[00:00.000 --> 00:06.760] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.760 --> 00:13.160] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.160 --> 00:21.120] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, brand [00:21.120 --> 00:29.720] crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.720 --> 00:41.480] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:41.480 --> 00:52.440] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.440 --> 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 entering 40. [01:04.760 --> 01:09.800] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hempon attacks [01:09.800 --> 01:15.000] his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, San Antonio [01:15.000 --> 01:19.120] have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones since they [01:19.120 --> 01:23.200] are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the [01:23.200 --> 01:27.760] earth 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] that 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, Kyma 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 --> 02:01.840] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.840 --> 02:06.720] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.720 --> 02:11.240] in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something [02:11.240 --> 02:13.480] 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 what they're [02:17.360 --> 02:22.600] charged with. [02:22.600 --> 02:27.240] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.240 --> 02:32.760] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark [02:32.760 --> 02:38.400] ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific [02:38.400 --> 02:39.400] Ocean. [02:39.400 --> 02:43.800] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.800 --> 02:50.080] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.080 --> 03:19.360] glow. [03:20.080 --> 03:35.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with our radio and they woke me up over the [03:35.080 --> 03:36.080] break. [03:36.080 --> 03:38.080] I was taking my old guy nap. [03:38.080 --> 03:45.080] Okay, we're going back to David and he is talking, he's going to how to fill out these [03:45.080 --> 03:46.080] forms. [03:46.080 --> 03:48.080] Go ahead David. [03:48.080 --> 03:56.400] Okay, the main question I asked a while ago was do you even have to file taxes? [03:56.400 --> 04:04.080] And there are several publications that IRS puts out every year that people can go, everyone [04:04.080 --> 04:05.080] has probably seen them. [04:05.080 --> 04:10.560] One of them is a little quarter inch thick book called Publication 17. [04:10.560 --> 04:18.280] Another one is your actual 1040 book for whatever year you're in, 1040 instruction book. [04:18.280 --> 04:21.640] And then there's a tax guide for that year. [04:21.640 --> 04:28.440] Every one of those, if you go around between pages 5 and 10, it has a paragraph in there [04:28.440 --> 04:31.880] that says, do I have to file? [04:31.880 --> 04:37.440] And it shows on there income levels that don't even have to file. [04:37.440 --> 04:41.280] And that's what we were talking a while ago about zero bracket amount. [04:41.280 --> 04:51.200] If you look on there and it says right now, each person, if they make less than $12,700 [04:51.200 --> 04:53.560] in a year, they don't even have to file. [04:53.560 --> 04:59.360] Or if they're on government income of some sort, if all of your income comes from government [04:59.360 --> 05:02.600] and they're not withholding anything out of it, the government already knows what you [05:02.600 --> 05:03.600] make. [05:03.600 --> 05:04.600] You don't have to file. [05:04.600 --> 05:06.440] And a lot of people don't know that. [05:06.440 --> 05:09.880] I'm in a Vietnam Veterans Group. [05:09.880 --> 05:14.360] And a lot of those old veterans are scrambling every year to have to file. [05:14.360 --> 05:15.360] And they don't even have to. [05:15.360 --> 05:17.640] I keep telling them, you don't have to file. [05:17.640 --> 05:20.520] Your retirement income is coming from the government. [05:20.520 --> 05:23.520] You don't need to file to say you don't know anything. [05:23.520 --> 05:27.160] But everybody seems to be too scared of it. [05:27.160 --> 05:36.240] Now along with the instruction books and giving you that figure, you know, right now, like [05:36.240 --> 05:39.640] I said, it was $12,700, that's for a single person. [05:39.640 --> 05:43.600] You double that if it's a married couple, okay? [05:43.600 --> 05:49.200] And then for children, right now, it's about $2,000 more. [05:49.200 --> 05:55.120] Now when President Trump came into office, those two tax forms, the 1040 and the Schedule [05:55.120 --> 06:00.640] C were single-page forms each, front and back each. [06:00.640 --> 06:08.440] He tried to simplify the tax forms because I'm sure everybody heard them talking about [06:08.440 --> 06:15.560] will get you to figure out your taxes on a half-page form or a three-by-five card or [06:15.560 --> 06:16.560] something like that. [06:16.560 --> 06:22.680] So what the government did and IRS did, they changed the forms to half a page long. [06:22.680 --> 06:25.920] They took a lot of the information out and then increased the number of forms you might [06:25.920 --> 06:27.920] need. [06:27.920 --> 06:34.880] So what it ended up doing was going from two full pages to three half pages. [06:34.880 --> 06:39.400] It did get a little smaller, but it just involved different pages for people. [06:39.400 --> 06:45.520] We're going to cover that in just a second to see what pages you might need and how simple [06:45.520 --> 06:47.520] it might be. [06:47.520 --> 06:51.880] Now one thing you want to look for, people are always wanting to get money back that [06:51.880 --> 06:58.360] you paid in or withheld and you hear them using the word credit. [06:58.360 --> 07:05.720] There are all kinds of credits and the word credit in taxes, tax jargon or buzzwords for [07:05.720 --> 07:11.080] dollars that you get back that you did not pay in. [07:11.080 --> 07:14.600] For instance, everybody's heard of what's called earned income credit. [07:14.600 --> 07:22.280] If a family is very low income, the lower the income, the government will subsidize [07:22.280 --> 07:26.880] their return by giving them more money based on how low their income is. [07:26.880 --> 07:30.600] So you apply for what's called the earned income credit. [07:30.600 --> 07:35.200] Now most of these things, you have to fill out a, go through a little table to see how [07:35.200 --> 07:36.840] much you're due. [07:36.840 --> 07:40.920] And what I tell people is if you're making low income, just put on there that you're [07:40.920 --> 07:46.360] supposed to get $50 for it and the government will figure it for you and put the right amount [07:46.360 --> 07:47.360] in there. [07:47.360 --> 07:53.040] Some of these things, you qualify for them but the government makes it too hard for [07:53.040 --> 07:55.360] you to get to them. [07:55.360 --> 07:57.520] There's another one called education credits. [07:57.520 --> 08:02.600] If you have children that are going to college or you're paying for education, that's a dollar [08:02.600 --> 08:03.800] for dollar credit. [08:03.800 --> 08:10.160] You can get credit for all those dollars that you put on your education or child's education. [08:10.160 --> 08:16.560] There's another credit, child tax credits that if you hire a babysitter, you can take [08:16.560 --> 08:18.120] the money you're paying for that. [08:18.120 --> 08:22.960] That's another credit that you get credit for money that you pay other people. [08:22.960 --> 08:28.240] There's an American opportunity tax credit, premium tax credit. [08:28.240 --> 08:33.160] So anytime you hear the word credit, that's a buzzword for dollars you can get back. [08:33.160 --> 08:38.560] Now one of the things that's happened in the last couple of years are these stimulus payments [08:38.560 --> 08:40.080] that they send out to everybody. [08:40.080 --> 08:45.200] They send out a couple hundred dollars and then they send out $400 and then they send [08:45.200 --> 08:54.160] out a $1,400 payment to everybody. [08:54.160 --> 08:57.440] Some people didn't get that and I'm going to show you how to get that back. [08:57.440 --> 09:04.200] And then they sent out what's, the last one was a stimulus payment credit or called it [09:04.200 --> 09:07.760] an economic impact payment credit. [09:07.760 --> 09:13.240] I just remember if you did not receive one of those and you want to get it back, the [09:13.240 --> 09:18.600] place to get it back is on the 1040 form that we're talking about on line 30. [09:18.600 --> 09:22.440] So you might make a little note of that somewhere. [09:22.440 --> 09:33.120] Now the tax returns that I put together are real simple to work with. [09:33.120 --> 09:39.440] Consumers are kind of confusing if you look at the big picture, but what you want to learn [09:39.440 --> 09:44.560] is to start your tax return from the back and move forward. [09:44.560 --> 09:51.800] So on the tax return, your 1040 will be the top page and what the 1044 is, it's got a [09:51.800 --> 09:56.880] whole bunch of blanks on it and what it is is a compilation of all the rest of the forms [09:56.880 --> 10:00.880] that someone might use in their tax return. [10:00.880 --> 10:05.440] So all the top page your tax return is that everybody's always filled out is the place [10:05.440 --> 10:09.440] to add up all the rest of the forms you use. [10:09.440 --> 10:15.520] Now if you use the method that I teach and you only have a 1040 and a Schedule C, then [10:15.520 --> 10:20.440] you want to do the Schedule C first. [10:20.440 --> 10:27.040] And if you do the Schedule C first, and again you can get up, get these forms by going to [10:27.040 --> 10:35.920] IRS.gov and just print you one off of there, 1040 or a Schedule C is a profit or loss from [10:35.920 --> 10:38.920] business. [10:38.920 --> 10:44.480] So we're going to assume that you already have a business or identify one that doesn't [10:44.480 --> 10:48.960] make any difference how much money you made in your business. [10:48.960 --> 10:54.320] What makes the difference is all the IRS cares, they don't care if you're a good business [10:54.320 --> 11:01.200] person or not, all they care of is if you have a profit making objective. [11:01.200 --> 11:07.880] You know you can go do drag racing with your car if you want to and bet some guy $10 you'll [11:07.880 --> 11:09.720] beat him in the race. [11:09.720 --> 11:13.640] If you do that consistently and you're trying to make a profit that's your new business. [11:13.640 --> 11:15.520] It doesn't make any difference. [11:15.520 --> 11:18.000] There's all kinds of things people get deductions. [11:18.000 --> 11:22.400] But if we go to the Schedule C, the second form that I'm talking about, flipped it over [11:22.400 --> 11:31.760] on the back, there's one section, part four, that is information about your vehicle. [11:31.760 --> 11:39.120] This is where you put the mileage we were talking about on your vehicle and in line [11:39.120 --> 11:44.240] 43 it says when did you place this vehicle in service? [11:44.240 --> 11:47.320] You may have been driving the same vehicle for the last two or three years using it in [11:47.320 --> 11:49.600] a business that you didn't know about. [11:49.600 --> 11:55.240] Whatever date you put on your tax form, you'll use that same date every year if it's the [11:55.240 --> 11:56.240] same car. [11:56.240 --> 12:01.360] If you started using that car in a business January 1st, 2016, that same date can be on [12:01.360 --> 12:06.960] every one of your tax firms till you get another car and then you put your other car in there. [12:06.960 --> 12:16.240] Line 44 asks for how many miles was your business, how many miles is commuting mileage and then [12:16.240 --> 12:19.160] how many is other? [12:19.160 --> 12:26.240] I had a person one time that filled out and said they drove 12,000 business miles but [12:26.240 --> 12:31.960] they didn't drive any other miles and IRS audited them because they said, wait a minute, [12:31.960 --> 12:35.400] you can't tell me that you never took that car and drove it to the store and back or [12:35.400 --> 12:38.320] you never went to church in your car and back. [12:38.320 --> 12:45.840] So what I teach people to do is once you figure your business miles, however many they are, [12:45.840 --> 12:51.400] if you don't know exactly what your non-business miles are, then take up at least 10% of your [12:51.400 --> 12:58.720] business miles and use that for other miles but you want to have both of them figured. [12:58.720 --> 13:06.800] There are also those mileage, those miles that you figured, say it's 10,000 miles and [13:06.800 --> 13:16.040] Brad asked it a while ago, has that converted to dollars in 2020, those miles convert to [13:16.040 --> 13:23.520] 57.5 cents a mile, 57.5 cents, that's a lot of money for miles. [13:23.520 --> 13:34.440] So if you drove 10,000 miles in 2020 for your business, that means you get $5,750 not off [13:34.440 --> 13:36.760] of your taxable income. [13:36.760 --> 13:41.480] So in other words, your taxes go down that much. [13:41.480 --> 13:49.840] So that means if you already had the $12,700 that the government gives you that you just [13:49.840 --> 13:56.640] get to knock off your taxes before you start paying taxes and then you claim another 10,000 [13:56.640 --> 14:04.320] miles and you got another $5,700 knocked off of it, then you're talking close to $18,000 [14:04.320 --> 14:12.080] off of just one item, mileage that you don't have to pay any taxes on, okay? [14:12.080 --> 14:17.520] Now on the back of the schedule, see your mileage is the only thing that I have you [14:17.520 --> 14:25.680] fill out, part four, there's also some questions, 45-47B, that was your vehicle available for [14:25.680 --> 14:26.680] personal use. [14:26.680 --> 14:28.840] I answer all these questions, yes. [14:28.840 --> 14:32.320] Do you have another vehicle for personal use? [14:32.320 --> 14:33.320] Answer yes. [14:33.320 --> 14:35.040] Do you have evidence as for your deduction? [14:35.040 --> 14:36.040] Yes. [14:36.040 --> 14:37.040] Is it written evidence? [14:37.040 --> 14:38.040] Yes. [14:38.040 --> 14:43.040] That's what I'm going to teach you how to do is make that mileage, turn it into written [14:43.040 --> 14:47.120] evidence and keep track of it as much as you can. [14:47.120 --> 14:53.720] I had an older sister one time and she was just anal about keeping track of her mileage. [14:53.720 --> 15:00.160] Every time she was captain in the Army, I was captain in the Marine Corps and every time [15:00.160 --> 15:05.320] she would stop and fill up a gas, she'd pull a 3x5 card out of her glove box and put the [15:05.320 --> 15:09.560] mileage down, how many miles she'd driven in the whole works, she had that for every [15:09.560 --> 15:12.440] car she ever drove. [15:12.440 --> 15:19.760] And I turned that into a $5,000 tax refund every year that she filed her taxes before [15:19.760 --> 15:20.760] she died. [15:20.760 --> 15:26.120] So anyway, mileage is worth gold to you. [15:26.120 --> 15:31.200] The back page of the Schedule C, that's the only thing we put on, it's the mileage and [15:31.200 --> 15:39.680] that converts to the front page of the Schedule C. It converts to part two expenses. [15:39.680 --> 15:45.360] Line nine is car and truck expenses and that's where that dollar amount would go. [15:45.360 --> 15:53.760] You take your mileage times 57.5 cents a mile and that dollar figure goes in there and then [15:53.760 --> 15:55.320] you get other expenses. [15:55.320 --> 15:59.600] Now, I know this is probably confusing going over these forms on air. [15:59.600 --> 16:03.160] You don't have the forms in front of you. [16:03.160 --> 16:11.040] I've got a two page tax return and if anyone will send me an email, I will send you a copy [16:11.040 --> 16:15.880] of this tax return and what I did was just put, take the pull up figure out of the air. [16:15.880 --> 16:18.000] I pulled $50,000 out of the air. [16:18.000 --> 16:24.240] I put on there that it was a family of three and put down there how they take that $50,000 [16:24.240 --> 16:29.520] with their own business and end up paying zero taxes. [16:29.520 --> 16:34.600] Anyone that wants to get a hold of me, I'll send you a free copy of that example tax return. [16:34.600 --> 16:40.400] You can either send a request in to Randy and Brett or you can send it to success2share [16:40.400 --> 16:43.800] at yahoo.com and I'll send you a copy of those things. [16:43.800 --> 16:44.800] Okay, hang on. [16:44.800 --> 16:45.800] Hang on, David. [16:45.800 --> 16:54.080] Back to go to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Mozilla Radio, Mozilla Radio, [16:54.080 --> 17:00.240] I'll be right back and I didn't fall asleep. [17:00.240 --> 17:05.560] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.560 --> 17:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meara's Proven Method. 