[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.440] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver [00:13.440 --> 00:24.200] $16.45.00, Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crew $55.63.00, Brent Crew $62.47.00, and Cryptos [00:24.200 --> 00:34.800] and Order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, White [00:34.800 --> 00:42.560] Coin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 of Crypto Coin. [00:42.560 --> 00:52.480] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.480 --> 00:57.800] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing [00:57.800 --> 01:04.800] 10 and injuring 40. [01:04.800 --> 01:09.480] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into [01:09.480 --> 01:14.240] taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, [01:14.240 --> 01:18.120] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.120 --> 01:22.800] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.800 --> 01:24.800] to test the error for THC. [01:24.800 --> 01:28.480] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.480 --> 01:33.200] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.200 --> 01:34.200] law. [01:34.200 --> 01:37.640] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.640 --> 01:42.160] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.160 --> 01:48.320] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.320 --> 01:54.560] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Caima Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.560 --> 01:59.040] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.040 --> 02:01.800] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.800 --> 02:06.800] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.800 --> 02:10.800] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.800 --> 02:13.520] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.520 --> 02:17.440] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.440 --> 02:22.640] charged with. [02:22.640 --> 02:27.640] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark as the [02:27.640 --> 02:32.800] first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark [02:32.800 --> 02:38.440] ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific [02:38.440 --> 02:39.440] Ocean. [02:39.440 --> 02:43.800] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.800 --> 02:50.080] its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.080 --> 03:16.920] glow. [03:16.920 --> 03:27.760] But I received my remedy today. [03:27.760 --> 03:44.760] Came in the rocks just like they say, I accepted it for value right away. [03:44.760 --> 04:05.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Helton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio on this, the 18th day of December [04:05.080 --> 04:15.640] 2020, and we're talking to John in New York, and John, I'm not a happy camper. I was doing a show [04:15.640 --> 04:22.960] with Scott Richardson on Pastor Massage Truth Radio, and I was talking to an ex CIA agent, [04:22.960 --> 04:32.560] and we were talking about what information we get and how you really have to be careful about [04:32.560 --> 04:41.640] the information that you hear. Back when a shooter went into a movie theater in Colorado and shot [04:41.640 --> 04:48.160] up a bunch of people within hours, I had people telling me who the FBI agents were who got him [04:48.160 --> 04:55.360] his weapons, who the CIA agents were that got him his psychotropic drugs. I got the whole story. [04:55.360 --> 05:04.280] It turned out to be horse manure, the shooter in DC. The reason, the whole purpose was to kill [05:04.280 --> 05:11.760] that FBI analyst, and all these others were killed just to cover it up. When it turned out that was [05:11.760 --> 05:17.880] horse manure, the guys who were spouting that stuff just went on to something else. You have [05:17.880 --> 05:25.560] to really be careful, not only what we hear from the other side, but what we hear from people on [05:25.560 --> 05:37.120] our side. And now to you, John, did you read that case? Well, what I did was, I sent it, I said, [05:37.120 --> 05:47.200] now take a step back. Did you read that case? No, no, no, I didn't. Okay, well, here's the deal. Brett [05:47.200 --> 05:54.600] did. Brett, will you tell us what you found? Well, I haven't read the whole thing yet, [05:54.600 --> 06:01.440] but I didn't find anything in there about elections or anything about voting, nothing about the [06:01.440 --> 06:07.120] president, nothing about... I know, it's not in them. It's not in them. That's right. But John, [06:07.120 --> 06:17.160] you presented that as if this case was on elections. This is a problem I have with the [06:17.160 --> 06:25.880] Patriot community. You spoke to the case, and Brett, what does it say about fraud? Well, [06:25.880 --> 06:32.120] it's... this is not where they're saying that fraud vitiates everything, although they do [06:32.120 --> 06:39.440] reference, they say something like Mr. Wells, let me go back there and find it. Mr. Wells, [06:39.440 --> 06:48.800] in his very useful work on Rez Adjudicata says in section 499, fraud vitiates everything and a [06:48.800 --> 06:54.280] judgment equally with a contract. So they're referencing that the judge that writes this [06:54.280 --> 07:00.800] opinion is referencing some guy, Mr. Wells. So everybody knew at that time, like you said, [07:00.800 --> 07:04.720] Randy, this is nothing new. Fraud vitiates everything. We know that. They knew that in [07:04.720 --> 07:13.480] 1878, too. And this is something that they're referencing as common knowledge. But it was [07:13.480 --> 07:21.800] not a ruling in this case. No, they weren't using that as something they're setting. This case has, [07:21.800 --> 07:29.280] this case essentially has nothing to do with the issue at hand. Nothing. And you promote, [07:29.280 --> 07:36.680] promote that case as if it is the end all to the problem and has nothing to do with anything. [07:36.680 --> 07:44.040] This is a problem, John. This is a problem of credibility. And you spoke to the case and moved [07:44.040 --> 07:52.560] from the case into speculation. And it took me a while to realize that you had moved out of the [07:52.560 --> 08:00.120] case and into speculation. Now it turns out it was all speculation. Okay, that's why I presented [08:00.120 --> 08:08.520] it. I gave it to the lawyer, Giuliani, to see. And in fact, I think in my letter, in my letter, [08:08.520 --> 08:14.920] my email, I think I said, review this and see if this applies. Because I know that the case, [08:14.920 --> 08:21.880] the only thing I know about the case was that it didn't involve an election. The United States [08:21.880 --> 08:28.040] versus Brock Morton had nothing to do with an election. But it did have to do with contracts. [08:28.040 --> 08:36.760] And according to whoever wrote this that I'm reading, they think, you know, it's speculation [08:36.760 --> 08:44.320] at this point, you got to prove that an election is really a contract. Okay, this is all speculation. [08:44.320 --> 08:51.240] Well, I know, I know, I knew it was speculation, but I was hoping that maybe it was the one. [08:51.240 --> 08:57.480] Okay, my concern is, is you didn't present it as speculation. You presented it as if it was [08:57.480 --> 09:04.960] law. And I have a big problem with that. We have enough trouble sorting out speculation from law, [09:04.960 --> 09:14.240] especially in the legal reform community. That's why I have this rule. Never make a proactive [09:14.240 --> 09:25.760] statement of law out of your own mouth. You brought us a case and then presented speculation as if [09:25.760 --> 09:33.840] it were the case. That was dishonest. Well, yeah, I'm just reading to you whoever wrote this. I'm [09:33.840 --> 09:39.920] reading to you what you didn't tell us that when you started, we kind of figured that out toward [09:39.920 --> 09:46.960] the end. Yeah, yeah, that we should have been advised to that from the beginning. I'm really [09:46.960 --> 09:54.080] not happy about this one. I'm going to ask you don't do that to us again. If it's speculation, [09:54.080 --> 10:00.080] tell us on the front end. Oh, okay. All right. All right. Yeah, I was hoping that even though [10:00.080 --> 10:06.720] the case they mentioned had nothing to do with the election, I was hoping that whoever reads [10:06.720 --> 10:14.160] this, the lawyers would possibly see if it would apply, you know, because I'm not a lawyer. I have [10:14.160 --> 10:21.760] no idea. It took Brad about five minutes. It shouldn't have took you any longer than that [10:21.760 --> 10:27.520] to figure out this case did not apply. Oh, no, I know that it had nothing to do with the election. [10:27.520 --> 10:34.960] But I was hoping that because of the fact that they were claiming in the article that the election [10:34.960 --> 10:40.240] is a contract, I was hoping that a lawyer would take that apart and say, well, you know, maybe we [10:40.240 --> 10:48.480] could use this. No, no. Okay. This is just some speculation. Yeah. But we don't even know who. [10:48.480 --> 10:54.080] You didn't ever tell us who made the speculation. Was it a lawyer? Was it a reporter? Was it [10:54.080 --> 11:00.800] someone with a hidden agenda? All right, because they identify themselves right here. [11:02.800 --> 11:10.720] The source is what they refer to as the state of the nation. [11:12.400 --> 11:18.320] They sign themselves as the state of the nation, whatever. So they're anonymous. They don't even [11:18.320 --> 11:28.880] have don't even have names. Don't ever bring us this kind of stuff. I get this stuff all day long. [11:29.440 --> 11:35.280] I get stacks of this stuff. And I wind up sorting through this and it's a source of an [11:35.280 --> 11:43.520] ending annoyance. I'm wondering who is putting this stuff out. Maybe if you can figure out [11:43.520 --> 11:48.400] how to get an injunction against them, then the Wise County can figure out how to get an [11:48.400 --> 11:55.920] injunction against everybody that's reports their crimes. Perhaps. But that is frustrating. [11:55.920 --> 12:02.400] Do you have anything else for us, John? Well, just one quickie. Somebody had called me yesterday [12:02.400 --> 12:09.360] and said she got a traffic ticket for... Okay, John, don't you say one word about seatbelts? [12:09.360 --> 12:15.920] No, no, no seatbelts. No seatbelts. Okay, for everybody else. That's a long time joke. [12:20.560 --> 12:26.880] Well, I want to know this for myself. Somebody gets a ticket for unregistered vehicle [12:27.840 --> 12:33.840] and they didn't have it registered as of September of 2019. It was due, I guess, [12:33.840 --> 12:41.440] like in August or September of 2019 until all this time has gone by. The cop sees the license plate, [12:42.400 --> 12:48.320] runs the plate while the person is driving the car. The cop is following and runs the plate [12:48.320 --> 12:55.360] and finds, according to the cop, the cop said, you don't have your registration. I found that your [12:55.360 --> 13:06.240] registration is lax. It's lax. And so the cop stops the car and tells her that the registration is lax [13:07.120 --> 13:13.680] and he writes her a ticket. Now, what's the best way to approach that from the standpoint? [13:13.680 --> 13:19.520] I mean, that's slam dunk. You haven't got it registered. It should have been registered. [13:19.520 --> 13:24.720] What's the best defense against that? It depends on where you, then you go to, [13:24.720 --> 13:32.400] you don't go to the merits. You go to due process. In Texas, Brett, I think you're [13:32.400 --> 13:38.800] the one that brought this to my attention that registration is in Section B of the [13:38.800 --> 13:45.040] Transportation Code and an officer can only pull someone over for a violation of Section C. [13:45.040 --> 13:54.160] Correct. They typically, they like to do the subtitle B and subtitle D for insurance, [13:54.160 --> 13:58.000] but that's not within the purview of what they're allowed to pull you over for. [14:01.680 --> 14:05.440] Now, what does that translate? Now, in Texas, what does that translate down to? [14:05.440 --> 14:14.320] Down to, we don't, we don't have all of the state's codes memorized. You'd have to, [14:14.320 --> 14:19.520] what state are you speaking to? New York. Your friend was, okay. [14:21.520 --> 14:26.320] Okay. New