[00:00.000 --> 00:07.040] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:07.040 --> 00:13.440] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals, Gold at $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.440 --> 00:21.760] Silver $16.45 an ounce, Copper $2.75 an ounce, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crude [00:21.760 --> 00:29.960] $62.47 a barrel, and Cryptos in order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.960 --> 00:41.720] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a Crypto Coin. [00:46.120 --> 00:52.680] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a Thai suitcase bomb was detonated [00:52.680 --> 00:58.440] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and [00:58.440 --> 01:07.640] entering 40 today in history. And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill [01:07.640 --> 01:12.840] 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, [01:12.840 --> 01:17.320] including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and [01:17.320 --> 01:21.800] even refusing to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or [01:21.800 --> 01:26.920] the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District [01:26.920 --> 01:30.840] Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and [01:30.840 --> 01:35.560] delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials, [01:35.560 --> 01:39.560] including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on [01:39.560 --> 01:44.600] Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate [01:44.600 --> 01:51.240] a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney [01:51.240 --> 01:57.480] in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:57.480 --> 02:02.920] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However, the issue [02:02.920 --> 02:07.720] was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, [02:07.720 --> 02:12.120] who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based [02:12.120 --> 02:16.120] on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, [02:16.120 --> 02:25.160] the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five [02:25.160 --> 02:30.120] and a half inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [02:30.120 --> 02:35.640] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [02:35.640 --> 02:41.000] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper, the [02:41.000 --> 02:48.120] shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure [02:48.120 --> 03:12.120] and prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Book Roadie with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [03:48.120 --> 03:52.920] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, and we're starting out with [03:52.920 --> 04:00.760] a real problem today. Before the show started, I was talking to Brett and he forgot to tell [04:00.760 --> 04:08.840] me what day and year it was. Did I forget to tell you or did I tell you and then you forgot? [04:10.040 --> 04:17.560] I don't remember. Just checking. Okay, Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio on this [04:17.560 --> 04:28.600] the 28 Thursday, the 28th day of October, 2021. And I'm going to start out with by turning the [04:28.600 --> 04:37.240] phone lines on. So if you have a question or a comment, give us a call 512-646-1984. [04:38.280 --> 04:45.480] Was that the right number, Brett, or did I forget? You got it. I got it. Okay, I need to take some [04:45.480 --> 04:52.200] more of that stuff from my memory. Do you remember what that was? I was at the Republic of Texas. [04:52.200 --> 04:58.360] I did a presentation there and the ex-president, after the presentation, he came up to me and he [04:58.360 --> 05:07.240] said, man, I don't believe how you can remember all of those codes the way you do. And I said, [05:07.240 --> 05:11.800] oh, well, that's because I got something I take from my memory. And he said, well, what is it? [05:11.800 --> 05:24.680] And it just was gone. It was there before he said that and it was gone. I lost it for the second. [05:25.400 --> 05:37.160] And he said, that is not a good recommendation. It was zinc, okay. Anyway, I do have something [05:37.160 --> 05:47.880] I want to talk about. I am taking on the district attorney, trying to do something very strategic. [05:47.880 --> 05:54.680] Tina Colbrook and Brett put together some criminal complaints and Tina filed them [05:54.680 --> 06:00.200] with the Tarrant County District Attorney and they investigated them for a year. And then all of a [06:00.200 --> 06:06.200] sudden, I guess they decided they didn't want to take on a high level ex-public official with a lot [06:06.200 --> 06:12.040] of money. So they sent Tina a letter saying that they didn't have jurisdiction. Well, she [06:12.040 --> 06:19.480] filed criminal charges against a public official, a no-republic, who is a quasi-public official [06:20.520 --> 06:28.600] because the no-republic in Travis County refused to provide her no-republic lender. [06:28.600 --> 06:38.040] Well, that is a statutory requirement. The only place in the United States in the world [06:38.760 --> 06:46.920] that could have jurisdiction over that issue is Travis County. And they sent Tina a letter saying [06:46.920 --> 06:52.840] they didn't have jurisdiction. So they weren't going to pursue any of her complaints. So I prepared [06:52.840 --> 07:01.240] a criminal complaint against the prosecutor and his head of his public integrity unit, accusing [07:01.240 --> 07:09.960] them of shielding all of these individuals, including a public official from prosecution, [07:11.880 --> 07:16.520] for criminal conspiracy to commit, official oppression, [07:16.520 --> 07:23.320] and simulating a legal process, not going to have a dozen complaints. And I put those in an [07:23.320 --> 07:34.920] envelope in a post office type, the cardboard envelope they've got, that when you seal it, [07:34.920 --> 07:40.120] the only way to open is to pull the string and rip the seal off. Well, I put it in one of those [07:40.120 --> 07:46.040] and gave it to the head investigator for the District Attorney's Office because she was only [07:46.040 --> 07:54.200] person in the building and told her, this is for the Foreman of the Grand Jury. Do not open it. [07:55.560 --> 08:03.720] Tell your boss, do not open it. It's a trap. Well, I put on a cover letter that asked the [08:03.720 --> 08:08.280] Foreman of the Grand Jury to email me. Let me know he received this. Well, I didn't get that email. [08:08.280 --> 08:17.320] Hmm, you believe that surprise? I couldn't believe it. Didn't get what the world could [08:17.320 --> 08:21.560] have happened. Well, surely the prostitution attorney didn't open that document after I [08:21.560 --> 08:28.280] told him not to. Oh, even after I told him like that. Yeah, I mean, told him it was a trap. [08:28.280 --> 08:38.920] So what do we do now, Brett? You know, I could file criminal charges against the DA with the [08:38.920 --> 08:44.520] Attorney General and the Attorney General acts like he has prosecutorial powers, but he doesn't. [08:46.280 --> 08:52.040] And by Constitution, the only public officials who can prosecute are [08:52.040 --> 09:02.680] county and county attorneys and district attorneys. Now, the legislature created [09:04.920 --> 09:11.000] municipal courts and allowed them to have their own attorneys, but the Constitution didn't do that. [09:11.000 --> 09:18.360] The legislature did. The legislature only contemplated in an elected county attorney [09:18.360 --> 09:25.400] and an elected district attorney. Those are the only ones that can prosecute. An assisted [09:26.520 --> 09:32.360] prosecuting attorney can assist those, but it is the elected official who has the power [09:33.160 --> 09:42.440] to prosecute nobody else. So I filed these complaints and asked them to prosecute. [09:42.440 --> 09:47.960] And what they're required, what prosecutors required to do when they made known the [09:47.960 --> 09:54.680] crime has been committed. If it's a felony in the code, they're required to give the complaint [09:55.720 --> 10:02.680] to the grand jury. Well, this has some felonies in it. And they didn't give them to the grand jury. [10:02.680 --> 10:12.520] There is nothing in Texas law. Let me step back. There's nothing in Texas [10:13.880 --> 10:23.160] statute or Constitution that authorizes a prosecuting attorney to exercise prosecutorial [10:23.160 --> 10:33.000] discretion. Now, there is case law that allows it, but that case law is in contravention to [10:33.000 --> 10:42.840] Constitution. The prosecuting attorney is a member of the executive branch. The magistrates [10:43.560 --> 10:52.120] are members of the judicial branch and the Constitution contemplated and specifically [10:52.120 --> 11:00.920] stated that anytime someone's arrested, they're to be taken directly to the nearest magistrate. [11:02.600 --> 11:08.360] And the magistrate is to hold an examining trial under Chapter 16 and make a determination [11:08.360 --> 11:16.680] probable cause. The only people, the only officials in Texas who could make a determination [11:16.680 --> 11:22.520] probable cause are magistrates. Now, I know somebody's thinking, well, judges can do that. Well, [11:23.400 --> 11:31.400] all judges are magistrates. When the judge makes a determination of probable cause after [11:31.400 --> 11:37.720] examined into a criminal accusation, he doesn't do that as a judge. Does that as magistrate? [11:39.000 --> 11:46.280] The only one who can initiate a prosecution is a magistrate. The only one who can [11:46.280 --> 11:54.920] dismiss a prosecution is a trial judge. Nobody else in law has authorized to do that. [11:55.640 --> 12:01.080] Nobody else in Constitution or Black Letter law, but we have some case law that says they can do it. [12:02.040 --> 12:06.600] Well, as far as I'm concerned, I'm good to take a look at that case law and just at least, even [12:06.600 --> 12:11.720] though we know that there's the constitutional challenge to it, maybe even just take a look at [12:11.720 --> 12:21.080] what would be on point in their perspective. Yes, how did they get there? And does that [12:21.080 --> 12:31.560] case law address everything in general or is it tightly focused on a particular issue? [12:32.840 --> 12:40.360] But as I recall reading it, it was pretty general. They decided in the interest of justice. [12:40.360 --> 12:49.800] Oh, this is one where they authorized themselves. Exactly. No, the judicial officers authorized [12:49.800 --> 12:59.160] an officer in the executive to exercise that authority. How does that even enter into their [12:59.160 --> 13:05.720] brain? That's a good question. Why don't you come out on paper where you embarrass them? [13:05.720 --> 13:11.000] Yeah, and I've got a brief in there and it talks about this and it says, you know, Texas law [13:11.960 --> 13:18.600] has been in place for 150 years and it's been adjusted and tweaked for a long time. [13:19.720 --> 13:27.480] And Texas law is a subset or a derivative of federal law and federal law has been in place [13:27.480 --> 13:36.760] and been adjusted and tweaked for 245 years. And Texas law is a derivative of English law [13:36.760 --> 13:48.200] and it's been in place for 800 years. And over that period of time, we have developed an incredibly [13:48.200 --> 13:58.520] sophisticated and well-structured legal system. And the courts said in Kennedy v. State, in order [13:58.520 --> 14:06.200] to avoid the obvious evils of the accumulation of power in any one office for the purpose of [14:06.200 --> 14:13.960] initiating a criminal prosecution, a prosecuting attorney is not a credible person. Clearly, [14:13.960 --> 14:23.720] a prosecutor cannot initiate a prosecution. If he does not trust him, they absolutely do not trust [14:23.720 --> 14:32.840] him. Not only did they forbid him to do that, they created a grand jury for this specific purpose [14:33.720 --> 14:41.560] of protecting us all from the prosecuting attorney to ensure that a prosecuting attorney [14:41.560 --> 14:47.560] did not get to decide who gets prosecuted and who does not. They got magistrates and grand juries [14:47.560 --> 14:55.800] for that purpose. The only purpose of the grand jury was to protect the public from the prosecutor [14:57.240 --> 15:04.200] so that we didn't wind up in a police state, the exact police state we have right now. [15:04.200 --> 15:12.840] Yeah. So prosecutors always felt like, well, we don't want to have to prosecute. So we should [15:12.840 --> 15:18.200] be the ones to decide whether or not there's sufficient evidence to warrant a prosecution. [15:19.240 --> 15:29.960] And our founders said absolutely not. In Kennedy v. State, they made