[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.440] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude [00:21.440 --> 00:29.720] $62.47 a barrel, and crypto is in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.720 --> 00:41.400] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:45.960 --> 00:52.680] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on [00:52.680 --> 00:58.200] Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and [00:58.200 --> 01:07.400] entering 40. Today in history. In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill [01:07.400 --> 01:13.080] 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including [01:13.080 --> 01:17.320] Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even [01:17.320 --> 01:21.400] refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time [01:21.400 --> 01:26.680] or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District [01:26.680 --> 01:30.680] Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and [01:30.680 --> 01:35.400] delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, [01:35.400 --> 01:39.400] including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on [01:39.400 --> 01:44.520] Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a [01:44.520 --> 01:51.000] misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney [01:51.000 --> 01:57.240] in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:57.240 --> 02:02.680] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue [02:02.680 --> 02:07.480] was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, [02:07.480 --> 02:11.880] who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based [02:11.880 --> 02:15.880] on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, [02:15.880 --> 02:25.000] the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five [02:25.000 --> 02:29.960] and a half inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [02:29.960 --> 02:35.480] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [02:35.480 --> 02:40.760] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the [02:40.760 --> 02:47.480] shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins. For the purpose, it is hypothesized [02:47.480 --> 03:11.480] to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Rook Rody with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:17.480 --> 03:45.480] Okay. Howdy, howdy. This is Renter. [03:45.480 --> 04:06.760] Welcome. Welcome. And Brett's not quite up yet. He'll be up here shortly. And I want to start with [04:06.760 --> 04:19.240] a project I have been influenced to go back into. I stopped doing foreclosures a number of years ago, [04:20.360 --> 04:31.400] but with the way things are changing right now and with the COVID issue, we expect very soon [04:31.400 --> 04:43.640] to have another avalanche of foreclosures. And had that investor want me to address foreclosures for [04:43.640 --> 04:50.120] him, so I said, what the heck? I might as well put this engine back together. I have so much [04:50.120 --> 05:01.880] information on foreclosure. And this time we have a special tool, and I will be developing this tool, [05:01.880 --> 05:10.600] and I will be making it available to everyone, not just for foreclosure. But if you're looking at [05:10.600 --> 05:20.360] foreclosure because of this COVID issue, where governors or county commissioners courts have [05:20.360 --> 05:31.160] issued shelter-in-place orders, those shelter-in-place orders are unconstitutional on their face. [05:31.160 --> 05:40.760] And whoever has issued those orders have to be aware that they are unconstitutional [05:41.400 --> 05:53.960] on their face. So what I'm putting together is an administrative procedure to perfect a claim [05:53.960 --> 06:06.200] that we can then bring to court to the governor. The legislature can authorize the governor or [06:06.200 --> 06:17.160] other public official to take, they can increase the authority that the governor or other official [06:17.160 --> 06:26.600] has during an emergency. And those officials can issue orders that affect the public. [06:28.520 --> 06:39.800] However, the legislature in Texas has no power to authorize anyone to issue any order [06:39.800 --> 06:47.640] that violates their Texas Constitution or the federal Constitution for that matter. [06:49.640 --> 06:57.880] No one has that power. So while they can authorize an official to take extraordinary steps, [06:58.600 --> 07:05.880] if those extraordinary steps include the denial of a citizen's phone free access to [07:05.880 --> 07:13.320] or enjoyment of a right, then the official becomes liable for those actions. And what I [07:13.320 --> 07:22.040] haven't found is anything that excludes the official from an allegation of official misconduct [07:23.000 --> 07:30.360] for exerting or purporting to exert an authority they do not expressly have, [07:30.360 --> 07:36.360] and in the process denying a citizen and phone free access to or enjoyment of a right. [07:38.680 --> 07:46.680] Haven't found that, don't think I'm going to find that. So what I'm looking at and over the years [07:46.680 --> 07:52.680] of doing foreclosures, if you listen to my show a lot, you hear I've got a bunch of these rules and [07:52.680 --> 08:05.160] or just platitudes, ideas that you need to understand. And one of them is you can never [08:05.160 --> 08:11.000] expect to win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [08:11.800 --> 08:20.280] Do you think so is naive? And I've pretty well developed that as a certainty from doing foreclosures [08:20.280 --> 08:29.960] because it is abundantly clear that the banks have the judges bought and paid for. [08:31.880 --> 08:40.520] In helping over 700 people file lawsuits on mortgage issues, [08:40.520 --> 08:49.240] never have I had a substantive motion granted by a judge no matter what it was. [08:52.360 --> 09:01.080] If you file pros say, the judges will ruin against you out of hand at every turn. [09:02.920 --> 09:07.160] And a lot of the tools that I've developed were developed to deal with that. [09:07.160 --> 09:10.760] And at this point, we don't care. That's okay. [09:13.480 --> 09:21.240] It's not for me trained as an engineer. These are not, I don't look at these things as problems. [09:22.840 --> 09:31.960] They are merely parameters. You know, if I jump off the top of a building, gravity is going to [09:31.960 --> 09:40.120] pull me to the ground and bump my butt. I don't get angry at that. That is the way it is. [09:40.120 --> 09:45.720] It's a parameter. I have to deal with it. I better take a parachute or a pillow. [09:47.480 --> 09:57.480] If I file an action in a court, either state or federal, and I file it as a pro say, [09:57.480 --> 10:04.520] I can expect the judge to rule against me out of hand at every turn. Just the way it is. [10:05.480 --> 10:11.400] So rather than get angry and feel betrayed and mistreated, okay, let's write that down as a [10:11.400 --> 10:20.840] parameter. So how do we handle things? Well, we stop acting from this unreasonable notion [10:20.840 --> 10:27.640] that the judges are somehow going to be just. Forget that. So how do you win if they're just, [10:27.640 --> 10:32.120] if they're not just? How do you win if they go to rule against you out of hand at every turn? [10:33.320 --> 10:39.000] What do you have working in your favor? We have two things working in your favor. [10:40.120 --> 10:47.400] Time and money. And ultimately money because time for these guys is money. [10:47.400 --> 10:56.040] So we developed a set of tools and techniques to take these guys on based on time and money. [10:57.400 --> 11:06.680] So we build a set of pleadings and procedures where from the beginning, [11:06.680 --> 11:10.120] we demonstrate to them, we're going to cost you a lot of time and money. [11:10.840 --> 11:13.800] You want to fight with me? Yeah, I know you're going to win in the end. [11:13.800 --> 11:19.480] Oh, seven, eight, ten years down the road. In the meantime, [11:21.160 --> 11:28.680] I'm going to cost you a lot of money. So tell you what, I'm going to ask the judge to order [11:28.680 --> 11:37.960] mediation. And then I'll hire a lawyer for the singular purpose of negotiating a mediated settlement. [11:37.960 --> 11:45.560] That's how we win. The end of the day, justice in the right of things is a nice ideal. [11:46.680 --> 11:53.640] But when you're dealing with foreclosure and civil type cases, it's always about the money. [11:54.920 --> 11:57.160] So whether you win or not, that's not so important. [11:58.680 --> 12:02.040] Whether you get the money, that's what's important because it's all about the money. [12:02.040 --> 12:10.040] Right. So I'm building a procedure where if you get pushed into foreclosure because [12:10.040 --> 12:17.560] the governor ordered you to shelter in place and shut down all non-essential businesses, [12:18.680 --> 12:24.280] even if you're right to participate in gainful employment, [12:24.280 --> 12:33.400] he unites you in your right to peaceably assemble. And that's what prevented you [12:33.400 --> 12:40.840] from participating in gainful employment. And that is unconstitutional. [12:42.520 --> 12:51.960] That creates a constitutional tort for which the official who signed the document, [12:51.960 --> 12:59.320] who signed the order, is liable. And the official who signed that order had no [13:01.080 --> 13:09.160] statutory authority to do that because any statute that would purport to give an official [13:09.160 --> 13:20.600] authority to do such a thing is void on its face as any law that has the effect of violating [13:20.600 --> 13:29.880] constitutional right is void on its face. And the governor, being a lawyer, ex-attorney general, [13:29.880 --> 13:37.800] he cannot pretend he doesn't know that. Or he can pretend it. But under law, [13:38.680 --> 13:47.720] he knows it whether he did or not. And he is liable to you because he acted outside the scope of [13:47.720 --> 13:55.560] his authority. And if you act out, if you're a public official who acts outside the scope of [13:55.560 --> 14:03.080] your authority, you have no immunity for that. So we file an action against the governor. And we [14:03.080 --> 14:08.360] charge the governor, we say to the governor, I bought this property in good faith. I paid $350,000 [14:08.920 --> 14:16.600] for this property. Now because of your tort against me, I stand to lose this property. [14:16.600 --> 14:21.880] So not only do I have this property, I have an investment in this property. I have my life [14:21.880 --> 14:29.880] invested in this property. And you acted outside the limits of law. So I will sue you for three [14:29.880 --> 14:38.280] times the value of the property. Let's dance. And then you see what a jury thinks of your violating [14:38.280 --> 14:48.680] law, especially when it turns out that the COVID pandemic was no pandemic at all. Consider this. [14:49.880 --> 15:03.000] Do you know how many people were infected with tuberculosis last year? 33 million worldwide. [15:03.000 --> 15:18.200] How many people died of tuberculosis last year? 1.5 million people died of tuberculosis last year. [15:19.880 --> 15:24.600] You're telling me COVID is a pandemic. Are you kidding me? [15:24.600 --> 15:34.760] COVID is a blip compared to tuberculosis and malaria, [15:36.600 --> 15:45.800] which the governor chose to shut down by state because of a variation on the common code. [15:46.920 --> 15:54.280] Well, let's see what a jury thinks about that. And as this moves along, we're already [15:54.280 --> 16:01.560] seeing what we've been alleging was the case that it's no more than a code. And when I come back, [16:01.560 --> 16:10.120] I'll talk about something that's obvious, cure. And I'm annoyed at myself that I didn't see it. [16:10.920 --> 16:17.880] And when I explain this to you, I think you will be annoyed as well, that it never was a pandemic, [16:17.880 --> 16:26.280] that this was easy to fix. We were just very, the media was very carefully crafted [16:27.720 --> 16:41.160] to avoid the obvious cure to COVID. Randy Kelton, I'm getting some odd beeping. Oh, well, [16:41.880 --> 16:45.400] we're about to go to our sponsors. We'll be right back. We've got to come people on the [16:45.400 --> 16:49.800] call boards. I got one more thing I want to address when I come back. And then we'll go to [16:49.800 --> 16:54.440] our callers. Randy Kelton, Red Fountain, we'll be right back. [17:03.800 --> 17:09.160] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by [17:09.160 --> 17:15.960] Central Texas Gun Works. Go to logosradionetwork.com and enter to win. Any amount is appreciated. [17:15.960 --> 17:21.160] Everything helps to keep us on the air. From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for [17:21.160 --> 17:28.680] grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR 15. More prizes and sponsors to be announced. Every $25 donation [17:28.680 --> 17:35.560] is a chance to win. When you purchase Randy Kelton's ebook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [17:35.560 --> 17:40.920] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. If you've enjoyed the shows on [17:40.920 --> 17:46.200] Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing you the best quality [17:46.200 --> 17:52.200] programming on talk radio today. We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. And remember, [17:52.200 --> 17:59.320] every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to logosradionetwork.com for details and donate today. [17:59.320 --> 18:05.560] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [18:05.560 --> 18:11.800] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [18:11.800 --> 18:17.560] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may [18:17.560 --> 18:23.480] see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's light and [18:23.480 --> 18:29.400] be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible [18:29.400 --> 18:35.560] studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. Our verse by [18:35.560 --> 18:41.080] verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. [18:41.080 --> 18:46.360] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [18:46.360 --> 18:53.160] Christian character development. So mark your calendar and join us live on logosradionetwork.com [18:53.160 --> 18:59.320] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the [18:59.320 --> 19:08.600] scriptures. You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. Logosradionetwork.com [19:08.600 --> 19:10.600] Oh [19:23.000 --> 19:31.960] Look what we got. We asked the Christian. No one knew what they had to answer. [19:31.960 --> 19:35.960] Oh [19:41.720 --> 19:50.280] Okay, we are back. Randy Kalkin, Brett Foutons, root of our radio on this the 20th day of August 2020 [19:51.080 --> 19:56.440] and there's one thing I wanted to address that I was watching. Someone sent me a video of a [19:56.440 --> 20:07.000] doctor out of West Texas who was treating covoid with a steroid nebulizer [20:09.080 --> 20:16.360] and when I looked at what he was doing I kind of smacked myself brain dead. [20:16.360 --> 20:26.280] How did we get duped into not seeing this stretch when people get covoid? What happens? [20:28.440 --> 20:32.920] When they get it? How do we even know if they have it? Okay, well, they don't come up with a test [20:32.920 --> 20:41.000] first. Yeah, well, no, if they have symptoms. Oh symptoms or asymptomatic. Well, no, no, I'm talking [20:41.000 --> 20:47.400] about the asymptomatic. You don't have it. You've got the virus but you don't have the disease. [20:48.280 --> 20:58.200] You have the disease when you have the symptoms but the symptoms are that the lungs inflame. Now [20:58.200 --> 21:04.600] that happens in a cold but a cold generally is localized to one portion of the lung so it doesn't [21:04.600 --> 21:11.080] involve the whole lung all at once. Covoid was unique in that it involved the whole lung all at [21:11.080 --> 21:18.760] once. I have a question for you, Brett. What if you happen to have hypersensitivity to peanuts [21:20.200 --> 21:26.760] and you eat something that has peanuts in it and it causes anaphylactic shock? [21:26.760 --> 21:36.920] What is anaphylactic shock? The swelling of the airways. Ta-da! Static rocket science. [21:38.440 --> 21:45.080] It is a histamine response. Has anybody ever tried taking an antihistamine? [21:47.400 --> 21:51.960] This is not... It might be too cheap. We need to have somebody spend seven years and [21:51.960 --> 22:00.040] bazillions of dollars on a vaccine. What this guy did was he did this for people who were [22:00.040 --> 22:07.480] in horrible distress. He said he didn't use the spray nebulizers for people who are [22:07.480 --> 22:15.640] allergies. He said because 98% of the medicine doesn't get to where it needs to be but with [22:15.640 --> 22:26.440] a nebulizer it does. He's just treating them for an allergy and that's exactly what the effects [22:26.440 --> 22:34.680] of Covoid is. It's anaphylactic shock. Okay, it doesn't affect, you know, anaphylactic. You [22:34.680 --> 22:41.480] sometimes get the throat and the sinus passages clogging up. Here it only seemed to affect the [22:41.480 --> 22:50.520] lungs but just taken head of histamine. This is a histamine response. The symptoms that you have [22:50.520 --> 22:59.960] for a cold or the flu are not caused by the bacteria or virus. The symptoms are caused by [23:01.000 --> 23:07.080] the histamine cells your own body produces to fight off the cold or virus. It is your body's [23:07.080 --> 23:15.000] defensive network trying to fight this infection off that causes the symptoms. Now this is not new [23:15.000 --> 23:25.960] science. So where are our doctors? We have something that causes a massive histamine response [23:25.960 --> 23:38.280] and instead of just hitting the guy with an epipen or an epipen, they put him on a, what do you [23:38.280 --> 23:47.160] call it, a respirator and blow up their lungs and kill them. Just give him an antihistamine pill [23:47.160 --> 23:56.040] for crying out loud. Give him a shot of steroids and the doctor didn't like steroids because they [23:56.760 --> 24:07.400] also suppress the immune system. He was talking about Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan. Hong Kong [24:07.400 --> 24:19.320] lost some 12 people to COVID. Singapore lost 8. Japan lost 17. What's that? Why isn't that big time [24:19.320 --> 24:25.880] in the news? And the reason they only lost those few is because they're treating them with a nebulizer. [24:28.200 --> 24:36.200] They're treating them for an allergic response. I heard another doctor saying a similar treatment [24:36.200 --> 24:43.560] that he was doing and he was having amazing results. Why didn't we all realize that? [24:44.840 --> 24:50.680] You and I, we had enough, you know, just living in this world. We have enough knowledge to recognize [24:50.680 --> 24:57.240] that. Well, I'll tell you what I did when I started hearing about the kinds of symptoms. [24:57.240 --> 25:05.400] I went and bought a nebulizer. That's regular asthma nebulizer and I put colloidal silver [25:06.040 --> 25:10.520] in there and tried it out to make sure it would work, right? Sure enough, that's what I would do [25:10.520 --> 25:16.840] if I or anybody I know came up with symptoms like that. I put them on my nebulizer. Well, [25:16.840 --> 25:25.320] go to the grocery, go to the pharmacy and pick you up an antihistamine, break the pill open, [25:25.320 --> 25:36.680] drop it into the nebulizer. It's specifically reduces the histamine response for the purpose [25:36.680 --> 25:42.520] of reducing inflammation. I don't know. I'm not sure I would do that for myself. [25:44.040 --> 25:49.720] Might work well for most people. I can't take Benadryl or some of these D, [25:49.720 --> 25:55.640] what is it, Claritin D, some of the ones that have the antihistamine in there. I can't take [25:55.640 --> 26:01.800] those. They dry out my lungs. So I don't know if it's something just weird about me, but maybe [26:01.800 --> 26:08.600] there's some other people like me. My wife has the same problem. A lot of people, I tend to be, [26:09.400 --> 26:17.320] I respond to milk and dairy products with a mucus response by body causing my body to produce [26:17.320 --> 26:29.160] mucus. So drying out my lungs in nasal capacity is not easy. Spearmint tea. Spearmint tea has the [26:29.160 --> 26:36.280] exact same effect on me that antihistamine does. Oh, great. So you could definitely put [26:36.280 --> 26:43.640] spearmint tea in there. Yeah. I drink spearmint tea along with peppermint. I got a concoction of [26:43.640 --> 26:48.920] tea that I drink, but I have to be careful of that spearmint. Spearmint has a nice taste, [26:48.920 --> 26:56.440] but if I get in too much of it, I'll get a sinus, a dry sinus headache. So that would be one. But [26:57.560 --> 27:02.600] Randy, the big problem with all of these solutions, you're not addressing the biggest [27:02.600 --> 27:08.200] elephant in the room here, which is how, if we take these kinds of solutions, how in the world [27:08.200 --> 27:17.080] are all these talking heads going to make billions of dollars? How can that happen? [27:17.720 --> 27:24.520] Shame on me. Those billions of dollars. Shame on me. Bad Randy. I didn't even take that into [27:24.520 --> 27:34.520] consideration. I stand corrected. I was frustrated when this became clear. This is just [27:34.520 --> 27:40.840] inflammation and we know all about inflammation. Okay. Maybe we can't kill the virus, [27:42.600 --> 27:50.680] but we can make the virus ineffective. And we've been doing that forever because the cold changes [27:50.680 --> 27:57.080] every year and people catch the cold and they take antihistamines and take cold medicine and they [27:57.080 --> 28:07.240] don't die from it. So anyway, that was a side point I wanted to address for anybody out here [28:07.240 --> 28:12.200] who's really worried about that. Just get you some antihistamines and take them around with you. [28:12.200 --> 28:19.400] If you start feeling a congestion in your lung, pop one of those quickly and shut it down. And [28:19.400 --> 28:28.760] if that would truly fix this, how do we all feel now about wearing masks, masks in public and [28:29.320 --> 28:35.800] keeping six foot away from everyone and not letting our kids go to school? This is insane. [28:39.720 --> 28:46.760] Anyway, I'm really getting kind of tired talking about COVID. We got a couple callers, [28:46.760 --> 28:50.920] Brad. Do you have something you want to address? You haven't been on long and quite a while, [28:50.920 --> 28:56.280] have you been beating up the locals? I've been beating up other people's locals. [28:57.960 --> 29:03.720] I had people that are looking for some help and trying to find out how to navigate some things [29:03.720 --> 29:09.960] and I've been offering them some help. No, with my locals, they're not really, [29:09.960 --> 29:13.640] they're really quiet right now. They're not chasing me. They're not doing anything. [29:13.640 --> 29:20.120] It's gone all the way up to the Supreme Court and it's just sitting there. I think maybe they [29:20.120 --> 29:23.800] don't know what to do or it's sitting on the back burner. I'm not sure how that's [29:24.920 --> 29:31.960] what's going on with that. They just may want to sit and let it die and let your time to sue them [29:31.960 --> 29:41.880] run out. It's possible. Okay, we're about to go to our sponsors again. So when we come back, [29:41.880 --> 29:57.800] we'll go to our callers. This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. We'll be right back. [30:01.400 --> 30:05.400] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep [30:05.400 --> 30:10.360] it safe. But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing [30:10.360 --> 30:14.360] your secrets. I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:41.240 --> 30:48.760] Start over with Start Page. Data privacy is a big deal. So nearly every company has a policy [30:48.760 --> 30:54.200] explaining how they handle your personal information. But what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.200 --> 31:00.280] It's not an idle question. According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit [31:00.280 --> 31:05.400] their security was breached by hackers in the last year. That's one more reason you should trust [31:05.400 --> 31:11.880] your searches to StartPage.com. Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [31:11.880 --> 31:16.200] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. [31:16.200 --> 31:20.840] The cupboard would be bare. Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.480 --> 31:25.960] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:25.960 --> 31:36.520] I lost my son. My nephew. My uncle. My son. On September 11th, 2000, most people don't know [31:36.520 --> 31:42.040] that a third tower fell on September 11th. World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, [31:42.040 --> 31:46.760] was not hit by a plane. Although the official explanation is that fire brought down building [31:46.760 --> 31:51.640] 7, over 1,200 architects and engineers had looked into the evidence and believed there [31:51.640 --> 31:56.440] is more to the story. Bring justice to my son. My uncle. My nephew. My son. Go to [31:56.440 --> 32:00.680] BuildingWhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:02.440 --> 32:06.440] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, [32:06.440 --> 32:10.200] we live in a us against them society. If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [32:10.200 --> 32:14.360] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [32:14.360 --> 32:18.360] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [32:18.360 --> 32:22.840] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [32:22.840 --> 32:27.000] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy [32:27.000 --> 32:30.600] Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive [32:30.600 --> 32:34.440] teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold [32:34.440 --> 32:38.280] courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to [32:38.280 --> 32:42.840] ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [32:42.840 --> 32:46.920] book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original [32:46.920 --> 32:51.320] 2009 seminar. Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how [32:51.320 --> 32:55.320] to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your [32:55.320 --> 32:58.920] copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:02.760 --> 33:06.920] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [33:06.920 --> 33:24.040] Yes, Mr. Office, I was taking the lighter. Won't you follow the law of the land? I don't [33:24.040 --> 33:40.680] understand. Your plan is to put a gun on service. That means I'll abuse. I'll be sorry. [33:54.040 --> 34:05.560] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio on this Thursday, the 20th [34:05.560 --> 34:19.240] day of August 2020. So 2020, 2020. Too bad we don't have a 20th month. Anyway, I kind of distracted [34:19.240 --> 34:27.400] myself. When we came in, I was telling you about I'm going to put together the foreclosure issue. [34:27.400 --> 34:34.120] I'm going to bring that back on board. And in conjunction with the foreclosure issue, [34:35.000 --> 34:45.800] I'm in the process of building a process we can use to go after the governors for these [34:45.800 --> 34:53.240] shelter-in-place orders. I've got about 100 lawsuits from around the country that people [34:53.240 --> 34:59.240] have filed against governors and local officials on this subject. So that'll give me a lot of [35:00.920 --> 35:11.000] law and case law to work from and a plan to build an online tool. First, I'm going to build one [35:11.000 --> 35:19.640] for foreclosure that will take into account this issue because if you're in this country and you [35:19.640 --> 35:29.480] work for a living, this necessarily impacted you greatly. And for those of you who have been on [35:29.480 --> 35:37.800] unemployment and unemployment, they added this extra $600 to keep you happy and pacified [35:37.800 --> 35:45.560] while they're trying to strip all your rights from you. I'll give you a little interesting [35:45.560 --> 35:56.440] information. You may not feel like you were so so greatly harmed by this shelter-in-place order [35:57.000 --> 36:03.720] because you got a pretty good deal on a workman's compensation. Well, a workman's [36:03.720 --> 36:12.120] compensation, that's insurance. You paid for it. Now, it doesn't seem like you paid for it [36:12.120 --> 36:20.280] because actually your employer is the one who wrote the check for it. But had your employer not [36:20.920 --> 36:26.840] written the check for it, your employer would have been able to use more money to compete [36:26.840 --> 36:37.560] in the business for better employees. So that money the employer was spending for [36:39.000 --> 36:45.720] workman's compensation was part of the cost of you as an employee. If he wasn't spending it there, [36:45.720 --> 36:53.160] he could give more of it to you. That's insurance. And if you collect on an insurance policy, [36:53.160 --> 36:59.560] that has nothing to do with any other harm. I once had a stereo system stole from me that [37:00.280 --> 37:06.360] when I bought it, I got a little insurance program with it. It was only about ten bucks. [37:06.360 --> 37:13.480] So I said, yeah, go ahead with the insurance on it. And then I had it in a garage and it got [37:13.480 --> 37:18.680] stolen out of the garage. So I went to call the police and they come out and do their little [37:18.680 --> 37:24.840] song and dance. And they actually caught the guy. The insurance company paid me for the stereo. [37:25.960 --> 37:31.720] And then the police caught the guy and got the stereo back. And they called me to come and get [37:31.720 --> 37:37.400] it. And I said, wait a minute, I got paid by the insurance company. They said, that don't make [37:37.400 --> 37:41.960] any difference. So I called the insurance company and told them that they got my stereo and you [37:41.960 --> 37:47.960] guys already paid me for it. I said, no, we didn't. I said, you had an insurance policy with us and [37:47.960 --> 37:54.520] we paid off the insurance. We don't want that stereo. That's your stereo. You see, the insurance [37:54.520 --> 38:03.000] company, they played poker with me. They bet that my stereo would not get stolen. I bet that it [38:03.000 --> 38:11.480] would get stolen. They lost the bet. So what you got for workman's compensation, that was insurance. [38:11.480 --> 38:20.760] Workman's compensation insurance lost the bet. So they paid the debt. That does not in any way [38:20.760 --> 38:29.720] compensate you for the harm caused by the governor. You were still harmed. Had you not had [38:29.720 --> 38:38.920] workman's comp, you had really been screwed. So you have standing to sue the governor [38:38.920 --> 38:48.760] for what he cost you or the county commissioner's court judge who issued an order that adversely [38:48.760 --> 38:55.160] affected you. So I will be building a tool for that. Keep an eye open for it. I'll let you know [38:55.160 --> 39:01.080] when I get it up and working. And I'd like some of you folks to look at it and pull it down and [39:01.080 --> 39:06.040] try it out. We're going to try out a procedure where we use an administrative procedure first, [39:06.040 --> 39:15.640] notice an opportunity. I've been harmed by this much. Make me hold or be sued. And we run the [39:15.640 --> 39:21.720] commercial process to perfect the claim. And then when the governor doesn't send us our money, [39:21.720 --> 39:26.280] then we file suit against them. And then we go to the court and show the court how we use the [39:26.280 --> 39:32.120] administrative process to try to settle this issue before it got here. And then we hammer the [39:32.120 --> 39:40.040] lawyers for the governor and see how much money we can cost them and then ask the court to order [39:40.040 --> 39:46.520] mediation. Play let's make a deal. Yeah, I sued you for three times the value of my property. [39:46.520 --> 39:52.840] I tell you what, cut my suit by two thirds, write me a check, and I'll drop my suit against you. [39:53.960 --> 40:00.920] That's kind of the idea we're going to go at this from. Okay, got three callers on. I'm going to go [40:00.920 --> 40:06.680] ahead and go to our callers unless you have something, Brett. No, I'm ready for some callers. [40:06.680 --> 40:13.240] Okay, we're going to JC in Texas. Hello, JC. Hello, Randy, Brett. Good evening. [40:14.200 --> 40:22.120] Hello there. What do you have for us today? Well, I filed a bunch of papers. I've got traffic [40:22.120 --> 40:27.800] court to go to and I wanted to go to trial because I've been playing with them for a while here. [40:27.800 --> 40:35.000] But I filed out all your forms on your website, filed them with the clerk in triplicate and got [40:35.000 --> 40:40.840] my copies and state stamped and all that. And so now I go to pretrial and it's about not having [40:40.840 --> 40:47.880] registration on my F-250. Oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. What did the cop stop you for? [40:48.920 --> 40:52.360] He stopped me because he said something flew out of the bed of my truck. [40:52.360 --> 41:02.040] Oh, darn it. I was hoping he stopped you for not displaying registration. [41:03.080 --> 41:07.000] Right, right. I've heard that before. Okay. Yeah, I've been listening to your show for some time, [41:07.000 --> 41:10.840] but yeah, he did. And then he says, well, I'm not going to write you a ticket for that, [41:10.840 --> 41:16.680] but I'm going to write you a ticket for your tax being outdated. And he also wrote me one for no [41:16.680 --> 41:21.960] insurance in which I have insurance, but that's an easy one. But my question is, I've filed all [41:21.960 --> 41:27.080] those documents. They're going to ask me questions. I've never been through this procedure yet, [41:27.080 --> 41:31.080] even though I've been listening to your show for a while. What should I expect and what should I [41:31.080 --> 41:38.040] say or not say? Well, when you go, have you made your first appearance at the court? [41:39.560 --> 41:47.000] No, sir, just to the clerk. Okay. Okay. Oh, that's an appearance. Did the clerk ask you for a plea? [41:47.000 --> 41:55.880] She did. And I said, I do not plea. And she said, well, everybody please. And then the bailiff [41:55.880 --> 41:59.560] said, well, everybody has to plea. And I said, well, are you giving me legal advice too? Because [41:59.560 --> 42:09.080] I'm not fleeing anything here. So what did they do? They just went forward and took my documents [42:09.080 --> 42:16.680] and filed them at the court. Okay, good. Then you don't have to file criminal charges against [42:16.680 --> 42:24.680] the clerk. She dodged that bullet. Now they're going to order you to come to court. [42:26.840 --> 42:35.960] And what it's going to be is, let's make a deal. What town? Tell me you're in Southlake. [42:37.320 --> 42:42.920] No, I'm in Grayson County, Texas, north of Dallas. Oh, okay. I know where Grayson County is. [42:42.920 --> 42:49.640] Yeah. If it was Southlake, I went with a friend of mine who has a trucking company [42:49.640 --> 42:56.200] or an excavating company. And he's finally got them to leave him alone because he's not in commerce. [42:56.200 --> 43:00.840] But they ticketed one of his drivers and I went there with the driver. And they're calling people [43:00.840 --> 43:05.560] in to meet with the prosecutor. And they call this guy and he gets up to go in and I go with him. [43:06.280 --> 43:12.600] And the bailiff said, wait, wait, you can't go in there. I said, oh, so is the judge in there? [43:12.600 --> 43:16.760] I know the prosecutor is in there. Well, is the prosecutor going to convene a hearing? [43:17.960 --> 43:20.680] Well, no, he's just going to talk to him. Then I'm going to go with him. [43:21.640 --> 43:27.560] I said, oh, no, you can't go in there. I said, bailiff, don't tell me that. Go get your sergeant [43:27.560 --> 43:34.680] to tell me that. Oh, this was Southlake and they already knew who I was. So they got the sergeant [43:35.560 --> 43:40.600] and I asked the sergeant to arrest you to go get the judge and arrest him. [43:40.600 --> 43:46.520] And I wound up filing 58 felony charges against the prosecuting attorney. [43:46.520 --> 44:10.520] 26, 26 year old, her first day on the job. Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [44:16.520 --> 44:21.960] You don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [44:21.960 --> 44:27.160] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with [44:27.160 --> 44:31.880] ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, [44:31.880 --> 44:38.840] go to logosreguletwork.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything [44:38.840 --> 44:45.320] from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do you have to do [44:45.320 --> 44:51.800] anything different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow, giving [44:51.800 --> 44:57.720] without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. Thank you so much. We are [44:57.720 --> 45:05.240] welcome. Happy holidays, logos. Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without [45:05.240 --> 45:11.720] an attorney with jurisdictionary. The affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show [45:11.720 --> 45:19.240] you how in 24 hours, step by step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.240 --> 45:24.840] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step [45:24.840 --> 45:32.360] by step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years [45:32.360 --> 45:38.360] of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should [45:38.360 --> 45:44.040] understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive [45:44.040 --> 45:51.720] our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much [45:51.720 --> 46:11.080] more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.680 --> 46:32.760] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio on this the 20th day of August [46:32.760 --> 46:41.560] 2020 and Brett has a suggestion for you, JC. Go ahead, Brett. Yes, I do. Well, that's really great. [46:41.560 --> 46:47.480] I was thinking about the story you were just telling about 58 criminal complaints on the [46:47.480 --> 46:55.480] lady's first day of work. That can't have been a fun intro for her, but I was thinking about, [46:55.480 --> 47:01.240] JC, your situation there. You said that they accused you of not having insurance, but you had [47:01.240 --> 47:13.480] insurance and when you get that cop on the stand, you might ask him what happened when he attempted [47:13.480 --> 47:24.200] to verify your insurance. Take a look at the Texas Transportation Code in 601-053 subsection C, [47:25.400 --> 47:32.360] and it says a peace officer may not issue a citation for an offense under 601-191, [47:32.360 --> 47:38.680] which is driving around without proof of insurance. He can't issue that citation unless he attempts [47:38.680 --> 47:44.440] to verify through his verification system that financial responsibility has been established [47:44.440 --> 47:50.280] for the vehicle and he is unable to make that verification. So he can't just walk up to you [47:50.280 --> 47:56.440] and if you can't find your paper, then he writes you a ticket. He has to go look in his verification [47:56.440 --> 48:12.200] system first. JC, did you file a T-Cole complaint against this officer? Oh, we can probably hear [48:12.200 --> 48:19.960] you better if I unmute you. Okay, try that again. Go ahead, JC. No, I did not. He was a [48:19.960 --> 48:25.560] consummate professional the whole way, but now that I hear about this 601 and I know that he did run my [48:25.560 --> 48:29.560] information because he went back to his car and he came back and he didn't even tell me he was [48:29.560 --> 48:34.440] giving me a ticket for no insurance because I have insurance and he told me about the [48:34.440 --> 48:39.560] registration being expired. So anyway, yeah, I should keep closing. I still have time, right? [48:41.000 --> 48:46.840] Yeah, absolutely. In this case, if the guy was a consummate professional, [48:46.840 --> 48:57.000] he should get a letter of commendation from you to his boss and then a T-Cole complaint. [48:58.360 --> 49:02.920] And what the T-Cole complaint said is this guy was a consummate professional, [49:03.880 --> 49:06.680] but he was obviously poorly trained. [49:06.680 --> 49:17.800] That'll make him crazy because you're talking good about the policemen while you're hammering him [49:17.800 --> 49:24.760] big time. Got you, okay. But JC, have you ever been in the military? Yes, sir. [49:25.560 --> 49:30.920] Did you understand that part? Yes. These are the rules. This is how we do this. [49:30.920 --> 49:38.280] You know, in COIC, he would hammer me for violating a rule. Nothing personal here and [49:38.280 --> 49:45.160] clearly nothing personal. We have to touch all these bases and you didn't touch a base, [49:45.720 --> 49:52.840] so we have to address that. So next time you'll touch that base. Nothing personal. Same with [49:52.840 --> 50:00.440] this officer. If you've got a guy who's a real scoundrel, they expect to be hammered for being [50:00.440 --> 50:09.720] a real scoundrel. But the guy who attempts to do it all right and screws it up and you sting him, [50:11.000 --> 50:20.040] that's going to get everybody's attention. Okay. And especially a T-Cole complaint really gets [50:20.040 --> 50:28.360] their attention. Okay, go ahead guys. I interrupt it again. That's okay. What do I do when I go [50:28.360 --> 50:39.480] to court now? You give them opportunity to screw up everything. They will almost certainly [50:40.200 --> 50:47.880] just want to send you to talk to the prosecuting attorney. And Brett was with me at the Highland [50:47.880 --> 50:54.600] Park when I told him, oh, I don't talk to persecuting attorneys. Well, actually the prosecutor, [50:54.600 --> 51:00.600] they were calling people up. The judge was and the prosecutor. We were in line and one went to [51:00.600 --> 51:04.680] the judge, one went to the prosecutor. Well, I went to the prosecutor and he called me over and I said, [51:05.320 --> 51:12.280] oh, oh, uh, you don't want to talk to me. He said, I don't want to talk to you. No, no, no, [51:12.280 --> 51:18.840] you do not want to talk to me. Besides, I don't talk to persecuting attorneys. And he was good. [51:18.840 --> 51:22.680] He said, oh, okay, we'll just get, step back there in line and the judge will take you next. [51:22.680 --> 51:33.560] That's what you tell them. The under 28.01 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. It lists those things [51:33.560 --> 51:42.040] for which you can be summoned to court. To talk to a prosecuting attorney is not one of them. [51:43.960 --> 51:49.960] So if you were summoned to court and you were summoned by way of signing the citation, [51:49.960 --> 51:55.240] and in this case, you made your appearance. So they'll send you a notice to appear before [51:55.240 --> 52:00.920] this prosecutor. And they summoned you to appear before a prosecuting attorney. [52:02.520 --> 52:08.200] Well, you look at what's going on there. Is there a judge in the building? [52:09.960 --> 52:15.800] Did the judge start things out by convening a hearing? [52:15.800 --> 52:22.840] Generally, they don't bother with any of that. Generally, the prosecutor will call you up. [52:23.560 --> 52:28.120] In Southlake, the prosecutor's in a separate room, and they sent you into that room. So they're, [52:28.120 --> 52:33.800] effectively, the prosecutor calls you up. Well, it was the prosecutor who convened the hearing. [52:34.840 --> 52:41.240] Right. But he's not a judicial officer. So he's improving judicial order? [52:41.240 --> 52:48.360] Yeah, he has no power to convene that hearing. Only the judge has power to do that. That's [52:48.360 --> 52:54.200] impersonating a public official. And he's going to say, I am a public official. Yeah, you are. [52:54.200 --> 53:02.440] Dog catcher's a public official. Big deal. You impersonated an official. That's not you. [53:03.560 --> 53:06.920] You're a public official, but you're not that public official. [53:06.920 --> 53:12.520] And that, Brett, is that a class A misdemeanor or a felony? [53:13.880 --> 53:17.240] I'm not sure. One of these is a felony. I have to go back and look. I don't recall. [53:17.240 --> 53:23.880] Yeah, but it's close to a felony if it's not. I think it's a felony. That's why I got 58 felonies [53:23.880 --> 53:31.880] against this prosecutor. And I charged her with impersonating a judge. So if there's no judge [53:31.880 --> 53:39.000] there, if there is no judge there, you also file, you get the docket sheet for everybody who's been [53:39.000 --> 53:47.240] ordered to appear. And you, that day, and you file against both the prosecutor and the judge [53:48.200 --> 53:55.320] for impersonating a public official. So I looked at that in penal code, it's 37.11. [53:55.320 --> 54:01.160] And it is a felony of a third degree. Yeah. Right. [54:03.400 --> 54:13.800] And however many people they have called in, and you think the only times did you ring that bell [54:13.800 --> 54:25.960] today? The only thing they can summon you to court for is for an arraignment hearing under 2801. The [54:25.960 --> 54:36.200] first thing is an arraignment under 2601. I'm sorry, 2602 defines an arraignment. An arraignment [54:36.200 --> 54:43.320] is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and taking a plea. [54:45.640 --> 54:57.960] Well, 2601 instead of 02 says an arraignment may be had in the matter of a felony or a [54:57.960 --> 55:08.360] misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. Now, I read that and thought, what in the heck is going on? [55:10.200 --> 55:23.160] Why on earth would the legislature in the very first statute under that chapter restrict arraignments [55:23.160 --> 55:29.640] to a felony or a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment? It intentionally excludes [55:29.640 --> 55:39.400] Class C misdemeanor. I have no idea why they would do that. But they did do that. [55:41.320 --> 55:48.920] So they can't call you in for an arraignment. The only other things, there's 10 other things [55:48.920 --> 55:54.920] they can call you in for. And all of them have to do with motions or pleadings that have been [55:54.920 --> 56:04.040] filed with the court. They can't call you in to talk to a prosecutor. That's simulating a legal [56:04.040 --> 56:13.880] process. I don't think that one's a felony. But there's a number of them there. If you look at it, [56:13.880 --> 56:20.520] look at the law, there's a number of problems there. Okay, they call you in. If they don't [56:20.520 --> 56:25.560] send you to meet with a prosecutor, if there actually is a judge there, and he convenes a hearing, [56:27.240 --> 56:35.000] and what they do sometimes is they'll actually convene a hearing, and then the judge will [56:35.000 --> 56:42.120] give you opportunity to talk to the prosecutor if you want to. And you tell them, oh, no, [56:42.120 --> 56:49.480] no, I don't talk to persecuting attorneys. And so then what they will try to do is have an arraignment. [56:51.000 --> 56:58.920] If the guy's already been hammered for not being there and just having a prosecutor there, [56:58.920 --> 57:03.000] then he'll be there and he'll have the convene hearing. And if you don't want to talk to a [57:03.000 --> 57:09.400] prosecutor, then you have an arraignment. You say, you know, I'm here to hear motions that I have [57:09.400 --> 57:14.520] before the court. That's the only thing you can call me into court for. So let's hear these motions. [57:15.640 --> 57:22.440] All of the documents that are produced on the traffic website are for the specific purpose [57:22.440 --> 57:31.480] of getting the judge to ignore them. Let me say, okay, oh, and when they start the hearing, [57:31.480 --> 57:39.400] the first thing you do is say, objection, I am here at arms link to the court. [57:41.000 --> 57:44.920] I have a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction before the court. [57:47.000 --> 57:53.640] This is between you and the judge. And if the prosecutor pops off, you object to the prosecutors [57:54.360 --> 58:00.040] opening his mouth because this is not between you and the prosecutor. This is between you and the [58:00.040 --> 58:08.120] judge. The prosecutor does not have to prove jurisdiction. The judge has to prove jurisdiction. [58:09.320 --> 58:14.680] And I've seen sometimes where the judge tries to lean over to the prosecutor and look to the [58:14.680 --> 58:19.160] prosecutor as if the prosecutor is the one who's going to provide that information. What would [58:19.160 --> 58:25.880] you do in that kind of situation? Objection. Your Honor, this is between me and you. The [58:25.880 --> 58:33.720] prosecutor has no standing yet. Unless the prosecutor is your attorney, in which case, [58:33.720 --> 58:41.560] he's disqualified from being the prosecutor. Let's dance, guys. Hang on. Going to our sponsors. [58:42.200 --> 58:46.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, root of our radio. We'll be right back. [58:46.680 --> 58:55.880] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.880 --> 59:01.880] because they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [59:01.880 --> 59:06.040] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:07.000 --> 59:13.480] Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [59:13.480 --> 59:19.560] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. Difficult and profound [59:19.560 --> 59:24.760] passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the [59:24.760 --> 59:30.760] Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. Bibles for America would like to give you a free [59:30.760 --> 59:36.840] recovery version simply for the asking. This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours [59:36.840 --> 59:47.800] just by calling us toll-free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:47.800 --> 59:59.000] That's freestudybible.com. You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:59.000 --> 01:00:05.720] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:29.160 --> 01:00:41.480] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:45.960 --> 01:00:52.440] In history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [01:00:52.440 --> 01:00:57.400] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [01:00:57.400 --> 01:01:00.280] killing 10 and entering 40 today in history. [01:01:04.520 --> 01:01:09.320] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp [01:01:09.320 --> 01:01:13.720] and attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, [01:01:13.720 --> 01:01:17.720] Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing [01:01:17.720 --> 01:01:22.280] to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:01:22.280 --> 01:01:27.160] equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, [01:01:27.160 --> 01:01:31.160] announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery [01:01:31.160 --> 01:01:35.960] of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the [01:01:35.960 --> 01:01:40.840] Attorney General stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana [01:01:40.840 --> 01:01:45.720] has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:01:45.720 --> 01:01:52.360] of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, [01:01:52.360 --> 01:01:57.320] Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:01:57.320 --> 01:02:02.760] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue [01:02:02.760 --> 01:02:07.560] was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, [01:02:07.560 --> 