York. So I had no idea. You'd have to read the Transportation Code in New York. [14:27.920 --> 14:35.200] But there are other things. The fact that she did not have registration meant that she [14:35.200 --> 14:48.400] was not operating, she was not in a contract with the state to act as a commercial driver. [14:51.360 --> 14:55.760] Right. And as not a commercial driver, she had no need to have registration. [14:56.800 --> 15:02.960] That's a commercial contract. Oh, so registration is for commercial only? [15:02.960 --> 15:06.640] Right. Yes. Even in New York? [15:08.400 --> 15:14.160] Every state, it falls under Transportation Code. Transportation Code only goes in every state [15:15.120 --> 15:21.840] to commerce. Oh, so what's the, how do you approach it then? [15:22.560 --> 15:25.680] Okay. You know, you just told me how do you defend it? [15:25.680 --> 15:36.080] You read the code. You accuse the officer of lacking the, the offense itself, the charge [15:36.880 --> 15:43.920] is insufficient because you were not operating in commerce and therefore didn't need registration. [15:45.280 --> 15:50.800] So this, but, but how exactly to do it? You'd have to read the code in New York [15:50.800 --> 15:56.880] and pull the case law in New York. I wouldn't know how to, I know how to make that argument in [15:56.880 --> 16:03.520] Texas, but I know how to make it in New York. Right. So this goes back to the old situation [16:03.520 --> 16:10.080] where it's insufficient on its face because the Transportation Code does not provide [16:12.800 --> 16:18.560] for registration for private drivers. There's no law requiring a private driver to be registered. [16:18.560 --> 16:24.000] Right. So that, that's the whole basis of this, isn't it? [16:24.800 --> 16:29.200] Yes, but that, that's an argument you can make. Now they're going to fight you like crazy and [16:29.760 --> 16:33.680] Oh yeah. You need to pick your arguments really careful. [16:35.040 --> 16:44.960] Right. Right. Okay. Hang on. We're going to our sponsors. Ron, Jerry, Tina, see there we, [16:44.960 --> 16:50.880] John, okay, we're going to move on when we come back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [16:50.880 --> 16:55.280] Rudolf La Radio, and my tang is getting toggled. We'll be right back. [17:00.080 --> 17:04.560] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.200 --> 17:10.800] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mearris proven method. Michael Mearris has won six cases [17:10.800 --> 17:15.520] in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. 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Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the [18:03.360 --> 18:07.520] Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us against them society. If we, [18:07.520 --> 18:10.640] the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand [18:10.640 --> 18:15.040] and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:15.040 --> 18:19.280] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.280 --> 18:23.520] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.520 --> 18:27.520] our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's deputy, Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule [18:27.520 --> 18:31.280] of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you [18:31.280 --> 18:35.520] understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own [18:35.520 --> 18:40.160] copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:40.160 --> 18:43.600] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [18:43.600 --> 18:48.080] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. Hundreds of research [18:48.080 --> 18:51.600] documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights with the [18:51.600 --> 18:56.320] help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have [18:56.320 --> 19:02.320] free society we all want and deserve. [19:57.040 --> 20:04.240] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [20:04.240 --> 20:09.280] and we're going to Jerry in Pennsylvania. Jerry, what have you been up to? [20:14.320 --> 20:20.560] Are you there, Jerry? Did I put you to sleep with all my eloquent oratory? [20:20.560 --> 20:29.280] I must have. I have that effect on people. Okay, we may have a bad connection. Jerry, [20:29.280 --> 20:36.800] if you can hear me, try calling back in. Okay, we are going to Ron in Texas. Hello, Ron. [20:38.480 --> 20:40.640] Hey, yes, good evening. How are you all doing this evening? [20:41.440 --> 20:44.000] Doing good. What do you have for us today? [20:44.000 --> 20:50.880] Well, we were talking about my son the other night and you asked me to call back in this [20:50.880 --> 21:00.240] evening. I was able to get these T-Cole complaints printed out, but I'm having trouble finding the [21:00.240 --> 21:06.960] judicial conduct form and the Texas Code of Judicial, let's see, the bar grievances and [21:06.960 --> 21:14.080] things like that. It's right on their website. Just go to their website and look up complaint forms. [21:14.080 --> 21:19.280] Well, I did. Okay, so it's very vague. They have a whole list of stuff, but it doesn't say anything [21:19.280 --> 21:25.360] about what y'all told me to look at. Like the Texas District Rules of Misconduct, [21:25.360 --> 21:31.280] one, two, three, five, and eight, Brett had suggested that I look at that. I'm not finding [21:31.280 --> 21:40.960] that on their page at all, at TexasC courts.gov. All right, so txcourts.gov [21:42.960 --> 21:49.600] and from their main, let's see, what their main menu, I think it's called Rules and Forms [21:50.480 --> 21:57.040] at the top there. Yeah, Rules and Forms. Click that and then Rules and Standards. [21:57.040 --> 22:02.000] Rules and Standards. You see that? [22:04.240 --> 22:09.440] I'm not sitting in front of that right now. I'm writing, I don't know, so, but I have it [22:09.440 --> 22:17.200] pulled up machine. I'm looking at it right now. It's Rules and Forms on the top menu there under [22:17.200 --> 22:24.240] their big flag, and then Rules and Standards. And when you click Rules and Standards, it has a [22:24.240 --> 22:29.040] little list in the middle of the screen, and it's got two of the options that you're going to care [22:29.040 --> 22:33.520] about. It's got probably 10 different things in there. And the two you're going to be looking for [22:33.520 --> 22:46.240] are Texas Code of Judicial Conduct, TCJC, and Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct, [22:46.240 --> 22:55.280] TDRPC. Texas Rules. Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct. [22:56.080 --> 23:02.880] That's the one for the lawyers. Send me an email asking for that specifically, [23:03.520 --> 23:09.040] and I will find you a link, drop the link in the email, send it back to you. [23:09.040 --> 23:16.320] I sent it, I already sent it today, and then you said something about doing, looking for [23:18.800 --> 23:26.000] I want to say disclosures, or I'm exhausted, I'm sorry. You were talking about you wanted me to [23:26.000 --> 23:31.920] send something to get them to give us all the information on the case, and this is supposed [23:31.920 --> 23:40.480] to be going to the clerk, I guess. I want to say discrepancies, and I'm losing my train of thought. [23:41.920 --> 23:52.480] Just send to the clerk the cause number and ask for all records relative to this cause number. [23:52.480 --> 24:02.000] Okay, all records relative. I just got a response from the clerk. [24:02.000 --> 24:11.760] I sent a clerk a request for all of the criminal records from June until October, [24:12.560 --> 24:19.120] and I wanted all of the documents filed in the case. She sent me a response today that said [24:19.120 --> 24:26.560] that she wasn't sure what I was looking for, and if I would clarify, then she would look into that. [24:28.480 --> 24:33.520] I sent her the same thing back. I want to see all the records. How much clearer can I get? [24:34.800 --> 24:40.240] So just ask them for all of them. If you ask for anything in particular, [24:40.240 --> 24:44.560] then they'll start doing a song and dance. So ask for everything. [24:44.560 --> 24:52.000] And then you said something about to hammer the prosecutor that said failure to speak to [24:52.000 --> 25:00.080] the candor of the court about proper way. Failure to speak with candor to the court. [25:01.360 --> 25:08.720] With candor. That's a nice way of saying he's lying like a dog. [25:08.720 --> 25:14.720] Okay. With candor to the to the court. [25:17.120 --> 25:23.760] Sorry. You will do better once you've read the cannons. You read through them. It'll read like [25:23.760 --> 25:30.080] a comic book. Every time I read it, I get tickled about all of the things you can hammer them for. [25:31.760 --> 25:36.880] Same with judicial conduct. There's all of these things that they're supposed to do and they don't [25:36.880 --> 25:42.960] do. Once you've been read through both of them twice, you will know the cannons better than [25:42.960 --> 25:53.920] most lawyers do. And one of the primary ones is not speaking to their client. And at the end of [25:53.920 --> 26:01.360] the day, you're concerned about getting your complaint correct. It doesn't matter what you [26:01.360 --> 26:07.360] file. They're going to trash it. You filed a complaint against a lawyer and they trashed it. [26:08.640 --> 26:11.360] Okay. That's a good thing. [26:14.160 --> 26:21.200] Let me explain why that's a good thing. It's a good thing because the lawyer has an errors in [26:21.200 --> 26:32.320] emissions policy. And how does the carrier gauge their level of risk by valid bar grievances? [26:32.320 --> 26:39.440] Heck, throw them all in the trash by the numbers. Valid, invalid, the insurance [26:41.760 --> 26:49.520] agent, he doesn't care. He's got two things he's trying to do. He's trying to charge his client [26:49.520 --> 26:57.440] as much money as possible. And he's trying to avoid any claims against his company. [26:58.560 --> 27:03.520] So one thing he's got to do is gauge his level of risk. You know, if you buy a brand new car and [27:03.520 --> 27:07.760] you go down to Walmart and you come out and somebody has backed into it and bashed your [27:07.760 --> 27:11.520] fender in. When you call the insurance company, they're going to come out and fix it. [27:12.400 --> 27:18.880] Double insurance policy. You come back next month, they bashed in another fender. They're going to [27:18.880 --> 27:24.960] come out and fix it and cancel. Your fault, their fault, nobody's fault, they don't care. [27:26.080 --> 27:36.000] You are an unacceptable risk. Same thing with the lawyers. Valid, invalid, they don't care. One bar [27:36.000 --> 27:41.680] grievance, your first year of practice, they cancel immediately. Two bar grievances, anyone [27:41.680 --> 27:47.680] year of practice, they cancel. Three, they cancel your law firms, my practice insurance. Valid, [27:47.680 --> 27:52.960] invalid, they don't care. So don't worry if you get it right or not. Who cares? [27:54.480 --> 28:02.800] If they get a grievance, they have to report it to the carrier as a part of the contract. [28:03.680 --> 28:10.640] If a lawyer has any reason to believe that he could possibly wind up being sued, he must [28:10.640 --> 28:21.200] give notice to the insurance carrier. If he doesn't, he's not covered. So bar grievances over minor [28:21.200 --> 28:30.400] stuff, well, it's low down and dirty rotten. And that's why we like it so much. It's exactly the [28:30.400 --> 28:36.000] kind of stuff they would do to you. So don't worry if you get it right. Don't worry if they trash it. [28:36.000 --> 28:42.160] They're going to trash it no matter what you do. Valid anyway. And they're going to send you [28:42.160 --> 28:46.560] something that you get back in the mail that makes it look like you failed. Don't worry about it. [28:48.560 --> 28:57.920] Yeah, just chuckle. I was in the military and I called the inspector general on my NC OIC. [28:57.920 --> 29:06.640] Long story, but he was a real jerk. Everybody hated him. And he stopped me from going home [29:06.640 --> 29:11.920] to get married before I went overseas. For a school that turned out when it came time for [29:11.920 --> 29:17.520] the school, I asked him, the egress school and ejection systems on fighter airplanes, [29:18.160 --> 29:21.680] I asked him where I was supposed to report to for the school. He said, oh, they counseled that [29:21.680 --> 29:28.880] three months ago. That was before he counseled my leave. So it didn't exist when he counseled my [29:28.880 --> 29:34.320] leave. So I called the inspector general and told him right there in the the NC OIC's office. [29:35.200 --> 29:40.320] I asked him, can I use that phone? He said the phone is only for for official business. So the [29:40.320 --> 29:47.680] sergeant, this is very official. I picked up the phone, asked for the IG and I was talking to him, [29:47.680 --> 29:52.160] told him what happened. And he said, where is your NC OIC? Oh, he's standing right here, sir. [29:52.720 --> 29:59.120] Put him on the phone. And this NC OIC, he was a chief master sergeant. [30:00.800 --> 30:05.920] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, but you might not know that the way you walk could [30:05.920 --> 30:10.320] predict how long you're going to live. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell [30:10.320 --> 30:16.720] you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you give [30:16.720 --> 30:21.520] up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [30:21.520 --> 30:27.440] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance [30:27.440 --> 30:33.200] and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service [30:33.200 --> 30:38.480] announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [30:38.480 --> 30:46.240] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Start Page. New research shows how fast you walk could predict [30:46.240 --> 30:51.200] how long you're going to live. The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older [30:51.200 --> 30:56.800] adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. In case you're wondering, [30:56.800 --> 31:02.320] one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. A senior's age, gender and walking [31:02.320 --> 31:07.680] speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional statistical measures. Generally [31:07.680 --> 31:13.200] speaking, faster walkers live longer. Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive. It only [31:13.200 --> 31:18.160] takes a stopwatch, some space to walk in a few minutes. Researchers say it could help doctors [31:18.160 --> 31:24.080] identify older patients who need special care. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information [31:24.080 --> 31:33.760] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. I lost my son. My uncle. My uncle. My son. On September 11th, [31:33.760 --> 31:39.600] 2004, most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11th. World Trade Center 7, [31:39.600 --> 31:45.200] a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. I will be official explanation is that fire [31:45.200 --> 31:50.320] brought down Building 7. Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.320 --> 31:55.360] and believed there is more to the story. Bring justice to my son. My uncle. My nephew. My son. [31:55.360 --> 32:00.160] Go to BuildingWhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.040 --> 32:05.600] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.600 --> 32:11.840] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [32:11.840 --> 32:17.600] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5.16. Let your light so shine before men that they may [32:17.600 --> 32:23.040] see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's [32:23.040 --> 32:28.240] light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both [32:28.240 --> 32:34.240] verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:34.240 --> 32:39.600] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [32:39.600 --> 32:45.920] one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine [32:45.920 --> 32:50.960] as well as Christian character development. So mark your calendar and join us live on [32:50.960 --> 32:57.840] LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring [32:57.840 --> 33:06.240] and motivating discussion on the Scriptures. Live Free Speech Radio LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:58.800 --> 34:05.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rularar Radio. The reason I told that story [34:05.120 --> 34:11.440] is it had some interesting fallout because when I gave him the phone, he held the phone away from [34:11.440 --> 34:17.920] his ear and you could hear the Inspector General yelling at him and he said, yes sir, yes sir, [34:17.920 --> 34:24.640] and I'll be right there sir, hung up, looked at me like you're gonna die and then stormed out of [34:24.640 --> 34:30.560] the office. By the time he left the office, everybody in the hangar already knew what happened. [34:30.560 --> 34:36.240] They carried me around the hangar because I hated this guy. Three weeks later, I was called to a [34:36.240 --> 34:42.400] meeting, me and one other guy with the Commander. And we walked in there and we're looking around, [34:42.400 --> 34:51.680] oh, this is not good. And the Commander, he, we sat down and he's, and we come in, we pop to, [34:51.680 --> 34:55.840] he salutes, he says, have a seat here. So I want to show you something. I have line numbers here. [34:56.960 --> 35:09.280] I've got 26 Master Sargents in my duty section. I've got one line number. Who should I give it to? [35:10.320 --> 35:18.720] Well, they all got minimum time in grade. They all have an essentially exemplary record. Oh, [35:18.720 --> 35:25.280] well, this guy, he got the IG called on him. So that's a reason to set him aside. [35:27.280 --> 35:30.800] He looked at us. I don't know what this other guy did. I never found out. [35:31.920 --> 35:37.520] He said, the Commander said, do you understand what I'm telling you, Airman? Sir, yes sir. [35:39.680 --> 35:44.960] That'll be all. That was a good education for me. [35:44.960 --> 35:53.760] Ron, this is exactly what you need to understand. This judge, you file a judicial [35:53.760 --> 35:56.160] conduct complaint against him. They're going to trash it. [35:58.080 --> 36:04.480] But when the judge runs for office again, you can be sure his opponent is going to drag out [36:04.480 --> 36:10.640] these complaints and wave them in front of everybody. That puts a mark on his record [36:10.640 --> 36:17.520] that never, ever goes away. He could never stand in front of his electorate and say, [36:17.520 --> 36:22.880] I have never had anyone file any complaints against me because I'm such a good judge. [36:22.880 --> 36:28.080] He can't say that because they're in there. And it erases boundaries. [36:29.280 --> 36:33.840] You say to file those because he's not allowing my son to wear his glasses [36:33.840 --> 36:44.960] to even see what's my son. That's a lack of accommodation to the lack of accommodation [36:44.960 --> 36:53.840] under the Americans Disabilities Act. I think that can, I'm always looking for ways to map [36:54.560 --> 37:00.400] their actions, the actions of some attorney. When they're doing something wrong and your gut tells [37:00.400 --> 37:07.600] you it's wrong, there's going to be several different rules and different ways that you could [37:08.480 --> 37:14.800] accuse and say that's wrong, depending on which rule that you say they violated. [37:17.440 --> 37:26.480] But we learned that fraud, waste, and abuse go directly to insurance risk, liability. [37:26.480 --> 37:31.520] So fraud, waste, and abuse. Keep that in your mind as you're looking at all the different rules [37:31.520 --> 37:38.640] and the possible things that you can map their actions to and try to lean toward the ones that [37:38.640 --> 37:46.000] are talking about fraud. They did this fraudulently. It was abusive. It was wasteful. [37:47.280 --> 37:52.720] And that would be the ones that I would suggest you look at charging them with first. [37:52.720 --> 38:01.520] So in case of glasses, you could say it in a way that they're trying to secure execution [38:01.520 --> 38:12.000] of a document by deception. And that's a crime. And then the way that you put that, [38:12.000 --> 38:25.040] that lines up with a rule in Texas it would be, let's see. Because they tried, they ran him through [38:25.040 --> 38:31.360] court yesterday. They pulled him out of jail. They told him, they told us both, oh, you're not, [38:31.360 --> 38:36.800] he's not even going to be going to court or any kind of hearing until after Christmas. They postponed [38:36.800 --> 38:43.040] it all because of COVID. So he went out and done December 3rd. They said, oh, you won't even see [38:43.040 --> 38:48.080] your son until January. So just forget about it. You're not going to get into court. They wouldn't [38:48.080 --> 38:53.920] allow me into court anyway because of the COVID nonsense. Then when I tried to talk to his attorney [38:53.920 --> 39:00.080] outside when he came outside of the court, he wasn't in there 15 minutes. I thought he withdrew. [39:00.080 --> 39:05.600] That's what I asked him. Did you withdraw? He said, I'm not talking to you. So he's telling [39:05.600 --> 39:12.960] my student that I'm being abusive to this attorney. Bar, Bar grieve, Bar grieve the attorney. [39:15.040 --> 39:22.720] See, Ron, see if you think this matches. Rule 3.02 says that the attorney shall not take a position [39:22.720 --> 39:29.920] that unreasonably increases the costs or other burdens of the case or that unreasonably delays [39:29.920 --> 39:39.840] resolution of the matter. He shall not. Well, he just did. So you are grieving for that violation [39:39.840 --> 39:49.280] of rule 3.02. Keep in mind, Ron, he's court appointed counsel. Yeah, he's on, he's on your clock. [39:50.960 --> 39:55.760] Yeah, he won't even speak to me. And what he's okay, we got that. We got that. He won't speak to [39:55.760 --> 40:03.360] you. He's not supposed to speak to you about the case. He can only speak to his client about the case. [40:04.240 --> 40:11.680] But he has to, he has to be polite to you. Don't bar grieve him for not talking to you. [40:12.640 --> 40:14.720] Bar grieve him for not talking to your son. [40:17.200 --> 40:22.400] Okay, yeah, because my son had no idea, then all of a sudden they railroaded him up into [40:22.400 --> 40:29.280] the court. Okay, stop, stop, we can't do this. You're getting, you're going to go through every [40:29.280 --> 40:34.480] bad thing that happened. We spend a whole show going through this. We're not about the bad things [40:34.480 --> 40:39.280] that happened. We're about resolution. We're about remedy. He couldn't see, he couldn't even see the [40:39.280 --> 40:44.720] documents that you're trying to put in front of him because he doesn't laugh. That's why, that's why [40:44.720 --> 40:51.360] you grieve. That's why you talk about fraud and accuse the lawyer of the fraud. And so like this [40:51.360 --> 40:58.480] would be another one that goes to that. You could say rule 1.02 subsection C. An attorney shall not [40:58.480 --> 41:04.720] assist or counsel a client to engage in conduct that the lawyer knows is criminal or fraudulent. [41:04.720 --> 41:09.440] Of course it's fraudulent for somebody to be forced to sign things. They don't even have a way to [41:09.440 --> 41:17.760] read. Obviously. Right. And 102 subsection D says that the attorney shall promptly make reasonable [41:17.760 --> 41:23.120] efforts under the circumstances to dissuade the client from committing crime or fraud. [41:25.040 --> 41:32.400] Well, he violated that one too. Okay. What they, what they, what they told my son was, [41:32.400 --> 41:37.200] hey, we want to send you home for Christmas. You need to go ahead and sign this and plead guilty. [41:37.920 --> 41:41.520] And he was like, no, I'm not okay. I don't even know what this says. [41:41.520 --> 41:50.560] Okay. We got that. We got that. Grieve him today. Grieve your, grieve his attorney for it. [41:51.440 --> 41:58.000] In another rule 104 subsection A says the attorney shall not enter into an arrangement for [41:58.560 --> 42:05.360] charge or collecting the illegal fee or unconscionable fee. So you can say that it's [42:05.360 --> 42:11.920] unconscionable for him to be collecting fees for his services to do something that is fraudulent. [42:11.920 --> 42:18.240] Oh, that's good. That will give him apoplexy. [42:22.480 --> 42:28.000] So watch what happens, Ron, when you start filing these and make sure you file them at least a week [42:28.000 --> 