[00:00.000 --> 00:06.860] The following news flashes brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.860 --> 00:15.500] Markets for Monday 22 July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429.00, Silver $16.45.00, [00:15.500 --> 00:24.620] Copper $2.75.00, Oil, Texas Crew $55.63.00, Brent Crew $62.47.00, and Cryptos in order [00:24.620 --> 00:37.280] of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, [00:37.280 --> 00:42.760] and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10, a crypto coin. [00:42.760 --> 00:52.520] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a Thai suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.520 --> 00:57.840] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Prepared-to-Stay Parade, killing [00:57.840 --> 01:04.840] 10 and injuring 40 today in history. [01:04.840 --> 01:09.880] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hempett attacks [01:09.880 --> 01:14.440] his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin and San [01:14.440 --> 01:18.920] Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:18.920 --> 01:22.920] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to [01:22.920 --> 01:24.880] test the herb for THC. [01:24.880 --> 01:28.520] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.520 --> 01:33.080] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.080 --> 01:34.080] law. [01:34.080 --> 01:37.680] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.680 --> 01:42.200] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.200 --> 01:48.360] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.360 --> 01:54.600] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.600 --> 01:59.080] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:59.080 --> 02:01.880] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.880 --> 02:06.880] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.880 --> 02:10.880] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.880 --> 02:13.600] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.600 --> 02:17.480] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.480 --> 02:22.680] charged with. [02:22.680 --> 02:27.320] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.320 --> 02:32.440] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.440 --> 02:38.120] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.120 --> 02:39.600] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.600 --> 02:43.880] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.880 --> 02:50.160] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.160 --> 03:16.800] clothe. [03:16.800 --> 03:21.800] Tell me, what you gonna do? [03:21.800 --> 03:23.800] What you gonna do? [03:23.800 --> 03:28.800] Yeah, bad boys, bad boys [03:28.800 --> 03:29.800] What you gonna do? [03:29.800 --> 03:32.800] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.800 --> 03:33.800] Bad boys, bad boys [03:33.800 --> 03:34.800] What you gonna do? [03:34.800 --> 03:37.800] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:37.800 --> 03:40.800] When you were eight and you had bad dreams [03:40.800 --> 03:43.800] You go to school and earn the gold and lose [03:43.800 --> 03:45.800] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [03:45.800 --> 03:49.800] All these people start cracking his mind [03:49.800 --> 03:50.800] Bad boys, bad boys [03:50.800 --> 03:51.800] What you gonna do? [03:51.800 --> 03:53.800] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:53.800 --> 03:54.800] Bad boys, bad boys [03:54.800 --> 03:56.800] What you gonna do? [03:56.800 --> 03:59.800] What you gonna do when they come for you? [03:59.800 --> 04:00.800] Bad boys, bad boys [04:00.800 --> 04:01.800] What you gonna do? [04:01.800 --> 04:02.800] what you gonna do? [04:02.800 --> 04:03.800] Bad boys, bad boys [04:03.800 --> 04:04.800] What you gonna do? [04:04.800 --> 04:05.800] What you gonna do? [04:05.800 --> 04:06.800] Bad boys, bad boys [04:06.800 --> 04:07.800] Oh, what you gonna do? [04:07.800 --> 04:08.800] What you gonna do? [04:08.800 --> 04:09.800] Bad boys, what you gonna do? [04:09.800 --> 04:10.800] Oh, what you gonna do when they come for you? [04:10.800 --> 04:11.800] Bad boys, bad boys [04:11.800 --> 04:21.300] bad boys, what you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad boys, bad boys. [04:21.300 --> 04:27.800] Bad boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Bad [04:27.800 --> 04:33.760] boys, bad boys. What you gonna do? What you gonna do when they come for you? Nobody [04:33.760 --> 04:44.240] Wait, Brett, you forgot to tell me what the date was. [04:44.240 --> 04:47.920] It wasn't that long ago, I told you. [04:47.920 --> 04:56.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountainbrew Radio, on this, the 12th day of November 2021. [04:56.680 --> 05:00.000] Welcome to our four hour info marathon. [05:00.000 --> 05:05.120] Okay, Brett, I'm sure you have something interesting to start to show with. [05:05.120 --> 05:10.840] I was taking a nap and you woke me up. [05:10.840 --> 05:14.240] Well if you want, we can start out, give the phone number out and then we'll start [05:14.240 --> 05:16.760] out with talking about some records requests. [05:16.760 --> 05:17.760] How about that? [05:17.760 --> 05:18.760] Okay, I'm old. [05:18.760 --> 05:20.760] Remind me what was the phone number. [05:20.760 --> 05:28.960] It's 512-646-1984. [05:28.960 --> 05:31.720] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. [05:31.720 --> 05:34.240] We'll be taking your calls all night. [05:34.240 --> 05:41.200] And last night I started out with what I'm doing to Travis County. [05:41.200 --> 05:51.280] I'm hoping that everybody listening reaches a point similar to this. [05:51.280 --> 05:55.640] We start out by trying to get people to take that first step. [05:55.640 --> 06:00.440] And once you've taken that first step, that first criminal complaint or that first lawsuit [06:00.440 --> 06:06.200] against them, just do something to get in their face. [06:06.200 --> 06:14.720] Once you've done that, you start getting more sophisticated with what you're doing. [06:14.720 --> 06:23.160] Right now I am in the process of softening up Travis County District Attorney. [06:23.160 --> 06:32.720] I'm going to be bringing complaints to him that I don't necessarily want the individuals [06:32.720 --> 06:35.360] indicted. [06:35.360 --> 06:39.880] But I do want them to have to face a grand jury. [06:39.880 --> 06:44.840] And in order to get that done, we've got to soften up the prosecutor because prosecutor [06:44.840 --> 06:47.960] only prosecutes what he wants to. [06:47.960 --> 06:57.800] He tends to decide which complaint to give to the grand jury and which one's not to. [06:57.800 --> 07:16.960] He decides which complaints to move forward on based on what they call prosecutorial discretion. [07:16.960 --> 07:26.040] I thought you were going to say it's based on his whims and the politics in his office. [07:26.040 --> 07:27.040] Exactly. [07:27.040 --> 07:39.880] But I can't find anywhere in law where the prosecutor is the state prosecutor, the elected [07:39.880 --> 07:46.600] prosecutors for each jurisdiction and those selected in municipal courts and such. [07:46.600 --> 07:54.520] I can't find anything that gives a prosecuting attorney prosecutorial discretion. [07:54.520 --> 08:04.840] There is this notion that a prosecuting attorney has some kind of power in his own right. [08:04.840 --> 08:12.240] And I'm saying, I don't, he's just a lawyer for the state. [08:12.240 --> 08:19.680] And that's what the code actually says, how they actually treat the prosecutor. [08:19.680 --> 08:26.240] Yes, he is elected and he is a public official in his own right. [08:26.240 --> 08:29.760] But he's just a lawyer for the state. [08:29.760 --> 08:34.520] He gets to do what the statutes tell him he gets to do. [08:34.520 --> 08:35.680] Exactly. [08:35.680 --> 08:41.920] And deciding whether to prosecute or not to prosecute is not one of those things he's [08:41.920 --> 08:45.280] authorized to do. [08:45.280 --> 08:53.160] As a public official, he may only do what he is specifically authorized to do. [08:53.160 --> 09:08.760] The codes, all the codes imply or intend that prosecutions commence with the filing of a [09:08.760 --> 09:12.480] criminal accusation with a grand jury. [09:12.480 --> 09:23.960] I'm sorry, a filing of a criminal accusation with a, with some magistrate. [09:23.960 --> 09:34.160] Now, it can commence with a prosecute, with a complaint coming to the knowledge of a grand [09:34.160 --> 09:35.600] jury. [09:35.600 --> 09:43.960] And even that grand jury doesn't replace the determination of a magistrate in an examining [09:43.960 --> 09:54.160] trial because if a complaint is, is made known to the grand jury and 20.08 is what it used [09:54.160 --> 10:01.080] to be, they changed it to 20, a point, something rather, I don't even remember what it was. [10:01.080 --> 10:07.920] But it says that under duties of grand jurors, it shall be the duty of the grand jury to [10:07.920 --> 10:15.160] investigate into all crimes subject to indictment that come to their knowledge by way of any [10:15.160 --> 10:25.320] member of the grand jury, the prosecuting attorney, or any credible person. [10:25.320 --> 10:34.800] So it's intended that while a prosecutor is not the person to whom any complaint is ever [10:34.800 --> 10:42.360] directed to by law, sometimes prosecutors get criminal complaints. [10:42.360 --> 10:51.240] And if he does, he should give them to a magistrate or the grand jury to 2.03 Texas Code of Criminal [10:51.240 --> 10:58.000] Procedure, 2.03, 4, 5, and 6. [10:58.000 --> 11:03.880] They tell the prosecutor what he is directed to do when he receives a criminal complaint. [11:03.880 --> 11:10.280] And he's to give it to the grand jury or some magistrate, right there in the code. [11:10.280 --> 11:16.640] There is nothing in there that can, that authorizes him to say, well, I don't care about this, [11:16.640 --> 11:21.640] and I'm going to toss it in a trash. [11:21.640 --> 11:22.640] No, he didn't get to do that. [11:22.640 --> 11:28.480] Yeah, Scott and Michigan called in a couple of weeks ago, and he told about a case he [11:28.480 --> 11:29.480] was in. [11:29.480 --> 11:33.840] He'd been fighting them, and he was thrilled because he won the case. [11:33.840 --> 11:42.640] He came to trial, and the judge said, we are here to pick a jury. [11:42.640 --> 11:44.920] And Scott said, whoa, whoa, objection. [11:44.920 --> 11:51.760] I got motions before the court, and the judge said, hold on, let me finish. [11:51.760 --> 11:58.080] He said, before he picks a jury, does the prosecutor have anything to say? [11:58.080 --> 12:00.360] And the prosecutor said, yes, Your Honor, we do. [12:00.360 --> 12:06.080] In the interest of justice, we moved, in this case, to be dismissed. [12:06.080 --> 12:07.680] And the judge granted a motion. [12:07.680 --> 12:14.120] That sounds to me like, it sounds like the judge had some insider knowledge of what [12:14.120 --> 12:18.320] was about to happen, so they had some kind of a chit chat in the office that they weren't [12:18.320 --> 12:19.320] allowed to have. [12:19.320 --> 12:25.960] Yeah, well, I got that impression too, but I got, the person I got, the judge was kind [12:25.960 --> 12:27.960] of enjoying himself. [12:27.960 --> 12:33.200] It sounds like the way, hey, let me finish. [12:33.200 --> 12:40.240] And the prosecutor said, in the interest of justice, we moved, in the case, to be dismissed. [12:40.240 --> 12:45.360] That is how it's done. [12:45.360 --> 12:53.680] That is the only method in law for dismissing a prosecution. [12:53.680 --> 12:59.360] By a prosecutor, it's not directly by the prosecutor, but the prosecutor can go to the [12:59.360 --> 13:05.760] judge in open court and move that the case be dismissed. [13:05.760 --> 13:07.800] A judge can do that. [13:07.800 --> 13:10.080] They can dismiss it. [13:10.080 --> 13:13.800] But the prosecutor cannot. [13:13.800 --> 13:21.520] Just because it hasn't gotten to court or to trial or to, into the process of prosecuting [13:21.520 --> 13:27.520] before a judicial officer, that doesn't mean the prosecutor accrues some kind of power [13:27.520 --> 13:28.520] and authority. [13:28.520 --> 13:34.840] So if I give a criminal complaint to a prosecutor, and he doesn't want to pursue on it, he can [13:34.840 --> 13:40.480] always move the court to dismiss the charges in the interest of justice. [13:40.480 --> 13:49.160] Or he can file it with a magistrate and, as the prosecutor for the state, move that the [13:49.160 --> 13:52.840] magistrate find no probable cause. [13:52.840 --> 13:56.040] He can do those things. [13:56.040 --> 14:00.040] But there is nothing in law that allows him to make that determination. [14:00.040 --> 14:03.520] That is a judicial determination. [14:03.520 --> 14:08.800] If he makes that determination, he is impersonating a judicial officer. [14:08.800 --> 14:09.800] Okay. [14:09.800 --> 14:14.840] People are going to say, yeah, but he's a wild spirit intern and he is a judicial officer. [14:14.840 --> 14:16.800] That may be true. [14:16.800 --> 14:20.280] But he is not the judicial officer that he is impersonating. [14:20.280 --> 14:24.440] Not that judicial officer. [14:24.440 --> 14:25.680] Exactly. [14:25.680 --> 14:32.480] That judicial officer is a magistrate or a trial judge. [14:32.480 --> 14:36.360] If he would have the powers of both, why would they need two people? [14:36.360 --> 14:37.840] Exactly. [14:37.840 --> 14:45.640] So what I'm trying to do is soften up the DA. [14:45.640 --> 14:57.480] And I'm not ready to construe that I am important enough that I can actually directly change [14:57.480 --> 14:58.480] things. [14:58.480 --> 15:04.240] I'm just an ordinary