[00:00.000 --> 00:06.880] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.880 --> 00:13.720] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver [00:13.720 --> 00:24.280] $16.45.00, Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crew $55.63.00, Brent Crew $62.47.00, and Cryptos [00:24.280 --> 00:34.880] and Order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP, Ripple $0.33, Lite [00:34.880 --> 00:42.640] Coin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a crypto coin. [00:42.640 --> 00:52.560] In history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a timed suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.560 --> 00:57.880] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing [00:57.880 --> 01:04.880] 10 and injuring 40. [01:04.880 --> 01:05.880] And recent news. [01:05.880 --> 01:10.560] Since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325, legalizing heaven attacks his law back [01:10.560 --> 01:15.240] in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, [01:15.240 --> 01:19.240] have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones since they [01:19.240 --> 01:23.280] are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test [01:23.280 --> 01:24.840] the herb for THC. [01:24.840 --> 01:28.560] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.560 --> 01:33.240] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.240 --> 01:34.240] law. [01:34.240 --> 01:37.720] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.720 --> 01:42.240] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.240 --> 01:48.400] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.400 --> 01:54.640] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.640 --> 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 --> 02:10.880] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.880 --> 02:13.600] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.600 --> 02:17.520] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.520 --> 02:22.720] charged with. [02:22.720 --> 02:27.560] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [02:27.560 --> 02:32.480] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.480 --> 02:38.120] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.120 --> 02:39.600] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.600 --> 02:43.920] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.920 --> 02:50.200] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.200 --> 03:17.040] clove. [03:17.040 --> 03:42.560] Okay, we are back. [03:42.560 --> 04:05.740] We are back. [04:05.740 --> 04:07.740] Oh, okay. I missed that. [04:07.740 --> 04:09.740] What? You weren't listening? [04:09.740 --> 04:11.740] You ought to be ashamed of yourself. [04:11.740 --> 04:15.740] I got on a little lead. I started around 9.32. [04:15.740 --> 04:17.740] Yeah, Scott called me and we were talking about it. [04:17.740 --> 04:19.740] I think the one right at 9.03. [04:19.740 --> 04:29.740] I'm talking about how things aren't coming out the way these supposed doctors, know-it-all doctors, projected. [04:29.740 --> 04:39.740] And so I went through the whole thing. I would like to find links to those statements that this guy... [04:39.740 --> 04:49.740] I sent you an email asking you for links to all these before I read the whole thing and realized that you hadn't written it. [04:49.740 --> 04:54.740] So I gave you an assignment to find me all the links. Did you do that? [04:54.740 --> 05:00.740] Well, I've got them in my computer and I will send them. I've been getting them out. [05:00.740 --> 05:07.740] I have a very large file and it's taken me a while to pull out each link for each part of that story. [05:07.740 --> 05:12.740] And it's in there. I just have to pull them all out and I have to literally just find them. [05:12.740 --> 05:17.740] That was great. We have a plan. [05:17.740 --> 05:31.740] Pastor Mass had called me and he was saying that it's like 40 million people that have been put out of work because of these orders, these shelter-in-place orders. [05:31.740 --> 05:34.740] That's correct. 4 million is the right number. [05:34.740 --> 05:41.740] Denver may come on a little later and last week we had a discussion about this. [05:41.740 --> 05:46.740] We want to talk about shelter-in-place. [05:46.740 --> 05:49.740] She's saying that it's reasonable. [05:49.740 --> 05:57.740] And I agree it's reasonable. Based on the early information, it was reasonable. [05:57.740 --> 06:11.740] So I put myself in the place of a mayor of a large city or a county commissioner's court judge or a governor. [06:11.740 --> 06:17.740] And I see a potentially deadly crisis coming. [06:17.740 --> 06:23.740] What do I do? Do I stand back and hope it doesn't happen? [06:23.740 --> 06:30.740] Or do I take some action that may be criticized? [06:30.740 --> 06:38.740] Which would be criticized more if I didn't take action and people died? [06:38.740 --> 06:50.740] Or if I did take action and people were inconvenienced, would I be able to say, well, yeah, you were inconvenienced, but all these people didn't die? [06:50.740 --> 06:55.740] Whether that was actually the case or not. [06:55.740 --> 07:07.740] So at the point of making the decision, I understand that these public officials are in a politically very difficult situation. [07:07.740 --> 07:15.740] But from the other perspective, I have this constitution. [07:15.740 --> 07:24.740] And this constitution says there are things you can do and there are things you cannot do. [07:24.740 --> 07:44.740] So if you are acting in the best of faith toward expedience and you take an action that is patently unconstitutional, [07:44.740 --> 07:50.740] you can argue that if I didn't take this action, most likely more people would die. [07:50.740 --> 07:58.740] And I say, OK, I got that part. But this is not about what is reasonable. [07:58.740 --> 08:09.740] That's not my argument. My argument is you are a public official and you are bound by your limitations. [08:09.740 --> 08:14.740] We remind people that the Constitution does not grant you any rights. [08:14.740 --> 08:25.740] The Constitution forbids public officials from interfering with certain rights and the very first one. [08:25.740 --> 08:40.740] You may not interfere with the right of the public to peaceably assemble what part of that is hard to understand. [08:40.740 --> 08:53.740] Under law, there are things you can do and things you cannot do no matter how reasonable you think it is. [08:53.740 --> 09:01.740] The law is not amenable to your particular political situation. [09:01.740 --> 09:10.740] That's my argument and I'm not saying what they did was not reasonable under the circumstances. [09:10.740 --> 09:13.740] They're trying to save lives and I got that. [09:13.740 --> 09:25.740] What I'm going to say is you need to find some alternative, some other method of affecting your intended outcome [09:25.740 --> 09:32.740] other than an action that is patently unconstitutional. [09:32.740 --> 09:36.740] Do something that's reasonable and lawful. [09:36.740 --> 09:42.740] I think there is such a thing. Last week we spoke to that. [09:42.740 --> 09:56.740] If I have deliberately acted in a way that exposed myself, then I become responsible for the result. [09:56.740 --> 10:03.740] Texas did a great thing in handling these people who ride motorcycles and don't want to wear a helmet. [10:03.740 --> 10:11.740] The supreme rule that you can't order someone to wear a helmet that exceeds your authority. [10:11.740 --> 10:14.740] What do we do? How do we handle this? [10:14.740 --> 10:17.740] The Texas did the smartest thing I ever heard of. [10:17.740 --> 10:21.740] They issued a law that did not go to a constitution. [10:21.740 --> 10:29.740] Their law said that if you get injured in a motorcycle accident and you're not wearing a helmet, [10:29.740 --> 10:40.740] the state is forbidden to expend state funds in your medical remediation. [10:40.740 --> 10:46.740] You're on your own. If you don't want to wear a helmet, I guess that's up to you. [10:46.740 --> 10:54.740] But if you get pitched off that helmet and bonk your conch, you are on your own. [10:54.740 --> 11:02.740] I suggest that we could have said we're suggesting everyone shelter in place. [11:02.740 --> 11:13.740] If you fail to shelter in place, and it can be shown that you became COVID-19 positive, [11:13.740 --> 11:20.740] and you were in a place that was essentially COVID free, [11:20.740 --> 11:30.740] and then had an outbreak of COVID after your presence, we will charge you with reckless endangerment. [11:30.740 --> 11:40.740] How account for every person who contracts the virus that can reasonably be attributed to you. [11:40.740 --> 11:45.740] So no, you don't have to shelter in place. [11:45.740 --> 11:52.740] But if you don't shelter in place, and as a result, it can be shown that you spread this virus. [11:52.740 --> 11:56.740] You could go to jail for a very long time. [11:56.740 --> 12:01.740] That's constitutional. [12:01.740 --> 12:03.740] What do you say, John? [12:03.740 --> 12:06.740] Okay, I see how you're quoting this. There is a solution to the problem. [12:06.740 --> 12:08.740] It's still simple and it's funny. [12:08.740 --> 12:11.740] I'll get to that in just a second. Please, please, I beg you. [12:11.740 --> 12:15.740] I know you're not the credit card man without you realizing it. [12:15.740 --> 12:18.740] Without you realizing it, though, you do know about debt validation letters. [12:18.740 --> 12:22.740] Now, I've written a debt validation letter to a debt collector, [12:22.740 --> 12:28.740] but then they send a paper that lists the debt from the creditor and they give you a copy of it, [12:28.740 --> 12:34.740] and then they say, see, we've validated the debt, and there it is on that paper. [12:34.740 --> 12:39.740] Now, I know that swimflam, you know that swimflam, but how is it swimflam [12:39.740 --> 12:48.740] and what's my defense for the swimflam and apply that to a credit card debt that goes back to 2007 or 2008? [12:48.740 --> 13:00.740] Exactly. The creditor or the debt collector will generally only have financial records [13:00.740 --> 13:07.740] from the last holder of that particular debt in this. [13:07.740 --> 13:11.740] It's just like in mortgages, we have servicers, [13:11.740 --> 13:18.740] and the servicer, when he receives the mortgage, he doesn't get any of the finances. [13:18.740 --> 13:23.740] He just gets what the previous servicer says they owe. [13:23.740 --> 13:33.740] He has no record of payments. He has no record of interest and other costs that affect the debt. [13:33.740 --> 13:36.740] He only knows the number the other person gave him. [13:36.740 --> 13:41.740] So he literally has no way to validate the debt channel? [13:41.740 --> 13:51.740] Exactly. He can validate from the time that he received the debt to this point, [13:51.740 --> 13:55.740] but what went on before that, he has no idea. [13:55.740 --> 13:59.740] Now, suppose you're not a debt collector, it's not involved. This is what I want to do. [13:59.740 --> 14:03.740] I've got a monkey on my back and I'm sticking tired of it. [14:03.740 --> 14:08.740] I have to trade food that I have and I have to trade food that I don't have [14:08.740 --> 14:12.740] and other necessities that I don't have in order to pay this every month. [14:12.740 --> 14:19.740] So now, what I want to do is just stop paying. Now, what happens from that point on? [14:19.740 --> 14:23.740] Well, it depends on the nature of the debt. [14:23.740 --> 14:29.740] Is it a credit card, an unsecured type debt, or is it a secured debt? [14:29.740 --> 14:33.740] It's a discovered card, unsecured. [14:33.740 --> 14:36.740] Okay, unsecured, discovered card. Okay. [14:36.740 --> 14:43.740] They will put it in collection. They'll call you and they'll harass you and aggravate you. [14:43.740 --> 14:56.740] Always keep a ledger of every call they make because you can subsequently make a claim of $1,500 each for each call they make. [14:56.740 --> 15:03.740] I have one calling me now for an internet service in Tennessee that was so horrible [15:03.740 --> 15:09.740] that I told them there's absolutely no way I'm going to pay you lousy scoundrels. [15:09.740 --> 15:11.740] Someone just called me today. [15:11.740 --> 15:18.740] Oh, Frontier, there's no way I'm ever going to pay those jerks a dime. [15:18.740 --> 15:28.740] She said, well, will you please verify this information? Yeah, I'll verify it. Click! [15:28.740 --> 15:37.740] And I tend to be as obnoxious as I can because if I'm lucky, I can make the other guy angry. [15:37.740 --> 15:40.740] My brother is to pro with that. [15:40.740 --> 15:47.740] He said he did that to a guy once and the guy said, look, I have your information here. [15:47.740 --> 15:54.740] I know where you live. [15:54.740 --> 15:59.740] I said, God, did you have that recorded? [15:59.740 --> 16:04.740] It's okay. So they cannot validate the debt. [16:04.740 --> 16:09.740] So that's the first thing you want to do is you send a request for that validation. [16:09.740 --> 16:16.740] Keep a list of every time they call you and each time they call you, tell them, don't ever call me again. [16:16.740 --> 16:21.740] And they'll call you again. Best if you can record their calls. [16:21.740 --> 16:28.740] A woman in Kansas City, they claim she owed 11 or 1300. [16:28.740 --> 16:33.740] She told them, you got the wrong person. I never did any business with you. [16:33.740 --> 16:44.740] They were so