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[17:41.040 --> 17:46.560] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meara spanner [17:46.560 --> 17:49.560] or email Michael Meara's at yahoo.com. [17:49.560 --> 17:59.120] Visit ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [17:59.120 --> 18:00.120] next. [18:00.120 --> 18:04.720] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [18:04.720 --> 18:08.240] In today's America, we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever [18:08.240 --> 18:12.040] going to have a free society then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.040 --> 18:15.440] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [18:15.440 --> 18:18.880] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of [18:18.880 --> 18:19.880] law. [18:19.880 --> 18:23.520] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.520 --> 18:25.320] our rights through due process. [18:25.320 --> 18:28.880] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the [18:28.880 --> 18:32.640] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [18:32.640 --> 18:34.680] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.680 --> 18:39.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:39.000 --> 18:40.360] ordering your copy today. [18:40.360 --> 18:43.560] By ordering now you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation Code, [18:43.560 --> 18:47.320] A Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [18:47.320 --> 18:50.400] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.400 --> 18:54.400] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.400 --> 19:24.240] For your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:24.240 --> 19:40.200] Thank you. [19:40.200 --> 19:46.200] Trusting the heart and the cream Telling your papa and the pain [19:46.200 --> 19:52.200] How many dreams do you want to study? Here we go, you'll know who you are singing [19:52.200 --> 19:58.200] Hey, I'm making my knees and everything He's everything to me, that's what I call him [19:58.200 --> 20:02.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rula Radio. [20:02.200 --> 20:05.200] We're a little late coming in. The reason we're a little late coming in [20:05.200 --> 20:12.200] is Brett was talking to David about his last conversation with David [20:12.200 --> 20:18.200] and I listened to it and I think you all ought to hear what Brett had to say [20:18.200 --> 20:21.200] Brett, will you go back through that again? [20:21.200 --> 20:26.200] Sure, I was just saying I really appreciate that David is on tonight [20:26.200 --> 20:31.200] and came on a few days ago and was saying, or was it, I don't know, last night [20:31.200 --> 20:39.200] The, me personally, I don't file, I know that I'm not a taxpayer [20:39.200 --> 20:43.200] and he's not raising this issue or really addressing that issue [20:43.200 --> 20:49.200] He knows that too, but he's helping people deal with it in a way that is not addressing that issue [20:49.200 --> 20:55.200] That's fine. A couple of years ago, I had an issue, I reached out to David [20:55.200 --> 21:01.200] and we talked about this approach that he's presenting tonight [21:01.200 --> 21:09.200] and I didn't go with that approach. I realized that it's working for a lot of people [21:09.200 --> 21:14.200] and that's great, but I misunderstood the approach [21:14.200 --> 21:18.200] When he was saying to me, keep all your receipts, everything is business [21:18.200 --> 21:25.200] If you go over here to visit your family, just make sure that you write it down, that's a business [21:25.200 --> 21:33.200] and I didn't get what he meant by that. I translated that to write it down as business [21:33.200 --> 21:36.200] even if what you're doing is you're just visiting family [21:36.200 --> 21:41.200] So I talked with my wife about this and we didn't feel like in good conscience [21:41.200 --> 21:48.200] we could make that leap and say, yeah, these are the numbers, just feed the appropriate numbers [21:48.200 --> 21:50.200] and the machine is going to be okay with it [21:50.200 --> 21:55.200] and we felt like that would be dishonest [21:55.200 --> 21:59.200] because we were visiting family, we weren't going on business [21:59.200 --> 22:09.200] and I'm really glad that the way that you're explaining it now makes a lot more sense to me [22:09.200 --> 22:17.200] You set up a business, do what you're doing, live your life, what's your passion, go set that up [22:17.200 --> 22:19.200] make a business out of it [22:19.200 --> 22:23.200] and then when you claim these numbers, that's real, that's honest [22:23.200 --> 22:27.200] and I appreciate that, I can do that [22:27.200 --> 22:31.200] Fantastic, alright, that'll work [22:31.200 --> 22:36.200] The form that we're talking about now, the Schedule C [22:36.200 --> 22:39.200] I'm not going to go over every line of it in detail and all of that [22:39.200 --> 22:44.200] but this is the form that the millionaires use to not pay any taxes [22:44.200 --> 22:49.200] You know, this is, everybody can use this form, you know, it doesn't make any difference [22:49.200 --> 22:55.200] The form, Schedule C for Form 1040, Property Loss from Business [22:55.200 --> 22:59.200] The top of it has the name of the business owner [22:59.200 --> 23:03.200] and the line A is the Principal Business or Profession [23:03.200 --> 23:06.200] including the product or services [23:06.200 --> 23:09.200] That's the line that I have everybody put [23:09.200 --> 23:14.200] outside and door-to-door sales, marketing, consulting, and fishing [23:14.200 --> 23:21.200] or whatever you want to put on there, whatever your specialty is that you're turning into your business [23:21.200 --> 23:24.200] You can take your hobby that you like to do the most [23:24.200 --> 23:27.200] and that is now your new business [23:27.200 --> 23:30.200] but you just keep all your receipts [23:30.200 --> 23:33.200] for that and you turn that into your business [23:33.200 --> 23:38.200] and then you keep track of everything associated with that [23:38.200 --> 23:46.200] Now, on the Schedule C, another gold nugget is [23:46.200 --> 23:52.200] that it has on line E the business address [23:52.200 --> 23:56.200] Always have a second address for your business [23:56.200 --> 24:01.200] You know, I have some people that have used private postal boxes as their business address [24:01.200 --> 24:05.200] and they carry their business through there, I do the same thing [24:05.200 --> 24:11.200] but have that as a separate address from your home address [24:11.200 --> 24:16.200] or another private postal box that you use for your filing address [24:16.200 --> 24:20.200] I won't go into right now the reason to do that [24:20.200 --> 24:24.200] but it's just easier and smoother if you have two different addresses [24:24.200 --> 24:29.200] one for your filing where you live and a different one where you run your business out of [24:29.200 --> 24:34.200] Now, on the Schedule C, there's two main parts on the front of the page [24:34.200 --> 24:39.200] and it is part one which is all your income [24:39.200 --> 24:44.200] I had a girl do her taxes one time and she sent in the Schedule C [24:44.200 --> 24:49.200] and on the income she put no income [24:49.200 --> 24:52.200] but then on part two is all the expenses you can have [24:52.200 --> 24:56.200] I had all these expenses and everything but didn't show one dollar in income [24:56.200 --> 25:00.200] and IRS said you don't have a business, if you didn't make one dollar in income [25:00.200 --> 25:02.200] you don't have a business [25:02.200 --> 25:09.200] So I have, the first time I ever did one of these tax returns for my sister [25:09.200 --> 25:13.200] I told her, I said Betsy, you know, you need to start selling something [25:13.200 --> 25:16.200] I don't care what it is, even if it's your body [25:16.200 --> 25:20.200] you need to start selling something and keep good receipts [25:20.200 --> 25:23.200] and so she started thinking what she could sell [25:23.200 --> 25:28.200] because she was a bureaucrat that worked in the capital building in Oklahoma [25:28.200 --> 25:35.200] and she worked in the department that helps mentally retarded prisoners [25:35.200 --> 25:37.200] in private prisons [25:37.200 --> 25:42.200] but they were always running her up and down the road from Oklahoma City to Tulsa, Oklahoma [25:42.200 --> 25:45.200] and back all the time and she was just logging in tons of miles [25:45.200 --> 25:49.200] and I said we're going to convert those miles into your business [25:49.200 --> 25:52.200] and so she said okay I'm going to start selling Avon [25:52.200 --> 25:59.200] she turned into an Avon lady and carried her a little Avon book to work with her every day [25:59.200 --> 26:02.200] and she didn't try to sell anything [26:02.200 --> 26:05.200] she just told everybody hey I'm an Avon lady now if you need something [26:05.200 --> 26:10.200] and she'd sell maybe one lipstick every two or three days [26:10.200 --> 26:13.200] or she'd sell some kind of perfume or something [26:13.200 --> 26:15.200] she didn't try it at all [26:15.200 --> 26:20.200] and I remember this when it was all over because of this schedule C [26:20.200 --> 26:27.200] her first year she, her total income was the same as selling $1 a day all year [26:27.200 --> 26:29.200] that's why I can't forget it [26:29.200 --> 26:33.200] her income was $365 for the whole year [26:33.200 --> 26:38.200] but with that income all of the expenses I got her [26:38.200 --> 26:44.200] I got her $13,520 in exemptions off of her taxes [26:44.200 --> 26:49.200] because she had a business and all the IRS says [26:49.200 --> 26:51.200] you don't have to be a good business person [26:51.200 --> 26:55.200] you can be a miserable business person and lose money every year [26:55.200 --> 27:00.200] however all you have to have is a profit making objective [27:00.200 --> 27:02.200] that's all of it [27:02.200 --> 27:04.200] profit making objective [27:04.200 --> 27:06.200] and that's what she did [27:06.200 --> 27:08.200] Can I ask you about that? [27:08.200 --> 27:09.200] Absolutely [27:09.200 --> 27:17.200] Is there anything that the IRS has some kind of guidelines or something where they eventually say [27:17.200 --> 27:25.200] you are obviously not, you don't have a profit making objective here [27:25.200 --> 27:29.200] is there some kind of, how do they decide that? [27:29.200 --> 27:32.200] They don't decide that [27:32.200 --> 27:38.200] because if you actually show that you have income on your tax return [27:38.200 --> 27:42.200] and the only income they know about is W-2 income [27:42.200 --> 27:47.200] if you're an employee of a company or 1099 income [27:47.200 --> 27:51.200] if you're a contractor to a company [27:51.200 --> 27:56.200] and W-2 income they withhold taxes and social security and everything out of [27:56.200 --> 27:59.200] if you're an employee 1099 income [27:59.200 --> 28:04.200] so if you're a contractor and you come in and fix my kitchen [28:04.200 --> 28:10.200] and I pay you cash you'll get a 1099 from that company [28:10.200 --> 28:13.200] it shows no taxes were withheld [28:13.200 --> 28:18.200] the 1099 is what goes on this profit or loss from business [28:18.200 --> 28:20.200] and they know that's the business [28:20.200 --> 28:24.200] the W-2 is from an employer and IRS knows that's the business [28:24.200 --> 28:31.200] but when I tell you to fill out your, make your own business, your hobby, your business [28:31.200 --> 28:34.200] all you're getting paid is cash, right? [28:34.200 --> 28:37.200] so if you put cash on this income [28:37.200 --> 28:40.200] just like I said a while ago, if you stuck 20 bucks in your pocket [28:40.200 --> 28:42.200] well I'd put more than that [28:42.200 --> 28:49.200] my sister, way back then took $365 was her business income [28:49.200 --> 28:53.200] but I always tell people now, good grief if you're not sure [28:53.200 --> 28:56.200] you know you made $1,000 added or whatever [28:56.200 --> 28:58.200] put 1,000 or more, put whatever [28:58.200 --> 29:02.200] but if you keep track of it and you know what you can put your income on there [29:02.200 --> 29:05.200] but that qualifies you for all of these expenses [29:05.200 --> 29:11.200] now, the expenses section of Schedule C, profit or loss from business [29:11.200 --> 29:14.200] is part two of this form [29:14.200 --> 29:19.200] and it has line 8 through 27 [29:19.200 --> 29:23.200] which are all the different kinds of expenses you can have [29:23.200 --> 29:27.200] for instance I'll just run through a few advertising contracts [29:27.200 --> 29:31.200] hold on David, we're about to go to our sponsors [29:31.200 --> 29:34.200] Randy Kelton [29:34.200 --> 29:36.200] go ahead [29:36.200 --> 29:38.200] okay, we'll pick this up on the other side [29:38.200 --> 29:41.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, move our radio [29:41.200 --> 29:44.200] I won't give out the call in number late yet [29:44.200 --> 29:49.200] but as soon as David's getting close to being done [29:49.200 --> 29:52.200] I'll give out the call in number [29:52.200 --> 29:57.200] okay, hang on, we'll be right back [30:22.200 --> 30:47.200] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live [30:47.200 --> 30:55.200] the Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected [30:55.200 --> 31:00.200] in case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour [31:00.200 --> 31:04.200] a seniors age, gender and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy [31:04.200 --> 31:07.200] as more traditional statistical measures [31:07.200 --> 31:10.200] generally speaking, faster walkers live longer [31:10.200 --> 31:13.200] measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive [31:13.200 --> 31:16.200] it only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk in a few minutes [31:16.200 --> 31:21.200] researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care [31:21.200 --> 31:47.