person here, although I do this radio show and I talk to a lot [15:04.240 --> 15:05.240] of people. [15:05.240 --> 15:08.720] At the end of the day, I'm just a person. [15:08.720 --> 15:11.120] I can't change things. [15:11.120 --> 15:16.640] I have to pursue my public officials to get them to change things. [15:16.640 --> 15:19.880] So I'm pursuing my public officials, Tina Colbrook. [15:19.880 --> 15:23.400] Oh, by the way, think of the thinking of that. [15:23.400 --> 15:26.520] I'm going to turn on the phone lines. [15:26.520 --> 15:34.440] I call in number 512-646-1984 if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [15:34.440 --> 15:37.520] And Tina Colbrook had done just exactly that. [15:37.520 --> 15:39.320] She gave us a call. [15:39.320 --> 15:45.040] And we'd talk back and forth, and Brett and I talked to her a good while back and suggested [15:45.040 --> 15:48.760] that she file some criminal complaints with District Attorney. [15:48.760 --> 15:51.720] And she did that. [15:51.720 --> 15:58.320] And the Prosecutor's Attorney for a year or so was all gung-ho to go after these people [15:58.320 --> 16:04.800] she filed against, one of whom was a notary in the State of Texas who refused to provide [16:04.800 --> 16:08.360] a notary ledger. [16:08.360 --> 16:14.720] And the prosecutor finally decided that he wasn't going to prosecute and told her to [16:14.720 --> 16:23.000] send a letter to an email to Tina saying that he didn't have jurisdiction. [16:23.000 --> 16:33.720] Well, I'm alleging he did not have the power to make that determination, right? [16:33.720 --> 16:35.600] That's a judicial determination. [16:35.600 --> 16:38.840] He doesn't have the power to do it. [16:38.840 --> 16:43.960] When he does that, we should throw him off the cliff. [16:43.960 --> 16:54.560] Andy Kelton, Brett Spouton, Rula La Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984, hang on. [16:54.560 --> 17:00.320] Go into our sponsors, we'll be right back. [17:00.320 --> 17:05.640] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [17:05.640 --> 17:09.320] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Miras Proven Method. [17:09.320 --> 17:13.440] Michael Miras has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [17:13.440 --> 17:14.440] can win two. 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[18:00.240 --> 18:04.720] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [18:04.720 --> 18:08.280] In today's America, we live in a us against them society, and if we the people are ever [18:08.280 --> 18:12.400] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.400 --> 18:15.480] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [18:15.480 --> 18:19.600] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.600 --> 18:23.560] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.560 --> 18:25.040] our rights through due process. [18:25.040 --> 18:28.920] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [18:28.920 --> 18:32.680] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [18:32.680 --> 18:34.800] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.800 --> 18:39.080] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [18:39.080 --> 18:40.400] ordering your copy today. [18:40.400 --> 18:43.680] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [18:43.680 --> 18:48.160] The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research [18:48.160 --> 18:50.480] documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.480 --> 18:54.440] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.440 --> 19:10.720] Through your copy today and together, we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [19:24.440 --> 19:44.120] We're standing like it's out of control, on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome. [19:44.120 --> 20:01.800] We're standing like it's out of control, on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome. [20:01.800 --> 20:19.160] We're standing like it's out of control, on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome. [20:19.160 --> 20:36.520] We're standing like it's out of control, on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome. [20:36.520 --> 20:59.760] We're standing like it's out of control, on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome. [20:59.760 --> 21:28.160] We're standing like it's out of control, on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark dome. [21:28.160 --> 21:35.240] Remember the Constitution and how the Constitution works. [21:35.240 --> 21:42.200] I just heard an interesting treatment recently about constitutions, federal and state. [21:42.200 --> 21:50.960] The federal Constitution grants powers to various entities. [21:50.960 --> 22:00.160] The Constitution limits the powers that the federal government grants to the states, [22:00.160 --> 22:03.040] to public officials. [22:03.040 --> 22:07.160] The state Constitution limits those powers. [22:07.160 --> 22:10.280] It was a very good way of thinking about it. [22:10.280 --> 22:15.640] We keep saying that the Constitution is not about you and it doesn't grant you anything. [22:15.640 --> 22:22.960] Apparently, the federal Constitution grants public officials certain powers and abilities. [22:22.960 --> 22:35.040] The state Constitution mirrors a lot of those grants but adjusts and amends a lot of them [22:35.040 --> 22:38.240] and restricts them. [22:38.240 --> 22:49.160] The state Constitution doesn't speak to the prosecuting attorney concerning making judicial [22:49.160 --> 22:52.720] determinations. [22:52.720 --> 23:01.800] That's only referenced in the Constitution and granted to judges in cases before the [23:01.800 --> 23:08.480] court and magistrates in the case of criminal accusations. [23:08.480 --> 23:13.640] Doesn't say anything about the prosecutor. [23:13.640 --> 23:19.760] Everything in law directs a criminal accusation to a magistrate. [23:19.760 --> 23:28.720] Nothing directs one to a prosecutor so what I'm doing is attacking the ability of a prosecuting [23:28.720 --> 23:34.880] attorney to exercise prosecutorial discretion. [23:34.880 --> 23:37.640] They have a name for it. [23:37.640 --> 23:42.960] They have a name for something that does not exist. [23:42.960 --> 23:43.960] They made it up. [23:43.960 --> 23:49.840] And they love it when you ask them about making things up. [23:49.840 --> 23:51.400] They think that's great. [23:51.400 --> 23:54.000] Oh yeah, they love that part. [23:54.000 --> 23:59.960] In Pennsylvania, there is such a thing as prosecutorial discretion. [23:59.960 --> 24:06.160] In Pennsylvania, if a complaint is filed with a prosecuting attorney and complaints are [24:06.160 --> 24:13.960] directed to prosecuting attorneys, they have what the law calls first blush. [24:13.960 --> 24:22.560] They can determine whether or not they believe there's sufficient evidence to warrant a prosecution. [24:22.560 --> 24:26.320] They are actually given judicial powers. [24:26.320 --> 24:30.600] However, it comes with a caveat. [24:30.600 --> 24:36.880] If you don't agree with it, unlike every other state, every other state, when a complaint [24:36.880 --> 24:44.440] is filed, it is filed with a prostitute with a magistrate and you are out of it. [24:44.440 --> 24:49.920] You have no standing to do anything other than file the complaint. [24:49.920 --> 24:52.840] You have standing to do that. [24:52.840 --> 24:57.640] Once the complaint is filed, it goes to the hands of the magistrate and the magistrate [24:57.640 --> 25:02.920] decides whether the complaint becomes a prosecution or not, and you don't have anything to say [25:02.920 --> 25:03.920] about it. [25:03.920 --> 25:10.320] And once it becomes a prosecution, the state has the power to prosecute. [25:10.320 --> 25:14.600] You know when they say, oh, are you going to pursue prosecution? [25:14.600 --> 25:21.440] Well, there's not a state in the union where you have the power to pursue a prosecution. [25:21.440 --> 25:27.920] You know, they ask people not to pursue the prosecution, like they want to make a deal [25:27.920 --> 25:33.960] or something, and they ask them that, like the people who have the power to pursue or [25:33.960 --> 25:34.960] not pursue. [25:34.960 --> 25:38.440] You don't have any. [25:38.440 --> 25:48.480] All prosecutions in all states in the United States are prosecuted by professional prosecutors. [25:48.480 --> 25:50.400] No citizen has the power to prosecute. [25:50.400 --> 25:54.920] There's a lot of pre-treat mythology guys out there that want to create their own common [25:54.920 --> 26:01.600] law courts and do their own prosecutions like they did before 1965. [26:01.600 --> 26:08.120] Before that, before 1965, if you had a criminal complaint against someone, you filed it with [26:08.120 --> 26:13.600] the court and then you hired a lawyer to prosecute the issue. [26:13.600 --> 26:22.040] In 1965, I think it was 1965 or 1963, they created professional prosecutors, state prosecutors, [26:22.040 --> 26:29.280] and gave exclusive prosecutorial power to those prosecutors, and you don't have anything [26:29.280 --> 26:30.280] to say about it. [26:30.280 --> 26:32.400] You just give notice. [26:32.400 --> 26:41.320] Except in Pennsylvania, you give notice not to a judicial officer, or to a judge or magistrate, [26:41.320 --> 26:43.720] but to a prosecuting attorney. [26:43.720 --> 26:49.360] And that prosecuting attorney can make a determination, really wants to prosecute him, however, along [26:49.360 --> 26:56.440] with that, my apologies, I keep turning this down and then after the show, I forget to [26:56.440 --> 26:57.440] turn it up. [26:57.440 --> 27:00.440] Time to wake up from the nap. [27:00.440 --> 27:05.360] Oh yeah, that too. [27:05.360 --> 27:10.240] You give notice to the prosecutor and then it's out of your hands. [27:10.240 --> 27:16.920] All you do is give notice, it's up to the state to prosecute, except in Pennsylvania. [27:16.920 --> 27:19.960] That's the only state you give notice to the prosecuting attorney. [27:19.960 --> 27:24.640] He makes a determination, rather to prosecute or not, but if you don't like it, if you don't [27:24.640 --> 27:31.640] agree with it, in Pennsylvania, you have standing. [27:31.640 --> 27:37.800] You can appeal the prosecutor's decision to the court of common pleas. [27:37.800 --> 27:44.760] If the court of common pleas agrees with the prosecutor, you can appeal it all the way up [27:44.760 --> 27:47.920] to the Texas Supreme. [27:47.920 --> 27:53.160] So while you don't have access to grand juries, and while you must file your complaints with [27:53.160 --> 28:01.560] prosecuting attorneys, as a compensation for that, you have standing and you can appeal [28:01.560 --> 28:03.360] it all the way to the Supreme Court. [28:03.360 --> 28:10.840] So it offsets the apparent problem of letting a prosecutor make a judicial determination. [28:10.840 --> 28:19.800] In every other state, all you do is give notice and from that point, it goes to a set of officials [28:19.800 --> 28:23.800] and there are things there are required to do. [28:23.800 --> 28:28.200] Goes to a magistrate, a magistrate makes a determination, a probable cause. [28:28.200 --> 28:34.520] If the magistrate does not find probable cause, you're out of here, it's over, Bubba. [28:34.520 --> 28:42.560] Now you can come back to the magistrate if you get more information, more evidence, but [28:42.560 --> 28:46.000] otherwise you're out of here. [28:46.000 --> 28:50.080] Once the magistrate makes a determination, they've got a set of procedures to go through [28:50.080 --> 28:54.320] and the prosecutor's not involved in that at all. [28:54.320 --> 29:02.320] The only time the prosecutor becomes involved is if the magistrate finds a probable cause. [29:02.320 --> 29:11.120] And then the case moves into the court system and the court needs a lawyer to represent [29:11.120 --> 29:13.120] the court. [29:13.120 --> 29:20.920] Then this guy called a prosecuting attorney and they bring him in as their lawyer. [29:20.920 --> 29:28.520] See, the prosecutors have come to believe that they are a legitimate judicial officer [29:28.520 --> 29:34.120] in their own right when it comes to making a determination of whether or not to prosecute. [29:34.120 --> 29:39.240] They are no such thing, they're just a lawyer for the state. [29:39.240 --> 29:42.960] But they believe that since they have to prosecute, they're the ones that should make [29:42.960 --> 29:49.080] this determination, but our founders, the genius of our founders or grand juries, they [29:49.080 --> 29:53.360] put in place to prevent just exactly that. [29:53.360 --> 29:59.000] And we'll talk about that when we come back from our sponsors, we'll be right back. [29:59.000 --> 30:06.160] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively [30:06.160 --> 30:07.160] affected our health? [30:07.160 --> 30:11.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how [30:11.320 --> 30:15.640] cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.640 --> 30:17.240] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.240 --> 30:20.840] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.840 --> 30:25.600] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.600 --> 30:30.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.840 --> 30:33.360] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.360 --> 30:37.660] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:37.660 --> 30:41.200] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.200 --> 30:45.