason why they lifted the stay is because she didn't [01:53:32.960 --> 01:53:37.360] make any payments to Keybank while the bankruptcy case was going on, but there's been no order [01:53:37.360 --> 01:53:39.160] from the bankruptcy judge to make payments. [01:53:39.160 --> 01:53:45.720] We've been making the $500 payments for the last seven months since bankruptcy started. [01:53:45.720 --> 01:53:50.640] Meanwhile, Keybank, the unsecured loan junior lean holder, has been sending little notices [01:53:50.640 --> 01:53:55.600] of statements of like, pay these $400 every month, but there was no order from the bankruptcy [01:53:55.600 --> 01:53:56.600] court to pay that. [01:53:56.600 --> 01:54:01.640] Meanwhile, we're still making payments to the trustee, but there's been no court order, [01:54:01.640 --> 01:54:06.680] so he used that and he used their BPO to go ahead and lift the stay. [01:54:06.680 --> 01:54:11.640] Well, okay, he's raising those issues. [01:54:11.640 --> 01:54:20.840] When you're in bankruptcy, the presumption is you have a fixed amount of funding, and [01:54:20.840 --> 01:54:26.920] once you go into bankruptcy, you can't just do whatever you want to with that funding. [01:54:26.920 --> 01:54:36.840] It must be distributed to the claimants based on their claims, and the judge will make that [01:54:36.840 --> 01:54:43.560] determination, and you can file an opposition claiming that if the judge had ordered this, [01:54:43.560 --> 01:54:46.280] he would certainly have paid it. [01:54:46.280 --> 01:54:47.280] Exactly. [01:54:47.280 --> 01:54:50.320] So, that should be easy to overcome. [01:54:50.320 --> 01:54:55.400] The judge lawyer is just throwing everything in there that he can find, and for the most [01:54:55.400 --> 01:55:02.360] part, judges don't like that kind of garbage, but if he has misrepresented the value of [01:55:02.360 --> 01:55:05.280] the property, he could have himself a problem. [01:55:05.280 --> 01:55:06.280] Yes. [01:55:06.280 --> 01:55:11.680] And if he has, then you have a countersuit against the lawyer that has nothing to do [01:55:11.680 --> 01:55:16.880] with the foreclosure or with the property. [01:55:16.880 --> 01:55:21.240] You sue him for double the value of the property for fraud. [01:55:21.240 --> 01:55:27.880] Is Texas the same law as New York when it comes to who regulates mortgage companies? [01:55:27.880 --> 01:55:29.880] Do you know who regulates them? [01:55:29.880 --> 01:55:38.400] There's going to be a realtor board of some type. [01:55:38.400 --> 01:55:44.440] And I think one of the first, no, I'm thinking of North Carolina, but every realtor board [01:55:44.440 --> 01:55:50.760] I've ever heard of, the real estate agents are terrified of them because they really [01:55:50.760 --> 01:55:52.520] worked these guys over. [01:55:52.520 --> 01:56:03.320] So, if you filed against this realtor, assuming that he did, he filed this false BPO, then [01:56:03.320 --> 01:56:07.000] and he, if he didn't do it, he's going to go ballistic and he's going to throw that [01:56:07.000 --> 01:56:11.160] lawyer under the bus for you. [01:56:11.160 --> 01:56:13.160] Okay. [01:56:13.160 --> 01:56:18.800] And the lawyers are stupid. [01:56:18.800 --> 01:56:22.440] And they surprised me at how arrogant they get. [01:56:22.440 --> 01:56:25.800] I was just trying to hire someone the other day and I told them I needed someone who could [01:56:25.800 --> 01:56:32.320] handle a room full of lawyers who think they're smarter than God. [01:56:32.320 --> 01:56:36.320] And that's what I run into. [01:56:36.320 --> 01:56:40.320] And most of them are domes of rock. [01:56:40.320 --> 01:56:43.360] They think they know everything and they think they're untouchable. [01:56:43.360 --> 01:56:45.400] They can do anything they want to. [01:56:45.400 --> 01:56:50.000] And when you come back after them, they're just, they're, this can't believe it. [01:56:50.000 --> 01:56:52.280] You know, they, they get all indignant. [01:56:52.280 --> 01:56:54.200] How dare you challenge me? [01:56:54.200 --> 01:57:00.000] Well, nothing I like better than bar grieving that arrogant lawyer. [01:57:00.000 --> 01:57:01.000] Okay. [01:57:01.000 --> 01:57:02.000] Okay. [01:57:02.000 --> 01:57:06.720] So, bar grieving, you know, depends on how this shakes out, there's a good chance. [01:57:06.720 --> 01:57:13.000] I can't tell you how many people I've asked to read the case law, read the case law. [01:57:13.000 --> 01:57:17.720] The other law cited and they read the case law and the case law actually supports their [01:57:17.720 --> 01:57:20.760] position and not the lawyer's position. [01:57:20.760 --> 01:57:27.440] And lawyers make claims, you check the claims, they just make them up because they think [01:57:27.440 --> 01:57:32.640] that their buddies with the judge in the courts, they work with them all the time and the judges [01:57:32.640 --> 01:57:34.200] that cover their behinds. [01:57:34.200 --> 01:57:43.280] What they don't count on is a out of control pro se who will, he's just as quick to hammer [01:57:43.280 --> 01:57:50.320] the judge as he is the lawyer and then the judge is not going to protect him. [01:57:50.320 --> 01:57:58.880] So that's kind of my story on foreclosure foreclosure is all about the politics. [01:57:58.880 --> 01:58:00.880] And you don't have to be a nice guy. [01:58:00.880 --> 01:58:02.960] They don't have to like you. [01:58:02.960 --> 01:58:05.920] It's probably better if they hate you. [01:58:05.920 --> 01:58:07.760] They want you out of their court. [01:58:07.760 --> 01:58:10.240] They don't ever want to see you again. [01:58:10.240 --> 01:58:15.040] So they tell the lawyer on the other side, do something to get rid of this chump. [01:58:15.040 --> 01:58:17.200] So he stops making my life miserable. [01:58:17.200 --> 01:58:18.200] Okay. [01:58:18.200 --> 01:58:21.800] Shane, we are out of time. [01:58:21.800 --> 01:58:23.000] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:23.000 --> 01:58:30.720] We'll be back next week with our regular shows and check out Eddie the chump, Craig on Monday [01:58:30.720 --> 01:58:33.040] nights for his traffic show. [01:58:33.040 --> 01:58:35.960] We never cut Eddie any slack here. [01:58:35.960 --> 01:58:38.000] And we'll be back Thursday and Friday. [01:58:38.000 --> 01:58:50.600] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:50.600 --> 01:58:56.680] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.680 --> 01:58:57.880] Recovery Version. [01:58:57.880 --> 01:59:02.880] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible [01:59:02.880 --> 01:59:08.520] says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.520 --> 01:59:11.840] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. 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