[00:00.000 --> 00:06.740] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.740 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals Gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.360] Silver $16.45 an ounce, Copper $2.75 an ounce, Oil Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crude [00:21.360 --> 00:29.680] $62.47 a barrel, and Crypto is an order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.680 --> 00:41.320] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:41.320 --> 00:52.280] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.280 --> 00:57.760] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing [00:57.760 --> 01:04.760] 10 and injuring 40 today in history. [01:04.760 --> 01:09.760] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hempett attacks [01:09.760 --> 01:14.400] his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin and San [01:14.400 --> 01:18.840] Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:18.840 --> 01:22.800] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the lavatory equipment to [01:22.800 --> 01:27.760] test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier [01:27.760 --> 01:32.480] this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases [01:32.480 --> 01:33.680] because of the law. [01:33.680 --> 01:37.560] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.560 --> 01:42.080] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.080 --> 01:48.240] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.240 --> 01:54.480] well as other cities too like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.480 --> 01:58.960] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:58.960 --> 02:01.680] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.680 --> 02:06.720] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.720 --> 02:10.760] in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.760 --> 02:13.480] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.480 --> 02:17.360] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches with their [02:17.360 --> 02:22.560] charge with it. [02:22.560 --> 02:27.200] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark [02:27.200 --> 02:32.320] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.320 --> 02:38.000] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.000 --> 02:39.000] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.000 --> 02:43.760] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.760 --> 02:50.040] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.040 --> 03:18.520] glow. [03:20.040 --> 03:27.040] What is she gonna do? What is she gonna do? [03:27.040 --> 03:30.040] Bad boys, bad boys, what's she gonna do? [03:30.040 --> 03:32.040] What's she gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.040 --> 03:35.040] Bad boys, bad boys, what's she gonna do? [03:35.040 --> 03:38.040] What's she gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.040 --> 03:41.040] When you were eight and you had bad dreams [03:41.040 --> 03:43.040] You go to school and learn the golden rules [03:43.040 --> 03:46.040] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:46.040 --> 03:49.040] If you get high and you're m JD's cool [03:49.040 --> 03:52.040] Bad boys, bad boys, what's she gonna do? [03:52.040 --> 03:55.040] What's she gonna do when they come for you? [03:55.040 --> 03:57.040] Bad boys, bad boys, what's she gonna do? [03:57.040 --> 04:00.040] What's she gonna do when they come for you? [04:00.040 --> 04:03.040] You're choking on that one, You're choking on this one [04:03.040 --> 04:04.040] It's choking on you What are you? [04:04.040 --> 04:07.040] Che choking on your father, It's choking on your processing [04:07.040 --> 04:11.040] It's choking on your system You're choking on that one, and you're choking on me [04:11.040 --> 04:16.520] bad boys bad boy watch they gonna do watch they gonna do when they come for you [04:16.620 --> 04:22.080] bad boys bad boys watch they gonna do watch they gonna do when they come for you [04:22.080 --> 04:27.480] bad boys bad boys watch they gonna do watch they gonna do when they come for you [04:27.480 --> 04:32.960] bad boys bad boys watch they gonna do watch they gonna do when they come for you [04:33.200 --> 04:37.880] Everybody not gettin' no break produce not getting no break [04:37.880 --> 04:40.480] That kill a soldier while he getting over it [04:40.480 --> 04:43.200] That even when you're at your not getting over it [04:43.960 --> 04:45.060] Bad Boyz! Bad Boyz! [04:45.420 --> 04:46.900] But whatcha gonna do?? [04:46.900 --> 04:49.520] But whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:49.520 --> 04:50.920] Bad Boyz! Bad Boyz! [04:50.920 --> 04:52.300] But whatcha gonna do? [04:52.300 --> 04:54.800] But whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [04:54.800 --> 04:56.300] Bad Boyz! Bad Boyz! [04:56.300 --> 04:57.620] But whatcha gonna do? [04:57.620 --> 05:00.300] But whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [05:00.300 --> 05:01.640] Bad Boyz! Bad Boyz! [05:01.640 --> 05:03.200] But whatcha gonna do? [05:03.200 --> 05:07.200] But what you gonna do when it's time for you? [05:07.200 --> 05:33.200] I didn't have to ask the moon, don't you know you're a human being? [05:33.200 --> 05:38.200] Born from other way to love us, but for the protection, because the protection goes [05:38.200 --> 05:43.200] I know sometimes, you wanna let it go [05:43.200 --> 05:49.200] Hey, hey, hey, I know sometimes, you wanna let it go [05:49.200 --> 05:52.200] Bad boys, bad boys, but what you gonna do? [05:52.200 --> 06:16.200] What you gonna do when it's time for you? [06:16.200 --> 06:22.200] I'll get it, we were discussing whether I was gonna screw that up or not before the show started [06:22.200 --> 06:27.200] and then it was all Brent's fault cause he had me distracted [06:27.200 --> 06:31.200] Yeah, my best, sorry about that [06:31.200 --> 06:36.200] This is the guy thing, guys never take responsibility for their own behavior [06:36.200 --> 06:41.200] That's why we have wives, so we can blame them for everything [06:41.200 --> 06:46.200] If any wives are listening, I'm sure you're agreeing with us [06:46.200 --> 06:49.200] I'm not telling them that you saw that [06:49.200 --> 06:57.200] Okay, I'm gonna start with what we were talking about last night [06:57.200 --> 07:07.200] We may actually have some pieces coming together to get one of the remedies that I've been working towards [07:07.200 --> 07:11.200] since I started doing the radio show [07:11.200 --> 07:25.200] And that is getting all of the jurisdictions to give someone an examining trial every time they're arrested [07:25.200 --> 07:28.200] The way the law commands them to [07:28.200 --> 07:34.200] And pieces are beginning to fall in place, I'm up here in Wise County, Texas [07:34.200 --> 07:41.200] Relatively small county, 35 miles northwest of Fort Worth [07:41.200 --> 07:46.200] We have about 60,000 people and I found that out today, I was surprised to hear that [07:46.200 --> 07:52.200] Because about four years ago we had 35,000 [07:52.200 --> 08:03.200] And you hear about all the people moving out of California and the northeast and all moving down to Texas [08:03.200 --> 08:08.200] Well, they're moving to the major cities and a lot of them are moving to Dallas, Fort Worth [08:08.200 --> 08:11.200] And they're spilling over out into where I'm at [08:11.200 --> 08:21.200] I live one block from the downtown crossroad [08:21.200 --> 08:25.200] And when I first came here, we had a stop sign [08:25.200 --> 08:28.200] Now we got a red light [08:28.200 --> 08:35.200] And now we got two red lights [08:35.200 --> 08:37.200] Count them, two! [08:37.200 --> 08:42.200] And we're actually getting traffic jams in rush hour [08:42.200 --> 08:44.200] I feel so sorry for you [08:44.200 --> 08:47.200] I know, I thought you would [08:47.200 --> 08:51.200] But there's just so many people moving in out here [08:51.200 --> 08:58.200] But in this particular county, they're doing everything wrong [08:58.200 --> 09:04.200] And in moving around the county and talking to different officials [09:04.200 --> 09:09.200] Everybody wants to do everything right [09:09.200 --> 09:15.200] But they wind up doing things the way they've been doing things [09:15.200 --> 09:19.200] Because that's the way they've been doing things [09:19.200 --> 09:29.200] And if you have a methodology that's working and everybody agrees on it, why change? [09:29.200 --> 09:35.200] And that's kind of been what I've been dealing with these last 30 years working on this issue [09:35.200 --> 09:45.200] So now I think I have a methodology for giving them a reason to want to change things [09:45.200 --> 09:51.200] This county may be one of the worst because I know that Travis County [09:51.200 --> 10:05.200] And a number of other counties actually have the order by a magistrate filed with the county recorders [10:05.200 --> 10:08.200] Or with the county clerk's office [10:08.200 --> 10:13.200] When a person is arrested [10:13.200 --> 10:16.200] They'll be taken directly to the nearest magistrate [10:16.200 --> 10:24.200] Well, what's happening in all of the counties is they take them straight to jail [10:24.200 --> 10:29.200] And then in the morning, the next morning, a magistrate comes in [10:29.200 --> 10:33.200] And they take them before the magistrate for a magistration [10:33.200 --> 10:36.200] That's not an examining trial [10:36.200 --> 10:45.200] The magistration they're giving people is a procedure kind of generally spoken to [10:45.200 --> 10:51.200] In 15.17 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure [10:51.200 --> 10:55.200] Chapter 15 goes to arrest on warrant [10:55.200 --> 11:05.200] And in this particular case, if a person is arrested on an existing warrant out of county [11:05.200 --> 11:11.200] Then what that means is there was an examining trial in the county [11:11.200 --> 11:15.200] Because that's the only way a warrant can be issued [11:15.200 --> 11:18.200] Unless there's already a case going on [11:18.200 --> 11:23.200] And the trial court already has jurisdiction and say you failed a short for hearing or something [11:23.200 --> 11:25.200] A trial court can issue a warrant [11:25.200 --> 11:33.200] But even if it does, the warrant was issued without you present [11:33.200 --> 11:36.200] If you're present, it wouldn't be me for one [11:36.200 --> 11:40.200] So when you are arrested on that warrant [11:40.200 --> 11:44.200] The law requires you to be taken directly to the nearest magistrate [11:44.200 --> 11:46.200] Well, if you're arrested out of county [11:46.200 --> 11:51.200] Then the magistrate can hardly hold an effective examining trial [11:51.200 --> 11:55.200] Because all their witnesses are over in another county somewhere [11:55.200 --> 12:00.200] So what the code allows the magistrate to do [12:00.200 --> 12:08.200] Is simply give the warnings that essentially Miranda warnings to the individual [12:08.200 --> 12:14.200] Then when the protections for the accused [12:14.200 --> 12:20.200] And then when the persons transported back to the county where the warrant was issued [12:20.200 --> 12:24.200] Then they can convene an examining trial [12:24.200 --> 12:27.200] Because a person has a right to an examining trial [12:27.200 --> 12:35.200] In the county where the crime allegedly took place [12:35.200 --> 12:37.200] So when they get back to the right county [12:37.200 --> 12:39.200] Then they have a proper examining trial [12:39.200 --> 12:42.200] Well, what all these counties are doing [12:42.200 --> 12:46.200] Is they're using this special purpose [12:46.200 --> 12:52.200] Magistration magistrates notice thing [12:52.200 --> 12:55.200] Instead of an examining trial everywhere [12:55.200 --> 12:59.200] So even when they're brought before a magistrate [12:59.200 --> 13:08.200] Magistrates are being trained to do some procedure that's not legal [13:08.200 --> 13:10.200] It's essentially not in the code [13:10.200 --> 13:13.200] And the code is very specific about what must be done [13:13.200 --> 13:16.200] But nobody's doing it [13:16.200 --> 13:20.200] 10 or 15 years ago I talked to my local justice of the peace [13:20.200 --> 13:25.200] And walked him through the code on what the statute [13:25.200 --> 13:28.200] Statues actually commanded [13:28.200 --> 13:31.200] And then as opposed to what they're actually doing [13:31.200 --> 13:34.200] And he said to me, he said, Mr. Carlson [13:34.200 --> 13:37.200] I've been a peace, I was a peace officer for 20 years [13:37.200 --> 13:41.200] Now I've been a magistrate for 12 or 13 years [13:41.200 --> 13:47.200] Are you telling me that what I've been doing for the last 30 years [13:47.200 --> 13:52.200] And what everybody else in Texas has been doing is wrong and you're right [13:52.200 --> 13:55.200] I said, don't ask me, Mark [13:55.200 --> 13:58.200] Just read the code, I didn't write it, I just read it [13:58.200 --> 14:01.200] It's very clear what it says [14:01.200 --> 14:06.200] And I believe that Mark Autry would do what he believes is right [14:06.200 --> 14:10.200] If it heralypped the Pope [14:10.200 --> 14:15.200] But he couldn't bring himself to [14:15.200 --> 14:19.200] Consider that everything he had been doing is wrong [14:19.200 --> 14:23.200] He was sure that I had missed something [14:23.200 --> 14:26.200] But I haven't missed anything [14:26.200 --> 14:29.200] These directives are absolutely clear [14:29.200 --> 14:36.200] Primary one is 14.06, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure [14:36.200 --> 14:39.200] I spoke to Chapter 15 a few moments ago [14:39.200 --> 14:44.200] Chapter 15 goes to an arrest on an existing warrant [14:44.200 --> 14:52.200] Chapter 14 goes to an arrest based on an on-site offense [14:52.200 --> 14:57.200] If you are arrested for an on-site offense [14:57.200 --> 15:07.200] The officer is directed by 14.06 to take you directly to the nearest magistrate [15:07.200 --> 15:15.200] And the case law says by the most direct route, by the most direct route [15:15.200 --> 15:18.200] The nearest magistrate, most direct route [15:18.200 --> 15:23.200] So the legislature didn't stutter [15:23.200 --> 15:27.200] That is very clear, but they don't do it [15:27.200 --> 15:31.200] So how do we get to this place? [15:31.200 --> 15:35.200] I was talking to our local chief of police about this today [15:35.200 --> 15:41.200] And he said, if this is all so wrong [15:41.200 --> 15:43.200] How did it get in this mess? [15:43.200 --> 15:51.200] Who are the decision makers that are telling people to do things this way? [15:51.200 --> 15:56.200] And that's what I thought, really good question [15:56.200 --> 16:07.200] I don't think anybody created this, any single person or any single group of people [16:07.200 --> 16:12.200] This is the result of an evolution over time [16:12.200 --> 16:21.200] But I think if there's any one party in this whole mess that's key [16:21.200 --> 16:24.200] It's prosecuting attorneys [16:24.200 --> 16:27.200] And I'm running out of time in this segment [16:27.200 --> 16:34.200] I'll address what I think is the underlying problem and how it snuck up on us [16:34.200 --> 16:42.200] There is no bad guy here that we can single out and then rail at and write us indignation [16:42.200 --> 16:46.200] This is not something someone intentionally engineered [16:46.200 --> 16:52.200] It is just something that occurred because we weren't paying close enough attention [16:52.200 --> 16:56.200] This is Randy Kelton Brett Fountain Rules Law Radio [16:56.200 --> 17:23.200] But we'll be right back [17:27.200 --> 17:29.200] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports [17:29.200 --> 17:34.200] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away [17:34.200 --> 17:39.200] The Michael Mearris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors [17:39.200 --> 17:41.200] Personal consultation is available as well [17:41.200 --> 17:47.200] For more information please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mearris banner [17:47.200 --> 17:57.200] Or email michaelmearris at yahoo.com [17:57.200 --> 18:25.200] To learn how to stop debt collectors next [18:25.200 --> 18:35.200] Former sheriff's deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law [18:35.200 --> 18:40.200] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today [18:40.200 --> 18:45.200] By ordering now you will receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation Code The Law Versus the Lie [18:45.200 --> 18:47.200] Video and audio of the original 2009 seminar [18:47.200 --> 18:50.200] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material [18:50.200 --> 18:54.200] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com [18:54.200 --> 19:01.200] Order your copy today and together we can have the pre-society we all want and deserve [19:01.200 --> 19:28.200] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:28.200 --> 19:45.200] Okay we are back Randy Calton Brett Fountain Rule of Law Radio on this Friday the Cinco [19:45.200 --> 19:49.200] Day of how do you say February in Spanish [19:49.200 --> 19:59.200] You got me. Okay it's the fifth day of you got me. [19:59.200 --> 20:04.200] Anyway okay how did the problem come about? [20:04.200 --> 20:18.200] I'm an engineer and the most difficult things for an engineer to handle are minor little problems that creep into the system [20:18.200 --> 20:31.200] Someone or some group or some part of the system makes minor adjustments doesn't tell anybody [20:31.200 --> 20:41.200] And over time the results of those minor adjustments accumulate and all of a sudden we have a disaster and have no idea how we got there [20:41.200 --> 20:57.200] The legislature in its wisdom decided that the police and the inferior courts primary justice courts needed legal advice [20:57.200 --> 21:06.200] And since we already had learned counsel in public employ in the form of prosecuting attorneys they felt it was [21:06.200 --> 21:18.200] a really good idea and would be efficient to use the prosecutors to give legal advice to the police and lower courts [21:18.200 --> 21:24.200] What did you do wrong? Bad idea, bad, bad, really bad idea [21:24.200 --> 21:38.200] Do you really expect a prosecuting attorney to advise the police and lower courts in practices and procedures that would make their life a living hell? [21:38.200 --> 21:52.200] Or are they likely to advise the police in practices and procedures that would streamline the process of adjudicating cases? [21:52.200 --> 22:00.200] Now most every prosecutor I've ever talked to wants to do it right [22:00.200 --> 22:05.200] They feel like they're there to protect the public [22:05.200 --> 22:14.200] And I haven't talked to a single one of them that wasn't interested in doing the best job they could [22:14.200 --> 22:31.200] But with all of that philosophical ideology aside the most important issue they got is this large stack of cases they have to address with this small budget [22:31.200 --> 22:41.200] Every prosecutor I've ever talked to has always been squeezed between budget and caseload [22:41.200 --> 22:47.200] So the reality of their job is they got to clear this caseload [22:47.200 --> 22:59.200] So they tended to advise the police and lower courts in practices and procedures to streamline the system [22:59.200 --> 23:12.200] The problem is their streamlining while it appeared to ease their caseload or help them move through their caseload more quickly [23:12.200 --> 23:20.200] It created a horrible problem mostly because they stopped doing examining trials [23:20.200 --> 23:32.200] It was more efficient or it seemed more efficient to take the person directly to jail and bring them all before magistrate at one time the next morning [23:32.200 --> 23:44.200] Well that might have seemed more efficient but if they had taken these people before magistrate immediately a lot of them wouldn't have been in jail at all [23:44.200 --> 23:59.200] They would have either been released for no probable cause or the magistrate could set bond and the prosecutor could get a bondsman or have someone come down and post bond immediately [23:59.200 --> 24:02.200] No need to go to jail at all [24:02.200 --> 24:10.200] Now the police are saying well they need to process them through the jail, no they don't need to do any such thing [24:10.200 --> 24:17.200] There's nothing in law that requires you to be processed through a jail [24:17.200 --> 24:22.200] Brett have you ever seen anything on that score? [24:22.200 --> 24:26.200] Have I ever seen anybody that didn't get processed through the jail? [24:26.200 --> 24:36.200] Any law that requires that a person if he's accused of a crime be processed through the jail [24:36.200 --> 24:40.200] No I've never gone across anything in law that says that [24:40.200 --> 24:41.200] Yeah not a word [24:41.200 --> 24:49.200] That's what they do, typical practice I realize that but no to answer your question I've never seen it [24:49.200 --> 24:53.200] Yeah so I've never seen a word on it but everybody's doing that [24:53.200 --> 24:59.200] Well why are they doing that when there's no legal support for it? [24:59.200 --> 25:10.200] The only time you're to be taken to jail is if you're to be imprisoned, if you're to be held in lieu of bond or held until you can make bond [25:10.200 --> 25:19.200] But they're taking everybody to jail, processing them all through the jail, holding them overnight [25:19.200 --> 25:21.200] What's that all about? [25:21.200 --> 25:24.200] Now where did they get authority to do that? [25:24.200 --> 25:31.200] Well how did it come about? Did somebody just decide we're going to throw everybody in jail? [25:31.200 --> 25:46.200] No this kind of came upon us slow, came upon us by prosecutors advising the police in lower courts in procedures that seem to streamline everything [25:46.200 --> 25:55.200] And it wasn't convenient for magistrates or for local justices of the peace to be interrupted during their day to hold examining trials [25:55.200 --> 26:01.200] So they said we could streamline this, do all of them at one time [26:01.200 --> 26:04.200] Problem, go ahead [26:04.200 --> 26:17.200] I did see something where in counties where this is, how do they put it, they didn't say busy, they said some kind of word like if it's efficient or something [26:17.200 --> 26:29.200] They can collect the various examining trials and put them all together so that people can all go, I don't know, I picture that being something like 10am, 1pm, 4pm [26:29.200 --> 26:37.200] And they put several examining trials to happen together, I did see that one place [26:37.200 --> 26:41.200] I'll have to find that, I don't recall seeing that [26:41.200 --> 26:48.200] I've never seen anything about taking to jail and letting them wait 48 hours, 47 and a half [26:48.200 --> 27:00.200] Or 28 hours, that's what I waited and for something that brought me to a magistrate, to magistrate, we were tossed immediately [27:00.200 --> 27:09.200] It will get tossed, but in the meantime it's in the system and they're having to deal with it [27:09.200 --> 27:20.200] It's on the prosecutor's plate, he has to set hearings, process all the paperwork, this is something he would have never had to touch [27:20.200 --> 27:27.200] But anyway, how did it happen? This is how I believe it happened [27:27.200 --> 27:32.200] Did anybody intend to create a problem? Absolutely not [27:32.200 --> 27:41.200] Was everybody in the process doing what they thought was the right thing and the best thing to do? Yeah, I think that's the case [27:41.200 --> 27:53.200] Well, maybe not everybody, we always have the outlier, the anomaly, but they are not the ones that moved the system [27:53.200 --> 28:02.200] The ones that tried to do the best they could under the conditions that they had [28:02.200 --> 28:14.200] And when they adopted practices and procedures that violated the due course of the laws, we got lawyers to keep them from doing that [28:14.200 --> 28:25.200] But lawyers are really not there for the primary purpose of adjudicating your rights [28:25.200 --> 28:35.200] Yeah, that's all the huff and puff they tell you, because they need you to think that so you'll give them the money so they can pay their office help [28:35.200 --> 28:44.200] Pay for their house and buy their cars, they need you to think that each one of them is Perry Mason [28:44.200 --> 28:50.200] But their lawyer's real purpose is to make money, he's in business [28:50.200 --> 28:57.200] So your defense attorney wants to streamline the process as well [28:57.200 --> 29:06.200] It is in everybody's interest to streamline the process except for the key individual, the accused [29:06.200 --> 29:13.200] Except for the one who is protected by the Constitution [29:13.200 --> 29:20.200] That's the one that really cares about everything being done to the letter of law, nobody else [29:20.200 --> 29:28.200] So lawyers, if what was going on worked to their interest, they didn't raise a red flag [29:28.200 --> 29:37.200] And sometimes even when it didn't work in their interest, they were afraid to raise a red flag because they didn't want the judge to get upset at them [29:37.200 --> 29:40.200] As lawyers would terrify the judges [29:40.200 --> 29:45.200] So things just gradually turned into a horrible mess, hang on [29:45.200 --> 29:52.200] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively affected our health? [29:52.200 --> 30:00.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry [30:00.200 --> 30:16.200] Privacy is under attack, when you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again [30:16.200 --> 30:21.200] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too [30:21.200 --> 30:30.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself [30:30.200 --> 30:33.200] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to [30:33.200 --> 30:37.200] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com [30:37.200 --> 30:41.200] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing [30:41.200 --> 30:52.200] Start over with StartPage [31:12.200 --> 31:16.200] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any chances [31:16.200 --> 31:20.200] I always keep the phone far from my body and I use a corded headset [31:20.200 --> 31:42.