[00:00.000 --> 00:06.900] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.900 --> 00:13.320] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.320 --> 00:21.520] Silver $16.45 an ounce, Copper $2.75 an ounce, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crude [00:21.520 --> 00:29.760] $62.47 a barrel, and Cryptos in order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $20.00 [00:29.760 --> 00:41.440] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:41.440 --> 00:52.600] 10. History The year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on [00:52.600 --> 00:58.360] Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and [00:58.360 --> 01:00.360] entering 40 today in history. [01:00.360 --> 01:09.520] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp and [01:09.520 --> 01:14.240] attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, [01:14.240 --> 01:18.000] San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to [01:18.000 --> 01:22.360] file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:22.360 --> 01:27.240] equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney [01:27.240 --> 01:31.280] announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery [01:31.280 --> 01:33.880] of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:33.880 --> 01:37.760] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.760 --> 01:42.240] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.240 --> 01:48.440] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.440 --> 01:54.680] well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.680 --> 01:59.120] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.120 --> 02:01.920] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.920 --> 02:06.920] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.920 --> 02:10.920] in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.920 --> 02:13.640] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.640 --> 02:17.560] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.560 --> 02:22.760] charged with. [02:22.760 --> 02:27.400] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark [02:27.400 --> 02:32.520] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.520 --> 02:38.160] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.160 --> 02:39.640] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.640 --> 02:44.400] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its [02:44.400 --> 02:50.240] front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.240 --> 02:53.120] flow. [02:53.120 --> 03:11.700] This is Rook Rody with your Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:11.700 --> 03:26.100] Well, I received my remedy today, came in a box just like the bait, I accepted it for [03:26.100 --> 03:36.180] fire right away, it's not true, no, not later, we are originators, and the pathway seems to [03:36.180 --> 03:44.820] get straighter every day, and I could take anything that belongs to me and put it to good use, [03:46.500 --> 03:51.140] but I was good for the gander, gonna work for the goose. [03:57.140 --> 04:04.420] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with our radio, and we're talking to Tim in Texas, [04:04.420 --> 04:09.220] and Tim, we will keep you on the line as long as you keep saying good things about me. [04:10.500 --> 04:15.700] Okay, Randy, you're a pretty good looking guy. [04:17.140 --> 04:26.020] No, no, no, Pastor Massit, he's someone that I trust his opinion, he told me that I have a face made [04:26.020 --> 04:37.380] for radio. Oh, that was a nice way of saying it. I was just in Chicago with my older brother, [04:38.340 --> 04:46.660] and I had on this red shirt with a little darker red t-shirt underneath, and my sister-in-law, [04:46.660 --> 04:52.740] his wife said, you know, that really looks nice, and my brother is always real quiet, he doesn't, [04:52.740 --> 05:00.260] he's always the peacemaker, so he never does much. He looked across and he said, yeah, [05:00.260 --> 05:10.340] it does, it looks like a hot air balloon. Ouch! Yeah, that's the first time my brother ever stung me. [05:12.740 --> 05:19.700] He learned from the best. Well, we're fine, we're getting along pretty good. I took that as a good [05:19.700 --> 05:28.580] sign. Right. Well, I was going to point out to you the five things that the appeals court requested [05:29.300 --> 05:38.100] from me, and we got them to them the same day. The first one was the, it's called the counter [05:38.100 --> 05:46.740] defendants' motion to dismiss, plea to the jurisdiction and all. In the plea to the jurisdiction, [05:46.740 --> 05:54.820] it says, Tixler's claims against the Newark defendants, which would be the attorneys and the [05:54.820 --> 06:02.260] board, Newark defendants failed to invoke this court's jurisdiction. In fact, he insists the [06:02.260 --> 06:09.140] court does not have jurisdiction. Okay, so that's kind of a tricky maneuver there, and therefore, [06:09.140 --> 06:09.860] wouldn't you say? [06:09.860 --> 06:17.860] Wait a minute, I'm not sure what that question was. There are too many pronouns. [06:19.140 --> 06:29.620] For the, I messed up Rockefeller and Fort. For them to say that they said that I tried to invoke [06:29.620 --> 06:34.740] the court's jurisdiction in my counterclaim, this is what this whole suit's over. [06:34.740 --> 06:42.660] Okay. Now I remember, I now know where you're going. What these morons said was, these guys [06:42.660 --> 06:49.300] claim we didn't have subject matter jurisdiction. Right. Therefore, they can't have subject [06:49.300 --> 06:56.020] matter jurisdiction either. Well, where'd you come up with that? They're making, they're making the, [06:56.020 --> 07:03.940] taking the legal position that if the court did not have subject matter jurisdiction to hear [07:03.940 --> 07:11.460] their claim, then it necessarily did not have subject matter jurisdiction to hear our claim. [07:12.420 --> 07:21.220] Okay, can I interject something? Go ahead. We're calling them morons, but apparently this judge [07:21.220 --> 07:29.700] who's been an attorney in this town for 30 years is now the district judge. So he's just like, [07:29.700 --> 07:37.780] you know, this is, this is like his first big case, civil case. And he rules in their favor. [07:39.700 --> 07:45.700] But he apparently would have ruled in their favor no matter what. [07:46.420 --> 07:53.940] Well, that's what that is. And it shows his character. Okay. So then the next thing they [07:53.940 --> 08:02.260] wanted to see was the order. And so this shows the order, the original, their counterclaim against [08:02.260 --> 08:09.060] our, excuse me, their motion to dismiss our counterclaim was in November of 2017. [08:10.980 --> 08:20.900] There, the court's order was in February of 2018. And then they asked for, let's see, this is May [08:20.900 --> 08:28.260] of 2000. What is this called? I can't remember what this is. Newer counter defendants' motion [08:28.260 --> 08:36.580] to sever dismiss claims and render final judgment. So they put that motion in there in May of 2018. [08:37.220 --> 08:46.100] And then opposite, then we put an opposition to severance and render, which was two weeks later. [08:46.100 --> 08:58.100] And about frugal silence. And then the court ordered the motion to sever dismiss claims [08:58.100 --> 09:03.540] and render final judgment. So that's the five things that the appeals court asked for. [09:04.740 --> 09:12.820] So is that a good sign, which you said? That is a very good sign. They're going straight [09:12.820 --> 09:19.140] to subject matter jurisdiction. Okay. And that has been our claim the entire time. [09:19.940 --> 09:25.780] And it has never been answered. In fact, wait, yes, it has been answered. [09:27.380 --> 09:35.620] The court of appeals in our writ of mandamus ruled that the original court did not have [09:35.620 --> 09:42.900] subject matter jurisdiction. And that was our claim. The original, they've already ruled on our claim. [09:44.100 --> 09:50.340] You talked about the municipal court. Yes. Okay. Since the municipal court did not have jurisdiction, [09:51.540 --> 09:57.700] they could not transfer jurisdiction to the district court. That was our argument. [09:57.700 --> 10:10.980] Is there some unwritten code that a judge, when he sees that he has taken the bait of the attorneys, [10:12.580 --> 10:19.940] that he shouldn't say, since the original case, there was no subject matter in the original case, [10:19.940 --> 10:28.500] I see that we should drop your case, but he didn't do that. He allowed the suit to remain [10:28.500 --> 10:35.460] against me, the district judge. Yes. He shouldn't drop it. He shouldn't drop it. [10:36.500 --> 10:43.460] But because apparently, and I don't know enough about this, so maybe you can straighten me out, [10:43.460 --> 10:54.980] about jurisdiction. I've been reading that if you answer the court, it gives them standing [10:54.980 --> 11:02.020] for jurisdiction. If you have not challenged it, but we challenged it the whole way. [11:02.820 --> 11:12.740] No, no, no. We challenged the ability of the plaintiff to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction [11:12.740 --> 11:22.100] of the court. Once we were in the court, then there's the jurisdiction is two parts. [11:25.460 --> 11:33.380] Does the plaintiff have jurisdiction? And if they do or don't, does the defendant have jurisdiction? [11:33.380 --> 11:42.500] Did we have the legal standing to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court [11:42.500 --> 11:52.740] in our counterclaim? That's a separate question rather than did the plaintiff have [11:52.740 --> 11:59.060] subject matter jurisdiction to start the case in the first place. Once the case was started, [11:59.060 --> 12:10.260] you were forced to respond. So you were engaged by the court. That gave you legal standing to [12:10.260 --> 12:19.140] invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court in your behalf. Okay. So they were saying that [12:19.140 --> 12:25.060] since we didn't have jurisdiction, they can't have jurisdiction either. That's nonsense. [12:25.060 --> 12:32.340] And in the in the pleadings, they just said that. And that violated one of my rules. [12:33.060 --> 12:40.180] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. And in our responses, we addressed [12:40.180 --> 12:48.420] that issue that they made this out of their own mouth. They provided no statutory or case law [12:48.420 --> 12:58.500] support of their claim. They just made it. So it was meaningless. And what the court is asking for [12:59.860 --> 13:05.540] are just the right documents. They're asking for the documents that would go to the issue [13:06.180 --> 13:11.860] of jurisdiction. The 20 something pages these lawyers filed in a response [13:11.860 --> 13:18.660] just argued a bunch of stuff that just like in Tina's case, they argued a bunch of stuff that [13:18.660 --> 13:26.340] was not before the court. And, you know, you were concerned about us doing a rebuttal to their answer. [13:27.940 --> 13:34.420] And I said, no, their answer is so stupid. There's nothing in there that matters. It does not [13:34.420 --> 13:42.740] deserve a response. And if we responded to that, all we would do is insult the intelligence of [13:42.740 --> 13:49.380] the court of appeals. And they've looked at our documents and it will be clear to them that we [13:49.380 --> 13:59.300] chose not to respond. There's a pleading. There's an answer that you can file a rebuttal to the [13:59.300 --> 14:10.660] answer. We filed an appeal. They filed a response to the appeal. We could have filed a rebuttal to [14:10.660 --> 14:20.980] their response. But the response was so incompetent that it did not warrant a rebuttal. And I don't [14:20.980 --> 14:30.100] think that will be lost on the court. Okay. And so the appeals court has more of a, [14:32.420 --> 14:39.780] how can I say this, integrity. Because I've heard you and Eddie and several others say that [14:39.780 --> 14:45.620] the lower courts always make you do the motion. So you just got the record. [14:45.620 --> 14:56.820] I hate to say integrity. It's not really like that. What they do is they have an interest [14:56.820 --> 15:06.180] in the Corpus Juris, in the body of law. Any ruling they make, other lawyers can take those [15:06.180 --> 15:13.860] rulings and use them. So if they're trying to screw a client, they got to be careful about [15:13.860 --> 15:21.780] the rulings that they make, because they might render a ruling that other lawyers can use to [15:22.420 --> 15:30.100] screw up the very guys that are paying them. So this appeal will be on the book for all time? [15:30.900 --> 15:40.500] Oh yeah. Okay. And if you, it's hard to imagine how they could not rule in your favor because [15:40.500 --> 15:45.860] they've already ruled that the original trial court did not have subject matter jurisdiction. [15:47.060 --> 15:54.340] I just, that takes down everything. If they change that, then they completely undermine [15:55.380 --> 16:01.540] the whole structure of jurisdiction in the state of Texas. I don't see them doing that. [16:02.980 --> 16:08.580] The only thing that had me worried was that the attorney's argument is solely based on [16:08.580 --> 16:13.940] suing the city and its employees at the same time, which voids it all. [16:14.580 --> 16:22.420] Okay. About to go to break. I will talk to that when we come back. When we wrote the counter [16:22.420 --> 16:34.020] complaint, that was very clearly in mind. I knew that argument would come and wrote this document [16:34.020 --> 16:41.940] to avoid that argument because we sued them in their private capacity claiming they did not [16:41.940 --> 16:48.020] have official capacity and the court of appeals has already ruled that. Hang on. [16:48.580 --> 16:53.940] Going to break. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. We'll be right back. 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For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue [18:45.780 --> 18:52.900] Michael Maris banner or email Michael Maris at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email [18:52.900 --> 19:00.020] m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. To learn how to stop debt collectors next. [19:00.020 --> 19:08.500] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:12.660 --> 19:18.260] Well, don't let nothing get to you. Only the father can do it by you. So don't let [19:18.260 --> 19:26.100] bad-mine people hurt you until they can get behind you. You know what I mean? My friend, [19:26.100 --> 19:33.780] now I've got you in the club. Don't spin behind me, pretty. Get in your problem, baby. [19:37.860 --> 19:45.300] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Tim in Texas. [19:47.460 --> 19:53.380] Okay, I think, you know, this sounds like they're setting up to give you the rule and you want. [19:53.380 --> 20:02.420] If they don't give you the ruling you want, then they will disrupt the Corpus Juris. [20:03.540 --> 20:13.380] And when I write pleadings, I'm always looking for arguments to make where, if the court rules [20:13.380 --> 20:22.500] against us, they disrupt the Corpus Juris. It's not enough just to look for legal arguments that [20:22.500 --> 20:28.980] are valid because the courts are corrupt. So you have to understand where the court lives. [20:30.180 --> 20:38.900] Court of Appeals must maintain the integrity of the Corpus Juris. Now I maintain that they're [20:38.900 --> 20:45.300] all corrupt and all of these rights and privileges written into the law were not written into the [20:45.300 --> 20:52.260] law for you and I or you and me. They were written into the law for these no good rotten [20:52.260 --> 20:59.300] corrupt scoundrels. The problem is, is they're sharks and they're swimming around in a pool full [20:59.300 --> 21:04.740] of sharks and they need tools to protect themselves from the other sharks in the pool. [21:06.900 --> 21:14.260] And the fallout of that is that you and I get to use the protections they put in [21:14.260 --> 21:23.060] to protect themselves from each other. We get to use them ourselves. So when we write an argument, [21:23.060 --> 21:32.900] we need to look at what argument can I make such that if they rule against me in the court of [21:32.900 --> 21:45.380] appeals, it will create case law that screws up the body of law. We have said that since the [21:46.340 --> 21:55.060] trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, then jurisdiction cannot be transferred to anyone [21:55.060 --> 22:06.180] else. If the court of appeals rules against that, that completely disrupts 200 years of well [22:06.980 --> 22:14.100] established law or in Texas 150 years of well established law, they're not going to do that. [22:14.100 --> 22:26.500] Not just to favor some po-dunk chump municipality in who knows where Texas, [22:28.980 --> 22:34.180] they're not going to do that. Now, if it were some really big deal case [22:36.020 --> 22:42.900] with real serious political ramifications, they might get bought off, but they would immediately [22:42.900 --> 22:50.980] already have another case in the in the wings they could use to undo that bogus ruling. [22:53.460 --> 22:58.980] But you're not big enough. You're not important enough to go through those kinds of maneuvers. [22:59.780 --> 23:05.940] The city's lawyers and the city itself are not important enough for the court of appeals to even [23:05.940 --> 23:14.420] care. So not because they're good guys, not because they're not corrupt, but just because [23:15.780 --> 23:23.380] of where this group of judges lives, the likelihood they would be is they will rule in your favor. [23:26.500 --> 23:31.700] So when you said the trial court did not have subject matter jurisdiction, you're saying [23:31.700 --> 23:40.900] from the get go from the very beginning? Exactly. Well, okay, not exactly. [23:42.340 --> 23:50.420] Judge Evans, the original judge in the criminal prosecution had subject matter jurisdiction. [23:50.420 --> 24:02.260] But when he allowed the administrative hearing, that hearing and all the persons involved in the [24:02.260 --> 24:09.460] panel did not have subject matter jurisdiction. It was lost at that point. The visiting judge, [24:09.460 --> 24:16.100] you meant? No, I'm talking about the original trial court. You went to you were called to court [24:16.100 --> 24:23.780] to answer a criminal accusation. Yes, that was a judge's mentor. But the prosecutor converted it [24:23.780 --> 24:32.660] into a civil prosecution. Right. The trial judge in the criminal case had subject matter jurisdiction. [24:32.660 --> 24:41.220] That was undisputable. Okay. But when the trial court allowed an administrative hearing, [24:41.220 --> 24:49.460] the administrative hearing never accrued jurisdiction. Right. And that was the argument. [24:49.460 --> 24:58.420] We never argued that the original judge did not have jurisdiction. We argued that the civil [25:01.300 --> 25:07.940] proceeding that followed that the judge allowed that proceeding lacked subject matter jurisdiction. [25:07.940 --> 25:14.420] Now, we argued it for one reason, but the court of appeals never got to our reason. [25:16.180 --> 25:24.020] They first looked at generic jurisdiction and said, okay, you were supposed to have this filing [25:24.020 --> 25:32.660] in the record. You don't have it. We don't get to whether or not a trial, a criminal court judge can [25:32.660 --> 25:41.380] move a case to a civil proceeding. That was an argument. They couldn't do that. The court never [25:41.380 --> 25:49.460] got that far. This court, they got to the point where can the city have a civil hearing in the [25:49.460 --> 25:54.980] first place? And they said, no, so we don't need to go any further. They don't have jurisdiction. [25:54.980 --> 26:03.460] Period. So you got that one. They cannot get past it. And that is resjudicata. So we've been [26:04.340 --> 26:14.260] adjudicated and this court will not change it. So that mandamus, you know, when you got the [26:14.260 --> 26:27.620] ruling in the mandamus, remember, I said, this is really a big deal. Yeah, it was. Because I doubt [26:27.620 --> 26:35.620] that any pro se litigant in the second circuit in state of Texas has ever had a mandamus [26:35.620 --> 26:46.020] granted in their favor. You may be the only one. 12% all the 12% of the mandamus is filed, [26:46.660 --> 26:53.860] get tossed. They don't get accepted. Of those 12%, 2% get ruled in favor of the filer. [26:55.940 --> 26:58.980] And you're a pro se filer and they ruled in your favor. [26:58.980 --> 27:03.700] Almost couldn't believe it when you got the ruling down. [27:05.620 --> 27:12.260] They actually gave it to you in your favor. Well, they did their homework, didn't they? [27:13.220 --> 27:16.740] Yeah, so that's in the court. That's in the record. They can't revisit that. [27:16.740 --> 27:31.220] And there is no way jurisdiction can accrue past that. Well, I've also tried to, I've been wondering, [27:31.220 --> 27:42.100] why, who was it that convinced this stubborn council that was not going to let me go, [27:42.100 --> 27:49.540] that we're not going to dismiss anything? Who convinced them? Could it have been [27:49.540 --> 27:57.700] their own attorney saying, if you just go ahead and drop this, maybe he will just go away? [27:59.700 --> 28:04.260] In other words, they were predicting themselves. We were at a hearing. You weren't at this [28:04.260 --> 28:11.620] here at this council meeting where one of the council members was trying to mediate between [28:12.580 --> 28:19.620] you and the council. Oh, you were there. You were there. That's right. You and Laura were there. [28:19.620 --> 28:26.420] And he's trying to mediate. And I felt for him because when he come out, everybody outside is [28:26.420 --> 28:37.300] really crawling down his throat. And he was kind of standing in the middle. And I suggested to him [28:38.900 --> 28:48.180] that why don't you ask the council to seek a third party opinion, because we've made [28:48.180 --> 28:55.860] accusations against the lawyers who have accused him of baritry. And they pretty well know we're [28:55.860 --> 29:02.820] likely to sue them. So they have a dog in this hunt. Why don't you get a third party council [29:02.820 --> 29:09.540] that doesn't have a dog in this hunt and have that council look at it? And I almost bet you [29:09.540 --> 29:16.660] they did that. And another lawyer came in and looked at this and said, are you guys out of your mind? [29:17.380 --> 29:22.580] This guy is going to clean your clock. That's when they dismissed everything [29:22.580 --> 29:28.740] and the hope that you would go away. And effectively you have, you gave them your word. [29:29.860 --> 29:35.620] Yeah, they stood by theirs and you'll stand by yours. You just want to make sure that they [29:35.620 --> 29:41.700] don't get a secondary shot at you. Yeah, I still have the idea, though, that their own attorneys [29:43.300 --> 29:46.500] may have said, in other words, we got nothing to lose. [29:46.500 --> 29:52.580] That's why they go ahead and dismiss it. And then that way maybe he will. [29:52.580 --> 29:58.020] Okay, okay, hang on. Going to break Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll roll radio. We'll be right back. [30:02.100 --> 30:07.540] Europeans take long stress-free vacations, but Americans have a tough time unplugging from [30:07.540 --> 30:13.140] their jobs. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with a new study that measures how much Americans work [30:13.140 --> 30:19.540] when they should be resting after this. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about [30:19.540 --> 30:24.900] yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms [30:24.900 --> 30:30.980] will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information [30:30.980 --> 30:37.540] to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. 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I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most [31:26.100 --> 31:36.100] private search engine. I lost my son. My nephew. My uncle. My son. On September 11th, 2000. Most [31:36.100 --> 31:41.780] people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. World Trade Center 7, a 47-story [31:41.780 --> 31:46.740] skyscraper was not hit by a plane. Although the official explanation is that fire brought down [31:46.740 --> 31:52.020] building 7. Over 1200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there [31:52.020 --> 31:58.580] is more to the story. Bring justice to my son. My uncle. My nephew. My son. Go to building what.org. [31:58.580 --> 32:03.300] Why it fell. Why it matters. As what you can do. Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home [32:03.300 --> 32:07.220] Improvements. Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? Come on, [32:07.220 --> 32:11.140] we all know the government caused it with their chem trails, but good luck getting them to pay [32:11.140 --> 32:15.220] for it. Okay, I might be kidding about the chem trails, but I'm serious about your roof. That's [32:15.220 --> 32:19.540] why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with [32:19.540 --> 32:24.820] little to no out-of-pocket expense. And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the [32:24.820 --> 32:29.700] Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle [32:29.700 --> 32:37.700] your claim and your roof right the first time. Just call 512-992-8745 or go to Hill Country [32:37.700 --> 32:42.820] Home Improvements.com. Mention the crypto show and get $100 off. And we'll donate another $100 [32:42.820 --> 32:48.180] to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. So if those out-of-town roofers come [32:48.180 --> 32:57.140] knocking, your door should be locked in. That's 512-992-8745 or Hill Country Home Improvements.com. [32:57.140 --> 33:01.540] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. I mean, I actually be kidding about chem trails. [33:27.460 --> 33:42.020] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruel Valrillo, and we're talking to Tim in Texas. [33:42.820 --> 33:50.420] Okay, Tim, have we about exhausted this issue or do you have something else? [33:50.420 --> 34:00.180] No, just hoping that they rule in our favor. Yeah, I'm pretty confident. I don't like to [34:00.180 --> 34:08.020] get confident. But from the documents that they requested, they requested only documents that [34:08.020 --> 34:14.260] went to subject matter jurisdiction. All that 20 pages of garbage, the other side argued, [34:14.260 --> 34:22.740] doesn't go to the documents they asked to see. So it looks as though they're focusing on the [34:22.740 --> 34:29.700] only issue in the court. And if they do, I think you'll get an easy win. [34:30.660 --> 34:34.660] What I'm going to tell you is this last thing here is signed by the Judge, [34:34.660 --> 34:44.340] District Judge, was August 21st, 2018, and it had those pages, those papers in those [34:44.340 --> 34:48.500] defendants' original answer, pleaded jurisdiction, conviction, and the counterclaim, [34:50.180 --> 34:55.700] counter-defendants' motion to dismiss, the counter-claimants' motion to recusal. So it's [34:55.700 --> 35:02.820] all in there. So I guess trying to put it together to see how the district judge got to where [35:02.820 --> 35:13.300] he, I don't know. It's all in there. Yeah, so, you know, I think it's going to be pretty clear. [35:14.500 --> 35:22.260] Okay. All right, sir. Okay, you guys have a good evening. Thank you, Tim. Now we're going to go [35:22.260 --> 35:33.220] to Adam in Texas. Hello, Adam. Hey, Randy. How you doing? Doing good. What are you up to today? Well, [35:33.220 --> 35:39.540] I got some good news. To talk to you, Brett. I guess Brett's still on the line. He's still there. [35:41.460 --> 35:46.260] Yes, sir. I'm here. Great. Yeah, I talked to y'all a couple weeks ago. [35:46.260 --> 35:53.460] Kindle County, they were messing with my wife, and I did some public information requests, [35:54.500 --> 36:04.260] and I got some responses back. And as far as the Commissioner's Court, the county judge wrote [36:04.260 --> 36:09.860] me a letter back, and he said he had no records responses to my request. That means that Kindle [36:09.860 --> 36:16.260] County doesn't have any appointed traffic control officers in that county under 701-001 [36:16.260 --> 36:25.780] transportation code. And then I got back a reply response from the Kindle County [36:25.780 --> 36:38.340] Court Clerk, and my request was under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 18.01b, and I was asking for [36:40.500 --> 36:48.660] any and all supporting verified affidavits that supporting any search warrants issued in the [36:48.660 --> 36:55.140] county by any magistrate from January 1st to July 1st. And I got back a response from the [36:55.140 --> 37:06.900] county clerk, and she had no records responses to my request. So under Texas Government Code, [37:07.780 --> 37:16.980] 24.591c, which 24.59 created the 451st Judicial District, which is in Kindle County because [37:16.980 --> 37:22.900] they got rid of the county court law a couple years ago, created the 451st Judicial District. [37:22.900 --> 37:30.820] The government code 24.491c says all civil and criminal matters within the current jurisdiction [37:30.820 --> 37:36.340] of the county and district courts must be filed with the county clerk's office and the county court. [37:36.340 --> 37:41.940] This is for Kindle County only. The county clerk serves as the clerk of the district court for [37:41.940 --> 37:49.780] those matters. So what we have is we have a blood warrant that was issued on my wife [37:49.780 --> 38:00.900] by the district judge, and there's no supporting affidavit filed on record as required by law [38:00.900 --> 38:10.100] out of the Chapter 18 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. So what's my cause of action? That's [38:10.100 --> 38:16.900] what I'm talking about. Who was required to file those affidavits in the record? The judge [38:16.900 --> 38:24.420] who issued the warrant and received them or the officers who generated them? [38:25.940 --> 38:34.260] Well, the officer that filed for the blood warrant, they were supposed to, by the law, [38:34.260 --> 38:39.300] they were supposed to file with it in order to get the warrant. They were supposed to have [38:40.180 --> 38:46.580] a verified affidavit. That's how you get the warrant. I got that. But what I'm doing is [38:46.580 --> 38:56.740] tracking where did the documents go. In order for the judge to issue the warrant, the judge would [38:56.740 --> 39:06.980] have necessarily had to have had the affidavits. So the officers would have given the affidavits [39:06.980 --> 39:17.140] to the judge, and then the judge was directed to file them and the clerk. Judge for tampering [39:17.140 --> 39:23.220] with the government document. Okay, tampering with the government document on the district judge. [39:24.260 --> 39:33.060] The presumption, this is under the presumption that the judge actually received these affidavits [39:33.060 --> 39:39.940] as required so that he would have jurisdiction for the purpose of issuing the warrant. [39:41.060 --> 39:48.420] So you presume that he had them. And since the clerk doesn't have them, the only reasonable [39:48.420 --> 39:56.100] presumption is that he secreted them from the clerk. He must have. Then you sting the judge. [39:56.100 --> 40:03.300] The only way the judge can get out from under tampering with a government document is to admit [40:03.300 --> 40:10.660] that he never had them in the first place. The legal term for that is rock and hard place. [40:15.060 --> 40:20.420] Well, yeah, I'm going to speak with the district judge, but I also want to hear this [40:20.420 --> 40:27.780] towards the arresting officer because my fear is that the arrest. Okay, here's the deal. [40:29.380 --> 40:36.100] The judge will have to produce them. If he cannot produce them, [40:37.380 --> 40:43.780] then it goes back to the arresting officers. The judge and the arresting officers conspired one [40:43.780 --> 40:53.220] with the other to deprive your wife and due process. That's my angle, yeah. So [40:54.580 --> 40:59.620] what I believe happened is what we have here is we have an illegally issued search warrant. [41:02.180 --> 41:07.940] Have you filed first degree felony aggravated assault charges against the arresting officers? [41:07.940 --> 41:19.140] Not yet. No, that's because you have the response from the county commissioners [41:19.140 --> 41:28.580] court. Now you have reasonable probable cause to believe that these particular sheriff's deputies [41:28.580 --> 41:39.220] were not certified, were not authorized to act in the capacity of a police officer. [41:40.180 --> 41:43.140] Correct, out of subtitle C, text trans bitch go correct. [41:44.580 --> 41:51.220] They were only authorized to act as a peace officer and when they turned those lights on [41:51.220 --> 41:59.380] your wife, they stepped across that line. Did I tell you about the last time I got a ticket in Texas? [42:00.980 --> 42:08.740] No, sir. This was Tim's case. I was coming, they were having a hearing and they knew I was going [42:08.740 --> 42:18.260] to show up. So I'm driving over there and I turned off of a road from the town I live in [42:18.260 --> 42:27.540] and on to another road. From a little side road, Bobo's crossing on to 730. I want to turn [42:27.540 --> 42:33.380] on to Bobo's crossing. There's a sheriff's deputy in front of me and I followed him. He turned down [42:33.380 --> 42:38.820] 730 toward Newark and I turned behind him. I kept a distance behind him because I was [42:39.700 --> 42:45.140] uncomfortable. Something, you know, sometimes something tells you this is not right. [42:45.140 --> 42:51.780] Well, when we got into Newark, there was a little road that veered off to the right [42:52.820 --> 42:58.820] that went down to Tim's house. He took that road. I said, I don't want to follow him down there. So [42:58.820 --> 43:04.420] I went down through town and come back to Tim's house from the other direction and there's that [43:04.420 --> 43:11.700] sheriff's deputy sitting waiting for me. Turned his lights on. I pull over. He comes up. I give [43:11.700 --> 43:20.260] him my license because I signed a contract with the state agreeing to do that. And he said, [43:20.260 --> 43:24.020] do you know why I stopped here? I said, no, but I'm sure you're going to tell me, [43:24.020 --> 43:31.540] well, Mr. Kelton, your registration is expired. I said, only two years. What's the problem? [43:32.980 --> 43:40.340] Well, hang on. We'll finish this on the other side. I got 20 seconds. He went back and right to [43:40.340 --> 43:44.740] take it. I'll call 911. I won't even rest it for a first-degree phone and aggravated assault. [43:45.620 --> 43:49.620] And it got real interesting from there. We'll be right back. Randy Kelton, [43:49.620 --> 43:52.980] Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [44:01.140 --> 44:04.980] At Capital Coin and Bullion, our mission is to be your preferred shopping destination by [44:04.980 --> 44:09.060] delivering excellent customer service and outstanding value at an affordable price. [44:09.060 --> 44:12.820] We provide a wide assortment of our favorite products featuring a great selection of high [44:12.820 --> 44:16.500] quality coins and precious metals. We cater to beginners in coin collecting, [44:16.500 --> 44:20.820] as well as large transactions for investors. We believe in educating our customers with [44:20.820 --> 44:25.540] resources from top accredited metal dealers and journalists. If we don't have what you're looking [44:25.540 --> 44:30.580] for, we can find it. 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If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, [45:20.820 --> 45:26.100] know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, [45:26.100 --> 45:31.140] and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:31.140 --> 45:37.380] with 22 years of case-winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what [45:37.380 --> 45:43.460] everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.460 --> 45:49.700] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.700 --> 45:56.500] prosay tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner [45:56.500 --> 46:22.500] or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:26.500 --> 46:39.620] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brent Felton, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Adam in Texas. [46:40.260 --> 46:46.260] Okay, the officer tells me that my registration's expired. I say only two years. What's the problem? [46:47.060 --> 46:51.940] He goes back to write a ticket. I call 9-1-1. I want him arrested for first-degree felony [46:51.940 --> 46:56.900] aggravated assault. Now, Brett's looking up the statute to make sure I got the number right. [46:57.860 --> 47:08.340] The only statute that requires a driver or a operator to pull over when an officer turns [47:08.340 --> 47:15.780] on his emergency lights behind them is in the transportation code, and I believe it's 353.345, [47:15.780 --> 47:24.500] but Brett's checking. Not that, but I don't see yet where it does say that. Okay, I've got it in [47:24.500 --> 47:31.700] one of the pleadings that's on the traffic side. There's only one statute, and that's under transportation [47:31.700 --> 47:36.180] code. Well, this guy turned his lights on me with the intent that I pulled over, so when I pulled [47:36.180 --> 47:42.260] over, he pulled in behind me. He didn't go around me to respond to an emergency. He intended that I [47:42.260 --> 47:48.820] pulled over, but he can only do that under transportation code. However, I had already [47:48.820 --> 47:57.380] checked with the county commissioner's court, and there were no sheriff's deputies authorized by [47:57.380 --> 48:06.340] the county commissioner's court to act as traffic control officers. So I had reason to believe that [48:06.340 --> 48:13.700] he was not a proper traffic control officer. Therefore, he had exerted or purported to exert [48:13.700 --> 48:20.580] an authority he did not have, and in the process, he arrested my freedom of movement [48:22.980 --> 48:31.060] and did so while permanently displaying a dead weapon. I considered the arrest of the lights [48:31.060 --> 48:39.540] as a threat to my person, because I can be relatively sure that if I'd ignored them, [48:39.540 --> 48:47.460] I would wind up being shot at, or maybe worse, actually shot, but he was certainly willing [48:47.460 --> 48:53.860] to use whatever force was necessary to force me to stop. So I felt threatened. [48:53.860 --> 49:04.740] 2201 Texas Penal Code calls that simple assault. If you commit simple assault while acting under [49:04.740 --> 49:14.420] the color or pretense of an official capacity, that is a felony of the second degree. Unless [49:14.420 --> 49:22.740] you are a public official acting under the color or pretense of an official capacity, [49:22.740 --> 49:31.140] in which case it is a felony of the first degree. When our legislators put pistols on our officers' [49:31.140 --> 49:41.860] hips, they put a tremendous responsibility on them. They said, this is a really, really big deal. [49:41.860 --> 49:53.060] Don't screw it up. So don't blame me, guys. I didn't like the code. I just read it. Brett, [49:53.060 --> 50:02.020] did you find it? No, I haven't seen something like that just yet. Try 353. No, it's not in there. [50:02.020 --> 50:12.980] Are y'all talking about 543 under this subtitle? Well, what really is looking for is the [50:13.620 --> 50:20.820] authorization. When somebody flips on their light bar, they are authorized to pull you over [50:20.820 --> 50:27.540] by the transportation code. There's only one statute that requires you to pull over and stop [50:27.540 --> 50:33.620] when an officer turns his light bar on behind you. That's in the transportation code. I was [50:33.620 --> 50:44.260] thinking it was 345 or 353. I keep thinking 353, but apparently that's not the right one. [50:44.900 --> 50:50.980] It is in