42:38.560] apart. Now you put the court in a position to where they have to protect their, their friend [42:38.560 --> 42:47.360] lawyer here from the client's father. If anybody says one word to you about this, especially the [42:47.360 --> 42:54.720] lawyer, when you bargery the lawyer, he is forbidden to speak to you about it. If he has a [42:54.720 --> 43:01.680] concern about it, he's to take that to the bar. The bar is the mediator. If he speaks to you about [43:01.680 --> 43:08.960] it, then that will be construed as him attempting to improperly influence a witness and you bargrieve [43:08.960 --> 43:21.040] him for that. Okay. Improperly influence. If he says to you, if he tells you that, you know, [43:21.040 --> 43:27.120] that's improper, you can't file a bargrieve, just be for that. You grieve him for telling you that. [43:28.080 --> 43:33.920] He has to keep his mouth shut. You both, if you like, you both go into court, you stand behind [43:33.920 --> 43:38.400] your table. He stands behind his, before the court starts, you walk over and kick him right [43:38.400 --> 43:44.000] squarely behind and he's got to stand there and act like you didn't do it. These guys are vulnerable. [43:44.000 --> 43:47.600] Once you've figured that out, you can get up to work at your favorite. Hang on. [43:47.600 --> 43:53.840] We have to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of our radio, call in number [43:53.840 --> 43:57.760] 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [44:00.400 --> 44:06.320] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.320 --> 44:11.200] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.200 --> 44:17.760] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. In a [44:17.760 --> 44:23.440] world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can [44:23.440 --> 44:29.920] provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [44:29.920 --> 44:36.400] most of which we reject. We have come to trust Jevity so much. We became a marketing distributor [44:36.400 --> 44:43.200] along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, [44:43.200 --> 44:49.120] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. As you realize the benefits of [44:49.120 --> 44:55.200] young Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:55.200 --> 44:59.680] help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [45:00.960 --> 45:03.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.520 --> 45:09.600] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand, [45:09.600 --> 45:16.880] four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, [45:16.880 --> 45:21.760] know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for [45:21.760 --> 45:28.800] yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can, too. Jurisdictionary [45:28.800 --> 45:35.360] was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. Even if you're not in [45:35.360 --> 45:40.880] a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices [45:40.880 --> 45:47.760] that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [45:47.760 --> 45:54.960] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflongradio.com [45:54.960 --> 46:00.560] and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:24.960 --> 46:48.560] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruella Radio, and we're talking to Ron in Texas. [46:48.560 --> 46:54.880] Ron, get two or three complaints in. Once you start putting them in, you will see [46:55.520 --> 47:02.400] that their whole attitude begins to change. And if you start hammering this lawyer, the lawyer's [47:02.400 --> 47:10.480] going to win off the case. And tell your son, tell your son, don't you dare let him off that case. [47:11.360 --> 47:18.480] Because if the judge takes him off the case, then he gets to sue the judge for interfering with [47:18.480 --> 47:26.640] private contract. So file a couple more, a couple complaints, and then come back next week and let [47:26.640 --> 47:32.000] us get us the text of what you filed and we'll address that. I need to move on. We've got a [47:32.000 --> 47:36.720] board full of callers and we're going to run out of time here. Thank you for calling Ron. [47:36.720 --> 47:39.920] Now we're going to Jerry in Pennsylvania. Hello, Jerry. [47:39.920 --> 47:53.600] Jerry looks like Jerry's still asleep. Okay. No, I've unmuted him. He might have [47:53.600 --> 48:00.000] dropped off and doesn't realize he's still connected. Oh yeah, I think maybe Debra's either [48:00.000 --> 48:06.320] screening him or he just dropped off. Okay, we are going to Tina in California. Hello, Tina. [48:06.320 --> 48:13.920] Hello, how are you today? I am good. I have a little voice issue, so that's [48:13.920 --> 48:18.720] spider bite he's got to Modelerinix and haven't quite cleared up yet. [48:20.000 --> 48:23.280] Are you sure you weren't drinking too much of that beer from your beer funds? [48:25.600 --> 48:28.880] I hadn't quit drinking beer for a long time ago. It gives me headache. [48:28.880 --> 48:35.920] Now the snobs, I really like the snobs. I hadn't quit drinking that too. [48:37.040 --> 48:40.640] Yep, I heard about that. I'll have to send you some grappa. [48:43.760 --> 48:49.520] Well, I have a quick question from one of the things I'm doing to even get to other people. [48:51.600 --> 48:56.720] I know I'd asked you this and I've forgotten what you said. I have this one case where I filed [48:56.720 --> 49:03.440] an adversary proceeding against a couple that took a bunch of people's money from this [49:04.800 --> 49:15.680] store, this consignment store and when she finally hired her fourth attorney in the deal and he put [49:15.680 --> 49:24.480] in the response that he put in a bunch of lies about people and he included in mine [49:24.480 --> 49:33.040] that, oh, you know, she's been accused of fraud in a bankruptcy years ago, which is false. [49:33.760 --> 49:42.000] But what am I doing when I file a bar complaint of the team? Because I think I should file it [49:42.000 --> 49:45.920] while we're in the case, correct? While we're doing that right now. [49:45.920 --> 49:50.480] Absolutely. File them quick. File them often. [49:50.480 --> 49:59.920] Okay, so what am I saying about what he's done? Because I know it's irrelevant to the [49:59.920 --> 50:08.080] current case. He's trying to mislead the judge and slander me, but what is the real wording I should [50:08.080 --> 50:17.120] use? Fail to speak with candor to the court. Fail to speak with candor to the court. Okay, like that? [50:17.120 --> 50:21.920] That's a nice way of saying you lied like a dog. [50:24.560 --> 50:29.520] And he defamed you with false assertions and allegations. [50:31.120 --> 50:38.160] Tina is one of the few people that already knows what candor means because she uses that kind of [50:38.160 --> 50:44.640] language. Well, that's because she's a foreigner and speaks a foreign language. [50:44.640 --> 50:48.720] Now you're being very childish now. You must stop that. [50:54.880 --> 51:00.720] Okay, so just those two things, false statements, fail to speak with candor to the court. [51:01.360 --> 51:04.000] Famed me, is there anything else I should add in there? [51:04.960 --> 51:06.160] Did he hurt your feelings? [51:06.160 --> 51:14.160] I actually put that in a court case while it said he hurt my feelings. [51:16.960 --> 51:23.200] No, so making me cough now. I'm laughing too hard. Well, maybe I could add that another time, [51:24.000 --> 51:29.760] and the other thing they put in was the amount I was asking for for the property they took [51:29.760 --> 51:34.080] was ridiculous. I don't know where they got the number from they put in there. [51:34.080 --> 51:42.320] But I have no idea where they pulled it from. But I think what it is, is the total amount on [51:43.200 --> 51:51.120] the appraisal for all the property was actually more than that. One painting was, [51:52.400 --> 51:58.320] you know, it was an insurance appraised for that amount. But that painting wasn't even part of this. [51:58.320 --> 52:04.960] And she claims in there, oh, I've never seen the appraisal. How would you know that figure [52:04.960 --> 52:08.480] if she'd never seen the appraisal, which she did, because she gave it back to me? [52:08.480 --> 52:13.040] So is there any way I can spin that she's lying about the thing? [52:13.040 --> 52:15.920] Is that a material fact? [52:17.200 --> 52:24.640] Yes, it is, because they're saying that I'm claiming all this money, and that if property [52:24.640 --> 52:30.560] was worth that much, it would have been in a high-end, you know, shop. And I wasn't claiming [52:30.560 --> 52:33.680] that money. I was claiming, you know, a lot, lot less. [52:35.120 --> 52:40.160] Then that's material. That should get aggravated perjury charges against them. [52:41.760 --> 52:46.720] The judge is a magistrate. Go ahead and file it in this case. [52:46.720 --> 52:55.440] Okay. And the judge may say, well, since I'm presiding over this case, [52:55.440 --> 53:01.040] I'm compromised. Well, in that case, give it to a magistrate who's not compromised. [53:02.800 --> 53:09.120] Okay. And what about the fact that they, you know, literally, Blaine said, [53:09.120 --> 53:15.920] you know, Chair Colbert did not even write this complaint. Some other party did, [53:15.920 --> 53:21.920] and they, they, they, this Kevin and John wrote the complaint. She didn't write it, [53:21.920 --> 53:29.680] and they put her up to this, which is entirely an utterly false, you know. [53:30.560 --> 53:36.240] Don't get caught. Don't let them drag you down a rabbit hole. [53:36.240 --> 53:39.840] Because it doesn't really matter whether somebody put you up to it. [53:40.560 --> 53:44.640] They're just dangling this shiny thing off to the side so that you won't go for their jugular. [53:45.520 --> 53:51.840] Yeah. Objection relevance. Irrelevant. Okay. [53:53.760 --> 53:58.320] Okay. Well, that's the only question I have for tonight, because I know you've got a [53:58.320 --> 54:02.080] board full of callers, and I've got lots of other call questions for another night. [54:02.080 --> 54:09.360] Okay. And that's it. That is an important point. When we're in any kind of case like this, [54:09.360 --> 54:15.360] we have to always focus on the outcome, on the end, on the end result. [54:17.280 --> 54:23.120] Do not let them lead you down a rabbit hole. And it's hard. When you're engaged in something [54:23.120 --> 54:30.320] where you're emotionally engaged, it is hard to do that. They say things you know are absolutely [54:30.320 --> 54:37.520] wrong and disparaging and hateful and you want to fight with them. And the other lawyer on the [54:37.520 --> 54:42.560] other side would like nothing better than to get you fighting about something that doesn't matter. [54:44.400 --> 54:48.320] And when you, when you just, you know, a lot of times when I was helping people, [54:48.320 --> 54:52.880] and the other side did that, we just simply ignored it. And a few times we put in, [54:52.880 --> 54:57.200] we're not going to address these issues. They're not relevant to the case and just went on. [54:57.200 --> 55:01.760] That will probably do you better than anything else. And then, then you can [55:01.760 --> 55:08.240] file criminal charges against them separately. Okay. So I was wondering about the other three [55:08.240 --> 55:14.480] participants. He said equally, you know, fault things against them, what they're claiming, [55:14.480 --> 55:20.000] just the other, and we're thinking of maybe all of those filing a separate law complaint [55:20.000 --> 55:27.120] against the attorney. That's four of us. Is that a good idea too? Oh, that'll make a great Christmas [55:27.120 --> 55:34.080] present. Well, what is one, there's one big drawback you have to consider. [55:35.840 --> 55:45.040] That lawyer is not going to send you a Christmas card. Oh, darn it. You'll just have to suffer [55:45.040 --> 55:55.440] that indignity. Oh, I'm really, really upset. Lawyers, it is just, they lie as a matter of course. [55:56.800 --> 56:03.200] And the judges just stand by and allow it. So the one thing we've got to fight back with [56:03.200 --> 56:11.040] is their insurance company. And they don't expect us to do that. So absolutely. [56:11.040 --> 56:18.240] Go ahead. Tina, I was going to point you about this candor toward the tribunal. [56:19.440 --> 56:31.680] I would point you