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com [31:52.200 --> 31:55.200] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son [31:55.200 --> 31:57.200] go to buildingwhat.org [31:57.200 --> 32:00.200] why it's health, why it matters and what you can do [32:00.200 --> 32:05.200] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year [32:05.200 --> 32:11.200] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time [32:11.200 --> 32:14.200] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516 [32:14.200 --> 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 --> 32:31.200] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies [32:31.200 --> 32:34.200] designed to provoke unto love and good works [32:34.200 --> 32:38.200] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew [32:38.200 --> 32:41.200] where we will discuss one chapter per week [32:41.200 --> 32:46.200] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine [32:46.200 --> 32:48.200] as well as Christian character development [32:48.200 --> 32:53.200] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:53.200 --> 32:57.200] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th [32:57.200 --> 33:01.200] for an inspiring and motivating discussion on the Scriptures [33:01.200 --> 33:11.200] Live Free Speech Radio LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:31.200 --> 33:44.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, root of Law Radio [33:44.200 --> 33:48.200] and we have our very special guest, Mr. David Lewis [33:48.200 --> 33:53.200] and he's going to tell us about how to not pay any taxes. [33:53.200 --> 33:55.200] Go ahead, David. [33:55.200 --> 33:59.200] Okay. Thank you, Randy. [33:59.200 --> 34:03.200] We're talking about the Schedule C and the part where you get all the deductions [34:03.200 --> 34:05.200] knocked off of your taxes. [34:05.200 --> 34:10.200] Now, in part two, the Schedule C, property loss from business form, [34:10.200 --> 34:14.200] there's about 20 different things on there and I won't go over all of them, [34:14.200 --> 34:18.200] but I'll just read like what the 10 most popular of them are [34:18.200 --> 34:20.200] and you can kind of fit yourself into that. [34:20.200 --> 34:24.200] If you've got your own business going, you can see where these be deductible. [34:24.200 --> 34:27.200] One is advertising could be big. [34:27.200 --> 34:29.200] The second one is car and truck expense. [34:29.200 --> 34:31.200] It's always the biggest one. [34:31.200 --> 34:33.200] Third is contract labor. [34:33.200 --> 34:36.200] If you pay someone to do something for you, that's all deductible. [34:36.200 --> 34:38.200] There's insurance. [34:38.200 --> 34:40.200] There's legal and professional fees. [34:40.200 --> 34:43.200] Oh, this brings up something else right here. [34:43.200 --> 34:49.200] If you have something that's under $600 that you pay cash for, [34:49.200 --> 34:51.200] you don't even need a receipt for it. [34:51.200 --> 34:59.200] So legal and professional fees, you can charge like less than $600 [34:59.200 --> 35:02.200] or you can claim less than $600 legal fees. [35:02.200 --> 35:06.200] Nobody will say anything about it because it's under $600. [35:06.200 --> 35:08.200] You don't have to have a receipt. [35:08.200 --> 35:09.200] Same as professional fees. [35:09.200 --> 35:13.200] If you're in organizations, different lodges or different kind of professional organizations, [35:13.200 --> 35:17.200] those fees are all deductible, up to $600 each. [35:17.200 --> 35:22.200] There's office expenses, naturally deductible, equipment, rental expenses, [35:22.200 --> 35:24.200] repairs and maintenance. [35:24.200 --> 35:28.200] Any supplies that you have by for your business naturally are deductible, [35:28.200 --> 35:30.200] taxes and licenses. [35:30.200 --> 35:35.200] Everybody goes and pays taxes on different stuff dealing with businesses. [35:35.200 --> 35:38.200] If you even have a driver's license, it's all deductible [35:38.200 --> 35:40.200] because you have to go places. [35:40.200 --> 35:42.200] Utilities. [35:42.200 --> 35:47.200] If you've got a separate office and you claim your office expenses [35:47.200 --> 35:51.200] and you claim utilities, those are all deductible. [35:51.200 --> 35:55.200] A lot of people have home offices and I just haven't [35:55.200 --> 36:00.200] taken what percentage of your phone they use for business, 10%, 15%. [36:00.200 --> 36:05.200] In that case, take all of your phone bills that are deductible [36:05.200 --> 36:11.200] and 10% or 15% of all of your other utility bills and make that deductible. [36:11.200 --> 36:15.200] Okay, so these are all the different kinds of deductions you can get [36:15.200 --> 36:18.200] to put on the Schedule C form. [36:18.200 --> 36:23.200] Now we're going to move from there to the next form. [36:23.200 --> 36:25.200] If you use proper to loss from business, [36:25.200 --> 36:32.200] one of the new forms that came from the downsizing of the tax [36:32.200 --> 36:36.200] from the old original full-page forms down to the half-page forms [36:36.200 --> 36:41.200] is you would have to fill out what's called a Schedule III. [36:41.200 --> 36:44.200] That's called an additional credits and payments. [36:44.200 --> 36:47.200] Remember I said, watch out for the buzzword credit. [36:47.200 --> 36:53.200] Well, on the Schedule I'm sorry, Schedule I is what I was talking about, [36:53.200 --> 36:55.200] official income and adjustment income. [36:55.200 --> 37:00.200] That's where the losses or profits from this Schedule C goes. [37:00.200 --> 37:05.200] You have to flip it over and put it on line three of a Schedule I. [37:05.200 --> 37:09.200] This is more like a bureaucracy schedule here. [37:09.200 --> 37:15.200] The one I'm looking at shows that that figure is $4,930 in the hole. [37:15.200 --> 37:19.200] In other words, these people ran a business and they lost $4,930 [37:19.200 --> 37:22.200] like most people that start a new business every year. [37:22.200 --> 37:24.200] They spend more money than they make. [37:24.200 --> 37:27.200] You put that on line three of a Schedule I [37:27.200 --> 37:34.200] and that flips you to the front form of your tax return, the 1040. [37:34.200 --> 37:39.200] Now the 1040 is the form that is the compilation [37:39.200 --> 37:42.200] of all the rest of the forms put together. [37:42.200 --> 37:45.200] Depending on what your income level is, [37:45.200 --> 37:49.200] you want to use the shortest form that you've got [37:49.200 --> 37:52.200] that will accommodate your income level. [37:52.200 --> 37:56.200] There's several 1040 forms. [37:56.200 --> 38:03.200] If you've got several forms that come to the 1040 form, [38:03.200 --> 38:06.200] then you might use the full 1040 like I'm talking about [38:06.200 --> 38:10.200] or the form that me or Randy would use, the 1040 SR. [38:10.200 --> 38:15.200] That's where you would have your Schedule C income [38:15.200 --> 38:19.200] would come forward and be put on line eight, [38:19.200 --> 38:22.200] which is called Other Income from Line 1 [38:22.200 --> 38:27.200] or the Schedule I or the Schedule C. [38:27.200 --> 38:34.200] If you have all of your income, if you have an employer [38:34.200 --> 38:37.200] and you have a separate full-time job besides your business, [38:37.200 --> 38:42.200] then your W-2 income will go on line one of the 1040. [38:42.200 --> 38:46.200] 1040 is the front page of tax return everybody's used to. [38:46.200 --> 38:48.200] That's where you claim the number of dependents you've got [38:48.200 --> 38:50.200] and number of exemptions you've got, [38:50.200 --> 38:53.200] but line one is wages, salaries, tips, [38:53.200 --> 38:56.200] and you have to include your W-2 on it. [38:56.200 --> 38:58.200] So on line one, you would have the total amount of income [38:58.200 --> 39:00.200] from an employer. [39:00.200 --> 39:02.200] And then when you come down to line eight, [39:02.200 --> 39:05.200] you'd have your loss from this business. [39:05.200 --> 39:08.200] So in this particular tax return I'm looking at, [39:08.200 --> 39:13.200] this person made $17,000 roughly, [39:13.200 --> 39:16.200] and on their business they lost $5,000, [39:16.200 --> 39:21.200] so that brings their income from $17,000 down to $12,000, [39:21.200 --> 39:23.200] right there. [39:23.200 --> 39:27.200] And then you finish filling the front of the 1040 out, [39:27.200 --> 39:32.200] and it shows that the taxable income, [39:32.200 --> 39:36.200] remember, they brought their income down to, [39:36.200 --> 39:39.200] they had $17,000, they lost $5,000 in business, [39:39.200 --> 39:42.200] that leaves $12,000. [39:42.200 --> 39:47.200] Well, how much did the Trump administration in 2020, [39:47.200 --> 39:49.200] how much did they say that they give you [39:49.200 --> 39:51.200] as a zero bracket of math, [39:51.200 --> 39:53.200] that everybody knocks off of their income? [39:53.200 --> 39:55.200] $12,700. [39:55.200 --> 39:59.200] If your income is only $12,000, [39:59.200 --> 40:03.200] and you knock off another $12,700 from that, [40:03.200 --> 40:07.200] that means your taxable income is zero. [40:07.200 --> 40:11.200] So this particular person, because of their business, [40:11.200 --> 40:17.200] dropped from having taxable income to having no taxable income. [40:17.200 --> 40:22.200] Now, on the back of this 1040 that I'm looking at, [40:22.200 --> 40:26.200] the first thing on top of it is how much is this person's tax? [40:26.200 --> 40:29.200] Well, since they have zero taxable income, [40:29.200 --> 40:32.200] their tax is zero. [40:32.200 --> 40:36.200] I'm coming down the form to the next place that it's filled in, [40:36.200 --> 40:40.200] and line 25 says federal income tax withheld. [40:40.200 --> 40:41.200] This person... [40:41.200 --> 40:43.200] Let me make a quick comment. [40:43.200 --> 40:44.200] Okay. [40:44.200 --> 40:47.200] You were talking about somebody's making $17,000 a year, [40:47.200 --> 40:49.200] and I'm thinking, that's not a lot of money, [40:49.200 --> 40:52.200] but they've got $5,000 deduction. [40:52.200 --> 40:55.200] But if I made $40,000 a year, [40:55.200 --> 41:01.200] then I probably created a whole lot more deductions [41:01.200 --> 41:03.200] because I'm moving around a lot more. [41:03.200 --> 41:06.200] So now I'm just trying to understand [41:06.200 --> 41:09.200] how we can get me down to zero, [41:09.200 --> 41:11.200] and the more vigorous I am, [41:11.200 --> 41:17.200] the more moving around I do, the more deductions I'm going to create. [41:17.200 --> 41:18.200] That is true. [41:18.200 --> 41:19.200] That's true. [41:19.200 --> 41:24.200] And I've got the example tax return for the $50,000 in my hand right now, [41:24.200 --> 41:27.200] and I look on the schedule C for it, [41:27.200 --> 41:31.200] and it shows out of the $50,000 that was made, [41:31.200 --> 41:35.200] I had several thousand in income for my business, [41:35.200 --> 41:37.200] but the business deductions, [41:37.200 --> 41:41.200] total deductions on that form ended up being $25,000. [41:41.200 --> 41:42.200] So all of a sudden, [41:42.200 --> 41:45.200] if you have $50,000 from an employer, [41:45.200 --> 41:49.200] and you've got a $25,000 loss in your business, [41:49.200 --> 41:52.200] then that knocks your employee, [41:52.200 --> 41:56.200] your $50,000 you made from your employer in half right there, [41:56.200 --> 41:59.200] and then you still get your standard deductions [41:59.200 --> 42:02.200] that the government gives you. [42:02.200 --> 42:05.200] See how it's starting to snowball that you, [42:05.200 --> 42:07.200] if what I'm talking about on this little figure here, [42:07.200 --> 42:10.200] you can multiply that times two or three or four [42:10.200 --> 42:16.200] to get into a person's different situation. [42:16.200 --> 42:20.200] So it's still shooting to get you to pay in zero income. [42:20.200 --> 42:24.200] Now, the last thing I was going to cover on this form was, [42:24.200 --> 42:27.200] this particular person that doesn't know any taxes now, [42:27.200 --> 42:30.200] their employer's been withholding taxes from them the whole time, [42:30.200 --> 42:35.200] because the government usually tells the employers to withhold approximately 10% [42:35.200 --> 42:37.200] for taxes. [42:37.200 --> 42:45.200] So this particular person had $1577 withheld on their W-2, [42:45.200 --> 42:49.200] and we figured how much taxes they owe is zero, [42:49.200 --> 42:51.200] so guess what they did? [42:51.200 --> 42:55.200] They have overpaid $1577, [42:55.200 --> 43:01.200] so they give a tax refund of all the money that they have paid in over the year [43:01.200 --> 43:03.200] for their taxes. [43:03.200 --> 43:06.200] They didn't owe those taxes, but they were withheld anyways, [43:06.200 --> 43:09.200] so this person filed a tax return, [43:09.200 --> 43:14.200] and they get that $1577 back, and they owe zero taxes. [43:14.200 --> 43:16.200] They owe no taxes, [43:16.200 --> 43:20.200] and that's basically the story of how to pay no taxes. [43:20.200 --> 43:24.200] The key thing is standing up to business keeping your receipts. [43:24.200 --> 43:28.200] How far can we do back taxes? [43:28.200 --> 43:30.200] Three years. [43:30.200 --> 43:34.200] Three years, so if you pay taxes the last three years, [43:34.200 --> 43:37.200] send me an email, send David an email, [43:37.200 --> 43:40.200] or just send me one, I'll send it to David, [43:40.200 --> 43:43.200] and he'll redo your taxes, [43:43.200 --> 43:46.200] and give us all a percentage. [43:46.200 --> 43:52.200] Randy Calvin Brett Fountain will be right back. [43:52.200 --> 43:54.200] Thank you. [44:22.200 --> 44:25.200] The young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.200 --> 44:29.200] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [44:29.200 --> 44:31.200] most of which we reject. [44:31.200 --> 44:34.200] We have come to trust Jevity so much. [44:34.200 --> 44:38.200] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, [44:38.200 --> 44:40.200] Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:40.200 --> 44:43.200] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, [44:43.200 --> 44:47.200] you're health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.200 --> 44:52.200] As you realize the benefits of Jevity, you may want to join us. [44:52.200 --> 44:55.200] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [44:55.200 --> 44:58.200] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.200 --> 45:26.200] Order now. [45:28.200 --> 45:31.200] This dictionary was created by a licensed attorney [45:31.200 --> 45:34.200] with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.200 --> 45:36.200] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [45:36.200 --> 45:39.200] you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.200 --> 45:41.200] about the principles and practices [45:41.200 --> 45:43.200] that control our American courts. [45:43.200 --> 45:45.200] You'll receive our audio classroom, [45:45.200 --> 45:47.200] video seminar, tutorials, [45:47.200 --> 45:49.200] forms for civil cases, [45:49.200 --> 45:52.200] prosay tactics, and much more. [45:52.200 --> 45:55.200] Please visit www.lulavlawradio.com [45:55.200 --> 45:57.200] and click on the banner. [45:57.200 --> 46:01.200] Free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:01.200 --> 46:29.200] Music playing [46:29.200 --> 46:31.200] When I'm hungry, [46:31.200 --> 46:35.200] I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:35.200 --> 46:37.200] I ain't asking for much, [46:37.200 --> 46:41.200] I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:41.200 --> 46:46.200] I'm just here making my living, pushing buttons. [46:46.200 --> 46:50.200] I get my message out when you want it, [46:50.200 --> 46:52.200] shout in distance. [46:52.200 --> 46:54.200] I'm full for bravery [46:54.200 --> 46:56.200] and against slavery, [46:56.200 --> 46:58.200] showing resistance. [46:58.200 --> 47:01.200] First, I'm crawling, then I'm walking, [47:01.200 --> 47:03.200] then I start strutting. [47:03.200 --> 47:08.200] I'm just so glad to make my living, pushing buttons. [47:08.200 --> 47:13.200] Music playing [47:13.200 --> 47:15.200] Okay, we are back. [47:15.200 --> 47:17.