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [31:51.200 --> 32:01.200] There's more to the story [32:01.200 --> 32:06.200] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year [32:06.200 --> 32:12.200] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [32:12.200 --> 32:15.200] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516 [32:15.200 --> 32:21.200] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven [32:21.200 --> 32:26.200] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear [32:26.200 --> 32:35.200] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works [32:35.200 --> 32:41.200] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week [32:41.200 --> 32:48.200] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development [32:48.200 --> 33:01.200] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures [33:01.200 --> 33:11.200] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:11.200 --> 33:32.200] Yeah, I got a warrant and I'm going to solve them to the head government them, prosecute them. Okay. Hold on a second. [33:32.200 --> 33:47.200] Well, I need a prosecutor to come and help me. Prosecute them wickedly that you see. [33:47.200 --> 34:16.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio and if you expect your lawyer to be on your side [34:16.200 --> 34:28.200] Forget about that. Your lawyer is on your lawyer side and he's going to do what's best for him in his business. One thing he's not going to do is anything that's going to annoy the judge [34:28.200 --> 34:38.200] Because the judge can arbitrarily and capriciously rule against his other clients that he's going to bring before the court [34:38.200 --> 34:55.200] So if he does something in your defense that annoys the court the lawyers actually believe that the judges will pay them back by ruling against other clients in the future [34:55.200 --> 35:14.200] And they consider it unprofessional of them to risk future clients in order to do something in your defense that would interfere with their relationship with the court [35:14.200 --> 35:26.200] And just a little minor point of clarification when you're saying the court, you're talking about the judge, right? The judges refer to themselves as the court [35:26.200 --> 35:42.200] Yes, and I'm absolutely specifically speaking to the judges. I once sued Denton County for $11 million. I sued 24 public officials. [35:42.200 --> 36:01.200] I talked to 60 lawyers. I kept a list of them. The last one I talked to was the previous prosecutor to the one who had, he didn't run for office and somebody else ran and was now the prosecuting attorney [36:01.200 --> 36:14.200] The previous prosecuting attorney. His name was Jerry Cobb and I said, hello Jerry, my name is Randy Kelton and I have sued Denton County and I need somebody to represent my suit [36:14.200 --> 36:24.200] He said, oh Mr. Kelton, I know all about your suit and you made allegations against judges in there and I have to represent clients in this county [36:24.200 --> 36:35.200] I said, what's the matter Jerry? You're afraid those judges will screw your next client to get back at you and he said, you darn right they will [36:35.200 --> 36:47.200] Now I don't know if that's true or not, but I do know that every lawyer I talked to thought it was true and that's all it takes [36:47.200 --> 37:05.200] And if your lawyer thinks that if he rules, annoys the judge in your case, that the judge will rule against his next client, then he considers it unconscionable for him to risk future clients just to help you out [37:05.200 --> 37:16.200] Well how does that work? So this is how the world we live in really works. We may not like it, we may not think it's right, but this is how it works [37:16.200 --> 37:22.200] So we're looking at what we have to deal with, so how do we fix it? [37:22.200 --> 37:33.200] And how I'm planning to fix it is, is make the procedures that they're using now become a problem for them [37:33.200 --> 37:47.200] And in looking through the codes, looking through the court records, one thing that a examining trial does is lay down a specific record [37:47.200 --> 38:07.200] And the way I read the code, there is no way for the trial court to get subject matter jurisdiction in a case, except by way of a probable cause of determination by a magistrate [38:07.200 --> 38:25.200] What the code says is that 14.03, I'm sorry 14.06, 14.03 authorizes a peace officer to arrest someone for an on-site offense [38:25.200 --> 38:38.200] An offense committed within their side and within their hearing. 14.06 requires the officer on making an on-site arrest to take the arrested person directly to the nearest magistrate [38:38.200 --> 38:53.200] 15.17, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, arrest on warrant. If a person is arrested on an existing warrant, they are required to be taken directly to the nearest magistrate [38:53.200 --> 39:05.200] Reason for that is, in order for the warrant to exist, there had to be a ex parte examining trial [39:05.200 --> 39:17.200] And someone came to the magistrate, filed a complaint with the magistrate, the magistrate looked at it, found probable cause, and used your warrant [39:17.200 --> 39:30.200] So when you're arrested, the complaint will always, I'm sorry, the warrant will always say, arrest this person and bring him before me [39:30.200 --> 39:40.200] And that's because this magistrate held an ex parte examining trial, an examining trial with only one party present [39:40.200 --> 39:51.200] When the person is arrested, he should be brought back before the magistrate, and the magistrate holds a proper examining trial with both the state and the accused present [39:51.200 --> 39:58.200] So, any arrest, any reason, must take them directly to the nearest magistrate [39:58.200 --> 40:03.200] So if you're arrested for an on-site offense, you're taken to the magistrate [40:03.200 --> 40:11.200] If the magistrate finds probable cause, let me take one step back [40:11.200 --> 40:22.200] By creating a verified criminal affidavit and presenting it to a magistrate, you invoke the authority of that magistrate [40:22.200 --> 40:32.200] That criminal complaint gives the magistrate subject matter jurisdiction for the purpose of holding an examining trial [40:32.200 --> 40:50.200] Once the examining trial is completed, if the magistrate finds probable cause under 16.17, he is to issue an order and forward that order to the clerk of the court [40:50.200 --> 41:06.200] If the court does not receive an order within 48 hours under 16.17 paragraph B, the accused has a right to dismissal [41:06.200 --> 41:09.200] Right there in the code [41:09.200 --> 41:22.200] And the way they get the order forwarded to the clerk of the court is in chapter 17, 17.30 [41:22.200 --> 41:35.200] After an examining trial, the magistrate is to seal all documents had in the hearing [41:35.200 --> 41:44.200] Cause his name to be written across the seal of the envelope and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction [41:44.200 --> 41:51.200] So it is very clear as soon as he finishes the examining trial, he's to seal that an envelope [41:51.200 --> 41:57.200] By sealing all the documents in the envelope, they protect the chain of custody [41:57.200 --> 42:16.200] So that when the guy gets to court, if he challenges the sufficiency of the examining trial, they have all the documentation that the magistrate used to come to the decision that there was probable cause [42:16.200 --> 42:20.200] Otherwise, these documents could disappear [42:20.200 --> 42:27.200] That's exactly what happens in Wise County. The documents disappear [42:27.200 --> 42:32.200] In place of an examining trial, they do this magistration thing in the morning [42:32.200 --> 42:40.200] Well, the magistrates won't do the magistration thing in the morning if they don't have a statement of probable cause [42:40.200 --> 42:51.200] They don't actually make a determination of probable cause, but they have to have something to give them standing to do this hearing, so they require it [42:51.200 --> 42:59.200] Well, 17.30 tells them to send it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction, but they don't do that to give it back to the sheriff [42:59.200 --> 43:10.200] And at least in some counties, I find them in there, but in Wise County, there is no statement of probable cause in the record in felony cases [43:10.200 --> 43:15.200] The only thing in the record is an indictment [43:15.200 --> 43:24.200] And that's a special problem, because an indictment cannot be made a part of the court record until the person's been arrested [43:24.200 --> 43:29.200] He had a statutory right to an examining trial [43:29.200 --> 43:34.200] And at that examining trial, these documents should have been sealed and an envelope was sent to this court [43:34.200 --> 43:37.200] So where the heck are the guys? [43:37.200 --> 43:43.200] Hang on, we'll talk about where they're at when we come back on the other side, this is Randy Kelton [43:43.200 --> 43:50.200] Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, our calling lines are open, 512-646-1984 [43:50.200 --> 44:00.200] I'll probably spend one more, maybe two segments on this, I think this is important for everyone to get down [44:00.200 --> 44:06.200] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition [44:06.200 --> 44:11.200] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that [44:11.200 --> 44:17.200] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition [44:17.200 --> 44:22.200] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated [44:22.200 --> 44:25.200] Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need [44:25.200 --> 44:31.200] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject [44:31.200 --> 44:39.200] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others [44:39.200 --> 44:47.200] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio [44:47.200 --> 44:51.200] As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, you may want to join us [44:51.200 --> 44:58.200] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family and increase your income [44:58.200 --> 45:00.200] Order now [45:00.200 --> 45:03.200] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.200 --> 45:11.200] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand 4-CD course [45:11.200 --> 45:15.200] That will show you how in 24 hours, step by step [45:15.200 --> 45:19.200] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing [45:19.200 --> 45:23.200] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself [45:23.200 --> 45:27.200] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too [45:27.200 --> 45:34.200] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience [45:34.200 --> 45:43.200] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts [45:43.200 --> 45:52.200] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics and much more [45:52.200 --> 46:02.200] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ [46:23.200 --> 46:29.200] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for [46:29.200 --> 46:35.200] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm wishing for [46:35.200 --> 46:40.200] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no blood [46:40.200 --> 46:43.200] I'm just here making my living [46:43.200 --> 46:54.200] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, ruleoflawradio, and the reason I'm spending this time on this, after some 30 years of kicking this horse [46:54.200 --> 47:00.200] I've been saying I've been kicking this horse for about 30 years, and you're not dead, you just don't want to get up [47:00.200 --> 47:06.200] So, right now I think I've figured out how to force the horse to get up [47:06.200 --> 47:13.200] When they fail to do a proper examining trial and follow the rules to the letter [47:13.200 --> 47:26.200] The jurisdiction that the magistrate has, based on a verified criminal affidavit being presented to him [47:26.200 --> 47:38.200] Evaporates because the magistrate was required to take that complaint that gave him jurisdiction, or her [47:38.200 --> 47:48.200] And the order under 16.17 showing that he found probable cause and forward that to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction [47:48.200 --> 47:55.200] That moves jurisdiction from the magistrate to the court [47:55.200 --> 48:03.200] What if it's not there, or what if something is missing from it [48:03.200 --> 48:18.200] In this case, in the county court in Wise County, there is a criminal complaint and a information [48:18.200 --> 48:26.200] In the Code of Criminal Procedure chapter 2 it specifies that when a prosecuting attorney receives a complaint [48:26.200 --> 48:34.200] He is to reduce the complaint to an information and submit that to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction [48:34.200 --> 48:41.200] An information is a complaint in proper form [48:41.200 --> 48:48.200] There are a couple of requirements for a criminal complaint, but only a couple [48:48.200 --> 48:55.200] One, it must run in the name of the state of Texas and that's unique to Texas, I've seen that nowhere else [48:55.200 --> 49:00.200] In most states a complaint looks just like a motion or a pleading [49:00.200 --> 49:07.200] But in Texas, a complaint starts out with, in the name and by the authority of the state