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:45.000 --> 30:46.760] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. [30:46.760 --> 30:47.760] It's a fact. [30:47.760 --> 30:51.280] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your [30:51.280 --> 30:53.040] head has been disputed. [30:53.040 --> 30:57.120] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:57.120 --> 31:01.520] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones [31:01.520 --> 31:03.040] affect brain chemistry. [31:03.040 --> 31:08.120] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest [31:08.120 --> 31:11.840] to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.840 --> 31:15.800] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any [31:15.800 --> 31:16.800] chances. [31:16.800 --> 31:20.320] I always keep the phone far from my body and I use a corded headset. [31:20.320 --> 31:22.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [31:22.200 --> 31:30.520] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.520 --> 31:31.520] I lost my son. [31:31.520 --> 31:32.520] My nephew. [31:32.520 --> 31:33.520] My uncle. [31:33.520 --> 31:34.520] My son. [31:34.520 --> 31:35.520] On September 11, 2000. [31:35.520 --> 31:38.760] People don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.760 --> 31:42.920] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [31:42.920 --> 31:48.760] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [31:48.760 --> 31:52.520] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.520 --> 31:53.960] Bring justice to my son. [31:53.960 --> 31:54.960] My uncle. [31:54.960 --> 31:55.960] My nephew. [31:55.960 --> 31:56.960] My son. [31:56.960 --> 31:57.960] Go to buildingwhat.org. [31:57.960 --> 32:01.160] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:01.160 --> 32:05.840] Our logo's radio network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.840 --> 32:12.120] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. central time. [32:12.120 --> 32:15.200] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. [32:15.200 --> 32:20.240] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [32:20.240 --> 32:21.800] which is in heaven. [32:21.800 --> 32:26.920] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:26.920 --> 32:32.120] Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [32:32.120 --> 32:35.240] to provoke unto love and good works. [32:35.240 --> 32:39.640] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [32:39.640 --> 32:41.400] one chapter per week. [32:41.400 --> 32:46.480] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [32:46.480 --> 32:48.680] Christian character development. [32:48.680 --> 32:54.520] So mark your calendar and join us live on logo'sradionetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to [32:54.520 --> 33:00.520] 10 p.m. starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the scriptures. [33:00.520 --> 33:09.520] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadionetwork.com. [33:09.520 --> 33:25.520] Yeah, I got a warrant and I'm going to solve them to the head of a man, prosecute them. [33:25.520 --> 33:26.520] Okay. [33:26.520 --> 33:27.520] All set. [33:27.520 --> 33:49.520] Well, I need a prosecutor to come and help me, prosecute them wickedly that I used to [33:49.520 --> 33:50.520] demand more than one liar. [33:50.520 --> 33:51.520] Okay, we are back. [33:51.520 --> 33:57.520] I'm Kelton Brett Fountain from Logos Radio and I've spent these two segments laying the [33:57.520 --> 34:03.520] groundwork so what I'm doing next will begin to make sense to you. [34:03.520 --> 34:09.520] Nothing authorizes a prosecutor to make judicial determinations. [34:09.520 --> 34:17.520] We know they do it all the time and the courts themselves have ruled that prosecutors have [34:17.520 --> 34:22.520] a certain amount of prosecutorial discretion. [34:22.520 --> 34:25.520] Was that a fact, Jack? [34:25.520 --> 34:34.520] So where did the courts get the power to grant judicial capacity to a prosecuting attorney? [34:34.520 --> 34:37.520] I can't find that anywhere. [34:37.520 --> 34:44.520] What I find is when a complaint is made against the public official or against a citizen, the [34:44.520 --> 34:50.520] attorney is to reduce complaint and information and submit it to the courts or the grand jury. [34:50.520 --> 34:54.520] If it's a felony, it must be submitted to a grand jury. [34:54.520 --> 34:55.520] That's the Constitution. [34:55.520 --> 35:03.520] Actually, the Constitution says that every criminal prosecution must commence with an [35:03.520 --> 35:07.520] indictment from the grand jury, felony and misdemeanor. [35:07.520 --> 35:17.520] But the courts have decided, well, indictments for misdemeanors are really inconvenient so [35:17.520 --> 35:20.520] we're going to dispense with that. [35:20.520 --> 35:26.520] Okay, I'm not taking that issue on at the moment. [35:26.520 --> 35:28.520] We'll get to that. [35:28.520 --> 35:40.520] Right now, I'm trying to get public officials to be concerned that if they exceed the limits [35:40.520 --> 35:48.520] of their capacity, if they exert a purport to exert an authority they do not have, malfeasance [35:48.520 --> 35:53.520] in office, or if they fail to perform a duty they're required to perform and misfeasance [35:53.520 --> 36:00.520] in office, that they're subject to criminal prosecution. [36:00.520 --> 36:05.520] And a prosecuting attorney doesn't have anything to say about that. [36:05.520 --> 36:09.520] Only magistrates and trial judges have anything to say about that. [36:09.520 --> 36:18.520] And as to the initiation of a prosecution, only a magistrate has something to say about that, [36:18.520 --> 36:21.520] not a prosecuting attorney. [36:21.520 --> 36:29.520] So Tina found these complaints, a prosecuting attorney in Travis County, decided he didn't [36:29.520 --> 36:38.520] want to prosecute Manukin, ex-director of the Treasury, rich guy, lots of power, political [36:38.520 --> 36:40.520] power, lots of influence. [36:40.520 --> 36:45.520] And the prosecuting attorney decided, well, that's scary business. [36:45.520 --> 36:49.520] He's got deep pockets, higher, expensive lawyers. [36:49.520 --> 36:51.520] I don't want to do this. [36:51.520 --> 36:57.520] So he lied to Tina and told her he didn't have jurisdiction. [36:57.520 --> 37:05.520] And I agree with him, all except for the notary. [37:05.520 --> 37:08.520] I agree that he didn't have jurisdiction over these. [37:08.520 --> 37:15.520] These had diversity issues and they were federal issues. [37:15.520 --> 37:18.520] So what? [37:18.520 --> 37:23.520] The prosecuting attorney had no power to make that determination. [37:23.520 --> 37:27.520] A magistrate had to do that. [37:27.520 --> 37:31.520] So I filed criminal charges against him. [37:31.520 --> 37:40.520] I took him down to the district attorney's office, inside a sealed post office type, [37:40.520 --> 37:45.520] these cardboard stiff envelopes, that once you've sealed them, the only way you can open [37:45.520 --> 37:53.520] them is to pull this string and rip the seal open and put form into the grand jury and told [37:53.520 --> 38:00.520] the investigator that I gave it to, because no EDAs were around, that I did this in person [38:00.520 --> 38:05.520] because I wanted to be able to testify that the prosecuting attorney's office absolutely [38:05.520 --> 38:11.520] received this with directions to give it to the grand jury, because the only address we [38:11.520 --> 38:16.520] have for the grand jury is prosecuting attorney's office. [38:16.520 --> 38:21.520] And I told the investigator, do not open this. [38:21.520 --> 38:27.520] And tell your boss, do not open this, it's a trap. [38:27.520 --> 38:31.520] Well, I suspect that he opened it. [38:31.520 --> 38:35.520] First page was a letter to the foreman of the grand jury asking the grand jury foreman [38:35.520 --> 38:42.520] to email me and let me know that he received this and let me know if the envelope it was [38:42.520 --> 38:46.520] in had been, the seal had been broken. [38:46.520 --> 38:51.520] Well, you probably won't believe this, but I did not receive an email from the foreman [38:51.520 --> 38:53.520] of the grand jury. [38:53.520 --> 38:54.520] What? [38:54.520 --> 38:57.520] Yeah, I'm not kidding. [38:57.520 --> 39:04.520] I think that the prosecuting attorney actually opened that document. [39:04.520 --> 39:14.520] He wouldn't, you wouldn't think so, but I didn't hear from the foreman and the criminal [39:14.520 --> 39:20.520] complaints that were contained in that document were against the district attorney, so surely [39:20.520 --> 39:31.520] he would not imagine that he could dismiss criminal prosecutions against himself. [39:31.520 --> 39:43.520] That would be pretty serious stuff, construction, jury tampering, shielding from prosecution, [39:43.520 --> 39:49.520] criminal conspiracy to commit, simulating a legal process. [39:49.520 --> 39:51.520] Randy, you set him up. [39:51.520 --> 39:52.520] That wasn't fair. [39:52.520 --> 39:54.520] You set him up. [39:54.520 --> 39:55.520] Poor bad me. [39:55.520 --> 39:56.520] Naughty, naughty. [39:56.520 --> 39:57.520] My bad. [39:57.520 --> 40:00.520] Yes, I did. [40:00.520 --> 40:02.520] And it was so much fun. [40:02.520 --> 40:07.520] And I'm probably the only person in the state of Texas who could do that. [40:07.520 --> 40:19.520] Well, me and 29 million other people, because this 29 million people in Texas are not public [40:19.520 --> 40:20.520] officials. [40:20.520 --> 40:21.520] We're not policemen. [40:21.520 --> 40:28.520] We're not clerks, judges, bailiffs, prosecutors. [40:28.520 --> 40:30.520] We're the masters. [40:30.520 --> 40:32.520] There are the servants. [40:32.520 --> 40:36.520] I can do that because I am the master of my servants. [40:36.520 --> 40:40.520] And I insist that my servant do what the law tells him to do. [40:40.520 --> 40:48.520] Do what I and you through our legislature has commanded him to do for her. [40:48.520 --> 40:53.520] And I was naive enough to read that stuff and believe it. [40:53.520 --> 41:01.520] So I filed against him with the grand jury and I believe he opened it. [41:01.520 --> 41:11.520] Now, I've just pulled down the names of all of the district attorneys in Travis County. [41:11.520 --> 41:15.520] They are all females except one. [41:15.520 --> 41:19.520] And over half of them is the first time in office. [41:19.520 --> 41:27.520] I think there were three or four that has more than one term in office. [41:27.520 --> 41:29.520] The rest of them are brand new. [41:29.520 --> 41:38.520] So I'm going to be accommodating and helpful to them by introducing them to the deep end of the pool. [41:38.520 --> 41:40.520] Make them feel welcome. [41:40.520 --> 41:41.520] Absolutely. [41:41.520 --> 41:52.520] I'm sending them, each one, a set of criminal complaints against the district attorney and the head of the district attorney's public integrity unit. [41:52.520 --> 42:07.520] Accusing them of conspiring to obstruct justice, to shield from prosecution, criminal conspiracy, criminal conspiracy to simulate a legal process. [42:07.520 --> 42:15.520] And the legal process is an examining trial held by the prosecuting attorney. [42:15.520 --> 42:26.520] Article 2.10, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure tells a magistrate that it is his duty to keep peace in the state of Texas. [42:26.520 --> 42:37.520] 2.11 says that when a magistrate sits with a purpose of examining into a criminal accusation, that is an examining court. [42:37.520 --> 42:48.520] And that examining court is held under Chapter 16, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, called examining court, their examining trial. [42:48.520 --> 42:51.520] That's with the law commands. [42:51.520 --> 42:54.520] He doesn't say anything about a prostitute attorney. [42:54.520 --> 42:59.520] So he simulated a legal process. [42:59.520 --> 43:07.520] That's my consideration, is that the prosecuting attorney convened an examining court. [43:07.520 --> 43:12.520] But he doesn't have power to convene an examining court. [43:12.520 --> 43:23.520] And then he shielded criminal complaints against himself from the grand jury that's felony in state of Texas. [43:23.520 --> 43:32.520] He conspired with this guy, Drummond Fellow, assistant district attorney, to do this. [43:32.520 --> 43:40.520] Because this guy, Drummond, was the head of the public integrity unit for the district attorney's office. [43:40.520 --> 43:45.520] I was made to understand that that had been abolished. [43:45.520 --> 43:53.520] Ron Earl got the legislature to grant funding for a public integrity unit. [43:53.520 --> 43:57.520] And when that happened, I said, what the heck is this crap over? [43:57.520 --> 44:00.520] Under 2.03 when a complaint's made against... [44:00.520 --> 44:06.520] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.520 --> 44:09.520] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [44:09.520 --> 44:11.520] And it's time we changed all that. [44:11.520 --> 44:17.520] The primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. 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[45:51.520 --> 46:01.520] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:21.520 --> 46:39.