it real clear the [15:29.960 --> 15:37.160] obvious evils of the accumulation of power. They put grand juries in to limit the power of the [15:37.160 --> 15:44.680] prosecuting attorney. They did not intend that a prosecuting attorney should make this determination. [15:46.120 --> 15:52.840] It is abundantly clear. So I filed criminal complaints against a district attorney, [15:53.640 --> 15:59.400] gave to the district attorney in the folder directed to the grand jury. So what I'm trying [15:59.400 --> 16:06.280] to do is soften up the district attorney. I've got complaints I want him to actually give [16:06.280 --> 16:14.280] to the grand jury. So now I've got Tina's complaints that he didn't give to the grand jury. So I'm [16:14.280 --> 16:23.240] going after him criminally. And when I file a complaint against him, I'm looking at filing it [16:23.240 --> 16:31.320] with a district court so that I can ask the district court to petition the head administrative [16:31.320 --> 16:36.680] judge of the district to appoint another district judge to convene the court of inquiry. [16:38.040 --> 16:43.640] Courts of inquiry, as far as I can tell, are just something to black somebody's eye and make them [16:43.640 --> 16:50.440] look bad. I don't see any reason for it to be there. Other than to drag somebody in front of [16:50.440 --> 16:55.720] the court and beat him up in public. But we got it. So I want to use it. And when we come back [16:55.720 --> 17:06.440] on the other side, I'll talk about how we intend to use that. It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network [17:06.440 --> 17:13.160] annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com [17:13.160 --> 17:18.440] and enter to win. Any amount is appreciated. Everything helps to keep us on the air. From [17:18.440 --> 17:25.320] Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. More prizes [17:25.320 --> 17:31.480] and sponsors to be announced. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. When you purchase Randy [17:31.480 --> 17:37.720] Kelton's ebook, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar [17:37.720 --> 17:43.880] and get 10 chances to win. If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser [17:43.880 --> 17:49.480] so we can keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. We also accept [17:49.480 --> 17:55.880] Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to [17:55.880 --> 18:03.880] LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our [18:03.880 --> 18:10.200] lineup for the new year. Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 [18:10.200 --> 18:17.000] p.m. Central Time. Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5.16. Let your light so shine before men [18:17.000 --> 18:22.200] that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to [18:22.200 --> 18:27.960] reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for [18:27.960 --> 18:33.640] both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and [18:33.640 --> 18:39.640] good works. Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [18:39.640 --> 18:45.880] one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine [18:45.880 --> 18:51.880] as well as Christian character development. So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadio [18:51.880 --> 18:58.600] Network.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating [18:58.600 --> 19:10.920] discussion of the Scriptures. [19:28.920 --> 19:47.160] Let your light shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [19:47.160 --> 19:55.720] which is in the book of Matthew 5.16. Let your light shine before men that they may see your good works [19:55.720 --> 20:13.400] Okay, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Ruev Law Radio, and what I'm trying to do is kind [20:13.400 --> 20:15.800] of strategize, how's the best way to do this? [20:15.800 --> 20:21.760] Now, we do this show and if you listen very long, you're well aware that we don't have [20:21.760 --> 20:26.800] any problem getting criminal complaints we can file against public officials. [20:26.800 --> 20:30.120] They're very accommodating in that regard. [20:30.120 --> 20:32.280] Yes, they are. [20:32.280 --> 20:38.760] And I've spoke to this before saying it's not enough just to have criminal charges [20:38.760 --> 20:39.760] you can file. [20:39.760 --> 20:40.760] You need to be creative. [20:40.760 --> 20:45.520] You need to figure out what your intended outcome is and then see if you can use these [20:45.520 --> 20:47.080] charges to bring them there. [20:47.080 --> 20:55.560] Well, what my outcome is, is I've got a complaint that I want to file against the U.S. Attorney [20:55.560 --> 20:56.560] General. [20:56.560 --> 21:03.960] He issued an order to his FBI that if someone goes to a school board meeting and they speak [21:03.960 --> 21:11.680] badly about masks and vaccines, they should be treated as an enemy of the stage. [21:11.680 --> 21:19.400] So I'm intimidated, I'm going down to Austin and I want to go to the Round Rock Independent [21:19.400 --> 21:27.520] School District School Board and ream their behinds about their mask and vaccine policies. [21:27.520 --> 21:34.760] But heck, I'm afraid to do that because the U.S. Attorney General is likely to stick the [21:34.760 --> 21:36.360] feds on me. [21:36.360 --> 21:47.000] Well, the way I read the codes, that is chilling my access to a public meeting. [21:47.000 --> 21:50.840] That's a crime in the state of Texas. [21:50.840 --> 21:56.840] Not in the fed, but in the state of Texas and under Rook Feldman, the fact that he's [21:56.840 --> 22:04.320] in Washington, D.C. when he commits that crime, I'm afraid to go to the school board meeting [22:04.320 --> 22:10.080] in Round Rock, Texas, Travis County. [22:10.080 --> 22:16.760] So I intend to file with the Travis County District Attorney a criminal complaint against [22:16.760 --> 22:18.920] the U.S. Attorney General. [22:18.920 --> 22:19.920] Okay. [22:19.920 --> 22:25.840] Can I ask you about jurisdiction there? [22:25.840 --> 22:36.280] Because earlier we were talking about Tina not being able to go after somebody who wasn't [22:36.280 --> 22:44.800] physically in Texas, he's the principal and his agent was in Texas doing his dirty deeds. [22:44.800 --> 22:54.480] And here we have the principal doing something in Washington, D.C. declaring this that causes [22:54.480 --> 23:00.720] you harm and he's not physically in Texas either, but how does the jurisdiction connect [23:00.720 --> 23:01.720] or not connect? [23:01.720 --> 23:05.720] Where do we draw that line? [23:05.720 --> 23:06.720] What is it? [23:06.720 --> 23:07.720] What is it? [23:07.720 --> 23:11.800] Connections, International Shoe. [23:11.800 --> 23:21.920] The Attorney General, and this may work for Mnukin as well, the Attorney General conspired [23:21.920 --> 23:34.920] with his FBI agents who are in Texas to come into a Texas school board and chill my access [23:34.920 --> 23:37.000] to a Texas law. [23:37.000 --> 23:44.040] Yeah, and the harm occurred to you in Texas, his agents in Texas. [23:44.040 --> 23:52.000] And he sent those agents in Texas and that gives him minimum contacts required by International [23:52.000 --> 23:54.280] Shoe. [23:54.280 --> 24:04.360] So I can essentially file against his FBI agents as respondent, I'm sorry, file against him [24:04.360 --> 24:15.920] because of the very presence of his FBI agents as respondent superior. [24:15.920 --> 24:26.840] So I want him extradited to Texas to stand trial for chilling my access to a public meeting. [24:26.840 --> 24:27.840] But you know... [24:27.840 --> 24:32.160] He had to hold him in jail while the governor of Texas thinks about that. [24:32.160 --> 24:33.160] Absolutely. [24:33.160 --> 24:34.160] He should be held. [24:34.160 --> 24:35.160] There's a flight risk. [24:35.160 --> 24:38.040] He should be held without bail. [24:38.040 --> 24:41.960] But imagine what the prosecutor's attorney is going to say. [24:41.960 --> 24:45.840] He's a Democrat, Attorney General is a Democrat. [24:45.840 --> 24:48.520] He's not going to want to do that. [24:48.520 --> 24:56.520] So how do I encourage the district attorney to give my complaint to the grand jury? [24:56.520 --> 25:02.040] What I'm going to tell the district attorney is, look, under 2.03, you don't have any option. [25:02.040 --> 25:05.280] You must give it to the grand jury. [25:05.280 --> 25:08.720] But there's nothing that says you have to agree with it. [25:08.720 --> 25:12.520] You do have to give it to them, but you don't have to agree with it. [25:12.520 --> 25:20.560] So you're perfectly at your liberty and within the scope of your employment to go in there [25:20.560 --> 25:25.040] and argue against indictment. [25:25.040 --> 25:29.880] And that works for me because I don't want him indicted in the first place. [25:29.880 --> 25:36.880] I want him to realize that he can be, that he can issue that BS order in Washington, [25:36.880 --> 25:43.880] D.C. and I can jerk him down here to Podunk, Texas and wind his clock. [25:43.880 --> 25:45.880] Thank you. [25:45.880 --> 25:47.880] Thank me? [25:47.880 --> 25:49.880] That's great. [25:49.880 --> 25:54.960] So it's strategy. [25:54.960 --> 25:56.800] I'm trying to develop a strategy. [25:56.800 --> 26:08.800] So how do I get the prosecuting attorney to throw somebody else under the bus? [26:08.800 --> 26:16.720] And I'm trying to do it by throwing him under the bus and indicate to him that if you do [26:16.720 --> 26:23.600] this, you're the one going to the grand jury, not them. [26:23.600 --> 26:27.520] So I'm trying to figure out how to apply the most pressure. [26:27.520 --> 26:35.480] Do I go to the Republican district attorney in Williamson County and ask him to hold an [26:35.480 --> 26:42.760] examining trial and then petition for a court of inquiry, and then we drag him up in front [26:42.760 --> 26:49.160] of this court of inquiry in front of all of the newspapers and all the cameras, or do [26:49.160 --> 26:56.680] I go to Travis County where all the district judges are Democrats and file with all those [26:56.680 --> 27:03.280] judges and then take all of those judges and the district attorney to Williamson County? [27:03.280 --> 27:06.320] Yeah, because you know they're not going to do it. [27:06.320 --> 27:10.400] So knowing that, you don't go in there and feel betrayed about it. [27:10.400 --> 27:14.160] You don't go in there knowing that that's what they're going to do. [27:14.160 --> 27:19.440] But my take on it is I'm playing them like a cheap fiddle. [27:19.440 --> 27:25.840] I've already done that to the Chief Justice and the presiding judge at the Court of Criminal [27:25.840 --> 27:26.840] Appeals. [27:26.840 --> 27:37.640] I'm banging all these guys at the top, and I'm in a unique position because I'm nobody. [27:37.640 --> 27:42.360] Yeah, I got this radio show, but these guys, I don't mean anything, but essentially I'm [27:42.360 --> 27:45.080] nobody. [27:45.080 --> 27:50.080] That's the unique position I'm in that gives me this unique power. [27:50.080 --> 27:56.960] I am a citizen in a republic, and all of them answer to me. [27:56.960 --> 28:06.000] So I want the prosecutor to think, do I throw myself under the bus for this manukin guy, [28:06.000 --> 28:14.320] these others that are claimed, or would it be more politically expedient for me to go [28:14.320 --> 28:19.480] ahead and file this with the grand jury and then go into the grand jury and argue against [28:19.480 --> 28:20.480] the presentment? [28:20.480 --> 28:26.160] So you know, guys, I don't have any discretion here. [28:26.160 --> 28:27.960] I got this complaint from a citizen. [28:27.960 --> 28:30.920] I have to give it to you. [28:30.920 --> 28:35.960] But frankly, I think this is a bunch of crapola, it's a waste of everybody's time. [28:35.960 --> 28:37.280] There's not sufficient evidence. [28:37.280 --> 28:43.760] I could never get a conviction on a complaint like this, so I'm going to ask you to no bill. [28:43.760 --> 28:45.000] He can do that. [28:45.000 --> 28:56.520] And if he did that, that would be fine with me because everybody in government knows that [28:56.520 --> 29:02.520] the grand jury is always a crapshoot. [29:02.520 --> 29:07.960] My prosecutor walked in his office, he's sitting with his head in his hand, I said, Greg, what's [29:07.960 --> 29:08.960] the matter? [29:08.960 --> 29:12.160] And he looked up at me with his full-horned look. [29:12.160 --> 29:18.080] Those darn grand jurors, you never know what they're going to do. [29:18.080 --> 29:26.000] Yes, I held up both hands, looked up at the ceiling and said, there is a God. [29:26.000 --> 29:31.480] Don't want them indicted, it's not my place to want them indicted, it's my place to report [29:31.480 --> 29:34.400] crime. [29:34.400 --> 29:39.320] What I want is them to have to face the prospect of being indicted. [29:39.320 --> 29:44.520] We leave them in office, get their attention, and they start doing it right. [29:44.520 --> 29:48.000] They stop breaking all these laws because their boss told them to. [29:48.000 --> 29:50.360] That's my purpose. [29:50.360 --> 29:54.800] So how do I get the prosecuting attorney to throw these guys under the bus and still [29:54.800 --> 29:56.240] throw it himself under? [29:56.240 --> 30:02.160] Hang on, Randy Colton, Brent Fountain, we'll be right back. [30:02.160 --> 30:06.720] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe, but [30:06.720 --> 30:11.560] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.560 --> 30:16.