of Texas [49:07.200 --> 49:10.200] So it runs in the name of the state of Texas [49:10.200 --> 49:22.200] Then it must allege that the complainant has reason to believe and does believe that a crime has been committed [49:22.200 --> 49:27.200] And that the named person committed that crime [49:27.200 --> 49:38.200] And all it requires for a complaint to be filed is that the filer has reason to believe and does believe [49:38.200 --> 49:45.200] It does not require any first hand information or any first hand evidence [49:45.200 --> 49:49.200] It can be based purely on hearsay [49:49.200 --> 49:57.200] If someone comes to me and says I got a neighbor and I saw my neighbor shoot his wife and bury her in the backyard [49:57.200 --> 50:02.200] Well, why don't you go to the police? Oh no, I'm terrified of this guy, he might shoot me [50:02.200 --> 50:15.200] If I believe what my neighbor told me, then my duty as a citizen under, oh, I forget which one, I think it's 51.1 [50:15.200 --> 50:21.200] There's a penal, 15.151 I believe is what it is [50:21.200 --> 50:28.200] That requires me, if I haven't made known to me that a felony has been committed and I don't report that felony [50:28.200 --> 50:31.200] Then I've committed a class A misdemeanor [50:31.200 --> 50:44.200] So even if I don't have personal knowledge, if I have hearsay information that a crime felony has been committed, I am required to report it [50:44.200 --> 50:58.200] So I can go to any magistrate and state that I have reason to believe and do believe based on the following [50:58.200 --> 51:09.200] And I state the facts that this named person, community, this specific criminal act against the peace and dignity of the state of Texas [51:09.200 --> 51:16.200] And that's what it always must end with, that statutory against the peace and dignity of the state of Texas [51:16.200 --> 51:24.200] But even with all those requirements, there's only one thing that renders a complaint invalid [51:24.200 --> 51:31.200] And I actually made that mistake by a typo in one of the complaints I recently filed [51:31.200 --> 51:42.200] If you accuse someone of a crime before they committed the crime, then that renders the complaint invalid [51:42.200 --> 51:44.200] Nothing else does [51:44.200 --> 51:59.200] I put the wrong month on a document and had the person committing the criminal act in November and I filed a complaint in October [51:59.200 --> 52:02.200] Well that don't work out so good [52:02.200 --> 52:06.200] But that's the only thing that renders the complaint invalid [52:06.200 --> 52:12.200] Because it is intended that an ordinary citizen file a complaint [52:12.200 --> 52:21.200] Well and they do ask for a certain procedure but it's not required if it's not there, it doesn't render the complaint invalid [52:21.200 --> 52:31.200] So they don't have to be able to write, they can just go to the attorney and he can drop the complaint based on their verbal say so [52:31.200 --> 52:33.200] Exactly [52:33.200 --> 52:39.200] And when a prosecutor gets a complaint, it could be in improper form [52:39.200 --> 52:50.200] And that does not make it invalid only if you make the one mistake of accusing them in October of committing a crime in November [52:50.200 --> 52:52.200] That would render it invalid [52:52.200 --> 53:02.200] Otherwise it's a valid complaint, then the prosecutor will take that complaint and reconstruct it in proper form [53:02.200 --> 53:04.200] And that's called an information [53:04.200 --> 53:16.200] So if you ever want to know what a complaint should look like, just go to the criminal court clerk and ask to see any file and look at the complaint [53:16.200 --> 53:22.200] I'm sorry, look at the information that you'll find in there and that's what a complaint should look like [53:22.200 --> 53:28.200] Take information off, replace it with complaint and you've got a complaint in proper form [53:28.200 --> 53:36.200] Okay, that's how things are supposed to work [53:36.200 --> 53:53.200] But when I look in the record in Wise County, in all felony cases, I see an indictment, I see a bond form and sometimes I see an appointment of counsel [53:53.200 --> 53:56.200] And that's all [53:56.200 --> 54:00.200] So Brad, what's wrong with that picture? [54:00.200 --> 54:04.200] There's a lot wrong with that picture [54:04.200 --> 54:07.200] People didn't get due process [54:07.200 --> 54:11.200] The law is sitting there waiting to protect the people [54:11.200 --> 54:16.200] And the people didn't get afforded those protections that are right there in the law [54:16.200 --> 54:25.200] Exactly, and mostly there's no order under 16.17 [54:25.200 --> 54:33.200] The magistrate did not perform a proper examining trial [54:33.200 --> 54:44.200] And because in that examining trial, he would seal all documents had in the hearing because it's named to be written across the seal of the envelope and forward it to the clerk of the court of jurisdiction [54:44.200 --> 54:52.200] So that criminal complaint that invoked the magistrate's jurisdiction would be in the public record [54:52.200 --> 55:00.200] It's not there, that order showing that the judge found probable cause would be in the court record, it's not there [55:00.200 --> 55:04.200] The magistrate [55:04.200 --> 55:12.200] Yeah, and if there's no determination of probable cause up front, then the court never acquired jurisdiction [55:12.200 --> 55:16.200] The jurisdiction of that court never got invoked [55:16.200 --> 55:24.200] So everything the judge did, he did without subject matter jurisdiction [55:24.200 --> 55:37.200] Yes, I don't argue that they have jurisdiction because they know that their particular courtroom is supposed to hear certain kinds of cases, but not that specific case [55:37.200 --> 55:47.200] That specific case has to have the jurisdiction triggered, invoked, it has to be commenced, there has to be a commencement of the case which never happened [55:47.200 --> 55:51.200] Exactly, the right word is invoked [55:51.200 --> 55:57.200] There was the proper documentation is not in the record that invokes that judge's jurisdiction [55:57.200 --> 56:03.200] Yeah, he has general jurisdiction over the general subject matter [56:03.200 --> 56:09.200] But he does not have, nothing invoked his jurisdiction over the person [56:09.200 --> 56:19.200] And it wouldn't be that big of a deal for them to do it right, I understand it's more work, but people's rights are more important than the bottleneck [56:19.200 --> 56:28.200] It's not that big of a deal, they can do the right paperwork, there are some authorized people that can do the paperwork and if they don't know how they can learn, it's not a big deal [56:28.200 --> 56:30.200] They could be doing it right [56:30.200 --> 56:34.200] I'm not so sure that it's more work doing it right [56:34.200 --> 56:43.200] That was the assumption that they went to these other procedures to streamline things, but I don't see where they did [56:43.200 --> 56:49.200] It would be more efficient if they took them to a magistrate [56:49.200 --> 56:58.200] And when we say take to a magistrate, everybody's thinking you put them in the car, you drive over to the magistrate's office, you go into court, they convene a hearing and all that stuff [56:58.200 --> 57:02.200] No, that's not where it works nowadays [57:02.200 --> 57:05.200] Technology has improved [57:05.200 --> 57:19.200] You brought that to me the other day, Brett, about the police being authorized or the magistrates being authorized to do an examining trial over video [57:19.200 --> 57:20.200] I just talked to my chief [57:20.200 --> 57:26.200] I talked to my chief of police and he said, oh yeah, we could bring him to our office and sit down [57:26.200 --> 57:37.200] I was thinking of doing it right out there on the highway, but he said yeah, but then you got people that can't hear anything, cars going by and it's a disruptive environment [57:37.200 --> 57:45.200] But I could take him to my office and we would set up cameras and stuff and do it there [57:45.200 --> 57:50.200] Instead of driving 15 miles over to the jail on the other side of the county [57:50.200 --> 57:58.200] And the magistrate could do the examining trial, it's all done and if the magistrate doesn't find a probable cause, send the guy home [57:58.200 --> 58:05.200] Or if he does and he sets bail, if the guy has bail, the police officer can take bail [58:05.200 --> 58:15.200] And if he doesn't, he can call a bondsman and the officer can take him to the bondsman or the bondsman can come and pick him up [58:15.200 --> 58:22.200] It will make the whole process more efficient because they don't have to take him to the jail [58:22.200 --> 58:27.200] So doing it right may be easier [58:27.200 --> 58:33.200] Hang on, we'll do one more segment on this where I'm actually going to how to invoke the remedy [58:33.200 --> 58:45.200] Brett Fountain, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, our call in number 512-646-1984, we'll be right back [59:03.200 --> 59:06.200] This is one of the most comprehensive study bibles available today [59:06.200 --> 59:13.200] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life [59:13.200 --> 59:18.200] The free books are a three volume set called basic elements of the Christian life [59:18.200 --> 59:24.200] Chapter by chapter, basic elements of the Christian life clearly presents God's plan of salvation [59:24.200 --> 59:28.200] Growing in Christ and how to build up the church [59:28.200 --> 59:33.200] Order your free New Testament recovery version and basic elements of the Christian life [59:33.200 --> 59:40.200] Call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102 [59:40.200 --> 59:44.200] That's 888-551-0102 [59:44.200 --> 01:00:00.200] Or visit us online at bfa.org [01:00:00.200 --> 01:00:06.200] To follow these flashes brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdowns [01:00:06.200 --> 01:00:17.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019, open with precious metals, gold $1,429 an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, [01:00:17.200 --> 01:00:29.200] oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude $62.47 a barrel, and 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[01:01:04.200 --> 01:01:19.200] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing HEP into Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin and San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones since they are [01:01:19.200 --> 01:01:33.200] stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:33.200 --> 01:01:49.200] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the [01:01:49.200 --> 01:02:13.200] District Attorney in El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.200 --> 01:02:22.200] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:22.200 --> 01:02:51.200] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:52.200 --> 01:02:58.200] This was Work Roadie with a lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:22.200 --> 01:03:50.200] Okay, we are back. [01:03:50.200 --> 01:03:56.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Maruva Law Radio, and we're talking about a remedy. [01:03:56.200 --> 01:03:59.200] Okay, I kind of built the setup there. [01:03:59.200 --> 01:04:11.200] It appears that they went to these procedures because they had the perception of being more efficient. [01:04:11.200 --> 01:04:15.200] So now we have to cause them to be a problem. [01:04:15.200 --> 01:04:23.200] So we have this county here with no complaints in the court record. [01:04:23.200 --> 01:04:32.200] So how does an accused achieve nature and cause? [01:04:32.200 --> 01:04:36.200] Because nature and cause is not in the court record. [01:04:36.200 --> 01:04:43.200] And that has the effect of denying accused in a very specific constitutional right. [01:04:43.200 --> 01:04:49.200] Nature and cause being a technical legalese way to say, what the heck did I do? [01:04:49.200 --> 01:04:56.200] Yeah, what are the facts upon which you make this claim? [01:04:56.200 --> 01:04:59.200] And that's a probable cause statement. [01:04:59.200 --> 01:05:03.200] And we've been seeking the probable cause statement. [01:05:03.200 --> 01:05:16.200] I was looking for it because the documents that are in there, the indictment doesn't have the arresting officer's name on it. [01:05:16.200 --> 01:05:21.200] The bond form that's in the record does have the arresting officer's name, [01:05:21.200 --> 01:05:30.200] but it doesn't tell me what department he works for, the Sheriff's Department or the municipality or the highway patrol. [01:05:30.200 --> 01:05:32.200] I don't know who he works for. [01:05:32.200 --> 01:05:35.200] And it doesn't have a badge number. So all I've got is the last name. [01:05:35.200 --> 01:05:45.200] So I can't identify the person specifically so that I can file criminal charges and a deco complaint against him. [01:05:45.200 --> 01:05:47.200] I need that information. [01:05:47.200 --> 01:05:49.200] In the county court, I can find it. [01:05:49.200 --> 01:05:54.200] There's a document in there, kind of a synopsis of the case. [01:05:54.200 --> 01:06:00.200] And it has the officer's name, who he works for, and the badge number, but