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Ruleoflaw Radio, and we're talking about what the prosecutor can do and what he can't do, [46:39.520 --> 46:44.520] and how to beam up if he tries to do something that he's not authorized to do. [46:44.520 --> 46:50.520] And one thing he's not authorized to do is exercise prosecutorial discretion. [46:50.520 --> 46:56.520] And if you've tried to call in, we seem to be having some issues with the call-a-board. [46:56.520 --> 47:02.520] Brett's talking to Deborah, see if we can take care of that issue, so it should be working shortly. [47:02.520 --> 47:10.520] Okay, so the prosecutor exerted, purported to exert authority he did not express to have, and in the process, [47:10.520 --> 47:20.520] denied me in the right to fully, in free access to or enjoyment, let's see, I've got that all confused. [47:20.520 --> 47:28.520] The prosecutor denied me in the full and free access to or enjoyment of a white, [47:28.520 --> 47:33.520] and that's the right to the equal protection of the laws and to do course of the laws, [47:33.520 --> 47:38.520] which is an act of official oppression under 39.03 penal code. [47:38.520 --> 47:45.520] But in order to do that, in doing that, I'm sorry, I got this out of place. [47:45.520 --> 47:53.520] I jumped ahead of myself. He denied Tina Colbrook in that right. [47:53.520 --> 47:57.520] When she filed these complaints against these public officials, [47:57.520 --> 48:03.520] or these one public official and other ordinary citizen type people, [48:03.520 --> 48:09.520] he decided not to prosecute, so he denied her in the due course of the laws of Texas, [48:09.520 --> 48:15.520] and that's official oppression under 39.03 penal code. [48:15.520 --> 48:24.520] But he also exerted, I'm sorry, I kind of tripped up my place. [48:24.520 --> 48:28.520] I wanted this to flow real easy. He decided not to prosecute. [48:28.520 --> 48:35.520] So I looked at that and said, oh my goodness, I have reason to believe that a crime has been committed, [48:35.520 --> 48:37.520] and it was committed by the prosecuting attorney. [48:37.520 --> 48:40.520] So I filed against the prosecuting attorney. [48:40.520 --> 48:47.520] And what I claimed is that he and this guy Drummond, who is an assistant district attorney, [48:47.520 --> 48:56.520] supposedly the head of the public integrity unit, which the prosecuting attorney is not supposed to have anymore, [48:56.520 --> 49:05.520] because that goes specific to public officials, and 2.03 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [49:05.520 --> 49:11.520] 2.01 says it shall be the duty of the prosecuting attorney not to secure conviction, [49:11.520 --> 49:15.520] but to ensure that justice is served. [49:15.520 --> 49:22.520] He shall not secret evidence or witnesses that will show the innocence of the accused, [49:22.520 --> 49:25.520] or mitigate the guilt of the accused. [49:25.520 --> 49:28.520] Okay, that's nice. I mind it, rhetoric. [49:28.520 --> 49:34.520] But it really doesn't instruct the prosecutor to do anything in specific. [49:34.520 --> 49:40.520] 2.02 says county attorneys to handle this stuff, district attorneys to handle this stuff. [49:40.520 --> 49:48.520] 2.03, first one that specifically instructs the prosecuting attorney to do something in particular. [49:48.520 --> 49:56.520] And that is, when a prosecuting attorney is made known in any manner that a public official has violated a law relating to his office, [49:56.520 --> 50:02.520] he shall reduce the complaint to an information and submit it to the grand jury. [50:02.520 --> 50:05.520] No discretion. [50:05.520 --> 50:11.520] What part of that is hard to understand? [50:11.520 --> 50:20.520] A prosecuting attorney should not be put in a position to make a determination as to whether or not to prosecute somebody who works with. [50:20.520 --> 50:23.520] Yeah, that could affect his golf game next time. [50:23.520 --> 50:31.520] Exactly. And the legislature got that, so they took him off that dime. [50:31.520 --> 50:38.520] You get a complaint against a public official, you don't touch it. You give it to the grand jury and get out of there. [50:38.520 --> 50:41.520] Let them decide what to do with it, so you're off that dime. [50:41.520 --> 50:50.520] Well, prosecutors, they really want to be able to exert that power, so that's what he did. [50:50.520 --> 50:52.520] And I raised an objection to it. [50:52.520 --> 51:04.520] I considered that when he made the determination not to prosecute, he simulated a legal process in violation of 32.48 text penal code. [51:04.520 --> 51:08.520] And that's a class A misdemeanor state of Texas. [51:08.520 --> 51:13.520] Or is it, I think it may be a 30 degree felony. [51:13.520 --> 51:17.520] I forget. It's one of the two. It's pretty serious. [51:17.520 --> 51:36.520] And he, by simulating a legal process acting in impersonation of a public official in violation of 37.11 text penal code, [51:36.520 --> 51:43.520] he shielded the accused from prosecution in violation of 38.05 text penal code. [51:43.520 --> 51:58.520] In order to accomplish that, he conspired with this Ron Drummond assisted district attorney to obstruct justice in violation of 36.06 penal code. [51:58.520 --> 52:02.520] See how these things stack together? [52:02.520 --> 52:08.520] Our codes are extremely well structured. [52:08.520 --> 52:15.520] Texas law has been tweaked and adjusted for the last 145 years. [52:15.520 --> 52:25.520] And Texas law is a derivative of federal law, which has been tweaked in a justice, I'm sorry, Texas law has been there for 150 years. [52:25.520 --> 52:37.520] It's a derivative of US law that's been there for 245 years, which is a derivative of English law, which has been in place for 800 years. [52:37.520 --> 52:45.520] 806 to be exact, since the first signing of the Magna Carta Libertatum. [52:45.520 --> 52:53.520] From that time, we've been tweaking and adjusting these laws over generation after generation after generation. [52:53.520 --> 53:00.520] And we have an exquisitely well structured body of law. [53:00.520 --> 53:03.520] It is a mosaic. [53:03.520 --> 53:07.520] You violate one of these. [53:07.520 --> 53:19.520] If anybody here has ever laid tile, you get one tile out of place and everything that follows that is screwed up and it keeps getting worse and worse. [53:19.520 --> 53:34.520] The laws are a mosaic. You violate one of them and all of a sudden you start bumping into others and it just, the violations increase exponentially. [53:34.520 --> 53:36.520] And that's what's happening here. [53:36.520 --> 53:38.520] He decides not to prosecute. [53:38.520 --> 53:47.520] And when you start looking at the law, you've got one code after another after another because they're designed to be interlocking. [53:47.520 --> 53:53.520] Everything has to work right or it gets really screwed up and that's what happened to it. [53:53.520 --> 54:09.520] So I filed six criminal complaints against Jose Garza, the Travis County District Attorney, and six criminal complaints against Ron Drummond, the Assistant District Attorney. [54:09.520 --> 54:30.520] Because when you act in concert conclusion with someone else, as defined in 7.02 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which addresses criminal culpability for the acts of another, you become equally culpable for the acts of all of the actors. [54:30.520 --> 54:33.520] So we've got this stack of criminal complaints. [54:33.520 --> 54:37.520] So what do I do with them? [54:37.520 --> 54:45.520] It goes to the grand jury, of course, because some filing against the prosecuting attorney would be inappropriate to give the complaints to him. [54:45.520 --> 54:47.520] So I gave him the grand jury. [54:47.520 --> 54:51.520] The only address I have for the grand jury is the District Attorney's office. [54:51.520 --> 55:01.520] So I took him down there myself, gave personal service and investigators since the AD, the prosecutor and the assistant district attorney, so we're not there. [55:01.520 --> 55:03.520] I gave him to her. [55:03.520 --> 55:07.520] With instructions not to open them, give them to the grand jury. [55:07.520 --> 55:11.520] But I didn't get a response to the cover letter I included. [55:11.520 --> 55:29.520] So I have reason to believe and do believe that the prosecuting attorney shielded himself from prosecution, tampered with a government document in that he secreted government documents from the person or office that it was directed to. [55:29.520 --> 55:43.520] And I'm filing those with every single district judge in Travis County in their capacity as a magistrate, and I'm going to ask each one of them to hold an examining trial. [55:43.520 --> 55:56.520] Well, it seems that all of the district judges in Travis County are Democrats, as is the prosecuting attorney. [55:56.520 --> 55:59.520] So correct. [55:59.520 --> 56:07.520] What odds would you give me that none of them hold an examining trial? [56:07.520 --> 56:09.520] Most likely not going to happen. [56:09.520 --> 56:18.520] I got this rule, never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [56:18.520 --> 56:25.520] Because you never ask them to do anything that the law does not compel them to do. [56:25.520 --> 56:47.520] So when these magistrates refused to hold an examining trial in this case, and they do like Bob Perkins, head criminal district judge for Travis County did in 2008, and says, oh, Mr. Kelton, I'm a district judge in Travis County and district judges don't take criminal complaints. [56:47.520 --> 56:51.520] You really need to take that to some magistrate. [56:51.520 --> 56:58.520] And he told him, well, that's okay, your honor, I'm not here to invoke your duty as a district judge. [56:58.520 --> 57:04.520] I'm here to invoke your duty as a magistrate, and that's a duty from which you may not shield yourself. [57:04.520 --> 57:17.520] That particular complaint got all the highest judges in Texas, the Court of Criminal Appeals, put in front of a grand jury in 2008. [57:17.520 --> 57:21.520] He's not one of the highest judges in Texas. Good luck, Bubba. [57:21.520 --> 57:23.520] Let's see how this works for you. [57:23.520 --> 57:26.520] Now, I don't want to prosecute or indict it. [57:26.520 --> 57:31.520] I want him to understand that he can be. [57:31.520 --> 57:36.520] Because I've got complaints against other officials that I want to give to him. [57:36.520 --> 57:48.520] One in particular, I went to the county court, into the courthouse in Travis County, trying to get some records, and went to the old courthouse. [57:48.520 --> 57:52.520] And they said, well, we just do civil here. You need to go down to the criminal. [57:52.520 --> 57:58.520] And a clerk had told me who I needed to talk to there, because I refused to wear a mask. [57:58.520 --> 58:02.520] So they had the clerk come down and talk to me, so I didn't have to go in the building. [58:02.520 --> 58:08.520] So I went across to the criminal side and told the bailiff there, I need you to give Suzy something rather. [58:08.520 --> 58:10.520] I don't remember her name. [58:10.520 --> 58:21.520] And the guy looked up at me. He had a young guy, kind of short, military tattoo on his forearm, looked up at me, and he said, is that an order? [58:21.520 --> 58:26.520] I was a little taken aback, and I thought about it, and I pulled out the rubber ball theory. [58:26.520 --> 58:34.520] And I said, well, yes, as a matter of fact, it is. He said, well, how's that work for you so far? [58:34.520 --> 58:39.520] I leaned over him and said, pretty good. You want to test it? [58:39.520 --> 58:46.520] And he said, yes. Wait right there. Don't go anywhere. Someone's going to want to talk to you. [58:46.520 --> 58:49.520] Get to that when we get back. [58:49.520 --> 58:53.520] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:53.520 --> 59:00.520] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:00.520 --> 59:05.520] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [59:05.520 --> 59:12.520] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:12.520 --> 59:17.520] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:17.520 --> 59:27.520] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.520 --> 59:40.520] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.520 --> 59:49.520] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.520 --> 59:59.520] Live free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [59:59.520 --> 01:00:05.520] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdowns. [01:00:05.520 --> 01:00:16.520] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019, open with precious metals, gold $1,429 an ounce, silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, [01:00:16.520 --> 01:00:28.520] oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, brand crude $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, [01:00:28.520 --> 01:00:45.520] Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:45.520 --> 01:01:00.520] 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, killing 10 and injuring 40. [01:01:00.520 --> 01:01:18.520] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing HEPA to tax his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, [01:01:18.520 --> 01:01:24.520] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.520 --> 01:01:33.520] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:33.520 --> 01:01:47.520] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, [01:01:47.520 --> 01:02:01.520] as well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.520 --> 01:02:12.520] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:12.520 --> 01:02:21.520] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:21.520 --> 01:02:26.520] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [01:02:26.520 --> 01:02:38.520] 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. [01:02:38.520 --> 01:02:44.520] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins. [01:02:44.520 --> 01:02:50.520] For the purpose, it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:50.520 --> 01:03:09.520] This is Rook Rody with your lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:09.520 --> 01:03:27.520] I read his book and it says he cares much over the other side. These warm hungers come by after Friday. [01:03:27.520 --> 01:03:42.520] I won't pay for the war with my body. I ain't gonna pay for the car with my money. I won't pay for the fun with my body. The plan's wicked and the logic's shite. [01:03:42.520 --> 01:03:49.