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.320 --> 30:17.880] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.880 --> 30:21.480] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.480 --> 30:26.240] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.240 --> 30:31.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.200 --> 30:34.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:34.000 --> 30:38.320] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:38.320 --> 30:41.800] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.800 --> 30:45.520] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.520 --> 30:50.280] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.280 --> 30:54.760] your personal information, but what happens if it escapes their control? [30:54.760 --> 30:56.120] It's not an idle question. [30:56.120 --> 31:01.560] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [31:01.560 --> 31:03.920] breached by hackers in the last year. [31:03.920 --> 31:07.720] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com. [31:07.720 --> 31:12.200] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [31:12.200 --> 31:15.880] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals [31:15.880 --> 31:16.880] to see. [31:16.880 --> 31:18.360] The cupboard would be bare. [31:18.360 --> 31:21.440] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [31:21.440 --> 31:51.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.400 --> 32:09.720] I'll take it as well. [32:09.720 --> 32:13.800] a free society then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those [32:13.800 --> 32:17.000] rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own [32:17.000 --> 32:21.000] private capacity and most importantly the right to due process of law. Traffic courts [32:21.000 --> 32:25.000] afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights [32:25.000 --> 32:28.800] through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law [32:28.800 --> 32:32.280] Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you [32:32.280 --> 32:36.320] understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get [32:36.320 --> 32:40.360] your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering [32:40.360 --> 32:44.320] your copy today. By ordering now you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation [32:44.320 --> 32:48.800] Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. Hundreds of [32:48.800 --> 32:52.480] research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights [32:52.480 --> 32:57.120] with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can [32:57.120 --> 33:03.040] have free society we all want and deserve. [33:03.040 --> 33:10.040] LogosRadio Network.com [33:33.040 --> 33:59.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. That's enough strategizing [33:59.040 --> 34:09.120] this show. If you got any comments on how I might be able to do this, email me. My [34:09.120 --> 34:18.200] email is randy at ruleoflawradio.com. Give me your thoughts on how best to put the district [34:18.200 --> 34:28.800] attorney in a position so that he has to weigh the consequences of his behavior. Do you [34:28.800 --> 34:35.920] care about manukin enough to risk having me file criminal charges against you and potentially [34:35.920 --> 34:42.200] to get you in front of a grand jury? Or would you rather just go ahead and throw this guy [34:42.200 --> 34:49.920] under the bus, file him with the grand jury and then talk the jury out of indicting him? [34:49.920 --> 34:54.800] Because what I'm really after is I've got some complaints I'm going to, I don't have [34:54.800 --> 35:03.720] yet but I'm going to have them with a municipality on the edge of Austin. And when I file against [35:03.720 --> 35:10.840] these guys, I want them to know that I'm hammering the district attorney and the district judges [35:10.840 --> 35:19.400] that I'm already beating them up and see if I can encourage the prosecutor not to shield [35:19.400 --> 35:25.560] my complaints from the grand jury but to give them to the grand jury. Just do your job. [35:25.560 --> 35:30.960] Just do your job. Do what the code says. Do these of office. That's it. Yeah. I'm saying [35:30.960 --> 35:40.640] you don't have any judicial discretion and if you attempt to exercise judicial discretion, [35:40.640 --> 35:48.360] I'm going to take you to the courts. And you're not going to want this to go to the courts [35:48.360 --> 35:54.320] because they've done the research. Prosecutors have been forbidden to do this. The courts [35:54.320 --> 36:02.400] have let them do it. If I get a ruling in my favor, every prosecutor in the state is [36:02.400 --> 36:10.400] forbidden to dismiss a prosecution. They have to go to the judge and ask permission. A prosecution [36:10.400 --> 36:17.720] is commenced when a citizen, a credible person files a criminal complaint with either the [36:17.720 --> 36:24.000] prosecutor or a magistrate. The prosecution has commenced and the prosecutor cannot dismiss [36:24.000 --> 36:31.200] it. He has to take it to the judge and get them to do it or get to the grand jury and [36:31.200 --> 36:41.240] get the grand jury to no bail. That's what the Constitution requires. If I eliminate [36:41.240 --> 36:49.520] prosecutorial discretion for prosecutors, it will disrupt everything. He's not going to [36:49.520 --> 36:55.920] want that to happen. So I'm really putting him on a legal dime. Are you going to be the [36:55.920 --> 37:05.160] scapegoat who causes every lawyer in Texas, every prosecutor in Texas, to lose the ability [37:05.160 --> 37:09.960] to determine who to prosecute and who not to prosecute? Do you want to be that guy? [37:09.960 --> 37:12.320] That'll make him popular. [37:12.320 --> 37:24.200] Oh, yes. So anytime you're going after these guys, keep in mind, it's all political. You [37:24.200 --> 37:29.760] can never expect to win your case simply because you have law and the facts on your side. To [37:29.760 --> 37:34.160] think so is naive. It is not that way now. It never has been that way as long because [37:34.160 --> 37:38.440] we've had human beings as judges. You can expect to win your case if you have the politics [37:38.440 --> 37:45.640] on your side. So collect the facts to give you standing and then get rid of this naive [37:45.640 --> 37:51.560] notion that you'll win your case just because you've got the facts on your side. Now let's [37:51.560 --> 37:56.680] back up and look at the politics. That's what this was about. Let's look at it. Every time [37:56.680 --> 38:02.040] we have an issue, let's look at the politics. Okay. I'm going to quit preaching the Gospel [38:02.040 --> 38:09.040] according to Randy and go to our callers. I'm going to start with E.J. in California. [38:09.040 --> 38:12.040] Hello, E.J. [38:12.040 --> 38:17.040] Hi, hello. I got a traffic ticket about six months ago. [38:17.040 --> 38:26.040] What? Oh my goodness. Oh, I used to look up to you. [38:26.040 --> 38:36.040] That's my opportunity to go through public records requests and doing the motion to dismiss, [38:36.040 --> 38:44.040] lack of venue, no venue. E.J., E.J., you get to have so much fun. [38:44.040 --> 38:45.040] Some money. [38:45.040 --> 38:53.040] And this is the best legal education you can get for a couple hundred bucks. You can beat. [38:53.040 --> 39:00.040] The worst that can happen is they'll do what they were going to do to start with. So they've [39:00.040 --> 39:06.040] already done their part. Now you get to have fun with them. [39:06.040 --> 39:11.040] I think the worst that could happen is they do what they were going to do, but you fail [39:11.040 --> 39:16.040] to show up and then they add a failure to appear and do the warrant fee and stuff like [39:16.040 --> 39:21.040] that on top of it. Then it gets more expensive. So don't fail to show up. You're going to [39:21.040 --> 39:28.040] have this interaction with them, but don't falter in the middle of it. Don't blink. [39:28.040 --> 39:36.040] I had someone call me and they have a really big case going on. And she had a house. I'm [39:36.040 --> 39:43.040] not sure why it went into tax sale, but she recovered it from tax sale and the person who [39:43.040 --> 39:49.040] bought it is suing her and they're trying to take her house away from her. A $750,000 [39:49.040 --> 39:54.040] house to try to take for $75,000. So they're just trying to steal it from her. And at this [39:54.040 --> 40:01.040] point, two days ago, they sent her a notice to appear in court on the 29th. And she's [40:01.040 --> 40:11.040] certain they're going to bar her from her house and possibly force her to get a psyche [40:11.040 --> 40:21.040] valve. They're setting her up. Someone told her, don't go to this hearing. I just shiver [40:21.040 --> 40:27.040] when they say that. I never tell anybody not to go to a hearing. Always go to the hearing. [40:27.040 --> 40:28.040] Right. [40:28.040 --> 40:29.040] Thank you. [40:29.040 --> 40:30.040] Thank you so much. [40:30.040 --> 40:37.040] If you don't, it gets worse. But that's okay. You've got a ticket here. You want to go to [40:37.040 --> 40:45.040] the hearing. Have you looked at my ticket site, trafficticket.website? [40:45.040 --> 40:47.040] Yes. [40:47.040 --> 40:55.040] Oh, wait, wait. Never mind. It's not working. Send me an email. I'll send you all the documents [40:55.040 --> 41:00.040] that that's supposed to produce. My programmer in two weeks, he's going to get on that and [41:00.040 --> 41:06.040] get that thing set back up because I need it for other reasons. But I'll send you all [41:06.040 --> 41:13.040] these documents. You look them over, convert them from Texas law to California law, and [41:13.040 --> 41:25.040] file it with the courts. Oh, it will absolutely be a circus. They will rule out everything. [41:25.040 --> 41:29.040] Very delay. Okay, wonderful. Yes. [41:29.040 --> 41:36.040] You get an opportunity now in the traffic situation. If you go into traffic court and [41:36.040 --> 41:44.040] the traffic court judge, they'll just blow off everything. You've got to try this. Mr. [41:44.040 --> 41:55.040] Baylif, did you hear that? Yes, Mr. Colton, I did. Arrest that judge in Bell County, [41:55.040 --> 42:01.040] Belsom, Texas. Is that the town just south of Temple, Brett? [42:01.040 --> 42:08.040] Don't give me one. Yeah, I think it's Belsom. I asked Baylif to drag the judge off the [42:08.040 --> 42:26.040] bench three times in this hearing with a jury. When we're picking the jury in the Vordyair, [42:26.040 --> 42:30.040] I told the jury the prosecutor is going to get up here and he's going to tell you that [42:30.040 --> 42:40.040] I was speeding out there on I-35. And that's where I was. But that's not why we're here. [42:40.040 --> 42:46.040] We're here to find out if they actually had the jurisdiction to arrest me and take it [42:46.040 --> 42:53.040] in the first place. The judge said later that that's the first time after they picked [42:53.040 --> 43:01.040] the jury, the entire panel stayed in the courtroom to watch. They knew something was coming. [43:01.040 --> 43:08.040] Ah, interesting. And they got a show. Mr. Baylif, did you hear that? Yes, I did. Arrest [43:08.040 --> 43:14.040] that judge. Well, I can't arrest the judge. You can. Just throw the cups on it and the [43:14.040 --> 43:22.040] judge jumps up, clear the jury, clear the jury. While the jury's filing down, I'm arguing [43:22.040 --> 43:30.040] with the mayor over arresting the judge. I did that three times in that case. Oh, that's [43:30.040 --> 43:40.040] so much fun. They found me incredibly guilty. How to win friends and influence people. You [43:40.040 --> 43:46.040] might be making buddies with the judge. I talked to the judge later and he was actually pretty [43:46.040 --> 43:54.040] cool about it. He said, Mr. Carlson, I've never had anybody do anything like that to [43:54.040 --> 44:00.040] me. Even the next Hypertrol. It wasn't an interesting... [44:00.040 --> 44:05.040] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm [44:05.040 --> 44:09.040] so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. I'd be [44:09.040 --> 44:14.040] lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to [44:14.040 --> 44:18.040] volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money [44:18.040 --> 44:24.040] to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. [44:24.040 --> 44:28.040] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. You can order them in your [44:28.040 --> 44:35.040] supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to logosregulnetwork.com. [44:35.040 --> 44:40.040] Click on the Amazon logo and book market. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, [44:40.040 --> 44:46.040] you use that link and logos get a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do I have to do anything [44:46.040 --> 44:52.040] different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow. Giving [44:52.040 --> 44:58.040] without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are [44:58.040 --> 45:23.040] welcome. Happy holidays, logos. Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.040 --> 45:43.040] Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.040 --> 45:57.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosay tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:57.040 --> 46:15.040] We're called toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:27.040 --> 46:37.040] We're called toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:57.040 --> 47:25.040] Okay, we are back. We're talking to E.J. in California. I brought this up to you, E.J., because you've been calling in for a while and we've kind of watched you develop. You don't appear to be afraid of them anymore. [47:25.040 --> 47:30.040] Thank you. You're exactly correct. You're right. [47:30.040 --> 47:47.040] Now you're ready to have some fun, fun, fun. Now you get a different education now. People start out. The system comes after them criminally and they're terrified. [47:47.040 --> 48:02.040] Even if it's just a minor traffic ticket, they walk in front of the judge and they've got butterflies in their stomach. They can't hardly talk. The mind goes to mush and they feel absolutely devastated. [48:02.040 --> 48:14.040] You already been through all that corpola. And then you've gotten your case dismissed. So it's clear you can get that done. [48:14.040 --> 48:19.040] Now this is the time to learn how to take them on. [48:19.040 --> 48:33.040] This is just a traffic ticket. Scott and Michigan called in recently. He did this. He took them on and he fought them for a long time, got them up to the courthouse door. [48:33.040 --> 48:46.040] The judge said, we're here today to pick a jury. And Scott said, objection, I have motions before the court. And the judge, when he talked to me, he said, judge kind of smile. [48:46.040 --> 49:00.040] I said, hold on. Wait till I finish. I'm not done yet. And he said, does the prosecutor have anything to say? The prosecutor moved to dismiss. [49:00.040 --> 49:10.040] They huff and puff till they get right up to the front of the jury and then they blow it off because they know they can't win it. [49:10.040 --> 49:16.040] So that's what these guys are going to do. But you know that going in. [49:16.040 --> 49:30.040] So now you get to set them up. You get all these motions I've got on my ticket side. And the only purpose of those motions is to get the judge to ignore them. [49:30.040 --> 49:42.040] We want him to rule against everything. Because when he does, we're going to start filing criminal charges against him for abuse of discretion. [49:42.040 --> 49:50.040] Bar grievances and judicial conduct in place. And just visit an onslaught on it. [49:50.040 --> 49:57.040] And Brett, with Miss Patty, how many attorneys have you run off? [49:57.040 --> 50:15.040] Well, the guy that was there today is not 11, but he's got a number 12 that's helping him. I don't know if you, I guess you count 10 people out of the room. [50:15.040 --> 50:30.040] Let me give you a little profile of a municipal attorney. These lawyers go to law school and they spend $160,000 to get this degree. [50:30.040 --> 50:37.040] They get out of law school and they don't know how to practice law. They know how to argue legal arguments or legal issues. [50:37.040 --> 50:48.040] That's what they teach at school. They don't teach how to practice law, how to file motions, how to get motions put on court, on for court, how to talk to this particular judge. [50:48.040 --> 51:01.040] Because he's going to have peculiarities, the things you can do and things you can't do. All of these things about how law is actually done, they learn that after they get out and out of law school. [51:01.040 --> 51:12.040] They want to get picked up by a law firm, but if they weren't the sharpest knife in the door or, you know, they weren't in the top 10% of the class, they might not get picked up. [51:12.040 --> 51:19.040] So what do they do? You can't go out and advertise directly. That's baritury. [51:19.040 --> 51:27.040] Licensed professionals are expected to get their business by word of mouth. They don't have anybody to give them word of mouth. [51:27.040 --> 51:34.040] So what do they do? Wait and go down and get put on the attorney wheel for a court of point counsel. [51:34.040 --> 51:44.040] And if you do that, then the judge and the prosecutor will kind of bring you along and teach you how things work until you can go out on your own. [51:44.040 --> 51:51.040] Or you go down and get hired on as a municipal attorney. [51:51.040 --> 52:00.040] And if it's an older guy as a municipal attorney, you can be sure he is not the sharpest knife in the drawer. [52:00.040 --> 52:08.040] Because if he was, he'd be out making the big bucks, not down here at the municipal court, grubbing for dollars. [52:08.040 --> 52:17.040] So the point of it is those municipal prosecutors are low hanging fruit. [52:17.040 --> 52:24.040] Oh, they're easy to hammer. I had one in Southlake. [52:24.040 --> 52:30.040] They ordered him to come in and had them all go in and talk to the prosecutor. [52:30.040 --> 52:33.040] But I went with this guy and they called him up and I go with him. [52:33.040 --> 52:38.040] And the bailiff was on tipi toes because he knew who I was. [52:38.040 --> 52:42.040] Wait, wait, sir, you can't go in there. I should sure can. [52:42.040 --> 52:48.040] This is a court hearing. It's public. Oh, no, this is just a meet with the prosecutor. [52:48.040 --> 52:53.040] Well, when I'm his paralegal, the guy said, yeah, he's my paralegal. [52:53.040 --> 52:57.040] Oh, no, you can't go in there. I said, don't tell me that. [52:57.040 --> 53:00.040] He said, I have to tell you that. No, no, no, no, no. [53:00.040 --> 53:04.040] Don't you tell me that. Go get your sergeant to tell me that. [53:04.040 --> 53:08.040] He said, I'll be right back. [53:08.040 --> 53:13.040] The sergeant tells me that. The guy goes in there. [53:13.040 --> 53:18.040] The prosecutor tries to make a deal. He don't make the deal. [53:18.040 --> 53:25.040] The next day I went to, and this was this prosecutor's first day on the job. [53:25.040 --> 53:35.040] She just graduated law school. They got her trained and this is her first time handling a hearing by herself. [53:35.040 --> 53:41.040] I went to the next day to J.P. and Paul. 58 felony charges against her. [53:41.040 --> 53:45.040] Oh, that was a hoot. [53:45.040 --> 53:48.040] 58? Oh, my God. [53:48.040 --> 53:52.040] There were 58 people that were ordered to come to court. [53:52.040 --> 53:55.040] It was one of those cattle call things. [53:55.040 --> 54:04.040] You have everybody show up at the same time and then you file past the prosecutor and they try to scare you into pleading guilty. [54:04.040 --> 54:07.040] Everybody shows up at the same time. [54:07.040 --> 54:11.040] He just got a docket call. You can get the sheet. [54:11.040 --> 54:15.040] You know, they pass out a sheet right at the back as you're walking in. [54:15.040 --> 54:19.040] You can pick up a sheet or you can look or ask the court clerk for one. [54:19.040 --> 54:26.040] And it'll say all the people that are signed up to have to show up at court today at 1.30 or whatever. [54:26.040 --> 54:28.040] He counted three there. [54:28.040 --> 54:32.040] So there are 58 of these people that you did this to. [54:32.040 --> 54:40.040] 2801, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, lists all those things you could order somebody to come to court for. [54:40.040 --> 54:46.040] The first one is for an arraignment hearing. [54:46.040 --> 54:52.040] And an arraignment hearing is for the purpose of determining the identity accused and taking a plea. [54:52.040 --> 55:02.040] But 2601 is the arraignment hearing, 26 is the chapter, 2601 in Texas says, [55:02.040 --> 55:12.040] an arraignment may be held in the matter of a felony or misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [55:12.040 --> 55:22.040] You read that and said, what the heck? They specifically exempted Class C misdemeanors. [55:22.040 --> 55:27.040] Why on earth did they do that? [55:27.040 --> 55:31.040] I never have figured out why they did that, but they did do that. [55:31.040 --> 55:34.040] Class C in Texas is the lowest misdemeanors. [55:34.040 --> 55:41.040] That's your parking tickets or something where everything's the very lowest petty level. [55:41.040 --> 55:43.040] Yeah, your traffic tickets, all that. [55:43.040 --> 55:46.040] Class C means fine only. [55:46.040 --> 55:53.040] So they could call you in for that, but in this case they couldn't. [55:53.040 --> 56:02.040] Or there were 10 other things they could call you in for and all of them went to motions or pleadings that are filed in the court. [56:02.040 --> 56:06.040] But there were no motions or pleadings spot. [56:06.040 --> 56:12.040] So I said, they didn't have authority to hold this hearing. [56:12.040 --> 56:22.040] So they simulated legal process and charged her with it 58 times. [56:22.040 --> 56:24.040] Took it to JP. [56:24.040 --> 56:27.040] JP refused to take it. [56:27.040 --> 56:34.040] I gave it to the JP's clerk and she took it back and said, JP is not going to take this. [56:34.040 --> 56:36.040] I said, do you have a bailiff around here? [56:36.040 --> 56:38.040] She said, well, I can get you one. [56:38.040 --> 56:40.040] She cost this bailiff over. [56:40.040 --> 56:45.040] And I said, I handed him the 58 criminal complaints I already had him made up. [56:45.040 --> 56:55.040] I teach you to arrest that judge for shielding from prosecution 58 counts. [56:55.040 --> 57:00.040] Oh, it was a circus. [57:00.040 --> 57:06.040] And then she took him to the judge and the judge refused to act on him. [57:06.040 --> 57:09.040] So I told the bailiff I wanted to go back there and arrest the judge. [57:09.040 --> 57:18.040] From 58 for shielding from prosecution, felony shielding from prosecution 58 counts. [57:18.040 --> 57:21.040] I couldn't arrest the magistrate and the judge. [57:21.040 --> 57:23.040] Sure, you can. [57:23.040 --> 57:28.040] Just go back there and throw the costs on him and drag him off to jail. [57:28.040 --> 57:31.040] And I always have this same argument with him. [57:31.040 --> 57:33.040] Well, I can arrest the judge. [57:33.040 --> 57:39.040] I said, look, Mr. Bailiff, I need you to take your chicken suit off. [57:39.040 --> 57:47.040] And I always say that because they want to say that you're agitated. [57:47.040 --> 57:56.040] So I get to say, did I get agitated before I asked you to take your chicken suit off or after? [57:56.040 --> 57:58.040] This is the kind of stuff you can do, Egypt. [57:58.040 --> 58:08.040] And it will give you, you know, they will give you every kind of BS, nonsense, emotion and pleading that they can think of. [58:08.040 --> 58:12.040] And every time they do, you get to bar grieve them for it. [58:12.040 --> 58:13.040] Bar grieve them. [58:13.040 --> 58:16.040] By the motion for sanctions. [58:16.040 --> 58:21.040] By the judicial conduct complained against the judge. [58:21.040 --> 58:24.040] All the stuff you get to do. [58:24.040 --> 58:31.040] And they both have the attorney and the judge both have in their respective rules of professional conduct. [58:31.040 --> 58:35.040] They have the duty to correct each other. [58:35.040 --> 58:41.040] A lawyer has to correct another lawyer or a judge and a judge has to correct another judge or a lawyer. [58:41.040 --> 58:42.040] Beautiful. [58:42.040 --> 58:43.040] That's right. [58:43.040 --> 58:46.040] We'll talk some more about that after we come back from our sponsors. [58:46.040 --> 58:50.040] We'll be right back. [58:50.040 --> 58:54.040] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [58:54.040 --> 58:58.040] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.040 --> 59:02.040] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text. [59:02.040 --> 59:07.040] But in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:07.040 --> 59:09.040] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.040 --> 59:13.040] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate. [59:13.040 --> 59:18.040] But the real story is the more than 9000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.040 --> 59:22.040] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way. [59:22.040 --> 59:28.040] Providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.040 --> 59:33.040] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.040 --> 59:44.040] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102. [59:44.040 --> 59:48.040] Or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.040 --> 59:53.040] That's freestudybible.com. [59:53.040 --> 01:00:01.040] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:01.040 --> 01:00:06.040] To follow in these flashes brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.040 --> 01:00:17.040] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold $1,429.00, silver $16.45.00, copper $2.75.00, [01:00:17.040 --> 01:00:26.040] oil Texas crude $55.63 of barrel, Brent crude $62.47 of barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, [01:00:26.040 --> 01:00:37.040] Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, [01:00:37.040 --> 01:00:46.040] and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 of crypto coin. [01:00:46.040 --> 01:00:58.040] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, [01:00:58.040 --> 01:01:00.040] killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:01:00.040 --> 01:01:05.040] Today in history. [01:01:05.040 --> 01:01:19.040] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing HEPA into Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, [01:01:19.040 --> 01:01:25.040] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:25.040 --> 01:01:34.040] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:34.040 --> 01:01:43.040] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, [01:01:43.040 --> 01:01:53.040] and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso. [01:01:53.040 --> 01:02:02.040] Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:02.040 --> 01:02:09.040] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, [01:02:09.040 --> 01:02:23.040] the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:23.040 --> 01:02:39.040] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark. As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.040 --> 01:02:54.040] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins. For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:54.040 --> 01:03:10.040] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:24.040 --> 01:03:34.040] This is Rick Rody with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:54.040 --> 01:04:04.040] Okay, we are back. [01:04:04.040 --> 01:04:20.040] Brandon Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rural Law Radio on this Thursday, the 28th day of October, 2021, and we're talking to E.J. in California. E.J., you're just getting to the good part. [01:04:20.040 --> 01:04:35.040] You don't have much to lose. It's just a ticket, and you can make a reputation. Have you ever heard Scott Richardson on our show? [01:04:35.040 --> 01:04:54.040] No, not last Friday. It's been a while. I chewed him out about that. He does insurance, and he does mostly Medicaid, Medicare, and they've only got about a two-month window in which they can sell their business. [01:04:54.040 --> 01:05:10.040] I wanted him to come on and talk about what he does. He really knows that area really well. He can help people get their best plans. But he was pulled over and didn't roll his window down. They knocked his window out and drug him out through the window. [01:05:10.040 --> 01:05:33.040] He got that on video and put it on YouTube, got over a million hits, and he went after them. Right now, you cannot tie up a Garland police officer and throw him at Scott Richardson. They don't want anything to do with him because he's beat him up. [01:05:33.040 --> 01:05:49.040] The last guy who wrote him a ticket was a motorcycle cop, and when the cop got off his shift, he came to the police department and met Scott coming out of the police department. He served him with his suit he just filed against him. [01:05:49.040 --> 01:06:09.040] Right in the ticket before the guy can get off his shift, he's already sued. That was pretty cool. That was cool. He sent me a stack of bar grievances about four inches tall. [01:06:09.040 --> 01:06:30.040] As a matter of fact, I just saw him in my back office yesterday. The bar association asked him to stop mailing bar grievances and please use their site because they had to hire an extra person to handle the bar grievances. [01:06:30.040 --> 01:06:51.040] He's the one that coined the phrase bar grievance to the stone age. We got tools. From my perspective, California is the most corrupt state in the union, but that doesn't mean you can't win in California. [01:06:51.040 --> 01:07:07.040] This will give you an opportunity to feel the other side. The best fight you to have is the fight you picked. So pick a fight with them. [01:07:07.040 --> 01:07:24.040] You get to tell them when they start complaining about you beating them up, or you kick this soap box up under my feet, you don't get to whine that I stand squarely on it. I told the district judge that once. [01:07:24.040 --> 01:07:45.040] He was not happy. This is what you do. So I kind of bushwhacked you and took it over because this seemed like an opportunity to address one of my favorite things and it went along with my first presentation on here on strategy. [01:07:45.040 --> 01:07:57.040] Now you get to play strategy. How do you get the judge to do stupid stuff so you can bar grieve the lawyer for not instructing the judge that he's doing stupid stuff? [01:07:57.040 --> 01:08:19.040] Brett, you want to address that? To go after the judge for not addressing the judge? No. The prosecutor for not filing judicial conduct complaints against the judge when he screws up or not correcting the judge when he screws up. [01:08:19.040 --> 01:08:31.040] Yeah, that's what I was going to just before the break is that the lawyer has a responsibility to correct a judge when the judge is violating the code of judicial conduct. [01:08:31.040 --> 01:08:54.040] And the judge has a responsibility to correct a lawyer who is violating the lawyer rules. The Texas Rules of Professional Conduct, California has them too. They've all pretty much been adopted from this American Bar Association's model rules, slight little modifications here and there. [01:08:54.040 --> 01:09:06.040] But they have attorney rules that they have to follow and the judge has to know those rules and has to be able to recognize when an attorney doesn't follow the rules and he has to bar grieve the attorney. [01:09:06.040 --> 01:09:20.040] And of course they don't do that, but that's his duty. So if a lawyer doesn't correct the judge or if the judge doesn't correct the lawyer, then you can hold them accountable on both sides of that. [01:09:20.040 --> 01:09:27.040] Okay. They will never see that coming. [01:09:27.040 --> 01:09:36.040] Judges and prosecutors and lawyers, they've all got their snouts in the same trough. [01:09:36.040 --> 01:09:54.040] And they all kind of look out for each other. The absolute worst thing that can happen to them is get EJ. A knowledgeable pro se that terrifies them. [01:09:54.040 --> 01:10:08.040] Because judges can control lawyers. I was in Australia. I went down there to do some seminars and when they met me at the airport, and the first thing they did is took me to the high court. That's like the supreme here. [01:10:08.040 --> 01:10:24.040] And this guy, they took me in this court and we sat down and this guy is crawling down that judge's throat, calling them a bunch of shysters and lawyers and no good criminals. [01:10:24.040 --> 01:10:37.040] Holy mackerel. If I had done that here, they would have threw me under the jail. But the judge was doing everything he could to placate the guy and the guy is just reaming him. [01:10:37.040 --> 01:10:48.040] And then we went across the hall where a guy is trying to protect his mother's estate. He's accusing him of trying to steal her estate. [01:10:48.040 --> 01:11:04.040] And this guy is really reaming the judge. But the judge had found out that I was there and I was an American journalist and we told him that I was there investigating corruption in Australian courts. [01:11:04.040 --> 01:11:18.040] So this guy is reaming the judge and the judge keeps looking over at me and I'm taking copious notes. And the judge is really getting frustrated and telling him, Mr. Brown, you really need to get counsel. [01:11:18.040 --> 01:11:34.040] I don't trust those no good lying shysters. Finally the judge got exasperated. Mr. Brown, you need to get an attorney. I can control an attorney. I can't control you. [01:11:34.040 --> 01:11:53.040] And I turned to the guy next to me and said, did he really say that? But that was the case. The pro safe from hell. There's nothing worse for these guys. [01:11:53.040 --> 01:12:04.040] And you'll get an opportunity to introduce them to the deep end of the pool. I once gave a judge on his first day in office. [01:12:04.040 --> 01:12:14.040] The judge before had a heart attack. He retired. They appointed this guy to fill his position. His first day in office, he had to hear my habeas. [01:12:14.040 --> 01:12:23.040] And when he was done, another guy was presenting a habeas because of his case. In the course of it, he kept asking me questions. The judge said, who is that? [01:12:23.040 --> 01:12:32.040] Oh, that's the guy who wrote the habeas. Oh, okay. So after the hearing, I went up to the judge and I said, Your Honor, I've got some documents I'd like you to look at. [01:12:32.040 --> 01:12:50.040] And he said, sure. And I handed him to it. And there are criminal complaints against the judge across the hall. He looked at those and said, Mr. Carlson, you know this is my first day in office. [01:12:50.040 --> 01:13:05.040] And I said, Yes, Your Honor, I just wanted to welcome you to the deep end of the pool. And it had to give him credit. He did get a chuckle out of that. But then I let him off the hook because they weren't verified. [01:13:05.040 --> 01:13:14.040] But this is where you get to introduce them to the deep end of the pool. You get to do anything to these guys you want to. [01:13:14.040 --> 01:13:21.040] Okay. The worst they can do is what they were going to do to start with. [01:13:21.040 --> 01:13:24.040] Oh, yeah. That's right. [01:13:24.040 --> 01:13:28.040] The best thing is just have fun with this one. [01:13:28.040 --> 01:13:41.040] Okay. I mean, I was having fun because I did a records request the day of I got the ticket. It was on a Saturday morning, 8am. [01:13:41.040 --> 01:13:52.040] And I sent a public request wanting the body cam. They have body cams now. [01:13:52.040 --> 01:14:05.040] Audio recording quarters. And also, you know, when they're calling in, I forgot what that's called. But they said, they gave me the dispatch audio and transcript of the dispatch. [01:14:05.040 --> 01:14:22.040] Yes. Audio and transcript of the dispatch. They wrote back saying that 3, 4, 5 audio, video recording are not subject to disclosure under 6254-S2-CT. [01:14:22.040 --> 01:14:38.040] I don't know what she says. I read the government code under Chapter 3-5, inspection of public records, 5254-S2-CT. This is victim for victim. [01:14:38.040 --> 01:14:41.040] So there is no victim. [01:14:41.040 --> 01:14:54.040] File for sanctions. For quoting bad law. Did a lawyer fill this out or did the custodian of the record? [01:14:54.040 --> 01:15:02.040] The custodian of the record. So she caught herself the lead of some record person. [01:15:02.040 --> 01:15:15.040] File a professional conduct complaint against her. Is she the clerk of the municipal court or whatever court you're in? [01:15:15.040 --> 01:15:26.040] Oh, good. Then file a judicial conduct complaint against the judge for failing to properly train. [01:15:26.040 --> 01:15:40.040] And we got a judge disciplined in New York on a traffic ticket because he called a person to court three or four times and they never got to his case. [01:15:40.040 --> 01:15:51.040] You know, they were just trying to harass him. And he filed a judicial conduct complaint about that and they actually sanctioned the judge. [01:15:51.040 --> 01:16:06.040] So a kid Magnuson's brother is an attorney and he was a municipal judge for a while and he found out what I did. He would not even look at me. [01:16:06.040 --> 01:16:16.040] I met him and talked to him a time or two and after he found out what I did, he wouldn't even look in my direction. He would look and it's like I wasn't there. [01:16:16.040 --> 01:16:25.040] He was terrified of me. Well, I forgot where I was going here. [01:16:25.040 --> 01:16:28.040] Got a judge in trouble. [01:16:28.040 --> 01:16:47.040] Okay, he was a municipal judge and he complained to his brother that the commission on judicial conduct never disciplines county or district judges. They're lawyers and they're elected. [01:16:47.040 --> 01:17:00.040] That they only discipline municipal judges and justice is a piece because they're not lawyers. [01:17:00.040 --> 01:17:11.040] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [01:17:11.040 --> 01:17:21.040] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [01:17:21.040 --> 01:17:34.040] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.040 --> 01:17:48.040] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [01:17:48.040 --> 01:18:04.040] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [01:18:04.040 --> 01:18:18.040] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. Any amount is appreciated. Everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:18.040 --> 01:18:30.040] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. More prizes and sponsors to be announced. Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:30.040 --> 01:18:40.040] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:40.040 --> 01:18:49.040] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [01:18:49.040 --> 01:18:56.040] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:56.040 --> 01:19:01.040] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:27.040 --> 01:19:30.040] Well, [01:19:48.040 --> 01:19:55.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and I just bailed off the cliff there. [01:19:55.040 --> 01:20:04.040] And, EJ, I'm hoping you get the idea that this can be fun. [01:20:04.040 --> 01:20:13.040] And tickets, I have more fun with tickets. I live in a small town and the jury always finds me guilty. [01:20:13.040 --> 01:20:19.040] I had a jury where I personally knew the foreman of the jury. [01:20:19.040 --> 01:20:27.040] And I had, they threw the sergeant on the DPS out of the building the judge did because he hated me. [01:20:27.040 --> 01:20:32.040] He tried to intervene in the trial. The judge threw him out of the building. [01:20:32.040 --> 01:20:40.040] And I worked over this DPS officer and had great fun with him. The jury went out and they came back and the foreman stood up and said, [01:20:40.040 --> 01:20:51.040] We the jury find the defendant incredibly guilty. And Judge Plum Raspberry, one of my favorite human beings on earth. [01:20:51.040 --> 01:20:57.040] She said, incredibly guilty. And he said, yes, your honor, incredibly guilty. [01:20:57.040 --> 01:21:05.040] And she said, well, it seems, Mr. Kelton, it seems the jury found you incredibly guilty. [01:21:05.040 --> 01:21:14.040] I paid 300 bucks for that one. But it was more than worth it. [01:21:14.040 --> 01:21:31.040] I had so much fun. And the most important thing was that it helped me get over being afraid of standing up in front of the court. [01:21:31.040 --> 01:21:37.040] Just a simple traffic ticket will empower you more than you realize. [01:21:37.040 --> 01:21:42.040] But not you, but you've already seemed to have. And you've got that. [01:21:42.040 --> 01:21:49.040] And for the most part, E.J., I haven't been talking to you. I've been talking to everybody else who's listening. [01:21:49.040 --> 01:22:02.040] If you guys get a ticket, E.J., can you give us a synopsis of what you went through with the hospital issue? [01:22:02.040 --> 01:22:21.040] Synopsis, like, I posted on Telegram the timeline. No one really responded. And, you know, I mean, the synopsis, they try to charge me [01:22:21.040 --> 01:22:32.040] with assault and battery charges because the hospital security said, can you believe this? I saw them right underneath his right chin. [01:22:32.040 --> 01:22:42.040] He even said, I'm going to go ahead and post all the investigative reports that the police took. [01:22:42.040 --> 01:22:48.040] They said there were two witnesses. There's no phone numbers on there. [01:22:48.040 --> 01:23:02.040] Also, the detective fled and some emails that I read, which I got from the public record request saying that the detective is no longer, [01:23:02.040 --> 01:23:08.040] she resigned, she left. She said that I fell behind a chair. That's how I fell. [01:23:08.040 --> 01:23:14.040] I mean, all these lies. So, and then she wanted a warrant out for my arrest. [01:23:14.040 --> 01:23:24.040] But they didn't come get me. Why? If I did all these things, if I saw, he actually saw the surveillance footage that I kicked him, [01:23:24.040 --> 01:23:30.040] I punched him, and what else did I do? What harm did I do to this? [01:23:30.040 --> 01:23:36.040] Okay, hold on, hold on. No, it didn't mean for you to get all cranked up in that. [01:23:36.040 --> 01:23:47.040] They came after her and filed outrageous charges against her. You went to a hospital to visit someone. Is that what that was about? [01:23:47.040 --> 01:23:59.040] And had an issue with a security and they blew everything up and they went after her and she fought them and they threw out everything. [01:23:59.040 --> 01:24:04.040] She beat them. You can beat them. [01:24:04.040 --> 01:24:18.040] So, the ticket will just be good practice for you and they do all kinds of horrible stuff because 99% of the people will just take a deal. [01:24:18.040 --> 01:24:25.040] We need a percentage of them that will go for these guys' quotes. [01:24:25.040 --> 01:24:29.040] Yeah, exactly. Hold them accountable. Make them follow the law. [01:24:29.040 --> 01:24:35.040] And what I'm trying to do with this show is make it a lot easier. [01:24:35.040 --> 01:24:43.040] This doesn't have to be difficult and it doesn't have to be emotionally draining. [01:24:43.040 --> 01:24:46.040] It can actually be fun. [01:24:46.040 --> 01:24:53.040] You know, I started out with this show talking about a fight I picked with the district attorney. [01:24:53.040 --> 01:25:00.040] The best fight to have is the one you picked. So, I'm starting this fight. [01:25:00.040 --> 01:25:10.040] They got nothing against me and if you guys get a ticket, big deal. It's just a ticket for crying out loud. [01:25:10.040 --> 01:25:16.040] I mean, what's the worst can happen? They're going to give you a fine. It's all they can do. [01:25:16.040 --> 01:25:22.040] If you fight them like a tiger, they can't give you a bigger fine. [01:25:22.040 --> 01:25:32.040] You can't lose, but you will get the municipal courts are the absolute worst. [01:25:32.040 --> 01:25:41.040] They're the most miserable, the most uncooperative and the most criminal of any court I've ever seen. [01:25:41.040 --> 01:25:48.040] As you move out of these lower courts up into the higher courts, you're dealing with more professionals. [01:25:48.040 --> 01:25:54.040] Municipal courts and JP courts can be presided over by non-lawyers. [01:25:54.040 --> 01:26:04.040] County and district courts, those are professionals and they tend to conduct themselves with a lot more professional decorum. [01:26:04.040 --> 01:26:10.040] Most people only experience municipal courts and generally it's a horrible experience. [01:26:10.040 --> 01:26:19.040] They just deny every right you have. So, this is a good place to fight them. [01:26:19.040 --> 01:26:25.040] Once you know what they're doing wrong, then you get to beat them up. [01:26:25.040 --> 01:26:31.040] You know they're going to screw... Go ahead, I keep interrupting you. [01:26:31.040 --> 01:26:40.040] No, this is very good because I forgot about all these. They have to tell each other what they did wrong. [01:26:40.040 --> 01:26:47.040] That's part of the professional conduct and also with my public... [01:26:47.040 --> 01:26:56.040] Okay, one thing I can tell you about that, they will not see that coming. [01:26:56.040 --> 01:27:08.040] That's the best part is when I get one of them, I want them to have to look around a little while before they figure out that I'm the one that got them. [01:27:08.040 --> 01:27:14.040] You know, I have these rules and one of them is never give fair warning. [01:27:14.040 --> 01:27:18.040] Bushwhack is so much better. [01:27:18.040 --> 01:27:26.040] Never tell them, oh, I got these rights, I got those rights, you're supposed to do that, you're supposed... [01:27:26.040 --> 01:27:30.040] You know, they hear that stuff all day, every day, they are not impressed. [01:27:30.040 --> 01:27:37.040] But when they don't do something you ask them to and you take out your cell phone and dial 911 and ask for somebody to come out and arrest them, [01:27:37.040 --> 01:27:43.040] well, that's a whole different animal. [01:27:43.040 --> 01:27:55.040] I have had more fun doing that because now when you make the 911 call, if they try to interfere with you in Texas, that's felony. [01:27:55.040 --> 01:27:57.040] To interfere with 911 call. [01:27:57.040 --> 01:28:08.040] The more than one time when I've had a baby say, here's that phone in here, are you going to interfere with a 911 call? [01:28:08.040 --> 01:28:16.040] Amarillo, I asked for a bailiff to arrest the prostitute. [01:28:16.040 --> 01:28:22.040] The prostitute is a real short guy and I'm trying to get him to take some complaints and he refused to. [01:28:22.040 --> 01:28:27.040] And I told him, Eddie Craig was with me that day. [01:28:27.040 --> 01:28:33.040] I said, I need you to call security and this guy's behind this bulletproof glass. [01:28:33.040 --> 01:28:40.040] A little short guy that's got his hands on the counter, raised up on his tippy toes so he looks taller. [01:28:40.040 --> 01:28:46.040] Then he said, Mr. Kelton, you're very secure. [01:28:46.040 --> 01:28:48.040] Well, you're not. [01:28:48.040 --> 01:28:51.040] I want him to arrest you. [01:28:51.040 --> 01:28:55.040] Oh, that's so much fun. [01:28:55.040 --> 01:29:00.040] And then I go out and they just wouldn't do anything, so I call 911. [01:29:00.040 --> 01:29:07.040] And I want an officer out here to arrest the chief bailiff and the district attorney. [01:29:07.040 --> 01:29:12.040] And I went and sat down on the bench and I'm writing out criminal complaints. [01:29:12.040 --> 01:29:14.040] And this bailiff came over. [01:29:14.040 --> 01:29:17.040] He said, Mr. Kelton, you're creating a disturbance. [01:29:17.040 --> 01:29:18.040] You're going to have to leave the building. [01:29:18.040 --> 01:29:22.040] And I looked up at him and said, get lost. [01:29:22.040 --> 01:29:25.040] In fact, you're right. [01:29:25.040 --> 01:29:31.040] He told me again, and then this sergeant came over and said, leave him alone. [01:29:31.040 --> 01:29:35.040] He's just trying to get you to do something so he can try to get you arrested. [01:29:35.040 --> 01:29:44.040] And I looked up and said to the first guy and I pointed at the sergeant and I said, he's really smart. [01:29:44.040 --> 01:29:47.040] You should listen to him. [01:29:47.040 --> 01:29:51.040] And then they sent a city police officer. [01:29:51.040 --> 01:29:55.040] And he came over and he said, are you Randall Kelton? [01:29:55.040 --> 01:29:56.040] I said, who the hell are you? [01:29:56.040 --> 01:29:58.040] Well, I'm Canyon City Police. [01:29:58.040 --> 01:30:03.040] What the hell did they do for? [01:30:03.040 --> 01:30:10.040] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:10.040 --> 01:30:13.040] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.040 --> 01:30:17.040] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:17.040 --> 01:30:19.040] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:19.040 --> 01:30:22.040] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.040 --> 01:30:27.040] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.040 --> 01:30:29.040] So protect your rights. [01:30:29.040 --> 01:30:33.040] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:33.040 --> 01:30:35.040] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.040 --> 01:30:42.040] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.040 --> 01:30:46.040] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:46.040 --> 01:30:49.040] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:49.040 --> 01:30:53.040] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:53.040 --> 01:30:57.040] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:57.040 --> 01:31:01.040] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:01.040 --> 01:31:04.040] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.040 --> 01:31:11.040] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:11.040 --> 01:31:16.040] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.040 --> 01:31:19.040] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:19.040 --> 01:31:22.040] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:22.040 --> 01:31:27.