01:02:11.960] who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based [01:02:11.960 --> 01:02:16.520] on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test [01:02:16.520 --> 01:02:25.800] matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch [01:02:25.800 --> 01:02:31.640] American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the [01:02:31.640 --> 01:02:37.640] second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 [01:02:37.640 --> 01:02:42.200] in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous [01:02:42.200 --> 01:02:48.840] fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey [01:02:48.840 --> 01:03:08.840] who may be drawn into the clove. This is Brook Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:18.840 --> 01:03:48.600] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelce and Brett Fountain, the rules of our [01:03:48.600 --> 01:03:55.640] radio, and we're talking to JC in Texas. JC, I kind of, Brett and I kind of cut you off a bit. [01:03:56.520 --> 01:04:01.480] You apparently have been paying attention and you pretty well kind of know what you're doing. [01:04:02.440 --> 01:04:08.760] Tell me, what is your plan on what you want to do with this traffic ticket? [01:04:10.120 --> 01:04:16.600] Well, I mean, you know, I'm tired of them coming after people and stealing money from us for things [01:04:16.600 --> 01:04:22.040] like a registration on my vehicle. It's my vehicle, not the state of Texas, but I know not this state [01:04:22.040 --> 01:04:27.880] any claims when I'm in court like such is that, but you know, they just beat people up. They get [01:04:27.880 --> 01:04:32.600] and people get in the line and pay their fines and your insurance goes up and all these different [01:04:32.600 --> 01:04:38.440] things. So I've got all these documents filed and when they violate my due process, I want to go [01:04:38.440 --> 01:04:46.440] after them somehow. Okay, that's the point of these documents is to get them to ignore them. [01:04:47.960 --> 01:04:57.640] Right. Because we have a Packer V, do you remember what that one is, Brett, that says [01:04:57.640 --> 01:05:04.360] that the court has a Walker, Walker, Packer V Walker. There's a Walker V Packer. [01:05:04.360 --> 01:05:10.840] Yeah, Walker V Packer, okay. Walker V Packer says the court has no discretion [01:05:11.720 --> 01:05:19.720] in properly applying the law to the facts of failure to do so is an abuse of discretion. [01:05:21.560 --> 01:05:28.920] Now, period, an abuse of discretion that has the effect of denying a citizen in a [01:05:28.920 --> 01:05:34.680] full and free access to or enjoyment of a right is an act of official oppression. [01:05:35.880 --> 01:05:43.480] It's a class A misdemeanor. So if you filed all these motions, so then we say, did the judge rule [01:05:43.480 --> 01:05:52.840] on this issue in this motion? If he failed to rule on that issue, then he has denied you in your [01:05:52.840 --> 01:05:59.880] right to petition the court for redress of grievance. Boom, criminal complaint. Did he rule on this [01:05:59.880 --> 01:06:08.200] issue in this motion? No, man, another criminal complaint. So you file all these documents, [01:06:08.200 --> 01:06:15.800] they blow them off, and then you come back with criminal charges, bar grievances, judicial [01:06:15.800 --> 01:06:25.320] conduct complaints, a bigger stack the next time. So look forward to you appearing before the court. [01:06:27.400 --> 01:06:32.360] It should get interesting. What if they ask, I mean, no, they're going to ask me, [01:06:32.360 --> 01:06:37.880] how do I plead this supposed arraignment or a pretrial or whatever they're going to call it? [01:06:37.880 --> 01:06:47.080] But if the court, if the judge is there and he convenes a hearing, then when they ask you how [01:06:47.080 --> 01:06:54.520] you plead, you say objection. I'm here at arms link to the court. I have a challenge to subject [01:06:54.520 --> 01:07:03.640] meta jurisdiction before the court. Before the court can get across the threshold, they must [01:07:03.640 --> 01:07:13.800] address subject meta jurisdiction. Judge, who the heck are you? And what authority do you have [01:07:13.800 --> 01:07:21.000] to stand in front of me and call me to answer? That's the first thing. And then if they, [01:07:21.720 --> 01:07:29.240] if he looks at the subject meta jurisdiction challenge and denies it, which they normally [01:07:29.240 --> 01:07:37.720] just denied out of hand, then you go ahead and plead not guilty and demand that the court hear [01:07:37.720 --> 01:07:43.560] every one of the motions that you have before the court. If the prosecutor objects to it too bad, [01:07:44.680 --> 01:07:51.480] these were timely filed. If the prosecutor did not prepare himself before trial and asked for [01:07:51.480 --> 01:07:59.400] sanctions against the prosecutor for wasting my time. And then if, then if, then if the court [01:08:00.600 --> 01:08:06.040] wants to delay the hearing to give the prosecutor time to read your pleadings, [01:08:06.040 --> 01:08:10.520] then you're going to notice the court that I will be billing you for my time. [01:08:12.120 --> 01:08:18.200] Because this is a due process violation. You did not ask me whether or not this was a good [01:08:18.200 --> 01:08:24.920] time for me to come to your court. You ordered me to be in your court on this day at this time. [01:08:24.920 --> 01:08:31.720] And because of that, you have a duty to be prepared. If you folks haven't done your job, [01:08:31.720 --> 01:08:37.240] your problem, not my problem, I expect to be paid for it. And then we start an administrative [01:08:37.240 --> 01:08:44.360] process against them to collect that. And then you put a claim against the city or the county, [01:08:44.360 --> 01:08:53.880] whichever it is, and that screws up their bond rating. When you have an unpaid bill. [01:08:57.560 --> 01:09:03.800] So, so it's good. And that's why I ask what you wanted to do. This is not, you're not so [01:09:03.800 --> 01:09:09.480] concerned about the ticket itself. You wouldn't bring them to task. And there's nothing more [01:09:09.480 --> 01:09:14.280] noble than that. I have the means and the wherewithal to go follow through with this. So I'm going to do it. [01:09:16.440 --> 01:09:22.920] And that's what we need. We have one guy in each county doing this. You're going to have every [01:09:24.280 --> 01:09:32.760] magistrate, every judge and municipal judge and JP in the county worried that they're going to [01:09:32.760 --> 01:09:41.560] wind up with you in their court. Right. That is my goal. I'd love to be on the do not detain list [01:09:41.560 --> 01:09:50.200] eventually, but yeah, that's the best we can do. You know, I'm usually driving to my farm to feed [01:09:50.200 --> 01:09:54.600] my cows. I'm not robbing any banks and not hurting anybody. I'm not a troublemaker. So don't mean [01:09:54.600 --> 01:10:04.120] to pull me over. The last time I got pulled over doing farm work, I was pulling a 32 foot goose [01:10:04.120 --> 01:10:12.040] neck with my avalanche. It's 70 in the 60. And the plates were two years old on the trailer. [01:10:13.000 --> 01:10:18.200] And the sheriff's deputy come back and told me, well, you need to slow down and get that [01:10:18.200 --> 01:10:24.280] registration taken care of. And I said, Oh, thanks. That was nice. The next day I went to the [01:10:24.280 --> 01:10:32.440] convenience store across the street from me. And Billy Joe, Joe Bob Cruz, he always listens to the [01:10:35.000 --> 01:10:39.960] the police standard. And he said, what'd you do that sheriff's deputy yesterday? So I didn't do [01:10:39.960 --> 01:10:45.240] anything to him. Why? He said, well, he called in your name. And the dispatcher said, don't you dare [01:10:45.240 --> 01:10:55.320] give that SOB no ticket? You give him his license game out of there. Why? They don't like me. If I [01:10:55.320 --> 01:11:03.320] only had all of your knowledge, I wish it's not knowledge. I don't have that much knowledge. [01:11:04.440 --> 01:11:10.280] I know it seems like it. But you know, if I come to you and tell you I got a cow down, [01:11:10.280 --> 01:11:16.840] and he's got these symptoms, bam, you're going to tell me exactly what it is. Right? Are you a [01:11:16.840 --> 01:11:26.680] genius? Yeah, you gotta there are things that keep coming up. And you just have experience [01:11:26.680 --> 01:11:32.760] with those things that keep coming up. I help people with with traffic and court issues. But [01:11:32.760 --> 01:11:43.080] if you listen a lot, you'll notice I keep telling the same things over and over. 39.03 Texas Penal [01:11:43.080 --> 01:11:49.560] Code. If you've listened very long, you've heard me quote that probably a hundred times. [01:11:51.960 --> 01:12:01.720] The biggest thing is having experience of going into the court one time with no fear of them [01:12:01.720 --> 01:12:10.680] and taking them on. Once you've done that right, once you realize that the emperor has no clothes. [01:12:13.080 --> 01:12:20.920] It's all smoke and mirrors. After the first time, it gets easy. And I tell people that, you know, [01:12:20.920 --> 01:12:27.320] I've asked the bait after arrest the judge. And they say, oh my goodness, I could never do that. [01:12:27.320 --> 01:12:31.800] But once you've been through a traffic court with them, [01:12:33.000 --> 01:12:39.240] and run them through your program one time, the next time you get a hold of them, [01:12:39.880 --> 01:12:43.640] asking the judge and the bailiff to arrest the judge would be a piece of cake. [01:12:45.160 --> 01:12:51.960] Because you realize this is the most important thing once you realize that it's all smoke and [01:12:51.960 --> 01:13:00.360] mirrors and it gets easy. The only problem with it is it gets to be way too much fun. [01:13:01.560 --> 01:13:09.560] We have Robert from California on here on the board. And he is clearly having way too much fun. [01:13:10.840 --> 01:13:15.080] Wow. I'm ready for that. I've got the time, like I said. So thank you, Randy and Brett. [01:13:15.080 --> 01:13:23.080] I actually have another suggestion for you about the court there. Randy was saying [01:13:24.360 --> 01:13:30.520] that if you get to a point you say not guilty, I personally don't do that. And I don't know, [01:13:30.520 --> 01:13:40.440] Randy, you may speak to this. But the Code of Criminal Procedure 27.14, subsection D, [01:13:40.440 --> 01:13:46.040] gives them a little loophole. It gives them extra leeway that I don't want to give them. [01:13:46.600 --> 01:13:55.320] If I say not guilty or I fail to appear based on a written notice, then they get a chance to file [01:13:55.320 --> 01:14:02.520] a different kind of criminal complaint that has much lower bar. They get to file a chapter 45 [01:14:02.520 --> 01:14:07.800] criminal complaint instead of a chapter 15 criminal complaint that has a much higher bar. [01:14:07.800 --> 01:14:12.680] And I want them to be held accountable to the higher bar. So I won't say not guilty. [01:14:14.680 --> 01:14:21.880] I'll just make them, what they always do is they say, well, if you're not going to plead, [01:14:21.880 --> 01:14:26.360] I'm just going to plead on your behalf. Well, judge, you do whatever you feel like you have to do. [01:14:27.640 --> 01:14:33.960] But if I say the word's not guilty, then the prosecutor's bar is lowered to a chapter 45 [01:14:33.960 --> 01:14:39.240] criminal complaint. And I don't want to do that. I want to be able to call him out for his insufficient [01:14:39.240 --> 01:14:52.120] charging instrument. JC, that's what a guru looks like. Oh, boy. Well, I'm going to keep studying. [01:14:52.120 --> 01:14:56.760] I've got until the ninth of the month, so then I have to appear. So I'm working on it. [01:14:57.720 --> 01:15:02.120] Keep us up to speed on how this goes. It sounds like you're going to have a lot of fun with it. [01:15:02.120 --> 01:15:06.920] Yeah, enjoy. Thank you. I love the show. I've loved it for years. And I'm about to have been [01:15:06.920 --> 01:15:11.560] learning things, but this is my first attempt at this. So I don't think, fortunately, I don't get [01:15:11.560 --> 01:15:20.040] pulled over every day. So you sound, you sound confident. And if there's one thing we try to [01:15:20.040 --> 01:15:28.840] impart, it's confidence. No matter what they do, you got all kind of stuff you can do back to them. [01:15:28.840 --> 01:15:33.320] And you sound confident. I think you're going to like this. [01:15:34.600 --> 01:15:37.160] All right. Fantastic. And thank you again, gentlemen. [01:15:38.040 --> 01:15:44.120] Okay. Thank you, JC. Now we're going to go to Chris in Colorado. Hello, Chris. [01:15:45.320 --> 01:15:48.920] Hey, guys. What do you have for us today? [01:15:50.600 --> 01:15:54.680] I have a question. I've been pretty busy since the last time I talked to you guys. [01:15:54.680 --> 01:16:03.720] I'm just experimenting with the whole mask mandate and businesses, etc. And I've got to a point where [01:16:03.720 --> 01:16:10.440] I need a little more rational guidance, if I may. Brett, you're up. [01:16:13.720 --> 01:16:18.280] I've watched what's happening. And obviously, we all know what's going on with COVID and we just [01:16:18.280 --> 01:16:22.840] don't even need to go there anymore. This is totally ridiculous. But what we're up against now is a [01:16:22.840 --> 01:16:28.760] new police, the type of police, which is our corporation. And so they're the ones that have been [01:16:28.760 --> 01:16:35.000] put to task by whomever the power is at the to see if they can enforce. Looks like we're going to [01:16:35.000 --> 01:16:42.040] a break here. Okay, hang on. We will pick this up on the other side. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:16:42.040 --> 01:16:49.720] RulaVar Radio. It's a good time to go to check out our sponsors on Logos Radio Network. And if [01:16:49.720 --> 01:16:57.240] you like what we bring to you, look at our sponsors. They will help you achieve the remedy we talk [01:16:57.240 --> 01:17:03.720] about here. You'll be right back. Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for [01:17:03.720 --> 01:17:10.360] the new year. Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8 from 8 to 10 p.m. Central [01:17:10.360 --> 01:17:17.080] Time. Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may see [01:17:17.080 --> 01:17:23.080] your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's light and be a [01:17:23.080 --> 01:17:28.760] blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible [01:17:28.760 --> 01:17:35.000] studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. Our verse by [01:17:35.000 --> 01:17:39.800] verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew, where we will discuss one chapter per [01:17:39.800 --> 01:17:45.720] week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [01:17:45.720 --> 01:17:52.520] Christian character development. So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:17:52.520 --> 01:17:58.680] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8 for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the [01:17:58.680 --> 01:18:09.320] Scriptures. It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by [01:18:09.320 --> 01:18:16.120] Central Texas Gun Works. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. Any amount is appreciated. [01:18:16.120 --> 01:18:21.320] Everything helps to keep us on the air. From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for [01:18:21.320 --> 01:18:29.000] grabs is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. More prizes and sponsors to be announced. Every $25 donation is [01:18:29.000 --> 01:18:35.720] a chance to win. When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:35.720 --> 01:18:41.080] Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. If you've enjoyed the shows on [01:18:41.080 --> 01:18:46.360] Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing you the best quality [01:18:46.360 --> 01:18:52.360] programming on talk radio today. We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. And remember, [01:18:52.360 --> 01:19:10.040] every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:22.520 --> 01:19:30.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue LeBlanc Radio, and we're talking [01:19:31.080 --> 01:19:38.360] to Chris in Colorado. Okay, go ahead, Chris. Okay, so obviously there's a new plan coming [01:19:38.360 --> 01:19:43.640] and it seems to be worldwide that they're going to try to implement, you know, almost like this [01:19:43.640 --> 01:19:49.640] social credit thing. Meaning that if we don't behave, we don't get to shop at certain places. [01:19:49.640 --> 01:19:52.840] And we're seeing it right now, obviously. You guys are probably seeing it in Texas some place, [01:19:52.840 --> 01:19:56.360] but stores won't let you in even if the state doesn't have a mandate. [01:19:57.800 --> 01:20:05.640] They'll try to enforce masks and not let you in. So I've been pushing against this since day one [01:20:06.520 --> 01:20:09.880] and making a stink and making them realize that I'm not somebody they want to [01:20:10.920 --> 01:20:15.400] keep going because I will call the police on them and we'll have the interaction and I've done it. [01:20:15.400 --> 01:20:18.200] Good. Good for you. Good. [01:20:19.400 --> 01:20:23.880] Yeah, so I had the police call to educate the place that they can't do it. They can't enforce [01:20:23.880 --> 01:20:27.640] that and, you know, they could ask me to leave. It usually doesn't get there because they don't [01:20:27.640 --> 01:20:35.400] even know why they're asking me to leave. So now I'm at a point where I want to start, [01:20:35.400 --> 01:20:39.160] like, I was out of business today. I was over in Illinois again. I was out of business today and [01:20:39.160 --> 01:20:46.120] they wouldn't let me in. And I said, well, you know, I use one of the strategies that I can't [01:20:46.120 --> 01:20:52.360] wear it. Okay, well, it doesn't matter. So I said, okay, you're now violating some of the law, [01:20:52.360 --> 01:20:57.560] even the rules behind the mandate. And so can I ask you why you're doing that? [01:20:58.840 --> 01:21:05.720] Well, we got threatened to shut our business down if we, and a $10,000 fine, if we don't [01:21:05.720 --> 01:21:10.920] completely deny every single person who doesn't wear a mask. It doesn't matter if it's medical, [01:21:10.920 --> 01:21:16.520] doesn't matter what the reason is. I said, okay, you understand that's not how it works. Then they [01:21:16.520 --> 01:21:20.280] said, we don't care. We don't want to get fined and shut down. And this is a pretty big corporation. [01:21:20.280 --> 01:21:26.680] This is a national business, a part of ours. So I eventually talked to the manager, [01:21:26.680 --> 01:21:29.720] he gave me a call and he says, you know, I agree with you, man, I don't want to have to do this, [01:21:29.720 --> 01:21:34.280] but we're a little worried because the wallgreens down the street got the $10,000 fine. [01:21:34.280 --> 01:21:42.680] So I'm up now to a level of having to see how I can get the businesses held accountable, [01:21:42.680 --> 01:21:47.160] because that's our next line. That's where it's drawn to see if the businesses are going to enforce [01:21:47.160 --> 01:21:51.720] this. And if they don't, then they get fined. So the people have already mostly submitted to the [01:21:51.720 --> 01:21:55.400] masks. So now they know they can go to the next, which is getting the businesses to now be the [01:21:55.400 --> 01:22:01.880] new police. I don't know what's going to come after that. But if we can, if I can, or if more [01:22:01.880 --> 01:22:09.640] people can turn the burden back on the businesses to stop being the police, then we can start to [01:22:09.640 --> 01:22:14.040] flip this down to the next level, which is us stop acquiescing for the mask. So that's where [01:22:14.040 --> 01:22:19.560] I'm at. I don't know how to go through some of these procedures to really put these businesses [01:22:19.560 --> 01:22:28.920] under scrutiny. I'll give you, sorry. Go ahead. I've got a question when you're done. [01:22:28.920 --> 01:22:34.120] I just want to give one last quick example of the other extreme. I talked to a business in Iowa, [01:22:34.840 --> 01:22:39.640] and he said, you know, up until just two weeks ago, this was one week ago, I wasn't wearing masks, [01:22:39.640 --> 01:22:43.800] but people started complaining. So we decided to do it. I said, well, how about doing this? [01:22:43.800 --> 01:22:48.200] Why don't you put a sign up and say, instead of putting a sign up that you have to wear a mask, [01:22:48.200 --> 01:22:53.960] put a sign up that says, in order to protect our employees, we are not requiring anybody to wear [01:22:53.960 --> 01:23:00.920] a mask. But if you want us to wear a mask, we will do that. And that now puts the shame back on the [01:23:00.920 --> 01:23:05.880] person who's going to complain, you know, the Karens. And they're not as many Karens as there are [01:23:05.880 --> 01:23:10.280] rational people, but most rational people are just doing it because they don't want to, you know, [01:23:10.280 --> 01:23:16.040] get in confrontation. So that's the angle. I want to start kicking it back down to the people, [01:23:16.040 --> 01:23:24.200] to the shaming, to the business that stops contributing to the shaming. Okay. What I'm [01:23:24.200 --> 01:23:32.440] thinking is, what duty does a business have to cater to your preference? [01:23:34.760 --> 01:23:41.960] No, I'm not being facetious, or I'm taking taking the side of the lawyer on the other side. [01:23:41.960 --> 01:23:51.640] This is my business. And since it's my business, well, I can put any requirements in I want to, [01:23:51.640 --> 01:23:56.360] and I'm going to say, wait a minute, wait a minute, you have a business that's open to the public. [01:23:57.160 --> 01:24:06.680] You cannot arbitrarily and capriciously treat one customer differently than another. [01:24:06.680 --> 01:24:13.880] Would you say that if I'm black, I can't come in your business at all? Or if I'm white, [01:24:13.880 --> 01:24:21.960] and I don't have a mask on, I can't come in your business. Where does that line drawn between my [01:24:21.960 --> 01:24:31.320] rights and your rights as the business owner, my rights as a customer doing business in public, [01:24:31.320 --> 01:24:37.480] doing business in public, being free from discrimination, and your right as a business? [01:24:38.600 --> 01:24:49.160] Well, in a sense, the businesses are not wrong to say, no shoes, no shirt, no service. They can [01:24:49.160 --> 01:24:53.800] add a mask to that, or they can demand that all of their customers have to wear a yellow tie. [01:24:55.080 --> 01:25:01.000] It's just, it's improper, it's inappropriate, but it's their business. So they can say they [01:25:01.000 --> 01:25:06.360] only want to do business with people who are between the ages of 10 and 12. And that's, [01:25:06.360 --> 01:25:12.280] that's their, that's their call to make. Well, then there's this call. But what about this? [01:25:12.280 --> 01:25:19.560] What about champerty? Randy, that comes to be as a possible, if we were to go to that Walgreens, [01:25:20.440 --> 01:25:30.680] and, and buy their claim, and then harass the heck out of the governor of that particular [01:25:30.680 --> 01:25:37.000] state. Do you think there's any traction to be gotten there? Because basically the governor [01:25:37.000 --> 01:25:42.600] is putting these Walgreens, he's turning them into law enforcement. [01:25:42.600 --> 01:25:49.400] Well, okay, we could get there, but first we have to develop a claim. [01:25:51.960 --> 01:25:58.440] Chris, what angles here? What claim, what claim under law could you come up with? [01:25:58.440 --> 01:26:04.440] Well, that's, that's, I understand a private business. And to be honest with you, most private, [01:26:04.440 --> 01:26:08.840] small businesses, they don't want to deal with this. I walk into restaurants, nobody says anything, [01:26:08.840 --> 01:26:14.840] very, very few, even in the states that have mandates. But the big corporations like Home Depot, [01:26:15.640 --> 01:26:20.200] I got thrown out of a, I didn't get thrown out, I left, but I was asked to leave a staples the [01:26:20.200 --> 01:26:27.160] other day. And, you know, Kroger grocery stores like that, they're the big guys. And, but here's [01:26:27.160 --> 01:26:33.480] the question. They're also essential. And they're publicly traded. So I'm trying to find out the [01:26:33.480 --> 01:26:39.160] legality of, of that ramification. You were open during the pandemic, which means you're essential, [01:26:39.160 --> 01:26:48.200] which means you can't deny me. But you, you have been given a special privilege. And that privilege [01:26:48.200 --> 01:26:53.880] gives you a dude, since you are essential to the public, it gives you a duty to the public. [01:26:53.880 --> 01:26:57.720] That's a good point, Chris. I think that's a worthwhile angle. [01:26:59.000 --> 01:27:04.440] Okay. And then the argument I had with the woman at Staples, and I looked into it when she was [01:27:04.440 --> 01:27:08.440] kind of right, because I was just pissed. It's the first time somebody really, second time somebody [01:27:08.440 --> 01:27:15.080] got in my face, but the first time somebody said, I'm asking you to leave. And I said, [01:27:15.080 --> 01:27:18.920] you're an essential business. Are you not? She says, yes, you were open during the pandemic. [01:27:18.920 --> 01:27:22.760] She says, yes, I said, and you're a public company. That's where she got me. She says, [01:27:22.760 --> 01:27:26.680] actually, no, we're not a public company anymore. We're private and it's true. Staples went from [01:27:26.680 --> 01:27:29.960] a public and was bought out by a private company. So they're a private entity now. [01:27:30.520 --> 01:27:35.560] But I heard somebody say something about this, that if you're a publicly traded company, [01:27:35.560 --> 01:27:42.760] that might also change the angle of liability as far as being an essential business. I just [01:27:42.760 --> 01:27:52.360] don't know where to look to start building that. Well, you may not have to. What Staples needs [01:27:52.360 --> 01:28:00.600] is plausible deniability. Staples needs to be able to say to the governor who issued this order, [01:28:00.600 --> 01:28:09.800] so look, Kai, you issued this order, but I had someone come into my establishment. I enforced [01:28:09.800 --> 01:28:18.440] your order and now I have a tort letter. Right. And they're about to bring me to court and sue me [01:28:18.440 --> 01:28:29.480] and potentially cost me a lot of money because I enforced your order. You have to protect me. [01:28:29.480 --> 01:28:34.440] How are you going to protect me? And the governor's not going to protect anybody. [01:28:35.240 --> 01:28:42.360] So what we put in now, what corporate can say is, oh my goodness, if we turn someone away [01:28:42.360 --> 01:28:51.000] and they wind up suing us, we could wind up deluged with suits and the suits themselves [01:28:51.000 --> 01:28:56.360] have put us out of business. So we need to go to the governor and say, look, governor, [01:28:56.360 --> 01:29:03.560] if I enforce your mandate, then you have to indemnify me from any claims that come against me [01:29:04.280 --> 01:29:07.640] for any potential constitutional violations. [01:29:07.640 --> 01:29:15.160] I said constitutional. How do we get to constitutional? What right do we have [01:29:17.000 --> 01:29:20.920] to move around in the public and do business with public establishments? [01:29:21.880 --> 01:29:27.000] A public establishment who has been given special privilege by the government [01:29:27.000 --> 01:29:37.560] becomes entangled in my rights. Hang on. We'll try to figure this out on the other side. [01:29:38.360 --> 01:29:43.400] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we have a radio calling. I don't know if I'll give [01:29:43.400 --> 01:29:48.120] up the calling number. We've got two more callers. We've got Robert in California and Shane in New York. [01:29:48.120 --> 01:29:58.920] We'll pick this up on the other side. [01:30:02.920 --> 01:30:09.960] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:09.960 --> 01:30:15.960] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. I'm Dr. Kaepernald Brett, back with details in a moment. [01:30:15.960 --> 01:30:22.280] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.280 --> 01:30:26.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.320 --> 01:30:32.680] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.680 --> 01:30:38.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, [01:30:38.120 --> 01:30:46.040] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. 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Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:24.280 --> 01:33:32.440] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:33:32.440 --> 01:33:39.240] Rule of Law Radio. And we're talking to Chris in Colorado. Chris, this is a good subject. [01:33:40.440 --> 01:33:48.040] And can you call in tomorrow night? Because I want to spend more time on this. And I got two more [01:33:48.040 --> 01:33:56.200] callers. If we address this the way I want to, it'll take the rest of the show. Yeah, absolutely. [01:33:56.920 --> 01:34:05.160] But think about this part. It's not about the law. It's about perception and plausible [01:34:05.160 --> 01:34:13.560] deniability. Corporations are terrified of lawsuits. It looks bad for them. It makes [01:34:13.560 --> 01:34:20.040] bad press and it costs them a lot of money to fight lawsuits. When losers draw, they always lose. [01:34:20.680 --> 01:34:29.080] So I'm looking from the perspective of how do we give this legitimate corporation [01:34:29.800 --> 01:34:36.360] plausible deniability? How do we give them good reason to go to the governor and tell them [01:34:36.360 --> 01:34:43.800] to take your order and cram it? You're going to cost me too much money. Okay. [01:34:45.480 --> 01:34:49.640] Yeah, a couple things that I'll get off real real quick is I think Home Depot and Walmart [01:34:49.640 --> 01:34:54.040] and all of them backed off. Their plausible deniability was they didn't like their boys [01:34:54.040 --> 01:34:58.680] getting punched in the face. So apparently they took a new policy that they're not enforcing it [01:34:58.680 --> 01:35:02.840] in any of their stores. And I had a manager in South Chicago say, yeah, I can't make you wear a mask. [01:35:02.840 --> 01:35:08.280] She told the security guard to back off. So they're starting to have some of that, [01:35:08.280 --> 01:35:15.160] but they're still got the signs up. And then somebody told me about a bowling alley guy who [01:35:15.160 --> 01:35:19.640] actually got his business shut down because he refused to enforce it. He didn't even want people [01:35:19.640 --> 01:35:26.440] wearing masks in his bowling alley. And what the judge said is I can't either deny or enforce it [01:35:26.440 --> 01:35:31.960] because the local health board already has the authority. And that's the interesting thing is [01:35:31.960 --> 01:35:35.640] what authority does a local health board actually have to enforce and get the police to do this [01:35:35.640 --> 01:35:40.360] therefore putting pressure on businesses? So that's part of the spin. And I'm happy to call back [01:35:40.360 --> 01:35:47.560] tomorrow and work on this because I think we have some leverage. Yeah. And we need to send [01:35:47.560 --> 01:35:59.480] information requests to the governor to request the data on which the governor relied to give him [01:35:59.480 --> 01:36:10.680] reason to initiate this order. He had those rumors. He heard rumors, Randy. Yeah. Asked the [01:36:10.680 --> 01:36:19.800] governor to support show how he had the authority to interfere with my rights. The problem I've [01:36:19.800 --> 01:36:25.880] had with the mask is how do I find a constitutional right not to wear the mask? [01:36:25.880 --> 01:36:32.520] Well, I can give you a few examples, but I don't know if they're constitutional, [01:36:32.520 --> 01:36:37.240] but the way do I tell you with some of the police in the stairs, it's all me in several [01:36:37.240 --> 01:36:44.120] states. I mean, this is interesting for sure. So yeah, I'll call back tomorrow. Several states. [01:36:45.480 --> 01:36:50.840] Yeah, I've been through eight states since it's all started. Oh, wow. I've talked and I've [01:36:50.840 --> 01:36:54.760] experimented on a lot of levels and it's not fun, fun days. You know, today sucks, but most [01:36:54.760 --> 01:37:00.680] days it's interesting, you know. And the stairs and most of the police stay there. I'm actually [01:37:00.680 --> 01:37:07.560] proud of these guys now for the first time in my life. At least the ones that I've talked to. [01:37:09.400 --> 01:37:11.880] Wait a minute. I mean, is that they're not too proud of this? [01:37:12.680 --> 01:37:15.640] I'm proud of them. I'm proud of most of the guys that I've talked to. [01:37:16.600 --> 01:37:21.400] Okay. So you're telling me that this is something I wasn't sure about. [01:37:21.400 --> 01:37:27.240] You know, I live in a small town, a small community, a rural, relatively rural community. [01:37:27.960 --> 01:37:35.880] And most of the people I've run into, a lot of them are complying, but all of them are upset about [01:37:35.880 --> 01:37:44.680] it. All of them indicate that they believe this is a lot of BS. So I'm wondering, is this just [01:37:44.680 --> 01:37:53.080] because I'm in this small community or is this a more broad-based perception? It's pretty big. [01:37:53.080 --> 01:37:58.120] I'd say 75% of the people think it stinks and something's up. Even the most ignorant person [01:37:58.760 --> 01:38:06.920] has a bad taste in their mouth about it. My wife has never listened to one of my shows. [01:38:06.920 --> 01:38:18.920] She has never had anything to do with politics. She has came over these masks. She is absolutely [01:38:19.800 --> 01:38:29.960] furious. And I'm looking at that and saying, holy mackerel, if they manage to get her furious, [01:38:29.960 --> 01:38:37.400] I wonder what the rest of the public looks like. And from what you just said, I'm encouraged. [01:38:37.960 --> 01:38:43.800] You know, it is my contention that by the time we get to the election, so many people are going to [01:38:43.800 --> 01:38:50.840] be angry about what's going on that we will have the biggest landslide ever. One of the problems [01:38:50.840 --> 01:39:00.280] that the Democrats are having trying to push this agenda is familiarity breeds contempt. [01:39:01.560 --> 01:39:05.720] You know, I was in the military and I was a weapons specialist and I loaded bombs and rockets [01:39:05.720 --> 01:39:11.320] and missiles and all that kind of stuff. We had fuses for bombs. They're about six or eight inches [01:39:11.320 --> 01:39:18.280] long, weighed about eight pounds apiece. If you drop one of them, it could blow up. So the commander, [01:39:18.280 --> 01:39:24.200] the squadron commander pulled into our area where we're loading bombs and I've got jungle fatigue [01:39:24.200 --> 01:39:32.360] zones. So I got two in the pockets on my calf, two in the pockets on my thigh, two in the pockets on [01:39:32.360 --> 01:39:38.360] my blouse, which had big pockets, and one between each of my fingers. So I've got about 10 of these [01:39:38.360 --> 01:39:45.880] fuses all at once. And so I got both hands full of fuses and I'm walking over from the armaments [01:39:45.880 --> 01:39:52.280] shed to the bombs before we're loading them and the squadron commander pulled up and I'm trying to [01:39:52.280 --> 01:39:58.360] salute him with all these fuses in my hand and he stopped. He got out of the Jeep and walked up to [01:39:58.360 --> 01:40:05.320] me. I figure I'm in big trouble. He said, we're supposed to pick these up with two hands on the [01:40:05.320 --> 01:40:12.280] fuse at one time. We could never hold it with one hand and then we walk over to the bomb and put it [01:40:12.280 --> 01:40:17.800] in. We'd never get these things loaded if we did that. So I got a whole handful of them and the [01:40:17.800 --> 01:40:23.880] squadron commander came up. He got out of the Jeep and walked up to me and I'm trying to salute. So [01:40:23.880 --> 01:40:29.160] he goes ahead and salutes. So I popped to attention and he looks at all these fuses and he said, [01:40:29.800 --> 01:40:36.280] Airman Kelton, what would happen if you dropped one of those fuses? Oh, well sir, it would probably [01:40:36.280 --> 01:40:44.920] blow up sir. Then for crying out loud, don't drop them. Now get back to work. Familiarity breeds [01:40:44.920 --> 01:40:54.120] contempt. You and I have been through the last six months with this coronavirus, this deadly [01:40:54.120 --> 01:41:01.720] pandemic and we're not dead. Yeah. How many people do you know that died from this? [01:41:01.720 --> 01:41:09.480] I know nobody, but I met one woman who lost two and that story got even more interesting. I've [01:41:09.480 --> 01:41:13.320] gone as deep as I could into all this. Yeah, I know. But I've asked hundreds and hundreds and [01:41:13.320 --> 01:41:23.400] nobody knows anybody. Exactly. So we rather it is a genuine pandemic or not. We're living here. [01:41:23.400 --> 01:41:31.480] We're not dying from it. We develop contempt for it. And I personally think that contempt for it [01:41:31.480 --> 01:41:38.840] is appropriate. Absolutely. Did you hear the start of the show? I didn't. I missed the first 10, [01:41:38.840 --> 01:41:45.400] 15 minutes. I apologize. I think you were. How many, do you don't have any people contracted [01:41:45.400 --> 01:41:54.120] tuberculosis last year? I know, 1. something million. I heard it. Yeah. No, 33 million. [01:41:54.120 --> 01:42:05.880] Oh, that was 1. something. Yeah. 1.5 million died. And we did not shut the world down. That [01:42:05.880 --> 01:42:14.040] happens every year. It's amazing. I know. That puts Corona in perspective. Corona is absurd. [01:42:15.240 --> 01:42:21.320] Yeah. I'm all over the details, Randy. I've got so much ammunition for that that I talk [01:42:21.320 --> 01:42:25.720] people's heads off everywhere I go. I probably talk to two to three long talks every single day [01:42:25.720 --> 01:42:29.960] just trying to spread information. And now there's documentaries that just put it all together. [01:42:29.960 --> 01:42:34.760] They're putting people in jail for some of this stuff. You heard about Millie Weaver. Oh my God. [01:42:34.760 --> 01:42:40.440] Yes. Yeah. They cut the power to her house. I mean, so this is this is big. And we could talk a [01:42:40.440 --> 01:42:49.240] lot. Wait, Millie Weaver, that's the Alex Jones reporter. Yeah. Yeah. But I saw the documentary [01:42:49.240 --> 01:42:55.320] and that's really good. It turned out she was arrested over a family altercation with her mother. [01:42:56.440 --> 01:43:01.480] I know that's the excuse. But did you hear that they cut the power to her house while they were [01:43:01.480 --> 01:43:05.720] arresting her? And then they turned back on after they got her husband and her back in the car? [01:43:06.680 --> 01:43:13.800] No, that was a little bit does sound a little extreme. They were uploading the video as trying [01:43:13.800 --> 01:43:18.440] to get it uploaded. They're in turn off. We kept getting interrupted. And then the power got cut as [01:43:18.440 --> 01:43:24.040] the as the shares were up showing up the rest. I mean, put the pieces together. They didn't want [01:43:24.040 --> 01:43:37.160] that video out. And then that I think that may be their biggest mistake. I'll touch that on that [01:43:37.160 --> 01:43:42.200] when I come back. And then we'll go to the other college, Randy Kelsen, Brett Fountain. Oh, I got [01:43:42.200 --> 01:43:51.000] 18 seconds. My wife is most furious about all of these supposedly horrible videos being removed [01:43:51.000 --> 01:43:57.400] from Facebook. Yeah, so I'm too stupid to be able to watch this. She's curious about it. I'll be right [01:43:57.400 --> 01:44:05.560] back. Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? Stop [01:44:05.560 --> 01:44:11.320] debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael Mears has won six cases in federal [01:44:11.320 --> 01:44:16.840] court against debt collectors and now you can win two. You'll get step by step instructions in plain [01:44:16.840 --> 01:44:22.920] English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. 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Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:45:55.080 --> 01:46:04.600] and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:25.080 --> 01:46:31.320] Okay, we are back. Randy Kalton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, [01:46:31.960 --> 01:46:36.440] and we're going to Robert in California. Robert, what have you been up to? [01:46:39.320 --> 01:46:47.400] Well, just trying to stay out of trouble. I told Brett on the break that we're going to like [01:46:47.400 --> 01:46:55.400] Robert because he's having way too much fun with these guys. Yeah, it's been interesting. [01:46:55.960 --> 01:47:02.760] They dropped one of the cases they dropped and the other one they reduced it to an infraction [01:47:03.560 --> 01:47:12.600] from misdemeanor to an infraction and the public defender couldn't wait [01:47:12.600 --> 01:47:21.320] for the judge to relieve him of duty. He wanted to get away from me as far as he can. Well, [01:47:22.200 --> 01:47:30.040] I sent a letter to his boss after I barred his boss for his behavior [01:47:31.880 --> 01:47:37.160] and I asked him for a certificate of liability insurance. [01:47:37.160 --> 01:47:41.320] Oh, I bet that made his day. [01:47:42.120 --> 01:47:48.440] Well, the public defender really started answering some of the questions [01:47:48.440 --> 01:47:53.640] that he has been blowing me off about even now that he's relieved of the case [01:47:54.360 --> 01:48:01.880] because he didn't do anything he said he was going to do. Anyway, that's been a lot of fun, [01:48:01.880 --> 01:48:12.600] but I was interested in what Brett had to say about when they enter the play for you. [01:48:13.720 --> 01:48:16.760] If he would run that by again, it kind of got by me. [01:48:18.360 --> 01:48:25.320] Oh, that was well in Texas. We've got the code of criminal procedure 27.14 [01:48:25.320 --> 01:48:33.240] and it's subsection D that gives them their little loop holes. B is in Delta and that's where [01:48:34.600 --> 01:48:42.120] normally for any crime you've got some pretty high bar which is defined in Chapter 15, 1504, [01:48:42.120 --> 01:48:50.120] 1505 and thereabouts specifying what a criminal complaint has to have to be sufficient. [01:48:50.120 --> 01:48:58.760] And, of course, they didn't have to turn around and file an information along with that criminal [01:48:58.760 --> 01:49:06.200] complaint. However, if you say the word is not guilty, then according to 27.14 D, [01:49:07.880 --> 01:49:15.720] they just got a free pass and they get to skip all of that and file a complaint that conforms to [01:49:15.720 --> 01:49:23.720] the requirements of Chapter 45 and that was originally written up for just municipal ordinance, [01:49:23.720 --> 01:49:28.920] parking tickets, stuff like that, but they're going to have this low bar. They get to just [01:49:28.920 --> 01:49:36.120] file one of those little complaints that doesn't have all these requirements. You've got to say [01:49:36.120 --> 01:49:42.200] what crime did the person commit and you have to what certainty is required and put the information [01:49:42.200 --> 01:49:50.120] with it and all this stuff that people, if you're going to hold somebody accountable to [01:49:50.120 --> 01:50:01.640] committing a crime, that's a high bar. Let me touch on this. Under Chapter 45, [01:50:02.440 --> 01:50:11.720] you can prosecute on the citation. If you can't use 45, then you go back to the Penal Code [01:50:11.720 --> 01:50:18.280] and the Penal Code requires that there be a complaint and the complaint is presented to [01:50:18.280 --> 01:50:24.760] the prosecuting attorney and the prosecuting attorney must reduce the complaint to an information. [01:50:26.600 --> 01:50:33.880] A complaint is intended to be filed by a procé by an ordinary individual and not learned counsel. [01:50:33.880 --> 01:50:43.480] So, the bar for a complaint is not so high. So, when it's a penal case, they must give it to [01:50:43.480 --> 01:50:50.280] the prosecutor and as learned counsel, he reduces it to an information. An information [01:50:50.840 --> 01:50:58.040] is a complaint in proper form so that they make sure the complaint is in the proper form as all [01:50:58.040 --> 01:51:03.400] the prerequisites before it goes to the court. Under Chapter 45, you don't have to bother with [01:51:03.400 --> 01:51:10.520] that. I'm sorry, I don't know what that's like in California. I don't know if you have something [01:51:10.520 --> 01:51:17.000] similar to that. I would imagine so. Well, what I found was when I go to Texas and look what they [01:51:17.000 --> 01:51:23.880] say in Texas, then it's easy to, or it makes it easier to find where it's at in California. [01:51:23.880 --> 01:51:37.160] And I guess my next question is jurisdiction. When the judge says, oh, we have jurisdiction, [01:51:38.680 --> 01:51:45.160] how do they, who validates that? Who determines that they have jurisdiction? [01:51:46.120 --> 01:51:52.120] And there's so many kinds of jurisdiction. He's not very specific. He said, oh, I've determined [01:51:52.120 --> 01:52:01.880] the court has jurisdiction. I objected, but... You object and ask for findings of fact and [01:52:01.880 --> 01:52:11.560] conclusions at law to show its support for your determination. Exactly. Findings and facts? [01:52:11.560 --> 01:52:21.800] Findings of fact and conclusions of law. Yeah. A judge, you know, we have in Texas, [01:52:21.800 --> 01:52:29.400] we have Walker V. Packer. We mentioned that earlier. A judge has no discretion in properly [01:52:29.400 --> 01:52:38.600] applying the law to the facts. It is the duty of the court to determine the facts in accordance [01:52:38.600 --> 01:52:44.920] with the rules of evidence, then apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:52:45.960 --> 01:52:54.360] Failing to do so, the abuse of discretion. So you want to know what facts the judge relied on [01:52:55.160 --> 01:53:01.800] and what law he applied to those facts to come to the conclusion that he had subject [01:53:01.800 --> 01:53:11.000] matter jurisdiction in this particular case. Whether he has general subject matter jurisdiction, [01:53:11.000 --> 01:53:18.520] a general jurisdiction over the subject matter is insufficient. He must have that first. Now, [01:53:19.960 --> 01:53:27.400] what are the facts presented to the court that invoked your subject matter jurisdiction? [01:53:27.400 --> 01:53:37.240] That invocation is key. I can say, judge, he did a bad thing arrest him. Well, [01:53:38.440 --> 01:53:43.400] that's not enough to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. I have to give the [01:53:43.400 --> 01:53:58.600] judge facts and law. He committed this act. This act is a violation of this statute. A citation seldom [01:53:58.600 --> 01:54:12.680] has sufficient facts. The big argument is about commerce. Since the transportation is a commercial [01:54:12.680 --> 01:54:24.440] endeavor, then the complaint must allege sufficient facts to bring the accused within the scope of [01:54:24.440 --> 01:54:33.960] the statutory scheme. So the complaint must state that I have reason to believe and do believe that [01:54:33.960 --> 01:54:40.120] this person was operating on the public thoroughfares in a commercial capacity. [01:54:40.120 --> 01:54:49.880] And in that capacity violated a specific statutory restriction. If they don't establish [01:54:50.920 --> 01:54:57.800] the requisite to bring you within the statutory scheme, then they have not invoked the subject [01:54:57.800 --> 01:55:03.160] matter jurisdiction of the court. The court may have jurisdiction over these issues, [01:55:03.160 --> 01:55:10.120] but it has to be invoked by the sufficiency of a pleading. Does that make sense? [01:55:11.640 --> 01:55:28.120] Well, I have, yes. Each crime has a set of elements. Every single element must be alleged [01:55:28.120 --> 01:55:34.600] in order for the complaint to be sufficient to invoke the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. [01:55:39.880 --> 01:55:43.880] So if the judge just says, well, of course I have jurisdiction. I have jurisdiction over all [01:55:43.880 --> 01:55:48.760] these kinds of crimes, then you say, oh, no, no, no, your honor. You may have that jurisdiction, [01:55:48.760 --> 01:55:54.760] but it has not been invoked in this particular case because the complaint is insufficient. [01:55:54.760 --> 01:56:05.960] And that's why it's important to get to the penal statutes instead of the transportation [01:56:05.960 --> 01:56:12.920] statutes. And that's what Brett was talking about. If you plead not guilty, then you plead under [01:56:12.920 --> 01:56:25.560] section 45 that allows you to prosecute you based on the citation alone, and the citation is never [01:56:25.560 --> 01:56:33.960] sufficient. Or any written notice. That's what it says. Is any written notice, which they'll use [01:56:33.960 --> 01:56:38.840] the citation for that, but yes, they could scribble it on an appkin and call that good. [01:56:38.840 --> 01:56:47.800] You just have to put them on the card. Right. Yeah. And so on the penal side, [01:56:47.800 --> 01:56:55.400] that's why they have the information because the citizen doesn't know what all components [01:56:55.400 --> 01:57:01.320] need to be there to invoke the jurisdiction, but the prosecutor does. So he looks at the complaint, [01:57:01.320 --> 01:57:07.480] and if it's not enough, then he goes to the guide and elicits the information he needs, [01:57:07.480 --> 01:57:09.720] and then he builds a complaint that's sufficient. [01:57:13.720 --> 01:57:15.800] Am I making sense? Yeah. [01:57:17.640 --> 01:57:25.960] Okay, Shane. Shane, I see you there. Can you call in tomorrow night? We only have a minute or so [01:57:25.960 --> 01:57:30.840] left, so I won't be able to get you tonight, but call in tomorrow and I'll bring you up early. [01:57:30.840 --> 01:57:38.920] I'm sorry. You tend to be a little late calling in. We always wind up not getting to you. Okay. [01:57:39.640 --> 01:57:48.760] Go ahead, Robert. I had a deal where I made the left hand turn, and I entered the bike lane [01:57:48.760 --> 01:57:57.320] when I made the left hand turn, and he pulled me over, and he used that for a reason to search me [01:57:57.320 --> 01:58:05.000] and all that stuff, and then when I went back and looked at the law, I wasn't breaking it at all. [01:58:06.600 --> 01:58:09.960] That should get criminal charges against the officer. [01:58:11.000 --> 01:58:18.760] Well, I've done that, yes. I should have known. Okay, hold on. If you got more, Robert, [01:58:18.760 --> 01:58:25.080] call back tomorrow night. You're always a lot of fun. We are out of time. This is Randy Kelton, [01:58:25.080 --> 01:58:31.480] Brett Fountain with our radio. We will be back tomorrow night at 8 o'clock central for our [01:58:32.840 --> 01:58:39.560] info marathon. Thank you all for listening, and good night. [01:58:39.560 --> 01:58:50.440] The [01:58:50.440 --> 01:58:56.840] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.840 --> 01:59:02.280] Recovery Version. The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain [01:59:02.280 --> 01:59:08.360] what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.360 --> 01:59:16.680] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. Call us toll free at 888-551-0102, [01:59:16.680 --> 01:59:25.000] or visit us online at bfa.org. 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