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [47:17.200 --> 47:19.200] Wilson Law Radio. [47:19.200 --> 47:21.200] David, you're going to finish up [47:21.200 --> 47:24.200] and let's see if we can get some questions. [47:24.200 --> 47:26.200] Okay, that's it. [47:26.200 --> 47:30.200] It's the simplicity of the 1044 [47:30.200 --> 47:32.200] and setting up your own business [47:32.200 --> 47:34.200] and keeping the documentation. [47:34.200 --> 47:36.200] Will we show you how to do that? [47:36.200 --> 47:38.200] Anyone that has any questions [47:38.200 --> 47:42.200] or would like a copy of that free example tax return, [47:42.200 --> 47:47.200] they can send me an email at success-to-share at yahu.com. [47:47.200 --> 47:55.200] You can give me a call at 512-394-8858. [47:55.200 --> 47:58.200] I even do taxes on TurboTax [47:58.200 --> 48:00.200] for some people or show them how to [48:00.200 --> 48:03.200] and on TurboTax I'm known as the no-tax man. [48:03.200 --> 48:06.200] So if you'd like a copy of that return, [48:06.200 --> 48:08.200] then just send me an email [48:08.200 --> 48:10.200] and I'll give it to you or send Randy one [48:10.200 --> 48:12.200] and he'll forward it to me. [48:12.200 --> 48:14.200] And now then, any questions that anyone has [48:14.200 --> 48:16.200] about any of these forms [48:16.200 --> 48:18.200] or about how it fits together, [48:18.200 --> 48:20.200] if I've left you cloudy in any way, [48:20.200 --> 48:24.200] then be sure and ask the questions. [48:24.200 --> 48:27.200] I'll be right here and answer them for anyone that I can [48:27.200 --> 48:30.200] and we'll get them all answered for you. [48:30.200 --> 48:32.200] And it's a pleasure being on here. [48:32.200 --> 48:34.200] Randy and Brad, thank you very much for having me come on. [48:34.200 --> 48:36.200] I love talking about this stuff [48:36.200 --> 48:38.200] because I've loved doing it for 50 years now. [48:38.200 --> 48:40.200] It's great. [48:40.200 --> 48:42.200] Okay, if you have... [48:42.200 --> 48:43.200] The call lines are open. [48:43.200 --> 48:45.200] If you have a question or a comment for David, [48:45.200 --> 48:47.200] give us a call. [48:47.200 --> 48:49.200] We'll keep the phones on the rest of the night [48:49.200 --> 48:52.200] and David will hang around in case he gets some questions [48:52.200 --> 48:54.200] in case he has a comment. [48:54.200 --> 48:57.200] He really likes to comment and annoy me, [48:57.200 --> 49:00.200] but he knows I like it. [49:00.200 --> 49:02.200] We're going to Scott in Michigan. [49:02.200 --> 49:04.200] Scott, what do you have for us? [49:04.200 --> 49:06.200] Do you have a question on point? [49:06.200 --> 49:08.200] I'm in line at the grocery store. [49:08.200 --> 49:10.200] We come back the next... [49:10.200 --> 49:12.200] No, you're the only one left. [49:12.200 --> 49:14.200] Now, let me go back to Rick. [49:14.200 --> 49:16.200] I'll come back to you. [49:16.200 --> 49:17.200] Okay. [49:17.200 --> 49:20.200] Okay, we're going to... [49:20.200 --> 49:22.200] Actually, we got... [49:22.200 --> 49:24.200] Let me go back to Rick. [49:24.200 --> 49:28.200] Rick, do you have anything else for us? [49:28.200 --> 49:30.200] No. [49:30.200 --> 49:34.200] No, I think David's gone to something pretty good here. [49:34.200 --> 49:37.200] Okay, then drop off this and listen on the listener line [49:37.200 --> 49:39.200] so that it'll free up this line. [49:39.200 --> 49:42.200] We only got four lines at a time. [49:42.200 --> 49:47.200] So go to the ListenLive on the website. [49:47.200 --> 49:50.200] David, you might take this opportunity to clarify [49:50.200 --> 49:52.200] that you were talking about the mileage [49:52.200 --> 49:57.200] versus the car and truck expenses individually. [49:57.200 --> 49:59.200] Okay, I'll do that. [49:59.200 --> 50:03.200] I had a question about if you could take your mileage [50:03.200 --> 50:05.200] and your actual expenses, [50:05.200 --> 50:07.200] like oil changes, gas in the car, [50:07.200 --> 50:10.200] getting your car tuned up and that sort of thing, [50:10.200 --> 50:13.200] and you can only take one or the other. [50:13.200 --> 50:15.200] You can take your total mileage [50:15.200 --> 50:19.200] and multiply it this year by 57.5 cents a mile, [50:19.200 --> 50:23.200] and that's the dollar deduction you get for all your mileage, [50:23.200 --> 50:27.200] or you can take actual receipts for every oil change. [50:27.200 --> 50:28.200] Every time you fill up a gas, [50:28.200 --> 50:29.200] every time you get the tune up, [50:29.200 --> 50:31.200] every time you do anything to it, [50:31.200 --> 50:33.200] get new tires or anything, [50:33.200 --> 50:35.200] you can take one or the other. [50:35.200 --> 50:37.200] I asked what would you take, both of them, [50:37.200 --> 50:40.200] and I found that it's just easier to keep track of your mileage [50:40.200 --> 50:43.200] because you can get your first week of the year, [50:43.200 --> 50:46.200] your last week of the year, [50:46.200 --> 50:49.200] but then do the best you can to keep track of your mileage, [50:49.200 --> 50:52.200] say, on at least a monthly basis, [50:52.200 --> 50:55.200] and anything that you can attribute to it, [50:55.200 --> 50:57.200] and that just makes it easier filing it [50:57.200 --> 50:58.200] at the end of the year, [50:58.200 --> 51:01.200] and IRS is much less likely to argue with any mileage [51:01.200 --> 51:03.200] if you got anything documented, [51:03.200 --> 51:06.200] even on an old calendar or something. [51:06.200 --> 51:08.200] Okay, Brett? [51:08.200 --> 51:10.200] Thank you. [51:10.200 --> 51:15.200] So if I kept track of all the money I spent on gas [51:15.200 --> 51:19.200] and then calculated my average mile per gallon, [51:19.200 --> 51:28.200] I should be able to extrapolate a specific amount of mileage. [51:28.200 --> 51:29.200] You're too complicated. [51:29.200 --> 51:31.200] You don't quit being an engineer. [51:31.200 --> 51:33.200] You're going to confuse the issue here. [51:33.200 --> 51:38.200] Well, what I'm saying is, if they raise a question, [51:38.200 --> 51:41.200] I can say, I used all this gas. [51:41.200 --> 51:44.200] The only way to use all this gas is all this mileage. [51:44.200 --> 51:48.200] You're saying that's not even going to be an issue. [51:48.200 --> 51:49.200] That's true. [51:49.200 --> 51:50.200] If you have all those receipts, [51:50.200 --> 51:51.200] they won't even question them anyway. [51:51.200 --> 51:55.200] They'll just look at them and say it's good to go. [51:55.200 --> 51:57.200] Okay, and if I have my receipts [51:57.200 --> 52:01.200] and where I use a debit card, [52:01.200 --> 52:06.200] is the debit card records sufficient as a receipt for the IRS? [52:06.200 --> 52:09.200] Absolutely. [52:09.200 --> 52:10.200] Yes, it is. [52:10.200 --> 52:12.200] It absolutely is now. [52:12.200 --> 52:15.200] Back 10 years ago, they wouldn't even look at it. [52:15.200 --> 52:17.200] But now then, it's the way to go. [52:17.200 --> 52:18.200] Absolutely. [52:18.200 --> 52:20.200] Any credit card, anything you can bring in, [52:20.200 --> 52:23.200] they will take as documentation. [52:23.200 --> 52:27.200] So your credit is donated to you? [52:27.200 --> 52:28.200] That's true. [52:28.200 --> 52:29.200] That's the trick. [52:29.200 --> 52:33.200] It's something that you can get a receipt or get documented. [52:33.200 --> 52:36.200] And anything that you can take into the IRS, [52:36.200 --> 52:37.200] the more organized you are, [52:37.200 --> 52:39.200] the faster and simpler an audit is going to go, [52:39.200 --> 52:41.200] I feel like to fill out a return [52:41.200 --> 52:43.200] where it's going to avoid the audit in the first place. [52:43.200 --> 52:47.200] And one example of that is on that schedule C [52:47.200 --> 52:50.200] that I was talking about, [52:50.200 --> 52:53.200] there's a place on there that for travel and meals [52:53.200 --> 52:56.200] and travel, deductible entertainment, [52:56.200 --> 52:58.200] do not use those two blanks. [52:58.200 --> 52:59.200] Don't use that. [52:59.200 --> 53:01.200] I marked them off the returns I do [53:01.200 --> 53:03.200] because that will get you audited. [53:03.200 --> 53:07.200] The Congressman and Senator screwed that all up [53:07.200 --> 53:09.200] by having three martini lunches every day [53:09.200 --> 53:11.200] and trying to claim it off on taxes. [53:11.200 --> 53:13.200] Now then, if you try to claim off entertainment, [53:13.200 --> 53:15.200] they audit you. [53:15.200 --> 53:18.200] Sorry about that, got off point. [53:18.200 --> 53:21.200] And I think that's one of the most important things to know [53:21.200 --> 53:27.200] is not just what to take, but what not to take. [53:27.200 --> 53:28.200] Absolutely. [53:28.200 --> 53:30.200] Absolutely. [53:30.200 --> 53:32.200] Okay, let me go to one of the callers. [53:32.200 --> 53:34.200] We have Shane in New York. [53:34.200 --> 53:40.200] Now, Shane, I know you are on point. [53:40.200 --> 53:42.200] Randy, how are you doing? [53:42.200 --> 53:43.200] We're doing good. [53:43.200 --> 53:46.200] What do you have for us today? [53:46.200 --> 53:49.200] Well, I just wanted to touch basically really quick. [53:49.200 --> 53:52.200] I got that brief filed regarding sanctions, [53:52.200 --> 53:55.200] regarding the bankruptcy court, [53:55.200 --> 53:59.200] and 9011 feet. [53:59.200 --> 54:01.200] Hold on, hold on. [54:01.200 --> 54:05.200] Give us a real brief synopsis of where you're at. [54:05.200 --> 54:06.200] Who you are or where you're at. [54:06.200 --> 54:07.200] Okay. [54:07.200 --> 54:11.200] Well, I kept on hitting them hard in the bankruptcy court [54:11.200 --> 54:13.200] to stop the sale of the property, [54:13.200 --> 54:18.200] which originally belonged to my mom way back in 2015. [54:18.200 --> 54:20.200] So make a long story short. [54:20.200 --> 54:23.200] I went after filed objections. [54:23.200 --> 54:26.200] And today's your backup. [54:26.200 --> 54:27.200] Let me back up one more step. [54:27.200 --> 54:30.200] I filed the bankruptcy to stop the sale of the property [54:30.200 --> 54:32.200] back in 2019. [54:32.200 --> 54:40.200] And the good news is the bankruptcy stopped everything. [54:40.200 --> 54:43.200] And I was coming after them under adversary proceedings, [54:43.200 --> 54:46.200] objections, filing subpoenas, [54:46.200 --> 54:51.200] and the court kept on stating it's a state case. [54:51.200 --> 54:52.200] It's a state case. [54:52.200 --> 54:57.200] It wasn't a chance to go into the foreclosure, [54:57.200 --> 54:58.200] actually, I go back to the state court. [54:58.200 --> 54:59.200] But I kept on filing away. [54:59.200 --> 55:00.200] I followed the re-hearing. [55:00.200 --> 55:02.200] I got hit with sanctions. [55:02.200 --> 55:06.200] And so that is all up on appeal at the United States District [55:06.200 --> 55:07.200] Court. [55:07.200 --> 55:10.200] And they sanctioned me for like $1,700. [55:10.200 --> 55:13.200] But they said I kept on bringing up frivolous arguments. [55:13.200 --> 55:16.200] They cannot be litigated in bankruptcy court. [55:16.200 --> 55:19.200] So I filed the brief. [55:19.200 --> 55:21.200] They responded back. [55:21.200 --> 55:23.200] And then I responded back about two weeks ago, [55:23.200 --> 55:26.200] which I was trying to get on the show last week. [55:26.200 --> 55:33.200] But pursuant to 9-0-11-2 for you to be hit with sanctions, [55:33.200 --> 55:35.200] no matter if you're pro-sayer or attorney, [55:35.200 --> 55:39.200] you have to have filing sent a record that the court must [55:39.200 --> 55:42.200] explain the reasons why they're giving you those sanctions. [55:42.200 --> 55:44.200] They never did that with me. [55:44.200 --> 55:47.200] They just said you're being sanctioned for $1,700. [55:47.200 --> 55:51.200] And the discussion that I came back with a re-hearing, [55:51.200 --> 55:54.200] and they sanctioned me again for the re-hearing. [55:54.200 --> 55:57.200] So that's all. [55:57.200 --> 56:00.200] It's been fully briefed as of two weeks ago. [56:00.200 --> 56:03.200] And who knows how long they're going to sit on it for. [56:03.200 --> 56:05.200] But I thought that was kind of interesting. [56:05.200 --> 56:09.200] For you to be sanctioned, they have to put findings in the record. [56:09.200 --> 56:14.200] You just can't sanction somebody for $10,000, $30,000, [56:14.200 --> 56:17.200] whatever they want, but you have to have some kind of findings [56:17.200 --> 56:20.200] with the record to establish sanctions. [56:20.200 --> 56:22.200] I wish they never did. [56:22.200 --> 56:25.200] It's kind of like you get penalized for something [56:25.200 --> 56:28.200] that you don't even know what you're penalized for. [56:28.200 --> 56:30.200] So I wanted to bring that to your attention. [56:30.200 --> 56:36.200] I thought that was quite interesting, but it's 9-0-11-2. [56:36.200 --> 56:40.200] So they're effectively sanctioning you, [56:40.200 --> 56:45.200] but not telling you why, or saying why, [56:45.200 --> 56:50.200] but not establishing us as a matter of law why. [56:50.200 --> 56:52.200] That's correct, yes. [56:52.200 --> 56:54.200] Nothing in the record. [56:54.200 --> 57:00.200] So how do you know how to keep from being sanctioned? [57:00.200 --> 57:05.200] It appears to become capricious and arbitrary. [57:05.200 --> 57:08.200] Right. [57:08.200 --> 57:13.200] So what's your remedy? [57:13.200 --> 57:16.200] Well, everything's filed. [57:16.200 --> 57:18.200] Got the brief filed timely. [57:18.200 --> 57:20.200] They respond it back. [57:20.200 --> 57:21.200] I respond it back. [57:21.200 --> 57:23.200] And now we're just waiting to hear the report [57:23.200 --> 57:25.200] where they set up for hearing. [57:25.200 --> 57:28.200] But the rule is the rule. [57:28.200 --> 57:31.200] Unless you don't want to follow the rule. [57:31.200 --> 57:34.200] So I just wanted to bring that to your attention. [57:34.200 --> 57:37.200] I thought that was quite interesting that they have [57:37.200 --> 57:41.200] specific reasons why you're being sanctioned. [57:41.200 --> 57:45.200] Did you hammer the judge for sanctioning you [57:45.200 --> 57:51.200] without giving you reason for the sanctions? [57:51.200 --> 57:53.200] Yes, I did. [57:53.200 --> 57:55.200] He said he didn't want to hear it anymore. [57:55.200 --> 57:56.200] Excellent. [57:56.200 --> 57:59.200] He said he didn't want to hear it anymore. [57:59.200 --> 58:03.200] Did you ask him to stand down from the bench? [58:03.200 --> 58:05.200] I didn't get that. [58:05.200 --> 58:07.200] No, I didn't do that. [58:07.200 --> 58:10.200] No, but I did ask him for filing for sanctioning the law [58:10.200 --> 58:14.200] and why I'm being sanctioned. [58:14.200 --> 58:17.200] The reason, the way I read the law, [58:17.200 --> 58:19.200] the judge has a duty to determine the facts [58:19.200 --> 58:21.200] according to rules of evidence. [58:21.200 --> 58:23.200] Why the laws come to him as facts and case. [58:23.200 --> 58:25.200] I don't care what he wants or doesn't want. [58:25.200 --> 58:27.200] If he don't want to do his job, [58:27.200 --> 58:29.200] get on off the bench and get someone who will. [58:29.200 --> 58:32.200] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [58:32.200 --> 58:37.200] Rue LaRidio, calling number 5126461984. [58:37.200 --> 59:03.200] We'll be right back. [59:07.200 --> 59:14.200] We'll be right back. [59:37.200 --> 59:44.