to the American Bar Association, Rule 3.3. And then Rule 3.4 is fairness to opposing [56:31.680 --> 56:40.160] party and council. And Rule 4.1 is truthfulness in statements to others. So that's like the [56:40.160 --> 56:44.240] parallel to the one about the court. You know, they need to speak to the court with candor. [56:44.240 --> 56:53.200] 3.3, 4.1 is they need to be truthful in their statements to you. Oh, I like that. That's really [56:53.200 --> 57:00.160] good. The lawyer shall not knowingly make a false statement of material fact or law to a third person. [57:00.160 --> 57:08.160] Thank you. So 3.3, 3.4, 4.1, take a look. Have fun. [57:09.360 --> 57:13.360] I will do that. And I'll point it out to the others. I think if we send them [57:13.920 --> 57:19.920] each to our own but send them within a few days of each other, this is a sole proprietor attorney. [57:21.280 --> 57:27.040] And so we're wondering if he'll withdraw from the case like her other three because [57:27.040 --> 57:35.360] they withdrew because she didn't pay them. He's likely to withdraw when he gets the first one. [57:36.400 --> 57:45.120] He will likely run like a rabbit. That would be fun. Then she's really scrambling because she has no [57:45.120 --> 57:51.600] idea how to answer any of this stuff. And she was just hoping she'd get this bankruptcy. [57:51.600 --> 57:57.600] She took charge and she dismissed all of it. Oh, she's running off the cliff. [57:57.600 --> 58:00.480] I'll let someone else come back on the other side. Thank you very much. [58:01.200 --> 58:09.440] Okay. Thank you. Tina, this is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rural Radio. We have Olivier. [58:09.440 --> 58:14.560] We will pick you up on the other side. Olivier has been taking on the state of Florida. [58:14.560 --> 58:23.680] And he's having way too much fun. So I've also got David in Texas. We've got two slots open. [58:24.480 --> 58:29.520] We've got an hour left. So if you have a question or comment you want to get in, [58:30.080 --> 58:37.120] we can probably get to one more caller by the end of the show. Okay, Brett, help me out here. [58:37.120 --> 58:45.040] I'm out of outro and I've got 10 seconds left. Let's tell them what number to call. Oh, yeah. [58:45.040 --> 58:54.000] Call in number 512646 1984. Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.000 --> 59:00.160] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really [59:00.160 --> 59:05.360] help. The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.360 --> 59:09.920] today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will [59:09.920 --> 59:15.920] help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three-volume set called [59:15.920 --> 59:21.360] Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [59:21.360 --> 59:27.760] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.760 --> 59:33.200] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, [59:33.200 --> 59:49.040] call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:52.080 --> 59:58.240] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [59:58.240 --> 01:00:04.400] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdowns. [01:00:06.240 --> 01:00:12.880] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [01:00:12.880 --> 01:00:20.640] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, [01:00:20.640 --> 01:00:29.040] Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, [01:00:29.040 --> 01:00:41.360] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:41.360 --> 01:00:51.520] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, [01:00:51.520 --> 01:00:57.360] was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [01:00:57.360 --> 01:01:00.240] killing 10 and injuring 40. Today in History. [01:01:04.400 --> 01:01:08.960] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing [01:01:08.960 --> 01:01:13.600] heaven attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, [01:01:13.600 --> 01:01:17.680] Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing [01:01:17.680 --> 01:01:22.240] to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:01:22.240 --> 01:01:27.040] equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, [01:01:27.040 --> 01:01:31.120] announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of [01:01:31.120 --> 01:01:36.240] marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney [01:01:36.240 --> 01:01:40.720] General, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana [01:01:40.720 --> 01:01:45.600] has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:01:45.600 --> 01:01:52.240] of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the district attorney in El Paso, [01:01:52.240 --> 01:01:57.120] Kyman Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:01:57.120 --> 01:02:02.640] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue [01:02:02.640 --> 01:02:07.440] was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, [01:02:07.440 --> 01:02:11.840] who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based [01:02:11.840 --> 01:02:15.840] on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, [01:02:15.840 --> 01:02:24.880] the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five [01:02:24.880 --> 01:02:29.840] and a half inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [01:02:29.840 --> 01:02:35.360] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [01:02:35.360 --> 01:02:40.400] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, [01:02:40.400 --> 01:02:46.480] the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes [01:02:46.480 --> 01:02:50.320] hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.320 --> 01:02:57.920] This is Wook Roadie with a lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:21.280 --> 01:03:31.920] Yeah, I realize by my father's eyes, I will tell you the truth, I realize by my father's eyes, [01:03:31.920 --> 01:03:47.360] he has to be with the strength and with the, I will, A, my concern. I realize by my father's [01:03:47.360 --> 01:03:56.160] eyes, I will tell you the truth. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:03:56.160 --> 01:04:02.080] Will La Radio, and we're going to Olivier in Florida. [01:04:07.760 --> 01:04:15.360] Okay, you were going after the state of Florida. Tell us what's happened since you were called in [01:04:15.360 --> 01:04:26.960] last. Not much, we just been going through the court procedure. I filed a motion. Oh, that's why [01:04:28.000 --> 01:04:32.400] three points, I want to get to real quick. I could save the time for someone else. [01:04:33.200 --> 01:04:42.320] Two points about one, the gentleman that was talking about the situation with the [01:04:42.320 --> 01:04:48.560] sister or something like that with the registration. Next time you talk to him, you could tell him [01:04:49.200 --> 01:04:57.200] that you could get her to do a void vagueness challenge against that statute, [01:04:58.000 --> 01:05:04.480] against all the reasons that they want to mention and relate it to the commerce and everything, [01:05:04.480 --> 01:05:12.800] and then already have them set up for the interlocutor appeal because we already know what [01:05:12.800 --> 01:05:21.760] is going to do with that. That was the, that was one thing. The second thing was with yours, [01:05:22.880 --> 01:05:32.640] you were talking about the, where they, where you was, where you were going after the issue [01:05:32.640 --> 01:05:42.080] of them not providing the defendants with that hearing, like the word of it, the [01:05:43.440 --> 01:05:53.760] examining trial. Examining trial, the examining trial. Well, in your state is written in the [01:05:53.760 --> 01:06:00.640] code or whatnot, but in Florida, I have not found that language in the code. So in I was [01:06:00.640 --> 01:06:07.840] figuring with states that don't have the language clearly written in the code, [01:06:09.280 --> 01:06:16.160] individuals in that state can challenge that statute for void vagueness because [01:06:17.840 --> 01:06:25.680] it, it restricts them from a right that they have, a protected right that they have, [01:06:25.680 --> 01:06:32.880] and I guess it would be a procedure, a violation of due process [01:06:39.600 --> 01:06:46.160] because they don't, they do not instruct the officers to take you to the examining trial. [01:06:46.160 --> 01:06:52.800] They, they, the statute states to arrest them and bring them to the county chair. [01:06:52.800 --> 01:07:04.240] Okay. The seminal case that we use to establish the federal right to a preliminary hearing is [01:07:04.240 --> 01:07:13.280] Gerstein-Pew. And Gerstein-Pew is a Florida case and it addressed exactly that issue, [01:07:14.720 --> 01:07:21.840] that Florida did not have it in their law to do this, but the federal constitution absolutely [01:07:21.840 --> 01:07:31.120] commands it. And they ordered Florida to include this in their procedures and in their law, [01:07:31.120 --> 01:07:38.800] but Florida didn't do it. So now you can go after them. It doesn't matter that the officer was [01:07:38.800 --> 01:07:51.760] following law. The law in Florida is unconstitutional. Okay. And that's what Gerstein-Pew established. [01:07:51.760 --> 01:07:57.840] If you read that whole case, a really hammered Florida for the lack of a preliminary hearing. [01:07:59.440 --> 01:08:06.480] Okay. So what, can I, you said it was on that website. Do you have the numbers [01:08:07.760 --> 01:08:16.080] tonight, hey? I think I sent it to you. If not, just send me an email and I will send you, [01:08:16.080 --> 01:08:22.320] have I sent you my due process, habeas corpus document? [01:08:24.640 --> 01:08:31.840] No. Okay. It goes through due process. Actually, you can find it on jurismimprudence.website. [01:08:31.840 --> 01:08:55.040] Gerstein-Pew is 420 US-103 and it's 1975. 420 US-103. 1975. Yeah. Gerstein is G-E-R-S-T-E-I-N [01:08:55.040 --> 01:09:08.160] versus P-P-U-G-H. And you might also want to look up, let's see, [01:09:08.160 --> 01:09:15.600] McLaughlin v. City of Riverside. This is the one that says they have to get you to a magistrate [01:09:15.600 --> 01:09:27.120] immediately, but if there is some, if they can establish an intermediate emergency, [01:09:27.680 --> 01:09:33.360] they can take up to 48 hours, but they have to show an emergency. That's [01:09:35.040 --> 01:09:40.480] City of Riverside v. McLaughlin. That's another seminal controlling case. If you will go to [01:09:40.480 --> 01:09:46.960] jurismprudence.website. Top frog on the, on your left as you're looking at it. [01:09:48.560 --> 01:09:55.120] Click on that and you can download this habeas corpus I wrote for a kid in Conroe. [01:09:55.120 --> 01:09:59.760] And it walks through due process and it has all these cases in it. [01:09:59.760 --> 01:10:12.080] In that City of Riverside v. McLaughlin, that's 500. 