obnoxious to her. She took them to court and the jury granted her 80 million dollars. [16:44.740 --> 16:50.740] Then they put that where it should have been. They adjusted it, I'm sure. [16:50.740 --> 16:53.740] Exactly. And the jury knew they would do that. They were making the point. [16:53.740 --> 16:59.740] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fouton, we'll be right back. [16:59.740 --> 17:04.740] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:04.740 --> 17:08.740] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. [17:08.740 --> 17:14.740] Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [17:14.740 --> 17:20.740] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [17:20.740 --> 17:26.740] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons. How to answer letters and phone calls. [17:26.740 --> 17:28.740] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports. [17:28.740 --> 17:33.740] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [17:33.740 --> 17:38.740] The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.740 --> 17:44.740] Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:44.740 --> 17:49.740] and click on the blue Michael Meares banner or email Michael Meares at yahoo.com. [17:49.740 --> 18:00.740] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [18:00.740 --> 18:04.740] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [18:04.740 --> 18:09.740] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.740 --> 18:12.740] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.740 --> 18:16.740] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:16.740 --> 18:19.740] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.740 --> 18:24.740] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:24.740 --> 18:30.740] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:30.740 --> 18:34.740] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.740 --> 18:39.740] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:39.740 --> 18:44.740] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [18:44.740 --> 18:49.740] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [18:49.740 --> 18:53.740] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com [18:53.740 --> 18:58.740] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [18:58.740 --> 19:08.740] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:08.740 --> 19:16.740] Well, don't let nothing get to you. Only the Father can deliver you. [19:16.740 --> 19:23.740] Don't let my people hurt you until they can get behind you. [19:23.740 --> 19:26.740] You know what I mean? My friend. [19:26.740 --> 19:28.740] Now I judge you. [19:28.740 --> 19:31.740] Come to those things that hurt me pretty. [19:31.740 --> 19:34.740] Get in your problem and pray. [19:34.740 --> 19:40.740] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [19:40.740 --> 19:42.740] We're talking to John in New York. [19:42.740 --> 19:47.740] But, yeah, I'm really not the guy. [19:47.740 --> 19:56.740] Deborah knows more than me and I'll talk to her and see if I can find somebody who can. [19:56.740 --> 20:05.740] Have you purchased the Michael Mirris package? [20:05.740 --> 20:07.740] There, John. [20:07.740 --> 20:09.740] Yep, I'm right here. [20:09.740 --> 20:19.740] We have that Michael Mirris package, but Michael emailed me recently and said to take that down because he was retiring. [20:19.740 --> 20:29.740] So we still have the package that tells you how to do it, but you won't have Michael to call and explain it to you. [20:29.740 --> 20:32.740] So we'll talk to Deborah and see what we can do about that. [20:32.740 --> 20:36.740] Maybe give a better deal on it or something. [20:36.740 --> 20:42.740] Working with a debt collector, that's not a problem. I used to be a debt collector. [20:42.740 --> 20:44.740] So I know the ins and the outs there. [20:44.740 --> 20:54.740] But what I'm concerned with is that they're going to sue me or file a lien against a house or, you know, I don't have a car so they can't file a lien against that. [20:54.740 --> 20:58.740] There's not much that I do have. I just have a house. [20:58.740 --> 21:02.740] But they can file a lien against a house. What do you mean, you think? [21:02.740 --> 21:03.740] Huh? [21:03.740 --> 21:08.740] It's that they can file a lien against a house. It won't mean anything unless you sell the house. [21:08.740 --> 21:13.740] Right, right. Oh, I understand. But that's one more black mark on your record. [21:13.740 --> 21:23.740] Okay, there are a few things you can get them to do. If they do a credit pull after they've started collections, that's a felony. [21:23.740 --> 21:25.740] Oh, yeah. Oh, no, I know that. Yeah. [21:25.740 --> 21:30.740] Okay, so set them up. Get them to do the things you know they're not supposed to do. [21:30.740 --> 21:36.740] Then you put together a lawsuit against them. It doesn't matter if you can grant it or not. [21:36.740 --> 21:41.740] You put together a lawsuit that's going to cost them a lot of money to defend it. [21:41.740 --> 21:45.740] And then you go to them and say, let's make a deal. [21:45.740 --> 21:49.740] I pay that thing off for a penny on the dollar. [21:49.740 --> 21:53.740] And I'll drop my lawsuit against you. [21:53.740 --> 22:12.740] Okay, and you don't see any real danger in following the steps that I want to follow by just stopping payment and then wait for them to issue a collection notice through a collection agency. [22:12.740 --> 22:16.740] And that's what they're going to do, right? They're going to give it to a collection agency. [22:16.740 --> 22:22.740] Yeah, and then get the collection agency to act ignorant and then sue the collection agency. [22:22.740 --> 22:32.740] Right, right. I know about the 30 days the dispute and this is a debt and any information you give us will be used to collect it. [22:32.740 --> 22:41.740] I once sued two collection agencies for debts that I didn't even have and they weren't even mine. They were part of the IDF. [22:41.740 --> 22:45.740] And it wasn't because they weren't part of the, they weren't really my debt. [22:45.740 --> 22:53.740] That's not why I was able to sue them. I was able to sue them because I knew the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act law and they broke two of them. [22:53.740 --> 22:58.740] So I ended up suing them and they went away real fast. [22:58.740 --> 23:05.740] That's how you do it. You probably know more about how to defend yourself against this than I do. [23:05.740 --> 23:15.740] Well, no, not actually. See, what you know that I don't know is how, again, is this, how is it? [23:15.740 --> 23:26.740] I recently had the state of New York. I owe about $2,500 to the state and I can't pay that. There's no way. [23:26.740 --> 23:31.740] I have to trade a lot of food to pay that bill and I can't do that. [23:31.740 --> 23:36.740] Just do a chapter seven bankruptcy. [23:36.740 --> 23:46.740] Well, Pastor Massad does not recommend that for me and I can see why. I can see why. [23:46.740 --> 23:54.740] But here's the thing with the state. They sent a collection agency and of course I know my way around with the collection agencies because I used to be one. [23:54.740 --> 24:03.740] And they couldn't get the first. It was really funny. I should play you those phone calls. She would love it. The way I handled it. [24:03.740 --> 24:13.740] But anyway, it was funny. It was hilarious. But anyway, they sent me a paper. They said, see, now you're asked for debt validation and here's the debt. [24:13.740 --> 24:20.740] And it was about three lines on the paper and it listed the amount of money that I owed the state and New York. [24:20.740 --> 24:30.740] And that's all it says. Now, I know for a fact that's not a debt validation. That's not a debt validation. Am I right? [24:30.740 --> 24:37.740] Yeah, debt validation has to show up to the debt, the payments, the interest, how the interest accumulated. [24:37.740 --> 24:42.740] That sounds kind of like we've investigated and we've found no signs of wrongdoing. [24:42.740 --> 24:46.740] Make up your own debt validation letter. [24:46.740 --> 24:53.740] Since they can't give you the records, then you file your own records. [24:53.740 --> 25:02.740] And you say, my records show that this is all I owe. [25:02.740 --> 25:09.740] Okay, but then they're going to say, well, I've got this in the state of New York and this is, you know, this is gossip. [25:09.740 --> 25:18.740] How do you get away from this? How do you get away from this? It may be gospel, but you still want documentation. [25:18.740 --> 25:21.740] And what's the proper documentation again? [25:21.740 --> 25:26.740] A complete ledger of all your payments and debits. [25:26.740 --> 25:33.740] Okay. And so they didn't have to go back. The scholar would have to go back to 2007, wouldn't they? [25:33.740 --> 25:39.740] Yep. They got computers and that's all in there. [25:39.740 --> 25:41.740] What? [25:41.740 --> 25:46.740] It's all in their computers. It's easy enough for them to come up with it. [25:46.740 --> 25:51.740] Well, they're not going to be able to go back to 2007, huh? [25:51.740 --> 26:02.740] They probably will. They may not want to. But the whole idea is just give them a suit that's going to make it look like you're going to cost them a... [26:02.740 --> 26:11.740] a whole lot more money defending me or prosecuting the suit than they're going to try to... [26:11.740 --> 26:19.740] They're going to be able to collect and then go to them make a deal. [26:19.740 --> 26:23.740] Well, I... You see, I'm a little skippy on that one point. [26:23.740 --> 26:28.740] I'm afraid that they're going to do what I just said. [26:28.740 --> 26:32.740] They're going to say, see, there's the debt validation right there. [26:32.740 --> 26:34.740] And even if they do vote now... [26:34.740 --> 26:40.740] Who cares? You say you object to the debt validation. It's insufficient. [26:40.740 --> 26:49.740] And you file a suit against them for trying to collect the fraudulent debt based on this incomplete debt validation. [26:49.740 --> 26:55.740] And let them come to... you know, force them to have to come to the court and prove up their position. [26:55.740 --> 26:58.740] It's not about whether you can win or lose, John. [26:58.740 --> 27:01.740] It's about how much it's going to cost them. [27:01.740 --> 27:03.740] I see. Oh, I see what you're saying. [27:03.740 --> 27:05.740] All right, now I've done the only question. [27:05.740 --> 27:11.740] The only other question I've got is, who do I... do I represent myself or do I represent or do I get a lawyer? [27:11.740 --> 27:19.740] You represent yourself and then you get a lawyer to negotiate a deal. [27:19.740 --> 27:24.740] Once you beat them up and bar grieve the lawyers into oblivion, [27:24.740 --> 27:26.740] then you get a lawyer to come in. [27:26.740 --> 27:32.740] You ask the court to order mediation and then you get a lawyer to come in to mediate the debt. [27:32.740 --> 27:40.740] I'm still afraid that I'm going to end up on the short end of the stick because of one reason or another. [27:40.740 --> 27:42.740] But how much is the court... [27:42.740 --> 27:47.740] Wait a minute, wait a minute. Aren't you already on the short end of the stick? [27:47.740 --> 27:51.740] Well, you sure I am. Sure I am, but they could make it worse for you. [27:51.740 --> 27:58.740] What court were they going to take me to? They got to come to me, am I right? I don't go to them. [27:58.740 --> 28:08.740] It depends on whether they're a debt collector from the same state, whether the original debt... [28:08.740 --> 28:12.740] It's almost certainly going to the federal court. [28:12.740 --> 28:20.740] The Discover Card has offices all over the place. Is there corporate office in New York? [28:20.740 --> 28:24.740] It probably is, but I don't know for sure. [28:24.740 --> 28:30.740] Okay, well, it depends. If their corporate office is in New York, they'll probably take you to the state. [28:30.740 --> 28:33.740] If it's not, they'll take you to the feds. [28:33.740 --> 28:35.740] And it'll be up right around... [28:35.740 --> 28:39.740] If it's under debt collection, it'll probably go to the feds anyway. [28:39.740 --> 28:41.740] All right, so... [28:41.740 --> 28:55.740] You know more about debt collection than any of us, but you're just afraid to do something because you have this terror that something bad may happen. [28:55.740 --> 28:57.740] That's correct, because of some... [28:57.740 --> 29:02.740] That's what most of the people do, and that's why these guys get free-ranked. [29:02.740 --> 29:07.740] Well, you see, when I'm in a traffic court, I'm right at home. [29:07.740 --> 29:11.740] And I'm in a debt collection. When I'm talking to a debt collector, I'm right at home. [29:11.740 --> 29:12.740] But you... [29:12.740 --> 29:16.740] I'm not at home. I'm not at home with the Discover Card. [29:16.740 --> 29:24.740] The only way you're going to get at home in a debt collection case is get in a debt collection case. [29:24.740 --> 29:30.740] It's probably one of the easiest things to deal with because, you know, they're not going to put you in jail. [29:30.740 --> 29:33.740] They're not going to shoot you. [29:33.740 --> 29:37.740] They're just trying to collect some money they think they could collect anyway. [29:37.740 --> 29:44.740] And you're just trying to show them you're going to cost them more money than they want you to pay them, just fighting them. [29:44.740 --> 29:51.740] This is not