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [59:44.200 --> 01:00:10.200] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:00:10.200 --> 01:00:17.200] We'll be right back. [01:00:40.200 --> 01:00:45.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:01:10.200 --> 01:01:33.200] We'll be right back. [01:01:33.200 --> 01:02:01.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:02:01.200 --> 01:02:18.200] We'll be right back. [01:02:18.200 --> 01:02:39.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:02:39.200 --> 01:02:59.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:02:59.200 --> 01:03:14.200] We'll be right back. [01:03:14.200 --> 01:03:40.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:03:40.200 --> 01:03:46.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:03:46.200 --> 01:03:56.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:03:56.200 --> 01:04:11.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:04:11.200 --> 01:04:27.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:04:27.200 --> 01:04:52.200] 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102. [01:04:52.200 --> 01:05:03.200] The main argument when you go to bankruptcy court, if the alleged creditor files a proof of claim, you have a right to have an evidentiary hearing. [01:05:03.200 --> 01:05:05.200] I believe it's 9014. [01:05:05.200 --> 01:05:08.200] E and D and E, okay? [01:05:08.200 --> 01:05:12.200] We have witnesses to testify under oath that you do owe this amount. [01:05:12.200 --> 01:05:19.200] They won't give me the evidentiary hearing, so I appeal that, and I've been sitting in the district court now for almost a year. [01:05:19.200 --> 01:05:33.200] The other two appeals were the sanctions for 750 and $1,700 because I kept on nailing them hard in the bankruptcy court, finding out a reason why I can't have these evidentiary hearings. [01:05:33.200 --> 01:05:38.200] And I'm not going to get too deep into the arbitration order then one. [01:05:38.200 --> 01:05:47.200] That's kind of a slippery slope, you know, with the arbitration, but more importantly, I just want to focus on the sanctions. [01:05:47.200 --> 01:05:50.200] And I did quote that wrong earlier, Randy. [01:05:50.200 --> 01:05:55.200] It's 90C3, by the way. [01:05:55.200 --> 01:06:00.200] I'm not sure if you're familiar with that rule. [01:06:00.200 --> 01:06:01.200] No, okay. [01:06:01.200 --> 01:06:02.200] Say it again. [01:06:02.200 --> 01:06:06.200] You were breaking up slightly. [01:06:06.200 --> 01:06:07.200] Okay. [01:06:07.200 --> 01:06:12.200] 9011C3. [01:06:12.200 --> 01:06:17.200] What is 9011C33? [01:06:17.200 --> 01:06:23.200] It's the federal rules of bankruptcy regarding sanctions. [01:06:23.200 --> 01:06:24.200] Okay. [01:06:24.200 --> 01:06:26.200] It's rule 9011. [01:06:26.200 --> 01:06:28.200] That's a rule number. [01:06:28.200 --> 01:06:31.200] And then subsection C, subsection 3. [01:06:31.200 --> 01:06:34.200] Right. [01:06:34.200 --> 01:06:45.200] And I'm just going to just basically just say right here that it says that the sanctions and grand proportions are the time to determine that it passed through the violation of law. [01:06:45.200 --> 01:06:49.200] Explain the case of the sanctions and falls. [01:06:49.200 --> 01:06:50.200] Okay. [01:06:50.200 --> 01:06:51.200] Hold on just for a second, Shane. [01:06:51.200 --> 01:06:53.200] Brett, are you hearing him okay? [01:06:53.200 --> 01:06:54.200] Yes. [01:06:54.200 --> 01:06:56.200] He's breaking up pretty badly. [01:06:56.200 --> 01:06:57.200] Okay. [01:06:57.200 --> 01:06:59.200] I'm not sure if he's just me. [01:06:59.200 --> 01:07:00.200] Okay. [01:07:00.200 --> 01:07:03.200] Try to talk a little more slowly. [01:07:03.200 --> 01:07:08.200] I think you're dropping some packets. [01:07:08.200 --> 01:07:09.200] All right. [01:07:09.200 --> 01:07:10.200] Here we go. [01:07:10.200 --> 01:07:11.200] I'm going to go a little bit more slower. [01:07:11.200 --> 01:07:12.200] Is that better? [01:07:12.200 --> 01:07:14.200] That's much better. [01:07:14.200 --> 01:07:15.200] Okay. [01:07:15.200 --> 01:07:20.200] And pursuant to the rule, which is number three, it says order. [01:07:20.200 --> 01:07:32.200] One imposing sanctions, the court shall describe the conduct to determine and constitute a violation of this rule and explain the basis for the sanctions imposed. [01:07:32.200 --> 01:07:37.200] So you know how they love to hit pro-state litigants all the time. [01:07:37.200 --> 01:07:46.200] Say you're a sanction for $10,000 and I don't know what's the rule in Texas, the state rule, but the federal rule, this is regarding bankruptcy court. [01:07:46.200 --> 01:08:01.200] I'm sure it's also in the regular federal courts along with the bankruptcy court, but they have to describe the conduct to determine the constant violation of the rule and explain the basis for the sanctions imposed. [01:08:01.200 --> 01:08:10.200] And I've been hitting it hard trying to find out how in the world, why can't I have my evidentiary hearing? [01:08:10.200 --> 01:08:16.200] I have a right to have an evidentiary hearing, especially when they file a fraudulent proof of claim to my bankruptcy case. [01:08:16.200 --> 01:08:18.200] And they keep on trying to state the state matter. [01:08:18.200 --> 01:08:20.200] You keep on arguing the same issues. [01:08:20.200 --> 01:08:22.200] Therefore, we're going to impose $750. [01:08:22.200 --> 01:08:28.200] I did a re-hearing and said, look, you have not focused on the issues of why I'm getting hit. [01:08:28.200 --> 01:08:37.200] At that particular time, I didn't really read the rule, but now I read the rule and I added it to my response on appeal at the district court. [01:08:37.200 --> 01:08:40.200] So very important to read the rules. [01:08:40.200 --> 01:08:55.200] I don't know how I missed this one, but it clearly states, if you look it up, it says that when you are imposed sanctions, they have to specifically describe the conduct to determine the constant violation of the rule and explain the basis for the sanctions imposed. [01:08:55.200 --> 01:08:58.200] And here, I'm the one that's being truthful. [01:08:58.200 --> 01:09:01.200] They're the ones that are, you know, the dirty dogs they are. [01:09:01.200 --> 01:09:04.200] They're lying about everything that I have along with them. [01:09:04.200 --> 01:09:06.200] And they forged all the documents. [01:09:06.200 --> 01:09:10.200] They deleted the name of my mom and stuck my name in there and all the documents. [01:09:10.200 --> 01:09:13.200] I mean, if that's not fraud, I don't know what it is. [01:09:13.200 --> 01:09:19.200] So that's why I haven't filed fraud charges against them. [01:09:19.200 --> 01:09:20.200] Not yet. [01:09:20.200 --> 01:09:24.200] No, because I want to go through any process of the appeal. [01:09:24.200 --> 01:09:29.200] Why? [01:09:29.200 --> 01:09:31.200] I just haven't, Randy. [01:09:31.200 --> 01:09:32.200] Just haven't done that. [01:09:32.200 --> 01:09:34.200] Are you talking about fraud charges? [01:09:34.200 --> 01:09:36.200] You mean criminal charges filed against the judge? [01:09:36.200 --> 01:09:38.200] Exactly. [01:09:38.200 --> 01:09:40.200] Okay. [01:09:40.200 --> 01:09:45.200] The criminal charges have nothing to do with civil litigation. [01:09:45.200 --> 01:09:50.200] The lawyers are going to want to say that because you're in civil, you can't file criminal. [01:09:50.200 --> 01:09:52.200] Well, show me that, guys. [01:09:52.200 --> 01:09:56.200] Did you just make that up? [01:09:56.200 --> 01:09:58.200] Bremore doesn't have anything to do with civil. [01:09:58.200 --> 01:10:01.200] Well, Randy, that sounds like baritry. [01:10:01.200 --> 01:10:03.200] That sounds like somebody buttoning in where they don't belong, [01:10:03.200 --> 01:10:10.200] trying to give unsolicited bad legal advice when you didn't even hire them to do that. [01:10:10.200 --> 01:10:17.200] Well, and these are guys for the banks that are lying and cheating and stealing [01:10:17.200 --> 01:10:21.200] and wants to keep you from going after them. [01:10:21.200 --> 01:10:23.200] Right, exactly. [01:10:23.200 --> 01:10:25.200] Randy, what I didn't do is just... [01:10:25.200 --> 01:10:27.200] It's all politics, Shane. [01:10:27.200 --> 01:10:29.200] You start going after them criminally. [01:10:29.200 --> 01:10:33.200] That raises the bar considerably. [01:10:33.200 --> 01:10:34.200] Yeah. [01:10:34.200 --> 01:10:38.200] I really need to do that, and I promise to do it this week. [01:10:38.200 --> 01:10:42.200] But I wanted to ask you about this. [01:10:42.200 --> 01:10:44.200] What's your thoughts? [01:10:44.200 --> 01:10:49.200] Don't we have a right to have an evidentiary hearing, 9014? [01:10:49.200 --> 01:10:53.200] In the early states, we have a right to have an evidentiary hearing regarding a proof of claim. [01:10:53.200 --> 01:10:59.200] Otherwise, you could have a homeless person file a proof of claim for half a million dollars. [01:10:59.200 --> 01:11:02.200] I mean, then why do they strip me? [01:11:02.200 --> 01:11:04.200] They strip me from my evidentiary hearing. [01:11:04.200 --> 01:11:06.200] You say, nope, that's a state matter. [01:11:06.200 --> 01:11:07.200] I just wait a second. [01:11:07.200 --> 01:11:08.200] This is a bankruptcy court. [01:11:08.200 --> 01:11:10.200] Okay, hold on, Shane. [01:11:10.200 --> 01:11:12.200] I'm sure you have one. [01:11:12.200 --> 01:11:17.200] You're in the Fed, so you've got a case similar to what we have in Texas. [01:11:17.200 --> 01:11:20.200] We have a case, Walker V. Packer. [01:11:20.200 --> 01:11:29.200] And it says, a judge has no discretion in properly applying the law to the facts. [01:11:29.200 --> 01:11:34.200] A failure to do so is an abuse of discretion. [01:11:34.200 --> 01:11:37.200] Now, the way I read the Penal Code of the State of Texas, [01:11:37.200 --> 01:11:45.200] if a public official abuses his discretion and in the process denies a citizen pulling free access to or enjoyment, right? [01:11:45.200 --> 01:11:48.200] Well, that's class A misdemeanor. [01:11:48.200 --> 01:11:51.200] So, you're in the Fed. [01:11:51.200 --> 01:11:57.200] If a public official has failed to properly apply the law to the facts, [01:11:57.200 --> 01:12:04.200] if the feds don't have case law addressing that issue, [01:12:04.200 --> 01:12:11.200] we have one in Texas that we can drag into the Fed under full faith and credit. [01:12:11.200 --> 01:12:18.200] And where the judge has failed to properly apply the law to the facts, go after him criminally. [01:12:18.200 --> 01:12:24.200] And let him explain to the FBI, you know, I filed criminal charges against Judge McBride [01:12:24.200 --> 01:12:31.200] in Fort Worth when he dismissed my declaratory judgment for failure state of claim. [01:12:31.200 --> 01:12:34.200] Declaratory judgments don't have claims. [01:12:34.200 --> 01:12:36.200] Yeah. [01:12:36.200 --> 01:12:41.200] So, went straight to the FBI with criminal charges against him. That was a hoot. [01:12:41.200 --> 01:12:45.200] I bet that stinker didn't see that coming. [01:12:45.200 --> 01:12:48.200] Stinker's the strongest word I can use on there. [01:12:48.200 --> 01:12:56.200] But these judges, you know, they're used to lawyers who bend over and kiss their behinds. [01:12:56.200 --> 01:13:00.200] They're not a lawyer and you're not dangling by your bar cards. [01:13:00.200 --> 01:13:06.200] They have powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal lawyers. [01:13:06.200 --> 01:13:09.200] File criminal charges against the judge. [01:13:09.200 --> 01:13:12.200] That'll give him apoplexy. [01:13:12.200 --> 01:13:17.200] And maybe he'll render such a stupid ruling against you [01:13:17.200 --> 01:13:20.200] that the court of appeals will overturn him quickly. [01:13:20.200 --> 01:13:25.200] And maybe like they did in the Pickersford case, dismissed the case outright. [01:13:25.200 --> 01:13:29.200] Or dismissed the bank's claim outright. [01:13:29.200 --> 01:13:32.200] But you have two fronts you can go after him on. [01:13:32.200 --> 01:13:36.200] Well, I want to finish my story real quick and it's only two minutes. [01:13:36.200 --> 01:13:38.200] Okay. [01:13:38.200 --> 01:13:45.200] The day I filed the response back for my appeal regarding sanctions against me for frivolous conduct, [01:13:45.200 --> 01:13:50.200] when I pointed out that rule, did you know within four hours, [01:13:50.200 --> 01:13:55.200] the attorney over in Rochester, New York responded in four hours [01:13:55.200 --> 01:13:59.200] and he had 30 days to respond. He responded in four hours. [01:13:59.200 --> 01:14:01.200] That tells me something. [01:14:01.200 --> 01:14:05.200] I think you might have done the nerve. [01:14:05.200 --> 01:14:09.200] Yeah. He filed both answers the very day. [01:14:09.200 --> 01:14:13.200] I think he was filed around 11 o'clock in the morning. [01:14:13.200 --> 01:14:16.200] His answer was at 4.30 in the afternoon. [01:14:16.200 --> 01:14:22.200] Which I believe I sent you that, Randy, but here's no way for you to keep up with all these emails. [01:14:22.200 --> 01:14:28.200] And basically in there, he's stating that I never attached the written order. [01:14:28.200 --> 01:14:32.200] Therefore, his response should be stripped from the record. [01:14:32.200 --> 01:14:37.200] Because I never attached the actual order of what I was appearing in my response. [01:14:37.200 --> 01:14:42.200] I never heard of such a thing. That was his answer, by the way. [01:14:42.200 --> 01:14:45.200] Wait a minute. Say that again. [01:14:45.200 --> 01:14:48.200] The written order by the judge, the bankruptcy judge. [01:14:48.200 --> 01:14:54.200] He claimed in his