500. Sorry? Yeah, 500 US-44. [01:10:12.080 --> 01:10:29.120] Yeah, and it also says 111, Supreme Court 1661. And that is from the year 1991. [01:10:29.680 --> 01:10:36.080] Okay. Well, I like, thank you. I'm, I'm kind of funny this 420. I'm, [01:10:36.080 --> 01:10:41.600] I'm, I'm reading cases and stuff like that. This 420 is really sticking out to me. So [01:10:41.600 --> 01:10:44.960] there's a good student to you. I'm probably going to find something interesting out of that. [01:10:45.520 --> 01:10:50.080] But as far as my case, and I filed the [01:10:51.920 --> 01:11:00.720] voice of agents, I filed a motion to dismiss. The judge dismissed my case without the prosecutor [01:11:00.720 --> 01:11:09.680] having an opportunity to address. The judge dismissed the case to a spontane. [01:11:10.560 --> 01:11:19.760] And I mean, not, not in case the motion to a spontane. So that's a, that's an issue there. [01:11:19.760 --> 01:11:31.760] And what I have done is I'm preparing to, well, we, we expected that. Randy, you expected that. [01:11:31.760 --> 01:11:40.560] Or some type of dismissal. But the judge failed to conclude findings of facts and conclusions of [01:11:40.560 --> 01:11:49.600] law. So I had a court date coming up. I mean, I was on the 11th, I think on the 10th or 11th. And [01:11:49.600 --> 01:11:55.600] I was got called out. I meant to submit it earlier. But the day before I submitted the paperwork to [01:11:55.600 --> 01:12:02.240] the clerk for the finding of facts. I got that paperwork. She said that it's not going to get [01:12:02.240 --> 01:12:08.000] in the docket by tomorrow. So she gave me a copy so I could bring it to court. That's fine. That's, [01:12:08.000 --> 01:12:13.040] that's perfect. She gives me a copy. I go to court. The judge is sitting there. [01:12:16.000 --> 01:12:19.760] I want to submit the paperwork. The judge is sitting there trying to get me an attorney. I [01:12:19.760 --> 01:12:25.360] told him I don't want the attorney. He's asking me my applaud, my diss now. I'm like, no, no, no, [01:12:25.360 --> 01:12:30.960] no, no. Well, I'm going to appoint your attorney. I told him I don't want an attorney. I'm going [01:12:30.960 --> 01:12:37.680] for a fake. And then he's like, well, right now, I'm going for your attorney. There's another court [01:12:37.680 --> 01:12:45.280] date to deal with that. And then we'll address those issues, when those issues arrive. But right [01:12:45.280 --> 01:12:49.680] now I'm praying to your attorney. I said, okay, whatever. You understand? I'm not going to, [01:12:49.680 --> 01:12:55.600] I'm not going to sit here and argue any further than I have to. I said, why don't you just say. [01:12:55.600 --> 01:13:02.720] So I said, okay, what do I, I need to turn this into the file because I filed it yesterday. [01:13:03.360 --> 01:13:13.280] And the clerk told me that it would not get into the court before today. And then the judge was [01:13:13.280 --> 01:13:19.440] like, oh, what's that? I'm like, it's a motion. It's like a motion. I'm like, yeah. And then I said, [01:13:19.440 --> 01:13:23.600] you see, well, you got to file it with the court. I said, I said that already. It's already filed. [01:13:23.600 --> 01:13:31.040] It is, they gave me a copy submitted to you and stamped it. So the clerk, the officer brings it [01:13:31.040 --> 01:13:37.840] up to him and he starts reading. And then it's a, most of us find demanding for finding the facts [01:13:37.840 --> 01:13:44.000] and it starts reading. And it's basically a cue when the judge is, but once he sees his name in [01:13:44.000 --> 01:13:49.360] there and asks him for finding the facts, he's like, oh my God. So he's like, well, [01:13:49.360 --> 01:13:56.640] he tells, he says, he tells, I'm going to give the public defenders this paperwork and [01:13:57.680 --> 01:14:05.280] they'll, they'll figure out how you want to deal with it. And like the judge seemed so [01:14:05.280 --> 01:14:12.000] distraught when he read it, like the filing effect. It was like, I think they already knew [01:14:12.000 --> 01:14:19.520] that we were setting them up. Well, at that point, he definitely knew it was a setup to walk out. [01:14:20.320 --> 01:14:25.200] He started figuring it out, huh? Yeah, but it's too late. So you already, [01:14:26.960 --> 01:14:34.480] it's already, I already made the court record and I'm ready to get rid of the attorney, [01:14:34.480 --> 01:14:42.160] bar greens or whatever I have to do. So, and we're going to the appeals. I read, I read through Florida [01:14:42.160 --> 01:14:50.880] appeals courts and the appeals court, they seem to go by law. And they'll get turned over, you know, [01:14:50.880 --> 01:15:02.880] but they seem to give the credit to the defendant or more, more so what I have read. And then the [01:15:02.880 --> 01:15:12.160] higher courts overturn it, if there, if there was a problem. So it's the court of appeals, [01:15:13.280 --> 01:15:20.880] they live in a different place than the trial judge does. The court of appeals only rules on [01:15:20.880 --> 01:15:30.400] point of law and it is their job to maintain the sanctity of the body of law. So if they render [01:15:30.400 --> 01:15:38.400] a bogus ruling, then all of these lawyers can take that bogus ruling and use it in their cases. So [01:15:39.200 --> 01:15:45.840] the court of appeals are much more careful in how they rule. So that's, that's why we say, [01:15:45.840 --> 01:15:51.760] don't ever expect to win your case in the trial court. Appeals court where the action is. So [01:15:52.880 --> 01:15:59.360] this wouldn't be good because I'm good chance when the judge saw findings of fact, he realized [01:15:59.360 --> 01:16:05.840] that you were going to prepare a petition for interlocutory appeal. [01:16:08.640 --> 01:16:16.080] Because it's a dispositive motion and he knows that now you're going to really take him to the [01:16:16.080 --> 01:16:23.600] wall. So good. Right. And so that's why I was saying like the truth, the guy, the gentleman [01:16:23.600 --> 01:16:29.360] that you were talking to earlier, you could teach them to, when they have that to go down the avenue, [01:16:30.080 --> 01:16:33.520] if you're going to bring the, if they're forcing them to come to court, okay, [01:16:34.000 --> 01:16:41.680] just do it ahead of time, beat them to the parts. Okay. Hang on. About to go to our sponsors, [01:16:42.240 --> 01:16:50.080] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. Okay. Call in number five, one, two, six, four, six, [01:16:50.080 --> 01:16:54.320] 1984. We've got a couple of empty slots. We'll be right back. [01:17:00.080 --> 01:17:04.640] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.200 --> 01:17:10.800] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. Michael Meares has won six cases [01:17:10.800 --> 01:17:15.600] in federal court against debt collectors. And now you can win too. 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Without the shows on this network, [01:18:02.640 --> 01:18:07.040] I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going [01:18:07.040 --> 01:18:12.720] back. I need my truth pick. I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network [01:18:12.720 --> 01:18:16.800] on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really [01:18:16.800 --> 01:18:22.080] don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [01:18:22.080 --> 01:18:27.120] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.120 --> 01:18:32.000] With ordering your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, [01:18:32.000 --> 01:18:38.960] go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything [01:18:38.960 --> 01:18:45.440] from Amazon, you use that link and logos get a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do I have to do [01:18:45.440 --> 01:18:51.920] anything different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow. Giving [01:18:51.920 --> 01:18:57.840] without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are [01:18:57.840 --> 01:19:07.840] Logos. Happy holidays, Logos. This is the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:19:07.840 --> 01:19:23.840] Oh, come on. [01:19:23.840 --> 01:19:33.840] Oh, [01:19:54.000 --> 01:20:02.640] okay. We are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and we're talking to Olivier in Florida. [01:20:05.680 --> 01:20:12.560] Okay. Go ahead, Olivier. Yeah, I was saying as far as the gentleman you had earlier who had the [01:20:13.760 --> 01:20:22.320] ticket for the registration and anyone who had the state that does not properly address the [01:20:22.320 --> 01:20:32.080] way to arrest an individual can apply this void for vagueness process because [01:20:32.800 --> 01:20:38.160] it runs a lot faster than the court system does. If they're going to bring you to court and waste [01:20:38.160 --> 01:20:48.640] your time and do this, then I think it's a good maneuver to teach the public [01:20:48.640 --> 01:20:59.360] to file this void for vagueness on this and get them set up for a finding of facts that [01:20:59.360 --> 01:21:05.680] they don't give you finding of facts and an interlocutor appeal. By the time they have the [01:21:05.680 --> 01:21:12.960] time to move you with the court date, your interlocutor appeal would move a lot faster. [01:21:12.960 --> 01:21:21.200] Can you send me that argument? And I will make it available to anybody who wants to see it. [01:21:22.400 --> 01:21:28.240] And tell us that case again. You mentioned it before that you had found for void for [01:21:28.240 --> 01:21:31.600] vagueness. What was the case that you had as a basis for that? [01:21:31.600 --> 01:21:45.680] Well, we couldn't understand you. We said that again. [01:21:46.880 --> 01:21:50.560] I said there's several cases that I got to see if I could pull it up. [01:21:50.560 --> 01:22:05.200] It sounds like a good maneuver because you take them to the books. You take them to the books [01:22:05.200 --> 01:22:10.560] in the front end. And while you were saying that, I was thinking what I need to add to my traffic [01:22:10.560 --> 01:22:21.440] site is a preliminary request for findings of fact and conclusions that law on all the rulings [01:22:21.440 --> 01:22:32.000] that the court makes. Now, I know that a request for findings of fact prior to a ruling will be [01:22:32.000 --> 01:22:41.360] considered untimely. But that's not the purpose. The purpose is to give notice to the judge [01:22:42.000 --> 01:22:49.360] that we're going to ask for findings of fact on each ruling. So now you have to take a step back [01:22:49.360 --> 01:22:57.680] and be a little more careful how you rule. So maybe we'll get some better responses. [01:22:57.680 --> 01:23:05.280] The main thing we want to do is send them to the books. Did you find anything? [01:23:06.800 --> 01:23:12.320] Yes, and it keeps you from having the experience of jail time. [01:23:14.000 --> 01:23:23.600] Or, you know, further, it could be if I found a seat. Overboard is several. The United States versus [01:23:23.600 --> 01:23:45.200] Williams 553 U.S. 285. There's Oakland versus Ohio. I think those are another reference to see [01:23:45.200 --> 01:24:05.680] do I have void for vagueness analysis. We have state versus Drake 796SO.2D, 522, Florida Supreme [01:24:05.680 --> 01:24:19.840] Court explains void for vagueness, the legal analysis. I'll give you a broader to see. There's [01:24:19.840 --> 01:24:39.280] another one, Supreme Court. Candler versus Lawson 461 U.S. 352 Supreme Court 1998. Those cases [01:24:39.280 --> 01:24:47.600] will explain to you what is void for vagueness, what the statute has to explain to you and [01:24:47.600 --> 01:24:56.160] the languages. They have to have language explaining to the officers how to do things, [01:24:56.160 --> 01:25:05.920] and it cannot leave up to debate a difference that two individuals could come up with two [01:25:07.120 --> 01:25:10.960] different understandings of the statute that makes the statute. [01:25:10.960 --> 01:25:18.720] With that right criteria, every statute would be void for vagueness. [01:25:20.800 --> 01:25:24.240] As you get any two lawyers to look at it, you've got three opinions already. [01:25:25.440 --> 01:25:32.400] Right. So, me, I don't care how I do it. I want to resolve and I want fast action, [01:25:32.400 --> 01:25:38.320] and that's the fastest thing that I can see. Everything else, playing in their court, [01:25:38.320 --> 01:25:47.840] to their game on their time. This, you pull it out their court. We're going straight to the book, [01:25:49.280 --> 01:25:56.800] and it's faster. You say, I don't have to sit here six, seven, eight months. I put it in as [01:25:56.800 --> 01:26:03.280] soon as you arrest me or whatever. You deny the motion. You have 30 days to give me fighting [01:26:03.280 --> 01:26:10.240] a fascist you haven't provided, and then I locked up the case and brought it to the big board. [01:26:12.000 --> 01:26:13.680] Beautiful. Yes. [01:26:14.320 --> 01:26:21.040] Yes, but you just have to know you have to understand your argument and what right it is. [01:26:22.800 --> 01:26:27.040] But like some people say, right to travel is not right to travel. Travel means they're keeping [01:26:27.040 --> 01:26:35.440] you from going from one place to another. Right to use an automobile is what you have to say. [01:26:36.080 --> 01:26:43.440] Right to use an automobile as normal means of locomotion. The registration and the licenses [01:26:43.440 --> 01:26:47.680] and all that keeps you from the right that you have. [01:26:47.680 --> 01:26:56.720] Yes. Yes. Right to travel meant the right to travel from one state to another state. [01:26:58.720 --> 01:27:02.240] It didn't encompass traveling within the state. That was locomotion. [01:27:03.520 --> 01:27:07.200] Frankly, when you come across that, that was a great find. [01:27:07.200 --> 01:27:16.480] Because I've got to find something. Because if we have a right, it has to be explained. [01:27:17.360 --> 01:27:20.720] It took me about a year. But I finally figured it out. [01:27:22.560 --> 01:27:28.960] But yeah, I think they have to give a good, like as I'm listening, I'm like, [01:27:28.960 --> 01:27:33.680] well, you can use words of aimless in that way. It's all that case. [01:27:33.680 --> 01:27:41.520] Right. So now we need to teach ourselves how to regain power. They took the law out of the schools [01:27:41.520 --> 01:27:44.400] so that they can manipulate the system how they want. [01:27:45.440 --> 01:27:51.920] If they call just how the rules work and what the restrictions were, we wouldn't be in the state. [01:27:54.800 --> 01:27:57.760] So you're bringing them right out into the Fed. [01:27:57.760 --> 01:28:07.200] Right. When you bring them to the Fed, when you remove to the Fed, [01:28:08.080 --> 01:28:14.640] okay, you have to file an inability to pay. Otherwise, they'll make you pay. They're [01:28:14.640 --> 01:28:23.360] filing fee for Fed. Is that correct? Right. But in this case, I'm not moving to the Fed. [01:28:23.360 --> 01:28:32.000] I'm moving into a Fed issue. Now, you can have two going on simultaneously. [01:28:35.280 --> 01:28:39.440] You can have one in the state. And if you want, you can file one in the Fed. [01:28:42.400 --> 01:28:49.200] Same claims? Only same claims. It won't be the same claim because you'll be only, [01:28:49.200 --> 01:28:56.400] yeah, same claims, but you'll be addressing federal violations. [01:28:58.560 --> 01:29:10.160] So you can claim that it's void for vagueness in the state law as state law applies to it or state [01:29:10.160 --> 01:29:20.480] constitution. So theoretically, it could be sufficient to meet state law, but could still [01:29:20.480 --> 01:29:25.600] be void for vagueness under federal laws. Am I getting that right? [01:29:27.680 --> 01:29:34.080] No. I get it. I see where you're going with it, but that's not what they're saying. They're saying [01:29:34.080 --> 01:29:40.240] is that if something happens in the state, you have the right to challenge it in the state. But [01:29:41.920 --> 01:29:47.200] there's also federal protection. Okay, okay. Hang on. Hang on. We're about to go to our [01:29:47.200 --> 01:29:53.040] sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. I'm not going to give out the [01:29:53.040 --> 01:29:57.040] calling number. We've got two more callers, so we'll be right back. [01:29:57.040 --> 01:30:07.280] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, [01:30:07.280 --> 01:30:11.520] the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.520 --> 01:30:15.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. Back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.840 --> 01:30:21.440] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. 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Thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.720 --> 01:31:54.080] I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.080 --> 01:31:58.320] I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.320 --> 01:32:01.040] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:02.800 --> 01:32:06.800] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, [01:32:06.800 --> 01:32:10.560] we live in a NUS against them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:10.560 --> 01:32:14.720] then we're going to have to stand in between our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [01:32:14.720 --> 01:32:18.720] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [01:32:18.720 --> 01:32:23.440] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn [01:32:23.440 --> 01:32:27.920] how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, [01:32:27.920 --> 01:32:31.520] in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool [01:32:31.520 --> 01:32:35.520] available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule [01:32:35.520 --> 01:32:40.080] of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [01:32:40.080 --> 01:32:43.840] and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you will receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas [01:32:43.840 --> 01:32:48.800] Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. Hundreds [01:32:48.800 --> 01:32:52.560] of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights [01:32:52.560 --> 01:32:57.440] with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have [01:32:57.440 --> 01:33:15.440] free society we all want and deserve. You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:27.440 --> 01:33:53.840] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, [01:33:53.840 --> 01:34:00.960] Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 18th day of December, 2020, and we're talking to [01:34:01.600 --> 01:34:08.640] Martichet Olivier in Florida. Okay, where were we? [01:34:10.080 --> 01:34:18.000] You would ask me about the jurisdiction about filing the cases in two different states and [01:34:18.000 --> 01:34:27.680] the state and the federal. How they looked at it was that as reading the doctrine, it's a doctrine [01:34:27.680 --> 01:34:40.240] as far as a right to be notified of a crime or a right for you to know what is a crime. [01:34:40.240 --> 01:34:49.200] And I think that's called nature and cause. Nature and cause. So the way that they explained it was [01:34:49.200 --> 01:34:58.560] that they argued that while he filed a voice of vagueness in the state, so it was a move in the [01:34:58.560 --> 01:35:04.640] federal court. The court stated that the voice of vagueness is a doctrine. He has a right to file [01:35:04.640 --> 01:35:12.400] it in the state if he has a charge amongst the state. And then he said that, but he said that [01:35:12.400 --> 01:35:19.040] even though if he didn't have a charge, the voice of vagueness does not operate that way. [01:35:19.680 --> 01:35:26.320] It also can operate if it violates someone else's. You have the right to [01:35:26.320 --> 01:35:35.920] challenge the statute if it violates someone else's or if it has the ability to violate one [01:35:35.920 --> 01:35:44.480] of your charges, right? And then he said that underneath that doctrine, the individual is [01:35:44.480 --> 01:35:57.200] asking the state or is asking the court to clarify an issue at law. And he said that [01:35:58.160 --> 01:36:06.000] underneath those interests, the federal court hold a vested interest to address any [01:36:06.000 --> 01:36:16.000] adversity because they're the ones that have the absolute jurisdiction [01:36:17.360 --> 01:36:23.120] as far as the constitutional amendment. [01:36:27.120 --> 01:36:31.680] I'm not sure I understand that, but I think I do. [01:36:31.680 --> 01:36:37.840] They have the higher power. You can challenge it in the state, but if you're challenging it [01:36:39.200 --> 01:36:49.440] because it's a question of law, we have the interest in answering and solving that question [01:36:49.440 --> 01:36:54.560] separate from the state. I'm thinking this in terms of Rooker Feldman. [01:36:54.560 --> 01:37:03.360] So if it's decided in the state, generally the Fed won't touch it under the Rooker Feldman doctrine, [01:37:04.080 --> 01:37:12.800] but this apparently gets passed that because void for vagueness is not just a state issue. [01:37:14.960 --> 01:37:21.440] But so the Fed also has a claimant, and that's wonderful. You get to take them [01:37:21.440 --> 01:37:29.120] on in two places. I guess I did understand because in this case, he filed the two cases [01:37:29.120 --> 01:37:36.880] were going on at the same time. So he had one going on in the state, and then he also turned [01:37:36.880 --> 01:37:42.640] around and filed one in the Fed. And they were trying to get it kicked out from the Fed because [01:37:42.640 --> 01:37:48.320] they're like, well, it's still going on in the state. The Fed says that's none of our business. [01:37:48.320 --> 01:37:56.080] And that's what it's going to say. So in the state, even if whatever ruling they get, [01:37:56.080 --> 01:38:03.520] they're speaking to a state law in the state, and that's none of the Fed's business. [01:38:03.520 --> 01:38:10.960] But if a state law can also interfere with a federal right, then that bypasses Rooker Feldman. [01:38:10.960 --> 01:38:20.080] Okay. And how does the federal CFR 49 come into play when that's because that's the [01:38:20.640 --> 01:38:27.120] motor vehicle stuff, the transportation that's all federal interstate that got adopted by [01:38:27.920 --> 01:38:37.120] the several states? How does that come into play? It doesn't. It comes into play because the same [01:38:37.120 --> 01:38:44.160] thing is common, is that they have a right to regulate it, but you have to regulate it properly. [01:38:48.160 --> 01:38:56.160] The only way, the two sets of code, one of them is for Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, Guam. [01:38:57.440 --> 01:39:03.680] The other one are the states. And then the only portion of the transportation code that would be [01:39:03.680 --> 01:39:12.240] go to the Fed is that portion where you're traveling, where you're moving from one state [01:39:12.240 --> 01:39:16.960] to another, that would be exclusively fed. But then that would only be that portion of the [01:39:16.960 --> 01:39:26.720] transportation code that went to travel or went to move interstate. I would think. [01:39:26.720 --> 01:39:34.400] But I'm just shooting from the hip there because that's not a issue I've looked very closely at. [01:39:34.400 --> 01:39:40.880] Have you looked at that, Martichet? I'm still trying to understand over what he's asking. [01:39:44.000 --> 01:39:54.000] Well, the federal, the CFR 49 is what's the basis of our several states' transportation codes or [01:39:54.000 --> 01:40:02.720] motor vehicle codes. And it's all about federal interstate. It's why you say in Washington, [01:40:02.720 --> 01:40:11.600] D.C., it's because it's a United States of America thing. It's not a state thing. But the states have [01:40:11.600 --> 01:40:27.120] adopted and they reference profusely this federal CFR 49. So it makes me wonder to what extent [01:40:27.840 --> 01:40:34.640] the Fed has an interest in protecting or adjudicating something about that. [01:40:34.640 --> 01:40:42.880] Well, the penal code code of criminal procedure are essentially the same thing. The federal [01:40:42.880 --> 01:40:50.480] government produced a model code and asked all the states to adopt it. And all of them did with [01:40:50.480 --> 01:40:59.040] three. And the three who didn't adopt the model codes, their codes are almost identical anyway. [01:40:59.040 --> 01:41:09.280] So it wasn't necessary. Like if you look in Pennsylvania, their criminal procedure code is [01:41:10.320 --> 01:41:19.920] under, I think, title section 18. It's either 15 or 16 or 17 or 18. But you've got penal code and [01:41:19.920 --> 01:41:26.560] code of criminal procedure right next to each other. You go through them. They look just like our code [01:41:26.560 --> 01:41:34.960] with minor variations. And then the federal code, the federal adopted it first. Each state adopted [01:41:34.960 --> 01:41:42.240] it. So each one is operative in their separate jurisdictions. They just happen to be very similar. [01:41:42.240 --> 01:41:51.120] And that was the idea. So you could move from one jurisdiction to another and pretty well know [01:41:51.120 --> 01:41:57.440] what was illegal and what was not illegal. But as far as I know, the two don't overlap just because [01:41:57.440 --> 01:42:06.240] they look alike. Was that what you were asking, Brett? Yeah, that makes sense. [01:42:08.560 --> 01:42:16.640] Well, I just made all that up. You said something earlier, Brett, about something making sense. [01:42:16.640 --> 01:42:25.760] And when you look at the law and, you know, people listen to me spouting out all these laws and [01:42:26.320 --> 01:42:33.120] they think I know all these laws. I don't. There's a few that are common to what I'm doing. [01:42:34.160 --> 01:42:42.800] Martichet is addressing another area. And I don't know that area. So he knows that area. [01:42:42.800 --> 01:42:48.080] But once you've worked with law for a while, you can look at it. And it's like what you said, [01:42:48.080 --> 01:42:57.600] Brett. If it seems like something should be a certain way, if your reason and good sense [01:42:57.600 --> 01:43:04.400] says it should be a certain way, you can almost bet it is. The laws are very well constructed. [01:43:04.400 --> 01:43:13.120] So look to what's right and then go look in the law. Sometimes you'll get tripped off, [01:43:13.120 --> 01:43:19.680] but most of the time you won't. People ask me about things that I don't know the law exactly. [01:43:20.640 --> 01:43:28.400] But I know what reasonable people of ordinary prudence would tend to do. [01:43:28.400 --> 01:43:35.680] And almost always you're dead on law. Just go look up. It's just a matter of finding it. [01:43:36.320 --> 01:43:46.640] We do have a great body of law. And I kind of took that section or that segment away from you. [01:43:47.680 --> 01:43:50.480] Martichet, we'll pick you up when we come back on the other side. [01:43:50.480 --> 01:43:59.120] No, no. I'm finished. Okay. Thank you, Martichet. When we come back, we'll grab that. [01:44:00.400 --> 01:44:04.320] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [01:44:04.320 --> 01:44:09.200] except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [01:44:09.200 --> 01:44:15.040] And it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic [01:44:15.040 --> 01:44:20.320] environment is good nutrition. 