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue Law Radio. We think we have some phone lines back up. [01:03:49.520 --> 01:03:54.520] If you have a question, comment, give us a call and we'll see if these things are working. [01:03:54.520 --> 01:04:02.520] But in the meantime, I'm playing the prosecutor like a cheap fiddle. I'm trying to soften him up. [01:04:02.520 --> 01:04:08.520] And on the break, I was telling Brett about me going to the courthouse looking for some information. [01:04:08.520 --> 01:04:15.520] I went to the old courthouse for the civil side and they wanted me to wear a mask and I said, that's not gonna happen. [01:04:15.520 --> 01:04:25.520] And I believe the bailiffs there recognize me. They do who I was. And I told them that you need to make reasonable accommodation. [01:04:25.520 --> 01:04:31.520] So they were real nice and professional. They didn't get huffy puffy and they brought their sergeant down. [01:04:31.520 --> 01:04:39.520] And he said, what seems to be the problem here? And I told them that I'm here to see the clerk, the district clerk, and they want me to wear this mask [01:04:39.520 --> 01:04:47.520] and I said, I'm not gonna wear one and you need to provide reasonable accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act. [01:04:47.520 --> 01:04:54.520] And he said, he stood there a minute and he thought and he said, well, I think I can do that. [01:04:54.520 --> 01:05:01.520] If you will have a seat right here on this bench, I'll go get up and get the clerk and have her come down to you. [01:05:01.520 --> 01:05:11.520] I said, that'll work. And he did. And she told me I was in the wrong building that I needed to go to the new building in the back, the criminal courts building, [01:05:11.520 --> 01:05:20.520] and talk to a clerk named Susie something. And I said, well, thank you very much. I will do that. So I did. [01:05:20.520 --> 01:05:28.520] Actually, I walked through the building without a mask, no problem. I went to the building behind it, which was criminal, [01:05:28.520 --> 01:05:38.520] and went up to the bailiff and I instead of having this fight with him, I told the bailiff, I need you to get Susie, whatever name was, [01:05:38.520 --> 01:05:49.520] young kid, short guy, military tat on his forearm. So clearly he was ex-military from his stance and posture. [01:05:49.520 --> 01:06:00.520] That tattoo, he was clearly ex-military. It was an American flag all the way up his forearm and very well done. So it wasn't a jail tat. [01:06:00.520 --> 01:06:10.520] So when I said I need you to go get Susie, whatever name is, he looked up at me and he said, is that an order? [01:06:10.520 --> 01:06:19.520] And I was kind of taking it back. I didn't expect that. But I pulled out the rubber ball theory and tried to give him a response he didn't expect. [01:06:19.520 --> 01:06:25.520] So I thought about it a second and I stepped forward and I said, yes, as a matter of fact, it is. [01:06:25.520 --> 01:06:33.520] He looked up at me and said, well, how's that worked out for you lately? Pretty good. You want to test it? [01:06:33.520 --> 01:06:42.520] He said, yes, way right here. I walked away a few feet, took out my cell phone and he came over and said, you'll have to go outside. [01:06:42.520 --> 01:06:50.520] You can't use that cell phone in here. I looked up at him and said, are you going to interfere with a 911 call and get your hand off that pistol? [01:06:50.520 --> 01:06:58.520] He had his hand resting on his pistol and he snatched his hand off that pistol like it was on fire. [01:06:58.520 --> 01:07:06.520] And then another bailiff come over and kind of captured him. And I called 911, asked him to come out and arrest him. [01:07:06.520 --> 01:07:09.520] That was so much fun. [01:07:09.520 --> 01:07:24.520] So they had the Travis County had cut the police budget by $150 million. [01:07:24.520 --> 01:07:30.520] And I called 911 and they put me on hold for 10 minutes. [01:07:30.520 --> 01:07:35.520] I guess they were protesting and they eventually refused to dispatch someone. [01:07:35.520 --> 01:07:46.520] I said, that's okay. That worked out perfect to me because I've already softened up the Travis County District Attorney. [01:07:46.520 --> 01:07:54.520] Now I'll file criminal charges against the district attorney with all the district judges in Travis County. [01:07:54.520 --> 01:08:01.520] Asking each one of them to hold an examining trial, I'm trying to get them all to refuse. [01:08:01.520 --> 01:08:14.520] And then I will file against all of the district judges with a district judge in Williamson County who is a Republican. [01:08:14.520 --> 01:08:21.520] And I want him to hold an examining trial and then convene a court of inquiry. [01:08:21.520 --> 01:08:29.520] So while all this is going on, I will come back to the prosecuting attorney with criminal complaints against this bailiff. [01:08:29.520 --> 01:08:41.520] For smart mouth and me, I'm going to charge him with first degree felony aggravated assault because he was permanently displaying a deadly weapon and had his hand on it. [01:08:41.520 --> 01:08:44.520] I had to ask him to remove his hand from the deadly weapon. [01:08:44.520 --> 01:08:54.520] They are trained to cook their fingers in their bulletproof vest up by their neck so that their hand is not near the pistol. [01:08:54.520 --> 01:09:03.520] That's why when I told him to get his hand off that pistol, he jerked it off so quickly because he wasn't thinking he would forgot to. [01:09:03.520 --> 01:09:05.520] He knew exactly what that was doing. [01:09:05.520 --> 01:09:07.520] Yes, he did. [01:09:07.520 --> 01:09:14.520] So I'm going to file first degree felony aggravated assault charges against him. [01:09:14.520 --> 01:09:19.520] Well, that's really excessive. [01:09:19.520 --> 01:09:21.520] And that's the intent. [01:09:21.520 --> 01:09:34.520] I'm going to give that to the district attorney and say, here, Bubba, are you going to exercise prosecutual discretion on this one too? [01:09:34.520 --> 01:09:47.520] Or are you just going to give this to the grand jury because there is no chance on earth a grand jury will indict this kid for this nitpicking BS? [01:09:47.520 --> 01:09:50.520] And I'm going to tell him, give this to the grand jury. [01:09:50.520 --> 01:09:52.520] They will simply throw it out. [01:09:52.520 --> 01:09:57.520] You can go in there and suggest that they throw this out. [01:09:57.520 --> 01:10:00.520] I don't want the kid indicted. [01:10:00.520 --> 01:10:03.520] I just want everybody to follow the law the way it's written. [01:10:03.520 --> 01:10:06.520] If the grand jury throws this out, I'm out of here. [01:10:06.520 --> 01:10:09.520] You have no more problem with me. [01:10:09.520 --> 01:10:29.520] So to keep me from doing to him over this, what I just did to him over the last set of complaints, if he gives it to the grand jury and that's what the district attorney did in Wise County when I filed first degree felony aggravated assault charges against the district judge, [01:10:29.520 --> 01:10:37.520] I went up to the grand jury and the bailiff was interfering with me and the district attorney walked out and he says, what seems to be the problem here? [01:10:37.520 --> 01:10:44.520] And I said, well, the bailiff here is interfering with my access to the grand jury. [01:10:44.520 --> 01:10:48.520] And he said, well, Mr. Kelton, what do you want to give to the grand jury? [01:10:48.520 --> 01:10:50.520] And I held up this folder. [01:10:50.520 --> 01:10:51.520] I'll take care of that for you. [01:10:51.520 --> 01:10:55.520] And I knew this guy and I trusted this guy, Greg Lowry. [01:10:55.520 --> 01:10:57.520] He's now the county judge. [01:10:57.520 --> 01:11:03.520] He took my complaints, walked into the grand jury room, 30 seconds later came back out. [01:11:03.520 --> 01:11:07.520] I said, Greg, what did you do with those complaints? [01:11:07.520 --> 01:11:14.520] I said, he said, I gave them to the former of the grand jury and said, handle this, I'm out of here. [01:11:14.520 --> 01:11:16.520] And he left. [01:11:16.520 --> 01:11:31.520] That's exactly what the code commanded him to do. And I had a couple months before I sat down with his assistant district attorney who was also a lawful professor for the purpose of addressing this issue. [01:11:31.520 --> 01:11:33.520] And she took me on. [01:11:33.520 --> 01:11:38.520] And when we were finished, she turned to Greg and said, Greg, he's right. [01:11:38.520 --> 01:11:40.520] That's what the code says. [01:11:40.520 --> 01:11:45.520] And I can't find anything that mitigates that. [01:11:45.520 --> 01:11:46.520] Perfect. [01:11:46.520 --> 01:11:47.520] So he knew. [01:11:47.520 --> 01:11:48.520] He knew. [01:11:48.520 --> 01:11:50.520] Well, he had known me for a long time. [01:11:50.520 --> 01:11:57.520] So he told me once when he was county attorney, he said, what were you doing in Wichita Falls? [01:11:57.520 --> 01:11:58.520] So you know about that? [01:11:58.520 --> 01:11:59.520] How did you know about that? [01:11:59.520 --> 01:12:05.520] Well, I got a call from the prosecuting attorney up there and he wanted to know if you were crazy. [01:12:05.520 --> 01:12:07.520] I said, what did you tell him? [01:12:07.520 --> 01:12:10.520] Oh, yeah, he's crazy. [01:12:10.520 --> 01:12:16.520] But if he tells you something about law, pay attention. He does his homework. [01:12:16.520 --> 01:12:20.520] I said, I'll take that. That'll work. [01:12:20.520 --> 01:12:27.520] So he trusted that I knew my law and I didn't ask him to do anything that the law didn't command him to do. [01:12:27.520 --> 01:12:30.520] And so he did it right. [01:12:30.520 --> 01:12:35.520] And I'm asking the Travis County District Attorney to do it right. [01:12:35.520 --> 01:12:40.520] But right by law. And you can be sure that the grand jury will no bill this kid. [01:12:40.520 --> 01:12:49.520] I'm hoping I can get him to do that to put out this fire I've started. [01:12:49.520 --> 01:12:52.520] And if he gives that to the grand jury, they'll just no bill. [01:12:52.520 --> 01:12:56.520] Then I'm going to come back to him with some other public officials. [01:12:56.520 --> 01:13:00.520] None of whom I actually want indicted. [01:13:00.520 --> 01:13:05.520] I don't necessarily not want them indicted. [01:13:05.520 --> 01:13:08.520] But indictment is not my purpose. [01:13:08.520 --> 01:13:15.520] Having them subject to a grand jury, that is my purpose. [01:13:15.520 --> 01:13:24.520] I'm hoping I can get him to give these to the grand jury and then go to the grand jury and say, while I have to give these to you, [01:13:24.520 --> 01:13:34.520] I don't believe that they are sufficient or are issues that should result in an indictment. [01:13:34.520 --> 01:13:40.520] And the grand jury will 99.9% of the time follow his prescription. [01:13:40.520 --> 01:13:42.520] I'm just trying to get him to make this step. [01:13:42.520 --> 01:13:46.520] So if you're a public official in Travis County, [01:13:46.520 --> 01:13:55.520] now you know that if someone files a complaint against you, the prosecuting attorney is not going to throw it in the trash can. [01:13:55.520 --> 01:14:03.520] He's going to give it to a grand jury of 12, not of your peers, but of all the citizens' peers. [01:14:03.520 --> 01:14:11.520] So you have to run the risk that there's one grand juror on there who's be owed. [01:14:11.520 --> 01:14:18.520] And all it takes is one grand jury to turn the whole grand jury and you could possibly get indicted. [01:14:18.520 --> 01:14:25.520] It is my position that the grand jury is the genius of our founders. [01:14:25.520 --> 01:14:29.520] They did not necessarily want anybody indicted. [01:14:29.520 --> 01:14:35.520] The penal codes are not there because we want anybody prosecuted. [01:14:35.520 --> 01:14:38.520] They're there to act as a deterrent. [01:14:38.520 --> 01:14:48.520] The grand jury was put in place specifically to protect the public from prosecuting attorneys. [01:14:48.520 --> 01:15:00.520] They did not want prosecuting attorneys making determinations a probable cause deciding whether or not to prosecute. [01:15:00.520 --> 01:15:04.520] Because, yeah, their focus is somewhere else. [01:15:04.520 --> 01:15:07.520] Their focus is on prosecution. [01:15:07.520 --> 01:15:21.520] They put magistrates and grand juries in place to prevent prosecutors from in their zeal to prosecute crime from denying citizens a due course. [01:15:21.520 --> 01:15:26.520] So we're trying to reestablish the intent of our founders. [01:15:26.520 --> 01:15:40.520] It sounds like the line that was drawn to prevent zealous police officers from going and ferreting out crime. [01:15:40.520 --> 01:15:41.520] Exactly. [01:15:41.520 --> 01:15:48.520] And in the case law, they state that's exactly why magistrates were put in place. [01:15:48.520 --> 01:15:56.520] In 1215 AD, it was not intended that the police hold the key to the jailhouse door. [01:15:56.520 --> 01:16:07.520] While they are allowed to arrest, and Gerstein-Pew says that it would be preferable if every arrest is made on a warrant issued by a neutral magistrate. [01:16:07.520 --> 01:16:13.520] But it is a reasonable accommodation to allow an officer to arrest someone for an on-site offense. [01:16:13.520 --> 01:16:19.520] But if he does, he is to take that person directly to a neutral magistrate. [01:16:19.520 --> 01:16:24.520] He doesn't have the power to arrest him in prison. [01:16:24.520 --> 01:16:29.520] The key to the jailhouse door is left in the hands of the magistrate. [01:16:29.520 --> 01:16:32.520] We want that back in place. [01:16:32.520 --> 01:16:43.520] The vast majority of our current problems with the police and the criminal justice system would simply go away. [01:16:43.520 --> 01:16:45.520] That's the way the law is written right now. [01:16:45.520 --> 01:16:47.520] It's not like we need it to change. [01:16:47.520 --> 01:16:50.520] That's the way it actually says it right now. [01:16:50.520 --> 01:16:51.520] Exactly. [01:16:51.520 --> 01:16:57.520] And that's the most elegant cure to this problem that I've been able to find over the last 30 years. [01:16:57.520 --> 01:16:59.520] We'll be right back. [01:16:59.520 --> 01:17:04.