hard. This is not like they're going to shoot you. What are you afraid they'll do to you? [29:51.740 --> 29:55.740] Well, you see, I can handle myself with debt collectors perfectly. [29:55.740 --> 30:00.740] No, no, no. You're not answering my question. What do you think they would do to you? [30:00.740 --> 30:07.740] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, but you might not know that the way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:07.740 --> 30:13.740] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. [30:13.740 --> 30:19.740] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:19.740 --> 30:24.740] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.740 --> 30:32.740] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.740 --> 30:39.740] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:39.740 --> 30:43.740] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.740 --> 30:47.740] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.740 --> 30:55.740] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.740 --> 30:59.740] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [30:59.740 --> 31:06.740] A senior's age, gender, and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. [31:06.740 --> 31:09.740] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:09.740 --> 31:15.740] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk, and a few minutes. [31:15.740 --> 31:20.740] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:20.740 --> 31:46.740] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:46.740 --> 31:52.740] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.740 --> 31:57.740] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son, go to buildingwatch.org. [31:57.740 --> 32:00.740] Why it fell, why it matters, is what you can do. [32:00.740 --> 32:05.740] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.740 --> 32:11.740] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [32:11.740 --> 32:21.740] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [32:21.740 --> 32:26.740] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:26.740 --> 32:34.740] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:34.740 --> 32:40.740] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [32:40.740 --> 32:47.740] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [32:47.740 --> 33:10.740] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:18.740 --> 33:27.740] Yeah Yeah [33:36.740 --> 33:41.740] OK, we are back. Ready Kelton, Brett Felton, Wilbur Radio and John! [33:41.740 --> 33:45.740] You're beginning to get annoying. [33:45.740 --> 33:54.620] You see the problem here, you're asking me how to handle a debt collection situation [33:54.620 --> 34:01.900] and you obviously know way more about debt collection than any of us here. [34:01.900 --> 34:08.340] And then you say, you don't want to do anything because there's a chance it could possibly [34:08.340 --> 34:10.540] come out badly for me. [34:10.540 --> 34:15.500] Okay, then just answer this question and then we'll move on. [34:15.500 --> 34:20.980] Just answer this question and then is a soft pull, will that qualify as a crime? [34:20.980 --> 34:24.020] No, only a hard pull. [34:24.020 --> 34:25.700] Okay, a hard pull. [34:25.700 --> 34:26.700] Okay. [34:26.700 --> 34:33.060] Now how am I going to find, now I used to have all kinds of technology at my fingertips [34:33.060 --> 34:39.100] when I was a debt collector and I could find out things like that but now I don't. [34:39.100 --> 34:45.620] I can contact my, just contact Equifat, TransUnion and the other one, I can never remember the [34:45.620 --> 34:49.300] third one and find out if there's not a pull. [34:49.300 --> 34:50.300] Yes. [34:50.300 --> 34:54.300] Okay, that's how I would think I would do it. [34:54.300 --> 34:58.820] Okay, so I think the only other question I have is how much is the Michael Merritt [34:58.820 --> 34:59.820] Court? [34:59.820 --> 35:00.820] How much is it cost? [35:00.820 --> 35:11.140] It was $260 I think but he asked us to stop selling it so we'll have to, I'll have to [35:11.140 --> 35:13.140] talk to Deborah about that. [35:13.140 --> 35:18.580] Okay, find out, find out, that's a lot of money for me but hey, it's probably worth [35:18.580 --> 35:20.580] it. [35:20.580 --> 35:23.660] It would be, he tells you how to set them up. [35:23.660 --> 35:29.780] Yep, and even probably, they even made better than what I used to do, you know, as a debt [35:29.780 --> 35:30.780] collector. [35:30.780 --> 35:33.780] You know, I was on that side of the road. [35:33.780 --> 35:41.260] Okay, now here's, here is the rest of it and I'm going to be real fast because I don't [35:41.260 --> 35:45.380] want to pick up any more of your time and then I'll tell you all about the solution [35:45.380 --> 35:51.580] for COVID-19 and it's a simple and it's so stupid because it is so simple. [35:51.580 --> 35:52.580] Here we go. [35:52.580 --> 35:59.740] There's a topic of discrimination that involves several public officials in this one town. [35:59.740 --> 36:07.380] And the cop intimidated my relatives into returning a key deposit even though the tenant [36:07.380 --> 36:08.380] broke the lease. [36:08.380 --> 36:19.460] So the cop, I would, and I told this to my friend who's an attorney and he said that's [36:19.460 --> 36:29.580] perfect reasoning that the cop was exerting authority he didn't have because of his uniform. [36:29.580 --> 36:31.860] And he was carrying a gun. [36:31.860 --> 36:40.100] He agreed with me that that was akin to first degree assault with a deadly weapon, all right? [36:40.100 --> 36:44.900] So you got one cop intimidating my relative into returning the key deposit to the tenant [36:44.900 --> 36:48.740] even though the tenant broke the lease and didn't deserve it. [36:48.740 --> 36:54.980] And another cop slandered my relative to my relative's tenant that he rents through. [36:54.980 --> 37:00.860] And my relative filed his figures with the local assessor as he's supposed to do. [37:00.860 --> 37:04.140] And the assessor turned around and changed all the figures. [37:04.140 --> 37:06.020] And now they're all gone. [37:06.020 --> 37:11.060] And there's a judge involved that you know about in both civil cases and trafficked [37:11.060 --> 37:12.060] cases. [37:12.060 --> 37:17.740] And it's obviously discrimination on the judge's part and all these other people. [37:17.740 --> 37:23.020] In other words, they have a conflict of discrimination in this town. [37:23.020 --> 37:26.060] Where do we go from there? [37:26.060 --> 37:30.740] My relative wants to file a lawsuit for discrimination with all these different people. [37:30.740 --> 37:35.540] File criminal charges against the police officer first. [37:35.540 --> 37:37.140] I figured you'd say that. [37:37.140 --> 37:39.140] Okay, tell me about that quickly. [37:39.140 --> 37:42.300] This will back the officer off. [37:42.300 --> 37:54.980] You charge him with obstruction and official misconduct and aggravated assault. [37:54.980 --> 37:59.780] And then start the routine on the local courts when they refuse to act. [37:59.780 --> 38:04.620] You start filing on them and just stacking up the complaints against them. [38:04.620 --> 38:09.780] As the complaints get higher up, the higher ups are going to be more and more upset at [38:09.780 --> 38:11.420] this officer. [38:11.420 --> 38:20.420] Right now police officers aren't in a very good light, especially with the Floyd case. [38:20.420 --> 38:26.740] So right now complaints against officers are going to get highlighted more because you [38:26.740 --> 38:30.460] got a public official here who's going to want to get elected next time. [38:30.460 --> 38:35.700] And when you tell him that he's protecting these police officers when they're abusing [38:35.700 --> 38:39.460] the public, that's a sensitive subject right now. [38:39.460 --> 38:40.460] So go for it. [38:40.460 --> 38:44.580] How do you handle the assessment? [38:44.580 --> 38:47.300] He changed all of his figures. [38:47.300 --> 38:52.580] File criminal charges against him for extortion. [38:52.580 --> 38:53.580] Extortion? [38:53.580 --> 38:54.580] Yeah. [38:54.580 --> 38:55.580] Oh, that's right. [38:55.580 --> 38:56.580] That's right. [38:56.580 --> 38:57.580] What happens if you don't pay it? [38:57.580 --> 39:09.460] Well, that and the fact that they've extorted you for more money, yeah. [39:09.460 --> 39:10.460] I see what you're saying. [39:10.460 --> 39:11.460] Yeah. [39:11.460 --> 39:12.460] That is a form of extortion. [39:12.460 --> 39:13.460] Yeah. [39:13.460 --> 39:17.460] Let him prove that it's not. [39:17.460 --> 39:18.460] Huh? [39:18.460 --> 39:19.460] Oh, yeah. [39:19.460 --> 39:20.460] Yeah. [39:20.460 --> 39:21.460] Well, you have no idea what was done in this town. [39:21.460 --> 39:22.460] It's like I've always said. [39:22.460 --> 39:23.460] Give me a break. [39:23.460 --> 39:25.460] It goes on in all the towns. [39:25.460 --> 39:32.820] People are always telling me their county is the most corrupt county in the nation. [39:32.820 --> 39:37.900] Most corrupt county in the nation used to be Williamson County, just north of Austin, [39:37.900 --> 39:39.500] but it's not anymore. [39:39.500 --> 39:42.900] They got rid of the really bad guys. [39:42.900 --> 39:45.900] Now it's California. [39:45.900 --> 39:46.900] Yeah. [39:46.900 --> 39:47.900] Oh, it's bad. [39:47.900 --> 39:48.900] It's really bad. [39:48.900 --> 39:49.900] I know. [39:49.900 --> 39:50.900] All right. [39:50.900 --> 39:51.900] Now you want to hear about COVID-19? [39:51.900 --> 39:52.900] Yes. [39:52.900 --> 39:57.900] If I could see what the solution is, you're not going to believe me, but here it is. [39:57.900 --> 40:01.580] COVID-19 was biologically engineered. [40:01.580 --> 40:07.540] There is no way that that virus could occur naturally in nature. [40:07.540 --> 40:15.420] That is a fact, and it has been attested to and sworn to by different laboratories across [40:15.420 --> 40:16.420] the globe. [40:16.420 --> 40:23.380] The first one that I heard about was in India, and this one that said it was an Indian doctor. [40:23.380 --> 40:28.180] That's a pretty good place to find an Indian doctor is in India. [40:28.180 --> 40:37.020] Anyway, what happened was they took apart the virus and they saw that it had the delivery [40:37.020 --> 40:45.980] system of HIV as a part of the virus, and they can tell by the way a virus is made whether [40:45.980 --> 40:51.860] or not it's occurring in nature or whether it's man-made in the lab, because there's [40:51.860 --> 40:56.860] always going to be certain attributes when you make it man-made, you're going to notice [40:56.860 --> 40:57.860] it. [40:57.860 --> 40:58.860] You can't hide it. [40:58.860 --> 40:59.860] You can't hide that. [40:59.860 --> 41:00.860] You're saying that CRISPR leaves. [41:00.860 --> 41:07.220] If you fire the bullet with a particular gun, ballistics will show that that gun fired [41:07.220 --> 41:11.380] that particular bullet, and if there's another bullet, and it came from another gun, they [41:11.380 --> 41:13.380] can tell that it wasn't that gun. [41:13.380 --> 41:14.380] It's the same thing. [41:14.380 --> 41:15.380] All right. [41:15.380 --> 41:16.380] Keep that in mind. [41:16.380 --> 41:23.060] Now, keep this in mind, HIV was genetically engineered. [41:23.060 --> 41:30.460] There is no way on God's green earth that HIV could have occurred naturally in nature, [41:30.460 --> 41:34.180] and there have been all kinds of books written on the subject. [41:34.180 --> 41:43.020] In fact, HIV is probably equal to the fraud in the cancer business. [41:43.020 --> 41:44.020] Okay. [41:44.020 --> 41:47.060] Let me get a clarification here. [41:47.060 --> 41:57.180] You're not saying, are you saying that the HIV virus that monkeys would catch did not [41:57.180 --> 42:05.700] occur naturally, or the one that jumped from monkeys to people did not occur naturally? [42:05.700 --> 42:11.700] Let's put it this way, animals are littered with viruses, and as long as you leave the [42:11.700 --> 42:19.860] viruses in monkeys, and in dogs, and in cats, and you don't put them in humans, usually [42:19.860 --> 42:22.060] the virus doesn't do an awful lot. [42:22.060 --> 42:25.260] There are simian viruses that don't do a lot in monkeys. [42:25.260 --> 42:34.020] Now, here's what I'm saying, that you've been, and we've been, and everybody's been, [42:34.020 --> 42:36.100] said a load of crap. [42:36.100 --> 42:38.260] There's no other way to say it. [42:38.260 --> 42:40.660] HIV was genetically engineered. [42:40.660 --> 42:48.060] They can tell by examining the virus, just like they can tell that COVID-19 was engineered. [42:48.060 --> 42:53.340] Now, I don't want to complicate this, so I'll move on quickly. [42:53.340 --> 42:57.380] I'm telling you about HIV for another reason. [42:57.380 --> 43:04.340] HIV, and they know this when they engineer pandemics, and they do this. [43:04.340 --> 43:06.780] Lyme's disease was genetically engineered. [43:06.780 --> 43:09.100] No question about it. [43:09.100 --> 43:12.020] It's not even up for debate anymore. [43:12.020 --> 43:16.860] All these different things that they have genetically engineered, they do so knowing [43:16.860 --> 43:24.100] full well what humanity's habits are, and what the nutritional habits are. [43:24.100 --> 43:31.060] You can look on a geographical map, and Dr. Harold Foster, MB, did exactly this. [43:31.060 --> 43:39.220] He could