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:32.040 --> 01:31:37.040] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:37.040 --> 01:31:39.040] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.040 --> 01:31:44.040] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.040 --> 01:31:47.040] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:47.040 --> 01:31:50.040] And thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:50.040 --> 01:31:51.040] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.040 --> 01:31:52.040] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.040 --> 01:31:53.040] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.040 --> 01:31:54.040] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.040 --> 01:31:56.040] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:56.040 --> 01:31:59.040] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:59.040 --> 01:32:02.040] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:03.040 --> 01:32:06.040] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:06.040 --> 01:32:09.040] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:09.040 --> 01:32:11.040] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:32:11.040 --> 01:32:14.040] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:14.040 --> 01:32:16.040] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.040 --> 01:32:18.040] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:32:18.040 --> 01:32:21.040] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:21.040 --> 01:32:23.040] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:32:23.040 --> 01:32:26.040] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.040 --> 01:32:29.040] Former Sheriff's Deputy A. Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:32:29.040 --> 01:32:32.040] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.040 --> 01:32:36.040] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.040 --> 01:32:38.040] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:38.040 --> 01:32:41.040] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.040 --> 01:32:43.040] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.040 --> 01:32:46.040] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:46.040 --> 01:32:48.040] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.040 --> 01:32:51.040] hundreds of research documents, and further useful resource material. [01:32:51.040 --> 01:32:55.040] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.040 --> 01:33:02.040] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:02.040 --> 01:33:26.040] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:32.040 --> 01:33:42.040] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:34:02.040 --> 01:34:22.040] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:34:22.040 --> 01:34:25.040] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [01:34:25.040 --> 01:34:28.040] And let me apologize to everybody for holding them this long. [01:34:28.040 --> 01:34:33.040] This show is not so much about answering everybody's questions [01:34:33.040 --> 01:34:43.040] as it is about teaching people not so much law, but who they are. [01:34:43.040 --> 01:34:51.040] If I can get everyone listening to understand who they are and the power that they have, [01:34:51.040 --> 01:34:54.040] all this other stuff I talk about is superfluous. [01:34:54.040 --> 01:35:00.040] You figure that out in the process. And EJ, you gave me the perfect opportunity [01:35:00.040 --> 01:35:10.040] to address the one topic that is the reason we do this show. [01:35:10.040 --> 01:35:15.040] Brett and I look for someone like you, EJ. [01:35:15.040 --> 01:35:19.040] We look for someone who is willing to pick up this mantle. [01:35:19.040 --> 01:35:24.040] Now, not everybody is in a position where they can do this. [01:35:24.040 --> 01:35:27.040] You know, I can do this. I'm an old guy. My house is paid for. [01:35:27.040 --> 01:35:35.040] My car is paid for. My kids are grown. My grandkids are grown. [01:35:35.040 --> 01:35:42.040] I don't know anything to anybody and nobody is looking to me for their livelihood. [01:35:42.040 --> 01:35:48.040] I fulfill my contract with life, so I'm going out and fighting with these people if I want to. [01:35:48.040 --> 01:35:54.040] Most people who get into these problems, they don't have that option. [01:35:54.040 --> 01:35:59.040] They've got much more that they have to take care of. [01:35:59.040 --> 01:36:09.040] I want to help those people, but beyond that, I'm looking for EJ and Robert in California [01:36:09.040 --> 01:36:18.040] and James, who's at TAM in Texas. I've got three or four or five in Texas. [01:36:18.040 --> 01:36:25.040] People that will stand up and take these guys on. That's who I'm looking for. [01:36:25.040 --> 01:36:31.040] EJ, you seem to be growing into one of those people. [01:36:31.040 --> 01:36:38.040] I used you to demonstrate to everybody else that you don't have to be afraid of these courts. [01:36:38.040 --> 01:36:43.040] You don't have to back down. You are not their servants. They're your servants. [01:36:43.040 --> 01:36:50.040] I'm sorry. You're not their servants. They're your servants. They answer to you. [01:36:50.040 --> 01:36:56.040] Once you realize that, everything changes. I kind of use you, but I do need to move on. [01:36:56.040 --> 01:37:01.040] I'm running out of time. I've got a couple more callers that have been holding on since the beginning. [01:37:01.040 --> 01:37:06.040] Was there something special you wanted to ask EJ? [01:37:06.040 --> 01:37:11.040] Yes. I got the pure public record this far. [01:37:11.040 --> 01:37:21.040] I need to do a complaint against the lead records from the police. Who do I send this to? [01:37:21.040 --> 01:37:25.040] Oh, wait a minute. Hold on. Hold on. From the police? [01:37:25.040 --> 01:37:27.040] Yes. This is from the police. [01:37:27.040 --> 01:37:35.040] Oh. Did you hire that person? [01:37:35.040 --> 01:37:38.040] No. I just said... [01:37:38.040 --> 01:37:41.040] Who hired that person? [01:37:41.040 --> 01:37:46.040] Oh, the city. I don't know who. [01:37:46.040 --> 01:37:55.040] Chief of police. You didn't file your information request with that person. You filed it with the chief of police. [01:37:55.040 --> 01:37:57.040] Correct. Yes. [01:37:57.040 --> 01:38:05.040] He is Respondiat Superior. The buck stops with him. [01:38:05.040 --> 01:38:08.040] Okay. I got it. [01:38:08.040 --> 01:38:13.040] He's the one you hold responsible. And he's so much better. [01:38:13.040 --> 01:38:20.040] He does something stupid. You don't do anything to them, but you do something to somebody else because of them. [01:38:20.040 --> 01:38:31.040] We got an IRS agent fired in Fort Lauderdale, Florida because she held an improper raid on a chiropractic office. [01:38:31.040 --> 01:38:38.040] We filed against the highest level person who had to sign off on the raid. [01:38:38.040 --> 01:38:43.040] He was like five or six levels up from her. [01:38:43.040 --> 01:38:50.040] And when the prosecuting attorney threatened me with jury tampering charges, if I tried to get to the federal grand jury again, [01:38:50.040 --> 01:38:55.040] and I told him, you charge me with jury tampering. I'll charge you with obstruction retaliation. [01:38:55.040 --> 01:38:59.040] And we'll see how this works out for you, bubba. [01:38:59.040 --> 01:39:04.040] He hung up on me. And the next day they fired the IRS agent. [01:39:04.040 --> 01:39:08.040] He was just feeling you out to see if he could back you off. [01:39:08.040 --> 01:39:12.040] And when he found out he couldn't, then... [01:39:12.040 --> 01:39:20.040] Yeah, so I went after her boss, his boss, his boss, his boss, his boss criminally. [01:39:20.040 --> 01:39:24.040] He told them you better do something than they fired her. [01:39:24.040 --> 01:39:32.040] You go after the chief. You will get that public information officer's attention. [01:39:32.040 --> 01:39:35.040] You'll get everybody's attention. [01:39:35.040 --> 01:39:38.040] I got it. Thank you. [01:39:38.040 --> 01:39:45.040] Thank you, E.J. I need to go on. I got a couple more, but I do appreciate you and don't be a stranger. [01:39:45.040 --> 01:39:47.040] Thank you. [01:39:47.040 --> 01:39:54.040] Okay. Now we're going to go to Trey in Colorado. Hello, Trey. [01:39:54.040 --> 01:39:57.040] Hi there, Mr. Kalman. How are you doing, sir? [01:39:57.040 --> 01:40:05.040] How are they still messing with you about your motor home? Is it a motor home or mobile home? [01:40:05.040 --> 01:40:09.040] Well, you know what, that's the... [01:40:09.040 --> 01:40:25.040] Yeah, the actual land use regulations, definitions, classifies my quote-unquote dwelling, actually, as it's dwelling, and not as a motor home. [01:40:25.040 --> 01:40:27.040] I was looking into that. [01:40:27.040 --> 01:40:31.040] Does the drawing have wheels on it? [01:40:31.040 --> 01:40:35.040] Well, but it even says that. Yes, it does, yes, sir. [01:40:35.040 --> 01:40:54.040] But it says that if it has a permanent chassis, spill chassis, which mine does, can go in and out of road mode and is at least eight feet wide and 40 feet or greater... [01:40:54.040 --> 01:40:59.040] It's not eight feet wide. [01:40:59.040 --> 01:41:01.040] No, it is. It's eight feet wide. [01:41:01.040 --> 01:41:07.040] Measure it at 76 inches. [01:41:07.040 --> 01:41:14.040] They're never eight inches eight feet wide because if it was eight feet wide, you couldn't have mirrors on it. [01:41:14.040 --> 01:41:20.040] Oh, no, no, no, no. This is a fifth width. It's a fifth width. It's eight feet wide. [01:41:20.040 --> 01:41:22.040] It still can't be eight feet wide. [01:41:22.040 --> 01:41:27.040] I've already measured it, sir, even on the inside. It's eight feet wide. [01:41:27.040 --> 01:41:29.040] That's unusual. [01:41:29.040 --> 01:41:37.040] The reason why I know that is because my wife and me get measurements for my little boys, so we could put a carpet in it. [01:41:37.040 --> 01:41:44.040] And you know how it goes with them wives. You better be right. [01:41:44.040 --> 01:41:49.040] Brett and I know about the court of angry wife. [01:41:49.040 --> 01:41:51.040] Oh, yeah. [01:41:51.040 --> 01:41:54.040] Okay, so it is eight feet wide. [01:41:54.040 --> 01:41:59.040] And how long is it? It's great. It's 42 feet long. So it's even greater than that. [01:41:59.040 --> 01:42:12.040] So here's the stipulation. There's a giant four after all that. And it says four, 320 square feet when opened, like when all the pop outs are out. [01:42:12.040 --> 01:42:20.040] Oh, man, my thing is going to be, it's definitely greater than 320. I think much closer to almost 700 square feet. It's pretty big. [01:42:20.040 --> 01:42:22.040] Wow. [01:42:22.040 --> 01:42:24.040] So already. [01:42:24.040 --> 01:42:29.040] So there's no way they can categorize this as a crime. [01:42:29.040 --> 01:42:31.040] Absolutely. [01:42:31.040 --> 01:42:35.040] Exactly. [01:42:35.040 --> 01:42:39.040] Wait a minute. I missed something. [01:42:39.040 --> 01:42:58.040] He's on his property in a motor home that's actually, by their definitions, a dwelling. So he, what they're charging him with this temporary camping stuff doesn't even work for him because that would only apply if it was a smaller unit. [01:42:58.040 --> 01:43:00.040] Okay, so it is a dwelling. [01:43:00.040 --> 01:43:04.040] It meets. [01:43:04.040 --> 01:43:06.040] Is that correct? [01:43:06.040 --> 01:43:09.040] Yes. Yes, sir. No, go ahead. [01:43:09.040 --> 01:43:16.040] Okay, so it is a dwelling and it's not a camp. No, you're not on the camper. [01:43:16.040 --> 01:43:20.040] The fact that you can move it becomes irrelevant. [01:43:20.040 --> 01:43:22.040] Yes, sir. [01:43:22.040 --> 01:43:40.040] In the, so county ordinance number 20 is what I'm being cited for. Now, county ordinance number 20 comes out of what is called Teller County Land Use Regulations. And in the same regulations, there are definitions at the bottom. [01:43:40.040 --> 01:43:42.040] And it clearly defines what... [01:43:42.040 --> 01:43:44.040] Okay, wait, wait. Stop. Stop. [01:43:44.040 --> 01:43:49.040] I think we may be starting in the middle. [01:43:49.040 --> 01:43:52.040] Okay, then we're about to go to the sponsorship. [01:43:52.040 --> 01:44:01.040] What? Those sponsors? Okay, we'll be right back. [01:44:01.040 --> 01:44:10.040] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? 