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:04.520 --> 01:17:08.520] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris proven method. [01:17:08.520 --> 01:17:14.520] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win two. [01:17:14.520 --> 01:17:20.520] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statute. [01:17:20.520 --> 01:17:24.520] What to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons? [01:17:24.520 --> 01:17:26.520] How to answer letters and phone calls? [01:17:26.520 --> 01:17:28.520] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [01:17:28.520 --> 01:17:33.520] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [01:17:33.520 --> 01:17:38.520] The Michael Mirris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.520 --> 01:17:40.520] Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.520 --> 01:17:49.520] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.520 --> 01:17:56.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:56.520 --> 01:17:59.520] To learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:17:59.520 --> 01:18:00.520] I love logos. [01:18:00.520 --> 01:18:04.520] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.520 --> 01:18:06.520] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:06.520 --> 01:18:07.520] I need my truth pick. [01:18:07.520 --> 01:18:09.520] I'd be lost without logos. [01:18:09.520 --> 01:18:12.520] And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.520 --> 01:18:15.520] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, [01:18:15.520 --> 01:18:19.520] and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:19.520 --> 01:18:21.520] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.520 --> 01:18:23.520] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.520 --> 01:18:28.520] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:28.520 --> 01:18:30.520] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:30.520 --> 01:18:34.520] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:18:34.520 --> 01:18:37.520] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.520 --> 01:18:42.520] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:42.520 --> 01:18:43.520] Do I pay extra? [01:18:43.520 --> 01:18:44.520] No. [01:18:44.520 --> 01:18:46.520] Do I have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:46.520 --> 01:18:47.520] No. [01:18:47.520 --> 01:18:48.520] Can I use my Amazon pride? [01:18:48.520 --> 01:18:49.520] No. [01:18:49.520 --> 01:18:50.520] I mean, yes. [01:18:50.520 --> 01:18:55.520] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:18:55.520 --> 01:18:56.520] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.520 --> 01:18:58.520] We are welcome. [01:18:58.520 --> 01:19:27.520] Thank you. [01:19:27.520 --> 01:19:49.520] Okay, we are back. [01:19:49.520 --> 01:19:51.520] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Rules Law Radio. [01:19:51.520 --> 01:19:53.520] We're working on the Caller Bridge. [01:19:53.520 --> 01:20:01.520] We hope to have it up soon, but in the meantime, you're just going to have to pull it up with me and Brett. [01:20:01.520 --> 01:20:08.520] Okay, everything I do in law is about this. [01:20:08.520 --> 01:20:13.520] I've been 30 years researching the problem going on. [01:20:13.520 --> 01:20:18.520] In 1981, I spent the night in jail for driving with a headlight out. [01:20:18.520 --> 01:20:26.520] Now, at the time, the law said that you must have at least two lamps lighted to the front, one of which must be white. [01:20:26.520 --> 01:20:37.520] While I was driving a truck, I had 13 lamps lighted to the front, one of which was white, one of which was out. [01:20:37.520 --> 01:20:40.520] And that was the right side headlight. [01:20:40.520 --> 01:20:44.520] But I had so much light out there, I couldn't tell it was out. [01:20:44.520 --> 01:20:49.520] And this was right after they put in the requirement to show proof of insurance. [01:20:49.520 --> 01:20:52.520] And the officer asked me if I had proof of insurance. [01:20:52.520 --> 01:20:54.520] And I said, yeah, I do. [01:20:54.520 --> 01:21:00.520] But what if I give you that proof of insurance and it shows my insurance expired yesterday? [01:21:00.520 --> 01:21:02.520] Well, I'll light you a ticket. [01:21:02.520 --> 01:21:05.520] Well, in that case, I'm not going to give it to you. [01:21:05.520 --> 01:21:10.520] Well, he was in a bad mood that day and promptly arrested me. [01:21:10.520 --> 01:21:21.520] He put the cuffs on me so tight that when they got me to the jail, they had to get DPS officer to get him off because my wrists had swelled up around them. [01:21:21.520 --> 01:21:24.520] And they let me out the next day. [01:21:24.520 --> 01:21:31.520] When they took the cuffs off, the blood flow started back and I got dizzy and set on the floor. [01:21:31.520 --> 01:21:40.520] And this DPS Sheriff's Deputy stepped up and stepped across my legs, standing straddle of my legs sticking out on the floor. [01:21:40.520 --> 01:21:45.520] Put his hands on his hips and said, what kind of drugs have you been doing? [01:21:45.520 --> 01:21:56.520] And by then I got my equilibrium back and I come up off the floor and told him, if I need any crap from you, I'll squeeze your head. [01:21:56.520 --> 01:22:03.520] Well, that got me tossed in the drunk tank. [01:22:03.520 --> 01:22:08.520] I got out the next day and that just didn't seem right. [01:22:08.520 --> 01:22:10.520] My family had no idea where it was. [01:22:10.520 --> 01:22:13.520] They just knew I didn't show up and they were terrified. [01:22:13.520 --> 01:22:15.520] They were afraid I'd got killed or something. [01:22:15.520 --> 01:22:18.520] And this is before cell phones. [01:22:18.520 --> 01:22:23.520] So I got out the penal code and the code of criminal procedure and I read them. [01:22:23.520 --> 01:22:31.520] And then I looked at the practice of law and I thought, have I stepped through the looking glass? [01:22:31.520 --> 01:22:38.520] How could the practice be so dramatically different than the code? [01:22:38.520 --> 01:22:39.520] And I'm an engineer. [01:22:39.520 --> 01:22:43.520] I read the code as a tech manual. [01:22:43.520 --> 01:22:46.520] What was the problem? [01:22:46.520 --> 01:22:49.520] What have I missed? [01:22:49.520 --> 01:22:57.520] I studied the codes for 15 years and if I became clear to me, I didn't miss anything. [01:22:57.520 --> 01:23:02.520] First time through, the code meant exactly what it said. [01:23:02.520 --> 01:23:13.520] Yes, but there's some kind of a, you encounter that and you just imagine as an engineer, you say, well, they wouldn't have just invent something different. [01:23:13.520 --> 01:23:15.520] They're going to go by somehow. [01:23:15.520 --> 01:23:17.520] It's going to follow a different path. [01:23:17.520 --> 01:23:19.520] They're going to find it, right? [01:23:19.520 --> 01:23:20.520] Exactly. [01:23:20.520 --> 01:23:23.520] I'm looking, what have I missed? [01:23:23.520 --> 01:23:25.520] And I didn't miss anything. [01:23:25.520 --> 01:23:30.520] I went to Mark Autry, who at this time was a Justice of the Peace. [01:23:30.520 --> 01:23:36.520] I had known him for quite a while by then and showed him the codes. [01:23:36.520 --> 01:23:45.520] And it is my contention that Mark Autry would do what he believes is right if it heralyped the pope. [01:23:45.520 --> 01:23:50.520] He didn't say it so much because he was Baptist minister at all, so he really didn't think too much of the pope. [01:23:50.520 --> 01:23:55.520] But he would do what he thought was right. [01:23:55.520 --> 01:24:05.520] And he said, Mr. Kelton, are you telling me that everything I've done for the last 30 years, he was a sheriff's deputy for 20 years. [01:24:05.520 --> 01:24:07.520] He was a Kathleen's Sheriff's Department. [01:24:07.520 --> 01:24:14.520] And then he retired from there and became a JP for 12 years. [01:24:14.520 --> 01:24:19.520] Are you telling me that everything I've been doing for the last 22 years is wrong? [01:24:19.520 --> 01:24:24.520] That everything, everyone in Texas has been doing all this time is wrong. [01:24:24.520 --> 01:24:27.520] And you're right. [01:24:27.520 --> 01:24:29.520] I said, don't ask me, Mark. [01:24:29.520 --> 01:24:31.520] I didn't write the code. [01:24:31.520 --> 01:24:32.520] I just read it. [01:24:32.520 --> 01:24:35.520] This is what it says. [01:24:35.520 --> 01:24:44.520] He could not wrap his head around the fact that he and everyone else in Texas was doing it wrong. [01:24:44.520 --> 01:24:53.520] I went to him to find out what his justification was for doing it the way they were doing it. [01:24:53.520 --> 01:24:58.520] And his justification was, is this how everybody else has been doing it? [01:24:58.520 --> 01:25:02.520] So therefore, it must be right. [01:25:02.520 --> 01:25:15.520] The idea that some two-bit redneck hillbilly in Podunk, Texas could come in here and say that what everybody in Texas has been doing the last 30 years is wrong? [01:25:15.520 --> 01:25:18.520] Well, that was ludicrous. [01:25:18.520 --> 01:25:20.520] That's what I run into. [01:25:20.520 --> 01:25:25.520] We call it cognitive dissonance. [01:25:25.520 --> 01:25:46.520] How would you accept it if you found out that all this stuff they taught in school about all of these great and wonderful rights that you have and these laws that are in place to protect you was all horse hockey? [01:25:46.520 --> 01:25:49.520] That you weren't protected at all? [01:25:49.520 --> 01:25:53.520] How would you feel about that? [01:25:53.520 --> 01:25:58.520] Another question is how do you feel about that? [01:25:58.520 --> 01:26:01.520] Because it is all horse hockey. [01:26:01.520 --> 01:26:07.520] I keep thinking of Paul Simon in this song, Codochrome. [01:26:07.520 --> 01:26:16.520] After all the crap I've learned in high school, it's a wonder I can think at all. [01:26:16.520 --> 01:26:24.520] The stuff they taught you in high school, how did it feel when you found out it was all horse manure? [01:26:24.520 --> 01:26:41.520] That's what I was asking Mark Autrich to accept, that all of this time he thought he was being the good guy doing the right thing when he was actually subjecting people to a horrendous abuse. [01:26:41.520 --> 01:26:44.520] That's what we're up against, guys. [01:26:44.520 --> 01:26:51.520] If anybody who, like you say, he wants to do things right, that's really hard for him to accept. [01:26:51.520 --> 01:26:59.520] That's a tough thing to get over, so we need to be able to apply some pressure to get there. [01:26:59.520 --> 01:27:11.520] After all this time of studying the problem and the potential solution, we never have to accuse them of doing everything wrong. [01:27:11.520 --> 01:27:26.520] The solution comes in getting them to change the smallest thing possible that will cause a cascading effect and right things. [01:27:26.520 --> 01:27:29.520] And I looked at it from an engineer's perspective. [01:27:29.520 --> 01:27:36.520] If you look at a system and the systems failing generally, you can't blame the operators. [01:27:36.520 --> 01:27:38.520] You've got to look at the system. [01:27:38.520 --> 01:27:45.520] Something is broken and it's caused everything that relies on that to malfunction. [01:27:45.520 --> 01:27:48.520] What's broken? [01:27:48.520 --> 01:27:57.520] And what's broken is when a police officer arrests someone for any reason. [01:27:57.520 --> 01:28:10.520] On an on-site offense, 14.06, on an existing warrant, 1516, they are to take that person directly to the nearest magistrate. [01:28:10.520 --> 01:28:20.520] That requirement went into law in 1215 AD, and when it did, it was a really big deal. [01:28:20.520 --> 01:28:24.520] No longer can the sheriff arrest you and take you to jail. [01:28:24.520 --> 01:28:33.520] He has to take you to a neutral magistrate and get an agreement from the magistrate to take you to jail. [01:28:33.520 --> 01:28:40.520] A neutral party, an elected party, answerable directly to the electorate. [01:28:40.520 --> 01:28:52.520] And it worked really well for 800 years, not quite 800 years, until the 1970s, about 750 years. [01:28:52.520 --> 01:29:05.520] And then we got some really ignorant rulings in Texas, and they started taking people directly to jail and holding this thing they call a registration. [01:29:05.520 --> 01:29:07.520] Magistrate. [01:29:07.520 --> 01:29:13.520] Yeah, that's only authorized if you're arrested for an offense out of county. [01:29:13.520 --> 01:29:23.520] And then out of county, magistrate gives you the warnings under 1517, and then when you're returned to the county of original jurisdiction, [01:29:23.520 --> 01:29:26.520] they're to hold an examining trial under Chapter 16. [01:29:26.520 --> 01:29:29.520] Well, they dispensed with the examining trial altogether. [01:29:29.520 --> 01:29:33.520] And that's when this mass incarceration problem started. [01:29:33.520 --> 01:29:36.520] That's when everything went off the rails. [01:29:36.520 --> 01:29:39.520] That one tiny thing. [01:29:39.520 --> 01:29:41.520] We don't need new law. [01:29:41.520 --> 01:29:43.520] We need them following the law we've gotten. [01:29:43.520 --> 01:29:47.520] We'll speak to that in a little more detail when we come back on the other side. [01:29:47.520 --> 01:29:50.520] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain with Law Radio. [01:29:50.520 --> 01:29:55.520] I'm hoping that we will have the caller lines up shortly. [01:29:55.520 --> 01:29:57.520] Deborah's on her way to get it fixed. [01:29:57.520 --> 01:29:59.520] We'll be right back. [01:30:01.520 --> 01:30:03.520] Sorry, soft drink lovers. [01:30:03.520 --> 01:30:05.520] Even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.520 --> 01:30:10.520] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:10.520 --> 01:30:16.520] I'll get your account for it all, Brett, and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.520 --> 01:30:18.520] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.520 --> 01:30:21.