foretell where HIV was going to run more rampant in one area as opposed to another, [43:39.220 --> 43:43.860] just by looking at a geological mineral map, and what do I mean? [43:43.860 --> 43:47.380] Okay, wait, wait, hang on, about to go to break. [43:47.380 --> 43:48.380] Okay. [43:48.380 --> 44:00.780] I call it number 5126461984, and we'll be right back. [44:00.780 --> 44:06.820] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.820 --> 44:11.540] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.540 --> 44:17.820] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.820 --> 44:22.660] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [44:22.660 --> 44:26.060] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:26.060 --> 44:30.740] Logo's radio network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [44:30.740 --> 44:31.740] we reject. [44:31.740 --> 44:37.060] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [44:37.060 --> 44:40.220] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:40.220 --> 44:45.620] When you order from Logo's radio network dot com, your health will improve as you help [44:45.620 --> 44:47.820] support quality radio. [44:47.820 --> 44:52.140] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:52.140 --> 44:57.380] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [44:57.380 --> 44:59.340] increase your income. [44:59.340 --> 45:00.340] Order now. [45:00.340 --> 45:04.500] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.500 --> 45:11.260] In your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.260 --> 45:15.260] that will show you how, in 24 hours, you debt by step. [45:15.260 --> 45:19.060] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.060 --> 45:23.100] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.100 --> 45:28.100] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.100 --> 45:33.980] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.980 --> 45:39.420] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.420 --> 45:43.700] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.700 --> 45:49.860] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.860 --> 45:52.500] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.500 --> 46:15.100] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:15.100 --> 46:33.060] Thank you for watching. [46:45.100 --> 46:55.340] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we're finishing up the John in New York. [46:55.340 --> 47:05.980] Okay, Lyme's disease, AIDS, genetically engineered, how does this go to Colvoid? [47:05.980 --> 47:07.500] Okay. [47:07.500 --> 47:17.980] When they engineer these things, they know human beings' habits. GMO foods do not transfer [47:17.980 --> 47:20.620] good nutrition to the person that eats them. [47:20.620 --> 47:27.500] Okay, no. Come on, come on. You go all over the place. What does GMO foods have to do [47:27.500 --> 47:29.500] with cohort? [47:29.500 --> 47:32.540] Everything. It'll be abundantly cleared about 30 seconds. [47:32.540 --> 47:37.500] No, no. Everything doesn't affect everything. You're running all over the place. You've got [47:37.500 --> 47:41.900] a whole stack of things now to stitch together. [47:41.900 --> 47:43.900] Let me do it. Just let me do it. [47:43.900 --> 47:46.540] Yeah, but it can't use up the whole show. [47:46.540 --> 47:49.100] Oh, I know. Just cross me. I'm almost there. [47:49.100 --> 47:51.100] Okay, get to the point. [47:51.100 --> 48:00.780] Yeah. GMO foods are poison. They don't feed you. The GMO foods are there for two reasons. [48:00.780 --> 48:07.020] First, they make money from Monsanto and to basically starve the human race. I know that [48:07.020 --> 48:15.260] sounds crazy, but if you look up Element Codex, come on, come on, come on. Let's go back. [48:15.260 --> 48:20.620] You've got 10 issues in here. Let's stay with one at a time. [48:20.620 --> 48:26.140] You don't understand. [48:26.140 --> 48:30.540] No, I don't understand. You're saying everything affects everything. Everything has to do with [48:30.540 --> 48:35.660] everything and I can make no sense of what you're talking about. [48:35.660 --> 48:41.020] You were talking about coronavirus, but we're off on all kind of other stuff and you're not [48:41.020 --> 48:49.740] even pointing toward getting us back to coronavirus. Now we're going off on a tirade on GMO foods. [48:49.740 --> 48:50.940] That's right. [48:50.940 --> 48:57.420] Take us somewhere. I've got a whole stack of college here. I'm running out of time. [48:57.420 --> 49:04.300] Well, you're wasting a lot of it. Don't let me continue. [49:04.300 --> 49:15.900] Okay. Do I sound annoyed? Okay, Tina, what do you have for us today? [49:15.900 --> 49:24.140] I have a couple of things to point to what you were saying to previous callers. [49:24.140 --> 49:34.860] And one of them is to John and I can probably address something after him on the debt collectors [49:34.860 --> 49:41.980] that I've been helping others with lately and finding some things out on that. [49:41.980 --> 49:49.020] But you talked to someone about the, if they mailed, if he didn't receive something, [49:49.020 --> 49:56.380] then he can claim that he didn't receive it and they have to prove that they sense it. [49:56.380 --> 50:02.700] Yes. This is the guy that was saying that if they send me something in regular mail, [50:03.820 --> 50:08.940] if they send it in regular mail, they cannot prove that you received it. [50:10.060 --> 50:14.620] All they have to do though, Randy, remember they did this with me in a very, [50:14.620 --> 50:21.580] very, very important motion that I didn't get, which took away my bankruptcy protection. [50:21.580 --> 50:27.980] They claimed that it's in the proof of service, which was rubber stamped, not signed, [50:28.700 --> 50:35.900] that they claim they sent it to me and the judge invoked the mailbox rule, [50:35.900 --> 50:42.460] which says if they claim they mailed it and they claim the proof of service, you are deemed to have [50:42.460 --> 50:46.620] received it. That is not what the mailbox rule says. [50:46.620 --> 50:50.460] So that's what the judge invoked, and I say I went over to the prosecutor. [50:50.460 --> 50:56.540] Oh, now, okay, you got that. Judges do not follow law. [50:57.580 --> 51:04.540] The mailbox rule says if you mailed it on this day, but you only mailed it on this day, [51:04.540 --> 51:13.980] if you can prove it, and he just accepted out of hand what the lawyer said, that was wrongful. [51:13.980 --> 51:16.460] That should have been, that part gets appealed. [51:16.460 --> 51:20.700] I appealed it. I appealed it to the highest possible bankruptcy, [51:20.700 --> 51:26.540] and they refused to take any more filings from me, and then I sent it to the US Supreme Court, [51:26.540 --> 51:30.460] if you remember, with a writ of surgery, and they refused to hear it. [51:30.460 --> 51:37.340] Okay, you're treating corrupt judges as law. You're in California. [51:37.340 --> 51:40.140] Judges are higher, well, that's true, I know it. [51:40.140 --> 51:46.940] I have never, ever in California had a judge rule on law, not ever. [51:48.220 --> 51:52.460] Well, for the most part, in foreclosure, I've never had a judge rule on law. [51:52.460 --> 51:57.900] But how do we make this? We go to every avenue we can. [51:57.900 --> 52:01.340] And I even went to the US Supreme Court. [52:01.340 --> 52:12.620] You still, you can never expect the court to rule in your favor ever. [52:13.740 --> 52:19.420] I keep saying this, and people still need the courts to rule in their favor, [52:19.420 --> 52:22.940] because they got the law on their side. It don't work that way. [52:22.940 --> 52:32.300] It's all politics. Where do I go if I've been to the highest court in the land? [52:33.260 --> 52:39.260] How many, you sue the judge, you file criminal charges, you file judicial [52:39.260 --> 52:43.340] conduct complaints, and then ask them for mediation. [52:45.420 --> 52:47.660] The only way we're going to win these things is to make a deal. [52:47.660 --> 52:53.180] So I got to file more criminal complaints against the judges, right? [52:54.060 --> 52:54.780] Exactly. [52:54.780 --> 52:58.860] Oh, did they provide his law on my right? [52:59.980 --> 53:07.260] Because, you know, I keep saying it's every American's right to have guaranteed service [53:07.260 --> 53:11.340] of any document that could take away their life, their liberty, or their property. [53:11.900 --> 53:15.260] And if you don't certify it, or you don't send a priority mail, [53:15.260 --> 53:19.420] nobody's guaranteed to receive it, because the Post Office does not guarantee they will [53:19.420 --> 53:23.580] deliver first-class mail. They just do their best. [53:25.260 --> 53:29.020] And the best is not good enough for the 2% or 3%. [53:29.580 --> 53:38.540] We all know that's what law is, but judges, when they're bought and paid for, they just don't care. [53:38.540 --> 53:48.060] Nope. They're at a point of where they can pretty well do anything they want to, especially [53:48.060 --> 53:52.780] in California. Ask Ted Scarlett. He'll tell you all about that. [53:54.220 --> 53:57.500] We talk, and the Ted and I are in email contact. [53:57.500 --> 54:03.980] Well, I did speak to that old attorney that's retired that thinks the attorney's today are garbage. [54:03.980 --> 54:12.780] He got your email, your message. He's moving, so he has not had internet, and he hopes to [54:12.780 --> 54:18.780] have it by Sunday and be in contact with you. And he said something about my rid of social [54:18.780 --> 54:25.260] rights. He said, you can't bring one again, but someone else who's had the mailbox rule [54:25.980 --> 54:31.420] used against them can, and then they can join you and anybody else in. [54:31.420 --> 54:37.820] And if you have an attorney, which I think I still have, who would argue it in front of the [54:37.820 --> 54:42.860] Supreme Court pro bono, just because he wants to get to argue in front of the Supreme Court, [54:42.860 --> 54:48.700] so that's kind of a high honor. If anyone else is on the show has had it, [54:48.700 --> 54:55.180] used against them, or if you know anyone, we can use my writ, just put their facts in, [54:55.180 --> 55:02.940] share it, and we can try again. And that is a good issue to bring to [55:02.940 --> 55:09.980] the Supreme, because that's the kind of thing where the Supreme needs to give direction to [55:09.980 --> 55:17.900] the lower courts. And it's exactly the kinds of things these guys who are misusing it will not [55:17.900 --> 55:28.780] want to get to the Supreme. Correct. But for everybody who, if you're motivated to fix the [55:28.780 --> 55:35.980] system, to change the law, then you fight them all the way to the end. But if you're, [55:37.660 --> 55:42.860] you need, you need remedy, then set them up so you can make a deal. [55:42.860 --> 55:51.980] And that is a whole different strategy. Yeah. If you're setting them up to make a deal, [55:51.980 --> 55:56.300] you're in there to beat them up and give them as much misery as you possibly can. [55:57.500 --> 56:04.620] If you're setting them up to get a ruling on a point of law, then you go in there very carefully [56:05.260 --> 56:10.460] addressing the specifics in the code, and you don't worry about the deal, you don't worry about [56:10.460 --> 56:16.860] beating them up as much as getting your arguments, your facts, and, and, and law on the record [56:17.420 --> 56:27.660] for the appeals court. And if any more, I'm, I'm suggesting that people not expect to win in the [56:27.660 --> 56:36.700] court. So it's been my hard experience that the judges just don't care. They're going to rule [56:36.700 --> 56:45.340] for the, the guys with the deepest pockets. Excuse me. And if you want to win this, [56:46.220 --> 56:48.300] the only way to win it is to get in their pockets, [56:50.540 --> 56:53.500] get them to pay you so you don't cost them a lot more money. [56:55.340 --> 57:00.780] So my attorneys a lot. They, the attorneys on the other side, they spend in a lot of money [57:00.780 --> 57:08.220] defending what I'm filing. Yeah. And if you set it up right from the beginning, and that's, [57:08.220 --> 57:14.940] you know, why I suggest people start out being the no good dirty rotten lousy pro se SOB. [57:15.900 --> 57:20.860] You bar grieve them every time they move. You file judicial conduct complaints. You file criminal [57:20.860 --> 57:27.980] charges. And then when other officials don't act on the criminal charges, you go in there and just [57:27.980 --> 57:35.500] give them all misery. And then say, tell you what guys, let's make this go away. Let's make it deal. [57:37.820 --> 57:45.420] But if you're in there trying to get a just ruling on a point of law, that's a different strategy. [57:47.580 --> 57:54.140] As I found out, but if, if anyone's listening and they have had the male box rule ruled against [57:54.140 --> 58:01.900] them, by the way, it is a rebuttable presumption that you can rebut. We did rebut, but the highest [58:01.900 --> 58:07.820] bankruptcy court in California still was used to hear it and denied me filing any other document [58:07.820 --> 58:15.340] in the case. That's exactly what they said. You cannot file anything more. We can, and I would [58:15.340 --> 58:22.220] love to take this 120 year old rule down, you know, to bring it to what, you know, relevant [58:22.220 --> 58:29.020] today, but I need other people who have had it used against them to come in and help with this [58:29.020 --> 58:35.500] or I don't even know if you've had it used against you. Do you have to have it used against you? [58:35.500 --> 58:41.660] Or can anybody who disagrees with the rule use it? No, you have to have it used against you. [58:41.660 --> 58:47.180] Hang on. We'll have to go to our sponsors. Okay. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, real law radio. [58:47.180 --> 58:54.140] We'll be right back. Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.140 --> 58:59.740] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.740 --> 59:04.540] can really help. The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study [59:04.540 --> 59:10.060] Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will [59:10.060 --> 59:16.060] help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three volume set called [59:16.060 --> 59:21.420] basic elements of the Christian life. Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life [59:21.420 --> 59:27.820] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.820 --> 59:33.340] To order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life, [59:33.900 --> 59:45.100] call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. [59:45.100 --> 59:49.100] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:52.220 --> 59:58.380] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.540 --> 01:00:04.460] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdowns. [01:00:06.300 --> 01:00:12.940] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [01:00:12.940 --> 01:00:20.780] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [01:00:20.780 --> 01:00:29.100] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, [01:00:29.100 --> 01:00:45.900] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:45.900 --> 01:00:52.380] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb was detonated [01:00:52.380 --> 01:00:58.220] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing 10 and [01:00:58.220 --> 01:01:07.420] injuring 40. Today in history. And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill [01:01:07.420 --> 01:01:12.620] 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:01:12.620 --> 01:01:17.100] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and [01:01:17.100 --> 01:01:21.420] even refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time [01:01:21.420 --> 01:01:26.700] or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District [01:01:26.700 --> 01:01:31.100] Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery [01:01:31.100 --> 01:01:36.300] of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the attorney [01:01:36.300 --> 01:01:40.780] general, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana [01:01:40.780 --> 01:01:45.660] has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:01:45.660 --> 01:01:52.300] of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso, [01:01:52.300 --> 01:01:57.180] Kaima Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:01:57.180 --> 01:02:02.700] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue [01:02:02.700 --> 01:02:07.500] was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, [01:02:07.500 --> 01:02:11.900] who stated that quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based [01:02:11.900 --> 01:02:16.460] on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test [01:02:16.460 --> 01:02:25.420] matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half [01:02:25.420 --> 01:02:31.020] inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being [01:02:31.020 --> 01:02:36.140] only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way [01:02:36.140 --> 01:02:41.740] back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the shark secretes a [01:02:41.740 --> 01:02:48.860] lumus fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey [01:02:48.860 --> 01:03:11.980] who may be drawn into the glow. This was Book Roadie with the lowdown for July 22nd, 2019. [01:03:18.860 --> 01:03:48.060] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton [01:03:48.060 --> 01:03:57.660] brought some real radio and we're talking to Tina in California. Okay, Tina. I had a busy [01:03:57.660 --> 01:04:05.020] break. Where were we? That's okay. We were talking about, you know, the going after the [01:04:06.380 --> 01:04:12.940] medical crew and, you know, making sure that we hold judges accountable. And I was saying that, [01:04:12.940 --> 01:04:21.020] you know, if anyone is really wanting to go after this rule and get it changed so that we are all [01:04:21.020 --> 01:04:28.860] every single person in America guaranteed service of process on any important document that could [01:04:28.860 --> 01:04:35.740] take away their property, life, or liberty, then we need to band together to do this. We need to [01:04:35.740 --> 01:04:43.100] find others that will, you know, share the same passion. And, you know, I will work to find the [01:04:43.100 --> 01:04:51.980] attorney to, you know, submit this. I just need others to be the conduit because they denied me [01:04:51.980 --> 01:04:56.940] when I did it. And unless we get it changed, there's going to be so many people that they [01:04:56.940 --> 01:05:07.100] denied the right to guaranteed service. Because it's a business. It clearly opens the door for [01:05:07.100 --> 01:05:14.140] abuse. All the law firm has to do is say they sent something, whether they sent it or not, [01:05:15.020 --> 01:05:21.660] and now you're screwed. Yes. You have no remedy. No. [01:05:21.660 --> 01:05:29.420] No. The problem with these kinds of things is scoundrels use these against each other. [01:05:30.940 --> 01:05:36.380] So even the scoundrels aren't going to want these kinds of rules because they can wind up on the [01:05:36.380 --> 01:05:46.940] other side. Correct. So it's a good one to bring there. Yes. So if anybody is out there who really [01:05:46.940 --> 01:05:55.180] wants to go for this, please contact Randy to get my information. Contact me because this is a passion [01:05:55.180 --> 01:06:02.540] of mine now to get this changed so that we don't get screwed continually for the rest of, you know, [01:06:03.260 --> 01:06:10.700] our time on this up. Okay. Do you have anything else for us? No. Thank you for everything that [01:06:10.700 --> 01:06:17.420] you do. I'll talk to you later. Okay. Thank you, Tina. Okay. Now we're going to Josh in Pennsylvania. [01:06:17.420 --> 01:06:25.340] Hello, Josh. What do you have for us today? I'm well. How are you this evening? I am good. [01:06:27.500 --> 01:06:32.940] Well, I have just a quick question for you. Well, hopefully it turns out to be a quick answer [01:06:32.940 --> 01:06:40.860] and doesn't take up too much time. I had the federal grand jury formant. How do you find this guy? [01:06:42.060 --> 01:06:48.780] I searched all over the internet and every... You don't have to. You don't have to. You send your [01:06:48.780 --> 01:07:00.780] complaint to the district attorney. Okay. To his address. Okay. And the named recipient is [01:07:00.780 --> 01:07:07.980] formant of the grand jury. And that's all you put. Gotcha. Yes. That should be simple enough. [01:07:09.980 --> 01:07:18.380] And is there, as far as venue goes, am I dealing with whatever federal court? [01:07:20.380 --> 01:07:28.780] Okay. The way I read the codes, the way they're set up is that a grand jury is impaneled in every [01:07:28.780 --> 01:07:38.060] state. But, okay, I'm sorry. You're in Pennsylvania. You don't get to grand juries in Pennsylvania. [01:07:39.260 --> 01:07:44.940] Well, I'm talking federal. Only prosecutors and judges can go to grand juries in Pennsylvania. [01:07:48.300 --> 01:07:52.940] I'm talking federal. I don't know. Oh, federal. U.S. attorney. [01:07:52.940 --> 01:07:58.780] Yeah. You send it to the U.S. attorney's address, address to the formant and the grand jury. [01:08:00.380 --> 01:08:05.420] Okay. Now, is that the one where you do the registered restricted insured? [01:08:06.540 --> 01:08:08.940] Yes. And the cover letter? [01:08:11.900 --> 01:08:16.300] You put in the cover letter to make sure that the prosecutor doesn't give it to the grand jury. [01:08:16.300 --> 01:08:25.340] I just, to give it directly to the formant. You just send it to the formant. [01:08:26.220 --> 01:08:30.220] Okay. It'll never get to the formant. The U.S. attorney will intercept it. [01:08:31.900 --> 01:08:39.340] But your second one will be against the U.S. attorney accusing him of intercepting the first one. [01:08:39.340 --> 01:08:46.300] And from there, it will go to the attorney general in D.C. [01:08:50.220 --> 01:08:57.180] Gotcha. So, his boss, he read it technically. And again, the U.S. attorney from my area, [01:08:57.980 --> 01:09:01.900] the federal attorney, I might have misheard you. [01:09:01.900 --> 01:09:12.940] Yeah. The U.S. attorney for whichever district has been you in your area. [01:09:13.980 --> 01:09:18.860] Gotcha. Gotcha. All right. Well, that's not simple enough. I can get on that. [01:09:19.820 --> 01:09:25.020] That was really my only question. I haven't seen more things for you, but for another time on another [01:09:25.020 --> 01:09:31.500] issue, I can, I can call you back for those. So, I can always use a wonderful help. [01:09:33.260 --> 01:09:41.100] Okay. Thank you, Josh. All right. Now we're going to go to Danny in Tennessee. Hello, Danny. [01:09:43.980 --> 01:09:49.420] Hey, how you doing there? I'm doing good. How are you doing up there in Hill Babyland? [01:09:49.420 --> 01:09:55.900] Well, pretty good. A couple of ideas and things. I don't know if you remember the last thing [01:09:56.540 --> 01:10:03.980] that you saw from it, you said should be interesting. But complaints I sent in [01:10:05.100 --> 01:10:16.300] and sent to the clerk of the appellate courts, a group of complaints. And the idea was that things [01:10:16.300 --> 01:10:23.420] are so bad in this judicial district, they have to be taken up from outside the judicial [01:10:23.420 --> 01:10:29.500] district to be able to straighten it out with the idea. That's why I was contacting them. [01:10:29.500 --> 01:10:35.900] Okay. Did you look at jurisdiction of grand juries? [01:10:37.980 --> 01:10:41.980] Oh, yeah. Well, yeah, I was supposed to be able to get to grand jury. I've done that [01:10:41.980 --> 01:10:47.900] a little time. No, no, no. That wasn't part of what I was getting to. The grand jury is [01:10:47.900 --> 01:10:56.780] impaneled in every county and they're impaneled by a district judge who has a venue. The venue [01:10:56.780 --> 01:11:04.540] is not always restricted to one county. But since a grand jury is impaneled in every county, [01:11:04.540 --> 01:11:11.420] the presumption has been that a grand jury only has jurisdiction to hear complaints that occurred [01:11:11.420 --> 01:11:18.620] in that county. I can't find anything to support that since a grand jury is a statewide grand jury, [01:11:18.620 --> 01:11:25.340] is a state grand jury, not a county grand jury. They just happen to be impaneled in a county. [01:11:26.300 --> 01:11:33.580] So is there anything that restricts the grand jury's authority to the county in which they were [01:11:33.580 --> 01:11:41.980] impaneled? I haven't looked for that in particular. I don't remember coming across it. [01:11:43.260 --> 01:11:48.620] That would allow you to go to a grand jury in an adjoining county. [01:11:50.780 --> 01:11:57.660] And with your laws in Tennessee, anyone who interferes with your access to a grand jury [01:11:57.660 --> 01:12:03.340] would be committing obstruction because you have a statutory right to go to a grand jury. [01:12:06.780 --> 01:12:11.660] So if you have a county that appears to be too corrupt, then you go to the next county [01:12:12.780 --> 01:12:17.260] and go to that grand jury or you go to every single surrounding county. [01:12:17.260 --> 01:12:30.780] Or even to a county like Shelby, Memphis, or Nashville, I can't find a restriction. [01:12:30.780 --> 01:12:37.580] That would be a great question to ask. Where is a state grand jury's jurisdiction limited? [01:12:37.580 --> 01:12:48.300] Yeah, I'm looking at that a little more. Another idea, too, that you might find interesting in a [01:12:48.300 --> 01:12:58.140] way. There was a news item here this week about the head clerk or the office manager for the [01:12:58.140 --> 01:13:12.060] city court being indicted for some things done in the office there, of misreporting, [01:13:13.020 --> 01:13:19.900] by putting information in the wrong fields in their computer system, about some people such [01:13:19.900 --> 01:13:30.860] that it avoided people making deals or something that should have been reported to the DPS that [01:13:30.860 --> 01:13:37.420] could have resulted in suspension of license and stuff. So it blocked that and there was sloppy [01:13:37.420 --> 01:13:43.340] with the cash drawer and that it wasn't locked and left unattended and these different things [01:13:43.340 --> 01:13:53.100] it said. But this was brought up by the Comptroller of the Treasury and looking up [01:13:53.660 --> 01:14:05.020] their mission or their duties, one of the main things is to maintain the integrity of the financial [01:14:05.020 --> 01:14:11.020] transactions of different government bodies and things like that, something of that nature is what [01:14:11.020 --> 01:14:22.220] it said. So my point is that, well, the local law enforcement is not really authorized to enforce [01:14:22.220 --> 01:14:30.700] the