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Please visit LulavLawRadio.com [01:45:57.360 --> 01:46:08.880] and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:27.360 --> 01:46:50.640] Okay, we are back. Andy Kelton, Brett Fountain, LulavLaw Radio, and we're going to David in Texas. [01:46:50.640 --> 01:47:00.080] David, are you in Texas? That's what's in our database. Hello, can you hear me? Hello, I can [01:47:00.080 --> 01:47:11.440] hear you. Oh, okay. Yeah, I had this case that's in the Federal District, and they went to a summer [01:47:11.440 --> 01:47:23.760] judgment on it, and they said that I'm non-moving. I'm a non-moving party. What is your standing in [01:47:23.760 --> 01:47:33.200] the case? Are you the plaintiff and defendant? Oh, I'm the plaintiff. Okay, did you move for [01:47:33.200 --> 01:47:40.800] summer judgment or are you the other party? The other party, yes. That means you're the non-moving party. [01:47:43.040 --> 01:47:49.440] Well, how would I be the non-moving party? In regards to that particular motion, you're not [01:47:49.440 --> 01:47:55.120] the one that filed that motion is what they mean. They're referring to you as the other party, not [01:47:55.120 --> 01:48:10.080] the moving party for that motion. Well, how come the judge moved the motion to summer judgment? [01:48:13.120 --> 01:48:16.480] Wait a minute. The judge can't move for summer judgment? [01:48:16.480 --> 01:48:31.760] Oh, the judge, he does whatever he wants. Let me see. They didn't have a warrant or anything [01:48:32.480 --> 01:48:39.840] to come on to the property in the first place, but in the minimum random here, they start out with [01:48:39.840 --> 01:48:47.280] a, my name, is a frequent visitor to the court. So I try to explain to them about the First Amendment. [01:48:47.280 --> 01:48:55.040] Then he goes on here and says that they were allowed to re-inspect and then re-inspect the [01:48:55.040 --> 01:49:03.920] property, I guess without a warrant. So then they turn around and kept going here and says, [01:49:03.920 --> 01:49:09.840] uh, the judge's motion to strike the criminal complaint that I filed against the lawyer [01:49:10.400 --> 01:49:17.600] and the complaint, the public servant, and I filed criminal charges against the federal judge. [01:49:18.480 --> 01:49:24.480] Wait, hold on, hold on. You said the judge moved to strike the criminal complaint? [01:49:26.240 --> 01:49:26.640] Right. [01:49:26.640 --> 01:49:33.280] Right. Judge doesn't have standing to move to do anything. I would have judged. [01:49:33.840 --> 01:49:39.920] The judge's motion to strike the criminal complaint, memorandum. [01:49:41.040 --> 01:49:48.240] This is a civil case, the judge, that should get a subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:49:50.160 --> 01:49:53.360] Oh, I tried that a long time ago. They just ignored that. [01:49:53.360 --> 01:49:58.320] No, in this issue, it's not about that. It's about setting the record for appeal. [01:50:00.160 --> 01:50:08.720] Oh, that was that here. They said that, um, from the exact word here, uh, [01:50:10.480 --> 01:50:18.720] I appear to be rash. Oh, I appear to rehash the county court proceeding. [01:50:18.720 --> 01:50:29.440] Well, uh, and then it says it goes to rule federal 56. Well, if I didn't have a county court, uh, [01:50:29.440 --> 01:50:35.360] proceedings, I wouldn't have been able to file this suit in federal court. Now, would I? [01:50:38.640 --> 01:50:45.440] I'm not sure how to answer that. Uh, well, it says, it says here in rule 56, [01:50:45.440 --> 01:50:54.400] motion for summary judgment and deciding two particular parts of the material in the record. [01:50:55.680 --> 01:51:01.120] So your country, your federal, it says right in their, their federal rule. [01:51:03.840 --> 01:51:11.600] Right. Okay. Let me understand why they would get to this accuser of rehashing. That would sound [01:51:11.600 --> 01:51:21.200] like they're going to rescue Dakota. So, uh, you're in the federal court because in the state court, [01:51:22.240 --> 01:51:27.280] you're alleging that they violated federal protections. [01:51:29.520 --> 01:51:35.280] And then the court is saying you're rehashing the state court. Well, in case, well, of course you are. [01:51:35.280 --> 01:51:44.800] That's your grounds for being in the Fed. I think that, uh, I am frequent visitor to the court. [01:51:45.840 --> 01:51:50.960] They, they keep saying that and all these memorandum, but I got like a half a dozen memorandum [01:51:50.960 --> 01:51:56.400] facts and every time they stipulate how many times I filed in the court. Well, what business [01:51:56.400 --> 01:52:00.960] is there that I filed in the court? It says right in the first amendment, [01:52:00.960 --> 01:52:07.440] redress the grievance. So whenever they file something on me, I have to file a redress [01:52:07.440 --> 01:52:14.720] agreement. Am I right? Exactly. Okay. And if that was something to be complained about, [01:52:14.720 --> 01:52:21.120] then the attorney would be in hotter water than you. Well, I don't know. He's more frequent [01:52:21.120 --> 01:52:28.320] visitor to the court. I filed for the FBI and I filed with a state attorney general. [01:52:28.320 --> 01:52:32.240] And I barked all the way around. [01:52:36.160 --> 01:52:40.720] I'm wondering, uh, have you received any Christmas cards from these guys? [01:52:43.120 --> 01:52:51.440] Oh, no. That's the punishment you get. So I don't understand this. They're saying [01:52:51.440 --> 01:53:00.320] that you're rehashing the state court in the Fed. Who is saying that? The judge or opposing [01:53:01.120 --> 01:53:05.920] council? Well, Proctor, if you wind up from there, they stipulate this loopy case law and every [01:53:05.920 --> 01:53:13.200] time I look up their case law, it has nothing to do with my case. Oh my. Wow. Hold on. Hold on. [01:53:13.200 --> 01:53:24.400] And wait a minute. Wait a minute. They bring up the cases on citations. My case is on the law. [01:53:24.400 --> 01:53:29.600] There is no law on that. I'm asking them to produce the law. They can't produce the law. [01:53:29.600 --> 01:53:35.760] They couldn't even produce the deed to the property or anything else in county court. [01:53:35.760 --> 01:53:45.520] Okay. Wait. Ask the city attorney to just come up often and the city attorney replies, [01:53:45.520 --> 01:53:51.360] well, he's just, maybe once in a while they do ask for the deed. Now, I'm a landlord here [01:53:51.360 --> 01:53:56.160] and I know one thing. They won't let you in the court unless you bring the deed with it. [01:53:56.160 --> 01:54:09.920] Right? I don't know. You lost me there. You had a little excited. You made a statement earlier [01:54:09.920 --> 01:54:17.520] that they filed case law. Wait a minute. We both can't talk at the same time. [01:54:18.800 --> 01:54:24.560] We have suppressors on the system that'll push your voice under mind so we get just bits and pieces. [01:54:24.560 --> 01:54:34.080] Hold on. I have a question. You said they cited case law that did not apply. [01:54:36.320 --> 01:54:42.800] That is about the worst thing a lawyer can do. That'll get a lawyer sanctioned quicker than [01:54:42.800 --> 01:54:50.320] anything. If they misside a case to the court, that should get a bar grievance every time and [01:54:50.320 --> 01:55:01.120] a motion for sanctions. Well, the point of case is there that some lady, some [01:55:02.400 --> 01:55:10.080] the cafeteria workers, some blades got discriminated against and they put that case law in [01:55:11.200 --> 01:55:19.200] trying to stipulate that I'm discriminating against the lawyer for some reason because I [01:55:19.200 --> 01:55:29.520] trial criminal charges against a lawyer. I didn't raise it. Okay. This is real serious. [01:55:30.640 --> 01:55:36.800] You filed a criminal charge. When you file a criminal charge, you become a protected class. [01:55:37.760 --> 01:55:44.400] You can call this retaliation and witness tampering. An obstruction of justice. [01:55:44.400 --> 01:55:51.920] These guys are dancing around in really deep water right now. [01:55:52.720 --> 01:56:00.320] The filing is all on them, but they won't take them in the local court. If I file something in [01:56:00.320 --> 01:56:07.840] the federal court, they usually just pass them off or whatever. They write me stuff like this. [01:56:07.840 --> 01:56:14.320] Like I said right here, the court's previous screen and dismiss as a [01:56:14.320 --> 01:56:19.920] rival suit from me. I mean, they always put that in there. [01:56:22.720 --> 01:56:26.480] Well, of course. The other side, if you're a pro se, they're always going to call what you're [01:56:26.480 --> 01:56:35.280] doing for us. Have you listened to our routine on how we file federal charges? [01:56:35.280 --> 01:56:43.440] Yeah, that's what I've been doing. Okay. Have you been filing with the grand jury? [01:56:44.400 --> 01:56:50.480] I filed with the grand jury. I went to the federal courthouse and put it in the box. [01:56:51.520 --> 01:57:02.400] Did you go after the U.S. attorney for tampering with the government document for [01:57:02.400 --> 01:57:07.520] secreting criminal complaints from the grand jury? I barked with him twice. [01:57:08.800 --> 01:57:14.160] No, did you file criminally against him? Oh, I'm getting ready to do that. [01:57:14.960 --> 01:57:20.560] Yeah, file against him with the special agent charge and then file against both of them with [01:57:20.560 --> 01:57:24.400] the U.S. attorney and, I mean, with the attorney general in D.C. [01:57:24.400 --> 01:57:35.840] Lots of politics is going on here. I was going to file against Barr himself, [01:57:37.040 --> 01:57:41.760] but I hear he's leaving. So, you know, with this holiday, it's a little iffy. [01:57:44.320 --> 01:57:48.240] Well, you could still file against him. It won't make any difference if he committed a crime. [01:57:48.240 --> 01:57:55.440] Resigning from office won't help a bit. He's probably going to retire, so it wouldn't hurt him. [01:57:56.080 --> 01:58:02.000] Yeah. You have to be effective. If they're getting a new one, you can file with the [01:58:02.000 --> 01:58:06.960] new one. He might actually, it's not about getting them to do something. It's about the politics. [01:58:08.000 --> 01:58:13.440] It gets everybody upset at the ones who started all this. And this is started in a [01:58:13.440 --> 01:58:18.960] municipal court when you're going after high-level federal officials because of these chumps down [01:58:18.960 --> 01:58:24.560] at the bottom. You get lots of political action. Then you come back to the chumps at the bottom [01:58:24.560 --> 01:58:30.320] and get them to make a deal, especially when they got a federal judge and U.S. attorneys really [01:58:30.320 --> 01:58:39.120] peed at them. This is about politics at the end of the day. Oh, and this is about us being out of time. [01:58:39.120 --> 01:58:47.920] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, thank you all for listening. We'll be back next week. Thank you for calling David. Good night. [01:58:50.240 --> 01:58:56.640] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.640 --> 01:59:02.080] Recovery Version. 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