response back, he said that they should dismiss my appeal [01:14:54.200 --> 01:14:58.200] because I did not attach the order to the response. [01:14:58.200 --> 01:15:02.200] My response. You know how you file a brief, they respond back. [01:15:02.200 --> 01:15:07.200] Isn't the order a matter of the court record? [01:15:07.200 --> 01:15:11.200] No, I understand that, but that was the reason why he said it should be dismissed. [01:15:11.200 --> 01:15:14.200] It's just based on that one issue alone. No, I agree with it, yeah. [01:15:14.200 --> 01:15:19.200] Is that in the rule that you must attach the order? [01:15:19.200 --> 01:15:25.200] It's already in the brief. No, I don't know. I couldn't find anything regarding that. That's ridiculous. [01:15:25.200 --> 01:15:28.200] So he made it up? [01:15:28.200 --> 01:15:30.200] It's apparently, yeah. [01:15:30.200 --> 01:15:37.200] 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:15:37.200 --> 01:15:41.200] If a public official exerts... [01:15:41.200 --> 01:15:45.200] If the courts do exert an authority, they do not express the haven and process my decision [01:15:45.200 --> 01:15:48.200] for free access to and drawing it right. [01:15:48.200 --> 01:15:51.200] That's the class A misdemeanor in the Fed. [01:15:51.200 --> 01:15:52.200] Right. [01:15:52.200 --> 01:15:58.200] That's the bait after arresting. [01:15:58.200 --> 01:16:01.200] I don't have much hope for the FBI, Randy, but... [01:16:01.200 --> 01:16:02.200] It doesn't matter. It's worth it. [01:16:02.200 --> 01:16:05.200] It doesn't matter. You put a mark on his chart. [01:16:05.200 --> 01:16:06.200] Yeah. [01:16:06.200 --> 01:16:16.200] A judge has to worry about, do I have a political enemy out there who will use what this jerk pro se is doing [01:16:16.200 --> 01:16:20.200] as political cannon fodder to ruin my career? [01:16:20.200 --> 01:16:21.200] Right. [01:16:21.200 --> 01:16:26.200] It's all politics. You're missing the politics. [01:16:26.200 --> 01:16:32.200] You start filing criminally against them and professional conduct complaints against them. [01:16:32.200 --> 01:16:37.200] That creates a lot of politics around them, just everybody else looking at them. [01:16:37.200 --> 01:16:42.200] Right. I agree. [01:16:42.200 --> 01:16:45.200] Okay. Hang on. About to go to our sponsors. [01:16:45.200 --> 01:16:48.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Our Radio. [01:16:48.200 --> 01:16:50.200] We'll have some call lines open. [01:16:50.200 --> 01:16:54.200] I'll call it number 512-646-1984. [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 Merris Proven Method. [01:17:09.200 --> 01:17:14.200] Michael Merris 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 phones, mail, or court summons? [01:17:24.200 --> 01:17:26.200] How to answer letters and phone calls? 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[01:19:13.200 --> 01:19:23.200] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:19:43.200 --> 01:19:53.200] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:19:53.200 --> 01:19:58.200] LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:19:58.200 --> 01:19:59.200] Hi, Jerry. [01:19:59.200 --> 01:20:00.200] We are back. [01:20:00.200 --> 01:20:02.200] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruebla Radio. [01:20:02.200 --> 01:20:12.200] On this, the 18th day of June, 2021, our four-hour info marathon, and we're talking to Shane [01:20:12.200 --> 01:20:13.200] New York. [01:20:13.200 --> 01:20:18.200] Shane, have you been filing bar grievances, judicial conduct complaints? [01:20:18.200 --> 01:20:19.200] It's time. [01:20:19.200 --> 01:20:20.200] Big time. [01:20:20.200 --> 01:20:24.200] This particular one finds such a crane in Rochester, New York. [01:20:24.200 --> 01:20:30.200] If there's anybody from New York out there, they are one of the ruthless law firms in [01:20:30.200 --> 01:20:31.200] the whole state. [01:20:31.200 --> 01:20:34.800] They're number two in foreclosures in New York state. [01:20:34.800 --> 01:20:36.700] The number one was the Rosicky and Rosicky. [01:20:36.700 --> 01:20:40.200] They already got indicted, and they are gone. [01:20:40.200 --> 01:20:44.200] The Rosicky and Rosicky was in your case originally, wasn't it? [01:20:44.200 --> 01:20:45.200] Yes, they were. [01:20:45.200 --> 01:20:53.200] They were representing HSBC, the first lean holder, which ultimately turned into Soteris, [01:20:53.200 --> 01:20:58.200] which ultimately turned into Mr. Cooper's slash nation that started down there in Dallas, [01:20:58.200 --> 01:20:59.200] Texas. [01:20:59.200 --> 01:21:03.200] They came to a point where the first lean holder is not going to be able to sell the property. [01:21:03.200 --> 01:21:04.200] We know that. [01:21:04.200 --> 01:21:05.200] They lost a note. [01:21:05.200 --> 01:21:07.200] They got no bond attached to the lost note. [01:21:07.200 --> 01:21:10.200] The complete message isn't even worth talking about. [01:21:10.200 --> 01:21:15.200] They're using your home equity line of credit to try to sell the property, which is at the [01:21:15.200 --> 01:21:16.200] county level. [01:21:16.200 --> 01:21:22.200] I want to finish up what you just said earlier in the response brief back, which was followed [01:21:22.200 --> 01:21:23.200] within four hours. [01:21:23.200 --> 01:21:24.200] It was pretty amazing. [01:21:24.200 --> 01:21:28.200] This is only two sentences, Randy, in review. [01:21:28.200 --> 01:21:34.200] It says that this year courts should review the bankruptcy courts' legal conclusions. [01:21:34.200 --> 01:21:41.200] Sinova, finding factual facts of clear error, and they quoted a couple of cases in the second [01:21:41.200 --> 01:21:42.200] circuit. [01:21:42.200 --> 01:21:48.200] It says to overturn a bankruptcy court's decision to lift the automatic stay in sanctions, there [01:21:48.200 --> 01:21:51.200] must be a showing of abuse of lower courts discretion. [01:21:51.200 --> 01:21:55.200] Did you just say that? [01:21:55.200 --> 01:21:56.200] Yes. [01:21:56.200 --> 01:22:01.200] I thought that was quite interesting what you just said. [01:22:01.200 --> 01:22:08.200] In the conclusion, this guy here from Fine Such and Crane in Rochester says there was no [01:22:08.200 --> 01:22:12.200] clear error in the bankruptcy court's legal conclusion or factual findings. [01:22:12.200 --> 01:22:15.200] The bankruptcy court's not abusing discretion. [01:22:15.200 --> 01:22:18.200] The appellant fails to demonstrate otherwise. [01:22:18.200 --> 01:22:23.200] Apportedly, the lawsuit remained untouched and undisputed. [01:22:23.200 --> 01:22:25.200] So there you go. [01:22:25.200 --> 01:22:27.200] He's on it right away. [01:22:27.200 --> 01:22:29.200] But again, we're right back to square one again. [01:22:29.200 --> 01:22:33.200] They never gave any reasons of what I violated. [01:22:33.200 --> 01:22:35.200] There was no finding. [01:22:35.200 --> 01:22:37.200] Okay, that was going to be my question. [01:22:37.200 --> 01:22:39.200] Did you request findings of facts? [01:22:39.200 --> 01:22:46.200] In Julian the Fed, there is no order until there's a judgment. [01:22:46.200 --> 01:22:50.200] And the judgment is findings of facts. [01:22:50.200 --> 01:22:51.200] Well, he never did any of that. [01:22:51.200 --> 01:22:54.200] But he did an order, which I had a way to... [01:22:54.200 --> 01:22:55.200] No, no, no. [01:22:55.200 --> 01:22:56.200] Wait, wait, hold on. [01:22:56.200 --> 01:22:58.200] You're in the Fed. [01:22:58.200 --> 01:23:04.200] In the Fed, an order is two documents. [01:23:04.200 --> 01:23:07.200] One is the order of the judge. [01:23:07.200 --> 01:23:09.200] The other document is the judgment. [01:23:09.200 --> 01:23:12.200] Without both of them, there is no order. [01:23:12.200 --> 01:23:14.200] They have never done that with me. [01:23:14.200 --> 01:23:15.200] Never. [01:23:15.200 --> 01:23:20.200] Then raise the issue that there is no order because there is no judgment. [01:23:20.200 --> 01:23:22.200] They do that in the district court. [01:23:22.200 --> 01:23:25.200] They do that in the district court. [01:23:25.200 --> 01:23:29.200] And Randy, I don't know... I know there's a lot to talk about here. [01:23:29.200 --> 01:23:33.200] This is only one stupid home equity line of credit and we're driving them nuts. [01:23:33.200 --> 01:23:39.200] I think they've already spent a couple hundred thousand dollars on an alleged 50,000 dollar line of credit by the way. [01:23:39.200 --> 01:23:46.200] And a couple of years ago, the attorney in bankruptcy court turned that emotional if the state was bitching and whining and crying [01:23:46.200 --> 01:23:50.200] that they've already spent double the amount of what the loans were. [01:23:50.200 --> 01:23:54.200] Now it's back in December 2019. [01:23:54.200 --> 01:23:58.200] Why would they spend double the amount? [01:23:58.200 --> 01:24:00.200] I would even bring up another question. [01:24:00.200 --> 01:24:06.200] I want to say it's because they don't want to lose to a pro se, but that's too simple. [01:24:06.200 --> 01:24:11.200] Well, I see a couple of other factors going on too. [01:24:11.200 --> 01:24:26.200] One is that the insurance fraud that they're in the middle of, when they go and collect on all of these, you know, that whole 85, 15 thing that got going on [01:24:26.200 --> 01:24:35.200] and then they resell to the next one, if they were to lose to the pro se, it's not just an ego thing. [01:24:35.200 --> 01:24:38.200] There's a whole lot of money behind that. [01:24:38.200 --> 01:24:49.200] And another factor that occurs to me is, like with this lady Patty, this is Deutsche Bank that's trying to get her home. [01:24:49.200 --> 01:24:57.200] They don't have any right to her home, but the lawyer that's jumping in the middle of this and trying to act like they have a right to it, [01:24:57.200 --> 01:25:01.200] that lawyer has Deutsche Bank for a client. [01:25:01.200 --> 01:25:03.200] And Deutsche Bank is huge. [01:25:03.200 --> 01:25:04.200] They're global. [01:25:04.200 --> 01:25:05.200] That's a lot. [01:25:05.200 --> 01:25:07.200] That's a big client to lose. [01:25:07.200 --> 01:25:11.200] If you lose to the pro se and Deutsche Bank goes, well, you're pathetic. [01:25:11.200 --> 01:25:13.200] I'm getting a different law firm. [01:25:13.200 --> 01:25:16.200] That is a huge loss. [01:25:16.200 --> 01:25:21.200] It's not just the cost of this lady's home. [01:25:21.200 --> 01:25:31.200] And that's why Shane, have you asked for court ordered mediation? [01:25:31.200 --> 01:25:33.200] No. [01:25:33.200 --> 01:25:37.200] Now, remember, the bankruptcy court has lost complete jurisdiction. [01:25:37.200 --> 01:25:38.200] No, the answer is no. [01:25:38.200 --> 01:25:41.200] And everything is sitting at the desk right now. [01:25:41.200 --> 01:25:42.200] Okay. [01:25:42.200 --> 01:25:47.200] You've got this lawyer here who is dancing on the head of a pen. [01:25:47.200 --> 01:25:48.200] Right. [01:25:48.200 --> 01:25:58.200] But he's a lawyer and you're a chump pro se and he is not going to negotiate with you unless the judge orders him to. [01:25:58.200 --> 01:25:59.200] No, he did. [01:25:59.200 --> 01:26:07.200] He did back in June of 2020 last year and sent the letter stating that they're willing to walk away. [01:26:07.200 --> 01:26:10.200] But you have to be $44,000 cashier's check. [01:26:10.200 --> 01:26:15.200] And we must have it within 10 business days. [01:26:15.200 --> 01:26:22.200] Did you file a motion for sanctions for failure to negotiate in good faith? [01:26:22.200 --> 01:26:23.200] And bar grieve them? [01:26:23.200 --> 01:26:24.200] No, but I did file. [01:26:24.200 --> 01:26:25.200] I did. [01:26:25.200 --> 01:26:28.200] Oh, I bar grieve them like crazy. [01:26:28.200 --> 01:26:31.200] He's very bar grieve several, but at least a half a dozen times. [01:26:31.200 --> 01:26:33.200] And I did file sanctions. [01:26:33.200 --> 01:26:40.200] And I didn't word it the way you said, Randy, just now, but I did attach that letter stating, you know, I touched the letter. [01:26:40.200 --> 01:26:43.200] I did word it exactly the way you just said it on there. [01:26:43.200 --> 01:26:50.200] And by the way, what was even more interesting is he found out all my sovereignty stuff I got involved in the federal court. [01:26:50.200 --> 01:26:59.200] Gene Keating, Winston Straub, Sam Davis, all the big gurus back in 2005 and 2006, he printed all my docket sheets. [01:26:59.200 --> 01:27:01.200] 300 pages. [01:27:01.200 --> 01:27:02.200] Three cases. [01:27:02.200 --> 01:27:07.200] One for the U.S. citizenship, the bond of promise, you know, all that sovereignty stuff. [01:27:07.200 --> 01:27:09.200] File it into the case. [01:27:09.200 --> 01:27:11.200] Try to make a mockery out of me. [01:27:11.200 --> 01:27:13.200] He filed sanctions against me. [01:27:13.200 --> 01:27:16.200] So this is not the first time he came after me like a shark. [01:27:16.200 --> 01:27:20.200] Some of those sanctions were hereby denied because they were irrelevant to the case. [01:27:20.200 --> 01:27:26.200] It's kind of like, you know, something you might have did 20 years ago and he filed all that stuff into the bankers case. [01:27:26.200 --> 01:27:28.200] I'm like, I'm scratching my head. [01:27:28.200 --> 01:27:30.200] How do you respond to this? [01:27:30.200 --> 01:27:32.200] Oh, he's squirming. [01:27:32.200 --> 01:27:34.200] Yeah, yeah. [01:27:34.200 --> 01:27:36.200] Well, that's what got me all fired up. [01:27:36.200 --> 01:27:38.200] So I said, I'm going to go after him now. [01:27:38.200 --> 01:27:40.200] So it's been an ongoing battle. [01:27:40.200 --> 01:27:47.200] The Bank of Secord just basically, whatever I filed, they just basically said they have, you know, don't really say I'm right or wrong. [01:27:47.200 --> 01:27:48.200] They said it's a state issue. [01:27:48.200 --> 01:27:49.200] It's a state issue. [01:27:49.200 --> 01:27:52.200] The evidentiary hearing, that's a state issue. [01:27:52.200 --> 01:27:55.200] So I can't get anywhere, but they don't really make any... [01:27:55.200 --> 01:27:56.200] Okay, but all of that's available. [01:27:56.200 --> 01:27:57.200] They don't argue. [01:27:57.200 --> 01:27:58.200] You're setting a record. [01:27:58.200 --> 01:27:59.200] That's work. [01:27:59.200 --> 01:28:09.200] Well, that's what I was going to tell you is everything's sitting in the district court and I brought up the point of evidentiary hearing on a rehearing. [01:28:09.200 --> 01:28:12.200] Because they dismissed one of the appeals because they said it's a state issue. [01:28:12.200 --> 01:28:15.200] But I said, okay, let's just say that's true. [01:28:15.200 --> 01:28:25.200] But I do have a right to have an evidentiary hearing pursuant to 9014 to prove that this proof of claim they fraudulently put into the record is true. [01:28:25.200 --> 01:28:27.200] And it just stuck right here. [01:28:27.200 --> 01:28:31.200] Have you considered a petition for rid of mandamus? [01:28:31.200 --> 01:28:32.200] Mandamus? [01:28:32.200 --> 01:28:33.200] No. [01:28:33.200 --> 01:28:34.200] Not yet. [01:28:34.200 --> 01:28:37.200] That's the remedy here. [01:28:37.200 --> 01:28:41.200] You have a right to an evidentiary hearing. [01:28:41.200 --> 01:28:44.200] The court's denying you an evidentiary hearing. [01:28:44.200 --> 01:28:54.200] A rid of mandamus is a petition to ask a higher court to order a lower court to do what the law requires them to do. [01:28:54.200 --> 01:28:55.200] I understand. [01:28:55.200 --> 01:28:56.200] And I haven't... [01:28:56.200 --> 01:28:59.200] That is the indicator remedy. [01:28:59.200 --> 01:29:05.200] The lower court, the county court, granted our extension of the moratorium all the way until the first week of September. [01:29:05.200 --> 01:29:10.200] So everything's intact for June, July, and August. [01:29:10.200 --> 01:29:11.200] Okay. [01:29:11.200 --> 01:29:15.200] Now you've got time to go after them. [01:29:15.200 --> 01:29:21.200] Well, I thought about filing the lawsuit against all the officers for keeping everyone... [01:29:21.200 --> 01:29:22.200] Too soon. [01:29:22.200 --> 01:29:23.200] Too soon. [01:29:23.200 --> 01:29:25.200] Follow rid of mandamus. [01:29:25.200 --> 01:29:26.200] Right. [01:29:26.200 --> 01:29:27.200] Yes. [01:29:27.200 --> 01:29:28.200] Okay. [01:29:28.200 --> 01:29:29.200] Right. [01:29:29.200 --> 01:29:30.200] No, I agree with you. [01:29:30.200 --> 01:29:31.200] It is way too soon right now. [01:29:31.200 --> 01:29:38.200] Look that up, rid of mandamus is a lot like an appeal, and it's structured like an appeal because it goes to the court of appeals. [01:29:38.200 --> 01:29:46.200] But just simply ask them to order this court to give you an evidentiary hearing if the law commands it. [01:29:46.200 --> 01:29:47.200] Hang on. [01:29:47.200 --> 01:29:48.200] About to go to our sponsors. [01:29:48.200 --> 01:29:49.200] Ready to tell them. [01:29:49.200 --> 01:29:50.200] That's right. [01:29:50.200 --> 01:29:52.200] Brett Fountain, Wheel of the Radio. [01:29:52.200 --> 01:29:56.200] I'll call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:56.200 --> 01:30:01.200] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.200 --> 01:30:05.200] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. [01:30:05.200 --> 01:30:11.200] If you build an electrical smart grid, the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [01:30:11.200 --> 01:30:15.