traffic code except that its city charter may provide a few minor things like a city sticker [01:14:30.700 --> 01:14:38.620] for the registration and stuff and another thing or two, but in general not. And the things under [01:14:38.620 --> 01:14:45.500] this general state law is not applicable. So they might have under that authority from the city [01:14:45.500 --> 01:14:50.620] charter have a city ordinance by which they could do certain things, but where they're doing it, [01:14:50.620 --> 01:15:00.140] they're not proper. And so these funds that they're collecting is really illicit revenue [01:15:00.140 --> 01:15:07.580] because it's been done by unauthorized law enforcement actions. And so I think about [01:15:07.580 --> 01:15:17.580] contacting the Comptroller of the Treasury about that. Wait, wait, have you been affected by this [01:15:17.580 --> 01:15:30.060] yourselves? Yes. Then you have standing to bring a private attorney general suit. Okay. And then you [01:15:30.060 --> 01:15:41.180] get to collect all of those wrongful fines that were, all of the misuse of funds, you get to [01:15:41.180 --> 01:15:49.740] collect all of that because you're acting on in your own behalf and in other similar situations. [01:15:52.060 --> 01:15:55.500] So that makes it profitable. That's the kind of thing you might get a lawyer to pick up. [01:15:57.020 --> 01:16:03.020] Lawyers seem to have no compunction at all about going after politicians, [01:16:03.020 --> 01:16:09.980] political officials. They seem to think that they're low hanging fruit. [01:16:12.780 --> 01:16:17.100] Well, it's not exactly just the political officials because if this was done in the right [01:16:17.100 --> 01:16:25.340] way, this would stop most of these revenue streams because it has to be like the high [01:16:25.340 --> 01:16:28.700] of trouble or something like this, doing something by not local police or sheriff. [01:16:28.700 --> 01:16:39.020] Yeah, it could get you a lot of money too. Well, yeah, that, but they'd be highly upset because [01:16:39.020 --> 01:16:48.860] the amount of money is costing them. Well, you would only get like 10%, but you're getting 10% of [01:16:50.780 --> 01:16:54.780] the money that was yielded. It's costing even more if they [01:16:54.780 --> 01:17:02.300] revenue that would not be generated. Are you being harassed by debt collectors [01:17:02.300 --> 01:17:07.500] with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? Stop debt collectors now with the Michael [01:17:07.500 --> 01:17:12.780] Meares proven method. Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors [01:17:12.780 --> 01:17:18.060] and now you can win two. You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win [01:17:18.060 --> 01:17:23.820] in court using federal civil rights statutes. What to do when contacted by phones, mail or court [01:17:23.820 --> 01:17:28.460] summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit [01:17:28.460 --> 01:17:34.220] report, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael [01:17:34.220 --> 01:17:39.900] Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is [01:17:39.900 --> 01:17:45.340] available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue [01:17:45.340 --> 01:17:56.060] Michael Meares banner or email MichaelMeares at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [01:17:56.060 --> 01:18:02.140] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. I love logos. Without the shows on this [01:18:02.140 --> 01:18:06.620] network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's [01:18:06.620 --> 01:18:12.300] no going back. I need my truth space. I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this [01:18:12.300 --> 01:18:16.460] network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I [01:18:16.460 --> 01:18:22.060] really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [01:18:22.060 --> 01:18:27.100] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.100 --> 01:18:31.420] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.420 --> 01:18:38.620] Now, go to LogosReguleNetwork.com. Click on the Amazon logo and book market. Now, when you order [01:18:38.620 --> 01:18:45.180] anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do you have [01:18:45.180 --> 01:18:51.500] to do anything different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow, [01:18:51.500 --> 01:18:57.820] giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. Thank you so much. We are [01:18:57.820 --> 01:19:10.620] welcome. Happy holidays, Logos. This is the Logos Logos Radio Network. [01:19:28.140 --> 01:19:36.620] If I can't get everything I want, [01:19:39.260 --> 01:19:48.780] I'll get a ranger. If I can't get everything I need, [01:19:48.780 --> 01:20:11.100] Okay, we are back. [01:20:11.100 --> 01:20:16.220] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio, and we're talking to Danny in Tennessee. [01:20:16.220 --> 01:20:24.300] Danny, what is the state of the case that you are in, was it Jackson County? [01:20:25.820 --> 01:20:29.500] Jackson. Well, the city of Jackson. Madison County. [01:20:30.300 --> 01:20:38.780] Madison County. In front of the courthouse, there's a placard up there about [01:20:38.780 --> 01:20:46.460] David Crockett, who ran for office in the county and didn't make it and he's telling them, [01:20:46.460 --> 01:20:51.340] screw all you, didn't vote for me, I'm going to Texas. [01:20:54.940 --> 01:20:55.820] Anyway, go ahead. [01:20:58.700 --> 01:21:05.740] Okay, well then, that's a private attorney general suit, what would be the court this would be [01:21:05.740 --> 01:21:09.580] taken to? Okay, well, oh, that would be, [01:21:13.340 --> 01:21:19.980] I hate to take that to the state court, that's the kind of thing that needs to go to a federal court. [01:21:22.220 --> 01:21:27.500] How do we get, embezzle what my state officials into the fat? [01:21:27.500 --> 01:21:35.500] It would be hard to do, you'll probably have to do that in the state court. [01:21:35.500 --> 01:21:41.260] Well, I don't know, I mean, depriving the rights and property of the people. [01:21:41.260 --> 01:21:50.300] Oh, wait a minute, wait a minute. Are any of the funds that have been misappropriated, [01:21:50.300 --> 01:21:58.220] do any of those funding schemes receive any federal funding? [01:22:01.180 --> 01:22:10.700] A matter of speaking, I imagine, because I work in off of the transportation department records. [01:22:10.700 --> 01:22:17.340] If there's any federal funds involved, you can go to the fed. [01:22:20.860 --> 01:22:27.580] Okay, well, okay, just by funds, but also a lot about deprivation of rights because of what [01:22:27.580 --> 01:22:34.220] they're doing to people are taking your, you know, charging them with things under color of law and [01:22:34.220 --> 01:22:41.020] taking money from them for buying the thing. Denial of due process can always go to the fed. [01:22:46.300 --> 01:22:53.660] If you can show that they're not strictly following the letter of law and by that [01:22:53.660 --> 01:23:04.300] failure, they natively affect the rights of a citizen, then that'll get you to the fed. [01:23:04.300 --> 01:23:05.900] Well, I don't think that'd be too hard to do. [01:23:07.260 --> 01:23:15.340] Yeah, that's the due process. You have a right to a reasonable expectation that the law will be [01:23:15.340 --> 01:23:24.300] followed as written, and that's a constitutional right. Yeah, so even if it's state law, you still [01:23:24.300 --> 01:23:31.340] have a federal constitutional right to expect that the state law will be followed as written. [01:23:31.340 --> 01:23:43.340] So yes, it shouldn't be hard to get to the fed. Okay, well, did you catch my other idea on that, [01:23:43.340 --> 01:23:51.180] too? That's related about using the Comptroller of the Treasury to get on them? [01:23:52.940 --> 01:23:59.980] If you can give the Comptroller enough information, you can, I don't know if you can directly [01:23:59.980 --> 01:24:06.780] request an audit. Oh, well, if you request it, it's reporting what I know that he made out and [01:24:06.780 --> 01:24:12.380] realized was being done that way. So you may be, as I was going to say, you can probably more [01:24:12.380 --> 01:24:20.380] effectively encourage him to do an audit. That shouldn't be too hard because that's his job. [01:24:23.900 --> 01:24:26.780] Well, he's the Comptroller. He's primarily an auditor. [01:24:29.580 --> 01:24:34.700] He don't keep books. He don't create books. He just checks them to make sure they're done [01:24:34.700 --> 01:24:37.020] right and all the money goes where it's supposed to. [01:24:37.020 --> 01:24:44.060] Yeah, well, that was my other thing about, you know, the integrity of their financial [01:24:44.060 --> 01:24:51.660] transactions is that the integrity of the income streams as well as the disbursements. [01:24:52.940 --> 01:24:57.500] Are they more interested in getting their cut of the income streams regardless? [01:24:59.260 --> 01:25:04.380] Well, I think every department is going to be looking at getting their cut of income streams. [01:25:04.380 --> 01:25:08.220] I mean, every department wants more money. [01:25:09.740 --> 01:25:14.380] Yeah, I'm talking about it. You know, you're showing it's being done in an illicit manner, [01:25:15.500 --> 01:25:17.260] more like a RICO operation. [01:25:19.740 --> 01:25:24.300] If you can find more than one, I think it's either two or three. [01:25:24.300 --> 01:25:37.500] Two is, I think, conspiracy. There's someone mentioned this last night that I think six [01:25:37.500 --> 01:25:46.460] or seven was a riot and three was a gang and two was a conspiracy or something like that. [01:25:47.340 --> 01:25:49.100] Yeah, seven's a riot in Texas. [01:25:49.100 --> 01:26:00.300] That's under the state RICO laws. Under federal RICO laws, if you have two or more people who [01:26:01.900 --> 01:26:09.020] engage in multiple predicate acts toward an ongoing criminal conspiracy, you've got RICO. [01:26:09.020 --> 01:26:21.500] Yeah, well, just that all the local law enforcement that is doing the traffic, most of the traffic [01:26:21.500 --> 01:26:23.500] has. And that's definitely RICO. [01:26:23.500 --> 01:26:27.020] Well, they don't actually know that's what they're doing necessarily. [01:26:30.380 --> 01:26:37.260] Well, there is a statute that authorizes the certified PSOS to enforce transportation [01:26:37.260 --> 01:26:42.300] code in Tennessee. I've seen that one. I don't remember what it is off top of my head, but [01:26:42.300 --> 01:26:49.660] I've actually read it. I had to go back into court and offer the court my sincere apology for [01:26:49.660 --> 01:27:02.140] misquoting law. I told the judge, I come before the court, shame face it, and humble myself [01:27:02.140 --> 01:27:16.300] before the court because I misquoted law to them. But anyway, have you looked at the unconstitutionality [01:27:17.020 --> 01:27:21.260] of revoking a license for nonpayment of debt? [01:27:21.260 --> 01:27:31.340] Well, I've heard you come up on some other programs, but I haven't looked, you know. [01:27:31.340 --> 01:27:35.180] Olivier is supposed to be sending me some case law on that subject. [01:27:35.180 --> 01:27:38.140] I heard you're a program where I heard it, yeah. Olivier. [01:27:39.740 --> 01:27:48.140] And he's talking about Florida and Tennessee. So apparently there's a case out of Tennessee [01:27:48.140 --> 01:27:53.900] on exactly that subject. Okay. Do you have anything else for us? [01:27:55.260 --> 01:28:00.700] No, I guess I'll let you go for that. Okay. Thank you, Danny. Now we're going to go to [01:28:01.660 --> 01:28:07.420] Shane in New York. Hello, Shane. What do you have for us today? [01:28:08.700 --> 01:28:12.220] Hi, Randy. I just wanted to, on behalf of the people from New York, [01:28:12.220 --> 01:28:19.500] I want to apologize, and we do appreciate you doing this radio show. So I want to apologize for [01:28:19.500 --> 01:28:26.220] John in New York. I really think that he does not treat you fairly. No, it's okay. You have to [01:28:26.220 --> 01:28:35.580] understand John is who John is. And yeah, he kind of annoyed me today. But I get a lot of people who [01:28:35.580 --> 01:28:46.780] don't do exactly the way I think they should do. So I don't know if that's necessarily a bad thing. [01:28:49.100 --> 01:28:53.180] I was trying to move John along because I had a whole board full of callers and [01:28:55.660 --> 01:29:02.300] maybe he'll do better next time. But I'm not offended at John. I have had callers I was offended [01:29:02.300 --> 01:29:10.860] with. And I hate it that I needed to hang up on him, but maybe we'll be more careful next time. [01:29:10.860 --> 01:29:16.140] And you don't need to apologize. John's heart is in the right place. [01:29:17.660 --> 01:29:21.660] Yes, I know. I wish you'd stay with one topic, but I just want to let you know that [01:29:22.220 --> 01:29:26.220] people like me and many others, we really appreciate the show. So I want to, I know a lot [01:29:26.220 --> 01:29:30.860] of people might not say that when they come on, because I know this takes an enormous amount [01:29:30.860 --> 01:29:37.260] of work we can do. So we really appreciate it. And it is good to hear that because we sit here [01:29:37.260 --> 01:29:43.580] speaking into a microphone. We can't see those, we don't know who's listening to us. [01:29:44.460 --> 01:29:50.620] And we don't know if anybody's listening to us. And it's hard to get good [01:29:51.740 --> 01:29:54.860] positive or negative feedback. And I don't mind negative feedback. [01:29:54.860 --> 01:29:58.860] I need to know what I'm doing. [01:30:25.180 --> 01:30:32.780] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [01:30:32.780 --> 01:30:37.420] it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:37.420 --> 01:30:43.420] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.420 --> 01:30:50.540] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home [01:30:50.540 --> 01:30:55.820] too with a smart grid. So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely [01:30:55.820 --> 01:31:01.820] monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. The cybersecurity expert David Chalk [01:31:01.820 --> 01:31:07.180] says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will [01:31:07.180 --> 01:31:13.100] have a field day. Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us [01:31:13.100 --> 01:31:18.940] vulnerable to our enemies. I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.940 --> 01:31:24.300] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. I'm Dr. [01:31:24.300 --> 01:31:28.620] Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.340 --> 01:31:37.260] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. The government [01:31:37.260 --> 01:31:42.620] says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was [01:31:42.620 --> 01:31:46.540] a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.540 --> 01:31:51.020] And thousands of my fellow first responders have died. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a [01:31:51.020 --> 01:31:55.580] structural engineer. I'm a New York City correctional. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his [01:31:55.580 --> 01:32:01.180] son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.860 --> 01:32:06.860] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, [01:32:06.860 --> 01:32:10.620] we live in an us against them society. If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.620 --> 01:32:14.780] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [01:32:14.780 --> 01:32:18.780] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [01:32:18.780 --> 01:32:23.180] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [01:32:23.180 --> 01:32:27.340] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy [01:32:27.340 --> 01:32:30.940] Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive [01:32:30.940 --> 01:32:34.780] teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold [01:32:34.780 --> 01:32:38.700] courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to [01:32:38.700 --> 01:32:43.260] ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [01:32:43.260 --> 01:32:47.260] book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of your original [01:32:47.260 --> 01:32:51.740] 2009 seminar. Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how [01:32:51.740 --> 01:32:55.740] to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your [01:32:55.740 --> 01:32:59.340] copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:59.340 --> 01:33:11.820] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.740 --> 01:33:41.820] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. We're going to start calling [01:33:41.820 --> 01:33:50.940] Brett Bubba Brett. Just so he seems more ethnic. Okay, Shane. I'm literative. Bubba Shane. [01:33:52.540 --> 01:33:55.820] Yes, Randy. I am back and I'm ready to give you some breaking news. [01:33:55.820 --> 01:34:05.100] Good. Okay. Yes, so we got a letter actually yesterday from the attorney representing Key Bank [01:34:06.140 --> 01:34:12.300] and a very cordial letter and he sent us a settlement and compromise if we were to. [01:34:13.500 --> 01:34:19.900] This is interesting though. He wants us to admit that the arbitration award is [01:34:19.900 --> 01:34:26.060] null and void and unenforceable and he says to withdraw the foreclosure proceedings if we send [01:34:26.060 --> 01:34:37.260] him a $44,000 check certified US currency, of course, within 60 days, you will drop the foreclosure [01:34:37.260 --> 01:34:46.380] matter. Otherwise, you owe us $70,000. And he addressed it to me and he has deprived me to [01:34:46.380 --> 01:34:51.980] being served in the state court and they will not serve in the state court. And it was addressed to [01:34:51.980 --> 01:35:04.060] me and not my mother. Something's missing there. Will $44,000 clear his lien? Yes. [01:35:05.180 --> 01:35:14.460] Oh, so and what's the property worth? Maybe around $2,000. That should be easy enough to get a bank [01:35:14.460 --> 01:35:23.100] to $44,000 against a $200,000 property. That's a piece of cake. [01:35:25.100 --> 01:35:28.700] Well, there's a little bit more in there that I want to tell you, but more importantly, [01:35:30.540 --> 01:35:36.300] if you were in my position, he wants us to sign off that the arbitration award is null and void. [01:35:36.300 --> 01:35:40.860] When they just got done writing a large document into the court case a couple of months ago that [01:35:40.860 --> 01:35:46.540] it was a fake one in the first place. What was the arbitration? Oh, that's the one where they [01:35:46.540 --> 01:35:53.740] didn't respond. Right. You'll lose that one. I would not consider that arbitration award. [01:35:55.820 --> 01:36:03.260] Okay. So we just got that just within the last couple of days here. [01:36:03.260 --> 01:36:09.820] I would consider that a win. How much did you owe on the property? [01:36:13.580 --> 01:36:20.460] It was in my mom's name in the beginning that it's a little complicated, Randy, [01:36:20.460 --> 01:36:25.740] because there's a first lien holder which was civilly indicted at Rosicki for falsifying [01:36:25.740 --> 01:36:30.780] documents and increasing. Yeah, that's a whole new story, but the first lien holder cannot [01:36:30.780 --> 01:36:33.820] foreclose because they don't have a true title. They can't get insurance from a lost note. [01:36:35.420 --> 01:36:37.980] How much is on the second lien holder? [01:36:42.300 --> 01:36:47.500] They claim $59,000. They claim $59,000. We objected and [01:36:49.900 --> 01:36:53.340] I'm going to say this is a good deal. You don't lose all your equity. [01:36:53.340 --> 01:37:01.260] You gain an extra $15,000 and you win this one. [01:37:02.620 --> 01:37:09.340] Well, what I was going to ask you is we just got it yesterday and it says if you don't respond by [01:37:09.340 --> 01:37:16.220] June 1st, we'll consider that you don't want to pursue it. So I'm going to, I just got it. [01:37:16.220 --> 01:37:18.700] Actually, it was a thing yesterday. I got it yesterday. [01:37:18.700 --> 01:37:22.300] Make an account or offer for $30,000. [01:37:22.300 --> 01:37:26.380] Exactly. Okay. Yeah, we're going to, I'm going to do... [01:37:26.380 --> 01:37:29.420] If you make it for $10,000 or $15,000, that'll be insulting. [01:37:30.860 --> 01:37:37.500] But if you make it for $30,000, then he's likely to come back with $40,000 and then you go for it [01:37:37.500 --> 01:37:45.020] and everybody wins. Okay. And Randy, another thing I want to tell you is the brief [01:37:45.020 --> 01:37:55.340] for my bankruptcy case is due on Friday next week. Okay. And there's been an issue getting [01:37:55.340 --> 01:37:59.500] to the law library here, which is not going to open up until the third week of June. [01:38:00.540 --> 01:38:06.460] Okay. Hold on. Hold on. You've got an offer to mediate. You might go to the bankruptcy court [01:38:06.460 --> 01:38:13.180] and say the primary reason for your bankruptcy is this mortgage issue, but you have an [01:38:13.180 --> 01:38:20.380] offer on the table. You may be able to mediate this issue and drop this whole thing. [01:38:20.380 --> 01:38:27.740] Ask the court to give you an enlargement of time until you can complete those negotiations on the [01:38:29.260 --> 01:38:37.900] mediation. I was just going to ask you that because I wanted to file an extension of time [01:38:37.900 --> 01:38:44.540] to mediate what you're just saying. And if we don't agree, then I would move forward with the brief. [01:38:45.580 --> 01:38:51.020] Okay. Okay. About the brief. Don't worry too much about it. If you've got a lot of it done, [01:38:51.020 --> 01:38:57.820] just when the time comes, file what you got. Okay. Make sure you meet the deadline. [01:38:59.100 --> 01:39:02.860] You can file an amendment. You can petition to file an amended later if need be. [01:39:02.860 --> 01:39:09.260] Randy, my question to you is based on, I'm not sure if you can pay attention to the news, but [01:39:10.220 --> 01:39:14.060] New York and the protesting and everything, we've had curfew here. I'm not sure probably [01:39:14.060 --> 01:39:18.380] over a year or two, but eight o'clock at night and there's been a lot of issues. What are the [01:39:18.380 --> 01:39:25.660] chances of a second extension of time being granted for a brief time? I think it's a pretty [01:39:25.660 --> 01:39:31.740] good chance. These are extreme and extraordinary circumstances. Oh, absolutely. Yeah. And I was [01:39:31.740 --> 01:39:36.860] just going to ask you, just file that yesterday, the motion for extension of time based on the [01:39:36.860 --> 01:39:40.540] curfew issues. There was a big issue to happen in Buffalo yesterday. Some guy had his back [01:39:40.540 --> 01:39:45.740] and his head cracked open by a couple of cops and it was all over the news yesterday. I'm not [01:39:45.740 --> 01:39:52.380] sure if you heard about this. And it's been absolutely amazing what's happened here. They [01:39:52.380 --> 01:39:57.580] had curfew in the whole county at eight o'clock and just, I'm sure that's the same crap going on [01:39:57.580 --> 01:40:07.100] over in Texas. But what's developing down in Texas with all this protesting? [01:40:07.100 --> 01:40:14.380] Not much. They haven't been too bad. There's been demonstrations, but they haven't been overboard [01:40:15.180 --> 01:40:23.020] and there hasn't been a lot of controversy. And the governor told the president about [01:40:23.020 --> 01:40:32.060] troops. He said, Texas can take care of Texas. We don't need your troops. [01:40:33.980 --> 01:40:41.740] Right. Yeah, it hasn't been near as bad as we've had our demonstrations, but they weren't as [01:40:42.620 --> 01:40:50.300] violent and looting like other places. Right, right. There's one little twist I want to [01:40:50.300 --> 01:40:58.460] tell you. This is pretty interesting. My mom filed bankruptcy. She's in Chapter 13 and we're [01:40:58.460 --> 01:41:04.060] going to be filing her hearings on set for July 7. We're going to file a motion for conversion from [01:41:04.060 --> 01:41:11.740] 13 to 7. Would her mortgage debt be eligible? Just that key bank loan was a key lock. Would [01:41:11.740 --> 01:41:20.620] that be eligible for discharge under Chapter 7? No. The only time it's eligible for discharge [01:41:20.620 --> 01:41:30.940] is if the other party, we always claim them as unsecured and then it's the responsibility of [01:41:30.940 --> 01:41:37.580] the other party to prove up their secured interest. This party will have a problem [01:41:37.580 --> 01:41:44.300] from proving up secured interest. I believe they will because they have to file a brand new proof [01:41:44.300 --> 01:41:51.740] of claims when you go from the 13 to 7. Yeah, that's what it is. That's how they have to prove [01:41:51.740 --> 01:42:00.860] that they have a complete line of holder status from the original, but the courts have always [01:42:00.860 --> 01:42:07.500] kind of ruled in the bank's favor here. I know that, but you're right. We might be 100% right [01:42:07.500 --> 01:42:14.780] but you're right on that one. But what I was going to ask you is if we do file an objection [01:42:14.780 --> 01:42:21.980] against her proof of claim when she converts it to 7, that would tie up things with me consulting [01:42:21.980 --> 01:42:30.380] with the attorney for a key bank to pull us out of this thing. This file brand new proof of claims. [01:42:30.380 --> 01:42:38.860] You see how intertwining this is? Okay, I don't know how to address that. [01:42:40.060 --> 01:42:43.900] Me either. I don't know either, but we definitely got them working hard. [01:42:44.620 --> 01:42:49.180] Yeah, if you got them offering you 40, you can get them down less than that. If you could get [01:42:49.180 --> 01:42:57.420] that, if it was me, I would take it and run with it because they don't get all of her equity. She [01:42:57.420 --> 01:43:04.220] gets to save her equity and they're offering you better than equity. I agree, but one thing I want [01:43:04.780 --> 01:43:11.980] Randy, what I want to tell you is Governor Cuomo has stopped all foreclosure proceedings to August [01:43:11.980 --> 01:43:20.460] 20th. Good, so they can place until after August 20th. I think they're seeing the quagmire they're [01:43:20.460 --> 01:43:30.060] getting into and they want to stop the bleeding out of funds. Okay, I'm going to leave you here [01:43:30.060 --> 01:43:36.780] because I've got Adam on the next segment. I really want to talk to Adam. All right, thanks Randy. [01:43:37.580 --> 01:43:43.580] Okay, thank you Shane and look into taking that deal. I think that would be a great win and we [01:43:43.580 --> 01:43:50.940] need some wins. Randy Kelton, Brett Fouton, we're going to our last segment, so I'm not going to [01:43:50.940 --> 01:44:02.300] give out a call-in number. Adam is the one who got his email had. 