one of my pleadings. I believe it's in my subject matter jurisdiction challenge [50:50.980 --> 50:57.940] that's on the ticket site. But there's only one statute in that there's nothing in the penal code [50:58.820 --> 51:03.940] that requires you to pull over and stop when an officer turns his lights on behind you. [51:05.140 --> 51:12.580] And in fact, that's a crime on his part. If you look in the penal code, it shows that there's a [51:12.580 --> 51:23.780] crime. It's in 4206 and it's subsection A, subsection 2, false alarm. If he knew there was no emergency [51:23.780 --> 51:31.540] and he used his light bar to indicate the existence of an emergency, and if that would ordinarily [51:31.540 --> 51:37.940] place a person in fear of imminent serious bodily injury, he has committed that class A [51:37.940 --> 51:48.500] misdemeanor or state jail felony. So I wanted that piece too. I was driving down Highway 287 [51:48.500 --> 51:54.180] north of Fort Worth and a car come up behind me and emergency lights come on. I moved over. [51:55.460 --> 52:02.500] It passed me and the lights went off. At Rome, Texas, he pulled off the highway to get, I get [52:02.500 --> 52:10.020] to get gas and I pulled in behind him and I asked him for ID and he said, what's the problem? [52:10.660 --> 52:17.140] See, you turned your lights on behind me and right away he said, oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. [52:18.180 --> 52:23.700] I'm in my patrol cruiser when I got my five-year-old with me and the kids sitting there [52:24.580 --> 52:29.940] and he turned them on. I didn't realize they were on when I did. I turned them off. [52:29.940 --> 52:36.900] But the guy was sorry all over the place, but he recognized the difficulty that put him in. [52:38.820 --> 52:45.140] So they know better. I accused the fire department of doing that to get me out of [52:45.140 --> 52:52.660] the way so they could get to the donut shop. They didn't find me as funny as I did. [52:52.660 --> 53:02.580] Anyway, okay. That was my position that he arrested my freedom of movement [53:04.660 --> 53:11.300] and did so with the implied threat that if I did not respond to those lights [53:12.020 --> 53:18.340] that he was prepared to use force. He was prepared to use deadly force and that is not an unreasonable [53:18.340 --> 53:26.900] presumption. So I consider that an act of simple assault at least 2201 Texas Penal Code. [53:28.740 --> 53:36.660] And 2201 Texas Penal Code says that if you, I'm sorry, 2202 says that if you commit [53:36.660 --> 53:43.620] simple assault as defined by 2201 and you are prominently displaying a deadly weapon, [53:43.620 --> 53:51.060] that's felony of the second degree unless you are a public official acting under the color [53:51.060 --> 53:56.740] pretence of an official capacity, in which case felony of the first degree. I filed first degree [53:56.740 --> 54:04.980] felony aggravated assault charges against the officer. To say that he was not a happy camper [54:04.980 --> 54:15.140] is a gross understatement. He came back with my ticket and another deputy had shown up and [54:15.140 --> 54:20.820] he's on the passenger side. I'm talking him through the window and he implied that he was, [54:21.540 --> 54:29.380] could arrest me for making a false 911 call. I said, what are you talking about? This guy committed [54:29.380 --> 54:37.700] first degree felony aggravated assault. You don't consider that an emergency? The officer [54:37.700 --> 54:43.700] come back with my ticket. He handed it to me and I couldn't find a pen so he gave me his pen. [54:44.660 --> 54:50.020] And I'm talking to the officer on the other side and yakking back and forth. I'll sign the ticket [54:50.020 --> 54:58.420] and give it back to him. And this is officer standing there fuming and then he says, give me [54:58.420 --> 55:05.780] my pen. And I held it up and looked at it. I looked at the other officer and I said, [55:06.500 --> 55:11.700] heck, I thought I was going to get away with that. It turned and handed it to him. [55:13.140 --> 55:20.900] You just had to be there. You have not had fun until you've done that to an officer. [55:20.900 --> 55:28.580] And we talked earlier in the show about setting these guys up so you can sting them. [55:30.500 --> 55:33.860] When a sheriff's deputy pulls you over, he sets himself up. [55:33.860 --> 55:48.020] And you can sting him. Adam, you there? Yeah, I'm here. Okay, this would be great fun. [55:51.380 --> 56:00.740] What do you want to do with this, Adam? I want it. Well, by law, okay? [56:00.740 --> 56:06.020] By law, there's supposed to be a verified supporting affidavit for the search warrant [56:06.020 --> 56:11.700] on file with the county clerk's office by law. It's not there. County clerk says it's not there. [56:12.260 --> 56:17.940] Well, that makes the fact that they took my wife, chained her to a hospital bed and drew her blood [56:17.940 --> 56:23.300] against her will. That makes that aggravated assault. Because the law says that you have [56:23.300 --> 56:29.940] to have a verified supporting affidavit for each every search warrant issued. So I want answers [56:29.940 --> 56:38.180] and I want to know the reason I asked that question is what you want at the end of the day [56:39.220 --> 56:46.660] will determine how you go about what you're doing. I want the officer to never work in [56:46.660 --> 56:55.220] law enforcement again. And I want to give the district judge the political turmoil of her career. [56:55.220 --> 57:01.860] Okay, that's different than suing them, getting them to pay you a lot of money to go away and [57:01.860 --> 57:07.700] leave alone. And that's why I asked that question. I would also like to sue them. That's why I called [57:07.700 --> 57:13.060] in because I've been looking in the O'Connor's, Texas 2009. I know it's a little old, but it'll [57:13.060 --> 57:17.860] change much though. O'Connor's, Texas causes of action. I'm trying to find my cause of action [57:18.500 --> 57:25.140] because I want to initiate my first suit against these. Send me an email and I will send you O'Connor [57:25.140 --> 57:40.260] 's 2008 on disk or electronic format. Okay. And if my database guy gets this done, he has taken [57:40.900 --> 57:50.820] O'Connor's and ran a, we're running an AI engine on it, where we're breaking all of these forms [57:50.820 --> 58:01.860] down into their component parts. And, you know, in O'Connor's forms, they will have a page with, [58:03.140 --> 58:08.500] say, jurisdiction. They will have about five paragraphs for jurisdiction. And they tell you, [58:08.500 --> 58:15.540] pick the one that fits your situation. And then you delete the rest of them. But what we're doing [58:15.540 --> 58:21.780] is we're taking each of these paragraphs and putting them in the database. And then we're [58:21.780 --> 58:29.300] looking at the paragraph and saying, okay, what questions would we have to ask to determine that [58:29.300 --> 58:35.620] this is the appropriate paragraph? And when we determine that this is the appropriate paragraph, [58:36.500 --> 58:42.980] what information do we need to ask for so that we can fill in all the blanks within the paragraph? [58:42.980 --> 58:52.980] We'll do that for each issue. Paul is about, would you like to make more definite progress in your [58:52.980 --> 58:59.620] walk with God? Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books [58:59.620 --> 59:04.500] that can really help. The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study [59:04.500 --> 59:10.020] Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will [59:10.020 --> 59:16.020] help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three volume set called [59:16.020 --> 59:21.460] basic elements of the Christian life. Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life [59:21.460 --> 59:28.340] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. To order [59:28.340 --> 59:34.900] your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, call Bibles for [59:34.900 --> 59:49.140] America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:52.180 --> 59:58.340] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:58.340 --> 01:00:04.500] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdowns. [01:00:06.340 --> 01:00:12.980] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [01:00:12.980 --> 01:00:20.820] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [01:00:20.820 --> 01:00:29.140] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and crypto is an order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, [01:00:29.140 --> 01:00:41.460] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:41.460 --> 01:00:51.700] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, [01:00:51.700 --> 01:00:57.460] was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [01:00:57.460 --> 01:01:00.340] killing 10 and injuring 40. Today in History. [01:01:04.500 --> 01:01:08.500] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, [01:01:08.500 --> 01:01:12.660] legalizing hemp into Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:01:12.660 --> 01:01:16.980] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges, [01:01:16.980 --> 01:01:21.460] and even refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time [01:01:21.460 --> 01:01:26.420] or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County [01:01:26.420 --> 01:01:30.580] District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession [01:01:30.580 --> 01:01:35.380] and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, [01:01:35.380 --> 01:01:39.380] including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on [01:01:39.380 --> 01:01:44.420] Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, and that these actions demonstrate [01:01:44.420 --> 01:01:51.060] a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney [01:01:51.060 --> 01:01:57.060] in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, [01:01:57.060 --> 01:02:01.780] quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.780 --> 01:02:06.740] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.740 --> 01:02:10.820] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [01:02:10.820 --> 01:02:15.300] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with [01:02:15.300 --> 01:02:24.660] something, the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified [01:02:24.660 --> 01:02:30.020] a five and a half inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [01:02:30.020 --> 01:02:35.540] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [01:02:35.540 --> 01:02:40.820] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the [01:02:40.820 --> 01:02:47.700] shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to [01:02:47.700 --> 01:03:00.740] lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Wolf Roadie with a lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:17.780 --> 01:03:22.740] I am a long boy, you know that? [01:03:22.740 --> 01:03:33.620] I will lie by my father's house until he returns. I will lie by my daughter's house until he returns. [01:03:33.620 --> 01:04:01.720] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett, Fountain, Willow Law Radio. [01:04:01.720 --> 01:04:07.380] My tangy is getting tangled, and we're talking to Adam in Texas. [01:04:07.380 --> 01:04:17.040] Okay, Adam, I was just talking to Brett on the break, and I've been doing this show for [01:04:17.040 --> 01:04:27.380] quite a while now, and in the process of doing this show, I'm looking for a group of people [01:04:27.380 --> 01:04:34.440] we can bring together that can implement some practices and procedures that will change [01:04:34.440 --> 01:04:38.940] everything. [01:04:38.940 --> 01:04:41.440] Brett is one. [01:04:41.440 --> 01:04:46.440] Brett and I have a history, he's kind of pee-overed at me about something, and... [01:04:46.440 --> 01:04:51.600] Well, don't put words in my mouth, that's not what I'm saying. [01:04:51.600 --> 01:04:54.520] We had disagreement, but I'm not letting him go. [01:04:54.520 --> 01:05:01.640] When I first talked to Brett, I talked to Brett about programming, but he's proved [01:05:01.640 --> 01:05:10.440] himself of far greater value somewhere else, the same place that you, Adam, have proved [01:05:10.440 --> 01:05:12.960] yourself of value. [01:05:12.960 --> 01:05:18.800] I've been doing this show for 12 years, and in all this time, I've been looking for people [01:05:18.800 --> 01:05:30.800] who have the moxie, or whatever it takes, to be prepared to take these guys on. [01:05:30.800 --> 01:05:46.200] And I've got about five or six in 12 years, and we used to hear a lot about sheeple, these [01:05:46.200 --> 01:05:50.000] guys who talk a big show, but don't do anything, and I got real frustrated with that, that's [01:05:50.000 --> 01:05:56.200] not appropriate, because people have their own issues, they have their own life they [01:05:56.200 --> 01:06:07.560] have to live, it won't take many of us to change everything. [01:06:07.560 --> 01:06:14.480] And Adam, we're at two of those people that do not want to get away. [01:06:14.480 --> 01:06:25.560] I am struggling to get my project launched, and when I do, I want these two on my team. [01:06:25.560 --> 01:06:27.680] We really can change everything. [01:06:27.680 --> 01:06:37.520] When I started this project, it was with the intent of helping people find some remedy. [01:06:37.520 --> 01:06:46.280] When I originally started, I never imagined that we could change everything, but we can. [01:06:46.280 --> 01:06:57.400] We can evolve the practice of law into the 21st century, change everything. [01:06:57.400 --> 01:07:00.880] It's hard to explain how profound this is. [01:07:00.880 --> 01:07:07.480] People have been doing legal research the same way for at least 800 years that we know [01:07:07.480 --> 01:07:10.600] of. [01:07:10.600 --> 01:07:18.480] And if I took the problem of legal research to a room full of 10-year-olds and told them [01:07:18.480 --> 01:07:25.400] to say, guys, I got this problem, I got all of these laws, and we've got all of these [01:07:25.400 --> 01:07:31.640] cases that were developed from these laws, how do I organize these things so I can find [01:07:31.640 --> 01:07:36.640] all the cases I need on a specific point of law? [01:07:36.640 --> 01:07:45.240] But one of them would say, oh, use key words, yeah, just make up this phrase that you might [01:07:45.240 --> 01:07:53.360] think might turn up in this particular pleading or this particular case, and you can find [01:07:53.360 --> 01:07:57.080] the cases that you did. [01:07:57.080 --> 01:08:05.000] That is just so fundamentally wrong. [01:08:05.000 --> 01:08:08.480] But we have lawyers who were taught to do it that way, by lawyers who were taught to [01:08:08.480 --> 01:08:16.680] do it that way, by lawyers who were taught to do it that way for 800 years. [01:08:16.680 --> 01:08:21.280] It is stupid. [01:08:21.280 --> 01:08:27.280] And when I show it to a lawyer, another way of doing it, and if I gave this to a room [01:08:27.280 --> 01:08:33.800] full of 10-year-olds and said, how do I organize these things, they would say, well, you should [01:08:33.800 --> 01:08:39.680] organize them by the cases as they refer to a specific law. [01:08:39.680 --> 01:08:44.360] Is that rocket science? [01:08:44.360 --> 01:08:49.760] I mean, duh, every 10-year-old in the room would agree with that. [01:08:49.760 --> 01:08:58.480] So why haven't 1,080,000 lawyers currently practicing in the state of, or in the United [01:08:58.480 --> 01:09:02.920] States, figured that out? [01:09:02.920 --> 01:09:05.980] They're all doing what they were trained to do by people who were doing what they were [01:09:05.980 --> 01:09:07.480] trained to do. [01:09:07.480 --> 01:09:15.080] They're inside this lawyer box, and they cannot see outside of it. [01:09:15.080 --> 01:09:22.600] I'm looking for a group of people who are not inside that lawyer box, who can go back [01:09:22.600 --> 01:09:31.560] and look at this problem from a different perspective, and clearly, Adams, one of them, [01:09:31.560 --> 01:09:34.400] Brett is clearly one of them. [01:09:34.400 --> 01:09:36.600] I lost contact with a few of them. [01:09:36.600 --> 01:09:44.520] I had someone in Riverside, California, that I told him once, he decided, you know, I told [01:09:44.520 --> 01:09:47.560] everybody the best fight to have is the fight you picked. [01:09:47.560 --> 01:09:52.400] Well, he wanted to test this out, so he picked a fight with the city of Riverside. [01:09:52.400 --> 01:09:57.560] And I told him once, you are having way too much fun, and he said, yes, I am. [01:09:57.560 --> 01:09:59.800] But I've lost contact with everyone again back. [01:09:59.800 --> 01:10:05.160] I want to get a small group, we put them together. [01:10:05.160 --> 01:10:13.520] We can change everything, and our grandchildren, and our great grandchildren, can have a tool [01:10:13.520 --> 01:10:19.960] that's dramatically more effective than what is being used now. [01:10:19.960 --> 01:10:26.920] They will have access to all of the law, and the law absolutely consistent. [01:10:26.920 --> 01:10:27.920] We can change everything. [01:10:27.920 --> 01:10:30.520] Okay, I'm going to stop preaching now. [01:10:30.520 --> 01:10:34.040] I'm a little bit passionate about this. [01:10:34.040 --> 01:10:40.320] Okay, Adam, and then that's the reason I asked you why, what you are after. [01:10:40.320 --> 01:10:44.640] If you want to sue them for a lot of money, it would move you in one direction, because [01:10:44.640 --> 01:10:51.600] the best way to get money out of these guys is through mediation. [01:10:51.600 --> 01:10:53.600] Let's make a deal. [01:10:53.600 --> 01:10:54.600] Yeah. [01:10:54.600 --> 01:11:00.680] But if you want to beat them up, then you can still make a deal, but you have to beat [01:11:00.680 --> 01:11:01.680] them up. [01:11:01.680 --> 01:11:05.040] You can beat them up for a while beforehand. [01:11:05.040 --> 01:11:11.880] If you expect to win a case at the end of the day, forget that noise. [01:11:11.880 --> 01:11:16.600] It's not about winning, that's not how we change them. [01:11:16.600 --> 01:11:19.280] We change them by having a good fight with them. [01:11:19.280 --> 01:11:24.960] Adam, when you were growing up, did you ever have a kid in a fight in the school parking [01:11:24.960 --> 01:11:25.960] lot? [01:11:25.960 --> 01:11:31.960] There was a school playground with a kid in school. [01:11:31.960 --> 01:11:32.960] Yes. [01:11:32.960 --> 01:11:39.680] Okay, what happened, okay, was it a good fight? [01:11:39.680 --> 01:11:42.840] Yeah, I won. [01:11:42.840 --> 01:11:45.840] What happened after the fight? [01:11:45.840 --> 01:11:49.120] Were you enemies, or did you become friends? [01:11:49.120 --> 01:11:55.080] Well, that's how I met my best friend, what ended up becoming my best friend. [01:11:55.080 --> 01:12:00.800] That is exactly how it works. [01:12:00.800 --> 01:12:05.720] I think most of us have stories like that. [01:12:05.720 --> 01:12:09.440] Good friend is bred out of mutual respect. [01:12:09.440 --> 01:12:14.560] A lot of people here know Harman Taylor. [01:12:14.560 --> 01:12:22.080] Harman Taylor gave up his bar card in disgust. [01:12:22.080 --> 01:12:28.040] When I first met him, I was introduced to him by a policeman that I kept from losing [01:12:28.040 --> 01:12:32.080] his job, and Harman was doing constitution classes. [01:12:32.080 --> 01:12:37.280] Harman's about five foot two, maybe five foot four, and maybe 120 pounds. [01:12:37.280 --> 01:12:48.800] A Walter Middy kind of guy, and the day before, Robert got me a meeting with Harman, and [01:12:48.800 --> 01:12:53.720] the day, the morning that I was going to go meet with him, I was in the convenience store [01:12:53.720 --> 01:12:58.120] across the street from my house, and I had this big Airdale dog in there that was trying [01:12:58.120 --> 01:12:59.120] to get out. [01:12:59.120 --> 01:13:04.280] There were just six women that worked there, so it was a big dog, so I got in there and [01:13:04.280 --> 01:13:08.920] I'm shooting it out toward the door, and two people coming in and saw what we were doing. [01:13:08.920 --> 01:13:10.880] They pulled the doors open. [01:13:10.880 --> 01:13:16.360] When the dog saw where I was pushing it, it spun around and dove and took my hand out [01:13:16.360 --> 01:13:25.600] of the air, and it bit me and broke the skin, so a dog got it, and he's not going anywhere [01:13:25.600 --> 01:13:31.840] now, so we run him in the office, and when he ran in the office, he ran to the back and [01:13:31.840 --> 01:13:36.960] realized there wasn't a way out, and spun around and come back at me, and I reached for [01:13:36.960 --> 01:13:39.960] the doorknob to close it, but she was too quick. [01:13:39.960 --> 01:13:45.960] She grabbed my hand and sunk every tooth to the bone, and when she did, I'd come over [01:13:45.960 --> 01:13:49.280] the top and hit her in the top of the head, and all four feet went straight out and she [01:13:49.280 --> 01:13:50.280] went down. [01:13:50.280 --> 01:13:55.240] I reached to grab her before she got her sense about her, but I was too slow, and she grabbed [01:13:55.240 --> 01:14:00.320] my other hand, sunk every tooth to the bone, so I just closed my hand around her lower [01:14:00.320 --> 01:14:06.280] jaw, tried her jaw open, pushed her head into the ground, grabbed her by the throat and [01:14:06.280 --> 01:14:14.320] choked her until she crapped all over herself, and when she collapsed, I thought, man, I [01:14:14.320 --> 01:14:15.320] don't want to kill her. [01:14:15.320 --> 01:14:16.320] She's an Airdale. [01:14:16.320 --> 01:14:22.920] Airdale was never back down, so I gave her one breath, and I gave her that breath, and [01:14:22.920 --> 01:14:29.360] she was on me like a tiger, so I managed to pick her up with my left hand, open the bathroom [01:14:29.360 --> 01:14:32.440] door with my right and explore in and slam the door. [01:14:32.440 --> 01:14:36.080] Well, I came out and Tom the cop is there. [01:14:36.080 --> 01:14:37.800] He said, does she bite? [01:14:37.800 --> 01:14:41.640] And I'm holding my hands out in front of me, and there's a line of blood going back in [01:14:41.640 --> 01:14:42.640] the office. [01:14:42.640 --> 01:14:46.120] Oh, yeah, Tom, she bites. [01:14:46.120 --> 01:14:54.800] Well, I got some gauze taping wrapped up in my hands, and I was wearing a white, three-piece [01:14:54.800 --> 01:15:03.600] Yves Saint Laurent suit, and I went to meet Harman Taylor, and I'm sitting in his house [01:15:03.600 --> 01:15:09.920] with my forearms on my knees and holding my hands out so that I don't get, because blood [01:15:09.920 --> 01:15:14.680] is seeping through the bandages, and I didn't want to get it on my suit. [01:15:14.680 --> 01:15:22.600] And finally, Harman said, I just got to ask, what happened to you? [01:15:22.600 --> 01:15:33.040] Oh, this, well, I had a little disagreement with a dog, and he said, who won, and I leaned [01:15:33.040 --> 01:15:37.440] forward and said, I did. [01:15:37.440 --> 01:15:40.320] I got a call from Robert the next day. [01:15:40.320 --> 01:15:43.000] What did you do to Harman? [01:15:43.000 --> 01:15:44.880] He thinks you're crazy. [01:15:44.880 --> 01:15:52.440] Well, Harman, I've since come to know one another pretty well, but he still thinks I'm [01:15:52.440 --> 01:15:53.440] crazy. [01:15:53.440 --> 01:16:01.960] The point of the story is, is the dog catcher come and got the dog, and they put the dog [01:16:01.960 --> 01:16:02.960] down. [01:16:02.960 --> 01:16:08.160] Nobody came to claim it, and it really kind of broke my heart. [01:16:08.160 --> 01:16:16.160] He said, that dog gave me a great fight, and I appreciate her, because she gave me a great [01:16:16.160 --> 01:16:17.160] fight. [01:16:17.160 --> 01:16:22.720] We appreciate people who give us a great fight. [01:16:22.720 --> 01:16:31.120] Adam, you give these guys a good fight, it will change everything, they won't hate you, [01:16:31.120 --> 01:16:32.120] they'll appreciate you. [01:16:32.120 --> 01:16:40.480] Hang on, I got to go to break Randy Kelton, Randy Kelton Brett's, Randy Kelton Brett [01:16:40.480 --> 01:17:00.440] 's fountain root of low radio, I'll get this fixed in a minute, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.440 --> 01:17:05.720] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.720 --> 01:17:09.400] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. [01:17:09.400 --> 01:17:13.560] Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [01:17:13.560 --> 01:17:14.560] can win two. [01:17:14.560 --> 01:17:19.360] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:17:19.360 --> 01:17:25.120] civil rights statute, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [01:17:25.120 --> 01:17:29.760] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [01:17:29.760 --> 01:17:33.960] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.960 --> 01:17:39.080] The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:39.080 --> 01:17:41.200] Federal consultation is available as well. [01:17:41.200 --> 01:17:46.720] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner [01:17:46.720 --> 01:17:49.720] or email Michael Meares at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.720 --> 01:17:57.440] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.440 --> 01:18:00.400] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.400 --> 01:18:01.400] I love logos. [01:18:01.400 --> 01:18:04.960] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.960 --> 01:18:08.800] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back, I need my truth pick. [01:18:08.800 --> 01:18:13.520] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.520 --> 01:18:17.280] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [01:18:17.280 --> 01:18:20.640] have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.640 --> 01:18:22.200] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.200 --> 01:18:24.160] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.160 --> 01:18:28.480] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies [01:18:28.480 --> 01:18:29.480] or holiday gifts. 