not in the district. [01:06:00.200 --> 01:06:03.200] And in the county, it doesn't have the probable cause statement. [01:06:03.200 --> 01:06:10.200] It has a complaint, but there's no affidavit and there's no 16-17 order. [01:06:10.200 --> 01:06:15.200] So it's still, the prosecution is still fatally defective. [01:06:15.200 --> 01:06:18.200] But the district is much more clear. [01:06:18.200 --> 01:06:20.200] There's nothing in there. [01:06:20.200 --> 01:06:24.200] So I'm trying to get this from the Sheriff. [01:06:24.200 --> 01:06:26.200] And they know why I want it. [01:06:26.200 --> 01:06:29.200] I told the prosecutor exactly why I want it. [01:06:29.200 --> 01:06:39.200] I just put it on when they refused to give me this and put in a request to the state attorney general for an opinion, which will stall it several weeks or a couple months. [01:06:39.200 --> 01:06:51.200] I put in a request for the name and badge number of all sheriff's deputies employed by the department from July to date. [01:06:51.200 --> 01:06:54.200] So I asked for that specifically. [01:06:54.200 --> 01:06:56.200] That's all I need. [01:06:56.200 --> 01:06:59.200] Name and badge number, that's all I need. [01:06:59.200 --> 01:07:06.200] I don't need the probable cause statement, but I've already got that thing in the works. [01:07:06.200 --> 01:07:13.200] So the prosecutor knows that when I get that, I'm going to start filing criminal charges, you can stall them. [01:07:13.200 --> 01:07:19.200] So they really, really don't want me to have it. [01:07:19.200 --> 01:07:31.200] And I told them that because I want them to do everything they can to keep it from me because everything they do to keep it from me makes things worse for them. [01:07:31.200 --> 01:07:33.200] That's a crime. [01:07:33.200 --> 01:07:34.200] Yeah. [01:07:34.200 --> 01:07:37.200] So keep stacking them up, guys. [01:07:37.200 --> 01:07:46.200] What I want to demonstrate to them is you have created a problem you cannot fix. [01:07:46.200 --> 01:07:59.200] This bell has been rung 48 hours after the arrest and after being brought before that magistrate in the jail. [01:07:59.200 --> 01:08:04.200] 48 hours after that, the bell was rung. [01:08:04.200 --> 01:08:09.200] The accused has a right to dismissal. [01:08:09.200 --> 01:08:15.200] And when I told that to the prosecutor, he picked up the code, looked it up and read it. [01:08:15.200 --> 01:08:22.200] He stood up for a second or two and you could see the gears grinding together. [01:08:22.200 --> 01:08:24.200] He leaned down, read it again. [01:08:24.200 --> 01:08:29.200] He looked up at me and he said, yeah, that's what it says. [01:08:29.200 --> 01:08:39.200] And you could hear the pieces clunking into place and I know he's thinking, holy crap, we got a problem. [01:08:39.200 --> 01:08:56.200] So after I went through all of this, I had a meeting with the prosecuting attorney, the new prosecutor or shiny teeth and what was the armpit thing? [01:08:56.200 --> 01:08:59.200] He might have sparkling teeth and odorless armpits. [01:08:59.200 --> 01:09:01.200] Partly armpits. [01:09:01.200 --> 01:09:02.200] Okay. [01:09:02.200 --> 01:09:07.200] He didn't find that as funny as you did, by the way. [01:09:07.200 --> 01:09:16.200] But once they saw it, he talked to the new county judge and the judge cooperated everything I'd said because I'd been over this with him before. [01:09:16.200 --> 01:09:24.200] So I asked him, would they have any opposition to an examining trial and they said, no, they wouldn't. [01:09:24.200 --> 01:09:34.200] And then I asked him about a questionnaire for people who have been arrested and who are asking for court appointed counsel. [01:09:34.200 --> 01:09:38.200] They'll use my questionnaire to do an audit of the case. [01:09:38.200 --> 01:09:54.200] And this audit would extract the information that would, that the person would have had an opportunity to present and add an examining trial. [01:09:54.200 --> 01:10:07.200] And then they can take this audit I create and the whole purpose of it is to convince them they need an attorney, but also give them the information they need to control the attorney once they get them. [01:10:07.200 --> 01:10:12.200] And we'll take this and send it to all the lawyers in the county who practice in the jurisdiction. [01:10:12.200 --> 01:10:16.200] This gives lawyers access to more clients. [01:10:16.200 --> 01:10:23.200] It gives the accused access to more than one lawyer. [01:10:23.200 --> 01:10:35.200] So he can potentially get offers to represent from a number of lawyers and the baritry laws that restrict advertising that a lawyer can do. [01:10:35.200 --> 01:10:39.200] This fits exactly what the laws intent. [01:10:39.200 --> 01:10:48.200] All licensed professionals are forbidden to directly promote themselves. [01:10:48.200 --> 01:10:59.200] About 15 years ago, they got legislation passed that let them do general general advertising, but a lawyer can't come to you and say, you know, I'm a lawyer. [01:10:59.200 --> 01:11:01.200] I can represent you in this case. [01:11:01.200 --> 01:11:03.200] That's a felony in the state of Texas. [01:11:03.200 --> 01:11:07.200] A plumber can't come to you and say, hey, you got a water leak over here. [01:11:07.200 --> 01:11:11.200] I'm a plumber and I can fix that for you. [01:11:11.200 --> 01:11:13.200] That's a felony in the state of Texas. [01:11:13.200 --> 01:11:18.200] Doctors, lawyers, plumbers, electricians. [01:11:18.200 --> 01:11:27.200] It's intended that licensed professionals get their business by word of mouth, not by solicitation. [01:11:27.200 --> 01:11:35.200] Because they're concerned, especially with lawyers, that lawyers will foment litigation where otherwise litigation might not occur. [01:11:35.200 --> 01:11:37.200] So that's a problem that lawyers have to deal with. [01:11:37.200 --> 01:11:47.200] So we give them a way to get access to clients, potential clients, and the client solicits an offer from the lawyer. [01:11:47.200 --> 01:11:51.200] Exactly what the baritry laws intended. [01:11:51.200 --> 01:11:56.200] And then this way both sides wins in this transaction. [01:11:56.200 --> 01:12:05.200] The lawyer gets to look at the case and doesn't have to spend that unbillable first hour evaluating the case. [01:12:05.200 --> 01:12:08.200] He can do that with the audit, we send it. [01:12:08.200 --> 01:12:12.200] And the individual gets offers from a number of lawyers. [01:12:12.200 --> 01:12:14.200] So everybody wins in that case. [01:12:14.200 --> 01:12:19.200] And we win too, but we'll get to that. [01:12:19.200 --> 01:12:38.200] So that we're talking about examining trials with the current technology, it would likely be much easier and much more efficient for if a policeman arrests someone. [01:12:38.200 --> 01:12:52.200] If he's like a sheriff's deputy, he's in south part of the county, he can just park the cruiser off the highway somewhere, call the judge on FaceTime or Zoom, [01:12:52.200 --> 01:13:00.200] a whole examinee trial right there, or if he's a local policeman and take them to their office, call the magistrate. [01:13:00.200 --> 01:13:07.200] If he calls the magistrate's office and the receptionist tells him the judge is in court or something, he'll try another magistrate. [01:13:07.200 --> 01:13:14.200] We've got 15 in the county, and this is a small county and a bigger county's got lots of them. [01:13:14.200 --> 01:13:24.200] So it's easy enough, and in a larger county like Dallas, Fort Worth, they can appoint magistrates for this specific purpose. [01:13:24.200 --> 01:13:34.200] In Tennessee, all the larger counties have magistrates that are appointed specifically to do examining trials. [01:13:34.200 --> 01:13:39.200] They can do that in the larger counties, and this is streamlined in the whole process. [01:13:39.200 --> 01:13:43.200] Most of these people won't have to be taken to jail. [01:13:43.200 --> 01:13:52.200] So the policeman doesn't have to drive halfway across the county and then spend the time it takes processing the guy in jail, [01:13:52.200 --> 01:14:02.200] and it takes two or three officers in the jail, and they have to feed them and change their clothes and all kinds of paperwork they have to do is costly to do that. [01:14:02.200 --> 01:14:15.200] They eliminate a whole proportion of it, and they get all the proper documentation in place that the law requires. [01:14:15.200 --> 01:14:30.200] Everybody wins here, and I think we have a way to, you know, by challenging subject matter jurisdiction and claiming violations of due process, [01:14:30.200 --> 01:14:36.200] we have the leverage we need to get them to start doing this the way it's supposed to be done. [01:14:36.200 --> 01:14:52.200] We're not claiming this is a cure-all, fix-all for all the problems of the world, but it's a very good start on fixing this rift between the public and the police. [01:14:52.200 --> 01:14:56.200] Yeah, it's a really important step in the right direction. [01:14:56.200 --> 01:15:01.200] Yeah, it was intended that the public not fear the police. [01:15:01.200 --> 01:15:11.200] If a policeman were arrest for any reason, and this was a put-in law originally in 1215 A.D. with the original Magna Carta, [01:15:11.200 --> 01:15:17.200] a policeman could arrest, but he did not hold the key to the jailhouse store, they gave that to a magistrate. [01:15:17.200 --> 01:15:23.200] You arrest him, you take him directly to the nearest magistrate and explain yourself. [01:15:23.200 --> 01:15:31.200] And if the magistrate agrees with you, the magistrate orders them to jail, not you. [01:15:31.200 --> 01:15:35.200] And that's the separation that was intended. [01:15:35.200 --> 01:15:44.200] If an officer knows that if he arrests you, he's going to have to go straight to the magistrate and explain himself right now, [01:15:44.200 --> 01:15:57.200] but before he gets to do that, you're going to get to tell your side first, and that's what 1601 A.D. says that before any evidence is entered against the accused, [01:15:57.200 --> 01:16:00.200] the accused has the right to make a statement. [01:16:00.200 --> 01:16:05.200] So the officer is going to be a lot more careful in what he does. [01:16:05.200 --> 01:16:17.200] He's not likely to be quite so arrogant and quite so quick to push his weight around if he has to explain that to a judge within minutes. [01:16:17.200 --> 01:16:26.200] It would help to fix this rift between the police and the public, because I believe all the cops I know, they want to be good guys. [01:16:26.200 --> 01:16:31.200] I don't know a single one that wants to be a jack-booted thug, not even the guy that arrested me. [01:16:31.200 --> 01:16:34.200] He wants to be a good guy. [01:16:34.200 --> 01:16:38.200] We need to give it a chance to do that and rebuild trust. [01:16:38.200 --> 01:16:41.200] We're going to go to our callers when we come back. [01:16:41.200 --> 01:16:44.200] Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, Rear of our radio. [01:16:44.200 --> 01:16:49.200] A call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:49.200 --> 01:16:52.200] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. [01:16:52.200 --> 01:16:54.200] We'll be taking your calls all night. [01:16:54.200 --> 01:17:00.200] We'll be right back. [01:17:00.200 --> 01:17:05.200] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.200 --> 01:17:09.200] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [01:17:09.200 --> 01:17:14.200] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:17:14.200 --> 01:17:20.200] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:20.200 --> 01:17:24.200] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons. [01:17:24.200 --> 01:17:26.200] How to answer letters and phone calls. [01:17:26.200 --> 01:17:29.200] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [01:17:29.200 --> 01:17:33.200] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.200 --> 01:17:38.200] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.200 --> 01:17:41.200] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:41.200 --> 01:17:46.200] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, [01:17:46.200 --> 01:17:49.200] or email michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.200 --> 01:17:57.200] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:57.200 --> 01:18:00.200] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.200 --> 01:18:01.200] I love logos. [01:18:01.200 --> 01:18:04.200] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.200 --> 01:18:07.200] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.200 --> 01:18:08.200] I need my truth pick. [01:18:08.200 --> 01:18:13.200] I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.200 --> 01:18:16.200] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:16.200 --> 01:18:20.200] and I really don't have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [01:18:20.200 --> 01:18:22.200] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.200 --> 01:18:24.200] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:24.200 --> 01:18:27.200] If you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.200 --> 01:18:29.200] We'd order new supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:29.200 --> 01:18:31.200] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.200 --> 01:18:34.200] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:18:34.200 --> 01:18:37.200] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.200 --> 01:18:43.200] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.200 --> 01:18:44.200] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.200 --> 01:18:45.200] No. [01:18:45.200 --> 01:18:47.200] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.200 --> 01:18:48.200] No. [01:18:48.200 --> 01:18:49.200] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.200 --> 01:18:50.200] No. [01:18:50.200 --> 01:18:51.200] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.200 --> 01:18:54.200] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money. [01:18:54.200 --> 01:18:55.200] This is perfect. [01:18:55.200 --> 01:18:57.200] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.200 --> 01:18:58.200] We are Logos. [01:18:58.200 --> 01:19:00.200] Happy holidays, Logos. [01:19:00.200 --> 01:19:11.200] This is the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:19:11.200 --> 01:19:40.200] Logos, Logos, Logos, Logos. [01:19:41.200 --> 01:20:01.200] Okay, we are back. [01:20:01.200 --> 01:20:05.