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht back with the shocking details in a moment. [01:30:15.200 --> 01:30:17.200] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:17.200 --> 01:30:21.200] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.200 --> 01:30:26.200] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.200 --> 01:30:28.200] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.200 --> 01:30:32.200] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.200 --> 01:30:33.200] Privacy. [01:30:33.200 --> 01:30:34.200] It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.200 --> 01:30:41.200] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.200 --> 01:30:45.200] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.200 --> 01:30:52.200] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:52.200 --> 01:30:59.200] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:59.200 --> 01:31:08.200] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will have a field day. [01:31:08.200 --> 01:31:14.200] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:14.200 --> 01:31:18.200] I'd long oppose smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.200 --> 01:31:21.200] The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? [01:31:21.200 --> 01:31:23.200] There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.200 --> 01:31:30.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [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 --> 01:31:44.200] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.200 --> 01:31:49.200] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow first responders have died. [01:31:49.200 --> 01:31:51.200] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.200 --> 01:31:52.200] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.200 --> 01:31:53.200] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:53.200 --> 01:31:54.200] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.200 --> 01:31:56.200] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:56.200 --> 01:31:58.200] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.200 --> 01:32:01.200] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.200 --> 01:32:08.200] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:32:08.200 --> 01:32:13.200] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.200 --> 01:32:18.200] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.200 --> 01:32:20.200] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.200 --> 01:32:26.200] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.200 --> 01:32:31.200] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with 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 reports to the Rule of Law. [01:32:35.200 --> 01:32:41.200] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.200 --> 01:32:45.200] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.200 --> 01:32:51.200] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.200 --> 01:32:56.200] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. [01:32:56.200 --> 01:33:25.200] Today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:26.200 --> 01:33:37.200] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:37.200 --> 01:33:43.200] And Shane, we need to move on. We've got Scott that's been hanging on for two and a half hours. [01:33:43.200 --> 01:33:46.200] Do you have anything else for us, Scott? [01:33:46.200 --> 01:33:49.200] Uh-oh. You mean Shane? [01:33:49.200 --> 01:33:52.200] I'm sorry, Shane. [01:33:52.200 --> 01:33:56.200] Yeah, just one more quick thing. I just want to let besides that, besides that happening, [01:33:56.200 --> 01:34:00.200] I'm responding so quickly after I follow my response and that rule. [01:34:00.200 --> 01:34:05.200] And if anybody's out there, they should take that rule and post it on their wall if they're going through this [01:34:05.200 --> 01:34:10.200] because they love distinction people that are getting close to getting the winning ticket. [01:34:10.200 --> 01:34:14.200] But I got one more last thing. [01:34:14.200 --> 01:34:22.200] Actually, my mom did. She filed a motion to withdraw her adversary proceeding because I filed bankruptcy [01:34:22.200 --> 01:34:26.200] and therefore she lost standing in this adversary proceeding we filed. [01:34:26.200 --> 01:34:29.200] So we filed a motion to withdraw the adversary proceeding. [01:34:29.200 --> 01:34:35.200] And just two days ago after it being dismissed at the appellate court, the bankruptcy court, [01:34:35.200 --> 01:34:39.200] which is the lower court, on his own motion filed an order to show cause [01:34:39.200 --> 01:34:44.200] why the adversary proceedings should not be dismissed, okay? [01:34:44.200 --> 01:34:48.200] And that's all it says, and they're going to have to hearing sometime in July, but it was already dismissed. [01:34:48.200 --> 01:34:53.200] So I'm wondering why this is regarding my mom's bankruptcy case from three years ago. [01:34:53.200 --> 01:35:02.200] Why does he even bother filing it when the appellate court already accepted our motion to withdraw the appeal? [01:35:02.200 --> 01:35:08.200] You should file a subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:35:08.200 --> 01:35:09.200] Yeah. [01:35:09.200 --> 01:35:14.200] It's in the appellate court. The trial court doesn't have any standing to do anything at this point. [01:35:14.200 --> 01:35:17.200] Right. Yeah. [01:35:17.200 --> 01:35:22.200] There's a lot to talk about, but I guess Randy, that's all for right now. [01:35:22.200 --> 01:35:24.200] Okay. Thank you, Shane. [01:35:24.200 --> 01:35:27.200] Okay. Now we're going to go to Scott in Michigan. [01:35:27.200 --> 01:35:29.200] Scott, what have you been up to? [01:35:29.200 --> 01:35:31.200] How's it going, guys? [01:35:31.200 --> 01:35:33.200] Going good. [01:35:33.200 --> 01:35:35.200] Good. Glad to hear it. [01:35:35.200 --> 01:35:41.200] Well, first of all, I just want to say Rose was amazing. [01:35:41.200 --> 01:35:44.200] And I've been a big fan of the Crow since the early days. [01:35:44.200 --> 01:35:51.200] I was probably his number one fan in these parts for the first couple of years that he was doing the show. [01:35:51.200 --> 01:35:56.200] And it was just really neat to see, you know, Rose get behind the mic, [01:35:56.200 --> 01:36:00.200] and I thought she was really interesting and had good things to say [01:36:00.200 --> 01:36:06.200] and was obviously a critical thinker and it was cool. [01:36:06.200 --> 01:36:10.200] Good. She'll be glad to hear that. [01:36:10.200 --> 01:36:12.200] Definitely, definitely. [01:36:12.200 --> 01:36:16.200] And I enjoyed her little plug at the end for all of her, you know, favorite organizations. [01:36:16.200 --> 01:36:19.200] I definitely got a couple of them down to check out later. [01:36:19.200 --> 01:36:21.200] That was cool. [01:36:21.200 --> 01:36:25.200] Yeah. If you want, want a whole list to send me an email and I'll get that to you. [01:36:25.200 --> 01:36:34.200] Man, I thought the Techman was on point two and I thought, you know, everything he said really resonated with my, you know, experience. [01:36:34.200 --> 01:36:39.200] Okay, now let me caution you there. Don't say too much nice about David. [01:36:39.200 --> 01:36:42.200] He's an old jarhead and he'll get the big head. [01:36:42.200 --> 01:36:48.200] And he is still hanging on if you have a question. [01:36:48.200 --> 01:36:50.200] Oh, you're still there? Oops. [01:36:50.200 --> 01:36:54.200] Oh, yeah. Thanks a lot for all the support. [01:36:54.200 --> 01:36:57.200] Thanks, Scott. [01:36:57.200 --> 01:37:03.200] You bet. You know, if somebody who runs an extremely small business, I got a lot out of it. [01:37:03.200 --> 01:37:09.200] You definitely answered a couple of questions that I had in the back of my mind and gave me some really good ideas. [01:37:09.200 --> 01:37:21.200] And Brett, just to get back to your question, the answer is there's no law against being not good at being a businessman. [01:37:21.200 --> 01:37:24.200] If there was, I'd be in jail. [01:37:24.200 --> 01:37:30.200] Yeah. Yeah, I might be running the world's smallest business here. Who knows? [01:37:30.200 --> 01:37:38.200] But yeah, if you put out money on expenses and then don't pull in very much, I mean, you can come out ahead in a weird way. [01:37:38.200 --> 01:37:42.200] So there's something to be gained there. [01:37:42.200 --> 01:37:45.200] You come out ahead by coming out behind. That's the key. [01:37:45.200 --> 01:37:47.200] Yeah, exactly. Exactly. [01:37:47.200 --> 01:37:53.200] That's why that's a really neat point we brought up, because on one of my tax forms, that happened. [01:37:53.200 --> 01:37:57.200] And I was kind of scratching my head, but that's just the way it works, you know? [01:37:57.200 --> 01:38:00.200] You need to make that happen every year consistently. [01:38:00.200 --> 01:38:03.200] Yep. You can do it now. [01:38:03.200 --> 01:38:06.200] I think you sort of made out what the formula would look like to do that. [01:38:06.200 --> 01:38:15.200] I mean, you plan ahead, you take advantage of all the little, I mean, the thing you said about, you know, a $600 cash expense that doesn't need a receipt. [01:38:15.200 --> 01:38:21.200] Absolutely. That's a golden ticket piece of knowledge for somebody like me, you know? [01:38:21.200 --> 01:38:23.200] Yes. [01:38:23.200 --> 01:38:25.200] That's why I definitely appreciated that. [01:38:25.200 --> 01:38:36.200] And then just a little thing about, you know, let the car repair place worry about verifying the mileage by handing your receipt. That's great, you know? [01:38:36.200 --> 01:38:43.200] That's the best way to document the whole mileage all the way through, and then the rest of it is keep track of it as good as you can throughout the year. [01:38:43.200 --> 01:38:50.200] All the cars you have, if you've got more than one car, do it on all of them, and then just add all the mileage together and claim it all. [01:38:50.200 --> 01:38:57.200] You, your wife and kids, everybody, they don't know what car you drove to, what business. [01:38:57.200 --> 01:39:09.200] Yeah, another thing that came out and what you're saying was, you know, the IRS is not as nitpicky about the accuracy of some things as you might think. [01:39:09.200 --> 01:39:18.200] There is a reasonable range of, you know, you do your best to report it as accurately as you can, and that's good enough, you know? [01:39:18.200 --> 01:39:22.200] Okay. David, that is a good point, and you've talked about that before. [01:39:22.200 --> 01:39:24.200] It really is. [01:39:24.200 --> 01:39:31.200] You talked about never fight with the IRS. Will you explain that part? [01:39:31.200 --> 01:39:43.200] Absolutely. The more organized that you can get, Scott, if you end up going in for an audit and you have all your stuff organized on that Schedule C or your business expenses and all that, [01:39:43.200 --> 01:39:54.200] you don't fight with them. They love you for it. That's why I've never lost audit. Every time I've gone into IRS with people, I have them all set up with all of that stuff in order, [01:39:54.200 --> 01:40:03.200] and, you know, at first, when I'd go into IRS, you know, I was with Patriots and they'd throw me out of there. I had them get caught and drag me out before. [01:40:03.200 --> 01:40:12.200] But then, since I started going in and being their buddy, they started thanking me for having the client organized, and I've never lost one. [01:40:12.200 --> 01:40:23.200] They're tickled to death. If you come in there, you make their job easier, they're going to give you what you want, and it's just got easier and easier, it seems like, through the years. [01:40:23.200 --> 01:40:34.200] Yeah, and during the show, people come on the show with a preconceived notion that the IRS agent is out to get you. [01:40:34.200 --> 01:40:48.200] But from my experience in business, the IRS agent is busy. He's got this caseload to get off his desk, and if you help him get a case off his desk, he's going to be a happy camper. [01:40:48.200 --> 01:41:01.200] And that's when I first talked to David about that. That's what I was most taken with, is don't fight with the IRS. Just give them what they want, and they'll gladly sign off for you. [01:41:01.200 --> 01:41:04.200] Yeah, absolutely. They loved me for it. [01:41:04.200 --> 01:41:18.200] Yeah, when I was doing mine, I texted a buddy of mine who knows, and I said, you know, my cell phone bill, the cycle always ends on the 6th of the month, so it's never going to land right on the calendar. I said, do I have to split my phone bills up into 30 pieces and prorate it by day to the month? [01:41:18.200 --> 01:41:30.200] And he was just laughing at me, like, no, bro, that 12 month average would be just fine, you know, which kind of surprised me in a way. I thought it would be more accurate than that, but then everything you said confirmed this new lesson that I just learned. [01:41:30.200 --> 01:41:35.200] That was good. Great. Great. Thank you. [01:41:35.200 --> 01:41:51.200] Yeah, you bet. You bet. And I also thought you did really well with the time that you had to give a good overview of everything in a limited time, kind of just run all the way across the board and back. A good presentation, definitely. [01:41:51.200 --> 01:42:09.200] I had a college professor one time that was teaching Texas history, knew what I did, and he took a day off of class and had me teach this course in his class. So I had outlines from his class where I taught it in the college one time to 30 students, and he had two of his students. [01:42:09.200 --> 01:42:18.200] Mother was the appeals court judge down here in Austin. And so I got, I got a little organized back there when I got ready for that one. [01:42:18.200 --> 01:42:30.200] Thank you very much. I appreciate it. It helped. Yeah, there's a lot, a lot of practical wisdom in that. And that's the comment you hear over and over is why, why don't they teach this to everybody at least in a basic level in school? [01:42:30.200 --> 01:42:38.200] Unless you decide to specialize in that, you don't get any instruction in that. So that point is well taken too. [01:42:38.200 --> 01:42:50.200] And most of the instruction I got in school on it was garbage. Well, they just tell you, pay your taxes, give a job and pay your taxes. [01:42:50.200 --> 01:43:10.200] What's absolutely amazed me the most is I go into these fast food restaurants and every employee, and I've talked to a lot of the fast food restaurant owners, every one of their employees are young kids that they withhold from 2000 to $5,000 each out of their paycheck for a whole year. [01:43:10.200 --> 01:43:24.200] And none of them owe a dime, but none of them know how to get it back. And I asked the employers, he says, I never hear anything about taxes until the kid comes in and says, I need my W2 so I can give it to my mom so she can file taxes. [01:43:24.200 --> 01:43:37.200] They don't know how to get that money back. It would be so simple to do this two page return, they'd get every dime of that back. So people making minimum wage or getting screwed up there and no one's helping them. [01:43:37.200 --> 01:43:49.200] All right, that's it. Okay, hang on. Let's pick this up on the other side. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, here with our special guest, David Lewis. [01:43:49.200 --> 01:44:00.200] And if you don't want to pay taxes, send us an email. We'll be right back. [01:44:00.200 --> 01:44:11.200] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. And it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.200 --> 01:44:25.200] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.200 --> 01:44:31.200] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.200 --> 01:44:39.200] We have come to trust Jevity so much. We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs and many others. 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[01:45:36.200 --> 01:45:45.200] 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. [01:45:45.200 --> 01:45:58.200] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:58.200 --> 01:46:16.200] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:28.200 --> 01:46:57.200] Okay, we are back. Ready to count in Brett Fountain with our radio, and you mentioned something earlier, David, about how many years we can file for back taxes. [01:46:57.200 --> 01:47:12.200] If people have filed and paid their taxes and they didn't know what you know, what can you do to help these people recover some of what they've already paid in? [01:47:12.200 --> 01:47:24.200] Okay, let me give you an idea of how the tax stuff works. Whenever they say you've got to file your taxes by April 15, [01:47:24.200 --> 01:47:33.200] I have a lot of friends that all I tell them to do is fill out an extension form on that day, put three zeros on it, and mail it in. [01:47:33.200 --> 01:47:45.200] It doesn't even require signature. So that gives you a six-month window from April 15 to October 15. So now your taxes aren't due until October 15. [01:47:45.200 --> 01:47:58.200] Now then, if you owed a bunch of money in taxes, they have to give you three more years if you filed a tax return to get it corrected. [01:47:58.200 --> 01:48:10.200] So if you found problems on a tax return, it's not October the 15th of this year that you have to get that thing fixed. You've got three more years to. [01:48:10.200 --> 01:48:20.200] So I have a lot of friends that don't even file taxes until three years after they're supposed to because they know nothing's going to happen. [01:48:20.200 --> 01:48:33.200] Now, if you got a big inheritance and you owed the tax man $20,000 and you didn't pay it this year, then they're going to wait three years. [01:48:33.200 --> 01:48:43.200] In the fourth year, they're going to start writing you nasty letters saying, hey, we know you owe $20,000 from back then, and you have to file that and pay us. [01:48:43.200 --> 01:48:52.200] And what you do is when they send you that nasty letter, I try to teach people do not throw those IRS letters in the trash because when they send your letter, [01:48:52.200 --> 01:49:02.200] they're going to finally say, hey, we've got you on paper, oh, and $20,000. And if you don't file your taxes, we're going to file them for you with all the penalties and interest. [01:49:02.200 --> 01:49:18.200] And at that point, at that point, three to four years later, you can file your original tax return and fill out the schedule C and show them that you don't owe any taxes and send it in and wipe every bit of that out. [01:49:18.200 --> 01:49:34.200] If you can file the taxes, even if it's four years late, and you show that they owe you $1, they owe you $1 in tax refund that wipes out all the penalties and interest forever. [01:49:34.200 --> 01:49:38.200] Now, that's a little nugget of information that people don't know. [01:49:38.200 --> 01:49:50.200] Now then, because of that three-year period, they have to keep taxes that you file open for three years. So if you had filed taxes every year and you file current this year, [01:49:50.200 --> 01:49:58.200] 20-20 taxes like you're supposed to, you can go back for the last three years and refile taxes. [01:49:58.200 --> 01:50:15.200] Now, if you filed an actual 1040 form on your taxes, but you want to go back and refile to get money back that you now know that you didn't know, then you have to use a different form that's called a 1040X. [01:50:15.200 --> 01:50:32.200] A 1040X form is what I show people how to file for past taxes because you can't file another 1040. You've already filed that. That closed the tax year, so you filed a 1040X as a correction form and it has three columns on it. [01:50:32.200 --> 01:50:44.200] How much the information was that you filed on your original return up to three years ago? How much you're filing now and what is the difference and how much refund are you payment? [01:50:44.200 --> 01:50:57.200] So you can do that and go back three years. Now then, if you've been filing, if you've been fighting with IRS over taxes, they claimed Joe four or five, six years ago and you're fighting back and forth with them on that, [01:50:57.200 --> 01:51:06.200] the IRS still fighting you is keeping the door open for you to go back and refile these taxes. [01:51:06.200 --> 01:51:17.200] So you can even go past the three years if they're keeping the file open and it's a bad reason. Okay, Randy, you know my friend down here, Larry. [01:51:17.200 --> 01:51:24.200] He came to me and said, man, they're saying he owes $5,000 from 2003. [01:51:24.200 --> 01:51:29.200] You're talking about the guy that drank all my red beer? [01:51:29.200 --> 01:51:39.200] Yes, absolutely. This is why he drank it. They're sending him money saying he owes $5,000 from 2003. [01:51:39.200 --> 01:51:48.200] So what I did is I went back, he said he didn't even file tax. Well, what did they do? 2003, he was supposed to file in 2004. [01:51:48.200 --> 01:52:03.200] He didn't because he didn't. What he did, he was a contractor and he was fixing someone's house, went in, put in a bid and so the insurance company came and sent him a check for $12,000. [01:52:03.200 --> 01:52:08.200] Since Larry was a contractor, they made it out to Larry and the homeowner. [01:52:08.200 --> 01:52:18.200] So Larry goes like a nice guy, signs the check, goes to the homeowner and says, okay, here's the money that I got you on the insurance. [01:52:18.200 --> 01:52:25.200] Here's the check they sent. When do I start? They said, oh, you start next week. He said, okay. Well, he gives them the check. [01:52:25.200 --> 01:52:31.200] They went and cashed the check and kept it and when he got there, they said, blow off. We're not going to let you do the work. [01:52:31.200 --> 01:52:41.200] Well, the check was made out to Larry's name and theirs. So they 1099 Larry and said he made $12,000. He never got a dime of that money. [01:52:41.200 --> 01:52:48.200] So since there was a $10,000 or $12,000 check in his name, they audited. [01:52:48.200 --> 01:52:58.200] They four years later, they filed a tax return for him saying he owes money and taxes for that and he owes those security and income for on it. [01:52:58.200 --> 01:53:07.200] Well, I finally filed his tax return, wiped all that out. Now, we just did this a couple years ago. That was a 2003 return. That's 15 years later. [01:53:07.200 --> 01:53:17.200] And I ended up getting him a refund of nearly $1,000 and he never filed or did anything. [01:53:17.200 --> 01:53:25.200] And so that's a wild story, but that's how you can go both directions. You can go back with back taxes if you're fighting with them or you can go forward. [01:53:25.200 --> 01:53:30.200] Depending on if IRS is, you're in some kind of trouble with them. [01:53:30.200 --> 01:53:31.200] Okay? [01:53:31.200 --> 01:53:41.200] So, David, when you are going back three years or more if they're holding the door open, is this applicable only to years that you filed? [01:53:41.200 --> 01:53:50.200] Or can it also be years where they did this automatic, the ASFR thing, substitute for return? [01:53:50.200 --> 01:53:58.200] Can it be the 1040X that goes back and does a correction for that as well? [01:53:58.200 --> 01:54:04.200] Yes, if it's still open, but are you talking about for someone who never filed a start with? [01:54:04.200 --> 01:54:05.200] Right. [01:54:05.200 --> 01:54:09.200] Or are you talking about someone who did file a 1040? [01:54:09.200 --> 01:54:18.200] Someone who did not file a 1040, but the IRS decided that it needed to be filed and they did this automatic substitute for a return. [01:54:18.200 --> 01:54:21.200] Okay, that's exactly what happened to Larry. [01:54:21.200 --> 01:54:28.200] He never even filed because he never got that money, so I took him to IRS and I said, you tell me how much money he made. [01:54:28.200 --> 01:54:40.200] They told me, or they said this $12,000 check, so I went in and printed a 2003 1040, filled it out for him with a schedule C, showed all his mileage, [01:54:40.200 --> 01:54:46.200] wiped out all the penalties and interest and all the money that he said that he owed, knocked out the $5,000 and he got a refund check. [01:54:46.200 --> 01:54:51.200] Off an original return filed 15 years later. [01:54:51.200 --> 01:55:00.200] In fact, we even got John Corman, the senator down here to jump all over the IRS and they got them nervous the month after he got his check from them. [01:55:00.200 --> 01:55:03.200] They sent him another check just like it. [01:55:03.200 --> 01:55:05.200] He cashed it too. [01:55:05.200 --> 01:55:08.200] They never said a word about it. [01:55:08.200 --> 01:55:13.200] I love it. [01:55:13.200 --> 01:55:18.200] When you see him, you tell him he needs to replace my red beer. [01:55:18.200 --> 01:55:21.200] What are you talking about? [01:55:21.200 --> 01:55:39.200] I called him the other day and told him that I was yet not licked from the IRS and we've been going over your income tax return for the last couple of years and quite frankly, Mr. Nelson, you're screwed. [01:55:39.200 --> 01:55:43.200] It's about 20 minutes to call me. [01:55:43.200 --> 01:55:48.200] He did not think that was as funny as I did. [01:55:48.200 --> 01:55:50.200] Did he tell you his story boy? [01:55:50.200 --> 01:55:51.200] That's his story though. [01:55:51.200 --> 01:55:52.200] I love it. [01:55:52.200 --> 01:55:53.200] He got two checks. [01:55:53.200 --> 01:56:01.200] He gave me one of them for getting them off his back for 15 years. [01:56:01.200 --> 01:56:03.200] God, what a mess. [01:56:03.200 --> 01:56:11.200] The thing I've always liked about David is he's an old Marine and they think different. [01:56:11.200 --> 01:56:19.200] They tend not to follow the rules quite as close so they don't really get far away from them. [01:56:19.200 --> 01:56:23.200] They just learn how to use them and manipulate them. [01:56:23.200 --> 01:56:30.200] And the thing I like the best is he says don't fight with the IRS. [01:56:30.200 --> 01:56:35.200] You can't win with the IRS. [01:56:35.200 --> 01:56:39.200] Make friends with them, get a good deal and get on down the road having fun. [01:56:39.200 --> 01:56:42.200] If you're not having fun, you're not doing it right. [01:56:42.200 --> 01:56:44.200] Exactly. [01:56:44.200 --> 01:56:49.200] So Scott, let's see, let's unmute Scott. [01:56:49.200 --> 01:56:55.200] So one thing I didn't hear about, what happened to your traffic tickets that you were working on? [01:56:55.200 --> 01:57:00.200] Oh yeah, yeah, well I was going to say a brief bit about arraignment. [01:57:00.200 --> 01:57:04.200] Brett, a minute ago there you reminded me of somebody who calls into a radio show and says, [01:57:04.200 --> 01:57:10.200] I'm asking hypothetically for a friend but you know it's about them. [01:57:10.200 --> 01:57:17.200] Anyway, it went really well. [01:57:17.200 --> 01:57:24.200] In your experience, how long would you say that a typical arraignment would last in a minute? [01:57:24.200 --> 01:57:26.200] Five minutes. [01:57:26.200 --> 01:57:33.200] Arraignment is a hearing for the purpose of determining the identity of the accused and taking a plea. [01:57:33.200 --> 01:57:44.200] But in traffic, they call it an arraignment but it's really a meet with the prosecutor and let him threaten you into a deal hearing. [01:57:44.200 --> 01:57:51.200] And here in Texas where I'm getting my Texas site back up, it should be up this week. [01:57:51.200 --> 01:57:54.200] And we're going to hammer these guys. [01:57:54.200 --> 01:58:00.200] I went to Southlake, Texas and they summoned 58 people there for this hearing. [01:58:00.200 --> 01:58:05.200] But in Texas they're not allowed to hold an arraignment in a classy misdemeanor. [01:58:05.200 --> 01:58:15.200] So I filed 58 felony charges against the prosecuting attorney and it was her first day. [01:58:15.200 --> 01:58:20.200] So welcome to the deep end of the pool. [01:58:20.200 --> 01:58:23.200] Tell her about that in law school. [01:58:23.200 --> 01:58:26.200] I bet they didn't. [01:58:26.200 --> 01:58:30.200] This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:58:30.200 --> 01:58:38.200] We'll be back next week, next Thursday and Friday at our regular time at 8 o'clock Central. [01:58:38.200 --> 01:58:50.200] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:59:08.200 --> 01:59:11.200] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. 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