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[01:20:00.520 --> 01:20:04.880] Okay. [01:20:04.880 --> 01:20:05.880] We are back. [01:20:05.880 --> 01:20:10.800] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with a lot of radio and I got my tang untongled over the [01:20:10.800 --> 01:20:11.800] break. [01:20:11.800 --> 01:20:12.800] Okay. [01:20:12.800 --> 01:20:20.560] But anyway, we give them a good fight. [01:20:20.560 --> 01:20:29.480] I'm believing that if we set these guys up right and essentially what you're doing, Adam, [01:20:29.480 --> 01:20:36.600] you're taking where they didn't follow their own procedures and cramming it down their [01:20:36.600 --> 01:20:37.600] throats. [01:20:37.600 --> 01:20:43.320] When you're in the fight, they don't like it one little bit. [01:20:43.320 --> 01:20:49.800] But once you're done, then you get at least a grudging respect. [01:20:49.800 --> 01:20:53.600] You know, I'm in Wise County, Texas. [01:20:53.600 --> 01:20:58.040] That's where I'm from and that's where I've been for the last 40 years. [01:20:58.040 --> 01:21:01.920] I work these guys over. [01:21:01.920 --> 01:21:10.120] But when a policeman has a problem with the system, they come to me. [01:21:10.120 --> 01:21:11.120] And they've done that. [01:21:11.120 --> 01:21:16.280] The guy that referred me to Harman Taylor, the city he worked for tried to fire him because [01:21:16.280 --> 01:21:18.480] he was one of us. [01:21:18.480 --> 01:21:21.680] He found me in a hardware store. [01:21:21.680 --> 01:21:24.200] I don't know how he found me. [01:21:24.200 --> 01:21:29.080] He never would tell me who referred him to me. [01:21:29.080 --> 01:21:31.080] But we took on the city of Decatur. [01:21:31.080 --> 01:21:35.400] He was off work full pay for a year. [01:21:35.400 --> 01:21:44.800] And when we were done, they had to take him back with full seniority, lost nothing. [01:21:44.800 --> 01:21:52.560] We even really beat up the Texas Ranger, who is now the county sheriff. [01:21:52.560 --> 01:22:00.920] I have worked over half the county, but I am highly respected. [01:22:00.920 --> 01:22:06.280] I took on the county attorney prosecuted me when a sheriff's deputy tried to kill me, [01:22:06.280 --> 01:22:10.960] couldn't get it done, and arrested me to cover up for what he did. [01:22:10.960 --> 01:22:14.240] I stood in the courtroom and asked the jury, are you going to listen to him? [01:22:14.240 --> 01:22:15.800] This was the prosecutor. [01:22:15.800 --> 01:22:17.680] You know what this is? [01:22:17.680 --> 01:22:22.280] This is an unscrupulous prosecutor and I'd already proved it. [01:22:22.280 --> 01:22:26.120] So I worked him over pretty good in court. [01:22:26.120 --> 01:22:31.640] Ten years later, he had left town and went somewhere in Alabama and then wound up in [01:22:31.640 --> 01:22:35.080] Alaska, came back to Texas. [01:22:35.080 --> 01:22:36.360] I met him in the courthouse. [01:22:36.360 --> 01:22:39.480] He was doing court appointed counsel. [01:22:39.480 --> 01:22:44.040] And I asked him for some consultation over some things that had to do with when he was [01:22:44.040 --> 01:22:47.240] a prosecutor, how prosecutors worked. [01:22:47.240 --> 01:22:51.160] And one of the things he told me, he said, remember that case we had? [01:22:51.160 --> 01:22:53.880] Oh, yeah, I remember that. [01:22:53.880 --> 01:22:56.720] He said, you were kind of hard on me. [01:22:56.720 --> 01:22:59.160] I said, well, I'm sorry I had to do that. [01:22:59.160 --> 01:23:03.400] He said, oh, no, no, you don't understand. [01:23:03.400 --> 01:23:11.840] I always respected you for that and that's the way humans work. [01:23:11.840 --> 01:23:18.840] If we get in a good fight and both of us fight fairer, win, lose, or draw, you gain a lot [01:23:18.840 --> 01:23:20.360] of respect. [01:23:20.360 --> 01:23:31.440] If guys like Adam and Brett can take these guys on one and just walk them through the [01:23:31.440 --> 01:23:41.360] system, then they look around wondering who else is going to be a Brett or an Adam. [01:23:41.360 --> 01:23:45.560] We can change everything. [01:23:45.560 --> 01:23:49.080] We don't have to have everybody doing this. [01:23:49.080 --> 01:23:53.600] There are a lot of people out there listening that have issues and we've got too much going [01:23:53.600 --> 01:23:54.600] on in our life. [01:23:54.600 --> 01:24:00.080] They don't have time to do what we're doing because they don't have this specific motivation [01:24:00.080 --> 01:24:02.200] and that's okay. [01:24:02.200 --> 01:24:04.720] Everybody doesn't have to do this. [01:24:04.720 --> 01:24:07.880] Only a few and we're finding them. [01:24:07.880 --> 01:24:13.400] Just for you to know, Adam and Brett, I appreciate both of you. [01:24:13.400 --> 01:24:19.520] Okay, where were we at, Brett, before I started preaching? [01:24:19.520 --> 01:24:30.040] Well, Adam was looking for some information as to what's the best approach for him to [01:24:30.040 --> 01:24:37.640] get to the result he's looking for, which is to run these guys through the ringer, give [01:24:37.640 --> 01:24:45.280] them a hard time making Adam the routine. [01:24:45.280 --> 01:24:53.560] We've got these rules, okay, get out your little invisible tar baby, make sure everybody [01:24:53.560 --> 01:25:04.040] gets an opportunity to touch it, and then sting them, and each person who touches it [01:25:04.040 --> 01:25:07.840] creates another tort. [01:25:07.840 --> 01:25:08.840] These are all torches. [01:25:08.840 --> 01:25:10.520] They're not causes that directly cause it. [01:25:10.520 --> 01:25:18.440] Well, they are causes of action in terms of, what's the term about when someone's under [01:25:18.440 --> 01:25:23.200] contract to you? [01:25:23.200 --> 01:25:24.200] Good services. [01:25:24.200 --> 01:25:25.200] Good faith. [01:25:25.200 --> 01:25:39.160] I was just listening to a deal now, some high-level executives were sued for not providing the [01:25:39.160 --> 01:25:45.320] services they were, they should have, there's a special term for it, I can't think of it [01:25:45.320 --> 01:25:46.320] at the moment. [01:25:46.320 --> 01:25:48.320] A breach of contract? [01:25:48.320 --> 01:25:57.960] No, it's about providing the service that the contract intended, and good faith, and [01:25:57.960 --> 01:26:01.440] this especially applies to public officials. [01:26:01.440 --> 01:26:08.760] Public officials are under contract with us, and they're required to act in good faith, [01:26:08.760 --> 01:26:12.120] it's good faith in something services. [01:26:12.120 --> 01:26:16.720] They're just specific cause of action for that. [01:26:16.720 --> 01:26:20.400] Public officials are especially vulnerable to it. [01:26:20.400 --> 01:26:26.960] Any time they fail to form a duty they're required to form, or to exert authority they [01:26:26.960 --> 01:26:32.440] don't want to express your have, then not only violate criminal law, if it denies you [01:26:32.440 --> 01:26:40.080] in the full and free access to your enjoyment of right, but they also create a tort, and [01:26:40.080 --> 01:26:41.600] you can sue them. [01:26:41.600 --> 01:26:49.920] And at the end of the day, it is my belief that a lawsuit is the most powerful thing [01:26:49.920 --> 01:26:59.120] you can do, that's the one thing they can't get around. [01:26:59.120 --> 01:27:04.880] And when you file a lawsuit, when a policeman does something stupid, and you file a lawsuit [01:27:04.880 --> 01:27:14.240] against him, now you've got his boss, his boss's boss, the mayor, they've got a pal, [01:27:14.240 --> 01:27:20.200] his attorneys, he turns into a city manager, and everybody gets involved. [01:27:20.200 --> 01:27:23.200] Risk insurance people involved? [01:27:23.200 --> 01:27:34.200] I was at the Tarrant County Courthouse, and I was taking photos outside, and I came in, [01:27:34.200 --> 01:27:43.000] and the guard asked me if, he looked at my cell phone, I had a little clip on it, there [01:27:43.000 --> 01:27:47.200] was a clip on my pocket, and he said, that's pretty cool, where'd you get that? [01:27:47.200 --> 01:27:49.800] And I said, I made it. [01:27:49.800 --> 01:27:50.800] You made that? [01:27:50.800 --> 01:27:51.800] I said, yeah, I did. [01:27:51.800 --> 01:27:56.960] See, where it sits, it slips in the case, and you clip it on your pocket, and it holds [01:27:56.960 --> 01:28:03.560] the top of the cell phone up so that the camera is above the lip of the pocket. [01:28:03.560 --> 01:28:07.440] And he said, are you videotaping us without our permission? [01:28:07.440 --> 01:28:13.200] Oh yeah, I do that all the time. [01:28:13.200 --> 01:28:23.400] And the deputy asked me, well, why do you do that? [01:28:23.400 --> 01:28:26.200] I said, oh, that's how I make my living. [01:28:26.200 --> 01:28:29.000] You make your living videotaping police officers? [01:28:29.000 --> 01:28:32.120] Oh no, no, I make my living suing police officers. [01:28:32.120 --> 01:28:36.360] That's all I got to do is come in and annoy you a little bit, you'll do something stupid, [01:28:36.360 --> 01:28:40.000] then I get to sue you. [01:28:40.000 --> 01:28:46.640] That got all over the courthouse in Tarrant County, there's either three or four different [01:28:46.640 --> 01:28:48.880] buildings. [01:28:48.880 --> 01:28:53.600] Every time I went into the building and they realized who I am, they said, hey, are you [01:28:53.600 --> 01:28:54.600] going to sue us? [01:28:54.600 --> 01:29:00.200] I said, were you going to do something stupid? [01:29:00.200 --> 01:29:08.240] The idea that I was coming in there for the specific purpose of getting them to do something [01:29:08.240 --> 01:29:15.760] stupid so I could sue them, on the one hand it scared all of them, and on the other one [01:29:15.760 --> 01:29:18.480] it got their respect. [01:29:18.480 --> 01:29:23.440] They got really, really careful with me. [01:29:23.440 --> 01:29:31.160] I want them really careful with every person that walks in that door. [01:29:31.160 --> 01:29:34.160] This is what we can do. [01:29:34.160 --> 01:29:36.000] I'm preaching again. [01:29:36.000 --> 01:29:38.240] I guess I'm in a preaching mode tonight. [01:29:38.240 --> 01:29:41.960] I'm feeling encouraged. [01:29:41.960 --> 01:29:46.680] I am, I got Adam and Brett at the same time. [01:29:46.680 --> 01:29:49.680] Hang on, about to go to break. [01:29:49.680 --> 01:30:02.320] We'll be right back. [01:30:02.320 --> 01:30:07.320] Online video gaming is big business in China, but now Beijing is imposing limits on how [01:30:07.320 --> 01:30:08.920] long citizens can play. [01:30:08.920 --> 01:30:13.720] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back to discuss gaming addiction and the Big Brother Nanny [01:30:13.720 --> 01:30:15.680] States, next. [01:30:15.680 --> 01:30:17.760] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.760 --> 01:30:21.400] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.400 --> 01:30:26.400] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.400 --> 01:30:27.920] So protect your rights. [01:30:27.920 --> 01:30:31.520] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.520 --> 01:30:34.160] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.160 --> 01:30:39.800] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:39.800 --> 01:30:41.480] Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.480 --> 01:30:45.440] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.440 --> 01:30:50.880] In China, more than 20 million citizens spend half a billion dollars a year in smoky cyber [01:30:50.880 --> 01:30:55.760] cafes lost in the virtual world of multiplayer role-playing. [01:30:55.760 --> 01:31:00.480] It's so popular that Beijing is trying to prevent addiction to online gaming by imposing [01:31:00.480 --> 01:31:03.520] limits on how long citizens can play. [01:31:03.520 --> 01:31:08.000] If they play more than three hours straight, their characters' in-game abilities go down. [01:31:08.000 --> 01:31:11.520] To get those abilities back, players must take a five-hour break. [01:31:11.520 --> 01:31:16.800] I'm all for parents doing this because no kid should waste his life in virtual combat, [01:31:16.800 --> 01:31:21.880] but for the government to monitor and control people's use of their own computers is just [01:31:21.880 --> 01:31:22.880] wrong. [01:31:22.880 --> 01:31:31.320] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.320 --> 01:31:36.720] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.720 --> 01:31:38.840] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.840 --> 01:31:43.760] Over 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.760 --> 01:31:47.760] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.760 --> 01:31:49.200] force respondents have died. [01:31:49.200 --> 01:31:52.960] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correctional [01:31:52.960 --> 01:31:57.160] officer, I'm an Air Force pilot, I'm a father who lost his son, we're Americans, and we [01:31:57.160 --> 01:31:58.320] deserve the truth. [01:31:58.320 --> 01:32:01.480] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.480 --> 01:32:05.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:05.680 --> 01:32:09.480] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [01:32:09.480 --> 01:32:13.600] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.600 --> 01:32:16.640] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:16.640 --> 01:32:20.640] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.640 --> 01:32:24.520] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.520 --> 01:32:26.400] our rights through due process. [01:32:26.400 --> 01:32:29.880] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [01:32:29.880 --> 01:32:33.640] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [01:32:33.640 --> 01:32:36.040] is, and how to hold courts to the Rule of Law. [01:32:36.040 --> 01:32:40.