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, root of Law Radio. [01:20:05.200 --> 01:20:10.200] And we're going to John in Texas in New York. [01:20:10.200 --> 01:20:11.200] Okay, John. [01:20:11.200 --> 01:20:18.200] Do you have a good presentation on these vaccines? [01:20:18.200 --> 01:20:22.200] Hello, John. [01:20:22.200 --> 01:20:24.200] Did you fall asleep? [01:20:24.200 --> 01:20:28.200] Did you call for something else? [01:20:28.200 --> 01:20:29.200] Hello? [01:20:29.200 --> 01:20:31.200] Knock, knock, knock. [01:20:31.200 --> 01:20:32.200] Okay. [01:20:32.200 --> 01:20:36.200] I think I have a load to sleep. [01:20:36.200 --> 01:20:39.200] My voice has that effect on people. [01:20:39.200 --> 01:20:43.200] Oh, working loud. [01:20:43.200 --> 01:20:47.200] Oh, I'm just sitting here with a little kitty on my chest. [01:20:47.200 --> 01:20:53.200] I couldn't get to the phone in time to answer right away because the little kitty is sleeping peacefully on my chest. [01:20:53.200 --> 01:20:55.200] I got to get her to get up, sweetie. [01:20:55.200 --> 01:20:57.200] I got to get up, sweetie. [01:20:57.200 --> 01:20:58.200] Get up. [01:20:58.200 --> 01:20:59.200] Go ahead. [01:20:59.200 --> 01:21:00.200] Go ahead. [01:21:00.200 --> 01:21:01.200] I got to get up. [01:21:01.200 --> 01:21:02.200] Okay. [01:21:02.200 --> 01:21:04.200] Okay, go to the radiator, sweetie. [01:21:04.200 --> 01:21:09.200] Okay, all set. [01:21:09.200 --> 01:21:13.200] Okay, still there. [01:21:13.200 --> 01:21:17.200] So tell us about vaccines. [01:21:17.200 --> 01:21:19.200] Okay. [01:21:19.200 --> 01:21:26.200] Now, I'm going to tell you up front, there's so much that we could go on for two days and I mean that. [01:21:26.200 --> 01:21:29.200] So I'm going to summarize it the best way I can. [01:21:29.200 --> 01:21:30.200] I'm going to leave something out. [01:21:30.200 --> 01:21:32.200] I know I am. [01:21:32.200 --> 01:21:35.200] You can't get everything in, but here we go. [01:21:35.200 --> 01:21:43.200] Do you have some data that you can make available to us that you can send me that supports all this? [01:21:43.200 --> 01:21:51.200] So if somebody wants to see it, they can send me a request and I won't censor any of it. [01:21:51.200 --> 01:21:52.200] Maybe. [01:21:52.200 --> 01:21:59.200] Where I get mine from or directly from medical doctors, I get it directly from nutraceutical doctors. [01:21:59.200 --> 01:22:02.200] I get it from clinical papers. [01:22:02.200 --> 01:22:11.200] I get it from pharmaceutical companies and I even get some of it from the FDA itself. [01:22:11.200 --> 01:22:17.200] For example, the FDA has just published their official word. [01:22:17.200 --> 01:22:27.200] The FDA has said that the COVID-19 vaccine causes heart attacks, strokes, and anaphylactic shock. [01:22:27.200 --> 01:22:35.200] A lot of where I get my information from comes from medical doctors and we can go through that. [01:22:35.200 --> 01:22:44.200] Can you send me a package that has references to those so that anybody who's listening who wants to dig deeper can do that? [01:22:44.200 --> 01:22:45.200] Sure. [01:22:45.200 --> 01:22:51.200] And I would probably suggest everybody do what I do because the best way is to look it up yourself. [01:22:51.200 --> 01:22:55.200] Then you know that it's for real. [01:22:55.200 --> 01:23:03.200] Anyway, I've been doing this 62 years and a lot of what I do is because you've had a background. [01:23:03.200 --> 01:23:11.200] You have a background in how things work and when you come across other information, I don't have to look it up. [01:23:11.200 --> 01:23:15.200] If I don't want to, I don't have to because I know it is correct. [01:23:15.200 --> 01:23:22.200] I have enough information to know that what I just found out is correct because it's based on what I already knew. [01:23:22.200 --> 01:23:32.200] Anyway, here we go. [01:23:32.200 --> 01:23:35.200] We were talking about vaccines. [01:23:35.200 --> 01:23:39.200] Did you take your VZ today? [01:23:39.200 --> 01:23:41.200] Oh yeah, I always do. [01:23:41.200 --> 01:23:47.200] I went to the store the other day and I was looking for something from my memory. [01:23:47.200 --> 01:23:53.200] And while I was standing looking at the vitamin section, this kid came up and he said, can I help you? [01:23:53.200 --> 01:23:58.200] I said, yes, I'm here looking for something from my memory. [01:23:58.200 --> 01:24:02.200] He said, well, what was it? [01:24:02.200 --> 01:24:05.200] I don't know, I forgot. [01:24:05.200 --> 01:24:11.200] And the kid stood there a second and he said, I walked right into that one, didn't I? [01:24:11.200 --> 01:24:13.200] Yeah, you did. [01:24:13.200 --> 01:24:16.200] I like someone who's quickly uptake. [01:24:16.200 --> 01:24:19.200] Okay, so we were talking about vaccines. [01:24:19.200 --> 01:24:23.200] All right. [01:24:23.200 --> 01:24:31.200] I will begin with Merck and Pfizer. [01:24:31.200 --> 01:24:38.200] They have admitted that the vaccine doesn't really protect you against COVID-19. [01:24:38.200 --> 01:24:49.200] All it does, they claim is it might guard against some of the side effects, but the symptoms. [01:24:49.200 --> 01:24:52.200] It doesn't protect you against the vaccine. [01:24:52.200 --> 01:24:55.200] The vaccine doesn't protect you against the virus. [01:24:55.200 --> 01:25:03.200] Merck, I believe Merck and Pfizer both have admitted that. [01:25:03.200 --> 01:25:06.200] Okay, I have a question about that. [01:25:06.200 --> 01:25:10.200] Why would they admit that? [01:25:10.200 --> 01:25:14.200] Because they're forced into a corner. [01:25:14.200 --> 01:25:26.200] You know things, people are waking up when the FDA admits who they protect the pharmaceutical companies. [01:25:26.200 --> 01:25:31.200] They are the military arm of the pharmaceutical companies. [01:25:31.200 --> 01:25:34.200] The FDA doesn't protect people, that's a fact. [01:25:34.200 --> 01:25:39.200] The FDA protects the pharmaceutical companies and big pharma. [01:25:39.200 --> 01:25:56.200] And when they come out and admit something like the FDA has just done that COVID-19 vaccine causes heart attacks, strokes, and anaphylactic shock, you know they've been back into a corner. [01:25:56.200 --> 01:26:03.200] You know that they have no choice now that everybody's waking up. [01:26:03.200 --> 01:26:05.200] And that's a fact. [01:26:05.200 --> 01:26:09.200] You have no idea the filth that goes out in the pharmaceutical industry. [01:26:09.200 --> 01:26:13.200] I dug it up for years and the more you look, the more you find. [01:26:13.200 --> 01:26:16.200] It never stops, it never ends. [01:26:16.200 --> 01:26:23.200] So, let me continue. [01:26:23.200 --> 01:26:25.200] I lost my trend of thought. [01:26:25.200 --> 01:26:32.200] Okay, so Merck and Pfizer both admitted that the vaccine doesn't really protect you against the virus. [01:26:32.200 --> 01:26:36.200] Nor does it protect you from passing the virus on. [01:26:36.200 --> 01:26:40.200] It just handles some of the symptoms. [01:26:40.200 --> 01:26:56.200] Now I sent you an email today that if you read that, I can tell you probably didn't read it because the top of your head should have blown off from what they are admitting from what has been coming in. [01:26:56.200 --> 01:27:02.200] This information has been flooding in like a fire hose from all over the world. [01:27:02.200 --> 01:27:04.200] People have been dropping dead left and right. [01:27:04.200 --> 01:27:06.200] People have been getting billion barred. [01:27:06.200 --> 01:27:11.200] What's this about Australia and England? [01:27:11.200 --> 01:27:13.200] UK. [01:27:13.200 --> 01:27:18.200] Yeah, Australia, they stopped giving out the vaccine for a while. [01:27:18.200 --> 01:27:24.200] I don't know if they resumed it or not, but I know they had to stop because of all the bad side effects. [01:27:24.200 --> 01:27:27.200] People were literally dropping dead. [01:27:27.200 --> 01:27:30.200] The ball player, Hank Aaron. [01:27:30.200 --> 01:27:32.200] Hank Aaron, yeah. [01:27:32.200 --> 01:27:36.200] He got dead after the second shot. [01:27:36.200 --> 01:27:39.200] And I'll explain all about that and then I'll explain it right now. [01:27:39.200 --> 01:27:52.200] What happens, what probably happened to Hank Aaron is basically what happened to the 1918 victims of the flu pandemic, the Spanish flu, [01:27:52.200 --> 01:28:02.200] which was a bio weapon that they deliberately released to kill soldiers. [01:28:02.200 --> 01:28:12.200] What happened, and it's the same thing that happens to little babies when they get all those vaccines and they die or their brain swells up [01:28:12.200 --> 01:28:14.200] or they get encephalitis. [01:28:14.200 --> 01:28:25.200] They get the covering on the brain, they call that when it gets infected. [01:28:25.200 --> 01:28:26.200] Anyway. [01:28:26.200 --> 01:28:28.200] Oh, meningitis? [01:28:28.200 --> 01:28:30.200] Meningitis, yeah. [01:28:30.200 --> 01:28:33.200] What happens, what probably happened to the ball player? [01:28:33.200 --> 01:28:36.200] See, there's so much information. [01:28:36.200 --> 01:28:40.200] You'd have to, I mean, it should be in writing is really. [01:28:40.200 --> 01:28:43.200] Anyway, I'll do the best I can. [01:28:43.200 --> 01:28:46.200] What happened to the ball player probably was this scenario. [01:28:46.200 --> 01:28:53.200] He got the first shot and didn't kill him, which surprises me because the guy was 86 years old. [01:28:53.200 --> 01:29:02.200] Now, he gets the second shot and probably what happened, he had a virus in his system. [01:29:02.200 --> 01:29:11.200] And that virus, and that's doing it together. [01:29:11.200 --> 01:29:13.200] Everything all right? [01:29:13.200 --> 01:29:16.200] All I'm hearing is a dog. [01:29:16.200 --> 01:29:19.200] Yeah, I don't know where that came from. [01:29:19.200 --> 01:29:28.200] Anyway, Hank Aaron got the second shot and he probably had a virus in his system. [01:29:28.200 --> 01:29:34.200] And when the shot met up with the virus, his immune system went into overdrive. [01:29:34.200 --> 01:29:39.200] And that's what they call cytokine storm. [01:29:39.200 --> 01:29:41.200] The babies do that when they get there. [01:29:41.200 --> 01:29:47.200] We're about to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Rule of Law Radio. [01:29:47.200 --> 01:29:51.200] I call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:51.200 --> 01:29:57.200] We've got three more hours tonight, so we'll be taking, we're two and a half more hours. [01:29:57.200 --> 01:30:00.200] We'll be taking your calls all night, we'll be right back. [01:30:00.200 --> 01:30:06.200] Sorry, soft drink lovers, even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:06.200 --> 01:30:11.200] Our study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:11.200 --> 01:30:17.200] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:17.200 --> 01:30:19.200] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.200 --> 01:30:22.