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Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should [01:45:40.620 --> 01:45:46.540] understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our [01:45:46.540 --> 01:45:54.620] audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:54.620 --> 01:46:10.540] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:24.940 --> 01:46:38.220] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rural Radio, and Brett, I'm going to let you handle [01:46:38.220 --> 01:46:47.020] Adam. Handle him? I don't think anybody can handle him. How are you doing this evening? [01:46:47.020 --> 01:46:55.420] Dude, I'm sorry to call. Wait, say that again, Adam. I didn't have you unmuted in time. [01:46:56.540 --> 01:47:03.660] I said, I said good, gentlemen. How are you all? Doing well. What is going on with you? [01:47:05.100 --> 01:47:13.260] Well, Randy was talking about grand jury jurisdictions, and I don't know, a few minutes back. [01:47:13.260 --> 01:47:21.660] I just wanted to, that got me taking through some of my paperwork. Now, I got my experience with that. [01:47:24.700 --> 01:47:33.020] You talked about touched on that a lot throughout the years, and I would love nothing more than for [01:47:33.020 --> 01:47:40.940] it to be true that the grand juries do have statewide jurisdiction. But like you, I've never [01:47:40.940 --> 01:47:47.340] seen anything in the law. So, one day last year, I went in there with, well, that wasn't [01:47:47.340 --> 01:47:53.500] ever going to be, went in there with a stack of criminal complaints and had 12 copies for each [01:47:53.500 --> 01:47:59.660] grand jury. You know, my briefcase would barely shut. I had so much paperwork in there. I was going [01:47:59.660 --> 01:48:06.300] to go in there and try to present to the grand jury with criminal complaints on public officials [01:48:06.300 --> 01:48:15.340] from other counties. And I went in there, and the assistant district attorney came out. Well, [01:48:15.340 --> 01:48:19.820] first the former came out, and he said, well, the district attorney said that that happened [01:48:19.820 --> 01:48:24.060] somewhere else, so we can't hear it. You know, we can't, you can't come in and talk to us, [01:48:24.060 --> 01:48:29.660] and I said, well, you go back and tell them that the jurisdiction of the grand jury is statewide. [01:48:30.380 --> 01:48:35.020] Well, okay. You know, this guy's foreign, you don't know anything. So, he goes back in there [01:48:35.020 --> 01:48:41.420] about five minutes later, this little simple push and teach, stroke, and assistant DA comes out, [01:48:42.780 --> 01:48:46.540] and he's real polite and everything at first, and he's like, you know, what's going on? I was like, [01:48:46.540 --> 01:48:51.580] well, my understanding is that the jurisdiction of the grand jury is statewide, and I want to present [01:48:51.580 --> 01:48:57.740] these criminal complaints to the grand jury. He said, he said, no, he said, no, that they, [01:48:57.740 --> 01:49:01.660] that didn't happen in this county, so, you know, they can't hear him. I said, well, can you back [01:49:01.660 --> 01:49:06.780] that up? He kind of looked at me like, you know, who is this punk? So, he's like, well, give me a [01:49:06.780 --> 01:49:11.500] second. So, he goes back in there, and he's gone about 10 minutes, and he comes back out, [01:49:12.060 --> 01:49:22.060] and hands me two-page copies of Texas government code 43.111, 24th traditional district, [01:49:22.700 --> 01:49:30.220] and he claims that subsection A, which says the voters of D.W. Goliad, [01:49:30.220 --> 01:49:34.300] referral counties, elected district attorney for the 24th traditional district, who represents [01:49:34.300 --> 01:49:39.500] the state and that district court only in those counties. And he said, see, he handed it to me, [01:49:39.500 --> 01:49:44.460] and I read it, and I said, hey, man, before you could walk off, I said, this doesn't have anything [01:49:44.460 --> 01:49:49.340] to do with what I'm asking. And he came back up and said, did you see part A right there? I said, [01:49:49.340 --> 01:49:56.940] yeah, he said, that right there is the authority. It's my grand jury. And I said, are you the person [01:49:56.940 --> 01:50:01.580] responsible for denying me access to the grand jury today? And then he got all snooty and said, [01:50:01.580 --> 01:50:07.100] yes, I am, and walked off. So, that... [01:50:07.100 --> 01:50:09.420] Have you filed against him? [01:50:10.860 --> 01:50:16.460] No, no, no, I've got it all catalogued, and I'm going to get there, because one of my main [01:50:16.460 --> 01:50:22.300] focuses is cracking open these grand juries and making them available to public DAs. They're like a [01:50:22.300 --> 01:50:26.940] crazed mama bear, and they think the grand jury's their cub. I mean, it's ridiculous. [01:50:29.420 --> 01:50:36.540] But that was his excuse. To me, that says nothing about it, really. That doesn't... [01:50:37.100 --> 01:50:41.500] It doesn't hold water. Yeah, it says that they elected him, but it doesn't say anything about... [01:50:42.060 --> 01:50:48.380] It limited the prosecutor's jurisdiction, not the grand jury's jurisdiction. [01:50:48.380 --> 01:50:54.940] Exactly. So, I just wanted to call in and tell that story. I mean, that's their angle, and then [01:50:54.940 --> 01:50:59.180] we're saying, you know, there's nothing to mow that prevents it. So... [01:51:00.380 --> 01:51:06.460] Tell you what you should do. You should email every public official in the county complaining about [01:51:06.460 --> 01:51:12.620] this. Right. Yeah, there are a lot of my backlogs. At first, I got a [01:51:12.620 --> 01:51:21.020] hammer kindle county one last big time, and then a couple other little things, and then I'm turning [01:51:21.020 --> 01:51:28.780] all my attention to my own county, especially the DA and the system DA. They're going to really [01:51:28.780 --> 01:51:35.340] hear about it, you know, a couple more months. Well, Brett, there's one thing that I have seen. [01:51:36.060 --> 01:51:39.980] I'm sorry. What would you say? I was going to say that Brett talked earlier about [01:51:39.980 --> 01:51:48.620] the prosecutor blocking your email. Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's funny. They almost hurt my feelings. [01:51:50.780 --> 01:51:51.500] I could tell. [01:51:55.420 --> 01:52:00.860] And I'm sure you felt disparaged. Well, he basically [01:52:00.860 --> 01:52:10.300] told me that I can't communicate or contact any public official in the county who's under [01:52:10.300 --> 01:52:16.780] that web server, which they all are. They're all under vo.kindle.ts.us. So now I can't talk to [01:52:16.780 --> 01:52:24.780] me, but unless I change my email address. Did you file criminally against the IT guy who [01:52:24.780 --> 01:52:33.180] blocked you? I'm working on that. He will be real unhappy when you come after him. [01:52:34.060 --> 01:52:40.620] He's going to want the prosecutor to do this, whatever lawyer got him to do this, to explain [01:52:40.620 --> 01:52:49.420] himself. Yeah. I always like to go after the guy who's basically innocent because he's the one [01:52:49.420 --> 01:52:58.940] that will scream to the high heaven. Yeah. The IT guy is going to be just as innocent as the [01:52:58.940 --> 01:53:03.500] driven snow. He's going to be the guy that, what do you mean? I'm just doing this. This is what [01:53:03.500 --> 01:53:17.020] I'm supposed to do, right? All I did was... Your problem, not my problem. If you have a problem [01:53:17.020 --> 01:53:22.780] with what the lawyer told you to do, take it up with the lawyer. Maybe that lawyer will come and [01:53:22.780 --> 01:53:32.220] throw himself under your bus. Let's see if he does that. You know what got me blacklisted, Randy? [01:53:32.220 --> 01:53:46.220] Your pleasant demeanor? Well, you know, I had limited email conversations with the man, [01:53:47.100 --> 01:53:54.540] but now I'm always pretty pleasant and stuff, but we got into a little bit of a debate about [01:53:54.540 --> 01:53:59.980] the interpretation of the AG decision that had already been handed down about two weeks ago, [01:53:59.980 --> 01:54:06.700] telling him to hand over the information, and he said he disagreed with it, and he said some other [01:54:06.700 --> 01:54:12.140] stuff, and I just politely asked. I said, are you currently impaired by drugs or alcohol, [01:54:12.140 --> 01:54:15.900] and the next thing to know about blacklisted? I was just looking out for the best sellers [01:54:15.900 --> 01:54:27.180] welfare. So have you bar-grieved him for that yet? No, but that's coming down the pipe. I've [01:54:27.180 --> 01:54:32.860] already, I've already grieved him three times in the last eight months, I guess. I've been [01:54:33.660 --> 01:54:38.860] fighting over this stuff with this guy for a year now. Well, not a whole new, but almost, [01:54:38.860 --> 01:54:47.260] feels like it. And, Randy, that's not the best part. Tell him about this being the second copy. [01:54:49.980 --> 01:54:54.220] Yeah, I don't think he noticed that I already have a copy to ask him, because [01:54:54.220 --> 01:54:59.340] Neil, my wife, went over there and slipped in there and got it, because they can't deny [01:55:00.060 --> 01:55:07.820] to her because she was being accused under one of their Penal Code 49. So there it says that [01:55:07.820 --> 01:55:11.900] the accuses is entitled to all of that stuff, so slipping there and got it. And I'm not sure [01:55:11.900 --> 01:55:17.820] this fella got word. I'm not sure if he knows I already have a copy. I'm simply doing this just [01:55:17.820 --> 01:55:28.380] for a second copy. And I'm going to keep fighting him over it. I want that second copy. Because [01:55:28.380 --> 01:55:33.740] the first one, you know, I don't know how to burn CDs, so I want them to send me another one. [01:55:34.620 --> 01:55:41.900] Okay, so is the case against your wife still ongoing? No, it was dismissed several months [01:55:41.900 --> 01:55:48.940] back, so now I'm completely on offense. Wait, I misunderstood that last part. [01:55:50.460 --> 01:55:55.100] I said it was dismissed a couple of months back, so now I'm completely on offense, [01:55:55.100 --> 01:55:58.620] and I'm coming. Oh, good. That's the fun part. [01:56:02.860 --> 01:56:06.300] You know, I would like to mention one thing. We were talking about the grand juries, [01:56:06.300 --> 01:56:12.700] and there's one thing that stood out to me when I was looking at that, and I haven't found anything [01:56:12.700 --> 01:56:18.460] definitive one way or the other that says that they do or they don't have the statewide jurisdiction. [01:56:20.060 --> 01:56:26.380] But when I was looking at our Texas Code of Criminal Procedure in Chapter 21, [01:56:27.340 --> 01:56:35.900] it's talking about the requisites of an indictment, and the indictments are only valid [01:56:35.900 --> 01:56:41.180] if they appear to be an act of the grand jury of the proper county. [01:56:41.980 --> 01:56:47.340] And so that makes me think there's such thing as a proper county and a not-proper county, [01:56:49.100 --> 01:56:54.220] at least in the context of an indictment. So just want to throw that in there. That's [01:56:54.220 --> 01:57:02.460] worth considering anyway. Was that in statute or case? Yes, not statute. It's a 2102 subsection 3. [01:57:02.460 --> 01:57:04.620] Oh, I'll have to look at that. [01:57:10.540 --> 01:57:17.100] That could be our sticker. Yeah, that's the strongest piece I've found. It's not very clear [01:57:17.100 --> 01:57:20.300] one way or the other, but because it could just be for the case of an indictment. [01:57:21.020 --> 01:57:27.180] Oh, wait. I remember you mentioning that. And you have a right to an indictment [01:57:27.180 --> 01:57:39.660] in the county in which the infarction occurred. But that doesn't prevent a grand jury from [01:57:39.660 --> 01:57:44.940] in another county from indicting you. It's similar to where the offense happened. Could [01:57:44.940 --> 01:57:49.340] be that grand jury does it, but then if it's a felony, then you could still have a right to [01:57:49.340 --> 01:57:55.980] an examining trial and get another, get it in your own county. Yeah, it's that way with [01:57:55.980 --> 01:58:02.700] examining trial. Examining trial is essentially the same thing that grand jury does. Any magistrate [01:58:03.260 --> 01:58:09.980] can hear any case felony or misdemeanor from anywhere in the state. But when you get back [01:58:09.980 --> 01:58:17.100] to your home county, then you have a right to an examining trial in your home county. [01:58:17.100 --> 01:58:29.340] So you can have the examining trial somewhere else as a patch, an interim until you get back, [01:58:29.340 --> 01:58:37.100] you know, a magistrate in another county can issue a warrant based on an examining trial. [01:58:37.980 --> 01:58:43.500] He can bind you over for trial based on an examining trial. But then when you get back [01:58:43.500 --> 01:58:51.740] to the state of to the county in which the infarction occurred. The Bibles for America [01:58:51.740 --> 01:58:57.740] is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament recovery version. [01:58:57.740 --> 01:59:03.420] The New Testament recovery version has over 9000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says [01:59:03.420 --> 01:59:09.260] verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. 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