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and [01:32:40.000 --> 01:32:41.360] ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.360 --> 01:32:44.560] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.560 --> 01:32:49.120] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [01:32:49.120 --> 01:32:51.440] documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.440 --> 01:32:55.400] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. [01:32:55.400 --> 01:32:59.160] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:59.160 --> 01:33:06.160] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.160 --> 01:33:56.320] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio, and we talked to Brad on the break. [01:33:56.320 --> 01:34:03.920] I feel like I'm rambling, there's something I'm trying to drag out of my brain, and it's [01:34:03.920 --> 01:34:10.000] not coming out, so I'm kind of running around in circles. [01:34:10.000 --> 01:34:15.120] Adam, what do you need, you need to get me focused. [01:34:15.120 --> 01:34:20.840] I think I'm getting overtired, I've been working since 2 this morning, so I'm brain [01:34:20.840 --> 01:34:21.840] dead. [01:34:21.840 --> 01:34:30.120] Can you hear me, yes I can, yeah I can barely hear you, well I humbly accept your, your [01:34:30.120 --> 01:34:37.720] knighthood, appreciate it, this is what I love to do, it's a one for you and Eddie and [01:34:37.720 --> 01:34:44.080] Deborah, putting on this program, I wouldn't have the outlet that I need to keep fighting, [01:34:44.080 --> 01:34:47.080] and that's all I really want to do is fight. [01:34:47.080 --> 01:34:53.720] So I will email you, and I'd like to get in touch with Brett, and that other fellow Scott [01:34:53.720 --> 01:34:58.960] that was on your program, sometimes he seems to need to be a pretty knowledgeable fellow, [01:34:58.960 --> 01:35:01.440] and I would love to join your team. [01:35:01.440 --> 01:35:10.560] Okay wait, there's one thing I have to tell you about Scott, he's a redneck, but I won't [01:35:10.560 --> 01:35:15.960] hold that against you. [01:35:15.960 --> 01:35:23.200] So yeah, I'm having a real hard time hearing you, but Randy I'll email you tomorrow, and [01:35:23.200 --> 01:35:29.280] if it's alright with Brett, I'd like to give you, if you want to give me his email, I'll [01:35:29.280 --> 01:35:34.160] email you and maybe we can get together, and maybe we can all meet up and have some sort [01:35:34.160 --> 01:35:36.760] of a conference or something and talk about this stuff. [01:35:36.760 --> 01:35:43.360] I'm not too far from Austin, I've got time and the motivation, so other than that I guess [01:35:43.360 --> 01:35:44.360] I'll... [01:35:44.360 --> 01:35:51.960] I can do it on Zoom or Skype or something, I'm in Tennessee at the moment, and I'm struggling [01:35:51.960 --> 01:35:55.200] with my equipment here. [01:35:55.200 --> 01:36:04.600] If I turn my mic up, it seems that my mic is picking up background noise on my end, and [01:36:04.600 --> 01:36:10.480] that suppresses your voice, because I have a suppressor on my side. [01:36:10.480 --> 01:36:17.680] So if I turn it down so it stops suppressing your voice, then you can't hear me be good. [01:36:17.680 --> 01:36:23.600] So I'm going to have to figure out something to solve this issue. [01:36:23.600 --> 01:36:24.600] Yeah. [01:36:24.600 --> 01:36:25.600] Maybe... [01:36:25.600 --> 01:36:28.760] I think the suppressor may be a little too hot. [01:36:28.760 --> 01:36:31.560] Okay, go ahead Adam. [01:36:31.560 --> 01:36:34.080] Barely hear you. [01:36:34.080 --> 01:36:37.600] Okay, how's that? [01:36:37.600 --> 01:36:38.600] No. [01:36:38.600 --> 01:36:40.600] Too hot? [01:36:40.600 --> 01:36:43.080] Yeah, then we can't hear him at all. [01:36:43.080 --> 01:36:46.080] All we hear is, so whatever machine is in your office. [01:36:46.080 --> 01:36:51.480] Okay, there must be something in here that I can't hear. [01:36:51.480 --> 01:36:56.280] Maybe it's the buzzing in my head that you're hearing. [01:36:56.280 --> 01:37:01.080] Okay, go ahead Adam. [01:37:01.080 --> 01:37:07.600] Yeah, I don't know what's going on with the production, but the last few months y'all [01:37:07.600 --> 01:37:14.080] are really, really hard to hear, and I'm in a car and I could just barely make out y'all's [01:37:14.080 --> 01:37:15.080] voices. [01:37:15.080 --> 01:37:16.080] So... [01:37:16.080 --> 01:37:22.160] Okay, I'm going to talk to Deborah and see if she can't turn down that suppressor somewhat. [01:37:22.160 --> 01:37:28.280] That way I can turn my mic up hotter, and it won't amplify the background. [01:37:28.280 --> 01:37:32.840] It won't use the background noise so much to suppress your voice. [01:37:32.840 --> 01:37:36.160] Yeah, yeah, because it used to not be that way. [01:37:36.160 --> 01:37:41.480] You know, year or so back y'all were very, very easy to hear, but some reason the last [01:37:41.480 --> 01:37:45.160] few months, y'all are really, really hard to hear. [01:37:45.160 --> 01:37:52.160] Well we've had some equipment go down that we haven't been able to afford to replace. [01:37:52.160 --> 01:37:56.280] So we're kind of struggling to keep this thing on the air. [01:37:56.280 --> 01:37:59.640] Well, maybe I can help out with that. [01:37:59.640 --> 01:38:03.400] Randy, I'm going to email you tomorrow. [01:38:03.400 --> 01:38:04.400] I'm Adam from Texas. [01:38:04.400 --> 01:38:08.120] I'm sure you can recognize my emails, I got the e-goals on them. [01:38:08.120 --> 01:38:11.920] I'm going to email you and let's get together and work something out. [01:38:11.920 --> 01:38:21.440] Okay, because right now Brett is looking at putting together some lawsuits based on what's [01:38:21.440 --> 01:38:28.760] has occurred with him, and I want to put together, when we put these together, we want to do [01:38:28.760 --> 01:38:36.520] it so that we create arguments based on issues. [01:38:36.520 --> 01:38:43.480] And doing all these questionnaire, something grew out of the practice. [01:38:43.480 --> 01:38:52.080] And that is, there can be essentially an infinite number of different facts that leads you to [01:38:52.080 --> 01:38:55.600] any one legal element. [01:38:55.600 --> 01:39:02.600] But once you get to that legal element, the legal element is almost always argued precisely [01:39:02.600 --> 01:39:04.800] the same. [01:39:04.800 --> 01:39:09.560] So I want to build legal arguments for the element. [01:39:09.560 --> 01:39:16.200] Then use the fact set to bring us to that element, so that anytime the questionnaire brings us [01:39:16.200 --> 01:39:20.760] to an element, the system can go into the database, pull that argument out, drop it [01:39:20.760 --> 01:39:25.880] in the document, and then we go to the next element and drop it in the document. [01:39:25.880 --> 01:39:31.600] We'll take a cause of action and each cause of action will have a set of elements. [01:39:31.600 --> 01:39:38.320] We use the fact set to bring us to the cause of action, then we bring out each of the elements [01:39:38.320 --> 01:39:44.920] that are always argued essentially the same, and just attach the facts that addresses the [01:39:44.920 --> 01:39:56.320] element, we can build a tool that will literally write petitions for people, write their lawsuit [01:39:56.320 --> 01:40:01.760] for them, and all they have to do is answer questions. [01:40:01.760 --> 01:40:06.480] Does that make sense? [01:40:06.480 --> 01:40:09.920] I think it's a great idea. [01:40:09.920 --> 01:40:17.760] This is something that grew out of, we have loaded all my questionnaires into a NEOJ4 [01:40:17.760 --> 01:40:27.800] database, and it counts 500 questionnaires and 1.5 million nodes at this point. [01:40:27.800 --> 01:40:31.320] So we have a lot of test data to work from. [01:40:31.320 --> 01:40:40.880] I have an AI programmer who is using this test data to teach the AI engine how to read [01:40:40.880 --> 01:40:53.200] code, and he's almost got that part finished, where creating a legal lexicon of legalese. [01:40:53.200 --> 01:40:58.520] So we have all the definitions for all of these terms, wherever they occur in the codes, [01:40:58.520 --> 01:41:05.080] so we can access the most appropriate definition of a term no matter where it occurs, and then [01:41:05.080 --> 01:41:11.320] we take that as the first step toward teaching the engine to speak legalese and read and [01:41:11.320 --> 01:41:13.680] understand it. [01:41:13.680 --> 01:41:22.760] Then when I create these questions from the code, the code says you must do this thing, [01:41:22.760 --> 01:41:26.400] and I turn that into did you do this thing? [01:41:26.400 --> 01:41:35.520] So there's only about six different structures that I've come across in doing this. [01:41:35.520 --> 01:41:41.240] The code can say if you did this and if you did that, then you must do this. [01:41:41.240 --> 01:41:48.800] So my process says, well, where you did this and where you did that, did you do this? [01:41:48.800 --> 01:41:49.800] That's a variation. [01:41:49.800 --> 01:41:53.160] There's only about six of them that I've come across. [01:41:53.160 --> 01:41:58.240] It's easy enough to teach an AI engine to recognize and understand. [01:41:58.240 --> 01:42:05.360] So we will be able to take a complete set of code and run the engine against it, and [01:42:05.360 --> 01:42:08.640] it will turn them into interconnected questionnaires. [01:42:08.640 --> 01:42:16.600] Then we have a human being read it so that we can pick up the inferences that occur in [01:42:16.600 --> 01:42:20.640] the language that's not directly apparent. [01:42:20.640 --> 01:42:29.000] I had someone contact me wanting to do some work for me building databases. [01:42:29.000 --> 01:42:37.280] He was from India, and his last name was spelled B-U-S-H-I-T. [01:42:37.280 --> 01:42:41.120] He didn't get it. [01:42:41.120 --> 01:42:47.720] Everyone in the United States would add two Ls in there, but him not being a native speaker [01:42:47.720 --> 01:42:49.000] would have never got it. [01:42:49.000 --> 01:42:55.880] So we need a native speaker to read these, to catch these implications in new windows [01:42:55.880 --> 01:43:03.120] that are in the language, but the AI engine will take out about 95% of the work. [01:43:03.120 --> 01:43:11.280] So we will be able to build these quickly, and pretty very soon we can have a tool that [01:43:11.280 --> 01:43:18.760] will light everything, criminal complaints, professional conduct complaints, bar grievances, [01:43:18.760 --> 01:43:26.760] judicial conduct complaints, crime, lawsuits, motions, pleadings, everything. [01:43:26.760 --> 01:43:31.120] When we get that, the law becomes absolutely consistent. [01:43:31.120 --> 01:43:33.000] We can change everything. [01:43:33.000 --> 01:43:34.000] Hang on. [01:43:34.000 --> 01:43:35.000] About to go to break. [01:43:35.000 --> 01:43:38.120] Adam, if we're done with you, I will go on to the other callers. [01:43:38.120 --> 01:43:43.040] Heck, we've only got one segment left. [01:43:43.040 --> 01:44:00.720] We'll be right back. [01:44:00.720 --> 01:44:05.360] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [01:44:05.360 --> 01:44:06.760] of nutrition. [01:44:06.760 --> 01:44:11.520] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.520 --> 01:44:17.760] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.760 --> 01:44:22.600] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [01:44:22.600 --> 01:44:26.040] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:26.040 --> 01:44:30.760] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [01:44:30.760 --> 01:44:31.760] we reject. [01:44:31.760 --> 01:44:37.000] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [01:44:37.000 --> 01:44:40.200] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:40.200 --> 01:44:46.200] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:44:46.200 --> 01:44:47.760] quality radio. [01:44:47.760 --> 01:44:52.120] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:52.120 --> 01:44:57.360] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [01:44:57.360 --> 01:44:59.320] increase your income. [01:44:59.320 --> 01:45:00.320] Order now. [01:45:00.320 --> 01:45:06.680] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:06.680 --> 01:45:13.440] In your case without an attorney, with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [01:45:13.440 --> 01:45:17.440] that will show you how, in 24 hours, you step-by-step. [01:45:17.440 --> 01:45:21.240] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:21.240 --> 01:45:25.280] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:25.280 --> 01:45:30.280] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:30.280 --> 01:45:36.160] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:36.160 --> 01:45:41.520] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [01:45:41.520 --> 01:45:45.880] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:45.880 --> 01:45:52.