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.520 --> 01:30:26.520] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.520 --> 01:30:28.520] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.520 --> 01:30:31.520] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.520 --> 01:30:32.520] Privacy. [01:30:32.520 --> 01:30:34.520] It's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.520 --> 01:30:37.520] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. [01:30:37.520 --> 01:30:42.520] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:42.520 --> 01:30:45.520] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.520 --> 01:30:49.520] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? [01:30:49.520 --> 01:30:50.520] Wrong. [01:30:50.520 --> 01:30:55.520] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:55.520 --> 01:31:02.520] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:02.520 --> 01:31:09.520] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners triggered the appetite, but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:09.520 --> 01:31:15.520] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:15.520 --> 01:31:23.520] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:23.520 --> 01:31:25.520] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:25.520 --> 01:31:29.520] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:29.520 --> 01:31:35.520] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:35.520 --> 01:31:37.520] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:37.520 --> 01:31:42.520] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:42.520 --> 01:31:45.520] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:45.520 --> 01:31:48.520] And thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:48.520 --> 01:31:49.520] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:49.520 --> 01:31:50.520] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:50.520 --> 01:31:51.520] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:51.520 --> 01:31:52.520] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:52.520 --> 01:31:54.520] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:54.520 --> 01:31:57.520] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.520 --> 01:32:00.520] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.520 --> 01:32:34.520] Working with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:34.520 --> 01:32:40.520] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.520 --> 01:32:47.520] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [01:32:47.520 --> 01:32:50.520] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.520 --> 01:32:54.520] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:54.520 --> 01:32:59.520] By ordering your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:24.520 --> 01:33:46.520] The way you come with temptation, they're trying to buy the whole place. [01:33:46.520 --> 01:33:58.520] They want to force the nation because they're falling from grace. [01:33:58.520 --> 01:34:03.520] I will not drink from that cup. [01:34:03.520 --> 01:34:09.520] I just can't act out a way. [01:34:09.520 --> 01:34:35.520] They got this problem they're dreaming of and I won't be the slave to what makes. [01:34:35.520 --> 01:34:42.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, the rule of law radio on this Friday. [01:34:42.520 --> 01:34:46.520] What year is it, Brett? [01:34:46.520 --> 01:34:51.520] November 12, 2021. [01:34:51.520 --> 01:34:53.520] 11, 12, 21. [01:34:53.520 --> 01:34:58.520] Yesterday was 11-11, Armistice Day, Veterans Day. [01:34:58.520 --> 01:35:01.520] Not one of my happy days. [01:35:01.520 --> 01:35:05.520] Then again, I'm an old, disgruntled bet. [01:35:05.520 --> 01:35:17.520] But anyway, our phone lines, it appears as though our backside server over that we use for the phone bridge is down. [01:35:17.520 --> 01:35:20.520] Not something we can do anything about. [01:35:20.520 --> 01:35:28.520] So we may not get our phones up and while I do, I'm a radio talk show host. [01:35:28.520 --> 01:35:31.520] I don't think I can do four hours. [01:35:31.520 --> 01:35:35.520] So we may pull the plug at 10 o'clock. [01:35:35.520 --> 01:35:41.520] We're hoping that the phones will come back up, but if they're not, we may end the show at 10 o'clock. [01:35:41.520 --> 01:35:49.520] So I apologize to anyone who wanted to call in, but we seem to be plagued, listen. [01:35:49.520 --> 01:35:50.520] Go ahead, Brett. [01:35:50.520 --> 01:35:52.520] We've done what we can. [01:35:52.520 --> 01:35:57.520] We've reached all the buttons we can and just beyond that scope. [01:35:57.520 --> 01:35:58.520] Sorry. [01:35:58.520 --> 01:36:06.520] So back to where we were, we were at the fun part. [01:36:06.520 --> 01:36:11.520] If we're going to fix this system, we have to take the system on. [01:36:11.520 --> 01:36:13.520] And I've been doing this a long time. [01:36:13.520 --> 01:36:18.520] Brett's been doing this quite a while and we did it. [01:36:18.520 --> 01:36:24.520] We're over that fear of taking that first step. [01:36:24.520 --> 01:36:29.520] Brett and I both took that first step under fire. [01:36:29.520 --> 01:36:31.520] That's one of the things I liked about Brett. [01:36:31.520 --> 01:36:33.520] They were coming after him. [01:36:33.520 --> 01:36:35.520] Big time. [01:36:35.520 --> 01:36:37.520] And he came to us and said, what can I do? [01:36:37.520 --> 01:36:39.520] And we told him what to do. [01:36:39.520 --> 01:36:43.520] Anyone here who listens to Eddie Craig? [01:36:43.520 --> 01:36:51.520] A number of years ago, Eddie Craig was up in Nacodotius and they were coming after him over sales tax. [01:36:51.520 --> 01:36:53.520] And he said, what can I do? [01:36:53.520 --> 01:36:54.520] They're doing this wrong. [01:36:54.520 --> 01:36:55.520] They're doing that wrong. [01:36:55.520 --> 01:36:59.520] And doing all this other wrong is about criminal charges against them. [01:36:59.520 --> 01:37:06.520] So after that, when I told him that the first time, a couple of weeks later, he called in and he said he filed some criminal charges. [01:37:06.520 --> 01:37:09.520] I said, well, how many did you file? [01:37:09.520 --> 01:37:12.520] 119. [01:37:12.520 --> 01:37:14.520] Well, why did you stop? [01:37:14.520 --> 01:37:19.520] Well, my printer ran out of toner. [01:37:19.520 --> 01:37:22.520] Brett did essentially the same thing. [01:37:22.520 --> 01:37:26.520] He asked us, what should I do? [01:37:26.520 --> 01:37:28.520] And we gave him suggestions of things to do. [01:37:28.520 --> 01:37:30.520] And he looked at it. [01:37:30.520 --> 01:37:33.520] And where he agreed with us, he did it. [01:37:33.520 --> 01:37:39.520] And then he came back and asked us more sophisticated questions. [01:37:39.520 --> 01:37:41.520] We gave him stuff to do. [01:37:41.520 --> 01:37:46.520] Primarily, we try not to give prescriptions. [01:37:46.520 --> 01:37:48.520] We say, go read this. [01:37:48.520 --> 01:37:50.520] Read these codes. [01:37:50.520 --> 01:37:52.520] Brett did that. [01:37:52.520 --> 01:37:58.520] And if you listen to Brett on this show, he makes me look like a chomp when it comes to codes. [01:37:58.520 --> 01:38:02.520] He is way more knowledgeable in the codes than I am. [01:38:02.520 --> 01:38:11.520] And I can't tell you how good it feels to have Brett on here more knowledgeable than me. [01:38:11.520 --> 01:38:20.520] The validation of the master is when the master is exceeded by the student. [01:38:20.520 --> 01:38:25.520] Are you saying I should feel really good if my offspring beats me at chess? [01:38:25.520 --> 01:38:27.520] I should be happy about that. [01:38:27.520 --> 01:38:29.520] You should be. [01:38:29.520 --> 01:38:31.520] Well, good. [01:38:31.520 --> 01:38:36.520] One of my greatest memories is back when AutoCAD first came out. [01:38:36.520 --> 01:38:39.520] I think it was AutoCAD 10. [01:38:39.520 --> 01:38:44.520] And I loaded it up and I got a blinking cursor. [01:38:44.520 --> 01:38:46.520] And I was old school. [01:38:46.520 --> 01:38:54.520] I did primary research on metal and silicon technology back in 1970 with Teletype. [01:38:54.520 --> 01:38:57.520] And we tried to design the first PC. [01:38:57.520 --> 01:38:59.520] Teletype never got it out. [01:38:59.520 --> 01:39:03.520] And you'll notice that Teletype doesn't exist anymore. [01:39:03.520 --> 01:39:09.520] Well, I was pretty good with DOS and working at the keyboard. [01:39:09.520 --> 01:39:12.520] But I loaded up AutoCAD and there's this blinking cursor. [01:39:12.520 --> 01:39:15.520] And I have no idea what to do. [01:39:15.520 --> 01:39:20.520] And I started studying the manuals and was able to do a few things. [01:39:20.520 --> 01:39:26.520] A couple of weeks later, I opened up the file that was on a floppy disk. [01:39:26.520 --> 01:39:34.520] Most of you probably don't remember floppy disks that hold 365 meg, I believe. [01:39:34.520 --> 01:39:37.520] Well, I opened up a file. [01:39:37.520 --> 01:39:39.520] No, it was actually only kilobyte. [01:39:39.520 --> 01:39:40.520] Yeah. [01:39:40.520 --> 01:39:43.520] Because this file filled the whole disk. [01:39:43.520 --> 01:39:45.520] There's a file I was working on. [01:39:45.520 --> 01:39:47.520] I opened it up. [01:39:47.520 --> 01:39:51.520] I opened the disk and it was pulled and it had this one huge file on it. [01:39:51.520 --> 01:39:53.520] And I didn't recognize it, so I opened it. [01:39:53.520 --> 01:39:58.520] And there was a spot on the screen and I'd figured out how to zoom and I zoomed in. [01:39:58.520 --> 01:40:01.520] And as it got bigger, it was an island. [01:40:01.520 --> 01:40:07.520] And it got bigger and there were roads on it and there were buildings on it and it's high-rise. [01:40:07.520 --> 01:40:11.520] And in between two high-rises, there's a little bird flying. [01:40:11.520 --> 01:40:14.520] I said, what in the heck is this? [01:40:14.520 --> 01:40:15.520] I called my son. [01:40:15.520 --> 01:40:16.520] He was 10 years old. [01:40:16.520 --> 01:40:19.520] I said, do you know anything about this? [01:40:19.520 --> 01:40:20.520] He looked at it. [01:40:20.520 --> 01:40:22.520] Oh, yeah, I did that, Dad. [01:40:22.520 --> 01:40:23.520] You what? [01:40:23.520 --> 01:40:24.520] You did all this? [01:40:24.520 --> 01:40:26.520] Yeah. [01:40:26.520 --> 01:40:28.520] You little bastard. [01:40:28.520 --> 01:40:34.520] Go tell your mom she needs to beat you. [01:40:34.520 --> 01:40:37.520] He just walked out laughing. [01:40:37.520 --> 01:40:42.520] That was probably my proudest moment. [01:40:42.520 --> 01:40:48.520] My 10-year-old made me look like a chump. [01:40:48.520 --> 01:40:49.520] That was great. [01:40:49.520 --> 01:40:53.520] And, okay, I want you guys to do the same thing. [01:40:53.520 --> 01:40:55.520] And you can. [01:40:55.520 --> 01:41:00.520] I've been 30 years working this out and Brett's been, what, five or six years? [01:41:00.520 --> 01:41:03.520] Well, five or six years around you, yeah. [01:41:03.520 --> 01:41:04.520] Yeah. [01:41:04.520 --> 01:41:07.520] Probably another couple decades before that. [01:41:07.520 --> 01:41:10.520] So Brett is way past me. [01:41:10.520 --> 01:41:15.520] I want you guys past, way past both of us. [01:41:15.520 --> 01:41:19.520] And you can, and it's fun. [01:41:19.520 --> 01:41:28.520] Right now, I'm having a great time beating up the Travis County District Attorney. [01:41:28.520 --> 01:41:36.520] How many of you out there have went to a district attorney or the police and filed criminal complaints against the public official, [01:41:36.520 --> 01:41:44.520] and they give you this blah, blah, blah stuff and do nothing? [01:41:44.520 --> 01:41:50.520] Have you come away feeling frustrated and defeated? [01:41:50.520 --> 01:41:58.520] Now I go to public officials and ask them to do stuff and they give me this blah, blah, blah stuff and I'm thinking, [01:41:58.520 --> 01:42:03.520] boy, am I going to kick your behind? [01:42:03.520 --> 01:42:10.520] My rule, never ask a public official to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:42:10.520 --> 01:42:16.520] And here, I'm playing the Travis County District Attorney like a cheap fiddle. [01:42:16.520 --> 01:42:25.520] I've already played the Chief Justice of the Supreme and the presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals like a cheap fiddle. [01:42:25.520 --> 01:42:30.520] I played the governor like a cheap fiddle. [01:42:30.520 --> 01:42:37.520] If you play chess, I hope you'll appreciate what we're doing. [01:42:37.520 --> 01:42:41.520] In chess, unlike checkers, checkers for the most part, you play in the next move. [01:42:41.520 --> 01:42:45.520] In chess, you play four or five moves ahead. [01:42:45.520 --> 01:42:58.520] If any of you have ever played the game of Go, it's only got two or three rules and it is far more sophisticated than chess [01:42:58.520 --> 01:43:04.520] because you have to play 10 to 15 moves ahead, at least. [01:43:04.520 --> 01:43:12.520] You have to set pieces out that the game will grow into. [01:43:12.520 --> 01:43:16.520] That's what we try to do here. [01:43:16.520 --> 01:43:27.520] When we're working with these public officials, we know that we want to push them into a place to where we can trap them behind their bad decisions. [01:43:27.520 --> 01:43:39.520] So we start out by laying pieces