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.200 --> 01:30:27.200] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.200 --> 01:30:29.200] So protect your rights. [01:30:29.200 --> 01:30:32.200] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.200 --> 01:30:35.200] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.200 --> 01:30:38.200] Public Service Announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. [01:30:38.200 --> 01:30:42.200] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.200 --> 01:30:45.200] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.200 --> 01:30:50.200] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:50.200 --> 01:30:51.200] Wrong. [01:30:51.200 --> 01:30:56.200] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:56.200 --> 01:31:03.200] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:03.200 --> 01:31:06.200] These authors say artificial sweeteners trigger the appetite, [01:31:06.200 --> 01:31:10.200] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:10.200 --> 01:31:13.200] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, [01:31:13.200 --> 01:31:16.200] which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:16.200 --> 01:31:19.200] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, [01:31:19.200 --> 01:31:24.200] and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:24.200 --> 01:31:26.200] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. [01:31:26.200 --> 01:31:30.200] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.200 --> 01:31:36.200] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.200 --> 01:31:38.200] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.200 --> 01:31:43.200] However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.200 --> 01:31:46.200] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.200 --> 01:31:49.200] Thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:49.200 --> 01:31:50.200] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.200 --> 01:31:51.200] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.200 --> 01:31:52.200] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.200 --> 01:31:53.200] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.200 --> 01:31:55.200] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.200 --> 01:31:58.200] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.200 --> 01:32:01.200] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:28.200 --> 01:32:31.200] Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.200 --> 01:32:35.200] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.200 --> 01:32:39.200] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [01:32:39.200 --> 01:32:41.200] and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.200 --> 01:32:44.200] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [01:32:44.200 --> 01:32:48.200] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.200 --> 01:32:51.200] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.200 --> 01:32:55.200] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.200 --> 01:33:02.200] Today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.200 --> 01:33:04.200] Looking for some truth? [01:33:04.200 --> 01:33:05.200] You found it. [01:33:05.200 --> 01:33:26.200] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:35.200 --> 01:33:51.200] Okay, we are back. [01:33:51.200 --> 01:33:58.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain on this Friday, the fifth day of February 2021. [01:33:58.200 --> 01:34:12.200] And we're talking with John in New York and he is giving us a presentation on the vaccinations for the dreaded COVID virus. [01:34:12.200 --> 01:34:14.200] Go ahead, John. [01:34:14.200 --> 01:34:22.200] The dreaded COVID virus has a survival rate in the United States and probably worldwide. [01:34:22.200 --> 01:34:33.200] But in the United States, we know for certain the survival rate of the COVID dreaded 19 virus is 99.99%. [01:34:33.200 --> 01:34:43.200] Some people say it's 99.98%, but it depends on how you're, those are the actual survival rate figures. [01:34:43.200 --> 01:34:52.200] Anyone who tells you that COVID-19 kills more people than one tenth of a percent is lying to you. [01:34:52.200 --> 01:34:54.200] And that is a fact. [01:34:54.200 --> 01:34:56.200] They are cooking the numbers. [01:34:56.200 --> 01:35:00.200] There's a lot of reasons why they're cooking the numbers. [01:35:00.200 --> 01:35:11.200] What has happened in the last 60 or 70 years, 80 years, with vaccines in general has set the stage for COVID-19. [01:35:11.200 --> 01:35:26.200] The history of vaccines in this country is a very dark, dismal, in the ancient times, what do they call that, the dark ages. [01:35:26.200 --> 01:35:35.200] The vaccine industry has a history that's buried in the catacombs, in the dark ages. [01:35:35.200 --> 01:35:41.200] The polio virus, a lot of people don't know this, I'll just be very fast when I say these things. [01:35:41.200 --> 01:35:43.200] Just bear with me. [01:35:43.200 --> 01:35:51.200] The polio virus, there was a lady who was a doctor who was in charge of the quality control. [01:35:51.200 --> 01:35:53.200] They did not listen to her. [01:35:53.200 --> 01:36:06.200] She discovered that the polio virus was infected with, among other viruses, this was just one of them, was SV40. [01:36:06.200 --> 01:36:10.200] SV40 is a very dangerous cancer virus. [01:36:10.200 --> 01:36:19.200] It is one of the things that is responsible for all the brain cancer that has happened to people in the last 30 years. [01:36:19.200 --> 01:36:24.200] That's just one of the many cancers SV40 has caused. [01:36:24.200 --> 01:36:29.200] She warned them not to release the polio vaccine. [01:36:29.200 --> 01:36:33.200] Oschner and a whole bunch of others did not listen to her. [01:36:33.200 --> 01:36:38.200] They said, well, we've already declared it to be safe. We've got to release it now. [01:36:38.200 --> 01:36:48.200] So they released it and she said, if you release this virus from the American public, you will have the biggest epidemic of cancer in about 30 years that the world has ever seen. [01:36:48.200 --> 01:36:50.200] Isn't that what happened? [01:36:50.200 --> 01:36:53.200] She knew exactly what she was talking about. [01:36:53.200 --> 01:36:58.200] That's the history of the polio virus or the polio vaccine. [01:36:58.200 --> 01:37:06.200] Oschner, one of the heads of the NIH, had, I guess it was him, if I remember right, he had to step down. [01:37:06.200 --> 01:37:09.200] People lost their jobs. [01:37:09.200 --> 01:37:13.200] Didn't he give it to his grandchildren? [01:37:13.200 --> 01:37:17.200] One died, the other wound up paralyzed? [01:37:17.200 --> 01:37:22.200] Yeah, I was just going to get to that. Yeah, you're very sharp. [01:37:22.200 --> 01:37:25.200] Oschner gave it to his own grandchildren. [01:37:25.200 --> 01:37:28.200] One died and one was paralyzed. [01:37:28.200 --> 01:37:32.200] Hundreds of children were paralyzed. [01:37:32.200 --> 01:37:34.200] Many of them died. [01:37:34.200 --> 01:37:36.200] It was a mess. [01:37:36.200 --> 01:37:38.200] So what did they do? [01:37:38.200 --> 01:37:58.200] They gave the job of public relations director to get the public confidence back in the NIH and the whole vaccine industry to begin with, to none other than Tricky Dickie Nixon, who then was, he was probably a senator, if I remember right. [01:37:58.200 --> 01:38:02.200] I met him many, many years ago when I was small in my town. [01:38:02.200 --> 01:38:07.200] And he was wearing the same stupid gray suit back then in 1952. [01:38:07.200 --> 01:38:09.200] I'll never forget that. [01:38:09.200 --> 01:38:17.200] Anyway, they gave him the job of public relations director to try to serve as damage control. [01:38:17.200 --> 01:38:20.200] Anyway, vaccines. [01:38:20.200 --> 01:38:24.200] In the 70s, it was called SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome. [01:38:24.200 --> 01:38:30.200] They tried to blame the women of America for putting their babies on their stomach and that's what caused SIDS. [01:38:30.200 --> 01:38:33.200] That's a big, fat lie. [01:38:33.200 --> 01:38:39.200] SIDS was caused by, you guessed it, vaccines. [01:38:39.200 --> 01:38:41.200] No question about it. [01:38:41.200 --> 01:38:51.200] Now you're going to, you still hear pharmaceutical companies and some doctors who don't know the information because they're not taught the information. [01:38:51.200 --> 01:38:56.200] The last thing they want to do is tell the doctors the truth. [01:38:56.200 --> 01:39:05.200] They, to this day, say, oh, there's no connection between autism and vaccines. [01:39:05.200 --> 01:39:11.200] There's every indication that autism is caused by vaccines. [01:39:11.200 --> 01:39:22.200] And 30 naturopathic doctors, mostly in Florida, suddenly jumped off of buildings and got shot twice in the chest, self-inflicted. [01:39:22.200 --> 01:39:27.200] Since when did you hear of somebody shooting themselves twice? [01:39:27.200 --> 01:39:29.200] They, they suicided themselves. [01:39:29.200 --> 01:39:32.200] They turned up dead under strange conditions. [01:39:32.200 --> 01:39:36.200] That's because they were on to the truth. [01:39:36.200 --> 01:39:40.200] They were on to something else I'm not even going to mention over the air. [01:39:40.200 --> 01:39:42.200] That's how dangerous it is. [01:39:42.200 --> 01:39:44.200] And I am not kidding. [01:39:44.200 --> 01:39:48.200] They were on to autism and vaccines. [01:39:48.200 --> 01:39:52.200] That was one of the things, one of the reasons why they were killed. [01:39:52.200 --> 01:39:53.200] All right. [01:39:53.200 --> 01:39:55.200] Now let's go from there. [01:39:55.200 --> 01:39:59.200] There's so many vaccines that cause so many problems. [01:39:59.200 --> 01:40:07.200] Hepatitis B vaccine is famous for causing a very aggressive form of multiple sclerosis. [01:40:07.200 --> 01:40:12.200] HPV, Gardasil. [01:40:12.200 --> 01:40:20.200] I've seen too many girls now in wheelchairs because they got the Gardasil shot. [01:40:20.200 --> 01:40:22.200] Let's see. [01:40:22.200 --> 01:40:26.200] Gey and Barr syndrome. [01:40:26.200 --> 01:40:29.200] That's where the body eats its own nerves. [01:40:29.200 --> 01:40:30.200] Bell's palsy. [01:40:30.200 --> 01:40:37.200] That's where your face is paralyzed on one side and the other side is normal, but you can't talk good. [01:40:37.200 --> 01:40:38.200] You can't eat. [01:40:38.200 --> 01:40:43.200] Those are just a few of the things, all of the wonderful legacies that vaccines give us. [01:40:43.200 --> 01:40:48.200] And they maintain that they are so safe. [01:40:48.200 --> 01:40:49.200] Wait, wait, wait. [01:40:49.200 --> 01:40:51.200] Were you getting off kind of off topic? [01:40:51.200 --> 01:41:00.200] Let's go back to the specific issue of the COVID-19 virus, vaccines. [01:41:00.200 --> 01:41:02.200] I'm getting to that. [01:41:02.200 --> 01:41:04.200] This is very just trust me. [01:41:04.200 --> 01:41:05.200] Just trust me. [01:41:05.200 --> 01:41:06.200] Okay. [01:41:06.200 --> 01:41:10.200] I'm going to start with this. [01:41:10.200 --> 01:41:25.200] The history of vaccines is riddled with fraud, criminal intent, what I would call at least manslaughter, [01:41:25.200 --> 01:41:30.200] if not murder one. [01:41:30.200 --> 01:41:32.200] It is riddled with lies. [01:41:32.200 --> 01:41:35.200] It is riddled with disinformation. [01:41:35.200 --> 01:41:40.200] If somebody like those naturopathic doctors that are really onto something come up against [01:41:40.200 --> 01:41:49.200] it and they are going to show that the pharmaceutical company or companies are big fraud and liars, [01:41:49.200 --> 01:41:52.200] they turn up dead. [01:41:52.200 --> 01:41:57.200] So I'm not going to get into all the different vaccines and all the different harms they cause [01:41:57.200 --> 01:42:02.200] because we'd literally be here all day. [01:42:02.200 --> 01:42:08.200] All I'm going to say is the vaccine industry is riddled with filth. [01:42:08.200 --> 01:42:12.200] Now that is your foundation that I'm working on. [01:42:12.200 --> 01:42:14.200] Now we're going to go to COVID-19. [01:42:14.200 --> 01:42:24.200] You've already got a public that is beginning to realize that they've been had by the pharmaceutical industry. [01:42:24.200 --> 01:42:26.200] People are starting to wake up. [01:42:26.200 --> 01:42:33.200] The last I knew, 60% of all healthcare workers do not want COVID-19 vaccine. [01:42:33.200 --> 01:42:34.200] I'll say that again. [01:42:34.200 --> 01:42:42.200] 60% of the healthcare workers, the last that I knew, did not want COVID-19 vaccine. [01:42:42.200 --> 01:42:49.200] UK, Australia, they both had major problems early on with the vaccine. [01:42:49.200 --> 01:42:54.200] The UK pulled them and I think they pulled them in Australia. [01:42:54.200 --> 01:43:01.200] And I don't know what they're doing now, but I know that at one point they had to pull them. [01:43:01.200 --> 01:43:07.200] There are so many people, there were two nurses and it's a good thing that they both were in a hospital [01:43:07.200 --> 01:43:09.200] and they both got their shots in a hospital. [01:43:09.200 --> 01:43:14.200] They both died and they had to be resuscitated. [01:43:14.200 --> 01:43:18.200] You know that little bit with the heart stops and the breathing stops. [01:43:18.200 --> 01:43:22.200] And if they didn't have a crash cart literally around the corner in the hospital, [01:43:22.200 --> 01:43:25.200] that's probably the guide, that's what happened. [01:43:25.200 --> 01:43:27.200] So I laid the groundwork. [01:43:27.200 --> 01:43:31.200] I said vaccines are already a dirty topic to begin. [01:43:31.200 --> 01:43:35.200] Now you've got a messenger RNA. [01:43:35.200 --> 01:43:37.200] Now you've got a messenger. [01:43:37.200 --> 01:43:40.200] Is that music coming? [01:43:40.200 --> 01:43:41.200] I hear the music. [01:43:41.200 --> 01:43:43.200] It is. [01:43:43.200 --> 01:43:44.200] Okay. [01:43:44.200 --> 01:43:45.200] Okay. [01:43:45.200 --> 01:43:46.200] It is. [01:43:46.200 --> 01:43:48.200] Got my page out of place. [01:43:48.200 --> 01:43:49.200] Yeah. [01:43:49.200 --> 01:43:50.200] Okay. [01:43:50.200 --> 01:43:52.200] Right, Felton. [01:43:52.200 --> 01:43:53.200] Move low radio. [01:43:53.200 --> 01:44:22.200] We'll be right back. [01:44:23.200 --> 01:44:30.200] We'll be right back. [01:44:53.200 --> 01:45:00.200] We'll be right back. [01:45:23.200 --> 01:45:33.200] We'll be right back. [01:45:53.200 --> 01:46:00.200] We'll be right back. [01:46:23.200 --> 01:46:45.200] We'll be right back. [01:46:45.200 --> 01:46:58.200] Okay. [01:46:58.200 --> 01:47:00.200] We are back. [01:47:00.200 --> 01:47:02.