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[01:44:50.040 --> 01:45:01.040] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:45:01.040 --> 01:45:15.040] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.040 --> 01:45:23.040] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.040 --> 01:45:34.040] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.040 --> 01:45:43.040] 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. [01:45:43.040 --> 01:45:53.040] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.040 --> 01:46:01.040] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-V. [01:46:01.040 --> 01:46:17.040] Hello. Oh, man, you're jailed. You got busted, man. Oh, man, I'm broke, man. [01:46:17.040 --> 01:46:42.040] Something in this world I'll never understand. Something I realize fully. Somebody's on the police, that police man. Somebody's on the police, the police. [01:46:42.040 --> 01:46:53.040] Okay, we are back. This is the rule of law radio. Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain, and we are talking with Trey in Colorado. [01:46:53.040 --> 01:47:08.040] And Trey, when we were going out, and Randy was saying we're starting in the middle, and I think what he means by that is, let's back up to jurisdiction. [01:47:08.040 --> 01:47:22.040] Do these ordinances have the ability to bind you? Are we the people bound by ordinances? [01:47:22.040 --> 01:47:26.040] No, sir. That's why they're not laws. [01:47:26.040 --> 01:47:44.040] Exactly. They would be called laws if they could be applied to all the people. So that's a good place to start at the beginning, but that's what you're going to. [01:47:44.040 --> 01:47:49.040] Exactly. Have you filed a subject matter jurisdiction challenge? [01:47:49.040 --> 01:48:00.040] Yes, sir. Good. Have they done anything after you filed a subject matter jurisdiction challenge? [01:48:00.040 --> 01:48:12.040] Yes, sir. I had courts two Thursdays ago. Let's see. Carry the two. Oh, that was on the 10th of October. [01:48:12.040 --> 01:48:19.040] Did they rule on your subject matter jurisdiction challenge? [01:48:19.040 --> 01:48:27.040] Yes, sir. The judge, Judge Kilgore, she denied it. And I just... [01:48:27.040 --> 01:48:32.040] What? Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Denied a subject matter jurisdiction challenge? [01:48:32.040 --> 01:48:33.040] Yes, sir. [01:48:33.040 --> 01:48:39.040] Did the opposing counsel file an opposition? [01:48:39.040 --> 01:48:44.040] I have received absolutely zero from the opposing counsel. [01:48:44.040 --> 01:48:49.040] Did you file criminal charges against the judge? [01:48:49.040 --> 01:48:59.040] No, sir. I received in the mail. I just got back to my house that we just recently sold for closing it in about a week and a half, and I'm here trying to clear it out. [01:48:59.040 --> 01:49:12.040] So I got the mail from the mail box. I got the mail out a few hours ago, and I clearly have the in person jurisdiction challenge and the subject matter jurisdiction challenge. [01:49:12.040 --> 01:49:20.040] And then it says, denied, it says at the very bottom of it, the reason why I was denied it was signed by the judge. [01:49:20.040 --> 01:49:23.040] What does the reason say? [01:49:23.040 --> 01:49:31.040] It says, let me read this for you, and it's definitely, I think it's definitely ridiculous. [01:49:31.040 --> 01:49:46.040] The motion slash proposed order attached herein to denied issuance of the summons and complaint grant the court's personal jurisdiction over defendant. [01:49:46.040 --> 01:49:55.040] And then they listed Colorado R. Krim. This is all, this is all abbreviation. [01:49:55.040 --> 01:49:58.040] It's C-O-L-O. I guess it's Colorado. [01:49:58.040 --> 01:50:02.040] Colorado rules of criminal procedure. [01:50:02.040 --> 01:50:09.040] Yes. Okay. Colorado rules, it's all abbreviated. Criminal procedure 4.1. [01:50:09.040 --> 01:50:13.040] Now, that's interesting because I thought this was a civil matter. [01:50:13.040 --> 01:50:18.040] They slice that. [01:50:18.040 --> 01:50:24.040] Maybe they're messing their mix of force. [01:50:24.040 --> 01:50:36.040] Maybe they're getting the emphasis on the wrong sololable. [01:50:36.040 --> 01:50:42.040] But you see, I always did pronounce you to it. [01:50:42.040 --> 01:50:46.040] Okay. [01:50:46.040 --> 01:50:52.040] Did you file for finding defect in conclusions at law? [01:50:52.040 --> 01:50:58.040] Not yet, sir. No. We have pretrial on the 16th of December. [01:50:58.040 --> 01:51:02.040] Pretrial? This is definitely criminal, huh? [01:51:02.040 --> 01:51:09.040] They filed a criminal payment. What's the criminal statute they're charging you under? [01:51:09.040 --> 01:51:12.040] This is ordinance number 20. [01:51:12.040 --> 01:51:14.040] That's not a crime. [01:51:14.040 --> 01:51:18.040] Yeah. This is a campaign. [01:51:18.040 --> 01:51:23.040] Okay. Have you filed a constitutional challenge? [01:51:23.040 --> 01:51:27.040] No, sir. You had processed some stuff on telegram, [01:51:27.040 --> 01:51:34.040] but I get to figure out how to coordinate that for Colorado [01:51:34.040 --> 01:51:38.040] and exactly which one would be the constitutional challenge. [01:51:38.040 --> 01:51:41.040] Okay. Here's the deal. [01:51:41.040 --> 01:51:47.040] What we're saying in this constitutional challenge is that the Constitution [01:51:47.040 --> 01:51:53.040] authorizes the legislature to write law only. [01:51:53.040 --> 01:51:59.040] And while the legislature can delegate some of its duties, [01:51:59.040 --> 01:52:04.040] they cannot delegate the lawmaking function. [01:52:04.040 --> 01:52:08.040] Do you have my brief on that subject? [01:52:08.040 --> 01:52:13.040] I do not believe so. On telegram, I'm under Ralph Kennedy, [01:52:13.040 --> 01:52:18.040] and you did send me something just a couple days ago. [01:52:18.040 --> 01:52:21.040] Yeah, I think that was it. Look at that. [01:52:21.040 --> 01:52:28.040] It's written into Texas law, but it goes pretty much to federal law. [01:52:28.040 --> 01:52:34.040] The Constitution authorizes the legislature to write law and they authorize the legislature [01:52:34.040 --> 01:52:39.040] to delegate some of its authority, [01:52:39.040 --> 01:52:46.040] but it does not authorize the legislature to delegate the lawmaking function, [01:52:46.040 --> 01:52:52.040] because that's the primary function of the legislature. [01:52:52.040 --> 01:53:03.040] The legislature could have passed into law a set of standard or model [01:53:03.040 --> 01:53:10.040] municipal or county statutes, I'm sorry, county ordinances, [01:53:10.040 --> 01:53:14.040] but it did not. [01:53:14.040 --> 01:53:22.040] It allowed the municipalities, the municipal corporation, or the county corporation [01:53:22.040 --> 01:53:25.040] to write ordinances. [01:53:25.040 --> 01:53:27.040] Yeah, they can do their own. [01:53:27.040 --> 01:53:32.040] But those ordinances can only apply to someone in contractual [01:53:32.040 --> 01:53:44.040] authority with the agency, either an employee who's agreed to abide by their rules or a contractor who's agreed to abide by their rules. [01:53:44.040 --> 01:53:51.040] If they apply those ordinances to you, then they act as a law, [01:53:51.040 --> 01:53:59.040] and only the legislature can issue an order that applies to you. [01:53:59.040 --> 01:54:03.040] The governor can't even do that. [01:54:03.040 --> 01:54:08.040] So if they apply that to you, then they have treated it as a law, [01:54:08.040 --> 01:54:13.040] and that's violation of separation of powers. [01:54:13.040 --> 01:54:18.040] Now, when we filed this in Tim's case, [01:54:18.040 --> 01:54:29.040] the Court of Appeals, and I'm saying in your case, you should file a petition for written mandamus. [01:54:29.040 --> 01:54:31.040] That's what we did. [01:54:31.040 --> 01:54:38.040] And we claimed that when we filed the appeal, the petition for mandamus, [01:54:38.040 --> 01:54:44.040] we claimed that the Court of Appeals did not have subject matter jurisdiction, [01:54:44.040 --> 01:54:49.040] because the trial court did not have jurisdiction. [01:54:49.040 --> 01:54:56.040] And the trial court, if it didn't have jurisdiction, it can't transmit jurisdiction to you. [01:54:56.040 --> 01:55:01.040] So we asked the Court of Appeals to dismiss the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. [01:55:01.040 --> 01:55:03.040] Well, they looked at the constitutional challenge and said, [01:55:03.040 --> 01:55:14.040] holy crap, we cannot let that get above us. This could undermine the whole state. [01:55:14.040 --> 01:55:18.040] Above, meaning let that issue go to the appellate courts. [01:55:18.040 --> 01:55:25.040] Well, they were the appellate court, the Court of Appeals, but they couldn't allow it to go to the supreme. [01:55:25.040 --> 01:55:36.040] Because if the supreme ruled in your favor, then all the municipal ordinances and county ordinances are void, [01:55:36.040 --> 01:55:41.040] across the whole state. They can't have that happen. [01:55:41.040 --> 01:55:47.040] So the court spent five months researching. [01:55:47.040 --> 01:55:52.040] I have no doubt they looked at this and said, holy mackerel, you know, [01:55:52.040 --> 01:55:57.040] the courts are always a crapshoot. What if we get a ruling against us? [01:55:57.040 --> 01:56:01.040] All the ordinances in the whole state are void. [01:56:01.040 --> 01:56:04.040] We can't let, we can't take that chance. [01:56:04.040 --> 01:56:12.040] So they sent their clerks to dig in the codes and found this real obscure requirement. [01:56:12.040 --> 01:56:18.040] Tim had already a prayer place and he had a bunch of cars there. [01:56:18.040 --> 01:56:23.040] And they called him junk. And he said they're not junk. They're clients' property [01:56:23.040 --> 01:56:27.040] or some that I own that are here to be rebuilt and fixed. [01:56:27.040 --> 01:56:37.040] So they set a hearing to determine if these vehicles met the criteria for junk wheels. [01:56:37.040 --> 01:56:41.040] But instead of holding, he agreed to that. [01:56:41.040 --> 01:56:47.040] But instead of holding that hearing, they held a criminal trial before this tribunal. [01:56:47.040 --> 01:56:55.040] And when they got this constitutional challenge, they said, oh my goodness, [01:56:55.040 --> 01:57:00.040] we can't let this pass us. So they found another reason. [01:57:00.040 --> 01:57:07.040] They said, you were supposed to hold a hearing, hold a council meeting, [01:57:07.040 --> 01:57:13.040] and have all the councilmen vote on whether or not you could have this kind of hearing. [01:57:13.040 --> 01:57:22.040] But you didn't do that. So dismissed this for lack of subject matter jurisdiction based on this issue. [01:57:22.040 --> 01:57:26.040] Now, we've got our constitutional challenge sitting there. [01:57:26.040 --> 01:57:29.040] But they dismissed it for a different reason. [01:57:29.040 --> 01:57:35.040] Now, the opposing side can appeal, but they can only appeal the ruling. [01:57:35.040 --> 01:57:40.040] And the ruling rules on this different issue, not the constitutional issue. [01:57:40.040 --> 01:57:49.040] So they rendered the constitutional into issue moot to keep it from going up the chain. [01:57:49.040 --> 01:57:54.040] When you write your pleadings, because keep that in mind, [01:57:54.040 --> 01:58:01.040] you want to give them an issue that they can't afford to risk getting a bad ruling on. [01:58:01.040 --> 01:58:06.040] Yes. And I know we are about to go up the cliff, but I just want to say real fast, [01:58:06.040 --> 01:58:13.040] because that's the reason why maybe I was considering putting in things about the whole side of my campus. [01:58:13.040 --> 01:58:15.040] So it gives them an out. [01:58:15.040 --> 01:58:22.040] Yeah. Yes. They were back a bulldog in the corner, unless you give them a way out. [01:58:22.040 --> 01:58:25.040] All right. [01:58:25.040 --> 01:58:32.040] Brett, these guys are pretty far to Miller and a deep stinker. [01:58:32.040 --> 01:58:34.040] Is he learning from the best? [01:58:34.040 --> 01:58:37.040] Yes, he is. Okay. Thank you all for listening. [01:58:37.040 --> 01:58:38.040] We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:58:38.040 --> 01:58:43.040] Danny, if you're calling tomorrow night, we'll take you first, root of our radio. [01:58:43.040 --> 01:58:47.040] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:47.040 --> 01:59:08.040] Come on. [01:59:17.040 --> 01:59:27.040] We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:59:47.040 --> 02:00:00.040] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com.