out on the board, asking them to do stuff we know they're not going to do. [01:43:39.520 --> 01:43:46.520] Oh, we're out of time already. We're having way too much fun. We'll be right back. [01:43:46.520 --> 01:43:49.520] You're telling about the pieces on the board. [01:43:49.520 --> 01:43:56.520] Yeah, this is, if you haven't played Go, you might want to look at it. It is a great game. [01:43:56.520 --> 01:44:00.520] Hang on. We'll be right back. [01:44:00.520 --> 01:44:06.520] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.520 --> 01:44:11.520] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.520 --> 01:44:17.520] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.520 --> 01:44:22.520] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [01:44:22.520 --> 01:44:31.520] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.520 --> 01:44:39.520] We have come to trust Jevity so much. We became a marketing distributor, along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.520 --> 01:44:47.520] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.520 --> 01:45:00.520] As you realize the benefits of Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:00.520 --> 01:45:07.520] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:07.520 --> 01:45:15.520] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.520 --> 01:45:22.520] When 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. [01:45:22.520 --> 01:45:34.520] 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. [01:45:34.520 --> 01:45:43.520] 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. [01:45:43.520 --> 01:45:56.520] To receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:56.520 --> 01:46:14.520] Call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:26.520 --> 01:46:46.520] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelsen, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [01:46:46.520 --> 01:47:05.520] On this Friday, the 12th day of November, 2021, and we're talking about how to manipulate public officials, how to set them up so that you get the end result that you want. [01:47:05.520 --> 01:47:12.520] First criteria, what do you want? [01:47:12.520 --> 01:47:21.520] We can go in and just start beating them up, but it won't have any real effect unless we have some special purpose. [01:47:21.520 --> 01:47:31.520] We do this telegram site, Brett and I, and we have a site called Masque Law Society. [01:47:31.520 --> 01:47:46.520] They're addressing this mask issue, and we suggested to them that you make up a criminal complaint against a 911 responder. [01:47:46.520 --> 01:47:56.520] When you call 911 on the people that are requiring you have a mask, you're going to get an officer respondent to your 911 call, [01:47:56.520 --> 01:48:05.520] and you want a criminal complaint against him when he refuses to arrest the people that are blocking you. [01:48:05.520 --> 01:48:13.520] And when he gets there, you want to take out a criminal complaint against the guy that's blocking you from using this public facility without a mask. [01:48:13.520 --> 01:48:21.520] We want it all written out. This is what he did, but you write it out before you ever go there. [01:48:21.520 --> 01:48:27.520] Yeah, because it's pretty predictable. Yeah, you know exactly what they're going to do, so you write it out, [01:48:27.520 --> 01:48:36.520] and then you get him to do what you want him to do, so you can't come in without a mask. [01:48:36.520 --> 01:48:41.520] And instead of arguing with him and bantering back and forth, you're telling him, [01:48:41.520 --> 01:48:51.520] wait right there. Don't go anywhere. Somebody's going to want to talk to you. You take out your phone and call 911. [01:48:51.520 --> 01:49:01.520] If you have never done that, you've got to once. That is so much fun. [01:49:01.520 --> 01:49:11.520] And then you tell him you don't talk to him anymore. I was at the Secretary of State's building and asked the Secretary of State to give me an app of steel, [01:49:11.520 --> 01:49:17.520] and the clerk didn't know what she was doing. She didn't. I don't think she even knew where it was and refused. [01:49:17.520 --> 01:49:31.520] So I called 911. The officer showed up and threw me out of the office and told me that I couldn't leave. [01:49:31.520 --> 01:49:40.520] I was going to go get the police to arrest him. He told me I couldn't leave. So I called 911 and was waiting for Austin PD to show up [01:49:40.520 --> 01:49:53.520] because this is Secretary of State building downtown Austin, and about a dozen DPS officers showed up because DPS does security for a state house building in Austin. [01:49:53.520 --> 01:50:01.520] And this black guy, big, tall, huge black guy come over, and I'm sitting down right now at Criminal Complaints. [01:50:01.520 --> 01:50:11.520] And he said, Mr. Kelton, I have some questions for you. And I looked up at him and said, get lost. Mr. Kelton, I have some questions to ask you. [01:50:11.520 --> 01:50:21.520] Leave me alone. Don't talk to me. He said, Mr. Kelton, I can ask all the questions I want to. I said, yeah, you ask, I'll ignore. [01:50:21.520 --> 01:50:30.520] So I'm trying to push him over the edge, but he wouldn't push. He finally stopped asking me questions when I just ignored him. [01:50:30.520 --> 01:50:38.520] And then his sergeant showed up and came over and said, Mr. Kelton, I need to ask you some questions. And I told him, no, no, no, no, no, I can't talk to you. [01:50:38.520 --> 01:50:46.520] Well, why can't you talk to me? Well, you're the bad guys. I've called the good guys and when they get here, I'll give them a complete statement. [01:50:46.520 --> 01:50:52.520] But since I'm making criminal complaints against some of your officers, it would be inappropriate for us to have any further communications. [01:50:52.520 --> 01:51:01.520] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, I need to ask you some questions. I told him, get lost. [01:51:01.520 --> 01:51:16.520] Well, I did the same thing to this big black guy. And the black guy never once lost his composure, not one break in his professional demeanor. [01:51:16.520 --> 01:51:24.520] This sergeant lost it and ordered me out of the building. So I can't leave the building. That guy over there said, if I leave the building, he'll arrest me. [01:51:24.520 --> 01:51:31.520] Or if he don't leave the building, I'll arrest you. Okay, okay. So I left the building and I'm out on the porch. [01:51:31.520 --> 01:51:36.520] And he came back up to me and said, Mr. Kelton, I have some questions for you. [01:51:36.520 --> 01:51:47.520] When I said, what part of I do not want to talk to you? Do you not understand? [01:51:47.520 --> 01:51:56.520] He lost it, grabbed me, smashed me into a wall, broke one of my teeth and then cuffed me and gave me to this big black guy. [01:51:56.520 --> 01:52:08.520] So I'm going to put him in the car. So he puts me in the car and it was clear. I looked at this big guy and it was clear he was mortified. [01:52:08.520 --> 01:52:20.520] I had took him on. He tried to intimidate me and pulled all his stuff on me and none of it worked. He never lost his cool. [01:52:20.520 --> 01:52:28.520] I pulled the same thing on his sergeant and his sergeant went berserk. Clearly, this guy was mortified. Put me in the car. [01:52:28.520 --> 01:52:36.520] And he said, Mr. Kelton, I apologize, but my sergeant gave me an order. This is what I have to do. [01:52:36.520 --> 01:52:44.520] And he put me in the front seat and I looked up at his dashcam. I said, is that dashcam on? He said, well, yes, it is. [01:52:44.520 --> 01:52:53.520] Will it turn around? And he looked from side to side and then reached up and turned it around and pointed it at me. [01:52:53.520 --> 01:53:02.520] And then he said, I have some business I have to take care of. I'll be right back. And I dictated a statement into his dashcam. [01:53:02.520 --> 01:53:17.520] It was glorious. The police are not all of them are bad guys. The vast majority are good guys. They want me to do it right. [01:53:17.520 --> 01:53:28.520] But sometimes you have to give them a way to do it right and put the pressure on them. And I kind of got distracted from where I was going. [01:53:28.520 --> 01:53:36.520] You call 911 and 911 operator gets there and you pull out this complaint. You already have made up. [01:53:36.520 --> 01:53:44.520] And you ask the guy who wouldn't let you come in without a mask. You ask him his name and you write it into the blank on the document. [01:53:44.520 --> 01:53:53.520] And then you put the date in and you sign it at the bottom and give it to the officer. What do you think he's going to think? [01:53:53.520 --> 01:54:04.520] This guy already had that made up. He's setting them up. And then this guy is going to refuse to arrest him because he knows I'm just setting them up. [01:54:04.520 --> 01:54:18.520] And then I ask him to call his supervisor. And when his supervisor gets there, I pull out the second one that's against the 911 responder explaining exactly what he did. [01:54:18.520 --> 01:54:26.520] It's not exactly walking science, figuring it out. And I give it to him. I give it to the supervisor. [01:54:26.520 --> 01:54:32.520] Guys, if you've never done that, that is so much fun. [01:54:32.520 --> 01:54:41.520] Now you can stand there reading them the riot act and letting them know how to cowage the cabbage. But they hear that all day every day. [01:54:41.520 --> 01:54:51.520] What they don't have is somebody coming in there and setting them up and playing them like a cute fiddle. [01:54:51.520 --> 01:55:00.520] This is what Brett was doing with these prosecutors, with these lawyers. Tell them about those vets, Brett. [01:55:00.520 --> 01:55:02.520] If you can do it without laughing. [01:55:02.520 --> 01:55:04.520] With lawyers. [01:55:04.520 --> 01:55:07.520] The ones in Wood County. [01:55:07.520 --> 01:55:11.520] Well, let's see. [01:55:11.520 --> 01:55:13.520] We had had one of them. [01:55:13.520 --> 01:55:20.520] Commencing criminal complaint criminal cases without any paperwork. [01:55:20.520 --> 01:55:35.520] We had one of them who would send in a request to the county judge, not an affidavit. [01:55:35.520 --> 01:55:51.520] If you want to have an arrest warrant or a search warrant, you have to have an affidavit of facts that leads a judge to make a determination of probable cause, right? [01:55:51.520 --> 01:56:00.520] Well, they didn't have that. Instead, they had a request for affidavit. So they got in trouble for that. [01:56:00.520 --> 01:56:03.520] They're asking the judge for an affidavit? [01:56:03.520 --> 01:56:06.520] No, I'm sorry. A request for a arrest warrant. [01:56:06.520 --> 01:56:08.520] Oh, okay. [01:56:08.520 --> 01:56:15.520] But there are no facts on it. It's just a request assault. That's as much of a request as it is. It's just the title. [01:56:15.520 --> 01:56:17.520] Request for a arrest warrant. [01:56:17.520 --> 01:56:20.520] And it says who they want arrested. [01:56:20.520 --> 01:56:26.520] But it doesn't say any facts that would lead a judge to say why, that this is legit or not. [01:56:26.520 --> 01:56:32.520] Well, I think they missed something there because that's not an affidavit. [01:56:32.520 --> 01:56:37.520] Let's see. What else did they do? [01:56:37.520 --> 01:56:41.520] What did you do to them? [01:56:41.520 --> 01:56:48.520] Well, I'm going to the bar grief thing. That's your signature thing. [01:56:48.520 --> 01:57:04.520] I did bar grieve, but I also found out that one, the district attorney, she had just stepped into the DA position from an assistant because she took her boss's job. [01:57:04.520 --> 01:57:12.520] She accused him of some kind of sexual comment and then he had a lot of hot water and she stepped up and took his job. [01:57:12.520 --> 01:57:29.520] And then she was in a position of like a temporary appointee that has to be approved, let's say, by all of the Senate, the Texas Senate. [01:57:29.520 --> 01:57:37.520] And so I wrote to the senators and laid all her dirty laundry out there and said, here's what she's been doing. [01:57:37.520 --> 01:57:44.520] Here's a look at this example of this and that. Don't you dare approve her. The people want an election. [01:57:44.520 --> 01:57:52.520] Because if you don't get appointed by the Senate, then there has to be an election. [01:57:52.520 --> 01:57:59.520] So I asked for that. Every one of the senators, I asked them all. [01:57:59.520 --> 01:58:07.520] And, you know, I guess maybe people expect you to only talk to your own senator. I don't know, but I wouldn't talk to them all. [01:58:07.520 --> 01:58:15.520] And what do you know, next thing I started seeing was these political signs all over the place up and down the streets. [01:58:15.520 --> 01:58:20.520] They're going to have an election. [01:58:20.520 --> 01:58:31.520] Okay, we only got 30 seconds. We don't have our phones up, so we're not going to go the whole four hours tonight, but one person. [01:58:31.520 --> 01:58:41.520] I think the point of this is one person can change everything. I apologize about the phones. We'll be back next week and I hope we have everything fixed. [01:58:41.520 --> 01:58:46.520] Thank you all for listening and good night. [01:58:46.520 --> 01:58:57.520] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:58:57.520 --> 01:59:05.520] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:05.520 --> 01:59:17.520] Enter the recovery version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [01:59:17.520 --> 01:59:27.520] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:27.520 --> 01:59:43.520] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [01:59:43.520 --> 01:59:50.520] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [01:59:50.520 --> 01:59:59.520] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com.