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:52.040 --> 01:45:54.680] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.680 --> 01:46:10.720] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:54.680 --> 01:47:04.680] Okay, you're in. [01:47:04.680 --> 01:47:10.800] All right, and this is Brett Fountain here with Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. [01:47:10.800 --> 01:47:17.480] We're wrapping up the last segment on this Friday, the August the 2nd of 2019. [01:47:17.480 --> 01:47:21.880] And we're going to go ahead and go to Shane in New York. [01:47:21.880 --> 01:47:24.880] Shane? [01:47:24.880 --> 01:47:31.880] Hold on, let me, whoa, we just lost Shane. [01:47:31.880 --> 01:47:36.880] Hmm, does he drop off? [01:47:36.880 --> 01:47:39.880] Yeah, it looks like he dropped off. [01:47:39.880 --> 01:47:44.880] Okay, let's go to John in New York. [01:47:44.880 --> 01:47:45.880] Hello, John. [01:47:45.880 --> 01:47:46.880] Hi, John. [01:47:46.880 --> 01:47:48.880] How are you doing? [01:47:48.880 --> 01:47:50.880] Thank you very much, Randy. [01:47:50.880 --> 01:47:52.880] I'm going to make this fast. [01:47:52.880 --> 01:47:57.880] There has been some events which have happened that are changing things, and that's why I'm calling. [01:47:57.880 --> 01:47:59.880] Here's a timeline with four dates. [01:47:59.880 --> 01:48:02.880] I'm just going to briefly mention the dates and then explain. [01:48:02.880 --> 01:48:08.880] November 5th, March 7th, April 9th, and July 7th. [01:48:08.880 --> 01:48:13.880] November 5th, the defendant filed a traffic ticket appeal in county court. [01:48:13.880 --> 01:48:21.880] March 7th, acting ADA sends his brief to the defendant and the judge in which he poo-poo's the defendant's arguments, [01:48:21.880 --> 01:48:24.880] but doesn't address the most powerful one. [01:48:24.880 --> 01:48:26.880] We already discussed that. [01:48:26.880 --> 01:48:32.880] April 9th, county judge sends his decision to the county clerk, but not to the defendant. [01:48:32.880 --> 01:48:38.880] The defendant repeatedly kept checking with the county court every day and got excused after excused. [01:48:38.880 --> 01:48:40.880] It's on the DA's desk. [01:48:40.880 --> 01:48:41.880] I don't know. [01:48:41.880 --> 01:48:42.880] I couldn't find it. [01:48:42.880 --> 01:48:44.880] It's an obvious setup. [01:48:44.880 --> 01:48:46.880] I understand that. [01:48:46.880 --> 01:48:51.880] July 7th, the defendant was talking with the county clerk on some other matter, [01:48:51.880 --> 01:49:00.880] and literally accidentally finds out that the county court judge has handed down a decision back in April on April 9th. [01:49:00.880 --> 01:49:02.880] Your comments. [01:49:02.880 --> 01:49:04.880] Oh, he's afraid to go forward. [01:49:04.880 --> 01:49:10.880] Well, first of all, he had doubts about it because of all the length of time that has gone by. [01:49:10.880 --> 01:49:12.880] So we need your help with this. [01:49:12.880 --> 01:49:16.880] We know what they're doing, but go ahead. [01:49:16.880 --> 01:49:20.880] You want to take this, Brett? [01:49:20.880 --> 01:49:25.880] No, I couldn't really follow what was being requested. [01:49:25.880 --> 01:49:26.880] Okay. [01:49:26.880 --> 01:49:37.880] I think the issue was the judge issued a ruling, but they did not reveal the ruling to the appellant [01:49:37.880 --> 01:49:46.880] so that the appellant was not able to file a notice of appeal. [01:49:46.880 --> 01:49:48.880] They did that on purpose. [01:49:48.880 --> 01:49:51.880] I know it, but that's beside the point. [01:49:51.880 --> 01:50:03.880] So if the appellant checked and asked the clerk and nobody let him know, then he can still file for an appeal. [01:50:03.880 --> 01:50:08.880] Okay, what's the nomenclature you told me once before if this should happen? [01:50:08.880 --> 01:50:09.880] And it did. [01:50:09.880 --> 01:50:13.880] If this should happen, what's the jargon? [01:50:13.880 --> 01:50:14.880] What did they do? [01:50:14.880 --> 01:50:17.880] What wrong things did they do? [01:50:17.880 --> 01:50:18.880] Did life... [01:50:18.880 --> 01:50:19.880] What I did, huh? [01:50:19.880 --> 01:50:20.880] Go ahead. [01:50:20.880 --> 01:50:21.880] Go ahead. [01:50:21.880 --> 01:50:28.880] What I did for something like this is when the appellate court was saying that I didn't timely file something, [01:50:28.880 --> 01:50:36.880] I filed a motion for leave to late file, and in the little bullet points of why I was giving them reasons [01:50:36.880 --> 01:50:44.880] for granting leave to file something late, I put in those bullet points. [01:50:44.880 --> 01:50:50.880] I just ripped the lower court to shreds saying they did this. [01:50:50.880 --> 01:50:52.880] They denied me in this way. [01:50:52.880 --> 01:50:54.880] They gave me no notice. [01:50:54.880 --> 01:50:57.880] They considered six hours to be noticed for this. [01:50:57.880 --> 01:50:58.880] They... [01:50:58.880 --> 01:51:00.880] The file that they... [01:51:00.880 --> 01:51:03.880] When I went to see the file, it was not in the file. [01:51:03.880 --> 01:51:05.880] The lady said she didn't know where it was. [01:51:05.880 --> 01:51:12.880] Bullet point after bullet point, just kind of making it really obvious that they're either incompetent or unjust or both. [01:51:12.880 --> 01:51:17.880] And that was my reasons for why I needed this... [01:51:17.880 --> 01:51:19.880] I needed to be allowed to file late. [01:51:19.880 --> 01:51:22.880] And they granted it to me. [01:51:22.880 --> 01:51:26.880] Okay, now Randy, can you reiterate what he just said so I can get it from both of you? [01:51:26.880 --> 01:51:35.880] A motion for late filing for good cause, and then explain the good cause. [01:51:35.880 --> 01:51:37.880] That's what you call it? [01:51:37.880 --> 01:51:39.880] Yes. [01:51:39.880 --> 01:51:41.880] Okay, now do you write it out yourself? [01:51:41.880 --> 01:51:43.880] Is there a form? [01:51:43.880 --> 01:51:45.880] What do you do? [01:51:45.880 --> 01:51:47.880] There is no form. [01:51:47.880 --> 01:51:49.880] Okay, so what do you call it? [01:51:49.880 --> 01:51:55.880] Okay, think of a motion to the court as a letter explaining your position. [01:51:55.880 --> 01:51:59.880] Okay, that was just common sense English. [01:51:59.880 --> 01:52:01.880] Common sense English. [01:52:01.880 --> 01:52:04.880] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:52:04.880 --> 01:52:11.880] If there's law to be asserted, state the law, cite the law directly. [01:52:11.880 --> 01:52:20.880] Otherwise, in this case for the most part, you can just explain what you explained to us. [01:52:20.880 --> 01:52:33.880] That your individual exercised due diligence in trying to determine when a decision was filed and he was blocked by the court. [01:52:33.880 --> 01:52:36.880] That's good cause for delay. [01:52:36.880 --> 01:52:40.880] Same argument you would make to a regular human being. [01:52:40.880 --> 01:52:42.880] Right, okay. [01:52:42.880 --> 01:52:45.880] Okay, that doesn't include someone who lives in New York. [01:52:45.880 --> 01:52:47.880] That's different. [01:52:47.880 --> 01:52:49.880] What? [01:52:49.880 --> 01:52:51.880] Just kidding, I'm picking on Yankees. [01:52:51.880 --> 01:52:53.880] That's what I figured. [01:52:53.880 --> 01:52:55.880] Okay. [01:52:55.880 --> 01:52:59.880] Oh, they're really, they're really, they're pulling every trick in the book. [01:52:59.880 --> 01:53:02.880] But you know, this is not something new. [01:53:02.880 --> 01:53:04.880] We all know that. [01:53:04.880 --> 01:53:07.880] And so there we have it. [01:53:07.880 --> 01:53:18.880] So you once quoted, I can't remember what you said, but you used legal jargon and it sounded very good [01:53:18.880 --> 01:53:20.880] explaining what it was they did. [01:53:20.880 --> 01:53:26.880] They presented his right to what? [01:53:26.880 --> 01:53:29.880] What did they present his right to? [01:53:29.880 --> 01:53:40.880] They denied him his right to appeal because they denied him notice. [01:53:40.880 --> 01:53:42.880] I'm not sure exactly what you're asking. [01:53:42.880 --> 01:53:44.880] A due process. [01:53:44.880 --> 01:53:46.880] It's a right to due process. [01:53:46.880 --> 01:53:48.880] I'll explain, I'll explain. [01:53:48.880 --> 01:53:58.880] It's like when you get to court and the judge does not, does not the law to the facts of the case. [01:53:58.880 --> 01:54:00.880] I'm missing a word. [01:54:00.880 --> 01:54:05.880] Oh, failed to properly apply the law to the facts. [01:54:05.880 --> 01:54:06.880] Yes. [01:54:06.880 --> 01:54:09.880] See, now in a case like that, that's what you call that. [01:54:09.880 --> 01:54:10.880] That's what he did. [01:54:10.880 --> 01:54:12.880] And that's a class A misdemeanor. [01:54:12.880 --> 01:54:15.880] Are they guilty of anything? [01:54:15.880 --> 01:54:17.880] Do they be sued? [01:54:17.880 --> 01:54:21.880] Official misconduct denied you due process. [01:54:21.880 --> 01:54:22.880] That's what I'm looking for. [01:54:22.880 --> 01:54:23.880] Okay. [01:54:23.880 --> 01:54:24.880] Official misconduct. [01:54:24.880 --> 01:54:27.880] He failed to apply the facts. [01:54:27.880 --> 01:54:29.880] Failed to apply a lot of the facts of the case. [01:54:29.880 --> 01:54:31.880] Is that what he did? [01:54:31.880 --> 01:54:32.880] Yes. [01:54:32.880 --> 01:54:35.880] No, no, that's, you're talking about a different issue here. [01:54:35.880 --> 01:54:36.880] Okay. [01:54:36.880 --> 01:54:53.880] The court, the clerk and the judge denied you notice that a order had been filed and since your time to file an appeal is restricted, you were denied in your right to an appeal. [01:54:53.880 --> 01:54:55.880] That's the language I'm looking for. [01:54:55.880 --> 01:54:56.880] Thank you. [01:54:56.880 --> 01:54:57.880] Perfect. [01:54:57.880 --> 01:55:00.880] All right. [01:55:00.880 --> 01:55:02.880] I don't know what this point. [01:55:02.880 --> 01:55:11.880] It's going to be 25 a.m. I'm fried because I start my day around four in the morning. [01:55:11.880 --> 01:55:21.880] So I can understand what you were saying before about being fried working from two in the morning. [01:55:21.880 --> 01:55:25.880] Any other tips, any other advice? [01:55:25.880 --> 01:55:36.880] All I'm going to say is, in one sentence, I get news for 40 years when I tell you that this county is probably one of the most corrupt in the country. [01:55:36.880 --> 01:55:37.880] I know there's others. [01:55:37.880 --> 01:55:45.880] I know that other things terrible happen, but this one was consistently in the news for a long time. [01:55:45.880 --> 01:55:56.880] The New York Times carried an article about the New York court and how corrupt they are and how they are a bunch of dummies. [01:55:56.880 --> 01:56:04.880] And how many criminal charges have you filed against the judge? [01:56:04.880 --> 01:56:20.880] He contacted the commission on judicial conduct. He filed with another magistrate, a higher magistrate, and filed two charges against the judge. [01:56:20.880 --> 01:56:27.880] And in each case, I've got to find out this whole thing is such a mess. [01:56:27.880 --> 01:56:29.880] And I am so tired. [01:56:29.880 --> 01:56:36.880] No, no, no. Keep telling us the facts and you keep slipping in to meta comments. Stay with the facts. [01:56:36.880 --> 01:56:43.880] I know. All right. Here are the facts. He threw a couple of charges at the judge with another magistrate. [01:56:43.880 --> 01:56:52.880] And I can't remember how that turned out, but I think he pooped it if I'm not mistaken. [01:56:52.880 --> 01:56:59.880] So we've got a lot of work ahead of us and I want to get these people. I want to get these people. [01:56:59.880 --> 01:57:07.880] You're not understanding the process. Your file complaints with another judge and he poopes it. That's what you want. [01:57:07.880 --> 01:57:09.880] Because now you get to file against that judge. [01:57:09.880 --> 01:57:16.880] No, no, no. I agree. I agree. I agree. But I want to know the next and the next and the next. What you do next. [01:57:16.880 --> 01:57:19.880] You just go up the ladder. [01:57:19.880 --> 01:57:25.880] Okay, now that's what I don't understand. I don't understand what the ladder is. [01:57:25.880 --> 01:57:28.880] The next higher level judge. [01:57:28.880 --> 01:57:34.880] Okay. He's going to file this with the appellate judge in Rochester, New York. [01:57:34.880 --> 01:57:38.880] Good. And then if they blow it off, file it with the Supreme. [01:57:38.880 --> 01:57:43.880] And then if they blow it off, file against all of them with the New York Attorney General. [01:57:43.880 --> 01:57:47.880] And when he blows it off, then you take it to the feds. [01:57:47.880 --> 01:57:50.880] And that would be the FBI? [01:57:50.880 --> 01:57:55.880] FBI. The Special Agent in Charge. [01:57:55.880 --> 01:58:00.880] That's the only one whose name you could get. You file it with him directly. [01:58:00.880 --> 01:58:03.880] And this all creates politics. [01:58:03.880 --> 01:58:09.880] You've got guys being charged with crimes that didn't have anything to do with what started all this. [01:58:09.880 --> 01:58:17.880] And they're going to be P.O. with it, the guy that got this started, because now they got these guys involved in their mess. [01:58:17.880 --> 01:58:19.880] It's politics. [01:58:19.880 --> 01:58:22.880] Okay. All right. We are out of time. [01:58:22.880 --> 01:58:27.880] Red Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. Thank you all for listening. [01:58:27.880 --> 01:58:31.880] And Tina and Shane, I'm sorry we didn't get to you. It's kind of my fault. [01:58:31.880 --> 01:58:35.880] I'm a little brain dead today and I took too much time on some issues. [01:58:35.880 --> 01:58:38.880] I shouldn't have. I apologize for that. [01:58:38.880 --> 01:58:43.880] Shane, Tina, if you want to call me off the air tomorrow, I'll address whatever you have. [01:58:43.880 --> 01:58:49.880] Thank you all for listening and good night. 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