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:47:02.200 --> 01:47:03.200] Move low radio. [01:47:03.200 --> 01:47:05.200] And we're talking to John in Texas. [01:47:05.200 --> 01:47:08.200] John, I always keep wanting to put you in Texas. [01:47:08.200 --> 01:47:15.200] That could get me strung up because you speak with this strange foreign accent. [01:47:15.200 --> 01:47:20.200] John in New York and we're talking about the COVID virus, [01:47:20.200 --> 01:47:23.200] COVID virus vaccine. [01:47:23.200 --> 01:47:27.200] Go ahead, John. [01:47:27.200 --> 01:47:29.200] Oh, okay. [01:47:29.200 --> 01:47:30.200] Hold on. [01:47:30.200 --> 01:47:31.200] I'll start over again. [01:47:31.200 --> 01:47:33.200] My page didn't refresh quick enough. [01:47:33.200 --> 01:47:35.200] So you were off the air. [01:47:35.200 --> 01:47:36.200] Go ahead. [01:47:36.200 --> 01:47:37.200] Now you're up. [01:47:37.200 --> 01:47:38.200] Okay. [01:47:38.200 --> 01:47:39.200] You mentioned Australia. [01:47:39.200 --> 01:47:40.200] You're pretty smart. [01:47:40.200 --> 01:47:41.200] You're pretty sharp. [01:47:41.200 --> 01:47:46.200] Australia, for a lot of reasons, had to quit giving out the vaccine for a while. [01:47:46.200 --> 01:47:51.200] I don't know what they're doing now, but they had to quit because people were coming up, [01:47:51.200 --> 01:47:57.200] testing positive for HIV when they took the COVID-19 vaccine. [01:47:57.200 --> 01:47:59.200] There's a reason for that. [01:47:59.200 --> 01:48:08.200] You see, COVID-19, the virus that makes up COVID-19 is comprised of five man-made assembled, [01:48:08.200 --> 01:48:11.200] not man-made, but man-assembled viruses. [01:48:11.200 --> 01:48:16.200] They spliced five different viruses, parts of them together. [01:48:16.200 --> 01:48:19.200] One of them was the HIV delivery system. [01:48:19.200 --> 01:48:24.200] So COVID-19 has the HIV delivery system spliced into it. [01:48:24.200 --> 01:48:25.200] Okay, wait. [01:48:25.200 --> 01:48:28.200] Let me ask a question about that. [01:48:28.200 --> 01:48:38.200] The fact that they tested positive for the HIV virus, as I understand, the vaccine did [01:48:38.200 --> 01:48:50.200] not include a viable HIV virus, but portions of the virus. [01:48:50.200 --> 01:49:02.200] In developing vaccines, we use portions of a virus enough to get our system to recognize [01:49:02.200 --> 01:49:10.200] this string that's unique to whatever we're trying to get a vaccine for, in this case, [01:49:10.200 --> 01:49:11.200] HIV. [01:49:11.200 --> 01:49:19.700] There's a string of chromosomes or DNA that's unique to HIV, but it's not a complete string. [01:49:19.700 --> 01:49:21.700] It's not the whole virus. [01:49:21.700 --> 01:49:29.700] So could the fact that that section of DNA is present cause the positive indication [01:49:29.700 --> 01:49:34.700] where the person doesn't actually have AIDS? [01:49:34.700 --> 01:49:41.200] Well, I wouldn't want to find out, but it is possible that it does test positive because [01:49:41.200 --> 01:49:43.700] it's got part of the virus in there. [01:49:43.700 --> 01:49:51.200] All right, now, when they made the virus, they spliced in the HIV delivery system. [01:49:51.200 --> 01:49:56.700] And I think the reason why they did that, it is my understanding, it's just common sense [01:49:56.700 --> 01:50:03.200] to me that they put the HIV delivery system in, and I think that makes it very infectious. [01:50:03.200 --> 01:50:12.200] All right, and people were not testing positive when they had the virus, but they were testing [01:50:12.200 --> 01:50:16.200] positive for HIV once they had the vaccine. [01:50:16.200 --> 01:50:21.200] And when they made the vaccine, it was my understanding they reverse engineered it. [01:50:21.200 --> 01:50:25.200] And you'll understand this because you're an engineer. [01:50:25.200 --> 01:50:29.200] They reverse engineered the virus so that they could come up with a vaccine. [01:50:29.200 --> 01:50:39.200] And so they included part of the HIV, I don't know what you call it. [01:50:39.200 --> 01:50:42.200] They included part of the HIV in the vaccine itself. [01:50:42.200 --> 01:50:46.200] Now, they claim it was a false positive. [01:50:46.200 --> 01:50:48.200] I wouldn't want to find out. [01:50:48.200 --> 01:50:51.200] I'm sure you hear what I'm saying. [01:50:51.200 --> 01:51:00.200] Well, the reason I raised that question is we want to be careful and not over exaggerate the issue [01:51:00.200 --> 01:51:07.200] if the entire viable HIV virus is not present. [01:51:07.200 --> 01:51:12.200] It's like saying that a headlight makes up the whole car. [01:51:12.200 --> 01:51:22.200] I can look at a fender of a car from the 60s or 70s, and I can tell you exactly what they come off of. [01:51:22.200 --> 01:51:26.200] But it doesn't mean that's the whole car. [01:51:26.200 --> 01:51:32.200] They're recognizing a portion of HIV, but they're not necessarily... [01:51:32.200 --> 01:51:38.200] They want to be careful in how we do this analysis and not overgeneralize. [01:51:38.200 --> 01:51:42.200] Let me say this. [01:51:42.200 --> 01:51:47.200] They used a portion of HIV in the virus. [01:51:47.200 --> 01:51:53.200] They had to reverse engineer it to find out how to make the vaccine. [01:51:53.200 --> 01:51:59.200] So they included a portion of the HIV virus in the vaccine. [01:51:59.200 --> 01:52:05.200] Now, that doesn't necessarily mean you've got AIDS because you tested positive, [01:52:05.200 --> 01:52:08.200] but I really wouldn't want to find out, would you? [01:52:08.200 --> 01:52:18.200] Anyway, which brings up the whole legal issue, and here's where you guys come in. [01:52:18.200 --> 01:52:25.200] I'm going to make a statement, and this is true, and you can take this to the bank. [01:52:25.200 --> 01:52:35.200] The COVID-19 vaccine is not a vaccine at all. [01:52:35.200 --> 01:52:37.200] You heard that right. [01:52:37.200 --> 01:52:41.200] COVID-19 vaccine is not a vaccine. [01:52:41.200 --> 01:52:42.200] A vaccine... [01:52:42.200 --> 01:52:43.200] Okay, okay. [01:52:43.200 --> 01:52:50.200] In legal terms, this sounds like an issue that goes to the definition of terms. [01:52:50.200 --> 01:52:54.200] Yes, both medically and legally, yes. [01:52:54.200 --> 01:52:57.200] They come together, and here's where you guys come in. [01:52:57.200 --> 01:53:02.200] Medically, COVID-19 vaccine is not a vaccine. [01:53:02.200 --> 01:53:04.200] It is an M... [01:53:04.200 --> 01:53:10.200] It is a messenger RNA genetic therapy. [01:53:10.200 --> 01:53:14.200] It is nothing to do with a vaccine. [01:53:14.200 --> 01:53:16.200] It is not a vaccine legally... [01:53:16.200 --> 01:53:31.200] Does it have the effect, or is it intended to have the effect of giving a person some level of resistance to the active virus? [01:53:31.200 --> 01:53:35.200] No, and Merck and Pfizer came out and admitted that. [01:53:35.200 --> 01:53:49.200] Remember early on when I first started on the air with you tonight, I said Merck and Pfizer both admitted that the vaccine does not give you protection against the virus, and they admitted that. [01:53:49.200 --> 01:53:57.200] What it does is it gives you protection against the symptoms that is not a vaccine. [01:53:57.200 --> 01:54:19.200] A vaccine is supposed to confer immunity by putting part of, we'll say, a virus or attenuating a whole virus, partially killing it, so that your body picks up the ball, and now it is immune from that particular virus. [01:54:19.200 --> 01:54:27.200] But this is not a vaccine, and it's important to bring this up because the way they wrote the law, here's where it comes in now. [01:54:27.200 --> 01:54:29.200] Here's the Lollapalooza. [01:54:29.200 --> 01:54:40.200] The way they wrote the law, 1986, and recently, vaccines, when you get a vaccine, you get harmed by it. [01:54:40.200 --> 01:54:45.200] You cannot sue the manufacturer directly. [01:54:45.200 --> 01:54:48.200] You cannot sue the manufacturer at all. [01:54:48.200 --> 01:54:56.200] Oh, so they're calling this a vaccine when it's not a vaccine, and that is a legal dodge. [01:54:56.200 --> 01:54:58.200] Yep, they are hiding. [01:54:58.200 --> 01:55:08.200] They're going to hope for God that you don't find out it's not a vaccine because they're going to make you think that you can't sue them when you can. [01:55:08.200 --> 01:55:10.200] Now, what happens in the court is another matter. [01:55:10.200 --> 01:55:12.200] That's where you guys commit. [01:55:12.200 --> 01:55:16.200] You know the politics that go on and the monkeys shine. [01:55:16.200 --> 01:55:36.200] So the important thing that I should be doing tonight is not giving you a history on where the virus came from and all the sneaky things they did to lie about the number of people that were infected with it when in fact one tenth of the population, one tenth of a percent of the population died. [01:55:36.200 --> 01:55:40.200] They're trying to make you think it's three, four or five percent, which would be a pandemic. [01:55:40.200 --> 01:55:42.200] This is not a pandemic. [01:55:42.200 --> 01:55:44.200] All this is. [01:55:44.200 --> 01:55:48.200] Another issue about that number. [01:55:48.200 --> 01:55:59.200] Do they have statistical breakdowns of what portions of the population die from the virus? [01:55:59.200 --> 01:56:05.200] For instance, older people are much more likely if a tenth of a percent died. [01:56:05.200 --> 01:56:13.200] Generally, what's the death rate of say someone between 25 and 50? [01:56:13.200 --> 01:56:14.200] Sure. [01:56:14.200 --> 01:56:15.200] They break it down to age groups. [01:56:15.200 --> 01:56:16.200] Yes, they do. [01:56:16.200 --> 01:56:18.200] And it's very solid. [01:56:18.200 --> 01:56:19.200] It's very solid. [01:56:19.200 --> 01:56:27.200] And when you consider that the same number of people, here we go, you can take this to the bank. [01:56:27.200 --> 01:56:37.200] Roughly, the same number of people have died in 2020 that died in 2019, 18, 17, 16, and 2015. [01:56:37.200 --> 01:56:42.200] This came out in a report from John Hopkins University. [01:56:42.200 --> 01:56:44.200] You want to talk about proof? [01:56:44.200 --> 01:56:54.200] Well, John Hopkins published that report that the same roughly number of people died from 2020 all the way back to 2015. [01:56:54.200 --> 01:57:00.200] Somebody very quickly yanked that report off the Internet. [01:57:00.200 --> 01:57:11.200] I was wondering if they got thrown off Facebook and Twitter. [01:57:11.200 --> 01:57:16.200] Oh, they got thrown off of everywhere. [01:57:16.200 --> 01:57:19.200] You'll find that that is the case. [01:57:19.200 --> 01:57:27.200] You'll find that there are doctors who were complaining that they were being coerced to put COVID-19 on the death certificate. [01:57:27.200 --> 01:57:35.200] And if they didn't, they'd lose their licenses and they got yanked from the Internet, too. [01:57:35.200 --> 01:57:39.200] You have no idea the level of filth. [01:57:39.200 --> 01:57:52.200] It is as bad as the election was with President Trump, all the different ways till Tuesday that they lied and cheated and stole and manipulated and coerced. [01:57:52.200 --> 01:57:54.200] It's the same thing. [01:57:54.200 --> 01:58:05.200] Big money in COVID-19, just like there's big money in cancer, there's big money in HIV and they turn those two into a political and medical circuit. [01:58:05.200 --> 01:58:08.200] Now, they're doing the same thing with COVID-19. [01:58:08.200 --> 01:58:13.200] Hospital, when they get a COVID patient, they get $13,000. [01:58:13.200 --> 01:58:18.200] If they use a ventilator on that subject, on that person, they get $39,000 more. [01:58:18.200 --> 01:58:26.200] That's $52,000 and 52,000 reasons to lie about the number of COVID patients. [01:58:26.200 --> 01:58:30.200] Okay, hang on. We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:58:30.200 --> 01:58:34.200] This is Randy Kelton, we're at Fountain Rule of Our Radio. [01:58:34.200 --> 01:58:38.200] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [01:58:38.200 --> 01:58:44.200] We have some empty places on our call boards, so if you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [01:58:44.200 --> 01:59:08.200] We'll be right back. [01:59:14.200 --> 01:59:18.200] This story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:18.200 --> 01:59:28.200] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.200 --> 01:59:33.200] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.200 --> 01:59:47.200] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:47.200 --> 02:00:03.200] That's freestudybible.com. You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com.